THE AMERICAN SOLDIER. 'Tla a far. 'r cry from the minute mea And tlmea of the buff and blue. To the days of the withering Jorgensen, The handa that hold It true. Tla a far. far cry from Lexington To the tales of the China sea, But aver the lame the man and the gun Ever the aamt are we. For the blood of the alrea at Bunker Hill. Through countless fierce campaigns, la aa red and eager ln,perilstlll In the deptha of the chlltlren'a velna, And the heart and the eye support the hand No matter what odds there be Ever the same thy sons, O land. Ever the sama are we. Not a Valley Forge, nor a Wilderness, Nor hall of a Cuban steep, Can take one Jot of our fearleaaaeaa. Who dally thy honor keep. We cary the flag through varying acenss From the sign of the old pine tree TotheStarsand Stripes In the Philippines Ever the suae an we. And the lad with the fresh, unshaded mouth Fights as his fathers fought. And the man from the north and the man from the south Do aa their fathers wrought. And whether from city or farm we come We answer the call with glee We heroes upsprtng at the beat of the the same are we. Edwin I- Sabln, In Munaey'a Slag-seine. IN A REAL WAR. A Veteran of Mil Steauaas I m on the Sabjeet of olrbntlng Ills tori Battles. It was at the breakfast table that Mr. Scott Unilsuy, a veteran of the real war, read something; about the anni versary of the battle of Kan Juau and began to breathe heavily through his nose. "Great gTief, mother'" be exclaimed. looking across the table at his wife. "Here's somethin' that'll make old Gen. Sherman turn over In his grave. They're goin' to celebrate the anniversary of -lie battle of Kan Jem Thttndern tion! The battle of San Je wan! Unt ile! Goth, all fishhooks Battle! Say, if the old boys that 'us with the Army o' the Tennessee ever started In to cele brate the anniversary of every durned -little popgun skirmish like that battle o Sam Jewan we wouldn't do nothln' but celebrate, day in and day out, from one year's end to another. We'd have to get up in the night and anny vener ate. Battle! Battle nothln'! W'y, around Vieksburf there we used to roll out in the morula' an' fight three or four o' them battles jusrt to whet our appetites. We didn't call 'em battles, though. We knew the difference be tween a battle and a strawberry festi val. I went out rabbit ehootln' several times but winter, you may rlekollect. Well, I didn't never come back and say T'd been In any battle, did IT "Oh, well, father, yon must make some allowance," said lira. Lindsay. THEY MADE THE OLD SOLDIER HAD. "These boys don't remember the other war." "I guess they don't I Just good an' guess they don't. If they did they wouldn't be spoutln' so much about beln' heroes an' aU that. There's a blamed sight o' difference between chaain' some runt of a dago with a -white feather in each hand and chimin' a six-foot Johnny Eeb that jest raises up on his everlastin' hind legs an' come at you like a runaway horse, breath In' moke out of his nose an' ears, 'y Oory, an' yellln' like an Injun. It's easy enough to chase anything that runs the other way, but this hero job's got Its drawbacks when the other feller gets it Into his head that he wants to do the chaain' an' swoops out o' the woods like an Ioway cyclone, by gosh, pump In' lead into you till you git too heavy -to run. Battle I When we had 'em tacked up till we couldn't see over 'em an' every regiment 'u whittled down to a company an' our flags blown Into carpet rags an' the blood got so deep it wet the ammunition in the wag ons we used to begin to suspect that we'd had a battle. Bomethln' a little leas argy mentativo than that we called a skirmish. Anything the sire o' this i Ban Jewan baaket-meetin' we didn't keep no tally of at aU. 1 That kind o' come under the head o' target practice." "I wouldn't be too hard on 'em, fa ther. They say these boys fought real .well down there in Cuby." "Well, to see 'em strntrln' around -town here in their cowboy huts and igaaaln' in front of every store you'd think, by cracky, that every one o' rthem had chawed up a thousand o' them Spanish generals, whiskers an' 11. Yon take some old codger that .crawled through them swamps for four years, dodtrin' mlnle balls and nothln' to keep him alive but hardtack an' hot alous-h water, an' he ain't in it so mora with one o' these cussed little wblpper - snappers, by ginger, that well, you 'ought to heard old Cap Nesbit the other alght after post meetin. He made n few remarks about these kid soldiers that wouldn't pass muster in a crowd o' women, but they wus satisfyin' to me." I "I don't see why Cap N'esblt wants to pick onto these boys. I think they de serve a lot o' credit for en list in' an', goin' down there in that hot country to fight." "Enlistin's all right an' fightin's all rfcjrht, if you do it. 1 don't begrudge no man the credit of goin' out an' fight in' i for his country. These boys done well as far as they went, but 1 don't want no kid to tell me what war is until lie s been through one. These young fellers got a sniff o' blood, and now they think they've been through the slaughter house. There's old Dan llalley that got shot so often he didn't mind It at nil toward the last, laid in Andersonville till he was a ruck o' bones, came home here lookin' like a corpse, and ain't seen a well day since, and he ain't as Iult a man in this town to-duy as thut grand son o' his that went dow n there to Forty Rico last winter an' laid In a hammock for six months smokin' cigarettes. lie's what they cuil a hero now had an ice cream reception for him when he come home, didn't they? I don t rcekulliet thut anybody had un Ice-cream recep tion for old Dan when he come home. Heroes wasn't quite so gusli -dan e ! scarce about that time. Nobody paid any attention to 'em. They used to ship 'em in here by the carload, an' most o' 'em went rihton through town un' out to the graveyard. W'uzn'tlt you, mother, that wux readin' the otherduy about some regiment thut wouldn't git on a train beCUl they wuzn't noRleep ers? Great Jchoshopliat! I'd like to seen somebody ask old Col. Griggs for a sleepinVar. I'd like to heard what he'd any, Sleepin' enrs! We wni tickled to death to git box cars, cuttle cars anything on wheels. We didn't need no porter to brush our cloze, for the durucd good reason that we didn't have no cloze to brush. Then there's nil this tulk about em bammed beef. We'd 'a' been mighty glad to git it eiubammed. petrified, moldy or any other way. We thought wc wuz lucky if we could git a little hunk n' salt pork to drop in with the beams now an' then. We wurn't out on no moonlight excursion, by gosh, play In' tag with a lot o' tambourine playera, We WUX out In the underbrush, dud (ling inv buttons, hm in it out with the toughest lot o' human panthers that ever wore uniforms. An' yit, like as not, If w e go to brenkln' in on this San Jewan celebration, we'll git a back seat In the gallery. We ain't heroes, I guess. Wv. on Decoration day these kids marched in front, everyone o em puffed up like a toad In a thunderstorm bigger man than old Grant, as the feller says. Now, they're goin to cele brate the annyversary of San Jewan. There wuz another likely skirmish about the same date, Gettysburg, I think they call it. Wonder why some body don't celebrate that. Hah! George Ade, in Chicago Record. DAHLGREN'S COURAGE. Uaatratlaw and Intereatlng deats Related by a Vetera of Ills Stall. After the launching of the Dahlgren at Bath on Monday afternoon, May 28, Mr. and Mrs. John V. Dahlgren, of New York, gave a reception and banquet at the Hotel Phoenix to the members of the Kennebec Naval Veterans' associa tion, the Hath iron works officials, and others. Judge Charles Cowley, of Lowell, Mass., who had served aa Judge advocate on Admlrul Dahlirrcn's stuff during the blockade of the southern norts. mild a glowing tribute to the memory of the admiral. "The incident of Terry shifting his flag from one ship to another in the bat tle of Lake Erie has often been quoted aa a cool piece of daring, and so it was. said Mr. Cowley. "Hut It was a thing that Admiral Dahlgren did repeatedly and thought nothing of. The man for whom we have named this warship was one of the most Intrepid men who evsr lived. I was with him when the Har vest Moon was blown up. Bhe was Maine-built vessel, designed for duty in shoal water. When she struck the tor petlo an immense hole was blown through her bottom, and she sank In about two minutes after the contact. Never shall I forget the perfect cool neaa of the admiral upon that occasion I was standing aft on deck and imme diately after the explosion I heard Lieut. G. IT. Hex ford excitedly exclaim: 'Admiral, we have struck a torpedo.' T think it very likely, Mr. Rexford,' said the admiral, coolly. We got out of the situation with our lives, but that we did was due to the perfect discipline that the admiral enforced and to his marvel ous ability to keep his head under the most trying experiences." The speaker referred to the fact that Admiral Dahlgren was not only a sailor, bat a man of science as well. "Home of his inventions," said Mr. Cowley, "have been superseded by the modern disap pearing guns, but many of his creations In the department of naval science still remain of practical utility. During the civil war many heavy guns burst, kill ing and maiming hundreds, but I think there has never been recorded the bursting of a Dahlgren gun. The Mon itor that fought the Merrlmac was armed with Dahlgren guns, and had the executive officer of the ship earlier in the fight made up his mind to double charge his guns, the southern boat would never have withdrawn. Bhe would have been sunk then and there. Lemar, the chronicler of the south, was generous enough to say that It was the Dahlgren gun that put down the re bellion." Lewis ton (Me.) Journal Abont Evaa. Customer Say, do you know you gave me a bad quarter of an hour with that imitation mineral water I drank hero yesterday? 1 Druggist Did I ? Well, yon gar me I a bad quarter of a dollar. I guess well call It sonare. Chicaffo Tribune. No tmgso Was, xmm for you, said four different physi cians, but I still had sufficient left to try Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure, as it was highly recommended to me. 1 had suffered tor years wan neart trouble; so bad was my case I was ivea up to die several times. Had ' , . - I 1L 1 sever1 palpitation, snort Drcaui ana much pain about the heart, fluttering and smothermg speiis, out ur. muies Heurt Uire irave rr.e prompt renei and finally a permanent cure. Mn. l, L. Taylor, Owengitcro, Hy. i--ir- St. tit m fWi U.l. - . ' GZMBB JUL. ai w is .w.ld by all druggistl i n guarantee first bottle bcuetits or money bock. Book on heart and nerves sent free. Mile Muclical Company, Elkhart. Ind. Dr. A rtllltnrlnn. "Ah," said the man who Is sometimes morose and vlslonnrv, it I only naa tin- wings of an eagle and the heart of a lion!" "Another touch of dyspepsia!" mur mured the family physician, in tones of sympathy. "My deur fellow, what you ought to wish for i.s the stomach of a goat." Washington Star. Esongh to ICxtlnsrulsh Heroism. Frantic Woman Olu sir! My hus band returned to our room after we had fled. Fireman IV you think he's In dnn- sjer? Woman He may bo. I'lease go to him and tell him not to forget my dia monds! Jewelers' Weekly. tloa Wanted. Her Father If you are already an- (raged and. matters have been settled between you, what do you want to sec ne about? The Budding Financier I would like to know tram you whether it a advis able to marry her.-Tit-Bita. The Same Proeen. Briggs I see by the paper that the school-teachers have been instructed to examine their scholars' heads. Baggs Oh, indeed! For phrenolog ical purposes? Briggs No; verraiiiologicaU Ally Sfeper. Hatare's Music. Tne woods strike up a melody; Their tones ure cleur and rich. The maple gives the sweetness And the pine-tree fives the pitch. Juds. EMOOVRAUINU TUB FARMER. i3B "Bill, don't ye like ter see th' farmer i workln' and lavin' off ther medder so ! nice and even ? Let's go over an' help him. lie oughter be encouraged." "Well, let's go over. I tell ye; you encourage him wid conversation while I swipe his kettle o' grub." Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. Aa Eatra Ingredient. "No," he said, reflectively, "this isn't like mother's pie." "And why not?" she wospishly nsked. "Because," he mildly explained, "mother's pie always hod ants in It." Cleveland Plain Denier. Had a Detter Job. Employer (Impulsively) Miss De Pinkie, Clara, will you marry me? Pretty Typewritist What! And give up my $20 a week salary? Not muchl N. Y. Weekly. Rot That Kind. Biggs I never hear Scrapleigh brag ging about what he did during the war. Hoggs Of course not. He really did things worth talking about, you know. N. T. Journal. Preferable. "Which is the best to be lucky or rich?" "To be rich. Then you don't have to be lucky." Chicago Daily Kecord. A Friendly Aoggeatloa. Chollie Mollie said I was enough to eat. good Dollle She probably thinks yon am a lobster. Yonkers Statesman. Of Coarse He Thinks So. "He thinks he understands women.' "How do you know?" "He's a bachelor." Chicago Pott gSaikW TffcnlT -ei, r' ,nhmmVMtiiteMii ewrikle Sasaxase. Ardent Lover (wildly) What does I this mean? I've called a dozen times a day for a week, and each time you tell me Miss Beauti is engsged. What j docs it mean? Tell nic. Has she fallen In love with some one else and Kind-Hearted Maid No, indlde, Mis- , tur Qoodheart, it's little ye nade fenr. "Hut why is she always engaged when I calir "Sure It would r(M mo try p!:'ce to i tell. Don't be worritln' me ;:; iut It. Sure It'll be all rilit." "Hut I must km w. If you lose yojir place 1 will continue your wages tint-' you get another. Tell me. For mercy'i sake, tell me!" "Oi'U tell yer. Phe do be engaged thrvln' t' cure n pimple on her swate nose." N. Y. Weekly. Temporarily- PMebed I p, "I hope," said the pastor and con fidential friend of the family, "van ami Mrs. Meeker have adjusted your ditll- culties and are living in peace and concord with each other again," "Wi ll." answered Mr. Meeki r. hesi tatingly, "we are not. exactly on the I old footing as yet, but but we have I established a modus vivendt," Chicago I Tribune. Ko idle Boast, Hilklns Smyths t ri s to make peo ple believe that lie belongs t the "up per crust." Wilkins Well, 1 should think he die: belong to the "upper crust." Hilkins In what way does he show It? Wilkins Always short :md easily broke. Hrooklvn Life. I nml I I ten ted QaU, First Passenger Would you be enough to lend me your tpuatll good cles n moment ? Second l'SM'!iLrcr Certainly sir. with pleasure. First Passenger Oh, thanks. Now. ns you can no longer read your new spa per, will you please have the kindness to pass it over to me? Tit-Bite. Tiiov iinve Their Llmltatlosis, "Some of those post office people are very clever. They can read Illegible writing and deliver letters when the address Is worse than a Chinese puz zle." "Yes; but they can't help out the man who forgets to mall his wife's let ters." Hrooklvn Life. A Wasted Period. "Yea, sir, 1 have always felt that my legislative career waa a dead failure." "Why so?" "Just because the party 1 represent ed waa so overwhelmingly strong In the legislature that a single vote wss worth little or nothing." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Before and After. "Mr dear," said Mrs. Ilunewcll, as she poured the coffee at breakfast the other morning, "do you believe in the eternal fitness of things?" "I nsed to," replied Hunewell, "but that was before you began to make my shirts." Chicago Dally Hews. Getting; to the Battaa. Grandma What time did Mr. plncott leave laet night, Grade? Llp- Grade Why, grandma, he started home at " Grendme(mtldly) Nevermind when he started; I asked you when he left, Brooklyn Life. A Nance of Regret. 8h used to be a pench, 'tis snld. Her figure plump with charming curves; But. nAw that she Is growlr. o'.d. She's been consigned to the preserve -I'uck. JCST LIRE A not (iHll T. Mr. O'Toole Beezy, we've ben swin dled 1 Oi bought a dozen av these flow cr pots, an' ivery dom one of 'cm has a hole in itl N. V. Evening Journal. Tie n-tter Bo. Harry Why did you postpone your marriage ? Jack My fiancee bus just graduated from a cooking school, and 1 want to give her time to forget what she has learned. N. Y. Journal. Hard Maa to Maaagre. Jorklns Mrs. Jasper bosses her hus band In everything, and yet they say she la not satisfied. Perkins No; she complains that she is overworked. Town Topics. A Pertinent Query. Mr. Jackson I told de boss dat I was contemplating matrimony. Miss Johnson An' whad did he say? Mr. Jackson Why, he asked me was I tired ob work or tired ob life. Judge, No Room for Moths. "How do you keep moths off your clothes r "By always wenrin' 'em." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Oat of the Ordinary. "I thought you were going to break up housekeeping?" "We did intend to, but the cook re fused to leave." Town Topics, Had OB Talking Staehlna. Agent Can I sell yon a phonograph T Mr. Henpeck Not on your life I nn married. X. Y. Journal. VAtfri , POINTS ON MARKETING. Some Hlnls Which Will Aid Housekeeper When Laying In Supplies. the Fish, to be pood, must be fresh. In buying see that the ilesh Is hard, the scales shiny and the eyes bright otherwise Mr. Fish has been on earth too long to be relishable. Fish should lie kept cool until cooked; it should be rinsed carefully, using as little water as possible, as much of it destroys its delicate flavor. Beware of canned fruit If the ends of the cans are bulged out; It means that the fruit has fermented. Always buy a small, hard cabbage In preference to a large, loose-leaved one it will taste better and there will be more of It. In buying beef or mutton, always choose the piece that- looks bright red when freshly cut. Fresh pork and 1 veal are a nice pink, and good salt pork Is firm and white. In buying asparagus, pick out the bunches with lone, thin stalks Hint nre green almost up to the butt of the stnlk they are younger, more tender and better flavored. If the skin of fowls peels easily It Is n sign of youth. If the spurs of chick ens are over one-quarter of an Inch long don't buy them it Indicates old age. Avoid dark-skinned potatoes with thleklv-sct eves. The smaller the eye tin- better the potato. To test eggs, place them In strong salt water. If fresh, they will sinK. Good flour will lump when pressed In the hands. The best lemons nre full and hard, and hnve thin skins. Detroit Free Prase, Don lite llearft. Cuaey I culled one nv thlin John nies a liur and he says to nie, says he: "Tu quoque." Now, what might that mean? Dooley It meane "You are on other." Casey FwotI An' I let um get way widout hit tin' um! Ah, that in what a man gits for basin' no eduoa lionl Vanity.. Fair. - PENNSYLVANIA KAILR0A0. Sunbury Ik LewiltoWU Division. In effect May '.W, 18d'.. wewTWASD, I statiohs, i bastward r am 2io B7 Banbury 2 18 to 7 Bellnsgrovc Junction j lu in 12 eellmgrova A M KM eta v IS i im 9 I li 9 01 in s g S4I N 89 hxi U S IS K 1ft HOtl H IH 7.18 7 2H 730 r m .-i :ni ft 2" ft I ftO'i Mil 4 : t .12 I lit 487 4 22 12ft 4 If 400 4 Ml 4. Ml : 411 8 4ft 848 840 2s in 'i raw ling :tl in At' Krtanief t :il ti' 27 Melsi r 2iii inn Mlilillrburg its in :i Ban ret M in t Beavertnan Him 10 M AiiiiiiialmrK II 117 lull 1!hiiI 1 111" HIS Una M.Vhiri- 22 11 la WltKliet II m 11 Ml Hnmlli- H0 1121 I'lilntcrvlllt II'' 111 JMnitlsiitl 3 4ft. 1 1 ir I.i n lnt.iwn 8 47 11 117 LSWt StOW It O'aln Ntn'rl 8M 11 40 Lewistowu Junction. Train leaves Sunbury f 25 n rn, ar rives at Selinngrove 5 45 p m renins leave Lewistown Junction : 12 in, 10 13 iii, 1 10 0 in. lan p ni 5 -.2 in. 7 07 II Mi .in, for AlliHimi, Flttfhurs ami the Wt. for Itsltl ream! Washington 7 at s in 1 Ml. I 88 4 88 IWpnt K'T ( li 1 1 n( l l I it nml New YorkSHftv s in. 1 08 1 N 4 88 anil 1114 nn I'm Itsrrlnburit 4 41 h in anil ) l in Philadelphia & Erie R R Division. AND NORTH KRN CKM llAl. RAILWAY TmIhh leme Bttpbur) dally axeil banoaj : I gt in fur Krlc sii.l I ansmliilk'un 6 in h in lor Belltlnnt Kris un. I Dsnsndslirus let ii in inr i.ii. Hven, Tyrone anil the We', l lit i in fur Htlleltmta Ksoe Tyrone and Osnss. dalgns 54ti in lor kasnvoanil K.lmlrn v 2 pro 'or niiHuiniioii !amniy m V4S m for 1ock ItABtniiorl Kriv ii to! ('iinitriiliilu'iil Haven m i 9 ii i in fni i, m in. 9Mainl00ni (48pm lor wmucii- tHirra Slid llsrellon 7 to a hi 19 M a in, 2 on u nil t W p m tor Shsroo kin ami Mount Oarmel Sunday tiftft.i m lor Wllkaebsrre rrniiii iwivr HellQtgrnve Jnnetlon imvi k in. wvi-k Auyt sflivlne si hit delpbis 801. . in Ni-" York'.-. r.!i i iii Baltimore i tl p m Wa'Mustnn 4 to im 5S4 i oil' miiHi i rini.oii i i.i .0 2ii ui New York H a it) . Ilsim I : ift in WhuIiIiiUIoh 10 .16 p in stvpin, wei-k day srrlvlnv l I'hllsdelphls 4 80m iii. New ore '.2-1 H ll , ltnltliniire 2 HO fi in WaslilnKtnii t ' -i a ni Tfa'llli sbtl leave Snnlniry : 2 -.7 a ni dully striving si I'tillHrlel.llilu it r iii HHllimore II .iV s in WSflilogton 7 41 a in Net York V83 n in Weekday. 10:iM am Snn'tam. 7 An s in week iluja arrivlnir at IMillndrlphiii 11 4S am, New York (09 p in, lialtlmcru tij' a B, Ws-lilnaVin I 00 p in. 1 ft.v pm.wtek sari arriving ai PblUdalphli t 28 in. New York tf 40 i in, Hsillinure ft Oil m Wavhliiginn 7 Ift p iu TriiUiF ni... iiiil.ury at VftOamtnd ft 2ft and a r-j i nr., lor ItnrrlahurK, Philadelphia and Biilt I mora I H. WOOD, Oen'l Pass Agent I. B. UUTCU1NMON Uan'l Manavsr. 4 c- THJS DIETZ DRIVING LAMP It about as near perfection at 50 yean ol Lamp-Making can sttsln to. It bums kerosene, and gives s powerful, clesr, white light, snd will neither blow nor Jar out. When out driving with It the darkness sully keeps about two hundred feet ahead of your smartest horse. When you went the very best Driving Lamp to be hid. ask your dealer for (he "Dletz." Ws Issue a special Catstogue of this Lsmp, and, If you ever prowl around after nlght-fsH. It will Interest yon. Tit mailed free. . R.B.DraT3CO.,J 60 UlghtSt, New York. TlgtgtllgaH ns sage HTi MTEIT Ind Mat "J may be seen red by Address, TNI PATENT RECORD, Subscription to Tbc Patent Record 41.00 r annum. THE PACKER BICYCLE Is a model wheel, and nne that will oui-w ear any wheel on the mar kef REPAIRING ufall kinds neatly done J have spent a number of years al the business under an experienced instructor. Call and see before buying a bioyole, WALLACE TEATS, Globe Mills. Pa. IH Alii " i 'I- .'tl'i'.i f i 'L set T I . ii V I . r " ,r Wit AWAN ...lll"l' ll'' MJ - .J most effectiv n festive scene whe throwi by waxen candles. The light that heightens beauty's charm, that gives the finished touch to tbcdrawiiiK room or dining room, is the mellow glow of AhinilFT WAX CANDLES Sold in all colors ana suaoes to harmonize with any interior 1 hangings or decorations. Uanufactured by ... n P. All AA C mm . Kl INIIBHU U I. VV, For sale everywhere. REVIVO BESIOBEt VITALITY Made a Well Man of M3. inc. -y fujdnoii in uivnnrj 3T nrodooMtbaabovoreeultaln 30daya. ItacU powarf ullr and iulckly. Cures when all otbi m Oil tonngmsnwIUrasaln tbalr lost manhood, and old mm will mmr tbslr youthful vigor by ualng BEVITO. II quickly and surely restores Ncrroua dm Loat Vitality. Im potency. Nightly Eiulamoiu. Lost Power, railing Memory. Waatlnc Ulaeai. ia.auJ an sflkota of self abuse or cseetaaaA indlnrnitlon. which anata one for study, business or mam ago. II not only ourea by suiting at the seal of dlacMo.but Uagrast nerve toolo and blood boilder. bring log back the pink glow to pale etseeka and re storing lb Ore of yonth. ft warts off luBKilty and Consumption. Insist on having REvlTO, no ether. II can l carried In vest pocket. By roell 1.00 per package, or six for MAO. with a post tie written guarantee to ears or refund the money. Artrlce and circular free. Adilrena . Royal Medicine Co.MI" For wile by Middleburg Drug Co. ON SALE EVERYWHHRE. 3V IVvvoaX ComovV. 5 c PACKAGES. Wallace & CoTlew York City. Manga cly over p i 1 gajaw ItatawfaSai fU Iron L. I.. 130 jgtlV'CotmS ANoTaROaT IrBITATIONS ' lpRrralwsJ