The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, November 28, 1895, Image 7

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    Fteeont |}
With Yhe Ontpuzt 0
3 aiirytries
Mannfacturers hhonld
a Fair Rhare of Vrpaort
f this
gtore manulactures
labor pite
tions of ecslamity howlers, the produc
tion of iron \
scale of
pome woeka the ontput, 45 8h
ports. of the
ate of 10,
mutes have bee
will soon reacl
a rate eomal 4
CR
| the fonry ried rire]
in this conutyy
15 now
. ;
nnexampled magnitnde
NEB by
furnaces. has heen
nnn
pred] wit
Ggther pouty
'3 Amer
f thie Dress rt
tion in the United States
sage
and bu
time thio
was: HK G2 N24
American tons), reported )
never, we bolitve, exceeded
od Kingdom. Dut as long 220 as in the
i vy ried in
1 year ending June 50, 1560, the |
iron prwdnced in the United Htates
moutited to 10,307,028 tous, and in
1892 abost the sun
It is not reinatiable that some thnid
people, ignoraut of (ho real oy ditions
af the fron treo, have booa ervin
against this euicoms 1
fron as unwise. taf
pals are cov {ir
the future he
xets of conv
present |
Tout
ie
TET
81
stalled
3:11 §
Rteel wares,
Hit \
ia N Whaat
that nrodue:
(1 tales IR
remdy fully gesort her op
macy in supy
with all m
Al aL
which ir
Alr
Yor + ine + 5
iv a ne cariiest pos io 1
thus enlarge their co IGUEsts (aw
uipnt in this o
Collaborating With Paul
Potter
Prisons.
ing In
PArison
Four
in the Unit- |
He claims
his
1
the night ezhool
trade of play writing.
at the end of the winter he will have
i 3.300 Cpe nC a88 Al
and teach them the
“4
several dozen strong and healthy young
men bard at work writing plays for
>almer aud the Frohmans and making
excellent wages, and that in the course of
a few years there will be a chair of dra-
i matio
| in the
“much,
‘me with grave apprehension. 1 am
"afraid that in the course of time play-
instruction in every trade school
land. Now, I like his idea very
but there is one thing that fills
§ +
Io tells me that
Ah, ‘tis the uatare of the vibe, and of
maiden, too—
Bo when the bold Montana boy came from his |
lair to woo
The fair Kentucky blossom felt all ber heart
strings {hril} -
Responsive to the purring of Penn Yan Bill
He told her of Lis cabin in the mountain far
BWHY, :
Of the catamennpt that howls by night, the
wolf that yawps by day; So
He told her of the grizzly with the sutomatic
JAW, vl
Be told ber of the Injun who devours his vie
tims raw > :
Of the jas
| § $1
hs
HALL CAINE
ing but few gostures.
low, bunt clear, except at the end of
- evening, when it became a trifle hasky.
Mr. Caina read his address. Ha sid in
His voile was
thn
tia
BLTOOG, (das a5 Ley Choust Wall J ddady,
the apparent fact of their ability to ar-
rive at an agreement may well excite as-
tonishment. To Russia the acquisition
of Constantinople would be incaleglably
more nsefnl than to any other power,
since only through the Bosporus can the
great northern empire gain access to the
Mediterranean. te : 2
Hitherto the czars have acted cn the
theory that it was better for them to
leave that coign of vantage under the
| control of a weak Turkish ruler than t
choy 14 1p Pall jit
rv Chrictiny hans