£5 AR SEE Cosine Peuwoceaiic, Wald. rol ; 1 EE ————————————— INK SLINGS. —The peace terms are completed and Germany has the next move. —Centre county simply must go over the top in this, the last issue of | bonds. —Don’t fail to own a Victory bond. Your grand-ehildren will be the prouder of you for it. —Bellefonte is always in the lime- light and another of her sons has added lustre to it by winning the French cross de guerre. —The victory is not won until the last thing necessary to it is done. We'll have no victory in Centre coun- ty if we don’t win it with Victory bonds. —Next month the sweet girl grad- uate will hold the centre of the stage for a few days and after that—proba- bly, post-graduate work in painting and cosmetic science. — Some town, this old Bellefonte of ours. Some class to its Burgess, when the government furnishes a special train of seven cars to haul him over the State on a speech making tour. —In these days when so many hearts are leaping with joy over re- turning soldier boys have a thought for those whose dear ones are sleep- ing in Flander’s fields never to return. —Only great men seem to be re- ceiving bombs by mail so that we have little fear of receiving one of these deadly reminders that anarchism and Bolshevism have taker root in our soil. \ — Shades of Governor Pennypack- er! Surely conditions are beginning to make a noise like normal again. The Pennsylvania Railroad is plan- ning excursions to the capitol at Har- risburg. —Praise be, now comes the report that the recent freezing weather did not destroy the cherries, nor certain varieties of plums, nor pears, nor strawberries. Let us hope that the report is true. —Bellefonte reverted to an old type on Saturday night. The police records show that there was almost enough doing to make us believe that old John Barleycorn has a few kicks left in him yet. — Landlord August Glinz, of the Garman house, views with alarm the effect the dry law is going to have on his hotel and, adapting an old story to the impending calamity, says: “The first of July will be the last of August.” Anyway the fellow who was lazy enough to resist his wifes goading about digging garden early is just as well off as the fellow who wasn’t. The freeze made double work for the one and gave the other a chance to say: “I told you there was no use in digging it so soon.” —More power to the strong arm of the law as the court administered it on Monday. His determination to break up drunkenness and rowdyism by prompt and severe penalties is to be commended. And the “Watchman joins every law-abiding resident of the county in congratulation. —1In less than a year of participa- tion in the war we were holding twenty-one per cent. of the entire al- lied line. Think of it. Is it any won- der it took money to make such a feat possible? Is it any wonder that we have to buy bonds to pay for such a world-beating show-down of power and resourcefulness. Is it curiosity or patriotism that draws the crowds to public gather- ings with a military atmosphere. We are ashamed of even the thought that it might be curiosity alone, yet we can never square the eager, enthusi- asm of the throngs on such occasions with their attitude when asked to buy Victory bonds. Don’t celebrate with- out helping to liquidate. —Ttaly is all right but she hasn’t yet seen the situation in the right light. The diplomacy of all foreign countries has been builded on the idea of get all you can while the gettin’s good and, naturally, they just can’t make a complete reversal of form in so short a time as we have been try- ing to teach them the new diplomacy of brotherly love and unselfishness. She will come to it. —Have you noticed the Victory Liberty loan poster of the mechanic in overalls who is saying: “Sure, I'll help put it over?” If you haven't, look carefully at the first one you see. Look critically at the expression of the face, particularly about the eyes and mouth, and youll see good, red blooded American amiability and de- termination so striking as to almost thrill you. It is a wonderful picture. It portrays a wonderful character. Are you like it? Do you live the clean, honest, open-and-above-board life that looks at you out of those clear, fearless eyes and smiles with a smug smile because it is conscious of its power. —The new luxury tax went into ef- fect yesterday so we presume you have already begun to notice addition- al reasons why bond issues don’t hit as hard as indirect taxation. Each time you pay a penny or so extra on nearly every purchase you make you can make up your mind it is gone en- tirely. Gone to help Uncle Sam pay his bills and you'll never get it back. If he doesn’t sell all of his Victory bonds there will be more and larger taxes of this sort to pay and you'll help pay them. Better buy Victory bonds. Lend Uncle Sam the money with which to pay his bills and you'll get good interest on the loan, get the principal back in a few years and keep the present taxes from getting higher still. , _ EE reer lH VOL. 64. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., MAY 2, 1919. NO. 18. Treason of the Gravest Sort. That the Republican leaders are League of Nations Assured. After carefully reading the revised | | Punishment of the Kaiser. { The Paris Peace Conference solved making political capital of the Presi- | draft of the covenant of the. League one of its most perplexing problems dent’s disagreement with the Italian { of Nations we confidently reiterate | on Monday when it declared that the delegates in the Peace Conference is | our previous statement that the Unit- former Kaiser shall be put on trial not surprising. The Republican lead- | ed States Senate will ratify the peace | before a tribunal from which there ers are willing to pervert any and treaty of which it is an important | can be no appeal on a charge of hav- everything into political capital. Chairman Hays, of the Republican National committee, has been urging partisan use of the Chautauqua as a medium of proselyting, and that is a close approach to the limit. The ap- peal to Italian voters to oppose Dem- ocratic candidates because President Wilson objected to the seizure of Fiume as an Italian sea port, how- ever, goes beyond anything hitherto reported. It is the prostitution of pa- triotism to the purposes of politics. The Italian claim to Fiume is based | upon a secret treaty made during the war between England, France and Russia on one side and Italy on the other. Italy had been in alliance with Germany and Austria before the war but refused to join in hostilities at the outset. Both combatants entered in- to negotiations with the Rome. gov- ernment at once and the allies having offered the best terms secured the al- legiance and efficient service. But the annexation of Fiume to Italy was no part of the consideration. Accord- ing to the records of the London con- ference it was agreed that certain portions of the Austrian empire, some islands in the Adriatic and a part of the Dalmatian cost were to be the recompense. In fixing the terms of peace, before the armistice was declared, President Wilson stated distinctly that the Ju- go-Slavs must be given self govern- ment with access to the sea. The on- ly way to fulfill this condition is to make Fiume a free port and Presi- dent Wilson insists on doing so. Every other demand of Italy has been conceded freely by all the powers in the conference and that one has been refused with equal unanimity. Eng- i part with practical unanimity. From i beginning to end it is a masterpiece | of constructive statesmanship. Since | | the first draft was published a few | alterations have been made in the | verbiage but in the main it expresses | the high purpose of avoiding war in ! terms which give assurance of com- plete success. It creates in the most ! vides machinery for the consideration | and adjustment of all disputes among | nations that are likely to arise. | The original draft would have achieved the result and was opposed not because of defects but for parti- san reasons. The opponents had no ground for their objections. But they built up imaginary faults to jus- tify complaints, most of which were puerile. For example, they alleged that it worked an abrogation of the Monroe Doctrine. As a matter of fact it simply extended the principles of the Monroe Doctrine so as to in- clude all the nations signatory to the instrument. And their complaints have been estopped in the revised re- port of the conference. Article 21 states that “nothing in this covenant shall be deemed to affect the validity of international engagements such as treaties of arbitration or regional un- derstanding like the Monroe Doc- trine.” The other provisions of the Cove- nant are equally clear and commend- able. It affords a guarantee of free- dom from actual hostilities to all strong nations and a shelter of pro- | tection to all weak powers. In fact it leaves no excuse for war and points ; the way for the gradual but certain { diminution of arguments, the most | prolific source of national impoverish- | simple form an organization and pro- | ling committed “a supreme offence ' against international morality and the sancity of treaties.” There have been wide differences of opinion among the i statesmen of the world upon the sub- | ject, of punishing this monster. Some even proposed ex post facto legisla- i tion to fit his case and others express- ' ed willingness to punish him “on gen- eral principles.” But the delegates of the United States set their faces against such expedients and the con- clusion arrived at was the result. The charge is vague and somewhat questionable but the concensus of opinion favored it. The idea of put- ting even so vicious a creature on tri- is repugnant to the mind of a people educated in the principles of exact justice and the murders and cruelties indulged in by the Huns during the war may easily be shifted to others. It is true that a charge of accessory before as well as after the fact, would lie against him and make his crime as flagrant as that of the principal in every case. ‘But hardly anybody wants capital punishment imposed punishment for a wretch of his tem- perament. He deserves a long drawn out penalty. The tribunal before which the ex- Kaiser will be brought is to be com- posed of a judge to be appointed by the United States, England, France, Italy and Japan. Only France and | Italy of this group suffered directly | from the cruelties of the Huns and | there is not likely to be any spirit of revenge or vengeance expressed. But it may safely be said that the punish- ment will be ample as well as just and if the suggestion that he be im- land and France are in full accord with | ment. In the fact that it is largely | mured on some dismal island of the the United States on this point but are not quite as frank about it. The result is that Italy has withdrawn from the conference and placed the blame for her disappointment on President Wilson and his American associates. : . If there ever was a time that pa- triotism required the cordial and unanimous support of the President it is in this moment. The attitude of President Wilson and his colleagues is essential to the fulfillment of our ob- ligations to the world. The United States entered the war to eradicate autocracy, establish self-determina- tion throughout the civilized world and extend civil and religious liberty to all people. In this difference with the representatives of Italy in the Peace Conference President Wilson, supported by Premiers Lloyd George and Clemanceau, is striving to that end. Perverting the facts to turn voters against his party on that ac- count is the grossest kind of treason. ——Of course Germany will have a big bill to pay but consider the orgie of crime and cruelty she indulged during the four years of the war and the enjoyment her Generals and statesmen got out of it. The “Watchman’s” Pine Grove Mills correspondent, Capt. W. H. Fry, has had a very thrilling week of it, but from the loquaciousness of his al- ways interesting letter as published in this week’s paper he has lived through it very successfully. Last week he became grandfather to two little boys and great grandfather to one, and on Sunday night he came within an ace of being arrested as a burglar. He was called out Sunday evening on a professional trip and detained a little longer than he antic- ipated. When he returned home his wife had gone to bed and the house was in darkness. ‘tain claims he had forgotten to take his night key along, and that must be true because nobody would blame him for being unable to find the keyhole; at any rate, he could not get in through the locked door so procured a ladder and climbed in at an upstairs window. Just about the time the end of him that never was exposed to the enemy during his war days was dis- appearing through the window one of his neighbors espied him and raised the hue and cry of burglars. But as soon as the captain was able to turn right about face he made himself known and thus escaped having his house raided in an effort to capture the midnight intruder. In the future the captain will likely see to it that he has his key with him when he goes out on an unexpected trip. ——When President Wilson moved in the Peace Conference ‘in France the adoption of the constitution of the League of Nations he gave every cit- izen of the United States a just rea- son for a thrill of pride. ——An esteemed contemporary “wonders if the money that the war cost could not have been spent to bet- ter advantage.” Not if perpetual peace is the ultimate result of the war. Naturally the cap-. | the product of the brain of the Presi- ' dent of the United States there is just reason for pride in the heart of | every American citizen. Some of the | irreconcilables in the Senate may pro- | test against ratification but it is cer- : tain that there will be few of them | EE ana For Premier Orlando was hailed as | : when the vote is taken. t ——We hold no brief to appear for {| Postmaster General Burleson and | have little inclination to defend him | but the complaint of grafting maga- i zine publishers that he compelled i them to pay what they justly owe de- i serves mighty little sympathy and will get little support. — | Centennial of Odd Fellowship. i A banquet in Philadelphia the oth- er evening brought public attention to the fact that this year is the centen- nial anniversary of Odd Fellowship. In 1819, at Baltimore, Maryland, a few gentlemen assembled for the phil- anthropic purpose of creating an or- ganization that would strive for the good of humanity. Sickness and death came then as now and worked sorrow and misery. The object of the organizers of Odd Fellowship was to mitigate, in so far as possible, the sorrows and miseries which were al- ways present. It was an ambitious undertaking and encountered a good many disappointments. Secret soci- eties were looked upon with suspicion in those days. They are more popu- lar now. : Odd Fellowship today is a vast and mighty force in the world. One of the speakers at the banquet in ques- tion stated that there are in this country alone more than two million members of the Order and in Penn- sylvania not less than two hundred thousand. This is a great force of workers for good. And its member- ship is not limited to the United States. In England, France and Ger- many it has a foothold and in propor- tion to population it is almost as strong in Canada as in the United States. In fact Odd Fellowship is spreading throughout the world and everywhere its influence is for good and its work beneficent. In various ways it has achieved its righteous purpose. In the one hundred years of Odd Fellowship services of inestimable value have been performed by this modest but earnest fraternity. If we were to recite its various beneficences almost incredible figures would be shown. There is hardly a community in this broad land which has not been benefitted by its philanthropic activ- ities and thousands ef families Have been saved from suffering by the prompt relief which Odd Fellowship delights to dispense. Its principles are as broad as its purposes are hu- manitarian and we are glad to know that the order is prospering in this its centennial year in greater meas- ure than ever before. May its future be as bright as its past. ——Now that the Governor’s health is restored the consideration of the Philadelphia reform legislation is be- ing delayed on account of the illness of Senator Vare. Legislators in this State are exceedingly credulous. | sea and denied all the luxuries and i most of the comforts with which his life has been replete, it will give no cause for surprise. That would be se- vere punishment for him but not as x as might be devised. 2 NPR a conquering hero on his return to Rome the other day but when the so- ber second thought overtakes city we will get a different story from those famous seven hills. Famous Victory All Areund. The battle royal between Penrose and Vare, at Harrisburg, continues with unabated fury or foolery. Last week the big Senator spent several days in that city hurling scurrilous left the little Senator sent after him a blue streak of malediction. Last Sunday Senator Penrose returned to the scene of his previous triumphs and resumed his barage of invective. But Senator Vare didn’t turn up. Playing for time he sent word he was sick and Governor Sproul ordered the Legislature to suspend on the subject of his concern. The reports are that Senator Penrose protested, and prob- ably he did. But the bills were plac- ed on the postponed calendar. On Monday evening of this week the Senate passed finally the bill to strengthen the lines of the Philadel- phia District Attorney. It is one of the measures that Vare denounced ve- hemently a week previously. But ob- viously he recanted. It provides for a score or more of new and well paid jobs and the chances are that Vare has been promised a few of the places. But the more important measures have been held up by the Governor, the big Senator “swearing he’d ne’er consent,” consenting. But it was a reluctant acquiescence, if the reports are to be depended upon. It required a good dinner at the Executive Man- sion and all the persuasive force of State chairman Crow to bring it about. But the battle is still on and the mouth musketry continues belching anathema. It is probably not of the deadly variety but it serves to create the impression that something is to be done for the people of Philadelphia some time. Of course nothing of that kind will happen. The people of Phil- adelphia deserve little and will get less. But the big boss and the little boss will reach an agreement which will guarantee Senator Penrose a li- cense to loot the State and Senator Vare a franchise to plunder the city. It will avert a destructive factional fight in the near future, moreover, which will be glory enough for Sproul and Crow, and taking one considera- tion with another, will prove “a fa- mous victory.” ——Even if the League of Nations should fail of its purpose’ to make peace eternal the hope is worth the Slot and shows the heart in the right place. : i ——It is also safe to predict that Italy will sign the peace protocol and fall into line with the other sane na- tions of the world. al for offences perpetrated by others ' upon him. That would be too mild a that epithets at his enemy and after he Temporizing With Japan. . From the DuBeis Express. | For the past ten or fifteen years this country has been more or less conscious of a “yellow peril.” Japan- ese alarms have been fed to it day and night. To many millions of | American people Japan has been a i sort of nightmare. They have felt i that soon or late this mighty warrior | would descend upon us and rend us. The Japs, with consummate skill, have contributed to this apprehen- | sion. They have made an issue with America over China. They have talk- ed mysteriously of the day when the . Philippines would be the victim of a Japanese thunderbolt. They have even measured in a stage whisper the ' distance between Tokyo and Honolu- ilu. They have allowed the Mexicans ; to talk in public about Japanese con- . cessions in Southern California, and | they no doubt found some secret de- i light in the Zimmerman note which boldly proposed the dismemberment i of the United States. Now there is further friction. The ! Japs have attacked and killed Amer- { ican citizens and shifted the blame ; upon rebellious Koreans. They have | made charges against the American | commander at Vladivostok to the ef- i fect that he refused to support with {his army a Japanese contingent en- | gaged in a fierce struggle with Bol- | shevist forces. This commander has ‘replied that he refused to re-inforce ithe J aps for the reason that they were ' murdering women and children. All the while this has been going (on Japanese commissioners to the | peace conference have been playing ‘another game. They have been de- | manding the recognition of a Japan- : ese Monroe Doctrine. They have been | insisting upon a league of nations | program of recognition of racial equality. All this, of couxse, is in | conflict with American policy, and is intended to be. Meantime Viscount Ishti the Japanese ambassador to the United States, is giving expres- sion to the sentiments unfriendly to the American government. His asso- ‘ ciates have even sneered at this coun- try by their statement that “Japan was not too proud to fight.” Now he has been recalled by Tokyo for con- ferences with the Japanese ministry, and the intimation is forthcoming that he may not return. The whole Japanese attitude to- ward America for more than a decade has been threatening, and the ti seems now at hand when afraid of her; that Americans will , pursue their own course whether the Japs like it or not; that no American policy will be modified merely because it is distasteful to Japan and that if i all this means trouble, this country is { fully prepared to meet it. The Amer- i ican people undoubtedly are tired of | Japanese intimidation and sick of the i Japanese type of diplomacy. They are willing to be Japan’s friends, but | not at the sacrifice of dignity and cer- i tainly not out of fear. i ' T From the Harrisburg Telegraph. - . President Wilson has taken an en- tirely praiseworthy attitude in the Italian situation which has arisen to disturb the Peace Conference. Italy in the first instance demanded Fiume in order to protect herself from Aus- tria-Hungary, but the menace of the dual monarchy no longer exists. Nev- er again will German aggression rear its head along the Adriatic. On the other hand, there is the new State of the Jugo-Slavs between, and Italy’s only reason for desiring this exten- sion of territory is that she wants more land, and the Peace Conference, if it is true to itself, must continue to frown upon mere land grabbing. Premier Orlando has accused the President of being unfriendly to Italy. The truth is that Mr. Wilson is play- ing the part of a very good friend to the Italian people. In denying them Fiume he is standing between them and another war, foritis certain that the Jugo-Slavs would demand an un- restricted gateway to the sea and Italy would either have to fight or give up the territory which now she seeks. We cannot make a permanent peace on the basis of giving the vic- tor all the spoils he can carry home. The country as a whole will support Mr. Wilson in the stand he has taken with respect to Italy. It is in full accord with American spirit and tra- ditions. Wild West Diplomacy. From the Philadelphia Record. A little while ago it was our “shirt- sleeve diplomacy” that was worrying Europe. Now it is “Wild West diplo- macy.” Both mean about the same. They mean telling the truth instead of lying, and in emergencies some- thing which we believe is described in the national game as “calling the bluff.” For weeks Italy has kept the peace conference hung up by demands for Fiume, which is represented as covered by its secret bargain with England and France. And for weeks the President kept silence and argued with Orlando and Sonnino behind closed doors. Finally, after the Ger- man commissioners had been invited to Versailles, and the Italian delegates were still clamoring publicly for the | pact of London and privately for Fiume, the President did his Wild West act by disclosing that in the pact of London Italy had admitted that Fiume belonged to Croatia. When nothing more can be done with coat on, the psychological moment ar- rives for shedding the coat and dis- playing shirtsleeves. The humbug of Dring Fiume under the terms of the pact of London can no longer be ~ ' maintained. “be told in th 28 Hane rob y be told in the p! of lan-|athisbara, oo. coven guage that America is not remotely at his bara, . SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —A novelty in the Lancaster curb mar- kets is the selling of trees. Last week a Smoketown nurseryman found a ready market for trees at 15 cents a piece. —An oil well is being drilled on Alder run, Graham township, Clearfield county, by an oil company that has taken options on a very large acreage of land in that section of the county. —Governor William C. Sproul on Wed- nesday appointed former Judge John W. Reed, of Clearfield, a member of the Pub- lic Service Commission to succeed the late Harold McClure, deceased. ‘—One of the worst divorce centers in this nation, it is said, is Lancaster county, which in 1918 had one legal separation for every seven marriages, while the average in the whole country is one in nine. —DMeriam Duncavage, aged two years, daughter of Barney Duncavage, died at Shamokin after an illness of three weeks, which phyiscians say was sleeping sick- ness. The child lapsed into unconscious- ness two weeks ago and never rallied. —As an echo of the influenza epidemic, the directors of the Central Pennsylvania Odd Fellows’ Orphanage Association have decided to erect two large wings to the big dormitory and study buildings at Sunbury to accommodate 100 more chil- dren. —The Wellsboro Realty company has let the contract to Harkness & Borden, of Wellsboro, to build forthwith ten houses, ranging in cost from $2300 to $2700. The company is getting figures on ten houses of slightly lesser cost, also to be built this summer. —A lumber firm has a timber job near Kane that will require six years to finish it, being one of, the largest untouched pieces remaining in the State. It consists of 6,500 acres, much of which is virgin for- est. The tract is estimated to be worth about $1,000,000. —Mrs. P. M. Charleston, of Elizabeth- town, while making garden noticed some green potato stalks and unon examination she found some new potatoes on them which evidently grew during the mild winter. They were of medium size aad had a fine taste. —A fatal accident occurred on Saturday in the grinding and edging department of the Mann Edge Tool company mill at Lock Haven, when Constantyn Rachysky, a Russian, was instantly killed by the bursting of a large grindstone, on which he was at work edging axes. —In an effort to restock Franklin coun- ty with rabbits Walter Clipp and several ‘other spertsmen left a consignment of Texan hares at large in various parts of ‘the county on Tuesday. The Texan hares are expected to cross with the wild rab- bits and produce a much larger animal. —More than forty vacancies are to be filled in the state police troops next month. An examination for the purpose was held at Harrisburg yesterday. Twen- ty men, veterans of overseas service, have applied for admission. Hereafter only vet- erans of army or navy service will be ap- pointed. —The First Baptist church of Sunbury, is given $1,000 by the will of William H. Riland, a wealthy Sunbury liveryman, which was probated recently. The bal- ance of his estate, said to be $50,000 is giv- en to his widow and daughter. Riland dropped dead while superintending work —Ferndale, a town in the Catawissa val- ley, two miles from Ringtown, is an actu- al deserted village today. Only one fami~ ly lives there, which is in charge of the farm of the DuPont Powder company, whose plant is nearby. Ferndale consists of twelve double blocks and had a popula- tion of 250 people during the war. —Four wagon loads of dresses, coats, shoes, silks and other merchandise were found by the police in the homes of four Pittston women, who are under arrest for shop lifting. Merchants have been com- plaining to the police of heavy losses. A clue was obtained and the four women watched. The result was a raid on their ‘homes and the recovery of much stolen property. —Hiram Miller, who lives at Kinder- hook, a town near Columbia, recently placed ninety eggs in an Old Trusty incu- bator. After the eggs were in the machine for a few days they were tested out and two were found fo be bad. This left 88 eggs. At the end of the hatching Mr. Mil- rel was surprised to find that from the 88 eggs 89 chicks had been hatched. The egg from which the two peeps. came was of ordinary size, but it must have contained two yolks. —Walter Sherwood, of Wellsboro, has been a notary public for forty-five years, having been appointed first by General John F. Hartranft, Governor, Apri 22, 1874. He has commissions signed by every Governor since that time, including one signed January 21, 1919. This record is four years longer than that of David T. Caldwell. of Tyrone, who has been a nota- ry for forty-one years, but is beaten by Arthur B. Mann, of Coudersport, who has held a commission for forty-eight years. —While making an excavation on his farm in Bald Eagle township, Lancaster county, and after digging through hard clay to a depth of eight feet, Harry HI- dred came upon two good sized toads ina small pocket in the clay. On being expos- ed to the air the “hoppers” became quite lively. No one ever heard of toads winter- ing under the ground to such a depth and farmer Eldred is greatly puzzled to know how the toads got there and how they managed to live. The facts are vouched for by farmer Eldred. —The first case of “sleeping sickness” in Pennsylvania. is reported from Cedar Springs, Juniata county, where Mrs. John Stouffer has been sleeping almost continu- ously for sixteen days. While attending a “flitting” of Russell Shively, of Cedar Springs, on April 3rd, she fell asleep after eating a hearty dinner. Despite the ef forts of physicians and friends she has been sleeping ever since with the excep- tion of waking for short intervals, usual- ly about meal time, and again lapsing in- to unconsciousness. Physicians exper- ience considerable difficulty in having her take her medicine. : —~Steps to assemble the colors of the units of the Keystone division in Harris- burg for display in the rotunda of the State capitol will be taken soon after the Pennsylvanians are demobilized. Adju- tant General Beary on Tuesday sent to Governor Sproul a copy of an order issued by the War Department that all colors, standards and guidons of organizations shall be turned over to the custody of the Governors of the State from which the majority of the men in the organizations came. The United States will retain title to all standards and present such data as may accompany them. Ww a aa aie so
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers