Bemorvai ian BY P. GRAY MEEK INK SLINGS. —For the old tank the first six months of 1919 won’t seem half as long as the last. —Surely we all hope that the New Year will not be filled with as much gloom as was the day that ush- ered it in. —The real beauty of the paving on Water street can be seen if you can only picture in your mind what it would be like now if it were not paved. — That the war is over is proved by events. Senator Knox is just about lawyer enough to know that treasonable talk in peace times is not actionable. —— What a difference between New Year's day this year and that of last. Wednesday it rained most of the day and last year the thermometer was just sixteen degrees below zero. —The 1919 war savings stamps are to be blue and you will be bluer if you paste one of them on a 1918 certifi- cate because you will later discover that it won’t be any good there. . —Resolve to look at the doughnut, not the hole it surrounds, during 1919 and you’ll be surprised how well you get on, how happy you will be and how much your society is sought. —1It doesn’s seem possible but it is a fact that four years have almost rolled around since we elected a full county ticket and we will have that job on our hands again next Novem- ber. —April 1st has been set as the date when the first flight in air across the Atlantic is to be made. The date is suggestive because if it isn’t pulled off how easy it will be to say that it was an April fool. — Somehow or other that coal pile of ours has been disappearing during this mild winter weather quite as rap- idly as it did last year when the av- erage temperature was fully thirty degrees lower than it has been thus far. —Fancy colored yarns will again be good form in the knitting bags of the ladies. The khaki colors have all been called in as there is an ‘ample supply of knitted garments on hand to fill all the demands the soldier boys may make on it. —Though a green Christmas is sup- posed to make a fat graveyard the “Watchman” does not carry nearly as many death notices in this issue, cov- ering a two week’s period, as it did for any single week during Novem- ber or December. ; ~_ Henny Ford has raised the mini- mum wage scale in his factories to six dollars a day. The increase is de- signe ‘make the living conditions’ of the makers of the tin Lizzie easier. The riding qualities of the flivver will remain unchanged, however. —Only about three more weeks un- til the new Legislature gets under way in Harrisburg. Let us hope that it will occupy its time with weeding out obsolete and uninforced statufes more than with adding new and use- Jess ones to the laws of Pennsylvania. — Viewed from the reports in the local columns of this issue the holiday week seems to have been the one dur- ing which scores of Centre countians decided to transfer themselves and their property. Both the real estate transfer and the marriage licenses made records for the old year. — The cables tell us that when Pres- jdent Wilson was in France he was a Frenchman and that when he was in London he was an Englishman, so readily did he adapt himself to his en- vironment. So far as London. was concerned it was easy, for there he needed only to roll up his pants. — Justice should move swift and sure to apprehend and punish the ter- rorists who are back of the wholesale bombing that occurred in Philadelphia. on Tuesday. Men and women who know no law and want no law are a menace to society and should be per- manently confined in a place where their, diseased minds can work no harm to any one. —Up to this moment the aerial mail service has been little more than a hunt for lost aviators and hauling in smashed ships. The failure of the service to function has been ascribed to the use of machines that are not adapted to the work and when the heavy DeHaviland bombing planes are replaced by lighter ships it is ex- pected the mails will go a flying sure eneugh. —The rumor factory is working overtime these days making up stories as to how frightfully some of our boys who have been reported wound- ed on the other side are mutilated. What heartless, despicable business it is. And, naturally enough, most of it has been proven false. Why people spread ‘such unfounded rumors we can’t conceive unless it is to wilfully cause distress for the parents and friends of those whom they chatter about. __ President Wilson’s reception on the other side has been so notably cordial as to leave no doubt as to the position America has won in the eyes of the world. The old world views the new with broadened vision since it has had opportunity to study us at the close range that our participation in the war has afforded. And Europe especially has made the belated dis- covery that we are something more than a merely money making people; that we have ideals and thoughts so altruistic as to be almost beyond her grasp and that we have the unselfish- ness and singleness of purpose to ad- vance them no matter what the cost. himself to-the charge of ingratitu “wg | r————— - ce ’ Y ~The Bavarian General, Montge- 2 | not a commanding figure in this coun- STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 64. Brumbaugh Violates His Agreement. | Our more or less esteemed friend the Pennsylvania Republican machine, ; is greatly perturbed by the appoint- ment of Mr. D. J. Snyder, of Greens- burg, to the vacancy on the West- moreland county bench created some | months ago by the death of Judge Lucien W. Doty. According to gos-. sip of the time Governor Brumbaugh ; had entered into a perfectly complete agreement with the machine mana- gers to leave the filling of that vacan- cy with several others to his success- or in consideration of his appointment to the $10,000 a year job of military historian. In pursuance of this agree- ment the machine selected Brumbaugh for the job and therefore the appoint- ment of Snyder is a repudiation of payment of the price. This was a clear violation of the principle expressed in the adage “there is honor among thieves.” When the Governor entered into a compact which was fulfilled strictly by his confederates in the crime, he ought to have performed his part with equal fidelity. It is true that he had some reason to doubt the purposes of his co-conspirators. A man who might easily have been controlled by the machine managers entered suit to prevent the consummation of the bar- gain. But it can hardly be claimed that this action was instigated by the machine managers. Not a word Ras been uttered to justify such a suspi- | cion. Therefore the Governor is clear- | ly amenable to the charge of “welch- ing.” : In any event the incident encourag- es the hope that the factional feud in | the party will be continued. “When | rogues fall out honest men come by | their own,” and this seems to be a falling out beyond repair or the pow- er to retrieve. The managers may imagine that the Governor will be without power to do harm after his retirement but this is an unsafe esti- | mate for he has a glib tongue in his head and a marvelous facility for us- ing it. Besides that it can scarcely be expected that the Vares will aban- don him in his helplessness after what he has tried to do for them during his incumbency of the gubernatorial of- fice... Brother Ed. will not subject oP he yt las, says his people do not want to be forgiven, but want justice. If Bava- | ria had got full justice it would have | been wiped off the map one hundred | years ago. Next to Prussians the Ba- varians have the record in atrocifies, perfidy and iniquity. ; Work of Traitors Revealed. An expression in one of the Paris news dispatches of the Associated Press the other day reveals the pur- pose of the Republican Senators in Congress in opposing the President’s plans with respect to the Peace Con- ference. “M. Clemenceau’s overwhelm- ing majority on the vote of confidence in the Chamber of Deputies,” says the the writer, “makes him a commanding figure in France, similar to that of Lloyd George as a result of the Brit- ish elections.” The obvious purpose is to show that Woodrow Wilson is try because traitorous politicians keep nagging him and the recent elections resulted in a majority in Congress for the party opposed to him. There is reason in this interpreta- tion of conditions. But it is easy to trace the cause. In France and Eng- land patriotism is the prevailing sen- timent while in this country it is pol- itics. Premier: Clemenceau met with opposition in many of his war meas- ures but when the acid test came the deputies aimed to strengthen him in the important work of the coming peace conference. In Great Britain’ Premier Lloyd George had opponents but upon the question of sustaining Great Britain against all others he’ was overwhelmingly sustained. In this country, on the other hand, trai- torous politicians intervened to let | the world know that the interests of any power are preferable because our Premier differs from them in politics. The Roosevelts, the . Lodges, the Smoots and the Penroses are welcome to any comfort they got ouv of these facts, President Wilson is at the con- ference in the interest of the Unit States primarily and of the civil. lib- erties of all peoples of the world in- cidentally. But his influence ‘is im- paired by the nagging of these trait- orous elements in our population who prefer party success to National pros- perity. These are the conditions that confront us at this time and it is for the people of this country to properly appraise them. We had the opportu- nity to make the United States the dominant force in civilization but the chance may be sacrificed to the par- tisan prejudices of politicians. Senator Chamberlain is still striving to earn the poor, reward of Roosevelt's praise by traducing the | Secretary of War. : 2 If the Krupp . company had | passed its dividend ten years ago the | chances are there would have been no world war. BELLEFONTE. od great-grandfather of the perfidious, Causes of European Enthusiasm. The enthusiasm with which the peo- | ple of Europe have welcomed Presi- dent Woodrow Wilson in Paris and London is not entirely ascribable to: his persenality. Appreciation of the! part the United States took in the great world war had something to do with it and the universal gladness that the war is ended was influential . in the matter. Then popular resent- ment of the attacks made by political | enemies at home may have had some influence. As the late General Bragg | said of Grover Cleveland, Europe may love Wilson “for the enemies he has made.” With Roosevelt, Lodge, Cum- mins and other scurvy politicians “barking at his heels,” is it not likely that fair minded Europe would take to him in resentment. Whatever the cause, however, the generous welcome to our first citizen by the two greatest capitols of Eu- rope must be gratifying to all right minded Americans. It may be flat- tering to the individual and gratify- ing in a personal sense to his close friends that Paris and London wel- comed him with an enthusiasm never before extended. But it must be equally gratifying to the citizens of the United States that each other cit- izen of this great country was honor- ed by the tributes to our President. He is in Europe representing the United States of America. His is the voice, by practically unanimous con- sent, of the more than one hundred millions of people who compose this great Republic of ours. President Wilson is in Europe rep- resenting the people of the United States in an enterprise in which the whole civilized world is directly con- cerned. As the President said in one of his London addresses it is the greatest enterprise of all time. It is for the safety and happiness of the whole world and there is no man so completely equipped to represent the United States in such a work as Woodrow Wilson. This is unquestion- ably one of the reasons why Europe has welcomed him with such enthusi- asm and the other reasons are simply supplemental. We all share in the glory that has been bestowed upon Woodrow. Wilson and rejoice for all 1 ” 1 ‘several Teaspns expressed. or us. ——No country in the history of the world has ever created and mobil- ized an army ‘of four million men as quickly and efficiently as the Ameri- can government did in the recent war and still there are grouches in Con- gress and out who criticise this great record. : Running True to Form. In all the intrigue, mendacity and duplicity practiced by the German autocracy during the war that odious conspiracy has been simply “running true to form.” In the Napoleonic period it was reduced to the lowest level of national existence, mainly be- cause of the imbecility of the King of Prussia and the perfidy of his min- isters. Prince Metternich, writing in a period between 1804 and 1806 de- scribes the work of the ministry of that time as “only a most extraordi- nary series of abandonment of all principle, of perfidy and false meas- ures.” The King, Frederick William III was a dupe and a coward and those about him perfidious and eorrupt. There has been no change in condi- tions. The question in issue at the time was a proposed alliance of Russia, Austria and Germany, with the moral support of England, to check the op- erations of Napoleon. Prince Metter- nich, representing Austria and a dip- lomat as capable as he was sincere, was managing the affair. The Ger- man King and his ministers profes- sed sympathy with the movement but lacked courage to openly align that country with the other powers and ac- cording to Metternich were constant- ly in secret negotiations with Na- poleon, not only deceiving their col- leagues but betraying them. Metter- nich tries to acquit the German King of perfidy but excuses him on account of his weakness, putting the odium on the ministry. ; The King of that time was the cruel and treacherous Kaiser of our day. He is much the sort of person of Frederick William and equally cowardly and contemptible. His own father, who was an exception to the Hohenzollern type, distrusted him and described him accurately as deficient in intellect and unripe in knowledge. But his father’s reign was brief and he early ascended the throne to work mischief which he did assiduously un- til he was compelled to abdicate te save his worthless life. Thus the events of the past support the condi- tions of the present and history “re- peats itself.” William II is a genu- ine Hohenzollern. — “Hope springs eternal in the human breast.” Though thousands of years of effort have failed to “make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear,” Presi- dant Wilson still hopes to make Vance McCormick a political leader. PA., JANUARY 3, 1919. Soldiers and the Constitution. Senator Penrose’s pretense that he is influenced to opposition to a con- stitutional convention by considera- tion for the absent soldiers is the rankest kind of punk. The action of | the Luzerne county Prothonotary in | throwing out the votes of the soldiers | of that county because a majority of | them were cast for the Democratic candidate for Congress, expresses the real feeling of the Republican machine for the soldiers’ franchise. That step was not taken at the initiative of the Luzerne county Prothonotary. It was, dictated by the Republican machine and probably by Penrose hiraself. The | soldiers’ rights and interests are measured precisely as the soldiers | help or hurt the Republican machine. ! Senator Penrose is against a con- | stitutional convention in the near fu- | ture for the reason that such a body ! might close up some of the sources of | graft which provides support for ma- chine lame ducks throughout the State. Upon every question of spoils ' Penrose and Vare get together and however bitterly they may fight on other subjects they are brought to a common purpose by the lust for plun- der. The Vares are opposed to a con- stitutional convention and Penrose is with them. Governor elect Sproul ex- pressed himself in favor of a conven- tion immediately after election. -But, he has probably changed his mind since or if he hasn’t he will before the Legislature can act in the matter. There are very many reasons why a constitutional convention should be held in the near future and very few against it. So far as the participa- tion of soldiers in the vote for dele- gates to such a convention it is prac- ! tically certain that they will have full opportunity to do so. No provision | could be made for the election of del- | egates to a convention before Novem- | ber next and by that time all the Pennsylvania soldiers who desire to | quit the army whether over there or over here now will be home. Besides that the law respected by everybody except the Republican machine, pro- vides that the soldiers’ votes may be taken in the camps and counted unless they are adverse to the will of the ma- k Ee ran Fe A Wh pa ——One of the French eulogists of the President said that “Europe loved Wilson as it had no man since Napo- leon” and the President’s friends are wondering whether that was a bou- quet or a brick bat. Aero ‘Mail Service Again Postponed. The second attempt to inaugurate the airplane mail Service between New York and Chicago scheduled for yesterday did not materialize and the new venture is suffering another post- ponement. The reason given is that the DeHaviland aeroplanes which had been turned over to the Postoffice De- partment by the War Department to be used on mail carrying routes have proven inefficient for the service. The result was that one hundred DeHavi- lands have been turned back to the War Department ‘and in their stead a dozen or more twin motor Handley- Page machines have been turned over to the Postoffice Department. But as all the latter machines will have to be assembled and tested before they can be put into service it may be a week, two weeks or even longer before the next attempt to inaugurate the service. : Last Friday morning four machines of the DeHaviland type left Belmont Park, N. Y., to go over the New York- Chicago route, but not one of them reached Bellefonte that day. Two of them came down about five miles east of Huntingdon, one of them sustain- ing a broken propeller in landing. One other machine came down at White Haven and the fourth man got so far out of his course that he land- ed in Maryland. The big army truck, with the necessary repairs, was sent over to Huntingdon on Saturday and the damaged machine repaired and on Sunday the two of them started for Bellefonte. Ome reached here safely but owing to propeller trouble the oth- er one was compelled to come down in the vicinity of Hunter's park. It was later brought to Bellefonte and at present there are four machines at the Bellefonte field. All the buildings have been com- pleted on the field, a big gas tank in- stalled and other necessary equipment added. A telegraph office connecting New York, Bellefonte, Cleveland and Chicago with the Postoffice Depart- ment at Washington will be installed with Maurice A. Kelly, for some time past manager of the Western Union office in this place, in charge. Mr. Kelly has tendered his resignation to the Western Union company but at this writing his successor has not been appointed. — The late Kaiser claims that he has friends in America and the ac- tions of Roosevelt, Lodge and the Mormon Apostle Smoot, Republican leaders justify his claims. ——The County Commissioners loving, industri have appointed Hon. John Noll mer- cantile appraiser for the year 1919. NO. 1. FAREWELL AND HAIL. By M. V. Thomas. Thou sorrow-burdened year, Weighted with sigh and tear, Trembling with pain and fear, Thou dost depart. Great with the woe or weal Mankind with thee must feel; Secrets thou dost conceal Deep in thy heart. Over thy heroes dead Numberless hearts have bled. Thou hast seen tyrants dread Flying in fear. Great will thy mem'ry be; Downtrodden souls set free Ever will sing of thee, Thou passing year. Year of the future born, Fair as the break of morn, Ne'er may thy heart be torn With sorrow’s wail. May thy sky not be drear, May'st thou be filled with cheer. Passing and coming year, Farewell! and hail! A Test of Democracy. From the Christian Science Monitor. The ease with which a nation may return to peace, rather than the alac- rity with which it may rush into war, is a good test of its democracy. Al- though repeatedly provoked, the Unit- ed States hesita long before enter- ing the conflict now at an end. The opinion had come to be commohly held that, with regard to its own dig- nity, it was in danger of hesitating too long. The reason for its hesita- tion, or, rather, the cause of its hes- itation, has been fully discussed, and, in the present opinion of those who give weight to circumstances appar- ently beyond human control, no dis- credit attaches to the nation, its sen- - timent, or its disposition. What concerns us here is that, when finally it felt the impulse to move, it went forward toward its goal with a speed perhaps unparalleled in histo- ry, changing from a condition of un- reparedness and peace to a war foot- ing over night, and becoming, withi nineteen months, a great military and naval power, with resources in men, money, munitions, and supplies suffi- cient to carry itself and to help to carry its associates through to a suc- cessful issue, even th the final victory should be RE ed. All of this is fine to think and about, in talk that it proves what a when once aroused to the absolute ne- cessity of doing something on a great scale and doing it quickly. But more still is the proof at hand satisfyin, i that, he accomplished all it went after in the way of military success, it is ready, within less than a month from the day of the signing of the armistice, to turn back to the ways of peace, to industrialism, and to the no- tion that the advancement of knowl- edge, justice, and happiness, and of the moral and spiritua ideals to which freedom leads, is a worthier ambition than the pursuit of military glory and world domination. . Inless than a month after the sign- ing of the armistice, the extra-gov- ernmental - bureaux organized to aid in the conduct of the war are being quietly absorbed by the regular de- Dariieniy of the Republic; within ess than a month, the functions dele- gated to well-nigh autocratic chiefs of those bureaux are rapidly and si- lently passing over to ordinary ad- ministration officials; within less than a month, prominent men, “big” men, the ablest obtainable, in the name of country, to have charge of public of- fices of vast and even vital import- .ance to the nation and the world, are, one by one, resigning their conspicu- ugly honorable positions and taking up their private affairs. In less than a month after the signing of the arm- istice great armies in the field, and even greater armies in reserve, are disintegrating, disbanding, vanishing from sight. Within less an a month, tens of thousands of men from the American Expeditionary Force are arriving at their home ports. less than a month after the signing of the armistice, a nation which then was at the very height of the tension of war, buckling itself faster and tighter than ever for the struggle against autocracy, sees its Chief agistrate sail away on a three- thousand-mile voyage, confident of its ability to take care of itself, be- cause its trust is in righteousness. All this is, indeed, a test of democra- cy. The Murdered President of Portugal. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. The assassination of the President of Portugal once more calls attention to a rugged little corner of the old world Ee seems to have had more than its share of trouble, even in troubled times; for the unsettled con- dition of Porityul dates from long be- fore the world war, and its revolu- tions, assassinations and sudden changes of government in our times have been so many that it is general- ly ong of as in a class with the South American nations where revo- lution is chronic. Yet, it clung firmly to royalty for a long time, making o the empire of Brazil a greater Portu- gal and even since the bloody whole- sale assassination of its royal family, it has shown tendencies to royalist re- action. : It is impossible to interpret the news of the assassination of President Paes until there is more information about it, but at first glance it looks like the act of a fanatic well calculat- ed to make a martyr hero of its vic- tim and to strengthen orderly and true Democracy in Portugal. For Paes was both a strong and enlight- ened leader. | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —The drafting of bills for the General Assembly of 1919, which will meet Tues- day, January Tth, is in full swing. At least fifty bills have been drafted at the State Legislative reference bureau, where such service is given to Legislators, and about fifty more measures are awaiting re-writing in legal form. —TUpon entering the home of their aunt, Mrs. Amelia Reutter, of South Williams- port, carrying Christmas gifts and a Christmas tree, two nephews of the wom- an, who was one of the oldest residents of the borough, found her dead on the floor of her home. She had been asphyx- iated by gas from a coal range. —The Lock Haven hospital was the re- cipient of a substantial Christmas gift in the form of three $1,000 Liberty bonds given by R. Hayes Stewart, of Island, a prominent farmer and tobacco grower and president of the Lock Haven Democrat company. The money is to be added to the endowment fund as a memorial to his late wife, Jane Eleanor Stewart. —The death sentence of Luther Knox, of Armstrong county, was commuted to life imprisonment, following medical ex- amination into his sanity, made at the in- stance of the board of pardons. He was to have beem electrocuted duriag the week of December 9, but a respite was issued by the Governor, fixing the week of De- cember 30. Commutation of his sentence was announced on Saturday. —Dr. Silas C. Swallow, of Harrisburg, Prohibition candidate for President a few years ago, last week conceived the plan of sending Liberty bonds to sixty of his own and Mrs. Swallow's relatives. The main stipulation is that the recipient must write once a year. To imsure this Dr. Swallow has asked that each holder of the bond mail him one of the two interest-bearing coupons. The other he may keep. —The Stanley-Analim Chemical compa- ny, of Lock Haven, which has been engag- ed in making explosives for the govern- ment and which had planned the exten- sive manufacture of dyes, went into bank- ruptcy Monday morning. The plant clos- ed down and laid off its men on December 1st, when notified by the government to cease the manufacture of explosives. —Angelo Samone an Italian, of Punxsu- tawney, poured oil over his clothing and applied a match at his home at that place late Sunday afternoon, and before help could reach him, he had burned to death. Despondency is believed to have been the cause of his rash deed. A few days ago Samone’s wife disappeared, taking her four children with her, and since then the husband and father had been acting strangely, culminating with suicide. —According to figures compiled at the Adjutant General's department in Harris- burg as the result of a survey of the prop- erty in the hands of the National Guard of Pennsylvania when it went into the federal service the United States govern- ment will owe the State almost $500,000. This will include tentage, clothing and other items which the State purchased for the guard and which were taken to camps. The matter will be taken up with Wash- ington officials. —Edward Smith, of Red Zion, Colum- bia county, charged with looting the Far- mers State Bank of Hallam of $5300, went into court at York on Monday, pleaded guilty and requested an immediate sem- tence. Judge Wanner refused to impose punishment at this time, stating that he ‘| would remand Smith to jail until next Monday so in the meantime he might make up his mind to divuige what became of $2500 of the booty which disappeared shortly after the robbery. —Referee Jacob Snyder, of Altoona, has awarded Mrs. Cora B. Snyder compensa- tion in her claim against the borough of Reynoldsville, Clearfield county. Her hus- band, Jacob Snyder, was employed as a laborer by the borough. April 3rd last the great toe of his right foot was crushed by a pipe which fell on it. Blood poisening developed, and Snyder died. His widow was awarded 45 per cent. of his weekly wage for 300 weeks and $100 funeral ex- penses. —James Thompson and John Stull, both of near Ralston, Lycoming county, met death by drowning in a shallow creek near Ralston, when the horse they were driving plunged off the road and fell on top of them in a creek twenty feet below. Stull had been thrown out of his own car- riage, and was found by Thompson later lying along the road unconscious. Thomp- son placed him in his carriage, and was turning around to go after assistance when his horse backed off the road. Both men were caught under the carriage and drowned. —Mrs. James Dempsey and her five young children were burned. to death ear- ly Saturday morning in a fire which com- pletely destroyed their residence at HI- dred, near Ridgway. James Dempsey, husband and father, was at work at an oil well several miles from his home at the time of the fire. There was no opportunity to save any of the inmates of the houseas it was not discovered by meighbors until the whole building was a mass of flames. . The bodies have not been recovered and it is not thought that they will be, as the house was completely destroyed and the fire was so intense as to have incinerated the remains. | » —The order of the War Department for the abandonment of Camp Crane, which came earlier than expected, means that after two fairless years, due to the war, there will in September, 1919, be a great Allentown fair, bigger than ever. It is believed that the governmeht will have moved Camp Crane by February 1st, which will allow plenty of time to get the grounds inte shape for next year’s exhi-, . bition. The lease provides that the gov- ernment restore the grounds, for which the War Department has been paying 2 rental of $30,000, about enough to pay tax- es, interest and other fixed charges. The barracks and other buildings, which cost more than $500,000, will be moved by the government. Nothing js as yet known as to how this work will be proceeded with. Laverne Scattergood, four years old, of Wilkes-Barre, was pronounced dead. Her father and mother were heartbroken, and the attending nurse went about the task of getting the death robes ready and preparing the body for the undertaker. £ | B. A. Scattergood, the father, had been accustomed to rocking baby every night, and he decided to take the little one in his . arms for the last time. He rocked and sobbed while the nurse went on with her work. Suddenly there came 2 yell from the father. The nurse hurried to him. «ghe is living,” he said. “She is living, and I know it.’ The nurse thought she saw signs of life, Baby was placed in her bed, hot-water bottles were applied. Vi- olent rubbing . started the circulation. When the doctor got there baby was very much alive. The following day the child was well enough to ask for something to eat. ’ 2
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers