) ji 7 -ri ? -- v-"' -Vvir'' feri '. ,!,.,- " " fT-'.l V.T-jfTJiTj, i J' ( , w , -rp. -.,- -- - ' r i" rT-v rJV C"11 ,il i ,1 l ' - vv . THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1900. literary Jonas Long's Sons. Jonas long's Sons. Jonas Long's Sons. Bfs Wednesday, the 28th, .NOTES rz1' : x .v. : ,' ; ., r tt ..imp, rmrwtn Smm f MONO thB most Important of JJ9 tlie books announced .by Messrs. w " Harper & lirothers 'for spring publication la a volume of po litical reminiscences by Colonel A. K. McCIuip, entitled "Our Presi dents, and How They Arc Made." Colonel McClure s experience In jour nalistic and political life extends over a period of half a century. Ho has known personally many of the presi dential candidates during that time, and has been In personal contact with every national convention. His book will Include much Information as to the Inside workings' of various cam paigns not heretofore published, und will touch upon many of the famous political quarrels, among them thoso between Huchanan and Forney, and Cleveland and Dana, showing their ef fects upon the political careers of thosj concerned. It will also give much In teresting detail on the electoral votes In the various campaigns. Coming at the opening of a presidential year, the appearance of such a wotk Is of more than oidlnary Interest. Alnslee's Magazine offers In Its April number four'rcadnblo articles on mat ters near to the heart of the Amerloan people. In "The Islands of the Pad lie," by Arthur I. Street, we have a kaleidoscopic view r.f that remote, world Into which expansion has led us. "Net Results In Alaska," by AVanca Cheney, Is n sane summary of chance and conditions in the gold Holds. "Tha Indian Congress," by 'Wade Mount foilt, Is a pathetic plctuie of the last days of a dying reim". "Our Con gressional President," by Goorgo Ice land Hunter, places the president's of. flee, ns It were, under the X-ray, thus revealing the Inner workings of the congress-executive machine. A volume Indispensable to students of government has recently been Is sued by D. Appleton & Company. It is entitled "The Theory and Practice of Taxation," and records the fruits of prolonged study and Inquiry In dulged In by Dr. David Ames Wells. The history of taxation Is carried for ward from the early days: wo are told how taxes wore levied and collected In Greece and Rome, In the continental countries In the middle ages and final ' how they vary in the different coun tries of our own time; and following the historical chapters are philosophic views of the subject of taxation with much practical ndvlce. The April Forum offers, among a baker's dozen of interesting contribu tions, a description of the new finan cial law by Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Vanderllp: a defense of the IS per cent. Puerto Itlcan tat Iff bill by Representative Hopkins, of Illinois; a. paper by James G. Whlteley, vice president of the International Congress of Diplomatic History, showing why the Hny-Pauneefote canal treaty Is wisest In Its unamended fotm;auda pa per by Major Symons, of the New York rirle canal commission, giving the routes and facts about the proposed canals fiom the gieat lakes to the sea. It was the wish of the late Mr. Moody that his biography should be written by his son. Mr. W. It. Moody, who has In his possession all of his father's papers and Is preparing a very complete life of the great preach er, has consented to write especially for the Saturday Kvenlng Post a series of anecdotal papeis on his father's llfo and work, profusely Illustrated with hitherto unpublished photographs. The fit st of those papers, entitled "Moody as Boy and Business Man," will appear In the April 7 number of the Saturday Kvenlng Post. "The Plctuie Rook of Reeky Sharp" Is a handsome folio Issued by Herbert H. Stone & Company as a souvenir of Mrs. Fisko's recent production of "Van ity Fair." It gives the cast of the players In the first performance, an autograph of Mrs. Flske, a story of the play and a number of exquisite Illustrations, full page and marginal. Of similar kind lu the same firm's folio of portraits of Henry living and Ellen Terry, done on Japan paper In fac simile of the pen-and-ink and crayon originals by K. Gordon Craig. To the Appleton eeriest of educational books for homo reading has recently bpen added "Stories of the Great Astronomers," by Edward S. Holden, being an attempt to put Into simple language fitted to young minds the salient facts of astronomy. The book is wtltten s-o that Its chapters can be read aloud by parents to children, In the lieu of fairy stories or other works of fiction; and we will guarantee that the young audltoVs will find them fully as Interesting as the wildest dreams of fancy. Frank M. Chapmin. the well known ornithologist and writer, whose hooka upon birds have become standard au thorities, Is completing a ncv wiik to bo entitled "Bltd Studies with a Cam era." Mr. Chapman's buccch In photo graphing live birds has not been equaled, and the nuinorou3 Illustrations which ho has obtained for his new book are said to be of peculiar inter est and value. "Rlrd Studies with a Camera" will be published by D. Ap pleinn & Co. "The Damnation of Theron Wiri',' by Harold Frederic, is being drama tized. "The Market-Place" Is also likely to be dramatized. Arrangements have already been made for the drama, tlzatlon of "Janice Meredith," by Paul Ielcester Ford. There wor-j live bid ders for the dramatic rights. "Divld Harum" Is to be produced on the stage next May, and dramatists ate at wotk on "When Knighthood Was In Flow rr." "The Immortal Garland," Is tho title of a new American novel which U said to treat certain phases of tociul, tin a trlcal and literary llfo In a manner which Is likely to attract much atten tion. The author Is Anna Hnbcson Brown, and the scene Is laid In largo port In Now York. "The Immortal Oarlanrt" will bo published shortly by P. Appleton &: Co. II. M. Caldwell & Company, New York and Hoston, publish In attractive form an edition of Rudyard Kipling's "Departmental Ditties," to which is prefixed an excellent portrait of the ftuthor. Extraordinary care Is being given to the typography and other details of 'Me J JONAS manufacture of Agnes and Egcrlon Castle's "The Hath Comedy," which Is to appear In May. An adiniicr of the authors of "The Pride of Jennlco" who has followed this new play of thelr's s-erlally in Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly says that there has been nothing to equal It since "The School for Scandal." The tide of travellers which has al ready turned toward Paris will find much to Interest them In Miss Tatbell's article In the April Scrlbner's, on "The Charm of Paris," which conveys with singular success the characteristics of Paris, which make those who know It well love It. The illustrations, arc by a number of the best known French artists. Ct ant's Magazine, " a monthly Jour nal of history, geography and topics of the day," has reached Its fifth num ber. This publication occupies a some what different field from that of any other magazine; it is n combination of text-book, newspaper, review, scrap book and vehicle of belles lettres. There is something in it for every taste. The issue for last January of the bi monthly American Journal of Sociolo gy, the University of Chicago's liter ary "clearing-house for the best socio logical thought of all schools," con tains, amidst certain rather ponderous essays, a description of the model pub lic bath at Hrookllne, Mass., which s-hould be read by every city official. Albert Kinross Is the name of a new aspirant for honors oC the first class In the field of fiction, and the Amer ican public will soon have un oppor tunity for Judging of his work In what Is said to bo one of the most graceful and sparkling novels of today that tho last year of the century has produced. The btllllant papers on "Social Life in the United States Navy," now run ning through the Woman's Home Com panion, will be continued In kind In the May number with an equally at tractive discussion of "Social Life In the United States Army," by Mary Breckenrldgo Hlnes. The last Issue of Collier's Weekly that for March 24 was known as the South African number, on account of the large number of war sketches It contained. There weic thirty-two pages, and every one of them had upon It pictures or descriptive matter of live Interest. "Diana Tempest," a nivel by Mary C'holmondeley, author of "Red Pot tage." Is shortly to appear in a new edition, with a nortralt of tho nutli.-ir. and an Introduction whlsh will give a t ketch of the author's lite and meth ods. The publishers will be I). App.e ton & Co. "Would Christ Belong to a Labor Union?" is.tho title of a now hook t. sued by Street & Smith, New 'otk. The author Is Rev. Dr. Cortland Mycin, pastor of the Brooklyn Baptist temple, and ho alms to Instil by means of a stoty the lesson of the Golden P.ulo. The new novel by H. G. Wells Is en titled "Love and Mr. Lewlsham," and It Is said that Henry James, W. E. Henley and others have read It In manuscript and speak of it In term of warm praise. It is to be published In the coming autumn. In Kverybody's Magazine for Apill Is a most Interesting description of thy enormous feteel works of the Carnegie company. The "simple explanation" In this Ibsue details the method of nav igating a ship by observation of the sun and stars. Robert Hichcns, the author of "Flames." "Tltn Gieen Carnation.'-' etc.. 13 enJo.Nlng llfo In Sweden, where he is devoting part of his time to correct ing the proofs of his forthcoming book, "Tongues of Conscience." "The Lunatics nt Largo" U the lltle of an original and entettalnlnB novel by J, Storer Houston, which will be published Immediately by ), Appleton &. Co. Stephen Cran, who Is living on a largo estato In Surrey, Is at work on a historical romance of Ireland for publication In the autumn. It Is undoubted proof of'the Intelli gent and keen Interest tuken by Amer leans In the Anglo-Boor question about 5,000 copies of a $3 book on the subject should already have been sold In the United States In adiltlon to large num. bcrs of cheaper volume.?. "The Trans, vaal from Within" Is the book referred to, and Its English publisher Is now preparing a cheaper edition of 100,UOO copies. DINING WITH VICTORIA. Tho Etiquette of Acceptance, of Con duct Upon Arrival, of Reception by Her Majesty, and of the Table. An American She Liked. From tho Chicago Recoid. "JJhose persons who have the honor to dine with Queen Victoria receive a note which reads something like this: "The lord steward Is commanded by her majesty to invito Mr. Carter IT. Harrison to dine at Windsor Castle on Saturday, the twenty-seventh of No vember, eighteen hundred and ninety seven, at nine o'clock p. m., and to re main the night." Inclosed with the Invitation, which Is written with a pen In old-fashioned script upon a large card, Is a smaller card, which reads: "Paddlngton station, 5.10 p'. m. Please hand this to tho guard." It Is customary and necessary to re spond at once to an invitation from tho queen, and all other engagements must be cancelled. No'Mng but serious Ill ness Is considered a sufficient reason for declining to obey her commands, and they are not Issued to sick persons. Before the lord steward sends out one of these Invitations ho takes care to ascertain whether the person to whom It Ik nddressed Is in England and able to accept. Tho proper form of accept ance Is: "Mr. Carter H. Hnrrlson accepts with great pleasure the invitation of her majesty to dine nt Windsor Castle at nine o'clock on the evening of Novem ber twenty-seventh." Upon at riving at Paddlngton station at 5 o'clock on the afternoon of the dinner the guest presents his card to the station master or one of the guards, and is escorteu to a special car bear ing the, royal court of arms and fur nished with unusual luxuriance. Some times when there are a numbar of guests there Is a special train. Gen tlemen ar accompanied by valets and ladles by maids and the servants have their own apartments In the car. The ride to Windsor on the quickest trains occupies forty minutes and usually an hour. Tho distance is twor.ty-four miles. Upon arriving there the guests find two or three footmen and other servants. One footman Is told off for each guest, take3 charge of his lug gage, escorts him to his carriage and looks after him or her, If it Is a lady, until he or she Is safely aboard the train for London the next morning. The entire party travels deadhead, and the expense is charged to the minister of tho household. Tlte lord steward receives the guests as they reach the castle und directs them to their apartments, which in clude a sitting room, a bed room, a dressing room and a bath. When the guest Is a lady there is always a maid In attendance. It Is not considered proper to leave the rooms until called for, and tho guests amuse themselves the best they cam Her majesty Is the soul of punctuality. She keeps her ap pointment on jthe dot and expects her subjects to do the same. If a guest Is ever late ho or she Is sentenced to perpetual banishment from the royal presence. No matter what his rank or Influence, he never receives another Invitation to the castle, and therefore tho attendants are In the haTU of nd-. monlshlng guests as to the necessity of being dressed In time. They have fully two hours and a half after their arrival and have no excusa for tardi ness. Precisely at a quarter before a lady In waiting calls at thu apartment of each lady guest, und a gentleman In waiting at those of a gentleman gues-.. to escort them to the leceptlon room and present them to each other. Each gentleman Is Informed by his escort whom he Is to have tho pleasure of taking to tho table, and Is properly In troduced. It Is also shown on a dia gram the seat ho Is to occupy fit tho table. After these preliminaries aro over the portieres that bide the second reception room are thrown Imok to dis closs th; li a 1, In full court IF YOU ARE PLANNING to move you will be .interested. If you have moved, you will be interested. If you are not going to move, you will be interested. This is a sale of Furniture worth reading about. It concerns almost every item on the fourth floor of this mammoth store. Every dollar's worth of it was contracted for six months ago since which time the cost of Furniture has increased 25 per cent. Scarcity of certain varieties of wood seems to preclude any possibility of prices ever being so low as right now. In other words, this is the correct time to supply your needs for prices during this sale will be the lowest ever quoted by any house. . When present lots are exhausted you will pay us-a good deal more. , Bear .in mind, this is a condition of things beyond our control. Our advice to you, to buy now,' is prompted by the same spi.it that always characterizes our efforts to serve you cheapest and best. And, whatever you .buy, remember we sustain our assurances of standard, quality and style. LONG'S dress, with his gorgeous staf.' of offi cers, standing besldo n stout, red-faced little woman, who sits on the edge of a great gilt chair. Ey her side are usually two or three princesses and maids of honor, and often one or more of her sons or sons-in-law. The guests then form a procession In the order of their rank and pass before her majes ty, who offers her hand to them and murmuts a few pleasant word. Loyat subjects always kiss the seams on the back of her white glove, but she does not like to have the Americans do so, because she knows that this ancient custom Is not In vogue In our country. Therefore, when she withholds her hand from an Amerlcnn guest It Is an act of courtesy rather than a slight. Americans aro usually Info.tied In ad vance by their attendants of this pe culiarity and are prepared for it. There Is no time fcr conversation. Only a few words arc txehanged. Her majesty usually asks Americans about the health of tho president and his wife and expresses her Interest In their welfare. If thera has been a notable incident or event In the Unltd States Bhe may allude to It, for she keeps well Informed concerning current events. Sometlmse she Invites a guest to take a seat Reside her, which Is a mark of unusual distinction that was conferred upon Mrs. Grant whrn sho and the general were visiting; Windsor years ago, and upon Mrs. John Hay during the Jubilee ceremonies last spring. When those In the party have all passed In review they proceed in the same order to tho dining room and each stands behind his chair until the queen entet'3 on the arm of one of her sons, or sons-in-law, or In their ab sence on the aim of a mild of honor. She Is always dressed In black or gtay. If In black she wears white gloves. If In gray, bla"k gloves. She carries an ebony gold-headed cane. Utrjiilly .wo Bast Indian servants In brilliant na tive costume follow her and wait upon her at the table. Befou hf-r majesty takes her suit one of Mie court chap lains says grace. She n.iy.sr sits with her guests, but haw u tmall round table ut the end of the roam near the door, and seldom has more than one companion, who may be on of her daughters, or the senior maid of honor or lady In waiting. This is duo to her majesty's feeble heultit. Shs cannot sit' through a long dinner, and quietly Mips out befora the gue3ts have hair finished. Nor does sits take the fnod that Is served to thr.n. A few plain and simple dNh.'s are provided for her repast roup, fish, rom beef or mut ton, with a salad and sweets. She drinks no wine, but takes a llttl Scotch whiskey In ApolIlnnriA water. At the main tahl v. loin; Trench dinner Is served of ten or twilv courses. There Is a waltor for every two per sons, and he moves with military pre cision. His llvry is n scarlet dress coat with brass buttons, trimmed with gold lace, blue velvet, short trousers with gold braid along the nenms, wh'tj silk stockings, an 1 paten: leather hhoes with gold buckles. The guest3 are In court dress and the gowns of the ladles must be cut In a certain way. Amer ican gentlemen nnd other commoners must wear black swallow .tail coats, white ellk low-cut vests, kneo breech es, black silk stocking. and patent leather pumps. The table service Is gold plate pur chased by Geor.w i, at a cost of sev eral millions of dollais. It Is large enough to dins 121) pjrr'jni, but mors than forty are seldom Invited. Jt Is said that tho gold and sliver plate in Windsor castlo Is worth at least $10. 000,000. Great chests of It lire never used. This belongs to tho government. The furnishings at Balmoral and Os borne housps belong to the queen's prlvato estate. Among the decorations that Invariably appear upon tlw table at state dinners are two Immense flagons, of gold set with precious stones that were captured from the Spanish armada at the time of Queen Eliza beth, and a fnmous wine cooler that was presented to Georgo IV., and is said to have cost $35,000, often occu pies tho center of the table. A pea cock made of gold and precious stones Is a favorite of the queen. It waa made In India nnd presented to her on the occasion of her fiftieth anniver sary. Another of her favorite orna ments is a tiger's head of gold with Immense rubles for eyes und diamonds for teeth. It also came from Indlu and was a Jubilee gift. If her majesty Is feellnar well the guests find her in the drawing room when they retire from the table, and there Is usually a programme of music for their entertainment, which she. thoroughly enjoys. Sometimes she asks a guest to sit by her side, and I know a pretty American girl whose hand she hold In her own In an affectionate way for half an hour one evening, and whom she kissed on both cheeks as she retlied at the close of the evening. "I hope to see you again, my dear," said the queen of England and the em press of India. "I shall send for you to spend a day with me vc-ry soon, and want you all to myself," and sure enough she did, and the young Yan kee damsel was not only with the queen all day, but drove with her In the park nnd slept that night In the room adjoining the Imperial bedcham ber. When the queen retires the party breaks up. The ladles may sit and gossip, but the gentlemen hurry oft to the pmoklng room and are allowed to play billiards and drink her majesty's brandy and soda If thoy are so Inclined. THE PRICE OF INDIA RUBBER. Is It Due to the Scarcity of the Ma terial From Engineering. l'he high price of India rubber Is un doubtedly due to the shortness of sup ply; but what is this decreased supply duo to? If It Is due to scarcity of the material, how Is It that after previous periods of high prices, notably In 1884, a fall of 40 per cent, and more1 took place In the Immediately succeeding years, seeing that no rubber from the attempted plantations of that date has come Into the market? No, we must look around for other causes, and we think they will be found under two main heads. These are tho shortness of native labor In he forests and speculation, 'though the former may be considered as the most important. The Serlngos, or natives, by whom the rubber In the Amazon districts of South America is entirely collected, are, comparatively speaking, a limited body of men, the total number of whom has been roundly stated at 10,000. though we do not vouch for this fig ure. Now, these men, like most others on the face of the globe, being free ngents prefer to sell their labor to the highest bidder, and, owing to the fact that the coffee planters have been shorthanded, there has been a spirit ed contest between the rubber and cof fee merchants for the available labor. The consequence has been that the higher terms offered by the latter have seduced the natives from their former adherence to the rubber col lecting business. A very similar state of affairs has occurred moro than once In West Af rica, where there is competition for la bor between the rubber and palm oil merchants. Maiket reports from this area have described the scarcity of either of these commodities at certain times to be duo to the lack of Ip.bor, This condition of things on either con tinent Is not ono that can be easily remedied, as, owing to climatic causes, it Is only certain constitutions that can successfully ward off the dangers to be apprehended. So much In a few words for what appears to us to be the cause of the present high price, and It will bo seen at once that any amount of plantations will not prove uppa'la. tlve. Of course, It Is a question for consideration as to how long the lub ber forests of South America will stand the increasing drain upon their resources, not only by ourselves, but also by the United States, Russia and Germany. At present there seems no reason for alarm, as there are large areas of ground comparatively un touched, and there Is ample scope for their exploitation under correct condi tions. It Is a pity that the law which was passed against the felllnsr of trees In many parts of the watershed of the Amazon and Orinoco seems to Le hon ored In the breach rather than In the observance, and this theme suggests Itself as one upon which energetic und concerted action might profitably be taken. At ono time tho best rubber came principally from the lower reaches of the Amazon, for the main reason that as It was nearest to the shipping port thero was no necessity or object In surmounting the difficulties to bo ex perienced In tapping the trees of thq more inaccessible regions. Today, however, the area Is being rapidly ex tended, and Bolivian rubber is quoted a fraction higher than Para. As the the rubber mav be stated to SONS jCVCRY'OAY IN THE YEAR THE OVERLAND LIMITED ' a strictly Crst-ciass train, consisting of (uHat SmoVIno and Library Cars, Pullman' Doubts Drawing-Room Shaping Can aw wining vorvi 'ruut inruiuju ketuccnCMesgoand ,iiiii Alll' il Iw ?? D2y& :i r"5 .r 5filimit cltSDge la thri 7HICAC07 UNION PACIFICX NORTH-WESTERN. LINl fartordlos the quickest transit to SAN FRMtCISCOA " ji the gateway to 'Hawaii, Phlllpplna Islands, Chlna'and'Japan For Information And dcscrlntlre namnhlet ' . flnnlv tn PrinMnnl A(rnMf, '36SVuMl(traSt, Boston ,...., . .....,...,..,.. --.- 435ViM, It. - tindositl' 4 srouTtT, mw lore mCUrkSI, - - Colon Ml nistnut St, rUliM tUt .301 Vila St, - la&to 907 Emitlltia Si, Pltutorr 127 Tto imd. Cltrrlml 17 CaJBDos-lliitlut. Detroit tlit(Et.bst, Tomato, Cut; lAll agents sell tickets via tho LCWdQO NofthiWiitcrn " RAILWAY depend largely, If not entirely, on cli matic conditions, there seems no reason to suppose that as good rubber as that produced In the watershed of the Ama zon may not be found wherever tho ell matlc conditions are similar. Th'.i question of climatic conditions Is un Impottant very important one, and It does not seem to have received proper recognition at the hands of promoters of rubber plantations. With an enthusiasm untempered by an Intimate knowledgo of the subject, proposals have been advanced to plant the Para rubber trees in divers coun tries nnd in all sorts of climates. Now, though we do not wish to say that no success whatever has followed tho planting of the Para tree (Hevea Bra zlllensls) out of South America, vet in no case has the yield of tho tree been found equal to what is obtained In Brazil, or up to the expectations of the planter. Tho venture has not been a success, and the sooner the fact Is honestly recognized the better. It Is not only a damp atmosphere, but the amount of damp that Is of primary Im portance; In other words, the problem Is a quantitative as well as a qualita tive one, and as there Is an obvious difficulty In regulating such a matter as the rainfall of a district, it behooves would-be planters to bear this fact as to the necessity of an adequate1 rainfall well In mind. The Para tree must stand in water for a great part of the year, and If this conlltloit Is not ful filled no cood results will ensue. We quite admit that the tree will gtow, In a way, under other conditions, but our point is that It will not give u satis factory yield of rubber. Besides the moisture, thero is the Im portant point of the chemical consti tution of the soil to be considered, though this is a matter which does not seem to have been seriously Inves tigated. We are assured, however, by a South American resident of consider able experience that there Is some thing about the soil of Biazll which Is not met with In other districts. Ho says that he has planted and success fully raised the Para tree In Central America, but could not get a satisfac tory yield of rubber, nnd he empha sized tho Importance of paying strict attention to this soil question In cases where the planting of the Para treo is In contemplation. From what we have said It will be gathered that we are not Inclined to look upon tho cultivation of the Para treo out of Its natural home In any very favorable light from tho stand point, thnt Is, of commercial success. With recard, however, to tho replant ing of denuded territory In Centrnl America with the Indigenous tree, the Castllloa elastlca, the case Is different, and, though we aro not particularly sanguine as to the probability of such schemes yielding any Immediate return on the capital expendltuie, yet thero seems good reason to suppose, that they may prove remunerative In the future, If not over capitalized. Advanced One Number. "Does your wlto let you sit in tho easy, chair she gavo you ChtlstmnsV" "No, she sits In that; but now I get to sit In tho one nhe gave mo last year." Chicago Record. FRRM m A m n iii I Ml ff1 Lawn Seed, White Glover Seed Red Clover Seed Timothy Seed Millett Seed Fertilizer. I 825-37 PENN AVENUE. Lager Beer Brewery Miinofacturera ir OLD STOCK PILSNER 435 to 455 N. Ninth Street, ,Pfl Telcphoiu Call. 2333. THE 1IC POWDER CO. ITER FORSYTH HIS Booms 1 and, Cora'llli BTd'fc SCRANTON, PA. nining and. Blasting-" -T POWDER Uada at Mooslo and Rush Jala Works, . , I i, H- LAPLIN RAND POWDBR CO. '3 ORANOE OUN POWDER El'etrlo Batteries. EleotrloKrplodart, " ' exploding blasti, baftty Fuss ua 1 , Repauno Chemical Co.'s uxpl"v6 H10UNT PLEASANT COAL At Retail. t HI t, t !' Coal of the beat quality for domeetlo ' use and of all elzea. Including Buckwheat and Blrdaeye, delivered In any part of the city, 6t the lowest price. - , Order received at the office. Connell building;, Room S06: telephone No; 17M, or t the mine, telephone No. til, will fee promptly attended to. Dealers aupplUf t the mine. - MOUNT PLEASANT COM, CO ' , -S
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers