hadn't really lived until I saw EUROPE" Sound enthusiastic? It is, and it's typical of letters we receive fron de- lighted passengers on our Tourist Third Cabin sailings. Fare $Q§ (up) Round Trip $170 [up] This service of ours is designed to bring the joys of a trip to the Old World within the reach of every- one—not a privileged few, and on some of the finest steamers includ- ing Majestic, world's largest ship. Thousands of cultivated people crossed this way last year, met cour- tesy, friendliness and helpful service all the way. L. A. Miller, Mgr. Union Trust Bldg., Pittsburgh or your local agent WHITE STAR LINE RED STAR LINE LEYLAND LINE ATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINE Wfanmarionar “s somxedny Clip this ad NOW! If Your Dealer . YY handle FLOWS Wiite LeRoy Plow Co., LeRoy, N.Y. BABY CHICKS From Inspected Heavy Laying Floeks SPECIAL PRICES bo 100 500 Wh, Buff & Brown Legh’'ns $7.00 $135. 2 $62.00 Bar. & White Rocks& Reds 8.00 2.00 Wh. Wyand'es& Buff Orpts. 8.50 16. 9 77. 00 Heavy Assorted ........ 8.50 12.00 55.00 Order from this ad and buy the best for less, 100% live delivery. (‘atalog Free, GALION HATCHERY, Box 25, Galion, Ohio, IMPORTED SWEDISH STEEL BLADES FOR GILLETTE RAZORS 10 for 35¢ NONR BETTER SAMPLE BLADE §¢ A. W. ABBS 14 Sheridan Ave. - = Pittsburgh, Pa. CALIFORNIA STATE APPROVED LANDS Small improved farms in well established settlement. Fruit, alfalfa, dairy, hogs, poul- try. Churches, high school, grammar schools, Also unimproved lands with first water r ights. Easy terms. Write Fresno Farms, Kerman, Calif, BABY CHICKS, TEN LE Hollywood Leghorns 280 DING BREEDS, 0 egg breeding. Also White, Buff, Brown Leghorns; Rocks, Reds, Wyandottes, Orpingtons, Anconas. Send for big 28 page catalog. CHICK HATCHERY, New London, Ohio. Ladles: Ww hy “Get Burnt, Handling Hot Pies, cakes, draining vegetables, etc.; a necessity Sample 30c. Agents! half profit. Handle C Halford St., Rochester, N. Y. IF YOU LACK NERVE FOR( E. TRY Win- chester’s Specific Pill. Price $1. WINCHES- IER & CO, (Est. 1858) O. Box 1247, Mount Vernon, New York. ‘Speelal Offer Apple Trees. 4 Delicious, 5 fit.3 4 Winesap, 5 ft,; two Transparent, 5 ft.; by Express, only $2, Too large for parcel post. Catalog. Hedge Lawn Nursertes, Roanoke, Va. Part or Full Time Selling. Karn big money every week. ‘Experience or capital unneces- sary. No delivering or collecting. Write Rochester L andscape Co. Roc ester, N. Y. Help Your ‘Chure ‘h Fund by yelling our boau- tiful Scripture Wall Mottoes, Pay for them when gold, os trust you. Particulars free. GOSPEL » Stapleton, N. ¥Y, A Representative Wanted in Your County, Full or part time. Experience unnecessary. Checks weekly, Write immediately. Geneva Nursery Co., Desk B, Geneva, N. Y. Curfew for Women Magistrates in the little seaside town of Hastings, England, near where the Normans conquered King Harold in 1066, say that all women should be in their homes by ten o'clock at night. They were asked by a saloonkeeper, who wished to give a party to his women customers, for permission to keep his premises open after ten o'clock, the usual closing time. His application was refused on the ground that all women should be in their homes at that time. Most Coriaidy Jake (the yegg)—How did you get on in court this morning? Jimmy (the slugger)—Fine! For economy's sake, why not buy a ver- mifuge which expe Worms or Tapeworin with a single dose? Dr. Peery's “Dead Shot’ does it. 372 Pearl St, N. Y. Adv He who is not ready today will be less so tomorrow.—Ovid, Ease irritated throatg, relieve coughs and sweeten the breath with Luden’s. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Removes Dandruff-Stops Hair Falling Restores Color an Beauty to 0 Gray and and Faded Hair 1" 79 Hise thon] Wks ey. Y. HINDERCORNS Removes Corns, Cal- louses, ete., stops all pain, ensures comfort to the feet, makes walking easy. 16c¢ by mail or at Drug: gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Fawhogue, N HOXSIE’S | GROUP REMEDY Ne ae no LiF Say Es OE at druggists, og KELLS CO.,, NEWBURGH, N. X. Sandma THE HAPPY CAT “ E-OW, Me-ow,” said Aggie, the cat. “I have been asked to tell about myself and my nice home. “My mistress is a lovely lady. She 1s very wise and very clever. She has wonderful books and magazines and papers about, and to show that I am the cat belonging to a clever person I pick out the best of these books and “l Pick Out the Best and Sit Upon Them.” magazines and them! “How do I know which are the best one? They're all good and so they're all best to my cat mind, me-ow-me- ow; ha, ha, you didn’t think I was go- ing to say that. “Joyce is the name of my mistress. ‘She has a little box outside her window and In the box she grows grass for me as [ really love grass. Then she grows radishes for the rest of the family, for they love radishes. “Then there are two paroquets and they like to nibble at all sorts of things. They like to nibble at the pa- per covers on books. “I suppose they think they show their wisdom that way but I think to papers and sit upon Martha , Martin sit on wisdom is better than to chew ic! “They are watched by a cat from the roof of the house beyond, but they are quite safe and though the cat gazes at them with his big green eyes they don’t notice the cat. “I've heard my mistress say that. nd these paroquets are allowed all about. They even climb on the window sill when the window is open and they never go away. They seem to think that the world ends where they are and that there is nothing to see beyond, “But I must continue to tell about myself. “lI am very neat, fur looking glossy and smooth. “I exercise enough but not too much, 1 play and I sleep and I eat. My white tuft of hair under my neck, or upon the front of my neck, is a handsome touch, my friends say. “I have a pink ribbon to match her pink dress, a red ribbon to match her red dress, a blue ribbon to match her blue suit and a greenish yellow ribbon to match my eyes. “After every meal I chew at the broom-handle and so keep my teeth clean. . “My mistress says the broom-handle has many marks from my teeth and that I never finish a meal without do- ing this, and that is the truth. “I keep my claws sharp by scratch- ing them upon the wicker chairs. “And I jump beautifully. “1 get up high, on a very tall man- telpiece, and then I put my two paws on the next little outstanding part of the mantelpiece and then I jump for the sofa below. “My mistress says It is a most beau- tiful jump. “Then sometimes I sit a long time on the mantelpiece while people wait to see this beautiful jump. And I keep them waiting for it so it will seem like an important act. “My mother and my father were fine, well-mannered cats and my mis- tress says I take after them. I play with my mistress and she plays make- believe tunes upon my paws while I purr and she sings, “But, she says you have to know me to really know how wonderful 1 am. That is what my Mistress Joyce says. And so it must be the truth!” (Copyright.) For { For Meditation : By LEONARD A. i BARRETT INADEQUATE EDUCATION HE most serious question con- fronting education today is wheth- er the present generation is going to be more Christian or more pagan. The responsibility for the answer lies at the door of universities, colleges and the public schools. The rising generation is being educated in a world surcharged with jazz, the spirit bf an intense competition and the law of the survival of the fittest. The tremendous task of developing a Christian idealism is therefore a mat- ter of community interest. As a preparation for this task our institutions of learning are rendering most valuable service. No more ade- quate system of education ean be found anywhere. Upon this task of preparation for world citizenship our youth devote five days a week of from four to six hours each. This is equiv- alent to about one hundred and twen- ty hours a month or about twelve hun- dred hours for an average school year devoted almost entirely to the study of the arts and sciences, Does this method of education, elab- orate as it is, furnish all or even the most important requisites for success in the economic world? Success, like the spirit of democracy, rests upon fixed and unalterable standards. They are the norms of a Christian ideal- ism. Upon the development of these standards the average youth spends about one-half an hour a week, in contrast to the one hundred and twen- ty hours devoted to secular education, The task of imparting the knowl edge of moral norms is also frequent- iy assigned to a pooriy prepared Sun- day school teacher or is undertaken hy an inadequate system of religious education. This factor cannot be ig- nored in our system of education if the present generation is to make an wdequate contribution to the develop ment of the social order. Shall the standards of a pagun or Christian philosophy of life rule the future? The problem is one for which education is responsible, (©. 1927, Western Newspaper Union.) 0 Japan Welcomes New Year The opening of the new year is cel- ebrated in Japan with more enthusi- asm than in any western country. The rejoicings begin on New Year's eve, when no one thinks of going to bed, and bells ring all night, and, though January 1 to 3 are regarded as the three chief days of the New Year, holidays and jollifications continue until January 16, winding up, charac- teristically, with a grand feast of Re- turn to Labor. EHH HHH OHHH HH HHI WHAT THE GRACIOUS HOSTESS SAYS: By DELLA THOMPSON LUDES HHH HHH OH HOH HHH HHH SHAKING HANDS V TE AMERICANS are rather noted / for shaking hands. That is be- cause we are a warm-hearted and cordial people, and the custom should not be too harshly condemned as bhe- ing ‘‘provincial.” We may Keep our warm-heartedness and our manner of friendliness and .cordiality, and still learn te control our impulses so that what we do or say will not appear ri- dieulous or “gushing” Men, when introduced, always shake hands. A woman shakes hands with a man if he is some one she is par- ticularly glad to meet, an elderly man to whom she wishes io show cour- tesy, or a special friend of some mem- ber of her family whom she wishes to honor, A person coming into a group and being presented to them, does not of- fer his hand first. Some one of the group may make him welcome by holding out a hand. A very young man, being presented to an older one, would wait for the older man to take the initiative, which he sheuld instantly do. To refuse to shake hands with any person who is a guest of your hostess wonld be the height of rudeness, as well as un evidence of narrowness. Shaking hands at parting depends entirely upon. the degree of acquaint- anceship or friendship existing, or upon the feeling that has sprung up hetween two persons who have been introduced. A gentleman always removes the glove from his right hand before shak- ing hands with a woman, unless at a wedding where he is usher, at opera or ball. One sometimes wishes hand-shaking were a part of every high school course, The clammy hand- shake is repulsive. You feel as if vou wanted to strike from you the cold listless finger tips that give no clasp, lessons in have no warmth, There is magnetism and charm in the clasp of some hands, and there are other hunds as lacking in person- ality us is the soul behind them, Then there is the hand that grips you like a vise, crushes your fingers and sees just how much you will stand without screaming. And even this is better than the handclasp that is no clasp at all. When you shake hands put some warmth into if. One doesn't need to “squeeze” the fingers of the other, nor treat the arm like an animated pump handle, but there may be sufficient pressure so that the “shaking” is not all on one side, (Copyright by The Eastment Syndicate.) 1 keep my black THE PATTON COURIER SRRRRANRNREN OARS Josephine Dunn ONENNRRNNEES [eA SSNS SSS SAN Film men say that ‘osemhine Dunn is one of the screen finds of the past | year. She has the leading feminine | role in “Love's Greatest Mistake.” Miss Dunn made her screen debut in | “Fascinating Youth.” She is a de: cided blond. stm) WHEN I WAS TWENTY-ONE BY JOSEPH KAYE a At 21—David Starr Jordan Taught a University Curriculum for $25 a Week. [43 T TWENTY-ONE without any worldly experience, and ig- norant and more or less scornful of the social duties supposed to be in- cumbent on tutors, I arrived at Lom- bard college, Galesburg, Ill, to begin my work as professor of natural science. “I worked very hard at Loratrard, did some excellent teaching and de- | veloped a certain degree of enthusi- asm in the small body of students of whom there were not over a hundred | in the entire collegiate department, with only eight in the graduating class. ) * ‘Natural Science,’ I found, was an expansible subject. My ‘chair’ de- manded classes in zoology, botany, geol- ogy, mineralogy, chemistry, physics, political economy, Paley’s ‘Evidences of Christianity’ and, incidentally, Ger- man and Spanish. [I also had charge of weekly ‘literary exercises’ and in off hours 1 served as pitcher of the stu- dent ball team. “My salary was $1,300 a year.—David | Starr Jordan.” TODAY—Mr. Jordan is perhaps grateful for these multitudinous du- ties of his early days; they gave him | a most extensive experience in the teaching of the seiences which he has since utilized to good advantage, for David Starr Jordam is one of the greatest teachers of the natural sciences that this eountry has, accom- plishing his work beth at university classes and threugh the medium of | numereus hooks. (© bv McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) How It Started By JEAN NEWTON “CORPORATIONS HAVE NO SOULS” N THE same sentinrent as “the pub- lie be damned,” which, fairly or un- fairly, is the attitude often attributed to corporations, we frequently hear | the saying that “Corporations have no souls.” Although the words have no alien | sound to American ears, it is in Eng | land that the saying had its origin, its first recorded usage being in a famous lawsuit that was fought in the Eng- lish courts. Its authorship is credited to Sir Ed- wurd Coke, whe during the proceed- ings In the cause of Sutton’s hospital, is recorded to have sald: ‘They (cor- porations) cannet, eomnit tregson nor be outlawed nor excommunicated, for they have no souls.” Subsequently this was affirmed by Lord Thurlow, who is recorded as haviag said: “You never expected justice from a corpora- | They have neither a | tion, did you? soul to lose nor a body to wick.” (Copyright.) ee “A (® by McC lure Newspaper Syndicate.) Ty PISCE A Modern Man “You do a lot of baking, Mrs. New Ilywed," smiled Grocer Bill. “Yes,” the young bride answered “My hubby Is a cake eater.”—Pro gressive Grocer DADDY'S EVENING FAIRY TALE ' &Mary Graham Bonner COPYRIGHT BY WEITERN VEWIPAPER Uniory RABBIT AND FOX “I must tell you,” began Daddy, “about the way Old Mr. Rabbit tricked Old Mr, Fox. “One day when Old Mr. Rabbit was only a little rabbit Old Mr, Fox played him a most unkind trick. “Old Mr. Rabbit never forgot it and vowed that one day he would revenge himself, “You see, it was this/ way. “Old Mr, Fox considered the rabbit rather a stupid little creature, so he thought it would be fine fun to play a joke on him. “He, therefore, told the little rab- bit that he could find a most beau- tiful clover field where he could gath- er up all the delicious clover he de- sired. * ‘However,’ said Old Mr, Fox. ‘you will find it a long distance off and you may get very tired walking there, | but you will be well rewarded when you do reach the fleld,! and he gave the rabbit full directions how to get there. “Of course, rabbits love clover bet- ter than anything in the world, so off the little rabbit started. “He walked on and on through the woods, ever and ever so fur. He won- { dered if he would have the strength | to get there, for he kept feeling more exhausted at every few steps, and he field. “He remembered, though, that the fox told him it was a very long dis- Off He Went. tance, and the thought of clover just mansged to keep him from dropping on the ground, he was seo tired. “At last he saw an opening from the weods. “*Ah, I am atmest there!” wearily | sighed the little rabbit, and he began to feel better right away and thought the walk home would not be bad at all as long as he had clover to eat all the time, “Not a sign of clover, but a big field stones! “He then said that Old Mr. Fox had played a very mean joke on him. 3ut it was getting lute, and he was always a little frightened by himself, far from home, at such an hour. “He sadly and painfully made his way home, “Well, the little got this, vowed he would trick Old Mr. Fox. rabbit never for- gotten about the story of the clover field, and, anyway, Rabbit had always been somewhat afraid of him, Mr. Rabbit, -who was now called Old Mr. Rabbit, told him of a splendid tree where he would find a deserted beehive and plenty of honey. “Old Mr. Fox smacked his lips te- | he went. | “He found the tree and was just putting his nose inte the honey when , out flew countless bees, who lighted ' all over his face and tail. face was so swollen he could searce- ly see, but he went hack and ealled on Old Mr. Rabbit and said te him: *“*‘l deserve this, for I now realize how mean PI was te you when you were little. friends forevermore.” friendly for a rabbit and a fox.” Something Lacking baby sister born at the; hospital. She wuss much excited about it and took a and all the arrangements for the | baby's homecoming. When the baby | came home with her mother and they | uncovered it for Jean to see her little lips quivered and she looked up at her mother and said, “Is that ull there is to it?” Worth the Mud Little seven-year-old Buddie came | in from play one evening with a mud dy face and his clothes quite mussed | up. His mother was scolding him for | his appearance. Looking heroic, he re- | plied, “Oh, well, mother, anyway 1 made several touchdowns, | Tested “Now I know why mamma said von had goed taste” sald little Elsie “Why? asked the curious caller, “You ate up all our strawberries,” | replied the child felt he could never reach the clover | great dea! of Interest in the bassinet’ | throughout the country | fowl may nest and feed in safety is | proposed in a federal game refuge bill, { and sportsmen are recommending its | adoption to check the rapid decrease | in the number of hirds, says Popular | Mechanies Magazine. | the establishment of public | threatened with i Disease Works Havoc | paralysis | drinking contaminated [Have Kidneys Examined By Your Doctor Take Salts to Wash Kidneys if Back Pains You or Bladder Eothers Flush your kidneys by drinking a quart of water each day, also take salts occasionally, says a noted au- thority, who tells us that too much rich food forms acids which almost paralyze the kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They be: come sluggish and weaken; then you may suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night, To help neutralize these irritating acids, to help cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste, get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmaey here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is | made from the acid of grapes and | lemon juice, combined with lithia, and | has been used for years to help flush | and stimulate sluggish kidneys; also | to neutralize the acids in the system | so they no longer irritate, thus often | relieving bladder weakness, | Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot in- | jure and makes a delightful efferves- cent lithia-water drink. in Wild Duck Flocks Creation of bird sanctuaries where wild The plan includes | shooting grounds, adjacent to the preserves. According to experts, ducks in the western part of the country are extinction unless | | ways are found to combat a form of which afflicts them after | water, This | disease is widespread near Great Salt take. It afflicts other marsh birds as | | | well as ducks and, when least preva- | | years, with haystacks and plowed earth and | | and when he grew up he | “Of course, Old Mr. Fox had for- | he knew Old Mr. | | healed by morning. “So he was not at all wary when gether, for honey he adored, and off | “Oh, how he yelled with pain! His | “Now we're even, so let's be good “They would have clasped paws in | agreement but that was heing too | Little three-year-old Jean had a new | lent, takes a toll of 30.000 to 100,000 | yearly, while more than 1,000,000 | ducks alone are killed in the worst | The salts in the waters have made them poisonous to the fowls. The malady does not prove fatal if the birds can get fresh water in time. DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN | ee Aspirin Marked With “Bayer Groes” | Has Been Proved Safe by Millions. — re, | Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you | are not getting the genuine Bayer | Aspirin proved safe by millions and | prescribed by physicians for 26 years. | Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. | Bmitations may prove dangerous.—Adv. Peppery Pulchritude “Bob's wife is pretty, but she has awful outbursts of temper.” “l heard she was a raving beauty.” If yowr eyes are sbre, get Roman Eye Balsam. Apply it at night and you are 372 Pearl St., N. Y. Adv. Chance fights on the side of the] prudent.- Euripides. | cites in the | worked, but | Majestic, | vicious or hate them.—Montaigne. Why Suffer Needlessly? Lockport, N. Y.—"“Several times I have taken Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and I do think {t is the very best tonic and nervine a woman cal take. During the time I was bringing up my family I found the ‘Prescription’ very helpful. It gives a woman strength at that time, builds up the nerves and re- lleves her of a lot of distressed feel- ings. It helps the mental state as well as the physical. Also on several occasions since, I have taken ‘Fa- vorite Prescription’ when rundown, weak and nervous and always found it very beneficial. It seems to build up every organ in my body."— Mrs, Eddie M. Platt, 171 Niagara St. Al dealers. Tablets OF Nqald. MANY SCHOOL CHILDREN ARE SICKLY Mothers who value their own comfort and the welfare of their children, should never be without a box of Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for children for use through- out the season. They Break up Colds, Regu- late the Bowels, Relieve Feverishness, Constipa- or avs tion, Teething Disorders, Headache an tomac! ANY SUBSTITUTE Troubles. Used by Mothers for over 30 years. These powders give satisfac- tion. ‘All Drug Stores. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package sent Free. Address MOTHER GRAY CO., Le Roy, | N. LY. DEMAND GENUINE &>HYPO COD COD LIVER OIL“ HYPO PHOSPHITES A guaranteed remedy to prevent and overcome Coughs, Colds, Bronchial and Lung Affections, Lost Appetite, Dys- pepsia, Pains in Stomach, Indigestion, Pimples, Bad Blood, Sallow Complex- ion, Lost Weight, Strength and similar run-down conditions requiring a recon- structive tonic. TASTES LIKE RARE OLD WINE SAMPLE At your druggist's FREE or by mail. NOTE: Large size HYPO-COD sells for $1.00 at drug stores or by mail. The Earle Chemical Co., Wheeling, W.Va. Your Druggist Will Guarantee HYPO-COD to Help the Sick and Weak PISO’ Jforcoughs Quick Relief! A pleasant effective syrup, 5c and 60c¢ sizes externally, use PISO’S Throat and Chest Salve. 35¢ TRADE a e w. N. U, PITTSBURGH, NO. 11.-1927. Exhaustion the Result of Thoughts of Work A person may literally wear himseif | out doing nothing, aeceording to Wil- liam Frederick Boek, professor of psy- chology at Indiana university. He American Magazine the case of a boy who was taken to a nerve specialist, whose examination revealed symptoms of overwork. The physician rebuked the boy's par- ents for allowing him to become over- learned, to his amaze- ment, that the boy had done practi- cally no work at all. The youth's one task was to carry one pan of water each day from a spring a quar- ter of a mile from his home, a task required hy way of discipline. But the boy dreaded it so much that he wore himself out thinking about what a lot of hard work he had to do. The world's largest vessel, a liner 1,000 feet in length, is planned in Eng- land. The largest ship now afloat, the is 915 feet in length. A man must either imitate the 9 Years of Suffering Relieved by Tanlac Scranton Merchant, Victim of Stomach Trouble, Nervous» ness, Dizziness and Headaches Recovers Lost Health Emory J. Hinckley, well-known merchant, 128 South Grant Street, Scranton, Pennsylvania, says: ‘After 9 years of intense suffering I was so discouraged I did not know which way to turn. Then Tanlac brought me wonderful relief. “During all these years I suffered from nervous indigestion that kept me in constant pain. It seemed that something was growing in the pit of my stomach. My appetite was poor. To heap coals on the fire, I suffered from dizziness and headaches. I was so weak and run-down that often I could not work. “Nervousness caused by my trou- bles made it impossible for me to sleep. I would count the hours till dawn then arise more tired and worn- out than when I went to bed. For 9 years I sought relief without success. “Then I decided to give Tanlac a trial. After the first bottle I noticed a marked improvement in my health. This tonic has relieved my stomach trouble. I never have headaches. My nerves are always so calm that I can sleep at any ‘hour of the day.” Tanlacbuilds rstengih, Tritellesh end muscle on weak bodies, cleanses the system of the poisons ofdbnstipa- tion andsluggish liver. Itismadefrom roots, barks and herbs according to the Tanlac formule. Banish sickness from your life. En- joy good health and strength. Take ranlac. At your druggist’s. More than 40 million bottles sold. Sample each free. B3, Malden, Masa." Cuticura Comforts Tender Aching Irritated Feet Bathe the feet for several minutes with Cuticura Soap and warm water, then follow with a light application of Cuticura Ointment, gently rubbed in. This treatment is most successful in relieving and comforting tired, bot, aching, burning feet. Soap 2c. Ointment 25 and £%. Talcum 25¢. Sold everywhere, > Address: “Outicura Laboratories, Dep. 4 BEEP Cuticura Shaving Stick 28¢. Machine gunr tonese. Rebellious tro lution. Inset is Ge FOR POI Bonnie Maclear tor, with the statu pleted for Porto R island's greatest vera. It will be 1 the campus of the Rico, San Juan. T figure stands eight HAS A SC Col. Hugh IL. authority on powe named chief cons the soviet authori] tion of the $60,00( hydro-electric pro; dispatches from Cooper has been cl Niagara Falls pow Muscle Shoals pro, kuk dam
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers