11—ellgiopte Democratic Alatclitaa, 13y P. <WAY MEEK, JOE W. FUREY, ABBOOIATII EDITOR Ink %IMO. —Pie-nice are getting to bo all the rage nOW. —Pittsburg is enjoying the email• n a just now. Eleven deaths from it 'fast week. —Mrs, • Jay Cooss and Mrs. GLArrer Jowls holb died last week of 'heart disease. —lt in thought that the Pope is likely to leave Rome any day for the island of Comics, —Radicalism in Centre county is as flat as a pancake. The life has all been s mashed oneof it. —The difference between Gen. Mc GODLESS and Dr. STANTON . IB that the one dol the slaughtering and the other the curing. —We believe that Dr..llgoa N of the Ilepubliean, contemplates accepting the Radical nomination for Assembly —if he gets it. —Local politics are quite warm at present, and candidates anxious. Go in, toys—the longest pole will knock the persimmoos. —A reporter on the Philadelphia Ageolained grove, was drowned on the D3th instant. What else could a Stone do but 8111 k ? .* - A lady 'Alta recently discovered weeping tears of grief over an ice-house at Mt. Vernon. She thought it, was the tomb of Washington. —The Standard says the Tyrone Blade wants to go "up in a balloon.' Well, why don't it go 7 There's gas enough in that paper to send it up a kale'. —The French President has refused to accept the resignation of the Minis ter of Foreign affairs. It is evident that the President is in Fat , fia of the minister holding on to that portfolio. —CuAgin DYKE, engineer on ItontaT FCI.TON ' S first steamboat to Albany, and the first engineer on a steamboat down the Ohio and Mississippi river,' to New Orleans, died on the 25th inst., aged S 5 'ears. —Geri r4ZABANTON hoe not yet re and It 19 reported that he dares rin remove him. If thin he it r $l,ll have a taste of the same k I,,e , lieine he Was BO anxious to ruliiiiimiter to A NDY 3 01INSON —The Ku-Klux investigation pm inittee is about bicloge its labors(?) 011 account of the appropriation being all expended! Poor fellows—how nice it would have been to have kept up the larce a little longer at the people's ex pense, —lf all accounts are correct, the rialtimore murderess, Mrs. Wu RTON, is one or the most miscellaneous killers extant. She don't seem to have any consideration for people, whatever. We guess a little hanging would do her good. —A lawyer in Titusville naoied JosErn K. Tcatlea has been sentenced by Judge McCANDLras to pay a fine of $2,000 and to' fourteen years in the Western penitentiary for forging pen• aion papers. Our Bellefonte sprigs can take notice, —Radical papers show their I ticon eistcncy by sneering at lien. Mcemen• LE 9, who stood In the front of the battle for three years, as a traitor, and praising DT. STANTON, who was al wa)a in t. e rear, with the sick and wounded, as a brave man. —Low, the American 'Minister to China, has appointed an Englishman acting United Staten Conan, for the port of Cbefoo I Notwit 118tatiding thin has been done by how, We may, u nder the cirenuistallo4:B, appropriately m• quire, how is that for high? —TI4 great light between Secretary BOLT ELL and Revenue COlllllll . BBllOlCr PI,CAst \ TON to all about beer stamps. The Secretary sa)a t hat the Commis sinner boat the Government $5,000,000 revenue, and the Commissioner stt3 s lie it was the S,:i.retar. So it goes. --The telegNaph recently stated that the Hey. T. V. Moose, of Nashville, was no more, but directly afterward contradicted itself and said that he was still Blot:1Ra, li;was very ill. We shall probably w more about it be. before lung. The telegraph should be careful. • —W e read of a terrible earthquake on one of the Phillipino (elands by which over t • o hundred people were swallowed up, and the island depopu lated by the flight of the inhabitants. Preserve us from living in such a country as that. We'd sooner at tempt to enjoy life among a school of Alligators. VOL. 16 _ . Claiming ail the Brains of the Coun try, Has the Radios( Party,„Shown any In Its Choioe of High Dip• nitayiee ? That very moral and self4righteone organization, the radical Party of the United States, have alwayk claimed that they possessed all the braine and all the ability in the• country. They have laughed to 'worn the idea of any intelligence among the Democracy, and have pharisaically exclaimed, 'We thank God that we are better than other in n.' have arroga• ted to themselves all the virtues in the calender, and hooted at their oppo nents am men incapable of entertaining a netistble thought or of expressing wise opinion. From such a party as this, the great est things might have been expected. It should have given the country the most profound laws, the most eminent rulers. And jet, when we come to examine what it has done in this re spect, we arc astonished at the meagre ness of the exhibit. We find that it has dz. absolutely nothing. In all its acts of legislation, we find nothing upon the statute-book that will emnd the:test of time or the lira, of investi gation, The whole work has been to accomplish something for the party of the present—nothing for the• country or the people oldie future. In every• thing it has done, it has manifested the must narrow and contracted spirit, never fur once soaring into the broad realms of statesmanship, or rising equal to the magnitude of the great questions that have, in years past, agitated the body politic. But, little as this party has done in the matter of giving us wise 'laws, it has done still less in the matter of wise rulers. With the exception of the two A 1i1M31.1.4, the inert it has pit into the presidential chair have been mere nobodies. Since then it has elected TttLOR, LINCOLN, GRANT. The first and second of theme presidents went into office on the strength of their military achteiments. It was not I even pretended that they were men of ability. Neither ol them had hail any civil experience, nor were either of them versed nr the first principles of government. They were plain, 'inlet tered men—fit for lighters and noth. ing else. ABRAHAM Liscot.tx was a second rate Western lawyer, who had made sonic noise by talking about an irrepressible conflict between the white and black races, and famous for tell ing droll stories and smutty jokes. Grassi . , the 111 , 4 of the remarkable four, rode into office on the military furore of the people, because they foolishly imagined tint they were owing him an everlasting dell of gratitude, which only the preeidentiai chair could in part repny./ Ls qualiticationn for the high position have proved to be even lees than those of his three insignifi cant predecessors, and to-day the peo ple who were so anxious to make him President and the platy that pushed him lurst,ti I, w.,liLl chin, their hands with Jon it to , y sun I but be iNd of hum. Ile his ,h--4race.! the office and the counts, and setiolene.l our cheeks with %it ) rhatile tor lon MICA: and venality. Such are the Presidents which this party that has claimed all the ability /11 , 1 intellp / onee of the country, has put into °Mee How insignificant they seem %%lien compared with such men as .11 itt t M ‘T•1,40:, bioxitop:, \ t\ lit aLv, PoLK, PILReg oud II N . - greaf lights of the timernitient, and nil eleeted and stip• ported lo the Dootocrat to. Party I It Halt 111 . 1.1 C 4,111" country it -,311 mil ell:tractor • 111 , it. , great Pre,4nletits Ili it I lir ).( 1),,e to look back ti,, wondt rm! to thenNel% es it they will ever bee the' like again. (if the our Radical Pr ~dents al-oe named, wo died shor y after they had want ed office, one was shot dead in a the and the last•lntntel is now stooling and drinking himself to de.lth, attend ing horse incenand inaktag for iiitnself an itnmen-e fortane nut hf The pre4erite given hint roe prat:llring tile'aloyi ilia gaming nepotism. The Di untcfapc rani', as We send Jast .a.tuk,-10 the party of the people. It Outdo the conn tr3, great and glorious, amt kept' it no until the jsople'afolly, in ISO, ,trane ferred the Government unto tho Wanda of their enewiei. DettiocratiC s ! 4 \ "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION•" BELLgrONTE, CPA., FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1871. Presidents were all great and good men, while those of the opposition who were not dishonest were ignorant and incapable. These are facts, and histo ry eller while will corroborate them. The Radicals may continue to prate of their intelligence and ability, but the evidence is that these qualifications have all been on the Democratic side of the house. IlisaisoN and TAYLOR were honest, but fearfully ignorant. Liticouir was not smart and waseia trickvter beside, and ORANT k a mere purchasable commodity, always ip the market and ready to knock himself down to the highest bidder. Something Loose There's something wrong The earth is tumbling about at a terrible rate, and earl Ii pink en, tornadoes, aim) der and lightning, hailstorms, aunoons and cayingsdn, have become wonder fully frequent. What does it all mean and where in it going to end ? Can it be that the lent days are at hand? We are told that in those days there are to be ware and rumors of warn, thun dere and li;litnings and great earth quakes, with other fearful signs. Well, we have all these things now, hut whether on a scale sufficiently large tc justrfy apprehensions of so sc noun a matter an the euililen closing np 01 thine mundane,' in not pi-d so clear. Taken in connection, however, with the wonderful story of the discov ery of a ineans to burn up the Pacific ocean, and, per consequence, all other oceans and waters, the ignition of which would, of course, set the uni verse aflame, we confess that, to a timid timid, there may be some cause for alarm. Science tells us now that our earth is a boiling, bubbling, molten mass of seething fire at the centre, and that the limn ground on which we atand, in but a crilst around this hot.- rible furnace, which at no point exceed ' fifty miles in thickness. If thin be so, and this molten Macs at the centre be disturbed by various minden, as often as our acientists nay it in, then it in no wonder that we so frequently bare such carryings ou on thin upper aide ut the cruet. According to these fellowe, we are living on a very treacherous soil that may at any time crack open Or blow up, and scud all of ADAM'S race into perdition or kingdom conic. Well, well—we don't know anything about it, and don't propose to bother our heads with tins:J.o4y log si.ecula lions. We'll endeavor to take things as they come, believing that en old earth has stood a good ilea! of knock ing about for five or .ix thousand yearn, obeli be able to worry it out for per Raps a thousand more. Under all circumstances, mankind are in the hands of Providence, amid if anybody is wine enough to demonstrate how th e thing could' be bettered, let him pro ceed to unfold his plan. i —The Age understands that a large number of men in Baltimore hate been promised work on the streets and under the water department of Philadelphia by the Radical mana gers. This i 4 in anticipation of the coining fall election, when these men will be used to swell the Radical vote. The Aye remarks that these men will be watched and arrested the moment they arrive in the city, as the "Demo crats do not intend lobe cheated either by native or imported scoundrels." 'rifle is right, and we trust that a succeseful effort will be made to pre vent the employment of a lot of aliens upon the public works of Philadelphia. She leas enough poor Inert within her own limits to do all the work she has to give them, and it would be Criminal injustice to crowd them out in order to make town for expected Radical voters from another city. Let the Democra cy of the city, aided by the Mayor, .lo all in therrpower-terprereat thus great trend from being perpetrated upon the poor working men of Philadelphia. —And now Lion. D. W. VOORIIIIEH signifies his intention to retire from public life at the close of 14 present congressiunaLlartn. 'jade-may be very pl re ii io DANIEL, but we judge the news will not beguile so acceptable to the people. • Mr. Voonuarte ie one of the ablest and most eloquent Dettio- Crate in the country, and we can but illy spare him from, the public coun cils. The Lew Supreme Sonic trouble seems likely to grow out of the lynching of MARTIN MRARii, who whipped and burned his son to death at Watseka, Illinois, the account of which is printed on one of our inside pages. ME%Rt was arrested and put lit/prison for trial, from which he was forffibly taken by a mob headed by some of the Most respectable citizens, against the protests of the Sheriff, and taken out of town and hung. Gov. Pitmiza now orders the Sheriff to ar rest We lynchers, and states that he will assist itiriwith all the power of the State, if necessary. The Sheriff says that it will be extremely hard to arrest these inen as the popular aym pathy is with them, but that he is willing to do has duty. Such is the way the matter stands at present. In our opinion, UM'. PALMER is right in asserting the supremacy of the law, and there is one of two things that the lynchers will have to do— either give themeelves up and stand a trial, or leave the State, and perhaps the country, as the Governor could de mand their delivery to him from the authorities of any other State into which they might retire. MsaTts Mrta.t was a fiend in human shape, and, so far as he was concerned, met with a righteous retribution. At the RAMC Lillie, the 1,11 , 8 Of this country gearatitee to every roan charged with crime tine right of trial by jury, and the people 11,t,%e no right to take the law into their own hands- We ma, even applaud the act whieb revenged the outraged popular feeling upon the tuurderer of an innocent boy, and 'that boy his own soli, but we cannot justify it Should the law, or those appointed to execute the law, once concede the point that the people in certain ag gravated cases have a right to do as they did in the present case, then the law would speedily become a ,lead let ter, without spirit or meaning, and anarchy and drilsorder reign s upreme. ' Hence, the only guarantee of the peace and order of the State and the happi nest, and prosperity of the people, is a strict regard for law by the citizens and a prompt and faithful vindication of its violated majesty by the authori The lynchers of MARTINI Me-tae would to well to give themselves up and stand their trial. In tiew of all the circumstances of the case, the fiendishness of the niurdelter, and the shocked and outraged state of public heeling, we doubt very much if a jury can be found who will he disposed to punish them very heavily lor the sum mary proceeding which they took to rid the world of a monster. 4 —We learn with regret - that Dt at ta, of the Chambershurg Valley Spirit, has lost his only daughter by typhoid fever. Miss I)LNCAN •ccom lamed her lather to this point when he came here to attend the Democrat ic editorial convention, and was after ward one ”f the happy party that made the excursion to Watkins Glen. She wa,i a y ou ng lady of much amiability and intelligence arid was hell ill high esteem ly the ladies and gentlemen of thiAlace who made her acquaintance. We sympathize with our coternporary in lull sad bereavement, but human sympathy, though sweet, cannot repair the desolation which death makes in heart and home. —lt Must be a little discouraging to President GRANT, when he looks over the political field and Fees the hosts of hornier friends that are desert ing ilk standanl. Even the II tRI . ERS are pitching into him a little, and Sen ator Tti-fOx declared in Omaha the other day that it the 'perambulating Provident' wee again nontinated,.he would take the etunip for the Demo cratic candidate. And so it goes. Like rata deserting a oinking ship, GRANT ' S friends are skedaddling at a wonderful rate, leaving the rotten pres idential craft to sink to the bottom or the political ocean. ----The poem furnished by JOIIN HAY, at the reunion of the''Army of the James,' ie as much superior to the one furnished 'by BRET HART at the re union of the 'Army of the Potoinan' as the moon is to a cat's eye. If either of these men will take advice, they will diecontinne their playeetout poetus in dialect and produce' something worthy of their powers. Fel I 11 /40 Shall There be a Lady President In , 1872? No one, we preadme, not even Mr. Greeley, will claim that negroes have more intelligence than women, In all history there have been distinguished women,great paintera,sculidors,writers, and even rillere, and some of them, especially Elizabeth of gngland and Catharine of Russia, actually surpass ed all their male contemporaries in this great function of government. On the central y,sitice the world began, not one solitary negro did anything, never even invented nn alphabet, or took one solitary Niel, toward what we call civilization, nor till the world elide, short of a new creation and a different brain, will there ever be one solitary negro with capacity above the white lad of lwelve to fifteen. Still, it in chtioliby new 'amendments' to the consto ition that this negro is ehitizen, with the same rights and the same status as the white man, while the ',arty that has done this 'big tbing• in the way of 'progress' demise that the immeasurably and inexpressibly supe nor white WORIMUI is a citizen, amid must expect to be ruled by a being whom God has created so vastly mien or that no words in the language can fitly express it? Meanwhile, however, women seem determined to reject this monstrous rule over them, and, unlike the negro, who on all this continent never said one word or did one deed for his 'emancipation,' they ask no favors ; and, lighting their own battle, show themselves quite competent to enter the het and contest the question with the ablest of their imtle opponents, including even the redoubtable Greeley himself. But why Ghoul l not they hold a National Coe vention, and so lectiog Victoria Woodhull, or Mrs. Stanton, or one of the best exponents of the cause for the Preeidency, enter on a solemn and complete cite vase, de Glaring that it such inferior beluga as negroes have been made citizens, the same 'amendments' hate made citizens of those whom God has created with all the capacity for citizenship so im measurably superior? No doubt they could poll a larger tote then ally other party, for even those women who onlitiardy would care nothing for sue frage must feel themselves so outraged that they would vote the ticket, and we should like to see any Jude._ or court in the land that would dare to question its legality whole assentin to negro citizensbip.—N. V. buy Book, f hie by one the (needs of the I'resi dent desert him. When he first en tered the White House the Itailicaln were enthusiastic in their praise of the silent soldier who was to reconstruct the Union, and bring disorder out of the chaos of civil war by the inear rat tle of his saber in its sheath. Now his professed admirers are limited to the circle of hie own relations of the Federal office-holders, the two being in most cases Identical. Among the most persistent of hie trumpeters have been the:Meeers. Ilarpers, who in their Rev eral periodicals have lavished much praise upon him. They too, however, have at last been forced to change their lone, and in the last number of there magazine publish the following hitte't assault upon hum in the form of an extract from a letter of Thomas Jeflereon, in which the writer said: The public will never be made to be• lieve that an appointment of a relative is made on the ground of merit alone, uninfluenced by family views; nor call they ever see with approbation offices, the disposal of which they entrust to their Presidents for public purposes, divided out as family properly. Mr Adams degraded himself infinitely by bin conduct on this subject, as General Washington bad duet himself the greatest honor. With two slick exam plea to proceed by I should be doubly excusable to err. It is true that this places the relations of the l'resideet ui a worse situation than it lie were a stranger; but the public good, which cannot be effected if its confidence be lost, requires this sacrifice. An attack so bitter anti unexpected ae this must greatly annoy the Presi dent. While criticism of hie official acts is always in order, it is not pleas ant to see him thus suddenly stabbed by those who have been hie foremost friends. 'Clue Meeers. Harper, of couroe, share in the eliaine which all good citizens feel at the gross nepotism of the President, but their assault upon the mail whom they have heretofore eo uniformly defended is cruel ui its suddenness and sarcastic bitterness.— N. Y. World —Horace Greeley tells us that souls of the purest and best women of New England have gone South to teach the coloredchildren. Very true; and yet in some cases the South has not treated theme women as the purest and best of women should' be treated. Near ',random Miss., for instance, one or two of them were actually ostracised not long ago for no other offense than that of bathing in the river number of Cblored gentlemen.—Lottis. edit Courier. —Rochefort ie to be tried upon an indictment, which' berore a (loon Mar. tial, can hardly result otherwise than unfavorably to him. NO. 29 Et Tu, Brute Spawls from the Keydotis. —Eris city has a debt of about $OO,OOO. —Mitlisnoy city Is to hare a $40,000 Catholic 113=111 —Welvan have made their Applarabes In rumberlend and Perry trountiet. yeer Penniyivanle farmers righted namoo,ooo buehele of mai, th• largest quanity of any 1-.tato In the Union. —Joseph IC. Turner, • lawyer of Titusville, on Friday last woo convicted of forging affidavits for tho procurement of pension IZIMIZIM —A daughter of John Shlmp, of West Calloo township, Lancaster county, was burned to death a short time sine. while trying to kindle a fire with kerosene. Camp tnueting, under the charge of the Met hudist Protestant Church, will be held on the land of John Barton, near Fawn Grove, York county, Pa., commencing on the inth of t Augural. —Eighty dollars worth of frogs were sap. turgid at Greenville by Pittsburg parties r•rently, the Gine occupied being three days. They used a dark lantern ane thus eucesded in catching them —A non of Samuel Zsager, near Centerville, Lnacester county, aged •leven ye•re, died very suddenly lately, from the effects of In dulging In too much cnld water whit• under excemelvo pereplratton. —Nine, fat gentlemen oyottstown, Mont gomery cuunly, bare bean challenged by nine fatter 011(11 of Dangle...rills to play a game of base hall at the hotter place. The Lknigisavllle nine weigh I,obe pounds. —Mr J 11. IL Fryer, of Pottstown, has an apple that was grown In Ma, end Is now two 1111 d it half year, Id. and lo in, good stele of toimmrVllLlllll Ile kept it In hi% cedar. f lila to certainly aonu•thing, of a champion apple. —Martin Stauffer, of P.M) township. Lansaw ler eounly • aged DJ years, this harvest, 1q two hours, reaped els •hock a of whist. lie lW worlu•d In eighty nnueensi vs harvests 1101, In good bealth, 1,11,i looks 1 , 11 If he would lest Amity years longer —A large number of ettisens of Camtirria and Somerset counties rust at Day Melville • few day■ ago for the purpose of taking step/ to build a railroad (ruin Johnstown to some terminus in Somerset county, oonnsetlng with the Connelleville railroad. —Tho Erie car•erheel works, yr birth Marred nitwit four years ago ,asys the FATIO Ahlipilathasap e , itntnetteed operations by manufacturing four heelna day They now produce eighty, and still the orders cumulus to roll In. luring don't pay; of court., not• —The Johnstown Trams' says • Tim notellinery eitnneoted with the Cambria Iron on.pony meal works was socoassfully tested on Wednesday, and abseil rails mode oith ent ire satisfaction to all coneernad A lVa learn that In the course of about two week*, the work./ will be finished la every detail, and work go on uninterruptedly. —A hoonakoepar should ne•sr buyeatlish In Jun.. or July, because the% nail spawns In June. and for some weak, p..otect% Its young, lead ing them out N 1 N hen leads her 01011 YVON. lotto •anon. lending grounda, anti drl•ldg off prsaisti , ry fish, such as as perch, sunfish, pike anti • tiler annul waters •arleuss. All this still. Ilia lutrent eatluill Is lank nod thin, and not 11l for human food. —At the meeting of the htock h•ld•ra of the l'ento , )lvan ,fret company, held le Pluto/dal. ph 111011 h nasty last, It was 1111.11E1110lInly agreed toso,opt the supple Tent the charter primed at the s ecru( see.ion u( the Legielators, and to authorise the ineretpte of Ilia capital stock to the amount of one stallion of do'lare• It le Intended to enlarge the works at lia:dwle, and snake a u• , sillier impruYetsiente. — 'j littleAlM Of ttm Merin!, of Miller's Eddy, k 11710 roily county, Pa , was killed a fey days ago in a very peculiar any lie was play # log with a largo augur, carrying It In fronts( him with the point nardnvt hi• brew. Going 111• Ar n to It klek•A him, striking lie hen, die ~f tha mownr and girl, log the stem •ritlrely ihrough the Loki)/ of the child, and entildnig away pert.. of !ging, The child lived lAA a few hour, —At Pluladelphia on Thursday of last week . while the Pennsylvania railroad earn were pasting Thlrty.fifth street, a young man rivaled from the sidewalk, and deliberately placld his head an the track IminediadelY 10 front of the I s. lira. Before the tral■ could 10 stopped every ear had passed over tlte oily. The head lora, •111,ektriKty mangled In the blind of too lleea.od WIRY clutched • piece of paper Inscribed an follow. • •'Jame* Davie, lawn 1047. Loft without frierola, death lute, and tired of living." —A Venerable Switch Tender At Bridgeport, on the oppogire nide of the riser, le a nwitelll tender name I Fred•rick Arnett, who has bean in the acr•lee of the Cumberland Valley In ..1\ pnl Ily ever enure It hel,lllo roar ,r ear,. ago Hiner, that time he tits thc res of ri. the little. armor iata4 with his position la the mica laithrti I an I ote exceptionable manor r. In rain and sunshine he hart error harm at his punt, and, stittloligh about eighty year. of age, he July tures the sw nob. Mr Armill wee born in France and fought antler the leadership of Napoleon in the memorable *are 'oetatien 1812 and 18.5. If the appearatiou und unlit° inovenumie are any Indication, be may live to perform the duties of Bench Icudet for crony years. But wouldn't the Cumberland Nielq . ley railroad company allow lin appreciation of Ida faithful r•urvicre by promoting him to 11 position 111 , 1ra lucre' the and los. ,•v pic,c,l and rosponsfhlo err t3llllY MI wit., /111, Mr . ,01/ ()In rend faith fully fir thuty hair yearn, through slimmers heat and rriator's cold, Orchid he ki n dly re. ,crate Ind in lo declining pars —um ntiDurg Innertor. n 4 en! —From the i.ancaster Infrltiqmirer Saturday rioting client Pin n'olock Mrs. Catharine Kirby, aged 101 yeni Inontler and 15 days, died at the renblenoe of bar soil-10. law, Michael Sullivan. Mrtt, Kirby was of Irish birth, having been born in queettstewu, Ire. land, on the Is/ of Januaty,"ll7o litto came to Xinertes, with her daughter, Mtn. buliivan, twenty•tx o viars ago, and removed with her and herhusband to this ,city eleven years ago, end hell resided here since that time. Mr.. Kirby spoke only the ancient Irish language, having au menden to the English. She was never sick a week to her life; never used spectaeles, and her head nes covered with a luxuriant growth of Jet hiack hair, among which scarcely, a dozen gray ones cotdd be teund, Although tier inteUeot L bee came weakened some two or three y l earSage she remained In ex &silent health until a few days ;motions to her death, when shb was overta'kep b' a lethargy and slept the greater part of *tithe, Until finally 'she .tept'tbs Sleep that knows no waking, Atte well no doubttthe oldest person In tunettatee, being the only Centenarian eeperted' tberslkarg marshals last year.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers