Dip it ever occur to you swan's np-side is never down? that Sanitary Walls and Ueliings, regarding sanitary walls’ A. Rend Leviticus, 14th Chapter, 334! verses, Q. What do modern sanitarians say, A. That wall paper and glu: kalsomines are directly responsible for much of the sic ness, ignorantly attributed to otha: causes, The C icago Jnlei-Ucran, in an article on papering walls, under the caption of “Nasty Practice” hes this to say. “Our Health Officer, Dr. DaWolle, says the free passage of air through walls of living rooms is an important element in proper ventilation, The practice of repapering rooms by layer upon layer of wall paper, made adhesive by glue or paste, which adds« a decomposing material to the uasty prac- tice, can receive nothing but condemnation from the sanitavian, he perfect wall for domestic habitation 1s 0° materia! which re. sists decomposition in every form, and which permits the free passage of air, It see ns ww me that Alabastine is a imirably adapted for the purpose.” The Doctor agrees with the Inter-Ocean that a special law suoa d bs pasel to pre vent the practic» of past.ng repeated layer: of paper oa the walls, Write the Alapastine Co,, Grand Rapids Mich ., for sup em sut fron tue repo t o. the Michigan St te Boar Lol tHealta, eatitie | SNanitary Walls ant Celli gs, Remember this name, Alsvastine, from aiabe ter roca. mal: “Excuse the liberty I take,” as the conviet remarked when he escaped from the state prison. of Geneva, N. Y., Is given the highest endorsement for ncaesty and integrity by all who know him. For years he bas worked for Mr D P. Wilson, the harness maker and member of the Gen eva Board of Health. Read the following statement of his terrible sufferings from D i And his cure by Heod's Sarsaparilla “1 was taken sick last October with gastric fever, snd my recovery was considered almost hopeless After 7 weeks the fevgr slowly left me, but [vould #0t eat the simplest food without Terrible Distress It seemed that | had recovered from the fever to die of starvation. 1! took pepsin compounds, bis muth, charcoal, cod liver ofl and malt until physician confessed that be did not know what else to try. Everything I took seemed Like Pouring Melted Lead I happened to think I had part of a bottle of Hood's Sarsapariils that had been in the house for two or three years, that | found had bene ited me previously for dyspepsia. | began taking It and soon began to feel better. | have pow taken & little over two bottles and can truthfully my 1 feel well again and can eat anything without distressing me, Pie and Cheese which I have becu nuavie to touch for years. Tha Fuglsh language does no! contain words enough permit me to express the praise | would like to give to Hood's Sarsaparilia.” W D. Wexre ig Castile Street, Geneva N.Y A Cood Voucher “I have known Mr Warren UU Wentz for many years and can vouch for bim as a man of veracity snd one well known abont I have sold bite my mto my stomach, even to here several bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla during the past few months” M. H Druggist, Geneva, N. ¥ Hood's Pills cu Liver llis WAME Y Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. 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TALMAGE. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun. day Sermon. Funject: © The Glorious Palin, | Text: “They took branches of palm trees end went forth to meet Him."—John xii, 14, i | - How was that possible’ How could palm | branches be cast in the wav of Christ as He approached Jerusalem? here are scarcely any palm trees in Central Palestine, Even the one that was carefully guarded for many years at Jericho bas gone, | went over the very road by which Christ approsched Jer- usalem, and there are plenty of olive trees | and fig trees, but no palm trees that I could see, You must remember that the climate has changed. The palm tree likes water, but by the cutting down of the forests, which are leafy pravers for rain, the land has be- coms unfriendly to the palm tree. Jericho | once stood in seveu miles of im grove. | Olivet was crowned with palms, The Dead Bea has on its banks the trunks of Im | trees that floated down from some oldtime in grove and are preserved froin decay | bythe salt which they received from the | Dead Sea. Let woodmen spare the tress of America, if they would not rauinously change tae cli- | mate and bring to the soil ewores ob instead of fertility. Thanks to God and the legisla - tures for Arbor Day, which plants trees, try- ing to atone for the ruthlessness which has destroyed them. Yes, my text is in har. mony with the condition of that country on the morning of Palm Sunday. About three million people have come to Jerusalem to attend the religious festivities. Greatnews'’ Jesus will enter Jerusiem to-day. The sky is red with the morning, and the people are flocking out to the foot of Oliver, and up and on over the southern shoulder of the mountain, and the procession coming out from the city meets the procession escorting Christ, as He comes toward the city. Theres is a turn in the road where Jerusalem sud- denly bursts upon the vision, We had ridden that day all the way from Jericho, and had visited the ruins of the houss of Mery and Martha and Lazarus, and were somewnat weary of sight seeing, “when there suddenly arose before our vision Jerusalem, the religious capital of ali Christian ages. That was the point of observation where my text comes in. Alexander rode Bucephalus, Duke Elie rode his famous Merchegny, Sir Heary Lawrence rode the high mettlet Con- rad, Wellington rode his proud Copenhagen, but thé conqueror of carth and heaven rides & cult, one toat had been tied at the roadside. It was unbroken, and [ have no douot frac. tious at the vociferation of the populace. An extemporized saddle made ont of the gar- ments of the people was put on the beast. While some people griped the bridle of the colt, others revereptiy waited upon Christ at the mountain. The two processions of people now become one~—those who came out of the ¢ity and those who came over the hill, The orientals are more demonstrative than we of the western world, their voices louder, their gesticulations more violent and the sy mbols Ly which they express their emotious more significant. he people who left Phocea, in the far east that they would never return, took a red hot ball of iron and threw it into the sea, and said they would never return to Phocea until that ball rose and floated on the surface. Be not surprised, therefore, at the demonstra- Hon io toe text, As the colt with i's rider desconds ths slope of Olivet, the palm trees lining the road are called upon to render their contri. bution to the scene of welcome and rejoice. ing. Thebranches of these trees ars higa up, and some must peeds climb the trees and tear off the leaves and throw them down, and others make of these leaves an emerald pave- went for the colt to trod on Long belore that morning the palm tree bad been typical of triumph. Herodotus and Strabo had thus described it. Layard finds the palm leaf cut in the walls of Ninsveb, with the same significance. In the Ureek athilgtic games the victors carried valme. | am very glad that our Lord, who five aays after had thorns upon His brow, for a little while at least had paims strewn under His feet. Oh, the glorious palm! Amarssings, the Hindoo scholar, calle it “the king among the grasses.” Linnaeus calls it “the prince of vegetation.” Among all the trees that ever cast a | shadow or yielded fruit or lifted their arms toward heaven, it has no equal for mult. tudinous uses, Do you want nowers® One palm tree will put forth a hanging garden of them, one c.uster counted by a scientist containing 207.000 blooms. Do you want food? Itis the coef diet of tae whole nations One palm in Cutle will yield ninety gallons of honey. In Polyoesia it is the chisel food of the inbabitants. In India there are mul titu jes of people depeandent upoa it for sus | tenance. i Do you want cable to hold ships or cords | to hold wild beasts® [tis wound into ropes furniture’ It is twisted into mats and woven into baskets and shaped into drinking cups and swung into hammocks. Do you want medicine! Its nut is the chief preventive of disease and the chief cure for vast popula- tions. Do you want houses’ Its wood turn. shes the wall for the bomes, and its leaves thatch them. Do you need a supply for the | pantry’ It yislds sugar and starcu ani oil and sago and milk and salt and wax anid ; Vinegar and candies. Ob, the palm! It nas a variety of endow. rooted the earth or Kissed the heavens the willow, God says, *‘dtand by the water | courses and weep.” To the cedar He says, “Gather the hurricanes into your bosom.” To the fig tree He says, “Bear fruit and put it within reach of all the people.” the im tree He says, "Be garden and storehouse and wardrobe and ropewalk and chandlery and bread and banquet and man ufactory, and then be type of what I meant | whea I inspired David, My servant, to say, { “The right:ous sball flourish like a palm tree.” Ob, Lord God, give us more palm trees men and women made for nothing but to be useful; dispositions all abloom; branches of influence laden with fruit; ple good for everything, as the palm tree. If kind words are wanted they are realy to utter them. If he.plul deeds are needed they ars ready to perform them, If plans of usefulness are | to be laid out they ars ready to project | them. If Suttons ary. to he _lortvaraud {| they are ready to 1 them. Feople | say “Yes! Yes” when they are asked for shuintancs by word or deed, instsad of “No! - of’ | Most of the mysteries that bother others do not bother me, because 1 adjourn them; but the mystery that really bothers me is why God made so many le who anount to nothing so far as the world’s betterment is concerned. They stand in the way, They object, They discuss hindrances. They su gest possibilities of fallure. Ovsr the road of lite, instead of pulling in the races, they are lying back in the breschingy. They are the everlasti No. They are bramble trees, they are willows, always mourning; or wild cherry trees, yielding only the bit. ter; or crab ® trees, producing only the sour, while God would have us all flou like the palm tree. Pianted in the Bivle that tree always means usefulness, But how little avy of us or all of us ao. ouiplish in that direction, Woe take twenty thirty years to fully ready for Chris tia yz Be after park of lita we Hah wort. ani jo th or the gradual ten or twenty years a closing of active work, and that leaves only #0 little time betwean opening sai ng work that all we accomplish is so li an angel of Uod needs to exert himself to see it all : Nearly everything I ses around, beneath and Ee in the natural world Aigets aseflul service. If there a nothidg: | the res to usefuiness, go out arountl Tou this sprit 4 for who cares for for thy shining® “No” saith the star, “I will not sleep. I guide the sailor on the sea. I ches: the traveler among the mountains, I help tip the dew with §ight. Through the window of the poor man's cabin I cast a beam of hops, and the child on her mother's lap asis in gles whither I come and want | do and whenca 1 go. To rons and glitter, God set me here. Away! 1 have no tims to slesp.” The snowflake comes straggling down. “Frail, fickle wanderer, why comes! thou 1 here” ‘Il am no idle wanderer,” responds the snowflake. “High up in the air [ was born, the child of the raiu and the cold, an i at the divine behast I come, anil am no straggler, for God tells me where to put my crystal heel. To help cover the roots, tus grain and grass, to cleanse the air, to maka sportsmen more happy and the ingle firs more bright, I come. Though so lizht I am that you toss me trom your muffi:r and crush me under your foot, I am doing my best to fulfill what I was made for, Clothed in white | come on a heavenly mission, and, when my work is done and God shall call in morning vapor I shall go back, drawn by the flery courses of the sun.” “What doest thou, insignificant grass blade under ny feet™ “I am doing a work,” says the grass blade, “‘as best | can. 1 help to make up the soft beauty of fleld ant lawn. [| am satisfie 1, if, with mi'lions of others no bigger than I. we can give pasture to flocks and herds. I am wondorfully made, He tho feeds the ravens gives me substancs from the soil and braath from the air, ant He who clothes th: lilies of tae fleld rawards me with this coat of green.” “For what, lonely cloud, goest thou across the heavens’' Through the bright air a voice drops from afar, saying: “‘Upand down this sapphire floor I pace to teach men that like me they are passing away. | gather up the waters from lake and sea, and toen, when the thunders tall, I refresh ths earth, making the dry ground to laugh with bar- vests of wheat and flelds of corn, catch the frown of the storm and ths huss of tae rainbow. Atevening tide on the western slopes 1 will pitch my tent, ani over me shall dash tie saffron, and the purole, and the fire of the sunset. A pillar ol cloud like me led the chosen across the desert, and sur- rounded by such as I the Judge of Heaven He cometh with clouds © Oh, my friends, if anvthing in the inan imate world bs useful, let us wnmortal men and women be us like the palm tne. Bat I must not be tempted by what David says of that green shaft of Palestine, that living and glorious { by what the Od Testament says of it, | lesson my empbasis of what Johu, the evan gelist, says of it in my text Notice that it was a beautiful and lawful | up Christ's trinmph on the road to Jeraslem i that Palm Sunday, | leaves that were strewn under the feet of the {| colt and in the way of Carist were torn off { from the trees What a pity, some one | mignt say, that those stately and grace ul | troes should be despoiled. ‘The sap oozed out at the places where the branches broke, { The glory of the palm tree was appropriately | sacrificed for the Baviour's triumphal pro- CERSIOn. be in this world--no worthy triumph of any | sort without the teariog dowa of something else’ Brooklyn Bridges, the glory of our conti. | nent, must have two architects prostrated, the one slain by his tolls and the other for a i lifetime invalided, The greatest pictures of the world bad, in their rehest coloring, the | blood of the sriists who made them. | mightiest oratories that ever rolled through | the churches bad in their pathos, the sighs and groans of th» composers who wore their lives out in writing the harmony. American | inde pendence was triumphant, but it moved i on over the lifeless forms of tens of thou. | sands of mon who feil at Busker Hill ana | Yorktown and the batties between which | were the hemorrhages of the nation, The kingdom of God advances in all the earth, bat it must be over the lives of mis. | ar Christian workers who preach and pray { and toil and die in the service. The Saviour | trimmphs ja all directions—but beauty aod | strength must be torn down from the paim { trees of Christian heroism and consecration | and thrown ia His pathway, {| To what better ase coud those palm trees { on the southern shoulder of Mount Olivet {snd clear down into the Valley of Geth- | semane put their branches Lhan to surrender { them lor the making o! Cuarist's journey | toward Jerusalem the more pieturewjue, the | more memoratue and the more tiuuphant® And to woat better use could we put our lives tham into the sacrifice for Chret and ' His cause and the hanpines of ‘our fellow cremtures’ Shall we not be | willing to bs torn down that right { eousness shall have triumphant way! Uhr st | was torn down for us. Can we not afford | to be torn down for Him? If Christ could | suffer so much for us, can we not suffer a i tittle for Christ? If He can afford on Palm | Sunday to travel to Jerumlem 1 curry a erose, can wo not afford a few leaves liom | our branches to makes emerald His way? ‘Ths process is gong on every moment ia {all directions. What makes that father { bave such hard work to find the hymn to- { day? | the book cioss up, and then holis it far off and is not quite sure whether the number of { the hymn is 150 or 13), and the fingers with which he turns the leaves are very clumsy. | straight as an arrow, and his eyss were kesa { bride on the marriage day was of goodly | shape an Tas God made it. I will tell you what i= the matter, Forty years ago he resolved his family should have | noneed and his children should be well edu- | cated and suffer none of thy disadvantages {of lack of schooling from which he had hunger should never put it« paw on his door. | sill, and for forty or fifty years he has been | tearing off from the palm tree of his physi- | cal stren sth and waaly form branches to | throw in the pathway of his housshold, It | has cost him muscle and brain and health ! and eyesight, and there have been twisted | off more years trom his lite than any man | inthe crowd on the famous Palm Suniay | twisted off branches from the palm tress on | the road from Bethpage to Jerasalem. | What make that mother look so mae’ | older than she really is* You say she ougut | pot yet to have one gray line in her hair. The truth iz the family was not always as well off as now, Ths mariiol pair had a hard struggle at the start. Examine the | tips of the lorefingar and thu ab of her right nand, and they will tell you the story of the needle that was pliel day in and day out. Yea, look at both her hanas, and they will tell the story of the tims when she did her own work, her own mending and scrubbing and washing. Yea, look into the face and read the story of scaries fevers and Sroups and midnight watehipgs, then none bat ( and borself in thal Bougs wers awake, and then the burials and the loneliness afterward, which was exhausting than the preceding watch had bean, an i no one now to put to bed, fair she once was, and as fair as the dee, tn all the Rushes Ningth an aty were and rown into the pathway of Alas! that sone and daugh themselves #0 straignt and sual po sdurated, shoul | ever forget that they are walking to- day over the fallen strength of an indus trious and honored parentage, A little ashamed, are you, at their uhivaumatioal utterances? It was through r sacrifices that you learned acourscy of spesch, Do yom jose Patisncy with them because are a i queru’ous and complaining. I guess you have forgotten how g and complaining you were when you were getting over that w ng congh or that ttent fever. A little annoyed, sre torn off house- drink a dgas woke her truinpet call of the resurrection, ok Oh, my roung lady, what is that under the sole of your fine shoes® It is a palm leaf which was toru off the tre of maternal fidelity, Young merchant, young lawyer, young journalist, young mechanic, with good salary and fine clothes and refined sur- roundings, have you forgotten what a time your father had that winter, after the sum. mer's crops had failed through droughts or floods or locust, and how he wore his old coat too long and made his old hat do, that he might keep you at school or college? What is that, my young man, under your fiae boot to-day, the boot that so well fits your foot, such a boot as your father could never afford to wear? It must be a leaf from the palm tres of your father's sslf sacrifices, Do not be ashamed of him when he comes to town, and try to smugzle him in and smuggle him out, but call in your best friends and take him to the houss of God and introduce him to your patter. and say: “This is my father.” If he ind kept for himself the advantuges which be gave you he would be as well educated and as well gotten up as you English Parilament a member was making a great speech that was unanswerable a Lord derisively cried out, “I remsmber you when you blackened my father's boots “Yeu” revlied the man, *‘and I did not do it well” Never be ashamed of your early surroundings. Yes, yes, all the green leaves wo walk over were torn off some palm tree. I have cultivated the habit of forgetting the unpleasant things of life, and I chiefly remember the smooth things, and as far as I remember now my lite has for the most part moved over a road soft with green leaves, They were torn off two palm trees that stood at the start of the road. The prayers, the Christian example, the good advice, the hard work of my father and mother, How they toiled! Their fingsrs were knotted with hard work, Their tore- heads were wrinkled with many cares, Their backs stooped from carrying our burdens, They long ago went into slumber amon their kindred aod friends on the banks " the Raritan, but the infiuences they threw in the way of their children are yet green as leaves the moment they are plucked from a and under our feet. und they will strew all Self sacrifice! What a thrilling word. I that our world has 80 many specimens of it. The sallor boy on ship. board was derided because he would not fight or gamble, and they called him a cow. But when a chid fell overboard and no one else was ready to belp, the derided salior leaped into the sea, and, though the Waves were rough, the salor, swimming arm till rescued and rescaer were lifted into buzzaed at the scene of daring and self When recently Captain Burton, the great died, ne lefl a scientific book in He often tid her so. He said, "This will make vou independent nnd affluent after 1 am gone” He suddenly the book. One publisher told ber make outof it F100.000, Sut it was a book which, though written With the two large volumes which hat book, and although my busband wrote it with the right motive and scientific apie might be helped by it, to the vast majority it would damage ths worid." Then she took apart the manuscript sheet after shoot and put it mo the fire, until the last line was consumed, Bravo! She flung ber livelihood, her home, her chief worldly resources under the best moral and religions interests of the world. How muck are ws willing to sacrifice for from Bethoage to Jerusalem, but for the He will surely take it, but who will furomsh the palm branches Self sacrifice is the word. There is more money paid to de- stroy the world than to save it There are more buildings put up to ruin the race than There is more de- praved literature to blast men than good iiterature to slevale thom Ob, tor a power to descend upon us all like that which wheimed Charles G. Finney with “I'he Holy Ghost descended on me in a manner that seemed to go through me, body and soul, 1 could feel the impression like a wave of dectricity going throagh and through me. Indeed it sessed Lo come in waves and waves of liquid love. It seemed like th breath ol God, I can recollect distinctly that it sesnied to fan me like immense wings, I wept aloud with joy and love. Thess waves came over me and over me one alter anotaer, ani until 1 I eried out, I shall die if these waves contious to pass over me. [| said, I cannot bear any more'” And when a gentleman came into the office and fy hearers, the times will ¢ ane when uson God will descend such of blessing, and then the a fow days ora Christ! for the Thou Christ who aidst ride on the unbroken colt down the sides of Olivet, on the white horse of ter of a few years, peruaps few hours. Ride on, OU sacrations, throw palm branches in the 1 clap my hands at toe coming vie [feo] this morning as did the Israelites wells of water and hree soore and ten paim trees.” Surely there are more than seventy such great and Indeed, it is something of the raptures which I shall feel when our ast battle fought, and our last burden carried, and our last tear wepl, we shall become one of the multitudes Bt. John describes ‘clothed in white robes and palms in their hands” Hail thou wright, thou swift advancing, thou everlasting Paim Sunday of the skies! Vietors over sin and sorrow and death and | wos, from the hills and valleys of the heav- | enly Palestine they have piuckel the long, 1, green lenves and all the ransomed some in gates of pearl, and some on battle- ments of amethyst, and some on streets of gold, and some on seas of sapphire, they shall stand in numbers like stars, in splendor like the morn, waving their palms! The Barro is Not a Beauty. The burro is not a pretty beast, but in the wild western plains he is sometimes very useful. The burros instinctively know where water 1s to be found, and if miners have been out a day or two with. out water, they are very liable to be de- serted by their jacks, the animals break. ing away and rushiog off in the direc. tion of the nearest pool. More than ous rty of or, travelers Pe Ay of thirst by the instinct—or intelligence, or what. ever else you please to call it—of the burros, for these wnimals, even if hal. tered, will smell L the water he cannot go to it, give brays y a its ty. 1f one of them is released when they exhibit these signs of en. thusiasm, und his steps are followed, he will be sure to lead the travelers to the pearest water, —New Orleans Pleayune. The Bkill and Knowledge Essential to the production of the most per- fect and popular laxative remedy known have tnablel the California Flg Syrup Co. to schieve a great success In the reputation of its remedy, Byrup of Figs, ax it Is cone oded wo be the universal laxative, druggists, For sale by ald There are 208 students {rym North America it the Berlin (Germany) University. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for uy case of catarrh that cannot be cured by aking Hall's Catarrh Cura, F.J.Cuexgy & Co. Props. Toledo, 0. 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NS. 5. 5, has no equal for Children nature in developing the child's health. ————————————————— ——— WRF WW vw rw ee TeERIeTIeOPReeY “MOTHERS! FRIEND” To Young Mothers svete =~ IL {OA TRE ONS al Cm LO Makes Child Rirth Eas Shortens Labor, Lessens Pain, Endorsed by the Leading Physicians, Book te “ Mothers’ mailed FREE. BRADFIELD RECULATOR CO. ATLANTA, GA. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. sesscocsscodosscsecesrcssscess Pls Remedy for Ostarrh is the Flest, Masdest 0 Use, and (Cheapest. CATARRH odd Ly druggisis of sent by mail Se. ET. Hassitioe Warren, Fa. $90.00 y. $000000000000000000000090000000000¢ seece YIN, enerpetic man on THAR wabied to take th sale ngeney for sn article that is meeded in every home and indispeneas ble in every SELLS AT SIGHT, town of country. ¥700 Wodayes and a steady | afterward A Bonsnea® for the right person. (Good WEEK :: are scarce and soon taken, Wroe of once F. W. JONES, Manager, Springfield, Ohi. 5 we me Aad i] i) $ A Ax » a ws, The H Br i The promptly, and assists Bin Hurry Teoursox, the most noted physicianof Eng and tha that ths sure mone baif of sll diseases cone {rom errors in det Send Lor Free Sample of Gurfeld Tea 10 23190 West \ BE ath treet, New York City results V9 6 of bad satingic ures Sick Hondache; restarestomplesion cuaresConstti nr tion, Over. BX U6 A Sample Cake of Soap and 12x Page Book en Dermatolog: and Beauty; lllustrated on Hin, deaip, Nervous and Hiood diseases sent isfigurements, ike irth Marks, Moles, Warts, Indias Ink and Fon der Barks, Sours, Pit tings Redtons of Nose Su fucus Hair, Plmples oka H. Weedbary, i Dermatologist, 733 W, 424 Se, Sew York Ots Consultation free at offon or by letter, hod 3 I BE DECENED " 00.37 3¢ nasneds, snd Paioos which stain the hand, fujnre the fron, and burn off The Rising Sun Stove Poilsh is Brilliant, Odor. tees, Durable, and the consumer pars for no tin of glass packare with every porchase, Te HE SAM I. 14 0 a1 Ho Prexers. is apart in a short time them and I» practically everlasting, MONIALS Malls D FREE DUFUR & OO, Paltimore, Mad, W. L. Do rounds w thout conosalin ALOGUE WITH PRICES AND TESTI E & DOUSON, Norioik, Va For GENTLEMEN, $5.00 wiser. $4.00 Van 83.50 "rine $2.50 Ciae 89,95 Joa, $2.00 “x... IT IS A DUTY times, to get the most wear if you purchase W. L. CAUTIO = on the ul and subject to ng uble WoL. DOUGLAS, shoes oosdug from For LADIES. $3.00 "sr. $2.50 "“begen $2.00 “soe. ®*1.75 xin. For BOYS' & YOUTH'S. *2 & °L.75 SCHOOL SHOES. hard foot. without question, represent icols om You can economize in your of each shoe, shoes. Douglas aw, for under
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers