—Let us see! Is California really one of our pacifico States ? —Evidence bas been accumulating since Tuesday to prove that the ground-hog is right on his job. —To those holding government jobs February is a regular mullum in parvo. Three legal holidays in the shortest month of the year. —The local political pot is boiling so that some of the candidates are stepping mightly lively lest they be scalded when the spill comes on the 16th. —If the capitol park at Harrisbarg is to be extended we hope is will be extended to some very remote corner where that QUAY statue can be planted in solitude. —Aunyway, if the Japs should decide to make a landing along our Pacific coast they couldn’s match to Washington before spring and then oar precious TepDY would be far away. ~The Panama canal and that new Peou- sylvania station at Johnstown are both booked for completion in 1915. Ol course this will be a listle sudden for the Flood city for she will scarcely have corraled that winping ball team by that time. —What on earth can Senator TUSTIN mean by wanting to have the necessity of having paid taxes eliminated as a qualifica- tion for voting? Sarely a man who will pay no taxes for the support of his govern- ment should have no voice in its conduct. —From oar point of view we woald rather take chaaoes with thas ‘‘unocivilized" Jap boy, whom the “‘civilized’’ students of California University beat up because they declared him to be “ancivilized’’ than wish the party of “civilized” boys who did the beating. —It is #0 much easier to be a builder than a despoiler shat we wonder thas there are nos more people with their sooulder to the wheel. A genial, optimistio {disposi- tion in some movements is worth more than thousands of dollars in cash sub. scriptions. i —Nine men have assumed the responsi- | bility ol the sixteen thonsand dollars neo- | essary for a two weeks campaign by evan- geliat Gresy SMITH in St. Louis. Stracge ! We were under the impression that nine of this kind of men could not be found in that place. —Auditor General YOUNG is up on his high horse becanse Representative BLEW- ITT wants to vestigate his department. While we baven't mach interest in their sorap we hope it continues because the pablic is boand to learn something that has been concealed. —*F. E. B.,” who ever that is, writes in the Daily News ol yesterday that our historic old ‘Eagles Nest'’ is not the place that we have been showing off up Spring oreek for many years, bus is located a mile below Milesburg. Right or wrong “‘F. E. B.” is an iconoclast and so lar as the general needs are concerned the one up Spring creek will do quite as well for show purposes as the real genuine article, if such it be, below Milesharg. —Iu a cube of street mad, thas is a hit aboat one-quarter of an inch square, there are said to be so many bacteria that if placed side by side they would cover a dis- tance of two handred and filty-nine!lileet. Think of it! And they told us when we were kids that eating dirt wasjthe health- fest thing io the world and mud pies— Well, they were veritable delicatessen in those days. After oll, we wonder, some gimes, whether some of the scares that science gets up are not merely scares. —Jadg? LANDIS has jast haaded down an interesting decision in a Lancaster coun. ty elecsion dispute. Two mean were as- piraats for a nomination on tha Repablican ticket in a certain towaship. Oae filed his name with the township commisteeman and paid his assessment ; the osher did not, The one who did not do it received she most votes in the primaries but Judge LANDIS ruled that his name shoald not be printed on the ticket because he had nut complied with the rules laid down by the party of whioh he was trying to become a candidate. ~The federal government expenditures for Janaary were more than filteen million dollars in excess of the receipts. This shoald not be a matter of much concern to the unthinking taxpayer who was satisfied lass fall to “let well enough alone,”’ bat possibly he will begin to think some it Congress decides to resume some of the Spanish war revenue raising schemes and + even go so far as to put a tax on coffee and tea. These means of increasing the reve- pues are being serionsly advocated at Washiogtou. Of conrse the matter of cus- ting down expenditares as a means ol sav. ing some money never enters the head of the average Republican Congressman. —A new public school hill shat is to be presented to she present Legisiatare by the commission appointed by Governor STUART last year proposes very radical changes in the law. Among the most noteworthy would be the compulsion of di- reotors to farnish educasion for sue blind, the dumb and the deaf, as well as to far- nish trapsportation for al! scholars living more than a presoribed distance from a school house. The bill would make it im- possible to change text books oftener than onoe in five years and compel all pablishers to make and maintain one price on their books. Under shis bill Centre county woald bave an assistant county superintendent at a minimam salary of twelve huudred VOL. 54 BELLEFONIS.PA Not That Kind of a Change. * The fool proposition to farther com- plicate onr miserable and unfair election laws, and make the matter of voting, as he desires, more diffianlt and doubtfal for the ordinary citizen, has already been sub- mitted to the Legislature. Like all she other abortion, in the shape of election laws, that we have tried sinoe the first tinkering with the ticket began in 1891, this one comes from Philadelphia and its sponsor claims to be a reformer. The change proposed, as we understand it, is to abolish the square on the present ticket and require each voter to Lunt ous and place his mark opposite the name of each and every candidate he desires to cast his ballet for, no matter how many offices there may be to fill or how many different candidates for each there may be. Every intelligent citizen knows thas with a dozen or fifteen offices to be voted for and with half that may parties having candidates named for each place, what a job this would be and how very lew would be able to exercise the right of franchise without assistance. Were snch a law to be enacted we have doubts if one foarth of the votes would be polled for any candidate, and if even thas proportion of the voters could, of them- selves, mark a ticket so that he would be voting for each of the offices to be filled. To resort to suoh a method of voting would either disfranchise oune-hall of the voters of the State, lose the different oan- didates, scores of votes at every polling place or require the assistance in the booth of some one who conld show the many and proper places marks were to be made. If shere is to be a change in oar election laws, and every one who knows the many, many, fanlts and weaknesses of the system we now have believes there should be, les these changes be such as will simplify them, and enatle the voter to cast his ballot with- out any exoanse for demanding assistance. For is is from the privilege allowed of having assistance in the hooth thas nine- tenths of all the evil of our present method springs. Is is where the Jdependeuts are iutimidated. It is the hiding place of the bull-dozer. It is $he fortress and proteptor of the briber. Any measare oaloulated to increase the excuse that mercenaries, bribe takers, and boodlers may have for demanding aid in the booth, is in the interests of the very wrongs and crimes that the people demand should be abolish and rendered impossible. Under any conditions, it this proposed change in the election law is to be made, in order that the measure making it would not be declared unconstitutional for the reason that she title does not olearly set forth the purpose of the aot, we wouald sug- gest that — If assistance in the booth is to be denied, then the measure ought to be entitled an “Act to disfranchise the voters of Penusyl- vania.” If aid is to he allowed the voter, then its proper title wonld be an ‘‘Act to en- courage bribery and enlarge the oppor- tanity of debanching voters’. Where Additional Taxes Could Be Secured. It our law makers at Harrisburg bave convinced themselves that additional reve- nues muss be had, to meet the necessary expenditure for State purposes, why not ges down to work and ascertain if all the oor- porations privileged to do business within the State are paying their proportionate share of taxes. Two years ago this paper se- cured and published a list of the offices of the Adams Express company within the State, and the amount of business done at each, and when compared with she report of that compauy as filed with the Aaditor General it showed thas shis one corporation at least, was paying bas aboat one-third of the taxes that aa houest retarn of their basines would require shem to pay. There are other foreign oarporasions benefisting by privileges given them in Pennsylvania shas are doabtiess makiog the same kind of returns, and gesting off with she payments of little or no tax as all. Hunting these up would be just as easy a matter as finding new sources from whioh to demand additional revenues. Take for instance the Pallman car company aud the United States Express company, twin brosh- ers with the Adams Express company in the exoessiveness of the charges they make against our people for she little return made,and neither pay auy tax as compared to the amounts oar home corporations are compelled to hand over. Aud these are loreign corporations, the owners and benefloiaries of which pay no other taxes or have no osher interests in the State {rom which revenues could be de- rived. They ara protected by our courts. They are given a monopoly of the business they are in. They are allowed to charge our people what they please. Is there is any reason why they should not pay their tull share of the Siate taxes ? They are not doing it now. They never bave done is. : To this fact the attention of the Ways avd Means committees at Harrisburg is here- dollars. by o alled. Criminal Demagogy. President ROOSEVELT is again foment: ing the absurd fear of troable with Japan. He knows as well a3 he knows that he is alive that there is no such danger menacing the country. Japan yielded to the terms upon which hostilities with Russia were discontinued three years ago because her financial resources were exhausted and the vast sacrifices of her soldiery made it neces- sary to do so. It is estimated that nearly a quarter of a million of men were killed or | maimed daring that savage encounter. She | has not recovered from those losses yes. She is not either physically or financially able at this time to engage in war with any power capable of making a strong resist ance. Bat ROOSEVELT starts these preposterons war soares in order to influence tke public mind to acquiescence in his imperial policy ol enlarging the navy. himself is true. Bat moral pervert. liberately misrepresenting facts in order to | dragoon Congress into carrying out his pro- | gramme for the navy. Just hefore the vaval appropriation bill passed the House of Representatives at Washington, the President began this agi- He wrote to the tation of war with Japan. Governor of California to intervene to pre- vent the passage of legislation pending in the Legislature of that State. It wasa rank case of impudent obtrusion, but that made no difference to ROOSEVELT. It bad the desired effect, however. passed his naval bill as he wanted it. It was onfidently expected shat the Sen- ate would conour and ROOSEVELT sent oat a bulletin that the differences with Japan had been adjusted. Bat the Senate balked and he immediately renewed the ramors of war. Such demagogy is worse than criminal. What Was “the Reason ! Oa Saturday night last former Ohians who are now resident citizens of Philadel phin gave their annual dinner as the Ohio society. Governor HARMON, the newly elected Demoocratio Executive of that State was the guest of honor. An invitation to preside at the banquet was extended Gover- nor STUART and requests to be present and participate sent to Senator PENROSE, Sena- tor KNox and Mayor REYBURN, T's courtesy was shown these gentlemen, we presume, on account of the officia! nd representative positions they hold, and in accordance with the universal cosvom when the execative of a neighboring State is to participate in a semi-public function of the kind. Strange to say, not a single one of the gentlemen invited was present. Governor STUART gave no reasons for his ahsence nor did he send regrets ; Senator PENROSE was not heard from ; Senator KNOX bad courtesy enongh about him to write thas he could not find time to he one of the party, and Masor REYBURN simply refused to recog- nize the invitation. The why of thus is the conaniram now worrying these former citizens of the Buok- eye State, most of whom are Repablican voters and have been glorying in the man- ner Republicaus of Pennsylvania do things. They are not so vociferous in their praise jast mow, however. Some of them are wondering if the absence of these Republi- can leaders was because HARMON, who was being honored, was a Democrat,nud through fear that some decent word, they might he compelled to say for him would be used in the campaign of 1912 when there is a possi- bility of his being the Democratic nominee for Presidens? This suspicion might be right, but it would be an awfully narrow mind shat would be inflaenced hy such reasons. Bat shen there are awfully oarrow mind- ed mer in politics in Pennsylvania. So Old that It's Moss Covered. The public should not ges frightened be- cause of the ery coming up from Harrishurg shat additional revenues will be required or a great reduction in the appropriations re- sorted to. This is a bi-ennial scare that has grown so old that its whiskers are gray and the moss has to be shoveled off is every time the Legislature meets. At other times than when appropriations are being considered the State revenues are asaally believed and admitted to be about forty-two millions ($42,000,000) svnually. There is no reason why they shoald be any less this and nexs year. Aod yet il we are to pus credence in whats we are told not half of shis amount will be available for the institutions and charities of the State and these will have to get along with much less than heretofore, unless new sources of reve- nue can be found. It was the same thing last year, and after STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. .. FEBRUARY 5, 1909. He understands that the people of the United States have a great veneration for the office he occupies. He estimates that they will be likely to imagine that no Chie! Magistrate of the great Republic would be influenced by ulterior motives to wilful falsification. That no other President would so abase | ROOSEVELT is a He has been convicted of falsehoods a dozen times and i= again de- | The House the charities were cut and hospitals erip- pled, and all the appropriations provided for it was discovered thas the Treasury had a sarplos of over six millions. And this was io the bands of favorite bankers in different parts of the State. Is the same job to be worked on the peo- pie she present year? Are our revenues to be used for the bene- fis of bankers or are they to he put where they will bess aid and benefit the people ? Roosevelt ts Not Disturbed. 1 | The President is not the least bit dis- | turbed over the developments in relation | to the absorption of the Tennessee Coal and Iron company by the Steel trust, a trifle more than a year ago, according to the Wasbiogton correspondents. ‘‘As a matter of fact,” writes one of these observant gentlemen, “‘the President is a bit disdain- fal about the whole business. He takes the attitude that Boss TWEED used to take,” continues shis chronicler of events, ‘“‘when be wonld ask what are you going to do aboot it?’ That the law was vio- lated is of no consequence to him and he is equally indifferent to the fact that the | constitution is subverted and his oath of | office falsified. There is no way to bring him to panishmens acd that is all he cares about, | This is a most unfortanate attitudelifor It implies a i complete moral perversion and an absolute indifference to the principles of honor and integrity. No man of proper impulses is Indifferent to his reputation. Only [re- creants get into that frame of mind and a public official who will violate one law becouse he is immune from punishment would commit any other crime if he was equally certain of eseape from the penalty. Therefore the attitude of the President is most reprehensible. Is indicates a bad bears and an evil nature. Sach a man if brought to account for his unlawful ac- tions is invariable a moral and physical coward and will resort to any expedient to avers the rightfal course of justice. There ought to bea way of punishing the Presideps for this manifest conspiracy to violate the law. Judge GARY and HeNRY C. FRICKE told him in plain terms thas the merger which they were going to andertake was a violation of the anti- truss law. They conveyed to him, no doubs, the fall particulars of the transac- tion. Batis was on the eve of 3 presiden- tial election in the result of which he was deeply concerned and as he bargained with Epwarp H. HARRIMAN for tainted money to debaunch the ballot when he was a can- didate himself, he entered into this conspi- raoy in order-to get fands to buy votes for his puppet candidate lass year. Under any circumstances sach action is abhorrent Bat when the exposure of it only pro- | vokes disdain it i= atrocious. | the President to assume. { More Commissions, Really if this thing of appointing ‘‘com- missions,” so codify, prepare and propose legislation, continues much longer the per. sons who are elected as Senators and Mem - bers of the House at Harrisburg will have little to do when they meet hereafter other thao to pass on the report of the differznt bodies of this kind they bave made, and appropriate money to pay themselves and the fellows who are doing the work they were elected to do. With a commission to codily and propose changes in our tax laws, with another to overhaul oar election laws, with another that has just reported a 260 page law rala- tive to the management of our public schools, and with ‘‘commissions’’ to run oar roads,oontrol our game, boss our forests, dictate our water supplies, prescribe our physio, t2ll us what we shall eat, and in fact manage and control everything with which the State government has to do, is is a question whether is would not be just as well toabolish the Legislature, burn the Constitution and allow the courts and these ‘‘sommissions’’ to do with us as they please, For years, whenever the Legislature bas had to tackles any particularly knotty ques- tion, or was up against a duty that would require some thought or honest work, is bas shirked she responsibility by naming a commission, and paying it out of the State Treasury, for bunting op facts, making suggestions, preparing enactments aud do- ing the very work that the Senators and Members are paid for doing. It is an easy way lor the 257 men we have chosen to make our lawe to earn the fifteen hundred dollars salary, the postage, she mileage aud other perquisites they are paid. Bat we submit that it would be fairer to the State and more honorable io them, if they bave to hire others to do the work that falls to their lot as Legislators, to pay these substitutes out of their own salaries. And if they will not do this, or retars to the old practice of preparing and enacting suoh legislation as public necessities de- mand themselves, then the positions ought to be abolished, and the whole thing turned over to the tender mercies of the many “‘gommissions” the State is now forced to pay for such work as she Legislature is chosen and paid to perform. From the Pittsburg Post. After all, there is nothing amazing in tbe proposition of a circus promoter to give Theodore Roosevelt a job as headliner for 30 weeks at the muificens salary of $10,000 a week. Of course, no person believes that Mr. Roovevels will accept, as he has set his heart on that African trip, aud not even so allaring an offer as this could he expected to induce a postpone- ment of even six months. Is this proposition so very muoh more spectacular than jumping seven-bar hur- dles for the photographer ? [4 it much more of a circus performance than shat memorable campaign in which a certain Rough Rider circles a State in his Rough Rider togs, making Rough Rider speeches ? Isit so much more of acircos than luring unsuspecting statesmen into the open and wearing them to a frazzle by compelling them so ‘‘follow my leader” over 50-foot precipices and waiss-deep through icy streams ? Is it 80 much more unconventional than a 98-mile horseback ride at top speed ? Is it #0 much more spectacular than a huodred things we have gasped at during the last seven years ? Indeed, (further suggestions might be given for Mr, Atlas’ show. Why not rep- resent the star as she modern Ajax defying Congress ? But why go farther ? A dat us not think too harshly of this man tlas. A Masterly Retreat. From the Springfield Republican. Mr. Jerome's epistolary entrance into the government's Panama libel suit againes the New York World suggests, of course, a masterly retreat hy the federal department of justice from the case. Newpaperdom will sypathize, with the World's or- gent appeal to the government to proceed on the original lines marked out by Mr. Roosevelt and his lawyers. Let the case now be pushed through as the president conceived it should be. Isis of real im. portance to the entire press to have defi. nitely and finally determined by the high- est judical authority whether the United States government, as a government can prosecate for a libel on itself and not on a particular individoal. The press is anx- ins to know what hocas pooas of old laws remains onder which the government might prosecute a journal uuder the legal fiction of a libel committed on a distant government reservation. The press seeks exact information as to whether jc tems i tion over is in libel suits growing ‘on processes from huggermugger federal courts. Various interesting and exceedingly importantant issues appear to bave been raised by this move of the government agaiust the World, and now that they have been raised let them he taken before a tribunal whiob, we have faith to helieve, will know how to decide them without violence to the constitutional gaarantees of the press in republican America. A Tax on Marriage. From the Harrisburg Star-Inde pendent. Marriage ought to be as free as salvation, and it is eaid thas salvation is free. Where- fore, the proposed increase of the inarriage license fee lacks popular support. A bill introdnoed in the Senate of Pennsylvania would increase the cost of ths marriage license from fifty cents to two dollars. The why and the wherefore of this increase have not been stated, and the pablic is iv the dark concerning them. The license law was uot intended to be a revenue raiser, but to provide a record of marriages and to prevent runaway mar- riages. The fifty cent fee for the issue of linoenses was intendel only to make she vew bureau of the government eell-sustaiu- ing. In tweuty years of its operation the law kas been satisfactory. The conduct of license business has not hecome more ex- pensive than it was in former years, and there is no real necessity for the increase. The new bill would impose a tax on the oldest of industries. It would stand in the way of happy marriages. Is wonld pre- vent the union of loving hearts and de- stroy American home building. It wonld atop the rearing of families and the in- crease of population, and weaken the de fences of the Union. Bat, all this aside, why should a man he taxed because he wants to get married ? Constitation-Makers Not Prophets, From the Sandusky Register. Those wise men of a hundred years ago did not realize that a century later there would appear on the American stage of skivn a man, Wis a lawyer in soy Segse of e word, utterly unpossessed of any legal qualifications mind or by education, who would hold that the federal courts under hie direction could do as they pleased regardless of the constitution or the people. They did not foresee a Roosevelt when they rendered that decision. Marshall was the greatest supreme justice the United States court ever bad. He easily ontranked even Salmon P. Chase, able as he was, and we will never have his superior and perhaps never his equal, but what did he know compared with Roose- velt and Bonaparte ? + The Way itgAlways ls, From the Philadelphia Record. There is bardly a member of the General Assembly at Harrisburg who bas not up his sleevs some measure involving a new drain on the Treasury. Yet this is a time when ail business aud employment is going forward at a slackened gait, and when the chiefest concern of men and women is to adjust expenditure to lessened income. The real task before the Legislature should be to devise economies that should help the people to better bear the burden of government : but this is a labor for states men which political buccaneers disdain to even consider. ~The municipal water plant of Franklin shows an annual profit of about $15,000. i spawls from the Keystone. —Diphtheria is prevailing to such an alarming extent in Selinsgrove that the schools have been closed and religious and other public meetings prohibited. ~The new Presbyterian church in Phil ipsburg, erected at a cost of $30,000, was for- mally dedicated to the worship of God with appropriate ceremonies on Sunday. —Throughout the potato belt of Berks county there are yet large quantities of po* tatoes in the cellars of farmers, as they have been holding them for higher prices. —Although Schuylkill county must pay $20,000 this year for State rond making done last year, the tax rate of the county bas heen fixed at six mills, the same as last year. —More than two hundred children are ill and one has died in Avalon, a suburb of Pittsburg, from drinking polluted water, and scores of adults are ill from the same cause, ~The Eldersridge Creamery company, of Indiana county, during 1908 manufactured 24,000 pounds of butter, all of which was sold in Pittsburg at an average price of 20§ cents per pound. —@George Garrahan, an oyster opener of Wilkesbarre, on Wednesday found nine good sized pearls in one oyster, several of which were of large size. Garrahan has opened oysters for many years but this is his first find of pearls. ~The Reading Railway cempany on Sat- urday suspended 250 employees at its car shops in Reading and about 150 were also laid off temporarily at other points. The cause of the suspension is attributed to less demand for cars. —A new coke company has been organiz- ed by Pittsburg men that is to be known as the Western Coke company, and plans for the development of 1,000 acres of cosl lands in Greene county are under way which will be followed by the building of a new coke plant. ~The report of the money paid out in Clearfield county for fire fighting in 1908 shows a total of $12,285.22. Of this $125 was paid out in February of that year and the balance during the many fires last Septem- ber, October and November. The amount is probably larger than that of any other coun- ty. —Dr. John B. Deaver, of the German hos. pital, Philadeiphia, will be given a dinner on February 15th, at the University club, by 150 physicians and surgeons, upon, every one of whom he has used the knife in a surgieal operation. These doctors will come from all parts of the United States to honor the noted surgeon. —Fanued by a high wind, fire practically wiped out the town of Patton, Cambria coun- ty. early Saturday. The fire was discovered in a skating rink and quickly communicated to the Central hotel. There was considera- ble excitement among the twenty guests, but all escaped uninjured. The loss is estimated at $50,000. —Using a flobert rifle which was loaded residing on the J. B Bloomshurg, shot and killed Friday after- noon, bis little brother, Harold, aged about one year. The shot entered the child’s brain and death followed in about an hour, —The Scottish Rite branch of Free Mason- 1y of the Williamsport Consistory, on Wed- nesday morning of last week, started a class of sixty candidates through the thirty-two degrees of that branch. The work was con- cluded Friday night. The Williamsport Cousistory of this fraternity has now 1,640 members, and is one of the largest in the State, & number of Bellefonters being mem- bers of the same. —Abraham Miller, of Somerset township, Somerset county, was driving along a road a few days ago, when his horse suddenly drop- ped out of sight, having broken threugh a thin layer of boards and earth that covered an abandoned well. The well was twenty feet deep, and had about eight feet of water in it, but after considerable work a number of men succended in rigging up a tackie and lifting the horse out of his ugly plight with« out any serious injury. —With a view to further completing the four-tracking of its line from Altoona to Pittsbarg, the Pennsylvania railroad has asked bids for widening the stone arch bridge over the Conemaugh river, just west of South Fork, on the Pittsburg division, to hold four tracks instead of three as at pres ent. This is the first piece of new coustrace tion work authorized by the Pennsylvania railroad for more thun u year. The addition to the South Fork bridge will increase its width from 33 to 58 feet. The work will ne- cessitate the excavation of 1,500 cubic yards of earth for the foundations. The construc= tion itself will require 5,500 cubic yards of stone musonry. ~The Peunsy!vania Railroad company, in awarding a contract for the erection at Mt. Union, Pa, of a “one cylinder” plant for the treatmant of timber by any standard process, has taken the initial step toward the preservative triatment of its cress-ties and other timbers. In connection with this plant two creosote storage tanks of 500,000 gallons’ capacity each are to be erected at Greenwich Point, Philadelphia. These tanks will have a combined capacity suffi- cient to receive a tank steamer cargo of oil, that will be shipped to Mt. Unien in tank cars as needed. The treating plant will have a capacity of from 1,500 to 2,000 ties a day, if day and night shifts of hands are worked. This will give an annual output of about 500,000 ties. —About four months ago Isaac Terrell, a youth of Irwin, Westmoreland county, found on the street a beautiful pin set with diamonds and pearls, which a jeweler said was worth $140. The boy's mother adver tised the pin twice, but no one came to claim it. On Tuesday young Terrell, being out of work, and needing some mouey, took the pin to Greensburg and offered to pawn it, but was made an offer of only $5, when he left the pawnshop. The broker reported the case to the police, and the boy and a com- panion were arrested, but at the hearing proved that the pin had been found and had been advertised, when they were released. The pin will be held by tho burgess of Ir- win for a few weeks, and if no owner comes it will be given to the boy. Np bi ve
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers