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There are In the United States thirty j Berlins, twenty-one Ilamburgs, twen- | ty-three towns hearing the name Paris and thirteen Londons. When the man who experiments with a "gun that isn't loaded happens ■ to he a girl he generally substitutes a mock marriage ceremony. Taking everything that floats Into , consideration, the United States now stands second in the tonnage of mer- ; cautile marine of all the nations. Japan is taking about every line of 'American-made goods. Water tube ! boilers, locomotives, general railroad supplies, iron piping, electrical machin- | cry, baled hay, bridge material, and , oil well supplies are going into that I country at a lively rate. In Siberia the percentage of illlter- | ney is ninety-nine per cent, in the country and ninety-five per cent, in the towns. The chances of self-govern- I ment in that country are, therefore, one to five in a hundred. Bring those | same people to America and in a dozen I years they know how to read nud vote. A new problem seems to be entering the arena of sociological questions. "How long shall the old man be per mitted to retain bis position?" The j query is not what makes an old man. j That is determined by the numerals, j which denotes the number of years j that he lias been on earth. And sixty- | five is made the limit. When that is reached lie must step down. An occasional consequence of a foot ball game is a deplorable accident. A frequent consequence of a pleasure trip by rail, an excursion on a yaclit or j a bath in the lake or ocean is an acci- j dent equally deplorable. Just why those persons who condemn the game of football because of one accident do j not condemn pleasure, travel, yaclit- j iug and bathing for the same reason i probably will never be known. Two business men met, after long \ years of separation. Both bad pros- | pered. as the world counts prosperity. j Both liad found pearls of great price. ' Looking back over the labors of tho years, the losses and the gains, one said to the other, "Yes, we have pros pered; but it's a pity we must go, aud leave it all." It does seem that it were indeed a pity to sum up one's investments of a lifetime in such ephemeral securities, and to have cum bered one's self with such a dead weight of unnecessary baggage. Tlie census enumerators iu many eases failed to realize the importance of mortality statistics. "In one of the Eastern States," says a correspondent of the Chicago Record, "an enumera tor liad only two deaths in a popula tion of more than 1300 for the entire year, which the supervisor thought was not sufficient, so he sent back the returns. The enumerator responded with the following explanation: 'Dear Sir: There were four more people that died, but they was widows.' Evident ly ho did not consider widows of suf ficient importance to be included iu the census." Kfllmieinuftikea* <*. Prayer. And prayer is the great antidote, flood is it for lis that obstacles and trials face us, that the very tenderness of our hutuan loves makes us fearful for tho health, the prosperity and the spirit ual welfare of pur dear ones, that our daily business frets us, that the harness chafes. Otherwise we should never be driven to prayer, or come really to know our God and our Father. And it is a com tort to think that when we have done our little best to get rid of worry and it still lingers in our breast-, like a poisonous thing, we can carry it also to God and ask him not merely to deliver us from evil, hut from the fear of evil. Then we shall be made glad and care free ngsiin. Have you never kept Christ waiting while he WTi* ready l'or some helpful work? One true Christian shows what a whole city fill might bo. THE BEST OF LIFE. Not till life's heat is cooled. The headlong rush slowed to a quiet pace, And c ry purblind passion that has ruled Our noisor years at last Spurs us in vain, and. weary of the race, We care no more who loses or who wins— Ah! not till all the best of life seems past The best of life begins. To toil for only fame. Handclappings and the ficKie gusts of flTor place or power or gold to gild a name Above the grave whereto Afi". paths will bring us, were to lose our days— We, oh whose ears youth's passing bell has tolled— In blowing bubbles, even as children do, Forgetting we grow old. But the woild widens when Such fyopes of trivial gain that ruled us lies Broken among our childhood's toys: for then We win to self-control! And mail ourselves to manhood, and there rise Upon us from the vast and windless height Those clearer thoughts that are unto the soul What stars are to the night. —The Spectator. OOGOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO § THE QUARREL CURE. I €> By Itla liectt Smith. Q Q O OOCCCOOOOCOGQOOOGOGOOOGGGG NINE days out of ten there were no better friends in the block than Molly and (, Mabel. They lived side by side, went to the same school, read the same stories, and wanted their best hats trimmed just exactly alike, even to the number of white spots on the gray quills, which made the blue felt sailors so very charming In the eyes of both. But, on the tenth day—oh, dear! how everything was changed! Molly went to school on one side of the street, witli never a glance across at Mabel, trudging disdainfully along on the other; and from breakfast to bed time the day was out of joint for both. To be sure, the quarrels never lasted long; but they were serious matters while they did last. In vain the mothers took counsel to gether. In vain they reasoned, each with her own particular little girl. Botii Molly and Mabel protested that they loved each other, and never meant to quarrel; but still the quarrels would come, and make both miserable. And they arose over such trilling things! After the "making up," the two friends never could see "how they came to quarrel over a little thing like that!" So things went on until Molly's Aunt Frances came to spend the winter with her sister. Now, Aunt Frances was Molly's ideal of everything a young lady should be. So it was 110 wonder that her niece sang her praises morn ing, noon and night. Neither was it any wonder that Mabel, who had a young lady aunt of her own, grew tired of so often hearing the same strain, and on the fatal tenth day chanced to remark that, while Molly's Aunt Frances was very nice in her opinion, her own Aunt Angie was nicer. This was the thin end of the wedge of dis pute; but half an hour later Molly rushed into the house declaring that she would never speak to Mabel Bye again so long as she lived—"so there!" The wedge had been driven deep, and friendship was split wide open. Aunt Frances listened to the tale of Mabel's presuming to think any one nicer than she with a perfectly grave face, though her blue eyes were danc ing merrily. When the story was end ed, she said, soothingly: "I wouldn't mind it so much, Molly. I'm sure I don't care if Mabel likes her own auntie best. But I'm sorry you two should have quarreled about me. I didn't come all the way from Texas to Minnesota to cause a cold ness between friends, and I shall feel dreadfully if you and Mabel never 1 speak to each other again." | "Well." said Molly, hesitating be ; tween her disposition to "stay mad" ■ and her desire to please Aunt Frances, 1 "I s'pose I could spoalc to her, just to 'blige you; but I'm quite sure I shall never like her so well any more." But, when Mabel's kitten ran away that afternoon and all the children In the block were looking for it, Molly could not help but look, too. And, when she found it in the coal-bin—it had fallen through the cellar window— of course, she had to carry it home. Mabel was so delighted that she hugged both her and the kitten, and the quar ; re! was over then ami there. I That night, after dinner, Aunt j Frances called Molly to her, and I showed her a small pink box, with a druggist's label on the outside. I "Molly," said she, "just look here! What do you suppose I've got iu this box?" "Not medicine?" questioned Molly, who, having lately recovered from a j slight illness, looked with suspicion on I pink boxes of that particular sort. "Medicine, sure enough," responded Aunt Frances, cheerfully. "Ycu shall be my first case. Molly, my dear, I will cure you; and my fame will spread through the length and breadth of tho land." (T forgot to tell that Aunt Frances was studying to be a doctor.) "But I'm not sick any more," pro tested Molly, drawing away from the box before she should be asked to take a dose of whatever was in it. "Oh, eertainl- not," agreed Aunt i Frances. "But I want you to try the j quarrel cure, dear. See? These are temper tablets of the very best make." She opened the box, and Molly saw the contents —tablets about the size of n. peppermint lozenge, clear, and of a lovely deep red. They did not look as j though they would taste bad. "Take one," said Aunt Frances. "My prescription would include 'one at bed time.' So you might as well begin the treatment right away." Molly obeyed. The temper tablet was sweet, and tasted of wintergreen. "Don't try to bite it," cautioned the prescribing physician. "Let it dissolve in your mouth. And now, Nieceums," she continued, with a very professional air, "when you feel a quarrel coming on I want you to take one of these i tablets. Don't crush it with your j teeth —just let it melt in your mouth. 1 And be careful not to speak until it is | all gone. Do you fully understand the directions?" Molly nodded solemnly. The respon sibility of being a first "case" rather awed her. "Will you treat Mabel, too?" she asked. "It won't be necessary," said Aunt Frances, gravely, "if you take the tab lets as I prescribe. And, if I were you, I wouldn't tell anybody I was being treated." The next morning Molly started for school with a temper tablet neatly wrapped in tin-foil in her small pocket. That day passed peacefully. So did se.veral others; and Molly had all but forgotten that she was being treated, when, suddenly, one Saturday after noon, she felt a quarrel coming on. Mabel had made a dress for her doll. Molly didn't think it fitted very well, and said so. Mabel answered tartly that she guessed Molly couldn't do as well; and Molly had just opened her mouth to say something peppery when she remembered the temper tablets. Hastily laying her beloved Flori monda Isabelle face down on the floor, she ran out of the room. The temper tablet was at the very bottom of her pocket; but she picked it out, un wrapped the tin-foil and popped it into her mouth. The rosy bit of sweetness tasted very nice, and she went back to her doll feeling better already. "Thought you'd gone home mad," re marked Mabel, with her small nose in the air. Never a word from Molly. "I didn't care if you had," added I Mabel, with a sniff. Molly rolled the temper tablet under | her tongue, but answered nothing at all. "Well, you needn't talk if you don't i want to," snapped Mabel; and she gave i her entire attention to putting the new dress upon its owner, Evelyn Kathryn Olivia. ( Little by little the temper tablet dis solved in Molly's mouth; and, strange I to say, her anger melted with it. It j was worn to wafer thinness; and Molly J was wondering just what she should say when the "treatment" was over, when she heard a faint sound of music far down the street. "Oh, Mabel!" she cried, excitedly, "there's a grind-organ; and maybe there's a monkey! Let's go and see!" "Oh, let's!" answered Mabel, jump ing up eagerly; and a moment later Florimonda Isabelle and Evelyn Kath ryn Olivia were left to be company for each other, while their respective mothers raced hand in hand down the street in search of the probable "grind organ" and the possible monkey. That night Molly told Aunt Frances the whole story, and that young lady listened with genuine professional pleasure. Her first case was doing re markably well, she said; and the pa tient was advised to continue the use of the invaluable temper tablets in all similar emergencies. Molly followed the prescription faithfully, and before spring both she and Mabel were com pletely cured. After a while Molly discovered the reason why the temper 'tablets had such a soothing effect in the first stages of a quarrel. I wonder if you I have guessed it, too? New York J Weekly. Suicide Catcher of Express Train, It lias become a fad recently in Italy among persons who desire to commit suicide to jump in front of express trains. Three weeks ago the engineer and the passengers of the Geuoa-ltome express were really vexed because in a short run of eight hours four persons used the train in this way to end their lives, regardless of the delay which they were causing by their selfish tliouglilessness. Moral suasion appearing inadequate to the tnsk of turning these self-mur derers from the fatal error of their ways the railroad authorities have • adopted a special suicide catcher. It is placed In front of the locomotive like the American cowcatcher, and it scoops up the person who tries to use tlie engine for his own unpleasant pur poses. Having stooped him up, it de posits him 011 a little platform, where lie gets a free trip to the nearest sta tion, while the engineer and the fire man enliven the journey by making deeply felt remarks to hiui.—New York ! Press. Hut One Emperor. Apropos of the paragraph I gave in last issue of the German showman's experiences < f the law of lese majestc, I remember hearing tne following story, for the truth of which, however, I would not l'ke to vouch. An officer in tlie German army, passing along a street in Berlin with a friend, made a remark about "tlie foci of an emper or." He was immediately arrested by a vigilant policeman. He.attempted to get out of the difficulty by explaining that he referred to the Emperor of Hussia. "That won't do," said tlie policeman. "I know very well you meant tlie German Emperor; there is no other emperor you possibly could 1 mean!"—M. A. P. Keglnzliig Crystal Pnlnre. The famous Crystal Palace in Lon don lias recently been reglnzed nt im mense cost, and on a new principle, j which does away with the usual wood I frame and putty joints. 111 the new j work tlie panes of glass are much larg er in size, and are held in lend frames, | which are so arranged that the metal II can bo worked down on the glass in lan absolutely water-tight joint. Tlie ; cost of the work Is estimated at SIOO,- I 000 and is now almost complete. THE NERVE OF A HORSE THIEF. & Guest of tlo Horse's Owner While He Was Looking For the Culprit. Charles Wilkins, now In jail at Ed- R'ardsville, 111., a confessed dorse thief, spent the three days prior to his arrest as the guest of John West, a liveryman of that town, who had been looking for him everywhere but at home. For downright audacity and out and out "nerve," Wilkins' performance caps anything ever done in his section of the country, and there are some who favor setting him free, on the ground that it's a shame to confine such genius behind bars. Now that the story has been com pleted by the culprit, it seems remark able that he escaped arrest so long, but up to a few hours before the con fession every detail seemed surrounded by an impenetrable fog of uncertainty. On Oct. 3 Louis Hess, of Mitchell, Madisou County, reported that some one had carried off his best horse. Next morning the animal was purchased in Collinsville by ,T. A. Owens, to whom the seller represented himself as a horse trader. A few hours later Owens learned that he had bought a stolen horse, and word was sent in all direc- 1 tions, with minute descriptions of the thief. Police Chief Barnsback, of Edwards ville, suspected that the thief was head ed toward his town, and told John West, the local liveryman, to keep sharp lookout for him. West was fur nished a good description of the fugi tive, and promised to "keep his eye peeled." A day or so later Wilkins, who had formerly worked for West, blew into town, and put up at the home of his j friend. West entertained him with true Edwardsville hospitality, and told him J about the man he was looking for. j Wilkins seemed interested, and said \ the thief must be pretty smooth to es cape capture in such a populous com- I munity. He even went so far as to offer to help watch for the culprit, and j took notes from the memorandum that West carried in his pocket for refer ence. After three days Wilkins bade his former employer adieu, and told him he was going up to Old Ripley, a near by village, to visit his folks. The next day Owens, the victim, had business in Edwardsville, and called on West. They talked over the theft, and Owens gave a complete verbal de scription of the thief. Then West woke up and realized that Wilkins was the man he had been looking for. The next step was a telegram to the Sheriff of Bond County, and within a few hours word came back that Wilkins had been arrested at Old Ripley. When the prisoner was brought back to Edwardsville and thrown in jail West called on him. Wilkins smiling ly confessed that he was the man want ed and complimented the caller on his astuteness. He said, furthermore, that this was his first experience at horse stealing, and that he did not wonder that the business had thrived so in re cent years. His manner implied that he thought the Madison County of ficials "dead easy."—St. Louis Repub lic. Walilel-see'a " War House." No officer has ever been as comfort ably lodg duriugaeampaignof actual warfare as is the .resent Commander in-Chief of the allied troops, Count von Waldersee. His dwelling (for it is no mere tent) is unique both on account of its size and the novel material em ployed in the construction. With its white walls and green blinds, this portable villa, some forty feet deep, and sixleen feet high, resembles a country house rather than the head quarters of an army chief. It is made of wood, with a double covering of as bestos, separated by a superposed coueli of compressed air, roofed with fireproof slate. This building, consist ing of an orderly's office, the general's study, bed and bathroom, and the ad jutant's quarters, is constructed in sections so accurately fitted and num bered that the entire house can be mounted in eight, or unmounted In two hours. Despite its apparent lack of solidity, it is constructed with a view to resisting the strongest winds, and being impervious to atmospheric changes, such ns lient or rain, it Is pe culiarly adapted to the needs of the present campaign. Tholr School ill a Tent. Many of the Spahis, who are Alge rian troopers on the borders of Mo rocco, in the service of the French, have their entire families with them in camp. Tlie children are educated by a native non-commissioned officer, and are obliged to study French. Morning and evening tlie bugle is sounded for school, and the funny little mouolia chous flock to their studies in French and Arabic, after which they have physical drill or work in tlie fields. The huge tents are covered with a cloth made of wool and camel's hair, that furnishes protection from all weathers. Men, women, children, sheep, goats, dogs and other live stock live amicably together. Some of the Spahis are mounted on camels, but tlie horse is generally used, and a frequent duty is to gather lmlfa In the mount ains for fodder. They cultivate land allotted to them iu the "sinnln," as tin encampment is called, but, as in mos Oriental countries, the women do tin greater part of the work. The riche; men have several wives. A Lively Function. City Editor—"How did you come tc get scooped on that fire early thli morning?" Night Assistant—"There wasn't anj one here to send out 011 it nut the so ciety reporter." City Editor—"Well, why didn't you send him?" Night Assistant —"I did, and he turned In half a column of names ol those presen'."—The Journalist. POPULAR SCIENCE. A Viennese dentist, while experi menting at the Hygienic Institute at Wurzburg, claims to have discovered the successful application of electrici ty for the destruction of liacterin. It is said that the treatment Is very sim ple. With such comparatively modern work in the study of tlie earth's fig ure. it is interesting to recall the ob servations of Eratosthenes (B. C. 27G), who Is supposed to be the first geodes ist, though Tliales and Pythagoras both taught that the earth was a sphere. Eratosthenes noted that at noon on the day of the summer solstice there was no shadow cast 011 the ground nt Syene, where as at Alexan dria at noon on the same day a shadow could be seen and measured. With data thus obtained and knowing tlie distance between the places, lie was able to calculate the length of the earth's circumference. Cow's milk should be diluted with one-third its volume of water and two tempoonfuls of white sugar added per quart of liquid. A small portion of tills is rubbed into a paste with the yeast and added to the milk, which is then lilac.) in strong bottles and allowed to fermsdt. After a few days, during which the bottles should be repeatedly shaken, a beverage of great value in case of digestive disturbance, as well ns of excellent palatability for a healthy person, is produced. Especial enre must be used in corking the bot tles tightly, and it is safer, owing to the great pressures produced by the fermentation, to wrap the bottles in a heavy cloth before shaking them. Captain R. H. Elliott, who has for some time been conducting researches into the nature and action of snake venom in India, lias come to the fol lowing conclusions regarding the snake-charmers: The snake men of South India are certainly ignorant of any method of producing in them selves a highly developed condition of immunity. Some few of them appear to practice the swallowing of venom or the inunction of venom into their limbs, but it is doubtful if they do so with any well-defined object. It is possible, however, that they thus ob tain some degree of immunization. They confine their snake-charming operations almost exclusively to the cobra, and escape harm by their intim ate knowledge of the safe methods of handling this snake. The relrificd Forest or Chalcedony Park or Lithodendrum (stone tree) Valley, as it is variously called, is situated in Apache County, Ariz., be tween the Little Colorado and the Rio Puerto, about six miles south of Ad aniana Station on the Santa Fe Pacific Railroad. Professor L. F. Ward, of the Department of the Interior, at Washington, has recently published a report based 011 a recent visit to the forest. The trip was made especially with reference to the desirability of setting aside the district as a national park. Professor Ward fully confirms the great interest of the formation, and points out the fact that its inter est is much enhanced by its great age, dating as far back ns tlie Triassic. The destruction of this nat ural wonder, due to the piecemeal in roads of idle curio hunters, is becom ing more apparent with each succeed ing year. "Romeo ami Juliet" Up-to-Date. At a small seaport town a star actress of tlie third magnitude ap peared as Juliet. "I cannot do justice to myself," she said to the manager, "If you do not have a lime-light thrown ou me when I appear at tlie balcony." „ "We ain't got no limelight, miss, but I think we could get you a ship's blue liglit," replied the obliging manager, and to this the lady agreed. The lad who went to the shop to buy the bluclight brought back a signal rocket, which was given to him by mistake. The prompter took the rock et in good faith. Romeo—"He jests nt scars who nev er feels a wound." (Juliet appears. Prompter lights a match.) "But, soft! What light through yonder window breaks?", (This was the match lighting the fuse.) "Arise, fair sun!" The sun, or, rather, tlie rocket, did rise, with a terrific hiss. Juliet was knocked off the balcony, the fly borders were set 011 tire, and the theatre was tilled with sulphurous smoke, while tlie audience, which was fortunately a small one, made a stam pede to the doors. Since then "Romeo and Juliet" has always been looked upon in that town as a dramatic work that could not be wilnessed without personal danger. —New World. I.iuly "Wilson Betrayed by n Pigeon. The Duke of Marlborough, at the Woodstock Agricultural and Historical Show, told nil amusing anecdote of the Boer war. Referring to the use of homing pigeons he mentioned that nt the siege of Mafeking General Badeu- I'owell expressed a wish that 110 Indies should remain in the town. Lady Sa rah Wilson went out a distance of some fifteen miles and, being anxious to communicate with General lladen- Powell, she attempted to do so by menus of a carrier pigeon. Lady Sarah wrote a letter and dispatched it with the pigeon, in the hope that it would fly straight into Mafeking, but instead of that It settled on the house of the Boer Commandant who was investing the town. The result was that the Boer Commandant ascertained where she was, and she had to explain the reason why she was near Mafeking.— St. James's Gazette. MINES AND MINERS. Wen of the Ki.ies Snareholderi —Pittsburg Coal Co. Employes Cranizo to Buy Stock and Form a Relief Association. Heads of departments and employes of the Pittsburg Coal Company have or ganized the Pittsburg Coal Company Employes' association, primarily to ar range an economical system for every one of about 20,000 employes to be come stockholders and subsequently io create a relief association 011 lines sim ilar to those of the Pennsylvania rail road. Application has been made at Harrisburg for a charter. The association will act as an inves tor, whereby every man who lifts a hand, a pen or a pick for the big com pany with its $64,000,000 capital, may participate in the association benefits and take to himself the dignity of a stockholder and partner in the business in which all are alike interested. Leaders of the enterprise have al -1 ready invested in several thousand shares of the preferred stock of the coal company. Further purchases will depend on individual wants. Details of the releaf feature of the association are now being worked out. Each employe may subscribe to the association for any number of shares to be paid for in monthly or semi monthly payments of not less than $z per month per share. The subscrip tion payments are to be invested in the preferred stock of the company by officers of the association at their op tion in the open market. Unexpended balances are to be deposited currently with the treasurer of the Pittsburg Coal Company, to bear 5 per cent, interest. Dividends earned by the stock purchas ed and the interest on deposits with the coal company treasurer will form the earnings of the association and will be added to the monthly payments of the subscribers until the monthly payments of the latter and the earnings to which they are entitled arc equal to the aver age cost of the stock purchased and owned by the association, when each subscriber will receive the number of shares he is entitled to under his sub scription. New series of subscriptions will be opened each month. Subscribers may pay as much more than the minimum of $1 per share per month as they wish. In such cases pay ments will augmented bv interest at 5 per cent, pen annum and the price of shares sold the subscribers by the asso ciation wi 11 be the average cost on shares in the association treasury pur chased during their term of such sub scribers' payments. Delinquents, who desire tc make up lapsed payments, may do so by paying interest at 6 per cent, rate on delin quencies. Subscribers leaving the em ploy of the company may keep up their payments or mav withdraw them with accrued interest, the association reserv ing the right to limit these withdrawals in anv one month to 50 per cent, of the actual cash payments into the treasury during that month. Subscriptions, if found burdensome, may be reduced. German Mottoos in England. Stoves ornamented with German mot toes seem somewhat out of place in English board schools, and yet the edu cational establishment in Addison Gar dens boasts several of these heating ap paratus. Mr. Thompson asked Viscount Morpeth, chairman of the works com mittee, whether he was aware of their Teutonic origin, and whether the in scriptions were supposed to possess any educational value. His lordship replied that the articles in question were not to be had in this country, and that he had not noticed the texts when giving the order. So far, so good; but. now that the stoves are there, the philologie occasion may just as well be improved. Squccrs asked one of his boarders to spell "winder," and, being satisfied with the result, told him to go and clean it. Perhaps among the precepts there is Wilhelm ll.'s favorite one, "Deutsch land über alles." After having exam ined a pupil as to the orthography of the inscription, the teacher may order him to polish the stove, in order to im press the lesson on his memory Ger man marks are equivalent to British shillings—few of the former leave the Fatherland. The shillings of the rate payers should be equally respected by those who have the spending of them.— London Telegraph. Where to Locate? Why, in the territory tiaverd by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, The Great Central Southern Trunk^e In KENiUCKY. TENNESSEE, ALABAMA, MISSISSIPPI, FLORIDA, wliere Farmers, Fruit Growers, Stock Kaisers, Manufacturers Investors, Speculators, and Money Lender* will find the greatest chance in t'ie United "•tato* t> make "big money" by reason of the abundance and cheapness of LAM* nud FARMS, TIMBER and STONE, IRON and COAL, LA lIOII—EVERYTHING I Free Bite*, financial assistance and freedom from taxation, forvbe inanuiacturer. Land and farms at $1 per acre and ut>- wards, and fifIO.OOS antes in AN est Florida that can be taken gratis lender U. S. Homestead laws . _ Stockralaing In the Gxrlf Coast District will make enormomi prollta. Half fare r*ci'rloiiH the first and third Tuesdays of each month. Let us know what you want, and we wll) tell you where and how to get it but don't ielav, as the country is filling up rapidly. Printed matter, maps and all information free. Address, R. J. WEMYSS, General la migration and Industrial Agent LOUISVILLE, i£Y.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers