THE PATTON COURIER George Marsh a Copyright by THE PENN PUBLISHING CO. W.N.U. SERVICE SYNOPSIS i Up the wild waters of the un- | known Yellow-Leg, on a winter's hunt, journey Brock McCain and Gaspard Lecroix, his French-Cree comrade, with Flash, Brock's puppy and their dog team, After several battles with the stormy waters they arrive at a fork in the Yellow-Leg. Brock is severe- ly injured in making a portage and Flash leads Gaspard to the unconscious youth, Gaspard tells Brock of his determination to find out who killed his father. Tracks are discovered and the two boys separate for scouting pur- poses. DBrock is jumped by two Indians and a white man and knocked unconscious. He is held prisoner. Gaspard rescues him while his captors sleep. Gaspard believes these men killed his fa- ther and is prevented from kill- ing them by Brock, While out alone Gaspard is shot from am- bush by an Indian and kills his would-be-slayer, While out on his trap lines Brock is caught in a heavy snow storm. Gaspard finds him and the two start out on Brock’s trap line. CHAPTER IX—Continued Sy In the uncertain half-light, some- thing moved across the snow—a dim gray shape, and was gone. “Fox!” said Gaspard. Slowly from eastern ridges, groping fingers of light flickered out over the ash-gray floor of snow. The shadows died. It was daylight. “There they are!” said Brock, be- tween his chattering teeth, slipping his right hand from the mitten sus- pended from his shoulder by a thong. “Three—six—ten of 'em!” Before them ten caribou, $a their blue winter coats were feeding, their frosted breath rising like jets of steam, “You tak’ de bull wid beeg horn!” Gaspard whispered to his friend. Then the frozen silence was split by the explosion of two rifles. A large bull leaped into the air, plunged forward, stopped, then made a short circle, to lunge into the snow. A cow reared on her hind legs, beat the air with fore feet, and fell dead. The others, mad with fright, leaped and circled aim- lessly, sniffing the air for the direc: tion of the danger which threatened. Again and again the rifles cracked. Then, from the stricken band, three fear-frenzied survivors fled across the barren, their flexible hoofs clicking sharply on the still air as they ran. “Seven!” cried Brock, when two wounded deer had been put out of their misery. “That's a good start, Gaspard! We'll build a cache at the little camp and shoot enough more to take us through to the spring break- up.” “Yes, they may not be here in the moon w’en de Cree starve; we mak’ de beg cach for us and de dog.” The remainder of the day the boys spent in cutting up the caribou and hauling the meat with the dogs to the platform cache seven feet high which they built in thick timber near the camp. Then trimming the spruce up- rights smooth with their axes, they circled them with inverted fishhooks to baffle thieving wolverines who might attempt to climb. At the carcasses of the deer, they set traps, for night would bring every prowler within miles down wind, to the feast on the white barren. The following morning, putting their copper kettle of deer stew and the tea pail on the freshened fire, Gas- pard and Brock hurried to the barren. “We've got something in those fox traps!” said Brock, as they approached the carcasses. “De fox have fine meal last night, for sure,” answered the other, Near the bodies of tne deer the snow was networked with fox tracks, and two of the traps were occupied. “A red and a cross!” announced Brock, with satisfaction. Two remaining traps Brock found unsprung, and he was returning when with an exclamation of surprise he stopped dead in his tracks. “Hey, Gaspard! Come here!” he called. “Look at that wolf track!” In the snow trampled by the cari- bou, near the bows of Brock’s shoes, was the clearly defined print of the left hind foot of a wolf—minus one toe. For a space Gaspard kneeled and studied the track, then with a nod, raised his hooded face to his friend. “It is Tete-Noir, my father’s dog,” he said huskily. “She has turn wolf. It ees the same track I saw in the freezing moon.” For a space the son of Pierre Le- croix and his friend gazed at the im- print of the mutilated foot in silence, then Brock said: “Well, Gaspard, we'll lie low for the next six weeks and pile up a big catch of fur, then we'll strike north and do a little ambush- Ing on our own hook. We'll get one of these Crees on his trap-line and make him talk.” Gaspard nodded. “I nevaire strike back for Starving Riviere before I find out how my fader die.” “I'm with you, partner!” With the meat safely cached and the dogs wired to separate trees, where they gnawed to their hearts’ content on caribou ribs, the partners followed the barren into the west. It was a clear day when the frozen plain shimmered like a sea of fire— a day when the earibou bands, hav- ing fed, like to lie in the sun in open spaces, on lake and barren, when the wind is dead. The hunters had not traveled an hour in the scrub on the rim of the barren when they saw many deer yards from the cover of the scrub. Working back out of sight Brock and Gaspard stole silently through the small spruce and tamarack, then crept out to the lip of the barren. The two rifles cracked. Two deer leaped, started to circle up-wind and fell. The others reeled back to their haunches in surprise, then wheeled in terror and fled toward the main body, their snowshoe-ltke hoofs click- ing in the still air. Again two rifles exploded, again, and again. In mad panie, for a space the main band circled aimlessly, leaping high A Large Buil Leaped Into the Air, Plunged Forward. from the snow, then, with white tailg up, fled out across the barren, led | by a cow. “Good shot, Gaspard!” cried Brock, es the halfbreed knelt, and firing the last shell in his gun, brought down a galloping caribou at three hundred yards. “Well, we won’t starve until April, if the wolverines don’t get this meat,” continued the excited Brock, counting the deer on the snow. “Eight, we got every one! That’s better shoot- ing than any red Crees in this coun- try could show!” So with enough meat on their plat- form cache to tide them over the lean days of the spring breakup, when the melting snow balls hard between the toes of the tortured dogs, compelling the use of moccasins; and travel by snowshoe and sled is prolonged agony for husky and man, the boys turned back to inspect their traps and move the main camp to a place of greater safety. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Flowers Used as Food in Oriental Countries Flowers for food are virtually un- known in America, hut in several parts of this wide world they play an important part as table delicacies. The Chinese, Japanese, Egyptians and various people of India eat blos- soms prepared in several ways, says the Farm Journal. In China, lilies are served as vege- tables, boiled with pepper and salt, either in milk or water Banana blossoms, dipped in vinegar, are al- most a staple of diet during their sea- son. In northern India a cake is made from the aromatic flowers of a local shrub. They are mixed with butter and a coarse sugar before baking Many other such fecipes, startling to the foreigner, are to be found in northern Africa and that vast stretch of the world lying between the Medi- terranean and the Pacific. Brushing Ship Hulls An Australian company has intro duced in England an ingenious method of cleaning the outside of the hull of a ship. The invention has been in successful operation for a number of years in Australia, and has been tried at Southampton dnd Plymouth. The apparatus is mounted upon a suitable frame, which can be suspend: ed from the side of a boat. It consists of a cylindrical brush about 5 or ¢ feet in length, held in a framework which also supports an electric motor | and a propeller, The purpose of the propeller is to keep the brush pressed against the side of the ship. The case | carrying the apparatus contains alsg a four-cylinder motor directly coupled to a dynamo. The current produced serves to raise and lower the carrying frame as well as to drive the propeller and brush. | | Land Surface of Earth If the land surface of the earth were divided between the inhabitants, each person would receive about twenty acres. sunning themselves not two hundred ' A oes dreodsaleedralin ieeleaisaenleeleaienirogs & 3 + HOW TO LIVE i { LONGER | | TO Dido dedededetede o ati dc | & By 3 | JOHN CLARENCE FUNK % * Pa ee OVERWORKING THE SUN MAN and his wife recently re- turned from their vacation. No one could have doubted the fact for one moment, for they were both vic- tims of the “sunburn complex.” Complex i8 used advisedly, for they were repeaters. It happened every summer to them. People, you under- stand, must in this fashion be told that they had been away! It seems strange that so many of us will studiously avoid the direct rays of the sun for three hundred and fifty days and then just as studiously stick our heads, shoulders and legs into it for the other fifteen. But that Is exactly what happens. Some are even so foolish as to sit hatless on the hotel porch deliberate- ly growing a “tan.” To these mis- guided individuals there appears to be something almost sacramental in permitting the sun to do its worst to them. Or are they merely looking for the undeniable proof of their sojourn? Sun is almost synonymous with life. But it must be respected and proper- ly used if the best results are to be obtained. While wonderful cures have been effected by utilizing the sun's direct power on the human body, it has taken the scientific watchfulness and care of expert physicians to achieve these results And it will continue to do so. The sun handled by experts is one thing, and mishandled by seashore excur- sionists quite another one. effectively take the joy out of one’s vacation if, indeed, it does not actual- ly make one ill. Under the excitement and lure of the sad sea waves, many are prone to forget that the sun is shining un- til they are scorched. But by that time the harm is done, Fifteen minutes is long enough for the first dip if the sun is out. In- deed, a quarter of an hour out of the water and the same time in it, is all the bathing anyone should have until the skin is pigmented or tanned. Why come home all “done up” and miserable because of this sun busi- ness? Permit people to assume that you are honest about your trip to the shore even though you cannot ex- as proof of the fact. A vacation primarily should mean a change in environment, recreation and health. Any outing that does not fulfill these requirements is not | giving you your money's worth or { doing you much good. Fresh air? Indeed, yes. Exercise? | Plenty of that too. Amusements of (one kind or another? That's what | | you go for. But sunburn? Well, the | next time you go to the mountain, | lake or shore, join the sensible minor- | ity and take your sun in homeopathic doses. Thus you will display unusual | wisdom and in addition have the best vacation of your life. Don’t become | too friendly with Old King Sol—the | stingeree! * * * USE THE BRUSH T'S coming back, they say. But | even if it were not, there is still | plenty of it left on women’s heads | and on th2 pates of many men, to Justify a bit of information on the subject. If one were to believe the bald- | headed barbers, one has but to dash {on a bit of this and that and behold ‘one’s hair will remain forever. And more than that, dandruff will be gone! One does not blame the tonsorial artist or his trade sister, the beauty | specialist, for their suggestions. Busi- ness is business. As a matter of fact, [a dandruff remover once in a while is a good thing. The alcohol in it [Frome cleanses the head. It is | excellent sanitation. | However, while barber and beauty- | shop lotions destroy and remove dan- | druff, they only remove a particular crop. For, like the bad penny, it is | sure to turn up again. Many are prone to coddle their hair. They wash it with soap and water | frequently and between times pour on | tonics. When it comes to the head | even the good old standby, soapsuds, {can be overdone. Dandruff always develops in a more or less degree upon a healthy head that possesses hair. It is npt a sign | of disease. True, there are some un- | usual conditions causing dandruff that | need the attention and care of a phy- | sician; but these are easily recog- | nized. For the general run, however, | | the practice of gently rubbing the | scalp with a stiff brush is a most | effective, quick and inexpensive way | of massaging the head and keeping | it free from the ever-active process of | dandruff development. Therefore, buy all the hair beauty you want to buy. Use barber-shop lo- tions and soap and water in modera- tion. But when you have done all this. don't forget the brush! (©. 1929 Western Newspaper [Inion.) Famous Old [Italian City The city of Pisa, Italy, was probably | of Etruscan origin. [It became subject to Rome in 180 B. C. At the height of its greatness, in the Twelfth century, it is thought to have had a population { ot 150,000. In the Sixteenth century its population had dwindled to about 8500. It is now in a thriving condi tion, with a population in the com mune of about 70,000. " SO Rr errr te setts | Sredeadsodeedsaleuiiniaaloeeoduufieeogsatentuntoatiateosteatieoate london Sunburn is no joke. It is painful | as most of us know; and can most | hibit a peeling or blistered epidermis | PLAN TASTY MENU AND SERVE IT NEATLY |GIRL’S PURSE IS Cooking Club Girls Learn to Set Dinner Table. (Frepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) One of the outward and visible signs of progress in the field of home making, as 4-H club girls learn its various phases, is the ability to plan a good menu, from the health stand- point, cook it palatably, and serve it gracefully. Part of this last aspect of meal preparation is learning to set a table in the accepted way. These club girls in Albemarle county, Va., are all at the age when they help their moth- ers constantly with the different household tasks. They usually have | ideas on what is attractive or up-to- date in the appearance of their homes, and are especially interested in the details that are concerned with hospi- tality of entertaining the friends of | the family. The home demonstration agent is showing this group how a dinner table ought to be set for six persons. She has demonstrated the use of a low flower centerpiece on a round embroidered doily of white lin- en, and has begun to place the “cov- ers” or individual sets of flat silver in the proper positions—forks to the left, knives and spoons to the right, napkin neatly folded at the left. Next, at the tip of the knives, the wa- ter glasses will be placed, and salts and peppers if used. Bread and but- ter plates with spreaders will go above the napkin, on the left. She shows how platters and other containers should be set squarely in front of the person who is to serve, not diagonally or in hit or miss fashion as such dishes sometimes appear on the table. No doubt a count will be made of the number of serving spoons that are needed and the position of the carv- ing knife and fork indicated. Instruction about unobtrusive erumb- ing and clearing away is part of the general subject of table usage. As in many homes, no rug is used on this dining-room floor, for experince has shown that this is the hardest floor covering in the house to keep clean. One of the charms of this dining room is its freedom from articles that do | not belong in it or add in any way to | its appearance. Farm girls who live | far from neighbors have fewer oppor- | tunities than city girls to go into oth- er people’s homes and observe how surroundings may be made attractive. The co-operative extension work takes this into consideration in planning what to include in its club projects. CONFECTIONS FCR JOYOUS OCCASION Unusual Comfits Are Made From Grapefruit Peel. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Try these two unusual confections the next time you need something to mark a festive occasion. Both can be made at home from materials read- ily obtainable. The bureau, of home economics gives the directions for making them. Be sure to get the kind of chocolate especially intended for dipping, and take care that it does not become hot when melting it in the double boiler, as that will cause the candy to be streaked when cold. Jellied Grapefruit Peel Dipped in Chocolate. Prepare the grapefruit peel several hours before you dip it, so that it will dry off somewhat. 10 ounces grape- 15 cups water fruit peel for sirup, or 2 cups (14 ounces) enough to cover sugar Chocolate for 15 tsp. salt dipping Thick, soft, unblemished peel from smooth grapefruit should be selected. Strip the peel from the fruit in quar- ter sections, including all the white part possible, and cut into strips one- half inch wide. Do not trim off either the outer rind or white pith; use the entire peel. Parboil the peel three times. Add 2 quarts of cold water each time, bring to the boil, cook for half an hour, and discard the water after each cooking, The strips should then be tender and must be handled gently to prevent breaking. Place the water, salt and sugar in a saucepan about 8 inches in diameter and stir until the sugar is dissolved; then add Making Candied Grapefruit Peel Be- fore Dipping in Chocolate. the strip of peel arranging them care fully, skin side up, so that they lie | parallel to each other to prevent their being brokgn when turned. Cook rap- idiy for about 40 minutes, then re- duce the heat and continue to boil gently for about 30 to 40 minutes long- er, or until all the sirup is absorbed. Great care must be taken at this point that the sirup does not scorch, and the strips of peel must be lifted or turned frequently with a fork so that all are equally penetrated by the sirup. Place the strips skin side down on waxed paper and when cool cut in pieces from 114 to 2 inches long. Put the dipping chocolate into the upper part of a double boiler over boiling water, remove from the fire, and allow the chocolate to melt slow- ly. When soft drop in the fruit. Use a fork to lift the grapefruit from the chocolate scraping off the drip- pings and put the candy on waxed paper to dry overnight. Chocolate Coated Apple Confection. This is dipped in the same way as the grapefruit peel, after it has been standing for an hour or two to dry | off. In packing either of these con- fections in boxes, put paraffin paper | | and as far as his family knew, had no between each layer. To make the apple filling for this second confection you will need: Rind of 1 lemon Chocolate for dipping 3 firm tart apples 1 cup sugar 1 cup water . three-quarter-inch cubes. Prepare a sirup of the sugar, water, salt and lemon rind, and cook for about 5 minutes. Put the apples into the sirup, cover and cook slowly until they become clear, and the sirup thick. Drain from the sirup, spread out in a single layer, and let stand for an hour or two to dry off. Sausage, Cabbage and Apples en Casserole With boiled or fried hominy grits, rice or baked or mashed potatoes, this dish, from the bureau of home economics, will make the main course of a meal. 1 pound sausage #4 tart apples, meat sliced 1 quart shredded 1 tbs. taragon cabbage vinegar 15 tsp. salt Make the sausage into flat cakes and fry until crisp on both sides. Put a layer of the shredded raw cabbage inte a lightly greased baking dish, and add a layer of sliced apples, an- other of cabbage, and so on, Continue until all the cabbage and apples are used. Salt each layer as it is put in and have apples as the top layer. Lay the cakes of fried sausage over the top. Wash out the sausage pan with the vinegar and pour over the con- tents of the baking dish, Cover and cook until the cabbage and apples are tender. Serve from the dish in which cooked. Large Canned Peaches Utilized for “Melba” | Some of your large canned peaches may be utilized for a ‘“Melba” des- sert—which means fruit filled with vanilla ice cream. The bureau of home economics suggests that the sirup will be good and look extra ap- | petizing if it is slightly colored and used as a sauce, Here's the complete recipe: 6 halves large 1% cup finely canned peaches chopped nuts 1 quart vanilla jce Fruit sirup cream Coloring Drain the pesches from the sirup. Cook down the sirup until fairly thick, add enough red coloring to give it a pinkish tinge, and allow to cool. Place the halved peaches with the kernel side up on plates for serving and fill the hollows with the ice cream. Pour over the ice cream some of the cold sirup and sprinkle the nuts over the top. | | | ONLY CLUE IN MURDER OF MAN Found Near Scene of Myste- 5. rious Killing at “%{ Hoboken, N. J. | { | New York.—A girl's shabby yellow | purse found a block and a half away | from the pool of blood in which a | murdered man law sprawled is a clue | on which Hoboken police are working | Im an effort to solve the mysterious death of James Paul Sheridan, West New Brighton, S. I The body of Sheridan, dumped, ac- | cording to the police, at the foot of the Palisades on Marshall street, Ho- boken, by the occupants of an auto- mobile, the tracks of which indicated it had been driven from Jersey City, was found by Patrolman Arthur Ul- | rich. A few minutes later a dog owned by the night watchman picked up the yellow purse under a trolley trestle. Photos on Body. caliber bullet through the right breast, were found photographs of himself, a group of Eskimos and a ship named Canadian Raider, John Patrick Sheri- dan identified his brother’s body, and in telling the story of his brother's life to the Hoboken police he increased the mystery. Whether James Sheridan was “taken for a ride” by gangsters or some one | who held a grudge against him In- spector Daniel Kiely of the Hoboken police said he could not yet say. Sheridan, according to his mother, Mrs. Catherine Sheridan, was “home- loving,” usually went out once a week only to go to the movies with his Something Reminded Her of Her Duty “Today I am reminded of a duty that I have neglected, and that is te let you know how wonderful have been the results I obtained from the use of Milks Emulsion. Nothing could have been more beneficial to me than your Emulsion. “In the winter of 1917 and 1918 X had a severe case of pneumonia, and in the spring of 1919 I took a cough. I was doing some summer work to prepare myself for a college, but by the time school opened I was too ill to attend. I finally went to bed for the rest cure. I gained a little im strength and got up by Christmas, but my cough never left me, and IX caught cold very easily and it would take a month to get over it. “Finally, in September, 1920, I got a bottle of Milks Emulsion and wrote you for instructions, to which you re- plied promptly and for which I thank vou. I followed the instructions care- fully and soon my cough began to disappear. I was able to sleep better { than ever before and my appetite was | fierce. TI could not eat enough. I gained in weight slowly but surely, | but continued the use of Milks Emul- On Sheridon’s body, torn by a .45 | sion, until IT am a well girl today. “I went through the entire seasom without a cold or a cough, and I came back into the society circle and played all the big affairs without any ill ef- fects. About a month ago I neglected myself and took a dreadful summer cold and, being at a house party, I could not care for myself properly. But as soon as I reached home I flew in on my old standby, Milks Emulsion, and within a week I was well. “I have recommended it to many and if at any time I can be of any help to your company by telling what it did for me, let me know. Sin- cerely, MISS KATY WALLER, 40% Argyle Ave., San Antonio, Tex.” Sold by all druggists under a guar antee to give satisfaction or money refunded. The Milks Emulsion Co. Terre Haute, Ind.—Adv. | Husbands Made Butt of Flippant Jokers Judge Ben B. Lindsey, champion of companionate marriage, eugenics and { such-like advanceed movements, said | at a luncheon in Denver: “There's a flippant class of people | who try to make the role of husband a ridiculous and impossible one. | “Even Hudson, the great nature | writer, takes a whack at husbands in his ‘Purple Land. Hudson says, you know, ‘She did not love the youth, for she was married, and how can a married woman ever love any one but her husband? “People will sometimes say of a | man, ‘He? Oh, he is a born husband.” It’s the most insulting thing they cam { think up. “Wagner was once rehearsing am orchestra in the love music of “Iristam and Isolde.” The lack of passion and fire in the performance displeased him, and he rapped with his baton for silence. Then he said: “ ‘Come, come, gentlemen, this won't do. You're all playing like husbands { instead of lovers.’ ”—Detroit Free brother, never went out with women, | Press. interest in bootlegging. He was by trade an automobile me- chanic anc had been employed by the | Tompkins Bus company. He had been out of a job for four weeks and when Wash, pare and cut the apples into | he left home for the last time he told her he was going to Hoboken to look up some relatives and take a posi- tion there. Good Reputation. He had made some money going up to the Hudson bay region with the Merritt, Chapman & Scott Salvaging corporatior two years ago. At that time he had helped in the. raising of the Canadian Raider, she said, and | the snapshot found on his body had been taken then. The mystery to the police has been heightened by the good reputation that Sheridan had with the companies he worked with. He was studying engi- neering by reading every book on the subject he could find, Mrs. Sheridan said. “I never knew him to have a sweet- heart,” she added. “In fact, I never remember him going out with a woman.” Bobcat Wrecks Shop That Keeps Union Hours Salt Lake City.—Utah’s milk wagon horses fear the arm of the law and her bobcats know where to go for a bob. A horse started to run away here recently. At the first street intersec- tion he found a green traffic light and continued on his wild course. The next one showed a red light. He stopped and was promptly captured by a policeman. A bobcat from the mountains near Provo went to town recently and headed for a barber shop. Finding no one there, he proceeded to wreck the place. His arrest was not so easy, but was accomplished by police after a 20- minute chase, with the cat a dead prisoner. Released From Prison, Celebrates, Put in Jail | | | | | | | Washington,—Celebration of his re- lease from a Virginia prison landed | Lloyd West, colored, in the District | jail Patrolman Quentin Heyne of the First precinct testified he saw West | walking with unsteady step and ex- changing pleasantries with passersby along Seventh street nerthwest, car- ing not whether he had heen formally | introduced to those he addressed. When arrested for intoxication, the patrolman declared, West told him | that he had served five years for theft of some cantaloupes, beans and a few bottles of ginger ale, J A Tempting Price She (with magazine)—It says here that the chemical constituents of a man are worth 98 cents. He—And you women are great bare | gain hunters. Environment doesn’t do children with good minds as much harm as you might think, The Very Best Time to take Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is now. This herbal alterative extract makes the blood richer —im~ proves and repairs your system, rouses organs into healthy action and builds up needed flesh and strength. Read this: G. B. Musselman of 265 Johnson Ave, Springfield, Ohio, writes: ‘My honest belief is that Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has no equal, far it restored me to health whem I was given up by several eminent physicians as being beyond medical aid. I discarded aR other medicines and began to take the ‘Dis- covery.” It took a little time but it restored me to health.” | . Ask your nearest druggist for Dr. Pierce’s Discovery, in tablets or liquid or send 10c for trial package of tablets to Dr. Pierce’s Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y. Write for free medical advice. | SAVE YOUR BABY FROM WORMS | The most dangerous ill of childhood is—worms! You may not know your child has them. Disordered stomach, gritting the teeth, picking the nostrils are signs of worms. Take no chances. Give your child Frey's Vermifuge today. It is the safe, vegetable worm medicine which has been used for 75 years. Buy Frey’s Vermifuge at your druggists. | Frey’s Vermifuge | Expels Worms : F- : ER AYE EIT RE Absorbine will reduce ine 1h flamed, swollen joints,sprains, bruises, soft bunches, Quickly heals boils, poll evil, quittor, £4, fistula and infectedsores. Will d notblister or remove hair. You\\ | can work horse while using, } $2.50at druggists, or postpaid, Send for book 7-S free, From our files: *‘ Fistula ready to Ee attacar av Spthing. field be without Absorbine,” | TRADE MARK REG.U.S.PAT. OFF .F. YOUNG. Inc. 510Lyman St., Springfield, Mass | | | | | | | | “ne NE THERE AQ PULLMAN BEEN YAW > pre oC i SS i (Copyright, W. N. | HOME POLK, w—— A DARN FINE GUY IS ERIC DRAPER HE ALWAYS PRAISE HIS HOME PAPER iEven a Wou By PERCY © by the Mc Smeaton
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers