NO FENCE COR NER FARMING The Very Good Reason for the Long, Straight Furrows and Great Fields That Are a Feature CURIOSITY and a love of travel combined caused nie to take an extensive trip through the ag ricultural sections of Western Canada during the past summer, and "while there I was given the best of opportu nities of studying and judging for my self of the conditions tha.t exist in that extensive section of our continent. After I had Cc.veled over a few mil lion acres of Western Canada, and matched and studied what at first seemed to me an extravagant waste of land on the part of the farmers, 1 be came better acquainted with condi tions and the very good reasons for thi« seeming wastage. I had been used to the farroing oper ations of the more thickly populated 6tates, where to make farming pay it was necessary to cultivate practically every foot of ground; where it was the rule rather than the exception togo to the length of blasting out, if neces sary, heavily rooted trees or large bowlders; where much of the farm land was secured by clearing it of tim ber and stones, which had been accom pli shed only after years of toil and privation on the part of the first set tlers. There traveled with me over these millions of acres of Canadian soil * gentleman who had been reare# upon just this sort of a farm in Michigan, and, as he expressed it, "land was ?o scarce anil so" valuable because of its scarcity that Ave had to cultivate even the corners of the rail fences." But in my journey through the agri cultural section of Western Canada, ranging from Winnipeg on the east to the ltocky Mountains on the west, and from the international boundary on the south to the Saskatchewan river •nd beyond on the north, I saw noth ing that savored of our method of "fence corner farming," and in time I learned the reason for the little un cultivated tracts. Time, rather than land, Is the valu able commodity in Western Canada. In a country where the soil is sufficiently ■ .;,V <jv4. > v i■rumi lit iiiMnli i i i— ' v -V-'? *'Th« Wettern Canada Farmer Cultivate* Hl* Land Upon Wholetal* Method*." fertile to produce thirty and forty bushels of wheat to the acre from le«s than a bushel of seed; where the gov ernment gives everyone desiring it a free homestead of 160 acres of this land, and where more may be bought at from $3 to $5 per acre; where one year's crop will much more than pay for the land upon which it is grown, it Is a wicked waste of time to cultivate the "fence corners." Before I had acquired this informa tion I was on one farm where a road way cut off a small corner of land from the remainder of a field of wheat. There was, I should say, nearly an acre in this little plat of neglected ground, and I asked the owner of the farm why it had not been put under cultivation. "To undertake to plow that little three-cornered strip of land would take far more time than the land is worth, giving both the present market ralue. To add it to the remainder of the field would necessitate a longer way around from the main road to the house. Lying just across the road there is 300 acres of as good land as this upon which I have this year grown more than 30 bushels of wheat to the acre, and I can buy that land of the railroad for $4 an acre. It would take as much time to plow that small piece, In its present shape, as it would to plow two acres of the land across the road, and so would be what we in this country consider a waste of valuable time." Straight furrows and long ones is the plowing rule in Western Canada, and the gang plow is the favorite meth od of turning the soil. The Western Canada farmer, 1 found, cultivates his land upon wholesale methods. No matter where he may come from, no matter what the methods in vogue in his native place may mave been, the farmer in Canada soon learns that it is wholesale methods that pay best there, and for this reason it is Western Cana da that is the home of every improved agricultural machine that tends to the speedy handling of great harvests or the production of them. Ther.e ma chines arc not always the product of Western Canadian inventors, but the Western Canadian farmers are among the heaviest buyers of this class of ag ricultural machinery in the world. The Canadian farmer never becomes land poor as does- the farmer in the States. When he buys land he knows that it will bring him adequate returns upon his investment, and that his gov ernment will not put a burden of taxes upon it. As a sample of what is possi ble with the progressive farmers in West ern Canada let me cite the ease of one living near White Plains, in Mani toba, a Mr. Winslow by name. During the past season this one man had 2,700 seres of land planted in wheat, and har vested 67,500 bushels- lie makes farm ing on these fertile lands Immensely profitable by going about it in a wholesale way. Do not, however, imagine that it is only the wholesale methods that pay well in Western Canada. I saw men who owned only the 160 acres of land the government had given them as a homestead who claimed to be making better* livings for themselves and their families and saving more money than they had ever been able to do in the States on the same amount of land. Prac tically every one of these compara tively small farmers whom I met as sured me that it wastheir ambition to purchase more land as rapidly as they could accumulate the means with which to buy. They fully realized that they could not get too much of what they knew was a good thing. There is a vast amount of difference in buy ing productive land at $3 to $5 an acre and at S3O to S4O an acre. The straight furrows and the long ones are possible in Western Canada, where, as I know from my own investi gations made during the past summer, farming'pays and pays well. WRIGHT A. PATTERSON. The oftener a man is sold the cheaper ha feels.—Chicago Daily News. HUMOROUS. "And you will devote your son to art?" "No. He has too good an ap petite."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Epliraim—"He dun held foh aces." Rastus—"Wot did you hold?" Eph raiin—"Mali breff!"—Baltimore World. "It is an error to allow automobiles to whirr along even faster than the bi cycles." "Still to whirr is human." — Philadelphia Times. Outside the Fencp.—"Did youse see de last baseball game?" Shorty—"Yes, all but de last inning. Den's when de limb broke."—Ohio State Journal. Mistress—"Margaret, I told you I could, not permit you toentcrtain male callers in the kitchen. You had amau there last evening." Maid —"I know it, mum; but that was Tim Murphy, a tur'ble bashful feller. Ye'd never in jnee him to stip into the parlor."— Boston Transcript. His One Literary Success.—Miss Kulcher—"Did you ever go in for litera ture, Mr. Gay?" Mr. Gay—"Well—er— not exactly, but once when 1 was at college 1 wrote a short story and got SIOO for it." Miss Kulcher—"Really? What was it?" Mr. Gay—"Dear Fa ther: I'm broke. Please send me a hun dred."—Philadelphia Press. "I don't feel the confidence I would like to in that young man you are en gaged to,"said Ethelinda'sfather. "He talked about nothing but the stock market while he and I were together." "Yes," answered Ethelinda. "He's a little worried about that conversation himself. He says that if you don't know any more about stocks than you Appear to he's liable to have to support the entire family."—London Fun. HAPPENINGS ON THE STAGE. Od«l Situations Thnt Ari*e from Oc currenm Out of the Lsiml LJiip. "Things frequently happen on the stage that are not down on the pro- ■ gramme," said a well-known tlieat- ' rical man, relates the New Orleans Times-Democrat, "and sometimes the ' least thing in the world will discon cert the most finished artist. At ! West end a few evenings ago I saw i an electric bug frighten one of the j singers until she forgot her lines and rushed off the stage. The bug just settled on the ruffle of her skirt, and was doing no harm whatever, but it so disconcerted the young lady and made her so nervous that she had to leave the stage until she could rid herself of the bug. Little things oi this sort affect women more than they do men, unless the men are of that peculiar and highly tensured nervous temperament which we some times find on the stage. "I recall a curious thing in Mem phis some years ago, while Bernhardt was there, and it convinced me that the immortal Sarah was just a lit tle different from the common run of women. She was playing at the old Lyceum theater, which has since burned, and the place was crowded, as is usual when this splendid artist appears in any of her favorite roles. Bernhardt had reached one of the climaxes, and had gotten well to the center of the stage. Her eyes foil to the stage tloor just as a mouse scampered out from the wings and rushed across the stage right by her, and almost brushing the ruffle of her skirt. Other women might have leaped up into the nearest chair with piercing screams. But not so with Bernhardt. She stood her ground un flinchingly, and rolled out her sen tences in French without even the slightest change in the intonation of her voice, and without a twitch of the muscles to indicate that she was at all alarmed by the sudden appear ance of the mouse. "But one of the cleverest things I ever saw was out west some years ago, while the leading woman in some comic opera was singing her most fetching song. A cat appeared on the stage. The feline member was in a playful mood, and insisted on divid- | ing honors with the star singer. The | young woman took in the situation j at a glance. The audience had begun j to titter. She quietly reached down, ' picked the cat up, and sang her song ' while brushing the purring pussie's fur back with her pretty white hand, and it is not likely that she ever received more applause than she did on that occasion. It was really the hit of the engagement." nnllriiiK Hl* Wife. .Tones—Dear met You say you you often lay down the law to your wife; how do you go about it? Bones —Why, all you need is firm ness; I usually go into my study, lock the door and do it through the key-hole.—Tit-Bita. • CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1901. Wmm_ CHICKENS WITH PIP. ITnlcna They Arc Treated Vt'ltliont De lay the Worm That CanHca the Trouble ivills Theui. Herewith we illustrate a chicken with the gapes—popularly called the "pip." Many a farmer sees his chicks acting as indicated in Vhe illustra tion and imagine that the food is not right. The food is changed, but the trouble is not obviated. The difficul ty is the presence of *he gape worm, •a little red worm with a V-shaped terminus. This Vis formed by the Juncture of the male and female Worms. We give this much for iden tification purposes. The worms in habit the trachae. Sometimes they can be removed by a feather and some claim to remove them with drops of turpentine. Others have failed in all the things they have tried. Without doubt prevention is the factor that should receive the most attention. A CHICK WITH PIP. When the chickfs show the symptoms indicated, have all the young chicks put at once on board floors where they cannot get at the dirt. The an gle worm and dirt in which the angle worm is found are the sources of contagion. After the chicks are ma ture they are not injured by the gapes, as apparently the linings to their traclreas are too firm to permit of the worms attaching themselves.— Farmers' Review. STRICTLY FRESH EGGS. They Certainly Should Find a Heady Market Whenever I'crfcct Food Is in Demand. There are various articles of food which can be produced hundreds of miles away from the place of consump tion, and which suffer no injury or deterioration from transit; but others are perishable in their nature, and even when not actually perishable do> not retain the quality which is their characteristic, nor are they absolutely fresh. In these days of rapid transit, of refrigerators, etc., a great deal has been done to minimize the difficulty indicated, but distance must always be an important factor iu this class of food. Eggs are included in the list of per ishable articles, but consumers do not realize that to obtain an egg in its very best state and while its nutritive value is greatest it must be absolutely fresh —not more than two or three days old; and yet multitudes of those who by reason of their ability to pay for good quality ought to oreate a demand for the best are content to be put off with eggs in which, to say the least, the first indication of decomposition can be traced. For really fresh eggs it is es sential that a price be paid which is re numerative to the producer. Some producers do not feed their hens dur ing the greater part of the year, but allow them to find their own susten ance. If eggs were not perishable articles our farmers cou'.d not hope to secure the highest prices. Con sumers, therefore, should realize the fact and be willing to pay a reasonable price for absolutely fresh eggs. When or.ee they understand how superior these are to those not fresh they will do so. If consumers will ijisist. upon having the best (which some do), and be willing to pay fair prices for it, they will obtain an article of food superior to anything that can be used, consid ering the various modes in which eifgs can be used and their high nutritious value.—Farm and Fireside. A WORD ABOUT QUEENS. LonsrevMy of lleeu In a Subject Which AplarlHtM Can SVo I.outer Af ford to Ignore. Says Dr. C. C. Miller in Gleanings in Bee-Culture: "Longevity in bees is coming to the front. Assuming that in harvest time a worker lives six weeks, and goes afield when 1G days old, if its life were prolonged a week it could store 27 per cent more. If one» queen lives twice as long as another, will not her workers live at least a little longer? Is it not possible that, by proper selection continuously exer cised, we might add that week to the life of the worker? If we could add ». sixth to the summer life, that ought to add a sixth to its winter life. In that case, a bee born October 1, which now lives till April 1, would live till May 1 —quite a help in the wintering prob lem. Another thing: We can tell better what a queen is by two or three seasons' work than we can by a single season's work. The one that shows herself best for three seasons is a safe one to breed from.l have queens, born in 1897 that are among the best— one of them, 1 think, the very best I have." tVhile this is true, the average queen, I think, would better be dis placed in two years by a young one, remarks the editor of tlic Bee Journal* GEORGE M. PULLMAN TO WED. Ill* ICiigiigrnieii t (o Tlri. Hruzell, a U ldow ol Kuu Franclaco, HUM Hecli An mm need. George M. Pullman is once more giving- to tempt, fate and enter the holy if somewhat fragile bonds of matrimony, just as soon as lie can secure a divorce from his present, wife, Lynne Fernald I'ullmaii. The 11 o;irr ( .Diciit has been announced to a few intimate friends, which means 'that everyone in Burl'i'iigame, San IMateo and lied wood knows of it, and 'it is admitted somewhat cautiously ■by relatives of the fiancee, Mrs. ilra zell, who is Mrs, Sanger Pullman's sister. Mrs. Brazell is one of four West sisters, who were considered and still are among the most beautiful women in San Francisco. One of the girls was married to Uugh .McDonnell, a mine owner, who has the reputation of be ing- fabulously wealthy. Another, while living at the palace hotel with Mrs. McDonnell, met and shortly af terward was married to Sanger Pull man. Still another, who still re mains 'Miss West, is a teacher in San Francisco. 'Mrs. Brazell was always thought to be the prettiest and most attractive of the family. She is the oldest and considerably the senior of young Pullman. She has two children, boys, the eldest being nearly 12 years of age. Mrs. Brazil was married when she was very young. ller husband was "Jim" Brazell, a very popular man in San Francisco. He had plenty of money and spent it freely. Finally In lost all he had in mining speculation and drifted away from home, leav ing Iris wife and family. Subsequent ly Mrs. 'Brazell obtained a divorce from her husband. IHe died recent ly at the city and county hospital alone and friendless. llmv lie Wai Sent. Several ladies and their children were strolling through a cemetery reading in scriptions. "Oh, mamma," ciied little Agnes, stop ping at a grave, "1 ers's gome one sent C. O. D." The horrified mother turned to chide her daughter, hut paused as she read: "James Brown, Co. D.," on the headstone.—Chi cago Daily Xe«s. Where Heanx Are Scarce. Mr. Perkins—l had to do five men's work. Mr. Simpson—Gracious! In your office? "Oh, no; at that summer resort."—De troit Free Press. W hat'* In a .\nnie. "Ah!" he sighed, after she had blushing ly whispered "Yes" in his bosom. "My own Mehitabel! 0! that name's so formal. Sure ly your friends use some shorter one; some pet name." "Well," she murmured, "the girls at boarding school used to call me 'Pickles.' " Philadelphia Press. Very Suspicions. "My daughter, you have been out with one of those football players again," said the watchful mother. "Why, how you know, mamma?" "Why, I found a long hair on your blue shirt waist."-—Yonkers Statesman. Martyr to Love. Pearl—But are you sure that he loves her? Ruby—Loves her? Why. he actually let her sketch him in crayon; and she has only taken a two-weeks' course, too. —Chicago Daily News. Crushed Ajtain. Drummer (in train)—ls this seat en gaged? Coy Country Maid—No, but I am.—Judge. How disappointment tracks the steps of hope.—Landon. Many women mistake courtesy for ad miration. —Town Topics. Some pretty girls are attractive despite their beauty.—Chicago Daily News. Lots of men would rather lose a friend than a dollar. —Chicago Daily News. Lives of great men occasionally remind us that success is sometimes due to a mere fluke.—Puck. That noble animal, the horse, has outlived the bicycle, and will survive the automobile. —Town Topics. Fond Parent —"Isn't he a fine little chap?" Prize Idiot—"Rummy little shrimp, I call it. How long have you had it?"— Punch. "Lawyer Shecphound is turning his atten tion to religion." "That old backslider? You don't mean it!" "Yes, I do. He told me he was down to the courthouse to-day and prayed for a receiver for one of his clients."—lndianapolis News. Friend—"Hallo, Mike! Off back to ould Ireland, eh? But Where's your box?" Mur phy—"Faith, an' phw.it ud I do with a box?" Friend —"Why, put your clothes in, of course." Murphy—"l'hwat! an' me go widout?"—Glasgow Evening Times. "Why don't you put on your hat, my boy?" remarked the summer boarder. "Don't you know you're likely to be sun struck? "Yes, I know, but if Igo home with wet hair an' dad ketches me there'll be a son struck, anyhow."—Philadelphia Press. Sue—"Mabel was terribly disappointed last night." Belle—"In what way?" Sue — "Why, Charley came around and said he >vas going to tell her the 'old, old story.' " i Belle—"And did lie propose?" Sht —"No; j he told her about Jonaii and tbt> whale."— I Philadelphia Record. Yes, of course, you do, and you want £T7 ib 1 to ve I MMfuf'M tli : iu I y, ou can &* vc Him? Then help him live tS&'Qzzy sH | right! When his skin gets yellow and n _■**">•, «=j hp /?■=— rn » I looks bilious, his eyes red and watery, MwEU&I k reat k smells bad, 99 times out of JOO | tzrj fciy [hj £J vA | his liver is logy. Now, if you want a man /?F FXffl F nHQ rmtk I *° iflSroJrra MM Mm.Mm B * n rc habits I Give him plain m Iti 1? bkzsr £9 K wholesome food, and make him take Cas \L _Jm carets to stir up his liver. Big doses of sa j ts strong medicines make him weak and leave him worse than ever. We make the best bowel and liver tonic for man, woman or child —Cascarets. They are easy to take, cat them like candy. Cascarets arc made of bark, roots and herbs; act just like nature acts. Get a box on our say-so and if you are not pleased you can have your money back. That's fair, isn't it? We sold over six million boxes last year. Our business is big, the largest of its kind in the world. They cost JOc, 25c and 50c a box. A 50c box is a month's treatment for the worst case of bad liver and bowels. Remember the name—Cascarets —each tablet is stamped C. C. C. Get the genuine and if ths dealer offers you something else just as good he lies. We guarantee them. Get what you ask for and you will be satisfied. M Plilladelph 2a French. A Philadelphian tells the story of a wa«t er at a restaurant in the Quaker city who has lately announced that he has begun to study French. "Do you find it necessary here?" asked the customer. "Not here, sir," said the waiter, "but I've been offered a steady job in Paris at one of the hotels if I can learn French." "But Paris is full of French waiters," said the gentleman. "I'm Alraid you're being de ceived." "Oh, no, sir!" said the man, with much earnestness and absolute simplicity. "It's a perfectly straight thing. The proprietor of the hotel says the waiters he has can't understand French as we Philadelphians speak it, and that's what he wants me for, you see."—Youth's Companion. W'lncoiiNin Farm Lnnil*. The best of farm lands ran be obtained now in Marinette County, Wisconsin, on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, at a low price and on very favorable terms. Wisconsin is noted for its fine crops, excel lent markets and healthful climate. Why rent a farm when you can buy one much cheaper than you can rent and iri a few years it will be your own property. Fcparticu lars address F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Rail way, Chicago. t'nreleMK .lolin. "I brought this milk back," said the an gry patron to the milk dealer. "It's three fourths water," "John, ' said the milkman sternly, to his son, who was standing near, "did you give the cows a drink before you milked 'em this morning?"— Ohio State Journal. Itace of the Auiitriillaii-London Mail is graphically described in No. 11 New York Contrul'H "Four Track Series" Every person interested in the growth of our com merce should read it. Bent free on receipt of two-eent stamp by General Passenger Agent, New York Central, New York. An Overflow. First Financier—Are you getting much out of that new oil well? Second Financier —Are we? About $'.".000 a week, all in five-dollar subscriptions! Cincinnati Enquirer. Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga. The greatest dropsy specialists in the world. Read their adver tisement in another column of this paper. Knighthood In Flower. Beenaway—And what of Willie Puttinate, whose mother considered him a budding genius? Staidhomc—Oh, he turned out to be a blooming idiot!— Smart Set. Sweat or fruit acids will not discolor goods dyed with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. Sold by druggists, 10c. package. She Believed Him. Wigg—She is very susceptible to flaftery. Wagg—l should say so. I once told her she was as sweet as honey, and—'Would you believe it?—the very next day she had hives. —Philadelphia Record. The Public Awards the Palm to Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar for coughs. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. "I sec that $50,000 in counterfeit railway tickets was recently found in the posses sion of some St. Louis ticket brokers." "They ought to be good for passage one way to the nearest state prison."-—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infalli ble medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W. Samuel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. Buttons—"The count gave me a dollar to tell him truthfully if Mi.-s De Kiche was at home." The Maid—"And did you?" Hut tons —-"Not much! I told Mi.-s De Riche about it, and she gave me a dollar to tell him she was out."- —Town and Country. Relieve AYliooping- CouKrh With lioxsie's Croup Cure. No nausea. 50cts. Housewife (to cook) —"Do you boil or bake your lobsters?" Belligerent Cook— "That depinds. If it's de copper what wuz here last noight yer mane, phay I roasted him—good and pliiity, too!' —Indianapolis News. Sozodont Good for Bad Teeth Not Bad for Good Teeth Sozodont • . 25c Sozodont Tooth Powder 25c / Large Liquid and Powder 75c 9 HALL & RUCKEL. New York. DON,T GRT WEfFI THE ORIGINAL & \A J' vi M/A SLICKER // / 112 1// \ MAJt IN BUCK (M YELLOW SURE PROTECTION WIT W^THSS. CATALOGUES FREE SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS A.J.TOWER CO.. 803T0N.MA55.3c DROPSY SSSS case*, ilook of testimonial- ami IO «liiym* treatment Free. Dr. 11. 11. UUKK.VB SUMS, l.ox |>, ATLANTA, UA. Knlp Wnriilnjc. Time, 11:45 p. m. A sound resembling a distant. peal ot thunder is hoard distinctly i verhcaii. "What was that?" asked the young man as he started up from the parlor sofa in alarm. "That?" echoed the fair pride of the household. "Oh, that was only papa drop ping a hint." And hastily gathering the hint unto him self the young man eariied it out into tho gloomy night.—Chicago Daily News. A Doit lit fill Compliment. Lady—l always come out so plain in my, photographs—plainer even than I am! Photographer (gallantly) Oh, r.i.idam. that is impossible! Moonshine. Wliy do all tlic f*rcat ft Atlantic Liners Have special lockers built to carry St. Jacobs 01! A: B , (ri fs~. riecause for euiwaril euiwaril appli 'o ratios. Jt lias no AW*, ll|\ I' is a medi \ fur it ttl'j 1 , mj. Conauers Km p "" MARft I I i'or More Tl»an a Quarter of a Cer. turf Tho reputation of W. L. Douglas 33.CU and 93.50 shoe 3 for etyle, coiclort ond wear has excelled all other makes field at these prices. This excellent refutation htm been won by merit alone. W. Ij. DcujcJasj ehoes have to give better satisfaction than other §3.00 and 53.50 shoes because lii:j reputation for the best 53.00 and .«3.E®' shoes must bo maintained. Die str.r.dcmt lias always been placed BO high that the wearer receives moro value for his money in the W. L. Douglas 53.00 ar.d §y.o(> shoes than ho can get elsewhere. VV.L. Douglas sella more S3.CO arid 93.GG shoes than any other two manulacturcit;. W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Lire cannot be cqualleu at any price. Wm Lm Douglas $3.00 and $3.50 shoes are a find* of tho samo high grade leathers used In $8 and $Q shoes and are Just as good. Bold by the best shoe dealers everywhere. Insist upon having? W. L. Douglas ihucs With name and price stamped on bottom. How to Order by Moll.— If W. L. Douglaa Shoes are not sold In your town. Bend order direct to factory, siioes p«nt anywhere on receipt or price and r® '; |j' 125 eta. additional for carriage. My |. v/> ! AMr»uc>. i custom department will make you a pair that will equal $5 and 10 ctis- JgPW. \ torn made shoes, in style, fit and |T=f ■: •••• wear. Take measurements of *. CL foot as shown on niodol; stato E'n|. V-'.' style desired; size and width ktS/' ~,5 usually \? jrn; plain op Rv r m± V* s cap toe; heavy, med £> A# v:$V lum or light soles. r "'"r FTAITttB nifl >C ~ CsUlog freo. W. L. Douiclan, llrockton, ille^ ni Sfl K_ lief and POSITIVJB- I 18 I.TWREHPII.FX iißc'bull<Uu£.'Naw York, Sim « rees ■"t&jswt FRUIT HOOK free. We [);« CASB I WANT MOKE SAI.KBMIN lAI Weel.lv STARK UHOj, Louisiana. Mo.: IJansviKv i'. V.", htc Finesi TEA Orown 45 , c j s . Special Price to Agents. "Write IIOM K TKA COMPANY. £3 Pearl St.. IVcw York City* S3 OTT R Van Huron's Khao- Wft P w h "iw H IvtVa m&tic Conapouud Is &-j9 fi Qi iheouly posltire cure. Faste*- ETk X m9v parlsacs speaks for itself. Depoi 2 *** Califorala AYS.. Ciictiafr, Cain time. Sold by dnigglsts. |»8 A. N. K.-O 1885 VillFN WIIITiXG TO AI)VEKTISER« please «tate that you taw the Advertiwe merit la tiii« paper. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers