44 A Miss is As Good as a Mile/' If you are not entirely well, you are CI. Illness does not mean death's dcor. It is a sense of weariness, " tired feeling" a life filled with nameless pains and suffer ing. In 90% of cases the blood is to blame. Hood's Sarsaparilla is Nature's corrective h_• blood. Hgmember A Oloba Trotter. Customer (Backhampstead, Ct.) — Wal, I don't know about that calico; I think I've seed better. Storekeeper— Nancy Jane Bosworth, there ain't no better calico than that on alrth! I know—for I have traveled! I have been to Springfield, I have been to Hartford, and I have been to New Haven! In fact, Nancy Jane Bob worth, I have traveled this wide world over! So you can safely take my Judgment 'bout that calico!— Puck. How Are Your Kidney. Dr. Hobhii'Spanutui Pill.euro nil kidney 111.. Sam pie free. Add. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N. V. An international congress of Roman Catholic workingmen will be held in Paris during the coming summer. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Lifts Avraj. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be maff. netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To 13ac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, COc or 61. Care guaran teed. Doolilcfc and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or Jfew York. The total revenue of New South Wales for the year 1898.was $17,500,000, the best record ever made by the colon v. Beauty Im Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body, llegin to duy to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Boohs* Narrow Kscapes. Three of the greatest books In the world have narrowly escaped destruc tion, the "Aeneid of Virgil," the works of Aristotle and the great body of Jew ish tradition represented by the "Tal mud." It is recorded that Virgil on his death bed sought to burn the only copy of the "Aeneid," as he had not revised it, and when he was foiled in this he ordered his executors, Varro and Tucca, not to give it to the world, a direction which was disregarded by order of the Emperor Augustus. The works of Aristotle suffered from neg lect. They lay many years burled in a cellar, and when, by mere accident, they were at last unearthed, they were BO damaged by damp and dirt that In many passages they are hopelessly cor rupt. How great would have been the loss of this work to the human race may be Judged from the fact that everything that was known in the mid dle ages of the arts and sciences was derived directly from these writings. The "Talmud" nearly became extinct through persecution. The possession of the "Talmud," by a long series of edicts, extending over many centuries, was made penal, and the book itself was burned. No fewer than twenty four wagon loads of "Talmud" manu script were burned In France In 1244. —Stray Stories. A Busy Woman Is Mrs. Plnkham. Her groat correspondence Is under her own super vision. Every woman on this continent should under stand that she can write freely to Mrs. Plnkham about her physical con dition because Mrs. Pink ham is M woman and because Mrs,. Plnk ham never violates con fidence and because she knows more about the Ills of women than any other person & this country. LytSia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has cured a million sick wo men. Every neighbor hood, almost every family, contains women relieved of pain by this great medicine. galzer'r. Rape ■ , M fipritx— given Rich, is It! SEEDS^, t0 Rr> ,rrante< * Prodm- H 10 DOLLARB WORTH FOR 100. T. . 1 iii j' oc " CANNOT ESCAPE IT. REPUBLICAN PARTY MUST FACE FINANCIAL 19 SUE. The Currency Bills of the Present Con- CrenH Fixo4 the Responsibility for the British Cold Standard—Cannot Pool tho Farmers. From the Atlanta Constitution: While some of the editors are wonder ing if the money question will figure in the next campaign, Hon. J. G. John son, vice-chairman of the executive :ommittec of the Democratic national committee, calls attention to the fact that the currency bills of the Repub lican party In congress have already fixed the Issue. By proposing to fix the single gold standard upon the country, the Republicans have shifted the issue from that which was before the country in 1896, to a contest over the gold standard pure and simple. In the last campaign the discussion was between those who favored the free coinage of silver at the old ratio and those who were opposed to the propo sition. At that time the Republicans refused to make the gold standard the Issue. They fought shy of it and evaded It. They admitted In their platform that bimetallism was better for the people than the single gold standard pro vided it could be reached as tho result of international agreement. And now Mr. McKinley was so keen for the In troduction of international bimetallism that ho took it upon himself, even be fore he took the oath of office, to ar range for a commission whose duty It would be to visit Europe in order that the evils of the single gold standard might be mitigated as promptly as pos sible. It is hardly necessary to say that many voters who were utterly opposed to .the single gold standard were won over to the Republicans by the con servative stand which they conceived that party had taken on the money question. The impression left upon the more thoughtful voters by the Re publican leaders was that these lead ers were equally opposed to the gold standard and to the Independent free coinage of silver; they were supposed to occupy the safe and conservative ground midway between; they feared independent free coinage, and so they turned to international bimetallism. For the first time since the ques tion of the standards has been agi tated the people will have an oppor tunity of deciding whether they want bimetallism —the free coinage of both money metals —or the single gold standard. Always, heretofore, the is sue has been confused; the Republic ans have been shifty enough to evade It. But now they cannot escape the results of their efforts to make the gold standard the permanent measure of all the values In this country. This Is the question which the peo ple must decide for themselves, and they will be given an opportunity next year. Still a Larger Army. From the Denver Post: The coun try is up against a new problem. Ac cording to the chairman of the house committee on military affairs the standing army of .100,000 men, instead of being reduced, must be materially enlarged, for, says Mr. Hull, the chair man, the 65,000 men in the Philippine islands should not be kept there a year. Their health would be ruined If they were forced to serve there for that length of time. They must be relieved within the year, and to do that we need an additional force of at least 50,000 men, which brings the standing army up to 150,000 from the 25,000 we had a year ago last March. No doubt the proposition of Mr. Hull will be accepted as iegal tender. We cannot let the troops die in the Philip pines, as we will have need of soldiers there for centuries to come. The war along the coast is over, no organized force appearing there, but the interior still is unsafe. Spain had something over 100,000 men stationed there. Mr. Hull thinks that we can get along with 65,000 provided we renew them at least once every nine months. A relief ar my must therefore be provided for this exchange, and an increase of the regu lar army to 150,000 men is the best that can be done. As we have con cluded to expand, it is but natural that the people thus enlarging the army to six times its former strength, but as the people seem perfectly willing to pay war taxes in time of peace this latest imperialistic movement doubt less will be allowed to go by default. Memory Conveniently at Fault. New York World: It Is one of the commonplaces of medical science that civilization vzlth its new luxuries brings new penalties and that diseases unknown amid simpler conditions of society obtain luxurious development amid congenial environment. A strik ing illustration of this truth is fur nished by the evidence of loss of mem ory which suddenly afflicts the mighti est intellects of the age when put on the witness stand and asked to tell the court about events nnd Incidents ac curately remembered by all except themselves. For Instance, while the mental fac ulties of William Rockefeller of the Standard Oil trust are otherwise unim paired—as anyone who antagonizes him In his colossal business enter prises is certain to discover —he was totally unable when put on the witness stand to remember stock transactions of recent date Involving millions of dollars. While a cure for this strange malady Is eagerly to be desired, It has not yet been classified or named. It is certainly worthy of medical Investiga tion, if only on account of its tem porary and eratic manifestations. It Is noticeable that Its victims Immediately on leaving the witness stand regain full possession of their memory and all other mental faculties. Warrant for Snsplclon. From the Washington Times: Ad ded to the accumulating difficulties now threatening the lean purse and foreshadowing an economy that means shivering thousands Is the dishearten ing report from the Pennsylvania coal fields that the dissatisfaction of the miners may soon result in a general idleness of the collieries. An unsym pathetic public, believing Itself about to be victimized, cannot be blamed for entertaining certain vague suspicions concerning the growing complications in the coal situation. They may be wrong in their views, but the individ ual consumer, who has no reason to expect a munificent assortment of Christmas gifts from the coal trust, has a right to his opinions. As the greedy trust gathers in the shekels it might devote a few moments to deciphering the handwriting on the wall, for one of these fine days the average man, who is doing the think ing on his own account, will suddenly make some natural deductions. When that time arrives something is bound to drop and the opinion is ventured that the average man will be in at tendance to view the debris with un disturbed complacence, if not with actual satisfaction. Congroflsnien and Trants. From the Indianapolis Sentinel: Senator Kyle and his commission may report trusts are good things and ought to be perpetuated, but there is not a man in the United States who does not know that the statement is false. Nobody of ordinary intelligence believes anything of the kind or be lieves that the commission believes it. Nor is it because the constituents of congressmen are '..vorable to trusts. They are not. The great majority of the people are opposed to trusts and would gladly see them suppressed. Any man not directly or indirectly in the pay of a trust would be a sim pleton if he were not opposed to trusts. They hurt him personally and they hurt the country. Hundreds of men would refuse to vote for a legislator who was favorable to trusts if it were not for party pressure. The congress man who favors trusts does so know ing that his constituents do not favor them and that if they re-elect him it will be In spite of his action and not In consequence of it. The people are not in favor of trusts. Always Bleeding; the People. From the Denver Post: Not so very long ago the people were told that a home market was what was required to make the manufacturers happy and the people contented; that in order to have a good home market we must im pose a high protective tariff so that foreign goods could not come in. The people are now told by t.heir chief ex ecutive and his secretary of the treas ury that the home market is a delu sion and a snare. They argue that to obtain a good market abroad and have the trade follow the flag we must en courage shipbuilding by offering sub stantial bounties to tliose who want to engage In it. For a generation our people have been robbed poor by the beneficiaries of protection, and now the president proposes that they be robbed some more for the benefit of those who will establish a carrying trade to expand the markets for American in dustrial products. How to Overthrow Trust A. From the Philadelphia Ledger: a tariff is so excessive as to promote domestic monopoly it Is unreasonably applied, even from the orthodox view of Republicanism, and It should be al tered in such manner and measure as to neither create, foster nor sustain monopolistic trusts, which control the conditions of trade, stifle wholesome competition, decree arbitrary prices by restricting production and oppressing labor and consumers by their un scrupulous and dishonest practices. Are the president and congress equal to the situation? Is any other plan for the confusion and overthrow of the trusts feasible or possible? If so let it be tried. Trusts ami tlio Tariff. From the Rochester Herald: Presi dent McKinley, the chief apostle of protection, is an example of the pro tectionist who fears to take up the only weapon available for attack upon the trusts. The preservation of his tariff system is dearer to him than the destruction of any evil that the tariff may be fostering. While he Is presi dent and while the clique of Repub lican's. headed by the president's chief adviser, are In control of both branches of congress, nothing In the way of tar iff reductions need he hoped for, and the trusts will thrive along with the smaller protected creatures. The I'lilllpplu. Muddle. From the Minneapolis Times: We are not fighting a government—we are only pursuing a disturber. It IB a paper chase over a rather moist coun try. If we capture him it will be nec essary to deprive him of his liberty for a season, and tile Tagalos will imagine we have burned him alive or chopped his body into mincemeat and scattered it to the four winds. That would make a martyr of him and the pacification of Luzon would thus be rendered in finitely more difficult. Admiral Dew ey has suggested that the best dlspo sltion of Aguinaldo would be to let him escape. The hint is not a bad one. Humility Is the solid foundation of all the virtues. —Confucius. ; Soldiers by experience taught Learn the art of packing, Luxuries receive no thought; But, whate'er is lacking, Soap is there. The veteran shows Care in its selection. Ivory Soap is best for clothes; For the bath perfection. Then it floats; and so he chooses) Ivory, as the soap he uses. Cured the Choir Sopranc. "I am sorry to learn that you are so 111 that you cannot possibly be in your accustomed place tomorrow morning, Miss Hysee," said tho minister's wife, condolingly, according to the Christian Endeavor World, "and I have hurried over to say that you need not feel the slightest uneasiness about the solo you were to sing in the opening an them. Dr. Goodman and the choir have arranged that Miss Goneby shall take the part and " "What?" The popular soprano of the Rev. Dr. Good man's church choir sat bolt upright in bed. "What?" she screamed. "That old maid with the cracked voice trying to sing my solo? Never!" With one hand she tore the bandages off her head; with the other she swept the medicines from the little table to the floor, and then kicked down the cover let. "Tell Dr. Goodman and the others," she said, In a voice that rang through the house like the silvery tones of a bell, "to notify Miss Goneby that she needn't mangle that solo. I'll be there." Speaker Henderson's Gavel. Speaker David B. Henderson's gave! Js made from rosewood brought from Manila by Capt. Charles V. Mount, captain of the Shenandoah company in the Fifty-first regiment He se cured the wood from tho Spanish bat tleship Relna Christina, Admiral Mon tejo's flagship. The gavel, which is now ready, is inlaid with gold, and each end of the mallet is solid gold. Speaker Henderson's monogram and the state and national coats-of-arms, are inlaid in gold, and in the handle are 45 gold stars. Its cost Is J2OO. ■■■■BaßamßßßOißßai You're Gambling! It's too risky, this gambling with your 1 cough. You take the chance of its wear ing off. Don't 1 | i The first thing you know it will be | down deep in your | | lungs and the game's | I lost. Take some of g I Ayer's Cherry Pec toral and stop the gambling and the j cough. " I was given up to die with quick consumption. I ran down from 138 to 98 pounds. I raised blood, and never expected to get off my bed alive. I then read of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral and began its use. I commenced to improve at once. I am now back to my old weight and in the best of health." —Ciias. E. llartman, \ Gibbstown, N. Y., March 3, 1899. ( You cm now get Ayer's Cherry Pectord in a 25 cent size, just right for an ordinary cold. The 50 cent size is bet ter for bronchitis, croup, whoop ing-cough, asthma, and the grip. The dollar size is best to keep on hand, and is most economical for long-standing cases. Catarrh Cannot be Cured With local npplicntions.asthey cannot reach the Heat, of the (liseaso. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di rectly 011 tho blood and mucous surface. Hall's CatarrhC'uro is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, nnd is a regular pre scription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with tho best blood puri fiers, acting directly on tho mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredi ents is what, produces such wonderful results i? curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials, frea F. .1. Cheney v Co.. Props., Toledo, O. Sold by st*. pric e, 75c. Hall's Faiully P ills are the best. London is 12 miles broad one way and 17 the other, and every year sees about 20 miles of new streets added to To Care Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. It is observed by travelers in Siberia that the effect of constant cold is prac tically the same as the effect of con stant heat. The people develop a disin clination to work, and become strangers to ambition of any description. What Do the Children Drink 7 Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink called fIRAiN-O? It is delicious and nourishing, unci takes the place of coffee. Tho more (Irain-O you give the children the more health you distribute through their sys tems. Grain-0 is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about : H us much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c. The Allgcmeine Deutsche Sprachver cin has offered a prize of 1.000 marks lor the best study of the slang used by seamen. Vitality low, debilitated or exhausted cured by I)r. Kline's Invigorating Tonic. Free $1 trial bottle for 2 weeks' treatment. Dr. Kline, i Ld„ 031 Arch St., Philadelphia. Founded 1871. ' Of the 77.671.000 acres of land and | water in the United Kingdom, about j 47,800,000 arc under crops and grass. ' We have not been without Piso's Cure for Consumption for 20 years. Lizzie Fkuuel, Camp St.. Harrisburg, Pa., May 4, 18& L The wages of a Chinaman at Amoy j amount to about $5 a month. Mrs.Winslow'sSoothingPyrnp forchildren i teething, softens the gums, reduces in fin 111 in a- ' tion. allays pain, cures wind colic.2sc a bottle. —At Bellville, Kan., a circus changed j its line of parade in order that two 1 sick boys might look out of the window and see the procession go by. Edncnte Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Rfllcicut Postal Service. The annual report of the third as sistant postmaster general contains ' strong testimony in favor of the hon esty and efficiency of the postal service, writes William E. Curtis in the Chi cago Record. During the past fiscal year the postmasters of the United States and their assistants handled $196,653,544, of which $95,021,384 was receipts from the sale of stamps, boxes, money orders, etc., and the balance j was disbursed for various expenses, j Of this enormous sum the entire loss ! to the government by burglary, fire, . bad debts, embezzlement and all oth ; cr forni3 of carelessness and dishon esty was only 519.358. I doubt if any j private firm, oank or corporation, or , any institution in the world that re- | eeives and disburses money, can show .so good a record, and yet we keep ; talking about the inefficiency and cor- ; ruption of the public service and other ; j evils of partisan appointments. It may I * ; be said, too. that the customs collec- J j tions and the business of the internal t ! revenue office will show similar evi- J dence of honesty and efficiency in our | public service. tip In Dreenland. . j "No," continued the Eskimo sadly, J , "there isn't so much money in the \ hotel business in Greenland as the j volume of travel would indicate. ! The average Arctic explorer is so par -1 tlcular these days! He has to have ; boot for dinner every day, and fresh boot at that! Canned boot won't an- t swer at all! No, I don't know as I | blame the explorers so much. They've - j got to have such experiences as tho j | I public taste demands, if they are to uo i j anything lecturing, I suppose. Yes.''— I Puck. ECZEMA Hands and Limbs Covered with Blisters and Great Red Blotches. Scratched Until Almost Wild. Burned Like Fire. Sleep Impossible. CUTICURA Remedies Bring Speedy Relief and a Permanent Cure at a Cost of Only $2. I was a sufferer for eight years from that most distressing of all diseases, Eczema. I tried some of the best physicians in the § country, but they did me little were covered and would become inflamed ; little white blisters at smooth surface which would burn like fire and itch ; well, there is no name for On the inside limbs great red blotches, not unlike hives, would appear, and as soon as I became warm the burning and itching would begin. CURA REMEDIES, got them and gave them a thorough trial, and after a few applications I noticed the redness and inflammation disappear. Before I had used one box there was not a sign of Eczema left. I can truthfully assert that $2.00 worth of CUTICURA REMEDIES cured me. There has been no sign of its return anywhere upon my body since I wrote you I was cured, nearly four years ago. Hardly a month passes but what I receive a letter or some one calls and wishes to know how I got cured, if I had Eczema bad, and if the cure has been permanent, etc., etc. I always take pleasure in enlightening them the best I can. JOHN D. PORTE, Pittsburg, March 1, 1899. Of JOHN D. PORTE & Co., Real Estate and Insurance, 42S Fourth Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. The agonizing itching and burning of the skin, as in eczema, the frightful scaling, as in psoriasis; the loss of hair and crusting of the scalp, as in scalled head; the facial disfigurement, as in pimples and ringworm, the awful suffering of infants and the anxiety of worn-out parents, as in milk crust, tetter, and salt rheum all demand a remedy of almost superhuman virtues to successfully cope with them. That Itemodioi aro such stands proven beyond all doubt. No statement is made regard* ing them that is not justified by the strongest evidence. The purity and sweetness, the power to afford immediate relief, the certainty of speedy and permanent cure, the absolute safety and great economy, have made them the standard skin cures and humor remedies of the civilized world. The treatment is simple, direct, agreeable, I and economical, and is adapted to the youngest infant as well as adults of every age. Bathe the affected parts with hot water and CUTICURA SOAP to cleanse the surfaco of crusts and scales, and soften the thickoned cuticle. Dry, without hard rubbing, and apply CUTICURA Ointment freely, to allay itching, irritation, and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and lastly take CUTICURA RESOLVENT to cool and cloanso the blood. This sweet and wholesome treatment affords instant relief, permits rost and sleep in the severest forms of eczema and other itching, burning, and scaly humors of the skin, scalp, and blood, and points to a speedy, permanent, and economical cure when all other remedies and oven the best physicians fail. CUTICURA THE SET, prico $1.25; or, CUTICURA SOAP, 25C., CUTICURA OINTMENT, 50C., CUTICURA RESOLVENT, roc., sold throughout the world. •' llow to Cure Eczema," froe of the Bole Props., POTTER DRUG AND CIIKM. CORP., Boston, Mass. MILLIONS OF MOTHERS Due CUTICUKA SOAP exclusively (or bativ's nkln, sculp, and hair. Ills not only the purest, [ sweetest, ami most refreshing of nursery soaps, but It contains delicate emollient proper! tics, obtained from CUTICURA, the gieat skin cure, which preserve, purifv, and beautify the skin, scalp, and hair, and prevent simple skin blemishes from becoming serious. For distressing heat rashes, chafing*, inflammations, and eruptions, for crusted, itching irrlta tions of the scalp, with dry, tliin, and falling hair, for red, rough hands, and shapeless nails, und simple infantile humors, it is absolutely indispensable. That Small, Clear Voire. | For a whole long, weary hour he had | hold forth on his flrstlys and secondlys and albelts and therefores, and, get i ting his second wind, he exclaimed: "On the other hand—what?" And when a clear, small voice replied "Fin- ! gers!" he knew that the greatest ef- I fort, of his life had struck a snag. i SiaiMMEaak Conquers Croup without fail. ' Kj j l]f° r th e cure ofC o nsum p tio n. | r. N. U. 3 'Oo CARTERS INK I Just as cheap us poor ink. ; I it*® "I aitfffbrcd the torture* of tier cluittmd with protruding piles brought on by const'pa* tlon with which I was alllictcd for twciiv years. I ran across your t 'AS( AKI ,TS in tlib town of Nowell. la., and never found anything to equal them. To-day 1 am entirely free from i piles and feel like a new man." C. H. Keitz. Mil Jones ISt., Sioux City, la. CANDY | CATHAR TI<= mmumtm TRADE MARK REGISTERED Ploasnnt. Palatable. Potent. Tar,to Good. ~>o Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 2."ic. 50c ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... SUHIng liciii< il> Cmpuy, Chle.iKn. n..ntr<-ill. \e V. rk. Oil* Mn.Tn RAP Sold an<l guaranteed by all drug- NU" I U'llAu uiststo CJtJRK Tobacco Ilnblt. 1 ,oieeye, us."\ Thompson's Eye Wafer pMIILIONbOLLAR^iaS Most talked of potato on earth ! Our-r—3Sak Catalog tells—-ho hlmi about Sal- Largest farm and vegetable seed' growers In U.S. Potatoes, f1.20 and f $ , f* upabhl. Send thin notice and />c. bdi > iii j|l i Stamp for Big Catalog. ASALZER SjIDjHKROSSEws i asth ma" f'osirivtTn""™ 3 cnoslt ,•*., Itllis.ll ASTH.IIA ChliK n lines I ills. A I rial i imps iiiaft il live. Mi . insi C0.,8r. Louis, Mo, DROPS YiWJSSra s *!; tree. Ur. 11. 11. QitEEN'B SUSB. Bo* U Atlanta, G.v J EARN TELEpRAPHV !„ ... st, : 11!: < in: lull lull i.-u!;i i.. '*" I ' •)... Hick., .lie, Ohio. DR. ARNOLD'S 60II8H KsLLER I t , lhe nu . : re:! TV t'ree .l cli/ivsc* •irent Vital Principle heretofore unknown. Ref Huiotory Cnsca • •- --i !. C> a:: h miit corresponded o Invited fr"tn nil. . • , .11 v PhVMlcliiiin. ST. jamus j SOCIETY, jiSi lIRo- DWAY, NEW YoKK. BOOK At;l-NTS WANTED EOIt the grandest and fat-ten selling hook ever published, Pu Spilt EcSioes hit LIVING TWIT IIS Fill! lil' Al> AM) IIKAKT. Containing Mr. MIHIDVS his- mo . with ," Tlmli.ng Storks. Incidents. Perßonal rx|eiici,. ,-s etc., untold By I). L. Moody It mtelf. With n complete hhtcry of his life by Itrv.CIIAR. F. GO**, I'lietir i>( Ali M.umi , b t hiengo hunch lur tWe vmri, n < I hi Introduction h, 1.,, I.V.MAN X IUIOTT, 1. IS. Ilrand new 'ii j, , .n/fi-", T,\ Q;° 1 ,0()0 mors \.l \T* U VNTI 1) -Mm and \\ <>ni, n (h/" Sides ImmcnßC y hiirvc't iiiiic for Agents Send for term- to A. t>. \l()l. ll.i.Miro.V V C'U., Ilurtibrd, Conn-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers