E- A *nf- A IRM AND GARDEN.] ■WW ▼ ▼ wwwv^f Number of Slieep on Itapn Pasture. The number of sheep that one acre of rape will sustain, nnd the period through which it will sustain them, will, of course, depend upon the char acter of the growth of the rape. But an average crop will sustain from 10 to 15 auimalß per acre for 60 days. At the end of the 60 days they should all bain condition to "take the mar ket," even though lean in form when put upon the rape. —Professor Thomas Shaw of the Minnesota Experiment Station. Watering: Stock. If one figured up the time spent every year or eveu every winter in driving cattle a quarter of a mile to the brook and back again, twice or even once a day, and computed it at a fair price for labor, and then added to it the value of the milk lost and the extra food consumed to keep up the system to its normal temperature, he would find that from even a few cows it would not take long to reach the cost of a good cisteru, or some other method of having the water right in the yard, or even in the stalls so that the cattle could drink without man or beast going out of doors. The Army Worm, Few insects are more dreaded by the American farmer than the army worm. Although it becomes destruc tive in a given locality only at rare in tervals, it then does great damage to cereal and forage crops, feeding es pecially upon the members of the great grass family. The parent in sect is a light brown moth which de posits eggs in grass lands. The young worms hatch soon after aud feed upon the grass loaves, growing slowly for about five weeks. The army worm is then about au inch aud a half long aud is striped with brown. The full grown army worm burrows a short distance into the soil, where it changes to a pupa, aud again two weeks later it changes to a moth, like the one which laid the eggs. It is only when these insects become extraordinarily abun dant that they move from field to field in armies. At such times, how ever, they do great damage. Probably the measure that is most generally useful in preventing out breaks of the army worm is that of burning over glass lands in fall, win ter or spring. Large numbers of the insects may thus be destroyed. The migration of the worms from field to field may be prevented by plowing deep furrows with the perpendicular sides away from the worms, or by set ting long boards on edge, leaning a little toward the worms, and smearing the upper edge with coal tar. The herbage ahead of the moving army may also be dusted or sprayed witn Paris greeu or some other poisou. Nest* for Layers, Many claim that the nest should be on the ground, but all claims that hens should have their nests on the moist ground are but theories, aud unsupported by facts. What is re quired for the heu in winter is a snug, warm location, while in the summer she should have a cool place. The best material for a nest is dry earth on the bottom, with chopped hay over the earth. Then dust the nest, hens and eggs with insect pow.ler, put a small quantity of tobacco refuse iu the nest aud clean it out thoroughly should an egg become broken or the nest foul. The broken eggs will cause lice quicker than anything else. But first see that the hen has no lice, then give lier good eggs and she will bring off a brood if she has a warm and comfortable nest. The nest should be made movable, so as to be taken outside for cleaning, and it should never be placed where any of the fowls can cause it to be filthy or roost upou it. It should never be so high as to compel effort to reach it, as the large breeds will prefer to lay on the ground rather than to reach a high nest, even when a footway is provided, to eay nothing of the fact that soma of the hens learn to fly over a fence by first learning to reach a high nest. Never have the nest in a barrel, or so constructed that the heu must jump down to it, as broken eggs will be the consequence, but rather to place the entrance as to permit her to walk in upon the eggs. The nest should be placed in a dark position, or so arranged that the in terior will be somewhat dark, which will be a partial protection against egg eating. For a flock of one dozen hens four nests will be sufficient.—American Gardening. Burning Orchard Briinh. Many a good orchard has been ren dered largely unproductive from year to year because the owner did not keep the old dead trees and limbs cleaned np. A good fire of orchard brush once a year will have a wonder ful effect in protecting the fruit trees from insect and fungous diseases, and this will be especially the case if the orchard be at a considerable distance from other orchards. Of course, when there is an orchard over the fence that is permitted to become a harbor for pests, it is discouraging work trying to keep one's own premises clean. Neverthe less, in any case it must be done, but it can be done with more hope of good results in the one case than in the other. In human diseases of a contagious nature, it has been found that the greatest barrier to their advancement is cleanliness in all surrouudings, and the same is true in the orchard. If the work has not been done in the fall before the leaves fell, the dead limbs should bo cut off in the spring and burned, together with all the dead wood that has fallen in the orchard during the winter. The orchard should be more carefully raked over than the lawn, for the reasou that some of our orchard pests live over on those that have fallen. This gathered brush should not even goto the wood pile, if the latter is near the orchard. The writer remembers a woodpile that wns a part of a great orchard, and to that woodpile was brought all the limbs and other material that came out of the orchard. The piles of brush would romain for more than a yeai sometimes, and the enemies of the orchard found in them a safe harbor. Where trees have been killed with the scale it will not be safe to try tc use them for firewood, and the same might be said of peaoh trees that have yielded to attacks of the yellows. Let the fire do its work, for it is a safe agent. No scale or fungus germ cat stand its purifying etl'ects. It wili catch many enemies that tho eye ol man never detects. —Farm, FielJ anc Fireside. Corncrlb and Bti9hel Crate*. The first thought that comes into one's mind in building a corncrib is, where is the nearest convenient place to the place of feeding? Second, tc build a crib that cau be kept free oi nearly so from rats and mice, for thej not only eat the corn, but they make the corn they do not oat unfit to be fed. I have seeu coru that has beer taken from a crib where rats and mice have been that horses would refuse tc eat. When mice once get a harbor in a corncrib they breed very fast anc cause great waste of corn. I here de scribe a corncrib and one that I think very good. The place to build is ou the side of the hogpen. If the hog pen and corncrib are both built at the same time they may be under one roof. Have the alley in the pen on the side of the crib. Have an open ing the whole length of the bottom ol partition between the corncrib and hogpen, aud wide enough to let the corn come out sufficiently to shovel. Have the shovel nnd basket or crate handy. If the place of feeding is iu the hogpen the corn is right there. If the feeding place is in the hogyard at the back of the pen, make a door iu the back end of the alley. By taking the coru from the bottom of the crib all the corn is stirred which keeps it from moulding, if soft, and rats aud mice will smother to death if they get in the crib. Be sure to have the crit so fixed that the coru can be emptied into it from crates, for bushel crates are a necessity on overv farm, in handling corn, potatoes, roots and apples. They cau be bought ready made or the ninterial can be bought nnd nailed together on i-ainy days. In husking coru, put it iu the crates as husked. It will dry ont much quicker nnd will save pickiug, and then it is not on the ground to get wet and dirty when it laius. In pick ing up potatoes with crates set them ou a sled made one crate wide and sis or eight crates long. Hitch a horse to the sled. Go between two rows ol dug potatoes, pick up from both sides of sled. If the potatoes are to be sorted put the small potatoes in the middle crate. The potatoes can be stored away in the cellar in the crates, then there is no picking out of bir when ready to soil. Soft corn cau also be kept in the crates when it will not be kept in the crib.—Burtor Shiugleton in the Epitomist. How to Succeed in Growing Onion*. At the outset, I would like to saj that success in growing the onion croj: is not possible without well-directed effort. This means that the soil must be well supplied with plant food,eithei naturally or through years of inanur ing aud fertilizing. Ido not mean tc say that there can be no good results where the grouud has not been es pecially prepared. I have succeeded fairly well where I have begun to fit the ground the first season of planting crops, but when this is done I would suggest a liberal application of barn yard manure. Plow this under deep ly, using the jointer. This is a good beginning, aud when the roots of the crop reach the mauure the plants will grow rapidly, if the ground is fairly moist. This stable manure, however, will not be suffi cient, and it will bo necessary to ap ply some quick-acting fertilizer, as nitrate of soda, to the surface when the plants most need it. Be sure tc get barnyard manure that is free from straw, as unrotted material interferes with cultivation. Where an applica tion of fertilizer is made to the surface of the soil, it must be well worked in to give the plants a rapid growth. After the ground is plowed, great care must be taken to pulverize tho surface thoroughly, for several reiv sous. During the dry season, unless the soil is well compacted and finely divided, the air will get into the uppet layers and remove all the moisture, so that there will not bo any left to ger minate the seed. Then clods choke the tender sprouts until they are smothered and never get to the sur face. The grouud must also be well drained, for if water accumulates dur ing a wet time the seed will rot. Next secure good seed, for failure will surely result if this is not looked after. I would suggest obtaining seed of the latest improved varieties. Drill in the seed as early as the ground can be safely worked, as I find that early sown onions are the best, es pecially where blights, mildews and rusts are abundant. My onion field has been wholly free from these pests, but any field is apt to be attacked. An extra effort must be made aftei the seed is in the grouud to keep down the weeds, for if they once get started it is almost impossible tc eradicate them, because of the small ness of the young onion plants. Go over the ground often so as to form a soil mulch and thus conserve the moisture and keep the hard crust | broken up. —B. F. Underwood in I American Agriculturist. THE MOBLER'S INVITATION. Oh! come ride, Love, witlx me in my Auto mobile! Come! 't's fieetness itself, shod with velvet each wheel. Like birds in midair we will skim o'er the ground, .Our motion a poem—with no jar ol sound. Come! while Night 's touching Earth with her opiate hand, And a lethargy steals o'er the sea and the the land. Come! all's beauty, enchantment; the moon from her height Fills the earth with pale glory, our path way with light; The roses fling sweetness, the lilies in cense To 'tone for their slumb'ring, a sweet recompense; While in rush ot the river and lap of the sea There throbs a sweet love-song about you and me. Then, come ride. Love, with me In my Au tomobile! Ne'er can horseman o'ertake us, or scorcher awheel. As shoot we along beholders will cry: "That surely's a meteor dropped from the sky!" And the jealous orbs, planets, a-plunglng through space, Will defy us, will dare us to give them a race. —Jennie Vickery, in Puck. HUMOROUS. She—Would you die for me? He Well—er—l'd rather become a widow er for you. Hoax—Wigwag is so fond of fish he'd steal them. Joax—Get 'em by hook or crook, he? "Is your friend a literary man?" "No," answered Miss Cayenna "He's just a writer. He's too bald headed to be a literary man." "Your friend the seance medium moved out of that old house in a hurry." "What was the matter?" ".:he found out it was haunted." "May I make so bold as to offer yon my hand?" asked the impeennions suitor, "i'ou can't palm that oft on me," replied the unfeeling heiress. "Was your daughter popular at the summer resorts, Mrs. Whooper?" "Popular? She had to make a card catalogue of her marriage proposals," Of all tho men beneath the sun There's only one 1 know That I would throttle. He's the one Who says:"l told you so" Gaswell—l hear that women barber* are becoming quite numerous in some places. Dukane—Well, most wome* possess the conversational qualifica tions. "Women should have their rights," said she, with some spirit. "True," he replied; "but in a crowded trolley car, for instance, they're not willing to stand up for them." "You look robust," remarked the lady of the house. "Are yon equal to the task of sawing wood?" "Equal isn't the word, madam," replied the pilgrim as he resumed his journey, "I'm superior to it." Gladys (sipping)— Papa is so eccen tric! Madeline—How so? Gladys— lie heard me telling mamma that Professor Keeze, my music teacher, had an exquisite touch, and he dis charged the professor immediately. McJigger—He'll never succeed in life—never muke a living, in fact Thingumbob—Why do you think that? McJigger—Oh, every time he opens bis mouth he puts his fcot in it. Thingumbob—Well, that's one way at least of making both ends meet. "James," whispered the good wom an, "there's a burglar in the parlor. He stumbled agaiust the piano in the dark, I heard several of the keys struck." "All right!" said James, "I'll go down." "Oh, James, you're not going to do anything rash?" "Cer tainly not. I'm going t i help him. You don't suppose he can get that piano out of the house without assist ance, do you?" LOVE IN AN OVEN. Romance of Henry and Minna—A Baker Who l'ropofleil In a Singular Way. A baker of Nuremberg, in Ger many, recently proposed marriage to a girl in a singular manner. Minna and Henry are their names, but as to their family names their is no clew, since the German papers which tell the story considerately refrain from publishing thein. Minna had been keeping house for Henry for the past few years, and gradually the two had fallen very much in love with each other. Miuna, however, would have died sooner than let Henry kuow how she felt toward him, and Henry was equally bashful. Finally he went for advice to an old woman in the neighborhood who makes a living by telling fortunes, and she counseled him togo dining the next full moon into the largo kitchen where his bread was baked, and, when the clock struck midnight, to open the oven and look into it. She assured him that he would then see the face of his future wife. Henry went home well satisfied, not knowing that Minna had cousulted the same old womau on the previous evening, and had been told by her that she would surely obtain her heart's desire if she would only get into the oven in the kitohen a few hours before midnight during the next full moon and keep her face turned toward the door. Minna did so, and though the oven was uncom fortably warm, she lay as still as a mouse until the clock struck mid night, when lo! the door opened and before her appeared the well known face of her beloved Henry. Even then sho hardly stirred, bnt stared at Henry, who, utterly amazed at sight of her, speedily retreated, evidently under the impression that what he had seen was some ghostly vision. The old woman's ruse, however, succeeded admirably, and in a fortnight from that memorable night Henry and Minna weie made man and wife,—Ex change- Value of a Laneli. The value of a good-natured laugh may be rated low by some people, but many writers have attested its worth in no measured terms. It is not surprising that the merry Charles Lamb should have said, "A laugh is worth a hundred groaus in any market;" but from the lips of the sombre Carlyle one is scarcely pre pared to hear, "No man who has onoe heartily and wholly laughed cau be altogether or irreclaimably bad." It was Douglas Jerrold who boldly stated that "What was talked of as the golden chain of Jove was nothing but a succession of laughs, achromatic scale of merriment reaching from earth to Olympus." "I am persuaded," wrote Lawrence Sterne, "that every time a man smiles —bntmuch more so when he laughs— it adds something to his fragment of life." Last of all comes the verdict of Doctor Holmes, given with his own, inimitable humor: "The riotous tumult of a laugh, I take it, is the mob law of the features, and properly the magistrate who reads the rio' act." For Wheeling or Golfing* The proper breeches for wear when wheeling or for golf, if you prefer to wear breeches, are of the decided pear shape. They are very loose about the hips and thighs and fit snugly under the knee. The knee buttons are closely spaced and the vent is in front of the leg, just on the outside of the shin bone. The breeches are made of tweeds or rongh cheviots and are best in dark grounds with a neat hair line plaid. They may be worn with a black jacket of the Norfolk or plaiu model, or with the scarlet golf jaoket. With the breechea wear plain top hose, low-cut calf shoes, a soft shirt, trace leather belt, coat, stock, kerchief or collar and tie or four-in-hand. The best hat is the sombrero with pugree. —Haberdasher. Wliy Hie Asulntant Failed. Carl Hertz,the conjurer, has rather a horror of small boy confederates, and no wonder. On one occasion he was performing iu London, and, bor rowing half a crown from one of the audience, he placed it in the center of an orange. The idea of the trick was for the coin to disappear and tind its way into the pocket cf a youngster at some distance from the stage. Mr. Hertz, at the proper moment, called upon a boy in the crowd to produce it. Fumbling in his pockets for a moment or two, while all eyes were turned upon him, the boy at last fished out a quantity of small change. "Here's two and threepence-half penny, sir," he shouted; "I got thirsty, so I changed that half crown you gave me." No Choice of Cviln. Some people are never satisfied; 01 rather, perhaps, their tronbles are of so general a nature as to admit of no particular alleviation. Sir Algernon West says that he was one day lingering in an English coun try road, when an old man shuffled along, and then, sinking on a bank, looked up pathetically, saving: "I mostly 'as a lit goin' up-'ill!" "Where are you bound?" asked Sir Algernon. "Down there toward Cobham." "That's all right," said the gentle man, encouragingly, "for its down hill all the way." "Ah," groaned the pilgrim, "that's the worst of it! I always pitches on my 'ead goin' dowu-'ill!" Japanese Wit. A tale of Japanese wit has been re~ vived in Paris in connection with the present visit of Japanese Ambassa dors. A Japanese Embassy had come to Paris to arrange for three free ports to be open in France and Japan re spectively. The French selected Yo kohama, Yeddy and Hau-Yang. The Japanese at once suggested Havre, Marseilles and Southampton. "But Southampton," said the Frenchman, with a burst of undiplomatic laughter "is in England, you must kuow." "Yes," said the Japanese, "and Han- Yang is in Corea."—London Globe. Copper Mines on Sinat* The copper mines of Sinai are the most ancient known. They were worked from about 0000 years B. C., until 1300 or 1200 B. C. They had been abandoned tor 3000 years on account of poverty of the ore. From these mines Pepi L., a King of the sixth dynasty, obtained his sceptre, which is preserved in the British Museum. The shafts still exist as well as the ruins of the furnaces, crucibles, huts of the miners and fragments of tools. Valuable Quarries Discovered. Some old quarries of Oriental ala baster have recently been discovered in the neighborhood of Monte Amiata, near Siena. It now seems very prob able that the beautiful columns of that material in the interior of the Cathedral of Siena came from those quarries. The quarries are about to be worked. Westfikld, Mass.. Nov. 27, 1899. The Genesee Pure Food Co., Le ltoy, N. Y.: Gentlemen—Having used your Gbain-G for the past 8 mos. I thought I would write and let you know bow much good it has done me. When I wus on ray vacation last summertbe peoplel visited asked me totry QBAIN-O, and I drank some, but I didn't like It; but tne more I drank the better I liked it, and now 1 wouldn't drink anything else. I never weighed over 106 lbs. and last winter 112 was down to 103, and now I weigh just 120. I ney»r felt better in my life. It gives mean awful appetite and makes me strong. It is doing me more good tbnn anything I ever took. I reuom mend it to everybody. • Yours truly. Mas. GEO. R. IIBOWS. A Lithuanian in Chicago bears the name of John Uppermost Short. To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Kroxo Quinine Tablets. All driijriflßU refund the money if it fslls m cure. E. W. (Ikove's signature la on eacb box. Sic. Any man who has the pile* of a wig cup raise a good head of hair. How are the children this spring? ■i a Compltining a good deal of hetd - acne, can't study as well as usual, easily (ill asleep, and are tired all the time? And bow is it with yourself? Is you? ■■ IMltlMlA. v / strength slipping away ?Do you HI If / tremble easily, are your nerves all unstrung, do you feel dull and sleepy, / and have you lost all ambition ? That's I wT\Spring Poisoning I Jfl Nearly every one needs a good spring medicine: a medicine Bfl flfl that will remove impurities from the system, strengthen the iH H digestion, and bring back the old force and vigor to the IH R nerves. A perfect Sarsaparilla is just such a medicine; a H Sarsaparilla that contains the choicest and most valuable in fM gredients; a Sarsaparilla accurately and carefully made, and B one that experience has shown is perfect in every way. BThat'sAYEC'Sl H «The only Sarsaparilla made under the personal supervision of ■B three graduates: n graduate in pharmacy, n graduate in B chemistry, and a graduate in medicine." ■■ H SI.OO a bottle. All Druggists. H| "I am perfectly confident that Ayer's Sarsaparilla and Pilli hare saved my life ■M by taking them every fall and ipring. I have kept them in the house for the BH past twenty yeari." —Eva N. Hart, Buffalo, N. V.. March 19, 1900. Hflj feunctlilne and Influenza. In view of the known bactericidal influence of sunlight it would not be surprising to learn that an inverse re lation exists between the amount of sunshine and the prevalence of infec tious diseases,providing, however, the temperature is not excessive. Some observations recorded by Huheman appear to indicate that influenza is more prevalent jwhen the amount of sunshine is less, and it is not impos sible that a similar rule would be found to apply to other infectious dis eases also. In the eight years from 1893 to 1900 the number of hours of sunshine during the month of Janu ary, when influenza was exceedingly prevalent, was between 9.8 in 1900, and 62.3 in 1899—the mean being 36.4. A similar state of affairs was observed in Madgeburg, where from 1882 to 1900 the number of hours of sunshine varied during the same month between 19 in 1900 and 86.3 in 1883. Similar figures were obtained in observations made iD other cities of Germany.—Philadelphia Medical Journal. Deducting dubious vessels, the completed battleships of England now number thirty-six and those of France and Russia thirty-eight. Jell-O, tbe New Deucrt Pleases nil the family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 ots. It's only natural for a fellow to feel cheap when his salary has been reduced. Tlir Beit Prescrlptlen for Chill* and Fever Is a bottle of GHOVS'S TASTEMSS CHILL TONIC. It U simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price 50c. Hungary's annual coal production has doubled in ten years. Carter'* Ink Ii the Beit Ink made, but no dearer than the poorest. Haa the largestgale of am ink ia tLa world. Only one person in 1000 reaches 100 years of uge. J. C. Simpson, Marquess, VV. Va., says: "Hall's Catarrh Cure cured mo of a very bad jase ot catarrh." Druggists sell it, 75c. The man who beefs Is liable to get roasted. I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consumption has an equal tor coughs and colds.—JOHN F. BOYEII, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 10.11)00. Every square mile of sea is estimated to contain some 120,000,000 ilsh. Mrs. Wlnslow'sSoothlng ayrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cores wind colic,2sc.abottle. London manufactures $10,000,000 worth of umbrellas annually. 1900 J ! There is every good j I t reason why , , | St Jacobs Oil ! | should cure ' RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA LUMBAGO SCIATICA i for the rest of the century. One par- ' i amount reason is—it does cure, ! SURELY AND PROMPTLY ; i JM \ —■* ALABASTINE IIMIWIIV IIIVH base wall coating" in 5 lb. paper packages, made ready for use ir white and fourteen beautiful tints by mixing with cold water. It is a cement that goei through a process of setting, hardens with ago and can be coated and recoated without washing off its old coats before renewing. ALABASTINE H= various kalsomines on the market, being durable and not stuck on the wall with glue. Alabastinc customers should insist on having the goods IK packages properly labeled. They should rejeo all imitations. There is nothing "just as good.* ALABASTINE PreTants much lickness, particularly throat anc lung difficulties, attributable to unsanitary coatings oa walls. It has been recommendec In a paper published by the Michigan Stat. Board of Health on account of its sanitarj features; which paper strongly condemned kalsomines. Alabastine con be used on eith* plastered walls, wood ceilings, brick or canTaf and any one can brußh it on. It admitß of radi cal changes from wall paper decorations, thut securing at reasonable expense the latest anc best effects. Alabastine is manufactured by th< Alabasline Company of drand Rapids, Hidi^an Instructive and interesting booklet mailed tifi to all applicants. RR# For headache (whether nick or nervous), tooth ache, neuralgia, rheumatism, lumbago, pains HII£ weakness in the back, spine or kidneys, pair around the liver, pleurisy, swelling of the Joint! and pains of all kinds, the application of Bad way'i Ready Relief will afford immediate ease, and it* continued use for a few days effects a permanent cure. CURES AND PREVENTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Hoarseness Stiff Neck Bronchitis. Catarrh, Headache Toothache Rheumatism Neuralgia Asthma Bruises Sprains; Quicker Than Any Known Remedy. No matter how violent or excruciating the r>al>4 the Rheumatic. Bedridden, Indrm, Crippled, Ner vous. Neuralgic or prostrated with diseases may sufler, RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Will Afford Instant EUNC. NTERNALLY —A half to a teaspoonful in naif • tumbler of water will in a few minutes cure Cramps. Spasms, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Vomiting, Heart burn. Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, Diarrhiea, Colic, Flatulency aud all iuterual pains. There in not a remedial agent tn the world tha« will cure fever and ague and all other malarious, bilious and other fevers, aided by RADWAY'H PILL 9, so quickly a* RADWAY'S READY RELIEF. 50 1 >ni* per Bottle. Sold by Uruvciits. HE SURE TO GET RAIIWAV'S. W. L. DOUGLAS S3 &3.8Q SHOES aivap 4S£Worth $4 to $6 compared JW\ with other make* / » >7 « \lndoried bjr over . 3 iCJI » 1,000,000 wearers, KMr» fll #| filf I7*« genuine have W. L. rT yfl ■ I B Douglas' name and price /Jf Il\ s,am P € d on bottom. jT I no substitute claimed to be MVS as good. Your dealerA ■ M should keep them % m . W not* we will send a pair receipt of price and Vextra lor carriage. State kind of leathet, VM and width, plain or cap toe- Cat. ire#» SSnmm N.LOOUfiLASIHOE CO.. Brockton. Mm ADVERTISING S T (■■■■jaSTOMCD FREE ■ ■ ■■ P«MM*ltr Car.l in ■ I m DR. (LIME'S MUT I I W NERVE RESTORER ■ ■ ■ w NtritotfMrlmtev'iaN. ■ ftumlHHw.jwiMl f>? Mil; wittn u< " ti TRIAL BOTTLR ran U FU FTIIMU whs pmy UFRMM#* tmU MI Ftrmmmmt MrCMtMI; uayonrj nIM. fcrillJfcf MM DU»r4in, Iptlspav. SMMI. Rt. YltW DUN, Mint*. iitMituili, CH.KLINB, U. IK liih iiroet PMtoMikk r hetii ian. |)ENSION^.^W£
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers