yru An. " ;0 Llixirfdennci ,?icts oatlyyet prompt: ijy on the bowels, cleanses me system eectually, assists one in overcoming 'habitual constipation 'permanently To get its bene icial effects buy the G enuine. f anulacturcd by tKo California JjlO'SirmjpCo. SOLD BY LEADING DRUCaSTS-KHf.-BOmi Remarkable Influence. Love Is the wonilprful Influence whose alchemy fills this earth with blessing and happiness. Jt softens the coarseness, the asperities, the rudeness, tho bitterness and malice of human life so that kindness, gentle ness, courtesy and good will prevail In society and mnke this world a fit place to live In. Rev. Dr. W. II. Vincent. t What Causes Headache. From October to May, Colds arc the most frequent came r.f Heaiinche, Laxative Bromo (ninino vemovci cause. E. W. Urovo on br.x. 25c. This Kind May Work. A Nebraska woman sewed her hus band between two blankets and bela bored him with a rolling pin until he agreed to sign a temperance pledge. We rather suspect this is one variety r prohibition likely to actually pro- bit. Washington Herald. For Over Half n CcnUiry Brown's Bronchial Troches have been unexcelled ns a cure for hoarseness. coughs and sore throat Tastes an Index of Character. A lr.an's tastes better thnn his words are an Index to his character. These show whether a man Is a friend of God or a friend of the world. Uev. Dr. S. H. Walnwrlght, Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Bynip for Children allays paiu.curoa wind colic, SWc a bottle Using Sea Weed. " Of late years the chief use to which sea weed has been put In this coun try Is as fertilizer, and In this direc tion the department of agriculture has made some interesting Investigations. As sea weed taken directly from the rocks contains about 80 per cent of water, and as It Is most valuable for fertilizer, when It is only partly dried, It Is clear that It is useful for that purpo?e c.ily alung the coast. . Hut It has Ik Van-led eight or ten miles inland ana still used effectually. It is. a particularly good fertilizer for such crops as potatoes and clover, which require plenty of potasTi. It Is said that there is no place in New England where red clover grows so well as near Rye beach, where the soil has been fertilized with sea weed ever since the country was settled. In that locality it perpetuates itself and grows on the same land year after year without reseeding. Washington Post. No 1007 Dollars. A clerk at tho Illngham House who has been blessed with a boy baby du ring tho last year wanted among other little girts, to give hist young hnneful a silver dollar mnrked "1907" which could be suspended about his neck on a string and used to help cut the little teeth which were begin ning to show signs of appearing. Ho Inmiired among all his friends for a 'T07" silver dollar and it was not until he had been Tin .the vain search nor nearly a week that some one told mm me can at tne mint, ana there lie received official information that under advices from Washington they had not coined any silver dollars 'since 1905. Philadelphia Record. THE DOCTOirs IJIFT Food Worth Its Weight In Cold. We usually expect the doctor to put ns on some kind of penance and fire ns bitter medicines. A Penn. doctor brought patient something entirely different and the -results era truly Interesting. "Two years ago," writes this pa tient, "1 was a frequent victim of scute Indigestion and biliousness, be ing allowed to eat very few things. One day our family doctor brought me a small package, raying be had found something tor me to eat, at last "He . tatd tt was a food - called Grape-Nuts, and even as its golden color might suggest. It was worth its weight In gold. I was sick and tired, ftrying one thing after another to no avail, but at last consented to try this sew food. "Well! It surpassed my doctor's Jfondeat anticipation, and every day Vnce then 1' have blessed the good doctor and the Inventor of Qrape Muts. "I noticed Improvement at once, and In a month's time my former pells of Indigestion had disappeared. In two months I felt like a new man. Sly brain was much clearer and keen er, my body took on the vitality of youth, and this condition has contin ued." I"here's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek. Mich. Bead "The Road to WellvUle," la pans8 Keeps a Lantern Safe. Tho lantern Is a barn necessity, but It is not necessary to take risks of setting tho plnce on fire. Keep the lantern out of the Btalla.. Run a wire across the barn, behind the tails, and hlg.h enough to be out of the way. Then with a hook or rein nap the lantern may be suspended to the wire and quickly moved along the whole length of the barn. Tri bune Farmer. Milk Pall. The subject of milk palls was gone over at some length in r. recent Mas sachusetts dairy meeting. Objection was made to the so-called sanitary pall, with closed top and strainer. It was asserted that the best authori ties favor tho pail with a partly closed top, but without strainer, the opening being about eight inches across. It was asserted that the strainer does not help the quality or cleanliness of the nillk. American Cultivator. Dynamite the Slump. ' Dynamite Is surely a help In tak ing out stumps and rocks. Whether It pays or not depends upon tho value of land. If rough land Is to be set to apple trees, only a few of the stumps need bo blown, and tho fruit trees set in their places. The other stumps, If barked and sprouted, will be gone by the time there Is much fruit to be harvested, and tho tree may be kept growing among the stumps and roots by mulch or hand cultivation. American Cultivator. Cntllo Culm. Will you kindly give me the colors of Durham, Ayrshire and Hereford cattle? A. W. P. "Durham," gen erally called Short-Horn, cattle, are red, white and roan, tho last being a mixture of red and white, almost confined to this breed; they never have any black, except about the muzzle, and It Is objectionable there. Ayrshlres are red, brown and white, sometimes with black muzzle. Here fords are red, or red and white, and always have white faces. Country Gentleman. Pucks on the Farm. It will pay to add ducks to the poultry department of every farm. Nothing was ever known to grow so fast and cause so little worry and work as ducks. Everything Is "grist" that conies their way. They consume vast quantities of coarse foods and convert It rapidly Into flesh and money. They are Independent of the caretaker except so far as food Is concerned. When they have grown to be. two or three weeks old, they even provide the greater part of their own food by hunting for it. They are the happiest, brightest and most In dependent things on the farm. They require a house or houses of their own, plenty of water to drink and puddle their bills in, and grit in some form. Their houses should be sprinkled well with sand or dry lit ter, and Bwept out every day. If ono has many of them, a park of their own fenced off with poultry netting Is best for all concerned, for they are always getting Into the drinking water set out for tho hens and chicks. A large park need not be very expensive. Low netting answers every purpose, unless you wish to keep every hen out of their yards, and that Is really best, for hens and ducks do better if kept separate, but for the sake of clean liness and comfort it would bs bettor to have the ducks by themselves. Farmers' Home Journal. The Hor.sc mul the Fond Supply. The supcrcession of the horse, by reason of the use of mechanically propelled vehicles fo! transportation, Is expected to be practically com plete in the cities of the United States by 1930 that is to say, by the time young Americans born next year nro old enough to vote. The only employment for horses by that time, it is calculated, will bo. in the labors of the farm. One of the results of this phase of evolution will be the simplifying of the problem of keeping the streets of cities clean. There will be less dust, and fewer flies. This is a direction in which physicians look for sanitary gains. Another effect of the elimi nation of the horse is suggested by a correspondent of a New York news paper. He estimates that at the present time there are 20,000,000 horses in the United States, and that 80,000,000 acres of good land arc cultivated for the purpose of sus taining them. Fifty million of these acres, he figures, will be released from this use by 1930, and will be come available for growing food for human beings. If sown to wheat these acres might be made to add a billion bushels .annually to the wheat crop an amount considerably in excess of the present annual wheat harvest of the United States. Statistics, in some hands, assume the aspect of an exceedingly cheerful science. In the present Instance it jnakes a suggestion which should go tar to allay the fears of those who are apprehensive regarding the pros pects of a continuance of the foo'd upply in view of the rapid Increase of population in the United States. Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin. Some Farming Doesn't Pay. A few days ago I had occasion to stop over night with a farmer in Northern Illinois, and as usual I mt 9 it pret.y early the next morning, just to nose around and see things. I found lots of things to grumble about. There were probably 100 bens about the place and half as many turkeys and ducks, but there was not even a pretence at a poultry house. The fences, trees ' and the machinery under the sheds were the roosting places. Not many eggs could be expected from bens freezing their combs and feet roosting In the tree tops or on the steel braces of a harvester. There were piles of straw and fodder around there, so that It nothing more substantial was made, at a very small expense and a day's time a warm shed could have been put up. So much for poultry. It was n losing proposition. The cows were more exponslve, There were nine head being fed dur ing the winter. Three were giving milk that is, about two quarts each at morning and night. These cows were fed straw, cornstalks In the field and mighty little of anything else. The dogs were sent after them in the fields and brought them home on a run. Other things about the farm were run in the same fashion. Of course thnt farm did not pay, but what other business would stand such methods for even twelve months? L. C. Brown, in Tribune Farmer. Advantages of Dehorning. There are many advantages In de horning cattle. When not de horned many cattle are very mean and harmful, and often gore other cattle, horses and sometimes even people. When dehorned all fear of this kind is removed. The cattle are much more easily haltered and can bo more easily handled and hal tered or put into stanchions when freo from horns. Many fences and gates are often destroyed by tho rub bing and scratching of the horns. All the energy and strength which would be put Into the large horns would bo distributed to sonie oilier part of the body If tho cattle are dehorned. When feeding the cattlo together and when feeding them salt, If all are dehorned no one will get it all or gore another while eating. The maleB of the herd will be much gentler and kinder If they have no horns to gore others and possibly men. There are many ways to dehorn cattlo. When tho horns or buttons as they are sometimes called, first appear on tho calf then Is a good time to remove them, for It' will not pain the calf or Injure Its growth; and It can bo done by clippcrB made for the purpose or by a shnrp knife. When the cow Is older and larger cattle may bo placed in a narrow Btall and after securing their heads fast with ropes, use a common meat taw to remove the horns, and they should be sawed off near to the head so they will not grow out again. A patent machine Is also used to re move tho horns by a knife between two levers, but I think this still more cruel thnn the use of the saw. J. A. B., In tho Indiana Farmer. Tho Wool Taste in Mutton. It has been pretty well conceded that the wool coming in contact with the flesh In dressing 1b the cause of "woolly" mutton, but it is doubtful If it Is not proper to chargo the "woolly" tasto to Blow dressing. The wool coming Into contact as It does only at the opening of the stomach cannot possibly Impregnate the whole carcass with tho undesirable flavor of "woolly" mutton. The cause of "woolly" mutton Is unquestionably gas accumulating in the stomach af ter the death of the lamb or sheep. It takes but a very short time for de composition to set in where the en trails are left in a dead animal, and the "woolly" taste and smell of mut ton very much resembles that of de composition in a sllghL.form. . In the case of old sheep their mut ton carries a "woolly" taste, due no doubt to the presence of excessive yolk in the skin. "Woolly" mutton is more in evidence during summer months thnn at other seasons. The starling of tho yolk has, no doubt, something to do with this. Rapid butchers - are usually the cleanest butchers, and they who dress their lambs in the usual time of less than fifteen minutes rarely have cause to complain of woolliness. Of course the time mentioned is not very rapid dressing. A sheep dressing match (or $50 a side between R. Addy, of Barnsley, England, and J. Thomas, Sheffield, England, took place some time ago, when Thomas won by twenty seconds. He completed his animal in two min utes and fifteen seconds. The pecu liar part of this contest was that the contestants had to walk a distance of five miles, after which they were allowed ten minutes in which to change their clothes for the killing contest. In large, well equipped slaughter houses lambs are hung by their hind legs and stuck. In small ones, they are either stuck on a sticking bench or placed on their left side In such position over the slaughter house gutter that ft receives the blood of the victim. The head, or nose rather, Is taken In the left band and the knife plunged clean through the neck Just back of the ears and as close to the Jaw as possible and the Jugular vein severed by cutting toward the vertebrae. It is entirely unnecessary to cut tie windpipe or food channel in sticking. Shepherd Boy, in Mod em Sheep. , A WELL MAN, AT 81. The Interesting Experience of an Old Settler of Virginia. Daniel 8. Queen, llurrell Street, Oalem, Va., says: "Years ago while lifting a heavy weight,' a sudden pain shot through my back and after tbst I was In constant mis cry from kidney trou ble. One rpell kept nit, 'n bed six weeks. My ar.r. and legs were stlJ an.! I was helpless as a child. The urine was dis ordered and though I UBed one remedy after another I was not helped until I used Donn's Kidney Phis and I was so bad then that tho first box mnde only a slight change. To-day, how ever, I am a well man, at 81, and I owe my life and health to the use of Doau's Kidney rills." Sold by all denlers. GO cents a box. Foster-Mllburr- Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Necessity of Ideals. It Is absolutely necessary for us to have Ideals. If wo hnve none, then We will sink to the level nf the liensta of the field. We will go through life ns (lunil) driven cattle and not ns heroes With the Unlit nf lltitl ahlnlii In our faces. If we wish worthily to achieve our destiny, then there must ever be before us "the vision splen did." Our religion as the blithest nf Idenls beckons us upward and bids us ro lorwnrd and practice what we bellevo In dally life and duty. Rev. George Downing Sparks. Hoduced Colonist Hates. One way tickets at special low rates on sale dally throughout March and April, from all points on the North Western Line to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland and Puget Bound points.. Dally and Personally conducted tours In tourist sleeping cars vln the Chicago, Union Pacific & North Western Line. Double berth only $7.00, through from Chicago. For full particulars write S. A. Hutchison, Manager Tourist Dept., 212 Clark St., Chicago, 111., or address nearest ticket agent. An Apology for Idlers. Somebody said that dirt Is matter In the wmng plnce. The same defin ition applies to nine-tenths of those called lazy. They are people gnno astray In a direction that does lint nnswer to their temperament nor to their capacities. In rending tho bio graphy of grent men, we are struck with the number t;f "Idlers" among them. They were lazy as long ns they had not found the right path, and af terward laborious to excess. Very often tho Idler Is but a man to whom It Is repugnant to mnke the eighteenth pnrt of a pin all his life, or the hundredth part of a watch, while tie feels he has exuberant cnorgy which ho would like to spend elsewhere. The C raftsman. THREE CURES OF ECZEMA. Woman Tells of Her Brother's Terri ble Buffering Her (irumlcliiltl mid Another llnby also Cured Cuticura Proved Invaluable. "My brother had eczema llireo different ummera. Kucli lummer it came out be tween hia shoulders and down Ilia back, and he iiiitl hia Buffering was terrible. When it came on tlie third auminer, lie bought a box of Cuticura Ointment and gave it a faithful trial. Boon he began to feel better and lie cured himself entirely of eczema with Cuticura. A lady in In diana heard of how my daughter, Mrs. Miller, bad cured tier little ion of terrible eczema by the Cuticma Remedial. Thin lady'a little one had tho eczema lo badly that they thought they would lose it. She Used Cuticura Remedies and they cure.l her child entirely, and the dircnac never mine back. Mm. Sarah 12. Lusk, Culdwuter, Mich., Aug. IS and Sept. 2, 11X17." The Scarcity of Lumber. Tho Russlnn government has re cently granted to nn Australian cor poration a concession for the cutting of 30.000.000 feet of timber In Siberia, some 800 miles from Vladivostok. The timber Is to bo shipped to Melbourne, about 8,000 miles from the point of cutting. It Is not claimed that lum ber has particular value on account cf its size or quality; It rather Illus trates the Increasing scarcity of tim ber the world over. The threatened lumber famine docs not face the Un ited States alone. Piles Cured in O to 14 Days. Poxo Ointment ia guaranteed to cure any caseof Itching, Mind, bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to U days or money refunded. 50c. Christian Fellowship. The majesty of Cod's doings Is un derstood by those whom he has brought to full Christian fellowship by Inflicting the suffering and pain that beautify the soul and bring It nearer to heaven. Rev. G. R. Van de Water. Itch cured in 31 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggist. A commission agent In the Paris fruit markets recently shipped a bas ket containing G3 selected peaches to London. The price paid for the lot was $540, or about $9 eacn. MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A 0rttt1a On far FrrrrUfcnenat C'onattpmf ton. H r a ft r a Htosvarb Trablrt Tt-rlblnit Ti I n r Am r a. sinri ntitro.y Worn a. Tbr Brr afc wp Col id ctt. In 14 h'Kirv. At all nniMia', U BftmpU matd FREE. AddreM, Bftmpl nnf)fl ni KB. AddreM, A. 8. OLMSTED. L Roy. N. Y P. N. u. il im DROPSY ITIJIX! vf MM. Mfc OT lM4lawmUI m4 ! tmtmiM Wm. fw H. . nul l mil, n a, UteaU, Urn. NSsgaSir Mothar Ora. Kane in Ohila- K.wYorkCltF. TTV C r 11 Write for free Booklet "How I iVP .UPPtCQlll llV Color double quantity of goods 'jC kJUV,C531llljr ordinary gym--At your druggists, islth Putnam Fadeless Dyes Monro Drug- Company, Quincy, Illinois Eating and Living. There Is a school of hyglenlsts whose motto Is "Eat less and live longer." Abstemiousness is commend ed as the first of virtues. Persons, of course, who lead a physically ac tive, or laborious, llfo are conceded larger rations thnn are allowed to persons engnged In fedentsry occu pations or without occitpatmusi, but In any case there Is danger, it Is con tended, of eating ton much. The hu man engine requires Just so much fuel and no more. If given too much, the only result In to burn out the boilers and clog the pipes, with the effect of Indigestion, dyspepsia, rheu matism, Ttrlght's disease and the hun dred other Ills caused by excessive feeding and deficient exercise. "Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die," In commended ns a wise fay ing, for the rensnn that those who look chiefly lo eating and drinking for their merriment are sure to die tomorrow, or next day. It Is pointed out that octogennrlnns comiminly lend the simple life nnd are content with simple food nnd little of It. Iialtlmore Sun. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward fur liny cine of Catarrh that cannot be cured by llull'a Catarrh Cure. K. J. CllKNEY & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undcriiKiiP'l, have known F. J. Cheney fur the last )" yearn, nnd believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions nnd linnnrinlly able to carry nut any obligations made by hia firm. Wai.iuno, Rinnan & MAnvw, Whole anlft l)rugrita, Toledo, O, llnll'aCntnrrh Cure i taken internally, art ingdireetly upon the blood and mucunuaaur fueea of the ayatem. 'J'entimoniaia acnt free. Trice, "Sc. per bottle. Sold by all Druggiata. Take Hall's Family l'illa for conatipution. The Honor of An Indian. It Is for you to show In your own lives that the honor of an Indian Is not for bnle, the word of an Indlnn something more thnn an empty form nf speech; thnt you enre for your parents and friends and your country, not. because yon expect to get some thing out of them In tho way of re ward, but because you are rendy to give them whatever they need nt your hnmfc If you enn ncrept this for yourselves, end believe It of others, and say so plainly, you will do good to your country nnd your fellowmen beyond all power to calculate. Car lisle (Ptt.) Arrow. Tlio Editor of the Rural New Yorker, t'inn whom there is no belter Potato El pert in the country anye: "Halzer'a Knrli eat Potato is the earliest of 38 enrlieat aorta, tried by me, yielding 404 bit. per acre. ' Kilzer'a Knrly Wisconsin yielded for the Rural New Yorker 730 b'u. per acre. See Palzer'a catalog about them. , .TUST SEND 10e IN STAMPS and this notice to the John A. Ralzer Pe?rl Co., La Crosse, Wia., and they will mail you the only original seed catalog tmlilisbed in America with samples 'ot Kmperor William Oats, Bilver King Bar ley, llillion Dollar Grass which produces 12 tine per acre, Sainfoin, the dry soil luxurintor, etc., etc., etc. And if you send 14c we will add a pack age of new fnrm accda never before seen by you. A. C. L. What the Bridegroom Wore. The blazing spot in the description of the Vnnderbllt wedding Is the par agraphing In which is told not how tho bride was dressed, but what the bridegroom wore. The braided eont of cashmere fine as Ratln, the astrak han mantle, the skintight breeches of scarlet, tho tasseled boots, the Jew eled sword hilt, the T2-lnch feather In his hnt what creation of a wo man's dressmaker nnd milliner ever equaled the decorative toggery In which this young man nrroyed him self! it must have been a vision to paralyze with envy the mere men wearing plain black coats and long trousers. . Alaskan Winters Cause Insanity, Long winters spent in isolated sec tions of Alaska have bo greatly in creased the percentage of Insanity that the senate pabsed a bill author izing larger expenditures for the maintenance of the Alaskan Insane. A good way to keep well is to take Oar field fen frequently; it purifies the blood, insures good ftnrcatinn and good health! The poor children of Exeter, Eng land, are provided with breakfasts at school ot a cost of a farthing. . OF ST PATRICK Drove all the snakes from IRELAND' r k 'JACOBS OIL Drlvei all aches from the body, curei Rheumotism, Neuralgia and CONQUERS PAIN 25cALL DRUGGISTS 60c (t HOC AT ALL rPRICCB. rOR (VERY MEMBER OFTHCMMILY. MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. rc& W. L. Dotifflmm mmkmrn mnd mmltm morm "KjQ man'm S2.BO, 03 .OO mnd S3 . M mJrtyma than mtiy other mmnalmetmrum in thm , J&9$" tnrtd, bmcmtrmm thoy of fAerd mhaom, fit bmttmr, owpee, aurtf IKS' ot ormatmr raaro than mny othmr i. , mhomm In thm world to-dmt. W. L Douglas $4 tnd $5 Gilt Edei Shins Cannot TCAl'TIOSf. W. U DtiirU name and prim is atamried on bottom. TnkrcHMIMA Bolrt bT the hrt thoe drmlrri rrflrywlMfm, bUums BUiil from fsi-torr to anT port of tho wor14. lUoa im laui rrro to uit uldms. Write for free Booklet "Hew FACTS FOR SIGH uora LYDIA E. PJNKH. No oflwr mwlMno 1ms Ixion bo sut'CftRNful in rclioviriK tho BUfl'cring (if women or rcoeivea bo iminy Ron iiino tcsliinonmls an htm Lydlu. K. lMnkliaiirBVcfrt-tiiltlefJoiiipotiitil. In overy coininiinily you will find women who linvn lieon restored to health by Lydin E. riiikhtiin's Veff etablo ConifMiuiid. Almrmfc every 0110 you meet has cither heen bene lltert by it, or has friends who have. In tlio l'inkham Ijilmratory at LynnjAlassnny woiniinaiiydaymny seo tho Hies containing over ono mil lion ono hundred thousand letters from women Reeking health, and hero are tho letters in whieli they openly Btato over their own Bigwu turns that they were cured by Lydin E. rinkham'B Vegetable Uompound. Lydin K. rinkhnm's Vegetablo Compound has saved many women from surgical ojieratioris. Lydia E. rinkhnm's Vegetablo Compound is made from roots nnd herbs, without drugs, and ia whole some and harmless. Tlio reason why Lydin E. 1'ink ham's Vegetablo Compound is bo successful is becaiiso it contains in gredients which act directly upon tho feminine organism, restoring it to a healthy normal condition. Women who nro Buffering' from those d istressing il Is pecti liar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt tho ability of Lydia K lMnkham's Vegetable Compound to restoro their health. Original of "Jim Bludsoe" Dead. A Mississippi river hero, John Jones, said to be the original of John Hay's "Jim Illudsoc," Is dead at Da kota, Minn. Ho once saved a burn ing ferry boat full of passengers, be ing the Inst to lenvo the craft. FITS,Rt.VltnN'Danen:NervoiiaDismiiespniw mnnentlycnred by Dr. Kline's Gront Nnrve Restorer. 3 trial bottle and treatise frna. Dr. II. K. Kline, LdW.H ArchHt,, I'hila., I'a, Honesty the Best Poli'y. Ileccnt events have served to bring homo to the minds of multitudes of people the wholesale leswin that dis honesty or tilnkery or tho obtaining of special privileges by manipulation and deceit, or the creation of wealth by methods which do not square with the economic law, does not pay. Wall Street Journal. i Only One "Hromo Quinine" Thnt to Laxative Hromo Quinine. Lonlc for the signature of K. W. Crore. Csed the World ever to Cure a Cold in Une Day. 25c. Fighting the Friction Match. The South Carolina legislature has enacted a law prohibiting the sale or uo of friction matches, and the gov ernor Is expected to sign It at once. The same sort of regulation was pro posed In the board of aldermen of New York some months ago, but was abandoned on the ground that It was one for legislative rather than mu nicipal action. Be Emailed At Ant Price w. L IMl'tius, ar to Dye, Bleach and Mia Colon.' to - - a 10 and btter-for ammo priest of 10 cents, o sent on receipt of orico. AM Ac V ' 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers