Pa WEL ACCIDENT. ————————— A Mail Train Hurled Down a Forty Foot Embankment, FOUR PEOPLE FATALLY HURT. Many Persons Injured on the Western { New York and Pennsylvania, Near Olenan—Narrow Escape of Passen- goers from Fire and Water, Bravronrn, Pa., Avril 30, Train No, 2, the mail bound south on the Western New York and Pennsylvania railroad, was wrecked one mile west of Olean. The disaster, which did not result but maimed and injured man caused by the rails spreading. The mail and ars and two coaches, well filled with passengers, were hurled dow mbankment about forly feet high. In their decoant the mail and baggage cars turned a complete sor wilt, and landed right side up but the passenger coaches rolled pver several tUmes and anded bottom side up in about three feet of water, The occupants of the smoker fared the hardest, and many bad narrow escapes from drowning. The stove in the mail car upset, and the car was fired, but the flames were extinguisied before great damage was done. The expiess car and locomotive clung to the rails, but the ex- press messenger bad an arm broken by the shock. Twenty | in a direct loss of life , was Ung Le ( ale LA} ersons were injured, four fatally. It is a mi wt none d instantly, The injured were taken to Olean. The train was running at a speed ol thirty miles an bour when the accident occurred. The track was torn up for many feet. The cars, which rolled down the embankment, contained forty passengers. The list of those fatally burt is as follows: Mns. Goopsern, of Coudersport, Pa, ber bead cut and suffered internal Mrs. O'Hara, of Colegrove, Internal injures J. J. Sait, of Bath, and bas his spine burt Mrs O. WW. WHEATON, ¥X., was internally injured. The others injured were; ELLs Avaxs, Duke ( severely cut and bruised V. Coviiy, of burt. EvGEx burt. Mary Donick, of Sverely Lruisod H. Hurcsisson, of Rochests bart. Mrs B. Jacuamxs, of En Was serious. v * 4 Joax Kerve CHARLES KEENAN, clerk, ua 1 D. McG fojured. O'Hara, Co O'Hara, chia Bruised C. Bippoxs, a €rushe«] Gro arm Lr KATE Sx Allegheny, serio ited on the neck and C G. Tuyxo, of Oiean, N Wi i d and injured internally, Ww Mu Wasson, of Buffalo, was badly cut » Phe Dead and ar Of Nobhn A acie t Wei e Kil had injur Wa, Pa. received Y., was badly cut N. N of Alleghany, of entre, Pa, was Rochester, was slightly E DEAN, of Rochester, was slightly Southport, Pa, was , was slightly iporiam, Pa, Talo, bad his shoulder of Rochester, the postal ester, was slightly Pa., srious'y bruised. of the precwling, seriously had bo h lege if South Wales, bad his wgrove, brakewan, ROE STEVENS, UROL, Ti. of Port Pa., was ead, Y., Is, the most seriously injured are pd Willis Wasson MDOT. ON OF THE CONSTITUTION, n is the Erection of =» ment in Commemoration IA, April 5 The governors inal states and their rep. ve in Carpenters’ hall for the purpose of making arrangements for erecting & mon Fa.rwouat clebra- tion of the centennial of th ution The fo p ere Governors (Povo; f Pennsylvania; Sawyer, of New ampshire; Davis, of Rbode Isiand; Biggs, of Delawa Green, of New Jersey, and Jackson, of Maryland; Lieutenant Governors Jones, of N York, and Howard, of Cone mecticut; K Thomas A. Hoyt, D. D,, of Georgia; Maj Charles 8." Stringfellow, of Virginia, and ex-Secretary of State J. N. Lipscomb, South Carolina Sotis was 1 Governor Beaver called the meeting to | order, alter prayer by Rev, Dr. Harper. Charles Emory Smith delivered an addres of welcom Governor of the thirteen orig Peseniat 5 1 ment in pars in present of Green, of New Jersey, was made chairman of the meeting and Hampton L. Carson » cretary, Upon motion of Governor B ges, the chair appointed the following commities to prepare suitable resclutions to be presented to the meeting: Governors Biggs, Beaver, Sawyer, Davis, and Rev, Thomas A. Hoyt The resoiutions reported by the committes, and which were adopted unanimously, “call upon the national government and the vard | ous stales and territories of the Union to sake suitable sppropriations to a fund to be dedicated to the building of a grand national monument commemorative of the framing | and adoption of the constitution of the United Btates, to be erected within the city of Phila delphia—the birthplace of independence and fhe Federal Union—said monument to bear he names of the signers of the Declaration of Independence in their autographs, and of the framers of the constitution,” A resolution was also adopted that the Bovernors of the thirteen original states be tavited to appoint a commissioner from euch te to co-operate with the citizens of New ork in their preparations to fitly celebrate centennial of the inauguration of Geofge mshington as the first president of the United States, and to Invite co-operation on | fhe part of the sister states and territories, The Editor of German Puek Dead, New Yourx, April 80.—Dr. Emil A. Knoster, or of the German edition of Puck, died Baturday at his reddence, 30 Duryea street, roslyn Deceased was a native of Austria, In Kraniohberg, and about 58 years of mge. He stodied law at the University of Gratz and at Vienna, and was admitted te the bar in the last named city. On coming 10 the United States in 1578 he entered the Journalistic field. He took editorial oharge of The Milwaukee Besbote and remained iz that position until July last, when he became editor of Puck. His body will be cremated | at the Mt, Olivet erematory, on Long Idan. | Brooklyn n Danger of an Fpldemie, Brooxrys, April 30. The health official have discovered a nest of smallpox in the double tenement house No, 10 Monteith street, Nine people were found suffering with the disease and removed to the pest house, There are still soveral people in the house, but the place is strictly quarantined, The health oticers are apprehensive of a serious outbreak of the malady in the neighborbosd, ts removed were children who had tir Massachu- | t represented | | physician, VERILY HE WAS A PROPHET, Curlows Poswinent Found in the Chimvey of an Old New Jersey House. Bervipene, N, J., April 80,~While wore mon were tearing down a house in MoKees- port, which was built in 1833 by Orlando Grier, they found built in with the chimney a flask filled with whisky, a label on the bottle giving the date of distillation as 1828, Near it vasa tin box containing documents which said that Grier had placed the flask in the chimney when the house was built, and ut- tered a series of prophecies, One of the most remarkable was as follows; “Twenty-five years from this year slavery will not exist in this land, but it will have cost the lives of thousands to bave made the change. Men will converse from beach to beach of the coean easier than indite a letter. The demons fashion and drink will enthrall the masses. Efforts will be made to over throw the flend rum. The tallow candle will not even be used to grease boots, Men will touch the wal as Moses touched the rock for water, and light will di the darkness Prohibit | be a battle ery, with tems perance a formidable enemy, The first will fall, the latter prevail for a time, wax woak, and men will again court the cup. The flask of spirits which I place herewith will rise in the midst of a conflict which will claim it as one of the principals " je 100 wii MR. CARNEGIE'S STRIKERS. The Men May Accept the Steel Manufac- turer's Terms, and Resume Work, The Knights Reply, Denying Some of Mr, Carnegle’'s Statements, Prrrspuna, April 30.—The feeling at Brad. dock was intensified when the men read the published interview in which Mr. Carnegio not only repeated his views, but ewpbasized the statement that the men must go to work on the terms proposed. For days a large number of the men had been led to believe there would be an oppor- tunity for another conference, and acting under such belief they refrained from report- ing at the office. This last ultimatum, how- ever, bad a most depressing effect, and it may be that the men will accept the advice given them, if they do protest against the terms offered, Up at the mill everything was as peaceful as could be desired. In speaking of affairs one of the superintendents said: “Mr, Car negie merely repeats what be has said on | og . | ported from committees, former occasions, but he gives decided weight to the statements that Capt. Jones has made, that the mill has started. We wil | | | | [ANY ABSENTEE, Jougressmen Consider Launching Preferable to Lawmaking, WHAT THE STAY-AT-HOMES DID, Thirty five Manage to Carry on w Very Lively, Although Hepresentatives Somewhut Informal, Debate on the Tariff BIL WasninaroxN, April 30, Owing to the ex odus of members of congress and newspaper correspodents to Philadelphia, to participate in the ceremonies attending the launching of the “Yorktown,” the Capitol deserted Saturday, But two senator and Blair, put in an appearance in the s chamber, and after a glance at the empty seats, they retired to their rooms to write letters, On the house side the committee on factures, engaged in the investigation of trusts, was the only committee which was able to attend to business, and even that had no quorum, Not more than thirty-five mem. bers were in attendance when the speaker called the house to order, and of the small army of newspaper men who usually congre- gate in the press gallery of the house, not a corporal's guard remained, The feature of the debate on the tariff bill in the house was the colloquial discussion re- specting the question of labor and the bear- ing of a revised tariff thereon. Only thirty five members were present when the house met. The tariff debate was immediately re sumed in committees of the whole, with Mr, Springer, of [llinols, in the chair, Mr. Kerr, of Towa, spoke against the bill Mr. Tarmney, of Michigan, followed, advocacy of the measure Mr. O'Neill, of Pennsylvania, said that if Mr. Tarsuey bad joined the excursionists to the launch of the Yorktown he would have soon the great shipyards that would be closed on the passage of the Mills' bill, The conversational method of debate was then adopted In reply to Mr, Russell, of Massachusetts, Mr. O'Neill said that if congress passed the free trade bill and supplemented it with the free ship bill, which had been favorably re the shipbuilding in- Wis nearly , Luliom nate array of Commies manu in | dustry would be destroyed | make rails | on Monday morning sure, and those who are | 1 bolding back know IL" The Knights had a continuous session until 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon. To a reporter Messrs. Bennett, Jamison and Richardson, members of the conference committee, said they would have a reply to Mr Carnegie formulated. The following was sulmequently given out: “Ihe conference committees wishes to make a statement in regard to Andrew Carnogie's published statement He makes the state ment that a few fighting Knights have been keeping 2.500 men out of work. Now, be knows that is a false statement, as has been fully demonstrated at several public meet ings. It is not a question of wages alto gether with a great number of the men is a question of principin, for this strike does not affect a large numb wr of our men on the wagn question.” Some of the men my that they will go sway, but the general impression is that the major ty of the old employes will accept the inevitable. Preparing to Lay the Corner Stone, Wassixaron, April 30 —{yreat the vinity The s are wing made in connection with aving of the o we of the di ding of the new Catl@lic university stone will be laid by Car o] Gibbons, May 24, at 4 pm. About 10,000 will it to the rer ate A00 ay, writ adding wnt lending i as to be of the on wintry se Lig dent and his cabinet and promis of congress ndddress will be del John Law Ie It completed in time for dedication in N next. The that invitations clergy and laity bers of the ARs we matic rps, the presi members and government fficials An light Rev ent aster Spalding, bishop of Peoria, will be vember s will 8 expe ted] that the building caremon ies on CCASIOL Mr. Bynum inquired whether the gentle man was in favor of tariff revision or not Mr. O'Neill replied that he wanted the tariff revised when there was a Republican president ; he wanted ft revised in the of its friends. (Loud laughter.) Mr. Ford, of Michigan—Would gentleman just as soon call on Bob house not the Inger. . 90l to write a revision of the Now Testament, | a8 to call on the | the tariff} lepublican party to revise {Great laughter.) Mr. O'Neill-This is a tariff destruction, not a tariff reduction. He had received a letter from a young lady about to graduate, | in which she said that she had been desig. It | | you for protection, pated to speak at ber commencement ex. ercises on protection to Amercan industries (Laughter ) Mr. Richardson, of Tenn lady ask you for protection! Mr. Milliken Did the young Laughter If the young lady had asked wou you bave boon a free trader then! (Laughter. ) Mr. Russell, referring to the condition of the protected state of Pennsylvania, stated that affairs in the coal regions of that state were a shame and a scandal to human civili- i ation. prepars- | yyelaoan form a part of the Centennial services com- | of the h will be at that lebration, memorative of the establishment hierarchy in the United § beid the States, whi nm oathedral, Hal He in and which will be a nation Killed While Resisting Arrest, Forr Worm, Tex, April 30-8 PF Thrower, with his wife and two children, took dinner with Mrs. Cunningham in the country near Smithfield, Alter dinner Thrower assaulted Mra Cunningham's 10 year-old daughter. Wednesday afternoon he was arrested, but just as the offi The officer thought the ball had entered the brain and started at once for a but while the officer was gone Turower regained consciousness and fled The ball had made only a scalp wound, with. out passing through the skull The officers followed him into Denton county and killed him while he was A iting arrest. Stranded at Kiogsna, New Yomrx, April 30. A cablegram re ceived at the Maritime Exchange states that | the ship Fairholme, from Caloutta for New York, is stranded at Kingsna, and is a total wreck. The steamship Dabulamangie, which arrived at Cape Town on April 2, reported having passed the Fairholme off Cape Agul hos on fire and abandoned, with no signs of her boats or crew, No tidings have since been received of those on board. The crew consisted of about thirty persons, and it is possible thoy may have landed at some out of the way place. The vessel is ship rigged, of | 1,700 tons register, Conviets Terribly Nursed. Jepvensonviter, Ind, April 30. Walter Selvers, a twenty-one year man, and Charles Davis, a two year man, was alinost burned to death at the Southern prison. Seivers and Davis are cupola tenders in the foundry, At pouring off time the tamping bar became chilled and could not be removed from the aperture through which the molten iron flows. They knocked out the bottom, sod the molten iron, 1,000 pounds or more, fell with a igniting the clothing of the two who had not retired a proper distance, They were burned from had to foot, Roses for Representative Matson, Wasninoron, April 30. When the house was called to order Baturday there was a large pillow of very beautiful flowers on the dek of Representative Courtland Maton, who had just beens nominated by the Democratic party of his state for the office of governor, The offering was Sompoke i almost entirely of rows. Across the face of it, in lottors male of purple mii tiiias, Ske words: “Governor—Indians.” When Mr. Mr. Bayne declared that the wages paid for labor in the county of Alleghen annually more than the ent all the nted by econtingent on the. WAYS AD menns « (App the Repuidiconn side Mr { Kentucky, said that the concrete representative of the pry of Plakerton Thomson sted works for ng Hungarian to work while American =» st the point of the Was A ouncrete In ¥ Rone were ATO Wages paki In sintos repress the south ALi 1] Breckenridge, « live was a guard detectives Edgar f enal atl the pury the grant rkmen were Kept wit Kun axl revolver That wage rats Mr of Maine, said that the man from Kentucky had drawn which jeft the American w sold, snd sli protected by | cture of the state of in Allegheny Applause on Deno wide.) Foed, gentle nn I wt rKinen ure in Le wed the Hungarian workmen inkerton detectives The gen | thoman bad pictured that as the final result | of | trast | smployes ors were ! about to take him to jad he shot himself in | the bead. protection, when it was only an noident in the great dspute which went on either under protection or free trade. The gentleman wanted to con the wages of men tempormiuy smployed with those received by permanent He (Reed) thought that it ought to be pointed out that such methods ATE ing this question of free trade or protection were somewhat potty in their nature. The | question was what system scoured the greater | wealth to the country and the higher wages | to the workingmen, One of these working: | men had appeared before the waysand means committeo—-a ways and means commities better constituted than the one in this house, because it had beard the workingmen—and { ho bad been asked: “Do you get the benefit of the tariff Do not your employers try to get the benefit from ! youl” He had replied with perfect frankness: “That is a quarrel between ourselves. Just give us a market and we will try 0 get our work.” And be (Reed) believed that thay would (Applause on Republican side.) Mr. Breckeuriige retorted that as to what the gentleman said about the ways and means committee either in the present or last cone grem, he (Breckenridge) treated it with the contempt it deserved. (Applause on Demo cratic side.) Mr. Farquhar, of New York, warned the members of the honse that they were walking on mighty thin lee when they took one cent from the wages of American mechanics and laborers. Within the last seven yoars there had risen up a lon of an organisation which oven the oldest organisations stood in dread of, because it had the power to vindicate its rights. That power bad been felt on the floor of the house more than once, and if It authorises the secretary of the treasury to male rules for the anchorage of vessels in the harbor or adjacent waters of the Hudson prescribes a penalty of $100 for violation of he roles by hose Maser Funersd o Mrs. Thome, Wasminaron, April 30 «The funeral sr vioes over the remains of the late Mra EF. | Buck, manager of the Holly Tree Gospel | etait Calf base 8 this city, left on SHE BAYS HE WAS CRUEL A Brother of the Late Gen, Merrit Susd for Divorce. Kinasron, N. X., April 80, An action for limited divorce is on trial before Judge Alton B. Parker in this city, The plaintiff is Anna P. Merritt and the defendant Joremish K. Morritt, a brother of Gen, Abram Merritt, of Nyack, who committed suicide in the Fifth Avenue hotel, in New York, on Thurwiay, The parties were married at Saugerties on the Hudson, on Oct, 15, 1579, For a number of years the dsfendant has beon a leading and prosperous diy goods mer- chant of that village, Lie has aso stood high in church and social circles. Ac one time he was an officer of the Heformed chu and alwo its Sunday school superintendent. Mrs Merrit sues for separation, alimony and the custody of bor three chi dren, | f bint she alleges cruel ad inhuman treatment She save that her struck ber and frequently called ber opprobious names, He nlso forbade he lx f Indies socially and otherwise, turned ber relative un the doors of her hone In be Bas falled to provide biaent and clothing, in way has endeavored to lowan of ber friends and the public rel, CO ud hia cimling with & mu and pa wie kK nes proper every he her nthe Bein Palas y The dels nes Is nt his wife and devoted, he contrary, was abus ive and il-tempered. He that he did everything for ber comfort and provided for | ber as any husband uld, A further hear- | ing was postponed on account of the death of Gen. Merritt, WAR SHIPS LAUNCHED, and Lewin a general denial. Merritt was everything but loving mm i says Lo but, « it HY The Dynamite Cruiser Vesuvius and the Guenbont Yorktown Glide Graecefully Into the Delaware at Philadelphia Amid Intense Enthasinsm, PRILADELFHIA thousands of April 30. Thousands upon people were gathered Saturday afternoon cinity of Cramp's ship- | yards to witness the launching of the two war vescls, and delegations from Washing ton and of leading citizens of Philadelphia were embarked for the soste on the steamer | Columida and the res cutter Hamilton, The shipping which was gathered in the river | was thick with humanity and gayly bedeckaed in colors. In the yards workmen had for hours been busy in preparing for the move | ment of the new war ships nto their proper | slement, and their huge structures awakened | the patriotism of every beart Cordons of streamers and flags were strung er them, | and they bad as much of a bridal look as grim war vessels can bave, | The Washington party, which was brought | in two sections of sev each, are the | stems Columbia, ved | by Mayor Fitler and a d mn of the load. ing tizens, ther veral of the | governors of the “thirteen original states ™ who bell a meeting here for making arrang ita for erecting a moun. | ment in Fairmount park in celebration of the centennial of the Constitution, The Columbia left Washington street wharf at 1:33, and procesded to the ship | yards, s lunch being spread during the trip A snents before 2, which was the | bour set for launching, Secretary Whitney | and a portion of his party J in the ¥ venoe en Pullman od at 1 o'clock and po they ware Pedy we Ta weeded to w hery de toge with = the purpose of | gerne few my left the Columbia | snd proceeded to a pistform near the bows | of the two The sig fron under the Y the slowly moved toward the water, At this moment Mis Mary Cameron, daughter of | Senator Cameron, broke a bottle of ver | the bow and christened the vessel “York wn” The steel monster glided grace into the water amid the blowing of wi waving of handkerchiefs and burrabs of mowd w ocd Lhe Five ater Ves is ven the blocks were and at 36 pm mis wing @3 out | rRtown, wine « uuy Low, the docks the dynamite cruiser water. Mis Eleanor | of Kentucy, christened ber ! wails | the ng the vessels a few mon fully Sonted in the r the return was given, The Colum dook at 4:15 pw, and wretary Whitney's party were on heir way to Washington The Mowrs Cramp deserve weoms which attended the laun was no hited programme was carried out prom) water Ma reached her A350 pom Be groat for the There and the hing or accident of any kind tly Steamers for the Argentine Nepublie, Quurrc, April 30. Mr. J. A. Maguire, con wl g ral in Canada for the Argentine Re public, announces: “The Argentine govern- | ment bas recently made arrangements with sn important British shipping firm for the sonsiruction of fourteen large and rapid | stearnships, four of which will be placed on the North and Bouth American route. | have petitioned our government with 8 view of waking Halifax, N. 8, the northern winter | twa sinus of the line, and I have every reason | to liope and believe that the Arg gentine He public will accede to my suggestion” The | | ships in question are 0 be sbout 5,000 tons | register, and will fly the Argentine flag. | bs expected that they will be ready for service {in 1880. Nearly 2,000 immigrants have passed It wrough Quebwe during the pat fow days en route for the American and Canadian north- west. Navigation is now fairly opened here, at | least so far as ocean trade is concerned. The i St. Lawrence up to Montreal is expected to be | free from joe early next week, An Allentown Man Missing. Arixxrows, Pa, April 30, George J. ursday morning for Easton to engage ad fitional help for the coffee house here, He fits mot best seen or heard from since. His wife thinks an accident has happened to him, or that be wandered away while laboring under a temporary mental aberration. Bix yoars ago last Thersday Mr. Buck's first wife died, and their daughter was legally adopted by friends in New York city. The anniver- sary of this event has shways been a severe mental strain on Mr. Buck. He is 81 years of | age, 5 feet 2 inches in height, has brown board and mustache, dark gray eyes and prominent noss, which has been broken. He | wore a light gray business suit and derby | | A Tunnel Ruined by Snow and Rain, | Burre, M. T,, April 30. —A Garrison speo- fal to The Butte Miner says the Mullan tun. pel on the Northern Pacific, which passed through the main range of the Rocky moun. | S & A Loeb. We have pow on exhibition and sale the largest and most complete assortment of »OCARPBHTS« evergshown in Bellefonte, any and all times can be relied variety with all the fixtures belonging thereto, and fixtures, including Sheeting, Pillow at the very lowest prices, in fact everything Casings, which at Curtains io great Window Blinds on. Lace in the House Keeping lise, Tickings, &e., &c., &e. We handle the +ROCHESTER CLOTHING <~ And are the only Clothing dealers in town who do, and will sell you a well made g asked yon for slop shop trash, rood fitting suit at the same prices Try it onee. S.& A LOED. Complexion Beautifier AY CTRE Pom . Malaria, Fever nnd Ague, Serofula. | Cancer, Erysipelos, Bolls, Pimples Wicers, Sore Eyes, Scald Head, Tet. | Aer, Salt Bhenm, Mercurial and sil Ricod and Skin Diseases, fot by wil Breggeis, ren £ iS or BA IEZINESE, COAT ED TONG E and ail oases arising fr ® the LIVER or STOXA Thomas Adama, of Hig Sandy Ky. sare Jory’ lil saved Lun areing bills in bis county Sold by brug Bellers Medicine Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. irede uti Crxoelient Boule sm, settlers and of) » Dakota, are & fow of the od vin poem extensions of (pe oF other information ade ] Wann, Genersi Passenger A a 4 we 8. 1. Wanner, General 7 Broadway, New York v map of Northwest, orders of the Bomaet HIN ERCORNS. When Baby was sick, we gets har Oastoria, When she was 8 Child, she ariel for Castoria, When she became Miss, she dhung fo Castoria, When she had Children, she gave thom Castoria, Where Are Youn Going? Wher Jo you start! Where from? How many i " tains, will probably be a total loss. Trades | are now being run over the switohback at | much expense, Experts on the ground say | that the snow and spricg rains will bring oa | a heavy squeess, which will necssitale aban | doning the tunnel as a tolal wreck. Low over $4,000,000, ! The Nerwiek Incendiary Coptored. i Witkesnanny, Pa Apt Hany Bn yowsr party? What amount of freight spy + Toor you ® What routs 0 300 Freel ; t of an suswer to the above ques. @ Jutetinioan! Tree Of ¢ Apthas, With ». pt ten, nis # —. ary ah . aa: ite "do aie other vain. iy f atton which "iE ee Apvnile wil Parttes mt aid t tang it A&M, Pe. : “wn + . ‘. i" . Longfel OV Engroved vo 1 Postage +B po & SPECI We have eral a send 1 FHS LBB | engreviog BEND AT OBOE « » rou. 4 y » " wr HMERALD & PRINBYTER, poh} y » ERAT Oso CJ Bont Bee oneacns siamo To tipo copy snd out § Usbolbay bor Bink. sion § 3426 17 inches. on has yw. LOW TOURIST RATES. For $47.50 a firstclass round trip ticket good for 90 days, with stopover privieagm, oan be obtained from St. Paul Ww Great Falls, Mon. tana, the coming manufacturing centre of the noth west aT RL Only 856 00 ] Ealnt Paul | and retary ductions | east and south ox correspondingly as low will be named 10 points in Minnesota and Da. kota, or upon Puget Bound and the Pacific | Const. For further particulars address 8. 1. Warren, General Eastern Agent, 287 Broadway, | New York (Sty. or CH WamnEs, General Pas senger Ageat, Bt. Paul, Minn | | SUFFERING! WOMEN: a] lhe hee pope tog & old or ex pins Here 18 - wo poculing bo thelr vox, FEMALE RE Similar re = rter Organs and Pianos. The Cabloet Organ wit lnlf@aced by Mason & Mamitn bn i860 Meson & Helin Organs have always maintained thelr supreNecy over gil others i enelvid igen Honors al 80 Gres Word» since 1967, Trmproved Mode of Sir hy doi gg ec in 18s comvirnotion, 1 Plan . 8 Pres! ne win -" 1 1h pike in aif century 3 iy Pe ny Ay and Piano — Catalog, (ree, NASON & RARLDT ORSAY A3™ TLANO OO. 48 Baet 1600 Be, (Delsn Spar, LG THE, nriteed vance in FARTS of | UE. = 1) TEETER ITTY ACY
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers