1 ) Th Market End of Farming. Frank B. White, the specialist on advertising thinks that, while the rower could not take too much pains la packing his fruit honestly and at tractively, he should not fall to an nounce publicly what he had for sale. He should also tlx the price himself, not let others fit It for him. In addi tion to newspaper advertisements, ac cording to Mr. White, he should pre pare a booklet or circular and send It to every one attracted by the news paper announcements. The specialist's advice applies fully as well to other country products, such as pure-bred live stock, fancy poultry, honey, maple sweets, canned goods and all special products, where the demand is limited and the margin of profit large enough to pay for a liberal outlay in finding customers. Lesson In Farm Economy. The National Provlsloner" gives a capital innutrition of the economy which is now applied In the working up of an animal. A twelve hundred pound teer Is worked up in the following manner: The two ribs give us 165 pounds; two loins, 215 pounds; two rounds, 165 pounds; two chucks, 120 pounds; two plates, 113 pounds; four shanks, ' 45 pounds; two flanks, 21 pounds; suet, 28 pounds; two kidneys, 2 pounds; tongue, 5 pounds; hide, 65 pounds; oleo oil, 25 pounds; oleo stear ins, 13.20 pounds; tallow, 6.21 pound; cattle hair, 12 pounds; glue, 1.55 pounds; cheek meat, 8 pounds; brain, 5 pounds; ox Hps, 1 pound; heart, 3.5 pounds; liver, 10 pounds; tall, 1.25 pounds; sweetbreads, 2 pounds; medi cinal glands, 6 pounds; tripe, 8 pounds; casing, 6.07 pounds; fertilizer, 24.75 pounds; hoofs, 1.75 pounds; shins, 1.5 pounds; neatsfoot oil, 1 pound; butter stock, 1.25 pounds; raw bone, 13 pounds; horns, .75 pound; albumen, 1.20 pounds altogether 881.65 pounds. From the different parts come leather, ' soap, glycerine, butterlne, lubricator, candles, albumen, fertilizer, stock foods, buttons, hairpins, glue, oleo oil, lllumlnant, bonemeal and a large nutn- to this at the shambles should bo prac ticed '"i every department of farm work the result would be a saving quite beyond estimate. It is certain that farming would pay more than twice its present annual valuation. Keep the Cows Clean. Nothing is more Important than proper attention .to the cleanliness of the cows and the stable. Filth not only serves as a breeding place for files in summer, but draws them around to Irritate .the cows; and all good dairy men know the difference in milk yield between quiet and disturbed cows. By keeping the stables clean which is always done by the most prominent and successful dairymen, and which Is not done by the general run of those In this business, greatly to their loss tie cows are kept clean mucn more eas ily, and when both stable and cows are clean you have gone far in the right direction. Clean, wholesome milk can not be had from rooms impregnated with filth, notwithstanding the care used in scrubbing the pans and buck ets. One has only to travel through the average country to note the filth that generally surrounds the cows' quarters. Many are so careloss as not to furnish daily bedding nor dally stall cleaning, but allow the cows to lie In filth for days. Milk, as is well known, readily absorbs Impurities from the air, and these Impurities greatly hasten decom position.' In the south It Is very dim cult to procure mllkeis who will milk the cows dry and handle them gently, observing cleanly habits. They are so noisy and rough that a serious loss is caused. The sight of a herd of clean, healthy cows is a pleasing one, and is the best advertisement possible with v those who care about the source of their milk supply. But what decent per. son wants to patronize a filthy milk man and use the milk trom a filthy herd? Keep your cows clean and your stables clean. Albert D. Warner, In New York Tribune Farmer. Packing for Good Returns. Dealers complain that the average farm-packed appies and other fruit are notproperly put up. Tbey say that the man who sorts his own apples is like ly to consider them all first-class, whether they are such or not, and he grades them accordingly. If he leaves the sorting to incompetent hired help, the result is still worse. Even when well sorted, many barrels are so poor ly headed up and so loosely hooped that some barrels break open, while others -' are so looanlv nnrkpd that aftpr iha Journey the fruit does not fill the bar rel, the fruit shakes about and is bruised and dented. The following de tailed and readable suggestions along this line are contributed by Charles Forstor, a prominent New York com mission merchant: What the markets require Is quality first and quantity next Let peaches be well graded, with but one variety In a package. Give generous measure. A crate of raspberries or strawberries scantily filled never brings Its value. Avoid the "pony" package, and let the latter be new whenever and wherever possible. The apple barrel adopted by the National Apple Shippers' Associa tion is the standard of the country, and will sell In any market at home or abroad. The "stove pipe" barrel of the Hudson river can go to Europe or to Mew York, where they don't want It; but the great west will have none of it When using the generous secoaa-aand flour barrel, always wash and dry It thoroughly. Flour dust upon apples, pears or quinces means a cnt of twenty five or fifty cents In the price to make the stock sell. It represents a poor economy of time and labor. Use a sten cil for the different varieties of any thing. It costs but a trifle, and Indi cates care and Interest In the details that Is always appreciated. Don't be ashamed to have a brand of your own and pack up to It The No. 2 stock will sell under a second brand which can be understood. Shake apple barrels of ten while packing the fruit, and the attendant pressing need not then be too sovere to bring It to market tight and in good form. American Cultivator. Chickens and Eogs. Chickens and eggs have long been considered one of the minor crops of the farm, and only Indifferent success has been attained because systematle effort has not been made to get the most out of them. If we devote the same attention to their needs as we do to the main crops we will soon find that instead of a minor crop chickens and eggs may easily lead all others for a great many localities, writes Annie C. Webster, the well known poultry au thority. The man or woman who ac cepts this doctrine, and then pro ceeds to carry It Into effect, will soon realize that there are surer returns than In half the other farm products. There must be experience enough to make the handling of chickens on a wholesale scale of course. With two or three thousand hens on the farm one stands In a fair way of making a good Income. But that means careful meth ods and study. Lot It be understood, however, that chicken raising cannot be entirely separated from farming. We farm to raise the chickens. That is, we must raise grass for the chickens, fruits, grain and vegetables. To make these thoroughly profitable we need a number of cows, for skimmllk and warm milk are an essential part of the food of chickens. The ideal poultry farm is one where the chief commercial crop is chickens and their eggs, but where grass, grain, fruit and a few cows are raised. The owner of a poultry farm should raise all the summer fruits needed for the table, all the vegetables that can be eaten at home, with enough for the poultry, all the grass he will need for the chickens, and hay for wintering a few cows, and all the milk and butter for home use. Here we have one crop helping another. We plant a few acres of clover, which gives the chickens fresh green food In the season and good hay for winter. The fruits supply the table with what we need, and then add .to the diet of the chickens. Likewise the vegetables lessen the cost of our living, and give to the egg layers the very food they require. In such a sys tem of farming, eggs and chickens are the commercial crops, and everything should contribute directly toward this, but the other crops should be raised in sufficient quantity to supply what is demanded for home use. A farm con ducted In this way is bound to pay. Winter Feeding. From pasture to winter feed Is the most trying time on the dairy cow, and the results are to be found In the milk, cream and buttor. It Is at such a time that the milk gets its tainted odor and flavor, and butter loses its delicious flavor suggestive of green grass, writes C. M. Butler. If the change is very violent, the effect on the milk and cream is very great, and it will sometimes Injure the sales of It or prejudice such poor butter that it Is marked down when sent to market. The change from pasture should be commenced before frost has killed the grass. When the pasture hns been de stroyed by freezing weather, it will give a certain taste to the. milk and cream which is very unpleasant. Now Mf the change Is made gradually, be ginning to increase the feed before the grass has been killed there will be less injury to the dairy products. Indeed, It Is almost essential for a high-class dairy to make such a change with the feed of their animals. It is the time of the year wheh extra creamery butter Is scarce, and high prices are paid for the best, and It will prove remunera tive to any one .to change the food of the dairy cows very gradually and carefully. Good, liberal feeding at such time will always pay. No matter how high or scarce feed Is, It will prove more profitable in the end to give the ani mals all that their systems need. Of all times it is the piorejt to starve or stint them. The question of food and forage, in the fall of the year is one that each dairyman must solve for him self. Oue section finds sorghum the best, the most economical, and the most satisfactory in every way. Until late In the season It will supply good green fodder, and later as a hay it will help the cows to weather a trying pe riod In their Uvea. Corn, alfalfa, beans, peas, oats, hay and millet all have their advocates and territories, and, In deed, the latter is the most important factor In the problem. Climate and lo cation must always determine the rela tive Importance of these several fod der crops. The success of one cannot always be duplicated by another under totally different conditions. We must study our special problem and profit by the experience of others only so far as they apply to our special case. But whatever we do, a good feeder must certainly supplement his pasture that will help through the fall when grass Is dying and scarce, and then furnish a crop of cured fodder for early winter feeding. The saving on such a crop is sufficient to pay a large percentage on the investment The district of St. Ettenna franro has produced annually for the past j five years over 117,000,000 worth of ribbons. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. The busy have no time for tears.- Byron. To make pleasures pleasant shorten them. Charles Buxton. Mediocrity can talk; but it Is for genius to obierve. Disraeli. To know how to wait Is the great secret of success. De Malstre. After crosses and losses men grow humbler and wiser. Franklin. Progress Is the activity of today and the assurance of tomorrow. Em erson. Persistent people begin their success where others end in failure. Edward Eggleston. Great men lose somewhat of their greatness by being near us; ordinary men gain much. Landor. True enjoyment comes from activity of the mind and exercise of the body; the two are ever united. Humboldt. The brave man wants no charms to encourage him to duty, and the good man scorns ail warnings that would deter him from doing it. Bulwer. LAST OF THE HUGUENOTS. Few Traces of the Community In the East End of London. When Princess Charlotte entered London for her marriage with. King George and the coronation revels which followed It. she passed from WlItechBpel to Islington through a prosperous French section known as Spltalflelds. It was the settlement of the Huguenot refugees who carried their Industries as well as their re ligion from France and planted mul berry trees In large gardens where silkworms could he fed on home grown leaves. Tho descendants of these weavers' wore rich and prosper ous in the days of George III, and they lived In fine old houses, with oak paneled rooms and hlrjh latticed win dows close under the eaves where they could have light for working their looms. There were as niany as a dozen Huguenot churches In the East End of London during the Georgi an reigns, and when the beaut Iful Splt alflelds church was built, with Its lofty spire, Its hell early after sunrise and again at curfew was the signal for thousands of Industrious weavers to begin or end their laoors for the day. The Industry has disappeared, the houses have fallen Into decay, and the gardens aro neglected. Spltal flelds has lost Its French sspect and been converted Into a swarmtlng ghet to. In order to find a distinct trace of the Hugenot community, which had so honorable a history In the East End, one must now go farther out In Hackney and visit the French Protestant hospital near Victoria park. It 1b a beautiful modern struc ture designed In imitation of an old time French chateau, and it stands in spacious, well kept grounds which offer a marked contrast to the ordi nary East End environment The in stitution owes Its origin to a bequest made by a French Huguenot refugee two centuries ago and to liberal con tributions from weavers and mer chants In London. Work was begun near reorless Pool, In the northern suburbs, where a hospital for poor French Protestants and their descend ants w-as opened, and was long known affectionately among the refugees as "La Providence." When the growth of suburban London rendered the old site Ineligible, the second building was constructed 40 years ago and is now the refuge of about 60 aged pension ers of Huguenot descent. Phil May's "Dottyvllle." Some waggish friends of Mr. May once painted a lgn, "Dottyvllle," and attached it to his front gate in the small hours of tho morning. It was subsequently removed, and has since found a permanent place on the door of his studio. The series of "Dotty vllle" drawings in Punch Is well known to Mr. May's artist friends, one of whom brought him a letter from an Inmate of Hanwell Asylum, which said: "I greatly resent those sketch es. You apparently did not understand your subject, for you have drawn the head of an idiot and labelled it a lun atic. You ought to know the differ ence, but you don't and I am not surprised, for although I have never seen you I am very familiar with pic tures of you, and in all drawings and photographs I have noted that yours is the head of an idiot" Mr. May rec ords against himself the fact that, having proceeded thus far with the lotter, a listening friend who did not mean to be uncomplimentary broke in: "Oh, the man who wrote that let tre was no lunatic," a remark that naturally upset the gravity of the par ty and covered the speaker with con fusion. M. A. P. Officer Trod on Wrong Passenger. The Austrian army clubs are much discussing this Incident: An elderly gentleman who had the misfortune to step on the toes of a lieutenant when the street car, on the platform of which both were standing, gave a jolt was apostrophized as "an old ass who ought lo look out when he traveled with persons of distinction." Thereupon the "old ass" pulled the lleutennnt's nose, while the young of ficer tried to draw his sabre to "wash off tlhe Insult In blood." He was pre vented, however, and the pair ad journed to the nearest police station. When the elderly gentleman attempt ed to make a statement the sergeant told htm to "shut up" ard wait until his Ueutenantsliip had spoken. "Very well," said the old man, "let him talk, but after that he will go In to arrest for three months. I am Field Marshal Baron Schoenfeld, Inspector general of the army." The lieutenant handed In his reslg nation on the spot and went to jail. New York American. Makes Better Scholars. Punctuality buttons and book stamps are two new devices that are being used with marked success In the schools of Indiana. A button Is given to a pupil at the beginning of the school month, and he wears It until he Is absent or tardy, when he forfeits H until the beginning of the next school month. If a book Is well kept a stamp Is placed on the inside of the front cover. The children take pride In both button and stamp and strive to earn them. HARDY ORANGES. Experiments to Secure Frost-Resistant Variety Seems to Be Successful. Florida orange growers, who accord ing to press dispatches are now pro tecting their groves from the disas trous effects of the threatening cold snap, will be glad to learn that the hardy orange experiments of the de partment of agriculture give promise of Immediate success. It will be re membered that Investigation was start ed some years ago to develop a frost resisting orange. During the past sea son the first fruits of the hybrids were obtained. They are said to be Inter mediate in character between the Flo rida sweet orange and the hardy tri foliate and have good, though few seeds. It is from the seeds of these oranges that It is hoped to obtain a variety that will possess the neces sary commercial characteristics as well as the physical one most valuable to the Florida growers, namely, the abil ity to resist, low temperatures. The hybrids referred to are the result of crossing the hardy Japanese form with the Florida sweet orange. They are pronounced the hardiest evergreen oranges known in the world. They promise to be of great value as hedge plants apart from their frult-bearlng value. The commission of United States Senators In Hawaii accepted an invi tation to a native banquet. The prin cipal dish was cooked dog, which the Hawalians have long considered one of the greatest delicacies. The Sena tors thought they were eating roast pig. Mother O ray's Sweet Fowdirt For Child BuocsMfully used by Mother dray, nan in tha Children's Home In New York. Cure Feverlshness, Bud Htomanh, Teething Disor der, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worm. Over 80,000 testimonials. At all druggist, Site. Sample mailed Fas. Address Allen B, Olmsted, t Boy, M. Y. When a man finds himself in a hole he shouldn't be surprised if other people look down on him. There Is more Catarrh In this seatlon of the country than all other disease put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many year doctor pronounoed it a IochI disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly tailing to cure with loeai treatment, pronounced It in curable. Science ha proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore require constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O., lathe only constitutional cure on the market. It I taken Internally in dose from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts direct ly on the blood and muoous surface of the system. They otter one hundred dollar for any case it falls to cure. Send for circular and testimonials. Address F. J. Chsxit At Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggist, 75o. Hall' Family l'llls are the best. When a man ha a good opinion of him self he i anxiou to share it with the rest of the world. FITS permanently cnred.No lit or nervous ness after first day use of Dr. Kllae's Great NerveRestoror. 2 trial bottleand treatise free Dr. B.H. Sunt, Ltd., 981 Arch St., Valla., Pa. It take a man with a strong face to travel on his cheek. Mra.Wlnslow' SoothlngSyrup for children teething, sot ten the gums, reduoes Innatnma tion,allayspain,cu res wind oollo.iSq. abottle When a man' temper get the better of nim he is naturally seen at hi wont. I do not belters PUo'i Ours for Consump tion has an equalfor coughs and colds Joan X. Boras, Trinity Springs, Ind.. Feb. 15, 1 900. The man with a clear conscience doesn't mind i people see through him. Ko muss or failure mads with PtJT5AM Fadeless Ptes. Our trouble lose half their bitterness if we .can but tell them to other people. Why Syrup. of Fis Ihfrbsst family laxative- It is pure. It is gentle. It is pleasant. It is efficacious. It is not expensive. It is good for children. It is excellent for ladies. It is convenient for business men. It is perfectly safe under all circumstances. It is used by millions of families the world over. It stands highest, as a laxative, with physicians. If you use it you have the best laxative the world mm produces. Should the experiments In progress In the neighborhood of Berne prove as succetsful as Is Anticipated, travelers to Switzerland In the summer of this year will be able to cress the moun tains by automobile Instead of the nsual post diligence. The actual trials will be made in the spring, and the result. If successful, will be not only lo allow travelers to make the differ' ent journeys In half the time, but to open to nutomoblllsts the chance of driving over the mountain roads, which are at present closed to them on account of the horses. Hunters In Maine. It Is estlmsted that 8,000 or 10,000 hunters from other States visited Maine during the hunting season, each of whom raid $2 or i a day to the li censed guides. The law compels per sons from without the E'.rus to employ these guides, the object I rl.ig the pro tection of game from rreWrss slaugh ter, and. Incidentally, to bring money Into the State. Including the guide fees, hotel bills, camp rentals and rail road fares, the hunters left probably 11,000,000 there. THE PINKHAM CURES ATTaACTHG GREAT ATTEJTIOS A10M thumg mm. Mrs. Frances Stafford, of 243 E. U4tb St., N.Y. City, adds ber tes timony to the hundreds of thou sands on Mrs. Pinkham's files. Vhen Lydia E. Pinkham's Reme dies were first introduced skeptics all over ,the country frowned upon their curative claims, but as year after year has rolled by and the little group of women who had been cured by the new discovery has since grown into a vast army of hundreds of thousands, doubts and skepticisms have been swept away as by a mighty flood, until to-day the great good that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and her other medicines are doing among the women of America is attracting the attention of many of our leading scientists, physicians and thinking people. Merit alone could win such fame j wise, therefore, is the woman who for a cure relies upon Lydia K. Pinkham's VegetableCom pound. cuius wukuE Ti i Ti It rn c I Best CuURh Sjnin. TaMM Good. V I in time. PnlHiy (IruiKlKt. Tte Rothschilds of Japan. The Mitsui family is called "the Rothschilds of Japan," standing upon a pedestal as compared with other business - firms In that country. The line comes from the thirteenth cen tury, but It was not until three hun dred years later that they became mer chants. Since that time the Mltsuls have been pre-eminently the leading business family, connected with every large commercial enterprise in the country, and conducting many under takings as much for public benefit ss for private gain. A Treacherous Foe. The latest dispatches from Mexico about the bubonic plague are far from reassuring to those who have watched the progress of the disease since it was first reported In that country. To many people the fact that It is in Mex ico and that Mexico Is far away causes them little concern. The tame apathy was apparent In this country when the scourge appeared In Honolulu, but la ter when it reached across the Pacific and gained a foothold In San Fran cisco there was a general cry for meas ures to prevent Its spread. In crossing the Pacific ocean the disease gave a striking evidence that It Is a danger ous, treacherous foe, therefore extraor dinary precautions should be taken to prevent Its passing the border between this country and Mexico. Once over the boundary no one can predict what may happen. While there Is no occa sion for any great alarm In the North ern 8tates, yet the health officials, both State and Federal, cannot be too care ful, for it has been proven more than once that fancied security has brought about a lax condition of affairs with disastrous results. So now is the time to apply the remedy of prevention, in which in the end Is the better and cheaper method. Electric Headlights. Year by year electricity Is becoming a more Important factor In operating trains. Great strides have lately been made In perfecting the apparatus so that a strong ray of light (almost equal In power to that of a searchlight) can be thrown a thousand yards ahead of the engine. All this means more com fort for the engineers and firemen on night runs and greater safety for the passengers. A small dynamo Is fixed on top of the engine and operated by steam from the boiler. It Is under in stant control from the cab. Electric headlights are now used on most of the passenger trains on the Santa Fe main line trains. A large number of engines on the New Mexico division of that line have recently been equipped with this simple device for turning night Into day. KPFI 771 TWvh.timl food iu FARM set. urn . SEEDS ATrwe ifftriG wvwwra warn. 1 .000.000 Customers iviq ytji ra era rmrnmg out for more, we ftoiro. by .July it, Ki'jrjuu more aud hence - uiiyrrosuemtru ouer. OlO.OOfor 10c. VTm ssrlll mad MlHt - i- . i fHir srrMB ifal ,n-ii. i,rtl. Snii'm trlriA awake fkrtnr nr snnUnsr ' 1 r-i viiii many iann rri avxinpm a. viu.tsj to err Mart WlttJ, hi- .'.i.,cu ,,i.nm iy t villi maXi? IF. aln rrx rlpt of but 10c. . wnd thliMew" --rfVritalo. ...... w. .T'JTaW,fAU3r Slon-.ftt' Sffirt at onc, PATENTS H. w.T.i-nnr,Wotn Ihtrtnu, li.i:. Ht-iidioi circular. A (rood M?! may luaka on riclv. Its component parts are all wholesome. It acts gently without unpleasant after-effects. It is wholly free from objectionable substances. It contains the laxative principles of plants. It contains the carminative principles of plants. It contains wholesome aromatic liquids which are agreeable and refreshing to the taste. All are pure. All are delicately blended. All are skillfully and scientifically compounded. Its value is due to our method of manufacture and to the orginality and simplicity of the combination. To get its beneficial effects buy Manufactured by (auforKia pVRiI LoulsvllU. Ky. rOB SALS STALL LXAS1SQ The Cmperor's Tea. The tea used In the Immediate household of the Emperor of China Is treated with the utmost care. It IS raised In a garden surrounded by wall, so that neither man nor beast can get anywhere near the plants. At the time of the harvest those collect ing these leaves must abstain from eating fish, that their breath may not spoil the aroma of the tea; they must bathe three times a day, and. In addi tion, must wear gloves while picking the tea for the Chinese court DJBASSUOJRaJBBSBJBSnsSVSSJBS I Colds il t mA m tr4ri1) enM enif mtilfl hardly breathe. I then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me Im mediate relief.' W. C. Ltyton, SldeU, IK. How will your cough be tonight? Worse, prob ably. For it's first a cold, then a cough, then bron chitis or pneumonia, and at last consumption. Coughs always tend downward. Stop this downward tendency by taking Ayer's Cherry Pec toral. Tans sins i tic, Hc.'tt. Alt emffM. Consult Tint Soetor. If he srs take , Ihsn so u ! toy: I h. tslh ,ou not t k It. than don't tk. It. He knows. Lnit it with Mm. w r wiinn. J. C. ATKII CO.. l.owi!lt, Mass, RUNNING FOR COVER. THE ORIGINAL OILED CLOTHG (MAie m aim wm) WILL COVER YOU 1KDKFFP YQIICJYII S!mwiTTBTWttTa u TMI e JvssTtTtrrti. A J. TOWW CO.AftSrON.HAU.niJL pet YOWU CANAMAN UM. TO KOTO, M Capsicum Vaseline PUT IT IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES. A Rnrwtttut fnr and Hntwior to MnatiTfl oritur other rlM'ttr, nd will nut l)lsftr th inott delicate iktn. The rln bIImvIhv and rurtttre qualitira of tlilnartli Inar wnnilrrtul. It will atnp th tooth erbsi at one and relltvr hMriarhe and iHatlra. we rxttnintnu it an tn inii ana rc aitrnai rnuutr-irrttud knnwn, alert an an itfrnal remrvl ir ialn In tha rht ami atnmach and all rhrn mane, nuraltif and runty complaint. A trial vlll row m hat im rial tn fnr ft. and It will hm fnnnrl tm b invaluuMa in thr household. Many people ear ''It fe th tt ( all ynr prt ratloiii." 1'rfre, 15 c3!itri. at all druiririata. or other dnjre, or ty e:idltr thin anionnt to tu in poetaffeeuiupe we will nnl yon a tut by mail. Noirticl nil on Id bearHitl by the public unlet the aame carriea our label, aa ot haretee 11 la not a-nulne. n 17 State Street. New York City. nDflDCV NBW DISOOVBSY; ! U 1 J B O I qmek rall.f na am worst hm. Boofc of iMtlmonis'. sod IO days tratromif Vrre. Dr. S. . QSI.a'S SONS. B. AtlsaM, Oa. the genuine. Now York. N. Y. DXUQQ1STS. asm i I I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers