HH Winter Feed or Cow>4. It depends oil whether you want quantity or quality from your animals. It milk is sold by the quart, feed roots and wheat shorts, stirred into hot wa ter, so as to make a rich warm grueL Clover hay cut in June is one of the very best. If rich milk and yellow butter is your end, feed the blades of corn and sorghum, gathered green and sweet, upland hay, cut anu wet with hot corn meal gruel. For roots, use carrots and parsnips or sugar beets, about a peck a day. Never speak a loud > or cross word to a cow, and carefully abstain from pounaing her hip bones with the milking stool, which is so very frequently the habit. Tlio Time for Planting Bulbs. There is no definite rule to be laid down as to the length of time in which ' bulbs should be left in cold storage. As a general thing top growth will not begin until root growth is completed. This nearly always takes from six weeks to two months. It is therefore generally safe to begin bringing Oc tober planted bulbs to the living room In December. Those desired for later flowering can be leu. in cold storage, where tiiey win remain dormant as to toil growth. Ily bringing bulbs to light and warmiu at intervals of a week or 10 days we secure a succession of bloom which make 3 it possible for us to brighten our windows with their beautiful bowers during the greater part of winter. —Eben E. Rexford, in New Lippiucott Improving tlio Poultry Flock. Those who endeavor to improve their flocks of poultry by selecting the most prolific hens trom which the young stock will be produced next year make no mistake, but there is much care lessness on the part of some in the se lection of males. Neighboring farm ers frequently exchange eggs, in older to add new blood to their flocks, hut they fail to notice that by such prac tice, continued during several years, there is no out-cross made. Every farmer who desires to improve his flocks should send to some distant breeder, either for fowls or eggs, and aim to secure pure-bred stock of some kind. This should be done every year, i.he result will be fewer cases of dis ease, more prolific hens and better quality of poultry for market. A Few of III© Little 1..-oka, Jacob Biggie. In Farm Journal, men tions a few of the little leaks that are apt to appear ort the farm and which ought to be stopped: Letting tlio harness go without oil ing until it becomes dry and cracked, s Allowing the briers and poison ivy to grow from year to year in the fence row. Piling the manure on a hillside where much of its strength Is lost by being washed away with heavy rain storms. Leaving wooden buckets or tubs standing in the sun until they fall Into staves. Turning on so much oil or grease when oiling the farm machinery or greasing the wagon axles that some of it runs off and falls to the ground. Allowing the other hens to lay eggs In the nest of the sitting hen. Dipping feed from the sack or bin with the hands instead of a dish and thus spilling it upon the floor. letting the weeds grow at the ex pense of the crops. Letting the easy milker go all day without relieving the tension of her udder by taking out some of the milk. Working with dull tools and letting the mower and reaper rattle to pieces through loose nuts and screws. Allowing the sparrows to thresh your wheat in barrack or mow. Ico for Dairy. Owing to the fact that the ice must be put up in winter and the icehouse needs to be built and made ready in the fall, it seems to be seasonable to dis miss at this time the Importance of pro vdiing ice if you are to make a marked success with the diary. To he sure a good deal of successful dairying has been carried on in the years of the pant without ice. In Maryland and Virginia and in a num ber of otner states where they have had cool spring water, and the "spring houses," the good dairy woman would have smiled at any talk of the neces sity for ice. i But then, how many parts of our h country where the cool spring is not P to be found, and yet where dairying might be and often is profitable. We want to encourage such farmers to have their icehouses. The usual idea is that me ordinary farmer who has only a few cowo cannot afford an ice house. In reply to this we quote from an exchange: "Such farmers err. They cannot afford to be without ice during June, July and August if they make milk. If they churn, they need ice. If they ship, they need ice. If they sell their milk in neighboring vil lages. they need ice. Besides finding djuly valuable use of ice in handling milk the farmer can use ice in many ways that will mean profit, comfort and convenience. The small ice houso is almost a necessity on the dairy farm." please note that a very large and ex pensive icehouse may not be neces sary. It is something that most farm - , ers can do for themselves; both the J building of the ico house and the flll * Inp It witn ice in winter. If the cash were to be paid out for all this labor ft would alter the eae.—Farm, Field and Firesfila V Fnrm Sanitation. There is a time when every farmer who values life and health for self and family and wants to save the suf fering and cost of illness, will' thipk seriously about the best things to do to prevent sickness. A great many will, of course, ignore suggestions on this subject or any other, because they simply won't get out of the rut they are used to running in. And yet many lives, much suffering and many doc tors' bills would be saved by the knowledge of and practice of some sim ple rules. And it is certainly well worth the trouble —in fact, is may save a hundredfold in money alone— to study the rules of hygiene and san itation that both theoretical and prac tical science have demonstrated to be best In the first place the continuous tes timony of scientific experts and of practical observers is that the great est amount possible of pure fresh air is the greatest preventive and the greatest cure of many diseases. In deed, it has now been shown that about the only reliable cure of con sumption, the great scourge of mod ern civilization, is living in the open air both day and night. Even in so bleak a region as New England people have succeeded in being cured of this oi3oase by sleeping out of doora winter and summer. It is evident that every house ought to be arranged to have the freest possible circulation of air, and it should be fresh air, not loaded with the odors of pigpens, manure piles or other offensive matter. So every farmer, if he cannot prevent bad odors otherwise, ought to keep a supply of the best disinfectants and use them. The next important item is pure wa ter and plenty of it. If there is no other way to get pure water the sup ply for drinking should bo distilled. This is easily done by having a tea kettle spout to extend into a condenser and keep it boiling all the time the stove is running. This will certainly got rid of every germ of disease that is communicable through the stom ach. One of the worst of these is ty phoid fever. But water should be so abundant as to afford also the great est plenty for bathing. This is a thing that the great majority of people do not appreciate as an agent of health and comfort. A great many people are not aware that the skin is the most important organ of the body in get ting rid of the poisonous waste matter that is being generated every moment of our lives. Farm work is necessarily a dirty op eration. In hot wcainer, when the sweat is pouring out and the dust fly ing, the body is soon covered with a sticky mass that will entirely check the free action of i ,-e pores. There fore every one who does hard work ought to take a good hath and put on clean clothes to sleep in.—Journal of Agriculture. Feeding 01* Selling Grain. It is an important point constantly coming up for decision, whether it pays better to sell grain directly or feed it to cattle, sheep or swine, and many a farmer has found that his success or failure has been largely dependent up on the method adopted When thero is a famine in either corn or wheat it stands to reason that with the high prices that follow it pays better to dispose of the cattle anu sell the grain direct to the best market. Likewise, when the crops are enormous and prices low the wise farmer meets with success who immediately proceeds to buy up cattie and feed them liberally with the grain for market. In this way many a farmer has mado his fortune while others were complaining that the low prices of grain were ruining them. Instead of using grain in some profitable way they let It mould in the fields or grain elevators while they be moaned their hard luck. Now, one of the most important ne cessities on the farm is quick and prac tical decision, which enables the farm er to meet any emergency. It may he said that this is also the great busi ness talent. The man who can decide quickly and surely for the best in an emergency is sure to come out ahead. Farming today has its reverses, its changes and its emergencies. No man can foretell the size and nature of the crops, nor the prices which may rule in the world's markets for them. Therefore he may at any time be con fronted with conditions that will tax his resources and wisdom. No man should raise a single crop of anything without uetng prepared to utilize it in ■two or three different ways. If there is no direct profitable market for It, what then? Feed it to the cattle and convert it into good meat, which will bring a profit. If there is no market for cattle and they are selling as low comparatively as grain, then turn to the sheep or swine. It seems like throwing away a good thing to feed grain to swine or sheep. Yet with careful feeding even the best grain can he fed to them with a safe margin of profit, provided pork, mutton and wool are selling well. It is very rarely that all of these farm products command small prices at the same time, and one is not apt to find that all of his re sources are exhausted. Nevertheless, it is important that one should be thoroughly prepared for a quick shift ing of his work. 'l'hat is, the ability to adapt himself to changing condi tions and intelligent adaptation in this world is often the secret of success. It is probably the one tiling more needful among farmers, cattle and grain grow ers than anything else. At least that is the opinion of your humble sub scriber. —E. P. Smith, in American Cul tivator. It is estimated that the United States imports from the northern countries of Africa and the Persian Gulf states upward of 12. 000,000 pounds of dates annually. CIRCUS CHILD'S SCHOOL. NO LCN3ER A MATTER OF BRU TALITY AND HARD USAGE. Tlio Little Performers Trained Without Either Correction or Coercion Must 2'irst <*et Them Interested in 'llielr Work—Devices for Saving Life and Limb "Brutality was the characterizing feature of the old school of juvenile tiaining among the showmen of the past." The speaker was William Mar tell, head of a well-known family of acrobatic performers. "The new meth od is the opposite," continued the per former. "] have accomplished results that have delighted the public, and never yet have I raised my hand, either in correction or coercion, against the little ones whom I have trained to do the most difficult feats. In fact, in spite of the prevailing con tinental notion that juveniles must be hammered into shape, as it wore, and cufiings and blows are the necessary lot of aspiring acrobat, I believe that I by the more scientific, and certainly more approved, method, a higher standard of excellence may be at -1 tained. "As for myself, I may say I was hammered into shape, but by no means as brutally as many that I have known. It may be that recollection of the bar | baric methods has made me more len ient, and at least more enlightened in the training of juveniles today. "At five years of age I was a Ger man turner. At the age of ten I was so proficient on the bars and trapeze that a showman immediately offered to train me for the profession. It was against my parents' wishes, hut tlio glamour of the showman's life encouraged mc to win my pareuts' con sent, and I was taken in hand by my trainer for better or for worse. "It was some years before I became accomplished enough to make a pub. lie move, and bitter years they were. But with my first public performance I took on a new lease of life, as it were, and felt myself on the high road to wealth and fame. "When I was married and little ones came into my care it was my one thought to make them accomplished acrobats, and to do this by a method radically opposite to those conceived by showmen to bo the only sovereign method —infinite patience and pains taking. "Children ore marvellously suscep tible. The first thing necessary is to make them interested in their work. This is done by showing them the re wards of success and by inspiring ab solute confidence. The confidence of a child is a wonderful thing and well worth cultivating. "By the old method, when a child made a slip he got a blow with a stick as well as a hard fall. This either took the courage out of him or drove him to desperation so that he made daring leaps and plunges through sheer recklessness. By the new method, to avoid accident is the main feature. In all my training of ju veniles I cannot recall a single acci dent of any seriousness, for the rea son that I watch every move and take every precaution, thinking of many things at once. When a child learns to stand erect on my shoulders as 1 go whirling around in a circle on the high wheel, if I see that there is going to be a fall I lot everything go in order to save the child. The littio acrobat soon learns that this guardian eye is ever upon him, and he gains confidence with every effort. "There are many devices for tho raving of limb and life, of course. These used in training, even when there is a reasonable belief that pro ficiency might bo attained without their use. One of these is called a 'mechanic.' It is a sort of body har ness which leaves the arms and legs free, and from which a rope extends to a pulley on the celling, thence along some distance to another pulley and down into the hands of a strong manip ulator. "When the child is standing on an other's shoulder and whirling around in the 'three' or 'four high,' as we term the acrobat upon acrobat trick, if he wavers or falls tho man at the rope has but to pull tho rope, suspend ing him in midair or letting him down to the floor softly. The 'mechanic' is then a very valuable aid to Juvenile training, and aids in inspiring com plete confidence in the young mind. "Another safeguard in training is to have efficient assistants over at hand. Some of tlio tricks that are accom plished—for instance, the aforemen tioned 'four high'—are exceedingly dif ficult and dangerous. "A fall would mean serious things— the breaking of limbs and, perhaps, something even more serious, an utter loss of confidence on tho part of tho child performer. After the little fel low has learned to balance himself aloft without calling too much upon tho man at the rope, the 'mechanic' is dispensed with and two trained help ers follow tho act around tho stage with hands ready to seize a wavering figure with the first sign of a fall. These helpers are never once called off until the child has mastered thor oughly and confidently the difficult art of balancing aloft. Even in moments of completest self-reliance there is danger of a lapse, and only days, weeks and months of training upon a single difficult act can insure that pro ficiency which justifies a public per formance. "With the first public exhibition all discouragments and illusion that the labor did not pay and that the acro batic art is not worth the cost is at once dispelled. The music, the lights, the glow ot a thousand faces and tho deafening applrnse with which tho finest feats are greeted—all these fill the Infant mind with a new inspiration. He begins to see that after many months of hard work amid many dan gers he has accomplished something which is the marvel not only of those of his own age, but of his elders. "A natural emulation inspires him to even better work. He begins to re gard training as a pastime rather than a season of penance, and when the following pay day he opens a little bank account all his own, starting on the highway to independence, if not, indeed, wealth, he is thankful to those who have spent such efforts in his behalf, and shows it by going hack into training with delighted zeal. In deed, instead of driving them to work, as a father drives his son into the potato patch with his hoe in hand, I am constantly repressing my little performers, watchful of the first signs of fatigue and over-exertion. Often, while traveling through the country, when an opportunity occurs for a holi day, I say, 'Which shall we do—try that new feat again or go on the excur sion?' The answer is always the same —'The new feat!' Then, if we have time, the excursion. "And while the body is thus trained you may he sure that other accom plishments and graces of mind are not neglected. Every morning there is an hour or tv/o of hard study over school looks, and I find that the perfect phy sical condition of the child makes for wonderful alertness of the mental fac ulties. "In spite of the vicissitudes of cir cus life performers keep themselves in the prime of condition, eschewing the commonest dissipations and main taining a high standard of conduct. This is absolutely compulsory. Of course many pleasures common to the ordinary man are missed. But when one meets a retired acrobat, as was my pleasure a few days ago—a man who is his 85th year could lift a bul lock or climb a rope hand over hand clean to the peak of the main tent — one sees the reward of a life of ab solute temperance in all things, of outdoor labor and constant strife to excel. This veteran of the circus ring, I must say, was the best preserved specimen of humanity it was ever my delight to meet, sound as steel, with the physique of a man of 40 still, and jovial as a freshman. "It is said that athletep are short lived. This may be true in the ranks of pugilism or any contesting profes sion depending upon single violent and sirenuous competition between long periods of training. But with the pro fessional acrobat it is different. One day's work is very much like another's, with a new feat added and an old one discarded from time to time, and the chances of his attaining a long life of health, strengtli and consequent happi ness are as certain as anything may be in this world. This is not one of the least rewards to which the youth ful performer may look forward." — Kansas City Star. INSECT STINCS. What Cannon tho Swelling and Some ICcmedlen to He Applied. The fact of death occasionally re sulting from the sting of insects such as bees and wasps is no doubt largely responsible for the species of terror which the presence of these insects brings upon many persons. Only re cently, for example, a case was re ported of a laborer who placed in his mouth a gooseberry, which proved to contain a wasp. The wasp stung him at the root of the tongue; he went into his cottage and medical aid was sum moned, but death ensued in five min utes. In mis instance, of course, death most probably supervened on suffoca tion due to intense swelling in the throat, and was not due directly to the poison itself. Vomiting, fainting, delirium and stu por strongly suggest a highly virulent substance of the nature of a toxin. The precise nature of the poison of wasps and bees is not known They possess a poison bag and sting and the fluid secreted is as clear as water, ex hibits an acid reaction and in fact con tains formic acid But this acid can hardly account for tho severity of the symptoms sometimes following a sting. Fatal results have, indeed, occurred which could only be attributed direct ly to the toxic action of the sting. Some persons, howe.ver, endure the sting with impunity, others develop alarming symptoms, such as blood poi oning, and undoubtedly the toxicity of the sting depends very much upon the condition of the soil into which it is implanted. One of the old-fashioned remedies, and wo believe a good one, is to apply immediately to the part stung the juice of a raw onion. Tho rationale of this remedy is not clear, the sulphur oil in the onion possibly serving as a pal liative. The sting at any rate, if it remains in the wound, should be ex tracted and tho puncture dressed with a littio weak ammonia and afterwards a little bromide of ammonia may be added, which frequently serves as a sedative. Judging from the great number of • v, asps which have somewhat suddenly appeared in the country during the re cent hot weather, this seasonal pest promises to be of no small dimensions. The intense irritation caused in Borne persons by mosquito bites may be promptly relieved by tho application of ipecacuanha, either the vinum or the powdered root, made into a paste with water or vinegar.—Tho Lancet. Lonilm illi. World*. Art Mart. An English art journal says that for a goodly number of years the turn over at art sales in London may be roughly placed at over $3,000,000. Nothing seems to depress the prices at art sales, not even tho prolonged war in South Africa. It has been moro and more apparent during the last few years that London is the best market in the world for the sale of objects of art FROM RECENT CENSUSES. Facts About Density of Population in Various Countries. Henry Gannett, in tine American Geographical Society's Bulletin, dis cusses recent censuses of population. The United States has 26 inhabitants to the square mile, while France has 189, Germany 269, England and Wales 557, and Belgium 593. There is little relation between tho density of pop ulation and the rate of increase. "The rate of increase in the United States," says Mr. Ginnett, "although rapidly diminishing, is still 50 per cent greater than that of any other na tion here represented. Of the Euro pean nations, Germany shows the most rapid rate of . Increase in spite of the large emigration. Spain has prac tically come to a standstill, its recent census, taken in 1900, showing a few thousand less inhabitants than that taken throe years earlier. The recent famines in India are doubtless respon sible for the small increase in that country. Proportion of urban popu lation differs widely in different coun tries. Measuring it by the population included in cities of 100.000 or more inhabitants, it is seen that this ele ment, which in the United States com prises 10 per cent of the total popu lation, includes in England and Wales not lees than 34 per cent, while in Bel gium it is 18 per cent, in Germany 16, in Prance 10, in Spain 9 and in Japan 8 per cent. If, on the other hand, all bodies of urban population be includ ed, which is a much better test to apply, the situation is different. Meas ured in this way, the urban popula tion of the United States forms 40 per cent of the total number of inhabi tants; While that of England and Wales forms not less than 72 per cent. In Germany and the Netherlands just one-half of the population is includ ed in such urban bodies; in France, Switzerland and Belgium two-fifths, in Denmark 30 per cent, in Norway 28 per cent, in Sweden 21 per cent and in Rus sia 12 per cent. PRESIDENT DIAZ'S GUARDS. Close Watch Kept Over the Chief Magistrate of Mexico. Dr. Frank J. Toussaint has re turned from a six months' exploring trip through the mining and agricul tural districts of Northwestern Mexico. Dr. Toussaint traveled on horseback with his own caravan of pack mules nnd peons, and his knowledge of the foothills and arroyos of the states of Chihuahua and Sonora, as well as the remote plantations far from the railroads and beaten tracks of the modern tourist, is very exact. He al so made a visit to the City of Mexico and conferred with President Diaz in relation to mineral rights on a gov ernment grant in Yaqui Valley. "The Bhooting of President McKinley," said Dr. Toussaint, "would not have been possible in Mexico, a country where attempted assassination is one of the expected incidents of government. President Diaz never takes a walk on the street or in any public place with out socret service men watching over him. Nobody with his hand wrapped up or with a hand in his pocket could approach him without being stopped. One morning a lame man, carrying a heavy cane, was passing him on the street. A detective brushed against the man as if by accident and knocked the cane out of his hand. He picked it up and returned it to the man with profuse apologies, but while he had the cane in his hands he gave the head a turn and a pull to satisfy himself that it was not a sword cane. An other time an old woman carrying a basket on her arm was stopped be cause her hand was concealed in the basket. The detective lifted her hand out of the basket and, seeing that it held no weapon, apologized for the lib erty. Attempts on the life of Diaz have been made, and no precaution has been spared to prevent a repeti tion of them. If a man clasps his hands behind him while he is talking with a public man a detective will suggest that he allow his hands to hang naturally at his side." Jamaica for Tourists. A correspondent writes that Jamaica is again being alvocated as a winter health resort for the tourist. It pre sents a variety of advantages in tho way of warm temperature and beauti ful scenery, and, more than that, it is comparatively inexpensive. There is also the charm of novelty, as the isl and has not hitherto come within the scope of the tourist. Its condition has, of course, been vastly improved since the days of Governor Eyre, when it. was not particularly safe for Euro peans. Now that fine roads have been made in tho interior Jamaica offers a fine refuge for the valetudinarian, alike for seaside and inlau* enjoyment. Handshaking a National Custom. The Swedish people are always shak ing hands with each other. At break fast or dinner the children or tho guests of a household shake hands with ihe mother or the hostess when they enter the room, wishing her good morning, and also before they leave it, thanking her for the l'ood they have eaten. At formal dinner parties tho same ceremony takCs place. The guests shake hands with the host and hostess when they enter and again before they leave the dining room, and the ceremony is repeated when they say good night before leaving the bouse. GREATEST GUN BARGAIN IN YEARS. SIS.OO GUN FOR 510..55. Owl OK: to the very unusual dry "pell during the summer and early fall ri Una aeetion we find that we have more fi-y. a QUNS, li U NTIN Q CtOTMINw. BOOTS.LOADnDSItLLLAnmI <? l'w.Sa If SPORTING GOODS in general th.> wecaieU. We pro- .<-0 pose to urate me exit. tcc each and <s£-dSf§~'i •s£xt every art it !•• j| K,ltl i 5, h nol( \ b y merchants __ in., twist harreln boreif, bur locks,'steel work a, top snap pistol grip, walnut stock and fore-end both checkered. ****** PR/TINGTON model breech, extension rib, double lug; n rim exactly as the picture above (from n photograph) shows for $10.35 sent to ntiy part of U. S. on 1 receipt of X 1.50 C. O. 1> subject to examination, largest and cheapest sporting gocda house in the world. Forty-five years in business, references nnv bank or express companv. ComnJete Gun Catalogue fiee. SCHR.TEL3LER ARMS CO. Kansas City, Mo. * Golds |wBIWI 'Tuiv I "I had a terrible cold and could B hardly breathe. I then tried Ayer's 9 Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me im ■ mediate relief." W. C. Layton, Sidell, Ili. | How will your cough I be tonight? Worse, prob ably. For it's first a cold, then a cough, then bron chitis or pneumonia, and at last consumption. Coughs always tend downward. Stop this downward tendency by taking Ayer's Cherry Pec toral. u Three start: 25c., 50c.,*51. AH irtijglstf. I Consult rnur doctor. If ho r.trn take It, I I thou do as he uf. IT he tells yon not ■ B to take It. the* don't take H. He knows. W B Lear© It with him. Wear* witling. ■ ii inn i *wvm' i JJ uliijß fti England an electric automobile has recently run 94% miles on one cn-argc. It carried four persons and the average speed was 12 miles an hour. The vehicle weighed 39 hun dredweight and the battery 22 hun dredweight. £ Trilling that Costs. Neglect £ Sciatica and lumbago \ And you may be disabled and $ 'a* Incapacitated for work for 'Jt yt, many Jong days. 5f \ I I St. Jacobs Oil! # Will cure surely, right away, S Q and save "time, mcncy and g suffering. It 2 | Conquers Pain g Price, 25c and 50c. O BOLD BY ALL DEALERS IN MEDICINE. y* Capsicum Vaseline Put up in Collapsible Tubes. A Substitute for Mid Superior to Mustard or any other plaster, unci will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain allaying and curative qualities of this artide are wonderful. It will stop the toothache ut once, and-relieve headache and eetutica. We reoorniuend It as the be3t and safest external counter-irritant known, also ns an oxtern:l remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all rheuma'.ic, nouraUrie and Kouty oemplaints. A trial will prove what we claim for it, and it will ho found to lie invaluable in the household. Many l>oople say "It is the best of all your preparations." Price, 1.1 cents, at all druwists or other deal us, or by sending this amount to us iu pofctoffo stomps we will send you a tube by mail. No article should bo aooeple-1 by the public unless tko same oarrios our label, as otherwlso it is not CHkIiSEBROUGII HANUFACTURING CO., 17 Stroot, Now York City. WET WEATHER WISDOM! \ TH£ ORIGINAL vl t fVXJS 018-ED N \| \j CLOTH INC \l (\ f BLACK OB YELLOW Kf mm KEEP YOU DRY NOTHING ELSE WILL TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES \5 CATALOGUES FREE SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS. A.J.TOWER CO.. BOSTON. MASS. $3.00 one of tha fff buys beet made |j Lh. Platform Scales p ever Sold. Weil made. WILL LAST A LIFE TIME. FULL ! 817.0 Platform. Cutaloguo free. JUNES (HE I'AYB THE FKEI3HT). BIN<IIIA .V'jv ' v v. DROPS Y dentty ridi, w-nir -• i.i, honest husband. *Act ... lira. S 7 .tlnilif 1 -... t i.l.ujiO, 111. r, 11> V AKMNTS WANTKI) 11 • n- i ii J worn ; i x li • v. territory , la li* profits; business permanent IV. V tv. lock iiox -<, Detroit, Mich. Hold Modal nt Fuflalo I'xpnnitlon. McIOIENNV ? S TABASCO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers