BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. A vote for OSBORNE is a vote endors- ing QUAY. —And TEDDY ROOSEVELT now wishes he had paid his taxes like a man. —Everybody can vote for JIM HALL for Congress, because he is everybody’s friend. —It’s beginning to look as if Mr. STONE might, with great propriety, stake off his lot in the political cemetery. —The grand plan of reform for Pennsyl- vania cannot be carried out unless Demo- cratic Legislators are elected. Vote for FosTER and WETZEL. —The People’s bank developments have added volumes to the Democratic campaign argument. They may also add to the Re- publican majority in the Eastern peniten- tiary. —There wasn’t much trouble for Mr. QUAY and his friends to get away with the State’s money in the People’s bank. The great trouble they now experience, how- ever, is to get away irom the results of that thieving. —The gold fever took many men to the Klondike regions. The latest reports from there are to the effect that typhoid fever is carrying them off as fast as possible. Three thousand argonauts are said to be prostrated with iz now. —A vote for SWALLOW is just the same as a vote for STONE. JENKS is the only candidate for reform who can possibly have a chance of being elected ; but he can’t win if people are foolish enough to vote for some one else when they know their votes are being thrown away. —The New York Sun has taken up the task of directing the Republican politics of New York State. A few years ago the Sun was endeavoring to do the same thing for the Democracy, but times have changed and the Sun has changed, in fact it changes oftener than the times. —The job that WOMELSDORF and Os- BORNE put up on MILLER, the Clinton county aspirant for State Senator, simply goes to show that no anti-QUAY man need apply. They had a dead-lock right up to the last day of time, but when it became necessary one man very promptly hauled off, for he knew who was to be the nomi- nee all along. You know QUAY works in a mysterious way his wonders to perform. —Why don’t the Republicans have the courage to stand up and insist that DALEY and TOWNSEND make a fair, open state- ment of where they stand in the fight that is being made against QUAY-ism in the State by a large and respectable element of the Republican party. FosTER and WET- ZEL will tell you-where they stand; but DALEY and TOWNSEND are trying to do the old country circus act of riding two horses at one time. —If Mr. Quay and his son RICHARD and former State Treasurer HAYWOOD are actually guilty of having misused state funds deposited in the defunct People’s bank of Philadelphia, then they should be punished, but if their arrest appears to be only part of the plan of scheming, jealous seekers after the power held by QUAY and his friends in this State to get that power themselves then it will react in favor of QUAY and prove a boomerang to the other side. —TEDDY ROOSEVELT’S ncmination for Governor of New York has made him pay his taxes. On Monday the suit which he had brought against the commissioner of taxes and assessments in New York city was withdrawn and TEDDY’s brother-in-law paid the $1,005 tax on the Rough Rider’s Madison avenue home. He had tried to avoid the payment of the levy by claiming his residence to be in Washington, but since the Republicans have made him their gubernatorial nominee he has loosened up. —Poor old MATTHEW STANLEY QUAY’S lot is certainly becoming an unhappy one. With WANAMAKER and SWALLOW both peppering at him they have him arrested now, charged with complicity in unlawful- ly using state funds in the defunct People’s bank of Philadelphia. Senator PENROSE speaks of the arrest as an attempt to assassi- nate his colleague’s character ; thus put- ting a farcical appearance on the proceed- ing. If that is all it is it will not result seriously for QUAY, because everyone knows that he has no character to assassi- nate. —EL1 did say it, notwithstanding the denials of the honorable editor of the Ga- zette and the three hundred witnesses he calls to swear for him. ELI TOWNSEND, Republican nominee for Legislature, said on the stage of Garman’s opera house dur- ing the last Republican county convention, that he had ‘‘never voted for a Democrat in his life.”” ELI would like to run his campaign on the dark lantern plan, hut we intend that the people shall know this even if they can’t force him to tell whether he is for QUAY or not. —Little did Mrs. LEITER think, when she had that ‘bust made of her daughter's hand’’ that soon those busted digits would be holding the sceptre of almost queenlike sovereignty over India. Sir GEORGE Cug- Z0N has been appointed vice-roy of India and MARY LEITER, his wife, the Chicago girl whom Washington laughed at because of her mother’s malapropisms, need now only bend to the Queen of England. Young JOE didn’t fly far in his great wheat speculation, but MARY has outdistanced all the other American brides of English titles. a STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 43 _ BELLEFONTE, PA., OCTOBER 7, 1 898. NO. 39. Investigation of Army Abuses. President McKINLEY has succeeded .in getting a committee to which will be as- signed the work of investigating Secretary ALGER’S war management. It was only after he was driven toit by public indigna- tion that he consented to have the conduct of the war department investigated, and the men whom he has secured to do this work are not of the kind from whom can be expected a thoroughly impartial and ex- haustive investigation. Some of the committeemen, among whom is General DODGE, the chairman, have expressed themselves already in ad- vance favorably to the official whose con- duct is to be the subject of their action. At least one of them, Colonel SEXTON, commander-in-chief of the G. A. R., is a red-hot partisan, who proved his unfitness for the work this committee will have to do by expressions which indicated his eagerness to be on the committee for ALGER’S benefit. One of the last of the committeemen to be selected was our own Gen’l BEAVER, who we trust will not find it a difficult matter. Gen’l BEAVER has an opportunity here afforded him to do his country a signal service. We know he has the honesty and nobility to do it, but will he have the courage to see anything in the management of the war that might ‘‘hurt the party ?"’ The very first act of the committee, when it got together in Washington on Monday, was calculated to make an unfavorable impression upon the public mind, as their conclusion to conduct their investigation with closed doors excites the suspicion that the white wash brush is going to be used. The committee will have neither the means nor the power to compel the attendance of witnesses, and while no one will be interested in bringing before it the soldiers who suffered, and securing their testimony, ALGER’s backers will not be in want of witnesses to testify that there was nothing wrong in his management. This investigation was not gotten up in good faith. It will be conducted under the management of the parties who want to exonerate ALGER, and it is pretty cer- tain that its report will attach no blame to him for the abuses in the field and in the camps that inflicted so much suffering upon the soldiers and cost the lives of s¢ many of then. ——If the voters of Centre county would only take the proper view of it C. M. Bow- ER, candidate for Superior court judge, would get the entire vote of Centre county. Such a position should be without the bias of party feeling and if all were to look at it in such a light, which is really the only proper one, he would get the unanimous vote. The result in Centre county will have no effect on the general result in any event, so why not give Mr. BOWER the rousing testamonial that we all know his sterling qualities and high character as a citizen merit. Do the People Want a Draft? The policy of expanding our colonial possessions would impose burdens upon our people which would be very repulsive to them. The military burden which would attend such a policy would be the hardest to bear. Troops would be needed to garrison and defend such colonies. Where would the troops required for that purpose be obtained ? We refer merely to the men who would have to perform this military duty, without speaking of the cost that would be incurred. The Republican Portland Press, speaker REED’S organ, ‘is of the opinion that 100,- 000 troops must be stationed in the Phil- ippines to keep the flag flying in those conquered islands. Where are those troops to come from in view of the evident dislike of our people to do service of that kind ? During the recent war they have had such experience of military service in tropical climates that they will not readily volun- teer to keep up the force that would be needed to hold the conquered colonial pos- sessions. “It would take many months, if not years,”” says speaker REED’S organ, ‘‘to increase the regular army to the necessary size for this purpose.’”” As volunteers would not be forthcoming, a process of conscription would be necessary to secure each State’s proportion of the required number. All the volunteers in the service now want to get out, and it would be im- possible to raise another force by the vol- unteer process. Therefore an army of 100,000 men for the Philippines would mean conscription, or, in other words, a draft. Do our people want this? Are they will- ing to be forced into military service in sickly tropical climates in order to carry out an imperial policy which was not thought of when the war for the liberation of Cuba was started ? _ —MircHELL I. GARDNER is young, competent, courteous and a Christian gen- tleman, therefore he is the right man to be made prothonotary of Centre county. No Abandonment of Principle. Some of the Republican organs make sarcastic allusion to the fact that the Dem- ocratic state conventions of Pennsylvania, New York, Connecticut and New Jersey have made no mention of free silver or the Chicago platform. This is represented to be an abandonment of the principles which the Democratic party maintained in the last presidential campaign. In the adoption of such a line of action there has been no surrender of. principle by the Democrats of those States. They merely displayed their practical sense by not bringing into state campaigns an issue which is in no way related to state govern- ment. If the Legislatures and Governors of the State had the power to determine the question of currency it would have been not only proper but obligatory upon these Democratic state conventions to make that question an issue in their state campaigns, but when matters of state interest are so urgently demanding attention, the intro- duction of irrelevant national issues, that would divert. the attention of the people from the abuses that are to be corrected, would be reprehensible trifling with mat- ters that intrinsically effect the welfare of the States. To secure the blessing of good state government men of all shades of opinion on the money question can temporarily suspend their preference on that subject in order that they may act together for the attainment of a purely state object. Machine politicians who are interested in the maintenance of state abuses are bet- ter suited by intruding national issues that will turn the attention of the people from their bad acts, but when the Demo- crats, in their state conventions, agree to suspend their differences on such national issues as the currency in order that there may be united action in securing better state government, they display the prac- tical common sense of citizens who know what course to pursue for the accomplish- ment of a desired object. After they shall have rescued their States from the control of political corruptionists, their preference on the money question, whether it be for silver or gold, can be expressed in national elections to which that issue belongs. : Good in Both Ways. We have heard it remarked by a number of men that M. I. GARDNER, the. Demo- cratic candidate for Prothonotary, is one of the best and most effective workers that has ever been upon a ticket in the county. This is not to be wondered at. In every- thing that Mr. GARDNER undertakes he is earnest and thorough. In all his work, he is systematic, orderly and careful. It is this that has made him successful in every undertaking, and it is this that will make him one of the best officials the county has everhad. That his election is certain there is no doubt, and that when elected we will have a careful, obliging and prompt official isjust as sure. Mr. GARDNER ds a good candidate, and will be just as good and thorough as an official. Platt's Military Figurehead. In nominating ROOSEVELT for Governor the Republican managers of New York State showed how hard up they were for a candidate who would supply them with a war hurrah. They needed a military figure- head who might help to draw the attention of the people from a $9,000,000 canal steal, and from the shameful record that has been made by the passage of the Raines law, the municipal force bill, and other acts of mis- rule that compelled them to shelve Gover- nor BLACK and trot TEDDY, the rough riding and tax dodging hero, to the political front. By accepting the nomination at the hands of boss PLATT, whose machine rule he pro- fessed to abhor, but whose control he will be forced to submit to, ROOSEVELT dis- played a greed for office that would accept any terms to secure the coveted prize, mak- ing it evident that his military performance was designed to win political preferment. The raising of his regiment was done with a parade intended to attract all possible public attention ; his exploit at Santiago was given a prominence of publication that pictured TEDDY as the chief hero of the fight, and after succeeding in having him- self exploited with all the theatrical ac- companiments that could be worked in, he hastened home to receive his political re- ward, without showing any squeamishness in accepting it from one of the most cor- rupt party bosses. It is to be seen whether the people of New York will allow PLATT to blind them to the iniquities of his machine rule, in- cluding the canal steal, by using TEDDY, the Rough Rider and tax dodger, in a hurrah campaign. ——It is not possible for Centre county to elect Mr. BOWER to the superior court bench but she can show to the rest of the State that he is a man in high favor at home, if he is given the vote that ought to be given him. A Game Which Democrats Should Under- stand. The scheme which the machine has adopted to detract from the vote for GEo. A. JENKS is to create an impression that the fight is between STONE and SwALLOW. This is intended to affect the class of voters whose desire to down the machine makes them anxious to vote for the candidate who may appear to be most able to do this. It will be a gain for STONE if this class of voters can be misled into casting their bal- lots for SwALLOw. This is the game that is being played by such an assistant of QUAY-ism as the Phila- delphia Times, which has undertaken the role of stool pigeon in luring Democratic votes away from the Democratic nominee t0 SWALLOW by representing the reverend political adventurer as having the better chance of defeating the machine candidate. It does not require much intelligence to detect the object of this device and to see through its shallow fallacy. As GEo. A. JENKSs is the regular nominee of a party ‘that has a membership of at least 450,000 in the State, that figure may be justly counted as the basis of his strength in this contest. When the character of the Demo- cratic candidate and the regularity of his nomination are considered, is there any- thing apparent that should detract from the support he is entitled to from this large organized force of Democrats ? There is no cause for Democratic dis- satisfaction with either the candidate or the position of the party in this campaign. If the SWALLOW vote of last year is in- creased this year the only legitimate cause for that increase will be the Republican disaffection toward the machine ticket. While this is likely to be heavy, the only inducement for Democrats to vote for SWALLOW may be the delusion that he be more able than JENKS to defeat QUAY’S candidate. Itis the purpose of the ma- chine managers and their stool pigeon as- sistants to work up this delusion among Democrats with the object of drawing enough away from the Democratic candi- date to prevent his getting the plurality which he will have if all Democrats stick to him. ‘When the situation is viewed logically nothing could appear more preposterous «| than the idea that a candidate representing nothing but his personal vanity should poll a larger vote for the Governorship of Pennsylvania than the regular nominee of the Democratic party, and that nominee a man of GEo. A. JENKS' character and repute. -——They say that JOHN DALEY is run- ning his campaign on the ‘‘friend of the soldiers’’ plea. Well, well, well, JouN knows better than to try to make people believe that every other one of the Assem- bly aspirants are not just as friendly to the soldiers as he is. For instance, BoB Foster. Now BoB isn’t making a parade of it, yet experience has taught all that he is very much the friend of the soldier, even though he doesn’t run around trying] to make votes out of it. While in the Legis- lature he voted for the act prohibiting the discharge of soldiers from public positions in the State and asa member of the Soldiers’ Orphans commission, without salary, he has placed several children in the schools from this county and has secured positions as teachers for several deserving Centre countians. Vicious Federal Appointments. The manner in which QUAY has used the federal offices to keep his machine going has been long known, but never received as much ventilation as has been recently given it. The disposal of those offices for his politic- al purposes, and the profit of state money deposited in banks that paid the machine for its use, have been among the agencies with which the boss has maintained his power. WANAMAKER has called atten- tion to the manner in which QUAY has used the post offices for political huckster- ing. Candidate SOWDEN has made a furth- er exposure of this form of machine corrup- tion, furnishing actual proof of QuAy’s complicity in the traffic in post offices for his political profit. The Philadelphia Press, a Republican or- gan opposed to the boss, remarks that ‘‘the power over federal appointments is a strong lever in Senator QUAY’s hands to promote his purposes,’”’ and adds that ‘‘should he be retired to private life his control of federal appointments will end and the power of the machine will be greatly reduced.’’ But would this corrupt machine politi- cian be able to exercise this pernicious power if President McKINLEY did not give him the control of appointments that con- flict with public interests ? The horse doc- tor HUIDEKOPER, who was allowed to trifle with the health and lives of the soldiers at Chicamauga, was recommended by QUAY, but McKINLEY made the appointment. The responsibility for this vicious method of disposing of federal offices lies with the chief appointing power. man Where We Stand and Why. Jenks and Reform.—The Leading Republican Paper in Western Pennsylvania Advocates “The Good Government Ticket. A reader of the Dispatch writes a letter enthusiastically applauding its recent edi- torial utterances. The letter he states ‘is not written for publication, but simply to endorse your stand for honesty in public affairs.”” But as the letter indicates a neces- sity for clearly defining the stand of the Dispatch on present questions we feel jus- tified in quoting the part of it bearing on these points, as follows : I could not resist the desire to a persistent consistent stand against the war, and also against political machines—with a single ex- $epilon, 1 e., you encourage the support of “Is the loco-foco machine less obnoxious to honest men, than the Republican? Can we hope for more true or honest government from the one than the other! “What's the matter with Swal- low?’ Ts he not “all right”’—and honest and fearless withal.” As touching on the first point, in order to avoid misunderstanding it seems neces- sary to tell our friend that the Dispatch has not taken any stand ‘‘against the war.” It has warmly and consistently supported the war, as pledged by the declarations under which it was inaugurated, to be a war for civilization, humanity and free- dom. It will give the same support to any other war, for the same cause and in which the duygy is as clearly laid upon this government as’it was in the cause of Cuba. But when it was proposed to violate those high pledges and to ignore the principles on which this government is founded, by perverting it into a campaign of military conquest for the enrichment of politicians and speculators, the Dispatch will always be found in opposition to any such propo- sition. More extending comment is called for by the inquiry of our reader concerning the ‘‘loco-foco machine’’ and the respective claims of George A. Jenks and Silas C. Swallow. We do not know of any Ioco- foco machine in Pennsylvania that has such control of state affairs as the Repub- lican machine. The Democratic party has its share of selfish and greedy politicians, no doubt. But so long as the only hope of that party for suceéss in Pennsylvania lies in the candidacy of men like Jenks and plaud your Pattison it cannot be obnoxious to those: who only wish to see men of high character in high office. As to the honesty of Swallow, taking the term in its meaning of superiority to par- ticipation in stealing, we believe that Mr. Swallow is honest, but he is no more so than Jenks. Taking the term in the larger sense of scrupulous justice to others, the readiness to charge that anyone who does not devote himself to the advancement of the Swallow movement is a secret ally of the state machine is in some of its ‘aspects the reverse of honest. how far Mr. Swallow may be responsible for that aspect, but we do affirm that, as practiced by the influences behind him, the persistent falsehood that Jenks is a Quay man and the standard oil candidate is rank dishonesty. Beyond and aside from these special aspects the Dispatch believes that there are controlling principles which should govern the action of men who place honest and good government ahove party. First, the duty of supporting a party when it makes a good nomination is as imperative as the duty of voting against it when it makes a bad one. The Dispatch has taught the principle of independent action involved in voting against a party whose ticket rep- resents broken faith, spoils and corruption; and it is bound to follow the logical con- clusion that when a party makes a nomi- nation that means integrity, ability and up- rightness, it is the equal duty of independ- ents to vote for it. Next, any intelligent conception of good government must take into consideration, in addition to the moral qualities of the candidates, their mental abilities, their knowledge of public affairs and their training with the regard to the principles of legislation. On this point there is no comparison between Jenks and Swallow. An equally vital consideration is the duty of independent citizens to take the best opportunities offered to secure the election of honest officials. On this point the last election presented the situation as follows : There were 372,000 Republican votes ; there were 242,000 Democratic votes ; 119,000 Swallows’ votes, and 439,- 000 voters as compared with the vote of 1896, who stayed at home, the majority of them so dissatisfied with the choice pre- sented to them that they would not vote at all. In such a situation it is a vital necessity of reform that if the organization controlling the greatest vote nominates a candidate whose name is a guarantee of his superiority to machine dictation, and plants itself on a platform of state reform it is the duty of independent and earnest men to support it as the one feasible way of securing what that class is after. This is independent duty as the Dispatch sees it. With others who honestly and conscientiously see their duty differently it cannot quarrel for following their own convictions. But they incur the hazard of being responsible for the failure to elect an upright, independent and able Govetnor. Every man knows that it was impossible to bring the 242,000 Democratic votes to a Prohibition candidate, while if the object of securing good government were not hampered by personal ambitions it should not be hard to bring the independent vote to the support of Jenks. Our friend further expresses the hope of seeing a ‘‘good government party’ with the Dispatch in the forefront of such a party. If a good government party should be developed on broad, intelligent and practicable lines, it would undoubtedly command the approval of this paper. But if a party, claiming to be for good govern- ment, is so lacking either in intelligence or disinterestedness that it will not utilize such opportunities as those offered by the nomination of George A. Jenks it can have no claim on the support of the Dispatch.— From Pittsburg Dispatch, October 2nd, 1898. ——If you want to lose your vote the most effective way to do it is to waste it on SwaArLLow. If you are honestly for reform you will vote for JENKS. We do not know: Spawls from the Keystone. —Rush Blackwell, son of F. A. Blackwell, and George Reed, two North Bend young men, have left for Porto Rico, on which island they will locate. —Joseph Work, a well known lumberman and farmer of near McGhee’s Mills, Clear- field county, died a few days ago of a stom- ach disease. He was 64 years old. —John M. Charles, of New Castle, has mysteriously disappeared. He left home Tuesday, since which time no trace of him can be found. His wife has asked the police to help find her husband. —F. P, Notley, of Barnesboro, has pur- chased from the estate of Aaron Patchin, near Patchinville, four tracts of timber land, for which he paid $180,000. Mr. Notley will begin cutting timber at once. —The coal traffic on the Beech Creek rail- road is unusually heavy at present. Up- wards of 500 cars pass over the road daily loaded with bituminous coal from the mines in Clearfield, Centre and Jefferson counties, bound for the seashore. —William W. Lewis, of Michigan, commit- ted suicide near Ulysses, Potter county. He tied a handkerchief around his neck and, putting a stick through the knot, twisted it until he strangled to death. He was 68 years old. —The work on the extension of the Tusca- rora valley railroad from Blair's Mills, Hunt- ingdon county. to McConnellstown, Fulton county, is being pushed very rapidly by the president and owner of the new road, Col Thos. S. Moorehead. —J. Kirk Jacobs, one of the oldest passen- ger conductors on the Pennsylvania railroad and on the Philadelphia division, died at his home in Newport on Monday even- ing, after a short illness. He was 62 years of age, thirty odd years of which he served as a conductor. —Porter’s station, on the Beech Creek rail- road, has been changed to Clearfield bridge, a mile east of the old location. This brings it to the junction of the new railroad being built at Clearfield creek. Work on the new railroad is being pushed rapidly, and before many months it will be completed. —Twenty-five cars of California fruit ar- rived in Sunbury a few nights ago for icing. These cars are as a usual thing iced at Reno- vo, but that place is out of ice and they were sent on to Sunbury. The cars came di- rectly through from California and were billed for Philadelphia and New York. —Samuel B. Tuck, late clerk at the Penn- sylvania railroad’s Juniata shops, pleaded guilty in court to embezzling $15,000 of the funds of the Juniata building and loan asso- ciation, of which he was recretary. He was sentenced to pay 8700 fine and to serve six years’ imprisonment in the Western peniten- tiary. —Levi Deitrick, of Nippenose, died at his home on Tuesday from injuries received in a runaway. He was jostled from a wagon and dragged by the feet for over a mile. He was fearfully bruised about the body and his face lacerated in a terrible manner by his false teeth falling out of his mouth and lodging against his cheek. —Lieutenant William Rooney, of the United States navy, a native of Hollidays- burg, who was an officer'on board: the cruiser New Orleans during the war with Spain, has been commissioned to distribute 300,000 ra- tions among the needy Cuban citizens and soldiers of Santiago. The lieutenant held a conference with General Garcia relative to the matter. —The Perry county bending works of Darlington and Gilliland, at New Bloomfield have received an order from Owego, N. Y., for 6,000 sets of drill rims and 350 sets of wagon rims; and from the Columbia, Pa., wagon company an order for 2,200 sets of rims. This will keep the works running steadily for over a half year, and will take a train of twenty-five cars to carry them to their destination. —Physicians declare that the pens and pen- cils used in the school rooms are loaded with deadly disease germs. They say that parents should caution their children not to put the end of a pen or pencil in their mouth. A pen or pencil furnished by the school, is in time passed through the hands of every scholar in the room and by the time each has taken a chew at the end, the germs, if they exist, will be thoroughly distributed. —It is said that the Pennsylvania railroad company has decided to enclose its lines west of Pittsburg with woven wire fence and that orders have been placed for over 1,000 miles of wire fence. A gentleman from Braddock stated that an order had been placed by the railroad company with the American steel and wire company at that place for 500 miles of fence to be used to enclose the Fort Wayne railroad between Pittsburg and Chicago. He also stated that the firm was turning out five miles of fence daily on the order mentioned. —The most wonderful piece of construc- tion work that has ever been done on a rail- road in the eastern part of the United States is going on on the Pittsburg division between Lilly and Portage, where great cuts, 155 feet deep, and fills of like extent are being made. Six degree curves are being eliminated and the work will shorten the tracks between the two places named about a mile, making it six miles instead of seven. The curvature is being reduced 540 degrees. This work is ex- pected to be completed about the first of the year. It makes a comparatively straight stretch through a portion of the mountain, and Drake, Strattan & Co., of Pittsburg, are the contractors on this work. —Agents of the proposed Beech Creek rail- road extension have been in the vicinity of Jeanette for the past two weeks, obtaining options on farm properties and rights of way through the territory it is intended to traverse. The representa- tives of the railroad are working in a very quiet but effective manner, and have ob- tained options on several farms in that neigh- borhood. The route of the new line was sur- veyed several years ago. Lately agents made their appearance and obtained several options. The new road will enter Jeanette from the north and will cross the Pennsylva- nia railroad there. It will open up valuable coal and timber lands in Indiana and West- moreland counties. It will connect with the Baltimore and Ohio at or near Suterville, in the southern part of the county.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers