H 1 V Cure ForThe Blues ONE MEDICIEE THAT HAS NEVER FAILED Health Fully Restored and the Joy of Life Regained When a che erf ul, brave, light-hearted woman is suddenly plunged into that perfection of misery, the HLUES. it ia a sad picture. It is usually this way : 6he has been feeling' "out of sorts'' for some time ; head has ached and back also ; has slept poorly, been quite rervous, and nearly fainted once or twice; head dizzy, and heart-beats very fast; then that bearinjr-down feeling1, and during her menstrual period she is exceedingly despondent. Nothing pleases her. Her doctor says : "Cheer up: you have dyspepsia; you will be all right soon." But she doesn't pet " all ripht." and hope vanishes; then come the brood ing, morbid, melancholy, everlasting BLUES. Don't wait until your sufferings have driven you to despair, with your nerves all shattered and your courage gone, but take Lydia E. l'inkham's Vege table Compound. See what it did for Mrs. Rosa Adams, of 819 12th Street, Louisville, Ky.. niece of the late Gen eral Roger Hanson, C.S.A. She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinlham: " I cannot tell you with p?n and ink what Lydia E. I'inkhrim's Vegetable Compound has done for me. I suffered with femnlo trouble, ext renin lassitude, 'the blues,' nervousness and tlmt all gone feelin i I vtas advised to try Lydia E. l'inkham's egetable Compound, and it not only cured my femnle dernng.vnent, but it has restored mto perfect health and strength. The buoyancy of mv younger days hns returned, and I do not suf fer any longer with lesiondency, as I did lie fore. I consider Lydia E. rinktanm's Vege table Compound a boon to sick and sulTuiiig women." If you have some derangement of the female organism write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, ft'.ass., for advice. What London Pays Policeme.i. A London policeman earns, as long as he remains a patrolman from $3.S4 to $7.79 a week. He may lodge In a section house for only 24 cenis a week, and get his board for $1.70. His uniform i3 supplied free. FTTn',w 'v rtire,i. 1f " orri ftrwiq 7'ess n'rnr flr;r dav's rm of Dr. 1 1 hp's flrcit Nerve Tles:forer.0i'Tl hottlnnml triHsofriw Dr. It. H. Kline. Ltd. ,931 ArchSt.,rhiia.,ra. Thrn nrc in Germany twenty-one uni versities. Mrs.Wlnslnw'sSoitMnctSvnip for Children tenthlag.softon tlt crums. reduces inflamma tioa, allays pniu.cunnwind colic, 25c. a bottlo Winnipeg. Manitoba, is mid to be tin fastest glowing city in the world. .'do not bslleve Pho's Cure for Coasu-nn. tlonhas'ineprtl (or coughs nnd colds. Johi I'.UoTtB.'f riiiity tlnrlnirs, Ind.. Fob. 15, 190). The production of quicksilver in 1904 is cstimuted at 33!)1 tons. German shopkeepers are appealing to the government to restrain the rap idly growing tendency towards co operative stores. BE HAPPY! The Plarrlmtnntlv. nnyer 'iici our Latest Model Plaited Skirts Mtul to tnAfftirn frnm fDPiiinrciniiiH.wena npu, nip una ir nt iRIIlTf)lllllllMiirta trim. iliir color of penult ddsiml anil price. At $198, $3.93 or $198. All .WKW J .1 j Manhattan Skirt Mfg. Co., 5 438 Sixth Av Nftw York City MADE IN ALL STYLES. Bend for Hook let giving full description. BROWN MANUFACTURING CO ZANESVILLE, OHIO. ? FOR WOMEN trcablea with ills peculiar to ttaeir sex, u.ied as a douche is rrurveluusly sue- cuobiui. xuuiuuuiy uiuauBcv, KmsaiBuase germs, tops discharges, heals inflammation and louii soreness, Cures leucorrboca aud Latal catarrh. faxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in prrm water, and Is tar more cleansing, healing, BermicuUl and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 60 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. Tm H. PaaTois Compawv Sqston, Maia. H R f"i D Q VNEW DISCOVERT; ,i,M aV I 1 VrsJ I auck r.ll.f ui cure. w.r.t eaMS. Hsiid for book of tcitiuiooialt ind 10 Daya' V. N. U. 29, 1906. i M I M',1 III I t Ml 11 w IJW, Fruit Production. The family that eonsumes a bushel of Rood fruit this year will wi.nt a larper quantity next year; hence It would appear that both quantity and quality should be our aim. When we produce fruit for sale, we often think the people want nothing but quantity, when in reality they also want quality. I believe the planting of fruit is beins overdone, and those who have planted for quantity only will find no market for their fruit at profitable prices. A few years ago, fall and winter varieties of pears of high quality brought, good prices, but the large planting of Klef fers drove out even quality, and the people have lost their taste for pears. Weekly Witness. Feeding Fowls, The manner and time of feeding fowls is of nearly as munii importance as the feed itself. We always adopt a regular system of feeding, and only change with the seasons of the year, or when conditions absolutely require it. We have known a change of feed, and the time of feeding it, to make a dif ference, with our own flock of Leg horns, of over four hundred eggs a day inside of two weeks. Too much stress cannot be laid on regularity in feed ing, and the adherence to a steady sys tem, only changing when there is a good reason for so doing. All soft feed should be fed on wide boards or in troughs which are kept clean, and the fowls should never be allowed to huddle together any more than is nec essary. Exercise is of prime impor tance when trying to produce eggs dur ing the winter months. By keeping the floor of the house littered with dry straw, chaff or leaves, and scattering the whole feed into it, the fowls get all the exercise they need. Weekly Witness. The Stretching Wire. As I have seen a lot of ways to set and brace corner posts for pastures in your valuable paper, I will give you my way of stretching wire a half mile long. Get a wagon and back it up to the corner post so that the hub of the hind wheel is in line with the rest of the posts. Next get a, post or a piece of 4x4 timber seven feet long and put from the centre of the corner post or half-way up the post, to the hind axle of the wagon near the wheel. Then raise the hind wheel off the ground, next get a small piece of chain with grab hook to fasten around spoke of wheel, then fasten the wire to the end of the chain and start turning on the wheel. One man can stretch wire so tight that he could break it if he turned too much on the wheel. When the wire is stretched as tight as wanted either tie with a piece of rope the hind wheel to the front wheel, or have a stick to put between the spoke and under the wagon box to keep the wheel from turning back, and then go and drive in your staples. You'll find this Is the quickest and best way to stretch wire a long distance. Chas. H. Sim monds in the Epitomist. Silage Better Than Cured Corn. The raising of corn for the silo and the feeding of silage is In great favor in this section among our milk pro ducers. There is one point I think some writers have overlooked, and that is in comparing the amount of waste in the methods of dry curing and siloing corn. In the dry curing the cattle leave the butts and in the silo some rots in the corners and on top. It seems manifestly unfajr to compare the losses on equal terms. The reason is that corn raised for dry curing is always our native field variety and is of small growth, and would not make more than five to eight tons, green, per acre after the ears are off; while torn that Is in tended for the silo is usually a large variety that would not be suitable to dry and is consequently raised much cheaper and will produce fifteen to twenty tons-per acre. In making com parisons, we must reckon at least three times as much waste in the silo to equal the one part waste In the dry curing. Another point is that in the dry fodder there is usually no corn in it at all, while for the silo the ears are usually all cut in, which makes It much the richer feed without extra cost of husking, etc. The American Hog. About two-fifths of the world's hog supply is produced in the United States, according to an advance proof of a short bulletin to be issued by the Department of Agriculture on market ing swine, and about 85 per cent, of these are produced in the Mississippi valley; hence this section of the coun try has developed the fat or lard hog and has set the standard for bogs in other parts of the United States. The fat or lard hog is such because corn has been hie principal feed and because there has been a demand for pork from such a hog, and he will con form to the present prevailing type Just as long as corn remains his prin cipal feed. Butcher hogs are the best hogs from the fat or lard hog standpoint that come to market, and should be used as standard for comparison. From the' bacon market standpoint the English bacon hog Is the ideal toward which hogs are being devel oped. To the close observer It to apparent Garden that the gradually changing conditions brought about by the development of the I'nlted States, and the Increase In the price of corn resulting from its varied commercial uses, cause the hog to be fed a more mixed and usually a more nitrogenous ration. This will in the future affect the type of the hog of the United States, so that it will more nearly approach that of the Eng lish bacon hog. Farmers' Home Jour nal. The Staple Crops. According to the final calculations of the United -States Department of Agri culture crop yields were bountiful this season. Values are high on the whole. The corn amounts in total to 2,467,480, 934 bushels, the second largest yield on record, of a value on the farm of $l,0i7,4til.44O. This figures to some thing over 44 cents in the bin. With such a value and a second best-on-record yield the corn status leaves little to be desired. The wheat show ing is not quite so satisfactory. The total crop of the winter and spring varieties amounts to 552,399.517 bushels, but the weight In the spring wheat States Is light compared with that of a year ago, showing the effects of the black rust which invaded the Northern fields last fall and caused such a furore In the grain pits in every large city In the world. This lowers the milling value of the spring wheat. The re turned value in the bin on the farm is close to $1, in fact one may call it dollar wheat this year. The weight as promulgated is for Minnesota 52 pounds, against 55 in 1903; for North Dakola, 51 pounds, as against 56, and for South Dakota, 50 pounds, as against 58 last season. Cats made a splendid crop. The total reaches 894,595,552 bushels, which is not far from the pre liminary estimate of 900,000,000 bushels made in October. The main feature, however, of the 1904 oat crop is not so much the yield per acre as the super lative quality of the grain. It is prob able that more of this crop will be fed out during the cold weather than In any other season, for the reason that in comparison with corn, oats seem cheap and the farmers for the most part are able and disposed to hold. Barley, rye and the other grains hold their own well and the figures show that hay is worth very nearly ?!) per ton in mow and stack. llreedcrs' Ga zette. VALUE OF LIGHTNING RODS. Prorer Installation Needed Rules for Setting Up Protective Apparatus. M. R. Chavanncs discusses the gen eral prejudice against lightning rods in Paris Electricien. and his argu ment, is translated and adapted by the Electrical Review. He calls attention to the need of investlgallng more thoroughly tho value of these devices so r-s to remove this feeling. A dis tinction is drawn between lightning arresters (parafoudres) and lightning rods (naratonnerres), Ihe former be ing that type of apparatus intended to protect objects insulated from the earth, and the latter protective devic es for objects not so Insulated. The reliability of lightning arresters has been taken up by a Swiss commis sion, but its report has not yet been rrade public. M. Chavannes holds that lightning rods are valuable pro tective devices when properly In stalled, but the. way In which this should be done Is not well recognized. The original Idea of a lightning rod was a device which would allow at mospheric charges to escape slowly to the ground, but, in fact, the action of the device is generally otherwise. Discharges are sudden and severe, and have apparently an oscillatory chatacter. M. Chavannes has con ducted experiments on a laboratory scale, with a view of studying the ef fect of sudden oscillatory discharges, using for this purpose high-tension transformers. These experiments have given the following results: The surface of a lightning conductor is as important as Its cross-section. The ohmic resistance of the conductor is of little importance. ' Breaks in the continuity of the conductor are of small consequence. The self-induction of the conductor should be as small as possible.. Induction between the lightning conductor and neighbor ing circuits may give rise to discharg es In these circuits, and offer a re sistance to the discbarge of the main circuit. A house covered with a metal roof is analogous to a condens er, and may set up resonance phe nomena. The following rules should be ob served wherever possible: All light ning protective apparatus should be placed exterior to the building. The rod, the .conductor, and the ground plate should be placed In a straight line. The coefficient of self-induction should be sensibly zero. While it Is not always possible to arrange the differ'iit parts of the lightning rod in a straicht line, unnecessary bends should be avoided. M. Chavannes be lieves that, when the Question has been studied thoroughly and the nec essary conditions more fully under stood, the real value of lightning rods will be recognized, and that by means of them, the accident! due to atmos pheric discharges will be greatly reduced. a. wq.vian's Misery. Mrs. John Lnltue, of 115 PnterRon Avenue, Paterson, N. J., says: "I wai troubled for about nine years, and what 1 suf fered no one will ever know. I used about every known reme dy that is said to be good for kidney com plaint, but without deriv ing permanent relief. Often when alone In the house the back ache has been so bad that it brought team to my eyes. The pain at times was so intense that I was compelled to give tip my household duties and lie down. There were head aches, dizziness and blood rushing to my head to cause bleeding at the nose. The first box of Doan's Kidney Pills benefited me so much that I continued the treatment. The stinging pain In the small of my back, the rushes of blood to the head and other symptoms disappeared." Doan's Kidney Tills are for sale by all dealers. CO cents per box. Foster-Mil-burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Quebec's New Fortifications. The Dominion government Is about to enter upon the construction of gi gantic military works in the city and district of Quebec. .The old oitadel is to be overhauled, and the three forts at Point Levis, and big guns put oh all of them. At Beaumont, nine miles from the city, on the south shore, two lnrge fortresses aret to be con structed, commanding a full view of the channels up and down the river and costing about $3,000,000. "When they are done Quebec can go to sleep at night with an added sense of secur ity, though it is a question whether it will be a bit safer than It is now and has been ever since Wolfe and Montcalm, for tho time being, settled its status on the Heights of Abra ham. On lz8 armllor nftor uln Allet' FmN Ease, a rvowdBr. It mikru tin t1: or no-.v shoal enav. Cure swollen, ho;, swrvitln. ncilni? fppf. Intfrowin-j Ttlh. corn nhd b-inloo. t nil dni2rt?lsts rind shoi sloroi, 2;( Tlon't arj oent nnv itilntlMte. 'J'rl il rw'tne Fttrr by mrtH. Address, Alien . Olmsted, I.elloy, N.Y. Russia has eighty-six genera! holidays in a year. Tho Jews celebrate this year the 25oth anniversary of their settlement in the United States. BABY'S TERRIBLE SORE Unity Hrtv Wltli (1 tiuior C:tusirl I'ntoM Agony Doctor l)li No Ooinl Mollicr DIpcouruKrtl Ctitlcura Cure! Ht Once. ' My child was a very delicate baby. A terrible sore and humor broke out on his body, looking like rnw flesh, and causing the child untold agony. My physician pre scribed various remedies, none of which helped at all. I became discouraged and took the nmtter into my own hands, and tried Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment witlt almost immediate success, llefore the second week had passed the soreness was gone, not leaving a trace of anything. Mrs. Jeannette II. Block, 281 Hoscdale St., Rochester, N. Y." Hidden Money Produced. Not very long ago William Mar tin, a business man of Martinsburg, Washington county, has brought Into New Albany a considereable sum of money, which consists entirely of old "greenbacks" issued before 1805. A" great part of this money had evident ly been secreted for many years, as it was covered with mold. It had ap parently not been in circulation. Sev eral hundred dolars of the money was in compound Interest notes issued during the last years of tho Civil war. The money, Mr. Martin said, was a part of a large sura left by a wealthy farmer of Washington county, Ky who died a few years ago, and was being put In circulation by the heirs of his handsome estate. While not at all miserly, he was careful and prudent, and, being distrustful ot banks, he had kept his money secret ed about hlit house. The greater part of his accumulations had been on hand for more than forty years, and had the money been put at interest It would have more than doubled it self during the years it had lain idle. Louisville Courier-Journal. Longest Tunnel. ' Tho Simplon is the longest tunnel In the world, and has been finished in the face of tremendous difficulties, most of which were entirely unex pected, and many of which presented new problems for engineers. It ex tends from Brieg In Switzerland to Iselle in Italy, the total length being a little over 12',i miles 21,576 yards In fact. COMES A TIME When Coflee Shows What It Has Beea Dolnc. "Of late years coffee has disagreed with me," writes a matron from Rome, N. Y., "it's lightest punishment was to make me 'logy' and dizzy, and it seemed to thicken up my blood. "The heaviest was when it upset my stomach completely, destroying my ap petite and making me nervous and Irri table, and sent me to my bed. After one of these attacks, in which I nearly lost my life, I concluded to quit and try Postuin Food Coffee. "It went right to the spot! I found it not only a most palatable and refresh ing beverage, but a food as well. "All my ailments, the ioglness' and dizziness, the unsatisfactory condition of my blood, my nervousness and irri tability disappeared In short order and niy sorely afllictcd stomach began quickly to recover. I began to rebuild and Lave steadily continued until now. Have a good appetite and am rejoicing in sound health, which I owe to the use of Postum Food Cpffee." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. . There's a reason. , Read the little book, "The Road to WellvUle," Xound In each pkg. - UTILIZING INVENTION. T we Kinds of-Talent Rarely Found In , the Same Person. Most men who have Inventive talent think that If a useful thing Is once perfected and patented there should not be any difficulty about making the thing sell. They are often puzzled, therefore, by the reluctance shown by other people to iake up the device, manufacturing and pushing It. The truth is, however, that another kind of talent is needed for this purpose. In the first place, it is not easy to foresee the fate of any novelty. Gro cers, booksellers, hardware dealers, druggists and other merchants know pretty nearly what demand there will be for such articles as have been in Ihe market for years; but when a new thing appears they do not feel certain about its future. It may go off like hot cakes, or it may remain unsold on their shelves- fOr years, and prove al most a dead loss. They say, probably with truth, that many wise men shook their heads over Bell's telephone, greatly doubting that. It would pay. Some of the trouble grows out of the difficulty of estimating popular taste; but, aside from that, an unusual com bination of business qualities is need ed in order to advertise properly the merits of a new Invention, and Its au thor rarely possesses these. In discussing this truth the Engi neering Record recently remarked that even when clever business men get hold of a good thing they do not always recommend wisely or to the right class of customers. To illustrate its argument that periodical referred to small refrigerating machines, such as ore being used in hotels, apartment houses and largo restaurants in cities and also In the rural districts. The men who are making the most money out of these machines are the owners of small cold storage plants, which are springing up rapidly In many parts of the country. In some parts of the wheat districts the farmers have or ganized co-operative elevator compa nies, and other farmers are now or ganizing cold storage companies in the same way. Dairy products, eggs and fruit are being kept where pro duced until the market conditions are favorable for their sale. This busi ness does not cut Into the large stor age enterprises In the cities, and, in fact, it is of assistance to the large wholesalers. The small storage business affords a good example of the fact that the most money to be made from an in vention Is to be found In its utiliza tion. When an Invention of real mer it has ben made it must be intro duced, and it Is the failure to grasp the necessity of educational work in introducing novelties that, delays the adoption of desirable improvements. The construction of small cold stor age plants, operated by gasolene en gines, was loft for the farmers to un dertake, and the slowness with which it has been undertaken has been due to the lack of encouragement given by the builders of such machinery. In contrast with this condition is that of the pneumatic tool business. This has reached its present astonishing devel opment very largely through the edu cational work done by. Mr. Duntley. He exhibited the tools In actual work In all the large cities where there were Industries to use them. He sent out men to show how to keep them In con dition, and he sought far and wide for suggestions for their improvement. Bird-Inspired Music. One of the most pathetic scenes re membered from the experiences of an unhappy genius Is given, among other facts, about Beethoven In the "Life of Sir Herbert Stanley Oakeley." The great composer delighted In the out door world. He loved a tree, ho once declared, with pardonable exaggera tion, "better than a man." After he had Income stone-deaf he visited the valley of Helligenstadt, near Vienna, where he had stayed in other and happier days. "Here," he said- to tho friend who accompanied him. "I composed my Pastoral Symphony, and here the birds composed with me. Can you hear a yellowhammer?" "No," wrote his friend on the con versation slate. "And In the sym phony I only remember the nightin gale, quail and cuckoo." He believed certain phrases to have been meant for a direct imitation of certain birds; but Beethoven's meth od was a more poetic one. The birds had inspired him; they had "com posed" with him. But they had done it by contributing unconsciously to the joyous harmony of the scene. Beethoven, in answer to his friend's suggestion, took the slate and wrote upon it a passage for the flute, In the "Brook Scene." That was what the yellowhammer had inspired him to do. An Artist's Mistake. Oliver Herford while recently ex ploring a remote part of New York, found himself beset br the pangs of hunger. Entering a small restaurant of somewhat doubtful aspect, he or dered a mutton chop. The waiter, af ter a long delay, returne'd, bearing a plate on which reposed a dab of mashed potato and a much overdone chop of microscopic proportions and with a remarkably long and slender rib attached. Clapping this down briskly before the famished artist, thwalteir started off to attend to an other customer without further cere mony. ' "See here," called Herford, "I or dered a chop." . "Yesslr," answered the man. "There it is." "Oh, beg pardon; that's true," re turned Herford, peering at it closely, '1 thought it was a crack in the nlate." Saturday Evening Post. A VETERAN OF THE BLACK i HAWK-r-MEXICAN AND THE CIVIL WARS. CAPT. W. W. JACKSON. Sufferings Were Protrac t I and Severe Tried Every Known Remedy Without Relief Serious Stomach. Trouhte Cured by Three Bottles of Peruna I Cant. W. W. Jackson, 705 G St., N. V., Washington, D. C, writes: "I am eighty-three years old, a veteran of the Black Hawk, Mexican and the Civil Wars. I am by profession a physi cian, but abandoned the same. "Some yeat-8 ano I was serintmly afl'reted with latarrli nfthc Momttvli. Mu Btiff erlntiH were protracted and severe. 1 tried every ff it omit remedy without ohtafntna relief. 'In desperation 1 began the ur of your l'eruna. 1 began to realise immediate though yradual Improve ment. "After the use of three bottles evcrv appearance of my complaint was removed, and I have no hesitation in recommend ing it as an infallible remedy for that dis order." W. W. Jackson. Address Dr. S. H. Hnrtman, President of The Hnrtman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. (J JiwSpLJl 8 Do', B wi,Boo, T,em ,n YMr "-"m I Lunch Tongues Veal Loaf I fWW Bone," Chicken Dried Beef jr&SPfW to-'zM Brisket Beef Soups Ti 'ifTY tfTtm& Hock" BtxkedBean. m -efsfezl' "Ze 3 & The Booklet "How to Make Good Thingi -yyr' -JjltVr to Bat- tent free. tLIbby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago Facts Are Stubborn Things Uniform excellent quality for OVCT a quarter Of a Century Las steadily increased the sales of WON COFFEE, The leader of all package coffees. Lion Coflee ia now used in millions of homes. Such popular success speaks for itself. It is a positive prool that LION COFFEE has the Confidence of the people. The uniform quality of LION COFFEE survives all opposition. LION COFFEE keeps Its old friends and makes new ones every day. UM COFFEE has even more than lis Strength, Flavor and Qual ity to commend It. On arrival from the plantation, It Is carefully roast ed at oar factories and securely packed In 1 lb. sealed packages, and not opened again until needed for use In the home. This precludes the possibility ol adulteration or contact with germs, dirt, dust. Insects or unclean hands. The absolute purity of LION COFFEE Is therefore guaranteed to the consumer. Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-h"ad on every package. Save these Lion-beads for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE GUARANTEED CURB blood, wind oa th. nomach. p.iD.nr.atlnf , liver rctuiariT 70a ar. Hen. start, ehroale allm.oU P A Rf AOura 1 r noa.y retuafed. Th. nauia. folrt ituH troubl.. ullow .km and ditiioeu. wh "J 7rT-f''',c" I ton.op.uoo nil. nor. pmpl. than .11 othW diSh i! I MAY BE USED FROM THE HOUR OF BIRTH Wclnh. ing tlies JJaby. Physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and chemists throughout the world endorse Cuticura Soap because of its delicate, medicinal, emollient, sanative, and antiseptic properties derived from Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, united with the purest of cleansing ingredients and most refreshing of flower odors. For preserving, purifying, and beauti fying the skin, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet and bath, Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuti cura Ointment, the great Skin Cure, is priceless. Guaranteed absolutely pure, and may be used from the hour of birth. Two Snip, In on it one nrlcfl nimriy, a Medlrtnal tml TdH.t Sonp lor Futtrr Ilnijr Ik Chrm. Corp., Bole Prop,., Morton. Msilwl 1'reo, 'llww to Uare lur ' B&ly'i skin, Scalp, and Usir." (77 W WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. M for all hawfil frrrmSlnsi mrm.mmAi.itiTm'!mmm'ifa n C C C. NirM ! f,t'Tau; ear. or I 'i 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers