ii r I; I v li i' From the Southern Planter. IMPROVING OLD iIaNDS. ' MaEDiTOR,i-At the request of a fr I wrote to Dr. it U- Palmer desiring to communicate a" knowledge whic had derived from experience as to thd mode of improving our old lands. I .you for publication what he says.on th lect. as ne e3vc me permission id uo s end, him lihe best end sub- if I FLY PROOF WHEAT. ' -s I The following article, copied from ,the Winchester (Va.V Republican, will com- mend itself .to the attention of a numerous class I of I our readers who are ene-aed in agricultural pursuits : J.; ! Mr. Gallaher : I observe in your paper of last week Jhat the Fly-Proof Wheat re- who kney,Mackay arid hispropensL thought any one jmight.be benepted by it. cently introdaced in the Valley, and indeed, It is evident that we shall have to resdrt to i may say into the State of Virginia, -lis be lli or some othei! mode for reVorin our ginningito attract the attention cf our ari-worn-out lands. From my owtj experience culturisk iBelieving that any information ; and observation I feel no hesitation insaying upon this subject, however limited,1 may .1.1 L.I! ikJ n.li.J. Ia Li iL. . . '. ! - i'i ' V inai i oeneve mc, wociur s piao u e prove interestine to son most practicable and economical 1 have suggesteu, ' Spring Grove, seen J. MOltTON. Au. 11. 1S43. prove interesting to some of your readers, I will cheerfully state all that' has come into my possession. How the word 'Mediter ranean' became attached to this species of wheat, 1 am unable to say; but I knbw that it Was not originally imported from anv hs 1.19- 827, 1 settled on a farm ol5GO acres, country! borderine unon that sea. T ,in the lower end of Campbell county, ih the tory of its introduction into the U. States, i i Mr. David Houinssworth, a practical and I Munoo M ackay.-t-Tht practical Joker. church experienced roiller, in reply to enquiries on Of all the mad devotees to1 the ?cience of ties well, and a single glance was sufficient the subject of w iat is called the JMed iter- practical joking ol all the inveterate man- jto convmco them lhat a successful hoax nad ranean Wheat,! i;tates that he has ground it, ufacturers of mischief In thisltne of acting, jbeenj played off for their amusercent 'A and finds its average to be about the usual the ;) most systematicaljy -Umublesome that general, titter ran round the place, "nods standard pf good Wheat. It takes five ever'; I heard of, was Mungo acka;, of the and becks, and wreathed smiles"wcre tho assachusetts 13ay. order;- of. the day. &Ien held down their spoit as most men follow MheaJs, and laughed outright : and the ladies cultivate music! as a Irecrca- had to stuff the scented ra'mhrio inin itJ,- might be saitl to follow it mouths, which had been so recently annlieU raiset',nyiof 'this Wheatlhims'eif,'' and' can i as' though it :were hisf-frade.!'.- VVith -Ihem'.-U I lo the' sparklioe' founts above. i I M iiui n;treiYru wnai is lis average jieni 1 was uui me y 'J 7ni j f 111c 1 1 jv lengin sorrteining like order was re- to the acre; but as far asfstetl; in. the -.way;'! liusiness pf life ! ;'It 'wlfolt&tu) raj men t to j stored, !the hymn- sung," the blessin civeri Flour, his opinion is rather favorable. him ; he could not exist withoutia plot against amidst, stined noises of yarious kinds, when P. We hare just seen a gentieman the tranquility j off his neighborhood i he the congregation rose to depart. 'JTie tvidow, who hd ijeen in duht whether cr no( ha layghed but when others w4re n a rage, and pp to Ihis point, feeling strong ill the con- wouid sow any of the Mcditsrranear. Wheat enjoyed life to mark when tfiose around him piousness of having performed "virtuous -" mis Ian, cci navmg just r h Innr mnnti'ti'rfl trnm it r a fill', 't lh I tlVA (f?nilH. r I !H lather llrl tuef aa h hirl I th ctbtr nf iha mirinn. :i .U what, was her astonishment. . - . r w bushels to the barrel, and makes vpry good town pf Boston, on superfine Flour, such as bakers would prefer 1 Others followed the on account of . thd Quantity cf water ihieh the hounds, or it absorbs, Mr.! Hollingsworth has not tibn ; but Mackay mosi ciniausivM kuuuiiiuii yi j t rw ""r" i i win siate in a tew th State of Virginia. It had been tinder r the very worst system the time of its settlement soil being red, its aspect generally was tnore i for thejeircumstance occurred in the Hesse lhat ol a guuy-siao man any ui..fi country;! when the conversation I turned Hundreds! of gullies were everywhere to upon the agriculture cf the two coantrie?. he seen, some from forty to hliy ieei wiae, it was asked of the American, why j with ' llCOUr KIP rllmif - ri im i u m nrt.n! rmlArl best he ha$ had fir. a long tinje, and is there- grown to msjfs estate, leain him a com- J mirthful, but fore determined to try the wheat aijain, and tortafcle indepentlencie! and from tKat period I whcn Mackay t : . ' . ti: : ? . 1 'IS.- - W s andj nights .in a crusade I one of his npbellcounty, ih the tory of its introduction into the U. States, would'tpui linKis j whola '. crop ' with it,.-ifj he he passed his dcy )nofrfny, perhaps, in I willstatein a few' words. 'J-Severa!;. years' had theseed. ,J. '., ;:. i Jj ' i ; j against (he peace It hail been tinder agoran American gentleman who wastry TheAmericait Farmer in a note to an ar- ton. i He was an of management r elling if Holland received and aecepled an ticle faWujink 'tile cultivation of the Medi- ,y " his ha"! wa ,ent in, 1755. IThe invitation to dine with a number of HeWians fpr.a,n whiiUnv. '! eTery Inan 8 ha iteenerally washiore ffor the pircumstanr nrpiirrt in thl IIpui. e ; , . . t s hand of every w and as deep as-atSmmon house top previous o'ecupant hail annually expehde.d rAm rn in iwn hundred dollars for corn! An intelligent lady Remarked lo mehhit the land was so thin! that wo would lave to'double it.' .: J . I. : -' I 'From this appalling picture the que it ion wilt naturally arise j 'why did youpurch is'e?' Th answer lis that H thought it a sui able stand for the practice of medicine, and that from some eighty orj ninety aires of creek hoitdms I should be able to draw a suriport until the exhausted 4and could be reclainfedj' I tAi r.r.t l.tScWlPit i Hp. farm into four eaual ! shifts, and cultivated in corn, followed 6y- j wheat, where tho land was thought td be 1 bod enbuzh to pcduce it, and where lriot, n oats or rye In consequence oi tne in having. good wheat crops? The latter icpucu inai ii was ciouoijess in a great mea sure attributable to an insect which it was supposed was iotroduced into the U. States in the wheat sent from Holland diinnor the' Revolutionary War fcr the subsistence of the liritish army, which was known, in this i i - "- -M-a w 'm eouniry as xne ncssian i ly. j ne ie9Sians were amused at the reply, but admitted that some kinds of wheat , in that country were liable to injury by insects, while -thftre was a species in very ceneraii. use inai resisteu their attacks. I ! rose fibm his seat,' lifted tm paralytic hands, and took his hat against (he peace of tha good; people of Bos- from a peg above his Jiead. and with the ' He wag an Ishmaeljtish iwit : for tru I other began searching hisrnat nnrttM fnr i,ta was janstTevefy man, and gloves!. Though the unkindest 'cut of all hand aganst him," and the was yet to come, for Mackay havine drawn f every woman too, from the Charles Uhem on. and onened ihe ni innr t.lrn..i "We have hearu an objection raised against River to; South BostcrU and fti many miles! and out this'auestion in n tnn. ihi '.t :Ai this variety of wheat that it was too thick ipund the villages,! byfa sernreircle of which slnuating, but still loud enouirh for fiftv neo- ! skinned and gave too much bran; we.' were,' the ancient capitolbf tihe lanjlof steady hab-1 pie to hear : I ! j- J 1 therefore, pleased; to hear,, the other day, its is enclosed. l:YW hi!5 S i I " Is it not madrtri n mih M;L' from a ! very observing culturist, that in tnis j One pleasant Sunday morning, Mackay ?re to operate vpon a Jinelookih" Roman particular t haq changed its character, Jandl went to church bylirn?8, iqdkhis seat in a pose like mine, than vpon such a Queer ..no .o !hn -l..n..A,l nniil-.n . W I . . ... 71 ..'..J.L'il . Si li I I .'ill. I J . "...: - vtt uu aa linn sniimcu us me ,xjiuc oicm. ceuiiai new, iusi unuer ine ssnauowi oi me i ttiiie snuo as tou int' r'r : 1 .If V v m puipu, sai uoii upngnuwun itis arms extena- . j sreat it The! American gentleman was presented with sonSe of this whaat, which he hrought to this country land sowed unon his farm in I Dplawira. "'55nhpfiiipntl v. a small Iniiantitv poverty oC the soil rye was generally jpre- WM f07Praed to the Patent Oflicekt Wash ftrred, as oats would not grow hiRh endughl ins,toni' where attracted thb attention of to be cut. My aim, from the hrst, w: s t o j James H. Taliaferro, Esq. a son cfthe late f clover and plaster all of tho land m s nall j representative in Congress from! ihelNorth l grains but, from the paucity of my mdan. i ern Neck district by whom it was lintro much could not oe uone in inaway. iorj juced nto Virginia: and its ability to resist several years. Experience soon taughti me j ,he atucks of the Fly successfully Nested. that one fourth ot my .lana wpum not pro- You will therefore oerceive that the' name SECRET .WORTH KNOWING. now to mane, three pair ol boots last, as long as six,! and longer. The following' extract from Colonel Maca rone'S " Seisonahle Hints," which appeared in the Mechanic's Magazine, idated Feb ruary; 8. 1833:- After statingvtha utility of sheepskin clothing for persons whose em ployment rentiers it necessary that they should be much out of doors, &e he says, ' I Will not conclude without isiVitingthe at tention of y bur; readers to a cheao and easy meinpo oi preserving ineir ieet irom wei, and their boots from wcarinz. I have had duce enough to support my ilamily ot ten or twelve in number. And that the bitter way would be to resort to a ring fence: and cultivate the flat land and such places as re- 'Mediteranean,, given to the wheat,has no more applicability than it has to our common Indian corn. There may hive beenja spe- quired cleaning up, t while I wa manuring from gome one of the States boideJing on tie thinner parts ol the iarm., iiyairrthas the Mediterranean sea, but, if so, the "Fly eu, witn an apparenttj degree lot unnatural I he late t air atRdchester, NJ Y must riftiuiiy, aown oytnjs;smes.i was pre- pave been an immense aflair. It irestima senlly surrounded )y half ja ozen females, ed that there were -t least Jour thousand nearly all of whomj 're sirangers to his :wheeled carriages there, and ten thousand person, and in a liltleUime the whole church ior8es,'and in ihe show ground some sixtv Was -full l.to joverfloWig.f J.T3ie- psalm was Durham hulls, twenty stud horses several sung, the prayer vafaid, Upe sermon de-j jhundred sheep arid liogs, a thousand horses Jivered injthe preatljer's est style. He jof all kinds, &c. Eleven hundred sat down dwelt particularly onjthe reqliirements of the to the Agricultural scupper. great precept of brbtierly ove, upon the .1 ' ; . 4 - S i" ' i beautyf universal rfevolec' on the plea- ; THE PERSONA ii APPEARANCE'OF sure which arises nonly (rbrn clothing the j p . WASHINGTON. 1 j l ..-u a , ccuu,s um.g, uui iium . Here is an extract fro:n the Editor's Table ienlion to tne minute and graceful courtesies IL r .u - Tr .- t . ,r - - ' . i i k rh.rMJp. nf.H-U tX iK litmmv I 'lne Knickerbocker, for September;' . v iiivji w i iiivi ii y i w ; 3 f ) 4- -? ft only three pair of boots for the last six years, path is softenedand aaorned In the langu- 1 r nV, a Personaiappearance was that of tho uu siiuks, auu i umiik. i siism noi require age oi ine critics in susn niauers, inere ir . " ccou acree any oiners ipr ine next six ytars to come, was noi a ciry eye in line place;," me appeal '. , ucaru an.oiu gentleman say, not tiaU lound its way to e,very hpajt. . All Mac- Jong ago, that when clerk in Philadelphia 1'ha reason is that. I treat them in the followi- in manner: 1 put a pound of tallow and' Pi oof Tha Wheat", is another 'article. this Wheat is fly-proof I cannot be ever been to raise as roucn manure as l pos sibly could, without neglecting other neces- wry iniDTO -.. uv J I permilled lo doubt, nd, being fl, 'roof, I luiii a.-.o, .v-, v,, ' 1 " .U.-oW-b oca 9K a ir tiiRpf frnm' 1 Vi rnsl put in the stables and farm pens they afford ,, tli j li kr. i,:r,ia ii : .'U::rt r-..ui. u . u-uA.:.; -..m. i'i than the common kinds. It is my opinion While, at the same tme, they absorb andl.. . i ' r t. n-n nJvu, rU . retain the liquid manure, which etherise Lhe ,y altacks ,he; stalk of wheat before it ..' is lointcd. and of course in a youna and Will would be lost. I The present condition of my jfarm it i n l i ; i ten wneiner my euona nive ueen in vain. I' Ml ' t ll L .il. . . .1 . I I i snouiu noi negieci losay, inn as soon as all of my plied land got in a condition W ! i .1 . 1 in L I to bring grass, 1 again uiviueu my larminto 't.;rj.i--' I- i live, insicau 01 lour sums, ana inai now we fallow one, so as lo have, annually, on hi corn and two in small grain. ; i I l made no tobacco until my fields every tender state : the first shoot is either killed or so much damaged. that lataral branches, or suckers sre thrown out from the root (as we observe from the root of a tree after the tree has been cut down) which are so laie , ' - . -..IB in maturing that the -heat of summer catch e3 the wheat green and tender and liable to be destroyed by a lew hours ol sultry wea cuyci, MMU uu a ncil a -fi.1,1 a .nmPlImP nrems ta surh a drre a , " .- I 1 " 7 that fsrmeis have been known to deliberate r i I ii r " ' . il.- 'til''. I lor uavs oeiore commencing wie wneai iitr 9 i - taken mantle. of. ereen. - ; f utu.. r. r rl I 1 no mat uujcui ui iic jariiier, mi rei Claiming woruoui muus, iiiuuiu ue ip exEcntl his manures so as to get as much stuck it grass as ne can. rpr this purpose 1 ttiink vest. half a poundscf rosin into a pot on the fire : when! melted and mixed, I warm the boots, and apply the hot stuff wkh a painterVbrush, until Ineitherthe sole nor the upper leather win suck m any more. I ii it is uesireu mat the boots should immediately take, a polish, lissolve an dunce of beeswax in an ounce of spirits of turpentine, tb which? add a. tea spoonful ol-lampblack. A day or two after the boots haye been treated with tallow and rosinj lub. over them 4he wax in turpentine, but not before the , fire. Thus the exterior will have a coat ol wax alone, and shine like a minor. Tallow, or any. other grease, be comes rancid, and rots the stiching as well as the leather ; bui the rosin gives it an antiseu- tic quality which preserves the whole. Boots or.shoes should he large, so as to ad mit of wearing cork soles. Qork is such a bad- conductor pf heat, that, with it in the boot, 'the feci are. always warm on the coldest stone! floor. the calm sweet little Thus you will perceive that I chaige al- most every evil to which our wheat crops '--so as to put a bushel of plaster to the abrc m will generally stick ! well, especially if the' t thinner phces have a little top dress ,nJ But little grazing should be dpne except on the field intended for corn theUnsuirJg iUarJ ier uic iuii uiosst and lhat, principally a ing of. the clover, i U. D. PALME ca a. a 20 ars Profitable Farming. The Ul ....' , ! I . Zctte stales lhat a person purchased acres of land in Wiscwnsin'al two dol per acre, making 8150. He paid for, brdak jng it up and sowing, 552 an acre, and for s fencing S100O, His seed cost -Vim about dk t AAA a I li a! If'At J ArAn... I . plUUU iiiurCf iiiul "iiuio si iau was 1 . . . 1 . 1 . ri . "1 1 aro onViiPpt. in the hpssian b lv: and it seems mixture ot red clover herdsgrass tirrfo hr lhat ifJindd this evil was inflicted upon us greensward seed. &c.,w,th plaster .of p, rU b lhe,Hessians during the Revolutionary sown late in February c-r eaHy ,n Ma ch Jr be ides havim: drubbed them! pretty well at .that time for their interference in our affairs, live are at last indebted to them for a preventive of its pernicious e fleets. j "From all I can learn (for I am neither a farmer nor a miller, though I have paid some attention to the farming interest, and only regret ihat my zeal has not -been rewarded by a corresponding degree of benefit to those interests from all that I can learn, I am induced to believe that this wheat will not yield as well, either in quality or quantity of flourjas the favbiite kinds sowed in the Valley i but I presume this matter will( be thoroughly tested this fall by our millers, .-uan 1 h result! will be made public' Let about S-1500. . From." tli he . ...I.. - . J . . nr . hnt. in' Inn . r-a iamJ jirsi year uj uujmsu, "j ovi,p which is 21,700 bushels, worth; at least 50 cents above the expense of harvesting L This will amount to $10,850, or in other -words, he will piy (or his landi getting it Under and enclosing, and all expenses, ind have a risins of SG000 net profit. - . i realized the1 this result be what it may, this wheat; has nroved to yield well; and if it is what it. sidvdcates claim for it, that is, Fly Proof, and therefore less liable to be injured by the is a desideratum long sought, anu will be of immense advantage to iu ivhrdi ronntrv ,...T.T - : - , -.. ' ' - -i- m Yours, frc. i . rust, it one that ADVANTAGES OF AGRICULTURAL 'ly JOURNALS. ':; In the latter part of the sixteenth century, Sir Walter Raleigh had made the discovery that the potatpe was a nutritious vegetable. He then introduced it into cultivation among his tenants; but it spread slowly, and was not brought over to this eouniry by .emi grants, till a, company ot Irish Presbyter ians settled in Londonderry, New Hamp shirej 3nd it was forty years more, before this excellent root had become a regular dish on the farmer's tablej even in few England. Nowi by " roeansf agricultural journals, how soon would the discovery of any new vegetable as valuable as the Potatoe, become known throughout the land, and.be brought into general cultivation?. . We will venture to say,' if only a single bushel were this day in existence, five years hence the country would be pretty fairly stocked with it; so rapidly woijild ja (knowledge of its good qualities and the profit andj advantages of cultivating it1 be, disseminated. And thus the agricultural papers of the present day, Would be tpe means of accomplishing as much! in five years, as was done in the olden time withoqt their aid; in two centuries. And ire theyj not now annually bringing about the same result, though perhaps in a less degree, (than the supposed one stated above ? j What man, then,' with the least regard for tho progress! of his profession; the developerhent of the hidden wealth and resources of lliis country: or the increased comforts and happiness of his species, will refuse; to subscribe for one or more asricul J tural papers ?i-American Agriculturalist. W 8 'meuiate neighbors were sensibly af- he used to walk two or three squares every 4ectea, ne wepi wnn tnem the big tears I morning, to meet Washington ail he came chased each other dorwn his cheeks. But ATa.i,, . u- ' -1 u i ' ?; .. . , j uown market st. to eee his quarters. Tiro kerchiefs, wipin away the! water that the hgni,yV rtid-.he.l,of hU movements, orator, like at sscond: Moses had. bv the grace of his salutation, and the calm sv strokes of his eloquence, caused to gush from ness of his smile, were beyond description or their flinty hearts', Mack held his arms stifl comparison." Sitting the other day on a IofJ anu. siraigiu, wnue uum a guss oi uquiu sui- scarcely a stoned throw from where Andre iiicod nil ioad i no in art no rt I ha I I a r ' . . I '"r-r V i.- --'"""- ; was captured, and not far from! he irien'is were uui iuwio ouserve ims:-ior, ? l L:t-?. J i i-' ' .-i-li: : . . . i switli a re volulionarv Inatruii. rmiilnn. i. ing exniuueu, ins - icp, was rainer a nanu- 'i, ' i ' , f some face. 1 He wriggled, fidgeted, looked, lhe PajIsy of aKe pointed out tu us the confused, and interesting, but raised no spot, over the Tappan sea which lay before hand, searched lor. no handkerchief, and ;us, where Andre was hiinsr,. and seeiined.to be-in. derdistess.:'iJ'At- length I (that la'y the troops! 'spread out ja' young' widow lady, 1 who sat Leside him, yark alono- ov frnnVih- mif... remarked that he wa ijl at ease, and (Heaven U VeVWlanWpi3 M u T . T jblessthe feniale hear fit alys melts at any f Terf;,anck ? when ArnoU SmvMtPrinus sonoWyfiPr orlor t rln came down to Ins barge,' said he 'from this cast;looks, and flutilrliig pause?j she said in de : having got nevs of the treason by ex ah under tone, " I ' f ;j ; I j press ; but the gun burst at ' the second! dis- Pfav, sir, is there; anything the matter I charge and took off lees to the thtVa of one with you ? You appear to he unwell." j poor fellow, who was brousht totour 'Louse.-1 Ah ! madam," .(Jfteathe Mackay, in ,a (,ul he ded in two KoUrs.. ! The! army ihen whisper, " I am a poor partflyt c, and have fairoini-,tr..f ,'i ' i net lh iicp nt inv arma I hnilorh m ir foora I i i " isitiau, have flowed in answer to the touching senti ments pf the pastor;i have! not the power jtb Wipe them away fC' ' - uj-:-.--" . ' ,"i ' In an instant, a far!Vand .was thrust into a recticule, and a w l i t.e handkerchief, scen ted with otto of roseSjij-was applied to . Mac Ikay's eyes, the fair Sam a ri tab seeming to re joice in this firsUoppoVlunity of practising where, on thick ) and He lived what had been so recently preachd, appear , ed to polish them Jwjth riglit good will. fYrrn on them: it was beautiful to see. rm and unirerpal is. this testimbnv of the When she had done; Mackay looked unut- Myc terable obligations, but w hispered that she would increase them a thousand fold if she would as it wanted it very much, ! conde scend io wipe his noski Thji novelty of the request was thought siothing! of ; the I widow was proud of the praniplitute in the recollection of AVashiiigtotV. she had dPs- , and to a played in succoring' the dist ressed person who "has donf one Kind action, the -zLlA --' , I IY.1 .' l.tJ-, ' i. !' i seconq seems casy.jcr w wniieruiaiiuKi-i cmci cre rait eut-waterJ but the moment T . - (. . -I?-:. - T ' I IV enveloped in the fplds of Ihe cambric, lie gave such a sneeze as-inaueme wnoie cnurrn ring lit wasj in fadf; mor like a ; neigh. The minister paused lA'givingout the hymn; the deacons put on ineir spectacles to see what cWld be the matter ; and n an instant, I ' SCARCITY OF MINISTERS.3 The Mobile. Herald says : Rev. Jefferson Hamilton, of the Meihodift Church, is! tho only minister now ori duty in this city ex elusive of Catholic priests, and Rrv. Dr. Rorl ing, presiding elder of llie Methodist Church but who dees imt reside in the. city. Tito of and I saw General Washington almost every" cjayj ' He was a noble looking man; his couii lenance ;was terriblyj pleasant. . lie did not till k much, but even the little children fairfy loved him; and they used to gather about the door of his marquee e very morning id see himi and he used t par. their heada and smile How dni- ciirrence has nut happened before since the vanoui ciiuicnes were?orffanizru. . ;j ; ; I .. . he Pre-ident name is honor and inlecii says the Madbouian: I - My .name is or i: kit' : said a ruriawav youth : ho was jSIackaV and li ?arc,er ,n 8?,aJ lh"trP' V ! ' .... 1- . Ji... K every fVC tv iuiucaupuu iiuuH) iuu inui i ! . i . r" i- Vi I, T J . j ... . iji " t k ., Ju- I A niapolis, some ytars since. ! "oulie, you airoiniH...f .H. ' f u" j dd.n anl in -.officer-: in the crowd, " yur uiiui pit W p.mvm.,m j name is ISiII Urown. and you owe Mr?. Knini tne general uuiuiieiy; ruc uai acquueu, u i per three dollar and a half for boating and convulsively grasped the noe. I washing and here's a writ; so cbmef alongj 1 hete were hundreds ot Persons in that tax da ' - Louisville Journal. V 1 ;; V 4 : ii1- -1 H.' "-:,' ' r;.;'!-f ! f - 4 ! '" " ".- -.'.'' '' ;J" i ' ' ' i-' I - ' ; ' " V f "' ! ' U '-; 1 s '. ; .' i .:iL,i w ' "I ' -- ! - - i- ; . v' f ; -i I' it. ;.r ; ; ". .:-:' PJ-iHi't-i i's'l 1 1 1 - ill Ii I lis i;!' If

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view