HOW TO KEEP COOL. SOME OF THE METHODS EMPLOYED BY NATIVES OF THE TROPICS. Artificial Swamp ( New Gain IUai tnc of the SyrUaa The Kin of Stain's Glaaa Him. If ppojilc will only profit by example Ihrv c:sa kef p cool. Jat e how tbe ether fellow, vrho lives where it is al vays be.t, manages to be conifortafcK ttiid then yea will Lave struck the key note. For centuries the inhabitants of the tropics have been devising ways to krrp rooL Not only have the natural resonrrea cf their own countries been converted into methods of cooling sthenics, but the mexlianical skill of modern science has also been introduced by the fabulously wealthy rulers of these semi barbarous lands. The Datives of New Guinea, who are compelled, owing to the inten.se heat, to go almost naked during most cf the rear, have hit upon a tse-herue that is claimed to make life not only bearable, but highly enjoyable during the long, hot days when tbe broiling ran is Bend ing down eeeming rajs of fire. While their plan does not tax the brains of modern science, it is, never theless, unique and involves the labor of an enormous army of workers. Their method is to take a broad ttrctch of land adjeiuhig their large villages and ctmvert it into a swamp. This is done by clearing the land thoroughly of all vegetation and underbrush, only the trees being left standing. By mouths of pati?nt labor, in which all inhabitants of the village, both men and women, join, they C.Cr a canal from the nearest lak aud drain it into their artillcial marsh. The depth of water in these marsh: vnrirs from 10 to 20 or 30 feet, according to the excavation done bef ore band. Tkts are then cut and carefully strip ped cf beta t-aifc and brauebes and driven in groups in numerous parts cf the marsh, leaving about 10 or 13 feet above tho water. On the tops cf these stilt, or pile, the houses arc then built and so overhang the marsh. Ia some parts of India "floating vil lages" have been constructed with great success. The inventors of this mode cf keeping cool came from inland tribes of natives, where the heat killed cS hun dreds every year. These men journeyed to the river shores and there built their houses on large flat rafts. Some of these villages have now grown to large pro portions, and one near Mae-Oner's inlet, or gulf of Gain, as it is now called, numbers over 800 houses. They are all connected by ropes, with seme 20 feet of water between, and move with tbe current. This huge excursion fleet, as it appears, lazily floats from one shcre to the other and up and down the btrtuni, catching all the air that ctnnrs from the neighboring forests. The difference ia tmiK'rature between the land and the rafts averages 2o degrees. In yria the latest and most effectual scheme cf escaping the stifling heat has been f cu-u in the subterranean passages, of which tbe country has many. Large forces of Syrians have made mammoth excavations in the passages, and here, deep down in the bowels cf the earth, fcuilt abodes. It is very cool tleiwn there, the rocks oftentimes being actually cold. This is large ly accounted for by their contact with the numerous subterranean waterways, which flow along under mountains aad rents in the neks canned by internal volcanic eruptions. " Down there, hundreds of feet beneath the earth's surface and in, as it were, a gigantic tomb, the Syrians pass the ueated portion of the day in quiet se clusion and peaceful rest. The Chinese, although a backward and nnprogrcssivc race, havo neverthe less tried many experiments for keeping cool, and think they have solved the question by their "tree dwellings." At least it is the most satisfactory method that has ever been put in operation in the Flowery Kingdom. Taking advantage of the tremendous growth of tri'es in tao parts of the yel low empire, the natives have built their houses, like nests, in them. This they do by splitting tho largo and topmost branches and fitting the foundation cf those houses securely in these splits. Perched up there, a hundred feet in the air and in the direct sweep of tho wind when thero is any, tho Celestials tlroam away the tedious summer day. Tbe type of irehitet ture is more preten tious than that displayed in the simple log cabin. The walls are decorated with curious designs, and the inter woven latticework cf palm and bamboo which form the houses give them a de lightfully cool and airy appearance. It is an ideal nest,- aiid one in which the Ob-stial never tires of lingering. Tho king of Siam has a scheme on whieh that swarthy raler labored for many years, and which, besides being w holly original, represent an expendi ture of money that wonld make a dozen anen wealthy for life. In substance, it is j mammoth glass room, measuring fame 0 feet square ly 13 feet high, onstmctcd on the surf ace t.f a lake-, into which it is submerged ou hot days. With the txc-ej lien tf the floor, it is entirely of heavy plate glass closely fit ted into steel frames. It took over five years of steady labor to make this re markable room, and so jealous of the seere't vai its imperial inventor that each particle of the loom was manufac tured in a ciliisvnt ila ai:d 1 y work men entirely unfamiliar with ti other par u of tho structure New York Jocr iiaL "ia!; Eaaish Radeon. Wat"r s:rv"ca-i!" : f irusrr'r m TmTi.tr ia tho r-.. :: to Taylor, lia. !a recent y.u; y l:ave beeenss M-arce. .vi.i : ii:;h : :.v increased in ima-bers. Oil Lcu: :s shrres-ay that the mii:k i t'.. tic:id!y t ;. rvy f the suake, and that in a t'.-Lt quaurcped sl- tras comes o!I victDrio-:. Tbe I.l-.iDi-r--- I Among the biras i.o:ecn:mon!y found is the rhinoceios bi.-d, from tli Trsar'vaaL Uuf7l pikker is its Dutch uatce. Its habits are remarkable ai.d its plctnge unusual. Small flocks w ccmp:;nyiiostcf the large antelopes, tl.c l ufTalocs ai:d the rliinoccreses, in Sooth .Africa, and ru all over tLe creutuns" lodjc, jiicking i.S flies and insects. When an enemy ajrruiclie e. t!? bufT. 1 pikers r:t in a hue . i -..s nisei e.a t'.x back ci the tr.:i;:l y are ::t teuuiiig, l:Lc t-yurrov s en r i f rii!;;e, a::d signal 'tU-eDC-V j . ..;::." ylnmage is curiously lex', j:!:i."T-.u r.i-d iupact, so much so iL;." i ; ..:! b.u a:a ;:r::tci-l lix.fc. a if c vi" I witie paiud fatia and i;et v. : i- n f 'iLe gon ial lir.f t f i!.e Wry:. :.:;.: XJtn blenni:, with Viii;.v t . ; . . :t ..- giving th t 1 r . : t jeilow iris. Louden tp: I To isccct iole-jp s V a jl!;.ss. ts:!-. 4 cuueos f gelati! 11' f ...i " r ! a': ltnr in 10 ouiMrjief v. -t r.: it ; : into a large elih of v. yi;.j :.: r :.i lisw4vethe pelat:ii. V.:s 4.,-. pour itito a sLaliow tiay. 11. v. t.r jprint rvltl tin a re!l( r, aIV-..i..-. .: : : , ir.t; take tin print by tl:e -:n. :s at:t. jasii rapidly tiiixnigh the g, l.i great care to avoid air LcLi.l.s. l cp with clips to ory; vkeu t.:y. sqaic z carefully on to the glass. Tl:e U :. r tin (quality cf glass tho fine he effect fow Vcrk Ledger. Tbe earliest year consisted of 12 mouths, liaving eac h 9 and CO days al ternately, thus making S04 days. This being found too short, it was lengthen ed to SCO days and afterward to 3 Co l. fci: arched cellars and cuffs are good barometers. In dry weather these ar ticles are stiff and hard, but when rain is coming the moisture iu tbe atmos phere make them soft and pliable. Bto Honor' Toothache. A good story is told of Judge V7, D. Greer, a prominent lawyer of Paducah. Once during a visit to St. Louis he had a severe attack of toothache, lie sought a denf.sfs office and was met by a voung man who was scrupulously neat and clean. Tho latter bowed 6uavely, and the judge began : "I believe you profess to be able to retract teeth without pain." "Ves, sir," was the reply, "and if I .lon't do it 111 refund your money." The judge was seated in the operat ing chair, and the last thing he remem bers was the dentist inserting a small ute iu his mouth. He got a dose of gas and became unconscious. When he caaie to, the young man was under a table, his erstwhile spotless shirt end collar covered with blood and his clothe torn almost beyond recognition. He was uvs peratoly waving the jueW- off, sayii.g all the while: "Get our? hero. Get out of here. " Ho seemed very anxiocs to have tbe judge get out, but he couldn't oe in duced to leave his retreat under the table. "Why. yonug man, what's the mat ter?" asked the judge, who dic'.n't un derstand the situation, in surprise- "If I've deii anything, I'm willing to pay for it." The young man obtruded his head for a moment, glanced reproachfully about at the demolished furniture and his own sorry plight, wavered tor a moment and then exclaimed: "Pay hell! You get cut of here!" It seemed that the judge, under the influence of the gas, had cleaned out the establishment, and the dntist didn't get the tooth either. Paducah Stand ard. Th Stone Forcrt or Flnrtaeant. The silicified trees of the Florissant basin arc a marked curiosity of the United States. They are less known than the "stone forest" cf Arizona r than the similar mausoleum of the Yel lowstone region, but it is only because they have not yet been brought to tLe attention of the tourist The tree are at the prefect time represented enly by their 6tunips. Ia wandering over the preen meadow the eye here and there rests upon a seemingly "l.ald" spot. Cher it are scattered white and yellow chips, and, for anything that the eye can itself distinguish, these could easily be the chips lift in the path of work of a recently passing woodsman. The de ception is absolute, and it belongs to the stump as welL The knots and gnarls and annular rings are perfectly preserv ed. The bark stands in prominent relit f both by rnggedness and color, and ul this not in wood, but in the monumental substance of stone. The prexise mania r in which the substitution vt silica fcr wood was effected cannot now be learn ed, but ia a gene ral way we know it to bjve lieen brought about as the result of a slow infiltration into the tree trunks of heated waters containing silica in so lution. The remains are fairly numerous, but what strikes one with special astei:i.-h-mrnt is tbe giant size which seme of tliem attain. Diameters of six, sev u and eight feet are by no means uncom mon, and we measured three specimens which spanned ten feet rr more. Ia most instance the stumps hardly rie above the surface, coming rp flush with it; therefore without excavation it is impossible to say at what height above tbe roc ts the measurements were taken. Popular Science Monthly. CLimneye Are Fickle. "The hardest problem the builder hr.s to wrestle with," said a well known member tf the prcfession, "is the chimney. What the heath n Chinee is to the human race and the left handed mule to the animal kingdom the chim ney is to the various appurtenances that go to make up a human habitation. There is no safe rule for the construc tion of chimney. You can build a chim ney all right in theory, but when it comes down to practice thf.t is another matter. Build two chimneys side by side in precisely the same manner. Em ploy the best skilled labor nud cei).-:r'act them exactly on the same principle.. One may draw all right and the other cue smoke like a Choctaw. Yes, sir, the chimney is beyond all unde rstand ing, and any builder will te-11 you so." New Orleans Time-Democrat. Original Definitions. A teacher in the mountain field give? ia a recent l-tter seme of the answers that came in frcm the pupils in their examination papers. Some if them are tax using. "Climate is the combined space cf hear hi:d moittcie," "Tho eolur syste in is situated in that part cf the heavens called the milky way." "The polar circle is paralie 1, running slanting round the earth." "It is the wind's duty to refresh and cherish ihe earth." "A volcano is the safety valve cf si: earthquake." Digestive organs are toned "direc tive organs" and the differ, nt races e l men were given as "Indians, i. grecs, u bites and French. "American Alis sionary. Wanted, m New Kind of rjamorUt. So far frcm its being possible to "in ternationalize" humor, we may think ourselves lac ky if we can manage tc preserve even a national type. The Diekcnsian humor, it would seem, is "off;" the American drolL after a vogue of a good many years, is apptr eutly ceasing to amuse; the "inverted aphorism" had but a short pc pularity and ultimately perished in calamitous snd indeed unmentionable circum stances, r.td nothing seems growing up to take its place. The new generation "tivockirg at the door" rat tats with qcitr perte ntous gravity. This it, no d'intt, un improvement on the olde-r gi-uciaticus, who thought it a first rate Etickcrf wit to wrench off tho knocker, but their successors are 6uiely carrying a virtue to exce sa lt stems a pity that they should be enable to laugh, but tbe most respected and "intellectual" among them can not It was the way of certain frivolous old fogies a few years ago to twit them with their supposed taste for what was then called the new humor, but there was really co foundatiou for the taunt The new hnmcr turned out to be simply tho old bnffooweTy "writ small," and whoe ver its patrons ere or were they are not to bo found among the thought ful young men who represent the gen eration with it hand on the door kneckcr. Fortnightly Review. I of Wild Bice. Few know mere cf the rrod of our river mud Cats than that it furnishes tho fried on v hie-h fattens for the epi cure tho reedbird of autumn dinner tables, the bobolink of other seasons. i iZt as wil l rice, Zizania aquatica of ir-ii.'C. it li.:s played no mean part in tbe service of man. It was the staple feed cf the Indians that formerly in habited northern Wisconsin and Min nesota, whe-re the plant abounds on the t;argin of lakes. Dr. Elli 3tt Cone says ttst it is still the chie:f recourse of the Cbjibway Indians on the reservations of ilmucsota. They not only gather it for their own use, but for tbe purposes of trade. A common name is Indian rice, jthe lakes along which the plants abewud jtre known as ric lakes. Whole Indian villages will be tenant less in au tumn, the inhabitants) having gone "ricir.g," as the harvesting is termed. The Indians push thr canoes into masses cf rice, bend tlie heads of rice over a crotched stick and thrash the grain into the bottom tf the boat In dependent j V nen baa weatne-ri is imnnne-..i, swallows fly low, because at such times the insects which constitute their food keep near ths ground, and the swallows arc forced to fellow tbern oa to lower i regions than at other Kmoaus. j The f rst American tele-cope was put jn pta-ition at Yale coutge in 1530. CHIVALROUS CONDUCT. The Cart Were Marked d Colemel Da lea Refined HU Gpctt'e Money. "T otice had a satnrle cf southern chivalry," said Judge Wildy after ho had adjourned court and dropped into tbe village tavern, "that made a deeper impression on me than anything I eer read about the subject After I was ad mitted to the t ar I was pretty well run down in health, for I had gone a faster pace than is good for any young man. Ihere didn't appear to be any impera tive demand fur my services in the racks of the profession, and, as my folk still had some nicaey that they were willing to spend uiui me, I decided on a southe rn trip. "I did a good deal of wandering through that delightful part of the conn try and finally brought up in the north em part of Texas, where t'c c'iruate just suited me ami many people ia the town had nothing todo Lot -ujcy them selves. The hunt iag was good, and there were always a dozen young fellows ready to join in the sport The girls at the female seminary were charming, and the clandestine flirtations I carried on will always bo a pleasant memory. "But I met my chivalrous friend iu Colonel Dulen. His manners and con versation betokened gexwl breeding, but he was a lover of horses, cards and high living. One day he told me that there was going to be a 6tiff game of poker and asked me if I would like to see it. Notwithstanding it was Sunday, I went along. We walked to the rear of the city hall, where he quickly unlocked a rear door and stexxi oa tho insido acting as lookout until half a dozen young men were admitted. Then he led the way to the council chamber, and there the game was played, "The colonel did not ask me to take a hand, but some of tho others diel, and I grate fully acce-ptod. It did not reqaire long to discover that it was the colonel's day. Iu three hours he had all tho money, several 'I O UV and my gold watch. Through it all he was suavity itself and cool as a northwest ViueL He went with me to my room at the hotel, lex-ked the door, counted out what ho had won from me and laid it, with my watch, on the table. I indignantly de clined to be thus reimbursed, but he coolly disposed tf tho matter Ly raying: 'All tbe calabj weah mawked, suh, so I could have read the m across tho street. That gang has be n robbin me, and I was ge-ttin even, suh. Yoa played squah cud had o show. Sec you in the mawcia' "Detroit Free Press. That Swell Count d'Onay. Mrs. Newton Crossland, whom the count once took into dinner, remarked that his hands, "large, white atd nppai ently soft, 'had not the physiognomy which pleases the critical observer and student of handi, for they indicated self indulgence." He struck her, mere over, as being "mannish rather than manly, and yet with a touch of effem inacy quite different from that woman like teneierness which adds to tho e xcel lei.ee of man." Thackeray met the splendid humbug in ISoO auel deseribes him as "living ia a charming atelier, which he has fitted up for Limse-lf with arms cad trephie-s, pictures and looking glasses, the tomb cf Dle-ssingtou, tin sword and star cf Napoleon, and a ru ciSx oe r Lis bed. And here he dwells," writes the cynic, "without any doubts or remorse s, admiring himself in the mast horrible pictures which he has painted, and statues which he gets done for hiia." Tbe count had received within 12 months of his marriage a sum cf f 20, UO0, white Lord Blcssington arranged that after L:s decease a similar sum should be settled upou hiin for life. So generous a dower a genuine prttiuia emella. as it was might havo mado him kindly uispe'sc-d toward his child wife, who, thre-e years after her mar riage, when she had reached the ago cf 19 grew to he a remarkably handsome woman. Not fcr her was the "brilliant wit" ar.d "wmidexful fascination" which made D'Orsay the pet of society. That was reserved for othe rs. "Iuste ael of be ing the wife of her hus band anil the mistress of her home, she fe.uud herself a superaumerary iu a cir cle with which she had no sympathy. Disagreements followed, rebellion set in, and in tho autumn of 1631 she and Count d'Orsay separated by mutual consent Aeademv. The Pnnuihmcnt of the llaznei, Iu former times the punishment of the bagno (bath), one of the most clev erly cruel inflictions ever devised by an ofncial of the torture chamber, was ad ministered ia Italy, probably iu Venice, where the water of the lagoons played so prominent a part in its penal system. The punishment was as follows: The prisoner was placed iu a vat the sides of which were slightly iu exce-ss of the average height of a man. Iu order to hold in check the rising tide cf a supply of water which raa into the vat ia a constant stream the criminal was furnishe d with a scoop with which to bale out tho water as fast as it came in. The respite from death by immersion thus obtained was mere or less pro longed, according to the powers cf en? durance possessed Ly the victim. But imagine the moral torture, the exhaust ing and even hideously grotesque efforts, tho incessant and pitile ss toil by night and day, to stave off the dre ad moment, fast appioae-hing, whin, overcome ly sleep and fatigue, he was enable to struggle any le;uger against his fate---Alouiteur '.u Pay. Wl.-i a Ocnunn Want. Merchants ia the foreign trado have a hard time. The following is mi exact opy of a letter received ia this city :ro:a Germany. If the writer had only wrirtem ia German, the American firm would have known what to da What does this mean? "It is me still always not successful to reived a Grain Exporters cf New York. Please work you ouca more few m: and sjc k yoa me to procure a repre sentation cf a Lrpsrters ia Wheat ia Ne vr Yeik." Helton Dulle'tia. Km Plants Are Exprnilve. Our beds and cur. border become crowded, and yet we are always raeet iug with plants we should like to pos sess and might easily grow; while, as jf in despair of keeping pace with the time-a, societies are formed which de vote themselves to the cultivation of some particular flower; firtrs associate themselves primarily with .osos, lilies, chrysanthemums or orchid.') and are rec ognized as authetruics, and costly illus trated Ueoks make their .-piearauce at such frequent intervals that iu some di rections they bid fair to develep into libraries, with the varieties cf one flow er as their subject No pains or ingenu ity or money is spared, and unique specimens are seurche d for in the most distant parts of the world. The outlay in some ease is enormous. Orchids being a very special branch of the gardener'f art, it is well we should refer to the enormous sums that are expended in forming a collection of these fascinating flowers. Syndicates are constituted for their importation and a number of skilled collectors, who often carry their lives in their hands, are always at work in the East Indies, in Mexico, in the hot, steamy swamps cf Brazil, in Madagascar, searching for new Fiecimens. Twenty thousand pounds and more, it is said, may be easily spent upon a collection; 310 guin eas have been paid for Cypnpcdiun stonei, 300 for Vanda sanderiana, 235 for JEridac laurencias, 220 for Catt'e ya me.udel'i bluntii and the prices of a large number of cithers range from J 00 to 200 guineas a plant Saturday Review. 'Cargoes of Head Cat. Liverpool receives some curious car goes at time cargoes of turtles and other live and dead animals, casks of leeches, shiploads of bones from battle fields, cf banian mummies from tbe Egyptian temts and of dead cats front jthe cat cemeteries of the same country. The Bast tetertlvea. A Frenchman naturally thinks the Parisian detectives the best English, men swear by the shrewdness of Scot land Yard men. and Americans, of soursc, swear by tho New York detect ives. After three years' residence in China (says a traveler), I do not think Mther of the three bodies is entitled to the credit given it The Chinese beat them alL They are at one time tho most expert thieves and at another the most skilled detectives in tho world. A Chinaman can steal yourwatchwhileyonaro look ing at it, and he can catch the roan who stole it, if it happens to be some other mau than hiinst lf, when a rreneh de tective could not I have scon evidences of detective ability among the Chinese which would Etartle even Lecocq. It is impossible for an evildoer to long elude the Chinese detectives. They scent a crime and fol low it to the last before civilized detect ives would know of it Tho Chinese detective force is a secret body, and the best organized in the world. They have an eye upou every man, woman and child, foreign or na tive, in China, and in addition watch over each other. Informers are encouraged, and col lusion is impossible. The head of the Chinese police is not known, but there is one, and a very active one tea I have beard that the present head was once an ambassador to a European coun try, but really I do not believe that any one knows who be is. There are said to be over CO, 000 men under him and bis assistants who control tho various d:s trictSL Pearson's Weekly. Air Bat hie UTeaU. Paradise fishes come from Japan, and their nests are very odd, indeed, fcT thry are composed of air bubble. Un like goldfish, they will breed and raise their young in an aquarium or even a glass glebe, and, as they raiso three or four broeds each year, the girl or boy who owns a pair of the interesting pets is almost sure to have a large fish fani ily in a few mouths. Ordinarily the male paradise fish is of a dull silvery color, but when he goes a-courting he puts cm a brilliant cor.t. striped with streaks of red, blue r.i;d green. When the female) fish is rcaeiy to lay eggs, she builds her rnt by swal lowing air and making bubbles, which are held together by a sticky secretion that comes from her rrouth. The eggs riso in the water and find a resting place among the air bubbles, to which they cling. The female fish tries to swallow the eggs, but her husband drivis her away and keeps guard unt.I the eggs are hatched. If the air bubbles burst, the male fish blows some more, so that the nest is always floating on the surface of the water. At tho end cf five days the young are batched out They cannot swim, but cling like tadpoles to the air lubbles. If one falls, tho father fish catches it ia his mouth cud blows it up among the bubbles again. He does not leave 1 is little ones until they are able to swim, anel then they take care of themselves. The paradise fish grows to a length of three or four inches and thrives bet on chopped up angleworms. If tin. are kept from the cold, they increase rapidly and make fine pets. Chicar Record. ConsaccniEieotM Marrisces. With regard to deaf mutisin, statis tics show, for tbe most part, that the closer the degree cf relationship be tween tfce parents, the more numerous are the number of the deaf mate children born. For example, one marriage between an nunt and nephew produced 3 de-f mutes. Four marriages between uncle and niece produced 11 deaf nmtcs. Twenty-six marriages between first cousins produced 38 deaf mutes. Sixteen marriages between second cousins pro duced 2S deaf mutes. Fcrty-se ven mar riages between blood relatives produce .1 72 deaf mutes. Theso are important facts, which leave no measure tf drut as to the irfiueuce of the intermarriage ef blood relations in causing deaf mut ism. But just in the fame way as con sanguineous marriages should be avoid ed so also ihe.uld the intermarriage of persons tainted with hereditary disease be discouraged. London Medical Press. Are Oar Law Jtut? A man was accused of having stolen a pair tf -trousers. There were sovoral witnesses, but the evidence was rat hi r meager, and so tho accost d was acquit ted. He was told that he could go, but he remained. His lawyer, to whose suc cessful defense he mainly owed his lib erty, hinted to him again that he was free to depart, but still he staid. There being no more cases to be heard the court was getting empty, when the lawyer, growing impatient, asked,, with some asperiry, why he didn't go. The injured, innexent man whispered in his ear: "The fac t is, sir, I did not like to move till tho witnesses had left the court." "Why bo?" '-Because, sir, I have got on the trous ers that I stoJV London Tit-Bits. Failed bat Once. "Don't be afraid. Come right in. My rvife's out Have a little something? Here's a nice quality of old" "Good heavens, maul You've got the Wrong bottle! Look at that lable! Don't yon see it's marked 'Poison?' " "Oh, that's all right That saves it from the hind girl. My own invention, vou know. Clever, isn't it? Never fail tel but one. " "How was that?" "Hired girl couldn't reed. "Cleve land Plain Dealer. Worry Fate of Japanese Girls. When a Japanese wemau marries, her teeth are Marketed by a pre cess so tedious and painful that some girls for tais reason refuse to be married. Iu 1 T84 aP explosion and fire occurred in the government dockyards at Brest, in France, which occasioned a less of fo.000,000. Brass pins were first made in New York by English machinery in the yeai 1S12. New York has 2" female liarbers. Every Why Has a Wherefore and 'TLs Well to look for i at Times. In these daps people want to know the , Whys and wherefores. ' 1'Uu lliU ceutury man is a Datura) sk iHio, '1 he why and where fure of such is plain, lle reads statements eif tmp'xised facts. He is told every niimcut can be cured. He trie Kemie imuueea. It faiw; be trivs suother with the some result Stab experiments mute him look ask taiet at fui'ire claim. Often tilt fnult is his, but be don't see why. He way hire a backache or perhaps s lame or weak back. He used plaster or liniments, they re lieved him lor a time, but failed to curt the trouMe. This is his fan.'t: the why l that hs did not know the v herefore ef his aches. Had be known that tbe kidneys were tb cae:e. That backache generally means kidney ache. , That the kidneys must filter the blood. Tliat failure to do ko aflVet tbe back. That backache is emiy the first, tetep to wan I many kidney disorders. Frinary troubles feillow. Retention of rtr.ne. Excessive urine. Diabetes Bricbt's disease. Doau's Kieluey Pills are a positive spe cilie for ail kiduey cumphiintte. The acbin; bae-k ban no greater enemy than Dcau'a Kidney Pills not injurious to the must delicate constitution. Don't ae-t on the bowels. ut direct on the kid neys. For sale by all l-al.-rs. 50 rents per box, or sis boxen for (2.'iO. Mailed on receipt of piiee by Foxtcr-ililburn Co FniTalo, N. 1, sole agents for tho United States. THE REASON THE BEAUTY OF A SHIP. Mra. Stowe'a raarinaUna DeMirlptloa of Ven I fuller KalL Mrs. Stowe, in "Tho Pearl of Orr's Island," gives this fascin'ng elescrip t ion of ajj'bip wider niii? "What is there belonging to this workaday world of ours that ?.as such a fund of never failing poetry and grace as a ship? A ship is a beauty and a mystery wher ever we see it Its white wings touch the regions of the unknown and the imaginative. They seem to us full cf the odors of quaint, strange, foreign shores, where life, we fondly dream, moves in brighter currents thnn tho muddy, tranquil tides cf every day. Who that sees ono bound outward, with her white breasts swelling and heaving, as if with a reaching expectancy, does not feel his own heart swell with a longing impulse to go with her to the faroff shores? Even at dingy, crowded wharfs, amid the stir and tumult of great cities, tho coming in of a ship is an event that never can lose its inter est But on these romantic shores cf Maine, where all is so wild and still and tho blue sea lies embraced in the arms of dark, solitary forests, the sud den incoming of a ship from a distant voyage is a sort of romance. Who that has stood by the blue waters of Mieldlo bay, engirdled as it ia by green slope s of farming land, interchanged here and there with heavy billows of forest trees or rocky, pino crowned promontories, has not felt that sense cf seclusion and solitude which is so delightful? And then what a wonder! There comes a ship from China, drifting tn like a white cloud, the gallant creature! How tho waters hiss and foam before her! With what a great, free, generous plash she throws out h r anchors, as if sho said a cheerful 'Well done!" to some glorious work accomplished! Tho very life and spirit of strange, rcmantio lands come with her. Suggestions of sandalwood and since breathe through the pino woods, fc-'he is an orient-il queen, with hands foil of mystical gilts. 'All her garments smell of myrrh and cassia, out cf the ivory palaces, where by tboy have made he r glad.' No won der me n have lewrd ships liko bird1 and that thre l.ave teen found brave, rough hearts that in fatal wrecks choso rat In r to go e'.emn with tLe ir ocean lovo than to leave Lir in the kat throes cf hex death rxc -nr." JEFF! WAS THE MAN. Ia Claltill tt:e Famous Actor Taleen For the Or:j!aa! Cld Kip. Joseph Jt ;u u rclute.8 tho following interesti::.:: incident: "There i iu tlie villago of Catskiil a Rip Van Winkle club. The society did me tLe honor to iuvite me to art the character i:i their town," said 2Ir. Jof ferscn. "I accepted, and when I arrived was met by the piesideut anel other members cf the club, among whom was young Nicholas Vedder, who claimed to be a lineal descendent of the original Old Nick. I was taking a enp of tea at tho tablo in tho hotel," continued Mr. Jefferson, "when I was attracted to the colored waiter, who .was giving a graphic and detailed account of the legend of the Catskiil mountains to one of the boarders who sat nearly opposite me. " 'Yes, sah, said tho waiter, 'Kip went up into de mountains, sle p' for 20 year", and when ho come back Le re in dis berry town his own folks didn't know him. " 'Why,' said his listener, 'you don't believe the story's true? " 'True? Ob course it is! Why,' pointing at me," said Jefferson, " 'dat's de man. ' "When I got to tho theater," said Mr. Jefferson, resuming tho story, "I could scarcely get iu, the crowd was so great about the eloor. During t'-'o icce in the last act, when Rip incmires of tho innkeeper, 'Is this the village cf Falling Wu'er?' I altered tho test and substituted the correct name, Ii this the village of Catskiil?' Tho pe e plo in the crowded house almost seemed to hold their breath. "The name of the villago seemed to bring home the scene to every r.ian, t woman ami child that v.'as lrokii.t' at it. From that time on the interest was at its fall tension. Surely I had never seen an audience so struck with the play be- j fore. "Thero was a reception held at the club cfter tho play, and the president was so neivcus that Lo introduced ;.e 83 Washington Irving. " tan Francisco CulL Puppies and l lowrr teds. We oneo watched the united e Certs cf a litter of s; tte r puppies, tSioiiurticul.tr object Icing the destruction if a fine bed of geraniums, an enterprise ie h iire niid a i..f wf" . ,.! U,WA.U.UU. "UU .V.I a set oil of a mere trifle cf aa eS'eit, if once a protecting fence cf wire nnUi.g could be surmuunteeL Oue r.f ter another the puppies charged the fence, enly to fall back baffled, bet not discour.iged. Failure only made them more deter mined. With savage barks and growls they returned again to the attack until, after a desperate leap anel scramble, tho biggest peppy rolled over amoi:g the geraniums. For a moment be was al most awed by his success. lie squeaked and sat down, but only for a moment. Then he hurle d himse lf into the thickest part of the bed and tore the geraniums to pieces. Cornish, In the Ar Oallery, Peasant Women (noticing a man copying one cf tho old piasters) Why do they paint this picture twice? Her Husband Why, that is cibvioua. When tho new picture is done, they bang that on tho wall and throw the old one nway. Fliegcnde Blatter. Spanish Town, in 1608, was blotted out lya terrible cci fiagraticn, wLieh destrcyeel pre pe rty estimated to exceed 7,o0li,000 in value. The first egricnlrural nrwsprrer wa3 The Aire rican Farmer, begun at Balti more in IS 19. Ez-Go.ernor 3 aies aad His Hired Han. From the Council Bluffs ilenra! Xonp-itvi!. Hired Man '! beard that in your lies Moines speech yiu said priisare so low that you have either got to gf-t more for yjur oats or else cut my wages." I5eies "You heard right." Hired Man "Well, which are yeu going to do?" Boies "I am ging to get m.ro for my oats." Hired Man "How T" Boies "By lessening the pnre-haMng power of money. Free eaiinago uillgue us a dollar which will only l)iy rive bushels of oats instead often bushels, and that will lie tbe saino as getting 3) cents for my oat." "Hired Man "Well what aro you going to do about my wages'" Ikiies 'H ih, pJl pay yon J;ist the same as I'm paying you now, 3) a month." Hired Mau---'Are yon 2-iu ti pay me In those new eb liars T" B'-ies ''Certainly j tho aatno kind of dollars that I get for my uU." Hired Man Those dollar!! that can't bny only half as much of anything as the old dollars ?" Boies "Yen, yes j tho samo sort of dol lars." Hired Man "Then, as I understand it. yon propoeee lo get twle-e an iniie-h foryenir oats "d pay mo only half what I'm ga ting now." Boies "Why, no; I'll still piy yeu Hired Man "But this .) won't boy only half as much slulf as now, yo'isiy. for the pnre-liitsing power is to bo bssen e 1 one-half, sr with my $J) I can only get $10 worth of stuff. Your scheme uould bring you twice as iintt-h for your o-its. and bring me only half as iimeli for my work. Is this fair, do you think ?" B iies "Well, every man h:u to look out for himself." Hired Man "Se I see ; anel I think I'll look out for myself and vote for an twin osl d dlar for aa hju j.it daj'j work." The strvMU syaum is weakened by the soroliia Torture. Every nerve is strengthened In A Madera Slndbad. Some imaginative writer tells the tale of a sailor who was shipwrecked three times, wee in four collisions and two fires at sea. suffered from sun stroke and ye llow fever, lost a finger or two by frostbite, had ouej eyo gouged out iu a f ght at San Francisco, came home, married a shopkeepiug widew, who henpecked him, got out of bin course one feggy day and walked into the river, where ho was found next morning still chewing his overnight quid tf tobacco, but without Lis glafs eye. This is the novelist's typo anel is perhaps somewhat highly colored, bet it may bo compared with some actual types. One of tho men wo havo in mind fell ird and broke bis left frcm tne mam yare arm before he had been at sea a month on his first voyage as an apprentice. Ou the return voyage from fc'an Francisco he fidl from the same yard and Lroko one of his legs. The vessel was wrecked in a gale off the sonthwest coast of Ire land, and this unhappy yemth, fato pro- fngus, was raved, with three others, cut nt a rr. w nf 2(5. fuilY. however. te find ;t.L.. ,r; -.u "... mat jus next snip, Jaeie-u nu niai, ena fire on the othc r side of Cape Hern and ! had. to bo abandoned by her crew, who were Six days in their beats U fore a homeward bound ship picked them up. His third vessel ran ashore at the en trance to Ileugkoug harbor in her hur ry to get insido before a Yankee with whom she was in company. Whe n onr friend found bis fourth ship dismasted in a cyclone in the Indian ocean, ho camo to the conclusion that sea life, which ho had been quite prepared to like, was tco exciting for him and ho decided forthwith, provided he got safe ly out of that scrape, to leavo it to thc:e with better luck. ilaemillan's Maga zine, Charles Reada oa Hare Walla. I bad the honor once to know in Lon don Charles Keade, a mott remarkable and great man, as well as a great novel ist cf tho higher realistic school. Reaele was, above all things, a practical man. He had the eye of an eagle, and no things that needed reformation escaped it. One day, when I dined with him at his house in London, his rus in nrbe, as he called it, he said that he had been an examiner at a board school exuminatien that day and that he had been again struck by the barrenness and nuattrac tiveness of the average public school room. "I suppose," said I, "that it is a realization of the American idea. By giving the scholars nothing to lrok at but their Looks their attention is sr.p posed to be concentrated en their le-s-sons. " "Just so, " be said, "but it isn't The brain works through the eye. The o infernal bare walls do not stimulate ti e mind. They stupefy it" Here is the statement of an absolute fact which, fortunately, wie teachers are row rec ognising the world over. Collector. Bow to th Wind. Take a polished metal surface cf two feet or more and with a straight edge?. A largo handsaw will answer the pur pose. Take a windy day on which to make tho experiment, paying no atten tion to atmospheric conditions, for such an experiment can be as successfully mado on a clear day as it can cn a cloudy one, and tho results will bo eeroally good in summer or winter. TLe only thing yoa need to bjok out fer in that you do not attempt to "sec tho wind" on a rainy cr murky day, as con ditions are then very unfavorable. When everything is ui readiucs-s. Lol l the me-taliie surface at right itLglea to .1 i . : . . 1 : , .. . t 1 iue cireceiuu en wio ei iiiu i e., 11 iiio Wind is in the north, hold the met-1 east and west, but instead cf holding it vertical incline it about 43 de frees to the horizon. T hen this has le n done. j sight care felly along the edge cf a sharply defined object fo some mo ments and you will see the v i:d f ur ing over iu grace ful curves almost liko water. St. Louis Kepublic. Forcot the Violets. Among the characteristics cf Walter Savage Ladder, the famous author. I were his abxntniindcdncss and his pas siejuate love for animals and tho ve'ge- table world. On CUe OCCasieiU, having f ttlero Ircm leaving .. ..... 1 . I - . i i ; i suffered net long : i. r. l. . i.:., . i . i "77 " I" t be teok sjiecial precauticus le fere fturt- I .. . ... . n ... . t .. . i : . " " r iiiui jiis kejs . , . 1 . , . ! were in nis pocue't vnen. nowexer. lio produced them in triumph at Lis jcur- ney s enu, he xouna tiiat ne li.erl lelt, the portmantcin behind. Lauder, thengh . i n.,., u:- ..... 4icuio. u uj-uiiu iiis iiuuw Veen rornc- what roughly, hated to ecc an eld tree felled and even shrank (rem plucking a rose. Ono morning be collared his man cook and fh'fg him out of the window. Then, sudde nly remembering cn what bed in the garden the man would fall, the flower loving Lander exclaimed: "Good heavens! 1 forgot tfce poor vio lets!" MaraalayB WIU Macaulay. who was in the habit cf having himself, and badly, toe it would seem, tmee patrcuired a first class barber. After obtaining tin cay shave, he tamed to the tensorial artist and inemircd: "flow much Co I owe you?" "Whatever you have been in the hab it cf giving the man who shaves yon, sir," replied the barber. "I generally give him two cutscn each cheek." replied tho celebrated Englich historian; "but yen, sir, being a sapcrit r workman, deserve to fare Let ter." Washington Times. An Old Tawa Ticket. An eld pawn ticket which Las beca nuearibcel at Florence is crectii.g con siderable ftir in tho literary worlel. Tb ticket was found in a curiosity shop in a portfolio f drawings and eld letters. It runs as follows: "I, the undersign ed, herewith acknowledge the receipt of 25 lire from Siguor Abraham Levi. lot whic h he holds as security a sword cf my fat Ler, four sheets and two table covers. Jlsicb. 2, 1570. TorquatQ Tassa" Euciiea's Arnica Salve. The Rest Salve in tlie world for Cuts, Cruise, riores, Uloers, Rslt Kheuru, Fever Sores, Tetter, ChapiMsl llamls, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Files, or no pay roe-Mired. It is guaranteed to give pe-rfect s.-tisfaction or money refunded. lrieti" isnts jst Ux. For sale at J. X. Sfiyiler's elrug si.-rt, Somerset, Pa., or at LVallicr's dnig sleire lierlin, Pa. Andrew Jackson was a gMbiig. In his ineage of Dec. 2, 1S.1I, he srii.1 : "The progrsn of ur gol.l coiuugi; is ereeliUible totiie otlloers of the mint, and promises iu a short period to furnish the country with a souuel and portable currency." Ilicycle riders, f.Ketliall player and athlete, generally, find a sovereign remedy for the anr;iiMs :md brtiises rend cuti I i w ie'.i t- .-v :tri-oirii iv i;i Dr. Tlio.eias lY.n trie Oil. Tiie rise in the price of wheat basi "kneM'ketl the stuillng" out of tons of Pojj.xratic literature. It is still circu lated by the nitichinc, however, and ll:ids a place in some of the back-country newspapers; but ii. make very Luioldy reading. the core of It by OMKKSKT MAItKKT KEIOKT, 7 coRBKcrcu wrr.ai-r ut Cook & Beerits, WediMmluy, April 8 1S06. (lTl)U . .. . Applt-M lrl.il, - (fVHix .rated B Apple butter, mt i roll. pr 9. butter. k.-tf, per I .. (er-inirv. pc-r .. tc .lt 1 1k (.- - r . - -i,l;tl!0 lI"i l r tt Jttol-'"' r. I .ui::.r i un-l bum, per l 11 IJ!,C fine-on.-' lu H.r g, 7 t n vhoil.i-r. per J 7 to w f white navy, per bua Si- "lUina. p. r l . Cftee. J 'V'. per r, ;.Tf i -,-ri..d. rr b.l " ror.; .i. n i- 1 ftrriiiiai, p:r P P' 1 MtA . Ish. !ke nerrtnrr " Lll iin.y, uHr c''.v-r. .. r 8 . i. p, r u u l'- I mi;., p. t t.en . . fl.U M!i!;-.s-.--, M.e).. per Kui . " 1 iimm:, per;leii ..-.' rUiloe. per bu J I'. .. .... -v .. r ft, lllt.il.- j i-rum-e. per v. w uj i.h I I - P r l"l ' I rituburjf, per Wl I.uo Suit, t iMiry, 4 bun na k . bus ks .'.. Ifrroein't uluen. laM U Kucit H.M !K- nutple, per B . -loc l!ili U'i yellow, per 9t wiiile, A. per t . ' Kruiiuluu-.!, per . . lie Cubev. or buiverixed. okT .... tsciifur. per K il s-V .syrup. niupie. per Kiel-... ...50 toe Stone ure, talloli -Mc Tklluw. per tb . to linear, i r khI... JU to : iiiii.nii,, u,-r - , clover, per bu ei.(J0 to 6..K) enniMoli, er Iuh i.tt) .Set-els. " ulfciliu, per tiuH.. ei aLvkf. tier turn 7.."v ill! let, e.ernuitl. per bu 1-- lieiriey. while bearuleMi, per bua. l.J buefcwueuC per bun A ic corn. ear. t r bus. . :1m 10 c Grain - shelled, per bus U ic j ontK, pT bus ... t to :)e i rye, i r bus . .." 1 feed I wliet, per bus . 7'le bran, p-r km w we eoru Mini t chop, per B... . Hour, roller pns-es, per bbl fAJii " spnuK puiei.l and limey hluh gra.ie I.U lo .25 Flour. dour, lower rra'ie, per llu2w at. 9t u.j.i f while, per l' His '"v J reel, per lis! I HEXXSYLVANIA RAILROAD. CASTIRM STAKOASO TIME. IN EFf ECT UykY 20, 1S95. (XIJDISSID SCHCDUI.lt. Trains sirivesnd et part from tbesta'.lon a joiiu.iuun at ioiiow: WIKrWABO Western Express. t:t a. Southwestern Kx press Johiislown AeconiiiiO'Ltioij...... i: T AecoiiiimsluLion it) Psciflr Express leiil Why fusseiiKer ::"J Mail A:H r'ast Line p. Johnstown Accommodation ' IA.STW ARD. Atlantic Express a. Hwenhure rlxpress 6rW Altoona Arsililluoialiou....... KJ-ft Isey y press le-sl Mum Ueee Kxpress. lehl.S " AlUsMin Areiiiiiioiittitn.....lL''2 p. Mail Kxpn-ss 4:11 " JohnsNiwn A(Tiimtniidatioii...w.M S:.v rhiludelphla Express 7:1 East Line 10:30 " Kor rates, nmps, Ac.eull on Ticket Aeentsor address Tlwse, alt, 1. A. w. I)., :iuO r iftti Avenue, !"liLsl)urit, la. S. M. Prevwt. J. R. Wood. Gen. Manager. Gcu'l PahS A CONDENSED TIME TABGS. Baltimore and Chio Bailroad. SomerMt and Cambria Branch. KORTHWABS. Johnstnrn Muit Express. R.iekwon1 7:eo a. i ersville l.HO. Johnstown ll.lo. Johnstown Mall Express.-Ror k wood a I m., Somerset li:su. smyestown U-'S, Uoov- i epsville llHse inlinlm'n r ... ' , iiiiw" mimniwmniin.-iuihi .-yen ' ATl . . .! n . . . . . j $XsSiZI&ZTn Hwv ""any. sot thward. ! Mail.-Johnstown 7:.7la. m.. Hoovervil :T. ssioyeslown S:it, J-oinersel a-js Hock wood Express. -Johnstown ilO p. m H.wiTervllle sroveviown S:1J, Suiuerset Kock- Sunday Only. Johnstown 7io0, Somerset 9-.2 ivorawejou xb Salesmen Wanted on Sivtiry, to sell" Pennsvlvanla grown Nur sery si.irk. whieh h th belt is the world. All the new speeltklties as well as the sluil.Unl vsrie tles ef Frvit & Onwnentalv A fine oeitnt fur uKlied and all iraveiiiix expenses paid. Sala ry dales from day work is vumnieuce-d. Write for tern is, statiut; age. Hoopes, Bro. & Thomas, Maple Avenue Nurseries, West Chester, Pa. tt UsWS k NEW s U a-, "?-V t 0iLY PERFECT For Sale By j. B. HOLDERBATJM, Somerset Pa. YOU CAN FIND THIS D cm mi file in IlTTwsrs h t IUe All cr:r i'or. s-jT'lirT'lTrsm s-ts exes ITOA t AH V r-A i Mtaut t adwmuaa as Vpm raw THE None Too Good When You -p-: MEDICINES.-; Jt i Just ft- FRESH, PURE DRUGS it is To Have ConpUnee in the rhyUian Uho ,' Aa AT SNYDER'S You are always sur of getting the frehet medH:!.- t'art-fully ("oinpo'iiided. TRUSSES FITTER All of the liest ana jioi ipprore jniwji Satifae1inn fJtutrwitteit. OPTICAL GOODS. GLASSES FITTED TO SUIT m. LTLb. CALL AND HAVE r f SI3HT TESTED. JOHN N. Somerset, Louther's Main Street, This Hodel Emg Stcrg is Rapidly EsMSain? afe; Fivcrlte with Facpls in Search ;f FBESE . AHD . PUEE . mi Jledicinvs, JDye Stutfs, Sponges, Supporters, Toilet Articles, JPcrf umes, &c. j THS OOCTOB GIVES PIKSOSj-1. ATTBSTIOS TO TRK tXlHjr.1HN., r,f Loitlier's FresBriutioiislFaffiily Eeofe? GREAT CABC EEI.SG TAIIM TO CS O.SLT EtSH AJD IT EE ART:( LE. SPECTACLES, EYE-GLASSES, I And a Full Line of Optical Goods always on Land. Fra r large assortment all can be suited. THE FISEST BHMSS OF CIGABS Always on hand. Tt is always a pleaTCre to d:s:p!ay c: : to interidiiig pnrchaser. whether they btij Sr.'rtt as or ebevihere. J. ftl. LOUTH Yfi. D. MAIN STREET Somerset ELIAS CTJSnSTEiSrGrlJAil, JlASCFACTCkEK A5D DE-IXF.R AD WUOLIAALI A.U KtT.l.MS -,T Lumber and Building Materials. Hard and Oak, Poplar, Siding. IV Ml rant. Yellow Pine, Flooring;, 'berry, kbit) glee. Irs Ijilh, DhitePine Blind, A jeneral line of all rrades of Lumber and Building M.iteiial and R."f!ni7".. i-k lock. Also, can furnish anything tn the line erf ewr business uiord. r w.'-i r- ble promptness, such aa BraekeU, odJied.work,'ete. Elias Cunningham, Office and Yard Opposite S. C. R. The New York WEEKLY The Leading Nr.tior.il Rerub!c Famiy Newspaper, m mase a vigorous and tial campaiirti, f or pi incij.Ies w Licii will l-rin pra-; or:!; '-' entire country. Its campaiirn news and discussions will intero.'t ar.i s be read by every American citizen. IVp furnicri "TUP UCRAI n iiw iwiiiidii inu iiLiinLU ONE YEAR FOR ONLY S2.00. CASH IN ADVANCE. SUBSCRIPTIONS KAY Adelrvss all orders to Write yonr namo an 1 aJJrss an a postal eanl, sa it t liei. W. K.-. j rmniM Bulldlar, 5ew Trk Cltj, and sample copy of Tbe Weekly Tribune will be maile d lo ju. IT WILL PAY. Y0TJ , ... - TO Ijuy tOCR Xemorial Work or WW. F. SHAFFER, SOMERSET, PESX'A. Manufacturer of and Dealer la Eastern Work FarnUhsl mm mium mi AU Agei for U WHITE BRONZE I Persona tn nawatl nf i w . And u, thelr treT u"at m.h.p -!Satisreein 5".,. . 1 : , . T . lr,,, t'rlcea very low. I InvlU apecial attenUoa to he Wnite3j, Or Part Ziv Drnr re!tiel by IW. W. A. Ut ne..,. d..le.l. e" .T.VV"1 ln .,h P"'nt f Material and Coimtruefon.and whleh 1. ,e .1 ... . .k K';,''i'.M"','' r our chanceafcle ell Ua c u m CKIL 2V F. SAFFEIU BEST Important to Srvur. -'l:r Ve. SNYDER, Drug Storef i Somerset, Pa. - - CfiMrDCr-" s ti'jvv-lrn;i.i.:1 1 .Lumber Yb Sott Wood 1 RaliiHtert. hestsbf .cwrl Pot!, I le. t t - E. Mation, S01 EE"! EallyBoMiliof!! F0S Sound Money. : T1 1 TT,J ndUUlldl iiuiii: ; Home Prosperij. " TRI reIeiitio.-5 ;:'it t!irourii t.iv- i: - . onri "m v vvrrii V TP'?' Vi a.iu ii. i . iiii(ii BEGIN AT ANY TIXE. TI-1 13 II K I i aSESTlSl'SIS Xl Over SCO Beautiful Designs. WCNUMENTL BRONZE C BUNB t & 4 i I ! 1 1 x v7 L--t 4 I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers