CAtt, gear Publishers will confer a favor by mentioning the prices of all books sent to this Department. The SERMONS or FRED. W. ROBERTSON, of Brighton, have already taken their place among the classics of the language. There is much both in their fiats and their excellencies to insure their success. They appeal to an age which the cease less jar and jangle .of dogmatic theologians has unsettled on many points of orthodox doctrine, but which is sufficiently alive to spiritual issues to welcome fresh and vigorous thought on re ligious topics. They speak with no authority but that of the author's earnestness of conviction; they are so utterly candid and sincere that they make you feel that tliese'words were not learned by rote, but stood in earnest, vital relation to the man's life. They eschew the speech of all schools —Broad Church, Low. Church, High Church, and Rationalist alike. They deal with matters of di rectly personal concern; they force home the great principles of Christian morality at,all times. That they are deficient in their presentation of several cardinal Christian doctrines will be the judgment of all Evangelical readers. The Atone ment is apprehended in them mainly on its moral and regenerating side; its relation to 'the satis faction of the Divine Law is either denied or slurred over. The Christian Sabbath is treated in a similarly objectionable style. Indeed the want of a proper conception of 'law is- their au thor's great dpfect. But even with those who deplore these short comings, Mr. Robertson is and always will be a favorite author. His suggestiveness, his clear ness, his thoughtfulness in treating of ordinary matters, are not to be forgotten. And many lead ers will doubtless rejoice that the competition of his English publishers has forced Messrs, Tick nor & Fields to publish a• Popular Edition of his Sermons in two volumes, from the same plates in which their five volume edition is printed, though not on such fine paper. They sell, this edition at the low price of three dollars. We hope, that they will issue , his "Life and Letters" and his " Lectures and Addresses" in another volume of the same bulk. The same publishers issue, in a neat volume, a book with so striking a title that at first it looks sensational : THE SEVEN CURSES OF LONDON," by James Greenwood, the "Amateur Casual," and author of seVeral wdrks of 'fact and fiction. Mr. Greenwood has devoted no small pare'of his life to the study of . the various , forms of sin and misery, which abound in the greatest of metropo lises, and serve to realize. the dictum of ;Jeffer son " Great cities are great sores on the :body politic." On one occasion he-passed , a night amid the temporary population of the casual ward of a London poor-house, and electrified all readers of English by his narrative of his, es perienoes. The seven heads under which.lhe sums up the social evils of the great city are Neglected Child ren, Professional Thieves, Professional Beggars, Fallen Women, Drunkenness, Betting Gamblers and Waste of Charity. His book is full of curious facts and valuable suggestions, ; which may be of use in other cities. One fact we notice,— the professional thieves of London are decreasing in number at the rate of 7 per cent. a year. The book may be read with safety as a deli cate, and with confidence as .a reliable, handling of the unsavory topics to which it is devoted. But it must be read with caution also; because it deals with a single aspect of English Society, and the wide eirculatibn of Reformatory works of this clasi in America , has created an utterly false and injurious impression as to English society as a whole. Thank God there is an England which Kaye's "Social Condition of England," Carlyle's " Past and: Present," Lester's " Decline and Fall of England," and other such works as this of Mr. Greenwood's do not tell us' about, and these, however valuable,, if not read with judgoient, may mislead. Pp. 336, 16mo. Price $1.50. Princeton ) like the Bourbons, " learns nothing and forgets nothing;" unless, indeed, it be its own liberal origin and that peaceful' poliey which char acterized it till 1835. The COMMENTARY ON THE WESTMINSTER. CONFESSION, which. the 0. S. Board of Publication have just pnblish6d, and which is from the pen of Prof. Hodge, of the West ern Colony of Princeton, embodies just such a view of the Calvinistic system as we had expected. The letter of the Confession, and all its Cocceian glosses, are accepted as the very truth of the Re formed system, while all protest and dissent of Calvinistic writers in matters of detail, are kept out of sight. That Christ died to secure the sal_ vation of the elect only, that He bore the penalty of sin, that:the Covenants are these of works made with Adandand of grace made with Christ,—in a word, the whele.lettei bf the Confession and the whole mass of •Princeton traditiOn and gloss are set forth as of, oAd ; less offensively, indeed, than in his work ,oir the "Atonement," because with less of controversid bitterness 'and more abundant quotations of Serifothre to relieve the text. Pp. 549, —The New Jerusalem Messenger gives the following concernin g lte — Hon. Henry J. Bige low, who succeeds the late 'How. Henry J. Ray mond as editor of the New York .nme " k 11 -r. Bigelow is a biucere and avoweoprew, 91k,91,'Pa man, (Swedenborgian ) ) anti rekiice that T he has resumed his connection with th'dlitelitPulider THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST, 26, 1869. circumstances which will give him frequent op portunities of rendering service to the Church." LITERARY ITEMS. —The editor of the Kirchenfreund, as a direc tor of Wittenberg College, (Lutheran) insist on the election of a German professor, or at least on one whose special duty it would be to impart instruction in the German language. In Dr. Sprecher the College has a fine German scholar ; but as the study of German is optional with the students, they neglect. In Germany, says the editor of the Kirchenfreund, a teacher, clergy man, or professor, would be ashamed if he could not also speak English; but in America, men are proud in not being able to understand a word of German. These remarks he makes for the spe cial benefit of the 161 students of Wittenberg College, but be apprehends that they will not'do much good, because he fears that hardly, Single one of them will, learn enough German to under stand what he ha's written. —The wealthiest novelist in Germany is John Tourgenueff, the Russian exile. Berthold, Auer bach received •since 1844 about $120,000 'for his books, and has accumulated a wry handsome fortune. Carl Gutzkow is poor., Louisa Muhl bach, who rreeeived. about $BO,OOO since she entered the field of .literature,•bas.spent•every thing and is now obliged to write for a living: Fritz Reuter, the .1 5 1att,dentsche romanaist is in comfortable circumstances ; his "- books being more popular and saleable than those any High-German novelist. He has a splendid t vilLa near Eisenach, infull, view of the Warthb - ur... Ferdinand' Spieihagen, who, now, at the head of 'the younger generatiOn' of German roman cists, is making money by his nov,els, but spends more than he earns., Gustave Fyeytig his .a handsome competency, and saves annually 'a thousand dollars or two. —A committee of fourteen, seven from each branch pf the, about to be united .Presbyterian Churches, have issued in Chicago, a prospectus of a new weekly paper a forthcoming organ of said - Churches. The basis is a' joint stock com pany with eapital enough to insure the probation inevitable =to every new periodical. The North western Presbyterian, is discontinued; so, with a clear coast, cordial denominational support and judicious conduct, we do not see room for even the shadow of failure.—.Y. W. Advocate.• —Messrs. Nesbit and Co., the well-known book-publishers •of London, are about to. issue from their press " The Memoir of. Rev. James D. Burns," a minister of the Free , Church of Scotland who died in 1864. The preparation of this Memoir was the last literarPwork, of ,tbe late excellent and lamented Rev. Dr. • James Hamilton, of the Regent Square (Scotch) Church, London. It will have tnelattelaoly ,in terest to many , a reader. Biuttiaitunto, DR. AUGUSTUS THOLTTOL BY IL S. BURRAGE, A. M Recently I gave the readers of the' Watch man a rapid sketch of the life of Dr. Tho luck. I wish: now to' speak of his , i)resent position and influence. Although in the seventy-first year of his age, he still, retains his place at the head ofthe Theological Fac ulty of the University of Halle, and is ac tively engaged in all the daties of his office. His lectures are largely attended ; indeed, more so than those of the other professors. Daring the last autumn and winter he went through the Epistle to the Romans, and 'al though he had lectured on this epistle for many years, he prepared his course anew, dictating each morning to his amanuensis the licture for the day. 'ln the lecture:Town, however, he very rarely referred to his man uscript, his prodigious memory holding-the contents—ifnot the exact form of the written lecture. His Greek Testament lay : open on the desk before him, and as, he is very near sighted, he was obliged in turning to it, to bend over until his face almost touched the printed page. Then having caught the word or words which demanded explanation, he would raise his head, taking occasionally a large pinch of snuff, and give, the exegesis, speaking fast or slow; according to the im portance of the ,remark. At times he would speak. so ,slowly that he might, be _said 'to dictate. Here and there he would intro duce an anecdote, or some apt quotation, yet never for its, own sake. In Tholuck's best moods, 'however, one who'had, studied exegesis under. Dr. Hackett would long for the days gone by. And, this, reminds me of a remark of Dr. ,Tholuck which is worthy of mention here. He waaspeaking of the leading commentaries which have ap peared in America—those of Stuart, Hodge, &c.—and he said that he regarded Dr.' Hack ett's commentary on, the Acts of the Apos tles as the very best. It is also worthy of remark in the same vonnectiOn that the only American exegetical works which are no ticed ,in Denier's "History of. Protestant Theology,"—a work recently published, which even a Roman Catholic reviewer calls, an honor to Protestant theology—are Dr. Hackett's Acts of the Apostles and Dr. Co ,naet's Matthew. Dr. Tholuck's influence on his students does not cease with his labors in the lecture room. ' The mornin g lecture ends at 11 o'clock. FioM that hour until one o'clodk the doctor takes his daily walk, -accbMpanied always by two students, who have been summoned for thia purpose by Carl, Tholuck's' well known man-servant. Ifthe weather is fair, the trio, the doctor in di craentre, wend their way into the suburbs of, Halle, especially by the road which leads to Wittekind, or by that which follows the course of the Seale to Giebichenstein ; if it is a rainy day the walk is in the covered way in the . garden back of the doctor's house. It is on these walks that Dr. Tholhck studies the Mind aid 'character of his studenti. Question ' folloWs question' in rapid successioa . , and Very rarely does the 'doctiir rotting to his houge without having quite accurately 'as- certained the quality and aims of the men with whom he has walked. On the other hand the students, too, have had an oppor tunity for asking questions, and many a one, using the words of Wagner in Goethe's Faust, has said, at the close of such a walk, " To walk with you, Herr Doctor, is both honor and gain." These social walks do not belong to Tholuck's old ago merely, they date back to his early years; and hardly an American has visited Halle, who has not carried away some pleasing reminiscences connected with them. The example is one which might well be followed by those who occupy like positions on this side of the At lantic. Walks of this kind furnish that in tercourse with older and more cultivated minds which every true student , desires, and at the same time they afford the professor a better opportunity for personal influence over those whom he 'daily meets in the class room than can be otherwise obtained. Dr. Tholuck, hciwever, is not only a pro fessor, he is also the: University preacher. This is an office which he has long filled, as he was made an assistant to the University preacher.soon after his arrival in Halle. In a short time his audiences weia so much larger than those of his senior that the lat ter very wisely - resigned, and Tholuck was made his successor. Here in this old cathe dral he has wielded an influence perhaps greater than in his lecture-room; for Many of the sermons here delivered have' been printed and •scattered as wide ati 'thufGerl man langnage is spoken, while some ;of them have been translated and have had a wide circulation in foreign countries. The 'first sermon of Dr. Tiklack which I read wits'on Luther; arid by a happy coincidence the first one I heard from his lips was on the same 'subject; ii, very appropriate one for the day,:since a few days before occurred the anniversary of Luther's nailing his theses to the door of the church in Witten berg, and two days 'after, November 10th, was Luther's birthday. A large number: of students - were present, sitting, for the most part, on the benches which occupy the space around the pulpit, While the rest of the large church was crowded with men and women, representatives of the leading fami lies in the • City. The services opened with the singing; by the congregation; ef a verse of a hymn commencing, "Arta: us .with power from the Lord," during which Tho luck, in his preaching robes,) entered the an from n ante-room and his place' in the reading desk below th pulpit Dr. Tholuck then read a short ' - prayer, after which a choir of students in hp organ loft sang, without accompaniment Cordau's " Je sus, rny Redeemer, come to t e aid of Thy servant's flock, Thou .who h st ,purchased all with Thine own precious ood." As the last notes of the anthem died away among the distant arches, Dr.. Tholu k • said, " The Lord be with" Yon," and th congregation replied, singing, "And' wit thy, spirit' "Glory be to God in the highes," added. Tho luck ; and the choir respond d, 4 'Peace on earth and good will to men. Amen." After another short prayer, to which the congre gation responded "Amen," A°, ,choir sung Vulpin's "Blessed be God iar - the highest, together with His only horn Son, who has made satisfaction for us all. Hallelujah." Then to Dr. Tholuck's . " Lift up year hearts," the congregation, singing,' replied,." We have lifted our hearts to the Lord?' The reading of the so-called Apostles' Creed fol lclived, and I never shall forget the appear ance of Tholuck, as, .drawing himself up to his fall height, he said, "And now. let us with the whole Christian Church on, earth, declare our faith,: I believe in Ged,"'&c., Tholtick repealing the wOrdi and the don gregation-reEiponding• "Amen." A short an them followed, and then a'hymn. At the Close of :the hymn, Tholuck, -who, in the mean time * had retired to the ante-room, aseended the pulpit, and announced as' his text 2 Cor. 4: 5, the whole congregation standing while the passage 'was read. 'He commenced his sermon by 'an allusion to the 'dedication of the Luther memorial at Worms, in the preceding" summer, to the anniversary of the nailing of the theses 'to the door Of the church in Wittenberg, whfch occurred a,few days before; arid to the cele bration-of Luther's birthday, which was So soon to follow. , It is well', he said, that d these festiveays are stilliiernembered by. , the German people. :Then he spoke of Lu ther,' of hi's great gifts, ' intellectual and, spiritual :''yet, it ,is not on account of these that we honor him - , he said ; it is because he - preached Jesus 'Clirist, and• the forgiveness of, sins through faith in Him. In closing he turnedto the Students and asked, " lf Luther Were to come among us to-day, what would he say to you, young Men?" Then as if Luther had"indeed appeared •in the place; he poured fOrth •a: tide of 'earnest exhorta tion which might 'well have come from the lips of the fiery reformer himself. It was a plea for the exercise of a warm, earnest Christian faith; such a'pleaaS could cot' e only from a deep experience. A verse of a hymy`folloired,, and then the congregation 'quietly withdrew. It was an occasion never to be forgotten. I heard Dr. Tholuek preach several times -afterwards, and ,also his col league, Dr. Beyschlag, and can well under- Stand the remark which a colonel in the Prussian army once made to me ; "When I hear Prof. Beyschlag I am pleased, but when I hear Dr. Tholuck, I am ,edified." This year Dr. Tholuck celebrates his fif tieth jubilee—that is, it is' fifty years since he received his appointment as .professor and at some time during the year he•pro poses to gather around him all those who have in' his long and laborious life served ' him as amanuenses. The • Univertity of Halle' will also probably celebrate this 'fif tieth jubilee of its senior professor; and would it not be a fitting' recognition , 'of many kin'dnesses if thoseen this side of-the Sea who have received the attentions and enjoyed the hospitalities of the venerable professor ' should come together, and, as; a body,'Send him a friendly greeting? , • , EaVing passed now his threescore years and ten, Dr. Tholuck naturally expects a re lease from his watch-post. Patiently, though weary from bodily sufferings, he awaits the call, as he said to me on that last night, for ever sacred in my memory, as the last night is with all those who have known, for any length of time, this truly sainted man : " I know not how long the Lord may wish me to go back and forth through these streets in the performance of my duties at the TJni vergity, as I have done for so many years; but as long as He wishes me to do so, I am willing to go, and when he is ready for me to. depart, I shall receive the summons with joy." ,The king of Prussia sent Dr. Tholuck, during the last winter, the Maltese cross of the''order of the Red Eagle, the highest honor which one can receive in- Germany unless of royal blood. To me that day,- B 0 full of gladness to all of Tholuck's friends, was only, a, faint emblem of that more glo riOuis day when to him the sacred promise shall be fulfilled, "Be thou faithful unto death, and I' will give thee a crown of life." —The Watchman and Reflector. HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN MINISTRY. In the apostolic age there, was but one rank of ministers, sometimes termed elders and at others' bishops. These' names were evidently - designations of the same 'office and the same perions, being as fully synony mous/ as are the terms pastor, ,minister, clergyman„ &c. at present. See Acts 20 : 17 ; 28. Tit. 1: 5, 7. Phil.l : 1. 1 Tim. 3: I;l3:This fact . ' is als4• - distinctly affirmed by Jeronie, the celebrated and confessedly most learned Latin thurch-father of the earlier centuries. " Presbyter and Bishop," says he, " are the same. office,, and until by the insti gation or the devil, 'divisions arose in re ligion, and men beian to say I am of Paul, and I Of Apollos, - and. I of Cephas, the churches ;were governed by the joint coun sel of the presbyters." , After death had re moved the apostles and their 'immediate disciples, had naturally exerted a con trdlling inflaence in - the churches; the pres byters (i. e. elders)" in cities who generally presided at the. provincial; Synods in the third century, gradually acquired influence over those in smaller neighboring churches, the title of bishop was gradually confined -to them, whilst, the less prominent ministers Were still termed presbyters, i. e. elders. Yet -their ordination was the same. Each of ,them ,was a presbyter or elder, but ,the hishop • had priority, in that whilst every bishop was a presbyter, not every presbyter was a bishop. In short the bishop was pri mus inter pares, first among his equals. The dignity of: the bishops was gradually in creased, and thus the church lapsed from the primitive simplicity of her government. The next important change in the posi tion of the ministry, resulted from the be lief which prevailed in the third 'century, that a compact union was necessary in the, external • organization of the church, of which bishops and councils', or, synods, were to, be the cementing bonds. The moral unity l or essential'identity of purpose, in all engaged in promoting the kingdom of God, is Obvi ously just. But' the necessity of external unity of Organization throughout the.whole ohureh; conflicts with' the primitive purity of'' Ministers, as well as 'with the indepen dence of each individual congregation of believers, as„ constituted by the -.apostles. The ,idea ,of one universal (i. A. Catholic) church, tended greatly to increase the dig nity and prerogatives of diocesan bishops. After Churbh -and- State had been united' under Constantine and his.successors, these Christian emperors, doubtless from,,the best of motives, conferred, various • privileges., on the church ,and her ministers; nor were the bishops theMselves sloW'to improve every opportunity for adding to their immunities. The clergy! were released from• Various civil duties. Church, property was for a, season , exeinpted from taxation. Under the merle ror Jastinian, the bishOp.s hid 'Civil jurisdic tion assigned giant over' mOnksi nuns a,rk'd clergy.' These concessions to ,niinisters in volved, their submission ,on 1,4 p other points to the will of the emperors, who often sug gested or dictated measures to "the bishop's, and even wrote lawa and Sent them - to the, councils for their adoption:'‘; Lithe mean tinie the hishopg of -several 'larger cities ; of Alexandria, Antioch,: Constantinople, arid Rome were, about the close of the fourth century, termed , patriarchs, and invested with general oversight of large, portions of the Church in their respective sections of the Empire. These; atriarchs thus became rivals, arid-for a long tine each one conten ded for the claims 'of - his own pa,triarchate, until about the , year A. D. 606, when the bishop of Reme,',Boniface 111, was acknowl edged, as .Universal "Bishop of the whole Church, by the El-reek Ethperor Phocas, who had murdered his rival klauricins.—Lutheran Observer. F• ' _ BIGHT USE OF TEXTS. An exchan,ge charges that, much as the pulpit censures profanity, it is sometimes guilty of the'sanie sin. It refers, in proof, to a repent lecture, by a reverend gentle man, on "Mud," based on the text, "Prepare ye the way of the Lord;" to anOther mon, preliminary to a summer vacation, from tip words; "I go a.fishing;" , to a third; ,addressed. to fast young, men,- from,ithe words, "..Let ,her . drive." Such perversion of Scripture by those who have been set apart to defend, unfold and enfoiice it, cannot be too strongly condemned.. We know of hardly anything more calculated to bring the Word Of God' into onntempt. - It id un doubted profanity. It is downright trifling with „sacred, things.. No ,herm,' 1,8 meant? Of course net. The profane .man ; outside the pulpit. means none.. .tOth; too, alike; bite at a-naked hook: - ' " • The wrong 'use of texts, ho*ever;ls net confined those who use them..profanely. A g American; divine, _ptsome ,eminence ,our own denp,m i inatipn, weached a dis r course on certain PrOtiastant tendencies to= wards Popery 'from ' the *bids df 'l4 e 're= —The London correspondent of The National Baptist writes': The principal topic of interest among the Baptitts just now ; relates to the•question of send ing out , our missionaries unmarried. The present rule is, not indeed to, require ' but strongly to ad vise, all missionaries to marry before goin g abroad. But for many reasons the wisdom of this is dnubtful. The', fitness of a, missionary for. his work, his ability,to bear the, effects of the climate, his power . Of acquiring the language of the coun try so as Steak it `with fluency, can never be judged beforehand. He may, go out and fail in -one or all, of Ahese respects. • If he go alone, the expense of his failure and, return is but small. If he, haswife, : the cost is more than doubled. Besides - thiS, it is felt that in a new country a man would be' better' able to "rough it" if he were alone. TTlie presence of a wife must, to a certain extent, be :a check upon his movements. He can hardly diepley the same ,spirit of adventure, the same indifference to personal ease and security, if he has a Wife:with him and dependent upon him; that'ilie, might ,if he has no one to . care for hut,himlitelf.„ Yet further, i it.is urged •that„for the work.of the mission an addiiiOnal test of earnest ness and seledenial is valuable. A man who is •prepared to go.ont alone; to leave behind him all -thosiiThe , loves, for a time at least, and single handed to ~encounter the hardships of a mission ary life, has .gives preof, that he is prepared to make. every sacrifice, which may be required at his h , anda. It is, therefore, proposed' that' for the future the •iiiinainhary shall in the first instance go out alone . and unmarried. At the expiration of ,a,periocl•to, be, agreed upon,—say two years,— if he has given satisfactory proof' of his fitness for the work, his betrothed shall 'be sent out to Join:him and be married.. If, on : the other hand, he does not ,giv,e the requisite evidence, it will be ,easy, to bring him home again, at a small cost to the Society, with little difficulty to himself. Gen r,.,.ly'speaking the plaivis finding fai•or. It has, howevelyrifiet with unfaAtrable criticisms in some quarters, and the missionaries now actually in the field, seam to be, on the whole, against its adopt ion. This was perhaps to be expected. Some thing is clearly needed to revive the spirit of liberality in Churches, and the spirit of heroic daring amongst our missionaries. But I doubt whether this will be effectual to the pur pose.., MEMNI specting Paul's journey, " And so we jour neyed toward Rome." 1)r. Porter, in his Homiletics, tells us of a minister who preach ed a number of sermons from the smallest possible fragment of a sentence, the inter jection "0." If this is not "handling the Word of God docitfully," it is next to it, and tends greatly to lower the popular rever ence for it and to kill out confidence in it as an ultimate standard of truth. Others force a passage to their purpose by the omission of important portions and thus wrest it from its true meaning. Others, taking a complete passage and expounding it in its obvious import, accommodate it to a theme having not the slightesioconnection with it, except in a certain identity of terms, the words being the same but the ideas dif ferent. Others, again, employ texts whose adaptation to their subjects is based on some word which, having become obsolete in its ancient , use, they well, enough know does not, in its modern acceptation, and as they employ, it, represent .the ; original Greek or Hebrew. For instance ) a theological pro fessor delivered to the graduating class a very sound discourse on- "Conversation," based on "this word in our common version, which every scliolar knows does not, as now, mean familiar interchange , of thought, but the every day behaviour and the general conduct of the life. Now we hold that all this is wrong in principle and injurious in practice- The,preacher's authority to preach .is 'derived solely from the Holy Scriptures, and here, too, alone is found the subject matter of his preaching. A sermon is sim ply a text ;unfoldedand applied. Hence, to use a text as the foundation of a discourse, when, in act, the l preadher knows that the latter does not rest 'on the' former, is not honest, and must, to a greater or less ex tent, be followed'by the usual• consequences of dishonesty; his ,words do not carry weight with them as the words of an ac credited' eXpounder of God's truth. He may be witty, and men may laugh. He may be eloquent, and . ,men may be charmed. He may be logical, and men may assent to the connection 'between premise and conclusion. He does not 'speak, however, as one having authority. The whole general effect is dis astrous. It, helps to bring the Bible down to the plane of nian 7 tnade books. We will our brethren in the ministry would be on their Aitiid in this thing. Along side of Chillingworth's great saying, " The Bible, the Bible alone is the religion of Protestants," we need to place another in equal prominence : " The meaning, the meaning of the Bible is the Bible—Watch man and Reflector. UNMARRIED MISSIONARIES • IMPORTERS • wactufan &Delo, A' ; ~ Whit, and }led Check ...114XVINGOls ride minima we grepar a large varied and well seleoted Rock • 1 tii at redia3 4 ;d prices'. ' No. 43 Siratiybeity Street, , , , „ ! Atilt Peed ior !mold. IfiNOLMBLPiniI.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers