pens ated etts, rgia, yrder osed wed, the e to ants- steps n by leave adual just f the coms 1 em- roads facil- traint 10nop- public | tele- 1onga- Irown- saved gaso- psized ner in South er, 23 treet; , mas- mills, 1d lay treet; of 60 maid- h had ry the mills Com- it out Rival ch fol- se for le was ake of work- to es- to the wave 0 cap- 6 men Enlist of all a cir- tment, ‘egular , mem- tate or itisfac- honor- ce. 10 case L mem- cepted iew to MBS zled by United und 60 of El lexican uncov-, 0 were 'S weTe 5 filled L fromw 1 fuses placed ‘mploy- They n Min- rom $2 las ap- use in way of em to nents book a aie Truth and Quality appeal to the Well-Informed in every walk of life and are essential to permanent success and creditable standing. Accor- ingly, it’is not claimed that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of known value, but one of many reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives is the fact that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acts pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxative, and its compdnent parts are known to and approved by physicians, as it is free from all objection- able substances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuine— manufactured by the California Fig Syrup __Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug- «gists. A Wagner Anniversary. The twenty-fifth anniversary of the death of Richard Wagner brought ‘Wagner stories old and new, true and false, in great numbers into the Ger- man papers. One of these published in a Vienna paper, entitled “Jean Paul, as a Wagner Prophet, “is to the effect that™in the second decade of the 1ast century he Wrote an introduc- tion to one of the works of C. I. A. Hoffman. “Before this was finished,” so goes the ‘story, “Jean Paul heard that Hoffman was not only a poet but a musician of no mean order, and he added to his introduction: ‘So much the better, so much more seldom.’ Heretofore the sun god has always bestowed the gift of poetry with his right and the gift of music with his left hand upon men so far apart that we are still waiting for the man who can write and compose an -vupera. The introduction is dated Beyreuth, November 24, 1813, the year of Wag- ner’s birth, and, strangest of all, it was written in the place where the wish was later realized.” Why Naval Uniforms Are Blue. Naval uniforms all the world over pretty well are navy blue. The British fashion in this matter 'has been the rule with maritime people in general. That blue was ever selected for the King’s naval service was a fortuitous happening. When in 1747 the question of uniferm was being considered the color selected had very like to have been French gray laced with silver. . While the King was still not quite decided he saw the Duchess of Bed- ford in a riding habit of blue faced with white and enlivened with gold lace. It was a revelation. Here, the King declared, was the uniform for his sea-service officers; and no more was heard of French gray. The navy took the blue, and ‘every other -navy has taken to it since.—Pall Mall Gazette. 32 Entitled to the Best. Tipping is admitted to be a bad habit, but it is firmly established. A young fellow who took his best girl to supper felt that he must conform to custom, and handed out his coin with liberality, so that no one in the restaurant was overlooked. After they had been swung through the re volving door she said: “Did you give that man at the door anything?” “No, Why?” . “He ought to have had the most. He let us out.”—From the St. Louis Republic. Radium’s Propectiles. The alpha particle of radio-active matter travels about three inches, ac- cording to Prof. Rutherford, its aver- age speed being 6,000 miles a second. Its path is marked by extraordinary violence and about 100,000 molecules are broken up, giving rise to much heat and producing positively and neg- atively charged ions in the process. WONDERED WHY Found the Answer Was ‘‘Coffece.” Many pale, sickly persons wonder for years why they have to suffer so, and eventually discover that the drug —caffeine—in coffee is the main cause of the trouble. “I was always very fond of coffee and drank it every day. I never had much flesh and often wondered why I was always so pale, thin and weak. “About- five years ago my health completely broke down and I was con- fined to my bed. My stomach was in such condition that I could hardly take sufficient nourishment to sus- tain life. “During this time I was drinking coffee, didn’t think I could do with- out it.. “After awhile I came to the con- ‘clusion that coffee was hurting me, and decided to give it up and try Postum. I didn’t like the-taste of it at first, but when It was made right —boiled until dark and rich—I soon became very fond of it. “In one week I began to feel better. I could eat more and sleep better. My sick headaches were [ess frequent, and within five months I looked and - felt like a new being, headache spells entirely gone. “My health continued to improvs, and to-day I am well and strong, weigh 148 Ibs. 1 attribute my present health to the life-giving qualities of Postum.” “Threre’s a Reason.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. NOT BAD PO BLONDES. ; SUM. - Dr. Knopf Combats the Theory That They Should Keep in the Shade. “Sunlight bad for blondes? Bosh!” exclaimed Dr. S. A. Knopf, the New York pathologist, in an address before the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis at the Auditorium Hotel, Chicago. Publica- tion in newspapers a few months ‘ago of theories that consumptives should keep in the shade and that sunlight is gradually eliminating the blond type, he declared had been dangerous in the extreme. There is still a chance for the blond type, he said, and as for con- sumptives, why, in certain cases even sun baths are beneficial. Dr. Knopf traced the anti-sunlight theory back to Major Charles E. Wood- ruff, M. D., of the United States army, and against the arfly man’s philosophy he arrayed statistics gathered in a canvass of fifty. prominent physicians in all parts of the country, according to which brunettes have no advantages over blondes when it comes to fighting tuberculosis, at least in the temperate zone. Irish-American brunettes, Dr. Knopf declared, are as a class more susceptible to the white plague than German-American blondes. “In no disease are such seemingly contradictory opinions more dangerous, when copied in the lay press, than in tuberculosis,” he said: “I have a high personal regard for Major Woodruff,” continued the New York physician, “and this paper is not to be interpreted as minimizing the scientific attainments of this disting- uished scholar and gentleman. I am frank to admit, however, that I do not entirely agree with his conclusions and that I consider sunlight in general in cool and cold weather and even sun batis at certain times for certain in- dividuals valuable adjuncts in the treatment of tuberculosis patients in our temperate zone.” Varying suscep- tibility to tuberculosis of persons of different types of complexion was next treated. “I have noticed this,” he said, “that red-haired individuals—that is to say, the Venetian blondes of the French writers—seem even more susceptible to the disease and offer less favorable diagnosis. With other types I believe it to have been observed that many Scandinavian immigrants who as a rule are blond, when transplanted from the healthy agricultural sections of their native country to the congested districts of our large cities offer: less resistance to tuberculosis than do na- tive born Americans.”—New York Sun. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. A kitten doubles its weight in nine days; and a baby in 180 days. - Paris has a church made out of pa- per treated so as to resist the action of the weather. The hair on a man’s arm, like the hair on a monkey's arm, grows in two different directions. At the present rate of excavation Pompeii will not be entirely uncovered before the year 1970. ° in a-fight with an owl near-€lare- mont, Okla.,, Charles Tosser was de- feated, recently, the bird pecking out one of his eyes. A Massachusetts judge has decided that dogs are property, but that a cat has no value and is not to be re- garded as prosperit. In the French schools in Algiers and Tunis the Arabic boys sit with the French_in school, but out of school they do not mix much. . A single fruit company exported last year 40,000,000 bunches of bananas to Europe and the United States from Central and South America and Ja- maica. Stiffening of the brain, a rare di- sease, was given at the inquest as one of the causes of death of a boy 17 months old, on whom an operation was performed at St. Thomas’ hospital, London. Massachusetts has a town of 600 in- habitants which receives $2750 annu- ally from a single hotel for license to sell liquor. This is believed to be the highest license fee paid in the United States. The fee is nearly double the amount paid in Boston and other large cities. ; A giant elm tree at Wolcott, N. Y., was recently cut down. It was the last of the original forest. The stump was fifteen feet in circumference and the rings indicated that it was fully three hundred years old. The body will made at least 2500 feet of lum- ber and the top twenty-five cords of wood. That great and prolific English pain- ter, J. M. W. Turner, bequeathed to the British nation when he died in 1851 pictures of his own the value of which was in 1902 estipated at $5,- 000,000. These pictures consisted of 362 oil paintings, 135 finished water colors, and over 20,000 studies and sketches. South’s Real Battle Flag. For the first time in the history of Confederate reunions the battleflag was historically correct at this year’s Confederate reunion, in Birmingham, Ala. Heretofore thé oblong battleflag has been in vogue notwithstanding that the flag is square under .which the brave sons of the south fought and died and won imperishable glory. The committee in charge of the ar- union has issued warnings to the peo- ple to beware of the oblong battle flags. The committee has made ar- rangements to make Birmingham during the reunion a brilliant and variegated vista of waving flags and floating bunting.—Mobile Item. rangements for the Birmingham re- | V FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW MODERATE GAINS IN TRADE 2D Reviews Show Greater Volume Than for Previous Week, Espec- ially in Steel. New York.—R. G. Dun & Co.’s ‘Weekly Review of Trade says: Trade reports continue to indicate moderate net gains each week, al- though progress is irregular. Some sections make much better exhibits than others, the southwest leading, while improvement is slowest at the east. There is also a similar irregu- larity in returns from the industries, some occupations gaining steadily while others proceed erratically. The - net result, however, is a: larger volunfe of business in the aggregate, and comparisons with this time last year are especially cheering, when it is considered that a year ago all{rec- ords up to that time were being eclipsed. More plants have resum- ed, wholly or in part, but there are still many unemployed. At a further slight reduction in price of Bessemer pig iron the Pitts- burg market has experienced increas- ed activity, and other material mar- kets are somewhat busier, including coke ovens at Connellsville. Most fin- ished steel lines are quiet, new= con- tracts coming forward siowly and for small quantities, but spccifications on old orders aggregate a fair tonnage. Bach week the production of all the mills increases slightly, more plants constantly resuming, althrough usually on part time and with reduced forces. Business failures - in the United States for the week ending July 30 number 275, against 263 last week, 142 in the like week of 1907, 170 in 1906, 178 in 1905, and 179 in 1904. Canadian failures for the same period were 32 as against 24 last wegk, and 16 in this week last year. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. 86 3) 88 9) 85 86 7% 73 67 63 7 ji 63 44 Flour—Winter patent............. 580 5 90 ancy straight winters........ Hay—No.1 Timothy............... 150) 1: 5) Clover NO, 1. it -:.cxs foornsives i250 13 0) Feed—No. 1 white mid. toy. 2800 x8 50 Brown middlings 50) u5350 Bran, bulk.. 2 Straw—Wheat.. 5 OBluenseesnn >. es TRS 7 50 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 2 OIC. CrOAINOLY «xc: eassnssansss 20 21 Fancy country roll. omy 18 Cheese—O0hio, NOW....ivvueereeeias 15 17 Now York. new.............4... 18: 17 Poultry, Etc. . Hens—per 1D. ...c.oeerecirersansens $ u - 13 Chickens—Aressed.......c.occeuuenn 12 13 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 17- 19 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 126 1% Cabbage—per ton.. cee 100. 1.85 Onions—per barrel 550 600 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent... <8 3707590 Wheat—No. 2 red...... . 1.08 Corn—Mixed.......... . 71 73 BES es sorrresrnvnsssrians 17 18 Butter—Ohio creamery...c..cc..coee 25 2 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 360 57> Wheat—No. 2 red........ 1 00 Corn—No. 2 mixed....... 86: 86 Jats—No. 2 white........ 64 65 Butter—Creamery.......... A 25 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts. ....... 17 18 NEW YCRK. FIour—Patents......:c-cuseeassasss $ 580 5.9 Wheat—No. 2 red.. 1 00 Corn—No, 2........ 84 85 Oats—No. 2 white. sen 59 61 Butter ~-Creamery . 22 z3 HBggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 7 18 LIVE STOCK. Unlon Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 to 1,60) 1bs............ $660 68 Prime, 1,300 to 1,40) 1bs .. 6 15 6 40 Good, 1,200 to 1,300 1bs.... 540 5 90 Tidy, 1,050 to 1,150 1bs....... ease 0.00 £ 550 Common, 700 to 900 1bs............ 100 50) OXON ress. Joana sis ssensrradonane 300 540 Bulis.. gk ~3 00 4 50 Cows. soy ann. is 150 12 Heifers, 700 to 1,100......... 2 00 5 55 Fresh Cows and Springers 15 00 55 00 Hogs. Prime heavy 7 05 TH Prime medium weight 705 7 15 Best heavy Yorkers 705 7 10 Good light Yorkers. . 650 6 7 P! 53) 5 40 srss enn 475 52) 18S ..0enees Pen ster itavanrnn inne: 835) 1 0) Sheep. Prime wethers, clipped. .....ce0ued $4 60 470 Good mixed...... 42 450 Fair mixed ewes and wethers. 3560 400 Culls and common......... 2 00 3 50 AMDB. ec veseesernreasranais 700 1300 Calve - Veal cBIVES .....cueriviicensnsniae 500 77 Heavy and thin calves............. 8 00 400 Herself as Hebe. Rohert Barr, the English novelist, was entertained at dinner by a North Woodward avenue family a few nighty ago. The men adjourned to the smok ing room and the hostess lingered to give orders to the maid. “Oh,” said the young girl, “I was go proud to have been able to wait on Mr. Barr. He is the first famous man I have ever attended.” ‘And then, in a burst of maidenly enthusiasm, she exclaimed: “Perhaps some day I may be called to wait on Shakespeare.”—Detroit Free Press. ee LOOSENING GLASS STOPPERS. There are several ways of doing this. Pour round the mouth of the bottle a little oil, and in an hour or two, if you cannot move the stopper, place the whole bottle in warm water, remove it, and gently tap the stop- per on either side against glass and it will come out easily.—New York Times. eee ee eee Professor Brandle, of the University of Berlin, maintains that Americans speak English better than the English themselves, for reason that the Brit ish educational sy m gives more attention to dead languages than live ones, ALL RUN DOWN. Miss Della Strocbe, who had Come pletely Lost Her Health, Found Relief from Pe-ru-na at Once. Read What She Says: ISS DELLA STROEBE, 710 Rich- g mond St., Appleton, Wis., writes: “For several years I was in a run- down condition, and T could find no re- lief from doctors and medicines. I could not enjoy my meals, and could not sleep at night. I had heavy, dark circles about the eyes. : “My friends were much alarmed. I was advised to give Peruna a trial, and to my joy I began to improve with the first bottle. After taking six bottles I " felt completely cured. I cannot say too much for Peruna as a medicine for women in a run-down condition.” Pe-ru-na Did Wonders. _ Mrs. Judge J. F. Boyer, 1421 Sherman Ave., Evanston, Ill, says that she be- came run down, could neither eat hor sleep well, and lost flesh and spirit. Pe- runa did wonders for her, and she thanks Peruna for new lifo and strength. Mechanical Novels. * There is a certain type of novel of today which always recalls hateful memories of the mechanical doll. They start off with a shiver of clock- work; all through their set poses and posturings you are conscious that the wheels of their mechanism are going round, and they leave off just where the penny you have dropped into their publisher’s slot has expended its pro- pulsive force.—Ohnlooker. : SAVED AT THE CRISIS. Death From Kidney Troubles. Delay Meant Mrs. Street, Athens, Herman Smith, 901 Broad Ga., says: “Kidney disease started with slight irregularity and weakness and developed into dan- gerous dropsy. I became weak and languid and could do no housework. My back ached ter- ribly. 1 had bear- ing down pains and mal size. Doctors did not help and I was fast drifting into the hopeless stages. | used Doan’s Kidney Pills saved my life.” Sold by all dealers. C Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. 3 Changed His Mind. A genjleman who once served on an Irish jury tells an amusing story of his experiences, says the Dundee Advertiser. over and the jury room to consider their verdict, they found that they stood 11 to 1 in favor of an acquittal, but the one happened man who rested his chin upon the nounced defiantly that he was ready to stay there as long as any of them. The hours dragged om, evening ar- night of it. the head of his cane. fast asleep and the cane fell heavily to the floor. men picked it up and found to his sur- with good old Irish whisky. relieved it of its contents, and then awakened its slumbering owner. Slow- ly he lifted the cane to his mouth, sucked ineffectually for a moment, with the anmouncement, “Boys, I'm afther changin’ me moind!”’ : ECZEMA SEEMED INCURABLE. Body was Raw—Discharged from Hospitals as Hopeless—Cuticura * Remedies Cured Him. “From the age of three months until fifteen years old, my son Owen's life was made intolerable by eczema in its worst form. In spite of treatments the disease gradually spread until nearly every part of \ his body was quite raw. He used to tear himself dreadfully in his sleep and the agony he went through is quite beyond words. The regimental doctor pronounced the case hopeless. We had him in hos- pitals four times and he was pronounced one of the worst cases ever admitted. From each he was discharged as incurable. We kept trying remedy after remedy, but had gotten almost past hoping for a cure. Six months ago we purchased a set of Cuticura Remedies. The result was truly marvelous and to-day he is perfectly cured, Mrs. Lily Hedge, Camblewell Green, Eng- land, Jan. 12, 1807.” The Girls Ahead. At .the spelling contest at Cleve- land, out of four teams of 15 children each, two little girls had the only per- fect scores. At a recent performance of 4Q children pianists before a com- mittee of noted musicians in Paris a little girl received the prize. In an inquiry conducted by the New Jersey State Teachers’ Association recently 25 out of 32 cities reported more boys than girls behind grade, and fur- ther behind; and in every physical test applied except one more boys than girls were found below the aver- age. In near-sightedness alone were more girls than boys found afflicted. In every form of mental defectiveness more boys than girls were found af- flicted. Prohibitionists Paraphrase. hibitionist campaigner, “is somnic p:ic- turesque title §; our candidate, such as it is now e& head of the ticket.” “Very true,” replied the other. “Why not refer to him as ‘the beer- less leader?’ ’—Washington Star. my limbs bloated to twice their nor- | ‘When the hearing was | retired to their | | | | | | at the critical moment and they really | a 50 cents a box. | Transvaal | | | | | | | | to be a very complacent old gentle- | head of a thick bamboo cane and an- | { 1 | rived, and the old gentleman obstin- | ately held out. The other jurors wear- | ily arranged themselves to make . a | From time to the old | gentleman would contemplatively suck | Finally he fell | Then one of the jury- | ® 9 ° ‘1 Libby’s Olives prise that it was hollow and filled | The | thankful 11 passed the cane around, | looked at his watch, and then arose | ” aid one Pro- | stomary to give the | Bape " THE ORANGE AS MEDICINE. Its Value In the Treatment of Many Diseases Is Now Being Recognized. People are coming around more and more to the true opinion that min- eral drugs don’t aid, but rather re- tard recovery in case of sickness, and that the only true medicine is to be found in those that nature supplies so. freely—air, water and food. Foremost in value as medicinal foods are fresh fruits, and none of these ranks higher than oranges, says the Des Moines Register. Oranges are very rich in organic salts. They contain a high amount of potas- sium, calcium and sulphur, surpassing both cow’s and human milk in this re- spect. No other fruit Has such a high percentage of sulphur. Orange juice contains on an average of 11% per mille acid, which accounts for the high amount of potash and lime which are necessary for the formation of natural fruit acids. Pure orange juice is an ideal remedy for scrofula, rickets, nervousness and especially blood diseases (principally scurvy.) It is most valuable for the reduction of uric acid and other waste matter in the system, and therefore both a preventitive and curative food for rheumatism and gout. Consumptive and anemic’ people will also be great- ly benefitted by a diet of oranges on account of the high? percentage of blood building salts they contain. Lemons have the largest amount of magnesium lime of all the fruits. They show the greatest acidity—73 per mille. Their juice is excellent for the preparation of both fruit and vegetable salads and should altogether replace vinegar, which is worse than alcohol, by depriving the blood of its important organic salts. Its medicin- al qualities are highly appreciated in the cure of uric acid diseases. The Latest Nature Fake. Attacked by a huge catamount 10 miles south of Poplar Bluff, E. Em- ory, a timberman, fired every bullet he had in a squirrel rifle without bringing the animal down. The cata- mount closed in on him and would probably have killed him had not Emory thought of his watch chain, composed of bullets he had saved while a private in the First Tennes- see regiment at Manila. Jerking off the chain, Emory loaded his rifle, us- ing powder from his horn flask, and succeeded in killing the animal just as it was lunging forward toward him. This is the story as sent out from Poplar Bluiff.—Kansas City Journal. Plenty of Gold in Transvaal. Mining experts estimate that the mount of gold which remains to be Rand reef in the is worth five billion dol- lars. Food @ Products Libby’s Sweet Mixed Pickles That firm, crisp quality and delicious flavor is what you get when you insist on Libby’s Mixed Pickles at your dealers. They are always the finest and never disappoint. It’s the same § with Libby's Sweet Gherkins and Ask for them. mined along the | B Sweet Midgets. The cultivation of centuries marks the olive groves of Spain as the world’s best. Libby’s Olives are imported from the oldest and most famous of these groves. The result is a rare product, delightfully appetiz- ing. Try one bottle and you'll uy more and never be without them. Libby's Preserves Pure, ripe fruit and pure sugar in equal parts, cooked just right and timed to the second, in Libby’s Great White Kifch- en, is the secret of the extreme superiority of Libby's Preserves. ere s none as good at any price. rocersand delicatessen stores carry all of Libbhy’s Food Pro- duets. They are war § ranted thebestto both you and the dealer oa LY : Make Good Things fo Eat." } Insist en Libby's at your dealer's. Libby, McNeill & Libb Ys Chicago. P. N. U. 32, 1908, want Thompson's Eye Water This woman says she was saved from an operation by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Lena V. Henry, of Norristown, Ga., writes to Mrs. Pinkham: «J suffered untold misery from fe- male troubles. My doctor said an opera~ tion was the only chance f£ bad, and X dreaded it almost as much as death. “One day I read how other women had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I decided to try it. Before I had taken the first bottle I was better, and now I am en- tirely cured. ‘Every woman suffering with an female trouble should take Lydia B Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera- tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear- ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges- tion, dizziness or nervous prestration. ‘Why don’t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. 1 As well as for the proserva- tion and purification of the skin no other skin soap so pure, so sweet, so speedily effective as Cuticura. For eczemas, rashes, inflamma- tions, chafings, sunburn, wind irritations, bites and stings of insects, lameness and soreness incidental to , outdoor sports, for the care of the hair and Scalp, for sanative, antiseptic cleans= ing, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bath and nursery, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura are unrivaled. Guaranteed absolutely pure, and may be used from the hour of birth. Oe ou er PE Eick China Co., Sydney; India, B. XK. Pa Hong Kon Drug Tokio; Russi Co.; Japan, Ferrein, Moscow; y .. C s US.A, & Chem. Corp., Sole Props. Bostons B¥-Post Free, Cuticura Booklet on the Skin, EVERY MAN HIS OWN DOCTOR By J. HAMILTON AYERS A. M., M. D. This is & most Valuable Book for the Household, teaching as it does the easily-distinguished Symp» toms of different Diseases, the Causes and Means of Preventing such Diseases, and the Simplest Reme edies which will alleviate or cure. 59% Pages Profusely Illustrated. 60c. postpaid. Sen ostal notes or postage stamps, BOOK P OUSE, 134 Leonard St., New York. Compare your foot with a SKREEMER shoe,—that is, with the part of § tho shee that bears your weight,—and note the resemblance, the lines of the shoe foii>wing perfectly the lines of the foot. That means comfort. Look for this label. Bl If you do not find these shoes readily, write = the makers for directions how to secure them. FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass. Py MADE BY 12 FrenFFiEin (a oll ER TOT, . is. ST. OF
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers