THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. ARMOR PLATE AND SHELLS Made of Best Steel Strugflle Between Armor and Projectile Firms. "A constant struggle la always go lC on between the firms that make armor plates ami tuose that niako guns anil projectiles, though these tri&B aie often rival departments of the same great establishment," writes Capt. F. (i. Jucksou, the liiigliah wi it er and explorer. "The old armor elates of wrought Iron could keep out shells of a diameter equal to their wn thickness, except at short ranges. The Talliser shot, however, with hard ened point, soon disqualified Iron ?iates. Then a steel face was welded - a wrough-lron back. This was Dfcaten and then plates were made wholly of steel. A fresh advance In projectiles was met by various hard- i ning processes applied to the face of 6 steel j-late. 4 Center of Krupp Hardened steel, It Is said, will scrht'h jlass like a diamond. This intensely strong resistive had the effect of aither throwing off the projectiles when they struck at an angle or of kreaking them up, even when they penetrated the plate. The makers of erojectllea responded by fitting the joints of their missiles with softer car of mild steel, so that they should bite on the plates instead of slipping aft when striking at an angle. "All modern projectiles are fired from rifled guns and are cylindrical in jhape, with conical heads. To keep them point first and to correct devia tion from the course they are made to rsvolve on their own axis while trav eling. This is the purpose of the rifling of the guns with spiral grooves. The projectile is made to follow the grooves by having a driving band of copper on the shell, which is rather larger in diameter than the bore of the gun. This band is forced into the grooves by the explosion of the oharge, compelling the projectile to follow the grooves. The latest Ameri can invention is to fit the projectile with ball bearings to avoid friction and damage to the grooves, and inner lobe of the gun. If practicable this should enable an even higher velocity, thug a longer range, to be obtain ed from guns. "Armor-piercing shot or shell goes through a special method of manufac ture. It is made of the very best steel, sometimes alloyed to give additional : strength. It is cast or forged to a size , very slightly larger than its intended j dimensions. A groove is turned round , It to hold the driving band that takes the rifling and the shot or shell is 1 then hardened by heating the head of it till red-hot and cooling it suddenly In water or oil. The scale produced by this process is ground off the shell, the driving band is pressed Into its groove by hydraulic power and turned down to its proper size and the pro jectile is ready." A Sioux Falls Samson. Peter Sater, of Sioux Falls, is the aame of a strong man who Is surpass ing all by his marvelous feats. He is a Norwegian, about twenty-four. Sater is a section hand on the Great Northern, between Sioux Falls and Qarretson. His great strength lies chiefly in his jaws. On one occasion he fastened a strap around an anvil in t blacksmith shop, placed the end of the strap between his teeth and walk id away with the anvil. At another time by means of a rope and his tcjth he lifted a 300-pound granite hitching block clear of the ground. Another (eat is to take three sacks of sugar, weighing 100 pounds each, grasp them with his teeth by the corners and lift Cham clear of the ground. Feared to Disturb Them. On one occasion Joseph Chamber lain was invited to Liverpool to mako a speech. It was to be a great cele bration. The mayor, who was to pre side at the meeting, had arranged a fine dinner for the guest of honor. A disingulshed assembly surrounded the table and at the right of the host sat Hi. Chamberlain. For a couple of hours the company chatted over the (ood and finally the coffee was served. It was at this juncture that the mayor leaned over and whispered to Mr. Chamberlain: "Your excellency, shall we let the crowd enjoy Itself awhile longer or had we better have your speech?" The New Jerusalem. There Is a Jerusalem without the walla as well as one within. "The new Jerusalem without the walls is larger than the Inclosed city. There are several Jewish colonies, a Syrian orphanage, an English agricultural colony, an American colony called "the Overcomer's" and several Euro pean consulates. The view of Jerusa lem, both the inner and the outer cities, is best seen from the Mount of Olives. Without the walls one sets many cemeteries. The Jews lay flat tombstones over their dead. The Mo hammedans erect marble slab or headstones like those seen in our cem eteries, but for some strange reason the Mohammedan tombstones all seem to stand aslant. The effect la most forlorn. . Welsh In House of Common. A country gentleman in Wale has sent a letter to every member of the British house of commons written in Welsh. One of the recipients has s! made a neat retort by replying in Qer- Thigh Broken Kissing. English newspapers tell of a laborer warned Samuel Wellington who at tempted for a wager to kiss his toe. In doing so he broke his thigh and had to be conveyed to a ho:-. ' -.I. USE OF PEN NAMES. Some Cognomen of Famous Male and Female Writers. Following is a list of the pen names Of some famous authors: "Mrs. Part ington," H. p. Shlllaber; "Janny June," Mrs. J. C. Croly; "Grace Green Wood," Mrs. S. J. C. Llpplncott; "Ike Marvel," Donald C. Mitchell; "Josh Uminns," 11. W. 8haw; "A. L. 0. 13.," (a lady of Kngland), Mrs. C. Tucker; "JJU Perkins." M. I), lndon; "Fanny Fern," Mrs. James 1'arton; "Gall Hamilton," Atnry A. l)ol,io; "Artemus Ward," Charles F. Urowne; "Gath," George Alfred Townsend; "13111 Nye," Edgar William Nye; "George Sand," Mme. Dudevant; "13oz." Charles Dick ens; "Sam Slick," Judge T. C. llali burton; "Gcoige Elliot," Mary Ann Evans or Mrs. G. II. Lewes or Miss Cross; "Timothy Titcomb," Dr. J. II. Holland; "Susan Coolldge," Miss Woolsey; "Mark Twain," Samuel L. (Siemens; "Knickerbocker," Washing ton Irving; "Max Aller," C. H. Clark; "Petroleum V. Nasby," P. K- Ixcke; "Oulda," Louise de la Ramec; "Nym Crinkle," A. C. Wheeler; "Oliver Op tic," William T. Adams; "Torte Cray on," D. II. Strother; "H. II.," Helen Hunt; "Shirley Dare," P. C. Dunning. Encouraging an Industry. An act passed in the time of King Charles II. of England, "for the en couragement of the woollen manufac ture of this kingdom and the preven tion of the exportation of the monies thereof for the buying and importing of linen," provided that "from and af ter the five and twentyeth day of March, in the year of our Lord, one thousand six hundred and sixty-seven, no person or persons whatsoever shall be burled in any shirt, shift, or sheete made of or mingled with flax, hempe, Bllke, halre, golde, or sliver, or other than what shall be made of wooll only." There was one exception to the rule. A person dying of the plague was permitted to be burled in a linen shroud. Otherwise penalty bad to be paid, $25 for each offense. The act was repealed In the reign of King George III. First Land Sale. The first sale of land of which there Is any definite record is that men tioned in the twenty-third chapter of Genesis. The transaction seems to have been very simple. Abraham wished to buy a field for a burial place for his family. Ephron, the owner of the field, valued it at 400 shekels of silver, about $200 of our money, which Abraham agreed to pay. He accordingly went to the gate of the city and weighed the money, which ha raid in the Dresence of all who entered through the gate. This ! Dimple ceremony, without the inter vention of lawyers or other officials, made "the field and the cave that was therein and nil the trppst that tvpra in the field, and in all the borders around I about," sure unto Abraham for a poa- j session. Hot Meal Without Fire. Readers of the war news will notice one or two references to the fact that tinned meats for the Russian troops are prepared by a process which en ables the contents of each tin to be served hot without a fire. This boon U secured by having the ordinary tins tilled with food "Jacketed" In patent tins. The patent tin contains water, together with a chemical mixture, by means of which the water can be rais ed to boiling point in ten minutes or a quarter of an hour. All that it is necessary to do when it is desired to heat the food is to puncture the top of the patent tin, the chemical mixture being thereby forced into the water, which soon begins to boll. Memento Hunter In Palestine. Painslluo, it is said, Is being de rpoileJ by tourists. A scientist writes: "Many of these visitors are mere trlppera," with no real interest or knowledge of the history of Palestine, as the astounding questions they pro pound to residents abundantly prove. But all are eager to possess at any price, however exorbitant, what they call 'curios' as mementos of their ex cursion. To meet this demand a tribe of dealers has sprung up ail over the country each employing an army of agents who ride everywhere, east and west of the Jordan, encouraging the natives to tear In pieces tombs that otherwise might have awaited scien tific examination in comparative safe ty." The Monk of Tibet. a traveler in Tibet says that the pvksant women of that country are chuery, and, when washed, buxom td comely. The monks are the blot c:. the landscape. They bear no re semblance to the women of the coun li y. One would think they belonged to a different type, and yet they are the sons and . brothers of these wo u.eu. The reason, probably, is the low, degraded life led by the ordinary flionk, a life without Interest, without work, devoid of any pursuit, Intel lectual or otherwise, and passed in the droning of chant and the per foimance of ritual, the meaning of which they neither know nor care about How He Got the Moon. John Honry Maedler, the aatrono mer, whose favorite study was the moon, having learned that Frau Witte, the wife of the state councilor, owned a wonderful model of his pet lumi nary, spent year In trying to gain possession of it. A her husband was living he could not marry the owner of the model, so he married her daugh ter and at the death of his mother In law the coveted moon became his. WOMAN'S ADAPTABILITY. She Readily .Adapt Herself to .Her Surroundings. Why is it that women have so much more adaptability than menY Is it because they have more need of it, and that men have so many fields open to them thai they are nov cr called upon to adapt themselves to various conditions or circumstances? The mother of a family can place the baby upon the floor, aud watching its frolicsome manoeuvres out of the corner of her eye, can readily nail up a shelf, hang a picture or mend a piece of broken furniture; but what would be the world's opinion if the father should be called upon to help wash the dishes on his return from the office? Oh, the very idea! Again, a girl can go downtown and attend to all her brother's shopping commis sions, but, on the other hand, her brother would staggered at the thought of remaining homo and mak ing his sister an evening waist. Sometimes we see a lovely, fun making girl marry a solemn, staid man, and before the year elapses a change is noticed In that girl's dispo sition. One of the two obliged to adapt himself or herself to the change, and such a thing Is never ex pected of a man. It was up to the girl to do it, and she did. If a man does not happen to be a poet he can enter into business life, and if he pos sesses no business ability, various pro fessions are holding wide their doors for his entrance. But a woman! If she is a poetess, in all probability she will have to sell pins and shoelaces over a notion counter in a dry goods store; and if she Is practical and domestic, the only employment she la able to obtain ia likely to be that of writing sonnets for the Sunday paper or correcting composition papers in a school. She does it well, not because it is agree able, but for the reason that it 1 a means of maintenance. And it is on account of this very faculty of making the best of circumstances in whatever lot she may be cast that the palm of adaptability belongs to woman. New Orleans Times-Democrat. Canned Milk Preferred. It was her first visit to the country. She never before had been out of Chi cago. Everything she saw was a fresh delight. Eve in the garden could not have found it more novel. The cows especially interested her. At milking time she clung so close ly to the hired man that to free him self he gave her a cup of new milk, warm and frothy from the pail. She took a deep draught. Then such consternation was pic tured in the pretty, piquant face, that her mother cried: "What Is it, .Dorothy?" "Oh," she sobbed in disgust and disappointment. "I don't like cow's milk. It's horrid. I like milkman's milk." Chicago Record-Herald. Buying Gold is Dangerous. It is dangerous to purchase un wrought gold or rough diamonds in South Africa from any but the recog nlzed dealers in those articles. Isaac Goldfiam, a Johannesburg jeweler, charged with purchasing' from a po lice officer a quantity of unwrought gold valued at 93.000, has been sen tenced to eighteen months' hard la bor, and to pay a fine of $1,500. The purchase did not actually take place, and the point was reserved for argu ment before the Transvaal Supreme court as to whether the agreement to purchase was an offense. Venezuelan Aligator. Consul Plumacher at Maracalbo re ports that untold numbers of allgators of all sizes swarm in the lakes, la goons and rivers of Venezuela. He has himself seen thousands of them of large size on the banks of the Rio de Oro and the Rio Tarra, where they deposit their eggs on the sand banks. He thinks that there are commercial possibilities in hunting them, for their oil, as well as their skins, command a good price in the market. Ex change. Ventilation Through Walls. The fact Is that considerable ventil ation is capable of taking place, and quite a large exchange of fresh for bad air ia effected through the walls of buildings. Many a room that is notoriously "stuffy" could doubtless be made pleasant to live in by remov ing the solid paper or impervious coat of paint from the wall and substitut ing porous paper, or, better still, giv ing up paper altogether and using a distemper wash of pleasing tone. Lancet. Whiskey ,., ., Church. Thorverton Church, Devon, was re cently put to a novel use. A serious Are broke out in the village, Involv ing an inn and half a dozen thatched cottages, and the inhabitants of the adjacent houses took their furniture to the church and burial ground for aafety. Among the property takeu into the church were a number of jar of spirits, rescued from the cellar of the inn before the roof fell In. Emotion and Baldness. Strong emotion sometime causes baldness. A farmer saw his child thrown from a cart and trampled un der the feet of a mule. He supposed it killed and experienced In hi fright and anguish a senaation and chill and tension in the head and face. The child escaped with a few bruises, but the1 father's hair, beard and eyebrow began to drop out the next day, and at the end of a week he was entirely bald. If a man gels rattled there must be a Ecrcw loose somewhere. FLOWER ARRANGEMENT. They Are Made to Represent Month and Day by Japanese. ' The general Ideas of Japanese floral arrangements may be summarized in this way: Each setting of flowers or plants must represent earth, air and water, or heaven, earth and man. in plac ing the blossoms in a vae, the vaso and water are earth, the short-stemmed flowers man and the tall ones heaven. The ramifications of this principle, the delicate subtie mean ings and properties, are infinite. There nre flowers which represent months and flowers which represent days, and as every Japanese house J contains flowers, they form a calendar .for the Initiated. JGvcry family of standing has artis tically correct vases, vase-holders and flowers, and the manner of entertain ing an honored visitor Is to ask him to arrange somo flowers. The guest Is governed by rigid laws. He must not make too elaborate an arrangement, for that takes overmuch time. He always offers to destroy what he has done, to prove he consid ers it valueless. Only when he Is urg ed by his host does he leave It these are examples of tho long list of re strictions. The Japanese knows thrm as he knows bis language and his lit erature. Harper's Bazar. English Women Not Mercenary. A writer in the "Chronicle" sugge?' that the majority of Ensllshc.ta marry not for love, but for a larder, end gives three Instances from her own personal friends. No doubt thero are women who marry for convenience and a little liking, and perhaps even a few who marry for convenience, alone, without the liking; but they are really very few much fewer than appearances or alleged post-matrimonial confidences would lead one to believe. The last thing an English woman would think of confessing, even to an intimate, Is the existence of such a sentimental weakness as love in her case; and her husband is quite as reticent on the subject. The man or woman who talks about such things Is generally looked upon as a bore, and the common attitude toward the sentimentalist is so well known that few care to risk being branded. The deeper feelings are kept for the matrimonial tete-a-tetc, and sparingly unveiled even then; but they are there In more cases than the "Chron icle" contributor would credit. With all her faults, the Englishwoman U less mercenary than most oi her sla ters abroad. London Tatlor. An Industrious H'.n. A more or less truths I Australian relates that he put u unusually large porcelain egg in th 'iest of a hen and found that the neU eggs she laid wero of increasod size. Then he put a boobs egg In the nert.. The hen laid mi 035 Just as larj:o. Ho was so pleased with the scheme that he put a whitewashed football In the nest. When he wont the wext time to search for eggs ho found one as big as a football, but no hen in sight. Securing tho egg, he saw engraved on it, by hen photog raphy these words: "I'm no ostrich, but I've done my best." Later ha found the hen Inside the egg. Diamond Fields. For more than 100 years it has lbn thought that extensive diamond -deposits are hidden in the island of Borneo and recent rumors have given the old suspicions new life. A diamond of 367 carats, found on the west oast in 1787 and named the Matan, was, after a brilliant but brief career denounced as a mere block of rock crystal. Should It now prove that Borneo can yield diamonds in paying quantity the Brit ish empire will be in possession of practically every diamond field of any importance in the world Couth Af rica, Australia. India and Borneo. No Special Hurry. A negro hack driver in Washington was driving along the street when he encountered a funeral. A long line of coaches was behind the hearse, which was moving along at a lively rate. The negro was superstitious and did not want to cross between the carriages Ju the funeral procession. He tried to drive around in front of the hearse, but could not make suffi cient speed. After driving alongside the hearae for two blocks the negro called out ' to tho driver: "Say, boss, hold up ju' let .me go past. 'My pas senger is in a hurry and yours isn't" Ship on the Link. An Irascible old colonel who used to play golf at Sandwich, on the River Stour in England, had a habit, com mon with many, of blaming everybody but himself for his bad strokes. Fi nally one day. becoming badly bun kered, he Urst took mighty vengeance on the turf with' hts club. Then, glar ing around in expectation of the usual friendly icomment. and' nobody saying anything, he 'blurted out: "How can you expect ia iwian to play decent golf on these cursed links with ships passing up and down the channel?" Our Giant Forefather. A French scientist combats the pre vailing opinion that the races of today are' .the sons of a taller and stronger race. The idea so tenaciously held Is be thinks, only a form of ancient u- jKirstltlon belief in giant. In default of real giants In modern ages, men tion ia made of the inhabitants of Patagonia. Magellan accorded to them the height of 7H feet, but the aver- o rrtm Y af irtir tt rhaau tAsvrt1 a s V, given by different authorities as 7 feet, ! 10 feet to 11 feet and C feet. fjetntb Thl Kind Von Haw Always Bngjj Signature Z3?--i?- its mm It it much entitr fur women to confide in the average man ttinn in the average woman. Kh known that the man will re spect her confidences and keep thrm to himself. He if strong, has tnnr experience of the world and can help the woman who needs advice. There ia every reason why worucn should not truat their delicate conatltutiona in the hands of unskilled parsons. It requires a thorough medical education to appreciate and understand the womanly organism. Wheu a woman has ilia and pains that ahe cannot bear when life seems dark for every woman, he should confide her troubles tn a physician of standing in the community, or one who has national reputation. Cer tainly it would not be the part of wisdom to confide in an ignorant person without medical education simply because she was m woman. There ia every reaaon wtiy sne ahould write to aomt great apecialist. one who haa made tfe diaeaaea of women a apaclalty for a third pf a eentnry. like Dr R. V. Piarct, founder of the Jnvahde' Hotel and Surrical Institute, of BuiT110 N- Y All hia correspondence ia htld sacrew'7 tonj Cdantlal, and he givae hia advice free nd without eliarg. So nnlformly auccessful baa Dr. Pierce 'a Favorite Preaoription proven in all form of female Weaknesa, Prolapaua, or Palling of Womb, and Lcucorrhaa, tiigt, after ourl" ht .worfl c"t of luos distressing an'3 debilitating ftilmenta, Dr. Pieree now feeta roily warranted in offering to pay $100 in cash for any case of these diseasea which he cannot cure. Dr. Plerce'a Pleasant Pellets ahould be naed with "Favorite Prescription when ever a laxative ia required. DOTY THE SUCCESSFUL MAN. He Wa the Merchant of the Town Was at Store When Wanted. I remember In the little town where I was born there was a little mer chant named Doty, says Manly M. Gillian. He had a store about twenty feet square, and his whole stock might not have amounted to over $50. In that town there were several rather pretentious grocery stores, and a gen eral store, and people used to speak disparagingly of Doty. To i!lu--,tri:j the end of amallness we would say 'Doty.' When I returned to that town, after an absence of about twenty years and abked 'Where's so and so, and where's bo and bo?' people would say, 'Well, so and sti's dead, and so and so's carrying on business here and there'; but when one asked what had become of Doty, the people said 'Doty is tho merchant of the town.' Doty was thero during busi ness hours and when any one wanted Doty, Doty was there. Nobody ever estimated that Doty had any capac ity, but by and by the people began to find a reason for the growth of Doty'8 business, and they found that he had the very elements of business success. When people were making fun of him, he was attending to bus iness, and the result was that he had a large business. To Test Wool and Linen. It often happens that woolen gor.ds will be doctored with rotton. To dis cover this there are several tests that can be made. One Is the match test By applying a lighted match to a sam ple of the goods, the manner In which it burns will be evidence of its gen uineness. Wool will burn slowly, while cotton will go like a train of gunpowder. Another test is to unravel the threads and the cotton can easily be detected. TO the experienced buyer the "foel" of linen Is a sufficient Indication of the quality, but for those who lack this knowledge there Is an old-fashioned test which our grandmother used which ia unfailing to show if there is cotton in the linen. Dampen the finger and apply to the surface Cf the linen fabric If the moisture da aeen on the other aide you may know at once It ia linen. If it is alow In coming through, without doubt there i an admixture of cotton. Another method is to unravel the threads, as in uie wool test Knowing Chinese Dog. Prince Pu Lun and the .Chines minister Sir Chentung Liang Cheng, attended the races at Oravesend early in the month. A number of New Yorker were presented to the distinguished foreign ers, and one of them told an Incident that Illustrated the remarkable intel ligence of a dog of his. The minister said, with a smile: "I am reminded, sir, of Chinese dog story. "There was a Chinaman who had three dogs. When he came homo one evening he found them asleep on his couch of teakwood and marble. He whipped them and drove them forth. "The next night, when he cam home, the dogs were lying on the floor. But he placed hi hand on the couch and found it warm from their bodies. Therefore he gave them an other whipping. "The third night returning earlier than usual, he found the dogs sitting before the couch, blowing on it to cool lt"New York Tribune. Never Taught Bear. A Michigan paper wound up a com pliment to a young eohoolma'am with a Rood word about the "reputation for teaching she bears." The next day the young school ma'am met the edi tor and chased him down the street with an umbrella, and at every Jump she screamed that ahe had never taught 1 ahe bear In her life. GRANGE NEWS. Ey J, T. Ailm.n, Trcsi Corn spondenl nt Secretary Pcnn'a Slate Grange. CONl'KRliNCH OK STATU CRANGK Ol'l'ICHKS. On the iCth mid 17th of January the Master, Sccutary nnd Lecturer, the inctnher.s of the Kxcctitive mid Legislative Committees of the Penn sylvania State Grange held a con ferenee nt llarri.ibttrg. K very phase of grange work was consider ed. The prosperous condition of the order in the State inspired nil with enthusiasm and a determina tion to work for still better results. It was again agreed to offer banners as prizes tolhe five granges making the greatest gain during the yw. The lixecntive Committee conclud ed contracts with a number of new business houses. The Legislative Committee reported progress on the bills in the lines in which candi. dates were interrogated before elec tion. In support of these measures there will be concerted action all along the line. Ivvery Subordinate and every Pomona grange is urged to have legislative committees to po-opcrale with the state committee. I The complaints of bossism arc heard on every hand. There is no aouut entirely too mucii lust cause for this. But even the boss is amenable to the will ot the peor-le. These need only organization aud education to make them trample under foot the dictator and the corruptionist. The grange is gathering in the farmers and unit ing them as one man in defence and advocacy of the rights of theirclass. We are asking for legislation only that will benefit the farmers and work injury to 110 legitimate busi ness. If we do not get it the thous ands of our membership will ask the reason why. 'Grange fire insurance lias proven Very profitable and is becoming quite popular. Two new companies were organized in the state last year. One in Butler count., and one in Chester and Delawarccount ies. There are now eleven com panies in the state that insure only the j roperty of members of the order. Their risks aggregate not far from $30,000,000.00. Some of these companies have been doing business tor a quarter of a century cr more. The cost to the individual has been less than oue half of what cash companies charge for the same service. TlKOUT tAW CONVENTtori : It is many a day since a stronger demonstration was made in a mass meeting cn proposed legislation Aan was made in Harrisburg, January 16. against the relpeal of the Grout law. A'ddVesses wef delivered by Governor Penny pack er aiwl United States Senators Pen rose nd Knox. Fttfly 250 farmers bad come from all parts of the state at their own exjponse. It developed that at least thrcse fourths of them -were members of Hhe grange. In this great organ isation farmers are !led to think for themselves. They keep posted on current events and are ready to act promptly when their interests de mand it. There is' little doubt that the oleo people have given up the fight for the preserit session of Congress. There is no more doubt that they,, will be at it again in the future. Does any one doubt that if the granges of the land were all to dis band, the oleo combines would' soon wipe the Grout law off the statute books, and with it all profits out of the dairy business. With) even half of the farmers in the grange their efforts would be block ed for all time. Fellow farmer, do not these' facts appeal strongly to you to join the grange and help? HUMPHREYS' Veterinary Specifics care disease fit TTnraaa ntla Y" TT "I wnny, vv UUg aiuK Poultrr tT aotinor dlmnttv nn h mrrr. . ww a w - wiw ri-l J without loss of time. ?ihJL WORM. Bote, GriiW. cjti-pi.:ifi"- O.O. Prcvonu MISCARRIAGE. JJJjJij KIDNEY BLADDER DISORDERS. J. K. BAD COWDITinw a-.i ..... !! oMloa, Stoma'ob StMuriT "J trtl C Speetnoi, Book, tk. . - prapwa ob rwMipt or i ..---7 ' .'. -- vx, VUC. TVUMUU ( -- i ww jars.. 'HOOK MAILED mil t
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers