Jkt tati or Onto, ottt or Tolido, i eousrv. Tkawr J Onr.!ir msfeas oath tnath Is the Senior partner of the firm o( f. J. C(ie?lT A Co, dnlni business In the Oitr of Toledo. County nd State aforesaid, and that said Arm will pay the sum nf oni nvNOKitD not La. for eaoh and vr)t rase of catahrh tAateaanot be enred by the nn nf Ham.'I Oatarru CTitnn. Fhanr J Ckknet. Sworn to biifnra ma and subscribed tn mf ( I presence, tuts 8th (lar of Drcember, in hi. y A. D. IMA. A. V. Ulsasoi, ( , . t Notar Puhlie. Rail's Catarrh CurelstiiVen Internally, and aota directly on the Mood and million aurfnoea of the system. 8nd for testimonials, fran. F. J. ( iusr,l & Co., Toledo, Ok fold by tlrwtirlst, 76c. Hell's Family l'l ll am the best There is n Mcndv demand for eight cars of beer a week in Manila. The largest library of small hooks Sn the world belongs to a Frenchman, who boasts that he ran park 700 of his pocket editions in a single portmanteau. Vitality low, nehllitarril oreshaustel cnrcd by Mr. Kline's Invigorating Tonlr. Knr.F. 1 trial Imltlo for 8 wi i k' treatment. Dr. Kl ne, Ld, 9U1 Arch U Philadelphia. Founded 1S7L At Bvllville, Kan., a circus changed its liue of parade in order that two tick boys might look out oi the window and sec the procession go by. Mrs AVInslow's Hot thing Syrup forrliltrtrcn teething, softens the ituni. rt'riu'rtnt1nnini:v tlon, allays ps In. cures wind collr.pxi abuttlo. The Congo region exports 3,000,000 walking stocks a year. about Aftor air years' snfTorlnu I waa enred by PI. DISHES THAT CROW. Plata with Curlona Growth I'pon It Sold tho Other Day for 1,000. The other day there was sold at Manchester, (or no loan than 11,000, an old-fashioned eh Inn plate of the ex tremeQy rare kind which Is known to the collectors as "growing crockery," though no explanation of this strange phenomenon was given in the news paper reports. Prom the plate Itself had sprung, to a height of more than a third of an Inch, a sort of eruption of beautiful crystals, that seemed to take the form of elegant trees and minia ture pagodas. Tho growing crystals were gradually rising higher and high er, and they had brought up with them the enamel surface of the plato at every point whore they had sprung from tho body of the latter. Such plates are a chemical manifestation of the rarest possible kind, and only a very few years ago a tea pot, the prop erty of a lady In London, that had bo come covered with beautiful crystals In thta way, was sold to a collector for $5,000. The clay of which such china is made contains alumina and mag nesia, and In certain cases thene are so acted upon by the presence of sul phuric acid as to produce fibrous crys tals, that are In reality very much of the character of Epsom salts or crys tals of alum. The plate sold tho other day had belonged to a poor ponton, who had never attached much value to it Stray Stories. "Proof of the cPudiing Is in the Eatino" r S Is not what we say, but mihat Hood's Sarsaparilla does, that tells the story. Thousands of people give the proof by telling of remarkable cures by Hood's Sar saparSla of Scrofula, Sail Rheum, Dys pepsia, Catarrh, Rheumatism, and all other blood diseases and debility. HOOK AGENTS TVAXTKD FOR , trw rdet ud fMlMMcllin hook mvmr nuhliah-rl Pulpit Echoes R i.iyiNO TiirTii- row iieati ami iipart. unllnlnr Mr. MOIHtVM h.i K,-n.. will, Alto tauUim stoilas, Incldcau. IVrwssI Kimrlcncn stc., a told J J). L. Moody tnmtef. 'WlthfteomplrtohMniyofhl-Iifr h? Ncr.rilAft.F. Piuttir ol Mr Moody a Clilvnirn Ciiun-li for flvu year. nd an Introduction b l.vv, . MAS A HHOTT. II. . llraiift nrvr. ftftti pp.,l,'autUulli ilhutru'nl 0 'l.OIMt mi -re A 4. K NTH W AfVTlJI-Mrn -ml WniWtn. fi T Hl LEARN TELEGRAPHY for ItHllrnn.l and dimmer, olnl Pan-loe. Yohiik Mn WanU'd 1m madlatoly. Pnaltlnnv Knirniitred, Ku- O'oat' at'imp for full p-irti'-ulars. . W. Dowoll, MHllllKvr, lllrk,vllle, Olilo. InAmertf k-t.ri.raiMH, m C luvartiw mi r'arm Hrnrlii. ksaaaal tltl m ,n A CLOVER i mani: i in Hi:KU NANI'l.l ). V John a. kaijikk nkku iu la uiohhk, win. The printer is just complet ins: for us a handsome hand book on Cuba an il Puerto Rico. Band two-oont atnmu for this and other literature on iiie buiijboc or outuvrn winter reaorw ami now to rvaoli tliuiu. train to Florida, Oiiiwu & Oimmii hnutheru Kv. and I'luiit Hyatoiu. njl iinatl to Ju iknnnvUla, Th rout li Olteeu & Crimoi-nt Idilitu, I'luiit Hratoiu. Hi Uourt. W. a lUNEAUrioN, u. 1'. A., Cincinnati. a Hun the ondoraement of tlia IJ. H. Govern meut and all tlie Loudiug llullruttd. C3a'r."?LD'SCQU2n uiiraa lonshe and Ctolda. ff II I Pp ( 1'mvenla Craauoiitlim. ICII I rail Ail Prut-cut NOvy laUbasMkl 00O09OOO0OOO0O00OOOOOOOC I FARM TOPICS Sooooooooooooooooooooooooc Onml unit Had f eauona. Good and bad seasons are mnoh rnoro subject to control than the aver age farmer thinks. Certainly too much thawing and freezing iu the spring, or plant wilMng due to fro" tracteil drontn or continnea not ury winds, are beyond tho romedyof man; bnt it frequently happens that "bad seasons" are free ot these ospeciol damages, and are bad seasons only because crop yiouls are light, thongu the tillage and planting methods have been quito the same as have in other years produced bonntifnl crops. Good and bad seasons will bo found largely a matter of plant feoding; if the till age has boen good the previous year and the winter more or less open the solublo plant food in the soil will be well loaohed out in the spring, and the orop has a continual up-hill fight for food. The remedy is simple nse fertilizers in tho spring for tho sitra- mur crop, and grow a crop cover tn the fall that the soil be not left bare duriug the winter. Watering Trough. It is not every one who can e9ily mane arrangements lor watering tuo stock in the barn, bnt any o'ne who is not dependout npon a brook or pond for watering their animals can plan to keep thorn from the necessity of drinking ice water. If the trough is in the yard it will cost bnt little to so box it in around and beneath it as to prevent water from freezing in it ex cepting in the very coldest weather, especially when a tight-fitting double cover is shut down over it. To pro vide for the coldest timos there should be a ohanne to let the water oft' after the cattle havo finished drinking, as indeed shonld be done every night in any caso. Tho cattle like water fresh from tho well or spring every day bet ter than stale wator, just as von do. There are also methods of boating water in the trough for those who care to be at the expense, either by n steam pipe or by beating water to add to it. The milch cows especially like warm water np neavly to 100 degrees, and it would pay to warm it for them, though they will drink ns much ob they need at fiity degreos to sixty de grees, it they are not standing in a cold wind or storm. Kxeellent Corn Criha. The corn orib shown in the illustra tion is found occasionally upon farms in the Xew England States and per haps elsewhere. It is worthy of more BIS FOB KEEPING COHN IS GOOD CONDI TION. general nse, since it is so constructed as to keep corn perfectly. The in sloping sides keop tho raiu from get ting at the corn, though the sides are of open slat work to lot Hie air pass through. Such a crib can be made of any size desired. Home are not over five feet wide at the floor. Windows can be placed under the eaves and the corn turned in through them direot from the wagon, but the most com mon plan is to have a door at one end, and carry in the corn iu baskets. It is filled in solidly from the rear to the door. A very large bin of this sort has a walk through the canter, with cribs on either side. The posts have wide strips of tin about them to keep mice from getting tip to the com. Fattening Awlne. The fattening process, duringwhich millions of bogs are fed wholly npon corn, is much less dangerous than many think. An animal that has been on pasture all summer, and has had a dne allowance of protein and ashy oonopntrates, is fully prepared to un dergo the strain ot eating large quan tities of heating, fat-forming feed. Its digestive trnot is large, its muscle firm and its bone strong. The sum mer treatment has fitted it for the, large consumption and ready diges tion of a one-sided food, and though it is nnder an nnnstnral pressure and in a oondition of disease during a large portion of the time for exces sive fat is disease no harm will re sult, it all the other conditions are right. Still it is wise to furnish some protein food even during the fatten ing prooess. Fat formers are fever breeders, and the temperature of the fat hog is very high. Gostiveness, more or less marked, is natural se quence of feeding corn steadily. An occasional feed of bran, oil meal, ground oats, or steamod clover bay, will, in some measure, counteract these effects, and make the animal more comfortable. The principal evil eonseqnenoes of feeding oorn to hogs are not to be fonnd in the fattening hog, bnt in our breeders. Many of these are fed corn to an extent that the result is litters that are constitu tionally weak and the ready viotimsof disease, Htartlns llliu Aright. "Darling," exclaimed the happy husband, after the minister had pro nounced them one, "I am not worthy of your love." "Ot eourse yon're not," she replied, "but at my age a girl oau't afford to let even an opportunity like this go by." Chicago News, , Bo many Chinese offioials are re igning that the Empress Dowager ha-:tfdered tht punishment of those who arpiy lor ware without pressing 3P neoossity, MESH TRADE DEVELOPMENTS. A coffee berry which tivals tin product of Java closely in aroma is being raised in Queensland, Australia, in small quantities. A miner's lamp, nsing acetylene gas, has boon introduced into the Helbeck mines of Germany. Up to dnte it does not appear to have been tried in this conntry. Bo rapid lias been the development of cotton mitls in Alabama that it is thought the whole amount of fiber grown there will bo consumed at home inside of a year or two. The paper mill in Ffolyoke, Mass., which makes Japanese napkins, is said to be the only one of its kind in this conntry, and its business is grow ing so rapidly that enlargement of tho mill has bocoine necessary. Owing to a lack nf rain in Sweden, the streams that alTord power for the woodpulp mills have beon low for mouths. This fact tends to raise the price of pulp there and in those conn tries that depend on Sweden for a supply. Eopcs are used extensively iu Eng land in place of belting for the trans mission of power. Cotton is the favorito material, bnt experiments have recently boon made with paper ropes, ami tuey are said to give satis faction. Most of the sheep of Northern Arizona are being driven to the outhern part of the Territory, but the cattlemen are joalous and threat en to do harm to men and sheep if the flocks are brought down across their ranges. Every drove of sheep oaid to remove a swath of grass half a mile wide. However, even the cattlemen are said to recognize the Fact that the sheep interests are soon to become paramount iu tho Terri tory. The Dlanliled Cannon. The gnu disabled by the British at Lombardskop was one of the few large pieces of artillery possessod by tho Bows. It is exactly similar to tho famous gnus mounted in tho latest Japanese ironclads. A rather strange Btory attaches to the purchase of this gun, with its companions. In lR'JO tho British Government obtained secret informa tion that uiado it evident that the Boers cf tho South African Kepublio were engaged in a plot with the ob ject of seizing Delagoa Bay, either by purchase from Portugal or by force. Great Britain has the right of pre emption over Dclago a Bay, and as soon as the intention of the Boers was known a large British floet was col lected outside Iioronzo Marques. The Boers, finding their arrangements dis jovered, gave np for the time their jhorished ambition ot obtaining a port. But so euro were tho authorities ot the Trausvaal at oue time ot being blo to secure Delagoo Bay that they jrderod the guns to protect it, pre sumably against the British warships. These guns were manufactured m France, aud were taken into tho Transvaal niaiked "machinery, with care," by the Netherlands Bailway, wluou is strongly pro-Boer in sym pathies. When the original purpose for the guns was impossible of accomplish meut, the Boers mounted thorn out side Jobaunasburg and some time ago sent thorn from there to Xatal. They formed the greater part of the strength of the artillery, which had been wor rying the garrison at Ladysmith, be ing mounted about four miles to the east of the town. Xew York Times. Elnganc at Klghly. One scarcely expects eleganco in an old man at eighty. Tho lean and slip pered pantaloon at that age begins to slop around considerably. But I have in mind a patriarch in this city who is as spick and span at fourscore as he was at thirty, when he was the dandy of lower Broadway. He has all his shoes made to order at $10 pair, and both right and left are shaped on the same last, so that he may change them at every wearing. He has seven pairs, one for each day in the week. They are kept iu cases over night. His underwear is rich silk. He has twenty pairs of tronsors, each provi ded with its particular suspondors, which have boeu carefully adjustod to give the correct hang, and are never removed until tho cloth is worn out or oast off. All his bats are lined with satin by the fashionable Fifth avenue dealer with whom he trades. His ties are never ready made, and are ex quisite gems, costing never less thau tL Yiotor Smith, in New York Tress. A Unique Manner of Donth, "I heard the following conuudruin," aid a well-known lawyer the other day, "which struck mo as distinctly olever: 'What charaoter is there iu the Bible who possesses no name, who suffered death in different form from any inflicted before or since that time, a portion of whose shroud is in every household, and the cause of whose death has been made famous by a modern author?' Give it up, eh? Well, the auswer is, Lot's wife. She possesses no name; no oue else met death through being turned into a pillar of salt; salt is in every house hold, and Edward Bellamy wrote 'Looking Backward,' so there you are." Btrrets In China. Lord Charles Beresford' latest China story illustrates the viloneas ot the roads in the Celestial Kingdom. Complaiuiug ou the subject on one oooasion to an American gentleman resident in China, Lord Charles says he reoeived the reply, "Yes, mule was drowned the other day ia the road outside my lionta." London Chronicle. THI MARRKTS, riTTsnrno. drain. Floor and Feed WTIEAT No. J red. WHKAT No. 1 new CORN No 2 yellow, ear. c 89 86 88 29 67 40 87 89 80 88 8 85 8 60 SO 14 It 18 00 18 00 15 7ft 18 25 7 25 7 25 no, i yel.ow. iDoiiou Mixed ear OATH No. 2 white No. 8 white 89 to 40 FLOUR Winter patents 8 tanny straignt wiiiifr a Hve No. 9 HAY No. 1 timothy 14 00 80 74 1 00 78 75 Clover, No. i I J FEKD No. 1 white mid., ton.. 17 Drown middlings m Jlran. bulk 18 BTHAW Wheat. 8 Oat Dairy F rod not a BCTTF.Tt Elgin creamery.....! 2a9 !9 23 24 18 19 19 13 18 14 85 45 13 14 19 14 20 21 Ohio creamery Fancy oonntry roll CIIKKHK Ohio, naw New York, new 1'oultrjr, Eta, HENS per pair ( HK'KKNH dresaeil TlllKEVH d reused EGGB I'a. and Ohio, fresh .... Frnlla and Vegetables, PEANH Oroen V banket 8 259 8 50 rOTATOKH Knaey White bu 65 C8 CA1I1IAQE 100 head 1 60 8 00 ONIONS per bu v 40 45 IIALTIMOItie. FI,OTTn 8 9 85 WHEAT No, 8 red 70 85 roHN Mixed , OATH 81 21 27 EOOH Dl'XlEH Ohio ernnmery miLADKLPUIA Fi.orn. , HVI T Nn 0 red .8 t 8 74 69 87 81 15 70 83 82 58 20 CORN No. 2 mixed OATS No. 2 white BUTTER Creamery, extra... EQQH rennsylraula flrata... MEW XUHK. FLOUR rntents WHEAT No. 2red CORN No. 2 OATH W hite Wentnrn BUTTF.lt Creamerv. M IUGS Utata and l'enn 8 8 759 4 00 . .. 72 40 29 80 23 28 15 ' 20 LIVE STOCK. Central Stock Yardn, Kaat Lluarty, Pa. C1TTLE. rrtme. 1800 to 1400 ttis 8 BO 8 70 Good, 1200 to 1300 lt 6 15 Tidy, 1000 to 1160 It.a. 4 85 8 40 6 10 4 63 8 60 4 0) 4 10 8 65 4 50 4 25 8 9) 81)1 7 25 B 05 4 95 4 80 4 20 4 15 4 05 a so J-air light (leers, !0 to 1000 ins a va Common, 700 to 900 lt 2 71 BOOS. Medium 8 05 Heavy .... liouuhi and stags 8 60 rrl-e, 96 lo 105 lts 4 15 Good, 86 to 00 tts 4 10 Fair, 70 to 80 lbs 8 60 Common 101 Veal Calves 6 00 . LAMBS. Pprlnger, extra 4 PI hjirlnnr, good to choice 4 85 Common to fair 4 60 Extra yearlings, light 4 10 Good to choice yeurllogs. ...... 4 00 Medium 8 85 Common.................. 2 60 FACTS ABOUT AMERICAN CITIES a,ome Data Ki'garillna; Health, Popula tion and Other Comlltlona. Anticipating tho work of the cshriis takers and noting on instructions from congress, the department of labor at Washington has issued statistic relat ing to all the rlt'es in the I'nltcd States of a population of :i).00) or more. It was found that tlii'.o wore HO Bitch citica and the Rt.itlsr.lra col livted throw much IntorestliiK Hslit on their status and development. Tiio oldest city in the United Stut isi i-j Al bany, N. Y., which was incorporated n 1USG, Philadelphia dating fifteen ynars later. New York, Chicago aud Philadelphia are the only American titles whose population runs Into the millions. Somo odd contrasts are presented in tho tables which give the urea covered by the different cities. It appears that Taunton, Mass., occupies a territory greater than that of elthor Boston or Baltimore. New Orleans, a city of 283,000 Inhabitants, covers 125, 600 acres, while Newark, N. J with a population of ahout the iame size, oc cupies less than 12,000 acres. Ono ex pects to find the manufacturing dis tricts of Pennsylvania, Massachusetts r.nd Illinois closely packed, but It Is surprising to notice that Rlchrroiirl, Va., covers only 0,520 acres and Louls vlllo, Ky., 12,800 acres, as compurei with Duluth, Minn., and Dps Moines. Iowa, which, witii much smaller popu lations in each case, covers r?spoctlve ly 40,960 and 34,560 acres. The health statistics show that McKoiwport. Pa., is perhaps the healthiest city In this country. Its rate of deaths from con sumption Is only 1.09 per thousand, as compared with 12 in Boston and New York and 20 In Denver, Col., tine, ot course, to the fact that consumptive resort to Denver from all parts ot the country. The rate of 13.60 deaths por thousand from old age (considerably the highest on tho list) Is accredited to Salt Lake city, a condition to account tor which no theory has yet been brought forward. In Pittsburg and Chicago deaths from old age are only 2 per thousand. At a time when the extension of municipal functions is occupying publio attention It is in teresting to note the figures which re late to city ownership. Ninety-six cities own their water supply, among the exceptions being Indianapolis, New Haven, New Orleans and San Francis co. Four have municipal gas works Dulutb, Richmond, Toledo and Wheel ingand thirteen own and operate electric light plants. Origin of Craekerjaelt. The Boston Herald thus explains the origin of the word "crackerjack": "In the hot southwest cactus whisky, or mescal, is a favorite proscription for a Jug. The Mexican loaded with mescal ia much given to Castillan profanity and Invective, his favorite verbal Jewel being 'carajo,' pronounced 'carahoo.' In time a gorgeous, red-hued, vociferous drunk came to be called a t-rajo Jag carahoo Jag and by corruption a crackerjag or crackerjack. Hence, all things supreme, clever, first-class, were by analogy termed ''crackerjack." IVORY SOAP PASTE. In fifteen minutes, with only a cake of Ivory So.ip and water, you can make a better cleansing paste than you can buy. Ivory Soap Paste will take spots from clothing ; and will clean carpets, rugs, kid gloves, slippers, patent, enamel, russet leather and canvas shoes, leather belts, painted wood-work and furniture. The special value of Ivory Soap in this form arises from the fact that it can be used with a damp sponge or cloth to cleanse many articles that cannot be washed bt-cause they will not stand the free applica tion of water. DIRECTIONS FOR MAK1NO. To one r'nt nf Killing water add one and one-hlf ouncrs (one-quirter of tho araall sire cako) of Ivory Soap cut Into shavlni;, roll five minutes aftrr the soap la thoroughly dissolved. Remove from the lire and cool In convenient dishes (not tin). It will keep well In an airtight glass jar. 00moMTliot.ByTM.fl area a aAMsi-i oo. cimoinhati righting a Shark. A lively experience with a twelve foot striped shark came to Boatmen Harry Johnson and Bob Burnard, re lates the Ban Francisco Chronicle. Tney were fishing between Mission Rock and Goat Island when they saw the shark. It followed them persist ently, and once when It came boldly up to the boat the boatmen set upon It with oars, stretcher and gaff.' A blow from the big brute's tall came near capsizing the Whitehall. Barnard barely escaped -being drawn Into the sea through sinking the gaff Into the body ot the shark, which set oft at a terrible speed, pulling the boat nfter him. It was so weak from the blows and from loss of blood that ft was finally conquered. In the fight the boatmen broke one onr and a stretcher. Flephantlne Mlarhler. Five of the elephants attached to the circus of Lord Georgo Sanger escaped from the large tent In which they had been hobbled for the night at Dnrt ford, England. They wero found de vouring the contents of a baker's shop, having smashed a largo plate-glass window In the shop front aud eaten all the bread and pastry they could find and then beginning to destroy some bags of flour. Four of tho olephants Charlie, Edgar, H. R. 11. and Mury were escorted back to the tent, but Minnie could not be found anywhere. She subsequently was discovered a mile and a half away, quietly sleeping near a conservatory in a market garden. She had amused herself by smashing the windows of the conservatory, de stroying a quantity ot valuable flowers and eating a big lot ot vegetables. "I hve used your Hair Vigor for five Years and tm greatly pleased with it. It cer tainly restores the original color to gray hair. It keeps my hair Soft and smooth. It quickly cured trie of some kind of humor of the scalp. My mother used your Hair Vigor for some twenty years and liked it very much.' Mrs. Helen Kilkenny, New Portland. Me., Jan. 4, '99. Used Twenty Years Wc do not know of any other hair preparation that has been used in one family for twenty years, do you? But Aycr's Hair Vigor has been restoring color to gray hair for fifty years, and it never fails to do this work, cither. You can rely upon it for stopping your hair from filling out, for keeping your scalp dean and healthy, end for mak ing the hair grow rich and long. II 40 s ketlls. All iniiilits. Write tho Doctor If yon do not obtain all the lifneflta rmt dnetre from the uso of the V linir, wrllo tlte IMwtor about It. address, Dr. J. C. Avau, Lowell, Mass. Keeps My Hair Soft Holes and Violate. The scent of the sweetest rose be comes noxious and the humble violet seems to he scowling up at you from under its eyebrows when you know that these flowers and their fellows are Indebted to the deadly microbes for their colors and scents. The delicate pink of the Rothschild rose is com posed of the bodies of thousands of the identical microbes which bring death. thrmiRli consumption to so many of our friends and relations. The violet and pansy get their odor from the can cer microbe, the tulip from the gout germ, and tho geranium from the senr-let-fever bacillus. Likewise, every ' time you Inhale the scent of any flower you are In reality gulping down mouthful after mouthful of some ter rlblo disease. There is no way of dis infecting flowers, as they are actually composed of microbes, and If you take the latter away no flower is left. , Switzerland exnorts regularly to other countries 17 dilTcrcnt kinds of chec. COUCH SYRUP, Cuies Croup and Whooping-Cough Unexcelled for Consumptives. Gives quli k, sure results. Kclutc substitutes, , Vr. Unlet JMlscute Jjilioumest. Trial, to or $c Try CraitvO ! Try Crain-O ! Ask your Orocer to-day to show you a puclmge of GHAIN-O, the new food driuk thut takes tho place of coffee. The children may drink it withont Injury as well as the adult. All who try it, liko it. GHAIN-O has that rich soul brown of Mochu or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and tho most dcliunte stomach receives It without distress. the price of coffee. 15 cents and 25 cents per package. Sold by all urocers. Toetes like CorTott Looks like Coffeo Insist that tour t rocer gives yon ORAIN-O Accept no imitation. LOYELY SC. 00 AMPS iF3 All hand-palntcd. No ruinilsoincr lninp msda. Held nt mnnufiiuturer'a prices. Wb l-AY TBS CiiruinT. Mnkt's a most accept" llo ire-ent. lu-autltul colored rat. nlfigue nf hand-painted 1- A K I A 1 It or II A fc O liKf LilHrs, free, Ewm lamp Outran- U td, Money back if you want it. Manufactured by Pittsburg Glass C I'lttsburg, Fa. WI MAKE THI LA Hit, FOR 14 CENTS Ws wish to 1 sin thl rr 900,Au dsw ousttiiuor. sud n sues or lfki.Uitiliir.l,DB..r. 1 IPs Ksrl'sl KiuvrsUH'ucumbsrlte 1 " LsCroMo MarbtLeUuoe.lte I Hlrswberrr Malgo, 10O " 111)11 Rsil.h, - lus " Ksrlr Rips I'alhSfa, (us ' Esrlv Dinner Ouinn, 0 a BilllliDtl'lowarSssds, 1.1e tV.rlk 1.00, for 1 4 ssaU. T3 abors 10 Pkss. worth S1.00, ws will buu iita ir, tou t her with Bfet UUo, teLilliar all About SAltCI t MIlllON DOlUI P9T ATI t ill pi. Wfl luvlte rourtri, od fun. ui tun noiire m i o. I, know when roo ouc try Nai acr'a ! ru win nTfr ao wttaoai AAI PriiMDn Hftl-Dp'ti yuu MlMNIO-w TDBiiouiftnionuriD. .;- JOIM A HA I.X Kit KKU CO., LA UOkKI, WI. T. N. U. 2 '03 nPnDQV DISCOVERT;i-j 1 l Vef 1 O I OUiokr.ll-f.ndOwr. ...a- hum. Bu. ut uimumU au4 10 day' liMiawut Vr Dr. H. U. OJLKKJI UMlt, Bel . AUuM,lk jail, I 33 mm t I I SatOouirh Ujrrup. Tuit trntd, Om I I Lj. '.a aiii 3 . J-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers