"A Gentle Wind of Western Birth" Tetls no sweeter story to humanity than the announcement that the health-giver and health-brtnger. Hood" t SarsapariUa, fells of the birth of an era of good health. S la the one reliable specific for the curt of all blood, ttomach and liver troubles. 3 (cCid& SaUafiaM In Purrey, Knttlnnd, there Is a profit poultry fntti-ntiiH: estnlillMliment, which annually semis "About SG.ooo fowls tu Ixmdnn. Pont Tenser Spit ind RsioV. Toir 110 iwiy. To quit tohaeco easily and forever, be mm nette. full of life, nerve and vlgnr. Inks No To Bno, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All dmra-isM, COc or ft, Cure (tnaran teed Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kemcdy CO.. Chicago or New York. There are 2.3(10 centrnl etntlou plnnts for ftt-ni'rating electricity In the I'nlted States. o-To-Bae for fifty Cents. Guaranteed tohaoeo habit cure, makes westt ttennroug, blood pure, too, II. All drugglsl There Is an epidemic of Ileus in one of the New York markets. The naltlmore nnd Ohio, South West ern Kallroad nlaced In service several n ncniirmHn "R ill ini'flt. t'limiit-B mis f n MrnpNT ixhpithi nn. entire line In addition to whnt was al ready In use. The compound engines were an experiment but hard service has proved that they are entirely suc cessful and show a savins; of 10 per cent. In fuel as compared with simple en ir Iocs of the same type. Kxhaustlve tests were made with both the simple and compound locomotives before the order for the entire lot was placed with the result vastly In favor of the com pound locomotives. How's This T We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for inr im of Catarrh that cannot be oared by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. .1. Cnr.NFT Co., Toledo, O. We, the undernl trued, have known K. .1. Che ley for the lat IS years, and believe him per fectly honorable la all mistness transaction ind flnanolsllv able t carry oat any obliga tion made by their nrm. VVasT Thuax, Wholesale Draifglsts.Toledo, Wai.dino, Kixsaw Mabvim. Wholesale Druirlt. Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is token Internally, act. In directly ukiii the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price. 7lki. ner bottle. Hold by all Druggist lull a saniuy i-tiis aro ine wni I have found Plso'a Cure for Consnmntion an unfailing medicine.- F. K. Lot. MB Scott bU, Covlugton, Ky., Uct 1. 1K1H. Richest Gold Mine In the World. The Band Barton and Albion gold mine, under the town of Ballarat, in Australia, has yielded more than fifty millions as the value of lbs output of gold alnce it was discovered about thir ty years ago. It is the most productive Cold mine yet known. Its supply o( paying quartz seems practically inex baustible, and as the vein is extensive, being spread over much territory, the mine bids fair to laat for centuries. The work in the Ballarat gold mine Is said to bo much safer as well as more com fortable than that of the workers in a coal mine. At Ballarat there are no noxious gases and no danger from ex plosions. Air Is forced into the work ings through various shafts. In the Transvaal rich and regular deposits were discovered in 1886 in the Wltwa tersrand. The reefs are estimated to contain nearly 100,000,000 tons of ore, the gold of which is said to be worth 45,000,000. From eighty to a hun dred years must elapse before the field la worked out Doubtless Remembered The Advocate of India tells of a curl, ous way of rejoicing. The Nawab of Rampore being blessed with a daugh ter, rejoicings were tuklng place in his state, and a week's pay was deducted from every state official In commem oration of the event f I HE very word operation ' SOU). Nearly always these through neglect. If the menses are very painful, get the tight advice at once and stop taking chances. It will cost you nothing for advice if you write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for it, and if you let the trouble run along it will surely cost you a great deal of pain and may mean an operation. Miss Sarah J. Graham, Sheridanville, Pa., writes: 'Dear years doctored wretched by prompt attention to it. Finkham's advice. tin lure, rJo ray. Is tha war Findley's Eye Pairs Is sold Chronle and granulated lids cured In 80 days; eommon sore eyes In 8 days, or money baek for the asking. Hold by all Drnfrirlsts. or by mull, 2So. box. J. 1. lUrria, Deoa tur, Texas. In ft Methodist Chnrrh In ft remote fieorpria community the old rule of sep aration of the sexes during worship la observed. To Car Constipation Tr"orser. Take Casrarets CnnUv Cathartic, Mo or Be, It C. C U. falUo cure, druggists rotund rooncr. The lnr-"st ptimplnjr engine In the world Is In the Calumet and Hi-cta mines. Tnttrnlnir Is Just now the. popular pastime of the leisured world. BUY OF THE MAKER. jytrty-nnft j-mn we l-ppnn cur present plnn of rtoiiij iM.Hin Mof m-il-ing ninit 10 the consumer, an fHtindihniiftnnflA of pnpio livinfr in nil pint nor ihmmunir) whop.iy cuMi fnrthfir miri'!minlifM ro tired of pftjinjf tlm IjIk fipifita ibeir local d(MlTS wpm charging. W a then b'tfn MMlingorrrnnnnr own jfonft 01 till' In om omn rm-uini-, rnimlMf tntr of rvtT thtnir mil Kiif. CVstff. SOetolJ. every thiny you Vi-ar, tlmiR you 1 m ri (Tj 1 iniiK loillld in honin. in an oirW, in nn ho lt1!, on a Mini, or In a turn, nrnl we nre saving mnnrr to-day for nearly two mil lion pmpin, who live in all parln of ihf world Our At 14 fagt iilaofM co.tts tti fi!c to print and matt is free to rv von it triit aft about eretythmf tn h'at Wear and V, Afic ID.ono ifHstrattont and quote n hottsale firu es om liXMHN) different articles. Our l.tthnrrHttlirH Car Stwlfq MncMim, J7.U5t,fV7. Rnt Catftlitatt" filinHH rnritft"), u , Art Nfiiarrn( Inrtlrra nnd l.nvr 4'nHnlnii In thrlr ral rtilnr. 4'nrplfl Mwt1 frr, lln In lumlnht.fi free ami freight prrpnld. 4hir IMfid -to-Ordrr Clntfiln CntitloKue with aamidra of rloth atlHi'hntl, oftf-rn aula and over Chair 80c. rnntm rrnm sw.oo. whrr. e aUi Innne a Kperlnl ntnlfia:ue nf riannn, ra;an. Hewing Marhlnt aud Ith t 1 1 1. n C'ulalogue do you want? Addretwihts wny: JULIUS HINES&SON, 11AI.TIMOKK, Ml. Dept. t:l Vou deny yourself plnssure and comfort If you don't use it. Kxporls of coal from the ITriltcd Stntcs have Incieascil from 2'J7,918 tons In 1S70, to over 4,000,000 tons during the pnst year. Kdneato Toor Howell Wltn Oaseareta. Candy Cnthartlo, cure constipation forerer. loo, 8do. If C. C. C. fall, druKiilsu refund money. noma for Families of liantllts. Not actuated by remorse, but by pure philanthropy, Jim Jenkins, hunter nl outlaws, has concluded to devote all his money to the maintenance of a home for the orphans and widows of men be has run to earth, in particular, and of criminals of the great South west in general, Jim Jenkins, now o! Kansas, is now 65 years old and has spent forty years as a scout and hunt er of bandits nnd train robbers. In this way he has made about $50,000. Among the distinguished outlaws he has chased were Jesse James and his broth, er, Bob Ford, Bill Dal ton nnd Bill Cook, while he was the leader of the band that caught Cherokee Bill in 1893. In the Dolton raid in Coffeyville, Kas., Jenklr.s wns snot eignt times. He esti mates his bag of bad men at about 130, The home, which is being built on a 6,000-acre farm owned by Jenkins, near I'ryor Creek, I. T., is to cost ?20, 000. Buffalo Express Lnn Swim. Ernest Whitehead captured a young seal near Anncapa island, California, recently, and took him on board his ship, says Our Dumb Animals. As the vessel started the mother seal was no tlced swimming about, howling plte ously. The little captive barked re- sponsively. After reaching the wharf at Santa Barbara the captive was tied up in a jute sack and left loose on the deck. Soon after coming to anchor the seal responded to its mother's call by casting Itself overboard, all tied up as It was in the sack. The mother seized the sack, and with her sharp teeth tore it open. She had followed the sloop eighty miles. strikes terror to a woman's operations become necessary or too frequent and excessive, WOMEN AVOID OPERATIONS Mrs, Pinkham : I had suftered for sev. with female troubles ana until I was discouraged. I felt and tired of living. I had dis ease of kidneys, bladder trouble, dropsy and bloating, had womb trouble and a large tumor had formed; in fact all my organs were out of fix. " Seeinga woman's letter prais ing your remedies, I wrote to her and she begged of cne to try it, telling me all that it had done for her. I bought six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabla Compound and now cannot ex press my gratitude to you. The tumor began to come away in pieces and I got better all the time. I believe now that I am entirely cured. " My doctors could not believe) it at first, as they all bad told mo that my case was a hopeless one, and no human power could do me) any good. Tbey were astounded. If I can say anything that can help other women, I shall b glad to." . It is not safe to wait until the last moment. Head off trouble Don't be satisfied without Mrs. I FARM AND GARDEN lo Hot Overfeed Hens. Overfed hens often have sonr stom achs and a condition similar to dys pepsia. (Hmr a little coru on the cob ami give them carbon iu this agreeable form a a sweetener, or take a little dry corn and bake it in nn oven until it is somewhat blackened, reed while warm. To Make a ('heap "lerlllier. Pr. Mel'lnnnhnn states tbnt a cheap nml efllciont sterilizer can be mnrie iu the following manner: Take an ordin ary one gallon tin bucket twelve in ches high, having a movable, closely lltting lid. Have a linmlle solilei ed to one siile for convenience in handling. Have a fnlse, perforated bottom, to which are ntlaclieil three legs, each one inch long. This is to be slightly smaller in circumference than the bucket, so that it will ro inside and rest npon the bottom of the bucket. Iu the lul a small openina is to lie made for the escape of steam. This sterilizer can be made by any tinsmith at a nominal cost. Popular Hcicuce, Vnnae.l I'ortlnns of Mannre. Value does not ahva.vs depend on bigness. It is this fact which farmers are learning that ives them more fnitU iu the concentrate I mineral fer tilizers as compared with stable mau nre. But iu both there is much bulk that goes to waste. It is a good min eral fertilizer that has four or five per cent, of available phosphate or seven to ten per cent, of potash, Ho when 200 pounds of mineral fertilizer are distributed per acre, it menus that the benefit is all concentrated in ten to fifteen pounds if we could distribute it evenly in concentrated form. With stable manure there is always much less proportion of mineral fertility, but this is offset by the available ni trogen which the stable manure gives off while it is decomposing. The stable manure has also another effect. It is bulky in proportion to its weight. nnd therefore makes the soil much lighter than it should be, because it separates the soil particles aud admits air. This imprisoned air warms the soil, which is an advantage iu early spriug for most crops. Hence it is that coarse manures are so genornlly drawn in winter ami plowed under early in spring for hoed crops. It is then probably the best use to which the manure could bo put. Ideas on rinnrltlR'. To do good plowing one needs a good plow, and to know how to se lect a good plow one should thorough ly understand the object of plow ing. Too many think it is simply to turn the soil over, upside down, nnd yet leave it as smooth as it was before. Others consider that plow the best which will move the largest amount of earth with the least possible exertion of man or beast. HotU are erroneous ideas. Of course, iu plow ing sod land it is de sirable that the soil Bhotild be left underneath aud friable soil brought to the surface, says Massachusetts Ploughman. For this a wedge-Hhaped plough is necessary, or wedge-shaped so far as it goes down into the enrth, but when tho plough begins to lift the furrow slice it should also impart to it a turning motion, a twist which will not Iny it nearly upside down, but press against it in such a manner as to break np the earth into minute cracks, which will lot the air into it so that it will be partially pulverized before the harrow is put into the field. To work with snch a plow, lifting, turning and breaking up the furrow slice all at one operation may add something to its draught and require more horse power, but it will save something in the labor required nt harrowing, or give great value to it by more thoroughly fitting the soil to admit the action of air aud moisture and heat to make availablo the ele ment of plant food in it, as well as to allow the plant roots to penetrate it more readily iu all directions. But for plowing old ground the plow which turns it over is not the best plow, neither is the one which will go over the largest area in a day. Our ideal plow for this work would be one which wonld take a narrow fur row slice, nnd iustead of inverting it rather set it up on edge, in which position it would crumble more, be cause more of the air and water and sunshine would go down into it be tween the furrows, which being of warm and dry earth on one side nnd the mirist and cooler soil from below upon the other side, would be pulver ized by chemical action iu a short time, instead f baking iu tho sun's rays, as does the under soil when the earth is turned over perfectly smooth. The action of the harrow then is to still more stir it np and lighten it, iu stead of packing it solidly below the depth to which the barrow goes. liaise Oood Hogs. If a person who knows anything at all about ho? feeding was given a chance between a hog that would gain tweuty-thiee pounds in six weeks and one that would gain ninety pounds iu the same time on the same feed, he would not be loug iu choosing. Dur ing the past ten moutlts the Kansas experiment station has fed 190 hogs that were bought of the farmers iu the vicinity of Manhnttnu without regard to bieed or breeding, juBt as they wer thriving and weighing in the neighborhood of 100 or 12" pounds. This class of hogs is used because these experiments nie for the highest benefit of the farmers, nnd by taking the stock they raise we stay within their conditions. A few conclusions may be drawn from the following facts taken front observations of feeding eighty head of hogs which were just finished. These hogs were nearer of the same age and size, and ranged from the long, big-boned bacon hog to the short, rlne-boned chunk, accord ing to the care or carelessness of the farmer who raised them. First, as to point of gain: The com parisons are bc'-reen hogs fed the same in every respect. The best and poorest five out of twenty have the following showing: Best five, weight at beginning of est fiilO pounds, gain 410 pounds 70 per cent. Poorest five, weight nt beginniugbl test C7!l pounds, gaiu 2:)5 pounds 10 per rent. This was for a period of forty-two days, and from observations made from week to week, this difference of gain from a little over one pound to rnctically two pounds a tiny was iirgely due to the breeding, A short smnll-boned chunk will make good gains for a few weeks and then stop. It will be fnt and ready for market, while a well bred, rangy hog will fat ten nnd continue to grow nnd mnke gains for a much longer period. Then as to the demand of the market: The tin eo-rib-shoulder is now one of the most tiroflttble cut" that is made for export trade. Hojs from which these cuts nre made must be large nnd mus cular, long and rangy. The short, small-boned chunk will not answer the mi pose. The bacon hog is also of the alter description nnd brings the best price on the markets. Well-bred, rangy hogs make the most profitable gains, ar e the most ready sale aud bring the best price on the market. Management of Itces at Kwarinlns: Season. One of the most important steps tow ard securing a good crop of bees and honey, is that of getting the brood combs well tilled at the begin ning of the harvest. Home varieties of bees, particularly the yellow Italians, nie inclined to crowd the brood nest with honey.. That is, they nre disin clined to put any honey in the supers, so long as empty cells can be found in the brood nest even to put houey into cells from which young bees have hatched. If supers containing drawu combs can be put in nt the be ginning of the flow, the bees will realilv store honey in the drawu combs when they would hesitate to beoiu work in sections filled only with starters or comb foundations. This relieves the pressure upon the brood nest, nnd induces the bees to begiu storing their honey iu the sections, and where they begin they nre likely to continue. Tho removal of the pressure upon the brood nest allows of the rearing of more brood, nud is likely to delay swarming nutil a good start is made in tho supors, and enough young bees nre hatched to make a good swarm. Shading the hives, giving A good, generous entrance and plenty of room in tho Mipors.nll tend to retard swarm ing. As soon as the first super given is one-half or two-thirds full, it is raised np, nnd another placed uudor it, next the hive. When the super Inst added is hulf full, another is placed between it and the hive. By the time it is noeossnry to add another super, it is likely that the upper supor of honey will bo llllod nnd ready to come off. Hoinetimes supers are tiered np three high. When n colony swarms the swnrm is hived upon the old stand in a hive having its brood chamber contracted to only five frames, the frames being furnished with starters of comb foun dation. The supers are transferred from the old to the new hive aud the old hive set down near the new one. By this method all of tho field bees that may be out when the swnrm is sued, return to the old stand and join the newly hived swarm that has the sections. The small brood next crowds the boes into the sections, and the lack of combs in the brood nest compels the bees to store their houey in tho supers until combs can bo built in the brood nest, aud as fast as the combs are built, the queeu fills them with eggs, aud the result is that all of the white honey goes into the sec tions, while tho brood nest bocomes a brood nest indued. With this man agement a queen-excluding honey board is needed, or the queen will go into the sections where the swarm is first hived, aud make trouble by lay ing in the sections. - The old hive is allowed to stand by the side of the new one until the eighth day after swarming, when it is picked up and moved away to a new locution. All of the bees that have fiown from the old hive in the eight duys mentioned, have marked that location ns their home and will return to it, and joiu the new swnrm. This accomplishes two things: It throws a lot of bees into the hive where the sections are, and robs the old hive at juBt the time when the young queens are hatching, so weakeuiug its forces that all thoughts of further swarming are giveu np the young queens being allowed to fight it out on tho Hue of "the survival of the fittest." By this method the working force and the sections are all kept together, aud there are no small after-swarms to bother with. After the harvest is over, there are two courses to pursue with the swarms that were hived upon only five frames: One is that of giving them more frames, or combs, and al lowing them to build up for winter, which they will do if there is a full flow. The only objection to this ar rangement is that s warms with old queeus sometimes build drone comb. When colouies are united it is easy to reject undesirable eoiubs. American Agriculturist. Indisputable Proof. As Brown jumped out of reach of one of tha big apes at the circus, that showed an inordinate desire to sample his flesh, said Fogg: "I've always heard that man sprang front the mou key. and now I know it," IY0KY SOAP HOFREEALKALl THE REAL ISSUE. ' ' Some say "Free silver is a rurse," Some think it is the nation's hope; But no one wants "Free Alkali," And there is none in Ivory Soap. IVORY SOAP 99"& PER CENT. PURE. COSVStSHT IMS IV THt SSOCTf S a OAMSII CO. CISCISNATI The glmlct-polnted screw has been responsible for mure wealth than most silver mlnes Beaatr Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean akin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blooj and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. lliRin today to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 5Uc. An Mm." Economy Is so important a subject that the mathematical housekeeper will doubtless find It greatly to her edifi cation and profit to consider the fol lowing from Puck: If a housewife twists In one hour and fifteen minuter ninety-three "lamp-llghtera" when 1.2S0 matches can be bought for five cents, at what rate per hour does she value ber time, assuming the worth ol the paper to be zero? If the aforesaid woman will take six steps across a room and six returning, each step being of twenty-two inches, to save one match, how far should she consistently walk to save five cents carfare? If a man can draw from boards In fifty minutes seventy-eight nails of a cer tain size, what wages would he be earning per hour, nails being worth four cents per pound, and there being ono hundred of this size in a pound' In a certain climate underwear at a price of $4 per winter will assure against colds. Assuming that under wear costing $1 per season will lead to two visits from the doctor at (1.60 each, what is the saving by tho pur chase of the cheaper material? Oil Is worth nine cents per gallon. Lamp A burns forty-live gallons in reading or sewing period of one year; lamp D, twenty-flve gallons. Spectacles A cost 14.50; spectacles 25 cents. If lamp E and spectacles B are used, the eyesight is made useless In eight years for a person whose expectation of sound eye sight with the use of lamp A and spec tacles A Is twenty-flve years. Making no allowance for deterioration ot lamps or spectacles, estimate the value of eyes per pair. Fore Exerted by tha II ear t. By accurate measurements of the heart's force it has been calculated that tn twenty-four hours the amount ot work done by It is equal to 124 fool tons; or, in other words, If the whole force expended by the heart In twenty four hours were gathered into one huge stroke, such a power would lift 124 tons one foot from the ground The heart really performs this work In sixteen out ot the twenty-four hours, for eight hours during the day are tak en up by rests, every beat being follow ed by a pause, during which the heart stops. Another calculation showi that the distance traveled by the blood thrown out of the heart Is seven mllei en hour, 168 miles a day, or 4.292.00C miles In a lifetime of seventy years. Is your breath bad? Then vour best friends turn their heads aside. A bad breath means a bad liver. Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They cure constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, sick headache. 25c. ah Druggists. Wuiil yuur liiou.lai-li. or btmrtt a bMUOlul brown or rl-h Mnrk Y Then mo BUCKINGHAM'S DYE tvUSr. rrTirir!Lj-Lt'yirT"' Ji "P jLS t Jli!"WV.VJ GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Aretha bast. Ask for them. Goat no nor than oouimon eblmuays. All dealer. flTTUUUHU OI.ASH CO., Alleatieiiy, Pa. r- Onm VTBaninaton's Arsanal- New York Sun: The tearing down of the old buildings, 93, 96 and 97 Cher ry street, to make way for a modera structure, removes a landmark vaguely associated in the annals of the netgh brohood with the days of the American revolution. When Washington made his headquarters at Roosevelt and Cherry streets, the local historians declare, he stored In these old build ings munitions of war supplies for his army. The historians of Cherry Hill then skip tho Intervening years until a period beginning fifteen or twenty years ago is reached. The buildings were then occupied as resorts for sail ors. The Iopey gang, which once threw a man Into the river for C cents, made its headquarters In the nelguuor hood. Near by was Sneepy'a alley, leading from Roosevelt to Cherry itreet, In which a Roosevelt street rest dent declares there were three mur Sers within as many months. a The best remedy for vOUctll Consumption. Cures a Coughs,Colds,Grippc, wVm D lironchitis, lioarse- J urn. Asthma, WhfKjiite- courIi, Croup, flmntl d.wt : quick, sure rrtnlli. Jji.buU tliUiunConitipatwn, 'Jua.KmiC -have been usliin f t M' A H I'.T" for lnsuuihlii, Willi wlikh 1 Uave been nnilctcd for over twenty years, unci I run say thut Cuscorcts have trlvon me more re lief thun any other reme dy I huvo ever tried. I shall certulnly recom mend lliem to my friends ds being all they are represented.'' Tuus. uillahu, fciglu, IU. CANDY Pleant. palatable. Hotent. Tnnte OonH. no QuuU, NiiTcrHlrken. Weaken, nr Grle. 0c, tfc.UJo. ... CURB CONSTIPATION. ... St.ril.i l.H'l. '". alrwl. B.w In. IIS Nfl.Tn.Rir Solo and nnmnteed by all dru UUM U-DAIf gituio c l atu Tobacco llablu W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & $3.50 SHOES Si,N'ON Worth 4 to $6 cnmptrtMiiUi trier make. Inrtnnid by nrnr l.ouu.ooo wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES -TIIK UKNI iKR fcaf W. L. ItaratiM MM nd pi-It tlaapfi m balMa. Take no labntltutA cl timed to be m sT'kmI. Linrett mrUeri of 1 ana t-I.M thoei la itit world. YuurdealtrhuM krep them If not, we will tw-nd yon ftnnlron receipt ofinica. Hum klutl ut leal tier, line nnd width, pltio or Cp tu Catalogue CJ Free. W. L DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton, Miss. Stopped free"1 Permanently CirtsJ latanltji PrattaM kt DR. HUNt'S SREAr NERVE RESTORER feu al.M. fjaua. f IIS Off MtnuiSMfl adrlHHM atl " . ftar Iltl Teaifistlsii At trial rtf I fret) FlipsUMM, tfc7 yjuH ettirft tlf imii Feeira. pBJ w er. him, t-vi, nr.uvssj ImtHnl" ftf HfHcln. tM Afh 8t-, Ph UtU IpD I . f. ARNOLD'S COUGH Cures Couulia and Tolda KILLER rrtivenia lonaiitiiptlun. All DruutfUU. 20O. f Successfully Prosecutes Claims. LattiPrtnciual F.xftoilner U S reuaiou BurtMU. 3 i in civil r, tiUjuaitiUuu tloim-t.miy tuuvm. Dr. Rlcord's Essence of Life ttiX," art, neter-fSlliQa rmiljr for all cam, uf osrvou. iilHnUl. liy.l. Al ilebMty, Ion vitality sad ere lust uro JH'ay In both Mti: poittlva, riuannl rure: full trt-tlurllt VS, or SI a IhiiiIv; tisiuu fuff cirtuUr. i. i Acyl'fcS. gut, lit broJwy. X. niirilM CFBKn-tatr!ebotlle.4aaT IfntUmAIIOirl Irmtuient, p...t l.l, 10 oeula, "ALU Annas IUmkuy cu.,aimwirh St., M y. If. H. U. 40 "5 I I Dost I ruS rtrnrLrTi I. mna dt annftuti. mmm .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers