Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, January 28, 1909, Page 7, Image 7

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HOLDING NEW SOIL.
The Time to Begin the Work of Im
proving is at Very First.
The time to begin to save and fer
tilize the soil is when it is new and
rich in plant foods. Land which has
always been in forest or wild grass
and has never been broken by the
plow has high possibilities when
brought under cultivation. The soil
of such lands is full of the roots of the
plants which grew in it and the sur
face is more or less covered with dead
vegetable matter. After the soil lias
been plowed and these plant remains
decay much humus is formed and good
crops can tie grown.
New fores land just cleared and
plowed does not as a rule produce a
large crop th ■ first season. Hut when
the immensi quantity of tree roots in
the soil n to decay and give up
their fertilii. the soil becomes very
fertile and >vill produce large crops.
The roots oi trees are very large and
penetrate tie earth to great depths.
When they lecay they not only leave
available plant foods in the soil but
leave deep openings in the subsoil up
which deep soil water may rise and
down which the roots of cultivated
plants can easily go in search of sus
tenance. It requires several years for
all of the tree stumps to fully decay,
but as they decay they gradually give
up fertilizing elements. By the time
roots and stumps have all rotted on
new land the soil should be in its high
est state of fertility and none of this
fertility should be allowed to wash
away or otherwise goto waste. Some
people farm new land carelessly,
thinking that because it is now rich
that it always will be so. They burn
the trash on the surface and allow the
top soil to wash away without any
thought of the future.
Much new ground is planted to corn
for the first three or four seasons.
These corn crops are cut for fodder
and the entire crop removed from the
field, leaving the soil bare. If the land
at all hilly, the top rich soil of
these new fields washes away during
the winter and early spring. This an
nual of soil fertility is very large,
and difficult to replace. There is sel
dom any attempt to either save the
fertility or to increase it.
The richness of new ground, in the
opinion of the Journal of Agriculture,
should not only be conserved but in
creased as cultivation goes on.
Manure and commercial fertilizers will
do as much, if not more, good on new
ground as they will on old ground.
Commercial fertilizers should be used
only when there is humus in the soil,
and in new ground, if anywhere, their
use is to be commended. All refuse
vegetation should be saved and used
on new ground so that the supply of
vegetable mould would be increased
rather than diminished. Instead of
hauling away, or burning the stalks of
a corn crop they should be carefully
plowed into the soil where they will
decay, hold the wash, and feed the
soil. In like manner, all remains of
rotten stumps and roots of trees
should be covered with soil to decay
beneath its surface.
Th»-e is no rational need of allow
ing new land to diminish in fertility,
but very much need for it to increase
In fertiliity.
A SNOW ROLLER.
After Heavy Fall of Snow It Packs the
Road Bed.
Snow rollers are used for rolling
the highways after a snowstorm to
pack the snow down, which when
frozen makes a road ten feet wide.
The diagram shows how made. They
are made with two drums 4% feet
long and five feet diameter, with two-
Inch steel shaft running through, on
Plan of Snow Roller.
which they turn independently, thus
permitting them to turn a corner eas
ily. They are made of two-inch oak,
the heads being double, and hooped
with two by one-half-inch tire iron.
The drums are hung in a strong frame
and the pole goes through between,
and they ate about a foot apart. A
seat frame is placed on tile main
frame over the drums, with a place
for tools, etc. Four horses are » re
quired on the level river roads and six
on the hill roads.
Better Education.
"lr. our judgment the most import
ant single thing to be done for the
general betterment of country life It is
to provide better education. First, carry
good teaching to the homes through
the farmers' institute, bulletin, and
local papers until our people fully re
alize that all the advantage does not
lie with those in town. Second, adapt
our country schools more closely to
the needs of the country community.'
TANNING HIDES AND SKINS.
How the Work Is Done and Good Tan
ning Formulas.
The effect of tanning is to make
'he soluble gluten compounds of
which the skin is composed Into in
soluble leather. If the skin !s hard
and dry it must he soaked in warm
water and worked until soft. The
hair or wool can be cleaned of
grease and dirt by adding a table
spoonful of soda to three gallons soap
suds and washing repeatedly.
Place the hide upon a round,
smooth log and scrape of all fat
with a dull knife. Then take the
brains of the animal and work them
thoroughly into the hide, which will
render it pliable. Now cover the
skin with powdered alum and a lit
tle saltpeter and fold up with th»
hair out. Leave it for three or four
days, then hang up to dry, and as
the skin dries work it until dry and
soft.
Another formula recommended by
Farm and Home is as follows: Dis
solve two ounces alum and two ounces
salt In one pint boiling water, and
when cold put the skin in and leave it
for 21 hours, then hang up to dry.
This quantity must be varied to suit
the size of the skin to be tanned.
When nearly dry stretch the skin
out and nail it hair side down. Then
rub in a mixture of equal parts alum
and saltpeter until the skin will not
take any more, and keep on rubbing
it periodically for three hours. Take
out the nails, fold it up with skin
side together and hang it up for two
or three days, rubbing fresh salt and
alum in every day. Then rub the
skin down with pumice stone and
comb out the fur. This process is
especially suitable for large skins,
such as sheep skins.
To lake the hair off bury the skin
in wet wood ashes or soft soap for
two or three days until the hairs
start, or it may be soaked in lime
water. Then clean off the hair, wash
well and proceed to tan as before.
Following is a tanning liquor for
large skins: Mix four ounces pulver
ized alum, eight ounces salt, one quart
new milk and one pint prepared
starch with four gallons soft water.
Putin the skins and air them often
by hanging over a stick laid across the
tub, so they will drain back into it.
After a few days of this treatment
remove the skins and add one-half
teacupful sulphuric acid to the liquor,
adding very carefully a spoonful at a
time and stirring well.
Replace the skins and stir often
for an hour, after which take them
out, wring and rinse in lukewarm
soft water. Hang the skins up in a
cool place to dry, and when they be
gin to turn white work and stretch
them until they become dry. Very
large and thick hides should be kept
in the liquor three or four days.
After skins and hides are dried out
the flesh side should be dressed down
with pumice stone. This dressing
will soften the hide, when it may lie
trimmed as desired.
A VERY CHEAP GATE.
It Is Made of Sassafras Poles and
Barbed Wire.
A light, useful and curable gate can
be made of sassafras poles and barbed
Ik jt- s 4
|LVTfLS\/fl
1 W —"igfpr — 112 J?
\ It i if % ii
4.P J/*
Pole and Wire Gate.
wire as shown in the cut. Set a
strong post four feet in the ground in
the middle of the gateway and balance
the gate on it. The lower rail, ex
plains Farm and Home, is made of
two forked sassafras poles securely
nailed together so as to work around
the post.
FARM FACTS.
Hotter baked beans paid for than
roast beef on trust.
Where your fight is your heart ought
to be. If it '.s not—give up the fight!
Some of our readers report the
worst consequences of a drought—
"round frozen before sufficient, rain
Tell to fill wells or springs.
You wouldn't from choice buy water
for fuel. That is what you do when
you buy coal in a wet time. In some
cases there are 200 pounds of water in
a ton of wet coal. You make that
much in buying dry coal.
It is easier to keep breeding sheep
in condition than it is to put them
into condition after they have onci
run down.
Feeding the fodder out in the pasture
is a good practice in dry and pleas
ant weather. It spreads the manure
where you want it and saves hauling.
Kerosene and Eggs.
It must be remembered that in the
use of kerosene in the poultry house
none of the liquid must ever touch
eggs intended for hatching. It is
death to the embryo within. Even a
drop or two will ruin an egg for hatch
ing. When coal oil is used in the
henhouse for exterminating lice, first
gather all the eggs. If a setting hen
and her nest become infested, remove
the eggs to a clean nest, paint and
burn the inside of the nest box with
kerosene and refill with clean nesting
material. To remove lice from a set
ting hen insect powders or dust must
be used, but never any oil or grease,
as it will get on tT/a eggs and cause
them not to hatch.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1909
COULD NOT SHAKE IT CFF.
Kidney Trouble Contracted by Thou.
sands in the Civil War.
Jamea W. Clay, G6C W. Fayette St.,
Baltimore, Md., says:"l was trou
tbled with kidney
complaint from the
time of the Civil war.
There was constant
pain in the back and
head and the kid
ney secretions were
painful and showed
a sediment. The first
remedy to help me
was Doan's Kidney Pills. Three boxes
made a complete cure and during five
years past 1 have had no return of the
trouble."
Sold by all dealers. 60c a box. Foa
ter-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.
CAUGHT.
"I'll give you a penny if you can
apell fish."
"C-od."
"That ain't fish."
"What Is it, then?"
THE GIRL AND THE LOBSTER.
Possibly Harmless Remark, Though
Decidedly Malapropos.
Dorando Pietrl, at one of the many
Italian banquets given in his honor In
New York, talked about professional
athletics.
"Amateurism Is no doubt more ro
mantic than professionalism," he said,
"but we live in an unromantlc age."
He smiled.
"Only the other night, at one of
your gayest Italian restaurants," he
said, "I overheard a dialogue that il
lustrated forcibly the age's lack of ro
mance.
"It was late. At the table next to
mine a rich young Italian contractor
was supping with a beautiful young
girl. As the young girl played with
the stem of her wineglass I heard her
murmur:
" 'lt Is true. Isn't It, that you love
me and me only?'
" 'Yes,' said the young man, 'though
this lobster is certainly mighty good.'"
How to Know the Trees.
There is an auctioneer whose "gift
of gab" and native wit draw many
purchasers to his sales, but some
times he is the subject rather than
the cause of amusement.
The man's name is O. A. Kelley. Not
long ago he had to sell, among other
things, a iot of pine logs, and the day
before the sale he over them
and marked the end of each log with
his initials.
On the day of the auction an Irish
man came along and immediately no
ticed the logs with the letters on them.
"O. A. K.," he read, loud enough
for all round to hear. "Begorra, if 'tis
not just like Kelley to deceive us into
belaving thim pine logs are oak!"—-
Springfield Republican.
Mice on the Pillow.
"I'm not so much afraid of mice as
lome women," said she, "but I don't
like them in my hair. The other
night I finished a biscuit I was eating
after I went to bed and naturally left
some crumbs about, not meaning to,
never thinking of mice.
"Well, about the middle of the night
I heard scampering, and there were
the mice all over my hair, trying to
get at those crumbs.
"I tell you, I gave one shriek, sprang
up, Righted all the gas in the room
and sat up the rest of the night watch
ing that pillow."
HER MOTHER-IN-LAW
Proved a Wise, Good Friend.
A young woman out In la. found a
wise, good friend in her mother-in-law,
Jokes notwithstanding. She writes:
"It is two years since we began us
ing Postum in our house. I was great
ly troubled with my stomach, complex
lon was blotchy and yellow. After
meals I often suffered sharp pains and
would have to lie down. My mother
often told me it was the coffee I drank
at meals. But when I'd quit coffee I'd
have a severe headache.
"While visiting my mother-in-law I
remarked that she always made such
good coffee, and asked her to tell me
how. She laughed and told me It was
easy to make good 'coffee' when you
use Postum.
"I began to use Postum as soon as I
got home, and now we have the same
good 'coffee' (Postum) every day, and
I have no more trouble. Indigestion Is
a thing of the past, and my complex
ion has cleared up beautifully.
"My grandmother suffered a great
deal with her stomach. Her doctor
told her to leave off coffee. She then
took tea but that was just as bad.
"She finally was induced to try
Postum which she has used for over a
year. She traveled during the winter
over the greater part of lowa, visiting,
eomething she had not been able to do
for years. She says she owes her
present good health to Postum."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to Well
ville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason."
Ever rend tlie above letterT A new
OOP nppenrN from lime «<> time. Then
are genuine, true, uud full of human
interest.
WESTERN CANADA'S 1908 CROP
WILL GIVE TO THE FARMERS OF
WEST A SPLENDID RETURN.
The following Interesting bit of In
formation appeared in a Montreal
paper:
"Last December, In reviewing the
year 1907, we had to record a wheat
harvest considerably smaller In vol
ume than In the previous year. Against
ninety millions in 1906 the wheat crop
of the West in 1907 only totaled some
■eventy-one million bushels, and much
of this of inferior quality. But the
price averaged high, and the total re
sult to the farmers was not unprofit
able. This year we have to record by
far the largest wheat crop in the coun
try's history. Estimates vary as to
the exact figure, but it is certainly not
less than one hundred million bushels,
and in all probability it reaches one
hundred and ten million bushels. The
quality, moreover, is good, and the
price obtained very high, so that in
all respects the Western harvest of
1908 has been a memorable one. The
result upon the commerce and finance
of the country is already apparent
The railways are again reporting in
creases in traffic, the general trade of
the community has become active
after twelve months' quiet, and the
banks are loosening their purse strings
to meet the demand for money. The
prospects for 1909 are excellent. The
credit of the country never stood as
high. The Immigrants of 1907 and 1908
have now been absorbed into the in
dustrial and agricultural community,
and wise regulations are in force to
prevent too great an influx next year.
Large tracts of new country will be
opened up by the Grand Trunk Pacific
both in East and West. If the seasons
are favorable the Western wheat crop
should reach one hundred and twenty
million bushels. The prospects for
next year seem very fair." An inter
esting letter is received from Cardston,
Alberta (Western Canada), written to
an agent of the Canadian Government,
any of whom will be pleased to advise
correspondents of the low rates that
may be allowed Intending settlers.
"Cardston, December 21st, 1908.
"Dear Sir: Now that my threshing
Is done, and the question 'What Will
the Harvest Be,' has become a cer
tainty, I wish to report to you the re
sults thereof, believing it will be of In
terest to you. You know lam only
a novice in the agricultural line, and
do not wish you to think I am boasting
because of my success, for some of my
neighbors have done much better than
I have, and I expect to do much bet
ter next year myself. My winter wheat
went 53 bushels per acre—and graded
No. 1. My spring wheat went 48%
bushels per acre, and graded No. 1,
My oats went 97 bushels per acre, and
are fine as any oats I ever saw. My
atock is all nice and fat, and are out
In the field picking their own three
square meals a day. The weather is
nice and warm, no snow—and very
little frost. This, in short, Is an ideal
country for farmers and stockmen.
The stock requires no shelter or win
ter feeding, and cattle fatten on this
grass and make the finest kind of beef,
better than corn fed cattle in Ills.
Southwestern Alberta will soon be
known as the farmers' paradise; and I
am only sorry I did not come here five
years ago. Should a famine ever
strike North America, I will be among
the last to starve —and you can count
on that.
"I thank you for the personal assist
ance you rendered me while coming
In here, and I assure you I shall not
aoon forget your kind ofQcei"
NO TEMPTATION.
Wag (referring to
Um, I should think it would be more
suitable if she were standing under
"elderberries" instead of mistletoe
berries.
MIX FOR RHEUMATISM
The following Is a never failing rem
edy for rheumatism, and if followed
up it will effect a complete cure of
the very worst cases: "Mix one-half
pint of good whiskey with one ounce
of Toris Compound and add one ounce
Syrup Sarsaparilla Compound. Take
In tablespoonful doses before each
meal and at bedtime." Tho ingre
dients can be procured at any drug
store and easily mixed at home.
Used Dolls to Set Fashions.
Long before women's newspapers
were started, and fashion plates in
their modern form were thought of,
women derived their knowledge of the
fashions from dolls dressed in modern
costumes, which were sent from one
country to another, more especially
from Paris, which then, as now, was
the leading center of the mode.
There Has Recently Been Placed
In all the drug stores an aromatic, pleasant
neri> cure for woman's Ills, called Mother
SEX 8 AUSa ' R AHAN LEAF. It is the only
certain regulator. Quickly relieves female
weaknesses and Backache, Kidney, Bladder
11 i!! nar '' troubles. At all Druggists or by
E.J. 60 eta. Sample FKEE. Address. The
Mother Gray Co., Le Roy, N. Y.
It's easier for a girl to look like an
angel than It is for her to act like
one.
ONLY ONE "BROMO QUININE"
That Is I. AX ATI Vls BROMO OOININB. Look fol
the slunaturo of K. W. UKOVR. Used the World
over to Cure X Cold in One Day. 36c.
It Is not what we Intend, but what
we do makes us useful.—More. *
CURES COLDS QUICKLY
A never failing home remedy for
coughs and colds is made from the fol
lowing formula to be mixed at home.
"Two ounces of glycerine, one-half
ounce of Concentrated pine compound,
one-half pint of good whiskey; mix and
shake thoroughly; use in doses of a
teaspoonful to a tablespoonful every
four hours."
Thus will cure any cough that Is cur
able, or break up an acute cold in
twenty-four hours. The Ingredients all
can be gotten at any drug store.
The Concentrated pine is a pine prod
uct refined for medical use and comes
only in half ounce bottles, each en
closed in a round case, which is air
tight, but be sure that it is labeled
"Concentrated."
Inconsistency.
"Isn't that Jones over there—the
man who writes the bitter articles
about abolishing the tipping nui
sance?"
"Yes, that's Jones."
"What's he talking about?"
"He Is raising a sarcastic howl
over the fact that a noted millionaire
Is alleged to have given a waiter a
nickel tip."
There la more Catarrh In fhl? wrtlon or the countrj
than all other diseases put together, and until the lust
few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great
many years doctors pronounced It a local disease and
prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling
to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable.
Science has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional dis
ease. and therefore requires constitutional treatment.
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney
<fc Co., Toledo. Ohio, Is the only Constitutional cure on
the market. It Is taken Internally in dopes from 10
drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one
hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Bend
for circulars and testimonials.
Address: F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Bold by Druggists. 75c.
Take Hull's Family Pills for constipation.
The average woman is fond of pets,
but her husband is not In that class.
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 HAYS.
PAZO OINTMBNT la guaranteed to cure any case
of Itching, Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Piles In
bto 14 days or uioney refunded. 60c.
A good detective makes light of hla
ability as a shadow.
Wa\yv\vxo\
Cows^a\\ow
May \)C ovc.rcoxue>
\rccpet \>crsu\a\ as
sistoftaoj oweAtuVy bmsic\a\
\axaXwe, x&m&v.Syrap cjTigs &tVvx\r
cj S&Tttvaytoiic>v awfolcs
\a\n\s soWxoX ass\s\awccto nature
ttvqv; be dwpewscA w\\\v
uVcwwo \otv.£et needed, as best ej
tem&ves ate \c ass\st
naXwre.andwA to s\yp\A<wv\ t\\txva\uTo\
sutvclvoifcS .\vVi\c,Wus\ defend uWv—
\tvo3tety wpoxi proper wour\s\wvew\,
proper esorts.attd nditWvVftfc fcntraWy.
Tu bcnestc\aV «sccti.aWv/s\>uv ttve
HfiNurOCTußfDß> T*, c
CALIFORNIA
FIG SYRUP CO.
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS
ONESIZEONLY-RCOULAR PRICE 50« PER BOTTt*!
SICK HEADACHE
A i ■."./"I Positively cured by
CARTERS
They also relieve Dls-
E tress from Dyspepsia, In
jfj | m g digestion ami Too Hearty
|j Iyf U Eating. A perfect rem-
El D| II C ei!j ' or Dizziness, Kau*
■1 "I LLw, sea, Drowsiness, Bad
■j" - Taste in tlie Mouth, Coat
& tSS," •' ll Tongue, Pain In the
TOIiPID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
PADTCD'cI Genuine Musi Bear
uAnlCnO Fac-Simile Signature
■ittle "
| PYlls!
ML REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
Much of the chronic lameness in horses is due to neglect.
See that your horse is not allowed togo lame. Keep Sloan's
Liniment on hand and apply at the first signs of stiffness.
It's wonderfully penetrating—goes right to the spot—relieves
the soreness limbers up the joints and makes the muscle#
elastic and pliant.
Sloan's Liniment
will kill a spavin, curb or splint, reduce wind puffs and swol
len joints, and is a sure and speedy remedy for fistula, sweeney,
founder and thrush. Price, 50c. and SI.OO.
Dr. Earl S. Sloan, - - Boston, Mass.
Sloan's book on horses, cattle, sheep and ponltry sent free.
| BAD COLDS 1 -
■D are the forerunners oi dangerous diseases of the throat and lungs. H M ,
Ih you have a cough, you can (top it with Piso's Cure. If you suffer from bfe4
MX! hoarseness, sore throat, bronchitis or pains in the lungs, Piso's Cure will ISU ■'
' '■ soon restore the irritated throat and lungs to normal, healthy condition. -
; l; iM An ideal remedy for children. Free from opiates and dangerous ih- Kjjfi
n gredients. For half a century the sovereign remedy in thousands of
■ homes. Eveo chronic forms of lung diseases » '
_* RESPOND TO PISO'S CUKE 112
I CUKE I
45 to 50 Bu. of Wheat Per Acre
have been grown on farm lands in
WESTERN CANADA
Much leu would ba
latisfactory. The geo
uJlVKn A eral average it ahovs
WMSr§t twenty bushels.
Im "Allare loud In their
™ praises of the great
crops and that won-
I derful country."— Ei-
I tract from correspondence NMi ton* i Editorial
| Association cf August, 190S,
It is now possible to secure a homestead of 160
acres free and another 160 acres at $3.00 per acte.
Hundreds have paid the cost of their farms (2
purchased) and then had a balance of from SIO.OO
'to $ 1 2.00 per acre from one crop. Wheat, barley,
oats, flax—all do well. Mixed farming is a great
success and dairying is highly profitable. F.mrj>
lent climate, splendid schools and churches, rail
ways bring most every district within easy reack
of market. Railway and land companies have
, lands for sale at low prices and on easy terms.
"Last Best West" pamphlets and maps sent
free. For these and information as to how
I to secure lowest railway rates, apply to
[ Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa,
1 Canada, or the authorized Canadian Govern
ment Agent:
H. M. WILLIAMS.
Law Building, Toledo, Ohio*
The Reason I Make and Sell More Men's $3.00
$3.50 Bhoes Than Any Other Manufacturer
la became I give the wearer the benefit of the moat
complete organization of trained experta and a killed
shoemakers In the country.
The aelectlon of the ieathera for each part of the
and every detail of the making In every department, is
looked after bv the beat ihoemaaeui In the ahoe industry.
If I could enow you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes
are made, you would then understand why they nold theiJF
ahape, At better, and wear longer than any other make.
My Method of Tanning the Solea makes them Norm
Flexible and Longer Wearing than any others.
Nhop« for Every Member of the Family.
Mcu, Hoym, YVomrii, HI lutes and t'hildrea*
For sal<» by shoe dealers everywhere.
PAIITinM I J* oll ® RHiume without W. L. Dongta*
UrtU I lull ■ name and price stamped on bottom.
Fast Color Eyeleta Uaed Ezelusively. Catalog mailed fire*.
W. L. DOUGLAS, 167 Spark St., Brockton, Mass.
Invest Yeur Savings
In the Leading Railroad and Industrial
Stocks of This Country*
We will bny for you on the New York Stock
change, stocks from one share and upward at market
prices. Writo for our CIRCULAR A2O. We will sang
' to those Interested, on request, our Kail road or In-»
dustrial Record solving most detailed information4r
all the leading stocks or thlscountry.
J. F. PIERSON, JR., & CO.,
Members of the New York Stock Exchange,
66 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
HAIR BALSAM
Mm Cleansca and beautiflej the hak
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
iJH Never Pall a to Beatore OIM
BwJPiA. -•JM Hair to lta Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases k hair fallkML
PilPp Beantlfol Souvenir Post Carda.
LULL {Simply send your name and address to as
■ [ILL ona P° sta l card, saying you will 6how tW>
■ ■**■■■ cards to seven of your friends, and we*3»
1 send you—freeof allcharges—l2of the most beauUfal
Souvenir Flower language Post Cards you ever saw-
We'll also tell you how you can get 60 more.Fßßßr
Simmons Co., 600 Washington, Springfield, Ohi«
S%£££££ Carpenters and Farmer?
>•> Self-Settinpr Plane c«
rules if this AdU
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