THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURO, Pa. "CAW FOR LIVER, ROILS For sick headache, bad breath, Sour Stomach and . constipation. Get a 10-cent box now. No odds bow bad your liver, atomacb or bowels; how much your head aches, how miserable and uncomfort able you are from constipation, Indiges tion, biliousness and sluggish howels you always get the desired results with Cascarets. Don't let your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable. Take Cascarets to-night; put an end to the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nerv ousness, sick, sour, gnssy stomach, backache and all other distress; cleanse your inside organs of all the bile, gases and constipated matter which Is producing the misery. A 10-cent box means health, happi ness and a clear head for months. No more days of gloom and distress If you will take a Cascaret now and then. All stores soil Cascarets. Don't forget the children their little In sides need a cleansing, too. Adv. On the ocean the swell imikes people sick nnd sonic of tlm swells encoun tered ou land linve u similar effect. Dr. Picrce'i Pellet nre heat for liver, bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for laxative three for a cathartic Adv. Serious. "She's only flirting with him." "It's more serious tlinti that I saw her looking up his rating." To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Ttke the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system, jo cents. Mother Knew. A Voice Mury I what are you doing out there? Mury I'm looking at the moon, mother. Voice Well 1 tell the moon to go home ntnl come In off thnt porch. It's balf-pnst eleven I More Nature Faking. "In your speech yu talked about the dove of peace as If It were n wur-llko bird." "That's the modern Idea," replied the orator. "The time has come when the dove of pence must he supplied with such defensive armament as sharp claws and a falcon's beak." All Dry. The lender of one of the "dry" dele gations from out In the state which came to the state capltol the day be fore the passage of the prohibition measure was explaining whut a rep resentative crowd of people he was di recting. "Yes, sir," he declared, we have 'dry' lawyers with us, nnd 'dry' doctors, and 'dry' grocery keepers, and a 'dry' Jeweler. Everything, In fuct, except 'dry' snloonkevper." "You bet," chimed In another boost er, "we've even got n dry cleuner along." Indianapolis News. Husband's Soft Answer. She wns waiting for him. Gathering her brows like gathering Storm, nursing her wrath to keep It warm, and wlien he entered the room she begun: "This Is n nice time of night" 'Ierluiow I'm late," he hnstlly Interrupted, "but I couldn't help It, my dear. Club had er big discus sion on female beauty." "And what hud you to do with that?" demanded the fretful wife. "More'n anyone else. I wns the one erwho had the , most beuutlful wife, an' er course, the best author ity on female beauty, an' " "Why don't you take off your over coat, Henry? Let me get your slip pers for you. It's awful cold outside; I think you must be half frozen." Half a minute Inter Henry was safe ly ensconced In his easy chair with his wife nt his feet putting his slippers on." Philadelphia Inquirer. i f Those Nerves! If it's caffeine the drug in coffee that's causing shaky nerves, the remedy is perfectly plain Quit coffee, and for a pleasant, healthful table beverage, use POSTUM Po8tum is a delicious cereal drink, pure . and nourishing and absolutely free from any harmful in-, gredient There's a big army of Postum users who are en joying better health and comfort since joining the ranks. "There's a Reason" Pictaresaue Ancient Customs' of Holy Week Where monarchs bathe the feet of beggars and why hot cross buns are eaten on Good Friday at breakfast :: Impressive church services 4 HIIISTS moment of trluinphunt entry Into Jerusalem, when the people took palms und went to meet him, has been c nemoiated In the church on the Sunday before Easter, which t day, therefore, has been called "Palm Sunday." As this is the beginning of Holy week, It Is a hnp'py Interlude be tween the devotional rigors of the former nart of Lent nnd the last Ix days, In which all religious exercises and per sonal sucrlllces are redoubled until the coming In of the great feast of Easter. I'ulm Sunday Reems also to fores'mdow the com ing of the spring, nt least from a merely mumhtno point of view, because of the great throngs of worshipers who pour 'Into the streets from Ito ninn Catholic nnd Protestant Episcopal churches, wearing or carrying the lilts of pali.i, green brandies or willow slips which have betn dis tributed by the priests. , In this country palm Is almost always used for this purpose, but In some countries, where this leaf Is not available, Its place Is taken by, lilts of native green. Ilox and yew also have been used from time to time as a symbol of Pulm Sun day. Generally the grenter part of the palm Is distributed In the form of little crosses, this be ing so especially In the case of the men worship ers. The women receive crosses or largo or small branches, according to the fushlon of differ ent parishes. Rome In Holy Week. In the years before the wor the Holy week services nt Itome drew thousands of persons from all parts of the world to that city. These cere monies begin with the beautiful Palm Sunday procession at St. Peter's. In all Human Catholic churches everywhere the I'ulm Sunday procession, In which palms are carried In Imitation of the first Palm Sunday procession. Is a stately nnd pic turesque spectacle. In the churches under the care of tho religious orders, such ns the Society of Jesus, the services of Holy week, Including those of Palm Sunday, are usually very beuutlful and elaborate. "Maundy Thursday," the good old Eng lish nnme for Holy Thursday, was so called from the French "ninnde," from the Latin "mnndntum" In allusion to Christ's words spoken at the Last Supper, "A new comninndmetit I give unto you, thnt ye love one another." In commemoration of Christ's net of humanity In washing tho feet of his dlsrlples on the occasion of the Last Supper one of the most Important ceremonies of the day, since the early middle ages, has been the washing of the feet of 12 or more poor persons by some one of higher worldly standing thnn themselves. In the very early church this ceremony Is not known to have existed, but from the fourth cen tury It became yearly more popular. Finally the rite came to be performed by the pope, nil Catholic sovereigns, prelntes, priests nnd nobles. At Dur ham cathedral until the sixteenth century every chnrlty boy had a monk to wash his feet When Queen Elizabeth wns thirty-nine years old she per formed this ceremony for 39 poor men nnd women nt her pnlnce of Greenwich, It being then the cus tom for the sovereign to wash the feet of as many persons ns she was' years old. Emperor and Beggar. On this occasion, history recites, the feet of the honored beggars were first washed by the yeoman nt tho innmlrv Aftnru-nril Hin eiilinlmnnnr n-nuhnrl them nml then tho nnnnn hnranlf Irnnnllnf? nftpp washing each foot, mudo the sign of tho cross upon it and Kisseu it. In Continental countries this prnctlce Is still kept up. The late emperor of Austria never failed to curry out the rite. Tho devotees of the Greek church also uso this ceremony at Moscow, Petrograd and Coustautl- nople. The day of the Passion, Good Frldny In Eng lish, supposedly from "God's Friday," Is the most solemn day of tho year In the church. From the beginning to the end of the three hours service which commemorates Christ's agony upon the cross there Is no lifting of tho deep gloom char acteristic of the occnslon. Altars nnd celebrants nre draped In black In the Roman Catholic churches. In the Lutheran churches also the altar nnd pulpit ore draped In black. The three hours' service Is used In the Episcopal church, and In this church, ns In the Homan Catholic, the history of the Passion according to St. John Is port of tho Good Friday ritual. This Is followed In the Itomon Catholic church by the adoration of the cross, nn nnclent cere mony, nnd the mnss ot the presnnctllled, so called because the elements have been consecrated the day bifore. In the Greek church also tho Good Friday fast is extremely strict nnd the mnss very ' long. Churches Filled to Limit More persons flock to tho churches on Good Fri day thnn on nny other day of tho yenr except Easter. In some of tho churches In New York It Is necessary to Issue cards for tho services on both these days, ns there Is no other way of. controlling the great number of worshipers who seek admission. Despite the length nnd solemnity of the Good Friday service the desire to attend Is so great that It Is no uncommon thing to see devout men nnd women standing In long lines in front of the olllces whero the cords nro distributed, fearful that they may even then be too lute to gain admission. The most popular of tfte seculnr customs con nected with this day Is the serving of hot cross buns. The genuine hot cross bun Is rather a small one, spicier than ordinary buns, nnd has a brown, sugury surface marked with a cross. It Is said that the hot cross bun Is of pagan origin nnd cun be traced buck to nn ancient custom of worship ing the Queen of Henven by the eating of sacred enkes. But the buns that existed previous to the Christian era were not In reality those of todny, because they bore no cross. In very enrly times the cross was placed on the bun to exorcise Its pagan spirit. For two dozen buns scald one cupful of milk, add to it a tablespoonful of butter, quarter of a cupful of sugar and n snltspoonful of salt. When lukewarm add half a compressed yeast cake, softened In n little warm water, nnd a pint of flour. This should be mixed early In the evening. Heat well' and let the butter rise until foaming nnd double Its original bulk. Then add a half cupful of sugar, quarter of a tenspoonful of mixed cinnamon,1 nutmeg nnd mare, a half cupful of currants, n tablespoonful of shredded candled lemon peel nnd enough flour to mnke a dough thut can be knonde.d. Knend well nnd set In a warm place overnight. In tho morning turn out on a well-floured board nnd divide Into pieces weighing nhout three ounces each. Pat them out round, let them stand for a few minutes, then roll Into oblong shapes and lay In n greased dripping pan for enough npnrt for expansion. Anglo-Saxon myth and Jewish pnscha nre sup posed both to have ployed a part In the construc tion of the Christian Easter. Whether Easter was named from the Anglo-Saxon Eostre, goddess of spring, or from another root which signified "the rising," the mennlng seems much tho same, and today the universal use of flowers as the most appropriate Easter token testifies to the general recognition of their appropriateness as symboliz ing a rising from the dead. . Why New Clothes Are Worn. The Idea of new clothes on Easter, thought by some to be n mere vnnlty, is In fnct ns truly sym bolical of the festival as the Easter egg or the Easter flower. To burst afresh upon the world in festival nttlre Is nn instinctive demonstration of genuine Easter feeling. Unfortunately, of late years the spring hat no longer plays a leading part as nn Easter symbol, for, ns It Insists on appear ing with the New Yenr nnd won't stay in Its shell until Easter time, It cun no longer make cn Easter entrnnce with any dramatic effect. Those who complain that it Is difficult to re member tho date of Easter should glance over the records of the troubles of tho early Christians in this regard. It was many, many years before It was possible to settle upon the method where by the date of Easter should be determined, and so violent were the disputes over the mntter that different schools of Christians nrose, some follow ing one decree ns to tho. Easter celebration nnd others obedient to entirely opposite pronundn mentos. , Discrepancies In Dates. There was such difference In calculations us to the time of the feast that Bede records that In n certain year Queen Eunfleda, who had received her instruction from a Kentish priest Of the Ito mnn obedience, wns fnstlng nnd keeping Pulm Sundny while her husband, Oswy, king of North unibrla, following the rule of tho British church, wns celebrating tho Easter festival. Ia 325, nt the council summoned by Constnntlne, It wns de cided that Esster doy .wns to be on Sundny nnd thnt it wns to be calculated nt Alexnndrln, the home of nstronomlcnl science. From this nrose the present method of calculating Easter, which sets the day ns the first Sundny after the first full moon after tho vernal equinox, provided that full moon does not fall on Sundny. Should It do so, then Easter Is the following Sunday. New York Herald. j APPROPRIATE DISHES t FOR JASTER WEEK Eggs, ham, chicken nnd snlnds figure conspicu ously In tho Easter menus, the eggs nnd chicken because of the Easter symbolism ; ham, since it Is connected with eggs from a gastronomic stnnd point, nnd salads because when Easter comes fresh green viands are particularly, enticing. . Here is.n good recipe for smothered chicken, which may well be the principal item of an Easter luncheon or dinner. Split the chicken down the back, senson with salt and pepper, nnd dredge well with flour on both sides. Put into a bnke pnn a smnll cupful of stock and n quarter of a pound of butter. Arrange the giblets on the bot tom and on them lay 'the chicken, breast down. Cover the pan closely nnd bnste every ten or twelve minutes. Allow about fifteen minutes to the pound In roosting. When tender tnke out the chicken nnd lay on a hot plate. Wash the- gib lets, add n cup of rich cream and serve with bis cuit These should be buttermilk or beaten bis cuit. To mnke chicken a In Baltimore, prepare the chicken ns for boiling; then cut Into joints, wipe dry, senson well with salt and pepper- and dip Into beaten eggs; then roll In fine bread crumbs. Place In n well buttered pan. pour olive oil or melted butter over them nnd bnke In a stendy oven for twenty-five minutes. When tender re move to a hot dish. Mnke a good cream gravy to pour over the chicken nnd serve with corn fritters nnd thin, crisp slices of bncon. A savory egg dish for an Easter luncheon or supper Includes eggs nnd nrtlchokes. To mnke this dish steam or cook in highly salted water ns many artichoke buttons as there nre guests to serve. Brown delicately in butter as many rounds of thin bread, each piece a little larger in diam eter than nre nrtlchoke buttons. Place the arti chokes on the rounds of brend, nnd then over ench one drop n poached egg, trimmed to the exact size of the brend foundation. Pour over the egg n smnll qunntlty of sauce nollnndalse. Add a dash of paprika and serve hot. To make tho Hollandalse snuce rub to a creom a half cupful of butter; then add the yokes of two eggs, one at a time, benting well after each nddltlon. Tut in the juice of a half n lemon, a saltspoonful of salt, n dash of pnprlkn or cayenne nnd a half cupful of boiling water. Set the bowl containing tho mixture in n snucepnn of boiling water and stir rapidly and constantly until It thickens like boiled custard. Tarragon vlnegnr may be used in ploco of the lemon Juice, with tho nddltlon of a few tarragon leaves blanched and cut up very small. Scrambled eggs with green peppers make n very good Easter dish. For four or five persons nt least six eggs should, be used. Toast slices of bread for each person nnd loy In n dish to keep hot Put a tablespoonful of butter In the frying pan, and while heating brenk the eggs Ipto a bowl. Allow a tablespoonful of crenm or water to each egg. Milk is not good for omelettes or scrambled eggs. As soon ns the butter Is melted nnd begins to bubble, turn the eggs in, and as the whites begin to set lift and stir with n silver fork. Have rendy two finely chopped sweet green pep pers from which the seeds have been removed, nnd after the eggs begin to cook stir the peppers through the mixture. Cook a half moment, dish on tho hot toast, gnrnlsh with a little watercress or parsley nnd serve nt once. A beautiful-looking snlud to serve nt Enster is the water Illy salad, which Is as delicious to the taste ns Its nppenrance suggests. To make this salad cut the whites of hard-boiled eggs Into point ed, petal-like strips. Keep out a couple of yolks, but mash tho rest. Mix with mayonnaise and fill the calyx of the arranged petals with the mixture. Put the remainder over the petals to give the ap pearance of pollen. Cut lettuce leaves in fine points to simulate the outer leaves. Served on a low glass dish this salad appears at Its best. It Is better served on Inalvlduul glass dishes than on a larger platter. Green pepper, lettuce nnd tomnto salad. Crisp the lettuce leaves by laying In cold wnter for half nn hour. Then shake dry nnd'lny on the ice. Tnke the sweet green or red peppers nnd with a pair of scissors cut the peppers In lengthwise ribbons. Slice the tomntocs. Arrange the tomatoes on the lettuce leaves and sprinkle the pepper ribbons over nil. Dress with mnyonnalse or French dress ing. New York Herald. AROUND THE WORLD More than two-thirds of the world's supply of tin Is mined In the Muluy peninsula. There nre telephones enough In the United Stntes for every ten persons to hove one. The streets of one English city nre watered entirely by electric sprink ling wagons. The mining industry In the Blue flelds district of Nicaragua U being rapidly developed. Jupnnese make a waterproof leather with many uses from the hides of sea lions. The anthracite mines of Pennsyl vania contain more than ' 7,000 miles of tunnels. Sweet butter Is preserved without a particle of salt Inside n gourdlike container made of cheese. The whole remains fresh and edible for years. Argentina and Pnroguoy have con cluded a new commercial treaty which provides for practically free trade be tween the two countries. After many failures Italian army engineers have bored the first suc cessful artesian well In Tripoli. France now leads the world In the manufacture of tinsel fabrics, Lyons being the center of the Industry. A department of New Jersey agri cultural experiment station hns re cently succeeded In producing purple carnations. Shipments of manganese ore from the Husslnn ports of Potl and Batura decreased from 788,214 tons In 1014 to 0,700 tons In lOlu. Women cnbdrivers are stated to be n success In Glasgow, Scotland. One firm hns nbout 40 women driving cabs. Freshly caught sen fish are sold. to be the principal Ingredient of nn nr tlficlal rubber of Dutch Invention. ' The German mauser can fire faster than nny other rifle used in the war. The magazine holds 'five cartridges packed in chargers. The Island of Ceylon is to be con nected to the mainland of India by building a roadway on a rocky reef, a distance of 22 miles. Temperance (Conducted by the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union.) BOOZER MUST GO. Employers' liability laws In the dlf cferent states have been an Important factor in bringing about the present at tlude of the business world toward liquor. Corporation managers, Investi gating the causes of accidents in mill bnd fuctory, on ruilrgad and waterway, found a lurge proportion directly due to the drink hublt. Hence the reuson for the famous "rule G" of the Ameri can llullroad association and the total abstinence requirements of big busi ness generally. In line with thin comes the Michigan Workmen's Compensation Mutual of Detroit, which, we learn from the West ern Underwriter, an lnsurunce Journul, has sent its members a circular letter on the booze question, We quote': ' "The careful consideration of all morul hazards Involved under the com pensation law reveuls the fact thut booze Is the biggest. "Booze is so insidious in its work ings thut even though nn employee may not be actuully under the Influence of liquor at the time of an Injury, a very large percentage of nil injuries aM either directly or indirectly due to tho drinking of liquor. -' "Therefore, we uro earnestly recom mending to all of our members that the service of the booze fighter, whether he drink much or little, be dispensed with as promptly ns possible, providing he cannot be, made to see the error of his ways and become an abstainer." LIQUOR BUSINESS AND LABOR. "The average worklngninn fears be ing out of. a Job more than he does going to hell, and the liquor Interests have capitalized on this fear," said Rev. Charles Stelzle before the Fed eral . Council of Churches. And he pointed out that: "If the money now invested In the liquor business were invested in the average American Industry it would give employment to four times us many worklngmen, who collectively would receive four times as much in the form of wages, and four times as much raw mnterlal would be required than Is now the case in the liquor busi ness." Mr. Stelzle said that the number of worklngmen employed In the liquor business hns been greatly exaggerated. The liquor interests purchase annually only about an average of $10 worth of produce from each furmer in the Unlf cd States. FAIRNESS TO TAXPAYERS. A Muncle (Ind.) Judge the other day made the novel ruling that a man not only hns a right to lio down In ihe sa loon where he becomes intoxicated but that it is his duty to do so Instead of going to some other place. The vic tim in the case had explained to the Judge that after drinking at the bar he felt the drunken stupor coming on and so hurried to the Jail, only a block away, and gave himself up, because he did not suppose the saloonkeeper wonld permit him to sleep off his in toxication on his premises. "So you thought you'd go to the Jail and let the taxpayers take care of you?" queried the court. "The next time you get drunk I want you to lie down right there in the' saloon and not become a public expense." INCREASES VALUES. From report of state auditor of North Carolina. Value of real estate: 1D0S '. '...$287,459,002.00 1014- 300,079,052.00 Value of personal property: 1908 ...$174,920,792.00 1014 21,324,039.00 Tnxes collected: 1908 ' $ 2,610,439.02 1914 4,033,875.13 "North Carolina," says Governor C'rnlg, "hns never known In nil her his tory a period of grenter prosperity thnn thnt through which she has passed since prohibition wns adopted. Renl estate in all the cities nnd larger towns has greatly enhanced In value and every line of business has pros pered." SCIENTIST FEARS ALCOHOL. I fear alcohol' ns I f cor the bacillus found associated, probably casually, with anesthetic leprosy, because It does away with the danger signals with which we are provided through our senses) pain, irritability, hunger, fatigue. Each one of these may bo rendered less Insistent by the use of alcohol, but the real causes of these sensations are left unaffected or may even be increased by the use of the very agent that blunts the "senses" through which they nre manifested. Trof. G. Sims Woodhead of Cambridge University, England. PROHIBITION GAINING. Twenty-five states and the territory of Alaska are now dry. Utah has the honor of coming in with the first half of our 48 United States. Indiana, only 20 hours behind, has the honor of lend ing the second section of the dry pro cession. Wyoming, New Mexico and Minnesota have submitted the ques tion to the people, and prohibition campaigns are on in Missouri, Ohio, Texas,' Wisconsin, Illinois, Florida, Pennsylvania, Nevada. Indeed, there is hardly a state not already dry which is not more or less stirred COMMENDS PROHIBITION. Rt. Rev. Henry Granjon, D. D., Cnth ollc bishop of Arizona, opposed the pro hibition amendment In that state in 1914 because it did not exempt wine for sacramental purposes. Tho amendment adopted last November makes this ex emption and Is heartily approved by tho bishop. He says: "Prohibition, ns enacted Into law In this state, has proved beneficial, all things duly considered. It has done away with the saloon evil, and that alone weighs 75 per cent In the balance. Why That LamcfaJ Morning lumeness, slum, tJ when bending, or an iil.(nv,i ache ; each is cause enugh u peel Kiuney iruiiuiu. ti(t 0I(t cause. Help the kldnpn Americans go it too hnri overao, overeat ana netwl sleep and exercise and eo ,! fnar hecnmlnsr a nntlnn n f sufferers. 72 more deuthil In 1890 Is the 1010 conUr use uoan s ruuney rnii, aands recommend them, A Penniylvanla Can i D. R. Prlngle, WJ Oak St., Indiana. Pa a y a : 'I suffered acutely from pal in across the mall of my back. The kidney secretions paused too frequently, especially at night and I felt miserable. Two boxes of Doan'i Kidney Pills rid me of the back ache and regulated the action of my kidneys. The cure has lasted and my kidneys are now ,t , hape.'' Get Does' at Any Slew., 60i,H DOAN'S? FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO? A Hard J to Crack When a cold hits you in the ket throat, it's hard to get rid rf Don't experiment Break it with Hale's Honey of Hureb. and Tar. Prompt and c!Tc AU druggists, 25cts. a bottle. Try Pike's Toothaehs Drooi Don't think because a glrU from the bottom of her h there Isn't plenty of room at t! SKIN-TORTURED 8leep, Mothers Rest After T With Cutlcura Trial F Send todny for free sample enra Soap and Ointment nnd 1-. quickly they relieve Itching, skin troubles, and point to ment of baby rashes, eczema; ings. Having cleared ImliyV it clear by using Cutleura ei Free sample each by mall r Address postcard, Cutlcura, : Boston. Sold everywhere.-:' An onion or a potato is eM with every purchase by a J J c drug store. fj r-ir yuu u Invert $25 cash and a lew dob J you can become associated with i -thai should return big profili. Ynr nize Ihe truth ol this statement was eented to you. This ia not oil, a: schema. lour oanKaror lawyer a business. Address P. O. BOX llS.m The Wretched: of Constipatic Can quickly be overcome or rial CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable act surely ana gently on the liver. Cure Biliousness, Head ache, Dizzi ness, and Indigestion. Theyds SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, S5M Genuine must bear Slf- A 3 i iSi - .aaT" T Mms It to wts n aaai aa as as aftltf I KHtUMMIH Lumbago or Go.J Take KH EPM A C I D K M "W"', ' and drive toe ptrisun rruu oRUiuaacini 01 thi iksiki run ausuaiTws A All DrnzKliU Jas. Baily Son, WkslenW M Deuuniore, mo. J ITU ' ' I'm ml STOCK LICK IT STOff and Hot H lor id , lor the K"H Dairy Silt 1 erinirisM Doslnf. feed box. A" for DlackjSt BLACKMAN STOCK REMEDT1 CHATTANOOGA, i CONSTIPATj K;:m IJi PARftJ UAIR B1 FROST PROOF CABjgj Barlr Jureer and CharlMtnn and flat Dutch, HO furl.; f.o.b.here;poetpaidUopor ' SWBHT POTATO PLANTS-'fiST, Nanor Hall ajd Porto W.OOU up at II to. t. o. b. Jim l.WO for 11.86: Bkk and !' 'Ul 1.W0, fur li.Ml: MOO and nP.fi,' A rusipaia suo per luu. ..---. Invest In Land! i ns pike, trollar ndJL,71 riV'IosIng an estat. J"2tl J. UConwell, liU)""1". Frontl Inanity pnoioi For Sale long pod okiUy 16o paoa. PATENTS B'-l Bates reasonable. Blibe"'" W. N. V., BALTIMORE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers