Time ali- rllision d the Pacific s have fears ch 20. engers, to be Ken to at San to that ty-four Joyce, ina llision, 3 light kes at well n time ear of went ersons others Thir- ntified Smith, Oluffs, ranians ) acres Tenn. eins of ix feet ‘or the mining irned. e senl- ww Mil- stroyed , and 540,000. )ersons ray on est on at left lorning ill and of 800 t from claims ~ ] on ac- by the ational Decem- ngland, d Kip- against vith re- aracter Colom- 1a and making aragua Jerbert ster at ffect a nezuela ny and luntjen, aly for 500,000 ,000 on ina ex- in the cham- rmany, ions in purpose nerican > ¢oun- as not ’s offer being h the ject. It eply is days. Holland General United ed with a3. He ates is for the in Tur- vn how Ss wore he sur- way at consid- China, exiled ecution rs, but cted by bilizing troops tion of tf Shen rura of fam a) -e A 50-Cent Calendar Tor Six Cents. If you want one of the handsomest cal- endars you ever saw, send 6 cents postage to the Boston Rubber Shoe Co., Calendar Dept., 9 Murray St., New York. It is 10x 20 inches, printed in 12 ‘colors; and a per- fect beauty. There*are lots of calendars sold for 50 cents nowhere near as pretty. It is difficult sometimes to draw the line between contentment and egotism. FITSpermanentiy cared. No lta or nervoas- neesafteriirst day's uss of Dr. Klino’s Groat NerveRestorer. $2irialbottle and troatiseiras Dr.R. H. EuiNg, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. The musical composer is not the only fellow whose notes go to protest. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrap for children teething softenthe gums, reducesinflamma- tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 232, abottle The happiest people are thoss who are easily flattered. Deafness Cannot Bo Cured » J by local applications as they cannot reach tha diseased portion of the car. Thercis only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti- tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining ot the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in- flamed you have a rumbling sound orimper- fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam- mation can be taken out and this tube re- . stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh,whichisnothing but an flamed condition of the mucous surface. We will give One Hundred Dollarsfor any cage of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Cir- cularssent free. ¥.J.CreENEY & Co.,Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, T5e. Hall’s Family Pills are the best, Taking the United States as a whole the census shows that one person in every forty has a telephone. i Impoliteness of Railway. Patrick McCabe, lately a section hand on the ’Frisco road at Wichita, Kan. is suing that corporation for damages for injuries received while in its employ. His plea is that while working the foreman spoke to him “in a loud, profane and very boisterous manner, thereby causing this plaintiff to be nervous and excited and there- by causing him to place himself in a position of great bodily danger, and to a greater degrec than he otherwise would have done.” The orders were given “in a very loud and boisterous manner, backed up by many oaths, such as ‘Be smart,” ‘Be quick,” and ‘Move yourself,” etc.” Kansas section hands seem to be sensitive plants.— x. An Animal Engineer. Animal instinct often gives a valua- ble hint to human reason. The beav- er does not build his dam straight across the stream, but with an arch against the current, his instinct tell- ing him that in this form it will better resist floods and the impact of float- ing ice. This hint from the little ani- mal has been acted on in many cases lately, notably in the building of the Great Bear Valley dam in California. Engineers as a ‘rule, build dams straight across .the stream, chiefly, perhaps, to save material, but the arched dam is the more economical in the long run. : There are plenty of people who have be- come depressed and discouraged, because that dry, hacking cough hangs to them continually. They have taken much medi- _ cine, mostly of the advertised quack sort, nothing like Dr. August Koenig's Hamburg Breast Tea, the discovery of a then noted German physician 60 years ago. We do not say that this will cure a case where the lungs are badly diseased, for it will not, and up to this date there is nothing that will cure under these conditions, but on the other hand, if the lungs are not hard hit, the patient should take Dr. August Koenig's Hamburg Breast Tea, a cup full every night on going to bed, have it hot, drink slowly, then every other night rub the throat and top portion of the lungs with St. Jacobs Oil. cover with oil silk, let it remain an hour, then remove. Eat good, plain, nourishing food, live in the open air ar much as possible, By all means sleep as near out of doors as possible, that is, windows wide open, except in the very gevere weather. Take a cold sponge bath every morning; then immediately rub the body vigorously with a coarse towel. Take Dr.. August Koenig's Hamburg Drops every othe: day according to’ directions. One can buy the three remedies for $1.25 of any reliable druggist. Begin the treatment at once, and see how much better you will be almost within a week’s time. Twenty years ago England imported 29,- 000 horses annually: now the number is 324,000. In German universities about one-fourth of all the young men study medicine. Jam sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mgs: THomAs RoB- EINS, Maple St., Norwich, N. Y., ep. 17, 1900. It’s because courtship is such a pose that marriage is often suck a failure. Bronchitis «tJ have kept Ayer’s Cherry Pec- & toral in my house for a great many years. It is the best medicine in the world for coughs and colds.’’ J. C. Williams, Attica, N.Y. Sn a YEE as All serious lung troubles begin with a tickling in the throat. You can stop this at first in’ a single night with Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. Use it also for bronchitis, consumptien, hard colds, and for coughs of all kinds. g Three sizes : 25¢., 56c., $1. All druggists. onsult your doctor. If he says take iY, gr oh = he says. If he tells you not to take it, then don’t take it. He knows. Leave it with him. We are willing. J. 0. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. .all. OR Wan W.MOIRRIS, Ef ns D.C, 2 ros i Ai iccesstully Brosecutes © ures, 3yrsiaucivil war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since NEW DISCOVERY; gives D BR O 4 S quick relief and cures worst cases. Book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatment ¥ree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'B BOKE, Box B, Atlanta, Ga. P. N. U. 52, 02 FARMS of all sizes at low prices. Write to Ei. W. Ww eiss, Mgr. of Immigration, Xmporia, Va. VIRGIRIA NSEC ICOERECICIRRE « AERICILTORAL » SEA LAL AIAN AAAI LA of IOI SH SKEORIEIISIS To Avoid Colds in Chickens. Each fowl showing evidence of: cold or congestion is shut up in a small coop and given two grains of calomel at night, followed by a one-grain quinine pill night and morning for two cor three days. If there is any dis- charge from nostrils, a few drops of camphorated oil is injected into each nostril. If any improvement is mani- fest im two or three days, they are removed to a small room and a solu- tion of copperas added to the drinking water. They are kept here for a week or two, or until they show a complete recovery. If, on the other hand, after two or three days’ observation and treatment, no improvement is mani- fested, the bird is killed and buried.— C. P. Byington, in Orange Judd Farmer. Homemade Wagon Jack. The wagon jack shown in the ac- companying illustration is not patent- ed. Anyone can make it easily. The construction is seen at a glance. A D consists of two strong picces of wood, and are connected with a sharp hinge at ¢. This is bolted to the lever at A THE JACK IN OUTLINE. and to the base at D. On the end of the lever a strong iron hook is secured. When the axle is to be raised, disen- gage the iron rod at I and let the jack assume the position as shown by the dotted lines. By depressing the lever the axle is easily raised and is kept in position. With this device the weight is over the centre of the base and the wagon or buggy will not run back- ward or forward as it often does with other jacks. The base of the jack may be as long as necessary. The hinge at D should be somewhatbelow the centre of AD. Ialways use bolts instead of nails for constructing this jack.—Du- mont Kennedy, in New England Home- stead. Soil For Pot Plants, ‘Although it is well known that dif- ferent varieties of plants need different treatment, too many amateurs give all pot plants the same soil, of whatever sort is handiest. I remember once replotting all the plants for winter, when quite a child. After the drain- age, I put nothing in the jars but garden loam, sifted through a ‘flour sieve to make it nice. Our plants ex- isted that winter and that was about Few grown people would make such a mistake, but many do not real- ize that pot plants require a concen- trated soil on account of their roots not being able to go far in search of needed elements, and the finest soil is. not usually the richest. A good mixture, which the novice will be safe In using for nearly. all plants, is com- posed of equal parts good loam or gar- den soil, leaf mold or wood’s earth to furnish humus and lighten the whole; sand to make porous, and barnyard scrapings or well-rotted manure to enrich it. Always put about an inch of drainage—charcoal or gravel—in every jar or can, cover with moss, dead grass or fibres from the ‘wood’s earth and some of the fertilizer, to prevent the soil washing down and spoiling the drainage and supply food as the plant grows. Ferns and calla lilies do best when one part muck is added to two parts the above mixture. Cacti do well in nearly pure sand, while roses, carnations and geraniums need a heavier soil—more loam and fertilizer in proportion to the leaf mold and sand.—The Epitomist. ¢ Improving the Live Stock. Breeding is a science when it is done for the purpose of arriving at results which are sought as a possi- bility, although the breeder may begin in a manner that does not apparently warrant him in proceeding with his venture. Some breeders, among them Bakewell and Western, were thirty years in perfecting one breed of sheep and swine. Every animal sold by them put the purchaser thirty years ahead in the line of improvement. They simply selected the best for breeding purposes every year, and were compelled to in- breed the animals in order to fix their characteristics. The farmer must pursue the same course with his herds and crops, and he must make his selections eevry year by discarding every animal that does not come up to a certain standard of excellence. He must never become discouraged, as even the most skillful breeders do not succeed in securing but a few very valuable specimens in a year, though an improvement will be noticed every season. The gain is but little, and skill is essential, but in time the stock differs greatly from the original. Should extraordinary excellence be observed in certain individuals the breeder may abandon his plans and methods and start on new lines of breeding, as he learns by experience during his prog- ress, and takes advantage of accident or discoveries, but he always adheres to his original object of making a breed that is to be adopted to a special purpose. Kven among the best breeds of live stock some individuals will be more valuable for certain uses than others, and those with the highest record may not display their best points of excellence until selected for breeding.—Philadelphia Record, .- How Long Seeds May Be Kept. Farmers who have seeds left after they have done planting or sowing often desire to know how long they may be kept before they lose the ger- minating power. If they were bought and proved good one year they will not be likely to fail the next year, but we take the fcllowing from an old; table, and is meant for home-grown seeds, saved with care. Parsnips one year, beans one to two years, borage, cress, balm and salsify two years; corn, nasturtium and peas two or three years; garlic and onion three years: lettuce, leek, savory, spinach and fr .- nip three or four years; caraway, : goram and rutabaga four years; fc nel five years, parsley and peppers {2 cr six years; carrot one or seven yei- cabbage, celery and radish six or eigi:t years; beets, cucumbers, mangel-wuz- zel, pumpkin, squash and melon eight to ten years; asparagus four to thir- teen years. Much depends upon how they are kept, and how ripe they are when gathered. Placed in a nearly airtight metal box they will keep much longer, while if left exposed to the air, dampness or extremes of heat or cold, they do not keep as well. Pro- fessor Lindly, in his “Introduction to Botany,” says melons.and rye have been known to grow when forty years old, sensitive plants at sixty years, kidney beans at one hundred years, and “there are now growing in the garden of the Horticultural Society raspberry plants from seeds 1600 to 1700 years old.” That is longer than many would care to keep seeds. Many gardeners will not use melon, cucum- ber or squash seeds until three or four years old, claiming that fresh seeds produce more vine than fruit, while the older seeds produce a less vigorous plant, with more fruit. Wie have known celery seed to do better three years after it was bought than it did the first year, and cabbage makes less leaves and more solid heads from seed two or three years old.—The Cultiva- tor, A Building For Farm Implements. Diversified farming calls for a great variety of tools and agricultural im- plements, and as these are used during only a fractional part of the year the average farmer lays them aside in a hurry; so much so, even, that he generally neglects to oil the polished surfaces of plows, spades. sickles and the like, and when again he wants to use them he finds, alas! that they will not work well. The fact is, he may consider himself fortunate if they are not out of order to such an extent as to require a great deal of repairing. Valuable time in consequence is lost in putting the ' machinery into proper working condition, and thus it is that a larger percentage of agricultural ime plements rot or rust out than wear out. Accordingly, money used in erect. ing suitable buildings in which to store wagons, sleighs, mowers, grain binders, reapers, corn harvesters, seed- ers, cultivators and all other kinds of implements on the farm is not only well spent, but proves soon to be a paying investment. The way to do is to select a site con- venient to the lanes leading to the various fields, and always at a proper distance from the other farm buildings, to insure safety in case of fire. The structure may be any size desired, but usually, if twenty feet by forty feet, it will answer every purpose; it can then be divided into three spaces, two of thirteen feet each and one o! 83X20 18x20 x30 : oy i Ny For ya for: 1. rog. venHicLef FARMING § HARVESTING IMPLENENT MACHINERY - 5 fourteen feet. Three of the sides should be inclosed, and the fourth fitted with double doors, as represented in the ace companying cut. Windows can be in. serted in the ends and likewise in the rear. Common lumber, if not shaky or rotten, will suffice, but the best quality of shingles obtainable should be used for the roofing, and pine lum- ber for the doors. With such a build- ing there should be no chance what- ever of fowls or sparrows entering, which are exceedingly fond of roosting on certain kinds of farm implements. The floor should be; at least a foot above the surface of the ground, and tlie approaches to the doors made of earth or gravel. The dryer the loca- tion for the building is, of course, the better. It is very important, indeed, to have a piace for every article and then keep it in its place. Moreover, when any implement is put in the building a geod coating of kerosene oil should al- ways be applied to the bright parts of the castings and where they are liable to be injured by rust; it is ad- visable, in fact, to do this as often as twice a year. Boiled linseed oil should also be applied to the woodwork, and especially where the paint has worn off. It is needless to add, of course, that good machine oil should be used on all the bearings of an implement when in use. To go a step further, it is fine policy to run the binders and other harvesting machines into the building just as soon as the day’s work with them is over. They can be taken out without serious delay, and will always be found in good working order, whieh is never the case if they are left in the fields for any long period.—Frelerick O. Sib- ley, in New York Tribune Farmer, THE MARKETS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red 68 Rye—No. 2... 61 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear.. 54 No. 2 yellow, shelled.. 52 Mixed ear...... 53 4 Oats—No, 2 white. “37 334 No. 3 white..... 56 381g Flour—Winter patent.. 3 90 4 00 Fancy straight winters. 3 90 3 95 Hay—No. 1timothy........... 167% 115 Clover No. 1... .:. ..... 1300 13 20 Feed—No. ! white mid. ton. 2050 2100 Brown middlings......... 1750 1500 Bran, bulk,..... ....... 182% 171 3B Straw—Wheat .850 900 OBL... ....i.ccsieiiiian 2 50 9 00 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery hio creamery......... Fancy country roll..... Cheese—Ohio, new Poultry, Etc. Beons—per Ib.,.ccme;ei-iateiianiia.. 8 1 12 Chickens—dressedy... ,.... 15 Eggs—Pa. and Shilo, fresh. . 0 Fruits and Vegetables. Green Beans—per,bas.......cceeenens $l 50 225 Potatoes—Fancy white per bus. . BO 60 Cabbage—per bbls... 100 1325 Onlons—per barrel 210 235 BALTIMORE. : Flour— Winter Patent ................837) 380 Wheat—No. 2 reG...... sy 70 71 Corn—mixed... a 3 $2 491% : a Bags ooo ind Butter—Ohio creamery. . PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent keat—No, 2red.. 76 T7634 Corn—No, 2mixed 51 a2 Oats—No. 2 white. 38 39 Butter—Creamery, 31 33 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts. 28 29 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents ...cee...en... 5 400 Wheat—No. 2red.. 79 80 Corn—No. 2.......... 5 63 Oats—No, 2 White.. 5 3 Butter—Creamery .... 27 0 Eggs—Stateand Pennsylvania........ . 28 so LIVE STOCK. Central Stock Yards, East Liberty, Pa. Cattle. Prime heavy, 1500 to 1600 1bs.......$ 550 575 rime, 1300 to 1400 1bs..... 52 b40 Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs. 4b 515 Fatheiters............. 450 480 Butcher, $00 to 1000 Ibs. - B50. 449 Common to fair....... teense RDO 205 Oxen, common to fat............... 200 45 Common togood fat bulls and cows 250 409 Milch cows, ench.................... 2500 8500 Extra milch cows, each............ 180) 8500 Hogs. Prime heavy hogs................ $650 660 Prime medium weights........ oe 40 645 Best heavy yorkers and medium... 635 640 Good to choice packers............ 615 629 Good pigs and light yorkers 615 Pigs, common togood........ 610 Common to fair 625 QUERE o.oo 610 EE 525 Sheep. Extra, medium wethers ............ $390 400 Good to choice. ........... 840 36> Medium... "0 27 32 Commoz to fair 150 225 dambsclipped.. |... .......... 0 500 540 jambs, good to.choice, clipped... .. 475 510 (Lambs, common to fair, clipped... 800 475 Spring Lambs........ Braid 6.25 Calves. Ven), extra, .... 00. ..c..... 00 Veal, good to choice. ..... 550 Veal, common heavy.... 50 Veal, common to fair.............. 0 REVIEW OF TRADE Orders for Products of the Mills and Factories Run Far Into the Coming Year. R. G. Dun & Co.’s “Weekly Review of Trade” says: Holiday trades¢has exceeded the most sanguine expecta- tions and retail dealings in all staple lines of merchandise are avell main- tained, with the ,better grades of £00 in brisk demand. Wholesome conditions prevail in most sections of the country, although in parts of the Southwest the season has fallen be- hind the average. Even in these cases reports are encouraging for the .fu- ture. Industrial plants are well em- ployed, orders running far into the future, and labor controversies are rare. The only adverse feature of the season is that supplies of fuel are utterly inadequate, both for house- hold and manufacturing use, and show increasing delay of deliveries. Railway earnings thus far reported for December exceed last year’s by 4.2 per cent, and those of 1900 by 10.4 per cent. The largest producer of iron and steel has over 5,280,000 tons of unfilled orders on its books, and work is being pushed as rapidly as supplies of fuel and material will per- mit. Two events of importance have occurred in relation to the leading manufacturing industry. The United States Steel Corporation has greatly extended .its scope hy absorbing out- side plants and certain desirable rail- way connections. The other was the announcement of advanced freight rates, to take effect January 1, show- ing an average increase of about 10 per cent on products of iron and steel. Otherwise the situation is practically unchanged. Supplies of coke do not increase and many fur- naces are idle. Contracts for bridge work and track elevators are freely offered by the railways and accepted only on condition that the exact date of delivery shall not be specified. Despite the fact that rail mills are sold close up to the end of next year, vew business is offered and urgent buyers are compelled to go abroad. New England producers of boots and shoes are not seeking new business, which comes forward moderately in the form of supplementary ordera. Prices firmiy held, but no further ad- vance is reported. A reduction in quotations of leading lines of bleach- ed cottons stimulated trading. This division of the textile market is now in good condition. In th&® woolen goods market there is a fair volume of orders, in many cases exceeding available offerings. Failures for the week numbered 267 in the United States, against 265 last year, and 16 in Canada, compared with 27 a year ago. Bradstreet’s says: Wheat, includ- ing flour, exports for the week ending December 18 aggregate 3,256,037 bushels, against 3,761,047 bushels last week, 4,432,832 bushels this week last Year, and 4,123,350 bushels, in 1800. Wheat exports since July 1 aggre- gate 123,763,533 bushels, against 140, 636,212 bushels last seascn and 90, bushels in 1500. Corn ex- g 1,526,141 bushels, 1,301,286 bushels last week, 330,941 bushels last year and 5,465. 578 bushels in 1900. | With Mars and its THE SON OF EX- U. S. MINISTER TO ENGLAND Commends Peruna to All Catarrh Sufferers. Hon. Lewis E. Johnson is the son of the late Reverdy Johnson, who was United States Senator from Maryland, also Attorney-General under President Johnson and United Sta*es Minister to England, and who was regarded as the greatest constitu- tional lawyer that ever lived. - In a recent letter from 1006 F Street, N. W., Mr. Johnson says: 7 %¢ No one should longer suffer from catarrh when Peruna is accessible, To my knowledge it has caused relief to so many of my friends and ac~ quaintances, that it ishumanity to commend its use to all persons suffer- tng with thisdistressing disorderof the humansystem.’’-Lewis E, Johnson. Catarrh Poisons. Catarrh=is capable of changing all the life-giving -secretions of the body into scalding fluids, which destroy and inflame every part they come in contact with. Ap- plications to the ian affected by catarrh can do little good save to soothe or quiet disagreeable symptoms. Hence it is that gargles, sprays, atomizers and inhalants only serve as temporary relief. So long as the irritating secretions of catarrh con- tinue to be formed so long will the mem- branes continue to be inflamed, no matter what treatment is used. * There 1s but one remedy that has the de- A PLANET'S MOUNTAINS. Great Elevations on Venus Have Eeen Discovered by an Astronomer. The star gazers are continually see- ing new wonders in the worlds that surround this one. Of course the great mass of the public, having no means of verifying or disputing successfully the statements of the men of science are obliged to accept them as true. intricate system of canals, if not its actual inhabitants, thanks to the delicate investigations of late years, everybody is pretty well’ acquainted. Now Herr Arendt, who is a German and therefore not a trifler, announces the discovery of mountains on Venus. To observers hitherto the planet has seemed wrapped in an im- penetrable envelope of cloud, which, when near the earth, is the cause of its astonishing brilliancy, but Herr Arendt, who has had the instruments of the ‘Urania observatory at Berlin to work with, considers that he has detécted markings on Venus which in- dicate the presence of great elevations seen from time to time through the clouds surrounding it. Novel as the suggestion is, it is but a revival of an old idea. Long age Schroter fancied he saw evidence of mountains on Venus in the raggedness of the termi- nator—that is, the line where the light and shade meet, such as the inner line of the crescent moon. He went so far as to measure them and announced that they were 25 miles high. But then no one had believed him. No Place for a Lazy Cat. In the wine cellars at Limehouse in London are 20 miles of lanes, lined on each side by huge casks of wine. They are a paradise for rats and the only way in which the pests are kept within reasonable limits as to numbers is by employing a small army of 300 cats. These cats must catch rats or starve and the result is that they are probably the most skilled force of rat catchers in the world. As soon as a cat becomes old and lazy she is re- placed by a young and active one, so that the morale of the force never suffers from bad example. Capsicum Vaselina PUT UP iN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES. A Substitute for and Superior to Mustard or any other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain allayin wd curative qualities of tuis article wondertt It will stop the tooth- y che and ice r-irritant known, als ains in the chest an matic, neuralgzic ax ty complaints, I t, and it_will be found to Many people say ions.” , or other dealers, to usin po e stampa will send you a tube by mail No article should be accepted by the public unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not Chesebroush ManufaciurinaCo IT State Street, New York City. ending this amount 100 1 A be. 50s : Drogglsts Genaine stamped C C C. Never sold in buik, Bevsare of the dealer who fries to sell “‘something jast as good.” sirable effect, and that remedy is Peruna. This remedy strikes at once to the roots of catarrh by restoring to the capillary ves- sels their healthy elasticity. Peruna is not a temporary palliative, but a radical cure. Send for Dr. Hartman’s latest book, sent free for a short time. Address The Peruna Drug Manufacturing Co., Colum- bus, Ohio. If you do not derive prompt and satisfac tory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state- ment of. your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. After I would eat a meal I would be suddenly taken with such terrible cramps that I would have to waik bent over, and I would have to It would be a couple of hours before I would ob- tain relief. One day I beard about Ripans Tabules, and since 1 have loosen my clothes. taken a couple of the 5-cent boxes I have not had a single attack. At druggists. Che Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains-a supply for a year. Earn $50 am $50 $0 $100 vel Covhagetiog 010; ' hy mail. Booklet § Lp ITo Toe Re y mail. Booklet free. (“RAPMUGILOGY + UE. CO. U3 UVitth Ave. New York. : Bd CURES V/RERE ALL ELSE | @ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes { in time. Sold by dru CINEREA = |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers