LIFE AND DEATH, As come the waves that lave the strand, As go the winds that sweep the lea, 80 come and go the faces strange, And life is felt in all wo seo The life that ohalls, The life that cheers, Is seen and felt in ev'ry form; But hearts that thrill And souls that fill With love for all find love alone. But more than form the spell that binds In love or turns the heart away; Above the earthly types the soul May mount to God's eternal day. In essenca there The good and fair Live on, live en, which come and go The joys and fears, The hopes and tears, That mingle life and death below. As tides of light the shades of night Forever chase from shore to shore; Bo streams of life are pouring in, Dispelling darkness evermore, The light and breath, Or gloom and death, Accept, reject, just as you will— Despair and death, Or lasting breath, The choice is yours—which law fulfil? ~H. N. Maguire, in Boston Transeript. CLARISSA'S LECTURE. BY AMY RANDOLPH. “The ‘Inconsistencies of Love,'” re- peated Jessie Jermyn. “What a funay name! And how strange it seems to have our Click's name printed up in big, fat, black letters at the Lyceum door, with ‘Admittance fifty cents’ under it. Well, she always said she was deter- mined to make herself a career and it seems she has succeeded. I wonder bow much she gets a night! I only have twenty dollars a month for drudging away, six hours a day, at that miserable district school in Turtle Valley. And then think of the delights of having one's name in the newspaper, and being | referred to as ‘our distinguished towns- woman !'"” Jessie stood as if transfixed before the big double doors of the Turtle Valley Lyceum, her eyes wide open as two blue moons, her rosy lips apart. Harry Jer- myn, towering at least ten inches above her head, also tcok note of the legends inscribed on the bulletin board in alter. nate red and black lines, with a full | letting her see it! “But it really isso funny! Come—I've let Click hear mine; it's only fair that you should follow suit. Give it to me, Hal; Jet me read it to Click!” coaxed Jessie. But Harry rose and went out of the room; he thought the joke, if joke it was, had been carried far enough, The next day was the day of the Ly- ceum lecture, All the Jermyn family were to drive into the village to witness the oratorical triumph of their little girl. Mrs. Jermyn had arranged for a cold supper, served an hour earlier than usuai, s0 that she and Grandma Jermyn might have time to dress. The house was to be locked up and left, for even Jeremiah, the farm-hand, and Arabella, the bound girl, were to be privileged to go. Jessio came flying to her brother's room. “Hal!” she eried—‘‘oh Hall Click has gone! In the wagon with father and mother! I thought you were going to drive her with the covered buggy and White Laghtningi?” “No,” he said, curtly. I obtrude myself upon her? to drive you!” “Why!” repeated bewildered Jessie. ‘Because you are Harry and she is Click I" ‘Is that such a very good reason?” “Harry, you used to like her!” “I like her now; but can't you see, Jessie, that Miss Courthope, the popular lecturer, is quite a different person from our little Click!" “No,” cried Jessie, **I don't?" “She is used to the cultivated circles of the city,” said Harry. ‘‘We are in another sphere, I thought of that when you were reading her your little effusion. She laughed; but are you quite sure that there was not a certain ladylike scorn mingled with her merriment? I, for one, am very thankful that she had not the chance to criticise my nonsense! I'm sorry I wrote it Jessie!” “But she has had the chance,” said Jessie, coloring to the roots of her crinkly yellow hair. That burlesque was so funny I couldn't resist the temptation of Oh, Harry, don't be “Why should I am going vexed with me! He bit his lip. “*What did she say?" “I don'tknow, I put it on her dressing- | table before tea. She knows your writ. ing; she'll understand what it is.” Harry gave a sort of groan, | “What a fool I was!” “Well, | I suppose there's no use scolding you, (Li) Jessie! he said. complement of exclamation points. | “I wonder how she does iti" said he. | | ! | ’ ‘1 suppose it's very simple,” observed | Jessie. ‘Not go simple as you suppose,” said the young farmer. *‘I know that time I rose to address the Agricultural Club, I felt exactly like a wooden dummy. All my points had gone out of my head, and I couldn't think of a mortal word to say. And Click is such a geatle, soft- voiced little thing." Clarissa Courthope—Jessie Jermyn's | Cousin Click—had left her uncle's | kindly roof at the age of eighteen, de- | termined to make a name and a liveli- hood for herself. She had stumbled by | accident, as it were, into the lecturing | arena. She had enlisted as ‘‘com- panion” to a strong-minded woman, who | addressed her sister women from the | rostrum, and on one occasion, in a soli. | tary little mountain village, when Miss Cackleton had unexpectedly succumbed to an attack of hoarseness and influenza, Clarissa had valiantly studied up her notes and addressed the assembled audi. ence in her stead. She was so successful that thencefor. | ward she had decided on the sword | wherewith she would open the world's | oyster, and she had achieved the fruition of her hopes. Uncle and Aunt Jermyn marveled at her success, Harry shrugged his shoul. | ders and observeC that he never had supposed so strong-midded a bird could have been nurtured in the old farm nest. | Jessie sighed deeply as she contrasted | her own slender earnings with the prices | commanded by the young lecturer; and this was Olick’s first return to the home | of her girlhood. She had been an ugly | duckling in those days—a peg which | seemed to fit neither in the square holes | nor the round ones—only ‘“‘our Click.” She was famous now, and all the rural world was crowding to see and hear her. “I could write a lecture, I'm sure,” | said Jessie, half admiringly, half reseat. fully. “80 could I,” said Harry. “Let's try,” proposed Jessie. ¢‘Nonsense,” said her brother. But the idea lingered in his brain for all that, Click laughed merrily at the fancy. “Anybody could write it,” said she. { get me that silly manuscript. | ike to see it flying up chimney in a | | ently she came back, looking rather dis- | she sped, proud to be ol use to the lit- “I'm not so altogether sartin o' that,” said the old farmer, patting his niece's smooth, seai-brown head, covered with | masses of shining braids, Click was not pretty, but she had soft, | pltding eyes of the deeper wine-brown, @ ealthy color and teeth whiter | than new milk. Her dress, of plain, | black mik, fitted her like a glove, and | the narrow frill of lace she wore at | throat and wrists was of the finest val. | enciennes, and fastened with a dead gold | bar. “She looks a lady all over,” sald Mrs, | Jermyn, proudly, “She is a lady,” pronounced the farm- “One o' nature's turning out.” “Listen, Click,” said merry Jessie, “I've writton a lecture. Do you want to hoar it} “I'm all curiosity,” declared Click, And Jessie read ita heterogeneous jumble of fact and fancy, fun and senti- ment, “How would that do for an au. diencel” eried the little schoolteacher, er. | scious Jessie sat fanning herself. | there was no further hesitation nor lack Jessie's lip quivered; she timidly at her brother. “Oh, Harry, have I done wrongi” “Kiss me, puss, I dare say you meant no harm,” he said, with a forced | laugh. *‘Come, let's make haste, or we | shall be late. Stay, though; run and | I should looked | stream of sparks before I go.” Jessie, overwhelmed with tardy peni- tence, flew to obey his behests. Pres- comfited. “It's gone, Harry,” can't find it anywhere. put it away.” Once more the young man groaned, then he laughed. “Kismet!” said he, “Come, let's go.” Had he but known where his luckless | roll of manuscript was at that identical moment, he would scarcely have recon- ciled himself with such philosophy to | the decrees of Kismet,” said she, “I She must have | dramatically. the unalterable. | At the eleventh hour, after Miss Court | hope was already seated in the family carriage, she discovered that she had left the all-important lecture in her | room. “Arabella,” she said, to the sewingmaid who stood gaping on the steps, *‘run as fast as you can to my room and get me the packet of written papers on the table.” “Yes, miss," said Arabella; and off little | erary young lady. “Thar's two on "em." said Arabella. “I guess it's the toppermost one.” And so Harry's burlesque was going | to the Lyceum safe inside Miss Court. hope's mink muff, while her own effusion lay peacefully by the blue.satin pincush- fon on her dressing-table, The building—no very spacious edifice ~was crowded with the literary and ms- thetic world of Tartle Valley. The squire and his family, the parson and his eleven olive branches, the storekeeper and the mill hands crowded up against the dress. maker, the telegraph operator and the genteel elderly ladies who lived in the peat white houses, on the interest of their money. In short, the indescrib. able conglomeration which one only sees mn an inland village. Miss Courthope advanced graciously and gracefully to the foothight-circled front with her roll of manuscript in her hand—for it was one of her idiosyncrasies to be unable to dispense with written memoranda—and opened it, There was a moment's silence. The audience sat breathless; the lecturer seemed stricken dumb, and in that awful second, Harry Jermyn, whose eyes were marvelously acute, recognized his own writing in Clarissa’s hands. He half rose; then sat down again. The oon. The good farmer snd his wife stared with all their eyes. ar Bhe fel memory and her womanly skill in impro- visation. If the audience did not get precisely “The Inconsistencies of Love,” they got quite as brilliant and amusiog. After first briel pause was oqual to back on her of utterance; and when at last she mat down, the little lyceum rang with ap. audaciously. “I am sure they would be amused,” gle, | room" at bas written one, nd said sil o—— Jessie. “Where ia it, Harry? n i] 4 A regular burlesque—all about love and Click. its inconsistencies. You see there is Pla Oh, Chick! Oh, Click!” cried Jes- into the miniature Hiren Tm “I am wipi of you her of { of the pipe lines, | western Pennsylvania oaly. | it was found in Southwestern New York | Btate. | 1s now light, the largest finds being in could possibly be selected—one's own old friends and neighbors. It may be very funny, but there is certainly a spice of cruelty about it that—that—well, in fact, it came very near unwomaning me, if I may be allowed to coin the word.” “I knew you were deeply offended,” said Harry Jermyn, “And I should have deserved it if 1 had deserved it. At fall events, you cannot be as mortified as I was," Miss Courthope colored and shrank back from the sternness of his tone. Jessie looked from one to the other; then she caught at the manuscript, “It's my fanli!” she exclaimed sud- denly. “‘All my fault, Click! I put it on your dressing table for you to read. [I never thought of such a complica- tion as this. Oh! don't blame Harry. He had nothing whatever to do with is.” The crimson blood dyed Clarissn's cheek more deeply than ever. She hes- itated ; opened her lips as if to speak, ! Harry rose | and still remained silent. and left the room without further com- ment. “G2 after him, Click! leave you in anger!” Clarissa obeyed. Like a deer she sped down the hall, overtaking him just where the moonlight streamed in white Don't let him glory through the cresent-shaped north | casement. “Harry! faltered. ‘‘Won't you forgive mel “Certainly. What have I to give?" But the tone was fat from satislactory. She stood looking piteously at him. All of a sudden she burst out crying. In a second he had her in his arms, clasped close to his breast. “Click! My love—my love!” “Oh, Harry! Harry!” That was the wooing and the winning. Certainly short —possibly sweet, But it needed nothing more. *‘Talk sbout the ‘Inconsistencies of Love,’ " said Jessica, who was the happi- est of little sisters, *‘here's Click —-has always declared she mesat to marry a city millionaire, snd Harry has said that a lecturing lady was his special detesta- tion. And Click is engaged to Harry and Harry to Click; and the strangest ”" | part of it is that they both seem per- f tly satisfied !""—New York Ledger. crater aii m— - The Supply of Coal Of] Is Immense, Concerning the facilities of the Stan. dard Oil Company to supply the entire world on short notice, Mr. Dodd made some startling statements, “The Standard Company bas now over 25,000 miles of pipe lines,” said he, “jacluding local pipes which bring oil from the wells to the main lines. Of main lines, there are two extending to New York, two to Philadelphia, one to Baltimore, three or four to Pittsburg, | one to Cleveland, one to Buffalo, one to Chicago, and a new one which is being constructed to Chicago. These take the oil to the refineries located at the termini The amount of oil running through these mains is about | 2,940,000 gallons per day, or 70,000 barrels. Of this amount, fully ongjghird comes to New York. “Originally, oil was taken from North- Afterward The production in those regions the vicinity of Pittsburg and points ex- tending into West Virginia, There is a big oil field in Northern Ohio, but the oil is inferior in quality and of use mostly as fuel, being transported to Chicago in pipes for that purpose. A small per centage of illuminating oil is obtained from it, and one of the largest refineries | of the company is being constructed in Chicago for the purpose of getting out the percentage. An oll well 1 never quite exhausted. Small wells are still being operated in the region of the first discoveries of 1858. At times we have hag 30,000,000 barrels stored in big brick tanks, such as’ you see along the Erie Railway, to the number of perhaps thirteen thousand, in New York and Pennsylvania. We have about 10,000,. 000 barrels stored at present,” —New York Telegram. Sensations in Hanging. in France during the religious wars, but was rescued from the gibbet by a Mar- shal Turrene after having hanged by the neck for nearly three minutes, said that be had lost all pain the moment the trap sprung, sud even complained at being light that defied description. Another culprit, who escaped through the break- across it a beautiful avenue of trees. momentary; that a pleasurable feeling that when these have been gazed at for a limited space the rest is totai obiivion.— St. Lowis Republic, a ———— ee —— We Have Plenty Elbow Room. A statistician says: “Few are aware of the vast number of people that can be placed on a small tract of ground. When we speak of millions of men we are apt to to ourselves an almost bound. less mass of humanity; yet 1,000,000 eried Jessie; and | I spoke unadvisedly!” she | for- | Captain Montagnac, who was executed | rescued and taken away from a besutiful | ing of the rope, said that after a second | or two of suffering a light appeared, sad | immediately succcods; that colors of va- | Lo through capillary attraction rious hues start up before the eyes, and | THE FARM AND GARDEN. THE BEST LAND FOR HEANS. Beans require less moisture, except to germinate, than any other grain. If they come up evenly a few showers about the time the pods are forming will make a crop if the land has been well cultivated. | A wet soil, or one containing much hu- | mus, 18 not fitted for this crop. Either a clay well drained or a gravelly sur- face 18 better than loam, The soil must | be permeable to moisture, so that if heavy raivs come, water will not stand on the surface, — Boston Cultivator, PURSLANE, This low, creeping plant, commonly called pursley, seems to grow in rich | garden soils almost as if by magic, so quickly does it spread over the ground. | It is quite easily pulled up and if left upon | the ground where it grew will soon take | root again, especially if the soil is at all is one of the | wet or moist, While it most common weeds, it is by no means as bad a pest us many others, The best | way to dispose of it is to scrape out the entire plant with a hoe, and carry ‘hem out of the garden, ucless one has chick- ens or pigs, when it may be pulled up and thrown to them, with a certainty that they will soon eat it up. — New Fork World, GROWING CROPS IN SUCCESSION. The practice of rotation of crops is not now followed as it used to be before the use of fertilizers became so com. mon. Itis now possible to feed the land with just what it wants for any crop, and 1t is not now considered as the actual means of feeding crops so much as a vehicle through which the food is given. Consequently, we do as we wish in this respect, and if it is desirable to grow and special crops we do it, taking care to provide all the plant food that the crop needs in the right form. This has made it possible to suit our products to the best markets and to the F oniy BH farmers But, bet be al als o 1 his vy " 2 t ial locality, and has greatly relieved from intolerable competition, inder these new circumstances, it nes necessary that a farmer should sie 10 Know what ny partic GIiAr crop needs an’ how to appl } i manner, Th that has ocenr the detal science of it, York Times. HOW TO TREAT HUNRSES. The great Axtell, who sold for $105, - 000, the greatest price ever paid for a horse, is an example of the keen sensi bilities of the noble animal. His driver tells i when hitched up if his harness does not fit us he will not even move perfectly in every respect. Horses know as well as people when they are kindly treated, and when a or severe manver, and, like people, they possess the spirit of revenge. They re member people and voices, as is shown by the wonderful mare Goldsmith Maid, who, after a separation of several years from her groom, knew his voice when she heard him talking, although she did not see him. "he Maid at this time hal a little colt by her side and had been so ill and cross that no one hardly dared t come near her. and called her. and when he came from his place « cealment she in ey sible to be trying to attract to her colt, He said that ber joyful whinny was as friendly a welcome as he ever cared to for it plainly showed that the royal old mare consid ered him her friend, and also that she had not forgotten the kind and gentle treatment he gave her when he took care of her. People should never be cruel to horses, and it seems to me that one of the greatest cruelties horses have to suffer is reining their heads so high. People say they do it to make them look stylish, used in harsh 0 Her groom hid himsell : Dae whinnied 0) seemed ery Way pos his attention receive, but in reality it only makes them act and | look awkward, and besides we should | consider how tired the poor animals get with their necks When you treat a horse harshiy and se- verely can you expect him to be kind and gentle Clark's Horse Keview, SUBSOIL PLOWING. Subsoil plowing, which by many is considered as greatly improving chances for a crop, has nevertheless as yet not come into anything like general use in farm practice. This arises, no doubt, from the fact that the to be derived from it are not common to all soils, and also largely to the double cost of preparation which subsoiling im. plies. The theory is that it is beneficial in both dry snd wet seasons—in the | former by creating a sort of reservoir All accounts seem to agree, in one par- | ticular, at least, that the suffering is but | for water in the loosened soil below the ordinary furrow against a time of need, when the plants may be supplied with that would otherwise have drained ofl from the surface; in & wet season, through a breaking up of the subsoil, which allows an excess from rainfalls to pass downward, where it would other. | wise remain too long on or near the sur. face to the injury of plants, Whatever view may be taken of these Jroputions, it may safely be said that ts advantages, or the opposite, cannot in all cases be icted without putting possess, wiry part, the merits often claimed g F i it 8 i3z : i H lh 7 igs i in such a position, | the | benefits and give exactly the same cure and treatment to the entire flold while the crop is growing, Keep a record and note every ten days the varying condi if any, in growth of the plants, and yield and quality of grain, In this man- ner the question of its usefulness for such quite satisfactorily determined. tion of farmers in his own State, method proposed is equaily applicable elsewhere. It may thus be used by any easy and inexpensive way of learning | whether on his own fields subsoil ling will | produc: a sufficient increase in his crops | to compensate for the additional ex- | pense, BUCCESS IN KEEPING POULTRY. It is comparatively an easy task to pro- teet poultry from both lice and mice. A litt [resh, strong insect powder dusted among the feathers will quickly dispose {of the one, and kerosene splashed or sprayed on the roosts will do away with { the other. Repest two or three times | during the summer, and once or twice during the winter, and the thing is done. The next thing of importance is a constant supply of fresh water. Nothing | is better than a running brook, but if it { cannot be had, the supply in the drink- | ing vessels should be replenished several times a day during the heat of the season, An admirable plana of drinking fountain is one that can be made and used by every farmer, and consists of an old bak- ing pan under a box, with one end pro- truding. The drinking dish, of what. ever form or material, should be fre- quently washed, preferably with boiling water, and a drop of carbolic acid, or a little piece of copperas be added to the water. Stagnant pools, especially of manure water in the barnyard, should never be tolerate : CBP slly where hg wuld get ace ( ess Lo IL, the as when foolish hen will take Ji &8 reacil rats, skunks and weasels, # by dipping them in kerosene there is to it, sdded about oe is about all Lint Ouly 8 word needs to be the breed Any good i will or shoul But Leghor toe such condi- ou good re- breed, under give 3 better an others. te or brown, The Brahmas give you a large, plump table fowl besides. Crosses of the two sre excellent, Plymouth Rockd make a fowl, and you can cross them with any other pure breed, espe- cially the Leghorns, for good results, I like my fowls to be all uniform, censo-| | quently prefer a single, pure breed, and none has ever suited me better as a farm fow! than the Black Langshan. Set the hens as fast as they wish to set in spring. Make the nests on the’ ground, in barrels, boxes, or nooks, ete., where the bird will be hidden and un- Do not fuss much with the setting hens, the chicks are hatched, put them with the hea in a coop for a few days; then, if possible, set them free. To break up the setting hen there is no better way than to let her set a week or so, then give her a few chicks to take care of. Feed her well and she will soon be in laying con- dition again, and all the better for the rest and change enjoyed for a few weeks. | This farm management of poultry, sad it will seldom fail to be profitable. — Practical Farmer. tions, i i suits, SOME are The will ll ns, either wh egr basket. are fair layers, and D Zo 4 | disturbed. Alter FARM AXD GARDEN NOTES. Allow each hen three square feet of room. Pekin ducks are best where there are no ponds. If kept dry and clean, earth makes a good floor for poultry. Ventilate your cellar into your kitchen chimney or one in which a fire is kept. Hens must be provided with warm | shelter if they lay eggs during the win. | | ter, Eggs are easily chilled. and | thoroughly chilled are unfit for hatch. | ing. Using milk to make soft feed for poultry will be found much better than walter. Bins should be thoroughly cleaned and scrubbed belore new grain is in them. If eggs are to be kept any time they { should be washed clean as soon as they | are gathered, Much loss in eggs is often ocossioned | by allowing the hens to lay outside the poultry house, One advantage in feeding the soraps trom the table to poultry is that it sup- plies them with a variety. i 4 i tions of the weather and the differences, after harvesting the difference in the | u soil and under such conditions may be | While the suggestions of Mr, Mohler | are intended primarily for the considera~ | the | farmer in any locality as a comparatively | | when NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Pond-lily is the latest tint. The fanshaped sachet is a novelty, The bonnets of the season are small, Jet nail-heads or cabichons are sure of being in style, There is a Glenville, Ohio. Dona Amelia Cardia is the first woman doctor in Portugal, woman's brass band ia Hats trimmed o:ly with ribbon de. mand a generous quantity, Bleached cows’ tails are used for loop- ing back heavy portieres. A single woman rons a Bearmont {Penn.) livery and boarding stable, Gold key rings are among the little favors sent to brides and grooms by poor | but elegant friends. i Brown University has decided to ad- | mit women to its ciasses on the same conditions as men. Arizona has a woman mining exvert in the person of Nellie Cashman, a beau. tiful brunette, only twenty years old, Oscar Wilde says that the secret of the charm of the American women is that they behave as if they were beautiful, A commendable tendency to lighten the weight of wool fabries is aoticed in the importations of winter dress goods. A Kansas City man has been compelled to pay a fine of #50 for kissing the hand of a beautiful lady who objected to the familiarity. Miss May Coliender, a shining hight in New York society, enjoys in connection with her social distinction that of being the most gifted amateur singer in New York, for such competent judges have declared her to be. Jean Ingelow now a gray-haired little old sixty-three She is a kind friend of the regular calls “copyright dinne ceeds of her books. i8 Pp— f woman i Tears, intervals gives then rs rom Among the women's ¢ Jersey is one that has nam Sparrows,” because the bs . $ hat f fr the crusts that fall fro les They have { { +} ta « e138 pa Cians 10 Lhe in- practices at Marie Decea's originally 1, & Maysville beauty, x ‘ 3 ing aay were a picasant users novation Maysville, Ky., for Mile, concert, Mlle. Decca Miss Mollie Johasor and the pretty ushers were her young lady home friends, in concert roo WAS The indiscriminate slaughter of gulls which formerly charscterized the shooting at the well-known promontory on the Yorkshire const, is pot 80 ( reason assigned bein of weariag sea birds a MORSON Flamborough, mmon ths year, one the fashion feathers is dying { that out. Chili must be a very expensive place in which to live. A dy & Doard costs from $30 to $100; dress silk from $6 to $20 the yard, and modiste will charge you from $30 to $50 for making it. As much as $12 a dozen has to be paid for linen handkerchiefs and $18 fog a pair of button boots, the Women seem to have it all their owa way in a Sinaland parish in Sweden. There is a female teacher at the school, a postmistress, a female organist and a fe- male secretary at the saviogs bank. Ia addition there is a female tailor, a female bookbinder, a female maker, a fo- male butcher and a female baker. In Washington hb is a woman who has a hothouse in which she finds not only play but profit. Last year she sold 100,000 violets, and ob- tained good prices for every one. This year she hopes to be able to give up her place as clerk and to devote her whole time to raising these fashionable flowers, 830% Young Women are coming to the front in Salvador as well as elsewhere ia spite of | the fact it is not considered at all good form for women to work there. A young women's telephone school has been es- tablished by the Governmeat for the express purpose of training young senor. itas for the service of the company there. Victoria has another strange taste for | a Queen. She has a fancy for wild ani- | mals and takes an unusual interest in | everything concerning them. Carter, | the lion tamer, bas been invited to | Windsor, and also the entire Edmunds | family, who have distinguished them- selves in taking care of the wild animals | of a certain show, The oldest woman minister in the United States is the Rev. Lydia Sexton, | who is now in ber ninety-third year. | She has been in the ministry between | forty and fifty years. In 1870 and 1871 she held the position of chaplain in the Kansas State Pouitentiary. Her relig- | ious denomination is known as the United Brethren. The old lady is in excollent health and declares that she expects to live to the end of this century, How's Your Liver It sluggish and painful, invig- orate it to healthy action by » taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla AYN Udy JOHNSON’'S Anodyne Liniment. eA ’}
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers