Gehoral Wood’s Absurd Scheme. | General LEONARD Wo0OD, who was rais- ‘ed to the highest rank in the army, dur- ing ROOSEVELT’S administration, as a re- , ward for favors to ROOSEVELT in earlier life, proposes the - organization of a re- : . i serve military force to be known as “the .notes. if they are handed him from a»... can Legion.” This is a new kink -mailed fist. in the campaign toward militarism. The ~ —In three years a Democratic board of | scheme contemplates the ~ caifing’ of County Commissioners have praetically | RoosevELT to the colors and investing Hifed out 2h nei tne of S192 0040 | him with the Sona of is force of and have put the {gx rate down to - 300,000 men. It would give him a new It pays, doesn’t it to elect business men . gpportunity to stand in the lime light to manage the county's business. 1 and flourish the big stick. . —These “Twilight Sleeps” and “Sun- { This country needs no “reservists” or ‘rise Slumber” methods of bringing the ! other military force other than the regu- little ones into the world may be all that | lar army and navy and it might well their advocates claim for them, but, take | curtail in the expenses of those depart: ‘it from us, there isn’t any twilight sleep ' ments of our government. So long as or sunrise slumber when the output gets we remain within ourselves and practice ‘the colic. the arts of peace and pursue the courses —Of course if the “Jitney” bus is only Of industry, no foreign power will have run in competition with street cars we Occasion or opportunity to make war needn’t look for the “Jitney” in Bellefonte 2gainst us. Under existing conditions soon. However, we’ll manage to get the dangers from that source are dimin- where we want to go so long as EMERICK ished rather than increased for the and RERICK, and THOMPSON, and MACKER fighting nations have all they can attend and our own legs hold out. | to taking care of themselves. —The Public Ledger announces that! When the European war ends, and we Pennsylvania is “swept by a tidal wave Sincerely hope that will be soon, the | of Temperance.” It always is up to the | participants in it will be so impoverished time that a new Legislature is to be financially and exhausted physically, that ! elected, then the tidal wave subsides war will be impossible. Already there | long enough for those who have heaved are signs of exhaustion in every country | it up to vote the same old way. | involved in the struggle and if hostilities , {that is continue another year their resources ~That German Peace Droposa he ) = | will be so completely dissipated that they heralded as being on the way to publicity | will be objects of charity. What is the will probably be as one sided as the toast: | use in distressing the American people “Heres luck to the Dutch let the Irish | with burdens to meet such a condition? pick rags.” However it may prove the po ., prepare to offer help when needed. entering wedge by which a stop will be | But' ROOSEVELT'S lust for power is put to the awful devastation abroad. insatiate and every sycophant who has —We have just heard of a fellow who | profited by his favoritism in the past Took three spools must strive to promote his ambitions. aa 3 Og LEONARD Woop is an officer in the serv- And the blamed thing ran. ice of the government and his endorse- | Inasmuch as this genius evidently made l ment of this military enterprise is an : offence against discipline which should no provision for the rattle we doubt | whether it really was a Ford that he be sharply rebuked. Let ROOSEVELT re- main where he is, in private life. He turned out. : § will be able to do considerable harm —In his weekly healtly talk Dr. Samu there and’thay be depended upon to do! ‘DixoN, Commissioner of Health, has for : : : . his text: “Cleanliness is next to Godli- all that is possible. His lust for power is ness,” and he announces that accumula- equal to his lust for blood. tion is a mania with some people. He was speaking, of course, of the habit many have of allowing all manner of | junk and useless things to litter up the home and the back yard. But this is not the only habit of accumulation that peo- ple have. Some accumulate on them- selves real estate enough to make breed- ing beds for millions of bacteria. your Uncle SAMUEL is ‘beaded for Vera Cruz with a menacing looking lot of battle ships. CARRANZA _ ‘may pay more attention to our polite ——The Republican conference at Delmonico’s, New York, the other day, has been likened unto Belshazzar’s Feast. The last imitation of that luxurious monarch’s culinary extravagance put the late Mr. BLAINE out of business and there are other Burchards in the bushes. Sowing the Seeds of Anarchy. There will be no abatement in the calamity campaign unless the Republi- can managers fail in their purposes. Last week a conference was held in New | York in which the chairman of the Re- | publican National Committee participat- ed, for the purpose of outlining a system of “howling” against the UNDERWOOD tariff law and the WILSON administration, ' two-thirds bottles of beer a day. And if and similar meetings are to be held in that is what they call being temperate sections of the country. Discontent will down there we retract most everything | be the gospel which these wealthy “graft- we have said in the past about the ex- ers” will preach and misrepresentation cesses of our own “Poo Poohs.” | the vehicle of spreading it abroad. The —Up to this time we have not com- measure of the enterprise will depend pleted our annual diagnosis of the state. | upon the credulity of the people of the ment of Centre county's business affairs country. which was made public last week. We| No domestic economic policy could have given it some attention and by next | have averted the commercial and indus- week, possibly, we will be able to set be- trial disturbance of the European war. fore you a condensed statement of what | The revision of the tariff and currency has been accomplished by competent offi- | laws mitigated the evil to some extent cials in the way of cleaning up the coun- | because one of these measures lightened ty indebtedness. At this time we can |the tax burdens of the people and the say, however, that there is practically no Other prevented a panic of dangerous county debt and that the tax rate is to be | Proportions. But the current of com. reduced to four mills next year. That | merce was completely checked for atime part of it is too good to keep longer, so | and the process of readjustment is in- we tell you of it in, advance. { complete so that industry is stagnant and a . .. | markets practically closed. This condi- —Secretary REDFIELD'S investigation ' yo; oon he aggravated or abated accord- of thebusiness depression in Montgomery | ingly as the captains of industry and the county ‘reveals the fact that ‘only fty |1e 004 in commerce’ treat -the subject. . per cent of the industries there manu- facture goods that can possibly be affect- ed by a tariff. Among these it was found that unsound business practices, more than anything else, are responsible for | their present depressed condition. It’ seems to us that if the foreign war has | done one thing more emphatic than another it has exploded every tariff argu- | of ype consumers, but it would register a ment known of. Practically nothing is | yjumph of national immorality and con- being imported into this country and we ! summate industrial outrage. Yet the have more consumers at home than ever. Republican managers have elected to Now why aren Son = oe all our | pursue this course and to that end have factories a ne oe ani by Yorates sey arranged for a series of meetings We can and demand a tariff to prohibit | i,q hou the country to promulgate . - . | foreign His factures om Coming - to | the doctrines of discontent and revenge. supply the demand. The war has built | They are planting the seeds of anarchy a greater wall of protection around this h tariff d in order that the people may reap a country ghan uny tant ‘ever enacie h yet i harvest of death and the conspirators they say our industries languish. | The | . 2 . increase their profits. truth of the matter is that we are a pro- | P ducer nation and that we have been over- stocking for several years and foreign | markets being closed to us we are not able to use all we can make. —North Carolina has enacted a real temperance law. That is, they call it temperance in North Carolina. Under this new and real temperance idea of theirs no one man can have more than two quarts of whiskey and ten gallons of beer in a single month. Based on a “two finger” size, that would give each fellow one drink of whiskey and two and ly chosen to knock rather than boost. It was “a lame and impotent conclu- sion.” The restoration of the tariff schedules adopted by the Congress of 1909 would increase the profits of pro- tected manufacturers precisely in the pro- portion that it multiplied the sufferings ——There are nearly two billion dol- lars worth of gold coins in this country but we are not covetous. Yellow backs or long green are good enough for us, BELL | The Republican leaders have deliberate- | Brumbaugh’s Conservation Bill. Governor BRUMBAUGH’S proposed Con: servation bill may be justly characterized as a codification of existing conservation legislation. It has the merit of concen- tration of power now diffused among several departments into one in which responsibility may be fixed, and that'is sufficient to commend it, if there were nothing else in its favor. The depart- ments it would abolish are the Game, Water Supply, Fish and Forestry. These would be merged into the Department of Conservation, under the direction of a Commissioner tobe appointed by the Governor. This reform would make for efficiency and economy. The measure was prepared by Attorney General BROWN and reflects credit upon its author. The Game Commission as at present constituted is a travesty. Its purpose appears to be to annoy hunters and spend money. The Forestry Department is only better because of the personal in- terest of two members of the Commis: sion and one of them is Mr. J. LINN HARRIS, of this place, while the capable and con- scientious Commissioner of Fisheries has’ been hampered in his work by political : | exigencies almost from the beginning of ! his service. The consolidation of these departments under a head with under: standing and courage might accomplish wonders for the benefit of the public. “The Water Commission is an expensive luxury at present and its useful functions might be better performed by a man trained to the duties and big enough to administer the affairs of the consolidated service. The only new features in the bill in question might better be provided for in a separate law. That is the improve- ments in Sandy Lake and Sandy creek in Western Pennsylvania and the draining of Pymatuning swamp in the same sec- tion. These items contain the symptoms of jobbery and should not be concealed within the body of a bill general in its character. Much valuable land might be reclaimed by the improvements proposed but the benefit would be to individuals clear why the State-should~ pay the ex penses of the enterprise. We would sug-} gest to Governor BRUMBAUGH that there are signs of serpents in these clauses and it would be well to look sharp. ——There was plenty of music at the adjournment of Congress but curiously enough HOBSON, of Alabama, was quiet on the occasion. And a HOBSON “swan song” would have been singularly appro- priate. Drastic Remedies May be Necessary. The conditions in Mexico grow more distressing, according to news dispatches. The people in the city of Mexico are actually starving owing to a plan formed by General OBREGON to force enlistments in the CARRANZA army. Offers of relief have been declined in discourteous lan- guage and the suffering is intense. Presi- dent WILSON has been compelled to forego his contemplated trip to attend the formal ceremonies at the Pan- American exposition, scheduled for next week, on account of it, and still these ambitious ‘“greasers” pay no heed. CAR- RANZA supports OBREGON in his cruelties and there seems to be no remedy. This Mexican problem has been per- plexing from the beginning of President WILSON’S administration. He has hand- led it in a masterful manner and offered i opportunities to the people of that un- happy country to establish just and stable government in half a dozen ways. But unfortunately there is an entire absence of patriotic spirit among those who have the wealth and education to assume leadership and the opportunities have been wasted. CARRANZA has proved himself to be little if any better than his murderous predecessor in office. He simply wants power for himself that he may abuse it. The time will come and it may be that it is already present when it will become the duty of the United States and the other American Republics to intervene in a more drastic way than has hereto- fore been adopted. In other words it may be necessary in the near future for the governments of North and South America to send a force into Mexico and hang every usurper with the instincts of the beast who imagines it is his right to torture, rob and oppress the people at his fancy. General OBREGON and CARRANZA would be shining marks for such treat- ment and the sooner that policy is adopt- ed the better. ——ROOSEVELT would like to be Com- mander-in-Chief of the army and navy of course, but heis willing to compromise on a less powerful post and offers to take command of the proposed “Legion.” —June 7th will be Pennsylvania Day at the San Diego Exposition. TATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. EFONTE, PA. MARCH 12, 1915. | cident. the regular routine of such institutions Significant Organization in University. The organization of a body composed of a considerable number of the stu- dents of the University of Pennsylvania to insist upon the right of free speech, is a new and significant development of student life. SAMUEL GOMPERS, president of the American Federation of Labor,had been invited to address the students in one of the University building. The University authorities prohibited the -use of the building for the purpose. Thereupon Mr. GOMPERS was in- vited to address the students on the campus and the use of the campus for the purpose was forbidden by the au- thorities. Then a neighboring hall “was hired” and last Friday evening Mr. GOMPERs spoke, after which the organiza- tion was formed Some weeks ago the student body of Princeton University invited BILLY SUN- DAY to preach at that institution of learning and the President of the Uni- versity intervened and prevented the in- Hitherto such diversions from have been allowed if not encouraged and a year ago BILLY SUNDAY spoke at the University of Pennsylvania and if our memory serves us right made a profound impression upon the student body. Mr. GOMPERS is the recognized head of an im- portant element in the industrial life of the country. He is said to be an able ‘and eloquent speaker and the morality of his teachings has never been question- ed. "Of course the discipline of these great institutions of learning must be main- tained. The student body, as a rule, is made up of earnest and capable young men who may be trusted to discriminate between right and wrong and there can be little reason for forbidding them to hear leaders of thought in the discussion . of public questions, economic or sociolog- ical, so long as they refrain from im- moral or dangerous doctrines. We may not all agree with Mr. GOMPERS in the things he talks about but young men of University age ought to enjoy the privi- rather than to the public and it is not | of determining that for themselves after a fult hearing. Besides the freedom of speech is a cherished asset in this country. ——An effort is to be made to pass a bill at the present session of the Legisla- ture providing for a convention to revise the Constitution of Pennsylvania. The present constitution was adopted in 1874, and in the forty years since then section after section ofthe Constitution has been amended until the original document is hardly recognizable. On the other hand are the advocates for a revision really sincere in their belief that the Constitu- tion needs revising, or are their efforts being put forth mainly to furnish fat ap- pointments for favored gangsters? This latter might be the “snake in the grass” of the entire movement. But if the time ever comes when the Constitution is re- vised one of the first clauses should make it a penitentiary offense for Members of the Legislature to introduce and insist upon the passage of the fool bills that clog the calendar of ever Legislative session. ——The Bellefonte police deserve cred- it for their prompt rounding up of the three young men who robbed the Miles- burg Store company on Saturday night. Within seventy-two hours after the deed was committed the men were behind bars and one of them had confessed to the crime. While the amount stolen was only of nominal value the degree of crime was just as great and had the men gone undetected it would only have been a question of time until they would have pulled off a job of greater magnitude. Chief of police HARRY DUKEMAN as well as policeman HARRY DUNLAP deserve commendation for their ability and de- cisive action in handling such cases. They not only seem to smell crime but have the bloodhound scent for criminals and because of that fact Bellefonte and surrounding community are kept partic- ularly free of wrong-doers. ——In his appeal to A. MITCHELL PAL- MER for help in his local option campaign in the Legislature, Governor BRUMBAUGH says the Pennsylvania Democratic plat- form of last year declared for that policy. As a matter of fact there was no Pennsyl- vania Democratic platform last year and Democratic candidates for the General Assembly ran on individual pledges with respect to local option and all other issues. ——Wall street has sent out a tip that the war in Europe will soon be over but it is unwise to place confidence in Wall street tips. Many a lamb has been shear- ed by listening to that song. ——Next Wednesday will Patrick’s day. ~—Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. be St. A RL NO. 11. | The Wheat Outlook. i From the Philadelphia Record. One of the momentous consequences of victory by the allies in their efforts to force the Dardanelles and thus bring Russia into free and uninterrupted ac- cess to the Mediterranean will be the re- lease of the vast .stores of wheat, esti- mated as high as 300,000,000 bushels, which have been locked in that country through the Turks’ control of the straits leading from the Black Sea. The proba- bility that this huge amount of foodstuff will begin to move to its material mark- ets in a few weeks gives a keen interest to the wheat situation in our own coun- try and the probabilities of the coming year. It is not customary for the gov- ernment to issue its report on winter wheat until after April 1st, but from pri- vate sources of information it is claimed that the outlook is excellent. An in- creased acreage has been sown, and the winter as a whole has been favorable. It is calculated, therefore, that with average conditions of winter and yield the prospects are good for a wheat crop, both winter and spring, of at least 900,- 000,000 bushels. This would compare with the record crop produced last year of 891,017,000 . bushels, which has been abundant for this country and allowed us to export great quantities abroad for the benefit of the nations at war. There are still in farmers’ hands holdings of the 1914 crop estimated at from 120,000,000 to 170,000,000 bushels. If we are blessed with a crop as great as last year, and to this are added Russia’s accumulations from 1914 and a normal .crop planted this year, not to speak of the supplies from Rumania, India, Ar- .gentina and other countries, it can be seen that the outlook is bright for a sup- ply of wheat ample not only for our own needs, but for those of Europe as well. Possibly the farmer may not receive as much for his yield as last year, but the consumer will benefit accordingly. In this day of high prices it must be ac- counted a gain if bread is held down to a reasonable figure. Now for Business. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. We usually think that the adjournment of Congress is a good thing for business on the theory that congressional legisla- tion is disturbing to it, while it is being agitated, and that when Congress ad- journs business men can take their bear- ings and sail ahead in the direction they give them. Doubtless there is something in the idea, and we will now learn ggeed- ily whether there is a CIA) ‘ing in it now that Congress has ddjourn- ed and that business is clearly in“a con- dition in which great improvement is possible; and we have even come to think that it is probable, since it has been so long depressed, and nobody knows just why it should be, and everybody believes that it will not long so continue. Now that Congress has adjourned there is no reason in uncertainty as to the laws to charge business depression upon. And there seems to be a great deal less un- certainty as to the war issue to keep business guessing. There is, in truth, nothing discernible in the business situa- tion in the early future that does not indicate its prosperous movement; and if it does not move off at a cheerful gait it will only be because of unforeseen in- fluences, all the perceptible ones being of cheerful import; so that we feel sure that when Congress reconvenes in De- cember it will be in the midst of a world peace and a struggle of business every- where to get a good gait on; which must be pretty well favored in the countries that have not been crippled by the war, and that will be ready to exploit its busi- ness in full measure. We will certainly be established in better condition than ever to lay claim to a full share of the business of the world, which we may feel assured will come our way readily. Legislature Not Overworked. From the Williamsport Sun. Some mathematician with a penchant for accurate figures, has figured out that in the two months covered by the pres- ent legislative session, actual sessions of either body have not totaled thirty hours in all. In the sixty legislative days cov- ered between January 5th and the pres- ent time, the Senate has met seventeen times, aggregating sessions of twenty- one hours in length, and the House on twenty-one occasions having aggregated twenty-nine whole hours in its sessions. The reply, of course, is that the actual work is being done in committees, but anyhow, the usual legislative penchant for killing time cannot be concealed. Also Russia is Bottled Up. From the Des Moines Capital. In Russia wheat is selling at 35 cents a bushel. In America it is selling at $1.50. Russia is at war. America is at peace. Here is a fine opportunity for those philosophers who know all about economics, the laws of trade, the doctrine of supply and demand, the logic of trans- portation rates, etc, etc. There is some- thing wrong somewhere, but the satis- factory diagnosis is not easily obtained. Post-Operative Feeding. From the Pottsville (Pa.) Republican. No food of any kind will be permitted to be taken in the Shamokin hospital for the patients because one woman took her husband, who had just had a delicate operation performed on him, four hard boiled eggs and five frank-furter sand- wiches, which he ate during the absence of the nurses, and became violently ill. | ———They are preparing to give BILLY SUNDAY a big donation in Philadelphia at the close of his campaign against | Satan and he deserves all he will get. ' He went up against a hard proposition. hit SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —“At least 1,000 people in Johnstown are ad- dicted to the use of morphine or cocaine in one form-or other,” is the declaration of a Johnstown physician. —Osceola has had seventeen cases of scarlet fever since the outbreak of the epidemic, most of them a light forni of the disease. No deaths have occurred. —The union painters, paper hangers and deco- rators of Johnstown are asking that they be paid the same wages eight hours that they now re- ceive for nine hours’ work. —A young Italian answering to the name of Joe Cosamento, alias Joe Love, has been arrest- ed at Gallitzin on suspicion of having murdered John Harley, near Philipsburg, on the 24th ult. —Charles Calvin Stringfellow, a twenty-one- year-old resident of Clinton county, residing near Mill Hall, has been arrested charged with having sent Black hand letters to a citizen of Lock Ha- ven. —Judge Rice, of the Superior court, has writ- ten the lawyers of Huntingdon county thanking them for their kind words but reiterating his de- termination to retire at the end of his present term. —Some citizens of Vandergrift, Westmoreland county, are trying to have Councilman Sheplar removed because the firm of which he is a mem- ber sold the borough eight yards of toweling at a total cost of 64 cents. —The handsome edifice which the ‘members of the Grove Avepue Methodist Episcopal church, Moxham, Johfistown, recently enlarged at a cost of $30,000 was rededicated last Sunday by Bishop John W. Hamilton, of Boston. ~The large barn of L. L. Shank, in Cherry Mill township, Indiana county, was burned to the ground a few mornings ago and cattle, chickens, grain, farming implements and other articles de- stroyed. Several head of horses were rescued. —The new Cunard mine near Morrisdale has had a marked effect in stimulating building op- erations all through that neighborhood. New dwellings and business places have been spring- ing up on every hand, and others are in course of erectien or projected. —By the will of the late Mrs. Alice Mary Wil- liams, widow of a former Mavor of Williamsport, the Williamsport hospital is awarded $10,000, the home for the friendless was given $5,000, which is to be paid on the death of a relative, while the boys’ industrial home gets $3,000. —George Stanley, aged four years, a Williams- port lad, saved his younger brother from burn- ing to death the other day when the latter stuck a celluloid ruler in the fire. The blaze set the child on fire but George threw him to the floor and extinguished the flames by smothering them with a rug. —The farmers of Lower Lancaster county, headed by D. F. Magee, Esq., who is a large own- er of farm lands in the lower end of the county, will meet today at Fairmount, to begin war on what the farmers term the “Milk Trust,” which now controls the purchase of milk in lower Lan- caster county. —DuBois is the home of one of the meanest men in the State. He has rigged up an electrical contrivance which turns on a light in his chick- en coop at an early hour each morning. When the hens see the light they get off their roosts and begin laying eggs. The fellow says his egg crop is now double what it used to be. —While at work on the farm of Jesse Horner, near Boswell, Somerset county, cutting down trees, Frank Deitz was struck on the top of the head by a heavy limb. His skull was crushed and he died about three hours later, not having regained consciousness. Deitz was aged 41 years and is survived by his wife and two children. ~—Two big gas gushers have been struck in the fk county gas field within the last ten days and excitément is again at a high pitch. The wells, drilled by the Talmage Natural Gas company, of Johnsonburg, and the Ridgway Light and Heat company, of Ridgway, registered 4,500,000 feet each. The wells were struck at a depth of about 2,600 feet. —Philip Mushino, aged 70, employed on the Lycoming county farm of Miss Rosa Deitz, arose about 5 o'clock the other morning, it is believed, kindled a fire in the kitchen range and sat down to read. When Miss Deitz entered the kitchen about an hour later she found Mushino lying on the floor, dead, the book on the floor and his spectacles in place. —James Ferlo, residing near Indiana, called his wife out of the house the other evening, ask- ing her to bring his coat to him. He took the garment and suddenly slashed the woma: with a razor, inflicting a ghastly and probably fatal wound in her throat. Then he disappeared. Mrs. Ferlo says they had not quarreled and she does not know why he did it. —Ten years ago Mrs. Arthur Heckert, of Wil. liamsport, while wiping dust from around the edges of her carpet ran a broken sewing ma- | chine needle into the palm of her right hand. | Last Saturday the needle was removed from her left hand. It had traveled from the right palm ! up through the arm, across her body and down her left arm, emerging from her left hand. It would be hard to find a similar case. —Wounded in the war of the Rebellion, fifty years ago, Ellert Ramsey, aSpringfield township, Huntingdon county farmer, has just had his right leg amputated. During an engagement of the war, Ramsey was struck in the right leg by a shell. An army physician dressed the wound, deciding amputation unnecessary. A few days ago, the wound of fifty years became infected in some way and gangrene developed. The opera- tion followed. —John Wolf, a rural mail carrier of Johnstown, suffering from toothache, wrapped an electric light globe in a towel and took the warming pad into bed with him. The ache stopped and Wolf went to.sleep. About one o'clock the mail car- rier dreamed there was a fire and that he was fighting his way through smoke and flame. He awoke. The flames were in bed with him. The bulb had ignited the bed clothing. Wolf’s home was damaged. —Miss Lillian Simmons, of Bareville, Lancas- ter county, was badly crippled by having her right hand cut off by a circular saw. The gitl lived with the family of Willis Herr, in Manor township. She was assisting to saw wood and for the purpose a circular saw was being used. ‘The girl was feeding the saw when she had her hand caught. The hand was cut completely off, while there was a deep cut in the shoulder and another in the chest. —Picking up what she thought was a glass of water in the darkness at her home in Point township, Northumberland county, Sunday, Miss Alice Rhoads, 18 years old, got hold of a glass containing tacks and pins, which stood close to ‘where she thought the water was, and swallowed a mouthful of them. She was rushed to a hos- pital, where an effort is being made to relieve her of them without an operation. Doctors say her recovery is in doubt. —Walter McJunkin, assistant cashier in the Clearfield National bank, took his own life at the Dimeling hotel by shooting himself through the head some time during Monday night. He was found in bed, covered, with the revolver in his right hand. Nothing is known of the circum- stances that led to the rash act, other than that he had been in poor health during the past year, and only the evening before complained of severe pains in his head. His financial matters were found to bein good shape. Deceased was aged ‘about 60 years. i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers