THE SCRANTON TRIBUTE-FRIDAY" MORX1XG. MARCH 2, 1894. OLD NEW ENGLAND. THE FIRST SETTLERS WERE HUMAN, LIKE THEIR DESCENDANTS. Tlio Puritan Wero Not Without Their PlSSSMfSS of a Worldly Cliurartrr TBSM Waa, IIowoTir, Very Little DiunUi'ii netta Heroes Ware Wholly Mortal. It ii not altogether ID rnsy thiiiK for lis to raallss that Um generations who ban h'n in-fore as iii lif' have ban Just snob Men ami women as WO OOnelvei ari', (lif- faring In ttielr aurroundlnga, ii'lr knowl edge and their habits, bntiossaeslog all the elements of pood and All, of weak ness mid itrength, which goto makeup human nature todny. Detptte the persist cDt Idol breaking of t lie times, the most of ni almost unconsciously ooptinue to set our heroes upon pedeatala and apart, and if it secretly (jriitilii -. ns, because it en hances our own self reapeot, It alaoahooki ns to be told now and again how wholly mortal they wen- that George Washing ton waa not sopretarnaturally good as the cherry tree incident would imply; that the heroes of Hunker Hill and Valley Forge were often flogged for their misdemeanors, and that even the godly founders of New England were early forced to make laws fur the punishment of Just sued offenses (J pervade our society today. N tt.evetl a careful process of selection could uarout envy, deceit, dishonesty anil licentious ness, and w e find Ciovertior Bradford Md ly expressing his fear that "tatane hath more iower in these heathen lands, as some have thought, than in more Chris tian nations, especially over (..oil's serv ants iu them.1' Many a night of jollity is needful for the full ripening Of the habitual drunk ard. And indeed, though serious, purpche ful people, thinking more of divine wrath than of earthly joy, the Purttani w ere not without their pleasures. Their gathering! Wen by no means all religious. There Was, for example, no element of the religious in the early Thanksgiving days, of which they became so fond that they sometimes bad two a year. Good, healthful animal enjoyments tilled those days. We think better of the PuritflS for it; We OTS glad to know that they must have been might? men at the trencher; we can even forgive them for the human quality it reveals that they were most 'potent in Dotting," They brought with them from England their beer drinking habits, ami pitiful are their complaints on Drat coming here against their enforced abstinence. Some of them afterward narrated their experi ences, as if they were well worth the tell inc. It was "not accounted a strange thing in those days to drink water," wrote one, and good Parson Blggtnson of Salem rather boasted that whereas his stomach formerly endured only "such drink as was both strong and stale" be was then able to say, "I can and ofttimts do drink New England water very well. " But this unhappy necessity did not long continue. The Puritans very soi'ti began to brew and to distill, and New England mm early won its widespread fame. The name of their stimulants was legion, and their consumption on festival occasions chief of which were the funeral and the min ister'sordinatiou was enormous. Flip glasses are preserved which hold over a gallon. The punchbowl was passed from mouth to mouth before every dinner, and beer or some other strow drink preceded breakfast and accompanied every meal and was partaken of as freely by the chil dren as by tlieir elders. It is recorded that a miss of s, sent to Boston to be educated, left the borne of her grandmother in high uuo.geou necause sue was not given win a With each meal. And her parents approv ed her conduct on the ground that they wanted her "brought up like a lady." Bat thougli drinking was so general .there was surprisingly little drunkenness in Puritan days. Cotton Mather complain ed that every other house iu Boston was an alehouse, but New England through out the seventeenth century was sober and law abiding. The tavern keepers always men of social and political importance, as the "precedence lists" of Harvard and Yale reveal were constrained to see to it that no man drank more than a quart of beer nut of mealtimes) that there was no singing or dancing or gambling on their premises, nor any smoking of tobacco. The minister, the magistrate, the deacons and the constables had an Unpleasant hab it of publicly chiding the overboisterous, or those who tarried too long with thu wine, and the titbingman would force himself upon the company of the HtrniiK'r in the inn and sternly countermand his order for drink if it seemed to him excess ive. There were, too, fires and imprison ment, the stocks, the pillory, the drunk- ard's clock a barrel with hobs for head ami arms or the bilboes for the intoxi cated, and for the incorrigible, disfran chisement and the shameful badge por trayed by Mr. Volk. Wo laugh at the sumptuary laws of enrlier times the regulations for bakers and feather bed makers and almost every other tradesman and every laborer. Some of them are ludicrous enough, but it is not certain that in small and Isolated commu nities, in n new country nt least, they were not, in the main well suited to t he oc casion, however it tony have been in more populous England, whence they WON brought. Even the penalty of fine, impris OOment or the whipping post, w hich await ed the youth who persisted in courting a maid without the formal consent of be? parents, amusing though it seems today, may not have been unbeneflolal in so prim itive, a society. The New England settle rs were bothered with few theories of gov ernment. Thy foundations of the republic were laid broad anil deep, hut they were concerned mostly with their daily lif" and those! about them, and they tried tn pre vent wickedness and to punish it In the way which seemed moat simple and most direct and should best serve as a warning to others. It is well to bear in mind, however, since a contrary notion has obtained credence, that, as compared with Europe, in their time, they were far from cruel in their punishments .aveonly in cases of offense gainst religion. One of the hardest les sons we ourselves have to learn Is toler ance of belief. Two centuries ago the ne cessity was never dreamed ,1. Men who Showed contempt fur Iho",vord prsjsohed" wero placarded and publicly pilloried; those who disputed were caged iu the market place and there preached to; those who could not be silenced w ere driven into exile. Hut of actual bloodthirstiness, of the tortures which make the criminal his tory of Europe so terrible, KeW England knows little. Men were banged alas, they were burned too but not for trifles, and their taking off was made a public holiday. Hut Incessant exhortation and publlo preaching to the condemned pre ceded their SXOCUttott, not the rack or any other implement of physical torture. Harper's Weekly. Ruttnna of I'm hlminon Kurds. Perhaps In nothing more than in the art of making buttons did our southern women sho,v their skill and Ingenuity, ffcimu were crocheted and were of nil sires, easily made of black and white thread, and very durable. Others were covered buttons, but (he molds, w hich have since those days been furnished to um in such abundance by our Connecticut friends and brethren, were then made of pieces of pasteboard or old boxes, the cloth used to cover them being filled up with small locks ,i( our own white fleecy stapletogivethem tbe desired roundish appearance. Hut the prettiest as well as tbe most durable of oil our buttons were those mudu of per simmon seeds. Thesu are a beautiful dark brown color, very smooth and glossy, and needed only to be washed and dried and have holes bored in them to be ready for use. Wut of the fruit of the persimmon tree we made beer, while the buttons just seemed as if made for lis and put dow n among our woods to be bad for only the trouble of picking and washing them. We talk sometimes of Yankee kill and Ingenuity, and vet, as we look back upon tbe past pud think of bow we managed when thrown UPOUOnrowu resources, It seems as if w hile trying to separate OUT selves from Ihem wo were show ing our selves, iu many ways, to be of the same blood and lineage. Blue nnd Gray. THE TROPICAL ANT MAN; A Relentless Destroyer who Fighti the Hardy Insects With NmoUe. To look at the mild, timid ants of our cool climates, which rnu at the sight or sound of people, build their humble nests under a stone or 1 ho roots of a tree, and Content themselves with gentlemanly lit tle thefts of needs or grain, or such small matters to look at these gentle little fel lows you would never imagine that there lire some branches of their family, distant rousius, which are fierce in the pursuit at their human neighbors' goods, so strong and so intelligent that even grown men are afraid of t lu-m, nnd sometimes whole Hag s turn out to light them. Hut it is so, and these eyes of mine have looked Upon them and their l ilt bless doings. Tim formlga, as pais destroyefta called, constructs a citadel for itself under ground, its only communication with the world above being DJ scent passages, ir it can And any wood lice thereabouts, it captures and carries them home, make i yard for them a veritable farmyard- and keeps them content by furnishing a supply of fresh leavea every day, just fur all the world as we feed our farm stock. Thefor mlga Isa marauder of its own kindred, too, making raids on Its Weaker cousins and bearing off their eggs, which, iu due COnne of batching, become .lio slaves of their captors. Usually the people of those tropical re gions pay little attention to tbe doings of the formiga. They come and go as they list, running over the rooms, tables, dishes. They are fished out of the butter, tapped out of the bread and cake. It isall amat tat of course. Rut when thesu sturdy little fellows in vade the house iu swarms, ami a warm re ception boiling water fails tn diminish the nuisance, then the services of the ant man become necessary, and be is sent for in hot baste. His stock in trade are an enormous bellows and a load of a cer tain kind of wood found in the ncghbor Ing forests. After stopping up all the open ings leading under the bouse, except a central one, he enlarges that and forms it into a furnace that will admit the pipe of tbe bellows. Then he lights a fire, and with the aid of the great bellows forces the smoke into the ant citadels Under tbe surface of the ground. Of course these are very porous, and when the smoke passes through them it goes nut into tho house above. Then the ant man leaves an assistant to work the bellows, and going into tbe bouse stnp-i up 1 very aperture and crack that be can And. Meanw hile there is a wild commotion among thoso doomed insects, whose home is being bombarded with smoke. They understand their danger with the very first puff that reaches them ami know that their only hope is in flight. They all has ten to the central chamber, where their precious eggs are stored. At a given sig nal from their chief each one seizes an eg: then ail turn in baste Into the sub terranean passages that lead into the gar den, deserting their homes ami carefully "hired stock of provisions, but holding fasl to the treasun d egg-. Hut there, before them, ale the cruel wreaths of bluu smoke. They turn and rush to another passage. Tie- same tiling then-. As a forlorn bope tho poor ants - we can't help feeling sorry for them, after all run into the old deserted galleries, or set to work to mako new ones, hoping their enemy will not find them thereat least. But the ant man is patrolling the ground around tbe house. As the old or new gal leries are cleared out by the bttkYe little nuts the smoke penetrates them and comes to the surface in a thin wreath. Thi y are thus betrayed as well 11s smothered, and a stroke of the spado ends their frantic ef forts at escape. All this time fresh quantities of the hot smoke are being forced through their high ways and byways, and the frail bodies of the formiga are shriveling and dropping along theirliueof attempted retreat. Soon they cense to struggle. They cannot breathe (he rarefied smoke laden air. The next day, when tho soil has cooled off, they are found calcined in their once busy galleries, their roasted eggs ut their side. Poor little creatures! Hut, their human victims call the ant man a blessing. Philadelphia Times. WEAK MEN Y0UR ATTENTION IS fHiTlP TO THE tilAIit. Ureal luitflteh Ik-un-dy, itiwrMiNi arm ium. h Cray's Specific Medicine IF YOU SUFFER fl'"m SHMSMMMM V 'III I t - bilitv. WViilftH'Hs vt Bolv und Mind. Siionim- torrbta, ami inpotoncyi Mid ' AImmm tlmt nririu limn ovr-mlulKo:ii:t' Mini MMI iibiim, ivt LOMOf Mt'inory And rOWtP, 01muhs nf Vi Ion, I'liMiiaturu Oil Am ami many other dU (MUWI that lead to hiwuiity OT Consumption ami an rarly ui avi', writ' for a pamphlet. Addrooa uRAY MEDICINE CO,, Buffalo, N. Y. Tim Bpoolflo HtdlCiM in md hy all drunitte at $ per packing. 'r wx packiiKva lor St,r fnt 1) until n reri'ipt if miou-v aml w(tb ever IKOU ordbr VY bUARANTtlE 11 -'hi inonei refunded f"on account if eounterfstsi we bevs saopted the Yellow wrspper, the only genu lie. Sold in Bersntou bv efattnews Hros. Walking Coder , Ladder. A well dressed, smart appearing man near the entrance of one of (he big liroud way hotels the other day turned out of bis way deliberately to walk under a lad der leasing against tho wall. He had to crowd close to the wnll nnd climb over a coll of rope to pass under the ladder, but Seemed to take great tatisfaction in bis performance. "I suppose," said a bystander, "that man feels he is helping to break down su perstition nnd disprove the foolish beliefs people haVS held for centuries. Vdnybc he isa member of the Thirteen orab, whose members go out of their way to walk on der ladders, assemble 18 at tables, cross their knives, spill salt with each other and do all manner of things like ( hat. "Hut the superstitious people will tell you such things don't count. They nri n't tests. It's only when 1.') get together by accident or a person accidentally does any one of the thousand and oiic'urdueky things' that bad luck is to be expected. Kismet doesn't belabor you beoausoyou spill salt, but when you spill salt It is a sign Kismet has it in for you bad." Phil-' ndelphia Press. THE Upholstery Department OP- William : Sissenberger Opposite BaptUt Church, Pci'in Avenue, Is replete with fine and medium Parlor Suits, Fancy Rockers, Couches and Lounges for the Holiday Trade. Prices to Suit all. Also Bed Room Sets,Din ing Room and Kitchen Fur niture. Parlor Suits and Odd Pieces Re-upholstered in a Substantial manner. Will ba as good as new Tlie Knlarr's I.arli of Tin t. While KmpSrOT rVsnois Joseph, Queen Victoria, Queen Christina of Spain and tbs queen regent of Holland am renown ed for their tact, King Leopold of Bel glum, the Portuguese royalties and par tlcularly Bmpsror William are noted for the absence of this ijuallty. Perhaps the most amusing illustration Hint, can bo giv en of Bmpsror William's lack of tad was when, iu taking leave of the pope on the Occasion of 11 visit to Home, be exclaimed in Drench, "Qua Dlsu vouabenlsss" (God bless youj. The emperor was probably Un conscious of the purport of his remark at. tint moment, but the idea of bestowing hi blessing mi the pope, instead of himself receiving it at the bands of the venerable pontiff, must, have taken even his holiness by surprise. And yet it Is entirely in keeping w ith the diameter and utterances of Kmperor William, w;ho considers him self ns God's vice regent over the German empire, ami not only as the "summus rex," but also as tho". summus eplsropus." Boston Herald. A HiRtnrln BtsphaSrti When Alexander tbe (ircnt conquered Poms, kiug of Indin, be captured a huge elephant which had fought very stoutly against him and set it five after having placed round Its log n band of metHl re cording tho fait that be bad dedicated it, to the sun. Three hundred nnd lifty years later this elephant was found with the in scription of Alexander lutact. New York IJawi Atlantic Refining Co, Manufacturers ami Di'lers iu Illuminating and Lubricating OILS Linseed Oil, Napthas nnd (iaso lines of all grades;. Alio Grease, Pinion Grease and Colliery Com pound; also, a larso Una of Par Tufliae Wax Candles. We also handle the Famous CROWN ACME OIL, tho only family safety burning oil in tbn market. WILLIAM MASON, Manager. Office: Coal Bsehanoe, WyoaUng Kvu. orks ut l'ino Brook. M. A. HULBERT'S City Music Store, - VOilUVU A. STKINWAY SON DKCKKK Hit OTHERS ui RHA.MIH & HACK hi I 1.1 & HAIKU PIANOS llw s lares utock of fmt-olaa ORGANS M USICAL M EKCHit HISli MUSIC. lii'U, ETCL MT. PLEASANT AX RETAIL, Conlnr tlm loat oii.'dity for domestic uso,nml cf nil sir.es, dellvorod in uuy n;irt of tUo city at lowest Ir1c. Orders hrft at my officn. M. WYOMING AVENUE, Itcnr room, first Hour, Thlr 1 National Dank, or xent by mull or t.-lenhono to thu mine, will receive prompt attention. j-jeeial contracts will bs mado for tho aulo ami delivery of Buekwhoat Coat WM. T. SMITH. O Every Woman Sometime1; needs a reli able monthly regulating medicine. Dr. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL PILLS, Am DtOfllpt, Mfn nnd rprtnln In rnnult. Tho genu P 'Dr. ftjsl't) novrr 1i:ipnlnt. Hont auywhurft 11.00s r- .11 MerilnnuCu , Clurnluud, 0 RoM hy JOHN II. PRSLPfl HiarmAoUt rumor Wyoming nvetiuo mid tipruce Htreat 8urnnt n. Pr. 1 j m Ann PinlAAll iifrniuioQllrrurM Wlnalc Rem- I OdVs ti'ifi" lOftlMtfs bMn-M tijr .Mxi TmjO c ry . I ftuftiv nrooti mt lOO-pige tuk , tlluitritnil from I I UJwfrMptylstf4fNtf Mil WhsnnotHiirlnfst I I ft&fl rnirfrii, fint Mngln Rnmndy ll (UOH HKTII.it (lilffttfl, III Dl 1TBS hllOIi W..1 .('aiUa1. SI. 000.000. BEST l.ftt HHOK IN TUB WOBlsDa A ifottar fiiiwtt in a ttutlar MfNttfs '! 1 1 ' I 1 11 s.sii.i I ti'ti. !. DuiiKulu Kill But ton Hoot iivnrtd fn fiuywbi hi tn t!o U.S., on of 'itrih, Monry (rdrr, ml Notn for l. in. Koillll pvory wny tli bootn r'lld la nil retiill ntfrim for .fti.fto. Wo miiito thi boot c;irrplvM, HMftfOft wo gmtr ntitff Ihn ft. thltt Mil iptnr. uiid U nny o;io U not mmnlUd tu win rciunu mo money or P' nd nnoini rpalr. uprrn or l.orniiion Mendo, Jths Ui 1. K. & KK, Hzcn 1 to S nnd half Srntl uonrnUt; tee mil pi V9Mi Illuitriilnl 10(11 ic mil FEDERAL ST ItOSTON. SLASH. Special ttrmi tv imUrt IHIrtrAlUitl mm Li 143 f 1;,: 1 loin the K 1. rn'liimr, Aor. t, 10X The Flour Awards "Chicago, Oct. Bt Fhs first ofiiciai annonncsnunt of World's Fair di plomas on flour Inn lnn made. A medal lias been awardad by the World'a Fair judges to tlio Qonr inaini factured by the Waslibuni, (.'rosby Co , in the Kr-fHt Washburn Flour Mills, Minneapolis. 'Ilia COXnmittM MpOTtl (he flour stroiiR and pure, nnd entitles it to rank ah first-class patent Hour for family and bakers' use." MEGARGEL & CONNELL VIIOI.KSAI.I'.AGE.NTS. SUPERLATIVE AND GOLD MEDAL The abort brands of llonr ran bi had at nny of the follovin merchants, who will accept The TriBUNI VIODH COl'PON of SO on each one hundred pounds of Hour or fit) on each barrel of Hour. leranton F . P. Prico, Wssbtngtoa arena i 1 Hold Mwini rirnnd. Dumuoro-R i" Prlos, Gold Medal Brand Uunni iro-l'. D. Ilaafty. HunBrlatlva liran I. Hyde Park Oarsoa a) riuTta. washbara st. Hold Me.ui Brsnd; Jsepn a. Bssrsjlsln uvumin, Huperluth'ti llr.nid. Greou liide A I. .Spencer. Gold Medal Brand. J. T.HoHaie, Bneerlatlre, I'lovlden.-e Peuner & C'hiitipoll.N' Main live- pas, Baaerlatlrs brand ;Ci J Oillsspls, w. Ifarksi street, Gold Msdtl Brand Olyiihant Jniues Jordan, Muperlatlvo Bran 1. I'eekeir.o sh iil'-r A K'lST 8nperlatlr. lermvtt V. U Wl itera . Co Mupi'ralutUe ArabDald Jones, 8 mpson a do . Bold Medal CurlondHlo-lt. S Clark, Gold Medal Brand. Honeedals -I N. Faster Ar Co Gol 1 MoJu. Miiiooka M II. I.avelle. Taylor Judge St Co. , Cold Medal; Athertoa & Co., Bnpsrlatire, Purree- Lawreaoe tttora Oo., Qold Medal. 00.1c John MeCrindle. Gold Hodul. PJttatOU M. V O'lioyle, Gold Medal Clin k's Oreen Frgee A; 1'i.rker Superlative. clurk'ii Mwninlt I'. M. Young, Gold Modal Dalton s E. Finn & Son. Gold Mo la! brand NU'holwD-J, E. Hardintr. Waverly-M. lillas A: Son. Gold Medal. Factory Tills Charles Gardner. Gold Ifsdsl Hophotto s N. H. Wnn A Boa, Gold Itedsl. , , . 111 Tohyhunna It UlQlgb l.uiuUe r i n (end Mo lid Bum 1 (oulasboro-B A. Adams. 1 1 11 Ualal Brsnd UoMOW -Gslge Clements, Gold Modal. L ike Ariel James A Bortr.'e, Gold Medal. Forest City J. l. Morgan A Co., Gold Medal Mercereau U Connell 1507 LACKAWANNA AVUXUti DIAMONDS, and Fine Jewelry, Leather Goods, Clocks, Bronzes, Onyx Tables, Shell Goods, Table and Ban quet Lamps, Choicest Bric-a- Brac, Sterling Silver Novelties. ce All Prices and all Sizes. Foote Sc Sliear Co. 513 LACKAWANNA AVE. Dexter Shoe Go., LUTHER KELLER Ifl KING'S WINDSOR CEMENT FOR PLASTERING LIMB, CEMEfi SEWER PIPES, FLUE LININGS. Office, 813 West Lacka wanna Ave. Quarries and Works, Portland, Pa. P U ZZ L E. THE GREATEST NOVELTY OF THE AGE. YahubU ss a Souvenir of tho Fair QUITS ICASY WHKN Y)I! KNOW Il) THOSE I)(H; Till :()( IN PR1ZKA WIM, II r. DISTItlUI Till) TO YVVmltti 11 aslu Niuiiiiiisi niiH H M- inui. l'OH sAliM BV ALL NEWS COMPANIES STATIONERS AND AT toy BTOHEH, oil BENT TO ANY ADDRESS UPON RECEIPT or PRICE, u." CUNTS, HY COLUMBIA MANUFACTURING CO. tig AND ill south I'll W STREET, BALTIMORE, MD fill MANHOOD RESTORED! NERVE8EEO8. This wti4ril -1 sr. ntvrd In riirr ill HHMI dll Hticli hn Wnnk MiMnorv. I, ens of Hiuln I'owrr. Hcnilni'hi VnkifnlniiiR. lopr MnnliM(1, Nlnhtly Emlvtloii, NfarToiiHnpn.aliUrutiipiini umi of pimor lnGt'iMrntlTP(.r(iiui8ttottb(,rttX('iius(!tlby ovrr(,xoi(lnn,3,oHiliUlrrr. t. i m ... nf tnhncco. oplutn ur rttninlnMs, wlilrli Mad to lnllrtnltT, Von- nnpuon -r .Tinnny. m f . i- mi . p(r im, a mr n, v mnll nniiMM. With onlor worlvr a written iriiiti uuter In rurp nr- rrfiiml ih. ihiiiiih'. ( tt'riilitr f Pt .J0I1I l.v nil lit nlils A.l ftirlt in so ilr'OREANOAf TLRU$ING."aLicr. AiiureM xhtvi: mkkim'o., :,.:,, 'ivvpi, chu-auo.ilu ForBvl in Heranlon, Pa., by H. C. SANDERSON, Dnirffidt, cr Wihlngtoo RESTORED MANHOOD Thoinvntrrnimly for rervuns proplmtlnn ni.d nil nfrToudltuMnen nf iih KHiit'iiinviMpriTiiiM in I'liiipr men tHrTlul:l rr. hi nil it n, r nil- liitf or Lostdlnnh I. IniiNitcnrT, NlKhllr i:inlfli'ri.Vuutiiiiil ICrron, M I Worrjr.i'Xoi'imKo uncol Tolmcviii Tdpliiui.whl 'ii l."'.l loi'on- BIT OKI aki aftlR UBiso. m 1 In the snip of th shears, The bondholder Wars The sound of his moncj Buhancingi Why not copy liis way, Ami clip every day To get something that's quite as entrat .in- You Can Do It! BY SNIPPING AND CLIPPING YOU GET $24 YALUE FOR TEN CENTS Just to think of the delights of a trip all over our own country, from Alaska to the Gulf of Mexico! Being able to do it in easy stages, at TEN CENTS "a stage," includ ing the services of a guide! Yet, that is just what we do for you. AND JUST THINK OF Realistic Pictures from ever part of America, done in NEW process indelible typogravure delineate the journey. The incomparable world-famed traveler and lecturer, PROF. GEO. R. CROMWELL, is the guide. Journalistic enterprise is the conductor of the trip. America "From Alaska to the Gulf of Mexico." will be published rj weeklv series of sivteeu viewa (taoh riew 1U13A iacbss (Oily worth $1 50), and will embrace the physic.! and scsuic woudera of Our Own Land, the whole edited by l'rof, G. K. Cromwell. Bxeh series will be enclosed ia hundsoine covers. iii,' Cspllol, sshlagtoa. i ha i omman, lioitoa 1 rintlnc HOUKC Siiuht.'. Ns Vort i n i nn., hi . ii nc Canon, olorado. Chestnnl nrw i 1 . 1 1 . , i , ,.!,,.. Vsllowitona Palls Wyoming, Branton'i i ,.,. Newport, Central I'mk, Mlnnoapolisi i Andltorlnni Hotel, Chicago. Mini aauii kUii. m. .,,,., , i. ...... Temple Square, hii Lake i iijr. Monntaln Boase, Craeson Iprlnas, Pa, M iti.liliiKt.iii Mniiunipiit, Haltlniore. Hin,. ,i Nlacara. Cliv of Victoria, It, C. ltKn. Alaska. Each Series Lasts but one Week, See That Yon Get Them All. llllllllllllllllllltlllliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiHiiHiHiHiHiyiimi,,,,!. I AMERICA COUPON NO. 6. StMul or bring two of those coupons, differently numbered, a m witli Ten (Vnts, and get the first series of sixteen magnificent S I photographs. "'i Milium iiiiiiiMimiiiMimimmiiiiMMiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiimr: a'Min miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiinmiiniiiiiifj MARCH 2 I antec tonne orrstnps thj Boasr, s. .1 i at bi.m petbi . otiojica furSS.VO. JUU. .110 1 T-t.t ii tMiai, to., llvvclaua.OUlu. Ili Mir !, . M. IIAlllll. liruKS''i 11 i'uiili Avvntlu. This Coupon, with two like it, but of different 3 I dates, and with Ten Cents in cash, will secure one I part of the World's Fair Art Portfolio in four I parts the one announced before. I I MARCH 2 I 55 asa This Coupon, with another like it, but of differ- I ent date, and with Five Cents in cash, will secura I t.hfl "Trin Arnnnd tho World" nnrtfnlin nf tilinto- 1 1 1 graphs, a rare and interesting glanca at noted I spots in all climes. inilllllllllllll!.IIIIIIIIIIIBllSilIIIIUIUIMUIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIHIIIIillimUJI!!IK!llM!