The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, May 31, 1899, Image 7

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    J
"In Union
There is Strength
True strength consists in iht union, tht
harmonious working together, of every
part of the human organism. This strength
can never be obtained if the blood is im
pure. Hood's Sarsapariffa is the standard
prescription for purifying the blood.
A. M. TriKKt, rmgg.t, flholhTvllle, Ind.,
Myi "Hall's ("nmrrh Cure gtms the lit of
aatl.fartlnll. 'n rt plenty of testimonials,
a It rnirs srerr one who takes It." Drugglata
vU Ik "Ho.
think PWa Cnra for (Vnumntlnn Is
thaonly mtrtlnlnx Tnr Couith-.liKiiiixl'lBtl-AliD.
Hprtngurld, Ilia., Oct. 1, 14.
In the Inst three ycnrs the United
Statos hna sold abroad It,300,000,0u0
more than It tins bought.
Baamty Is Blood Deep.
Clean Wood means a clean akin. No
beauty without rt. C'aacnreta, Candy Cathar.
tio clran your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up tbe laiy liver and driving all im.
ruritica from tha body. Begin today to
banish pimples, boila, blotches, blackheads.
I
I
VLaacaret, beauty for ten cents. All drug.
I gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 60c.
W'ncen In thn livnmntlva flnnnHmnnl
of the Kngllsh and Welsh railway llnea
Inrrensert ft 9
. half year; and the coat of coal was
augmented by 18 per cent.
The Tlnltlmore and Ohio Ttallronil, at
the request of numerous liiislrws or
ganizations of Rnltlmore and I'hllniliM
phla, has arranged for a ten days Ktnp
over at each of those cities undi-r the
usual procedure of the passenger dr
posltlng the ticket with the ticket
ten days Wop-ovors nt Washington,
Baltimore and Philadelphia.
W Wlnlnw'sPnrthlngPrrnn forrhllilren
tvetl ig, nnitansthegtims.rv1urcHlnHnmmn
no a. u8 pain, cures wind colics a outtlo.
European Slant.
Not from a letter Just received
from av yiservlng American who no
ticed thw signs on a trip from Liv
erpool to Naples. In Liverpool a sign
rcndli : "Shaving, Id.; shaving, with
clet n ter, 2d." In the Anglo-Amer-lear
bat, at the Grand Hotel, In Rome,
the popular American drink thus
masquerade on a sign: "Hnndsome
Cooler, 1 lire." Travelers on a train
from Paris to Rome were Informed by
placard that "Travelers may not put
the! hea and hands from the win
dow In case of accident." To what
straits a nation with no W In Its lan-
gua,. Is reduced Is shown by theatri
cal posters on the walls and fences
about Naples which stare one In the
face, reang: "Teatro Mercadante,
Etc., Ek' Etc., Amletto, 6 attl., etc,
tc, O. Bhnklspare." Shades of the
depat'ed William ! New York Times.
Sea Nvater for Street Sprinkling.
The Merchants' Association of San
Francisco, says the Popular 8clence
Monthly, has been trying the experi
ment of s;.. Inkling a street with sea
water, and finds that such water binds
the dirt together between the paving
stones, so that when It Is dry no loose
dust Is formed to be raised by the
wind; that sea water does not dry so
quickly as fresh water, so that It has
been claimed when salt water has Veen
used one load of It Is equal to three
loads of fresh water. The salt water
which is deposited on the street ab
sorbs moisture from the air during the
night, whereby the street Is thoroughly
moist during the early morning and
has the appearance of having been
freshly sprinkled.
BACKACHE is a symptom.
S6mething makes the backache and that something
requires attention or the backache can never be perma
nently stopped. " I suffered for years with a long list of
troubles," writes Mrs. C. Klenk, of Wells, Minn. (Box 151), to
Mrs. Pinkham, "and I want to
thank you for my complete re
covery. LydiaE. Pinkham 's Vege
table Compound is a wonderful
medicine for women.
" I had severe female complaints
causing terrible backache and ner
vous prostration ; was dizzy most of
the time, had headache and such a tired feeling. I now have
taken seven bottles of your Compound and have also ttsed the
Sanative Wash and feel like a new woman. I must say I never
had anything help me so much. I have better health than I
ever had in my life. I sleep
day without feeling tired. I
frightened and sent for the doctor; and he said that it was for
tunate for me that it came away. I got quite well after that
and have your Compound alone to thank for my recovery."
Multitudes of women suffer constantly with backache. Other
grateful multitudes have been relieved of it by Mrs. Pinkham's
advice andmedicine.
"Clasnlineiis Nas Pride,
ban Sensa Dictafss tha usa of
APOLIO
Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Font-Kane,
A'powdar to shake Into your ahosat rests
the feet. Cures Corns, bunion", Hwoll'n.
Bore, Hot, Callous, Itching, Sweating Feel
and Ingrowing Kails. Allen's Foot-Ease
makes new or tight shoes easy. At all drug-
Sifts and shoe stores, 75 ots. Ham pie mailed
ltfcE. Adr's Allen 8. Olmstoad. Leltoy, M.Y.
Late advices from the Niger says the
deserters from the French regiments
nre constantly arriving nt Ilo, Thty
allege ns their rpnson for leaving the
service that tliey got no pay.
Rdneat Tonr Bowels With Cnsearar.
Candy Cathartlo, core constipation forever.
10o,io. It G. O.O. fall, drugglata refund money
The Wisconsin Legislature has for
bidden the use of living rooms for
manufacturing purposes.
Ko-To-Bae for fifty Cents,
Guaranteed toooetonablt cure, makes wenk
men strong, blood pure. 600,11. AU druggists.
TH3 'GUIDES'' OP INDIA.
A Famous and Spleavded Corps Tn
Regimental Spirit.
Before 1896 our frontier post was
Martian "Mardnn, where the Guldos
are." Here, ever since its foundation,
that famous and splendid corps has
been quartered in tho Intervals of
campaigns which have consistently
added to the luster of Its record, says
O. W. Steevens in the London Mall.
The only corps in India, except the
Gurkha battalion, which has pesma
nent quarters, the Guides have made
Mardan less of a station than a regi
mental home. Here are Its family
heirlooms the mess-walls covered
with heads of buffalo and ibex, ante
lope and mountain sheep, with ban
nors taken from the enemy, and queer
Greco-Buddhist statuary excavated
out of the neighboring hills. Here is
the regimental cemetery full now
and overflowing Into a new one and
an arch and little garden tardily
created by government to the mem
ory of the handful of the corps who
died at post round Cavagnarl In Ka
bul. Also the little swimming bath
In the officers' garden, the fort with
sentries of mnny types here a Sikh,
there an Afrldl, a Gurkha, a Rajput,
a Dogra for "God's Own" Is composed
of the pick of all the fighting racos
of India. In enormous long white
trousers Sepoys and Sowars walk
placidly about their home and the
home of their fathers; for the fight
ing native puts down his young son
for the Guides as you might at home
for the Travelers. You come across
a native officer of forty-two years'
service straight away to before the
mutiny a smiling little old gentle
man, whose dyed beard only Just
matches the mahogany of his skin.
He regrets, politely, that the Guides
were not able to appear at Omdurman,
anil remarks, as an Incentive to my
future efforts, that he himself saw a
war correspondent killed at Landakat.
Every officer or man you meet has
the air of a gentleman taking his ease
in his own house. Mardan Is the con
crete epitome of the spirit that makes
a regiment tho only satisfactory
translation I ever met of the words
esprit do corps.
Bolldlned Spirits for Fuel.
A new Idea In candles has been
evolved by a German chemical manu
facturer. It Is simply a mass of solid
ified spirits pressed into cylindrical
form and distributed in round tin
boxes. The solid spirits burn readily
and need no wick to make them appli
cable for heating or cooking purposes.
Tho flame can be extinguished like
that of a chaflng-dlsh lamp, aftei
which the little surface spirits, which
became liquefied by the heat of the
flame, resume their hard and waxy
consistency In a few minutes.
WEARINESS
OF
BACKACHE
well at night, and can work all
give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound all the
credit, for I know it has
cured me of all my
troubles. I would not
do without your reme
dies for anything."
Mrs. E. Furton, of
Meade, Mich., writes:
"Two years ago I was
troubled with constant
backache and
headache and
was very nerv
ous. I resolved
to try your medi
cine and took two
sq bottles of Lydia
E. Pinkham's
V wsaJ Vegetable Com
V T pound, and on taking
' I the third a tumor was
I expelled. I was a little
Dirt's Nae Konssty.
Cora-
I CHILDREN'S C0LUMNrj
The Pirate foodie.
Once there was aTlrate Pood In,
And he sailed tha briny sees
From the land of Tnnkne Doodle
Houtliward to tha Cnrlbkeus,
Ilo would boast with tales outlandish,
Of his valor a-ad mnoivnt
And his cmlnss ho would brandish
With a tearful plrato frown.
80 ferocious was his mnnner '
All bis crew looked on, nghnil
And his sable plrnte banner
Floated from his pirate mast
He reiterated proudly
Naught had potter to make him qnnll;
Yet when thuiulor roared too loudly
He would turn a trllle pale.
And he turned a trllle paler
When there enmo a sudden squalli
For this funny UMlo sailor
Was ridiculously email.
And whene'er s storm portendod
He'd betake himself below.
80 much foar and color blondod
Did a pirate ever show?
Carolyn Wolls, in St. Kleholns.
An Indoor Ontno.
A very jolly game is the royal em
bassador. The children sit in a circle,
oue of them having been chosen as
leader. The leader, having prepared
some little "horns" of paper that can
bo attached to tbe heads of the players,
like waving pinnies, begins by address
ing to the boy or girl stated on his
left in the circle a speech, which all
the players must Repeat after him, word
for word, on pain of receiving tbe
name of horned embassador instead of
that of royal embassador, which all
hold in right of the game. The speech
is as follows:
"Good morning, royal embassador
always royal. I.tlie royal embNssa
dor always royal come from his
royal majesty always royal (indicat
ing his right hand neighbor) to tell
you that his eagle has a golden beak."
The second and following players
repeat this formula, and when any one
fails a paper horn is pinned on his
head for each blttuder, and in the fol
lowing round, instead of saying, "I.
the royal embassador always royal,"
be says, "I, the one (two or three, ac
cording to the number of horns ho has
received) horned embassador always
horned, " etc.
By the same rule, when speaking to
the. wearer of any horn or horns, in
stead of saying, "Oood day, royal em
bassador always royal," it is neces
sary to say, "Good day, one (or more)
horned embassador always horned."
At each f114wiug ronnd the leader
adds and the others repeat after him n
new quality, to that mentioned as
possessed by the king's eagle such
a, for instance, brazen claws, dia
moud eyes, silver plumes, etc The
last act of tins game is tho paying of
forfeits in proportion to the number
of horns that have been distributed.
Treutou (N J.) American.
Dorothy's Caller.
Nobody wout to the door. Ilat-tnt-tat,
rat-tat-tat, again atid again little
Dorrit heard it. Hhe began to feel
the "Hdgets" creeping up the spine
of her back, she told Tuvtoiae. But
what did Tortoise care? Tbe fidgets
might ci eop up little Dorrit's back and
clear down again, and Tortoise would
only lie on tha soft, fur rug ami purr
suoozily.
Bat-(at-tut! It sonndetl distinct
and imperative. It must be at the
back kitchen door. Nora must be
asleep or gone ofY somewhere.
"Oh, my sttzl If I could only go
to the door!" fretted little Dorothy,
"Somebody's there a-tryiug to come
in and make a call, and they'll think
my mother isn't polite. Idon't know,"
she shook her fluff of gold-ooloredhair
a little severely, "I dou't know as
it's auy politer to stand at folks's
doors and keep a-knockiug and a
kuocking, when it makes the fidgets
creep on folks's spines. tioem's if
that isn't polito, too."
liut-tat-tut. Again I
"Oh, my! doesn't she want to get in
dre-adfullyl Maybe she s'poses we're
the doctor.
Tortoise blinked sleepily on tho nig.
Little Dorrit that was what papa
called Dorothy lay back in her in
valid chair, dospairing. Her little
crutches were out of reach and Tor
toise was nothing but a lazy cat. She
must wait for mamma hark!
"Mamma! O mamma!" she called.
Yes, mamma was coming downstairs,
"Well, then, Dorothy?"
"O mamma, there's somebody
knocking like everything. She's beon
doiug it most forever. I con hear her
jnst as plain through tho crook of my
window. Do go quick and let her in!"
Mamma listened, too, and pretty
soon a little smile curled her lips up.
Hut Bhe only said, "I'll go and see
about it, dear."
When she got back again, the smile
bad grown into oue of mamma's big
cheery laughs.
"She didu't wont to come in, after
all, little Dorrit," she said. "I in
vited her and invited her. But she is
only Mrs. Woodpecker out doing a
little marketing for dianer."
How little Dorrit laughed)
"But I guess the butcher keeps his
door locked, mamma," she said,
" 'oordiug to the way she keeps knock
ing at it. "Youth's Companion.
Tha Wide World.
There is one little mouse who does
not live behiud the pantry door or in
a dark corner of the kitoheu. He has
the whole wido world fur a home, and
the tops of wheat straw is the spot lie
usually seleots to build his bouse.
This bouse of the field mouse is a
dainty ball, woven of grasses and
made soft inside. The inside is filled
with lots of baby mice. There is oue
small hole where the little master con
trives to get lu aud ouand the w hole
establishment is fastened firmly among
the heads of a few wheat straws
a pleasant, airy home for these mites
in the summer.
These pretty creatures don't look
like the little brown mice which live
in our houses. They have a reddish
back and a soft, white breast. And
they have a very, very loug, curly
tall which helps them in climbing
an nnd among the wheat quite as
much as one of their legs.
Perhaps the farmer does not think
this little mouse so pretty, for it eats
the farmer's wheat, and although a
meal for such a small creature takes
very little food, still when the mouse
families are numerous the farmer dis
covers that mnny littles make a good
deal, aud that his wheat crop is the
smnllor for the number of these little
red atoms that live among it.
In the fall, when the wheat is all
harvested and the angry farmer has
killed as many of these rogues as he
can get hold of, there are still many
left. What does Mr. Harvest Mouse
do then? Well ho and his grown np
children dig s snug little house nuder
the gronnd. It is a spacious mansion
for the little fellows. It has one large
pot ior, with long passages leading to
it, and cozy little corners all about,
where tho entire family con go to sleep
in warm beds of the hay or straw
which they have stoleu from the long
suffering farmer. There they lie, with
their eyes shut tight, nntil the warm
sun shines again and the spring comes
nronud. Aud on some balmy, sun
shiny day, pretty soon now, we can
fancy Mr. Harvest Mouse taking a
peep out of his front door aud squeak
iug to his pretty little wife.
"My dear, just open your eyes and
look out! It seems to me that old Mr.
Brown is over in that field plowing.
It is such a short distance; lotus hope
he is goiug to plant wheat." Brook
lyn Eagle.
Mrs. gpnrrow and Mrs. gwallow.
"I'll tell you what it is, Mrs. Spar
row. I'm glad the winter is over and
we can begin our nsst building."
"So am I, Mrs. Swallow. My old
nest nuder the eaves is getting rather
shaky. Those March winds nearly
shook our whole colouy out of their
aucestral home."
"Dear me, it seems to me yon use
big words. What is an ancextral
home? I don't see but your uest
looks just like other nests."
"Why, you know very well that our
folks huve lived here for many years,
and then date Buck to good old days
when we wore English sparrows.while
you are nothing but a common chim
ney swallow. You haven't any pedi
gree, while I pride myself, as I have a
rifjit to, on my ancestry. My fathers
and mothers came from Eugluud iu
the good old days."
"Ves, aud I heard Former Brown
sav lie wished they had stayed there."
'"Well, well, birds, like'folks, have
to bear ill will, but I'm sure no bird
ever deserved it less than the spar
row. We ouly ask for a chance to
make a good living. If we were al
ways foraging iu the coi n fields, pick
ing out the corn as soon 11 s it is
dropped in the Held, like Mr. Crow, or
tearing open the wrappers of the
young coin to get tho'sweot kernels,
as does tho blackbird, it would be
different."
"I suppose nil birds have their
trials," replied Mrs. Swallow. "Just
as we get nicely settled in a good com
fortable chimney, even when we have
waited patieutly for warm May weather,
some shivery grandma thinks it is
cold, and the grandchildren make a
fire in the grate, and then whore are
we? Why, smoked ont. It's never
quite safe iu this climate to nest in
chimneys."
And Mrs. Swallow solemnly shook
her head.
"Theu why don't you build as we
do, under eaves?"
"We have our ancestral customs as
well as you," said Mrs, Swallow. "If
our fathers aud mothers didu't come
from England, they did teach us
where to build our nests. Besides,
but yesterday I saw Mr. Brown's hired
man knock dowii a whole neighbor
hood of sparrows from the caves of
the barn. Ho you're not much better
oirjbii $e."
"1 hat's Some so. I toll yon what,
Mrs. Swallow, I would like to turn
iuto a hired man, or oven a little boy,
for just one summer, to teach bird
maunors, which, as you know, are
much better than those shown us by
boys and men, especially the hired
men. They seem to be our bitter
eueuiios. "
"Well, good morning, Mrs. Spar
row. I thiuk I'll risk building in Mr.
Smith's parlor chimney. I hoard Mrs,
Smith toll her muid she wasn't going
to have a fire in her parlor this sum
mer because the chimney smoked."
"And I'll away to neighbor John
son's barn. I bolieve we'll move our
family aud begin a new colouy. We're
getting pretty thick nuder the eaveB
where , my grout-great-great-grand-parents'
lived."
And tbe two birds were soon busy,
each in her own place aud way, while
Jack Thompson, who overheard their
talk, weut on his way to school and
told this story to his teacher, who
luckily chancel to be myself. That
is how I came to hove tie story to tell
my readers." Christian at Work.
An Englishman's Orewtonii Joke.
An Englishman, who had a splendid
bouse about a dozen miles out of
London, had a pructicol joke which he
was fond of playing at the expenso of
visitors. Iu a dark room over one of
his stables he kept a full-sized Peru
vian mummy sitting bolt upright on a
beuch. When he had showu a party
of visitors his house, his pioture-gl-lery.his
horses and lps dogs.he would
lead theiu iuto this dark loft and
chuckle with delight at their discom
fiture when suddenly oonfioutod with
I this mummy from an auoient tomb iu
1 Peru.
Some persons say they are never influenced by an
advertisement.
It is not expected that any one will buy Ivory Soap
solely because it is suggested by an advertisement, but
if you have never used Ivory Soap, you may be induced
to ask some friend about it; should you find as you
probably will that she is enthusiastic in its praise,
then yon may try it.
Millions of people use Ivory Soap: they use it because
they like it. You too will like it. There is a difference
in soaps.
' ooersiONt isas ar thc noons a oamili 00. omoinimti
LARGEST KITCHEN IN WORLD.
Dnllt by Oaorgs IT at Windsor Caitla
In 1838.
The last of the works of the much
maligned George IV. to be mentioned
here is the enlarged and impreved
royal kitchen (at Windsor castle). It
stands perhaps the largest single
kitchen in the world on ground where
royal kitchens have stood from time
Immemorial. George IV. It was who In
1828 gave It Its lofty roof and top-light
ventilators, its splendid clock let into
the stone walls, and its generally me
dieval appearance. At the other end
of the kitchen is fixed an Immense
and venerable smokestack, whose or
igin is lost In the mists of antiquity.
One of these annually has the honor of
roasting her majesty's baron of beef.
Tbe hot-plate table in the center of the
kitchen measures no less than 14. feet
by nine feet The batterle do cuisine,
!n its brilliant array of glittering cop
per, is large enough to cheer the hearts
of a small army of gourmands; and to
show Its office Is no sinecure, one may
mention that it has to make an annual
visit to the manufacturer for restora
tion and repair. Lady Bloomfleld says
of this kitchen in 1842: "The Ore was
more like Nebuchadnezzar's 'burning
llery furnace' than anything else I can
think of now; and though there Is now
no company at Windsor, there were at
least 15 or 20 large Joints of meat
roasting. Charles Murray (comptrol
ler of the household) told me that last
year they fed at dinner 113,000 people."
Pall Mall Magazine.
There wos nothing Napoleon wos so
fond of as boiled mutton with onion
lauce, and he frequently Indulged his
taste to such an extent as to make
himself lib
Dl't Tobacce Spit and gawk Toar Ufa AVir.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netic full ol Ufa, nerva and visor, take No-To-Dao,
the wonder-worker, t hut m&keg weak men
strong. All druggists, &00 or SI. Cure guaran
teed. Bookie and sample free. Address
Bterllng Bemad j Co., Chicago or New York.
The Samuel J. Tllden residence at
Clrammercy Pork was sold the other
day for $180,000, which was $320,000 less
than it cost.
To Cnra Constipation Taraveh
Take Caacoreta Candr-Cathanlo. lOoortSo.
V C. C. C. fall to cure, drugglats rotund money.
The capital of Herzegovina hns a
man named GJugja, who Is 100 years
old, and boasts of 13S descendants.
Fits permanrntlT cured. Naflt" nr nervous
prrs sftrr flrstdal's ne of Ir. Kllna's (Irent
Sre Hestrr. trial bottle anl trentisa
lrre. llr.H.II Kl.iwr, Ltd. ail ArchHtPhUa.f'a
CONSTIPATION
l have gone 14 Rt tlmo without a
mot emeu I the bowel, nut balug atl to
move ttiura exoepfc ly iMtng but wur liijuctlont.
Cbronto ounttipttilon for mtod yoar placed mo Id
tbla terrible condition; during-that time 1 did ev
rTiblng I board of but never found any rollof ; aucb
qraamroute unlit 1 bogm utthiti CAttCAKKTri. I
now bavo from one to thro pautagea a duy, aud If I
waa rich 1 would give UUu.uO fur each movement, it
Uauubft raUuf.' AVLMKUL. HtKT,
liW UuwrtU bi.. Detroit, Mteb,
CANDY
Pleasant, Palatable. ftotnt, Tn.te flood. Do
uooo. oor Biuauo, vveaaen,orurtpe, iou, wo, oug.
... CURI CONSTIPATION. ...
SfcBt ttmt) CwiMaj, mpi aiiMl, Sr fsra.
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Arotliobeat. Ask for them. Coat no mora
than rommon clilmnoys. All Uvaian.
riTTMII K1 CiLAKH CO., Alltiglmny. Pa.
FtEriSIONMKWft
8uocsfully Prosecutes Claims.
Lt Principal Bmrn1or U.8. Tenaion Bureau.
3f ra lu ulv 11 war, lb aujuuluatutg vuUuie, aUjr alue
f. K U. 11 'In)
WAWTBD-caMof had bwllh hl B I P A-N S
will Bl hen.St . tllii on. to inputs I liMtilra)
Do Msw York, tot l saiimlas and law laailiaonuls
FARQUHAR
RAKE SEPARATOR
fJrrhtMt dranzht: moat
durable, perfect In operation aud cbeapet t,
Farquhar Vibrator Separator
groetetH ca parity ; want no
Ernln. cleans ready fur mar
ft. Specially adapted for
merchant threshing and
lurge crops. Tbrewtiim rice,
tlax And fultleL Kecelved
nitMnlft and awards at tbree
world'i fairs.
Farquhar Celebrated Ajai Engine
higb
eat award at World's Co
lumbian FxKltlon. Far
quhar thnwhthg engines
are the must prf ct In uae.
Haveat, foot brakfiand
two Injectors. Are vrjr
strong and duiable and are
inane an light as la ronnta
tent with aitfetv. TbereU.
no record of t. rarqubar boUur ever eip.odlflg.
Farquhar Variable 'Friction Feed
Saw Mill.
Most aeotirate set
works made. Qnlck re-
n.ill.tf. ha.il hl.lr. .,..1
lightning gig bck. 'vfe"
Enclnr Bollrr Saw Mills and Agricultural
IlupluuientB Uvnerally,
( Send fur Illustrated catalog.
A.B.Farctuhar Co., Ltd.
YOR. PA.
HARTFORD? VEDETTE
BICYCLES.
$25.75.U'
12 MODELS OF NEW MACHINES.
Catalogue, Booklets,
Folders, etc, free of
any Columbia dealer,
or by mall for a two
cent stamp.
POPEMFG.Cd.Harlford.Cm k
VM,srwrw'WxW'rarrwst
"BIG FOUR"
"THE SEA LEVEL ROUTE"
NEW YORK.
DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE.
WACNER SLEEPING CARS.
DINING CARS.
U. I. IHOALLI, I. 0. MaOOKIIIOC,
President, Pass. Trafflo Mgr.
WiSBIH I LTN0B,
Asst. Oen'l Paaa. A Ticket Agt
1X77 BOOKLET
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INKPICTURE8
greatly mat! if you wrlta
with Carur'a luk to
CARTER'S INK CO., BOSTON, MASS.
nDODQV1 niicoriRT:
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