"Daly Feed Man and Steed/' Feed your nerves, also, on pure blood if you -would have them strong. Men and women who are nervous are so because their nerves are starved. When they make their blood rich and pure with HoocTs Sarsaparilla their nervousness disappears dre C< *' Slow Girl. Indianapolis Journal: Flora—Then you do not speak to Angeline any more. Why not? Laura—She Is so dreadfully vulgar. She speaks of the Dreyfusards as Dreyfusites. Save file Nickels* From saving, comes having. Aak your grocer how you can save 15c by investing sc. He can tell you just bow you can get j one largo 10c package of "Red Cross" j starch, one large 10c package of "Kubln- | ger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two I beautiful Shakespeare panels, prlnlod In twelve beautiful colors, or oue Twentieth Century Girl Calendar, all for sc. Ask your [ grocer for this starch and obtain these beautiful Christmas presents fiee. Not Exactly Felicitous. Pusher —Gusher is not very happy In his choice of adjectives. Usher—Why j so? Pusher —Miss Gumms fished for a 1 compliment by asking him what he thought of her slippers. Usher—And •what did he say? Pusher—He said they were immense.—Stray Stories. I Fiiidley's Eye Salve Cures Bore eyes in 3 days; chronic cases in 30 days, or money buck. All druggists, or by mail, 250. per box. J. P. HAYTKU, Decatur, Texas. Tho Odeon Theatre, Buenos Ayres, is I heated by electricity. This is not the ; first theatre in the world to be so heated, but very few large public build ings have been warmed in this manner. The Baltimore and Ohio Ral'road has placed an order with the Pullman's Palace Car Company for 1,F00 box cars, and with the South Baltimore Car Works for 1.000 box cars. The cars are . to be built according to the 13. and O. standards. This makes a total of 8.860 box and coal cars ordered for delivery within the next six months. Plso's Cure Is a wonderful Cough medicine. -Mrs. W. PICKF.RT, Van Siclen and Blako Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 1801. WHEN CHILDREN SMOKED They Were Sent to School with Pipes Iu 1 Their Satchels. Every one has read that Hawkins In troduced tobacco Into England and that King James inveighed against It. Eliz abeth liked to sit on a low stool and watch Sir Walter Raleigh puffing away. Once she bet him that he could not tell the weight of the smoke In his pipe, but the philosopher iron. In Anne's reign almost every one smoked. In Charles ll.'s reign "children were sent to school with their pipes in their satchels, ana the schoolmaster called & halt In their studies while they smoked." In 1702 Jorevin spent an evening with his brother at Garra way's coffee house, Leeds, and writes: "I was surprised to see his sickly child of three years old fill his pipe of to bacco and smoke it as audfarandly as a man of threescore: after that a sec ond and third pipe without the least concern, as It Is said to have done about a year ago." There were about 470 coffee houses in London, besides five chocolate houses, in Anne's time. Smoking was general in them, and in toxicants could be also obtained, as well as coffee. Bishop Trelawney was much hurt because Bishop Barnett hai accused him of getting drunk in one ol them on the 30th of January—a day ol grief to tories and all good churchmen. —Pittsburgh Dispatch WOMEN do suffer! Even so-called healthy women suffer) But they are not healthy! The marks left by pain are on the young faces of many of onr daughters. Pain that leaves its mark comes from a curable cause. If that cause is not removed its influence reaches out and overshadows a 6*|/v ff whole life. The reason Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been so uni- WW %JtwmE* Bw formly successful for ovei a quarter of a mm . ..I .j. century in overcoming the suffering of Ovr r •> women, is that it is thorough and goes directly to the cause. It is a woman's Miss EMILY F. HAAS, of 148 Freeman St., Greenpoint, Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: state that I used your Vegetable Com- v*. pound with the greatest success. I ii TCTIjEaSeSaPI was very sick for nearly a year with hysteria, was down-hearted and v nervous; also suffered with painful menstruation and pain in back and limbs. I often wished for death, t J SBEaf thinking nothing would cure me. I had doctors, but their medicines did //1| j; \ me no good. At last, by the advice /j[ I '\\\ of a friend, I began to take Lydia E. iflSsPP'ff! of the stomach for two years, \ ' so bad that I could not do any \ \ work. I had two or three doc- / I \ ' tors, but did not seem to get any bet- 11 I \ ter. I began taking Lydia E. Pink- 11 I \ ham's Vegetable Compound and Liver 1 I \ Pills and improved from the first, had 1 I better appetite, and after taking three bottles of Compound and one box of Liver Pills, can say that lam cured. Your Vegetable Compound is a wonderful medicine." Stump* Imperil Tree*. Botanists and entomologists know that a dead stump, or dead tree, stand ing near living trees is a source of peril to them, by furnishing a refuge and breeding-place for timber borers and other injurious insects. Trees, as well ae men, need hygienic surround ings. I,lk' Finding Money* The use of the Endless Chain Starch Book in the purchase of "Red Cross" and ''Hublnger's Best" starch, makes it just like finding money. Why, (or only 5c you are enabled to get one large 10c package of "Red Cross" starch, one lurge 10c pack age of "Hublnger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two Shakespeare panels, print ed in twelve beautiful color*, or one Twen tieth Century Girl Calendar, embossed in gold. Ask your grocer for tills starch and obtain the beautiful Christmas presents free Just I.lke a Bachelor. "I,do love dress," exclaimed a young society belle at a reception the other j evening. "Then I should think you l would wear more of It," commented a | cynical bachelor acquaintance of mid | die age.—Ohio State Journal. A 50c. Calendar For Two '-ic. Stamp*. If you will send I cts. to J. P. | LyooH, Art Publisher, 9 Murray St., New York, he will mail you a beauti ful screen Calendar for 1900, size llx 1G inches, in 3 panels, lithographed in 11 colors and gold. New York stores charge 50 cts. for Calendars as good. An Expensive I)ro*H. i The most expensive dress in the j world is said to be the property of Mrs. ! Celia Wallis, of Chicago, who, hearing ! I that the wife of a London banker pos ! sessed a garment costing $15,000. ! eclipsed this by an expenditure of $35,- 000. It was trimmed with Brussels i point lace, a yard wijle and three yards ' in length, costing $25,000, and diamond j ornaments held it in place How'* ThU? WentTer One Hundred Dollur* Reward fot | any ca eof Catarrh that cannot bj cured by I HalDs Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHUNKY & Co., Props., Toledo, O. ' We. the under*tgned, have known F.J. Che- j ney lor the la tls year*, and believe him per- | fee tly honor ble in all busiues* transactions nnd financially able to carry out any obliga tion m fie by their firm. WEST & THUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Oh o. WARDING, KINNAN A MARVIN, Wholesale I Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally.net- 1 tng directly upon tha blood and mucous sur tnces of the system. Pi ice, 76c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hail's Family Pills are the best. A Home Falaco. It is evident that the emperor of Germany does not expect the ' horse less age" to arrive very soon. He has under construction, in the outskirts of Berlin, what is to be, probably, the most splendid stable in the world. Out wardly It looks like a palace, and in wardly It has many of the appoint ments and characteristics of one. Cer tainly horses were never more pala tially lodged than they will be here. The stable Is being erected by the im perial architect, Herr Ihne. Ot occu pies a superficial area of more than two acres. There will be roomy and comfortable box-stalls for more than 270 horses, and carriage-house space for more than 300 carriages. In the center of the whole will be a two-story I building, where the Imperial coach men, grooms, stable-boys, and so forth, with their families, will be lodged. Eighty families will have quarters In the building; the drivers or coachmen will be at least fifty In number. The stable will be provided with horse ele vators, telephones and electric lights, ! and the walls of the carriage-houses and other portions of the building will | be beautifully decorated with paint and I gilding by the best decorative artists lin Berlin. The cost of the stable Is ! estimated at seven millions of marks, 'or more than a million dollars. Three years will be employed in Its construc tion Emperor'. Employes. There are 1,500 persons upon the | German emperor's list of employes. A Valuable Porto ltlcan Palm. The coco palm is found in great numbers on the plains and coasts of Porto Rico, and. is a profitable plant for cultivation. The external sheath of the cocoauut is composed of a mul titude of fibres which form a nap of a reddish color, which is excellent for calking boats, as it resists water bet ter than tow, and endures longer. The Indians make a cordage from this fibre, and sails for their boats, and io the dockyards of Guayaquil, Ecuador, they use no other calking material iD repairing vessels. Beneath this ex terior fibrous covering is auother, the color of chestnuts,which is very hard, and although elastio, is easily broken. A fine oil made from the meat of the oocoanut is used for lighting and cooking. The Indians make an in toxicating drink from the sap of tho cocoauut tree, which at first has a bit ter sweet taste, afterwards becoming sour. In Porto Rico the nuts are utilized by drinking the water from them when young, by making sweet meats from the meat, and by manu facturing drinking cups and other utensils from the outside shell. From the trunks of the trees the best palm boards are made for houses, be.'ause of their resistance to the inclemeucins of the weather. There are masses of fibre at the base of the leaves, which appear like bunohes of tow or bast. These are tho fibrous remains of dried leaves which have lost their fleshy portion, and appear like pieces of cloth woven from thick tow. This is used for filtering and sifting. Rejected With Thank*. "Good-day, gentlemen." A very nice-looking young man stood in the doorway of the editorial room, and gazed in a benign way at the occupants of the apartment. "Would it be possible for me to sell you u story?" he continued. "What kind of a tale have you ground out?" asked the assistant sub editor. "The story," said the visitor, "is one in whioh the triumph of love is depicted and " "Well, let us hear how it comes out. Read us your last sentence." The visitor seated himself and read as follows: "For answer Gladys' beautiful eyes dropped, but she gava him both her hauds; and there, under the heavy fruited trees, the golden bees flying all about them, and the air filled with their dreamy monotone, he drew her upon his breast, and, raising her long ringlets to his lips, kissed them reverently." "That's the last sentence, is it?" asked the editor. "Yes, sir." "I should hope it was." "Why, I don't see—" began tha author. "Of course you don't. Now, what do yon think of a young man that would go nibbling a girl's back hair when she had her face with her? Huch stories do not possess the fidelity to nature that should ever character ize the works of genius published iu our columns." Hacking Up. Not all of the driver's skill i 3 devot ed to driving ahead; it takef a good driver to be able to back up in good shape. Not every driver, by any means, can halt and then back up to a curbstone and hit it square and true with both wheels the first clip. That is something that requires more skill than might be imagined by one who had never tried it. But in backing up on the level, if a man fails to hit tho curb exactly tho first time, he can mameuvre until ho does. There are places where must be exercised and where a level head is called for, too. For instance, iu backing up, or rather, backing down, into an excavation, on the inclined causeway left for that purpose. Tho excavation is begun at the rear of the lot, and the earth forming the cause way, running up to the level of the street at the front, is left until the last. In the later stages of the exca vating the causeway is left just wide enough at tho top for the carts or wagons to move ou, and its sides slopo dowu precipitously. The driver who backs down on one of these narrow cellar causeways, simply must it right.—New York Sun. Chivalry on it Street Car. That the age of chivalry is not past was evinced the other night ou a North Clark street car. Hundreds of people begau pouring out of the north side parks and gardens about 10 o'clock. Many of the young women being thinly clad, and especially those having only a thin lace covering over tho shoulders, suffered visibly from the cool night air. One young woman sittiug with a girl friend was heard to remark that she was cold and that she wished she had brought her wraps. An elderly man sitting opposite arose, calmly took off his Prince Albert coat, and politely tipping his hat, asked that she accept the coat for the protection of her shoulders. After some urging the young lady allowed the coat to be placed around her thinly clad shoul ders, while the old gentleman sat dowu again as though perfectly un | conscious of having done anything unusual.—Chicago News. An Apt Pupil. There was once a boy named Parker, whose admiring relatives thought he ought to learn somethiug about tho alphabet. So one day at luncheon it was duly impressed on his mind that P stands for plates, and for prunes, and for pepper, and for Parker. He was letter perfect, and the next day at luncheon was called on to show off. "What does P stand for?" asked his brother. "Oh, I know this time," was the quiek reply; "it stands for," looking oarefully over the ta"l>le—"it stands for dishes—and for sauce—and for salt—and for me." —Progressive Age. THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE fUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. Brine: Hack the Good Old Duv*—Tin Baker's Premium*—The Cnur—Takei More Keat>l!H|)i>y Por Once—Kqulvo* Citl—New Use* ot Wealth, Etc., Kit*. Th school that rests upon the hill, With shutters loner and green, Its shadows bring to mo u thrill And whet up memories keen. I see once inore the master grin. That righteous man. Again I throw dried pens at bint And feel the sutne rattan. —Chicago News. The Raker's Premise*. "What would |be the technical term for the premises of this baker?" "Dough-main, I guess." The Cause. "Yes, 1 see you look sick. What is the matter?" "I ate too much of that health food." Take* More Itest. "Did your office boy's vacation trip do him any good?" "I think so, he seems lazier than before he went away." New Uses of Wealth. "I've got s hatpin made out of a nugget from my papa's copper mine." "That's notliin'. All my paper dol lies is cut out of miuiu'stock."—Cleve land Plain Dealer. Happy For Once. "Why do you stand staring at that steam engino all the time? Why not look at the other display? "No, I'll remain here. This is some thing my wife will not ask me to buy." —iTiegende Blaetter. JKqul vocal. J. Brutus Coldstuff—"And what salary do you draw now, Begiuald?" Reginald—"Five hundred per " J. B. 0. —"Per what—year o* month?" Reginald—"Per—haps." A Description That Describes. "Describe the hippopotamus." said the teacher. "The hippopotamus," nnsweredtha little girl, "is a very beautiful animal, but is not useful. It is raised only in circuses."—Chicago Tribune. A Corner in Curios. "What possessed Aunt Martha lo buy all these old horse-shoes?" "Why, she says she can sell them at almost any price, in a few years whoa automobiles have ruu horses out of style."—Detroit Free Press. A Picnic. The Mother—"Why, Willie, you fighting? You told me you were goiug to play picnic." The Vanquished—"We was. I was the pionic."—Judge. Happiness in the Household. "Here's a strry of a woman who owns and operates a shiugle mill," he said, lookiug up from his paper, aud before his wife had a chance to say auythiug, the boy broko in: "You bet, I'm mighty glad she aiu't my mother."—Chicago Post. When the Children Confer. Small Boy—"I don't wonder that women's heads sc often ache." Little Girl—"Why?" Small Roy—"Every time they sea any of their children they've got to think np some reason for not letting them do what they want to."—Sliay Stories. Exact Figures. "Yes, it's a fine machine," said th< neighbor who had been examining Mr Ferguson's new bicycle, "What's th< length of the crank?" Sirs. Ferguson answered for him. "Five feet eleven and three-quar ters," she said, eyeing her husband dreamily. Ancestry and Wealth. "They are quite the wealthiest family here." "Yes?" "Oh! much the wealthiest! They have eighteen ancestors in the direct line between them and the Conqueror, and nobody else in town has wore than twelve."—Puck. A Remarkable Interview. "What is there in that interview to get so exoited over?" asked the cold blooded citizen. "Why, don't yon see, it's one of the most remarkable productions of it. kind seen in months. The man wlij gave it out hasn't denied a word of it." —Chicago Tribune. A Money-Making Scheme. Fnddy—"l've an idea." Duddy—"Yon don't mean it!" Faddy—"And there's millions in it. See here. We'll go into the second hand bioycle business. Yon stand at the top of a big hill to buy, aud I'll be at the foot of it to sell. Bikes are worth twice as much to the rider go ing down hill as going up. If yon don't believe it, just try it yourself." Transoript. DRAINAGE OF ROADS. Their Durability DepenU* on the S|>eedj Kemoval ot Water. In road building the chief effort should bo toward securing the besl drainage, as water and dirt are bouud to make mud, A dry road ia usually MACHINE FOR LOOSENING MACADAM. a good road or will become a good road in time by constant usage. The ex ception which proves the rule is the sandy road. A sandy road is a dry road, but not a good road. To assist the drainage the road should be first crowned and then about four to six inches of crushed stone, depending upon the amount of travel, put on, gradually decreasing a little in thickness as it approaches the gutters; then a heavy steam roller j nssed over it two or three times to set it; upon this about three or four inches of finer crushed stone should be paced and a steam roller passed over i: again. A great deal of care should be taken not to have the road flat on top. This hard stone dressing forms almost a waterproof covering that will last for years if properly taken care of ench spring by putting on some fine crushed stone. This coveringwill letthe water drain freely to the gutters and leave a com partively dry road in a few minutes after a heavy rain. This is very im portant in another way, as it keeps the ground underneath the road tree from saturation and thereby makes a strong foundation. It is the Datural earth underueatu the covering that must bear the weight of the road. It really sus tains in addition the weight of stone, etc., as well. If this natural soil, or foundation of the road, is permitted to become satu rated with water, either by water per colating down into it from the surface or from water rising into it from be low, it has not strength to resist the wheels which at once sink into it, and ruts are formed. But if this soil foun dation is kept dry or nearly so it is strong and will support any load likely to pass over it. If the water is shed from the road to the gutters and there remains, the water works its wo.y into the earth at the foundation of the road and causes the injury above spoken ef. Speaking of the great importance of keeping a road in repair, let a wagon track, scaroely perceptible at first, af ter a shower stand full of water nnd soften the road at that spot, another wagon passing along later sinks fur ther into the softened track, here is a deeper hole to hold water, soon it be comes a rut, then the rut develops in to a pitch hole. The soil underneath is brought up and mixed with surface covering, the surface covering is broken down and foiced into the soil. Ministers Are Lone Lived. Clergymen havo long been regarded by insurance men as much more de sirable "risks" than are members of other professions. In the accompany- P>) 5 ° " as •vr ~T ft* J DOCTORS too —- —po ——p® * ft. "L 5 DIAGRAMS ILLUSTRATING THE COMPARA TIVE LONGEVITY OP MINISTERS. iug 'diagrams comparison has been made of the average age at the time of death of clergymen, farmers, teach ers and physicians. Out of the hundred in these classes it is shown that forty-two clergymeu, forty farmers, thirty-four teachers and twenty-four doctors live the "three score and ten years" prescribed by the psalmist. Several reasons for the longevity of clergymen are poteut. As a class such men are likely to be tem perate in their habits, and to have something like a system for the man agement of their work. Most of them are able to get more or less outdoor exercise and the large majority have vacations ranging from a month to six weeks, during which period they do practically nothing in the way of work. The reasons for the long life of the farmer are equally obvious. Nature will do a great deal toward lengthen ing u man's dav if he will only so live that he may see more of her. Teach ers, as a class, on the other hand, are not likeiy to take much exercise, and do a good deal of their work under circumstances which make severe drains on their nervous strength. And, pf course, the work and worry of the gonsoientious doctor is neves at an end. Do not wash your hands and face with a common laundry soap, or if you do, don't complain when you find them rough, hard and chapped. Ordinary laundry soaps are good for scrubbing floors, but not for the skin. Ivory Soap makes a creamy lather that rinses easily and takes the dirt with it. The natural oil of the skin washed with Ivory Soap is not removed, and the skin is left soft and smooth. IT FLOATS. LONGFELLOW'S WAYSIDE INN. Although Two Centuries Old, It Is Still Used as a Hostelry. "Rich in the historical and literary associations accumulated during two centuries of existence," says the Ladies* Home Journal for September, "the Wayside Inn, built by David Howe, still stands 'remote among the wooded hills' in South Sudbury, Massachusetts. 'The Landlord' of Longfellow's famous tales was the dignified Squire Lyman Howe, a justice of the peace and school committeeman, who lived a bachelor, and died at the inn in 1860—the last of his line to keep the famous hostelry. Beside Squire Howe, the only other real characters in the Tales who were ever actually at the inn were Thomas W. Parsons, the poet; Luigi Monti, the Sicilian, and Professor Daniel Treadwell, of Harvard, the theologian, all three of whom were in the habit of spending the summer months there. Of the other characters, the Musician was Ole Bull, the Student was Henry Ware Wales, and the Spanish Jew was Israel Edrehi. Near the room in which Longfellow stayed is the ballroom, with the dais at one end for the fid dlers. But the polished floor no longer feels the pressure of dainty feet in high-heeled slippers gliding over it to the strains of contra-dance, cotillon or minuet, although the merry voices of summer visitors and the jingling bells of winter sleighing parties at times still break the quiet of the ancient inn." American coal miners are teaching all the miners of other countries how to mine coal by electrical machines. Hauling by mules costs 50 cents a day per mule, while electric locomotives do the work at half that cost. pm Look at yourself! Is your face covered with pimples? Your skin rough and blotchy? It's your liver! Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They cure constipation, biliousness, and dyspepsia. 25c. All druggists. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers J HgnABTOPPED FREE ' ■ S" Permanently Cured B MM wk In,anil, Prevented b, ■ I I CM DR. KLINE'S GREAT ■L ■ ■ W HERVE restorer PddlUtd cure tor all Verwme in tea H afterflm day'a'oM. Treatise and $i trial bottl® free to rit paUanu, they * f' D uf/ Ltd etu R| lDNtltutR 0 f T V"*.Ufliiin. 911 Arch St.. Philadelphia. Pa. RHEUMATISM SSKSSr "MTfe *£SS. ■■ALKXAMDKII REMEDY Co.. :.'4t> Green w n-h St.. N. V. 11l AMTEn LAIMKN to represent us; ma-riot. Hi All I CU preferred; no canvassing; no v/ork; WW no capital required, b. P. CO., Westtleld, N. J. CHRISTMASPRESENTS ' GIVEN | AWAY. * The first five persons procuring the Rndlce* Chain march Book from their grocer will each obtain one largo 10c package of "Kcl Crowe" starch, one large 10c package of "Ilubinfr<*r*M Heat" starch, two Shakespeare panels, printed in twelve beautiful oolors, as natural as life, or one Twontieth Century Girl Calendar, the finest of its kind ever prlntod, all absolutely free. All others procuring the indices Chain starch Book, will obtain from their grocer the above goods for sc. ' k Kcd Crone" l.au ndry Starch is something entirely new, and is without doubt the great est Invention of the Twentieth Century. It has no equal, and surpasses all others. It has won for itself praise from all parts of the United States. It has superseded every thing heretofore used or known to science Tf the laundry art. It is made from wheat, rice and corn, and chemically prepared upon scientific principles by j, c. II übi tiger, krokuk, lawa, an expert In the laundry profession, who has had twenty-flve years* practical experience in fancy laundering, ftnd who was the first successful and original inventor of all fine grades of starch In the United States. Ask your grocers for thin Btarahand obtain these beautiful Christmas presents free. Pointers on Cellars. The cellar, well drained and aired, must be kept free from rubbish, and especially from decaying vegetable® and other foods. Frequent cleaning out the corners and sweeping the wall® , are essential. All kinds of food, in cluding vegetables, should be kept from the light. Jellies and canned fruit® ought to be stored in dark cupboard®. Windows enough to air the cellar and screens for all of them are essential. If the sashes are opened at sunset and remain so until the next day's heat, then closed to keep in the fresh air. It will be much cooler than if open all day. But to remain closed continually Is to breed foulness and disease. Lima scattered in the corners will conduc® to keep a cellar free from mold. A damp basement Is a dlßorder-breedlng spot.—Evening Wisconsin. Dr. Bulls i The best remedy for VsOUgn Consumption. Cures q ° Coughs, Colds, Grippe, SVrUD Bronchitis, Hoarse- J ■ ness, Asthma, Whooping- I cough. Croup. Small doses ; quick, sure results, i Vr.iiulVsPilUcureCons/ifiation, Trial t 3o/or^c. ARNOLD'S COUGH Cnreg toughs and Colds |M ■ | a p Prevents Consumption. ■II | R All Druggists. 25c. ■■■■■■ t II t| OVELY SCJOO Lamps J A hand-ijai ntcd. No Heau tlfu I colored cat. nlogue of hand-painted PARLOR or BANQUET Every Lamp Guar an-- Pittsburis Glass Co., VOL* BUY DIRECT. Pittsburg, Pa. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & 3.50 SHOES >j HtSi. Worth $4 to $6 compared/'" 7 tl \ otl, l ; M ~ size.jind width, plain or W.'l. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. F|ENSIONW?.S£g£?S% DROPSY NEW DISCOVERY;rITM Bo >k or tetlmonia? and To*dav•'° t r eatmant Fre. Dr. H. H. QREBN 8 BOMS. Box B. Atlanta, OK. T. N. U. 44 '99
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers