BOY'S INGENIOUS WHEEL. Lad of Fourteen Years Constructs ■ "Chainless" Bicycle. "A curious bicycle, en route from Hamilton to Warrnambool, was in spected by a number of interested per sons at the train last night," says *he correspondent of a Victoria (Australia paper. "It is of the old style, the front wheel about three feet eight inches high, being made solid from boards ol an old washing machine, and the hind wheel is from a small wheelbarro . Both wheels are mo it ingeniously tired with bark, with a strip of linoleum over nil. 'rue backbone aud hind fork is a DRIVING TIIE CATTI.E HOME. gum bough in its natural stage, benl with great accuracy to the requisite position. The front fork is anothei gum bough in its natural state, excepl ihat the parts forming the fork are bent together, so as to be parallel. This works through an old wheel box from r> light cart, which is fixed in the thick part of the first branch, which forms tne backbone, and an iron rod passed through near tho top serves as handles, and the pedals are ingenious adapta tions of some old iron utensils. Thi maker Is a lad of 14." A Surprise Party. "What's Mrs. Breezely iu such a stew about?" "She asked the pleasure of Lieut. Slick's company to tea, and ho appeared on the scene with forty of his men."— Detroit Free Press. __________ How to Wash With Care. Hard water, strong lye, or Inferior laundry soap are responsible for the yellow clothes seen in many house-* holds. To wash property,' fill a tub nearly full of hot water, put the v-hite clothes in first, rub with Ivory Soap, scald, rinse and starch. When dry, sprinkle and fold down over night and Iron carefully. Eliza R. Parker. New Electric Light Plant. In accordance with the policy of economy adopted by the Receivers of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad an elec tric lighting plant has been installed at Philadelphia for the purpose of lighting the passenger station, yards, freight stations, freight yards, docks, round houses, machine shops, etc. Twice as many lights are in service now as when the company purchased the current from local lighting com panies, yet the expenses have been re luced one-hnlf. The Philadelphia plant consists of one 150 H. I*. boiler, two 50 General Electric arc light generators which are Pelted to a 125 H. P. standard Westing bouse engine. It t00k,20 miles of wire for the overhead construction and a fub-marine <-ablo is used in crossing the Schuylkill River. There 1* more Catarrh In this section of the lountrv than all other diseases put together, And until the last few years was supposed to lie lucurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and proscribed focal remedies, and by constantly failing to fure with locnt treatment, pronounced It in surable. Science has proven catarrh to he a •onstitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, •lanufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the onlv constitutional euro on tho market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it falls to cure. Send for circulars and testi monials. Address F.J. CHENEY& Co.,Tpledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 7. r c. Hull's Family Pills are the best. Fits permanently cured. No fit* or nervous ness aitor first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Norve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free Dm It. 11. KMNE. Ltd.. SBl Arch St..Phila..Pa. Mr*. Winslovr's Soothing Syrup for children let-tliing, softens the gums, reducing inflamma tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 26c.& bottle. I can recommend Plan's Cure for Consnmp. tion to sufferers from Asthma.- E. I). TOWN HKND, Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4, lbtß. Was Nervous Troubled with Her Stomach- Could Not Sleep—Hood's Cured. "About a year ago I was troubled with my stomach and oould not eat. I was nervous and oould not sleep at night. I gre.T vory thin. I began taking Hood's Harsaparilla and am now well and strong, and owe It all to Hood's Barsapnrilla." MANR PETBS, 90 South Union Street, jloohesPor, N. Y. Remember Hood's Sarsaparilla U tho best—'The On. Tru. Blood Pnrlflor. Hood's Pills at* tb favorato cathartlo. I'V y V y y y y W W ■ a IM la Ml ZZZZZZSgfI < % :• Ayer's >: *4 For asthma, bronchitis, croup, or whooping cough, there is *4 ► no remedy so sure and so safe as Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. ► This standard remedy for coughs, colds, and all diseases . 4 of the throat and lungs, is now put up in half size bottles at ► half price, 50c. a < % :• Cherry :• :• Pectoral. : : 4 k A PIONEER'S NtULECTED GRAVE Beneath a Wild Cherry Tree Fleep* Austin, the Founder of Texas. Among the foothills of the Ozark mountains, in the cemetery at PotosL Mo., lie the remains of Moses Austin the founder of Texas, for whom th€ eepltnl of that State is named. His grave is in a neglected state. Moses Austin was a native of Dur ham, Conn., and emigrated to Mis souri about the year 1783. Iu 1707 he TOMB OF MOSES AUSTIN". obtained from the Spanlsu Govern ment a graut of land containing 0,083 acres, which is still known As the Aus tin survey, aud includes a portion of Potosi towusite. In the year 1708 Aus tin built u costly mansion just opposite the site of the present court house, aud was at that time the finest structure west of the Mississippi River. He was extensively engaged in mining on the claim, and in his report to the Govern ment in 181 D reported 200 miners at work on the claim. He built the first furnace in the Southwest. In the year 1821 he explored the un known province of Texas, and after ward secured a grant to enter and col onize. He returned to Missouri in 1823 for the purpose of organizing a colony, but was taken sick died aud liis remains were interred in the Protest ant cemetery. His plans were success fully carried into effect by liis son, Stephen F. Austin, but as his father was the originator of the exploration he Is rightly called the founder of the Lone Star State. A very large cherry tree has grown over the grave. The once famous inan- Klvna was destroyed by fire iu 1873. There are still numbers of the miners working successfully on tho claim, which is a regular honeycomb of holes, but the supply of lead is seemingly in exhaustible. Homes for Themselves. One of the best possible facts In the latter-day progress of this couutry is the Increase in the number of homes. In crowded centers of population, such as New York and one or two othei cities, the flat and the hotel must al ways be necessary, for space is too val uable to be monopolized by the humble But even around the very large cities there are being built thousands and thousands of suburban cottages and country residences, and all through the length and breadth of the couutry, lu the towns, villages and cities, artistic homes are Increasing at an astonishing rate. If anyone will take the trouble to look up the literature on the subject he will find that In this country there are more than a hundred papers de voted to these home-builders, giving them each week plans and suggestions, The number of books upon low-priced architecture written in the past fifteen years, exceeds the total for a century previous. A wider education la being spread, and the gain in every way ia enormous. A man who owns his homo Is a better citizen, even if there is a mortgage on It. There is a feeling of personal part nership in the protection of property and the preservation of public ordei which makes him stand for what la best in lnw and government. It Is the best possible thing for his wife and children; best for him and best for the \ountry. insurance against non-employmoni is an experiment begun in America during the current year. It is a pri vate enterprise. Its dues are fceavlei than those of similar European socie ties. hut its benefits also are mucli larger. As in the case of the European societies, voluntary non-employment, or non-employment for any cause with in the control of the beneficiary, makes all benefits voidable. This excludes the striker. As it is '•% the Interest of the non-insurance companies to help theii beneficiaries to get work, a company In Chicago supplies to its beneficlarlei the services of two employment bu reaus without charge. Patience Rewarded. His first love's age was just twenty-five, When at twenty iu marriage he sought lier; He failed; but again at forty did strive, And this time he married her daughter. FOR BOYS AND'GIRLS. SOME GOOD STORIES FOR OUR JUNIOR READERS. A Little Heroine, a Story of the Pen* Insular War Ghost Stories That Caused Laughter True Nobility, a Poena. True Nobility. fOR this true noble ness I seek In In woman and in man I find it not: I almost weary of my earthly lot My life-springs are dried up with Thou flnd'st it not? I pray thee look Look Inward through tho depths of thine own soul. How is it with thee? Art thou sound and whole? Doth narrow search show thee no earthly stain? Be noble, and the nobleness that lies In other men, sleeping, but never dead. Will rise in majesty to meet thine own; Then wilt thou see it gleam in many eyes. Then will light around thy path be shed. And thou wilt never more be sad and '•ne. —James Russell Lowell. A Little Heroine. Baron Lejeune, who played a con spicuous part at the siege of Saragossa during the Peninsular war, narrates in his "Memoires" a singular story of that terrible time, a story that speaks equal ly well for the chivalry of the soldiers of France and the courage of a Spanish girl. There had been fearful carnage with in the walls of the unfortunate city; even the convents and monasteries were reeking with evidences of war fare, and the inhabitants of Saragossa were in a desperate plight. A band of Polish soldiers, belonging to the French army, had been stationed on guard at a certain point, with or ders to fire upon any Spaniard who might pass them. Suddenly a girl of about fifteen years of age appeared among them. A cry of warning was heard on every side as she approached, but the child seemed not to hear. She When the last ArnHhe squi rre T~s hi ufLh 6ir. All the loHq suthme-fe^plaijs. autumn -wtgdg^^onhru). - -t£~vj_l4.ife sum. I ■T.*Then upolf/-y I §ipfffn4jd P| cfure5 made fl n the mbprabn<jWt —From the Youth's Companion. •nly continued to utter one ceaseless tnd piercing wall, "Mia madre! mla madre!" as she hurried from one group of dead and wounded Spaniards to an other. It soon became evident that she wa3 In search of the body of her mother, and the pale, agonized face of the child, whose filial love had made her almost insensible to danger, touched the soldiers' hearts with pity. A mo ment later a despairing cry announced that she bad found that for which she had risked her life. The Polish guards watched her movements with some tnlng like awe. as she stooped and ten derly wrapped the mutilated form of the dead woman in a cloak and began to drag it away. Suddenly the girl paused and seized a heavy cartridge box that lay in her path with an energy that seemed almost supernatural. Her frail, delicate form swayed and stag gered beneath the weight of lier bur den, but she did not hesitate. A thrill of mingled horror and ad miration filled the astonished watch ers as they perceived that there, be fore their very faces, she was taking from them an instrument for future vengeance upon them. The inhabitants of the besieged city were almost destitute of ammunition, and the motherless daughter sought to put into the hands of her countrymen a means by which her wrongs might be in some degree avenged. But the strain was becoming almost more than she could bear; she stum bled, and a cry of terror broke from her lips. The Polish soldiers glanced from one to another, and then, moved by a chivalrous impulse, they lowered saber and musket, and with one ac cord a hundred voices called out, "Do not be afraid little one! We will not hurt you!" And the Spanish maiden passed with her gruesome burden between a double line of her country's foes, who made a silent salute as she crossed their boun daries and returned to her desolate home. A Ghost Story. A party of people had been telling ghost stories, the ghosts In every case being accounted for in some matter of-fact way which aroused the laughter of the listeners when they came to an end. At last the host was asked for his contribution. "I saw a ghost once," he admitted, "and although it's a good while since I've thought of it I can well remember my fright. "I was a boy about 12 years old, and I had been oft fishing all day. I stopped to take supper at my uncle's farm on the way home, and after sup per went out to the barn with my cousin Sim. while he did the milking. Then Sim and I sal down in'the hay loft for a while discussing some plans, I have forgotten what, and it was dusk before I started on my lonely walk home. "I had never known what It was to be afraid, but I did remember a3 I started off down the long lane, close to the graveyard, that some foolish girls had said ghosts walked in that lane after dark. "Just after I had turned into the lane I saw what seemed to be a sha dowy figure walking, or rather flitting, a short distance in front of me. In voluntarily I lagged a little; the sha dowy figure seemed to do the same. "Then I hastened my steps, and still the flitting figure in shadowy garments kept before me, at exactly the same distance. In spite of myself I began to feel frightened, and then I turned out of the lane on to the loneliest stretch of road anywhere about, and saw the hovering figure still before me the perspiration started out of my fore head In beads. "I put up a damp hand to a still damper forehead and brushed awny a whisp of hay which had been hanging from my hat brim in front of my eyes. I saw no more of my ghostly compan ion, It Is needless to say, and I was so ashamed of myself that it was years before I could make up my mind to tell such a joke on myself." Belfry In a Treetop. They are a resourceful people In South Africa. In Pietermarlzburg the Cathedral of St. Peter proved unequal to holding the chimes presented to It, so small was the steeple. But the con- BELLS OF ST. PETER'S, gregatlon determined that the chlmee should not be wasted, even if a new belfry could not be built. So the bells were attached to a giant "blue gum" or eucalyptus tree, near by, and from their lofty tree-top perch they ring very sweetly. - ———- - THE MERRYSIDE OF LIFE ! 6TORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. And Then He Went—The RrnteUHon It Is Connumed—Ups and Downs—.4 Genuine Delight—Her Castles lit , Spain—An Objection—Consolation, Etc. ■ "That goes without saying," says young 1 Mr. Vaughn. (The roosters already were crowing.) "What bothers mo mostly," said Kate with a yawn, The Brute ! Wife—"l wonder how you can look me in the face." Husband—"Oh, a man can get used to anything."—Tid-Bits. Ups and Downs. "My life," said Mr. Lusliforth, "has been one of ups and downs." "Yes," said his wife. "Hic-nps J and fall-downs."—lndianapolis Jour nal. A Hot Time. The Bellows--"If it wasn't for me you'd soon be out of a place." The Fire—"Well, you needn't ho blowing about it all the time."—Chi cago News. According to Darwin. Simkins—"Softleigh is trying to trace his genealogical tree." Timkins—"l'll bet he will find > monkey on one of the branches."— , Chioago News. A Genuine Delight. i "There is one thing which gratifies a woman more than all things else." "And what is that?" "Being told that other women are jealous of her."—Chicago Becord. . j Her Castles in Spain. "She says their season in Europe was a perfect dream." "I guess it was. You see. as a mat ter of fact, they staid on a New Jersey farm all the time. "—Chicago Journal. An Objection. He—"Don't let you father put in j electric light." She—"Why not?" He—"Well, er, you can't turn it low, don't y'ou.see."—Detroit Free Press. They Are Friends. Helen—"l wonder why Kate doesn't mind her own business." Mattie —"She hasn't any." Helen—"Business?" Mattie—"No; mind." Chicago News. How It Is Consumed. "I wonder how it is possible for all the light literature we I have in this country to be consumed?" "That's an easy one. Books are cheaper coal now."—Cleveland Deader. A Compensation. Ethel—"Tommy Prescott's mamma is deaf. That must be awful!" Johnnie—"Oh, I don't know. I'll bet she never tells him that little boys should be seen and not heard!"— Ha rlem Life. The Time Fur Restraint. "Uncle Alex, why do people saw wood and say nothing?" "Because the v.-ords a mau wants to say when he is sawing wood would get him turned out of church."—Detroit Free Press. A Good Idea. Young Bride (on the train) —"I do hope that the passengers won't find | out that we have just been married." I He—"l can fix that. When we near a tunnel I'll go into the smoker."— Harlem Life. Impatient. He—"l told your father we expected to be married next month, and he was j wild." She—"What did he say?" He—"He wonted to know why wo , couldn't make it next week."—Puck. ] A Speculator* "They are claiming that these chain* less wheels will run easier the more they are ridden." "Yes. That's why I mean to buy , one. I'll ride it for a year, see? And then sell it for more than it cost meu" —lndianapolis Journal. Consolation. "Miss Mac Sere is immensely pleased with the Scorcher's review of her ! novel." "But I thought it was unfavor able?" "So it is; but it calls her 'this youug authoress.'"—Pick-Me-Up. Inconsistent. Hammerly—"What's come between you and Puuderson?" Osgood—"Oh, it was this way: He j said to me: 'What's the use talking? Every mau has his price, and you j know it.' Then I asked him what his I was, and he wanted to fight."—Chi- i cago News. Why, Indeed. She—"lf you could have one wish what would it be?" Ho—" It would be that—that —oh, if I only dared to tell you what it would be!" She—"Weil, go on. Why do you suppose I brought up the wishing question?"— Chicago News. Klondike Romance. It was the Klondike; there could be no doubt;of that; everywhere men were starving and being written up by the newspapers. "Dearest, be mine!" ho exclaimed. "Well, you've got brass!" she sobbed ecstatically. In truth, she had done him wrong, supposing him to have nothing but gold, like the ordinary youths who came and went and were smiled upon and presently forgotten. —Detroit Journal. . GO-WAN-GO MOHAWK. The Noted American Indian Actrcsl Who Una Won ltiatiiictlon Ahroud. ; Go- Wail-go Mohawk, says a writer ID I the Puritan, is an American Indian ! i woman who has recently attracted at j j tention on the English stage. She is j j a daughter ot the chief Ga-ne-qua, i j known to Americans as I)r. Allen Mo I I hawk. She was born at Gowanda, N, ! I'., on the Cattaraugus reservation, is J j a descendant of the old and famous j I chief Red Jacket, and belongs to the I | Six R.'ations. That she should have j | won success in a play of her own crea- j ! tlon, especially in conservative En- j gland, is a matter of comment even in these days of progressive women. When Miss Mohawk was last in New j | York, she headed a great parade of J , Tammauy braves which occurred there i some six years ago. Off the stage she j j is quite as interesting as upon it. She | J was educated at a girls' seminary NL I j Painesvllic, Ohio, and besides speak ing English fluently she knows some thing of French and German. Pliysi- I cally she is remarkable. Graceful as the deer of her own forests, she pos j J MM strength which !ln A woman is J 00-WAX-GO MOHAWK, phenomenal. She is a splendid horse- J I woman, hns won several prizes with the rifle and is a dead shot with the j bow and arrow. Most remarkable of j all. Miss Mohawk makes all her own gowns. She is the wife of a Mr. Charles, a former oflicer in the United States army. IN REGARD TO MEN. John Howeils, son of the novelist, William Dean Howeils, recently re celved a diploma in architecture from a Paris institution, where he had been a student five years. Brigands in the Roman Campagna hava no luck; they hd up Prince Francesco Borgliese, Duke of Bomar- J zo, and his agent recently, but the two ] had only $7 between them. Two years ago, when the Duke of Saxe-Melnln gen was robbed, he had just $lO on his person. Verestchagln, the Russian battle painter, will be the first recipient of j the Nobel prize, given for "the propa gation of pacific ideas," it is said, as his pictures have brought out the true ; | horrors of war. Kaiser Wiihelm calls i j them "the best assurance againsl | war." | It is reported that Verdi has intrust- : | ed to his friend, Boito, a box contain ing the score of a new opera, entirely I completed, but that the box Is not to ■ be opened, nor its contents investlgat i ed, until after the Italian composer's i death. I In a recent Interview Jean de Reszke told a funny story of how his brother Edouard went to sleep during the "Meistersinger" at Bayreuth, and how |he had to vigorously shake him to I make him stop the strange sounds which were scandalizing the audience, i Max Haddad, who now lives in re : tlrement in Worcester, Mass., was for i merly a favorite Jockey of the King of I Roumania. His Majesty had the am- J bition to have in his bodyguard of j skilled riders men of nearly every na- ! tion of the world. Haddad, a Syrian by j J birth, was one of these. The seven- - J teen riders always accompanied the i j King on his official tours about Galatz. j A Progressive "Woman. I Walker— l'm very much afraid my I j wife is going to have brain trouble. j I Ryder— What makes you think so? | Walker— Last Sunday when she re- ! turned from church she repeated the ! text, and never said a word about what | I the other women had on. But It Wasn't Funny, j Rnggs— Some of those biblical charae ■ ters must have been rattier comical. | Jaggs— Why do you think so? J Rnggs Well, there was Job, for In j stance; he fairly boiled over with hu- ! wr. Strong Evidence, j HE— Why, look here! Jenkyns lias I gone Insane. J Young Mamma— Well, I knew there was something queer about him. Why, | once the poor man actually told me Ills little son was neither bright, beautiful | nor partlc-'srly well behaved.— Truth. Paper Bottles. 1 Bottles now are being made of paper under a German patent. They are for j use particularly on shipboard, where | | heavy weather works havoc among I glass receptacles. ' " Cleanliness is Nee Pride, Dirt's Nee Honesty." Com mon Sense Dictates the Use of SAPOLIO ___ No. 203. Thliquar ter-gawed ' cjak^wrltlnf I ' 1 plate glut • ••[£ iWfIPIL in top and* deep drawer French leg*; 11 llm •!■< flushed jjr' " -j'i.. $3.95 \\ >; >1 p 'co for this $lO desk. (Mail orders filled promptly.) We will mail anyone, free of all charges, our now 112 putro Special Cat*- , logue, containing Furniture, Draperies, Lamps, Stoves Crockery. Mirrors, Pictures, iieddiug, Refrigerators. Daby Carriages, eta This is tlio most com plete book ever published, and we pay all postage. Our lithographed Carpet Catalogue, showing carpets in colors, is also yours for the asking. If carpet samples are wanted, mail us Bc. In stamps. There Is no reason why you should pav your local dealer CO per cent, profit when you can buy from the mill. Drop a liuo now to the m^tey-savei*. JULIUS HINES & SON, Baltimore, Md. Please mention this paper. Hours of Torture. In the last great day, when Jnqg I ment is passed upon the quick and the I dead, I hope to stand exi>ectant j absorbed to know what will lie the I fate of the mail who invented the j third-class carriage upon French rail I ways. The steerage of a vessel is par j adise compared to these instruments of torture, writes au American travel ing abroad. i To begin with, the compartment oar could only have liooii created in a , country where there nre classes. The I long, open, social, cheery, American i car is too democratic even for demo cratic Franco. All castes may travel on the same train, but there must Is opportunity for the noble and the rich ?x>urgeolse to exclude themselves from J those who, by reason of poverty ox I vulgarity, -re offensive to them. In France third-class apartments are the most uncomfortable of plank , seats and backs, and the "omnibus" - train is one which stops at every sta tlon. Two seats run crosswise of the i car. You face the passengers on the ; other seat, and whether your vis-a-vis ' Is man or woman feot are unavoidably | entangled; and If your opposite be a woman you nre constantly In peril of j being accused of a pedal familiarity of which you nre wholly Innocent. I This is a fault which also extends to Vrst and second class apartments. From Different Standpoints. Mrs. Brown Stone —I have such an In dulgent husband. Mrs. Upper Flatte—Not more so than mine, I'm sure. He's never sober. Never Awake. Some people will never wake up till th last horn blows, land then they'll ask It that's the horn for dinner. D elays are dan gerous and ruinous. Thousands ean say if they hadn't put off an opportunity, tliejr would have been rloh and happv. Som® never know they have rheumatism until crippled by it, and all the while in pain, thinking it will pass off. But St. Jacobs Oil never delays, end is always wideawake. It goes straight to its work of cure in a business way, and cures rheumatism in any form nud at its worst stage. It's a live remedy. John V. Farwell, the millionaire I merchant of Chicago, was fined re cently for taking sand from the beach at Lake Forest without paying for It. X 40-cent load of sand stood him $lO | and costs. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Brorao Quiuit . Tablets. All Druggist* refund money if it fails to cure. 'Ac. Consul Phillips of Cardiff, Wales, ad- I vocated the establishment of an Amer ican line of vessels to that port. He j believes that Wales could rival South- I ampton or Liverpool as a place of shipment. j Chew Star Tobacco - The Best. Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. The Merry murder case at Chicago I may be culled a paradox. njHinrn and TUMOR l"Ult£l.irK PERMANENTLY fl.rlnULiß oured H without knife, plaster or pain. AU forms of ItI.OOD DIMEASKM | thoroughly eradicated from tbo system. Si* weeks llomc Treatment for $lO. Book of j Information free. NATURAL REMEDY CO.. Woitfield, Man A __ I_Z IT$ JITFMTQ arß Pr ® pr iHf # ! Mn B Lit I O sold. Ar \ ' B INVENT Improvements In tools, Implements* ® household articles, etc. Write I'. N. APPLE* 1 I*l AN, Patent Lawyer. Warder Hid*., Wash* | Inaton. P.O. Free circular aud advice. Low fee INVENTORS iss.sflssss j ■ advertising "No patent no pay," l'rizes. medal*. great riches, etc. We do a regular patent huein***! | 7xiic ieta. Advice tree. Higheat reference*. ; Write tie. WATHON K. COLEMAN, .Solid*. I tor* ol'patent*, Wi V. tttreet, Washington, D. O. PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHNW MORRIS, WASHINGTON, D.Ik Late Principal Examiner U. 8. Penilon Bores*. H yn. ia lut war, lo adjudication oiainu, uLty. ALASKA MINING GAZETTE "dross ANGLO-ALASKAN CO..tM Liberty St..N. Y | BE YOUR OWN BOSS. j \\> ill bo handed you daily at home. Nocam*-.- J sing. Unu. Mfg. Co., Cincinnati, O. Life, Endowment and Tontine INSURANCE POLICIES PURCHASED Richard Herzfeld, 35 Nassau St., New York. CANCERS AND TUMORS CURED or no pay. Merrill's Inst., Middlebourue,\V.Va. PUD DO '97. Boat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Uao ■ In time. Sold by drugs!*!*. S EaassgsGfioangE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers