ARLINGTON. A PEACEFUL SPOT WHERE RE POSE OVER 10,000 SOLDIERS. The Place Consecrated to the Past— The Mansion of Robert E. Lec— An Estate Beloved of Nature Faithful Old Slaves. A delightful ride of three miles, through historic Georgetown, past old buildings in which George Wiishington dined, under the shadow ot the famous college, over Aqueduct Bridge and the beautiful Potomac, past Fort Meyer, where the signal service prognosticators are trained with military precision and discipline, and we are at the gates of Arlington, says a correspondent. It is like entering a new world. Behind lie commerce, wealth, ambition, politics, the present, the future. Once in Arlington you live in the past, and the past alone. The road winds among the oaks, elms, maples, magnolias, many kinds of evergreens, arbor vit® and thousands of flowering shrubs. The air is laden with the perfume of flowers, the sward is green and restful, the shade I cooling. But the marvelous beauties of I nature, here spread with lavish hand, are as nothing compared to the real Arling ton. These natural attractions are but ' the fair and graceful body. Arlington possesses a soul. Under the sward repose the remains of 16,288 soldiers. Four thousand four hundred and forty-nine of these are un known. Vast as are these figures, one can easily believe them true, for on either side the long, regularly formed rows of small, white headstones extend, perspec tives of green between lines of white as far as vision can reach. The grounds are perfectly kept. There is no grave that has become sunken, and none is marked by an elevation of the ground. Smooth and even is the surface everywhere. Walk among these stones and in ten minutes one may see such typical American names as Sherman, Whittier, Spaulding, Jack son, Lee, Buchanan, Lawrence, Sheridan, Grant, Randolph, Allen. One of the Jacksons bears the initials "U. S. G." and nearby, oddly enough, is an "Andrew Grant." Not far away is "George Washington," nnd within a stone's throw two other AVashingtons— "A." and "J." Plenty of good Irish names may be seen, too, and German as well, significant of the valiant part borne in the struggle by the sons of these countries. Silent witnesses of war's havoc are all these stones, but more es pecially the ones occasionally come upon marked "a leg," or "an arm." A few of these unidentified members w#re honored with separate burial, but in one great pit were thrown the bones of 2111 unknown soldiers, gathered after war from the fields of Bull Run and the route to the liappahannock. Over them is a cannon surmounted monument bearing the inscription: "Their remains could not be identi fied, but their names and deaths are re corded in the archives of their country, and its grateful citizens honor them as of their noble army of martyrs. May they rest in peace." Frequently one notes the name of a woman, and on inquiry is surprised to learn that the remains of several hundred women repose here in honor. But in this there is nothing inappropriate, and on the records all go down as "soldiers," for they were the wives of officers who fell in battle, or nurses in the field hos pitals. Surely these women who kept the homes and comforted the wounded and dying may fittingly be included with those of whom the roadside tablet sings: On fame's eternal camping ground Their silent tents are spread, And Glory guards with solemn round The bivouac of tho dead. Driulng through the cemetery these iron tablets with raised letters of white are seen by the way. Hundreds of thou sands of visitors have seen and admired thein—never did poet have a better set ting for his verses—but few know the origin of the lines. They were written by Theodore O'Hara, a gifted Irish- Kentuckian soldier and scholar, and read by him on the occasion of the unveiling of a monument to the dead of the Mexi can war at Frankfort, Ky., many years ago. As one enters Arlington by the west gate nearly the whole of this beau tiful poem is shown him, verse by verse, as he drives along. By the roadside stand many pretty monuments of officers and heroes. But of greater interests than any other object within the tract of 1130 acres is Arling ton House, a massive structure with a great portico of doric columns. Here Robert E. Lee was wed in 1831 to Mrs. Curtis, granddaughter of George Wash ington, and here he lived, when not away in his country's service, for thirty years. The old house stands just as it stood seventy-five years ago. Though stripped of its antique furniture and invaluable relics of Washington its precious mem ories still cling to it—memories which all the fortunes of war and tragedies of fate cannot take away from it. A year or two ago its outer walls had become much faded, but have recently been painted their old yellow cojor. Tlie servants' quarters, tho detached kitchen and other outbuildings are pre served intact. In a part of the houses now lives the family of the officer in charge of the cemetery, and the hall and southern parlors are given up to tho use of the public. A register is kept, in which 40,000 visitors record their names each year, and on the walls hang maps of the cemetery, the diagram showing every grave and the names of all the known dead. A magnificent estate was this of General Lee. Step out on the portico and behold the panorama. In the fore ground a sharp declivity; at its brow,but a few yards from the house, the grave aud new monument of Sheridan. Then a fast sloping lawn, next a forest of magnolias, oaks, maples, all vine clad or surrounded by flowering shrubs; a wind ing driveway; the stone wall with its beautiful gates made of columns from tho old War < )ffice and the old Patent Office; just outside the Alexandria Georgetown turnpike on which Washington rode many and many a time en route to or from Mt. Vernon, and beyond this the Poto mac with its moving ships and boats. Across the Potomac—all Washington, the distant hills green in the background; the great Capitoi, overshadowing every thing; the monument, nearer by, rising whiter and grander than from any other view; the red brick Pension Office, the Treasury, the White House barsly dis cernible, the War, State and Navy building. Spanning the Potomac is Long Bridge, over which the armies passed, thousands of them, to return to this eternal camping ground. Near the mansion is a pavilion mod eled after the temple of Fume, and bear ing on its frieze the names of Washing ton, Grant, Farragut and Lincoln, and on its columns Garfield, Thomas, Meade, McPlierson, Sedgwick, Reynolds, Hum phreys and Mansfield. Near by is the Monument to the Unknown, and just be yond it the beautiful amphitheatre, 100 feet in diameter, with chaste Corinthian rostrum and colonnade, wherein many thousands sat upon the green sward Decoration Day and joined the anniversary exercises. The greenhouses are fairly bursting with flowers to be used in the decoration of the graves, and the colored man, bent and old, whom we see ambling along, watering pot in hand, is Wesley Syfax, who once was Robert E. Lee's slave. Thirty years ago there were 200 slaves on the estate, and five of them still remain, so much attached to the place that they could not be driven away. They live in little cabins near by, and work, when they can, for the Govern ment. A little way from the house to the south are the graves of George Washing ton Curtis and his wife. In a gloomy spot under the hill is the resting place of Mrs. Mary Randolph. It is the faithful old slave, Wesley Syfax, who early each Decoration Day morning strews these graves with sweet jessamines uud forget me-nots. .. South American Railroading. The Corrientes, Orau aud Tartagal Railroad in Bolivia, South America, is being pushed on with much activity. Where the work is now in progress is through a thick forest, which extends from two kilometers from the starting point from Oran toward the Colorado River. The line stretches nineteen kilo meters through what appears to be an immense tunnel of vegetation, so thick is the forest in that district with the ex ception of a small space which is situated at the entrance to the plains, and where work is being pushed on in order to ar rive at the river Colorado, over which a bridge will be thrown. Engineers and workmen there suffer alike from the in tense heat, from thirty-eight degrees to forty degrees centigrade in the shade (above 100 Fahrenheit), and the im mense plague of venomous insects. La borers are lacking, as very few men will expose themselves to the labor and risk, and at this season of the year the Indians cannot be relied upon, as they prefer to live in the middle of the forests where they subsist by eating the algarrobas, and fully supplying themselves with liquor from the fruit which they call aloja.— San Francisco Chronicl«. A Blue-Beard's Tombstone. In an old burying ground in a large Southern New Hampshire town there is an Interesting group of seven tomb stones. Each of six of them marks n little 9trip of earth where rests the remains of one of the wives of one man, and the seventh is the gravestone of the Blue- Beard himself. The epitaphs of the wives are short and simple enough, but the fifth bears, underneath the nume and record of the woman's biith and death, these words: "The Peacemaker." On< can only speculate as to what the circum stances were under which she exercised her benevolent art: but no doubt she had to be a peacemaker to enable her husband to get along in any sort of comfort vl.'h j all his deceased wives' relations. But the i epitaph on the husband's tombstone ii ' a gem. It reads thus: "Rest, AVei r) I Pilgrim."— Boston Transcript. COSTLY WOODS. AVHERE THOSE SOL.l> IN NEW YORK COME FROM. 80111 c Cost More Per Pound Than the Most Expensive Meats—Rare Kinds That are Brought Many Thousand Miles. "Yes, we have wood here that costs more than the choicest slices of meat. Over there is some French burl walnut worth at a low estimate thirty cents per pound. Although called French wood it never saw France. It comes from Persia and Circassia by way of Constantinople." The speaker was a fancy-wood importer on the East River,this city,and he pointed as he spoke to a dark, roughly-hewn block that stood with many ot her blocks in a row against the wall of his office. Marseilles merchants, the dealer ex plained, wore the original importers of burl walnut, and at one time enjoyed a monopoly of the business, but of late years the city of Marseilles has not been a walnut market of much account. "Can the demands for fancy woods be satisfied by the productions of foreign countries," asked the reporter. "No," rejoined the importer. "We have never been able to supply our trade with enough of the rare qualities of wood. That block," pointing to another sample in the row, "is snakewood, out of which cane and umbrella handles are made, cannot be obtained in sufficient quantities. London and Liverpool concerns control the snakewood market. It is found in South America. Look at that piece next to the snakewood. That's camphor wood. Wealthy people have trunks made of it on account of its moth-destroying properties. We import camphor-wood from Japan. Here's another expensive wood—sandalwood, indigenous to the Sandwich Islands. It is worth about S3OO per ton. Sandalwood causes that peculiarly fragrant smell in the fumes of incense. East Indians employ it exten sively as a perfume. Here is a sample of boxwood. During the roller skating mania it sold for eight and ten cents a pound. To-day we can't sell it at almost any price. Boxwood comes from Africa aud the West Indies. Step into the next room and I'll show you something worth looking at." Tho reporter entered and viewed a plank of rosewood, the grain of which formed a ligure representing the body of a shark, with the snout of a hog. The plank was framed and polished. This plank is worthy of exhibition amonir the rarest curiosities known. "Rosewood," continued the importer, "is an expensive wood, its cost approach ing per ton. Brazil supplies us with most of our rosewood. Woods of the quality which I have .shown you are seldom used except as a veneer. What appears to be a rosewood colli 11 generally is pine, covered with a thin sheet of rose wood. Pianos and expensive furniture are almost invariably veneered. That three feet cubic of mahogany over there might serve to veneer a dozen pianos. After steaming it for twenty-four hours it can be cut, or rather shaved, into sheets oue-fiftietli of an inch thick and then pasted over fine piono cases." "Why do they weigh fancy wood in stead of measuring it?" inquired the re porter. "They don't always weigh it,"was the reply. "The very highest grades only are sold by weight—the common grades by the foot. In Europe the practice of weighing wood prevails more than in this country. Here is another curious feature. This is a small piece of mahogany. Its surface is smooth and free from blemishes —now look at the center," and the reporter's entertainer broke the piece in sections, disclosing an interior honey eombed with holes one-third of an inch in diameter made by a white seaworm. "This worm," continued the importer, "is a fell destroyer. When valuable rafts arc being floated from the shore of the countries in which these woods grow, this little rascal enters the logs filling the hole after him so that the exterior presents a sound appearance. lie de stroys whole rafts in the manner in which this piece has been destroyed. It is on account of this worm that the bottoms of ships are covered with copper." "Are these fancy woods becoming scarce?" was the last question to which the merchant replied. "Yes. Each year they become scarcer and relatively dearer. In some countries tho timber is cut away for miles from the coast. This necessitates the expenditure of more time and money to drag the umber to the sca-shore and consequently has a tendency to relatively increase the price, not to say anything about making the various woods scarcer. I almost for got an American wood that ranks with any of them in price and quality. This is American figured walnut, which is pre ferred by many to the French burl wal nut. Soft mahogany grows in Mexico and the hard mahogany we generally im port from Cuba."— New York Neies. It is probable that the Indian is of the Mongolian race. A Prison Keeper's Nerve. A shipmaster of my acquaintance, who has been very successful as warden in more than one penal institution, told me that he once heard that a criminal eon fined under his control had said that he would kill the warden on the first op portunity. Captain E. said nothing, but the next afternoon, when hehad an hour's leisure, sent for the man. "Bill," Ictus call him, found the captain strapping his razor. "Oh, 'Bill,' is that, you?" ex claimed the warden. "Well, never mind, can you shave?" The man replied that he had often shaved his companions. "All right, suppose I see what kind of a barber you are?" With that he took a seat in his chair, handed the criminal the razor, and was shaved. "Bill" went faith fully through his duty, and when he had finished the captain said: "They told me that you were watching for a chance to kill me, so 1 thought I would give you as good a one as you could ask for; that was all." "Bill" slunk sheepishly way, and from thence the captain had no firmer friend than the desperate criminal.—Bon ton Traveler. Electricity Does Not Hurt. The experience of an electric light em ploye in Virginia Oitv, Nev., cannot fail to be interesting. Ilenry Paull received a shock from which he remained uncon scious for fifteen minutes, during which time his heart showed no signs of pulsa tion. The palm was burned where he had held the wire. The current passed down through the right side of his body, leaving no mark save where it left the foot, the toes of which were scorched black. Faull gives the following account of his sensations: After grasping the wire he was im mediately drawn upward with irresistible force and endeavored to shout for aid, but, although another workman was but three feet distant, his voice was not audible. Although suspended by his hands, with his tors resting on the boiler plate floor for scarcely a second, Faull says it appeared to him that he was in that position several minutes. He felt no pain whatever. This is the last he remembers until restored to conscious ness.—Detroit Fret Press. An Old Showman's Sleeping Van. Old Adam Forepaugh has been in the show business for forty years, and has never missed a season's personal attend ance upon his circus. While on the road he has never been known to sleep in a hotel. The show carries with it a van that looks like one of the animal dens. It has an open top and sides, and is equipped with a cot bed and toilet ne cessaries. The old man sleeps in this every night, lie is given to a habit, of arising at all hours of the night, and making excursions through the tents. There is no telling at what hour the old man is likely to drop in, and the result is that eternal vigilance is the price of continued employment with 4-Paw.— St. Louis Star-Sayings. Of 5000 horses that started in trotting races last year, only forty of the list won seven or more races. The Widest " I bought my wife a ve vet sack." Thus proudly boasted Mr. Brown. ••She'll ho, with that upon her hack. The host dress.-d dame in town." But velvet sack or diamond ring Can brin£ no balm to suffering wife. Favorite Prescription Is the thing To save her precious life. The great and sovereign remedy, know the world live , tor all female troubles, inflamma tion, cruel backaches ana internal displace ments is |)r. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It. is the only <jiiar(inter<l c ure. See guarantee on every bottle-wrapper. Dr. Pierce's Pellets gently laxative or ac tively cathartic accxv ding to dose. 25 cents. TUB Amazon Kiver system contains 30,000 miles of navigable waterway*. 100 l.ntlicM Wanted, And 100 men to call daily on any druggist for a. free trial package or" line's Family Medi cine, the great root and herb remedy, discov ered by Dr. Silas Lane while in the Hocky Mountains. For disoases of the blood, liver and kidneys it is a positive cure. For consii*, ation and clearing up the complexion it does won ders. Children like it. Everyone praises it. Large-size package, CO cents. At ail drug gists'. THE famous leaning tower of Pisa has been put up for sale by lottery. Is it. probnhlc that what a million women say after daily trial is a mistake? They say they know by test that Dobbins's Electric is economical , purest and best. They have had £4 years to try it. l'«ugiv« i7 out ti uil- Thbiu: are 0,000 acres in thetwoDako tu«. Only 7,000,000 are under cultivation. Why Don't Ton Goto Florence xI•. < The foremost city of manufacturing facili ties in tiio South. Is located in Lauderdale County on the basal line of the great iron and cml belt. Plenty of water and steam power navigation ami i ail outlets. In the valley r* l,auuenl tie industry is rewarded by abundant crops of cotton, tobacco, sugar, wheat, corn, etc. Enterprising settlers will meet hearty re ceptions. For excursion races aud pamnhlet address E. O. McCormick, (J. P. A., Monon. Route, < '!u< ago, Jil. "Stick to your business,'* is very good ad vie . but still there are a great many people in t lie world who have no regular and profitable but ness to stick to; and there are others who an following a line of business w hi oh is manif« st ly unsuited to them. Now, when HUCII is the case, you had better write to B. F. Johnson A. Co., Kici mon-l. Va., and see if they cannot give you a pointer. They have helped a great many men and women along the way to for tune, and now stand ready to assist you, too. Oregon, the Paradise of Farmer*. Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant crops. Best fruit, grain, grass and stock coun try in the world. Full information free. Ad dress Oregon Im'igrat'n Board, Portland, Ore, One by one the roses fall, but "Tansill's Punch" sc. Cigar outlives them all. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp ecu's Eye-water. Druggists sell at -oc.per bottle Weak and Weary Describes the condition of many people debllitatttl by the warm weather, or disease, or overwork. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is just the medicine needed to overcome lhat tired feeling, to purify and quicken the sluggish blood and restore the lost appetite. If you need a good medicine ho sure to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. "My appetite was poor, I could not sleep, had head ache a great deal, pains In my back, my bowels did not move regularly. Hood's Sarsaparilla hi a short time did me so mil eh good that I feel like a new man. My pains and aches are relieved, my appetite Improved."-— GEORGE F. JACKSON, Koxbury station, Conn. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all drui ife i»ts. $1; six for s:>. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar N Y N U-MS IS YOUR FARM FOR SALE If so address < ÜBTIH \ WEIGHT, 333 lin-uewn \ v llalrlein beautifies hair, cures headache, remove* dandruff; 25c.; 5 for sl. Dr. PL'LLEK* Troy, N. Y. FROM SAVAGE TO CIVILIZATION. SWIFT'S SPECIFIC is a simple vege table compound prepared from roots fresh ly gathered from the forests. The formula was obtained from the Creek Indians by the whites who had witnessed the won derful cures of blood diseases made by that tribe. It has been used since 1829, and has been the greatest blessing to man kind in curing diseases of the blood, in many instances after all other remedies had failed. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Northern pacific. LOW PRICE RAILROiD LANDS & FREE Government LANDS. MILLIONS of ACHES of each in Minnesota, North Dakota. Montana, Idaho, Washington .:i»il Oregon- CFMn CAS J'indicationswith Map»deacribinir the wCnli ■ Uil Agricultural. Gray, iup aid 'A itno hrr Laudh nowoj>en t .Settler®. Meut Ivor. Address (MAS. B. LAMBOBM, #DUTCH E R'S FLY KILLER Vheot will kill a quart of flies. sto|<s buzzing around ears, cures \iw!ce at trifling expense, k DUTCIIKK, St. Albans, Vt. § JONES PAYS THE FREIGHT. 5 Toll W aft.tn Scale*. IrcmLeiera KteJ Hearing*, I.rass Tare licani .xn.l Heam Bor f« r , r SGO. Ererr *l/e Reale. I« r froo pr. v o ■,-il n.rntionthis i>air»r ar.u ailclr«~H JONES OP BINGHAMTON, BUtQHAMTOM, N. \ . Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is the B3 ran Best, Easiest to Use. and Cheapest. |jj fltt Sold by drupslsts or sent by mail, jjjjjj BEST IN THli wititl.l) G R EASE \r «Jet the Genuine. Sold Everywhere. BUara fy Irefcg] Its cured at home with ith ki [sir! ont pain. Boot of par- S ra e(9m ticulars cent FSFS. jSawuns B. LI.WWLLEY. MO. Atlaata, Gib. uHiCO G&Vj WlilUJhall ET la ' A day. Samples worth !S\*. 1 .> Free. ■ra Lines not untTer horses' feet. Writ'- IJrpw- Mrr Sate! > l{f iu 11 older < 0.. U«.i \ gents wanted. $1 an hour.SO new artlcles.CatTgue and ■-all l j li'fr«-e. <K. M vkshai.i., liufi'al », N. \ . PEERLESS BYES *££&£££ ulent or spasmodic. Rarely more than lor 2 doses necessary. It does not eon stlpate, rather acts as a laxative and Is entirely harmless. After 20 vears of trlaj in more than SOOu cases, our guarantee is worth something. Colic munt be ,r. i reared promptly. Expend a few cents and you have a cure on hand, rrncly jr" lien needed, and perhaps save a valuable horse. If not at your druggist's, eu- SO cents for sample bottle, s'*nt prepaid. \ AddrcFsDK. K(iKIII<('.K iV CO., Ilethleliejii, I*n. \ ' use Dr. Kochlee's "Favorite Colic I We cheerfully recommend Dr. Koehler*a \yii 's<*r) iwßgSSy Mixture" right olong uith succe**. It is j "Favorite Colic Mixture." Would not InJ V the best colic medicine 1 have ever seen. I without it as long a* ure have horaes. xb'ISAAC MOOO, llorae Deakr, ISAAC MOSES A BRO., B ooklyu, New York. ; .Sate and Fjrchanga Stables', Ea*t»n, Da. JOSEPH H. HUNTER. GERMAN-AMERICAN DICTIONARY n \jj,ONLY SI,OO, POSTPAID. tlipTeYoirMii IN SPARE MOMENTS INSTEAD OF WASTING YOUR TIME. A fsw minutes'earnest study of this excellent work each day will result in your knowing German. Chaanßstanfl Bestin Market. This Book contains 624 Finely Printed Pages of Clear Type on Excellent Paper, and is Handsomely yet Serviceably Bound in Cloth, It gives English words with the German equivalents and. pronunciation, and German words with English definitions. If you know a German word and desire to know its meaning in English, you look in one part of the Book; while if the English word is known and you want to translate it into German, you look into another part of the Book. It is invaluable to Germans who are not thoroughly familiar with English, or to Americans who wish to learn German. Consider how easily; you can master German with the aid of this Dictionary if a half hour per day is devoted io- study, how much benefit can bo derived from the knowledge, and hasten to send for this first-class book. BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 134 Leonard Street, New York, Swift's Specific cured me of terrible Tetter, from which 1 had puttered for twenty long years. I have now been entirely well for five years, and no sign of any return of the disease. Rogers, Ark., May 1,1889. W. H. WIGHT. One bottle of S. S. B. cured my son of boils and risings, which resulted from malarial poison, and affected him all the summer. IJe had treatment from live doctors, who failed to benefit him. Cavanal, Indian Ter. J. B. WISH. 1 have taken Swift's Specific for secondary blood poison, and derived great benefit. It acts much bet ter than potash, or any other remedy that I have ever used. B. F. WING FIELD, M. D., Richmond, Va. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga. gold»»°silver FOR 25 cts. handsome Cabinet of Beautiful Ore Specimen* from 20 different mines in Colorado. Address Rocky Mountain Specimen Co., Denver, Colo. DROPSY TKRATEI) FHEK. Positively Cured witli Vegetable Kemeriie*. Have cured thousands of cnse*. Cure patients pro nouneed hopeless by best physicians. From first nose symptoms disappear; in ten days at least two-thirds all symptoms removed. Send for free book testimo nials of miraculous cures. Ten days' treatment free by mall. If you order trial, send 10c. in stamp* to pay postage. DR. H. H. GKKEN A SONS, Atlanta, Oa. P JUMPED OiUlbCil ABALTIO, »■ AH applied at the Holland Medical aud Cancer Institute, Buffalo, N. V., removes Cancer without pain or use of knife. Scores of patients speak in unqualified terms of praise of the success or this treatment. Write for circular. HO I,LAX l> >5 F.I) 1(1 XK CO., Buffalo. X.Y. Dm mm After ALL othors C fail, consult r. Lodd, j m» Twenty years' continuous practice In the treat* ment and* cure of the u«vtul effect* of early vice, destroying both mind and body. Medicine ur.d treatment for one month. Five Hollar*, sent securely sealed from observation to any address. Hook on Special l)i*ea*e* tree. _ _fl I prescribe and fnlly ®n% dors# Blr as the oaly Cares la specific for the certain cure & I TO & of this dl"*ase. nci taU q. H. IN(iRAH AM.M. D-. 1 tioaa Bw-ioior*. Amsterdam, N. Y. k feSf vrdanly fcyife# We have sold Bir G for many years, and It haa 1 UfrJLgn-x Casnlttl Co. t k o best of satls- VStfk faction. D - * DYC 5j^f C o°ilr J*I.OO. Sold by CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS. *Vv —Ked Cross Diamond Brand. ZfKi The only reliable pill fc>r *al«. KafV «>i \ I ~~ tD wr-'- Lad lea, itk Ilrafglit for the Dta j I wA :nonu Rmnd.tu red metallic boxe«, eealol \ "C* E? wtih blueribbeu. Taken* ather. sUad4cw ■ \ *_ A < (tamps) for particular* an<l "Kellef for i I I.udtea/* in l«Uer, by in nil. >'<**»« Pov4F~ I Chlclivatcr Chemical l'f.| Madlawa k'hllada* Pa»
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers