THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG- PA. COL HOUSE HAS EXALTEDjyilSSION Directed by President to Collect Material to Be Used at Peace Conference. WAR'S END NOT IN SIGHT United SUtet to B Equipped With. Full Information on All Matters That Are Vital to Itt Interests. New York. President Wilson. being fully advised of the fact tluit the Ku ropcan governments liuve fur nenrly three yeurs been gathering mid collect ing (Ju tit, which would he Indlspensl ble at the now iiiiknowiihle hut yet In evitable date, when the warring mi tlous meet to Nettle peace terms, has asked Col. K. M. House, his liitiimite friend und uuolllciiil counselor, to as sume this complex and gigantic task. Colonel House bus ncceited the un dertaking, and with cliurncterlstlc promptitude mid thoroughness Iims nl reudy intuit? groundwork plans for as sembling nil pertinent Information. Ills torlcnlr geographical, mitl ethnological. Ills Initial move wns the selection us his chief lieutenant of Dr. John II. Flu ley. New York slute commissioner tf education, who has Just returned from Kuropp, where lie made an exhuiis Uve study of conditions. The selection of Doctor Fltiley In In dicative of the sort of experts with whom Colonel House will confer. No man or woman with a preconceived opinion which nilfcht temptone to color circumstances no as to prove .the cor rectness of a personal point of view will be permitted to participate In a work where open-mlndedness Is u pre requisite to the arrival at conclusions that will enable the government to de termine upon a correct policy. Prejudice to Be Barred. Emphasis Is put upon the unalter able determination that neither pro fessional pacifists nor continued mili tarists can be In the slightest degree useful In preparing statistics for gov ernmental guidance, which must be without taint of bias. In an Interview Colonel House inude It plain that his npiHilutment does not Indicate any thought of Immediate pence Is now being entertained by the United States government. He igrees with Lord Nortlicllffe In his message delivered before the American Hunk ers' nssoclatloa In Atlantic City that pence seems far off and America should beware the trickery and treach ery of such propaganda. The truth Is that this effort on the part of the United St'es to nnnlyze war condi tions and evolve a plan of proceedure when hostllitlt end is a belated one, Just as our military preparations lagged for a period. Hut now It Is "full steam ahead and dam the tor pedoes" with our army and navy with not n thought of let-up In mind, so from now on there will be urgent prosecution of senrch for material, his torical and Informative, concerning the world war. This quest of data will keep pnee with an energetic prosecu tion of the contest, but will not halt It In any way. To pause now In any phase of belligerent endeavor might mnke the prospect of peace even more remote than It seems at present. No Sinn of Early Peace. The government sees nothing what ever to indicate the early approach of pence, nor will Colonel House have anything to do with uscertitlnlng the point of view of either the l'utente belligerents or the central powers, er possible terms upon the basis of which they might be willing to enter into ne gotiations. He will remain in the Unit ed States. It Is possible Hint the shite department will bo able to nfford Mm tid In the work he has undertaken, hut he will not work with the depart ment nor In n diplomatic capacity, for mal or Informal. He will have no title and will receive no salary. The appointment of Colonel House fiords another Illustration of the ex panding position of the United States In world nITalrs. Heretofore the state department has been equipped with virtually all the Information that was necessary to the solution of Interna tional problems In which the United States has taken n direct Interest. The war has brought new problems and projected this country Into a field of laternatlonal activity which It has sel tom enteretl before. Information Must Be Ready. The questions which will come be fore the pence conference nt the end f the war will be multitudinous. The freedom of the seas, the neutralization of seaways, the political homeogenelty of peoples who claim the right of self government and the disposition of ter ritorial possessions Involving economic, historical and political questions, will be some of the many subjects to be considered, and the Information pon which conclusions may be based ixl policies decided must be nt hand. It will he Colonel House's function to gntlitT n corps of experts to get this aiaterlal In form for use. Others, tulw ar or. will prepare the brief. With exclusive Kuropeitn problems. It Is not expected that the representa tives of the United States at the peace rouncll will be concerned. Hut In the di- (Misltlon of general questions, relat ing M economic Intcrr-mre rnd po litical development which will aiTeit virtually all the nations of the world, the United States will have a potent Three Notable Physical Features. The surfoce of North America pre sents three great physical features the great Pacific highlands, the central plains and the eastern highlands. The great FneUlc highlands extend through the western part of North America, al most from the arctic shores to the Isthmus of Panama, and are traversed by the Rocky mountains and other high mountain chains. The central plains, wblcb descend gradually from the erests of the Rocky mountains, Include th Mississippi, Missouri and the Great voice. In accordance with the policy that has been consistently followed since the outbreak of Uie wur of hold ing aloof from Kuropcan combinations except In the prosecution of the war, this government probubly will not at tempt to uld In the settlement of tradi tional ICiiorpenii quarrels, except pos sibly us n matter of friendly Interest If opportunity arises. House Likely to Be Delegate. It wus said unofficially that when the, time comes to organize a peace conference, Colonel House, by virtue of his present assignment, would in nil probability be selected ns one of the delegutes from the United Elates. It will be a part of Colonel House's task to gather Intelligence relating to commercial, economic and political sit uations abroad. He will keep abreast of developments In all non-military af fairs. Colonel House will have associated with him, as has been stated, several experts, probably college professors, economists and specialists In commer cial and financial nITalrs. The work he Is to perform will not be connected Willi similar undertakings In any of the countries with which the United States Is associated In the war. State department officials, when re minded of the statement that the United States would be Interested In purely Kuropcan territorial ques tions, answered that the American army was In France, and that the United States would, of course, have delegates at the peace conference. Colonel House will be expected to gath er specific Information by which American peace delegates can follow the conference Intelligently. These data will be compiled pri marily to usslst American representa tives nt the peace conference nfter the ' nr. but may also be used In the mean time to help guide the government in fonnu'atliig polities. It has no bear lug on peace negotiations or negotia tions of any kind with foreign govern ments, which, of course, come within the province of the president and the state department. The United Stutes government Isn't getting ready to enter Into peace ne gotiations with Germany, Isn't going to meddle In strictly Kuropean ques tions relating to the war, and Isn't ne gotiating Just yet on the problems of peace with the F.ntente, us has fre quently been surmised. Must Have Data In Advance. It Is Important for the United States government now und will be even, more Important Inter on to have a so called "who's who and what's what" In the war In order that all phases In volved may be properly understood by reference to data compiled In advunce. In time of wur the government that falls to prepare for peace will ulti mately be nt u disadvantage, says the Philadelphia Public Ledger In an edi torial. The representatives of Great Itiitaln, Austria, Itussln and Prussia, found this out nfter the fall of Na poleon when they met Prince Tulley rand at Vienna. Tulleyrand, sent by France, had learned enough of the sit uation ns It concerned ult of the small er European powers and as It con cerned much of the opinion of Europe to turn the tables upou the four great powers and to stand as the champion of the public rights of Europe. Prince Talleyrand maneuvered, and successfully, uceordlng to the rules of a secret diplomacy. He really worked In belinlf of selfish and na tionalistic Interests. The partitioning of Europe by the congress of VeTiun was the outcome of urbltrury compro mise; It wus prolific of future wars. The knowledge which the great dip lomatic exponent of France displayed was more comprehensive than that of bis foes, that Is all. Excepting that he recognizes the need of precise In formation, President Wilson acts up on u principle dllTereut from that which guided Talleyrand. He will urge this nation into no alliance, even with the nations with whom It Is as sociated In the common wur against the Teutonic powers. He proposes simply to equip himself with knowl edge pertinent to the rights of all na tions In common with America ns they may be concerned by the proceedings of the peace conference. To Show War Aims. In this spirit the president has ashed Colonel House to survey the field of military, naval and political conditions in the count lies of our en emies and our friends; to get nt the economic, political and emotional state of things In every country, anil to tell frankly to Great Itiitaln, Uussla, France, Italy and the neutral powers the things that we are doing and that we Intend to do In the war. More over, on attempt will be made to lift the heavy curtain of censorship In Germany and Austria-Hungary, In or der to spread among their peoples a comprehension of American war alms and potentialities. (initials are anxious that no Impres sion should be created, as a result of Colonel House's appointment, of any Intention to start peace negotiations In the near future. So far as the at titude of the United Stutes Is con cerned, I he president's reply to the pope still remains tho unaltered view of the government here. The appointment of Colonel House Is recognition by the government of the fact that the adjustment of pence terms will be u very complicated pro ceeding. Many points of dispute must be sealed.- IJuestlons of ull sorts, economic, political, and historical, will come up for discussion, and the Amer ican delegates must be foreurined with a mass of Information and statistical data to meet every situation. No data concerning present condi tions In Germany or Austria will come wit hill the scope of Colonel House's work, as this would come under "mil liary Information." Lakes regions. The Atlantic highlands In the eastern part, extending front the northern const of Labrador, nenrly to the Gulf of Mexico. Include the low plateau of Labrador to the north and the Appalachian or Allegheny moun tains on the south, the principal sec tions of the latter bearing the nnmes of the White mountains In New Hamp shire, the Green mountains In Vermont, the Adlrondacks In the stute of New York, the Alleghenlcs In Pennsylvania, and the Black mountains la North Carolina. WINNERS OF 1 Williams; 2 E. Collins; 8 Rlsberg; 4 Fabcr; 5 Gandil; C Hnsbrook; 7 Jourdun ; 8 Jnckson; 0 Byrne; 10 Lelbold; 11 Lynn; 12 CIcotte; 13 Weaver; 14 Felsch; 15 Schulk; 10-ltussell ; 17 Manager Clarence Rowland; 18-Dunforth; 19 McMullen ; 20-Murpby; 21 Benz; 22 Scott; 23 J. Collins; 24 Wolfgang; 2 Jenkins. WRONG PLAYER IS BANISHED Umpire Rigler Should Have Fired Pitcher or Himself How John ny Evera Got In Wrong Fans who attended a receit game In Philadelphia wondered what Johnny Evers had done to warrant d:smissnl from the field. The true tale tas been learned from Pat Morun. Umpire Dlgler and Pitcher Jacobs were of a different opinion oa many of the PIrnles' pitches, and the latter were peeved. Evers enmo to bat In the sixth with the bases filled nd two out. Johnny tried to coax a pass and the count was tw o balls nnd one strike when Juke offered a doubtful pitch. Johnny Insisted It was a bull, but Big ler called It a strike. "How about that pitch, Jake; wasn't It a ball?" shouted the Quaker second baseman after flying out on the next one. "It certnlnly was," replied Jacobs, who was smarting over other deci sions. "There you are now 1" yelled Johnny In glee, as he looked at Rigler. "You're, finished for toduy," was the answer from the umpire. And then they wonder why a lot of people want the umpire curbed. PLAYERS PRAISE EACH OTHER Jack Coombs 8ays George Burns Is Hardest Batter to Fool Latter Lauds Pitcher. Some time ngo Jack Coombs, the Brooklyn pitcher, was discussing his work nnd hia methods of pitching to the different batters. He was asked whnt batter he found It hardest to pitch to. "That's a hnrd question to nnswer," he replied. "They're all hard and any batter In the league, no matter how carefully you figure him out, is liable to cut loose at any time nnd upset all your calculations," When asked to name the batter who gnje him the most trouble, he nnmed George Burns, the Giants' left fielder. "George Burns Is a good batter," said Coombs, "nnd It's a hnrd mntter to fool Mm, because ho rarely strikes at a bad -hall. He's a pretty tough propo sition for a pitcher." Some time Inter Burns was -asked what pitcher he found hardest to hit. He didn't hesl ftite a moment. "That's easy," he wild, "Jack Coombs." BOWLERS GO TO CINCINNATI Event Will Be Held In February or March Secretary Langtry Is Very Optimistic Cincinnati has accepted the Invita tion to hold the 1018 tournament of the American Bowling congress. The event will be held In February or March. A. L. Langtry of Milwaukee, secretary of the congress, telegraphed members of the alley owners' associa tion that be Is optimistic for a sue Tesful tourney despite the war. AMERICAN LEAGUE WAR HURTS "PRO" FOOTBALL Many of Stars Who Played With Mid dle Western Teams Now In Army or Navy Service. For the past five or six years pro fessional football hns been growing by leaps nnd bounds In the Middle West. In Ohio, Indiana and Illinois the professional elevens representing many cities and towns became bo popular that It was planned to form a professional footbnll league, nnd the promoters of the scheme had reason to believe their venture would prove a success. Crowds numbering Into the thousands nttended the big gumes; footbnll stars from colleges and uni versities throughout the country were paid big money for their serv ices, nnd the gnmo was nil to the merry. But the war hns put a terrible crimp In professional football. Many of the stars who played with Mid dle Western teams ore now In the nrmy or navy. Many more will be drafted Into service, nnd such teams as the one Jim Thorpe assembled In Ohio have been completely wrecked. BATTERS CAUSE MUCH DELAY One Reason Given for Unnecessary Time Consumed In Ball Games No Good Reason for It The attention of umpires Is called to the fact that a growing practice on the pnrt of batters Is one reason why baseball games sometimes are longer than they need be. The habit of batters stepping out of the box for little or no cause Is spread ing and there Is no good reason why It should be allowed. Whnt Is meant is batters, In a moment of petulance at real or fancied dellberateness on the pnrt of the pitcher, stepping out of the box nnd thus wasting more time. At the lenst sign of slowness or hes itancy by the pitcher, out of the box steps the batter, much as a peevish child might be expected to do. It's a childish thins to do, nnywny. FREAKIEST PLAY OF SEASON With Three on Bases In St. Louis Game Rousch, Caught Off First, Lands , 8afely on Second. - One of the freak plays of the senson happened In a game of the recent Cardlnals-Rcds scries In St. Louis. In ono Inning the Reds had three men on bases and Rousch, on first, was caught off that bag. Instead of trying to get back to first, Rousch ran for second, and Paulette ran after him with tho ball. As Rousch came tn to second, Kopf, who held that base, lit out for third, so Paulette took after htm. Kopf landed on third, where Fred Tony was anchored and refusing to budge. Paulette tagged Kopf and he was out, while Rousch was safe on sec ond. How did they score the play? Rousch advanced to second od Kopf'a out 1917 PENNANT FIND PHYSICAL WEAK SPOTS Many Baseball Players Have Athletic Hearts and Flat Feet Others Have Broken Toes, The physical examination for the army reveals the fact that a very large number of ball players are affected with uthletlc heart, which Is a bar to enlistment. It Is claimed that every mnn over twenty-five Is troubled In that way. Then there are broken toes without number among the avernge players on the average team. Thire Is also usually a broken leg or arm, crooked elbows, torn or misplaced lig aments nnd various other aliments. In one respect alone players will stand the test and that Is, eyesight. It Is certain that hardly a player un der thirty-one will fall In this. If he docs ho has succeeded In fooling his ninnnger, since the slightest Impair ment of the vlslou ruins him as a ball player. It probably would not be suspected, but mnny plnyers will be rejected on account of flat feet For some reason probably half of the ball players lack normal Insteps. Bunions also are par ticularly common. Both the flat feet nnd bunions are caused by wearing baseball shoes, which have always shown a tendency to "remake" the feet In a few years. BALL DIDN'T TOUCH GROUND Fielder Chasss Up Ladder, Gets Pill Out of Water Tank and Nails Bat ter at Plate. Tex Jones, who used to piny with the White Sox and now Is out (n the Western league somewhere, says this play actually happened In a gnme he took part In. It's a real "tnnk town" story, nt any rate. The playing field was along a rail road track; and there was a water taTtk without a roof on It Just back of the center fielder. The batter hit a high fly, and It landed plunk Into this open water tank. The batter thought he had a home run, so he jogged around at his leisure, but the center fielder chased up the ladder at the side of the water tank, reached In, got the ball that had come to the surface of the water, and from his perch threw home, getting the runner by a step. The umpire studied the rules, held tho play was fair because the ball hadn't touched "ground" after being hit, and allowed tho putout Record Horse Went Cheap. The more, Miss Isabel McGregor, by Jay McGregor, that recently took a record. of 2:084, was sold by P. W. Harvey of Cleveland as recently as June for $300 to Charley Moorhead, tho Butler (Pa.) trainer, who gave her new record to her. Why include 8oldlers? Swimming Is one Hawaii's great est sports, but track sports are all gaining In popularity among school boys and soldiers there. . FARMING IN 1840 Amazing Changes in Living Con ditions Are Shown. In Early Days the Farm Produced Practically Everything Family Con sumed, Food and Clothing. In view of the modern-day high cost of living and of the mnny wonderful advances made In the Inst century the railroad, tho telegraph, the ocean cable, the telephone, the automobile and farm and labor-saving machinery of all kinds and the amazing changes' these Inventions have necessarily wrought In all directions In almost ev ery walk of life It may be of Interest to recall living on a farm In the year 1840. The farm I have In mind, writes Warner Miller In, the New York Times, consisted of 200 acres. The stock was 15 cows, a yoke of oxen, 20 sheep, an old white horse, a dozen pigs, 60 hens, 10 geese, a few ducks and a flock of turkeys. The farm produced practically ev erythlng the fnmlly consumed, both clothing nnd food. The sheep fur nished the wool, which was carded at a "fulling" mill and made Into rolls for spinning. At home It was spun Into yarn and woven on a hand loom. There were no ready-mnde clothes; all clothes were made In the home. Several cows were killed each year. There was a tannery near by, where the skins were tanned. A shoemaker made our boots. They were usually too small and gave much trouble and pain. The flax, cut and laid down until the fiber loosened from the woody pnrt, was put through a heckle worked by hand and then spun nnd woven. This strong linen cloth was used for sum mer clothing, towels, etc. The seed was saved to make flaxseed tea (a medicine), or poultice for bruises. For food we had everything needed fresh meat, potatoes, beets, cab bages, parsnips, pumpkins for pies, ap ples, which lasted from fall to spring; cider, which gave us vinegar or pro duced a cider-champagne. Half a dozen pigs killed In the fall gave us plenty of ham and bacon, lurd, sausages and snlt pdrk. There were plenty. of chickens for roasting and potples nnd eggs, turkeys for Thnnksglvlng and Christmas, oc casionally a roast goose with apple sauce. From the cows' milk we made both butter nnd cheese. Whnt butter nnd cheese the fnmlly did not consume was sold In a near-by village. Butter usually brought 12 cents a pound. Cheese was also made nt home, as there were neither creameries nor cheese factories. Cheese was sold at 5 to 0 cents a pound. All eggs not used went to the village store and brought 10 cents to 12 cents a dozen. Every fanner mndo his own soap. It was called "soft soap." It was soft, but very strong, and took the dirt off your hands and face very thoroughly, and some skin, also, unless you were careful In your ablutions. Little was heard of the world at large. Twenty miles from the railroad the great four-horse stagecoach came every day, bringing the malls. There were few newspapers or magazines. The telegraph was unknown. The At lantic cable did not succeed until 1800. There were only 23 miles of railroad In 1830. Admiral Beatta Hero. Go Into Admiral Beatty's parlor and glance at the line of books which He on the table, says the London Dally Telegraph. It Is "Nelson's Dispatches." Look on his desk nnd you will find a bust of tho great admiral. The prints and pictures on the walls here com memorating great deeds of the navy also are lit with the light of the navy's greatest inspiration. Hero Is tho din ner table of the' captain of a famous ship of the first buttle squadron. Note the centerpiece a silver statuette. Need you ask whoso It Is? Nelson stands shining before hlra as sitting he drinks tho king's health In the way of the navy, nnd the statuette Is his mascot. Only once did he leave It bo hind, (tad the ships had trouble. That was on maneuvers nnd never since has Nelson been forgotten. Ills serv ant, who knew the vulue the captain attached to It, asked before the battle of Jutland If ho would stow the statu ette safely away. "No," replied the captain, "he must go through It." And go through It the little etatuette did, and the ship that carried him went through It too, and earned fresh lau rels. A "Dickens Spot" Going. It Is, of course, Impossible to pre serve all such places, but one hears with regret that "development" is to claim another Dickens landmark in London. It Is an old house, overhang ing the river In the neighborhood of Llmehouse Hole, and wus formerly oc cupied by the Wnters fnmlly, who, for generations, there carried on the busi ness of lightermen. The house is reached from the shore at low water by means of a flight of wooden stairs, and a recent writer relates how Rich ard Waters used to recount, with great interest, the visits which Charles Dickens pnld to his house when en gaged In writing "Our Mutual Friend." In order to secure tho true local color for his riverside scenes, tho novelist spent many days In the little bow win dowed room overlooking the Thames, 'writing away as If for dear life," as Mr. Walters would say. Christian Science Monitor. Saving Food. " "Drink to mo only with thine eyea so sold the poet." "Well?" "What did the poet mean by that?" "An early example of food conger ration." The Practical Girl. He You are the prettiest girl I ever saw. . She That sounds all right, but I don't know how much the compliment Is worth until you tell me how many pretty girls yon have aeen. GAVE UP HOPI Often Wished For Death to End Her Misery. Doan'a Effected a Complete and Lasting Recovery. "I was helpless with klune'yfrnn ble," says Mrs. Ellen Jar.1. Third St.. St Charles. Mo., ''anV gan to think my case wi,g bevom the reach of medicine. The paint, my back laid me up in bed anH seemed as If my buck 1 had been crushed. I couldn't sleep and was so nervous I was almost frantic. "Flashes of fire came before my eyes nnrt fha milna In m. heud were terrible. WJJf My sight was affected ittZiub and there were lurge, puffy sm beneath my eyes. "How I suffered when pnssnzth, kidney secretions I I scream ngony and I often wish,.,! j ,, , tlio and be out of misery, i L night sweats nnd mornings on m ting up I wns so weak and numl I could hardly stand up. j so pule and emaciated I i,,,,! like death. Doan'a Khhcy m cured me completely limi i hav. been as well nnd healthy since ti any woman of my uge." ( Cat Dou'a at Aor Store, 60eiBot I DOAN'SW FOSTER-MILBURN CO BUFFALO, N. Damaged Goods. The Utile boy of the suburb who errands for the neighbors h,.n a penny for It stepped timidly up tod counter or the nnruwure store. "I want a uh, a lock wiisIht! y know, one that goes on n Imlt tn k the nut from slipping, i.ml is siutiJ ar.v." The hardware dealer pulli'd nut tie druwer nnd tossed out n fw a- disks on the glass showcase. jw J examined them. He found that 11 were not only perforated In the oe0J but that they were split, ani the ends bent apart, much like the clla rim on an automobile tire. He handed the washers buck a gravely exumlnlng tbeni. "I don't want 'eta," he dorl. "Those things are broken." SKIN-TORTURED BABIES Bleep, Mothers Rest After Treatml With Cutlcura Trial Free. Send today for free samples of CI curu Soap and Ointment nnd learn M quickly they relieve Itehlng, burnl skin troubles, and point to speedy nl ment of bnby rashes, eczema nnd I ings. Huving cleured bahy's skin ki It clear by using Cutlcura cxclusivl Free sample each by mail with BJ Address postcard, Cuticiirn, Depti Boston. Sold everywhere. Adf, SERUM FOR RAT-BITE FEVl Japanese Physicians Declare Curl. umainea rrom veins or rcrwn Who Have Recovered. A group of eminent .Tiipflnese tors hns been busy studying rat fever ever since Futukl, Ishlwnri their associates reported two years the discovery of the microbe causes It. This Is n spirochete. onii.vl luwniwn its f i inn Is siiir:i lg-7.ag. Several types of this 4 chete were' found in men who hatf bitten bv ruts, nnd In guinea p! bail been experimentally I'""' These were Identified by I'Utau nil ncJinlillltv ill. lit tcill. Twwloi a Ihmtlro. Kuliekn nnd K Okiidn of the Imperial l'nlver Kyutdiu, Fukuoka, Japan, contrl to the Journal of hxperiiiienuu rlnn n confirmation of l'lltllkl'S I Doctor Rvoklchl Inadn eontrlb" description of the disease; I'ftorf tukn Ido. Hokuto Holt, Ultam i Hldetsune Wnnl describe exjaTi Hint ni'nvn tin. rut to be ine ci currier of the Sp.lroehetn Irterohii rhiiglen, ns the microbe f tbe d i ...,n.4. ,i ii, .fin's Yntukn b' 1.1 IHII. .....ki ti ii!,i..toiiic Wnnl nnd I Ik-ii.lii illseiiss the possibility 01 duclng Immunity. The latter go Into detail' 01 eviii'rlments and collie to H'e 0 slim that the "senna of l"'r;lull: have recovered from rnt-blt' fev tains nn Immune body which the spirochetes of that tliseiim'. The Importance of these nrUcn . .... .... i e .i! this spin1 in toe iiiiiii im-'i j Is the cause of the fever, that nj the carriers, nnd that the dual be cured. Don't Need Matchei. I. A nlnte Wl"' A COIII!-IIHku I " ,.J fastened over the keyhole tf1 locking the door In the pie mntter. P0STUM has been adopted the xaow beverage in many a, home d 1U M1 3 ilavovm healths X-t'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers