Bellefoile Democratic Watclimal - SY P. GRAY MEEK JOE V. FURRY, AmonTs Elam Ink Slings —Every vote for Wibsorr and Woons is a vote for StmoN CAMERON for United States Senator again. —lleac+ men as WILSON and Woon3 are to compose the Senate of Pennsyl. vaunt, the Good Lord deliver ue I —Antionoan can "omen a mechanic a mile off." After the election hie laical carcass will smell a deal further than that. —F.very vote for Wit.soa and Wooos is an endorsement of the Fifteenth Amendment, Which made niggere vo ters in Pennsylvania. ARMSTRONG fop Coagresa and WI pos and Wooos for Senators, are all hree pledged to nigger equality and Chinese coolieistn. Don't touch them. —We Pave To dottla Mr. DcNcroi is a friend of the L. C. C. & S. C. Rail road—as far as Spring Mills. But who would'm like to have a railroad terminus in his own town? Say --Br defeating A ausTsovo, Wff.sov WOODS, DuNcAr4, and the whole Radi cal ticket, the people will ex pres 4 their disapprobatiop and hatred of niggeriarn and Chinese coolieism. —To Flare his neck, \Vmsfor and his friends couldn't get but one man into their club room meeting the other night. Deponent don't state who was 'president of that meetin'." --The Radical candidate fur Con gresa is "death' on pairing off. We notice lie helped to pare off a tremen dous slice of the public lands during his terrn in Congress. —The Tyrone Herald pronounced W rr.LIAII P. WILSON, before his nottti notion, a respectable nobody, trillion( any brains! II be had none then, has he Any now? We pause for a reply. —During the war, A RIISTRONI) had too weak a back to go to the army and was ton stingy to give any money to pay bounties. He is bold enough now to ask the soldiers to vote fur him, and not too stingy to buy votes. —Attuaraosu is the man who re fused to loamhis lather's crutch to a wounded soldier, in the streets of Wil liamsport. lie now asks the soldiers him Will they do It? We ~t, —The beet way to ensure the per manent eatablishment of niggerism and cooboarn in this country is to vote for just such tickets as that represented by Aa a sTaoso, iI,SOV, WOODS, and Du 14 —ln common with all Radicals, 44 't Liswir and Woons preas their belief iii the benefita 10 be derived by the country from. Chinese coolieirtin. No doubt, both would rejoice to pity their hired help only 30 cello' a day. —According to Attittritiote, it with a big flood that kept hint from being present in Washington to vote on the taraquestion. We think a big flood will prevent him going there again, but it will ben big flood of the people's GEM LsoN thinks we might:l - it to at tack him so hard. We beg his par don. We were not aware that we were striking him hard. Ihit then, we have doubtless overlooked he weakness. !hereafter, we will only tire pop guns ut hirn. —For the benefit or R. 11. DuNrA Wiwar BROWN, of the Republican, aliects to see a big thing in the Sandy Run improvement company. Possibly, he may have Sandy Win on the brain. Most likely it is a run of sand, how. ME —WALKER, Win's, one of the Midi Tit candidates for Senator in this dis trict, is the man who cheated his friends and neighbors to the amount of thirty thousand dollars in won Bless oil stock. Ile now wants a chance to cheat the people of the State on a larger scale. We guess lie won't get it. —We wonder how much money WALKER WOODS 111100 out of his coin mis , donership to examine inth and award damages to the sulrerers by the e. , intederate raid into this State? how many of the claims did he buy up? What a nice thing it would be to get into the Senate and get the Border Raid bill through 7 Shoo Fly I —The WlLsos DuNexts organ, on Main street, says that about this time of the year the Democratic press tam ant "blossoms out with straws." That is about as fair an admission as we could expect. Straw is It valuable commodity. But what shall be said of the Radical press, which never at this time of the year produces anything but shah? This season, however, they can use it, to fill a bed tag enough lor the Radical party to lie down and die 211t1J1//1/ VOL. 15. The New Invasion The Above heading appears' over an article in the New York Tribune of the 23d instant, in which the employ ment of Coolie labor in this county is bOldly encouraged and advocated. Not only does the Tribune agree to have these Chinese come here, but it says we ought to be glad to have them come! This iv the langnuge of the leading Radical paper in this country, and proves what wo have heretofore charged, that that party is in favor of and does all it Can to secure and over whtlming immigration of Chinese Cool lee to these shores. We hope every working [nail in Cm] tre County will MO this article. It tin proof positive that the Radical party is in favor of capital against the white labor of this country, and that to the hope of adding these heathen tribes to the mougrel hosts that compose its plunderi.eek tag hordes, it in willing to crush out the hopes of the poor %011ie men of this country, and turn over into the hands of the coolies all the labor of ,the land. After this article from so high an authority as /brace Greeley, the greet rarrresentative of Radicalism, let the lesser lights of that party keep silent. The "Tycoon - has spoken—none may gainsay him. Thus speaks the Tri bune: The Cheese problem is forced up on Is even taster than the labor alum ists predicted. The tawny heathens have been .working quietly for mouths in a Massachusetts shoe idiot); five hundred of them are corning to dig railway cuttings and lay tracks in New .lersey ; and in the dead of night three score turd ten 1111%e just tranlle•d through the streets of one of our su burban villages, with their wicker lug gage-baskets, their rice-bags, there tea chests, and stores of viands, and strange implemente, such as move the inure delicately organized Irishman to lofty scorn and Christian fury. The latent arrivals menace a class of labor ere more tyrannous to employers and less skillful ut their craft. than any pthere in the iinited States—a clam which needs in an especial mannerthe wholesome corrective of competition, quite as much for its awn good as for the comfort of mankind it in ilrol,et and Mary Ann whose domain in now mvaded—for the new comers are wash ermen. At Belleville, near Newark, there is a great laundry, where the scrubbing of linen arid the manipula tion of the smoothing iron employ a 'molt-ell pairs of It is to this estrtblishnteut•tlntt China has scut her latest cargo of laborers; and as the work is one for which the Clintanuto has a notorious fondness and capacity, wcordiall not be surprised to see I 'ap taut Ilervey's example speedily iuu toted, and (adrenal queues fluttering over thounarele of washboards through out the A tlan tic St at Pit er Ill' release of so Many NVOlllell front the drudgery of the tali may perhaps tend to the solution of the "servant-girl question" which now threntena the peace of A erican or at any rate re lieve the preening want of female ifi meiidie labor in the newly settled poi• bons of the country. roptain Ilervey MOODS to have brcught his Cargo to Belleville with (carrot secrecy, marched them vier back door routes, and smuggled them into the village undercover of the night, dreading the violence of enlightened American citizens who don't belie% e in Wooly end human rights except in Fourth of July sl eechen, and don't accord the privilege of working for an hottest lit mg to anybody except them selves. Thin is a icry mortifying fact, and the worst of it is that the violent language of some mischievous persons has Pfltlfied Captain Ilervey'n appre Itepstons. We are glad to remember, however, that so far the violence of hostility to the Chinese iii f his part of the conntry ban never gone beyond threats and bad language. The mtrunge immigrants; work unmolested in North Minn i e, l ied we hops will not lie die , turned in New Jersey. Whether we want them here or not, It In clear that we have no right to forbid their coin• ing—still less a tight to molest them alter they arri(e• We founded the United Slides as a city of refuge for the poor and the persecuted of all on dole, and we cannot shut our doors against an orderly and industrious race just because we do riot like some oh their ways. Our lands lie idle for want of !made to 'till them, Our Ter ritories are a wilderness because we have not wee enough to open them. Au overcrowded empire sends its hard working, frugal eons of toil, WHOSE LABOR. IS .111S1' WII AT W E NEEI); and 0/ fit ri.ving meow' to keep them off \V E ()LIU II 1 BE GLA I) TO WET T EM. At tine rate they tire here, and they are still coin- Mg in a steadily increasing stream, and there is nothing for• the t (11.s8atbs lied to do but to make the best of the .sitantion. - - Walla .or.. Ihrunl OW 14.6 "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." II ,i‘ 1 1 1 _) . * 11 11 i • 1 1 Jr i 6 8 0 Daniel Malone Again We have no desire to do any man in. justice 1 flay, more, we are al ways glad to lie corrected when we have stated anything that is not strictly true. Con sequently, when a prominent D e mocrat, of Milesburg, it formed us the oilier day that the story "of Mr. Islst.omx, (111 e Radical candidate for Commis. sioner,) being a petty tyrant, in his family and abusive tit those whom lie ought of all others to treat kindly, had no foundation in fact, we at once re solved to do him the justice to any so, Consequently, we now slate that we are Wormed by a prominent Democrat of Mileshurg, t hat Mr. Msova IN not: an abusive man in his family : more than this, we are told that he is positively it kind mail toward his wile and chilren, and that the story of his being other wise is 1111 exaggeration, springing from some trilling cireionstanna that did not involve the question of his kindness or unkindness to his family. We make this correction with pleas are, We do not delight in saying harsh things about our political opponents' private characters, and would alwaye be much better anti/died if the canvass could be conducted on political grounds alone. In the heat of political strife, however, ugly stories' &ill, sometimes, get afloat, and, whether wisely or un wisely, they too often make their ap pearance in the public papers. Of course, we are opposed to Mr. N[ALONEf politically. Rut we are riot Opposed to Ilia) morally, and hence are riot desirous to injure his private repu tation, which, tiller all, seems to be g ood. We, therefore, give him the benefit of this correction, and are harm py to know, on restionsible authority, that he is a better man than our first information led us to believe. Nevertheless, the objection of incoin , petenry yet remains, Good as his rep ntation, privately, may be, lie is riot capable of filling the office of County Commissioner, This, his own party acknowledge. Ile is not it man oprdi nary educa.ion or general informa tion, finalities that areall on portant in .40 rCerollNilite an office its that of Coun ty Comintssioner. may be honest in his dealings, kind in 1119 family and till that, but lie is not lit tor commis filmier. Therefore we ask the people everywhere to vote for Mr. Swain', against whom none of these objections can be urged. Don't Fail to Register Democrats, to-morrow i ti the last day on which you can register. Are your names all on the lists? If not—it there yet remain any that are unregis tered, see to it at MICE that their names are put on. Look it your own name is there, and then look for those of your n e ighbors. Ransack your memo ries and call to mind all who may or in not be registered. In this way the Vis a likelihood that none will be neglected and that every Democratic voter will be able to exercise the right et suffrage. Don't forget that to- arrow is the last day. Every darkey voter in the county will have his name on the lists, as well alsoj:(ery white Radical. Don't be caught napping, then, Democrats I ye who are destined to be the Itaviolirs of your country and through whose of forts alone we may expect the disco) thralment of tile people I Be sure you Are all registered, and be sure VON all vote, and Providence will do the rest. Penurious Billy Again WILLIAM 11. ARMSTRONG, the Radi cal candidate for Congress ni this dis trict, has been called "Lord" A am- STRO:s (I ever since his advent as a poll Helen. This is done in derision of his claims to he made of baler clay than anybody else, anti of Ills pretensions to aristocracy and style. "Lord" is ali tle of nobility in England, and Attu. STRONG has just vanity enough to think that lie does, and of right ought to, be long to a privileged class in this coon • try. But, with all his pretentious and high mounding titles the people do not forget that, alter all, I,e ts only Wit List( 11. AumwrmiNit. Evecially ought the t•oldiers, who fought, in die late war, to remember this. They will hardly forget Attawrim:tu'ts reply when handed a subscription paper to ralt.e umimyl.l.l AMLY bualateedo the hone men in the field. Ife said: "I don't know why I should be called upon to contribute to dime bounty funds when none of our family are subject to the draft. There is father---)e is too old; and, of my brother's-in-law, one is also over forty-five, and the other i.e lame, and I have a spinal affection! So you ace, we are all exempt, and you must go somewhere theft,- money I" And this, solditirs, is the man %Ow is now asking you for your votes for the second time—this mean, little, petmri• one apology for a man—who was too cowardly to go to the army biome)f and two stingy to contribute of his abundant means for the support of the families of the gallant fellows who del go. If he was too weak hacked to "serve his country" then, he is too weak-lineal to serve it now, and had better be leg at home. Don't you think so? Will you vote Ipr such an individual? We hardly think you will. Itrmetrony and the Farmers The Wellabor° Democrat talks to the point, after the following style : Mr. Armstrong is reputed t o b e wealthy, and no doubt he is. Congress has pateied a law EX EM p r !NG the honorable member from paying taxes for the support of the National Stale Governments. Ile has largely invested in Government bonds. They pay six per emit interest to gold, and are EX EMPT from taxation. A farmer is not exempt. lie has to pay the Feder. al Taxes, State Taxer. County Taxes, Town 'Taxes, School 'faxes, Poor Tax es, Road Taxes, and every kind of tax. Mr. Armstrong can cut his gold bear ing bonds, present them for payment, receive his pile of gold, and loan it at an ex horbitant interest. Ile pays NO taxes; his bonds are EXEMPT front the burdens which fall upon the shout tiers of the hardworking farmers of T/Ofra county. This is the law, and Mr. Armstrong and his friends made it. We think the gentleman's bonds should be taxed as ii ell as other property, Rut they are not, and never will be as long us Mr. Armstrong and his friends can prevent it. Why should the farmer be compelled to pay his taxes, while the rich aristocratic nabobs, like Armstrong are exempt? Let IS have fair play in this matter; let there be no discruntria nun or fax oritetirm ; let is ALL. help to bear our share of the burdens of taxation. If Mr Armstrong gets as much as two thousand dollars per year for Interest on his bonds, he does riot contribute one cent in the way of tax es--he is exempt. Fanners of Tioga county, examine the matter for yourselves. Many of yOll have had to toil early and late, to pay for your property. You have to pay your taxes, And if y iii do not your chattels will lie sold. Mr. Armstrongy, says it is a good law ; it is all right'; he VOTED to ex4tupt his bonds from taxation ft you think it ri g ht an d J ust that he should riot pity tales, and the hut-Ilene should fall upon you, then give hint. your support; but if you think theilaw is unjust and oppressive between man and man, then vide fur the People's choice, If enry Sherwood, a gentleman whom you all know, lives right among vou, and who will, it elected, faitlitully guard and protect your interests tui" tar as lies in his pow er. A ICTII I'HS 1,4 r» m Hour: Mtn t for October, contains it bnllu n t pri,- gramme for the coming year. It in (be announced intention or the pub fishers of thin high toned periodical to make it the "Queen of the Meg amen" for 1,571. /laving strived) to !flake it the bent reading magazine of its clams, they now propose to gke all the attractions of the most popular filllllloll WWI( Id ice, Sildl its colored steel fashion plates, etc., etc., and to add new features never yet attempted by ally of them. Among these arc a series of cartoons on toned paper. These, as we understand it, are to bp finely engraved copies, double in eizlre th ordinary page of the mitgntiue, to choir e pictures, and will be a novel and highly popular feature:4. The' beauty, taste, excellence and rare interest 10 its literary contents, combined with all these new attractions catiiim h e l p ma k Ilg Ault] LI Wm Lady's Horne Magazine the laconic of the • corvine season. Specimens spit free. Published by 'l', S. Aran ti all SONS. Philadelphia, Pa., at $2 a •year ; with large redite lions for clubs. HOUR.—We see, by the October number, that the publish ers (T. $. A 'MIL It & Soss of Philadel phia) of this pine and beautiful maga zine, are preparing for the coming year their budget of good things for the lit tle once. II yoir have never taken it for}•our children, send for a specimen ropy ; and we are very sure that its appearance :Among them will make est:igh.n% uti , l dirk Immo with pleaetnc. I ~.,,! atfiltirtat ) hate Pubiications Give Us a Change This used to be the cry when the, people, worked up into a political phrensy by Radical rnie-representations and lies, and willihg toljsk their con dition of peach and prosperity for an idea, asked the Democracy to give over the reins of power into the hands that have since driven the country to ruin. They got the change they asked fot, but not tOone they expected. It was a change from prosperity to indigence ; o from happiness to misery ; from health to sickness; from life to death. It was a change which overthrew the Republic; destroyed our popular in- Atitutions; brought a mighty war upon the country; burdened us w ith taxes; deprived its of gold and silver ; filled the land with cormorants; made Dig gers the equals of white men ; the rich, richer and the poor poorer. It was a change which made 'the people not the masters.hut the servants; which placed a, tyrant,. in the presidential chair, the offices with. the creat• urea of despotism,and overact and tram pled upon the fundamental law of the /nod. This was the change the peo pie got. It was not what they asked for or were told they would get, but it was what they received, we have no doubt, in punishment for their wicked dissatisfaction with the order of things as ordained by Providence, 4nd which they vainly thought they could better through their finite wisdom. Sick and disgusted with their own folly, the people are now once more asking for a change, and this time with reason. They are asking for a change back to their original status under the wing of the Democratic par , ty—a change from misery to happi ness; from poverty to wealth ; from indigence to prosperity ; from tyranny to a wise and equitable administration of the laws of the land. These are what they once threw away—now they are again seeking them, with weary, anxious hearts. The change which you so much de sire, people of Pennsylvania anti Cen tre county, it is in your own power to make. lty voting with the Democra cy in favor of Democratic principles, and against niggerism, cooheism, cor ruption and outrageous prostitution of law, you will secure the end that you so greatly desire to attain, The whole history of the Democratic party proves that it is the party of law and order,—of liberty and justice—of hap piness and wealth—ol strength and prosperity—of right against might—in short, oh everything that goes to make the country great, prosperous and hap py, and the people intelligent and edu cnt4d. Let the "lamp of experience," peo ple of Pennsylvania, be your guide in the future, and, with the Democracy once more in power, we may yet, be able to rescue our country from ruin, Vote, then, the whole Democratic ticket. A Word to Democrats It in now but little over one week till the day of election f Democrats, are you really? (lave you seen that all who vote with in are assessed ? That those who are compelled to pillow their naturalization papers at the polls have their papere on hand? Have you dis tributed papers and documents in the hands of th'e waryvicing, and undecided, showing art importance of voting the Democratic ticket 7 have yen s ee n your neighbor and urged him to go to work 7 (lave you done all you can do? Understand, thin election in a very iur portrait one, and that a change of one vote in every election district will make t change of three thousand in the State. Work on, then, till the day uf election, and continue to work on that day (let nut every man. Don't let any I,e neglected. We can win a glorious vic tory if we will. If we do not, the fault will be ours alone. Let every Demo crat think that our success depends upon Alm. And it doer. Each Demo crat is equally responsible for our vie'. tory or defeat. Let us all work, then, and pi:levees will lie assured. L. DiEvravateu, Or Clinton county, hue pueelinsed The Col umbian, gt Bloomsburg, Capt. Baraa w Av's paper. Mr, DlEvirgsnAmt is a veteran editor and an a bl e Journalist and. under his charge, The Co/untoh% will lme none or its ability or II 2 Spawls from the Keystone. —The Lewistown band is uniformed. --The Democracy of Harrisburg hare nom! noted William K. Verheko, for Mayor. —Frank Glatismlre, or Pottsville was recent ly murdered In Memphis, Tanitessee —Game is bald to he reasonably plenty In the neighborhood of Mauch Chunk. —The Beaver Argue can't swallow the Radi cal nntnlnation for Atatembly In that county. --Lock Haven Is apprekenslre of fever and 1° ague (blo season. —A deer weighing 118 pounds wu shot near Williamsburg, Blair county, on the 13th inst. NO. 38. —ln Franklin county a yoang lady died front an ov'erdoso or Wright's pills. Wrong. —Dan Rice'. father died at Girard, the other day, aged 80 year!". —The State Fair commenced at Scranton on Tuesday and closes today, —Fever and ague la , prevailing In Elands- ME —A flue horse, valued at >1960,00, had his leg kicked and broken at Mauch Chunk the other day. —The toff-gote tzeepor at Cresson—named McLaughlin—foll dead In Ina potato patch the other day. —Tho harbere of Tyrone got Into the ctutch en of tho law lant week for keeping open on- Sunday, end were fined $l,OO earl). —John It Storm, Esq , tilts been nominated for Congress by the bemocracy of the "Old Tenth Legion." —Petrick Malay, an employe, of the Lanka• ,vvEnna Iron Compnny, fell dead very suddenly lent week —Hon John W Oeary, RarernorgtPagnsyl •snla, paid a •Tait to Oreenshars lut week, and addressed the public school• —A little daughter or fume Cropot was scald ed to death In Tioga, 1 loge county the other —A boy at New Coolie, named Delaney, about IA yew., old, was run over by a wagon last Week and so Porloumly hurt that he died, —Mr James U. Colio,near Bohuyik 111 flair en, has a lima bean clock 30 Net high. and it. Is .1111 ap owing. —Michael Medora, of NOW audit., nen over 70 yeere, was choked to death recently by a piece of meat lodging In hie throat. —hi the neighborhord of Potts,llla Sunday Is made the day for men sod boys to go s guts. —There are over eight thousand pupils Iry tho Mahanoy City schools this season. So lays an ezi hangs. —The accident at Girard villa on the 20th ul timo, by which ee•en ,not, Were killed, made twenty widow, and orphans, all in poor eiroum- =I —Wre II Good, convicted M Easton hot week or unlawfully practising medicine, waa sentenced to pay a fino of $lOO and costa. Good for him John R, Reading la the Democratic oandidato for Cnngresa. .1.1, Reading was eieoted to Congree. in Mai, Rut aria cheated out of hia seat by Ratileai chicanery. —Mr J W Thomas, a Merchant of Tyrone, nes thrown from his sulky last week by • ruo ■way horse and had hi+ left leg broken near the ankle. ""—our gallant moldier-friend, Captain C. B. Brockway, has received the nomtnotion for Congress in the Columbia county district. He will undoubtedly be elected —The question et Issue In Comforts county thin fall, I. the rentu♦ ki of the county seat from Ebensburg to JollL‘town. —The second annual:rminion of the 77th reg iment of Pennsylvania Vetertm Volunteers, will he held at Gettysburg, on the hilt of Om =CI —ln Weisenhurg, Lehigh county, the Canoes Marshall found n married couple. the differ enesoln the ages of which was 41 year., the husband being t 6 and the wife 24 year. old —Mr. David [turkey, of Loretta, Cambria roomy, fell from hie hoyetow onto the handle or a pitchfork, wlttch penetrated him rectum the depth of n or a Inelyex —A into and a stranger, whop° name was axe enflamed to be Samuel Zmunerman, was kill ed on the 22t1, by being struck by a pass ing locontotire about ale miles welt of Altoo na- —Col J e ni nip, Radical candidate for Itiaycie of liarriaborg, got hinteell completely nature ted with water and a finger badly hurt, while electioneering M the Lochiel iron w ork the other day —A serious nick Ilene seems to have broken ut at the Moravian theological college at Bethlehem Home of the students have re• eetitly died and a number of them are now ly ing very lit The studies have been suspended for the prevent —Mr Mender Cohen, stiperlntend-nt end wa. itislarlprestrient of the Lehigh and Magnet. henna ailroad, is one of the executors of the estate of Mr. Benjamin Nathan, lately murder ed In New York. Mr. Cohen in Mr. Nathan's undo law, and his sire is remendwred in the reordered man's will to the amount of a hun dred thousand flutters —Adam Hein:linger, a German, employed by Judge Pa.:kei, of Mauch Chunk, as his park. keeker, was killed on Monlay, the loth In stant, bykr le lous elk, which w an kept lo the park O n prong of the elk's horn penetrated his heart, and another passed up into his head, while his body was much bruised and lacers.. led, anal his face trampled ton Jelly. Better shoot that elk, before lie kills somebody else, A tl am e eases.—lt is paid Dr Kindt, residing on Math street, has sold a tree{ of coal land to AMP Packer, and is daily expecting the lint payment. Mr. Packer as alleged, will send his cheek for Ilitto,ooo this week. Mr. Kind. says when he receives all his mpney he will build un asylum in Wept Ward for widow, anti orphans. That will i.e good for these unpro tected being', and we hope there is no Joking alioutilthe coal tract —grottos Empress, —A lovely trio got into a light near Chester Springa on laid Hut urday afternoon. T 1.7 were a Mre.Sholiner, an Irish railroader ' .n3 the Pickering Valley It. R., and a map 'T o w: .a fe tn r . a . by the name of "Old San' Ramsey." Ramsay Is a cripple, and toomnotes rocks for of crutches, and folloWS blase_ e r living. lie wan assailed flrg `n "madam" with a billet of wood, foil.' a railroader. .It to a cracked skull Murfe""rere snip and bruises and several other 41 face, Ply several of his About the het% ribs badly . .11 h as been minus an (Pt 8 t , ears, and received a eat in the eye for nu Ttlio ineelee, which eame near other "rminits too. Ifs was found by souls nia 4tira, lying helpless among pile of "..11, where he had either fallen, or been docked by his assallints. Dr. M. Fussell reseed his wounds, and he is now doing well. (forts are being made to arrest the parties. 'he rail reader made track, shortly after... ' 414teitcsr.freersontan.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers