ddle ers, and reds ort- » do nter G. gold ving dis- Kal- Tess the his ted, ittle for 1. to am- 8 Cons ight cers ina. bad : he that 1 or The vere ure, the all and rate. lem. send d it 10W, cura ood, y of fier. ery- ent. aid. Al- but ash- the tha all Go wet the How 1ffer ders ills, t in Vrs, rsey A ys: ave aise ney een Ack- ect- feet and ney ions that so, D0X. ET Owe My Life to Pe-ru-na,” IW. L. DOUGLAS " Mrs. Mittie Haffaker, “ar Knowledge is Power. Knowledge is power in agriculture a8 well as in other professions. "The more a farmer knows about the facts of agriculture, and the more he prac- tices what be knows, the more success: ful be becomes. The wide awake farmer is observant, and profits by his fallures as well as his successes, Results of Feeding. In the selection of cattle foods the farmer should keep in view the results to be expected. Some foods are more valuable, pound for pound, than others, because they differ in the relative pro- portion of dry substance and its com- position. The digestive capacity of each animal should be known to the farmer, and he should endeavor to supply its wants. Fill the Pork Barrel, The farmer who raises a few pigs for his pork barrel may count the cost and affirm that pigs do not pay, but where a few pigs are raised they will con- HAD GIVEN UP ALL HOPE CONFINED T0 HER BED WITH DYSPEPSIA Says Mrs. Huffaker. Mrs, Mittie Huffaker, h. R. No. 3, Columbia, Tenn., writes: “I was affitcted with dyspepsia for several years and at last was con- fined to my bed, unable to sit up, “We tried several differen: doctors with- out relief. “1 had given up all hope of any re- lief and was almost dead when my husband bought me a bottle of Pe- runa, “At first 1 could not notice any benefit, but after taking several bottles 1 was cured sound and well. ‘It isto Peruna 1 owe my life to- day. ”] cheerfully recommend it to all suf- Revised Formula. " *“For a number of years requests have ®ome to me from a multitude of grateful friends, urging that Peruna be given a slight laxative, quality 3 have been ex- perimenting with a tive addition for mite a lergth of time, and now feel grati- to announce to the friends of Peruna that I have incorporated such a guality in the medicine which, in my opinion, can only enbance its well-known beneficial character, S. B. HARTMAN, M. D.” Queen Alexandra's Attendants. There are in all 15 ladies in per- sonal attendance upon Queen Alex- andra, the first being mistress of the robes, then the ladies of the bed chamber and maids of honor. DON'T MISS THIS, A Cure For Stomach Trouble—A New Method, by Absorption—No Drags. Do You Belch? It means a diseased Stomach. Are you afflicted with Short Breath, Gas, Sour Kructations, Heart Pains, indigestion, Dys epsia, Burning Pains and lead Weight in it of Stomach, Acid Stomach, Distended Abdomen, Dizziness, Colic? % d Breath or Any Other Stomach Tor re? Let us send you a box of Mull’s Anti Belch Wafers free to convince you that it cures. Nothing else like it known. It’s sure and very pleasant. Cures by absorption. Harmless. No drugs. Stomach ‘Trouble can’t be cured otherwise—so says Medical Science, Drugs won’t do—they eat up the Stomach and make you worse. We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers cure and we want you to know it, hence this offer. This offer may not appear again. 5266 GOOD FOR 25c. 144 Send this coupon with your mame and address and your druggist’s name and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we will supply you a sample free if you have never used Muil’s Anti-Beleh | Wafers, and will also send you a cer- tificate good for 23c. toward the pur- chase of more Belch Wafers. You will find them invaluable for stomach trou- ble; cures by absorption. Address MvuLr’'s Grape Toxic Co. 328 3d Ave., Rock lslaad, fil. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. All druggists, 50c. per tox, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. In Milan there are 238,000 families living in one room each. *32208*3SHOES W. L. Douglas $4.00 Ciit Edge Line cannot be equalled atany price. ‘ ESTABUSyeD | Joule jgr8, CAPITAL $2500, W. L. DOUGLAS MA & SELLS MORE KES EN’S $3.50 SHOES THAN ANY OTHER IANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD. REWARD to anyone who can $1 0,000 disprove this statement. I 1 could take you into my three large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite care with which every pair of shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. 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. W. L. Douglas Sirone Made Shoes for 2. 8. J & Boys’ Schoo. ress , $2.50, 82,891.75, $1.50 CAUTI ON.— Insist upon having W.L.Doug- las shoes. © no substitute. None genuine without his name and price stamped on bottom. Fast Color Eyelets used ; they will not wear brassy. it really makes the raising of chickens able, sume a large amount of material that would be of no value except for their use. When the pork barrel is full the farmer is at least fortified for the winter with meat and in many cases where no p.gs are kept there is a waste of material that could be utilized with the ail ~f at least one or two young and thrifty pigs. To Keep Meat in Summer. My way of keeping pork through the summer season, says Louis Campbell, of Pennsville, Ohio: 1 smoke it well as early in spring as 1 can and usually market all side meat as early as possi- ble. After I bave it nicely smoked 1 take it from thie smoke house and hang it on stout nails around the sides of a garner in my wheat granary. I just bang it up without anything over it, being careful to let one piece hang so as not to touch another. 1 keep the granary dark so as to keep out all flies. I have tried this plan for sev- eral years and have never yet had any trouble from flies or other causes. Hogs in Orchards. As scavengers, or for consuming refuse that cannot be marketed, hogs are almost indispensable in an orchard. The fattening of hogs on apples may be considered a successful method, it being certain that this fruit possesses a value for that purpose that has been overlooked, and the destruction of in- sects by bogs in consuming the fallen apples has given a new value to orchards and will probably check their destruction, which in some sec- tions of the country has already pro- gressed to a considerable extent. The animal should be allowed in the orchard from the time the fruit be- gins to fall until it is time to gather apples for the winter, and they will, in most cases, be found in good condi- tion for hardening with grain and slaughtering, and the meat will be tender and of an excellent flavor. When it is necessary to put them into the pen, boiled apples mixed with a small quantity of corn, oats, peas or buckwheat meal will make them fat in a short time and fill the farmer's pork barrel with sound, sweet pork of the first quality. The Hen and Her Brood. When it comes to surety, safety and comfort for both the hen and her keeper, the pen system of managing the hen and her brood is the best and in the long run it is much the cheapest. We have written on this subject be- fore, but it is so timely now and it is such a good thing—such a great help to the management of the hen mothers and their little ones during the grow- ing season, that we are writing on it once more. The chief idea is individuality and comparative isolation of each hen and her chickens and in this alone much is attained, for the more we divide the growing stock the more of it we will raise In carrying out this plan, observes H. B. Geer, a good, stout, weather and varmint proof coop is the first essen- tial, for the chickens must have pro- tection at night, The next necessity is a4 pen made of slats or wire netting, this to enclose the coop, say a space about ten by twelve feet all around it, and the fencing should be six feet bigh and then the flight feathers of one wing of the hen should be cut so that she can not fly out, should she be of a flighty turn. A gate at the front is, of course, necessary. Within a small yard of this kind one hen and her brood should be placed, but the fencing should not be so close that the little chicks cannot pass in and out, for it is not intended to con- fine them, but their mother. This makes a security reserve for them—a place of refuge for them from any danger, and yet they may enjoy free range at the same time. It also makes it possible to feed each hen and her brood separately, which is a most de- sirable condition, as it prevents mob- bing up and overcrowding. Another thought—when the showers come up, and we are busy, we need not chase all over the place, dropping everything else, to get the hens and their chickens in out of the wet, for the hen is stationed where there is refuge all the time, and the chickens can quickly scoot in through the cracks to ber. In fact, this system minimizes work, worry and the percentage of loss, and with hens a pleasure, as well as profit- Rape For Sheep. Write for Illustrated Catalog. . W.L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. makes the quickest and one of the best It has been well attested that rape | ¢ paper. protection from overheating. | be in individual birds and strains, it! considered to be among the very best of all-purpose fowls. active, good layers, good mothers and of good size and good table quality. getting along without the grower of live stock, and that same world ought [in a centrifugal pump. to be willing to remunerate him for his labor and risks. people is under any obligation to feed and clothe another class without pay | requested to send an examiner to Tren- for it. t operation. for poultry, both for egg production | fused to do. and for growth in chicks, is not a mat. ter of dispute. recognized that in no other way can] eggs be produced more growth made in young stock more cut bone in the ration. sheep and hog pastures that can be grown. One of our correspondents, Mr, L. C. Reynolds, says of rape: Rape has won for itself great popu- larity as a food for sheep in recent years. It is grown to-day more or less upon every farm where sheep or hogs are raised. I have grown rape for sheep pasture for more than twelve years, and the more I grow of it the more thoroughly I am convinced it is one of the best sheep feeds the farmer can grow. While it does not come on as early as rye in the spring, its hardy nature makes it one of the best of for- age crops. When sown under favora- ble conditions it will supply a large amount of palatable pasture at six weeks of growth, and the fact that it can be sown at any season of the year makes it one of the best general forage crops for the farmer. No sheep owner can afford not to grow rape. It can be sown during every growing season of the year and produce excellent pasture, | I prefer to sow rape in drills instead of broadcast, as many do. A better stand of plants can be secured by this method, and the stock does not tramp the forage down nearly so much. I sow my rape with a hand or grain drill in rows twenty inches apart. Sow about four pounds of seed per acre. Care should be exercised not to sow the seed too deep.—Indiana Farmer. Fertility and Fruit Growing, At a meeting of horticulturists Pro- fessor John Craig, of Cornell Univer- sity, said: “Every modern system of cultivating fruits recognizes as a first principle the right of the fruit tree to be con- sidered a specific and sufficient crop under the soil, or at least to be regard- ed as a crop quite as exbausting in character as any grown by the farmer. Unless the fruit grower realizes and puts into practice the essential part of this principle he will fail as a cultiva- tor of fruits. Experiments in orchard. ing conducted some years ago at the Cornell Experiment Station proved con: clusively that it cost the soil more to produce twenty average crops of ap- ples than twenty average crops of wheat. In other words, more fertility was extracted from the land in grow- ing an acre of bearing appies for twen- ty years than in growing twenty con. secutive crops of wheat. As a rule, the farmer recognizes the food needs of the wheat plant, but too often does he look upon the apple or fruit tree as a mere tenant of the soil, and one which is not to be regarded as a spe« cific crop. Having recognized the prin. ciples, the particular method of orch- arding much be worked out by the fruif grower himself, This method will ded pend upon soil conditions and climate, Nevertheless, it is safe to say that in eight cases out of ten that method which employs clean tillage for at least part of the season will be most suc- cessful. It is also safe to say that all secondary crops in orchards are in- jurious.” Farm and Garden Notes. Much labor and expense may be saved by planning abead. Only a few varieties should be plant. ed im the commercial orchard. Exercise has a decided value in lowe ering the cost of egg production. The more litter in the manure, thd slower the process of decomposition. Celeriac is a plant similar to celery, but more easily grown and more easily cooked. Too large quantities of fertilizers applied at one time will Kill tender plants. But few plants will thrive in a wet soil. A good drain is sometimes better than manure. There are few times of the year when a good pair of pruning shears can not be used to good advantage. Don’t forget the stock water in the pasture. Stock must not be without good water, not for a day nor half a day. When a better price for better fruit is obtained, the difference in price pays | for handling. It pays to grow the best, ! for that reason. In nearly all cases animals in low Fis Little Blufr, fhe was such a pretty girl That 1 wondered why the churl Didn't pay More attention to the maid There he sat and nothing said While the crowded Pullman sped On its way. { pronounced him king of chumps To sit silent in the dumps With a queen, Dainty, winsome, natty, neat, Dancing-eyed, attractive, sweet, There beside him on the scat All serene. But when they arose to go Then I understood, you know, In a trice Why he had been such a bore. For I saw upon the floor “Nhat I hadn't seen before— Grains of rice! — Louisville Courier-Journal. Can a man always be spruce without looking more or less wooden ?—Puck. Many a man who knows his place has his eye on a better one.—Chicage Daily News, Of the five senses, common-sense and a sense of humor are the rarest.—Sat- urday Evening Post. Some people lose sight of the fact that of two evils it isn't always nec- essary to choose either. Love is responsible for two-thirds of the happiness in the world—also for nine-tenths of the misery. — Chicago Daily News. “What makes you think Bilkins is in love?’ “I was in the room next to him and his girl, and overheard one of their silences.”—Life. The doctors gave him up, out be Retaliated then; He gave the doctors up. you see, And now he’s well again. —Philadelphia Ledger. A country gentleman is an ordinary farmer who has, however, 2 sufficient income to send his son to a large uni- versity.—Cornell Widow. Caller—*Poetry is a gift.” Editor— “Not here. You'll have to pay adver- tising rates to get this stuff in.”— Chicago Daily News. “I believe Jimpson would share his last dollar with a friend.” ‘Yes, but did you ever catch him when he had one?’—Milwaukee Sentinel. “Charley looked very sick when he returned from the races,” said young Mrs. Torkins. “What was the trou- ble?’ “He said his system was out of order.”—Washington Star. “By the way, Jack, what is impres- sionism?’ “It is the art of picturing womething which no one has ever seep In such a way that they wouldn't recog- nize it if they did see it.”—Brooklyn Life. Mrs. Cummins—“So you love your grandmamma, do you, Gracie? And why do you love her?’ Gracie—'"Be- cause she used to punish mamma when mamma was a little girl. I hope she used to spank mamma as hard as mamma spanks me.”—Boston Tran- script. “I’m free to say a friend in need,” Quoth Mr. Horace Hodge, “Is just the sort of friend indeed That I desire to dodge.” —Philadelphia Bulletin. Mr. Gardner—*"Well, dear, how are the tomatoes you planted?’ Mrs. Gardner—'Oh, John! I'm afraid we’l] have to buy what we need this year.” Mr. sardner—*“Why, how's that, Mary?’ Mrs. Gardner—*"I recollected to-day that when I did the planting I forgot to open the cans!”—Puck. “It’s no use,” said the Czar, dejected- ly. “What's the matter now?” asked his chief adviser. ‘Providence is help- ing the Japanese. Didn't you see the story of an earthquake having thrown up another island for the Japs right in the middle of their archipelago?’— Baltimore American. She (six weeks after elopement)—*I received a letter from papa to-day.” He—“Well?’ She—*"He writes that he had just finished making his will.” He—*"Did he remember us?’ She— “Yes, indeed. He has left all his money to an asylum for hopeless idiots.”—Chicago Daily News. Story of a Sevres Vase, A wealthy manufacturer in the pot- teries is at present the subject of a good joke.. While on a continental tour he purchased a Sevres vase for some flesh are more liable to disease than when in fine bodily condition, and it costs more to keep them. | Thinning fruit is proving such an advantage to the quality that the plan is gaining ground everywhere. Better | prices for better fruit is the result. Some fires have occurred from care- lessness in handling incubators and brooders. Possibly we might encase | the incubator, if in cellar, in light framework covered with asbestos | The latter is cheap and a sure | Barring all the differences that may may be said that Wyandottes are now They are hardy, The world would do a bad job of Indeed, no class of That bone has great value as a ration The fact is generally readily, juickly than by the liberal use of ! “home most carefully. It is a foreign imitation of our own work and is ~vorth £5 at the cutside.”— Liverpool Post. Sent Seven-Ton Pump to Patent Office fice procedure are not without their humorous side. filed an application for improvements vention inoperative and demanded a working model. a seven-ton pump to the Patent Office | —sent it, moreover, from Trenton te or § : ls one men were requirad to gei it into ican. hundreds of pounds and brought it Thinking that the fo eman of his works might gather a hint from the desizn, he called that gentleman in and showed him his :reasure. “How do you like it?” he asked. The foreman took the vase in his hand, ‘turned it over and returned it with the brief reply: “I don’t think that I can learn much from it.” “Why not?’ asked the manufacturer. “I don't like telling rou, sir.” “Come—out with it.” “Well, I designed that vase myself. Sometimes the rigors of Patent Of- A New York attorney The Patent Office declared the in- The Patent Office was on to inspect the machine in actual This the Patent Office re- The attorney, therefore, politely sent atisfy a sceptical examiner. Twenty- he examiner's office.—Scientific Amer- Voters Emigrating. Ban Marino, the smallest republie in the world, will soon be without voters If its rate of emigration keeps up. It has only 1,700, includ- ing widows, but it is still a good republic. Recently its assembly de- cided to aholish the executive coun- cil, the members of which have been elected for life. Hereafter memebrs will be elected by the people for three years only. Richest Senator. Senator Clark, of Montana, the richest man in the Senate, and one of the richest men in the country, is the must solitary man in public life in Washington. He has no close friends. FITS, 8t. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Disenses per- manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dx. H. R. Kuing, Ltd., 981 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Between 5,000 and 6,000 alcoho! engines are now in operation in Germany. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing 8yrup for Children teething, softens the gums reduces inflamma= tion, allays pain, cures wind colie, 25¢, abottle The premium on gold in Haiti now varies between 400 and 500 per cent. Good Field for Surgery. The surgical operations on the skulls of boys in Philadelphia and Toledo, by which they were con- verted from incorrigibly bad boys to models of good behavior, suggest that the scientists might find a field of work in the Senate. There is a possibility that they might discover some pressure on the brains of Senators at times. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country thanall other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to beinourable, Fora great many years doctors ronounced it a local disease and prescribed Ds! and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in- curable. Science bas proven Catarrh to bea constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure onthe market. Itistaken internally indoses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts direct- ly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials, Address F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75¢. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation Superstitions of Farmers. Farmers “stick to the moon” in CORDIAL INVIVATION ADDRESSED TOWORKING GIRLS Miss Barrows Tells How Mrs. Pink bam's Advice Helps Working Girls. Girls who work are particularly susceptible to fe- male disorders, espec lly those w are obliged to stand on theirs feet from morn ing until night in stores or facto. ; Huy in auad Mi F 0 ay in and day out the girl toils, and she is often the bread-winner of the family. Whether she is sick or well, whether it rains or shines, she must get to her Place of employment, perform the duties exacted of her— smile and be agreeable. Among this class the symptoms of female diseases are early manifest by weak and aching backs, pain in the lower limbs and lower part of the stomach. In consequence of frequent weljug of the feet, periods become painfu and irregular, and frequently there are faint and dizzy spells, wi loss of appetite, until life is a burden. All these symptoms point to a de rangement of the female organism which can be easily and promptly cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegeta- ble Compound. Miss Abby F. Barrows, Nelsonville, Athens Co., Ohio, tells what this greats medicine did for her. She writes: Dear Mrs. Finkhain — 3a shoved “I feel it my duty Lydia E. Pinkhan's Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier have done for me. uy 1 took them I was vi nervous, had headaches, pains in back, and periods were irregular, I had been to several dedtors, and they did me no ; “Your medicine has made me well and strong. I can do most any kind of work without complaint, and my periods are all right. 1 am in better health than I ever » and I know it is all dueto your remedies. recommend your advice and medicine to all who suffer.” It is to such girls that Mrs. Pink- ham holds out a helping hand and ex- tends a cordial invitation to correspon with her. She is daughter-in-law Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising sick women free of charge. Her long record of success in treating woman's ills makes her letters of advice of untold value te every ailing working girl. Address, Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass, regard to planting corn and other crops. Some of them will not under any circumstances plant corn in moonlight nights, claiming that corn planted then will produce a tall stalk with a short ear. Others just as successful plant when they are ready, when nights are dark or moonlight, as the case may be. Other notions are indulged in, such as throwing the cobs inrunning water to keep corn from firing. Some farmers would under no considera- tion burn pinder hulls, the seed of which is to be used for planting; they must be scattered along a path or highway, to be troddem upon in order to secure a good crop. Green butter bean hulls must be thrown in a road after being shell- ed for table use from day to day to insure a good crop the following sea- son.—Cbharleston News and Courier. The New Postal Notes. Postmaster General Cortelyou’s new postal note of small denomina- tions, designed to obviate the busi- ness necessity of transmitting stamps through the mails in lieu of coins, includes special forms for 1, 2, 3,4,5, 6,7 8 and 9 cents, to be sold at their face value without a fee. The regular postal notes would repre- sent sums from 10, 20 and 25 cents, graded by fives and tens up to $1, be- sides notes of $1.50, $2 and $2.50. Mr. Cortelyou has asked Congress to appropriate $150,000 to establish the change, commencing with the new fiscal year, July 1. BREAD DYSPEPSIA. Th: Dig:sting Klement Lefi Out, Bread dyspepsia is common. It af- fects the bowels because white bread | is nearly all starch, and starch is di- gested in the intestines, not in the stomach proper. | 8 Up under the shell of the wheat | berry Nature has provided a curious deposit which is turned into diastase when it is subjected to the saliva and to the pancreatic juices in the human | intestines. This diastase is absolutely necessary | to digest starch and turn it into grape sugar, which is the next form; but that part of the wheat berry makes dark flour, and the modern miller cannot readily sell dark flour, 7» nature's val- uable digester is thrown out and the human system must handle the starch as best it can, without the help that Nature intended. Small wonder that appendicitis, peri- tonitis, constipation, and all sorts of | trouble exist when we go so contrary to Nature's law. The food experts that perfected Grape-Nuts Food, knowing these facts, made use in their experi- ments of the entire wheat and barley, including all the parts, and subjected them to moisture and long continued warmth, which allows time and the proper conditions for developing the diastase, outside of the human body. In this way the starchy part is trans- | amusement in its toys, etc., with. THE SIN OF THE Fis | increasing sales, Remember this when you went waters Proof oiled coats. suits hats, or horse Rods for all kinds of wet work. WE GUARANTEE EVERY GARMENT, ig a TOWER C0.BOSTON, MASS. U.S.A. CANADIAN CO. Limited TORONTO, CAN. - “From the cradle to the baby chair” . HAVE YOU A BABY? i so, you ought to have a PHOENIX WALKING GHAIR _ (PATENTED) “AN IDEAL SELF-INSTRUCTOR." Owe PHOENIX Walking Chg holds the child securek Sa. venting those phi MIs and bumps which gfreso frequent when baby learns alk, "BETTER THAN A NURSE." The ch 8 provided with & ree movable, sanitary.cloth seat, which supports the weight of the child and prevents bow-legs and spinal troubles; it also has a table attache ment which enables baby to find out any attention. ~— “As indispensable as a cradle.” It is 80 constructed that it pre. vents soiled clothes, sickness from drafts and floor germs, and is recommended by physicians and endorsed by both mother and baby. Combines pleasure and utility. No baby should be without one. Call at your furniture dealer and ask to see one. — MANUFACTURED ONLY BY \ PHOENIX CHAIR CO. SHEBOYGAN, WIS. Can only be had of your furniture dealer. formed into grape-sugar in a perfectly natural manner, without the use of | chemicals or any outside ingredients, The little sparkling crystals of grape- sugar can be seen on the pieces of Grape-Nuts. This food therefore is naturally pre-digested and its use in place of bread will quickly correct the troubles that have been brought about by the too free use of starch in the food, and that is very common in the human race to-day. The effect of eating Grape-Nuts ten days or two weeks and the discontin- uance of ordinary white bread, is very - marked. The user will gain rapidly in strength and physical and mental health. “There's a reason.” Drill for Water Prospect for Drill Testand Blast Holes. DRILLING MACHINES LOOMIS MACHINE CO., Minerals ‘We make For Horse, Steam or Gasoline Power. Latest Traction Machine, TIFFIN, OHIO. DROPSY worst cases. Book Free. Dr. H. H. P. N. U. 21, 1906. NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and enres of testimonials and 10 Days’ treatment GREEN'S SONS, Box B, Atlanta, €a, > 48 p. book free. Highest ref! Long experience, Fitzgeral, CT ed
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers