jPpi POWDER Afesokstely f*u7e <Y*lel>i*atil Pa* its <m*ut leuvcnhiK strength :uul lie.dthl'ulness. Assurestho ; lood against alum ami all forms of ndul toratiou common to the cheap brands. KNV VI. II.VKI N( J I'OVV ILKU < .. NKVV YORK. MELAND TRIBUNK Es.a'clichoi 18S8. PUBLISHED KVEItY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. , Make all money orders, chccli*, etc., payable In the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SU BSC It IPTI ON HATES: One Year SI-"" 1 Six Months 75 Four Months Two Months The date which the subscript ion is paid to is on the address label of each paper, the chunge ol* wliieh to a subsequent date becomes a j receipt for remittance. For instance: orover Cleveland 28June07 means that Grover is paid up to June 28,18'-*7. j Keep the figures in advance of the present ; date. Kcport promptly to thisolliec whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. FR ICELAND. i'KXN'A. MAY 20, 1807. WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington. May IS. 1807. The talk of senators on Senator Allop's resolution asking McKinley not to par don Chapman, the broker who was sentenced to a month"- imprisonment for J refusing to tell the names of senators who speculated in sugar stock, resulted j in a change of programme. The sugar ' trust, as well as its friends in the.senate, beeanie thoroughly alarmed and decided that Chapman should serve his term in jail, hoping thereby to hush the talk about a new sugar investigation in the senate. The members of the sugar trust who are under the same sort of indict- j ment will trust to their money and pull to j escape jail by 1. gal methods. The past week has been a bad one in other j respects for the sugar trust. It has been demonstrated that the sugar sched ule, which the trust had attached to the Dinghy tariff bill, can not possibly i he gotten through the senate, not to mention the house. These things have j resulted in greater activity on the part j of the big sugar trust lobby and money j will be spent freer than ever to secure a sugar schedule in the tarilT bill, as it i (inally passes, that will bo fairly satis factory to the trust. Ante-election | promises have some of the most promi nent Republicans hound hand and foot ti the wheels of the sugar trust chariot, j Senator Debee, of Kentucky, seems to j he really grateful to Dr. Hunter for having given way for him to get elected 1 to the senate. Knowing that Dr. Hun ter's contest, for a seat in the house had j nothing more substantial to stand upon i than the partisanship of a majority of i the house. Mr. Debet* has secured the promise of a great appointment for Hun ter from Mr. McKinley, and still further ! to show his gratitude, he worked the J Kentucky contingent of Republican olllce-holders and would-be office-holders I for contributions to the extent of $1)4o J and invi-sted the money in two diamond 1 studded watches which were duly pre sented to Dr. Hunter and his wife. Of course it, is nobody's business if some of the contributor- to the watch fund area little behind in their hoard bill. They have helped Debee pay a part of his debt j of gratitude. Tin- second tariff comparative state- ; mnnt, prepared hy treasury officials for ' the senate financial committee, is a little better than the first one, but it is full of inaccuracies, and the charge lias made that the sugar schedule has been purposely mixed. The Democrats will be prepared in point out the badness of the bill, as well as the errors of the com parative statement by the 24th Inst., to , which date the opening of the debate was postponed by the Republicans. Ex-( ongressnian S. R. Mallory, who has been elected by the Florida legisla ture to lill the vacancy in the senate from that state, which has existed since March L is well-known in Washington as a good fellow and a good Democrat, lie will In; cordially welcomed hy his Democratic colleagues and ly. will add one more vote to the silver majority al ready existing in the senate. S. A \ uluablc Little linok. Messrs. A. Snow &. Co., patent at torneys, of Washington, I). ('.. have is -iied a little hook full of information. 11 treats of the cost of patents, copy wrights. infringements, state laws con cerning patent-. what patents are grant ed for. advice about selling patents, abstracts of decisions, etc. It is a treatise that every one interested in inventions or patents ought to have and 1 will be sent fr • to any address. Those wanting it should write to Snow Co. ! Shoes for all kinds of feet are sold at the Wear Well. I Llifii L> OLi) jIEXICO. ; ,\cc;unt of a Vi3lt to an Ano'cnt 1 and Quaint Village. Where Men anil Women Live Ex nelly fin 1)I<1 Their Ancestors Hundreds of Years Ako No riacc for Revolutionists. [Special Tia Juatia (Mexico) I. otter 1 Tiu Juonn, Mexico, just over the Call- ! fornia boundary line, is one of the ! most picturesque pueblos in "Old Mex ico." The sleepy village is in ruins, and its sleepy inhabitants furnish a striking contrast to the American push and enterprise over the line, and i specially with that of San Diego, l."> miles distant. It is a. step from the I resent into the past of centuries ago. . for the characteristics of the old vi I - j Inge are the same as when the conquer-- 1 1 BOUND A MONUMENT AT TIA JUAN A. j udors came. The picture is the same, i -nly the figures that form it have come i and gone, and their places have been i a he n by others. The pueblo is strangely ! named, Tia Juana, signifying "Aunt .fane. Legend has it that she was the good nurse" of the pueblo b< lore the ; dventof physicians with their mystical medicines, and more mystical prescrip tions. Tia Juana is an interesting point for travelers, especially those of the ob : erring kind, who keep their eyes and < ars open, and mouths shut, except at intervals. The ordinary tourist sees only with open mouth. A trip on the Mimshackle narrow-gauge road is of in terest only when it has ended, as noth j ; ng is to be Been until the passenger is ! landed in Tia Juana, a rare bit of Mex ! Ico, three and a half centuries old. : lumbering on the borders of a nine teenth century civilization and enter prise. Just before crossing the line, however, are seen houses of modern make, and paved streets —a deserted or 'orsaken village—now going to decay as its neighbor across the line. This is the remains of a "boom town" which ionie San Diego speculators attempted to build up. But it withered under the j influence of its surroundings. The unprogressive Mexicans laugh at this failure of the "Americanos," and point to their own pueblo, which no boom, nor anything else, can affect. | The traveler learns that he is on for , <ign soil from a stone monument on the boundary line. It is 1-1 feet in height, j and is "fenced in" with iron pickets sharpened at the top so that no on< 1 can climb over. This was done to I protect tlie monument from "fiends" j who chip off pieces for relics and deface i it with their ignoble names. The fac j ing of one of the monuments was so vandalized that it had to be replaced by another. The monument at Tia Juana is the finest of the 250 on the boundary line, reaching from the Rio Grande to I the Pacific, about 000 miles. Those in I the desert or uninhabited sections are I of iron and about six feet in height; the I others aie of stone, and are about ten ; feet in bright. The inscription, which I states that it marks the boundary lim is cut in a marble slab on each monu ment, both in Spanish and English. Al though it. is a misdemeanor under the ; laws of both countries to deface a 1 monument, it is, nevertheless, done when a vandal can get aw hack at one of them, unobserved. ; Strangely, Mexico has a law prohibit - • ing her citizens from occupying land tit! I- 1 -- ! K ' A MEXICAN WATER SELLERS. within 50 feet of the boundary line This is called the "free zone." The in tent probably is to prevent private ami international disputes over land occu pancy, also personal difficulties. The Mexican boundary commissi on en asked the United States boundary com missioners to recommend the pass; - of a similar law. thus leaving a "free zone" or path of 100 feet between t! < two countries. Whatever may have been the recom mendation of our commission the "free zone" idea was not adopted. On the contrary at some places on the line, the enterprising Americans have built right up to and over it. At Xogales. a smug ling saloonkeeper, fearing that he would not get near enough to the limit 1 of his rights," went beyond. The ; boundary line runs through his saloon and as it happened to he at a point where a monument should he placed, ii , was planted ut about- <inid hips of the bar, running a straight line through the ;r a loon. As there is a duty on tobacco ind cigars, he can import them through j the window, take them to the other end rf the counter on the American side and j cell them duty free. Other dutiable j tilings are smuggled and sold on each , side of t he dividing line in t his novel sa ' loon, and the authorities seem pouer j less to stop it. in fact, the local officials j claim that lliey cannot "see through it." | The dividing line, it will be seen, is 1 rifle crooked, but. this is owing to a de j feet in what is known as the "Gadsden ; purchase," shortly after the encLof the war with Mexico. The Hue should de flect a few miles south ward so as to give us aport on the Gulf of California. This i was the main object < f the purchase of ! that strip of land. and. indeed, the port \ ' as agreed upon by Loili gin wnments. i Rut the American commissioners were j outwitted at a grand dinner given at the 1 conclusion of the purchase. The wily j Mexicans had changed the wording so | ; s to rend "the mouth of the Colorado | rivi r" Inst ad of "head of the Gulf of : C'ali lorn in." Cur commissioners were ■ J too full of M. \iean mescal 1O notice the I <• k'erence, and we lost the gulf port. ( .'ids lino would a!-o hr.ve taken in the i la Juana, or Aunt Jam . which loss is i about the only rd; mi: f.. Hire of the j blun Vi ing transaction. At "Aunt Jane" Lie customs of the musty past are o<!'., dto with a zeal amounting aim . to fanaticism, if it were not ki.wv. n that laziness was the underlying i in most instances. The one-story adobe house, of three foot thick walls, seems to be the most proper style of architecture for this tropical climate. In winter the in terior is warm and dry. In summer it is cool. One door is enough. For w in flows they have narrow slits, and for window panes iron bars, like a jail. That is handed down from the days of robber barons and counts, w hen every house was also a fort. There are no chimneys, and the light cooking is done in small charcoal stoves of masonry, i'li©. smoke escapes through the grat ings in the windows. The kitchen, or Lake-oven, is on the outside. Here the general cooking is done, excepting when it rains. There is not a frame or brick house in Tin Juana; consequently no fire department. A house on lire is something these benighted people have never seen. The streets are narrow and crooked,so crooked that ast ranger would get lost in attempting to cross if they were not so narrow. The sidewalks are masses of loose cob blest ones, mnk ing the middle of the street preferable. The streets are cleaned by the heavy ruins, or winds, and by offenders working out lines. When a drunken man is arrest r'K.iy:x \ ;;:l A la'RiKV K-V. :vU> %'Ra - j n MEXICA\Y ASIIER WO M EN. Ed, and has no money, the aleade or ders the guard to put him to sweeping the streets. I!c v.oiks until tlie alcadi orders him released, it may be three days or a u oath. The iiieade's word is law, and he does pretty machos lie pleases. This, however, is only : means of punishment, and not a sani tnry regulation. They argue that as their an. -I;iis n'd nut have the st reels cleaned, and got along very well unde that system, or Ic X of it. why shone: they adopt any innovation? The chief industries are the sale ti pulque, a very strong drink distilled from the ninqucy plant, and curios. I*lie natives largely patronize the for mer, and Americans the latter. How ever, those who do drink of the Mex ican whisky pronounce it a very de ceptive article —easy to drink, but a few quaffs of which will make a man feel as if he had been in a railroad col lision. About the only sign of life is that of the street peddlers, wlii sell every thing, from a coop of chickens to a bucket of water, including, of course, oil kinds of curios, from one cen tury to three centuries old—manufac tured for t lie tourist, trade. Each ped dler has his own quaint and peculiar cry, or song; for they literally weave the cry ofthe'r various articles into a j plaint, soft," low and sonorous, and somewhat musical. A milkman with a bell, or a fiend with a cracked fish horn would bo condemned toporpelual street sweeping by the aleade. The street venders are very polite, and do not thrust- their wares under one's nose in an insulting manner, as is too often done on the other side of the lino. He walks along singing his wares, happy whether or not he makes a sale. Swearing is not heard; neither do they chew tobacco; but they arc death on cigarettes. At the zanga. or stream, the women meet on wn£h days, ami air the fnmih linen in more senses than one. Tin clothes are lathered with soapsuds, and then pounded between two rocks and what is left is hung out to drv while the washerwomen go in bathing J. M. HCANLAND Fount iii Ncvvfotiiullntifl. A Newfoundland Tog is frequently so thick that- for the bowsprit of a vcs&e to be seen emerging from the mist vvhil • : not o trace of the masts or hu!i is per ceptible. is as common as is the. spec tacle of a vo' sol the topnuis's of which are 1 ashing in the sunshine while tin crew below cannot see from stem lu stern. Tien peek— Is t'lis tlie oh ice of Quig*- . Quick Cure? Patent Medicine Man Yes. "Gimme me six bo Mies for my wife." "Tried all other remedies without j success, eh ?" "No; she ain't sick at all; but I saw j in your advertisement where u woman wrote after taking 1 six bot-tles. 'I aiu a | different woman,' and 1 have hopes.**— Tit-Bits. An Envlon* Observer. lie is a real estate man, and his mind is always on his business. lie happened to be passing the white house, and ttoppod to gaze at it. "I wish," he said, pensively, "that. I could handle a piece of property like that. Every time a tenant leaves,there 1 s somebody ready and waiting to move ia.* ! —Washington Star. A HaliNfylDK Jadsmcnt. A 1.1 an fell from grace, though the falling was slow; Twfls all brought about by bis love for the cup. And eueh of his friends said he'd fallen so low The Judge did quite proper In sending him up. -N. Y. Truth. MORE ECONOMICAL. <s. ijt f y.. % L "*'• f'M ,7V* ■' , ■ "J;'fCti ' ( S>yJ e? czz-iA "Say, Mr. Barber, how much will you j ' charge to cut my hair?" ■ "Twenty-live cents." I "Gee! guess you'd better gimme five cents' wort' o' dot hair restorer you use."—Up-to-Datc. Thtit'n Tlielr Un*litcn*. Two dentists who had long been foes One day made up, I know not how, In partnership quite well they pose, It seems they pull together now. —N. Y. Journal. | A Cood Lubricant. "Those children," said Mr. iNetherby, .is he threw down his paper, "are ntak- j ing so much noise J can't hear myself think. I'm going to attend to thorn." I "Don't be too severe," said Mrs. Neth or by. "Suppose you try the plan of j casting oil on the troubled waters." "I will," said Mr. Nelherby, as he picked up his ruler; "I'll try a little whale oil."—Detroit Tree Press. Juvenile Generosity. "That's just like you selfish boys," said Edith; "eat till of the orange your- j self. You never gave me any tiling in your life." "Yes 1 did, replied Hobble; "didn't : i give you the mumps, once?" —Youkers j Statesman. She Knew Hotter. Mnzie—l suppose that after you mar- j ry Mr. Clubhy, you will begin a general i reformation of his iittle weaknesses, won't you? Daisy (wisely)— What! And lose my j. best and only bold on him? Well, I quess not!—N. V. World. A Way Widow* Have. A.—l would never marry a widow. Phey are invariably looking after Num- : her One. 1 I. — I don't agree with you. It stems j to me they are invariably looking after j Xumber Two.—Tit-I3its. Reflex Action. "We have been very fortunately sit ;!.•!ted i his winter." "In what way?" " The people in the next fiat whip their little boy so often that our Tommy be haves like an angel."—Chicago Record. ; There Are Some Evidence*. "Are there really mastodons?" he asked. "Of course I can't be sure," she re plied, "but there is evidence that some people think their heads arc built upon that principle."—Chicago Host. Wisdom. 1 "I can't see why they speak of the wis | loin of the serpent." | "Well, yofi never heard of a serpent •retting its leg pulled, did you?"—N. Y. Truth. Set 'Em I |) Ami iit. Tippler—l can tell you that it is pretty hard work keeping one's head above i ; water these days. i Rippler—Yes! 1 should judge so by j the color of your nose.—N. Y. Tribune. < niistic CrftlclNin. ! "She must have quarreled with Mrs. Sage." "Ve.s ? " "\es, she calls her 'that woman.' " i Chicago Journal. A Hint to Investor*. • Eriendleigh—l'm thinking of dabbling | a little in stocks. What's a good thing j to put money in? Broker—Your inside pocket.—Up-to j Date. X Way He Ilnn. Ciri-.ro—Kilduff borrows a five-dollar j bill and is off like a Mhot. C'awker- Yes. it. is "touch" and go ; with Kilduff.—N. Y. World. One of Tliem. Party at the Door Is the lady of the house in? j Cook -I'm wan of thira, oor.—Boston Transcript. Pelt Snre All the Time. , There' naught to match It slnee the world begun*- i The ma33ivo wisdom of the man who wan -Chicago Journak NEWS OF THE WEEK. TJinrMclny, May 13. Typhoon II Won the race for the Ken tucky Derby at Louisville. C. C. Daklwin, naval officer of the port of New York, died in Newport, It I. \V. J. Calhoun, special commissioner to investigate the Ruiz case, has ar i rived at Havana. ('hang Yen Horn, special representa tive of the emperor of China, arrived ill New York on his way to attend the : queen's jubilee. Elmer Clawson, a boy, was hanged at Somervllle, N. J.. for the murder of Harry Hodgetts, a farmer at Pluck enlm, N. J., last August. ; The grand jury indicted Commander Booth Tucker of the Salvation Army for maintaining a public nuisance—th*. | Fourteenth street barracks, New York. Friday, May 14. An American missionary from UppeT I Congo reports that terrible atrocities I are being perpetrated in that country. Simeon lloagland, a famous owner and breeder of horses and roadhouse keeper, died at his home, near Coney island. Waller Connors was arrested and ar raigned on a charge of participation in the bold robbery of the Yonkers Sav ings bank on April 12. Mayor Patrick J. Gleason of Long Is land City issued the petition which will make him an independent candidate for ! mayor of Greater New York, j The I'nited States grand jury began ; an investigation as to the methods of bucket shops in New York and heard the. testimony of several brokers be longing to the Slock Exchange. Saturday, May 1.3. ' Tom Mann, the English labor organ izer. was ordered out of France by the j polite. Stephen R. Mallory was elected Unit ! ed States senator by the Florida legis lature. Frank A. Vanderlip of Illinois has I been selected lor assistant secretary ■>; j the treasury. The trial trip of the gunboat Nr. ;h : ville took plate in Long Island sound, j her average speed being 10.708 knots. | A special royal train having the Prince j and Princess Ferdinand of Bulgaria as i passengers had a collision with a mail j train In Servia. | Joe Killoran and Charlie Allen, two noted pnsioffice thit v s who escaped from Ludlow Street Jail in New York tin July 4. 1895, are said to be living in London. President McKinley. acompanied by the vice president and most of the cabi net members, arrived in Philadelphia to attend the unveiling of the Washington monument. ' Judge Wheeler, in the Uniled States , circuit court, handed down a decisi. n j requiting the elty of New York to pay j to C. C. Campbell &818.074.82 for the in- I frlngemcnt of a patent for lire engines. Moutlay, May 17. I The Very Rev. Dr. Edward P. Alien i was consecrated in Baltimore as bit hop j of Mobile. The Canadian government is about to send an expedition to explore Hud son straits. Two schooners came Into collision in New York bay, and the crews of both had narrow escapes. The Hamburg-American steamer Ar cadia ran on the rocks near Cape Ray, I N. F. The French briganttnc Croisine ; went ashore near Lamaline, N. F. Four men attacked and robbed a pas ; senger on a crowded ferryboat from | Long Island City. N. Y. Three were ; captured after a hard fight, j Preston Thornton, a member of one j of the most prominent families in Ken i tucky, shot himself fatally with suicidal intent at the homo of Milton 11. Smith, | in Louisville. Thornton had been en gaged to Smith's daughter and had j been rejected by her. Tuesday, May 18. A statue of General John A. Logan Is t 1 > !"• unveiled In Chlcag > July 26. Pres ident McKinley may be present. Ex-Embassador Thomas F. Bayard, upon his arrival at Wilmington. Del., placed the log of the Mayflower in the | vaults of a deposit company. ! The president nominated Frank A. J Vandelip to be assistant secretary of i the treasury and Brigadier General Ze -1 nas R. Bliss to be a major general. Chester W. McLaughlin of the Valen tine-McLaughlin alleged swindling syn dicate was placed on trial before Re corder (hill in New York. Daisy Hamp ton was a witness. The United States cruiser Detroit 1 reached the anchorage off Tompkins- I ville, N. Y.. after a cruise of more than years. She will go to the Brooklyn navy yard on Thursday. Tommy McLaughlin, a 17-year-old New York boy, proved himself a hero by jumping into the East river to res cue a 4-year-old Italian girl who had fallen into the Third street dock while at play. Nine thousand tailors on strike in New York against the task system in use by the contractors in the manufac ture of clothing began organizing un der the direction of their old leader ! Schoenfeld. A memorial signed by many business linns and individuals In various cities of the country who are Interested in trade with Cuba and praying the gov ! ernment to intervene and stop the Cu i ban war was sent to Secretary Sher ! man. Broker Elverton Chapman, the contu macious witness in the sugar investiga tion, began his 80 days' sentence fn Washington's District jail. Judge Brad lex postponed until May 25 the trial of President Havemeyer of the Sugar trust, who, like Mr. Chapman, refused to answer senators' questions. Wednesday, May 10. The relehstag by a large majority adopted a bill allowing German asso ciations to combine. J. Haraen Rhoades declined to be con sidered as a possible mayoralty candi date of Greater New York. Hudson county (N. J.) Democrats have named Supreme Court Justice Llp pincott as their candidate for governor in 1898. A diver discovered that the leak in the big Brooklyn navy yard dock is caused by a 10 foot square hole in the apron outside of tin? caisson. An address and a vas>* were present ed by the American chamber of pom- i merce in Paris to Samuel E. Morss. the retiring consul general Miss Emillo Grace Brlggr revived a diploma from the faculty of Union The- I ological seminary. Her father was sua- j pendoJ from that institution for heresy. I imihi—— if — : cnn lawiyrcmflj f THATTHE AVege tabic Preparation for As- S SIGNATURE slmilating tlieFoodar.clHeguta- 1 ting the 5 tomadis and Bowels of S OF Promote s Digestion, Cheerfu- 3 /i nessandßest.Contair.s neither 1 | Opium.Morphino nor Ffiaeral. a| jg QIT THE Not Nahcotic. Itia'/r afOldSrS'S'Hlir.'ia'Eß ji P P Pwnpkui Sctti" £tof ( I OF EVEEY IVmermint - / CuitionattSmLv * I ®3 I bottle OTP hjatuyrecn- Flwcr. 1 l ' Facsimile' Signature of ' 8 fj "H"" 11 -mamammmmmm tmmt Oatil i ft is put np i a ono-slzo bottles only. It ! | ' ' Tho fac- /? ' "-" EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. & C.nib SZS^/' 13 oa , w B! - a -; tarc OVOI 7 1 - i "- -■ •- -.- r of ' wrappor. I Bicycle from Castings. f J&"?/ xx TUe monarch f ' S K °° J a " i/ i H if . II Look 2 l|f Under the Enamel! ij| We want bright s J re '" esent l)s § fl p every "'*'** f I JIT monarch CYCLE CO., £ j jjj| Chicago New York London. THE BOOK WORLD. Popular interest lias recently been re vived in the i.ovels of Willi ie Collins. Rudyard Kipling- has finished a new •diort story of 1)2,1)1)0 words, ealied "Slaves of the Lump." •Judging from the sales, the most ixjpiiinr three of Hardy's now-ls are "Teas," 'Mtitle the Obscure" and a "Pair of Hlue Eyes." It has been asserted by n high au thority that the people of Indiana write more poetry than those of any other state in the union. Ilall Caine confesses 1o taking his work too seriously to be either carried away by warmest, eulogy or disturbed by severest censure. Walter Scott loved animals, and never could reconcile himself to the cruelty of shooting for sport. How can any healthy mind so reconcile itself? William Morris was the richest I'rit ish poet of his time except TeniiyHon. His wealth was due. of course, more to his business than to his poetry. Russell Sullivan said that he "read a | few |Mtges of Longfellow before sit t ing down to dinner, so as to be in a com fortable frame of mind for his meal." YV. I). Howells'daughter Mildred has a studio in her father's New York heme, and has furnished some clever lllustra- i lions for books and magazines. Thomas Hardy's personality is said to he Unit of "a retiring and modest man ! of letters, and nothing about him to | indicate the poseur or the prophet.*' j A request has been sent to Rrandcr ' Matthews to permit his "Introduction : to American Literature" to he printed in raised letters for the use of the j blind. Charles Peadc once gave to a you: •- novelist, now well known, the follow ing recipe for writing a novel: "Make 'em laugh; make 'em cry; make 'em 1 wait." j in direct opposition to the known wishes of Washington Ir.inir. the flew j Washington and Main Streets. HKNIIY IIA AS, - Proprietor. Tin? best accommodation t'or nermancut and transient truests. Good table. Fair rates. Itar linely stocked. Stable attached. Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use I*B In tiruo. Sold by druggists. liffl owner of Sunnysidc is building an ad dition to it. iMid T-losing up Sunnysiile | lane. Thackeray's own favorite l.ook was "Henry Iv-niond," and Lady ('nstlewood ~ was modeled on the late Mrs. W. 11. Hrookfield, from whose mind the au thor received most stimulation. The (lernnin empress is paying the expenses of a trip to Italy for .Johanna Ambrosias. That mighty land of niel ! ody, poetry and science has seldom j failed for long to recognize i # ts geniuses. STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, ) LUCAS COUNTY, I S3, FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that lie is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY & Co., doing business'in the City of Toledo, County and State afore s id, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each ai d every case of CATARRH that cannot bo cured by the use of HALT.'# CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Oth day of December. A. D. 1880. WVI" A.W.GLEASON ( I Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Ecnd for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. WSold by Druggists, 750. Hall's Family Pills are Ujo best.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers