THE BOY'S SUMMER SWIM. Now, off with your garments, boys; quick! look alive! No waiting about in fear on the bank: A run, and a spring, and a clean, clever dive. Just leaving a bubble to show where you sank. Or, if you prefer It. a "header" then take. Your head popping out as your feet dis appear; If managed aright, you will no splashing make, But enter as stiff and as clean as a spear. A shake of your head, and your eyes will be free From water, and now you start off for your swim; The side stroke, or breast stroke, which one may agree The bust with your fancy, your style or your whim. You're blown? Then turn over and rest while you float; It only wants pluck, and is easy to do. That's right; you're as safe and secure as a boat, You see, there's no need to get into a stew. Now make for the bank, clamber out, and prepare To try some new trick, such as diving for eggs, Or turning a somersault cleverly ere The water you reach, or else swim with tied legs. When tired of all, and before you grow chill, Come out (you may easily stay in too long) And rub yourself down with a hearty good will. You can't scrub too hard, and you can't scrub too strong. Then jump in your ciothes, and be off for a run. And do not pull up till you glow in each limb; Then, boys, believe me, when that run shall be done, You'll find yourself better by far for your swim. —Golden Days. NEAT TOY SPRINKLER. Made from fin KIIKHXII Wiilnut. Two , Iliizel XutK, Two Straw*, a Cork ami a Bottle, Here, is a toy sprinkler that any bright boy or girl can make with the aid of a pocketknife and a gimlet; the necessary materials are an English wal nut, two hazelnuts, two straws, a cork and a bottle. Following is a descrip tion of how to make the sprinkler: Remove by the aid of a small saw or a pocketknife about one-third of a walnut. (See illustration.) Then take out the kernel of the remaining larger THE SPRINKLER. part and make it nice and smooth int e •» with the knife. Now you bore t o holes in the sides of the shell (you c a easily see the proper place and direc tion on the accompanying illustration) and insert a straw in each hole, the straws to be about two and one-half Inches long. Then take two hazelnuts and make two holes in each, the holes being in right angle with each other and reaching the center of the kernel. Now put the straws coming out of the walnut in the top hole of the hazelnut, and in the side hole you introduce a short piece of straw. Use beeswax or sealing wax for stopping all leaks. Now your sprinkler is ready for use, and all you have to do is to place the walnut on its pointed end on the cork of an empty bottle and pour water in the walnut basin. The water will then run through the straws and thereby cause the little sprinkler to revolve quickly.—J. Bellrope, in Chicago Daily Record. Tree* anil Plant* Sleep. Trees and plants have their regular limes forgoing to sleep, as well as boys and girls. They need the same chance to rest from the work of growing and to repair and oil the ma chinery of life. Some plants do all their sleeping in the winter, when the ground is frozen and the limbs are bare of leaves. In hot countries, where the snow never falls, and it is growing weather, the trees rest dur ng the rainy season or during pe -iods of drought. They always choose the time when they cannot work the best for doing thefc- sleeping, just as mankind ehooses the night, when he ;annot see to work. A Norwegian sci entist has made some interesting ex periments trying to chloroform plants, and he has found that the fumes of this Bleep giver make the plant sleep hard er and grow faster when it wakes up. l)<-ath of a Noted H»K. Sultan, a Newfoundland dog, has fust died in France. He was noted for having arrested a thief, captured an assassin, rescued a child from drown ing and saved a man who attempted suicide. The Society for the Protection of Animals presented hiin with a 'fil ar. Recently he prevented a castle be ing robbed, and was poisoned, it is sup posed, by those who attempted the rob bery. There are C>s steamers on the Swiss lakes. The largest can transport 1,2(10 passengers. AN AMUSING GAME. It I* Doubly InteroilnK lieenu"c the M<>> H Can Make ICaeh of ll* Varlnua Part*. Here is a game that you can play in the house, out on the porch, or on the ground. Take a piece of board or plank 10 by 12 inches. Plane it on the sides and edges and cut away the corners all around one side, ;us shown in the draw ing. Call that side the top and the other side the bottom. See whether the side which you choose for the bottom is even so that the board will set well on the floor. If the board is warped, turn the hollow side down, so that the edges and not the middle will rest on the floor. If the board seems twisted a little, so that it will not set well, which ever side is down, nail a block to one side of the board at each corner. This is a good way, even when the side of the board is straight, for then the board THE GAMES OF RINGTOBS. will set better on an uneven place on the floor or ground. At the center of the board bore a hole an inch or an inch and a quarter In diameter. Into this set a standard reaching six or seven inches above the board. Make the lower end of the standard fit closely and trim around the upper end, as shown in the drawing. I'aint or oil all over, including the bot tom. Next make the ring shown by the drawing. The easiest way is to take a piece of rope a little longer than the distance around the ring. Cut away some of the strands at each end so that you can overlap the ends and make the same thickness as elsewhere. Wrap and tie these overlapping ends with string. Then wrap the entire ring with strips of cloth. In playing, throw the ring over the standard, as horse shoes or quoits are thrown. If two people play, use two boards and several rings. These soft rings make no noise and are not apt to do harm where they hit.—- National Rural. NATURAL FLY TRAP. The Dionea, a l.lltle Carolina Plant, IN Far More Ilellnhle Than Sticky Flypaper. Flytraps are well known in the ani mal kingdom to everyone w ho has eyes, or. at least, who uses them. The delicate web of the spider and the deeply cut and broad mouth of the swallow at once suggest themselves. But that a vegetable, should have an ex quisitely constructed and perfect appa ratus of this kind is very remarkable, when it is remembered that plants dif fer markedly from animals in regard to their food. For, while animals live on organic substances —that is, on plants or other animals —vegetables live on in organic substances. It is, then, unlikely that a fly could supply a plant with food, and a more perfect fly trap than the leaves of the dionea cannot be imagined. This little plant is a native of the sandy bogs in the pine barrens of Caro lina. It grows to a height of from six to twelve inches, producing a loose head of large whitish flowers, not unlike the flower of the lady's smock. The flower stalk rises from a rosette of yellowish green leaves, spreading on the ground. Each leaf is divided by a deep incision into two portions, the lower being a broadly winged foot stalk, and the upper the blade or true leaf itself. The upper portion is the flytrap— the most curious part of the plant— and demands a careful description. It is roundish and divided into two equal parts by a strong mid-rib. The mar gins are fringed with a row of strong spiny bristles, so that it may be likened to two upper eyelkls joined at their bases. The leaf is a little hollow on either side of the mid-rib. the upper sur face is dotted with minute reddish glands, and each hollow is furnished with three slender bristles. The sensi tiveness of the leaf chiefly lies in these bristles. If an insect alights on the leaf and touches one or more of them the sides suddenly close with a force so great as to imprison the little creature, notwithstanding all its efforts to es cape. The fringe of bristles on the opposite side of the leaf interlace like the fingers of the two hands clasped to gether, or like the teeth of a steel trap. The insect is not crushed or suddenly destroyed, but is retained firmly im prisoned until it ceases to move, which would mean until it was dead, and then the leaf suddenly expands. The two lobes are enfolded at night, but spread open in the day. When the bristles are irritated by man, the ieaf quickly closes, remains closed for a short time, then slowly expands, ready to close again if newly irritated. I!ut if it be caused to make repeated efforts at short intervals, its move ments become languid, or the sensibil ity is altogether exhausted and is re covered only by r. period of repose.— Philadelphia I'ress. Why Wallpaper I* "llnnis," Wall paper does not hang, and yet the person whose business it is to paste it up is called a paper-hanger. The rea son is simple. Long before the intro duction of wall papers, Arras, a town ii> France, was famous for ii>> tapestries called "Arras." These were used as wall coverings, and the men who were employed to put them up were called "hangers." CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1899 LAYING CEMENT FLOORS. They Slioulil Mot Be Too Smooth on the Top, Hut TlPry Slut He Level Throughout, It is important thr.t the cement floor be laid with a Irue level. It should not be too smooth on top, but very level. To secure a true level and to make sure that an even thickness of the cement is being laid on, the plan illustrated in the cut may be used to advantage. Lay down a strip of wood of there- HOW TO LAY A CEMENT FLOOR, quired thickness of cement, putting it about 20 inches from the back side. Fill in the cement and with a straight-edge smooth all off level with the piece of wood. Then move this back about 20 inches and continue to repeat the fill ing and smoothiT g operation. Cement is usually laid on a firmly packed floor of stone or graT el, but it can also be laid upon a bolTd floor if the building is elevated from the ground. For the use of cattle the floor should be inclined a little, either in the cement or by in cliningthe earth or board floor beneath. —Orange Judd Farmer. THE FARM MANURES. TTnul the Stuff Out a* l-'ns( n* It 1* .Made. Kx«*ept When the t.rouiitl In Soft In SprliiK. Farm manures is a more popular sub ject in the west than it was even as late as ten years ago. Over the larger por tion of the west, we have concluded that there is not. much business wisdom in burning straw stacks or regarding the manure pile as a nuisance. The manure is a part of the return from keeping and feeding domestic animals; just as clearly a part as the carcass is, and throwing away the meat, milk or wool of the animal would be just as sensible as throwing away the manure. In an elaborate article before us the state ment is made that "experiments indi cate that manure should be collected ill pits having impervious walls and bottom." If a farmer should construct a pit like that, he would be a fit sub ject for a lunatic asylum. If anybody desire* to "hoard" manure, to keep it in sight and indolence, he had better have a covered barnyard. Hut the land is the place for the manure, and there is where it should go just as fast as it is made and it is convenient to haul it out. The farmer who will persist in permitting his manure to burn out or leach out in the barnyard, might not be more unwise if be built a water tight pit, or adopted some other expensive contrivance to preserve the fertilizing elements, and forking the manure ijito the pit, and especially forking it out, might be considered a deserved punish ment. Hut the best advice to be given such a farmer, is this: Haul out your manure as it is made, ewept when the ground is soft in the spring, or other conditions make it impracticable. —Ag- ricultural Epitomist. AMONG THE POULTRY. Onions chopped fine make a desir able relish for chicks. Dispose of surplus or cull cockerels as soon as marketable. After breeding season separate male bird's from the females. As the chicks mature, separate the males from the females. Never allow your chicks to roost on their own droppings. Change their coops often. Chie.ks should have animal protein. Chicks must always have a plentiful supply of water and grit. Granulated charcoal is eaten greedily by chicks; it absorbs the gases in the bowels and regulates them. If your chicks have diarrhoea a feed or two middlings will ofttimes stop it. If constipated feed a few feeds of bran. Watch for lice 111 the hen house. Kerosene will kill the iiee. Use plenty of lime slacked or in the form of white wash in the hen house. Grease the heads of chicks with lerd, dußt the chickens under the wings with insect powder, clean their feed and wa ter troughs with scalding w-ter twice a week. If hens have formed the egg-eating habit, take a lot of egg shells, crush them up fine and feed them all thtjy will eat. They can usually be found in quantities at bakeries. —Rural World. A W'or.l of Wiirnlnii. The continued use of stimulant fer tilizers will eventually exhaust the soil of its natural fertility; hence it is poor economy to apply them continuously. It has been said that »t iinulant manures "enrich the father but impoverish the son." This is literally true, is has been demonstrated in the case of clover. Clovers will appropriate all the potash and phosphoric acifl which may be lib erated to them by lime or plaster. Con tinued cultivation 011 these lines has been known to exhaust the two ingredi ents mentioned and to make the lands clover-sick.—National Stoekuian. CAUSE OF ERGOTISM. The Dlxeime In De velopcil Only la Stack WIIIOII llitn Acce** to Krifiil. 11 l'litnt K ii>■ rum. Followingisabrief description of the disease termed "ergotism": This dis ease is caused by stock eating ergot, which is found in the feed. Ergot is not a species of weed, as is sometimes thought, but is a stage in the life his tory of a fungus. The term was ap plied to it by the French from its fan cied resemblance to the spur of a coek. The scientific name is "Clavieeps pur purea." Spores of the fungus are formed and carried by currents of air, or other means, to the flowers of the grasses favorable for its development. Here the ergot is developed entirely below the ovary and prevents the for mation of the grass seed. Full de velopment occurs about one month after the invasion of the ovary takes place. The grains of ergot differ in size, but are essentially the same in shape. Sometimes the grains are so small that they are dillicult to distin guish with the naked eye. Usually the size varies in length from one-half an inch to over an inch, and in diam eter from one-fifteenth to one-sixth. Thf-y are cylindrical; sometimes slight ly ribbed and furrowed, and often ir regularly fissured. They are curved and taper toward the ends. Their color varies from dark violet to blue blaek or black. Just what poison is contained in the ergot is unknown, yet the fact that a poison does exist there cannot be dis puted. The poisoning of animals by ergot may occur at the end of a longer or shorter time, even weeks or months after eating it. The system by this time has become so filled that there is no means of providing a remedy. Symp toms of convulsions are not often no ticed in the diseased cattle; but the most marked effect is in the circulatory system. The extremities, such as the ears, tail, lower parts of the limbs, ?tc., begin to lose their warmth and sen sibility gradually. Dry gangrene sets in.the parts harden, become mum mified and finally drop off without pain. It is evident that the only means of prevention is to cease feeding the fodder containing the ergot. —Nebras- ka Experiment Station. FEEDING AT PASTURE. A. Simple Device Which Will Keep Animal* from <1 mi rrelink Willi Their IVcitllihorN. it is often desired to feed grain or some soiling crop to animals at pasture. A convenient way to accomplish this without crowding on the part of the FEEDING CATTLE AT PASTURE. stock, or waste of feed by the animals setting their feet, upon it, is shown in the cut. The middle board in the pas ture fence is taken off and upright boards nailed to the top and bottom boards, as shown, nailing these upright boards upon the side occupied by the animals, so they cannot press them off. The feed can then be putin boxes, or on the ground, outside the fence, when each animal will take an opening and eat without quarreling with its neigh bor.—N. Y. Tribune. Keeping; Ekk* In Cellar*. During the summer months, when the air temperature is often near blood heat a large part of the day, it is ex tremely difficult to keep eggs even a few days without starting the germ to growing. Of course this ruins the egg, and as during the night the cool air chills the egg, it is good for nothing, even for incubation. Many farmers make the cellar the place where they store their eggs until they have a chance to market them. The truth is that in summer it is not best to have eggs longer than three or four days a I t er they are laid before disposing of them. The cellar often has very un wholesome air. and as the egg shell is porous its contents are affected injuri ously without regard to the tempera ture where it has been kept. When to Hnrrotv Land. Land should be harrowed after plow ing before the clods become hard and difficult to crush, and the surface made lis line as possible. Frequent harrow ing of lands already planted will check the loss of water. Orchards, especially those containing bearing trees, will lia greatly benefited by harrowing at brief intervals until midsummer. The disk harrow is best adapted to clayey soils. The disks should be set at such au angle that the entire surface will be tilled. If the land has been putin the proper condition early in the sea son a spike tooth or smoothing harrow will be all that is needed during tlia summer.— Farmers' lie view. .Small Celery I* licit. There is a great difference in the quality of celery, and this makes the size a matter of comparatively little ac count. The giant varieties of celery are now superseded in favor of dwarf kinds that are crisp and nutty in flavor. Something, however, depends 011 the soil and method of growing. A moist soil makes the celery grow much fuller of its native juices than one which is dry. The soil can hardly be too rich, for the quicker the growth the better it is, whatever the variety. Celery that is any way stunted in growth becomes stringy, and if it is cheeked by drought It will have comparatively little of the characteristic celery flavor. The Rnllle Field Ront*. The Veterans of sixty one and five and their friends, who are Koirift to attend the 33rd G. A. K. Annual Encampment at Phila delphia in September, could not select a bet ter nor more historic route tlian the Itij; Four, Chesapeake & Ohio, with splendid service from Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis on the Hig Four, ail connecting at Indian apolis or Cincinnati and thence over the Picturesque Chesapeake & Ohio along the Ohio river to Huntington, West Va., thence through the foot-hills of the Alleghanies, over the Mountains, through the famous Springs Region of Virginia to Staunton, \ a., between which point and Washington are many of the most prominent Battle fields: Waynesboro, Gordonsville, Cedar Mountain, Rappahannock, Kettle Run, Manassas, Hull Run, Fairfax, and a score of others nearly as prominent. Washington is next, and thence via the Pennsylvania Line direct to Philadelphia. There will lie three rates in effect for this business: Ist. Contin uous passage, with no stop-over privilege; 2nd. Going and coming same route with one stop over in each direction; 3d. Circuitous route, going one way and back another with one stop-over in each direction. For full information as to Routes, Rates, etc., ad dress J. C. Tucker, G. N. A., 234 Clark St., Chicago. Out. Caller—l have here several bills which are long overdue and— Harduppe (desperately)—l am sorry to jay thai our cashier is out to-day. "Oh, well, it doesn't make much differ ynce; I'll call and pay them at some fu ture date. Good day, sir."—Philadelphia Record. Laur'i Family Medicine. Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head ache. Price '25 and 50c. WIIy They Are Nervous. A correspondent says that those who dine with the queen are usually painfully nervous. Perhaps they are tortured with doubt of the propriety of praising the pie, not know ing whether her majesty or the cook made it.—Denver Post. The Nickel Plate Road, with its Peer loss Trio of Fast Express Trains Daily and Un excelled Dining Car Service, offers rates ower than via othsr lines. The Short Line between Chicago, Rutfalo, New York and Boston. I'nrnua I'lasler. "What are the holes for?" asked little Edna, looking at the porous plaster that her mother was preparing to adjust on Willie's back. "Its funny you don t know that, sis," interposed Willie. "They're to let the pain out, of course."—Boston Trav eler. Work for All. Thousands of men are making good wages in the harvest fields of Minnesota, North and South Dakota. There is room for thou sands more. Half rates via the Great North ■rn Railway from St. Paul. Write Max Bass, 220 South Clark Street, Chicago, 111. Home Hon Striken. Diggs—So your daughter is married, eh?" Biggs—Yes. . "And how does your new son-in-law strike you?" . "For a 'V' or an 'X' usually.' —Chicago Evening News. Pome people keep the Sabbath so holy that they don't work any for three days before- or three days after.—N. Y. Press. "He says his wife can't cook a little bit.' "That's unfortunate." "Yes. But that isn't the worst of it. She insists on cooking a lot."- -Philadelphia Bulletin. Always put off until to-morrow that which should net be done to-day.—Chicago Daily News. When the hostess no longer apologizes for the lack of pie, a wise guest knows her wel come is worn out, and talks of going.— Atchison Globe. Fish being rich in phosphorus and phos phorus being the essential tiling in making matches, it therefore stands to reason that girls should be partial to a tish diet. —Chi- cago Daily News. Mrs. De Tanque—"You horrid wretch! Aren't you ashamed of coming homo in.this condition?" IX- Tanque —'"No, shir; I'm proud of it. Ain t many fellows'h can fan' th" way home when they're full's this." —Philadelphia Record. "Mrs. Young says she has solved the ser vant problem. ' "She's a genius! What's tfie solution?" "Why, she says all you've got to do is never find any fault, submit to everything, do as you are told, keep out of the way, and pay good wages, with privileges, and you won t have a bit oi trouble." —Phil- adelphia Bulletin. "Something must be done with those bova of mine at college," exclaimed a staid old citizen. "They're wilder than March hares and in hot water all the time." "Oh, well, they're young yet, and you must make al lowances." "Make allowances, man? That's what's keeping me poor."—Detroit Free Press. "Well, I never thought that Jonesy would die a natural death." said Snaggs, when he had been told of the passing away of a man he had known. "1 didn't say he died a nat ural death," said Dir.widdie. "You told me he died in bed." "But it was in a fold ing-bed."—Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. [LETTER TO MRS. PINKJTAM NO. 93,284! " DEAR MRS. PINKHAM —For some time I have thought of writing to you to let you know of the great benefit I have received mm _ mm from the use of Mrs« Johnson Lydia E Pink . Saved from ham's Vegeta- Insanity by ble compound. D:„fcfoo». Soon after mrsm ftnkham birtll ofmy first •- child, I com menced to have spells with my spine. Every month I grew worse ami at last became so bad that I found I was gradually losing my mind. '"The doctors treated me for female troubles, but I got no better. One doctor told me that I would be insane. I was advised by a friend to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial, and before I had taken all of the first bottle my neighbors noticed the change in me. "1 have now taken five bottles and cannot find words sufficient to praise it. 1 advise every woman who is suffering Irom any female weakness to give it a fair trial. I thank you for your good medicine."— MßS. GERTRUDE M. JOHN SON, JONESBORO, TEXAS. Mrs. Perkins* tetter. "I had female trouble of all kinds, had three doctors, but only grew worse. I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills and used the Sanative Wash, and can not praise your remedies enough."— MRS. EFFIE PERKINS, PEARL, LA. Ml CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Ea ||gg Best Cough Syrup. Testes Good. Übg M Ly In time. Sold by drugirinta. |rf T<udl«-a Cnn Wfnr Hhoei One size smaller after using Allen's Foot- Ease, a powder for tlx* feet. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching feet, inprowing nails, i nrw and bunions. At all Orugpists and shoe stores, 25c. Trial package FHEE bv mail. Address Allen !S. Olmsted, Le Hoy, N. Y. Appreciated. Wife —John, let me tell you that as surely as you keep on in your present career, just so surely will you pay for your indulgences. Husband (with air of pride)- Thanks, dear, for that tender tribute to my finarieias probity.—Boston ('ourier. To < ure n fold tn One Way Tike Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. We have often wondered that women do not have their kitchen dresses made as low necked as their party dresses. It would cer tainly be cooler in working over a hot stove. —Atchison Globe. Hull's Catarrh Cure Is a Constitutional Cure. Price, 75c. Never do to-day any wrong thing you can put off till to-morrow. —L. A. \V. .Bulletin. I'iso's Cure for Consumption relieves the most obstinate coughs.-—Rev. 1). Iluch niueller, Lexington, Mo., Feb. 24, '94. What does it do? B It causes the oil glands H in the skin to become more a active, makingthe hairsoft g and glossy, precisely as I nature intended. § It cleanses the scalp from SI dandruff and thus removes I one of the great causes of I baldness. | It makes a better circu- I lation in the scalp and stops I the hair from coming out. I it Prevents and II I cures Baldness Ayer's Hair Vigor will surely make hair grow on ■B bald heads, provided only Vp* there is any life remain til! ing in the hair bulbs. H It restores color to gray ■ or white hair. It does not jg do this in a moment, as I will a hair dye; but in a N short time the gray color g of age gradually disap a pears and the darker color I of youth takes its place. I Would you like a copy wr of our book on the Hair Wand Scalp? It is free. If you do not obtain nil the bonefita you expected from the uso of the Vigor write the Doctor about it. Address, DH. J. C. AYER, jBSRL Lowell, Mass. IA FREE TRIP to the Paris Exposition ! TTHR CENTURY COMPANY is now making ■ arrangements to send to the Paris Impo sition in 1900 a number of persons (especially ministers and teachers) FREE OF ALJ* CHARGE — first-class steamers, L>est hotel*. For particulars address THE CENTURY COMPANY, UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CITV. ATLAS OF WESTERN CANADA |jVfflVX79PF3ranHP p n Containing Ave splendid j Maps of Canada and 1U ki N I Provinces, as well aaa I description of the r«- PUu I sources of the Dominion. H I Or** will be mailed free to all Liapplicants desirous or Vy Api O learning something of the Free Home.twrf USrlsfl I'iiniU of Western <*J ua- .«■» rmi mm (|a Address F.PEDLRT^ Hupt. of linin IK ration. Ottawa. Canada; or t<» M. V. McINNES, No. 1 Merrill Block. Detroit. Mick. jjT Whiskers Dyed 4t \ A Natural Black by La Buckingham's Dye. Price 50 cents of all druggists or It. P. llal! & Co., Nashua, N. 11. Fat ADIPO-CURA mm Will reduce your weight 10 fll If O to 20 pounds a Month. No ULIVd starving. No Special Diet- Purely Vegetable-Absolute, IySAFE and CERTAIN in K|t fl U its Results. SAMPLE, with ■ Treatise on Obesity, l-'kKH. NOKTII\V£MT£K.\ PIIARM.I€AL tU Box 4(18. MM.WAI'IiGE, WIS. HEADERS OF THIS PAPER DKSIKING TO BUY ANYTHING ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNB SHOULD INSIST HPON HAVING WHAT THEY ASK FOR, REFUSING ALL SUBSTITUTED OR IMITATIONS- A. N. K.-C 1773 CIRTEttSINK Is what Uncle Sain uses. EDUCA FIONA L. NEW HAMPSHIRE MILITARY ACADEMY Pf® Pares or Government Academics and College,, ball Commercial Course Major B. K. HYACT? A. M.. I'rtuciyai, WKST LHiSANON, W. U- 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers