PARENTHESISIANA. kr DARIIr DOTI.R. "Ot Orr Y. /171 ". I And muslin go? - (Yea .ei -7 r,"- 6 -? 0 k I'll break ' , or into bits)? . 'Tis not so late; ( YON are the rook On which my pleasure splits). Comb in, my /ore, and close the door, stop fifteen minutes hinger; t I hated that clock enough %Hemp— ,,,ll),,toight ray Mita is stronger). Come, sit you down and — dOh't go yot, F or the night I . s lonoly without you, pet. G i ve me your het end cloak, and then IT Fling your favorite song. The onelou—(Whet! she's striking ten ! 7hotolobk Is ehroye wrong) I _,Now_draw your chair to the fire,Zolar4 And -VII teetTlifixilfrOMTiiTtirr-:: (1 wish to gracious that eld cloak •‘ Would go a little slower) ! Come, gt I e the your hand and don't go yet, F or my hood goon out when you go, pot. [.Written for the Itt; The Chronicles of T,9ttfiA.own. BY yHrOINIA p•IIAPTEk VI -- -- When Alfred left the room Eugene drew a "conversational" near the fire, and seating Daisy, placed hiateelf be side her: She rolled wad unrolled idte music he hold in her hands. Het usual volubilitned to have forsaken her, while Eugen vae content to watch the blush - that came Rod went on the eweet face, and the little- hands and rounded arms ao gracefully displayed in her endeavors to ruin the unfortunate piece of music She formed one xquisite pit:dors, sit ting there in the softened, and .ruddy light of the fire. Mho wore a blue (ilk, whose rich folds fell around a figure that Hobo might not rival ller beauti ful neck and arms were bare, save whore mint like keen blended softly with the fair skin, and the foot that peeped from beneath tne folds of her dress, was in eased 111 a slipper that metaled well that of the famed Cinderella. Soft brown ringlets fell over her shoulders, and partially hid their loveliness for atti tude woe exquisttly graceryl, An l Ilu gene looked, and feasted his love hun gry eyes on her bright young beauty. A step In the liallarort4ed him to the coneiousness that these moments of qui et. happiness might not be lengthened, ••l'ut that music aside, Daisy, and lis ten to me. I've much to eay, and hut, it brief limo to say it in. Olvo me those hands if you ore at a loss what to do with thepi Look up, dearestr and he imprisoned them both in one of his own, while with the other be raised theblush tog face, and looked into the suit, timid eye that fell beneath the earnestness of his own. "Daisy, wy darling, shall I go away to-moirow without hearing you say 'I love you'--without telling you how dear yuu are to me" I said nothing last winter when the wealth, and talent of ----- were around your sister rind yourself I said nothing igen, wishing you to know that precious heart well Pre you trusted it to' wY keeping Is U mine now"• Her cheek rented lovingly on his shoulder, and ihe hand, clasped in hi% was not withdrawn, yet tube said nuth- Until be leaned down and Aiefied her, then she started away from him ..Oh Eugene, don't' Mama will be co shocked, and angry ' tnh tr.e, what have I done! I should not ha•e stayed in here Let me go hock to the drawing room. lou should not say such things to me, I am too young to think of it— not quite fifteen yet ," but her eyes con tontradicted her wordy, and a smile dimpled the sweet face as he replied "No, my darling, you are not lee pouhrit) love, or to he loved. and veolureto say Mania will not he very much' ellockeil. You shall tell her hi night, and payer the in the morning.-- Will your' _ •'Uf course I shall 'tell mania ; tiut I fear ahc wlll think me •ery preatimp illoll4 Entitle' ia hat did you mean when you said our parting may be for year!, may be forever "I malllll, pride, Mit our fears Ott weir way possibly be teslized, 0011 forbid it! but should such be the cue, duly, and loco would cull me to tho de fence of it . fy country; but ere I go I would claim the proutise k of you to be- CNA, rny wife 101 l ore young yel, and Wr can welt Iwo, or ihree yenes; but still I must hsve the promise " Delsj drew closer to him, sad looked beseechingly st hitr, "Oh Eugene don't say these horrible things shunt war. I cannot., cachet think it Will over be!" "I wind.' sot grieve you needlessly, my darling." he said. tenderly, looking tutu the tearful oyes; "hat sbouid these leers be resilsed it. :would cheer end en courage me lu the discharge et toy dit ties to know that there is a heart tha t teen ua•—that prays for ins, sod eyes that will weep sod watch for my cern - leg." Wa know oot her reply,ilte angels alarm beard it, and treasurok It up, ae did Eugene. goo) , happy momenta 4 1 40rned, sad pu4ene would fain, hare bade am tururi ; but Daki ~a114410y leuntnittred .tha errand rm./1044 .ah, , . had been seal. ..Engenti And jar . back nfiver:' Marna will ba,..allandad: that.haiv. abtlentri4 *VIM ter felting, and Claudio to. mat lag bey twee," I IN V ar: 13 01'1} lake ft to her, and mike all *r euses Not kiss me darling, and prowl lee to give me my answer is the morn- CZ Daisy kissed him, and eent him oft with the music to Claudia. She learned on the, mantel, looking down into the bright depths of the fire. * Was it LUo firelight alone that Irradia— ted het taco, with its soft, happy light+. Ah! we may not ask ; may qot fathom the depths of a maiden'e first love. We may not penetrate beyond the outer sanctua ry, where we may read its history as written in the blush, the smile, the tear, and the sigh that tipeaks the heart's en tire happiness. When Eugene. returned to Cie draw ing room he found Claudia still at the piano, and around het several gentle: men, the molt devetted of whom was Mr. Bell fie eeteoted her songs for her, of ten accompanying her with hie really fine base •oice Willie Burke, too. was equally devoted, though less pretentione perhaps; and while Mr, Bell took every (location to exhibit his edmirrtion, Wil lie endeavored to conceal it. flaitugus• to had laughingly remarked, "it wee a clear case of Jove at first eight;" a be lief in which Willie had hitherto been skeptical. and ever. now hie undefined feelings might not be considered an such, for is not the definitio p of love as varied as the , peeuliarit ies 6-r—eAtrt o• men ever loved alike; o•er no two does it exert the !IRMO influence. If, as the pout Final ii, "Love 7 'tie to two gouts 0 single thought— two hearts that boat if on( ," then Willie felt not ite potont_poever, for thou. wt no reciprooatlon on Clint" in . & lam Another, and a eigher authority hall said hopoth ell thing4en, dureth ell thtnge," Mid 1114 love bob! Wtllie captive Claudia smiled significantly irlien En laid the manuscript music before her, and asked, •'Where 71 Daisy Mr Stockton illl9 been inconsolable fur the last half hour " "In the library, probably I left her IBM "Here she comod nun!" said Mr Bell “Snitle again Stockton. You look,an the darkey raid, •I ilia Patience in a men ument baling at grief Daisy avoided the group at the piano, and joined her mother and the Judge. neve was a little frightened, timid look in her eye, as she glanced at hbr mother but she paid nothing, and Mrs, Compton IlYked no questions She seated hersolf in her graceful childish fashion, on a low ottoman., and rested her cheek against her tisilaber's attn. Miguel. Ran dolph Reeves, and two other gentlemen were engaged to a game of whist, and now, and then an etelnanation would be beerd from one of the otherwise silent quartette, as tt lucky earl would sweep from- the board the opponents best card Daisy listened apparently to thit Judge and her mother, but ebe heard nought save Eugene's ♦nice, whose wit, and humor, calivened the gruurat the pi ano Not once did .the dare look that way for fear of catching Etigine's'efe, thipmplivhe felt, rather than knew, he looked thlt way very often. tier moth er talked to the Judge, while she twined her fingers around Daley'seOffeurle,and wondered what made her en quiet. When coffee was served. Mr. dtoekton joined her, and for the remainder of the evening devoted 'Outsell toter• Eugene seemed quite content to hare it so, and smiled to see the meshes Daisy was no couolously *miring 'around Kr. Stock ton's heart. While the gentlemen Were 1 4 44 i-in lo leave, securing umbrellas;•and 'Gran tor their buggies En be brought to the door, Willie Burke stepped back to the driving room, and galled the ladies out on the portico. It had cleared off, end the moonlight shone - ntiniis green leavoe, glistening with rain dropb, ottani/log the deeavy scene u - r iho'nfltirunon . lo one of *oft, dreamt beauty . They laid all gather'on the porlito, Nugeae drew lialey's Um within hie Uri, and sauntered ofl to sibs end otit mid where an angle of the Inoue out a ehadoir,'ooneeiling thgm from ,view.— They stood silently tide by alai, looting on the sighi r uch the holy, hap py influence of the hour. The guest. Miperted • the ethers retired• to their. w ( Ix gemrpi Omni, anti 'Daley and weep 'lone., They bad et9i41 . 10, nOme limo Whim Vases* 1 , 10 ,14 4 dra,lll/7, nr4r ffill ILIGUTS AND ratantAL UNION." lIELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY APRIL 3, 1868. softly,, almost reverently the words of LOngfello We. "Night." I heard the trailing gramma,' of the night Sweep tbro' her marble halls -41111, her sable robes all fringed with light FrOUI Ilse celestial walls. I felt her, presence, by ita power of might, , Stoop over me from above— The calm majestic presence of the night. Like unto-the one I love. I tour the numerous sounds of night— The manifold e. ft chimes— That filled the t haunted chambers of the soul Like some ota•polit's 'rhymes. From the cool cisterns of the midnight air, My spirit drinks repose, . . The fountain of perpetual peace flows th ere— From those deep cisterns flow. Oh, holy night ! from thee I learn to bear, What Mill has borne before; Then leyest thy Anger finger on theilps of care, And they emnpleln no more. Peace! peace !—Otentes like, I breathe this prayer— Descend with swift winged flight, Then beautiful, thrice beautiful and fair Thou best beloved night." -How many hearts hare echoed those beautiful words, dear Eugene? My own does cit, this holy Ito . ur " 'My darling !" .be said as he bent down, drew her clover to him and, kissed her, "does my Jove also find an echo in that beautiful soul? Say again, ar ' .Irairvards, '1 love then ''' -Why ask tt, Eugene It needs no words to tell you, how dearly I love you V' 'True, dearest! but my-thirsty soul kneels at tborpure fountain of your love, and quad's its delicious waters eagerly fr ammet*e-sotirippiiiith dribug44, l ' Ah Eugene, I fear I am not worthy of such love' but come, we must go in. Nee, they have all left the portico,'-.- They went to the door, but found it fast ened Tie unoonscious AUred had been his rounds, fastening doors and abut tors „ Eugene laughed. Daisy felt annoyed, but after a moment's thought she remem bered there was a poseibiliiy of getting in without rousing the servant "Eugene we must go round by the southern portico, and 'get in by the li brary window. You know it opens on the portico, and is never fastened Comic'” and she led the way down the front steps, gathering bar dress up to protect it from the rain, but as she reached the last step, Eugene caught her in hirarms, and despite her protests bore her safely over the wet grass, and placed her on- the Flout - firm portico Daisy kuevr not whether to he angry or not, but she pouted most charmingly Eugene dad not seem to notice it. "There you are, petite' Did you suppose I wa s going to permit you. to risk that precious life, Just giyen me 1 - Nny, but if you are angry CH undo it, and carry you back Come," and he playfully held out his annul - t'lioneenee, Eugene, you know 1 she! qo no such a thing, IPe tnuot hurry in. I suppose there to no need to get angry with you, but you roust promise and do hotter lu future " will not promiseuuleors you bribe me," he said he he proomidod to opou the libreiry window which y iekled, to die band They entered the library The lamp bad been estinguished,.but the fire mill hurtled brightly, and Eugene pleaded virtu:loly -for a few momenta there, hut daisy left him, hurrying oft to her own room, frightened al what hal happened, and what would ho •ery like ly to happen if her mother knew of it; still she had no concealments from her mothei, and. bad fully determined to make a full oonfeesion. Aunt Either woe waking patiently in her reuto,wheawbe entered it, and aeibit ed her to undress, wondering where she could, have been. When her dillies were over - sbe waited to see her safely in bed, before leaving her for the night, "You need net wait, Aunt Esther, I shall not go to bed just yet. I'm going into utamo". room, for a_ little 1111Ya."_ "Lordy ! honey, your MIMa is bed ad steep, long, merr i y agPe' It's time yoo was in your bed, eao You do' ids as your ole mammy what nuss4 jolt, tedlo you to do, fiat's a good No, I mot eel lama before i go 0, sloop to night, Don't . ;taltdeay mammy, VII pants.. to be asleep beta...you 4trei. Oood night:" , nighty, void do'd't 'itgess Tercel f 'lliond your ,9 le lommmy i i, not gorine to sletip,ottswebe's a good sleep er, hie Is ;" and she Sit ihe vlot‘si finis,' crept to the door commun4enting with her mother's room, and opened it softly. A night lamp burned on the hearth, where the few embers were tly ing. aray. Mrs. Compton had retired, but was nwalie. '"May I oome in, mama !" "Yes, dear. Where have you been ? In Augusta's room 1" she asked as Dai: sj seated bersel(bestde the bed. "No mamma. , I've been—" "Where '" baked her t molher seeing She hesitated. If Daisy had seen the smile that accompanied the last question elle would have opened her frightened little heart; with less trepidation "Oh mamma! I'•e been been—l do not know exactly where—l'.can't tell— l've been In the— I want to loft you all but I cannot!" "Never mind. (teary, - said her nillther analog her confusion, cud tenderly on ressing the soft little hand trembling in her unn. ."Never mind, mother can gtiese." ..You are not angry then, dear moth- IMO "Angry, my child? No, how could I ?. Do you suppose I do not deem Eugene worthy of yon? Mother knew it all, lore, this morning, when he asked my consent to win and woo you It was given freely, and fully. Now kiss rue, darling, and go to /loop" and sho bola her In a tight embrace, while Dein) , whis pered ' good night," through her tears and B As ehe knelt beside her couch that. night, another name, very precious to her now, watt added to those for whom ehe pleaded at the throne of grime, —Eddy tha..ruaLl—auarAing Eugene Iota : Daley was In the library when he came down, and there, Where ehe had wel 'muted him to tier heart, bade him adieu, and 'mid tears, smiles andblustes gave him the promisednnswer: They parted. Ah ! little did their young hearts know then for how tong. "It may be for years, it may be for- CEE2 [To ILK CONVNUSD.I Whioh is on Trial—the President or the Constitution ? The people haws not asked for the im peachment of the President, and it is a profanation of their name to use it in the prosecution, The whole proceeding has notoriously been gotten up for the most sinister purposes by the Radical majority in Congress But now that solemn forms are thus trifled with and ■cored funotions prostituted, it has as sumed an unwonted degree of importance and become n question of i t/rt highest consequenoe before the highest court known to tha . Constitutiou. It is there fore, due to the people that their funda mental law, upon which the whole fabric of the American government rents, should be rightly interpreted It must be borne In minii , that the pee plc of the tlnUod 914tes are yet to lib() wherein the President In the exercise of the high functions intrittiad to him, has been ,guilty of "high crimes and misdemeanors," As meant bribe Consti tution, rind not. as tie WU/ by his aced sere There is a root difference between bold nsitertfona and clear logs I proof. The animus pt thq nonusers is patent to the whole world aa wallas to the Ameri can people, and tbal le, nnuitatakably, bitter personal and 'pOlitioal hatred of the president by every one of the aeons snapayers who are pro/riling, and a longing for more power and spoils by the entire Radical majority in both trouttea ilie implaohei are also the prosecut ing attorn4s, and in II great degree the witnesses against the officer accused. The caNe ls enilriily' euouielous. The Court in - crimitivetd:litigely .. of matt who have already sreadir*ned the men who to to be tried . beneuai he wou'.l not be their tool i and frorn'irs deoieloh thers oat' be no ompoat • eera to the P09P19 mthe selves wine , reads the Court. If she Present I. alertly proved Ertrilti (of whet 0314 , 401k.05in .11•14,„ for there le .no crime , Is env mf Ido 'hens, !Toads aireiluettrito . ,) med. the Court totittlie him the people 'trill ''ko, ' otr ' the two - 0 1. 1 It Li'll , k4 4 4•Pi ~ k; Igo 0,1 0 9 0P** 9 9 9 1 9 d fosiliyhtif, hare, di bleb Inmost hi na , wr , and ' ttle - rittift , l) l lo l .l4letti 1114 1 , 'Ofb e l amii:iitid d ,inttihitat*!lillte:i4 le 'l . lli . l i ii %! i g n g1 11460. 114 0 1 .A 4 *le' ).c Antertsaii (1004lulimi Malt Us no IP real,* indatutiktflriffig4iik at altrfi4ofeatt kirebeqiedietlifilt ito'lot"ltith Ithr ' , In. 4 1 I* - b el e 'r " ti x, If y iU.'i . I D The Women Question 0 tepopora 1 0 Mora: Where are wet Whither are we borne? A few t.eye since the mails from New York city, the maelstrom to which Many of the grand masters who wield the organs of public opinion reson, brought us . ; the tidings that Democracy in Ibis Country was a failure,and the prediction that the day Vac eta far distant when the idol whisk our oitieene have hugged for so long would be broken, and the &I/Yellen formerly given to it be transferred to other shrineg,, Bush predictions from such a. quarter should prove sufficient to Blithe breast of any man who loves his coun try with the saddest forebodings, how- ever his:. reason and his hopes might prompt him to question the opinion .of the no-to-be-called oracle. But worse, far-worse was to follow. To the patriot, the rufleotion that change in government however radical that change may be, is for the greater good of his "country, at length brings resignation and consent But what can reconcile him to the social revolution, whit* the same oracle in tones equally oonfitient asserts to be at our doors, with credentials which the people will endose! To what Letho shall we resort wheir tot& - that movement for the political equality of sexes is every day gathering strength and 'ffibment" in our land, atfa that though "Feniemism, Garabaldi, George Francis Train and impeachment may for a time seem to overshadow it," yet after these and . other analogous day!' wonders have lived out their little life, it has sprung again elastic into all its former importtioe." -- Why, when the sad announsemenswast made, wore no features of utility, or at lest of feseibillty, pointed 'out, which might reassure 113 in driving odr in stitutions front their present moorings to a sea of doubt and uncertainty! When Democracy was condemned, its failure was accounted for by the assert ed unsoundness of its prime dogums,and various fholfwere cited to substantiate the assertion. It we, proven that the wider the scope given to Democratic principles, the wider acre the doors thrown open to vice among our ',Moons and corruption among our officials. What more effectual balm than this could have been given to hearts that bled as they were torn from their old faith in Democracy ? But scarcely had our alarm at thin mighty shadow subsid ed, when we are told to listen to the mutterings of a social earthquake about to visit us, which must prove more deur !sting in its effects than even to change of government, Yes, the gallant Round Table, the political and 'octal oracle of the New World (•) has given out that woman is about to extend her present sph4re, so that her orbit will take in the privileges which heretofore have Ned' essirted by man to be peculiarly his own "With the necessity or expe diency of7hat social revolution," says the chivalric pioneer, "we have - nothing to do." What an assertion to be found in the columns of a nb'eet which pretends to mould the minds of its ream.. for the greater good of th . eir country and society And doe, it not sound Ilke favouring the change, when iu the col umns we find--"It is arguing on.a false assumption to assert that establishment of female equality abrogate , ' and annuls the kindly offices of male gallantry," and that "masculine gallantry is haled upon woman's physical inferiority, her weakness being the inspiring source of all the sweet observances whorewith chivalry loves to compass her " ' Why, when It Is of sant vital impor tance to pooiety, does it saititlLlitl. BO un decided a position? if It favours the change, why couch it in implication only; Ind if it opposes, when DO many minds make' it their only obannel to Sonclusions anti opinions, why does it not some boldly forth and eisy so? It calls Id mind the answer, of the Pagan oracles, such as "aig 4 , ^ c 4 r 4 Roa!mPalo b whit& may be .reader* either ••I ea" thst-you wlll 'eongetter Ale' Romani," tor •1 say that the lionitths esstpter ,y4 , U. " wh i t, we wooer kont the arhisle upon kabala outrage is similar, • That there. is is great probnhility- of said ittr.roge Is *alerted without quslifloation. git o ino neogstliy ,or *LW_ Its slow eat this ..sald , oosteveri be. ars Iliftinubd Mutt it it should hems 'ln IS abed' ho oro, for i , ;'pbstevar rehl or , inuiginaiy sights way" }LIMO lrer,..there is El thottenahls sight whisk No *hasty , In itihttiOir• '44 '46oiiiiqi4* - •• - privy liar of—the claim abet feelidsinesa. and frailty to care and prdMitiont". What. is this but a reservetion_aLletielr ion until time dots its oppvinted,mtilt, then and then only applauding or ..c u.. douning he pePtilerieveur Far from influencing ilie (worse ofebdia opinion, that sheet follows its 'Va .. ' ,wherever it goes. For ourselves we condemn the szt!tt eion of the privilege!, of the feiret..Bilii doe no utility in the change. but ea dye riontrary,,think it fraught with inumera hie evils. We do not think with the Round Table that woman's phyeigal ti larttrtirtrer - otrierrehritn - to - tha item— oration and Ofefert6o - that manhood - TRW extends to her, and that no Atter what her condition, socially ooneidered, that inferiority will always claim and receive the same deference. So far from doing eo, we think it the rlpB6r6 only fri *kith she uow moves which giros her the ten *nation eo cheerfully yielded. It la her higher calling, her diviner mission. ' NO. 14 which surrounds her with that hallowed tiorm wbioh axes man in her presence, and whieb, even it he would, he 011[1111111 resist. That calling, that mission, as God Intended it, is as superior to man's as lOtirand virtue are superior to Inter est and„ambition in the scale which has protection for its standard, It is Sea man's high duty to soften the naturally hard dispositions of men, to eterolse the power which an inscrutable Being has given her, in bestowing tenderness and clemency upon her, of curbing the mad longings and evil tendenoies of man's nature. And witcn she departs from, that realm, when the noble duties of wife, mother and mister are saeociattid. with politics—when she enters wiiit man upon a field where all is envy, ha tred and malice,tareweH to her benello4l influen4e. and the love and .veneration whieh oho now challenge and receives. —Southern Sot tety Lin MAIMS WATILit AND PatreTtilitte, It has been noticed as a somewhat re markable physiological fact that girl babies largely predominate in limestone regions 'rue writer of thie well re members that in traveling through the liniestone'cJuntryofcentral Penosylvania I=1:1 shirty miles, a male baby had net been soared up for years, he was atr object of oeneiderable curiosity and uo little re speot on the the part of the good dames 'there, on the fact transpiring that he was the father of several boys. The number of pretty girls to he peen at every pane of glass, and in groups by the roadside on the way to Antietam, showed that the limestone water of Maryland is equally propitious for a prolillo growth of the fair se:. On (be various roads and in the fields mbar the cemetery, there were acres of stout tive-seat Maryland wagons, crammed with bouncing. rosy girls, and with not male material enough among them to drive the team. Tog GO, I , TO BE LOST, —At a recent election in the State of New York, a lad preneuted himself at the polls to claim the benefit of the electimfranchiee. Feeling a deep interest s favorite candidate, his father, who was evidently opposed to the boy's preference., stood at the ballot-box, and challenged his right to vote, on the ground of his not being of age, The young man declared that he was twenty-one yesr,eOld ; that, he knew it, and that ho insinted upon his right The father becoming indig nant, and wishing, as the saying Is, to "bluff him off" before the judges, said: "Now, Bob, will you stand up there and contradict met Don't I know 111 how old you are ?Waen't I there f" Bob looked hie contempt for the old matt's speech, as he hastily replied : "Thunderstion I e'pose you woe! IVnett't I there too "' This nettled ihe, sire, and in wont the 802on's rota. -- A Quack, having produoe , La Won derful hair-invigorating !laid, applied to an etdtur (or a testimonial. He gave t is 11,04 n terms—oslaithited, we should think, to convinop . the west skeptical; "A little applied to the inkstand has given It a coat of belittles, making a splendid pen-wiper at it' little poet, We jipplied the lather io a ten , ostit rtair,aad the nail Is WWI the ilititlsfioinesi lather brush you ever saw, with'a helteillti soft • hair growing (rem (he end of it, 8011(10 five or six feet . in length. *gilled to door-steam', it does sway with the use of a met. Applied to a . Boor, it will cause to grow therehma hair . enffielent for • Drawls carpel. A litile'..Weak lather sprinkled Aver o hare, etaia". it impervious krthe 'wind, rain..et; Gold. It is goo 4 to putin old, of obildren's Arad lee, sorb:Alp on the road sifie, or any where, where fugal-tone gress . 6• wanted, for tile or ornensent.- 11 Pladadv• ' the eq'eot in ten Inir:±, - ir' ~. . 4. , . —Wagiwint to the .osPbt of ono of our rellwayi the other eventri. and findino' f #l,Ail„ daelnli sold itE •• loud loiter ' • • "- ' ',l " .. .. offili su r fs `tlig I' ' ' ,'''' ' Of iinUM`tbliiik rot' "ellitiel il u tin oral- iit4iloPedit;iti lit nal lbste tilt - best Neal.:" Phi Art o *eyed ow, 'ln the midst 0r414 iitdifattlin ?holt win! Anse tinned : " ''' ": •• . ' - I 24,i ' dill Ali lii* 4 4 , 4 i a ' g ik4l. " ii i ii I gl 'IV iitilni 'pitC lit I ,nowr.'" ' 'lO ' 1411AthopdhlIffiti; bitt'Wagge ;.I*i ; io , PiTilegMAtaik , nt - ere, Ina Ne r
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers