Rensselaer Republican, Volume 23, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 May 1891 — Page 7

Creates An Appetite There ti nothing for which wo recommend Hood’i Sarsaparilla with greeter confidence then for loe of eppetite, indigeation, lick headache end othe ( tronblea of dyspaptic nature. In the moot nature way thil medicine gently tonea the stomach, esalatj dlgeetion. and makee one feel “real hungry.' Ladles in delicate health, or very dainty and partfc cular at meala, after taking Hood's Sarsaparilla i few days, find tbemaelyea longing for and estinj the plaineat food with unexpected relish and satis taction, 1 Try it. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1: six for *5. Prepare! only by 0. L HOOD & CO., Lowell Mass. 100 DOSES ONE DOLLAR. SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE. The weees of ThS Great Conch Core fi Without a parallel in the history of medicine, All druggists are authorized to sell it on a po» Wve guarantee, a test that no other cure can sue. cessfully stand. Th|t it may become known, the Proprietors, at im enormous expense, an placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home m the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, fd| it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and rebel is sure. If yon dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist fo* SHILOH’S CURE, Price io cts., Jo cts. and fl.oo. If your Lungs are sore or Back lamcj, Ite Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts.

SPRING BAS COME And with it you feel the need of something to overcome that feeling of uneasiness and depression which has taken posession of yon. Dr. WHITES’DAKDELIOB It Is the best Spring Medicine It purifies the blood, aids digestion,and makes the weak strong and vigorous. PURIFY YOUR BLOOD. But do not US') the dangerous alkaline and mercurial preparations which destroy your nervous system and ruin the digestive power of the stomach. The vegetable king* dom gives us the best and safest remedial agents. Dr. Sherman devoted the greater part of his life to the discovery of this reliable and safe remedy, and all Its ingrodients are vegetable. He gave it the name ot Prickly Ash Bitters I a name every one can remember, and to the present da]; nothing has been discovered that is so beneficial for the BLOOD, for the LIVER, for the KIDNEYS and for the STOMACH. This remedy fs now so well and favorably known by all who have used it that arguments as to its merits are use* less, and If others who require a corrective to the system would but give it a trial the health of this country would bo vastly Improved. Remtssber the name—PRICKLY ASH BITTERS. Ask your druggist for it. PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO., , ST- I.OTTTB. WHEN L You feel “all run down” and life Becomes a burden, and you can hardly Drag yourself around, you feel that You would givo half you possess If You could only feel well again, take White’s Dandelion, And see what a lift It will give you. It purifies the blood, and tones up The system as nothing else will. Your druggist sells it THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY, BEECHAM S PILLS For Bilious and Nervous Disorders.: u Worth a Guinea a Box” hat gold for 25 Cents, BY ALL PHUGCISTS.^ To cure costlveness the medicine must bo more than a purgative; It must contain tonic, alterative and cathartic properties. Tuft’s Pills possets these qualities, and speedily restore to the bowels their natural peristal*)); motion, so essential to regularity. The Soap that Cleans Most § is Lenox.

SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY.

A very useful addition to the sewing machine has appeared in the shape of a quilting frame. This device can be easily adjusted to hold a quilt in position for being worked on and so that it can be readily adapted to the feed of any sewing machine. The frame supporting the quilt may be brought in an instant into any desired position, the suspended frame moving freely, and the device permitting of such arrangement in connection with a sewing machine that the feed of the machine will draw the quilt and frame through it. The device can be adapted to all sizes of machines and to the quilting of any desired pattern. The manufacture of artificial grind stones now constitutes a very important industry in this country. The materials used in this manufacture are pulverized quartz, powdered flint, powdered emery or corundum and rubber dissolved by a suitable solvent. These materials, after being carefully mixed together, form a substance that is exceedingly durable, and that will, when used for sharpening tools, outwear by many years any natural stone known. During the process of kneading and mixing there is a constant escape of far fumes, very often rendering necessary the covering of the mixers with a sheet iron hood. The compound is afterward calendered into sheets of one-half to three inches thick, shaped up and carefully vulcanized, and the process is completed by the wheels being trued up with tools made especially for the purpose. These wheels are used for the finest sort of grinding and polishing purposes^ The application of rubber to wheel tire* has proved a great boon to bicyclists, and the increase in this branch of industry is remarkable."" There are 100,000 bicycles made ip this country every year, and 40,000 more are imported. As all these have tires of the best rubber it can be seen that a good percentage of the world’s supply is absorbed, in this way. Each tire weighs on an average between three and four pounds, and this together with renewals, involves a yearly consumption of not far from 1,000,000 pounds. The solid tire was first used, but the .cushion and the pneumatic are now the popular forms. Each of these, however, is being further modified and improved, and the comfort of bicycle riding is being daily increased. The oushion tire is not liable to puncture and takes the jar well, but its weak point at present is its liability to crack at the sides in the interior. The pneumatic consists of a rubber tube jacketed in a stout canvas sack, which prevents it being burst by over inflation and other accidents. The whole is covered with a larger incasing tube -of rubber. The canvas sack is cemented to the outer rubber tubing, and the interior is inflated by an air valve. This form of tire, which is not yet perfected, has the advantage of being easily repaired by the rider in a few minutes by the roadside. The repairing outfit consists of a hidden pressure tube filled with a qulekdrying solution, rubber for patches and a supply of canvas. These adaptations of rubber enable the rider to travel long distances day after day with but little ill effect from the concussion which once effected so materially the health and comfort of the bicyclist. The public is frequently warned by the medical profession of the danfer which lurks in the practice of ampening the gum on envelopes with the tongue, and notwithstanding the many cases of serious and virulent diseases, especially of a syphilitic type, which have been traced to such an origin, the practice is still almost universal. Among attempts which have been made to provide a means of- escaping the necessity of licking the envelope is an automatic lock envelope, which has just been patented. On the the flap of the envelope are two projecting flanges, and all that is necessary to close the envelope is *to fold these flanges by clearly denoted lines and insert the flap thus narrowed in a slot, whereupon the folded flanges automatically lock themselves and the envelope cannot be opened without being torn. The operation sounds much more complicated than it real ly is, for one of the new envelopes can be closed as readily as the bet-ter-known gummed envelope. Still another remedy is a patent machine which moistens the open flaps of envelopes and similar articles drawn through it. This consists of a reservoir with con vexed under surface, which is attached to a vertical member of a frame. When the gummed flap of an envelope is passed under a sponge which extends slightly downward within an opening In the case of the frame, a spring arm is slightly lifted and raises a plug, allowing water to enter the reservoir and permitting its flow through the sponge, which is thus kept in a thoroughly moist condition. The immediate return of the plug to its position by the spring arm, after the envelope has been passed through, prevents further flow of the moistening liquid.

Rural Uruguay.

Harper's Magazine. Excursions across the territory of Uruguay reveal nothing of very great interest to the tourist. The landscape in parts is pretty; some finely situated estancias are to be seen ajong the banks of the Uruguay; the vicinity of the Rio Negro, too, is especially interesting and characteristic of the fertile parts of the territory, which present a similar combination of water, wood, and rolling prairie. But, after ail, one soon

i wearies of looking at the fame kkid ot View hoar after hour, league after league, and province after province. The fences of posts and wire are varied sometimes by fences of aloes and cactus; the eucalyptus, the poplar, and other trees are also planted to form fences as in Chili; the roads where one sees long teams of oxen toiling along with huge wagons, are as terrible as those of the Argentine; the prairies are dotted with innumerable herds of cattle and horses; occasionally you see two or three peasants wearing brown ponchos riding and driving animals before them; at long intervals you see one or two ranchos, or huts, where the peasants live. In the Argentine the ranchos appeared miserable enough, but ip Uruguay I saw many even more primitive, mere huts of black mud, with a roof of maize straw, a floor ot beaten earth, a doorway, but not always a window. The cabins of the Irish peasantry give some idea ol the Uruguayan rancho. It is a comfortless, unhealthy, rheumatic dwelling, less civilized than that of the Esquimaux, and more carelessly built than the most ordinary bird’s nest.

IMPROVING DAIRY STOCK.

An Important Matter for the Dairy Farmer to Consider. The need for better cows for the dairy is coming to be very generally appreciated. Statistics collected in lowa shows that the average cow in that state gives but 3,000 pounds ol milk annually, while good ones yield from 5,000 to 6,000 pounds. How unequal is the supply of butter is shown by the fact that in the state of Vermont the average yield of butter per cow is only about 13Q jK>und| _ per annum, while there are thirty dairies in the state that average over 300 pounds a cow. Some most im"portant facts were recently brought out by a series of experiments with twelve cows, among which were Jersey, Ayrshire, Devon, Durham, Dutch and native cows, under the auspices of the department of agriculture. The most profitable cow was bought for S6O, fed 584 days, and then sold for S2B, making her actual cost $32, and the feed cost. $135.05, so that the total cash outlay was $167.05. The milk brought $203.35 at the creamery, and the manure was estimated to be worth $56,93, making the total value received for feed consumed, $260.30. Subtracting the cash outlay of $167.05 from this, there remains $93.25 as net return for feed consumed. Deducting the estimated value of the manure, the remainder, “return in excess of estimated value of the manure,” is $36.32. In the average for the twelve cows, the net return was $50.43; and the return in excess of the estimated value of the manure only $15.12. With the least profitable cow, the cash outlay for cow and feed exceeded the value of milk and manure by $3.97, in other words, the net return for feed consumed was $8.97 less than nothing. Subtracting the value of the manure, the total loss was $34.25; that is to say, the allowing for the value of the manure the results with the twelve cows varied from a gain of $93 to a loss of $3.97, or if the value of the manure be left out of account from a gain of $36.32 to a loss of $34.25. It was found that the profit or loss did not depend upon either the breed or the length of the feeding period. The most profitable cow and .the least profitable but one were born* same breed. Of the two most profitable cows, one was fed for 584 days and the other for only 278 days. Two things are brought out clearly by these experiments. One is that in certain localities the value of the manure goes far to decide the profit in feeding dairy cattle. Another is that cows which would ordinarily pass for good ones may differ widely in product. To the practical dairyman, however, they teach the difference between cows which are profitable and those which are not, and the importance of selecting the best cows and getting rid of the poor ones; in other words, of being thoroughly cognizant of the issues upon which the success or failure of his, business depends.

James Makes No Mistakes.

I heard a good story in New York the other day on James Gordon Bennett. ‘ ‘One of the maxims of Bennett’s life.” said a well-known club man, “is never to make a mistake and; therefore, never have occasion to correct one. Bennet makes a few errors. He never acknowledges one. I remember a few years ago ne went into his club on Ohristmass Day for dinner. It was his usual way to give his waiter $5 on Christmas. He had two small rolls of money in his pooket. One contained five $1 notes, the other five SI,OOO notes. When Bennett had finished ho handed the waiter one oi the rolls of money without examining it, presuming it to be $5. The waitei thanked him and shoved it into his pocket without examination. Afte: the great Editor had gone the waitei drew forth his roil of bills and dis covered to his surprise five SIOOO bills He was actually frightened, and weni to the steward.giving him the moncj to lock up iu tne safe until Mr. Ben nett returned, stating that he knew Mr. Bennett must have made a mistake.

•‘A few days latter Bennett re turned to the club. The waiter./., an( the steward called him back Into ; rear apartment and handed hi it th roll of bills, both stating that h must have made a mistake. A t th i Bennett straightened himself, wit 1 , out even looking at the roll of mon-. and with an air of indignation v plied: “James Gordl)|p Bennett makes p mistakes,” and fitrode out.

A Sea Sick Passenger

On the ocean cares little about a storm. He la positively indifferent whether he Is trashed overboard or not. But, set right by a wineglassful or two of Sostotter s Stomach Bitters, he feels renewed Interest in his personal safety. This fine corrective aentralizes In brackish water —often compulsorily drank on shipboard, to the grievous detriment of health —the pernicious impurities which rive rise to disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels. To the mariner, the tourist, the Western pioneer and miner, the Bitters is invaluable as a means of protection against malaria, when Its seeds are latent in air and water. To the effects of overwork, mental or manual it Is a most reliable antidote, and to the debilitated and nervous, It great and speedily-felt relief and vigor. “Over the Garden Wall” Is the favorite lay of the hens, if garden making is proceeding on the other side. Is it probable that what a million women say after daily trial Is a mistake? They say they know by test that Dobbins’ Electric is most economical, purest and best. They have had 24 years to try 1L Yon give it one trial. There never was a woman who didn’t long to tell some other woman Just how she ought to do up her hair. • No bkmbdt in the world is ,so highly appreciated by mothers as Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers, Many little children owe their food-health to these dainty little candles, y mall. 25 cts. John D. Park. Cincinnati, O. A cheerful old man or old woman is like the sunny side of a woodshed in the last of winter.

Talk’s cheap, but when it’s backed up by a pledge of the hard cash of a financially responsible firm, or company, of world-wide reputation for fair and honorable dealing, it means business / Now, there are scores of sarsaparillas and other bloodpurifiers, all cracked up to be the best, purest, most peculiar and wonderful, but bear in mind (for your own sake), there’s only one gitaranteed blood-purifier and remedy for torpid liver and all diseases that come from bad blood. That one-r- standing solitary and alone—sold on trials is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. If it don’t do good in skin, scalp and scrofulous diseases —and pulmonary consumption is only lung-scrofula—just let its makers know and get your money back. Talk’s cheap, but to back a poor medicine, or a common one, by selling it on trials as * Golden Medical Discovery ” is sold, would bankrupt the largest fortune. Talk’s cheap, but only “ Discovery ” is guaranteed. For a disordered liver try Beecham’s Pills* FITS.—AII Fits «topped free by Dr. Kline’s Grea Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first days use. Mar 0 velloue cures. Treatise and*2.oo trial bottle freet a Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline.93l Arch St., Phils.,P No Opium in Piso’s Cure for Consump tion. Cures where other remedies fail. 25c

FOR FIFTY YEARSr Swift Specific S. S. S. has a record enjoyed by no other medicine. Considered Wonderful. fl s> For over ** r * Henr y v * BmHh * °* Belmont « is Virginia, says: “He considers his cure PURELY fifty years of Scrofula by 8. 8. 8., one of the most VEGE--3 hoc boon wonderful on record. He had the disease TABLE, ll nas Deen 0 f the worst type ill his life until he was AND curing aK 22 years of age, and his whole youth was IS HARltfrli j embittere d by IL Of course he had all U2BB SOnS Ot DiOOd sorts of treatment, but nothing benefited TO THE frrmhlp. from hlm Permanently until he took 8. 8. 8. MOST trouDie irom which cleanSMi iha pollon from Wt ty# . delicate an Ordinary tem, and cured him sound and well.” pimple to the worst types of scrofula and blood poison. Boolu on Blood and Skin Disease* Free. THE BWIFT SPECIFIC CO. v Atlanta, Ca.

It takes three scruples to make one dram so that a man may drown all scruples after taking a dram or two. Many so-called “Bitters” are not medicines, but simply liquors so disguised as to evade the law in prohibition sections. This is not tho case with the celebrated Prickly Ash Bittefs. It is purely a medicine, acting on the liver ana blood, and by reason of its cathartic effects can not be used as a beverage. It should be in every household. The swells are always in the swim at the seashore; Pennsylvania Lines. K. of P. Bigßixth excursion to Seymour on Saturday, June 6, via the Pennsylvania Lines. Special low round-trip rate from Indianapolis. For particulars see bills or apply to ticket agent.

LST , EeVI'r*COLDB, iyiujk MEASLES, CATARRH, Ac. BVTMC UPC OF THE INVISIBLE fnFAEISOUND DISC IU IwUek l. *• *‘lr * , « r »* r VS# IV oree.ee then all rtmUee 4* M||*a*MMrnei«*HieA *■». aaau uUu Man »i*. <r« r-riu.eiju-NllWieUFTlalMe Worn euml*. without removal BiMwort. ©*■* weeks' Scales COMBINATION BEAM V V W (U. g. STAND ABO) ______ No Weight* to be Lost or Stolen. 5-TON $60.00. For full information, address, WEEKS SCALE WORKS, Buffalo, N. Y. fTnmn DO vov want to make I Alllu\ PER DAY? If you do, send llfill Mill 50c, and get ir, y recipe for maniiliiliJiXJU factoring my faolal balm and lotion for beaatlfriac tbs complexion, sraslns all wrinkles, blsok-heads. pimples, sts. It is worth the pries esked for personal use, and if It does not do what I advertise, I will cheerfully refund you the money. Address, Jessie Bannst, 2*77 Indiana .* venue, Chicago, 111. ■apMQIMM JOHN W. MORRIS ntlwSMwN Washington, D. V r Succeßstuljy Pro»ecut*a Claims. I Late Principal Examiner u.B,Pension Bureau I yrs In last war, 15 adjudicating claim#,atty since

3 trade mJL REMEby^frAlhl Com Pboiqtly and Pmuramr RHEUMATISM, Lumbago, Headache,Toothache, * NEURALGIA, Sore Throat, Swelling*, Frost-bite*, SCIATICA*’ Sprains, Braises, Barns, Scalds. IM£ CHARLES A. VOfiSLIB CO- Baltimore, ■& Electricity is a very dangerous fluid, yet we make light of it. tate of Ohio, City of Toledo, 1 Lucas County. j Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co. doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pav he. urn of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each nd every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured bythe use of Hall’s Catarrh Cur*. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in mt presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. A. W. GLEASON, |s*alJ Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY dr CO., Toftdo, 0. by Druggists, 75c. “This 1b a ‘queer’ experience,” said the mao who received the counterfeit coin. How to Reach Brooklyn. Thelncreased number of people thatdesfre to travel to and from Brooklyn without crossing the city of New York has led the Pennsylvania Railroad Company to improve its facilities. For many yearn this company has had tho best means of communication between the West and the city of Brooklyn, its Annex steamboats plying between its Jersey City station and its Fulton street station in Brooklyn, connecting with all through trains. By recent arrangement tickets may now be procured direct to Brooklyn via the Pennsylvania Linea at the same rate, as to New. York and baggage checked through, thereby enabling the city to be reached with leastdelay and least discomfort A NEW TRAIN To the Pacific coast, equipped with Pullman and Dolonist Sleepers, has Just been placed in service by the Northern Pacific Railroad, leaving St. Paul every morning at 9 o’clock. The “Fast Train” via the Wisconsin Central Lines, composed of Pullman Vestibuled Drawing Room Sleepers, Dining Cars and Coaches of latest design, leaving Chicago daily at 5 p. m., makes close connection in the Union Depot, St. Paul, with this train, affording excellent service to all points West. In addition to this the Wisconsin Central and Northern Pacific Lines run Pullman Vestibuled and Tourist Sleepers without change between Chicago and Tacoma, Wash., and Portland, Ore., on train leaving Chicago via the Wisconsin Central daily at 10:45 p. m,. and St. Paul via the Northern Pacific at 4:15 p. m. For tickets, berths fn Pullman or Tourist Sleepers, etc., apply to Geo. K. Thompson, City Passenger and Ticket Agent, 205 Clark st., or to F. J. Eddy, Depot Ticket Agent, Grand Central Passenger Station, corner Harrison st. and Fifth ave., Chicago, lU. _ Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria, When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria When she had Children, she gave them Cast oris..

SlTd.nge indeed fha-t ike 43APO. LJ O should Hss'meike.eyerything so bright, but "A needle clothes others,and is ibselj: naked’.’Try it in you rnext house-cleaning What folly it would be to cut grass with a pair of scissors! Yet people do equally silly things every day. Modern progress has grown up from the hooked sickle to the swinging scythe and thence to the lawn mower. So don’t use scissors! But do you use SAPOLIO ? If you don’t you are as much behind the age as if you out grass with a dinner knife. Once there were no soaps. Then one soap served all purposes. Now the sensible folks use one soap in the toilet, another in the tub, one soap in the stables, and SAPOLIO for all scouring and house-cleaning. jh\ Moo Will ftl? f\V If so. do Dot fail to write us for our prices. Largest f ARTi line In the State. Good Agents Wanted in every town. \ Wheels from *35.00 to *165.00. Victors, Rambiers, and a full line of cheap wheels. HAY & WILLITS, lta*ri I 118 W. Washington Bt., Opp. State House, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Recommended by Physicians. Ks 821 Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the Et El Children take it without objection. Bj druggist*.

“August Flower” Perhaps you do not believe these statements concerning Green's August Flower. Well, we can’t make you. We can’t force conviction into your head or medDoubting icine 4nto your throat. We don’t Thomas. want to. The money is yours, and the misery is yours; and until you are willing to believe, and spend the one for the relief of the other, they will stay so. John H. Foster, 1122 Brown Street, Philadelphia, says: “ My wife is a little Scotch woman, thirty years of age and of a naturally jftelicate disposition. For five or six years p?.st she has been suffering from Dyspepsia. She Vomit became so bad at last that she could not sit Every Meal, down to a meal but - she had to yomit it as soon as she had eaten it. Two bottles of your August Flower have cured her, after many doctors failed. She can now eat anything, and enjoy it; and as for Dyspepsia, she does not know that she ever had it.” # TfASELINiT FOB A ONB-DOLLAR BILL sent us by mall Will deliver, free of *H charges, to any person In Itno United States, all of tbs foliowi OS articles,carsolly paoked. _ ■ ■ . ■* . ’ •ns two-ouac* bottle of Pare Vaseline, - - 10 cte me two-oonee bottle of YASeiteT Feaeade, - U ” me lar of Vaseline Cold Qreata, - - - - 14 " me Cake of Vaseline Compior Isa, - - - IS ” tins Cake of Vaseline Bony, nnaeetJted, - - 16 ” One Cake of Vaseline B*ap,e»'UU»lt«lT«oeoto<t,2J ” Oae two-onncebottle of white Taaellne, --as ” Or for no eta re stamps any sinije artlote all hi prices earned. On no account be perinaded to accept from tainiy receive an imitation whteh baa Utile or no Chosobrough Mfg. Oo.t Ed Stssta Bt. K. T. I EWIS’ 981 LYE HE 1 POWBEBID AND PEBPUKEB. ■■ (PATENTED.) HHgg# The strongest and purest Lye sHbTXt made. Will make the best per l@»A , /i fumed Hard Soap in 20 minutes ®without boiling , It is the wWg best for softening water, TMMf cleansing waste pipes, disinfect M ing sinks, closet*, washing bob ■ V ties, paints, trees, etc. aSknn. PENNA. SALT M’F’G 00, Gen. Agts., Philo., Pa. LOYAL JjgTi gF FENCE WIRE och |K ASMiIM Saves one-half of your posts 'JBgj! gjl saves wire, stretches the wire difIBHMBHg Mi keeps It from sagging, break ing, or becoming unsightly W One lock will control one W strand, 00 rods long; costs 10 cents, Alldealergjj Circulars free. Wire Fenee Supply Co., Indianapolis. whooping Cough. •BRONCHITIS. i&esss&l BORE WELLS llmonlyl Owr W«l 1 Machine* art the moit ffffl •flVllfcl • &XLI ABLE, ZXTfcABL B, BUOOSM FI7L 1 IJMJ ISsßfSal LOOMIS & HYMAN, JSfiS.'*'™" TIFFIN. - FREEt fkckaje inako 5 galloni. DdidooTiparkllnx and appetUing. Sold by »U dmlers. A twautifhl Picture Book and Card* mt free to any on* Bending their addre** to Th« C. HIRXS 00., Philad'a. “WOMAN HER DISEASES AND their TREATMENT.” A valuable lllua trated book of seventy-two pages sent free on receipt of 10 cents to cover cost of of m&lUing eto. Address, P. O. Box 1066, Phlla., Pa. ' IN U~ 22—01 INDPLIS