TJIE SCnATSTTOJjT TKTBUNE-THURSDAY MORNTSrG, FEBRUARY 4, 1S97. tfy cwmfon CriBune I el! und Weekly. Ko Sunday Edition I'ubllslied at Scranton, Pa., l Tlio Tribune Publishing Cotnpan. Ivc YotkllcprescntBlhe' ritANKa aiuv co. lloom , Trlbmio IlulldliiK, New York City. t ' XNTIRID AT TH PO9TOr7I0B AT ECIUNTOV PA. A3 BICOHD CIAB3 MAtL UATTEH SCUANTON, lUHUAUY 4, 1S07. Mrs. Tranc T Vail, who lins been mentioned us a proper successor to Mrs Sunn on the poor boiird, Is among tho brightest and most piogiussho of Bciantons bright women ami has had expei Iciilo In phlhinthioplo work that ttuulil be o muterlal aid on the poor board. Mis Vail has always taken great lntuicst In public affairs Se wul jeiui ago sho was a candidate for school conti oiler fiom the Seventeenth waid and received a lmcu vote. Manufactured Damne Suits. A lecuit dispatch fiom IlauHbuig to one of the Philadelphia panels con taineil tho abseition that Senator Jin gee, of Allegheny, pioposod to intio duce a bill to check thu multiplication of speculative damage suits agalnbt Tiactlon companies b requiring plain tiffs to glvu advance bond for the costs. "Ve leain fiom Senator Mageo that this Is not tiue. "While I believe," he says in a letter under date of February 1, "that something should bo dono to pre, vent the gi owing evil of manufactured damage enhes, I have no bill to pie sent upon the subject " That this Is "a growing evil" Is shown, among other vvas, by a search which Mi n I'aimalee Pi entice, of the Chicago bai, lecently made of the lecouls of Cook count, 111. Dining the lit st sK months of lS'K), 310 damage hults wete In ought, claiming a total sum of $.S1I,SG0 Duilng the (list six months of 1S9G, tho number of this cla&s of unite was S9J, and the total damages claimed was Xll.GlO.OOO Mr. Pientice "-ajs that it Is not unieason able to n'-bumii that thcio aie now pending In the coutts of Cook countj cabes of this kind to the number of 3,000, claiming damages of over $30, 000,000. A like Inciease' In the bWe of tho vei dlcts lendeied and the nuinbei of Judg ments obtain d Is also shown, as we leain fiom the TImes-lleiaUl, fiom which Journal these instinctive sta tistics aie taken In the Hist si months of 1S00 thieo verdicts weie i en tiered in the Cook county coutts of $10, 000 each or over, thu thiee amounting to $3",210. In tho first six months of 1S00 twent-slx vol diets were lendeied In the same couits, each foi an amount exceeding $10,000, the total of the twenty-six being $425,000 Othei llg uies aie given showing tho vast pie pondeiance of -vol diets that aie len deied for the plalntllf, tho piopoitlon being about sl to one, indicating that damage stilts against coi potations aie piacticably Indefensible because of the piejudlce of Juiles. Mr. Pientice assoits that the prose cution ot these suits has giown Into a regular business, that bureaus and brokeis mid nmneis aie emplojed to hunt up such tas(S, and that moie oi less ftiiud is used In piomotlng, fos tering and tijlng them; that damage claims, being assignable, uio tiuus foiied like stock in the mniket, and nu meious poisons thus become inteiested in them and in their successful piose cutlon. 'Thus,' savs tho Tlmos-Hci-ald, "a vast and often unseen powci is bi ought to beat upon couits and Juiles, which Is altogether unlawful" This is a plctuie which presents many points of local familiarity. It is to be legiettcd that a waj is not cleai by legislation to reach this evil with out denying Justice to those who have leal In juiles to be lediessed. It besins to look as If Clifton Knoir, of I31ooinsbuig, weie about to establish a new lecoid for the wanton abuse of the tiuth. Three Instructive Examples. Te Lancaster Net. J2ia cites thiee recent tilals foi libel under the present law wheielu, with similar facts, dls slmllai conclusions were leached The ill st case was a suit brought against the Heading Heiald, and tiled befoio Judge i:ndllch, In Match, 1S93 The Ilotald had published an Item stat ing that one Zuber was auestcd the night before, hav lng been caught In the act of adultery at the home of Deborah Shelly, No. 934 Muhlenburg stieet, the caption of tho Item being, "Ai tested in a I3aw dy House." The at tiele w as priv I leged and the statement tiue, except that a mistake was made in the location of the house nnd the name of tho pio prletiess. Mis. Shelly being a woman of ineptoachable chaiactei. The mis take, aiising out ot a mlsundei standing between the police and the topotter and edltoi, was discoveied and a coriection pi luted the next day But Mis Shelly, not satisfied, biought suit, and the Jui gave her a votdlct of $150, tho comt leserving for fuither consideration the question whether, as a matter of law, under the facts proven and admitted, there could be any iccovery. This le served point having been atgued, Judge Endllch, in a lengthy opinion, in w hlch he cited numeious authorities, leached the conclusion that "an honest mistake, both In the location and the name, in duced by piobablo cause, could not make the enoneous statement believed In at tho time, and made without malice, a lawful gtotind of lecoveiy," and, theiefoie, set the verdict of the Jury aside. The second was a Lancaster county case, that of Collins vs. the Moining News. In this case a mistake was made by tho repoiter In giving the wiong name as a defendant In a cilm lnal chai go. He w as misled in doing so by the statement ot the attorney for the plaintiff In the case, to whom ho had been lefcirpd fiom the police ofllee foi details. Tho mistake was collected as soon as biought to the editor's at tention, but the Jut y aw aided $C30 dam ages. In chaiging the Juiy Judge Liv ingston held that the publication be ing untiue It was not pilvlleged, but libellous per se, therofoie actionable and ptosumed to be malicious, The thlid case was that of Becker ngatnBt tho Philadelphia Public Ledger, than which there is not a inoio careful, conscientious or cautious paper pi luted. Last November an item uppeared In the Ledger stating that Mr. Becker hud been held In $S00 on a choigu of cm be?7leinent. Tills alleged libel also had Its otlgln In a contusion of names, The maglstiato gave the leporter tho name of Mr. Becker Instead ot that of Segal, the leal defendant. Becker sued for $2.",000, notwithstanding that a full and ndeituato letractlon was published In the Ledjjer as soon as the en or whb biought to tho attention of tho city edi tor. The Juiy returned a veidlct of $75 damages. Judge Ooulon, In a lengthy chat ge to the Jury, said "the vet diet In this case niUFt be for the plaintiff, It Is a question of amount only," though he also charged that as the matter was a publication touching fac'ts of a Ju dicial proceeding, It was a pilvlleged subject, and tlieio being no malice the plaintiff was entitled to recover onl compensation for actual Injury sus tained. Heie we have throe different Interpie tatlons of the libel laws under pi actu ally Identlcul clicumstancos Judge I2mlllc.li, holding that "anv thing whlih Is of public Intel est to the community Is pi Iv lleged," also sa s that a pi otnptly collected mistake Inlllcts no lnjuiy Judge Livingston, on the other hand, as that eveiy mistake In pilnt is nec essailly malicious, and Judge Gordon takes a middle position between tho two. Is It any wonder that when a law Is so obscuie In Its language that ex pel t can thus dl3agret publishers should wish, In their own protection, to have that lav amended with a view to making its .meaning clear? Tho fact that it is possible In this countiy foi a blight man like Prank Thompson to woik his way up fiom the veiy foot of the lalhvay laddet to the piesldency of the largest and best man aged tianspoitntlon company In the woild within les than foity jears is a tiibuto to Ameilcan Institutions off setting a gieat deal of academlo or djspeptlo ciltlcism Such Instances are not the exception but the lule among Ainei leans who prove them selves woithj of advancement. Tits Man Who Dared. No other political event of the ear has excited a gi eater stir among newspupeis and politicians than the selection by Governor Black of Louis 1". Paj n to 6o Insuiance superintendent of tho state of New Yoik Mi Payn Is one of the most skilful politicians In the Umplie state; by many he Is lated as second only to T. C. Piatt He has held impoi tant olhces with ciedlt, nota bly the United States maishulshlp foi the Southern district of New Yoik nu clei Giant, and has shown executive ability of a high older But he lias also been conspicuous In the factional stilfo which has so long and so bltteib pi ev ailed dining tho piesent political geneiatlon In that commonwealth, he lias thumped many heads, iasped many sensibilities, tiodden on many tendei ambitions and Is b a ceitain element fuilously disliked. This element in cludes those who like to make tiugels of men active in politics, w ho accept evil lepoit at face value' and consldei that the onlj wickedness Is the wicked ness of the opposition Concerning the clamor which has sought to defeat Paj n we have only to sa that It has exceeded in din any Within oui peisonal iccollection Most ot tile specific chaiges included in It have been lefuted in detail and shown to be fulse, but of couise this has hod as jot no peiceptible effect. Man hunting, while the ciae Is on, U seldom conducive to Inipattial justice, tho Itch of the populace peilodicallj to ciucify sume one Is seemingly an inhetltanco fiom humanity's eail das The point which commands out admtiatiou in this whole episode is the steadings and coolness with which tho main victim of this fuioie, Govetnoi Black, stands by his peisonal conviction, lemaius Hue to his wold and has lor the stotm about him cppaientlj the quietest contempt Whether jou agieo with Black oi not as to the piopilety of naming Payn, jou cannot get away fiom admit lng the illnt-llke deteu initiation with which he follows out his peisonal Judgment. Heie, you are sine, is no oidinaiy man Piedietlons ate supeiabundunt that Black has committed political suicide Time alone can tell. But for our pai t we don't believe It Newspaper abuse, paitlculaily In a case like this where It seems to be founded almost wholl onaitlflclal giounds, is often a due bill of chaiacter which the fuUtio will lion oi We don't think Black would have gone back on Pa n, to whom he sa s he owed his nomination, e'ven if the al ternative veto the uttei destruction of his peisonal piospects, but we unlet -tain very littlo tear that a governor who can face such a storm as Black is facing without waveilng from the line he has maiked out will be elimin ated fiom fututo politics by pop-gun newspaper criticism. "Wotd is lecelved fiom Canton, in a manner which couits ciedence, to tho effect that a cabinet poitfollo.veiy like ly tho postmastei geneialship, will be pioffeied by the piesldent-elect to New Yoik Hist, and in the event of a falluio among the factions of that state to agtee upon, a suitable man, this poit lollo will next be tendeied to Pennsyl vania. It is a safe guess that tho factions In New York, newly stilted to suite over the Payn appointment, will not agiee. m Appeal ances indicate tho defeat In the senate of the atblttation tieaty, chlelly because of the peisonal antagon ism in that body to Messis. Cleveland and Olney. On the other hand, appeal -ances ate ptoveiblally deceptive, and especially so in politics. Wo predict that the senate will simply not have the neive to hold out against the accu mulating public sentiment which is inc lining to demand the latiflcatlon by It of the essential pilnclples of that tieaty If Attorney acneial Ilaimon wete half us anxious to punish violations of the Sheiman nntl-trust law as ho Is to muke a legul case against the steamer "Thieo rrlends," which is chaiged with conveying ammunition und supplies to Cuba, he would piesent a much better appeal ance befoie the people. Lyman J. Gage Is repotted to havo pronounced tho gieenback "Idiotic and immotal." But not all that is lepoited these das can be believed, We doubt If ho ever said anything of the kind. A canvass of the next senate shows 44 votes ceitain to favot und 30 certain to oppose a now tariff bll), drawn on piotectlvc lines, besides 10 votes marked doubtful On the flmiwlal question, theie the lepoited to be 10 silver votes, 41 gold votes nnd 1 vote In doubt. This alignment Is twite milllclent to Insute conservative action on the two vital issues. STATE LEGISLATIVE TOPICS. Senator Gibson, of Brie, will Introduce a bill providing a radical leform In the present method of school government In Pennsjhnnlit. Tho mnln featuio of his lucusuie is that if passed it will lumovu fiom school bouids tho povvei to cinplo tcuchets and vest It In the school piliul P Ms oi superintendents thcmm.Ivex While the bonds of eontiol will, us heietoloie, elect supeilntrildetits and chief teaehets In district or ward schools, all subordi nates will be umlei the full control of these pilncipils und the public will hold tho Iiit tei dlrectlv icsponslble foi the qunlltv of distinction in tho schools Bx-Maor Pearson, ot Alleghenv, In discussing tho Gibson bill, which he lulped to frame, re centlv snld "Tho greatest evil toduj In connection with oui public schools Is the pi omlneiit part that politics pln s lu them In mnnv wards ot Alleghenv, for Instance, the fuct is frequently cleuily demonstrat ed thut competent toicheis nro removad only because they luck political power. A illtector, lu ordei to be lu-elected, Is com pelled to satisfy his constituents. If ho falls to secuio a position for a certain popular otitis' ladv, oi a ladv who Is wanted bj tho political leadeis, his chanc es for winning uro lessened. This trouble could all be overcome If tho power of electing tenchers was tnken from tho di rectors. The prlnclpnl, who should bo the governor of the school, would then bo entirely lespoiiblble foi the management of the Institution In all of Us details. Ho could be held nccountuble The lesult of such a change would moan thtt tho principal unless he mado a good show Ins would be culled to time bj tho dlnctois Poi his own part he would do his bst to sunound himself with the most compe tent lnstim tois, and wheie a toaahei was not satlsfuetoij he would ti to s tueono thut was" I'utoi tunatol foi this bill, tho objection bus been raised that If It weie pusid It would blmplj transtet the location of political inteiferen:e fiom school boards to piinclpals. The boon's would not elect piinclpals without a pi 'or uiidci standing as to pttrome, and the lutti r, iil.ni elected, would be compelled to do as the electing power wishtd or tin the huzird of subsequent defeat. As the Washington Post peillnently observes "Instead of getting the schools out ot poli tics oi politics out of tho schools, It would slmplv cieato a new set of bosses, or iub booes, In the peions of the principals, und the ehi onic ev II w ould expel lence no abate ment But there Is one wuj to bilng alout the dcslied tofonn The voters elect dlrec tois If they will tuin down solllsh political schemers ind elect onl the best available men und women the woili will be accom plished " Theie is no other wuy. Discussing tho pioposed new libel law the Altoonu Tiibune commends Its prin cipal foutuies, but adds "Wo have no deslie to jee the restialnts that guild the movements of a private citizen removed oi in ani wnj weakened. A candidate lot olllce oi an olllce-holdor maj be a legltl in HC subject of ciltlclbin When a mull asks the public to houot him with Its conll denee he must not complain It tho news papeis which ale advocating the claims of his opponent bilng out uny wea s-pats In his iccoid, make much of his fradtles, ctitlelse his charattei and even calumni ate him If he be u public seivunt and stand In the white IJght of publicity he must exptet mlsiepreseiitatloii and ma licious nltklsm almost cverv da' of hj life If a citizen violate the law, If he become a dingct and u men ice, It he en gage lu a business tint Is a pel II to the peaee of the community, ho Is a liltl mutu subject of tilth ism Indeed, the ncwspipei falls In its dut ns a guaiditn of the inteiests of the community unlesr It niukes vUoious warfuie upon e.lieie und eilmlials Hut the inun who is not In polities oi In olllce oi posing In an public cupie It betoi,. his fellow cltlens has a light to the piotectlon of th law when his pilvacj Is invaded Not bMn,j in anv sense nil object of public coin cm h. snouM be fiee fiom the Ini'iei tluciK of the lepoitci, and If, in spite of hi i erion stiancfl, oi without his know leue hK nane is bandied about bj tho press in u maiinc o .nike hlin notoilous oi I ifim ous he' has a nght to exemplary dt.ni if.ci No offens.vc publication about a private peison should evci be legnided as a privi leged one The 1 iw should piotect ones good name as well as his propel t " Our contempoidiv ens In demanding "exem plary damages" The pioper ledrej in the conlinhciio It cites would be n prose cution foi cilnilnal libel and u civil suit for ronipensatoij damages. It Is unfair, m the piesent law lo single out nownpaper men, even when gullt, foi ctimulous p in lshment No othei class of clt em aie thu clojbly punished, not even the low est und meanest and scurviest that haunt the plague spots and the slums. The Philadelphia Ledger heartily favors rtepiesentutlve Keatoi's bill appointing a "Thinking committee" for the beuellt of the legislatuie, I e, a peimanent com mission lot stututorj revision. It says "Notwithstanding the fuct that man of tho meinbets of tho legislatuie uio law jeis, and that the ucts of assemblj aie examined bj the governor and the uttor nej genet ul, mans defectlvo acts uppear upon the statute book. Much of oui leg islation Is precipitate Little time Is af foided for the close sciutinj of bills In the closing dujs ol the legislative session, when innnj lmpoitunt measutes uio hastllj passed The cieutlon of a sort of thin house to examine pending measmen, as Fot foi th in the Keator bill, would doubtless sive numeious nets of assem blj fiom annulment bj the courts for con stitutional impel factions Tho State Bar association of New loik, a few J ears ago, made this matter a subject of Inquiij, and the lecommendution wns mnde, which was bUbstuntiullj adopted by tho legisla tuie of that state, providing that com mlssloneis of statutoij levlslon should act us udvlscis to the membeis of the leg islatuie In tho dtawlng of bills. An Eng lish olllclul and his assistants, known as paillamentary counsel, lecelves n salarj ot nfailj $1D,000 In our moncj, and each of his assistants $10,000 A propel Ij consti tuted commission of this nattiio would be highly advantageous It would not elimi nate all tho uncertainties and Impel lec tions which cieep Into our luws by lnncl vertenco oi Inexperience, but tho tlrufttug of the statutes would bo Impioved, and less would bo left to be constiued bj the coiut" The pioposltlon casts no reflec tion upon tho abllltj of the legislature It would, doubtless, find such an odvisory third house exceedingly convenient ut times." o It Is an Interesting fuct, as bearing upon tho chHigu that Quay inline nces have sought to throttle the proposed Investiga tion of the stute tieasurj, that befoio the vote on this mattei wns token on Monday night orj member of the house filendlv to Quay iccelved u wiltten request liom Sena oi Penioso to be piesent und to vo'e for n thoiough Investigation, without prejudice to unj measures which mnj, Pi the meantime, bo Intioduced rela ve to the better tufeguaiding of state funds Purthet than this, it Is known that word has come from Senator Quny hlmselt suggestlUT the enactment of a law to se. cure inip'fst on state balances, his oulv wish being thut If such a law s'mll he pasted It shull lellevo tho stute tieoEUie of tespoi.flbllltj foi balances plfol .wi der U dliectlon and shall afford him a living saluij aftei the cost ot executing his bond shall bo mcvt. It Is to bo hoped that the present ses sion of the legislature will not adjourn be fore It shall luivo either abeiUshed tho Leg. Islatlve Itecotd oi taken some action which will Insure the. prompt appeurunce ot that publication so minted and edited that. It ran bo read. This, we lenllze, is a steieo Ijped complaint; but It Is also a Jiiit one. 'the money now spent on this dlsteptitnblo and uncertain spnBmodlcnl Is simply busi ed It might much better be donated to the llurtlsbuig lire- depaitmetit, which up paientlj needs help An uecutute lecord of legislative pioceedlngs printed In legi ble tjpo on substantial white paper mud Issued not later than twentv-tour bouts after the adjournment of the slUtti' to bo repoited would be worth something, but the piesent leisurely und vagiant lusltu Is not worth a counterfeit plcajuns. Tho Altoonu Tilbuno wants tho legis lature to provide fot the submission of a constitutional amendment abolishing tne board of pardons, and the Incorpoiatlo l of a section forbidding tho giantlng of put dons, save onlj undpi ceitain exceptional circumstances "A lid then," It adds, "let the gov el not shoulelei tho entlro responsl bllltj Oui pre'sent system has been In opoiutlon long enough to cumin's those who bollevo lu the eufoi cement of law thut It Is u rullure. ' Scnulor Hi own, of Westmoreland, pio poses an amendment to the prlmuiy elec tion luw ot 1S74, extending it to Include rongrp'smen, and compelling nil candi dates to llln it bill of expenses with the clerk of courts The panic logulation will applj to geneial elections, except that the monev put up bj candidates must be Fp'MU tliiough the eountv chairman for the benp llt of the whole ticket Senator Blown sijs It will protect nspliants foi otllo fiom muecrs nnd prevent corruption at primaries und In elections. tiii: uoviiiiMmsiiii1. Prom tho Washington Post. Half a dozen congressmen want to step out of tho house Into tho gubernatorial chair In l'onnsjlvnnln, und us only one man can be nominated and elected there Is llkelv to bo some heaitbumlng before the question Is settled. The six congi ess men uro William A. Stone, Lciscnrlng, Charles W Stone, Million, Hicks und Hulf It bus alwajs been supposed that the In fluence of Senatoi Quay would bo exerted foi William A. Stone, but slnco all the other candldntcs uio also friends of Quuj, It Is probable that tho latter will keep his hands out ol the fight until some one can did ite develops marked strength It Is snld to be within the mnge of probubilitj that the piUo, aftei all, will go to Congressman-elect Council, of Scranton, who Is another ot Quay's lieutenants., TOLD BY THE STARS. Unil) Horoscope Drawn by Ajnccliu The Tribune Astrologer. Astiolabo cast. 3 IS a m, for Thursdaj, Teb 4, 1S97. 6& 3K A child born on this daj will notice that tho suggestion that Mrs Plane Vail would muke an excellent pool director to succeed Mis Swan has caused seveial piotnlsing booms to droop like the proverbial moist dish-cloth It will bo proper for Major Ballej to cany a handful of stage snow In his pocket to throw ovei hlmselt when he signs that South Side sewer ordinance If file could bo successfully conti oiled with wind, theie Is no doubt that the Hniilsbuig blaze would havo been a veiy small afluli. Ulllj Iiijun's Jokes at this stage of the game lemlnd one of the efforts of a man to be funnj when sufterlng fiom tho tooth uehe. Attthoiltles differ ns to whether it is ad visable foi the ground hog to keep on his winter llanncls another month. Ajacclius' Advice. Take no stock In an enterprise that promises to pay Star lino dividends upon a canal boat Investment Odds and Ends, we find while taking stock, are being sold at greatly reduced prices to make room for new spring goods. Have some good Dinner Sets we are closing out very low. $15.00 Sets, with a few pieces short, now $10.00. THE Clemons, Ferbpr, O'Malley Co. 422 Lackawanna Av:. BYRON WRITING That 'shcol" was paved with good intentions,, probably realised the truth ot the assertion. Don't let our yood resolution to buy onl) the best IJllUlk Hooks, Olllce Supplies, Tjpe- Wrltillg Supplies, etc., at our store be a paving stone. We Keep the best in vailety and quality. We ,iiso make a bpcciait) of Draughting Supplies. eynoias uros., Stationers and EngraYan, HOTUL, JI3RMYN HUILDIMX OF Anthony Hope's, Fasclnat i 11 j4 Uoinitncc. Phroso. Just Issued by thebame Autlior, BEIDLEUN, 1HE BOOKMAN 431 bpruce Street. Opposite The Commonwealth. llKA Carpet Department o s S O S O 0 ! Large Invoice of Moire Velours, Taffetas and Pon gees have been put in stock and are ready for inspection tLmja LB Hanufacturers of the CAPACITY 100,000 The shoe store known as the I. Banister store, corner Lackawanna and Wyoming avenues, will hereafter be known as The Banister Shoe Co., of Newark, N. J. Are going to make extensive improvements in the store and the building and will close out the entire stock of the store at prices way below any ever offered to the people of this city. The improvements decided upon make it necessary to empty the store of all goods now there, and prices will not be considered to accomplish this result. Among the many improvements will be the doing away with all stands on the Wyoming avenue side and putting entrances and attractive shoe windows in their place. In short they intend having the best and most modern shoe store in the city. Below Are a Few Prices. Read Them Carefully ". All Kahler Last Shoes, $0,00 and $6,00 goods, will be sold for $3.00 a pair, Laird, Scliober & Go's Shoes, English Toe, worth $6,00, for $2.30 a pair, All the $4 hand-made Common Sense and Square Toe Shoes, will he sold for $2.25. All of Gray's $0,00 hand made Shoes for $2,00 a pair, The above are a few of the many bargains we have to of fer, and will serve to show the cut made on all lines. Every shoe in the store must be sold. Men's, Boys', Ladies, Misses' and Children's. On tables neatly arranged will be job lots of line goods that will interest you. Ladies' fine shoes $1.50 apair, $5,00 goods. Ladies' shoes at $1.00, original price $3.00 to $5. Children's and Misses' shoes 50 to 75 cents. Dressing 5c. a bottle. Ladies' rubbers IOC a pair, etc. It will be necessary to close the store all day Friday to arrange the stock and goods on tables for the Opening Day of Sale, Saturday, Feb. 6. W. N. BROOKS, Manager. r SS. We Are Now Showing New Designs in Axrninsters, Body Brussels, Wiltons and In grain Carpets. artment OM'S eer BrsA3ry. Celebrated PILSNER LAGER BEER. Barrels Per Annum. IN A BAZAAR, 3 $ 3 S $, g S SONS' FRM FEBRUARY
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