v FARM NOTES. —Trim evergreen hedges. —Keep account of your crops aud con- signments. ~The farmer “‘pays the freight’’ on San Joes scales. —Give roses plenty of water. ers ae goon as in full bloom. —Many flower seeds are very small and will not do well in rough, lumpy soil. Cut flow- —A new insect—the apple leaf miner, is getting in its evil work in some parts of the country. —It is a mistake to keep food continual- ly before the hogs after they have been pat on fall feed. —No hog can be healthy or produce meat of the hest quality if compelled to drink putrid water. —Sappose you sit down and tell us of an industry that will not be helped along with any help given to agriculture. —As soon as a hen hecomes useless sell her. She is better out of the way even if you do not get the highest market price. —QGather aod destroy all fruit dropping prematurely. This will diminish insect crop and increase fruit erop for next year. —Has the winter soggested any new ideas in household conveniences? How are your women folks cared for in regard to drying the family washing? —Il you bave a good home market, do not look elsewhere for the sale of your fruit, unless you have something extra fine and some first-class customers. —See those grape vines with their long new shoots swaying back and forth. That is their way of asking protection from the Vieds Tying them to the trellis or arbor oes it. ~—When blackberry canes reach a height of three feet they should be pinched off. This can be done with a pair of six-inch soissors or eheep shears. Pruning shears are too clumsy for this kind of work. ~When cold storms come on it is a good plan to throw an old piece of oileloth or | some other waterproof cloth over the coops. Is will protect the early hatched chicks from the rain and help make the coop warmer. —To raise fine large specimens of frait on a tree, graft it with an early and late sort. The early part will require the large portion of the nutriment until it is ripe, then the late sort will draw all the nour- ishment for its development. —While the matted row system for strawberries is preferred hy the majority of growers, yet it will he an advantage to train the first ronners to grow in the rows (and not have the rows very wide) by cat- ting off the late runners that appear. —Ducks need two feeds per day of a soft food mixture for quick assimilation. The bedding in a duckhouse needs frequent re- newal, as their manure will plaster it up oud dampen it easily. If confined with hens, they would soon create conditions not good for best results for the latter. ~The larger proportion of nitrogen derived from manare is in the liquids, and the farmer who depends upon the solids, permitting the liquids to waste will haul out to his land bulky material that will disappoint him when he harvests his crops. The liquids should be carefully saved. —Carbolic salve should always he kept ready for use at the cow harn. Bruises and sores often ocour in the best-regulated establishments, and there is nothing really better than carbolic ointment for such cases. This may be purchased already pre- pared at any drugstore, or the dairyman oan easily prepare it for himself by simply taking some vaseline, or even lard, and adding to it a very small quantity of the carbolic acid. —With all the remedies suggested for blight on pear trees, the difficulty still ex- ists, and many pear orchards are destroyed every year. At one time it was believed that by keeping the orchard ound in grass the pear trees would escape, ut, while the rapid growth of the trees seems favorable to attack of blight, and, although the grass may retard attack, yet the trees will succumb to the disease should it find its way into the orchard. The spray- ing of trees, or treating the trees at the roots, will confer benefit, but there is no sure remedy for blight. —Peas will probably bear deeper plant- ing then any other seeds. The crop de- lights in a cool, moist soil, and deep plant- ing insures these conditions. It has been found, however, that making a furrow seven or eight inches deep, filling it with a mixture of oil and a proportion of fertil- izer, and planting the peas on this, two inches below the surface, produces better results than deeper Fionviog. It the pea roots prefer to go down deep they will do 80, provided the gardener bas prepared the proper conditions. Peas may be planted at any time for a late supply. ~The currant and gooseberry worms that consume the leaves of the currant and gooseberry leaving the bushes bare of foli- will weaken the bushes so much that e berries will not ripen; even the bushes being sometimes killed by them. The worme may be poisoned by the use of helle- bore dissolved in water, the bushes bei yed with it. Take a tablespoontal e helleboro, add a quart of hot water, and allow it to stand a few hours; then add to it a pailful of water, and spray the bushes well with it. An old broom will auswer very well for sprayiog. The worms are soon killed, and the poiton will not last long. In afew daye the berries may be eaten. —Manure heaps are r ible for many diseases that appear Ep Even the well water may become contaminated, though the heap may be some distance from it. Typhoid fever and diphtheria have appeared in families living a mile or more from neighbors,and where it was apparent- ly im ble for the families to be attack- ed. A French scientist, who investigated diseases on farms in France, found that there was some relation between manure heape and epidemics of diphtheria. Sta- in Scotland and Prussia show that the rate of mortality from diphtheria ia higher in rural districts. It is suggested that all manure should be kept in closed locations, having cement sides and bot- Bellefonte, Pa., June 14, 1907, FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. A little while a little love May yet be ours who have not said "he word it makes our eyes afraid To kuow that each is thinking of. Not yetthe end ; be our lips dum? It smiles a little season yet: I'l! tell thee, when the end is come, How we may best forget, — Dante Gabriel Rossetti, There are two most important points to be settled in planning aud preparing for the wedding feast ; the hour at which the ceremony is to be performed, and the num- ber of guests to be entertained, as the va- ture of the refreshments and the manuer of serving to be adopted naturally depend to a large degree on whether the wedding re- ception or breakfast ia to he large, a cere- monious function, or an informal affair simply for the family and a few intimate friends The hours for tbe ceremony usually se. lected for a June wedding are high noon, or four o'clock in the afternoon. The for- mer allows for either a formal, elaborate breakfast, or a cimple one, aod the latter for buffet refreshments, which are served during the reception. If there is no reception given after the four o'clock ceremony, the bride does not plan to bave any refreshments, but at the high noon wedding, especially when the bride is attended, a wedding breakfast is absolutely essential, however, as [ pre- | viously stated, it way be formal or quite informal. For formal wedding breakfasts, where the guests may number over fifty or so, small tables may be used, and these afford no end of possibilities for charming decora- tions. Not more than six guests should be seat- ed at each table, and special care should be bestowed in arranging the places at the bri- dal table. A beautiful and novel effect may be gained by having the bride’s table made in the shape of a horseshoe, and so placed in the room that the party is seated on the outside of the shoe, and facing the room. This ia not a difficult matter to accom- plish, if one goes toa carpenter fortified with a diagram aud dimensions, and orders | a table top made from any ordinary wood. This is placed on three small narrow ta- bles, one at each side and one 10 thecentre, the whole is then covered with white fels over which ie fitted a damask cloth, the border being cut off and fitted so as to hang over the edge to the proper length. This is on rather difficuls piece of work, but as the whole surface is covered with decora- tions, lace doilies, ete.. the banging border is the most important point to adjust, Where the border is joined, lace insertion may be used with good effect, or a border of lace may he sustained for the damask border. In the curve of the horse shoe, palms and flowers are banked to the height of the ta- ble, and over the table several small flower bells are suspended and from each, festoons of flowers, smilax or asparagus grass are draped to the wall at the back, which should be decorated with screens covered with flowers and greens. The arrangement of the hidal table should be the same as for a formal lunch- eon, and any style of decoration preferred may be nsed as loug as it is not too high or ornate, simple table decorations being the best form at present. The wedding cake may oconpy a nlace directly in front of the bride, for it is quite the proper order of the day for the bride to cut the cake at the conclusion of the break- fast, which feat is accompanied with con- siderable ceremony of a merry nature. At each cover, the flat silver is arranged, and in addition to the flowers and candela- bra, (if artificial light is used) the well ap- pointed breakfast table should contain tall compotiers, relish dishes, bonhon trays, and small favey cat glass and silver dishes holding shreds of crisp celery, olives, salted nuts, confections, ete. The souvenirs for the bridal party should be arranved at each cover. The service of the breakfast should cor- respond with that of a formal luncheon, which has previously been given in detail in these columns, but will be gladly sent by “The Hostess’' to any reader who is particularly interested, with an appropri. ate menu for a formal breakfast, for Jane. The tables for the other guests should be arranged quite similarly to the bride's ta- ble, with the exception of the elaboration of floral decoration, and theshape of the table. These small tables should seat four or six persons, and ronnd tablesare far pref- erable to the square ones. Regarding the buffet service for an after- noon wedding reception, the up-to-date manner of arrangement is to have a tahle of generous proportions arranged in the centre of the dining room, covered with as handsome a cloth a3 one possesses, which should fall almost to the floor. Pretty candelabra with white shades and candles, conlectioner’s pieces of nouget or spun sugar of appropriate design are per- missible, and effective ; cutglass dishes of olives, salted nate, honbons, also covered glass dishes for sandwiches, tall compotes for candied fruits, and several tall vases holding a cluster of Bride and Bridesmaid roses should make a pretty table. Soutache is used on everything from gauze to cloth. Only the evening gown is immune from it, and it would not be sale to be toosare that isis nos there. The dressmaker’s ingenuity has revived for the present fussy styles all the garnitures nown to the past and a host of othera pe- culiar to this era. One of the effective arrangements isa band ahout two and a hall inches wide made up of verticle straps of half-inch vel. vet ribbon placed about a quarter of an inch apart. The sige of the is finished With horizontal rows of Joutache bind. A ovely gray marquisette gown bands of this kind composed of pale blue velvet ribbon &nd outlined horizontally with blue and gold soutache. Black gowns are trim- med with black velvet bands of the same Big flat button effects of soutache put on around and around are another fancy. These are combined with braided or em- broidered designs. An old-time suggestion is seen in the binding of edges with bias bands of silk. A white chiffon gown ready for an Easter wedding was trimmed with tucked pale blue chiffon and Valenciennes lace. e bodice has one of the long mandarin arm- holes that under the arm nothing what- ever to do with ths sleeve. The sides of this armhole are apart at the waist line and extend downward into side panels of a pol- onaise semblance. The armhole and the edges of the panels as well as the bottom of the polonaise are bound with a half-inch bias band of pale blue satin. All sorts of little silk or cloth jackets or et effects, often sleeveless, to wear over bodices are covered all over with pat- terns traced in soutache. 4 | DAILY THOUGHT. | 1 Henlith and Beanty. midnight is worth two after i’. sleep i= good at any time awd no one set of homs is better than another. Many infirmities of the eyes of Cushdren have their foundation Jain nr the early days in the nursery when esestrals was brought about by the injudicious use of colors and | a carelest arrangement of light. Sleeping | with the eyes buried in the pillow will | bring wrinkles all around them and will | produce that look of very old age that | wrinkles bring into the face. Even a baby | who sleeps with its face in the pillow will ! wake up with a thon<and wrinkles, | The symptoms of eye strain aie pain in | the temples, pain in the back of the head | and neck, red eyelids and inability to tee a | great distance or to read long at a time. The eyes become tired and vision blurred; | there is strabismus or cast in the eye; and ' a tendency to avoid light. The eyes are | partly closed; there are twitchings of the | lide; sick headache and dizziness. E-e | strain may cau<e chorea and other nervous | diseases. It brings on neuralgia and head- | ache that medicines fail to cure. Neatly every condition recited above, il brought about by defective vision or an aboormal | state of ocular muscles, can be relieved by | glasses. The fitting of glasses is at times | a very difficult task,aod should be entrust. | ed only 10 a painstaking physician who thoroughly understands the defects and | diseases of the eye. Nothing except abundance of vigorous | outdoor exercise #o stimulates and insures | the healthful action of the segaceous system | as the Turkish bath. The normal coustit- | nents of perspiration are various salts and acide, which are subject to curious chemie- | al chavges, and when retained in the sys- | tern become active poisons. An excellent substitote for the Turkish bath is found in the cabinet baths which are now made at prices varying from $5 to $45. The cheap- er ones are folding arrangements that can easily be put away, and are so adjastable that no attendant is required. Many wom- en ohject very much to going to a public Turkish bath, bat bave instead these little cabinets and employ a capable osteopath specialist or a masseuse, thus obtaining the luxury of a Turkish bath in their own omes, In case of extreme emaviation the bath shonld be followed by massage or cocoanut oil. A Good Dinner Table Story. For three days I've heen saving anap- propriate story to tell at a dinner party, but as I am not dining out anywhere this week I may as well tell itnow. The man who told it to me #aid he meant to tell it at a dinner next Thursday, and I thinkiv's the duty of every woman to get ahead ofa man every time she can. It's a story about a man in New Jersey, who invented a pro- cess lor making near-Limburger cheese. I don’t know what the process was becanse thereare » me things is is just as well not to know,bnt whatever it was, it was cheap. He could make cheese for almost nothing at all, and as Limburger is strong on the market, he foresaw huge profits. He made up a lot of the cheese and decided to take it to New York, or maybe Philadelphia, to sell it, hot when he came to consult the railroad company he found that it was going to cost more than he cared to pay to get his goods to market. He was a re sonrcefu! wan, and this is the part of the | story that charms me most. He packed that cheese in a coffin and bought two tickets to the city, one for himself and the other for the coffin. He decided to play the game well, and made himself up for | the mourner’s part with crape on his hat and black gloves on his hands, and thus accoutered started on his joar- ney. Every time the train stopped he walked forward to the baggage car and observed the baggage-car attendants getting fresh air at the door. Somewhere between two stations ove of those attendante—I never heard them called anything but bag: gage smashers and I never cared for the term-—came back into the car in which the mouarner sat. Of course he saw the crape on the hat, and stopped to express his spmpathy. “You traveling with—'' and he jerk- ed his bead toward the baggage car ahead. “Yes,” said the inonrner, sadly. ‘Any relative?” “She was my wile," mourner in broken accent. The haggageman bad a kind heart. “Well,” he said, ‘il it’s any comfort to you to know it, I can tell you one thing. She ain’t in no trance.” answered the Prizes for Ugly Girls. Au interesting showman in Milan, who has more than onze organized successful beanty shows, recently struck ountin a new line by arrauging what might be styled an ‘“‘agly’’ show, whereat a number of women and girls competed for three prizes which were offered for the three ugliest competi- tors. And, strange to say, the show was a decided success, which goes to prove that, contrary to a common belief, there are some women sufliciently ugly to be conscious of their defeot. There were fourteen competitors, and by all accounts every one of them deserved a prize ; indeed, some one suggested that while considering to whom to award the prizes the judges bad worn smoked glasses in order to save their feelings. However that may have been, the winner of the first prize—a young woman of twenty-four—was the wife of a local frame er and the mother of five children. In the German town of Haschmann itis an annual onstom to award cash prizes to the ugliest girl of the year, also to the most crippled and to a woman of more than forty summers who has had at least two lovers at different times, but lost them. These prizes are provided by the interest derived from a sum of money, left by a wealthy Haschmann philan t, and are really intended to encourage local men to marry the ugly, the crippled and the re- jected ; but in this matter they do not ap- pear to be very effective, though the prize to the ugliest girl generally amounts to about £15, and that to the crippled to some £12, while £10 usually falls to the woman of blighted affection. ~Hpker—I wonder why Columbus imagined the world was round? Pyker—Because is didn’t give him a equare deal, I suppose. ——When agit aive she had a happy dream it either todo with a foreign nobleman or a pearl necklace. ——Some people spend hall their time seeking advice and the other half in dodg- ing the consequences thereof. ~The rich men who turn Socialist are those who inherit their money; work and Socialism don’t mix well. There is a very common fallacy, eve: | | ally believed, that one hout’s sleep before | Healthful | THE SCHOONER. Where the Fore and After Beats the Square Rigger. “he ability of the schooner to meet “ee requirements of present day con- itions, while the square riggers have Leen found wanting, can Le realily tader toad when we take into cousid- ~itiun the numerous advantages pos- «1 by the fore and aft rig that are cutial to the ideal carrier, « perating expense, that prime factor in all transportation problems, is here reduced to a minimum, for there is no motive power go cheap as the free winds of heaven and no other craft so well adapted to utilize and control this force. The sails are of handy form and can be readily handled from the deck by a handful of men or with steam power if desired. The schooner can sail several points nearer the eye of the wind than a square rigger is able to do. Built on the old clipper model, they sall like witches and owing to their peculiar constructions can be readily loaded and discharged. They require but littie ballast and having no heavy top hamper can, if necessary to the trade, take on immense deck loads. In the lumber traflic of the Pacific northwest we find these vessels leav- Ing port with huge deck loads tower- ing ten to fifteen feet above the rail. Occasionally they get caught in a blow and, have to sacrifice a portion of the deck load, but where one meets such a mishap dozens reach their designa- tions safely and land thelr cargoes in- tact.—~James G, McCurdy in Outing Magazine, A GAME OF POKER. It Was an Object Lesson on Playing Cards With Strangers. A card sharp well known to the stewards of the great ocean liners was a passenger on a recent trip across. He received a line at Queenstown, which had the effect of keeping him out of the large games in the smoking room. He contented himself with pe- nuchle and bridge at 25 cents a hun- dred points. On the evening before landing one of his bridge party, none of whom knew that he was a profes- sional with a bad record, proposed changing the game to poker. “It's bad practice,” said the card sharp, “to play poker with strangers. There's too much risk, but it's all right in this case.” The others said there was no risk if a man had good sense and kept his eyes open. The deal fell to the pro- fessional, and when cards had been drawn by each man he said: “Now I'll show you how much you know. Mr. A, you have the winning hand. Mr. B, your three queens look good, but what show have they against Mr. C's four fives? And what good are they against A's four kings? Does it tally #” It did, and A sald, “Well, it's my pot.” “1 was afrald that might happen, so I dealt myself a straight flush.” He showed it, arose from his chair and said: “Glve the steward what I put in. This was an object lesson—don’t play poker with strangers.” — New York Tribune. The Barbecue. The word “barbecue” is derived from the Spanish word “barbacao” and is a native Haitian term for a wooden framework supporting meat or fish to be smoked or dried over a fire. In its popular sense it means a large so- cial or political entertainment in the open air at which sheep or oxen are roasted whole and all the feasting is on a most liberal scale. Georgia is probably the native home of the bar- becue and is called the Barbecue State, Who prepared the first barbecue is un- known. Deer, bear and other game constituted the meat roasted in the barbecues of fifty years ago.—Cincin- nati Enquirer. The Butcher's Smock. The butcher's smock was blue. It looked much neater than the white smocks of his friends, all smeared with dried blood. “Every butcher,” sald the man, “ought to wear a blue smock. Why? Because dry blood won't show on it. Dry blood turns bluish, and on a smock of this color it is invisible. I am descended from a long line of butchers, and from father to son the word has been passed down always to wear, for neatness' sake, a smock of blue.”—-New Orleans Times-Democrat. Croutons. To cut bread into dice before frying, If it is to be used as croutons, is not the most approved method. When done in this way it becomes very hard and indigestible. The bread should rather be cut into thin slices and then stamp- ed out in circles a little larger than a quarter or cut into squares of about the same size or in oblongs two inches long and over one-half inch thick. These tossed into hot lard and taken out almost instantly In the frying basket are the most palatable. Queer Marriages. In southern India marriage with in- animate objects is not altogether un- known. A man who has lost two wives and wishes to marry another will go through a formal marriage ceremony with a plantain tree, which fs afterward cut down. This stands for the third marriage, which is con- sidered inauspicious, and the man feels free to make a fourth marriage with a third woman. The Modern Version. “I want my boy to be able to earn his own living.” “To earn it, Mr. Merger?” “Well, to get it.”—Washington Her- ald. Hypocrisy is the necessary burden of villainy.—Dr. Johnson. I YN “The White Man's Burden” medically speaking isdyspepeia. The hur- ried eating of sells, ig of greasy s, mproperly prepared dishes, tend to ruin the stomach. Ill health and unhappiness surely follow. So long as men women eat carelessly and barriedly so long will Nature need the assistance: of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. This great medicine acting di- rectly upon the stomach aud o of di- gestion and nutrition, increases the flow of the digestive juices, cleanses the system of clogging hetructions, stimulates the action of the blood making glands, and so builds up the body with sound flesh and strong muscle. ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ contains no whisky, alcobol or intoxicatant in any form. ——The aunual butchering on a farm i= as big an event toa country boy asa minstrel parade to a town boy. Medical. IKE OLD FRIENDS. THE LONGER YOU KNOW THEM THE BET- TER YOU LIKE THEM. Doan's Kidney Pills never fail you. Bellefonte ple know this, Read this Bellefonte case, Read how Doan’s stocd the test For many years. It's local testimony and can be investigated, J. Curtis Johnson, 365 E. Bishop St., Bellefonte, Pa., 30¥8 “] think even more of Doan's Kidney Pills now than I did in 1807 when | made a statement for publication recommending them. I had been suffering at that time for more than a year with backache and lameness thébugh the loins. At times I was so weak that I could not lift any- thing and if I stooped it was almost im- possible for me to straighten up. When driving there was a steady aching ove: my kidneys the whole time. 1 felt soon free of the whole combination of troubles and was cured very quickly. My wife has used Doan's Kidney Pills tor backache and was cured and invig- orated generally as well, We bot! think very high To Doan's Kidney Pills and have n recommending them eversince [ gave my former statement in 1897 For sale by all dealers. Price £0 cents. Fos- ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan's—ana take no other, 52-20-2-m-e. 0. Ww. Flour and Feed. {urnis Y. WAGNER, Brockeruorr Minis, Berieronts Pa, Manufacturer, and wholesaler and retailers of ROLLER FLOUR, FEED, CORN MEAL. Ev Also Dealer in Grain. WA TA WAM TATE Manufactures and has on hand at al times the following brands of high grade OUR BEST. HIGH GRADE, VICTORY PATENT, FANCY PATENT—(ormeriy Phos nix Mills high grade brand. The only place in the county where SPRAY, an extraordinary fine grade of Spring wheat Patent Flour can be obtained, ALSO: INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD. FEED OF ALL KINDS, Whole or Manufactured. All kinds of Grain bought at office, Exchanges Flour for Wheat, OFFICE and STORE, - Bishop Street, Bellefonte, : MILL 47-19 : : : : : WHITE STAR, ROOPSBURG, : TNA TAS AST AST. Saddlery. MONEY SAVED IS MONEY MADE Reduced in price—horse sheets, lap spreads and fly vets—for the next thirty days. We have de- termined to clean up all summer goods, if you are in the market for this class of goods you can’t do better than call and supply your wants at thie store. We bave the largest assortment of SINGLE axp DOUBLE DRIVING HARNESS in the county anu at prices to suit the buyer. If you do not have one of our HAND-MADE SINGLE HARNESS you have missed a good thing. We are making a special effort to sup- ply you with a barness that you may bave no concern about any parts breaking. These harness are made from select oak stock, with a high-grade workmanship, an A GUARANTEE FOR TEN YEARS with each set of harness. We have on haud a fine lot of single harness ranging in price from $13.50 to $25.00 We carry a large line of oils, axle grease, whips, brushes, carry- combs, sponges, and everything you need about a horse. We will take pleasure in showing you our goods whether you buy or not. Give us a call and see for yourself. Yours Respectfully, JAMES SCHOFIELD, Spring street, BELLEFONTE. Z ACETYLENE The Best and Cheapest Light. COLT ACETYLENE GENERATORS.......... GIVE THE LEAST TROUBLE, THE PUREST GAS, AND ARE SAFE. Generators, Supplies and Fxtuves. . . . JOHN P. LYON, BUSH ARCADE, General Agent for Central Pennsylvania for the J. B. Colt Co. Headquarters - Bellefunte, Pa. 50-9-lm Telephone. Your TELEPHONE is a door to your establish. ment through which much business enters, KEEP THIS DOOR OPEN by answering your calls romptiy as you would ave Jour own responded to and aid us in giving good service, If Your Time Has Commercial Value, If Promptness Secure Business. If Immediate Information is Required. If You Are Not in Business for Exercise stay at home an. use your Long Distance Telephone. Our nig... rates leave small excuse for traveling. PENNA. TELEPHONE CO. 47-25-11 McCalmont & Company. "ATA Ta McCALMONT & CO. McCALMONT & CO. with the patented Al Be BB BB Bn Bo. DE BB. BB. DE AB DE DE BB. BB BB. DB BB ad McCalmont & Companv Sell CONKLIN WAGONS greatest wagon ever built. American Woven Wire Fencing, all sizes and heights. Smooth Wire, Barbed Wire, Poultry Netting. South Bend and Universal Plows, Har- rows, Potato Planters, Corn Planters. McCormick BINDERS, Mowers, Rakes and Tedders. plete line of Farm Implements and Machinery. FERTILIZERS of all kinds and the prices run: Acid Fertilizer, per ton, . . Phosphate and Potash, per ton . 14.00 Many other grades. You will do well to look us over before buying elsewhere. “Truss” axle, the A com- $11.00 rices are right. TTT TTY YT YT YT YN TTT TT TTT TT TT TY >. 4 51-17 McCALMONT & COMPANY, ‘ BELLEFONTE, PA. ) YT YTV YY TTY YTV YT YT YT YT YY YT YT Yv
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers