| NOT LIKE | 5 OTHER MEN ! s o By Frederic ° Van Rensselaer Dey, £ J Author of **The llrothcrliood of Si- • ° leuce," "Th« yunlit» of » O Copyright, 1901, by Frederic Van o 0 Rensselaer Dey. O 9 i) do-- i ' —•.—+&—■e»- ••9 [Continued from last Week.] "Harrington," murmured I.isle, not heeding the Interruption, which, how ever, did not escape the keen eyes and shrewd surmise of the lawyer. "Then my true name Is Lisle Harrington, or is the name Lisle also false'/" "No; that name was given to you in this room when you were a year old. You had not been named. It was nec essary that you should be supplied with one in order that It might be in serted in the will. Your father's moth er was a Lisle, and for that reason and also because the name Is not indicative of sex you were called Lisle." "Thauk you. Now, sir"—tremulously —"can you tell me about my mother?" "Yes." replied the lawyer. lie might have been a stone image for all the feeling he manifested, and yet he must have realized the heart eagerness with which Lisle asked the question. "Will you do so, Mr. Maxwell? I would like to have you tell me as much as you can about her without question on my part." "I will tell you all that it Is necessary for me to mention. Whatever further information you require 1 think it best that you should obtain from her in per son." Lisle leaped to her feet in great ex citement. Her agitation was so strong that for a moment sl\e could not utter a word. At last, however, she sank back upon the chair and more to her self than to the lawyer murmured: "She lives! My mother lives! Thank God!" "Yes," said the lawyer calmly, ap parently unconscious of the effect pro duced by his statement, "your mother lives. Her home is not very far from here. I will give you the address when you leave me togo to her. which 1 sup pose Is your intention, but"— "My intention!" —"but 1 hope that you will hear me through first. lam very glad that you are here and that It Is your evident in tention to atone as far as you can for the great wrong that she has suffered. 1 want to say to you that your father did his wife a deep injustice, and in consequence she has been a great suf ferer. But she has borne it bravely and without permitting the world to know of her sorrow. Sue is still a j beautiful woman, she enjoys good health, and she has never despaired of | your return. She has always insisted that your father would send you to her : when he saw death beckoning to him. i She has never looked for his return, j Now, Miss Barrington"—Lisle started at the name so calmly uttered—"the hour is still early. As your guardian. I regard It as my duty to advise you to goto your mother at once. Such busi ness as we have to transact can be at tended to at another time. This gen tleman, I have no doubt, will accom pany you." Tes. at once—at once! I thank you. sir. In my mother's name as well as in mine. Will you go now, Craig?" "Ready. Lisle," replied Craig, but he did not turn his head, and In another moment they were in the street, ami the card upon which Dauiel Maxwell had written the address was tightly held In Lisle's firm grasp. The distance that they had to travel was uot great, and It was soon cover ed, and during the walk not a word was spoken betweeu them until they had mounted the steps which led to the ; door of the house wherein Lisle was , boru. Then Craig Thompson put out one hand and detained his companion, i "Walt, Lisle." he said. "There is | something that I want to say to you be- \ fore you ring the bell. It Isn't fair that you should have too many sudden sur- j prises In oue night, and I want to pre- i pare you for another that Is to come." "What Is it, Craig?" asked Lisle. "Do you remember that night at ! your home In the west when you sang i to me while I sat on the veranda?" "Y'es. I remember." "Do you remember what you sang?" "Y'es; Asher's 'Alice.' " "And how It affected me?" "Yes." "Do you remember what I said to you about the soug at that time?" "Not distinctly. What was it?" "I told you that your voice sounded like my sister's. I told you that she used to sing It to me. 1 told you that I liked the song particularly well be cause its name was the same as her name Alice. Do you remember. Lisle?" "Yes; 1 remember now." "Well, little woman, don't you see what I mean?" "No. Craig. What do you mean?" "This: When I went away from here 25 years ago, that sister and my worth less self were all there was left of our family. I went away, an outlaw, with state's prison staring me In the face, and It broke her .**art. 1 wrote to her, and she begged me to return, and after ueven years I came, but I came in the night, for 1 was afraid to appear In the daylight, and I went to her house." "Why do you tell me this now,Craig?" "Be patient. I.isle. I went to her house. I had sent her word that I was roming. 1 had been two hours with aer and was on the point of taking my departure when her husband appeared. My sister was In my arms. I was kiss ing her, and she was clinging to me, begging me not to go. Her husband had never seen me. He misunderstood what he saw. Hr struck me with his cane, and I was knocked senseless ty'hen I recovered, Alice was Insensible on the floor, and he had disappeared. I carried her to the sofa, saw that she had only fainted, kissed her and went away more than ever convinced that the greatest service I could do for her was to keep out of her life forever. I never once thought that her husband would so misjudge her that she would have no opportunity to explain my Identity. I did not know him; I had never seen him; I knew name; that was all. That night when he struck me I did not see his fa'ce. The blow fell before I knew that he was in the room. Lisle, the name of my sister's husband was Philip Barrington." "Craig!" "Hush, Lisle; It is true! Your moth er is my sister. Her name was Alice Craig. My name is Thomas Craig. I am your uncle. Come, now; let us go In. God has given us the right this night to make one woman happy." "Two, Craig—l shall always call you that If you are my uncle —two, for I am happy!" A moment later they passed Into the house together. CHAPTER XVII. "NOT LIKE OTHEB WOMEN EITHER! " ' HE scene chancres oil. ;' nioro to Nevada lo (lie ranchlmuse r where I.isle passed the years of her youth. Gathered upon tlie veranda uear where the low win dows of the library opened from it were Lisle and her mother, Thomas O. Thomas of Kansas City and his daugh ter and, sitting upon the balustrade, with his long legs dangling over It, !v "Conic, now; let vs go in." Craig Thompson. A year had passed since that same party, with the exception of Mrs. Bar rington. was assembled there —a year that had meant much to Lisle and In fact to them all. Craig was Just tho same old Craig, not a whit altered ex cept by the disappearance of the beard, J which he had uot again permitted to j grow, and the fact that he wore his ■ hair shorter than formerly. In other | respects he was the same. lie bad ro- ) sutned his western manner and habits j with liis western dress, and. if the j truth lie told. Lisle liked him better so. I There was something Incongruous and ) unfamiliar about him while he wns in ■ the east. and.after the trip abroad, during which he accompanied Lisle 1 and her mother, they ail elected tore- j turn to Nevada, at least for the sum- j mer. and Krua and her father were In- | vlted to Join the party. Regarding the reunion of mother and daughter at that time one year ago, when, with Craig. I.isle had left the presence of her lawyer to call upon her mother, very little need be said. To look upon them now. side by side, one seemed to lie the counterpart of the other, with the difference wrought by years alone, for. although Lisle had re- i sembled her father, she certainly was "the image of her mother." The two ranches were combined into one, and both were under the manage ment of Craig Thompson, who had lived the free western life so long that he preferred it to any other and who also clung to his western name with the same tenacity with which he ad hered to habits which had become sec ond nature to him. "Tell you what. Lisle," he said when the conversation lagged somewhat, "people who live in the great cities of the east don't know what life is. You can't live to please yourself in such a place, no matter how hard you try, and out here you can't help it. The only times in my life when 1 feel Independ ent of all creation are when 1 have got my legs a-straddle of a good horse, with a foiled riata on the pommel of my saddle, a pair of forty-fours in my belt, a eool breeze from the peaks of the Siei ias tilling my lungs and my eyes roaming over a bunch of cattle that streti lies away Just as far as 1 can see. Thai's the life for me. and I'm going to live it to the end of my days. You and your mother can go poking round the world seeing things all you want to, L>ut I'll stay here and see that the bank accounts don't dwindle and keep my account with the Lord straight, too, for 1 don't believe 1 could do It in the east," "You ought to marry, Mr. Thornp »on," said Erna. "You wouldn't be so lonely when Lisle and her mother are I way." "Well, I don't know about that. May te you're right, and maybe you're nrong I can't tell, though, what I fvould do if you were a little older or I Aere a little younger. Perhaps in that tase I'd as!; you to marry me." "It might be that the difference In >ur ages would not be objectionable to lie." said Erna mischievously. "You might ask me anyhow. It is the only way to find out." "No. it isn't. There is another." "What is It?" "Never to ask at all. You see, Erna 1 don't want you. r never would ha contented anywhere unless I was boss, and If you made me stand around the way you do your dad I'd be the unhap piest fellow out of jail, and anyhow you're spoke for, so Tom tells me." "I might give the other fellow the mitten for your sake," she retorted. "Then I wouldn't have you anyway," he answered. "A gal that'll go back on one fellow for another will never be true to anybody, anil I wouldn't give 2 cents for her—not if she was the prettiest critter this side oi' kingdom come. Come on, Tom. Let's go over to the corral and see the horses." As they moved away Mr. Thomas murmured in an undertone: "What a lovely woman Lisle Is"' "You bet!" replied Craig. "Tonight reminds me of the first time that I ever saw her." continued Thom as. "She was a man then, but even then I noticed that she was not like other men." "No, and now she ain't like other women either. She's got enough of both in her to make the finest woman on top of Cod's green earth, and that's what she is." After that they changed the subject and talked horse. TIIK END. Cnrloulf !«•« In l.nnti nnjj«*. It Is curious to note at so late n pe riod as 15.50 the prothesis of "n" to which a word beginning with a vowel was subject when it was preceded by a participle ending In "n;" hence, "In England," pronounced "In Ningland." Such oddities as "a nele"—"an eel"— may thus l>e explained bv supposing not that the "n" of the article has shift ed its position to the substantive, but that it has simply dropped away from Its double. We may conclude also that "Coodby," the present representative of "God botii" (Anglice, "Cod b'wee''), was unknown to London ears in l, r »BU. A Frenchman would not have failed to tell us if he had heard anybody saying "Goude bal." Some persons think that the two forms have different etymologies, but it is more probable that the older form corrupted into the later when the pro nunciation of "b'wee" was found trou blesome and the etymology was lost sight of. Such corruption would be fa cilitated by confusion with the expres sions "good day," "good night;" hence the change of "Cod" to "good," which puzzles so many.—Notes and Queries. Little # I Neil b, r* a ALBERT Fowler I ross I C*n>\rrlvhU 1901% by A. S. Itichardtum Crowds lined the streets from curb stone back to the very buildings, and as far almost as the eye could reach this dense mass of humanity, men, wo men and children, cheered and waved parasols, hats, handkerchiefs and min iature flags. The great Labor day parade passed slowly along, and parties of pi nickers filled the street cars on other thorough fares. Fathers, husbands and sons were where every son of toll should be on such a day, In the ranks of the labor men on parade. A few were working In miniature shops erected as floats representing some particular lii of In dustry and drawn along the streets by gayly decked horses, but the multitude were In the ranks, each in his respec- j tlve union, doing his little t<> swell the showing In the army of the laboring man, the bone and sinew of a great j nation. Ted Gardner, as usual, was in Hue. { Ted's friends always looked for him on one of the huge floats that preceded the j various unions and labor organizers representing the different branches of mechanical art. For six years Ted had i been with the Westchester company, and there was not a man of the five hundred and more employees who j earned his livelihood within the walls i but hud a cheery word for Ted. Since j the last Labor day parade, how* ver, to j his most Intimate friends Ted had not , appeared to be Just as cheerful as in i the old days. Moreover, he was doing i too much night work at home. "It's enough to work your eight hours j each day, Ted," said Fltson to him the morning of the parade, "and put In your evenings knocking around." "Not tho kind that knocks around. Fits," replied Ted. "Go over and see the girl, then, my boy," responded Fltson as a parting shot. "That's better still." "Good advice," muttered Gardner to himself, "but I quit that a year ago." The Westchester employees always met after the Labor day ceremonies and had an excursion of their own in a general, good, old fashioned picnic style. This year Ted had decided to take charge of the two floats that came from the Westchester shops and see them safely returned. lie was not go ing to the picnic. On one float, showing a small marine engine and three benches with the same number of men busily nt work, was Ted attired in working clothes and doing nothing in particular, but moving about. Ills mind was evidently on the other float ahead, for he continually glanced In that direction. On this float was a genuine, if small, naphtha launch, and to add to the realistic effect three la dies of the office staff and as many men from the same department, be comingly attired in boating costumes, were lounging about on the cushions. The small engine in the craft was not working, but the naphtha was occa sionally lighted to keep steam up for the purpose of blowing the ear split ting whistle at stated intervals. It was not the float itself that at tracted the attention of young Gard ner, but little Nell Fowler, one of the three ladies. Nell was the oldest daughter of big Joe Fowler, for many years foreman of the Westchester works, and a man who thought well of Ted and had kept his eye on the boy in the early days, for "there's some thing more than ordinary in that cuss." he would say. But Joe contracted diph theria during the epidemic in the shops In 1889 and was the third of the eight men carried off that never to be forgot ten spring. The company did "something hand jome," as the boys put it, for each of the bereaved families, and in addition in Fowler's case took into the office at a fair salary his daughter Nell, a young woman of some twenty summers. The day of Joe's death Ted had met Nell walking down to the works to deliver the message. She was weep ing. He had never spoken to her be fore, but he suspected her mission and, raising his cap politely, said feel ingly: "Please, Miss Fowler, I'll tell them at the works. Don't you go down there." Nell hesitated u moment, looked ap pealingly at him, then "Thank you," she said. "Y'ou are very kind." Quick ly she retraced her steps, and Ted, watching the retreating figure for a moment, sauntered off to break the news to the office staff. Yes, he remembered all that as though it were yesterday, yet It was almost three years ago. Labor day of that year Nell was not at the picnic, but on the next holiday she was there, and on that very day he had told her. It needed no telling, for Nell had known long ago, as every woman does, and she wns proud of it, but she sat silently picking a wild flower to pieces as he spoke, and finally when he asked that she give up the office and come with him to a new home of their own Bhe rose to her feet and moved away. Ho had followed. From then on she seemed to change. At least Ted thought 80. Again he had spoken and this time got an answer. It was "No." If she held any love for him, it was hidden deep somewhere beyond the vision of human eyes. "If it's on account of your mother, Nell," Ted ventured, "why, of course, she'll live with us. I want her too. Why, bless you, Nell," he went on with n cheerful smile, "1 believe I want her as bad as I do you." But Nell only shook her head, and Aay after day, as Ted passed the office, he watched her bending over the desk, and she seemed to be slipping farther and farther away from him and his love. All this flashed through his mind as the parade moved on, and he glanced from the cheering crowds to the little tigure in the float ahead. The procession was now near the end of the line <>f march and had Stopped temporarily at the bridge over the river, which rushed past the south entrance to the park, where the final review and sports were to take place In the small launch ahead the occu pants were taking advantage of tin stop to change seats. The engineer was starting the flow of naphtha under the boiler to produce more steam for a final screeching of the little wliistl as they entered the grounds. Nell had moved down to the stern of the boat. Before she was seated, how ever, there came a deafening report and a blaze of light, followed by tin screams of women. Ted heard and saw it all. For a second he did not move, could not, but it was only for a second. Then In leaped over Into the crowd; In anothei instant he was climbing up the burn ing float. The naphtha had exploded. The horses, almost mnd with fright, dashed off »t n wild pace. Men, woiti I'M and children rushed and tumbled over each other, screaming in their frenzy to escape deutli beneath the hoofs of the horses. Tod reached the seat an O*<> *v » II Seed corn will retain its vitality nt least twenty-live years, perhaps much longer. Thrashing machines have put more mortgages on the farms than they ever helped to remove. Georgia raises more peaches than any other state and Is not through planting peach trees yet. There is an authenticated record of ninety-six sheep being killed by a sin gle lightning stroke in Colorado. The granger who goes to church In a rubber tired surrey ought to give at least §23 toward the parson's salary. Toms, spuds, cukes and cants are the accepted abbreviations for tomatoes, potatoes, cucumbers and cantaloupes. A lot of grass fed steers from North Dakota averaging 1,000 pounds each were sold in Chicago last August at 51U7.D0 per head. Upon the basis of a cord of shellbark hickory wood being worth $0 as fuel, the wood of the Lombardy poplar la worth only $2.40. We know of one man who by letting his wife have all the poultry money re ceived a nice fur coat last year as a Christmas present. The nut growers of the Pacific coast are to have a convention in the near future. It Is safe to infer that they Will have a cracking good time. The people of the United States have in their possession one-fourth of all the gold there Is in the world and about one-fourth of all the good things in the world also. The average hay crop of the year Is placed by the department of agricul ture at 1.45 tons per acre. Oregon shows up with the largest crop and Pennsylvania with the smallest. In Galicia the wage of the farm la borer has been so reduced that he Is starving to death on a pittance of from li to 10 cents a day. Men are justified in fighting before it comes anywhere near this. A friend writes us that if Canada thistles are cut each year on the 9tli and 10th of July and the oth and oth of August It will finish them up. The thistles which we have known could not be disposed of In this manner, not being subject to the almanac. Recent tests made by tho lowa ex periment station on the value of con dimental foods In the fattening of stock are adverse to the use of such foods. Some brands of prepared food special ly rich in protein and free from dope were fed to advantage, however. Nasal CATARRH In all its etathere g *o# #"«-rtVER Ely's Cream Balm I* " V M *r« away a cold in t lie li. & Co. McLain, G. L. Myers, Geo. A. Miller, R. S. O'Brien, Mrs. Kathryn Peters, A. M. Pursel wni»n * 112 THE TROUT SEASON. With flic trout K»-;»SOII in full win it in iuteresting to nott- tli> <1 it* ■ it devices which the crafty ti -1 >• rn in lias invented to catch tie wit . trmit Though they i»r»- as ingtn >u ; l in be conceived, it mast !>»* r1 that all the trout an not yt 1 And another consoling t;»tnr> 1 late season fisherman is that r 'r ,? cannot he ma to bite. Early season fi-ln rtn- n np and tin oM standby,the black gnat, hav» not in • n neglected by the old fly fi-LN IMM II These Hies will (»• very |Mipular • irll n two weeks. Fishermen still cling t.> tie • M style, altered to »uit their tast« s, <,f baiting with a two-foot b »'ler an i tl> three flies, the brown leading, tv n tin black or white, MMfliag to ti,. traditions governiug the sport F iug this season has been ni » n iy and it meets tie n>-t d as Both If - can. It cannot be soaked if it -ray in the water for 20 years. Whil» it pliable, it will not wrap around ob stacles for the reason that if 1- sn t!i and will not cling. Thi« is wb.tt makes the line so popular. Automatic reels have not tiius t*r proved as popular as it was exj • d they would. Old fisherman se* 111 to I suspicious of rhem and cling to the improved simple reel. The market has many varieties of good, simple roels. IVSQRE LIVES ARE SAVED ...BY rSING... Dr. King's New Discovery, —FOR Consumption, Toughs and Colds Than By All Other Throat Aid Lung Remedies Combined. This wonderful m. dicine po C !tiv«"LY cures Consumption, Coughs. Co"JS. Bronchitis, Asthma, P'ejmonin, H F Fever, Pleurisy, LaGrippo, Hoar n Sore Throat, Croup and ' Cough. NO CURE. NO PAY. Price 50c. & sl. Trial Settle 7rz: PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, TIME TABLE In Effect May, 25, 1902- A.M. Scran:on(H4lH)iv »3M i I'i »it I'ltmon " 14 FL' »o 5A I" * A. M P. >1 P M Wllke«harre. .. lv 510 V> .'».'>•> Plym'th Kerry " IW 4a T - ">-■ 18 «I I N antlcoke •' LE •" 3H "1 17 I >l ( .can ».JU.. ..." II tC; 3 J,I # ...... Wai.wall»L>en.. " II LII r> IL fl 4T I NE.'MIIWLI ar II M T4- T W A.*. f.M Potuville LV LI ►> Hazleton '' I- •- - • • . Tuinhi"ken " ILL "■ Kern (Men " ll' I ■ Koek <*len .... "I NEBRO|«I'K .. ar I+» ... .. < at AW l»-A * Nescopeck... . lv | I Is ;!l •• 4- 7 • Creasy • 13' 11 3 " ' K»L>Y Kerry... ' t 1 4 11 4T» I 4 UA 7 a E. Hlu.,met urii " -'4' II 4l> 7 '!• Catawlssa. LV » 6 11.'.R 4 i. 7;U south Danville " » 14 la I 4 ; Sunl'ury ar V 3.'. U4" 1 •*» ■< 1". - P M. P. M I - M Sontiury lv » 4'J JL- 1* I '4 I.<-WLl'liur»F ar •') 1' I 4' • * Milton •• LO 1 ' •» 3-' 7 Wllllanisi»>rt . -• 11 U<> I 41 IM'kliaieo... " 11 M* 7 .1 KetniVd - A.M. <1 - Kane " S IK IL'.M. P.M. I l.iK-k Mavrn..lv ;!» 1" > liellefonte ....ar 1 llt TLLWI , 3 -•>' I* • 'leartleld.... " & >* * 4-> Plttuburg,... " o ,V» lu A. M. P. M P M. P M .suntmry IT 960 I 1 '• * - HarrlohurK ar 11 3" » ■> I > #■ P. M. P. M P. >T \ M Ptiilaitel|>hla .arsi 3IT t•„ 1 * Haltlmore "J3 11 • M ♦ Wa»htn*ton ... "{ 4 lo 7 li U lit 41 __ M Snntiury lv >|N I«> 112 a I ■ LRF-wlwtown lc. ar 1 L i I •• Plttabum f > 64 SI" 4i . A~M P. M P. M. p VI IlarrlstmrK.... lv 11 45 .t» .7 L L P.I \ M A M I M HLTTTTIURK ar ' ' • V P. M.F P M \ M V M Plttiuri( LV 71' 1» <*J W•" .A M A M I* »L llarrlahaiK ar ON 4 : 3I" AM A M PHtoliurir lv * P >1 l«fill"*n JV ••• 7 ..... SUDt>ury ar W ■J' I FC' . P. M. A M A M A M WnrhlnKton.. . lv 14 7 I Hal 11 MORE ' II «> 4 . <• I lit Philadelphia... - 11 »> 4P A M A M VM. P"I HarrlHtiurir.... lv JJV 7 L. Sunbury ar »M • ' P.M. V M V PlllHl.ury IN :>a 4.S ... " Clearfield.... " i ' Plilllpsliurc. . " 4 411 1 - TJ r«>ne " 7I» ■> I- I. IWllefontc.. •• Sit. ... I <«• iMMNa ar •li .... P. 81. A MA M P « Krle. . lv | .'I .... Kane •' » 4-> 1 ■ " ItenoTo .. - 11 ' 4 LOOK Haven...." U -• ' U - AM P M WiniaiiiHiMirt.. 2-» " 4 Miltun -| - A »17 IA. 4 T Soiihur>-. ar 3 'J4 W». " A - M. AMP M »' M Sunhury lv F T; 4. J F Koutb l»aiiTille • 7 LI •« 17 T.'atawuiwa " 7 3*4 lo 31. . K Hlot>Ml>l>urK.. " 7 ..: T» t. T>L>y Kerry ..." 7 4." »L" 4: Creasy " 7 I" W ■> NEEEOPEEK " *OA 11 M o > fl T AM am P Mr ■ UMNTM IN 7 M - - Neiw«l|l«-ek lv « 'II Ktfk 11 T 4 HaxleUiti " WIN II ■ T " Pottvvllie " IN 1 • AM AM P M P M NCWOFEOK .....lv - HP'.' 11 "6 Wa|.walien..ar Sl' II AT' Moranaqwa .... " * tl Nantlci.TE " •> • 11 M F " P M Ply M l h K erry ■ I »«« 18 "I Wilk«harr« " W Itt |.' L' 4 AM P M P >1 R M Plttxloiu I'A II) ar WFW la 4 ■••• ■ HAMILTON " " 10 Oft I '.'l .AT » ) Weekday*. t Pally 112 Ki** IWIM. Pullman P;trl«r ar D Slr. T iinK ( »'« run <■ throuah tralni« tflween '-..R'T'URI W <■»«■>«) • and Krlf L-eiwern sunhnry an ' Ph»l and Wa«hlnnti>n and between Harr I •<. ■ P L. urn and the Went ItrMMrMMMMtaiM ' 1 " x -' / /<. HUTCMIMSOX, ■' B n OOD (itn'l Mauntjn OM' AM L' 1 T ACkAWISS4 ■\il. r: •»A D " »:f.< - iWSPJ'Ri; r»FVISION M A. M. A *l. r. M Si-* >»rit, v jm> ... ww .... IIIIIIHI. il M **-. .... , at -i Hl® Srrnti tori \. m \ « v *r t- M Hfll. vii. . r»y|..f • I . Ww.mifi.' :>m ion 1£ ««1 ... • Wilk»"*-M*rr>- ,r t« ii l«» ?'# 7MJ Wllk.« Hurr' .... i* ? l'» l«» *.« ««u Kir»a»l..ri Iv 7ii W«• IH *.« I'lynwmtli J»ri' I'iyiii-.utti :» n a*, in* \\«R I . I I -.1 r; a (X! a ."i •i r '• A. H. A v| 112. <4 Nurthiinif*rl •*».£» IWimi tl m Ji 1 l»»ll*ttH». . K57 in lt» ill *4 I ... ..... 7 I*l ill Mi %Jl $ rf* Kii|*rt...... . Klo>iiM*l«iri 7 "i» Kill 111 IM ►>»•> :-- i" m ifi *is l.lhn> HWff ;s f!«>« fS * Willow <*rrry » fli 47 . <#» * M WMtMll»y :ji na lluntn ir < 11 m in 7(P \VI!k»-#-K«rrt ... ur #Hi 13 H Ito 7 Wilk»-« Karrt ...... Tv *•» II SS# 7 Klnjplon. ., tv > • 13 w I** ?v KrnaHl,. - * i n 7ti Kurtjr lort f!nm .... ««7 Wjromtnt J ST* QW m 7( W*xt l'ltt.«fiiti '.»!•' . 117 :XI -nv t u»liarin i \ • »H BN IM 7W Pitt«t..n 431 DM Ihir> M »U |J| MM liaeMwaaM IS #4l t* Taylor Z I•' iWI M»-ll»-\iw.. . . 1.17 ' 115 .... Nrntnlon. .. . AT 9 ti. Bti lAt *#> \ vt r m.» * S»T»nlon ... ....1* whi fX*i .... I W New Vork »r IX> SO •• P. X xt-ran10n...... ..... it 1 .... II tw A. a. Knlfittn ....ur .... 7% *• 7MI »!•_?,»i nron lorunitirtnr T F I I. \ ItK K. T W. I m. li*B. !«u|»Tillti*ri C'NRLISH' SIMM'S AND THE Proof KIIIIImm- Boots A SPECIALTY. SCHATZ. IIDMETHISG KEW! A. RollatJl© TI3 SHOP Tor alt kind of Tin Roofing Spoutlne and Canaral Job Work. Stoves. Heaters. Plane**, Furnaces, sto. PRICES THE LOIIEST! QTILITT THE BEST! JOII\ IIIXSON NO. 116 E. FRONT BT. PEGQ The Coal Dealer SELLS WOOD AND COAL AT -344 Ferry Street