SIRE, TE Trouble or con- ed, was the Ea- llegheny, hz shot 1d in the n—In 10 he other ar, good rked my 1e insur- J How I have >p things he road oo slow. am ruin- not my ally rob- rerything ur hus- LEE. property ssued in ties by ningham Bank. ENTS. to shoot principal anchuria ernment se of the asserted osed vic- mystery ich sail- ve been and will iti] next king for nber of urg, ad- lish and ittsburg, Kaufman sity hos- an oper- 3n steps of the on the t Tsin, flice De- ee. deliv- tal num- it 33,948, y 1. th pole, Belgian > organ- ated at )y a na- scale. 1d, was ‘een two ). Wise iis head 1en they elegraph eived a 1lveston, se there. ton. to f Signal h terms ph sys- wireless egularly lar tele- nmercial re W. | States Porter, mmitted been a lia. He was at 4 the pub- close of he debt. mounted an in- ,068,116. nted for ount of sed ex- in the ovement of Ohio, le wash. n price, having et price 1S and juent at ivity in sold at X and A small Tichigan at 33@ at 25@ 3c and 1. r New > Enum- nounced red with ,414 in nhattan 697, and are now State. YW. 1 States regular cent on Novem- ared on 2arnings aber 30, of $12,- le same orders regated f 2,837.- ptember = r » - - . . > a x - . R v w 8 - . » < * a > i . - «> | A TRULY IDEAL WIFE NER HUSBAND'S BEST HELPER Vigorous Health Is the Great Source of the Power to Inspire end Encourage —211 Women 8hould Seek x. One of the most noted, successful and richest men of this century, in a recent article, has said, ** Whatever I am and whatever success I have attained in this world I owe all to my wife. From e day I first knew her she has been an inspiration, and the greatest help- mate of my life.” : To be such a successful wire, 10 re- tain the love and admiration of her husband. to inspire him to make the most of himself, should be a woman's constant study. fa woman finds that her energies are flagging, that she gets casily tired, dark shadows appear under her eyes, she has backache, headaches, bearing- down pains, nervousness, whites, irreg- ularities or the blues, she should start at once: to build up her system by a tonic with specific powers, such as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound. ? Following we publish by request a letter from a young wife : Dear Mrs. PT ‘* Ever since my child was born T have suf- fered, as I hope few women ever have, with in- flammation, female weakness, bearing-down pains, backache and wretched headaches, Tt affected my stomach so I could not en joy my meals, and half my time was spent in bed. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound made me a well woman, and 1 feel so grateful that I am glad to write and tell marvelous recovery. It brought me health, new life and vitality.” —Mrs, Bessie Ainsley, 611 South 10th Strect. Tacoma, Wesh, What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for Mrs. ‘Ainsley it will do for every sick and ailing woman. If you have symptoms you don’t un- derstand write to. Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free and always helnful. W.L. DoucLAS $3208 °F SHOES, W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled atany price. WLOO0UGLs LD SHOES you of my ALL BEST XUE Kop i 0) wl 03 Chenrsy roe, I = ¥; 558 4, £0, EN re. Wstas’S kop ESTAR, ce > 5 YUiy's, 1876 W.L. DOUGLAS MAKESAND SELLS MORE MEN'S $3.50 SHOES THAN ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER. $1 0 000 REWARD to anyone who can 3 disprove this statement. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their ex- cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearin qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50 shoe in world. They are just as good as those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 — the only difference is the price. Ii I could take you into my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest in the world under one roof making men’s fine shoes, and show Fou the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Douclas $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced in the world. If I could show you the difference between the shoes made in my factory and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. : W. L. Dougizs Strong Made Shoes for Men, $2.50, $2.00. Boys’ School & Dress Shoes, $2.50, $2, $1.75,$1.50 AUTION .—Insist upon having W. L.Doug- las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine without his name and price stamped on bottom. WANTED. A shoedealerinevery town where ‘W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. ~ Full line of samples sent free for inspection upon request, Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy. Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles. ‘W.L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mags. Good Teeth @ Good Temper Are characteristic of the Atkins Saws always. That is because they are | made of the best steel in the world — Silver Steel — by men that know how. Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor Scrapers, ctc., are sold by all good hardware | dealers, Catalogue on request. | E.C. ATHINS ® CO. Inc. Largest Saw Manufacturers in the World Factory and Executive Offices, Indianapolis BRANCHES—New York, Chicago, Minneapolis Portland (Oregon), Seattle, San Francisco Memphis, Atlantaand Toronto (Canada) ! Acceptno substitute—Insist on the Atkins Brand SOLD BY GOOD DEALERS EVERYWHERE 200 I Sars How a Badger Works. * During the daytime the badger sleeps deep in his burrow, far out on our Western plains and prairies, and at twilight he starts forth on a night's foraging. He is a dreaded enemy of the prairie-dog and the ground-squirrel; and when hg, begins to excavate for one, nothing but seild rock or death cam stop him. With the long, blunt claws of his fore feet he loosens up the dirt. Dig! dig! dig! he works as though his lifé depended on it, now scratching out the sides of the hole, then turning on his back to work overhead. At first he throws the dirt out between his hind legs, but soon he is too far down for that, 50 he banks it up back of him, then turns about, and using his chest and forward parts as a pusher, shoves, it out before him. He works with such rapidity that it would be somewhat difficuit for a man to overtake him with a spade.—St. Nicholas. Enjoyed the Luxuries. An Irishman who was notoriously impecunious has discovered a new way to achieve some of the luxuries of life. This is.. how .he explains it “Whist, man, don’t say a word about it. I found everybody wanted to sell an ‘auto’ for a good price to some in- nocent, so I just hung round the gar- age al every hotel I stopped at and pretended to be as green as the Em- erald Isle, and gave out that I wanted to get a second-hand. machine, “and would not go to a dealer, as I did not kaow anything about a machine, and he might rob me. I have had 49 rides, 17 luncheons, five dinners and about 40 cigars, good, bad and indif- ferént, but divil a machine have I bought yet.” FITSpermanentlycured. No fitsornervous- nessafter first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great NerveRestorer, $2trialbottleand treatise free Dr.R. H. KvINE, Ltd., 981 Arch St., Phila.,Pa Iceland produces most of the world’s supply of eiderdown. Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softensthegums,reducesinflamma- tion,allays pain,cures wind eolie,25¢. a bottle - The number of immigrants from Gers many last year was 27,084. Jam sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life three years azo.——Mrs. THoMmAs Roo- ERTS, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17,1900 Japan’s tea crop will, 1t is feared, be about 6,500,000 pounds short this year. Effects of Alcohol. Professor Kraeplin of Heidelberg, Germany, an authority on experiment- al psychology, recently made 2,000 ex- periments with delicate instruments ‘of alcohol taken into the human sys- tem is enough to appreciably depress sight, hearing, feeling and the various mental operations. . Colored Man Honored. George Washington, colored, was the founder of the town of Centralia, State of Washington, and when he died recently at 89 years of age, all the stores of the place were closed during his funeral. CONGRESSMAN COULDEN Finds Quick Relief From Bladder Troubles Through Doan’s Kidney Pills. Hon, Joseph A. Goulden, Member of Congress, representing the 18th Dis- trict of New York, { also trustee of the Soldiers’ Home at Bath, N. Y., writes: Gentlemen: As many of my friends have used Doan's Kidney Pills and have been cured of kidney and bladder troubles, I feel it my @ duty to recommend the medicine, From personal experience I know Doan’s Kidney Pills will cure inflammation of the bladder, having experienced re- lief the second day of using the medi- cine. ~ (Signed) J. A. GOULDEN. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The Century in 1206. Mr. W. S. Harwood, who wrote the recently published articles on Luther Burbank in The Century, has written for the same magazine the story of how California’s crops are saved,— largely by the work of the United States Department of Agriculture. Mr. Harwood will narrate how science has succeeded in exterminating insect pests that had well nigh ruined the chief crops of California. First Marine Insurance. Marine insurance dates back to the j time of the Caesars, Claudius Caesar having been the first to insure ves- sels. During a famine he issued a proclamation that all vessels engaged in the carriage of foodstuffs meeting with an accident would be replaced by the state, and by so doing largely in- creased the fleet of merchant vessels. —Chicago Journal. Duke With Many Titles. The Duke of Atholl is one of the greatest of Scottish peers, holds 19 titles, and possess the privilege of presenting a cast of falcons to his sovereign at the coronation. When the reigning monarch visits: Blair Atholl ancient usage decrees that the Duke of Atholl, on bended Knee, should present a white rose to his royal guest. THE COMFORTER A congested vein pressing on a nerve accounts for the swelling, throbbing ache of Neuralgia St. Jacobs frees the circulation, allays the pressure and soothes away the pain. Price, 25¢c. and 50c¢. and found that one-third of an ounce’ FINANGE ARD TRADE REVIEW SHORTAGE OF CARS R. G. Dun & Company Report That It Seriously Interferes With Many Transactions. Cooler weather in most sections cf the country: has stimulated retail demand for seasonable merchandise, improving the tone of business where there ‘has been more or less irregu- larity, but reports are still somewhat mixed as to collections. Supplemen- tary orders are coming to the pri- mary markets for wearing apparel and in many cases shipments would show still larger gains over the same time last year if transporting facili- ties were better. This car shortage is an increasingly disturbing element. There is still a very close compari- son of railway earnings, which were only .9 per cent larger than in Octo- ber, 1904. Industrial conditions are little disturbed by labor controver- sies, although several important questions are under discussion. Thus far work is scarcely interrupted and more cases of advance in wages are reported. At the south and west the scarcity of labor retards, operations, yet those sections are more prosper- ous than ever before, and quarantine restrictions no longer interfere in the New Orleans district, a Leading” bramches of manufacture make good progress, most miiis aad factories having orders for more re- mote delivery than is customary, and especially favorable statements are made respecting lumber and flour mills. It is no longer cause for com- ment when new records of output are established, as this has become the rule rather than the exception. Fail ure ‘returns were very favorable in October, liabilities falling 36 per cent behind “ast year’s. Finished ‘steel business is still coming forward, a large tonnage of structural shapes now pending. and the situation will find little relief in the starting of several new plants be- cause lheir output has already been sold far ahead. New England shops are well sup- plied with old orders to assure op- eration for the balance of the year, and when the time comes that job- brs must replenish stocks, it is the general opinion that new quotations will be accepted. : MAREE EIT SS, . PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red........i.........$§ 73 77 p Rye—No.2............. .“ Y 3 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear..... a 61 62 . No. 2 yellow, shelled.... 6) 61 Mixed ear;.,............ 1% 49 Oats—No. 2 white........... 33 3 No.3 whije.............. 2 20) Flour—Winter patent...... 425 4 30 Fancy straight winters........ 4 00 4 10 Hay—No. 1 Timothy.......... .» 1360 1350 Clover No: 1............... 10 00 1050 Foed—No. 1 white mid. ton... 1950 200) Brown middlings......... 16 50: 17 5) Bran, bulk....... 1550 16 00 Straw—Wheat. a .. 7 00 7 50 Oat... leviii iL, 700 7 5 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... Au Ohio creamery........ : . 2 > Fancy country roll....... 1% Cheese—Ohio, new................. 12 New York. new................. 12 Hens per ID.....cscevesrvey-=se-rs 14 15 Chickens—dressed : 16 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 24 25 Frults and Vegetables. ADDIES Dhl ,....0couenrieii: “arnens. + 251 32 Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 65 7 Cabbage—per ton............ «xe 1800 1510 Onions—per barrel.. rl 200 2% BALTIMORE. Flour—-winter Patent...ce.-..-... $ 505 3 Wheat—No. 2 red.... sane 83 Corn—Mixed........ 51 59 BS esesaniarsrranssnivasse ore 24 25 Butter—Ohio creamery............ 24 26 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 505 Wheat—No. 2 red.. “ 84 Corn—No. 2 mixed. 50 Oats—No. 2 white.... “ee 31 Butter—Creamery........... ve 24 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 26 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents.............. 000. S 500 51> Wheat—No. 2 red. . 5 Corn—No. 2....... Oats—No. 2 white. . 21 42 Butter -Creamery................: 24 6 Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 24 26 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 101,600 Ibs. ..........$ 52 $560 Prime. 1,300 to 1,100 1bs, 10 00 52 Good, 1,200 to 1,36) 1bs. 50 4 80, Tidy, 1,050 to 1,150 lbs es 4 2% 4 40 Fair, 900 10 1,100 1bs’..; .. 3 40 4 10 Common, 709 to £00 1bs....... 30) 3 40 Common to good fat oxen... 3 00 4 00 Common to good fat bulls. 2 60 3 50 Common to good fat cows. . 1 5) 3 40 Heifers, 700 to1,1001bs. ... R 7 4 00 Fresh cows and springers........ 16 00 50 00 Hogs. Prime heavy hogs................ $53 Prime medium weights 5 25 Best heavy Yorkers... ods 5 23 Good light Yorkers... 5 30 Pigs, as to quality...... 5 2 Common to good roughs : 23 470 Btags....... 0... oe 3h 375 Sheep. Frimewothers........ ........ .. $5 60 675 Good ‘mixoda..... 1... vere #00 05 5 50 Fair mixed ewes and w 50) Culls ana common.... 4 00 Culls to choice lambs 77 Veal Calves. £8 00 Heavy and tt 4 50 In Scotch Highland Regiments 12 men per 1,000 are over ¢ feet in height; in English, six; and in Irish three. “The commercial prize of the Ori ent has. commanded the attention of the Occident for more than 4.000 years,” says Hon. O. P. Austin, Chie! of the Bureau of Statistics, “From the earliest dawn of history down to the present hour the ever-expand ing West has struggled for the con trol of the commerce of the East This commeteial prize has inereased until its value has today reached the enormous sum $3,000,000,000 per annum. Fads of Wealthy Men. These strong men of money have their weak sides; they have their fads, and will spend money like water on them. Mr. Keene's weakness is the racehorse; Mr. Morgan's is pic- tures; the late Mr. Whitney’s was rugs (he is said to have paid $35,000 ! for one, and the transaction would have been all right had he left the two last ciphers off the price); Mr. { Brady’s of the tobacco trust, is black { pearls; Mr. Addicks’s, of Bay State | zas, is emeralds; while Mr. Lawson + wil] go in pawn to buy a ruby. Mr. Lawson travels beyond fads and owns to superstitions. He pins his faith to the numeral] three and its multipl=s. His telephones are 333 and 3339; his offices are 33 State street; onc ¢f his pet copper mines is the Trinity, and he begins his great enterprises on the third of the month, His “big medi- cine,” as the Indians would call it, is a chain of 333 golden beads, each with a ‘gypsy girl's face enameled thereon, and this fetish he consults and communes with in ways known only to himself.—Saturday Evening Post. I | | 1 ! i A Newspaper-Reading People. The per capita, consumption of pap- er in the United States is the highest in the world and of this amout the bulk is for daily newspapers. More than 650,000 tons of daily newspapers were printed in 1904, the total value of the paper being about $23,000,000. In 1890, less than 197,000 tons, at a cost of about $13,000,000, supplied the demand. In 1890 we were the great- est newspaper reading people on earth, and to-day we read three or four times as much. The greater part of advertising is done on paper and the greater part of the ‘paper consumed is by newspapers. The conclusion is obvious-—the advertiser has found the newspaper the most profitable field for investm.ant. It ts reckoned that by judicious adver- tising throughout ~ the Nation, a manufacturer or dealer may reach 99 per cent. of the buyers at a com- paratively small cost.—Butte, (Mont), Inter-Mountain. ECZEMA FOR TWO YEARS Little Girl’s Awful Suffering With Terrible Skin Humor -- Sleepless Nights Yor Mother—Speedy Cure by Cuticura. “My little girl had been suffering for two years from eczema, and during that time 1 could not get a night’s sleep, as her ailment was very severe. | had tried so many remedies, deriving no benefits, 1 had given up all hope. But as a last resort 1 was persuaded to try Cuticura, and one box of the Ointment, and two bottles of the Resolvent, together with the Soap, ef- fected a permanent cure. Mrs. 1. B. Jones, Addington, Ind. 1.” The Depth of the Ocean. The hydrographic office has just issued a general chart showing the result of deep sea soundings taken by the United States navy in different parts of the world in the course of the last 10 years. The greatest known depth of the sea is in the mid-Pacific yocean, and is recorded at 5,269 athoms—31,614 feet—or 66 feet short of six statute miles. This sound- ing was obtained on the United States ,steamship Nero last year, and i is greater than any elevation on our continent, or, so far as known, in the world. Sultan Prepares to Kill, The sultan of Turkey has bought an automobile. Perhaps he intends to make a tour among his unruly Ar- menians subjects and show them that there are ways of killing and maiming that they never dreamed of.—Pitts- burg Times. To Remove Mildew. Mildew is easily removed by rub- bing or scraping a little common yel- low soap on the article, and then a little salt and starch. Put the mil- dewed article in the sunshine. CATARRH Is the mother of CONSUMPTION. Our CARBOLATE of IODINE POCKET INHALER is a guaranteed cure. Price $1.00. .H. SMITH & CO., Of Buffalo, N. Y.. Sole Manufacturers and Proprs, I AND SCRIP Takes Government Land Quickly. 4Write. Also progressive men changing location should coma here. Huzo Seabers, Raton, N. Mexico ANTED- en and Women Agents. New article tx vy home uses. Large profits. WE LESSW ORK M HG. CO., East Liverpool, Ohio. When Baby Has the Croup Vse Hoxsie's Cronp Cure. It cur sand prevents Pn-:umonia and Diphtheria. No opin. No nausea. bU cents at druggi=rs or mailed postpaid. s ¥. HOXSNIE, Baftalo. N. Y. UNCLE SAM—«A Remedy That Has Such Endorseinents Should Be In Every Home.” WINCHESTER “LEADER’ AND “REPEATER” SHOTGUN SHELLS Carefully inspected shells, the best-of powder, shot and wadding, loaded by machines which give invariable results account for the superior- ity of Winchester ‘Leader’ and ‘Repeater’ Factory Loaded Smokeless Powder Shells. Reliability, velocity, pattern and penetration are determined by . scientific apparatus and practical experiments. They, . are THE SHELLS THE CHAMPIONS SHOOT COLLEGE, located at Fitisburg, Pa. Come to this great Commercial and Manufacturing center for a Business Education; don’t go to a small place where Stenographers and Bookkeepers are not required. Cireulars: W. H. DUFF, President. E 5,2) GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA, 0 I won’tsell Anti-Gripine toa dealer who won't Gu arantes NJ DALE fi 3 T CU Call for your MONEY BACK IF IT DOESN'T ne) ¥. Ww. Diener, M.D., Manufacturer, Spriagfield, Mo. THERE I5 NO moves | | $1,000m5Civentor SLICKER LIKE “ormes | § Rel: ‘Hi Reliable Information Forty years ago and after many years is We will give One Dollar for a Postal [§ of use on the eastern coast, Towers] | #8 Card giving the first reliable news of Waterproof Oiled Coats were introduced § a chance to sell a horizonts! steam in the West and were called Slickers By engine of our styles, within cur range the pioneers and cowboys. This graphic of sizes. We do not want inquiries at § name has come into such general use that | | & this time for vertical, traction or gas it is frequently though wrongfully applied] | ff engines. to many substitutes. You want the genuine 7&8 Look for the Sign of the Fish.and : AT the name Toiver en the buttens. i ON ENGINES AND BOILERS &] have for years been the standard for all steam ; plants. Best of material and workmanship. § Our big output enables us to sell on small prof- its. An Atlas, the best in the world, costs no § more than the other kind. Write today for our special offer. Selling agencies in all cities INDIANAPOLIS g% Corliss Engines High Speed Engines Water Tube Boilers i FourValve Engines Compound Engines Tubular Boilers Automatic Engines Throttling Engines Portable Boilers HAS NO EQUAL FOR HE . MADE IN BLACK AND YELLOW AND as SOLD BY REVRESENTATIVE TRADE } ... .. THE WORLD OVER, ns ¥, "A.J. TOWER CO. BOSTON, MASS. U.S.A. TOWER CANADIAN CO, Limited, TORONTO, CAN. FOR WOMEN Atlas Engines in service 3,000,000 H. P, troubled with ills peculiar to 2 ZI y dtlas Boilers in service 4,000,000 H. P, their sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc- NEW DISCOVERY; gives | cessful, Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, D R O PS quick relief and cure: worsd ay stops discharges, heals inflammation and local | cases. Send for hock of testimonials and 10 soreness, cures leucorrheea and nasal catarrh, Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for af TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box, Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. THE R. PAXTON COMPANY BOSTON, Mass. ONEY ISLAND SOUVENIR POST CARDS. Six beautiful colored scenss for 25c¢. Coney Island Postal Card Co., Coney Island, N.X. treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Atlanta, Ga. P. N.U. ¢5 1908 CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use In time. Sold by druggists. Science declares it the only way belch? It means a diseased stomac gestion, dyspepsia, burning pains a colic, sick hecdache, ;imples, bad ¢ low and take it to any druggist in 50¢. box. To convince you that it cures, Harmless. No drugs. Stomach tro they eat up the stomach and make y That is why we let you try it free. Ns a i = 2 abe bd nt BISFLSED CUT OUT ON THIS LINE. BED BENSArTnS Take this Coupon to your druggist and he will give you we give only one Box to each family. If vou can find a dru and address or the druggist, and we'll send you a sample by 1 Ne drugs. to cure stomach trouble. A new method. h. Are you affiicted with short breath. gas, sour eructations, heart pains, indi- nd lead weight in pit of stcmach, acid stomach, distended abdomen, dizziness, omplexion, bad breath or any other stomach torture? Cut out tLe coupon be- the United States and he wil! give you absolutely free of charge a full sized By absorption. Do you i LE TT a FE AEE: ® eich ‘afers Nothing else like it known. It's sure and pleasant. Cures by absorption. uble can’t be cured otherwise—so says Medical Science. Drugs won't do— ou worse. You will know that it will cure you as soon as you begin its use. ER CUT OUT THIS COUPON. 11 size 50c Box of 1 fers absolutely free. aregular I's Anti Bele 3 3 nd us this Coupon, torether wit full Mul st wuo does not keep Mall's Anti Belch il. 1 your n oo ®an tall Druggist, si eane here. iL ; ' wg sly . 0 GR § fa Patient. sign y here = « r Lass iy dit (Ulli Makers. 3 Sell eg eT a. o 131 Rock Island, Hil. 1105. Adress, street und nuinber here % n - Oo i ie} = Sign vour name and address on « Yo Joupon if the 2 To the Retail Druggist = the line below send this full To the Jobber 1 aor oil i -4 coupon to to the Jebber of whom yon purchased this remedy, tailer buy iy or e for - and he will give you 50 centsip cash or trade for each coupon, on ~ properly signed, which you send him. tuil uy v th ~ = { i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers