CHINESE LANGUAGE. ——— a Sh SS BOME OF THE CURIOSITIES OF THE | "HEAR SPLITTING JARGON." Musicians Say It Has an Affinity With the | Notes of Birds -No Alphabet and No | Parts of Speech - Some Amusing Exo. - 5 ples of Chinese Talk. ~The superficial observer often refers to the Chinese spoken rpeech as an “esr splitting jargom” anil to the written | speech as ‘‘hieroglyphics.” Frequent vis- itors to any “Chinese quarter,” notably 8 large “Chinatown” like that of Los | Angeles, will soon become so familinr | : with this so called jargon as to note that it is far moore musical than the English speech. Musicians are anthority for the | statement that the Chinese language has more affinity (when spoken) with the notes of birds than with the tones of any other language. Thisis perhaps because the Chinese, having tio alphabet, must have many tone combinations to give _ the various expressions and meanings to | the thousands of characters. Having no alphabet, the Chinese lan- guage has more symbols than all of the | _ alphabets in the universe com bined, and there are more tone combinations for the expression of those symbols than in all - other tongues. Each tone is attached to a character, and one character is made to mean several different things, accord- ing to the tone used. tonto gives the meaning. with a falling with a rising inflection. n-go. This means “1” He is talking of himself—perhaps saying how great he thinks himself {0 be. out the sound long and even he is eall- Wg some hoodlum a “goose.” He gives the falling inflection to the first xyliaile, and the rising inflection to the last, and in a rather musical voice. This would be a difficult feat for an American, Ni» matter in what mood he may be, Le may not and perhaps cannot change the | accent. The voice may be louder or in a minor key, bat the tones are as inflexi- | ble sis written words and must be so used, or the exact meaning is lost. All the _ expressions of human passions—laagh- | ter or sorrow —must be expressed by the samo inflexible words and precise ac- cents. There are only five tones. in the Chizeso voice, but as every word has all of its syllables accented there are 23 per- mutations, and these are almost always in constant use, even in ordinary conver. | sation. A question may be asked with or without a rising inflection, according ‘to the word used. ¢ Chinese adjectives are nouns. For “many thanks” it is ‘thank thank.” A - “great man” is “greatness man.” Some- times a noun is formed of a noun and a werb, as “barber,” whom they call “‘shave- bead teacher.” The verbs have neither moods nor tenses, and when your laun- dryroan wishes to tell you that “I have washed” he says, “I pass over wash.” '. Their adverbs are mostly formed by join- ing er nouns and verbs, as ‘finish day” for ‘‘yesterday.” To cook is to “eat rice,” Every noun is plural and includes all there is of that article, unless it is ~~ Mamited by the expression ‘‘one piece,” us “, pune piece house.” Instead of “wife and chililren” they express ‘family and wife.” The word woman means *‘father man.” If repeated, it signifies “scolding.” The noun always remains in the same shape, and the verb has but one form instead of the many known to the English lan- - guage. The Chinese language has no de- ‘clensions, subjugations, moods, tenses, prepositions, conjunctions, adverbs, first, second and third persons, no singular | . and plural, and no gender except by the addition of a few participles in rare in- | stances. It is evidently simple and easy to learn, one of the simplest and most | curious things about it being, as above stated, that every noun, unless qualified . otherwise, is plural. : There are about 60,000 characters used ip the Chinese language proper, but the | average Chinaman no more learns all of those characters than the everyday American learns the 100,000 words in the English language. The Chinaman, how- ever, learns on the average more than does an American in a similar position jn life. A Chinaman who can neither read mor write is a rarity. Chinese is not a monosyllabic language, as many , and it is impossible to utter in Chinese any but the shortest sentences in monosyllables. Im writing the Chinaman makes one ed but integral character for Som each word, but that word may be prop- | «erly spoken in two, three or four sylla- "bles. His syllables are divided by no longer intervals than are his words, and that is what makes his language sound en, a foreigner like a singsong jargon. \ 4 do not know whether he is telling a sory or attempting a song. The Chinese | - perhaps think the same thing of an Amer- | ican, who bites off his words and swal- lows them or telescopes one into another. | Business men in this city thrown in contact with Chinese merchants, who | - gpeak pure Chinese say that it isnot diff- | eunlt to learn. Instead of 28 letters, not | ‘including the useless &, the Chinese | have 500 or 600 syllables, and these are | corabined into various forms to make the . 80,000 words in their “dictionary.” Thisse | _. syllables vary in meaning according to the tone in which they are spoken or the . strokes used in writing them —Los Au. geles Cor, New York Post, ——— it mn 2 Starvation Among the Rich, SR “stricted to periods of business depression ‘por to the poor. ill nourished people in proportion amaoug the rich than among the poor. The nniuber of persons that seek relief from threatened starvation in the exclusive milk diet is constantly on the increase, but it is a remedy almost of necessity In. Chinese the | A word #poken | inflection means one thing, and quite another when spoken | We often hear | a Chinaman, as be walls along the street | talking with his companion, utter a word | in a falling inflection which sounds like | Put if he drawis Death by starvation is a thing not re- Perbaps thero aro more bd TA Ly at ae BR pi * ALL ABOUT PENS. . end Evolet Sharp pointed oalkin:, u of steel or of iron, were and they were used for ters and hieroglyphics in the lhnwstone, | sandstone or steatits of eastern coantries, ‘ used for writing on s» tah £5. sua of bronze, o first pens, | Such pens were als Assyrian tablets, Ti | of soft clay, and after receiving inserip- | tions were dried in the sun or baked in i the fire. Gy In the far east and in { ol's hair pencil soon took , metal bodkin. With the ¢ were painted. on the and the bark of trees ju much t ey f animals ERIS Of RDIITIAAR manner that the Chinese draw them on | paper at the present day. | leaden tablets came into use, and the stylus became the popular pen. stvins was made of bone, ivory or metal, with one end pointed and the other flat- | The flattened end wus used to | tened. | erase errors made in writing. The use of parchment anid papyrus, | however, ealled for a more flexilie pen { than either the bodkin or the stylings, & reed pens were invented, Fur making | these pens a peculiar kind of reed was nsed, which was shaped to a point and split, similar to the pens now in use. In A. D. 558 it was discovered that | quills made much better pens than reeds. The quills of the goose, the swan and the crow were nsed principally. centuriea later, when wriling paper was introdnced into England, the ¢uill pen was still the favorite writing instrament. However, the qnill pens had besn great- ly improved, and those froma Russia and Holland were excellent. | there was a demand for something better | and more durable then quill penr. Ac- cordingly a great many experuanents { were made with born, glass, tortoise | shell and finally with steel, silver aed { gold. It was soon found that pens made | of horn and tortoise shell softened under { the action of the ink and were not so | good as quill pens. Nor were the silver i pens very good. They were ton elastic and too easily worn at the points. y In 1903 steel was tried in Wise's barry] pens, but being poorly made and very expensive they were not a suocess. At i ! 1 | Birmingham, England, in 1520 the man- | ufacture of steel pens began in earnest. and they proved to be excellent. The bam brought $36 at wholesale, numbers and have hoen getting better can buy for a trifle the best steel pen ‘made. Europe has always excelled in | ica is noted for the manufacture of gold | pens. —Philadelphia Times. | Adulterated Food In Paris. In the guise of fine brandy have we white soap, colored with nutgalls or car- powder, ginger and pimento put into it gentian, centanry and ox bile In the yots and the brains of animals. Some: drawn from a real, live cow. For almost nothing you can have a su- | perb box of eanned lobsters, but in th sheet iron boxes that you buy you will only find cuttle fish. Tainted salmon, salts or zinc.. The scales are wade fresh again by rubbing them with vaseline, and the fins by rubbing them with fresh blood. Gingerbread has for base potas gitim or soap; cream has vaseline adde and is guaranteed to never spol, aw there are plenty of preserves into which not one bit of fruit has ever entered of | which they bear the name. Take aquan- tity of glucose, mix with. it suiphune | acid or amidon, give it flavor with spe- | cial ethers, cover the whole with a fine label and gain a respectable and respect- ed fortune. In chicory, the coffee. of the poor, is found the raspings of carrots, of beans, of glands, of torrified bread, of beet pulp, of brick dust and of ocher.—Letter in New Orleans Picayune, i § i i i i { | i i i i i i | 1 i i A Thoroughly Honest Man. said a lawyer to me, ‘1 mentiored the name of a certain gentleman. ‘Now, there,’ said the poiltician, ‘is as honest {| aman as there is in town. Yes, sir, I tell you, he is the straightest man I know, He is white he is. Yon need never be afraid of him besting you, for “he is honest to the backbone. you buy his vote, you may be sure he will do as he promises. [If he happens to find out that he cannot earry ont his | contract, why, he won't pocket your money and say nothing. No, siree, he will give your money lack to you every tite. Now, that is what I call est man.’ "— Louisville Courser-Journal. ay Fri 2) ARR : Stale Bread, - It is generally supposed that © | ness of bread arises from its becom { actually drier Ly the gradual Joss Slade Dre i ter, but this is not the case! contains almost exactly the same portion of water as: new bro . has become completely cold, [is merely in the internal of the molecules of the bred of this is that if we pat a st a closely covered tin, expose it ford an hour or an hour to a heat not exis ing that of boiling water and the lowing it to cool, it will be re appearance.and properties to the state o . the new bread. Brooklyn Eagle. fonaL wil ) 4 fea” STO in : Hard to Please. { Landlady--Thiz very bright, 38 3 confined to those who have sufficient | pleasant room, and - control over their own doings to tike | a meal every hour and a half, a thing _ parily consistent with earning a living af, anual labor, —Philadelphia Press. | my wife first, for she may want a ‘room i where she can have the morning sun in i the afternoon. —Chicago Inter Ocean, Tox | An Interesting Account of Their Torention | crit tm or ish Sat. 3 CUil}og mt jot instances to Prove That Vaceina Se ures | ets wore made | Egypt the cam- the plars of the pened JEtters Hs RAE | In Persia, Gresce and Syrian wax and | The In the early part of the present century 3 first gross of steel pena sold in Birming- | They were soon manufactured in great | and cheaper all the time, until now we! ‘the manufacture of steel pens, and Amer- | , becoming a danger to the rest. | ever may be said or done, itis inadmis-- . sible that any one should have the free- not drank alcohol made from potatoes, © added to by sulphuric acid, ammonia or amels, and owing its savor to insect. profusely? As for rum, it is colored with prunes or with tar, and savor is given by | adding the raspings of tanned leather. | In beer, instead of hops we find aloes, milk we drink there are water, whites of | gm. Eat, tien, of car cited in which 8 person properly vacei- times there is ev ittle k : Is even » little real mil { this I maintain my affirmation and shall explain clearly, I hope, how a vaccinated trout and other ‘‘denizens of the sea”, are embalmed by injecting ieto them | | — three on each arm. “In ~ouversation with a politician,” When | Mr. Henpeck— Well, I'll have to see [WHY iT IS NECESSARY AND TH! | VALUE IT POSSESSES. _ Only Limited Immunity From Smallpox, Vaccination Incriasing. M. Schrevens of Tournay, in a recent report to the Academie de Medecine de Belgique, insists oa the government mak- ing ap its mind to bring before the les. lature a law on chiizatory vaccination. He shows that in spite of the creation by the state of an izsiitate of vacoination {the death rate of smallpox, after having decreased for a certain time, pose agxn in 1802 throngh carelessness and impr dence. Children not vaccinated coniihe ned to be received in the schools, he says; | ‘the rag trade is not watched in any way; the isclation of contagions digcases in (he hospitals is not enforced; while work- { men, boatmaen, traveling showmen and | country letter carriers scatter the germs | of the disease right and left after being | turely. - : i It 1s in vain, adds M. Schievenz, that ithe Belginin government foun its {hopes on the regulations which the pro- rincial econncils are elaborating concern- ng the general organization of vacrina- tion. The law is the only radical and cer- tain measure in such questions, I have taken a good deal of trouble to defend the idea advanced by this writer, and in a paper addressed to the Academie is law making vaccination obligatory is impatiently awaited in Frances also, and would have a very direct relation to the : asticnal defense, : { While it is to be hoped that in case of Ft ANC {in 1550, { to smallpox, as against] i side, still there is { mobilization an important | scidiers placed in the auxilis i wha, having never served before, may {not have been vaccinated, and ran in i this way the risk of fecoming a danger {of contagion, La {The more one thinks on | the less comprehensible becoines itancy shown i law to an obligation deman opinion. i are more or less earnest adversaries of | vaccination, and that various antivacci- | nation leagues sérve as a raliying point te those who loudly claim the title of fenders of our liberties. But liberty isa term that must always be taken in a rel- ative manner, and the Liberty to do one thing implies that something else ia for- Mdden and imposes on society the duty of preventing one of its members from What- to give the st i, 1 Yoo with y pital ide- dom to damage a neighbor, The efficacy of vaccination can no longer be doubted. Its value has been ‘tested and consecrated by time and ex- perience, and it should be known every- where that it is by inoculating vaccina that we protect ourselves from smallpox and are rendered refractory to its action, 1 am quite aware that the following ' objection is often made, and that it is -gaid that it ia not true that vaccination prevents smallpox, and that cases are ' nated has taken smallpox. In spite of person may take smallpox and even bow stuallpox and vaccina can be seen going through their evolution together on the sine person. Take a child who has never been vac- cinates] and inoculate him in six places wae will be fol- lowed by the appearance of triles, and it is seventh a igh that if a wth inocnistion bad been made they have been followed by a seventh or eighth pustule. What does this prove? tion has possibly not that a certain amount of receptivity to the virus still remains. The impmanity ray be complete, but it may also be nly partial. If a man vaccinated six, seven, eight or ten years azo tie inoculated with the same vaccine matter nsed for the ekild and with the same care in six places, instead of zx pustules, as in the former case, only one, two or three may form. Saturation is manifest in this in. wl IE quile xssiine That 5 Deel (stance, and his immunity is completa, With another patient revacceinatad sues cessfully three months, six months or a year ago, and with whom the number of pustules was less than the n oculations made, however much care [ way take in inoculating him again, I shall fail altogether. In this case rition is complete and im smallpox absolute. : Observation has proved of the comparison between the virus of vaccina and the virus of smallpox, which, acting as two reagents of the sams fam- ily, may replace or complete each other. if 1 represent Ly 10 the maximum re- ve power of a person for smallpox, able by tn walating vaccina to come gd wy mpi 1am pletely annihilate ite power by confersing an immunity of 10, or I can do so incom- Yetely by an immunity of nine, sirht, peven, by making an insufficient anmber of fnocalations, : It 15 easy to understand that a recep- r of 10 defended by an immant- r instance, leaves a receps for smallpox. + BARR TL On a8 Vae- $1: iki UC ta 18 UT as ¢ s thisis also why smalls © ugh their in suche ad yo. st wir} uy N g pty lessens wilh time an a reg- IY pIrOGHrressIVe anner, that vaccina is the press the ix partial and deer 3 ated ba » with time 3p 18 well pmunity ferred may only periodically every six for eight vears, and again, as a matter of precatition, whenever there is an out | break of smallpox. — Paris Herald, : to be revacelt REVACCINATION, |* French Sent ment In Favor of Compulsory ill by resuming their occupations prema | de Medecine de Paris 1 showed that a ; c known quits well that there six fine pas- Pa - ¥ os 5 LIN OT Ol 18~ > - Refern her sex to aspire to that office, the legitimacy : Rome B. C. 34 smailpox, but. since NEWSPAPER F Conse, all ye lowly farmers. Come, all ye grager folk, the tivarion iral precinets ot find your nck, wiry the secret garde truck. an atede the ma Wo ho rash along 1] There tolls x gifted we Lope y POT BR MOOPRINE Sane “1% he handles He sweats his Li much of woadon t farmers nig hand : At OE (1 sive land And in bi ~3¥ « grief hs murmurs th rrons diversified The farmer woud With fortune for bi Bo come; ye lowly pi Who 1Airss And earn the goiden For be it understood That here we have a writer Who dGefiiy does the trick Of maak ing country butier By the paragraph or stick ~ Rt, Pani News Relteving Snowbound Passengers. “1 was snowhonnd in Michigan a few BY ME ; 3 - - employed in blowing vessels into the! air, Tecan eall to mind ons case vilich | A slave dhow of about 40 tons burden had i § years ago, between Uoopersvilie and Nunica,” said atraveling salesman. “The | snow was four feet deep on a level and | still falling. The passenger: had eaten | up everything the train boy had, includ- | ing even mixed candies, and children were crying for food. tee, and these were boiled at the engine. Then I started, accompanied Ly another passenger, to go to a farmhonse fo get some bread and butter. We waded through the snow, and hy the time we got there were near ly frozen, but we | could detect the oder of cooling victnala and felt that our mi winid be snc cessfnl, . “In afeweér to our came to flatly re let ns have bread at any price large loaves, inst baked, wore on a ta- ble ard a jar of butter rn I told my friend to go to the front gue with them while I ‘ This programme was carriod started back thron bread and batter, fore 1 cemld hear swemring at me. T through the snow. * Twice [ and soaked the bread i : hung on to it acd reached the train a the sane tite the farmer did. There : hundred passengers wera ready to help me, and we had one square meal. | had ei vs SEG 3 t. - x 5 Rracih a WoIal fused to Five. thé divr and enr mn. ®Ls ah Iead not g toe hen . ne sh ary adi saat cain nthe sno w, offered $1 a loaf for the bread and start | ed to make the promise good, but the | passengers insisted that the man should | get nothing except the empty butter jar.” | —8t. Lords Globe Democrat. Karean Use For Human Hair. Homan hair is in great demand in | some of the countries of Europe, and the | Our | consul in Korea points out that there is | plenty and to spare in the lrrmit King- | “have | supply is said to be inadequate. dom, '“The Koreans ™ he adds, remarkably fine heads of Liir, and they put their ‘combings’ to a se that I have never seen elsewhere, the packa of their ponies are made of hair woven into coarse mats or bags, and the halters and head ropes of their ani- | mals aro largely composed of the same material. 1 believe that hmuman hair ia largely exported from China to Enrope, and Korea could furnish a large and | cheap supply did the people know there there was a demand for 8.7 Herw's a chance fur some ploneer of commerce. — | Westininster Gazette, Mines of Fet rifactions. North Colorado and § and Montana are genuine mio«s of pet nifacti There ars petrifactions every kimd, ind ns. inding many varieties wood, ferns and plants, fish, "toads | snails, frogs, serpents, shelliish and ob- | * jects which cannot be classified. deposits often occur in layers, as though | © gotae great natural convulsion had de Gis. stroyed the animal life of a whole trict at conce. The sclsntists make very few and tolerably wea attempts to ex- plain the singular phenomenok, and the | InuTe i » roen who | pick out the best specimens and sell | * 3a ths fact is evident that about the matter than do ¥ know no the them to tourists, Chicago Herald. Nantacket lhead. Claimants for priority sre constantly getting into trot ments founded on ng cf the poor at Dedbam was the first of the tuckes Inquirer says: 1 a lady overseer o 3 da 8. Barpev-——aisd again in 1 elected the sane lady aw Susan P. Jones: So N ahead and pr “04 has re ane » wil of the His LR Lis Drie Took, win ry 1x which they dis tratin Thire was a ings at method reduce 1t t cake, in which {« served for many ERE » 8 of conesn | elome studies 1 & careful ex: Laomanter of repose always than the arth reg- vOunger Ker Fives ont, re Irstanoes of extreme of i ARMORY those wis 02 Are CTY Loa EXETCIRe the solves with gardening t an in any ofr { employment. | ; A grocery sales- | man offered his sampies of lea and cof- | : : Arabs : th A very large number of the saddleciot’s placed nnder | arts of Wyoming | af | af The | d y l to the mention by a Boston aper that a lady candidate for overseer I 3 » Nan- | » al 3 eiacteq | 1 of the whole 1 44 "1 & hair from wv tuckel 18 a year | wine so a8 10 | 3 T howe § | I “4 Trollope TORPZDOES AND WARSHIPS. ‘A Protest A simet Terrible Explosions on | ‘Paper by an Investigator. Naval men roost be anosed af the ter- : rible explesions on paper cansed to war- | ehips as portrayed in the recent sditions of “penny drendfuls’” A torpedo dis- charged from a torpedo boast is supposed te: have blown leer ad v's steamship : 1 of 5,800 tong, into; hich ship “then plunged stern nto tEn era, dnd with the onion © ~ingg disappeared without o =1 weing able tO save him- % JR? AOR a Teds ot when, I believe, two tor- 10 pa ands of gun oottan discharged against her ship Resistance, protect. | 2, x gi experiment in Ports | creek Th Registanon Wis Bpe- | bat she had rot Topo ne . El 4 ‘ L * i tf Clady RitTenZtoered, nearly a3 many separate compartrornts: | an our new ships She certainly sank at | the last discharge when the pets had © g@ven away, bat sank slowly. There was | , o> * ‘blowing ont of the water” about it | at all. The Resistanos ‘was if] remem. | | ber rightly, of about 4,506 tonnage. : Az to the actual effect of gan cotton] i happened to ry personal knowledge. thy rann been lightened beforehand. Contenins aly id ne t Vo floated for severil days i Te sent on r, and two 8 pound cod tor Were #1 was therel he { omn a -» kis down, ope under {12 feet from the stern. Instantaneous i fuses were fitted in pistols, and the party | . Sa ssa)d i 3 “tho bnsh | | potired about 50 yards i i The Arabs were in numbers log i pot Affering any resistances. i pistols were fred together, by the fall of a flag, th ] TALE ti into Bh Hr or 40 feet, two in a forma and fell In proces. : Crys AL + Boole ng, iv pe ahs ent boon ida Biowdd Sal evil lita {nels arainst the proceedings of th slave inp : differines in slowing ap a vessel of 40 tons, glimast on land, with 82 ponnds of gun cotton, anid blowing up a ship of 3.0060 tons in water, if coven with 290 pounda of gun cotton — Westzninster Gazette. “ - A PETRIFIED DUCHESS. | Identification of the Body of a Beautifol | Woman Fewul In a Cave In Germany. The petrified woman recently found in one of the caves which were used a4 burial places when Sorasizrg was beid, the annt of Frederick Barbarossa | The petrifaction, which has the appear- | ance of being a beantiful marble statue, is only perfeat from the waist up. It was found in a rade wooden coffin, which had been deposited in the cave, | among thousands of human skulls and | ocher remains. When the workmen opened the cofin, they found that it had | been filled with quicklime or some ther preparation which. strongly resembled Fo eommmon mortar : in { ns to know who had been thus v put away among the heaps of dead, they rote into the plaster incase- head and bat above alladed to trary to the expectations of tha did not crumble away 5 the amd nuvwastisl,. About } 4 of golden both 3d The face great beauty, every feature Gell, oy : 3 Seale ang onium petrifaction is fasley Baper, a sto =—5t Louis Res pow in wall Wail | public i £ Yeizhing a Hair. Lieney of the scales nsed in the tilustrated by the following, which from 8 conten Dorary Perhaps some persons wonld rather not know how many bairs they possess than to bave them However, the thing can be ut task n be made by weighing the; of hatr on aman’ head and | sa single hair. The welght | gus divided by that of ope | i Bair of average | ithe desired nuniber entire amo then welghis It you will pluck out | vr beard, 1 can show Son.” | one was secord A d siragging yed, Lhe refiner pa hh owas incl i mrted with extren w- a glass case | AC iG} he eq ipoise was | firtle weights of ainrainium ary: until : The hair weighed three milli figures,” he seid, | weigh ani #. %i% ounces, | 0 bairs 1 ba 1roltops’s Axgaatntanse With Loans. his sutoblography usd be why of the wrote: of those of Bis povels of seere was laid in Barsetsbhire. sir struck by the inti ate Kuowiel hich be showed of life Troflops tells us was al tad) whut some I's Critics were Fin a catbedr 3 drew hin bishops and bis deans! What we must bave made of them tin the ties i Overcthisprogouncement of the pundi } chuck He assures us that be fore those tales were written be had ney er wet either a bishop or a dean, nor had be; met, to his knowledge, any one who bad. Ho knew nothing, practically, of a clergy: man of any sort or kind, nor of life in a eathedrsl city either. He had drawn op Chis imagination, apd on bis imagivation { i $ JON, only, fur every life that be bad written.— = All the Year Hound. been chased by the boats of ene of our ! ernisers and escaped immediate capture! ing up a creek in the north part’ of Pemuba island, near Zanzibar. Saear- | | rived at the top of spring tides and had | Althemygh | 4 in the Zanzibar prize court, | r placed wader | her kezl, holes "sing dug out.and tamped | as 1 wg” ast and the cther | 2 the } v was hoisted bodily np | br Le in | The? ‘And, ! And | upsiderable blow | wr Pemabal, is a great | plagne striclom in the year i094 is now believed to be the Duchess Adel | air, but remained { i § The refiner of the assay oficn says: 1° + the hairs of your head is | A very close ap- | ath will of course give | ting tonal How excellently be 2x 3 $ 1 SENIZUARRRS-URNYS TATIONS £ Peasy West End Fmerald Park s 1 nekety Muster Riding Muanster fwd Karine Bradley Junction - PATTON Tank siding Bewwh Siding fairway Westover aloes Mahatfey GLEN CAMPBELL BRANCH. Mahaffey Junetion 11 Sod iin Ridge siting Cosh « rek June. tien Cam phe!) a agen SUSQUEHANNA BRANC 8, LE £55 Cherrytrve Ha raeshro __ Spengier FIT Carmlitown Resd T8 Bradley Jooethon - Oo 1 pr . Kx PBA 303% AND XORTHWESRTERNR. R Mail. Mail 0 pom, nn he ne Ms ni «88 STATIONN, Bel lwousd | Lioydeviile i sinsgOrw t raipore Irvons PBerwindale La Jose: Mabhaftey Motors Mid ney: Hillman 8 8 - Ss S83 aS TenwmwwREEs se SERENE OZRON Lindsey Horatio STAND BY THE POLICY, Spblime, Patriotic and National, . OF . AMERICA FOR THE RESIDENTS american. Do not atapdon the system whieh ites the country the best Opportunities for its ‘srmers, Mechanics, asl Yonng People, they ve ever had! No Interfereges with the Prop tive Tariff and no Repeal © : : TRAMPLE UPON TOG Lie for Unilmited Frees Or wiilnrs which are worth only ro Make thea worth a fuil } i 0 of National Bank ai Dolls Irom cieniiation since 8s] have hear pes ty over 35000000 of Siiver which has . Now make the periple’s diver worth ite face, for your own venefit! "RE aR Eee) 8srupesseinen SERVE THE PUBLIC LANDS ax actual wtilors and save then from ‘monop- o% gid speeglators! Protect and note mge | je actusd se tlie! ’ INTERFERENCE i" hit progressive policies of the Repubilenn Pparty repeatedly enacted into lnw) of buliding fy 2 New Navy: Protecting the Nea Conste; { Binstoning Union veterans; excluding the Chie Domapee: Heguilativg Interdmte Commerse, dos t arhding the Common Schools; Frotecting Amer | {ichn Citas abinoad Seenring Rediproeity with i otfper Anwrioan nations; demanding Fre Ex. | pipession of the Popular Wi in Elections, and i ap Honest Count: Kxtendidg American Come Dmjeren: Beviving Ameciean Shipping: Temper | athe and Restmining Trasts, : | | THE SUPERE MALKET RRPORTS of The N.Y. Tribune are now positively the { ubwt printed by any newspa in New York try, The Tribune is the only in Now York which sends men prronaaly inte ry market in the ity every day of the busi piss week to obtain actus! prices and the state of trade. Other papers make up quotations Wwrgely from circulars Commercin tra wy ananimousiy that The Tribune's Markes Heports aie the Dest. The Tribune now bests afl rivals in the pevumey and wonderful com pleteness of its quotations, To be i practical and level headed man mast { formed as to Prices and the State of | This can be done by taking The Tribune. i : ILLUSTRATIONS af the news of the day are freely ased in The | F Timbune. This paper has its own corps of ss {tists and photoengraviog plant. It containg femtures for he ladies and children; letters and book reviews, and many phe feminres . { NO MATTER WHETHER i | } i J a The N.Y. Tribune or not. in te wintiments, oan you afford not Wo rend its Dols ui agrees: with ment and found the wonderfal petrified | lr Weekly mgulariy, while a ractionary party Con- 1! sight in power and dunng HESE TIMES OF CHANGES The N + and = othon 4 Y. Tribune (x the abilest, most aggress iridest addviwnte of Bepabilenn polls : hat the Hepubilcan party intends ean varied from The NY, Tritmone, The Tis nets nH isthe Tmth and on arthsies of Roswell GG. Horr, Pohrrenesy, Wages, etc, will be continued, Rimember! he N.Y. Tribune is the cleanest, purest, and | of newspapers for vour Simily. Doss a r, which Invades the bome sensation, and Gilseboud, re 1 The broad columns and fe Tribane make it the suse re U'rivane has the largest dircunintion of adhy Welty in the United Stiles, jssded thle Bev of a mily.. We have challenged the | xlantry for a yews, with no takers, “Wash! sgton's Farewell.” Write for the Mil, iHustrated Premiam List | of The N.Y. Trihane., A copy. will be mailed frpe of cluarge. “Waskington s Farewell wn hs Offfforrs, Yan acon rate histories pivtiare, jainted prossly for The Tribune by an artist of grea | ayfthortty, will be seit 1 every one paying $1.39 if this paper. Other exocedingly inte Card valnelde articles ame included in The | ibaaney stl | : Terms for 1894. : Weekly, $1. Semi- #2. Daily, including Sunday, $18. The ‘ginday Tribune separately, $2 Tribune Als mae fori, remdy in Jananry, 2 cents, all privions Snbers evil peed, : THE TRIBUNE, - New Yark., PR He copies free, fi-wl Stop Thicf! Y Any one whose Watch has a bow ring), will never have oc. casion to use this time-honored It is the only bow that - # be $rq0ig J off the rh kA LOR - § ¥ found oaly on Jas ied and other waa ped with Z. mark. 3 A wateh case opener, which will save your finger nails, snl free on request, Keystone Watch Case Co, PHILADELPHIA, i> Boss Ft
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers