fREEIMD TRIBUNE.' ESTABLISHED 1 BKB. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY, BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, LimM OFFICE; MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES FREELAND.— The TRIBUNE is delivered by carriers to subscribers in Freelandattho rate of 12y$ cents per month, payable every two months, or $1.50 a year, payable in advance- The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct form tho carriers or from the office. Complaints of irregular or tardy delivery service will re ceive prompt attention. BY MAIL —Tho TRIBUNE is sent to out-of town subscribers for $1.5 ) a year, payable in advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods. The date when tho subscription expires is on the address label of each paper. Prompt re newals must bo made at the expiration. other- Wise tho subscription will be discontinued. Entered at tho Postoffico at Freel&nd. Pa., as Second-Class Matter. Make all money orders, checks, etc. to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. Those who were nt one time con ▼inced that iatercoileglate football .would have to be abolished have found It necessary to revise their opinion in K'ICW of the uncommon activity on the gridiron this falL It is fair to say, however, that several modifications of the game and the cultivation of gener ous and friendly feelings have justified the general complaints of a few years ago. It is true that John C. Fnirfax.Bnron Fairfax, made a great deal more of a figure through hts title In Maryland than he would have made over in Eng land. But it Is also true that he was an American citizen of the best type the type of those who, if they had his opportunity, would think as ho did that any title which a man does not earn for himself adds nothing to his value if he is a valuable person, and if he is personally insignificant gives a touch of the ridiculous to his insig nificance. Men suffer most from cancer now a-days, according to an English au thority. The most tainted places in England aye London, the Thames Val ley and the counties adjoining the me tropolis. The highest mortality rates for occupation are those which include commercial travelers, coachmen, mer chants, seamen, brewers, inn-keepers, butchers and plumbers. Doctors stnnd low on the list. It Is a curious fact that the better the nutrition and the younger the patient, the more rapidly the cancer grows, the patient often leaving a fine healthy color in his cheeks. The Stare Board of Health in Mich igan lias promulgated an order requir ing physicians practicing in that State to report eases of tuberculosis, under a statute which empowers the board to compel doctors to report cases of dangerous communicable disease. A medical practitioner of high standing !<: his profession disregarded this re quirement, insisting upon his right to 110 so, because tuberculosis was not ex pressly mentioned in the statute. The \iver court excused him ou this Aound, hut the Supreme Court has rc- J-rsed this decision, holding that the )iate Board has tho discretionary jower to classify pulmonary consump tion among contagious or communica ble maladies. I-iglit iiml Health. M. Trolat, a well-known authority on hygiene, recently gave it as his opinion that the best light for the house is the slanting light as opposed to the vertical and the horizontal lights. According to this view, the London Lancet points out, houses should lie constructed to receive the rays of light nt an angle of thirty de grees—tluit is to say, from a place cor responding with the mid-heavens— aud, in order to obtain this light, houses should not be higher than two thirds of the width of the street. If a street, for example, were thirty feet wide the Louses on each side should not he higher than twenty feet. The suggestion is, of course, not to cut down our houses, but to widen our streets. Homes oi Glasgow Workmen. The Glasgow workman finds that high wages go with cheap living. Rents in this northern metfopolis would be counted by the London laborer as ex ceedingly low. Most of the families have an exceedingly poor standard of household requirements. The rule in Glasgow is to live in blocks of dwell ings. four families to each floor for one staircase. The usual home consists of two rooms and a little scullery, and the Glasgow mechanic looks at you in cold Scottish surprise if you dare to suggest that his family requires more accommo dation than that. "I've known very good men brought up in a 'but and a ben,' " lie says stolidly. "It was good enough for my father: it's good enough for me. Rents are high about here." By "high" lie means about £ 18 a year, not including taxes. The fair average rent for the respectable Glasgow work ingnian is £ls a year.—London Daily Mail. The population of Finland includes 8,527,800 Russians. BY THE STREAM. The sunlipht steals between the leaves And flickers on the stream; The little minnows dart about Like shadows in a dream. Beyond the shade the clover-field la quivering with the heat, But here the water ripples cool About the children's feet. The leaves stir softly overhead; The shadows verge toward noon. 'And they will lmve to leave their play And go to dinner socm. •—Katharine Pylc, in Harper's Bazar. | A MIDSUMMER DAY'S DREAM. % S- By Mnrliui C. L. Reeves. > MADGE started violently as her eyes fell on the pic ture, well placed In the 6 gallery, to catch the eye even of a careless passer-by. To catch It, and to hold it, with Its warmth and depth of coloring and its quaint tone, like that of a Valks-Lled. "St John's Eve In Norway." Madge would have known It at a glance, without that label on it For an instant she stood staring. Then, nit her that her limbs failed under her than that she desired to sit down opposite the picture, she dropped upon the bench before it, her some what shabbily gloved hands folded on her lap. Her dress was a little shabby, too. The long, black mourning veil clung about her limply, as she pushed it back out of her way. To any passer-by she might seem but one of the crowd in the Corcoran Gallery on this free day. But Madge, the real Madge, was not here at all. She was yonder in the picture, In the midsummer night in the midst of the St. John's Eve pro cession. A year ago. Was it only n yenr ago?—it seemed a lifetime, hack into that happy IVnnderjalir which ended so abruptly. It was 011 the homeward passage to America that her father had died, suddenly, of heart failure, it was said. But Madge knew he had gotten his death blow from the latest American paper which the pilot brought on board as they entered the bay, a pa per lightly opened, and which con tained latest particulars of tlio great hank failure, sweeping clean away the fortune he had meant to leave his child. "A beggar"—Madge, bending over liini, had caught that last faint word upon his lips. "A beggar " Madge Btraiglitened herself and knotted her hands about tho little black silk hag which had carried her lunch tills morning to the olfiee, and which was now bringing back in its mouth a bunch of field daisies bought from a street boy on tho way up town. A but never farther re moved from that than since she had become a worker. But that Wanderjalir, in which lier only work had seemed to be to work out lier own happiness. Tlie glamour of it was in her eyes, gazing back into tho picture. How like one valley to another, sunk among those Scandinavian mountains. It might liavo been this very one, into which she and lier party had descend ed, drenched witli a sudden cloudburst ou the mountain top. There was noth ing for it hut to borrow peasant cos tumes at tho friendly guard below; and a bright color flushes up Madge's face now as she feels again tlie eyes of tlie artist of the party upon her, as, with tho farmer's daughter, tlie three girls traveling together come out, and for a moment fall Into line with tlie St. John's Eve dancers troop ing there from the neighboring vil lage. She remembers it all; the artist's eyes, as ho looked on; the speedy de tection of the three make-believe vil lage girls; the merry stirs, tho laugh ter aud light repartee among the tour ists; tlie gay village music; the farm house glowing in the background, its tall chimney ending in a cross, built high against the sky. llow like, how like it was! But Madge's thought broke off with a gasp. lii one of those faces, half turned toward her, she had recognized her own, as in a looking glass. How well—too well—she remem bered! The artist's eyes; no words of his. Few words had passed be tween them, indeed, though for three weeks they had been meeting almost daily. Over those unerowded routes the ways of sight-seers are apt to cross and re-cross; as had theirs from the time when, with an apology, lie put nil extra rug across her lap in the weird day-night when she sat on the deck of the stout coast steamer, watch ing for the midnight sun off Norway, to that Eve of St. John, that midsum mer eve, which ended it all. For while Madge slept in the queer little nest under the eaves, and dreamed her strange, bright, confused, little, inno cent midsummer night's dream, In which fairies' and peasnms' dances were'intertwined in Tltania's train,and the artist was Lysander standing apart, looking 011 at it all, witli his bands in his pockets and a cigar in his mouth, and that in his eyes. Madge's color was flickering up into her weary face again at that memory, and then it faded out; for while she slept her father had been revising his plans for further travel. That unlucky meeting on the mountain had damp ened his desire for northern travel. The next morning (when the artist had gone forward, with the tacit understanding that at the foot of a certain famous waterfall, deep in the mountain fast ness, one might very well meet mid summer friends again) over n rather late breakfast her father unfolded his new arrangement to Madge. They would retrace their way, and take the returning steamer on the morrow; and after all return home to America a little earlier. "Ater all, there Is noth ing much better than the home moun tains nud seashore for the summer weather, Is there? And then, Madge •" But there had been no "and then" for poor little Madge. Tier story was finished, she told herself. And, Indeed, it had been so very lit tle of a story! Just a mere hint of a sketch that might have been made. If she could have told her father! But what could she have told her father? That she wanted to climb and climb along the rough, wild moun tain ways, in the wake of a man who had flung a spare rug across her knees in a blenlc midnight sea wind; who had caught her once, staggering on a slippery, rolling deck; who had plucked a bit of mountain moss for her on the edge of an abyss; who had stood apart on a midsummer eve, on the edge of a village dance, with a cigar in his mouth, and his eyes Madge put a hasty hand across her eyes, shutting out the picture. What had she to do with pictures like that! Vain dreams! Her part was not with dreaming, but with work-a-day real ities. Well, well, she would go home. Al though her homo wns a back build ing room, and 110 one waiting for bei In It. She rose the more sloyly for the thought. She was turning toward the door of the main entrance, when sud denly—was it with that strange sense of being watched, that sometimes moves one?—she turned around. And in his eyes—in his eyes the same look she remembered. While she stood motionless, he came tip, and before she bnd recovered brenth, was shaking hands with her, quite as though they had met last week, instead of last year. But she saw Idm glance quickly nt her mourning veil, which she gathered about her, her nervous baud strok ing its folds. "I came to see the pictures," she said, with an eifort at case. "I did not expect to see a " "An old friend," he said promptly, filling up her slightest hesitation. "But I did." "You?" "I came to see you," he said, nod ding at tlie picture. "I tried In vain to find you. So I wns obliged to call you up there,to my own eye and yours. No stranger would recognize you. I took care of that. But I had, at least, a forlorn hope that it might prove a clue. Every one sooner or later comes to Washington, you know. And so it lias." "A forlorn hope, Indeed," she said, witli the gliost of a little laugh, sad der than tears. "It is a pity it did not fail you. We were all so merry and happy thnt midsummer night." "When I dreamed a dream," he said, "that is Just beginning to come true." Ho drew her hand, with Its little, worn, black glove, gently in his arm. "l'ou won't vanish so suddenly again like the vision of n dream?" he said. "At least, you will let me take you home?" She did not answer at once, and he said, quickly: "Fardon me; but It Is n year and throe weeks for me since I have known you. I forget that it is not the same tiling to you. You must not he angry with me if I beg that you will sometimes let me see you at your home." She stroked again the folds of her veil, with a hand that trembled. "I have uo home. I—l have noth- It was bis voice that trembled. "Nothing but an old friend," he snid; "an old friend of a year aud three weeks." That was ills pica, with a slight al teration a little later. "We have been friends for a year and four weeks," he said. "How much louger do we need to wait to know each other better? I knew you, Madge, the first time that I looked into your honest eyes. Why should wo wait? Lot me take all my life to make you know, better and bet ter, how I love and cherish and " "Obey?" archly. "Obey my wife, when she bids me have my way—as she will now."— Waverley Magazine. Civilization ami "Ads." The tendency of people to make use of the advertising columns of newspa pers is a result of tlie progress of civ ilization. Even the woman who wants a servant 110 longer hangs over the back fence to ask the housemaid next door to find one for her, hut adver tises her need. Tlie time is coming when a business establishment of any kind that shall not consider the con venience of the public cough to use tlie advertising columns of newspapers will be regarded as belonging to the old liorse-car period.—Mexican Her ald. Clock of Treo Grticefl. Count Isaac de Comondo Is the own er of a white marble clock, which is said to lie wort li $250,000. It is called tho "Clock of the Three Graces." Tlie graces are connected by festoons ot flowers, surrounding a broken fluted pillar, which serves as tlie base of a two-handled vase decorated with fes toons of oak leaves. This vase con tains the works of the clock, to the dial of which one of the nymphs is pointing with her finger.—Kansas City Journal. Soldiers Wlio Ilnn't Drink. In three British regiments—the Black Watch, tlie Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders and the Queen's Royal West Surrey Regiment—over half the men are total abstainers. COUDERSPORr ICE MINE. REMARKABLE SOUVENIR OF THE CLACIAL AGE IN PENNSYLVANIA. Tho ffrtentlflc Explanation of the Phe nomenon—lt Is Visible' From May Until October Every Year—Ten Thou* suml Yoars It 11ns I.ustcd. Coudersport, I'enn., docs not occupy a very conspicuous spot on the map, but to-day Coudersport is noteworthy. "Greenland's Icy mountains and In dia's coral strand" in Juxtaposition, an ice cave under foot and tropic heat over head, are Coudersport's twin ti tles to fame. In Northern Pennsylva nia, as well as nearly everywhere else In tlieso United States, It was unusu ally hot last summer, but In this ham let, in Potter County, one had only to descend a rnde ladder, leading to a small cavern under ground, to find frost. Icicles and December zephyrs. Icy stalactites ranging from an Inch to three feet In thickness hung from tho roof of the Coudersport "ice mine" during one of tho hottest hot waves of last Augus't. According to tho statements of men of, good repute in that neighborhood this phenomenon is visible from May until October every year, but tills summer additional explorations of the Ice mine have re vealed unwonted wonders. The scientific explanation of the phe nomenon Is this: Eons ago Southern New York, Northern and Northeastern Pennsylvania were covered to a tre mendous depth by glacial deposits. Scientists have dug down and found far below the ground, where the earth's heat should have Increased materially over the surface tempera ture, streams of ley cold water. Tho subterranean flows were the liquid re mainders of the great glacier which swept across Canada, byway of Lake Erie, Pennsylvania, New York cud Long Island to the Atlantic. In the Journal of the Franklin In stitute of Philadelphia, issued in Jan uary, 1883, Professor 11. Colville Lewis presented a map showing the bound ary of this glaeinl a pea in connection with an exhaustive lecture which he delivered before the institute on "The Great Terminal Moraine Across Pennsylvania." In the beginning of his monograph Professor Lewis says: "When Agasslz, over forty years ago, after a prolonged study of the Swiss glaciers, announced the conclusion thnt large portions of the continents of North America and Europe were once covered by an immense glacier thou sands of miles In extent and several thousands of feet In thickness, geolo gists the world over were stavtled at what then seemed an Impossible hy pothesis. "To-<lny there Is hardly a truth in geology more widely accepted or capa ble of more conclusive proof." Three phenomena plainly Indicate the progress of the great Northern Drift: (1) the mantel of "till" (a de posit of stones and clay unstratifled by water), which Is a characteristic feature of the Alleghany plateau, in Potter County, Pennsylvania, (2) the longitu dinally scratched bowlders nowhere found except in the vicinity of gla ciers, and (3) the smoothed or striated rock surfaces, another glacial remind er. All these go to prove the correct ness of Agasslz's hypothesis, for simi lar phenomena are found nt the foot of many Swiss glaciers. Just as the ancient Swiss glacier carried bowlders from Mont Blanc to the Juras, so this great continental glacier carried them from Canada across Lake Erie into Pennsylvania. Just as the GreenLand glacier now fills the valleys and overtops the mountains, so this larger glacier ad vanced over mountain and valley alike In n continuous sheet to Its final halting place only sixty miles norlh of Philadelphia. At its edge, as ob served in Pennsylvania, this glacier must have been 800 feet thick. A hundred miles back from its edge, amoug the Catskills, It Was at least 3100 feet thick, while 200 miles fur ther, In Northern New England,. it was 5000 feet thick. There are data, says Professor Lewis, which lndicato that the glacier did not finally withdraw from the United States until us recently as 10,000 to 15,000 years ago. Professor Wright finds from a study of glacial "kettle holes" In Massachusetts teat the accumulation of peaty matter In It, whether caused by growth of veg etable matter or by winds and rains, is equal to a level deposit of eight feet lu thickness. At tile rate of one inch in a century, which is probably less than the true rate, accord lug to Fo --fessor I>ewi3, this would place the close of the glacial epoch at less than 10,000 years ago. In Kansas similar lee caverns, or "kettle holes," have been found. In the Kansas Journal of March, 1597, Mr. J. Ritchie describes In detail these ice caverns and other glacial phenom ena, and the Kansas Journal previous ly printed a similar dissertation by Professor N. M. Lowu, but none of these "kottlo holes" equal hi Interest the Ooudersport find. Its precise location Is four miles southeast of Coudersport Four years ago William O'Neill, a mineralogist of no small knowledge and experience In Potter County, Pennsylvania, felt convinced that he could find a silver lode on tho farm of John It Dodd, sit uated in Sweeden Valley, near- Cou dersport. Consulting with the owner, who la a merchant and at present Postmaster of Sweeden Valley. Mr. O'Neill arranged to sink a shaft on an uncultivated hill of Dodd's twenty five acre farm. In case O'Neill discov ered all j - silver or other minerals of value Dodd was to have a pro rata share of the findings. Naturally the matter was kept a pro- Vunil secret, and O'Neill begun opera tlons very quietly. At first work was ! carried on only at night A couple of : years elapsed, and the* country folk thereabout were quite unaware of O'Neill's secret belief and persistent, search. An excavation sixteen feet square was dug through broken rock , and primeval debris on the hillside, j and then the work lapsed. Numerous ; curiosities in the form of roqjcs and bones were revealed in the 5000 square feet of earth excavated, but no argen tiferous matter was found. Last summer digging was resumed and small chunks of lee were found at a level a few feet lower than the petrified hones. Imprints of fern leaves had been revealed. Tho furth er the diggers proceeded, both later ally and perpendicularly, the more Ice was encountered under mossy l>edß be tween rocks. The ley belt was found to extend for twenty rods one way and a couple of rods crossways. At this time the thermometer at the sur face registered eighty-six to ninety degrees Fahrenheit in the shade. The mine was then about thirty-five feet deep, and the atmosphere was so cold it was difficult to make much progress. O'Neill abandoned his hunt for silver, and Mr. Dodd determined to exploit his lee mine In lieu of his silver shaft Repeated and thorough tests were made to prove tlie frigidity of the Cou dersport lee mine. It has been demon strated to the satisfaction of all who visited the spot that such articles as potatoes, fruit and small animals when left in the cave over night after an extremely iiot summer day are frozen stiff and solid as rocks. A platform lias been constructed over the lower seventeen feet, access which is bad through a trap door aud via a ladder. During tlie torrid Au gust days when a visitor stepped through the outer door and descended to tlie platform a current of cold air coming from the bottom of the shaft would turn Ills breath into dense mist, Just as when one leaves a hothouse on a frosty January morning. At the northeast corner of the bot tom of the mine there was discov ered an aperture about six inches square. From this point issues the icy blast in a steady current. It is impossible to hold a lighted match or a candle near this opening without having the flame extinguished imme diately. There are other lesser fissures throughout the mine whence come cold currents continuously. Efforts have been made to ascertain the deptli of the main aperture by throwing weights attached to twine and arrows, but bottom was not reached. The best local opinion is that two immense caverns underlie the mine nt a considerable depth, that subterran ean rivers have been formed from melting glacial Ice and that some cross current causes the draught of ley air In the Coudersport mine.—Now York Herald. A Wonndetl Ti^ep. Expecting to find the corpse we fol lowed tlie tracks quietly for about 200 yards, end then came upon a place where tlie tiger had evidently lain down and lost much blood. Tlioy cling to life with extraordinary tenac ity. Again we followed the tracks, and in the marshy ground the fresh pugs (footmarks) had water still ooz ing into them. We stole In line through the trees and grass up to some tall reeds, when our hearts stood still. There was a spring with an infu riated roar, and bounding through tho cover with open mouth, his tall lash ing Ills sides, his whole fur bristling, the tiger charged straight at us. Heav ens! what an unlooked for moment! I could see before me nothing hut a shadowy form, owing to the lightning speed of his movements—a shadowy, striped form, with two large lumps of fire fixed upon us with an unmeaning stare—as the beast rushed upon us. Such was the vision of a moment. Tlie trees were so thick that I dared not shoot till he was close, and I dim ly recollect, even then, thinking that everything hinged upon keeping cool and killing him if possible. Oa he came. I fired straight at his chest at about fifteen yards distance, without moving at all, and then Instinctively— almost miraculously—l spraug to the left as the tiger himself sprang past us, so close that I found his blood splashed over my gun barrels after ward. I rom "The Sportswoman in India," by Isabel Savory. An Overwhelming Thought. Our sun Is a third-rate sun, situ ated lu the milky way, one of myriads of .stars, and the milky way is itself one of myriads of sectional star ac cumulations, for these seem to be countless, and to be spread over In finity. At some period of their exist ence each of these suns had planets circling around it, waich, after untold ages, are fit for some sort of human being to Inhabit them for a compar atively brief period, after which they still continue for years to circle around without ntmospliere, vegetation or in habitants, as the moon does around our planet. There is nothing so cal culated to take the conceit out of an Individual who thinks himself nil im lK>rtnnt unit in the universe as astron omy. It teaches that we are less, com pared with tlie universe, than a col ony of ants Is to us, and that the dif ference between men Is less than thnt between one ant aud another.—London Truth. The Emperor of Chlnn Una Concur. Dr. Bnchmann, of Shanghai, has re cently stated In a letter to the Gcgen wart that Emperor Ivwaug-su suffers from cancer of the throat and Is una ble to reign. The same view is taken by Dr. Detliere, a French physician, and by Dr. Sheng Lian Feng, both of whom have examined the Emperor.— Medical Record. PLENTY OF BOOKS. Libraries of Four Nations with millions of Volumes. Tlie British Museum, situated on Great Russell street, in London, was founded in 1753. It contains collec tions of antiquities, drawings, prints and a library of about two million volumes, 55,000 MSS. and 45,000 char ters. The Harleian MSS., purchased in 1735, and the Royal Library, largely taken from the monasteries by Henry VIII., and 65,000 volumes given by George 111. and George IV.. raised the library to a position of great import ance. The first great Egyptian acqui sition consists of the objects taken with the French army in 1801. Tha Assyrian, Babylonian and Greek col lections are undoubtedly the best in any contemporary museum. The pres ent building, finished in 1547, is one of the best structures of the "classia revival." It wa3 designed by Sir Rob ert Smirlce, completed by his brother, Sidney Smirke, and was commenced very early in the nineteenth century. About 50,000 volumes are added annu ally. Modern publications in Britain are added free of expense by receiving gratis a copy of every book entered at Stationer's Hall. La Bibliotheque Na tionals, the great French library, is the largest in the world. It has been called successively La Bibliotheque du Roi, Royale, Nationale and Imperials. The Bibliotheque du Roi was original ly in the Palais de la Cite, consisting of the library of King John. He be queathed it to Charles V„ who re moved it and collected a library of 610 volumes in the Louvre. This was sold to the Duke of Bedford. Louis XI. partly repaired this loss and added the first results of the new invention of printing. Louis XII, established it at Blois, incorporating it with the Or leans library. The Gruthuyse collec tion was next added to it. Francis I. transferred the library to Fontaine bleau, and placed it in charge of John Budie. Henry 11. made obligatory the deposit of one copy of every book pub lished in the kingdom. Henry IV, brought it back to Paris, where it changed in location frequently, before resting in its present quarters in tha Palais Mazariti, Rue Richelieu. Na poleon I. increased the government grant, and under his care the library was much enlarged. It contains about three million volumes and about a hundred thousand MSS., besides col lections of prints and medals. It is especially rich in Oriental manu scripts. The Royal library of Berlin was founded by the Great Elector, Frederick William, and opened in 1661. The University of Berlin, it is not too much to say, is the leading university in the world. It is attended annually by about 6,000 students, and has a fac ulty of about 500 professors and teach ers. It has a most magnificent library. The two libraries combined contain about 1,200,000 volumes and nearly 50,000 MSS. The Library of Congress, as the National library of the United States is called, was founded in ISOO, and is supported by the national gov ernment. It contains upwards of a million volumes (250,000 pamphlets). Liberal provisions are made for the yearly addition of volumes through purchase, and in addition, the copy right law requires that every new pub lication shall be deposited in the li brary without charge. Although the library of Congress is not as rich in manuscripts and rare book 3as Its great European rivals, on account of its more recent beginning, it is never theless richly stocked with the books that can be obtained by purchase in these later days, and its purchasing committee are always alert to pick up treasures from such private collections as are from time to time thrown on the market. A nursery near Mexico, Mo., contains 205,000 young fruit trees, pruned and cultivated to perfection. Where to Locate? Why, in the territory traversed by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, Fho Great Central Southern TrunkiU?6 In KENTUCKY, TENNESSEE, ALABAMA, MISSISSIPPI, FLORIDA, where Farmers, Frnit Growers, Stock Raisers, Manufacturers Investors, Speculators, and Money Lenders will find the greatest chance in tho Unit*,/) statos to make "big money" Ly reason ot the sbuudance and cheapness of LAND Abtl FARMS, TIMBKK and STONE, IKON mid COAL, LA BO It—KVEBYTH ING I Free site*, financial assistance arid freedom from taxation, for the manufacturer. Land and farms at SIOO per acre and up wards, and 500,000 notes in West Florida that cku ho taken gratis under U. fc?. Homestead Styckrafßing in the Gulf Coast District will make enormous profits. Half lure excursions the first and third Tuesdays of each month. Let us know what you want, and we will toll you where and how to got it but don't iolav, as the country is Ailing up rapidly. Printed matter, maps and all information free. Address, R. J. WENIYSS, General Ijjmigration and Industrial Agenv LOUISVILLU, KY.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers