( Queen Alexandra's Autocar. ' Her Majesty has become the owner of a pretty little electric carriage, which she has driven considerably within the last few days about the private roads of tho Sandringham es tate.—London Auto-Car. Note Paper. The woman who always does the correct thing never perfumes her note paper. She never uses paper of a strikingly pronounced tint, and she does not chnnge it with every whim of fashion. She adopts a style of paper, which she intends to make distinctly her own, and then clings to it. Manages a Railroad. The Nevada County Narrow Gauge Railroad Company, of California, is probably the only railroad in the world that has a woman president. Mrs. John F. Kidder, of Grass Valley, Cal„ succeeded to this position on the death of her husband, who had for some time been president of the road. She had become familiar with the work during her husband's illness, when she was obliged to assist him in his duties, and she now has practi cally the sole ownership and manage ment in her hands. i Queen's Pots and Pans. The Queen of Holland is thoroughly Dutch in every way, and therefore it is not sin-prising that she is keen in the dischai-ge of housewifely duties. Once in three weeks the young Queen makes a tour of inspection of the royal kitchens, to see if the cupboards, the plates and the saucepans are in good order those beautifully burnished copper pans which are the delight of every Dutch housewife, and a tarnsh on which she would regard almost as a stain on her own reputation. Econ omy and thrift are marked character istics of Queen Wilhelmina'B domestic management, and it is said that often the Queen-mother has been made quite angry by her daughter's deter mination to have a dress renovated and turned when she ought to have had a new one. Bicycle Suits. The day of the bicycle is not at an end. There has been less said of it of late, to be sure, but this is simply because Its novelty is somewhat worn off, and'.tlie newspapers and magazines do not fill space with things that are not new. The number of those who advocate the riding of bicycles has not grown less. It used to bo that Lon don was looked to for all the best fashions in outing costumes, but now Paris takes the lead. The Parisian mailers of such costumes took the Ideas of the London tailors and added to them Just enough of fancy touches to make tho most serviceable of such costumes altogether fetching. A distinctly Parisian Idea is a skirt and Eton jacket of black smooth faced cloth. A suit of this sort will only do, of course, for wear over roads that are not loaded with dust. Such a suit is more fashionable and showy than useful. However, the same idea may bo carried out in the popular gray and tan outing cloths. Athletic Contests For Women. Physical training alms to enable woman to meet conditions and emer gencies that formerly filled woman with a nervous timidity that can hard ly be said to have been marked by womanly dignity or grace. If, for ex ample, there is an obstruction in the road, physical training enables a wom an to. fgt over it easily and makes It unnecessary for her to wait for as sistance. In case of fire, physical training makes It safer for such a woman to b(flowered by a rope to the ground if that should be necessary. Physical development, in other words, takes away from woman no grace of manner, no natural dignity or reserve, but fits her for physical tasks and emergencies for which she could be fitted in no other way. Athletic contests arc perhaps as in evitable as any other kind of con tests. They are stimulating and strengthening,-and the spirit of sport which necessarily enters into them may express itself in somewhat stren uous movements and tones, but there Is no reason to believe that these con 'tests, entered into as part of a scheme of physical training and conducted with tho decorum that ought to char acterize every educational exercise, have an injurious effect on the man ners ot the contestants. I should be be very sorry to believe that such an effect is produced. My own opinion Is that whatever natural superabundance of energy a growing girl may have could not be expended in any more healthful and profitable way than In properly directed gymnastic work or in an athletic contest such a3 the game of basket ball.—Miss Hope Narey, in the Boston Globe. An Object Leßson For Mother*. On one of the trains entering New York the other day a woman afforded her fellow-passengers an unconscious but powerful object lesson, says Har per's Bazar. With the woman was a little girl, about six years old. The day was warm, and through the open windows the dust drifted in a fine gray cloud. Every passenger was exceedingly uncomfortable, but each forgot his discomfort in the spectacle of that suffering child. The mother began operations by sentlng her little daughter beside her with a thump that made the Infant's teeth rattle. Then, at intervals of one or two minutes during the weary jour ney she paid the child these maternal attentions: She toolr off her hat; she smoothed her hair; she put the hat on again; she removed the child's little jacket, and put it on again; she straightened her collar; she wiped her face with her handkerchief; she re moved an Imaginary cinder from her eye; she smoothed her hair again; she took off and retied the ribbon on her hair; she stood her up and smoothed her down; she unfastened the bow at her neck and retied it. Over and over she followed this program while the awe-struck passen gers looked on. The child accepted the situation with" grim endurance. I Evidently she had been used to It all of her short life. Among those who watched the scene was a prominent New York specialist in nervous diseases. He turned to the writer and summed up the entire sit uation in one sentence, which has in it a sermon for every American mother. "Each touch," he said, grimly, "pushes that child a little nearer to the doors of the sanitarium that will some day open for her." Women and Their Clubs. It is amusing to note what consti tute the attractions of a club to many women. A wolf in sheep's clothing was present at the closing meeting of a well-known woman's club of Brook lyn this season. One dear little wom an came in late, panting and excited. "I was so afraid I wouldn't bd in time for the lee cream," she said to the hostess. "Am IJ" • • One bright-looking woman confided to the wolf that she had joined because her daughter wanted to got Into so ciety. "One must do things, don't you know. Such a bore, too." ... Then there was the ambitious wom an in search of an education. She saw no deeper than the sheep's cloth ing, for she artlessly confided to the wolf that she had always taken care of the children and the housekeeping, and bccu quite contented until her husband had obtained a political posi tion that gave them a certain social standing, and that she must now rise to meet it. So she had joined the club. "And it is such a help," she said; "all those lovely papers and so many superior women. It is so elevating. I am going to give a Longfellow tea myself this fall." * • * It is dangerous to open the door to a club too wide. One member met an other member, both being charming women. Their gowns had quite the right air and their hats were evidently not home trimmed. Those little things tell even in club life. The wolf sat in the corner and overheard this conver sation: "A mbst delightful meeting." "Most charming. And such a lovely house—so refined." "How did you ever get into the club?" "Why, one of the members presented me." "Impossible." "But she did. I met her at a recep tion at your house." "Impossible. But I am going to re sign, any way. All sorts of people one knows nothing about are coming into the club. It used to be such a genteel, exclusive affair. Good afternoon."— New York Times. ' e - - Very large buttons are seen on the latest driving gloves. The most brilliant parasols on the market are a genuine burned orange. Hats, neck ruflles and parasols to match are in order for the up-to-date woman. The approved shoe for feminine traveling use is calf skin with damp proof silk lining, which docs away with the necessity for overshoes. The ostrich plume reigns triumphant this season, and many hat brims are threaded and overcast with black vel vet ribbon half an inch in width. Belts showing fine filigree embroid ery in gold, others nail heads in steel or decoration of tiny jet beads, are worn with white gowns. The founda tion is black, white or blue elastic. A beautiful gown of cloth of gold is ornamented with incrustations of painted velvet. This gown also has the hip drapery and a big bow of satin in the back with a contrasting lining. A pretty gown is of gray taffeta, the skirt and bodice made of alternate tucks and strappings of cloth. There is a girdle of turquoise blue silk and the hat is trimmed with pink roses and a soft bh.e silk. Applications of panne, in either white, cream or corn color, are a pop ular trimming for white barege or white serge suits. In a dressy cos tume of barege a deep lace edged Bounce on the skirt and an entire lace waist give the most correct finish. The delicate gowns worn this sum mer demand the daintiest of petti coats. Some silk skirts will be worn, but in general the white lawn and ba tiste will have the preference. These a- > mnny flounced and much embroid ered, and are extravagantly charming. Women who do not care for tho round neck to their day gowns, a fashion which only a fortunate few can wear, like them for their robcß de nuit. To have these gowns cut out a little at the neck is delightfully cool In summer. They can be found in dif ferent styles in the ready made lin- j gerle. BANK NOTE WORK- How Money is Made to Foil the Coun terfeiters' Craft. The first consideration in making a bank note is to prevent others lrom making a counterfeit of it. Therefore all the notes of a certain denomina tion or value must be exact dupli cates of each other. If they were engraved by hand this wou.A not be the case. Hand engraving is more easily counterfeited Uhan the work done by the processes actually used. "Every note," said an official of one of the leading bank note compa nies, "is printed from a steel plate, in the preparation of which many persons take part. If you will look at a $5 greenback you will see a pic ture in the centre; a small portrait called a vignette on the left, and in each of the upper corners a net work of fine lines with a dark ground, one containing the letter V and the other the figure 5. These four parts are made on separate plates. "To make a vignette it is first nec essary to make a large drawing on paper with great care, and a dauguer reotype is then given to the engraver, who uses a steel point to make on it all the outlines of the picture. The plate is inked and a print is taken from it. While the ink is still damp the print is laid face down on a steel plate, which has been softened by heating it red hot and letting it cool slowly. If is then put in a press and an exact copy of the outline is thus made on the steel plate. This the engraver finishes with his graver, a tool with a three cornered point, which cuts a clean line without leaving a rough edge. "Now, this plaite is used for making other plates—it is never used to print from. It must be made very hard, and this is done by heating it and cool ing it quickly. A little roller of soft ened steel is then rolled over it by a powerful machine until its surface has been forced into all the lines cut into the plate. The outlines of the vig nette are thus transferred to the roll er in raised lines, and after the roller is hardene-d it is used to roll over plates of softened steel, and thus make in them sunken lines exactly like those in the plate originally en graved. "The centre picture is engraved and transferred to a roller like the vig nette, but the network in the upper corners, and also on the back of the note, is made by the lathe. This ma chine costs SSOO0 —a price that puts it beyond the reach of counterfeiters. Its work is so perfect that it cannot be imitated by hand. The lathe en graves the network on softened steel, and the figure in the middle of it is then engraved by hand. It is now hardened and transferred to a roller like the others. "The plates from which tho notes are to be printed are of softened steel and large enough to print four notes at once. Four engravings of the note must therefore be made on it, and this is done by rolling tho hardened steel rollers containing the raised pic tures over it in their appropriate places until the pictures are pressed into its surface. The fine lettering around the border of tin* note Is transferred in the same way, but tho other lettering is put on by hand. This process saves a great deal of time and it secures absolute unifor mity in the four engravings on tho plate. "The back parts of the note are printed first, and when the Ink is dry the greenback is printed, to be followed by the red stamps and num bers. It is then signed and issued. For greater security one part of tho note is engraved and printed at one place and another part at another place, when It is sent to Washington to be finished and signed. "But, needless to say, after all this care and all these safeguards, many skilfully executed counterfeits have been made and issued, some of them so good as to deceive expert judges of money." England nnd Sea Power. Uninterruptedly for more than 200 years we have held the command of the sen, after having wrested it from Spain and Holland, and owing to the command of the sea we have been able to build up our magnificent empire. But it would he rash to conclude there from that we rhall always continue to hold the command of the sea. The command of the sea has been wrested in turn from all the great commer cial nations of the past by abler na tions, which succeeded them. It has been wrested from Phoenicia, Car thage, Spain and Holland by nations abler In commerce and trade. This is only natural, for naval supremacy rests in the last instance on the broad basis of commercial prosperity. A na tion of energetic landsmen can soon acquire seamanship through the crea tion of a successful merchant marine, which provides the necessary school ing for naval war. This has been shown by many historical instances and by the recent and rapid success of Germany as a naval power. Germany has created within 30 years a most successful merchant marine and an im posing, well managed and ably han dled fleet. An army may be impro vised in case of war, but a navy can not be improvised. Naval supremacy once destroyed, is, as history shows, destroyed forever. The gradual or sud den loss of our naval supremacy would be acomplished by the gradual decline or the sudden fail of our empire.—The Contemporary Review. The African Red KafTlr always rubs his teeth after a meal with cold woodash from the fireplace, which ac counts for the absence of tartar, and tUa fine color of bis teeth. Coughing " I was given up to die with quick consumptien. I then began to use Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I improved.at once, and am now in perfect health.," —Chas. E. Hart man, Gibbstown, N. Y. It's too risky, playing with your cough. | The first thing you 0 know it will be down I deep in your lungs and B the play will be over. Be-1 gin early with Ayer's 8 Cherry Pectoral and stop I the cough. Three sites: 25c., 60c„ SI. All druggists. H Consult your doctor. If ho ays take It, then do as ho says. If ho tells you not to take It, then don't take it. He knows. Leave it with him. We are willing. J. C. AYEK CO., Lowell, Mass. A Bad Breath A bad breath means a bad stomach, a bad digestion, a bad liver. Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They cure con stipation, biliousness, dys pepsia, sick headache. 25c. All druggists. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYEw^rs Stoam a Hundred Years Ago. On July 5 tlio London Times printed the following item from its issue of corresponding date in 1S01: "An ex perlment took place on the River Thames last Wednesday for the pur pose of working a barge or other heavy craft against the tide by means of a steam engine on a very simple construction. The moment the engine was set to work the barge was brought about, answering tne helm quickly, at the rate of two and a half miles an hour." This was six years before Fulton's construction of a prac tical steam vessel which went from New York to Albany in 21 hours. The crude experiments of a century ago gave but the faintest forecast of tiie marvelous mechanical developments of the present day; and the story from the London Times moves the New York Commercial Advertiser to sug gest that "perhaps 100 years from now the accounts of the successful venture of M. Santos-Duinout's uirship over the roofs of Paris will sound as strangely antiquated as this experi ment with a steamboat which preced ed the airship by a century and two weeks." This is not an Improbable forecast .except in Its intimation that 100 years may elapse before Its veri fication. It will be surprising, in this Inventive age, if the Paris experiment does not seem antiquated within the life of the present young generation. Giibertlan Briganc agi. ~Signor Ttosario Buffatino, who has been in prison for a number of crimes, but succeeded in escaping, lias writ ten to tho "Uiornnle (11 Sicllia" that he has just formed a band of brigands who have elected him their chief, writes a Rome correspondent. Chief Buffallno informs the public that the new band of brigands proposes to be gin business In the New Y'ear, and to administer Justice according to the teachings of Holy Writ The letter concludes with an appeal to all those who are suffering from injustice, or want a wrong avenged, to apply to Slgnor Buffaliiioo, who will consider each case on its merits and mete out the death punishment where he deems tit. Enclosed in the letter were 10 francs to pay for the insertion of the letter in the "Gioruale di SlclHa" as an advertisement should the editor not think lit to Insert it in the correspou denoe column. Sciencs Reveals the Past. To construct a whole animal from a thigh bone or toe joint hns been the achievement of archaeologists in many cases. But to learn the habits and food of stone-ago gentlemen from the tartar on their teeth is comparative ly a new feat of science. All English journal gives an Interesting account of the experiments of the ex-Presi dent of the Royal Odontologleal Soci ety of Great Britain in this direction. Upon the teeth of ancient skulls he noticed a thick coating of tartar, and dissolving tills In acid, lie discovered minute cornhusks particles, vegeta ble substances, particles of starch, tile point of a lisli tooth, oval cells from fruit and portions of wool; also miner al fragments probably left by the rough stones used iu grinding the corn. Thus' the mode of life nnd sus tenance of people living some 4,000 years ago were clearly laid bare to the investigator and archaeology could achieve what not all the printed rec ords of history could unfold to us. Boer's Lack ol Ethics His Strength. The Boer cares less for his reputa tion than he does for his native's soul. He husbands life nnd lets his reputa tion take care of itself. If he does that which we would call disgraceful he is not kicked out or Ids cdub, be cause he has not got a club. He won't be cut in the Row, because he lias no Row, and his friends have not yet ac quired the gentle art of cutting. If he is riding along In the vicinity of a railway line with a few pounds of dynamite In his holsters he does not "have the honor to request" the per mission of the Hoofd-Commandant to lilow up the next troop train that pass es. He Just blows it up and casually the fact the next time he meets his chief. The butter output of Minnesota I his year will exceed that of any previous year. Books Are Man's Best Friends. The very company of books Is edu cating. As one sits before the book cases and glances at his favorite vol umes it Is as if each said a word or two or suggested a thought. Thus a boy's eye may fall upon his copy of "Tom Brown at Rugby," and in his mind rises the remembrance of the great hare and bounds run in which Tom and East and the Tadpole strug gled so pluckily, and at last held that delightful little interview with Dr. Arnold; or visions of least's tricks on old Martin. There is no need to open the book—one breathes its healthful air at the mere sight of its title. So from each old favorite there comes a friendly rffreetlng, and we recall the pleasant hours spent in its company. A great orator said: "Books are tha windows through which the soul looks out. A home without books is like a room without windows. No man has a right to bring up children without surrounding them with books if he has the means to buy books." The Fiction Sids of Golf. One of the latest lost golf ball stories is that one afternoon a couple of players were on the Penarth links, when a mighty drive by one of them sent the ball away out of sight, and it couW not 'be found. Nest morning, wliiltft taking his ante-matutinal stroll, the golfer was attracted by the pite ous cries of a small bird that kept fly ing backward and forward in front of him. lie followed the bird until lib was led to a small bush, in which he found a nest. The biru flew into it and appeared to be trying to scratch something out, hopping in and out, repeating the action two or three times, in a state of acute excitement all the time. The golfer raised him self to look into the nest and there was his lost golf ball! Lake Vessels Launched Brocdsid? On. Shipbuilders on the great lakes have devised the most ingenious scheme in use anywhere for shoving a great, ponderous steel vessel Into the water when she Is well-nigh completed. The shipyards of the great lakes are not located on the banks of the fresh wa ter seas, hut upon contributory rivers on artificial None of these waterways# are more than half as wide as a modern lake cargo carrier is long, and so, instead of sliding the vessel into the water endwise, as is the custom all over the world, these giant leviathans toboggan down a monster s-lide and take tho water broadside on. Three Londons. While building the London Ex change the workmen came upon a gravel pit full of oyster shells, bones of cattle, old sandals and shattered pottery. Two pavements were dug up under the French church in Thread needle street, and other pavements have been cut through in several parts of the city. Authorities on the sub ject say that all the soil seems to have risen over Roman London at the rate of nearly a foot in a century. Still farther must the searcher dig to find the third Loudon, the earlier London of the Britons. It is supposed to be burled under the of Roman days. All goods aro alike to PEN NAM FADELESS DYES, as they color all fibers at one boiling. Bold by all druggists^ Two electric mountain railroads have been constructed to operate on the French elope of the Pyrenees. The favorite flower of the fortune hunt er is marigold. Wo offer Ono Ilundred Dollars Reward for my case of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY A Co., Toledo, O. We, tho undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for tho last 15 yenrs, and believe him perfectly honorable In rfll business transac tions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. WEST A TRUAX Wholesalo Druggists, Tolodo, Ohio. WALIJINO, RINNAN A MARVIN, Wholesalo Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of tho system. Testimonials sent froo. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Hall's Family Pills are tho best. The man who says he would share his last dollar with you somehow or other never gets down to his last dollar. I-adiM Cast Wear Shoe* One sizo smaller after using Allon's Foot- Eaac, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweat ing, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Trial package FREE by mail. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Every woman who marries feels that to a certain degree she is a reformer. What Garfield Headache Powders bare de monstrated : that neadr.clies rnav be cured without tho UGO of harmful drugs. This rin j'le remedy acts like magic—it never fails to cure anddms not harm or the system. Women were first permitted to be come employes ill government offices in 1802. f'rt For flic ICoivel*. I'o matter what ails yon, headache to a rnncer. you will never get well until your bowels aro put right. CASCAHETB help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you Just 10 cents to start getting your health back. CAS CABETS Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, ©very tablet has C.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. Etymologists declare that the sugar cane has 227 varieties of insect enemies. Vrcy+a ViTuvifugo For Worm*. The standard cure. GO yra.' trial; no fail iro. Tho children's ffiend. 23c. Druggists. j There are too many people who enjoy wearing borrowed feathers. FITS permanently cured. No fit" ornervon"- nessaftor first day's use of Dr. Kline s Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatis > froo Dr.lt. H. KLINE. Ltd.. IS] Arch St., l'hila. Pa Brazil grows about half the coffee crop of the world. Mr*. IVTuslow's Soothing Synn forohildrin teething, sotoa tho gums, rolaoos intlamm tion.allays pain, cures wind colic. 233 a nosfci* The greatest railroad in the world is in the United States. Piso's Curo cannot be too highly spoken o* *s a cough cure.—J. W. U'BRIKN, 822 Third 1 venae, N., Minneapolis, Mjun., Jan. t>, 1900. Tho number of emigrants who left Ger many in 1900 was 22.30®. Icebergs Make Their Presence Known. The captain of an ocean steamer la often warned of the proximity of ice bergs by the men In the engine room. When a ship enters water considera bly colder than that through which it has passed its propeller runs faster, and as such water surrounds the vicinity of icebergs for many miles tlie engineers know when the propell er's action is greatly accelerated with out any Increase of the steam power Icebergs may he expected. Of course, the thermometer is the most useful In dicator of icebergs'. Joen Bull Can Still Exact Toll. It will take some years for us to capture the seas as well as we have tlie land—granting that we ever do it, for of the 25.200 ships of all nation alities afloat to-day—ships of over 200 tons—Great Britain possesses about 11,000. We have got a lot of John Bull's commerce, hut it is certain that we must continue to pay him toll for a whole to help us deliver the goods. Hidden Titian Brought to Light. A few months ago tlie Venetian painter Brass bought four pictures for S2O from a Dalmatian peasant named Braidotti, who had picked tliem up when a neighboring villa was dis mantled. Recently Brass found that one of the pictures had been painted over another on the same canvas, and on cleaning off the top one he discov ered a Saint Sebastian by Titian, which had been stolen from Italy by one of Napoleon's Generals. Brass has sold the Titian to the Count de Custellane for $15,000. Danger Signals for Alpine Climbers. All the Alpine clubs of Europe have Just agreed to a uniform set of danger signals drafted by tlie French Alpine Club for use by mountain-climbers in peril, says a Paris correspondent. Sig nals of distress are to be given by shouting, whistling, waving handker chiefs or firing guns during the day, and by lantern or other lights at night. A signal repeated six times indicates extreme ppril, and its return three times by the receiver signifies that its meaning has been understood. Motlvo Power in Clg Demand. Locomotive building is sharing with all the other industries of the country in the great business boom. Last year there were turned out of the American shops 3,153 engines, tho largest number ever built in the his tory of the country. The production showed an increase of GSO locomotives or 27.5 per cent, over the production of 1899, when tlie building record was also broken. In that year 2,473 loco motives were turned out. In 1898 tho American shops produced 1,875; iu 1897, l.Lol; iu 1890, 1,175. When the head aches and ono is weary, a Garfield Headache Powder is needed. This t ituple remedy will cure the pain and impart vigor to tile system. Send to Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y., for sample powders. The largest locomotive works in the world are in Philadelphia. A man in Calaveras county. Cal., is hatching pheasants in incubators. New Zealand crown lands are now disposed of for 999 years. The United Kingdom has 350 blast furnaces; France 570. Immigration for the 11 months end ing with May increased 40,073. A gallon of water weighs 10 pounds, a gallon of mercury 1,357 pounds. From 1803 to ISI2 many attempt! were made to fasten metal points ta quill pens. The early inhabitants of the Nile valley had excellent roads, paved somewhat in the macadam style of the present day. Over 7,000 men deserted from the French army last year. Great Brit ain's record for desertion is under 300 iu one year. Sheboygan, Wis., is a pea-raising district, and recently all the clergy men gave written permissions to their flocks to gather a crop on a Sunday to save it. WETWiATHSRII^ MADS BY TME ©T OJIrS) CLOTHING KAVS THE POINTS rmmm, £xsg-uen and sivc- COMPETE SATISFACTION. Prosecutes Claims. 3yrai iclwnvar. 1* uSlmlioulinuihJim"ntty sfuctt D R pPSY^7MTs?i''^s f Bo ik of testimonial., and 1(> dava' trpatramil k"r-e. Dr. H. H. OHEEN a BUSB. Box B Atlanta, Ga. CTARK tsees ASTHMA-HAY FEVER f_CUREty,Y - FREE TRIAL BOTTLE Athstss DS.TAFT.79 E.130-"ST..N.YCITY "The Satire that made Weet Point fameno.e McILHENNY'S TABASCO. P. N. U. 82. 1901.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers