t THE OLD YELLOW PUMPKIN. ITow dear to Iho heart Is Iho old ycll&tv pumpkin , When orchards are barren of siufnng for pies; When apples and penchcs have both been a failure, And berries of no kind have greeted the eyes; flow fonflly Vfe turn to the fruit of tlio cornfield. The fruit that our children were taught to despise, The old yellow pumpkin, the mud-covcrul pumpkin, The blg-beliled pumpkin that mnkessuch good ptc. OhI golden-hued pumpkin, yu surely r In It. Ton Jolly old rasonl so recently spurned; We nsk your forglvenness for thus having wronged you, When from your dear presence we scorn fully turned. Come rolling down the Mil till v. c met t you and greet you, Tour bulk Is a feast to our fruit-hungry eyes. We love you, old pumpkin, so much we could eat you. For you are a dandy when made Into pies. Oh! dear yellow pumpkin, the highly prized pumpkin, Around which our memory doth lovlrgly twine, May we never forget to plant you and hoe you. The time-honored pumpkin that grows on the vine. And may we all ever kindly remember The friends of our youth that are passing And when our life's Journey In triumph r ended. May we be remembered as sweetly as they. (-A. C, Blsson, In Philadelphia Fress. ) AN ECHO FROM EL CAKEY. By Anna Northend Benjamin. AS THE fortunes of reporting nml of war would have it, I was de tailed from our office to 'cover" tlio late contest with Spain. With a pass 'Signed by Secretary Aljfer in my brenst pocket, I journeyed south to Tnmpn 'early in May, a full-fledged war cor respondent. It was a dangerous honor, but one that filled me with delight. Mo&t of the correspondents and ar tists were at the Tampa Bay hotel. I remained there for a few days, hut I was Impatient to get Into the full swing of army life. With this end in view, 1 munaged to fall Into the good graces of Col. , of the h Infantry, and ob tained from him a willing permission to pitch my tent at the end of the row of company officers and to join the colonel's own mess. The term "messmates means n great deal. If you mess with men, you know them as they are. You may sit at table with a man at a hotel oratn city board ing house for years and never see nny thlngbut an alternation of business nnd evening clothes. But In enmp those who eat together have the same Intense, eon fined interest, the same ambitions, the nme love of the regiment and are often drawn together by bonds that can never be sundered. And thus began my friendship with Allan Clave. He was a first lieutenant and adjutant of the regiment. West Toint never graduated a boy who was more heart nnd soul a soldier It was in his blood nnd In looked It. Yet he was one of that chival rous type of manhood which combines the highest courage with gentleness. He would have been miserable in busi ness, fairly successful in professional fife; as a soldier I thought him perfect. In appearance he was thoroughly manly. He had a fine, clear eye that looked at you honestly. There were no subtleties about him. He tied to the regulations, but in everything left to his discretion it was his Instinct to sim plify. He never became involved in speech or In action, and wns unsym pathetic with the entaglements of oth ers, ne felt for me the same really ten der regard that I felt for him. We were frlcndb naturally, and, both recognizing this from the first, we waived the usual more or less .formal processes which lead to an established friendship. Week after week we waited in heat and suspense. Dny after day the sun poured its blistering rays from nbove, and the sand sent the heat up again. There was no escape from it. Whin a breeze blew refreshingly it brought sand with it, and our dinner was well peppered. But the young adjutant wus unconscious of discomfort. lie labored early and late in the service of his colonel. The men knew him nnd loved him, for he had gained their respect. I remonstrated with him one day about " the work that he was doing in that hot climate. j "Andy," he said, smiling, "this is war!" Hut there was in his eyes nn in tense gleam of happiness which puz zled me. Finally marching orders came from headquarters. In the dead of night the regiment was loaded on cattle cars and transported to the pier where lay the transports 30 of them. We shared the same stateroom and made the most of such cheer as wns provided for us. I shall never forget that miserable voy age nor how we felt when, with the rest of the fleet, we came to a drift In the Caribbean, under the lee of those grand and desolate peaks of Cuba with in sight of Morro. The fleet bombarded, the cnstle an swered back, and finally we were land ed at Daquirl and marched overland to Slboney, where the remainder of the transports unloaded. The temptation to launch forth into descriptions which do not relute to my story ar,suils me as I write. When my thoughts revert to thst time over whelming memories flock to my pen memories of suffering, horror and hard ship, memories of heroism and of self sacrlllce, of sickness and of sudden death, of weariness of body and of soul, of glimpses into the Jaws of hell. Hut I will brush all this aside to recount one little Incident Out of the thousands enacted there worthy of a record throughout eternity. We had reduced Hie to the s'ntpfefN equation. We hiil lived as the wild beasts. Our funis were bronzed and bearded. We had faced hidden fire nnd had stood unflinchingly by the side of falling comrades. It was the night be fore the onslaught of 101 Caney. Many ( f our messmates had fallen. Allan was in commend of a battalion. We Inula poncho nnd n blanket between us. I lay down, but Allan walked slowly back nnd forth near me, his hands clasped be hind, liis face turned upward toward those glittering stars that slur.e with nth brilliancy In the soulhern sky. Then he turned and looked toward his sleeping men. Finally lie sat beside me and peered Into my face. "You're not asleep?" I.e whispered, I stretched forth my hand and he clasped it for a minute. "Andy," he said, and his voice, usually so calm and mntter-of-fnet, quivered. "I have re ceived my summons from Heaven. I shall be shot to-morrow!" I lifted myself on my elbow. "Don't!" 1 exclaimed. "There is one thing that I wish to ppeak of to you to-night." He fum bled inside the breast of bis blouse. I gazed at him wondering nnd with a slow horror creeping through my veins. How many true soldiers and brave men had received notice the night before! lie brought forth a small package wrapped in tissue paper nnd unfolded It. It con tained a photograph, four letters and a tiny Testament. lie silently handed me the first, nnd, leaning forward, truck n match so that I could see it the hotter. The flickering light disclosed (he face of a beautiful woman a wont on whom I knew, "We lire engaged," he said, simply. I looked at him, nstonished. Despite our intimacy, this, was the first time he had spoken of it. He read my glance. "It has been too sacred to speak of, even to you. 1 have not been able to realize it" his voice faltered "but tiow I want vou to send them to her !f 1 fall." He replaced the packet within his blouse. ! "It only happened the night before 1 left," he explained. "I had not dared to dream of it before. I hope I hope lhat she will not remain unmarried she was born to be happv. This must not mar her life tell her so." I I grasped his hand in mine, nnd then , he lay down beside me and turned his ! boyish face once more to the twinkling stars. Though we neither of us slept, we lay silent on that Cuban hillside till the dawn of day. j How calm he wns, nnd forgetful of all , save duty, us he received his orders and ' formed his men for that bloody charge! We found him at night nfter the guns I were ttill and the rattle of the mus ketry had ceased, lying on his back where he had fallen, the cold starlight batliing his still, upturned face, lie clutched his breast with his left hand,' his right, grasping his sword, wns out- j stretched, straight. I removed the ' package. It was blood-stnyned a bul- ' let had passed through it. The fever took hold of me, nnd, heart- , sick and footsore, I crawled down to Siboncy and boarded the first return ing transport. At the post oflice on shore composed of a tent nnd attend ed by a government official, who, poor fellow, died soon of the wellow fever 1 found some letters nnd curried them on board ship with me to enjoy the treat of rending them at leisure, nnd then I noticed that one was addressed in the same handwriting as that of the letters to Allan Clave, written by the woman to whom he was engaged. I said that 1 knew her that explains it. The letter had been forwarded to me from Tampa, nnd this is what it said: "New York, June 10. 1S0S. Dear Coiniln Andrew: As usual, I have rotten mysoit Into a horrible mess and turn to you to help ' me out. You remrmbir last spring I vis- , ltod an army post, where the th Infan try were stationed? I had a desperate flir- tatlon with nn awfully dear fellow named Lieut. Allan Clave, 'i'hu regiment wan or dered to the front, lie was fearfully In earnest, and I suppose I was carried away I by the excitement and glory at any rate, I you know that I am impressionable. Hut you know, too, that 1 cannot keep that sort of thing up long don't blame me, I can't help it, it's the way I'm made. 1 have tried to write him regularly at Tampa, and lilt letters well, It's got to be stopped, for his iake. Now, I thought you might bo able ; to see him, and perhaps you could explain. I I simply can't write, l'ulnt me Jet bluek It ' It will do any good, only do it, nnd 1 shall be everlastingly grateful. Tell him that it was ' all a foollNh mistake. I" I I dropped the letter as if it had stung I me. 1 was ulmost alone on the after ! deck of the transport. We were slowly working our way along the Cuban coast. I took Allan's blood-stained j packet from the inner pocket of my coat and slowly unrolled it. I looked nt the photograph a minute, then struck a mutch and lit it and the letters, in- , eluding the one that I had just been j reading one by one, and let them con- I sume in my hand till but a fragment re-! niained, when I threw them out Into the ; swirling wake of the ship, where for a moment they made a fiery trail with which the copper rays of the setting sun mingled, and then they disappeared forever. j "She was born to be happy, this must not mar her life tell her so!" I whis pered to myself. And then, "Thank (Jod he is deod!" The little Testament with the clean hole bored through it I still have. Les lie s J'opulnr Monthly. lie Fenreil to Prmume. The American tourist is so firmly convinced1 that he is being cheated on all hands during his European travels that he occasionally oversteps the bounds of prudence. "Whut Is the price of this pin?" asked a young man in a Paris shop, handling a small sliver brooch of exquisite workmanship. "Twenty francs, monsieur," said Vi (Jferk. "That's altogether too mueh,!' said the young- American. "It's fop present to my sister; I'll give yon Aw francs for it." "Zen it would be I zvi pave ze present to your sister," saVI the Frenchman, with a deprecatory shrug, "und I do not know ze you'if mademoiselle!" Youth's Companion. An t'nfortnnnte ninnder. Mrs. D'Avnoo Oh, the awftillcst thing has hnppcnod! Clara de Style, who never could deign to look nt any one in trade, has just discovered that the man t,he has married is a dry goods clerk. Mrs. I)'I'ashion Horrors! I should think she might have found him out by his talk, Mrs. D'Avnoo That's just how the poor girl was deceived. lie never seemed to know anything about any thing, and she supposed of course he was a millionaire's son. N. Y. Weekly. lloumliiilil I'rnunMty. Mrs. Younghtisband Do you notice nny difference in the milk, ienr? Mr. Yotinghusband I should say so; this is a much better quality than we have been getting lately. Mrs. Yotinghusband Indeed it Is, I got It of a new man, who said he would guarantee it to be perfectly pure, so 1 got enough to last for a couple of w eeks. Chicago Daily News. lie linen- That line. A little fellow who him not, as yet, succeeded in learning the name of the three daily meals, came down to break fast the ot her morning, when his mam ma said: "Well, Hollo, what meal Is this?" "Oatmeal," was the confident reply. Cincinnati Enquirer. TrrnclicrntiK. Mr. Hroadstairs I have 300 hens on my place. Young Qulgley (solemnly) Well, you want to look out for them. Mr. Hroadstairs (astonished) Look out for them! Why? Young Quiglcy (still solemnly) Ite cause they are laying for you. X. Y. World. Kxnspcrnllns:. Quinn When women imagine them selves wits they are a menace to the community. DeKonte You must have met some 3f late. Quinn Yes, my wife. She asked me !f a sea horse was in nny way related to a hay mare. Chicago Daily News. lie Got the t ImiiKP. Judge Why did you pick this physi cian's pocket? Prisoner I w as only follerin' his ad vice, your honor. Judge What, do you mean? 1'risoner Well, I consulted him about my heelt', an' he told me that I had to have change or die. N. Y. World. What lie Mlirlit Heroine. "What do you expect your boy to be when he grows up?" "From present indications," returned the fond father, who had just heard of the youngster's getting into another scrape. "1 should say that there was every likelihood that he would be a dis appointment." Chicago Post. IT I n Imrirexulon. Uncle Silas Joslv nnd I was argyin' about what's the first thing they teach the young fellers that studies law Uncle Hiram Well, judgin' by what ye sec in the papers, the first thing they lcaxn must be how to get out an injunc tion. I'ticlc. Oiewlnir Family. The brother chewed tobacco And owned It with a brag; The ulster chewed the "tutti" Ar.d tlio father chowed the rag. Chicago Dally News. i.nssox ix T.vr.i.E MAXxrcns. .VS.-'-T- sim Mother l'eggie! darling! you should not scratch your nose with n spoon! l'eggie O! mother ought I to have used a fork? Moonshine. I'olltlcal I neertnlntlea. In serious things change still holds sway And tills the heart with sorrow. The map which ail respect to-day Is out of style to-morrow. Washington Star. Orlitlnnl. Mnrkham Your wife Is full of so cial devices, Lunilcy. l.umley Right you nre. The other day she noticed my hair wus getting thin and proposed giving n "coming out" purty for it. N. Y. World. Diplomatic. "You flatter me." she said. "After all, beauty Is but skin deep, you know." "True," he replied, "but just think of the vast number of girls whohaven't got it half that deep." Chicago Daily News. rime and I'.fTect. Lecturer The acoustics of your hall are very bad, sir. Proprietor No! sir. They're all right. It was the soap factory you smelt. llrooklyn 1'agle. Determining; Ntatua. The Foor I know that I'm not worthy of you, my dear. The Fairy Remember that, Harold, and my married life is sure to be happy. N. Y. Journul, An I uUinil llimland. Mrs. Gnzznm Woman's work is never done. Gnzznm Why don't you do It, then, nnd stop talking about it? Judge. ' Hlghtly t'nlUMl. "Isn't her new gownstunning?" ''Yes; her husband must hove been Ituiined when he got the bill." 1'hlla le.'phUv Hullctln. Information, ' Friend How came you to know your Mfo? Mr. Sourbjr I married her! ruck AG K NTS WANTKI) To sell tl e Marsh Kkaiini; S i anh and Revolv ing Hook Cask. I!est office or li lii ary article ever patented, and SK.l.l.s I'VLRVWHKRE ON SIC.1IT. At a ;Oful profit. Why .stain) iil'e witti such a chance to make money ? Ask the publisher of this paper to show you sample of this stand, or write us for fuJI particulars at once. (i4'16m) Marsh Mfc. Co., No 54i West Lake St , Chicago. THE YOUNGEST OFFICER. lie In I. lent. II null .!. ".Icl'laln, of I tie Kort -rvent h In-fnntry. Unit. Hugh J. lel"gin, of the Forty seventh infantry, now in Manila, is, it is asserted, the youngest oflicer in the volunteer service. He has only just passed his nineteenth birthday, says the New York Herald. lie belongs in llrooklyn, N. Y. When the war began he enlisted with his brother in Col. ( rant's regiment, the Fourteenth, As he had been trained in the College cadet corps of St. Francis Xavicr's, this city, he had charge of re cruits at Camp l'lack and Chickamauga. In the littler camp he was stricken with typhoid fever nnd was sent back to Brooklyn unattended and in a seem ingly dying state, under conditions of the most shocking inhumanity. lie re covered nt home and was mustered out with the regiment. lie then stood a compctit ive examina tion for Representative Clayton's ca dctship nt Annapolis and came out as the alternate. When the Forty-seventh regiment w as organized he got his com mission. In his company there are men who have served in half a dozen wars, and they regard him as a baby so'.dicr. On the way out to San Francisco he was otliccr of the day and went through the train confisentingtlie flasks that too hospitable friends gave the men. One old toper, who was caught in (he act, w hen lie saw tile bottle flyingout of the car window turned on him und with withering scorn said: "You miserable little kid, if it was tr.i'.k I'd have given it to yon. Y'ou need it." mm to ft cm t Golds, Grippe, WHOOPING COUGH. ASTHMA. BRONCHITIS AND INCIPIENT CONSUMPTION IS A. a. ill it j I - ... . X i oia By aiiaruggisis z; & aucts ELY'S CREAM BALM Is a positive care. Apply into th noetrlls. It Is qnickly absorbed. 60 cents st Draeirlrta or by mail ; samples 10c by mail. ELY BUOTUKliS, tl Warren Bu, New York City- ;rs ucc;ng ipcciairsis cr Amsnc: 20 YEARS II! OHIO. 250,823 (JJ:E3. WECURE&ilSS!0NS Nothing cii i 1 j i.iji j iluiinn.lmi to r iuKUr iinUav. :n !o tram of rymptnuin. Km 'I'liuv milk a nun t'ni hiKiin4. lmii-riixl L jrS .X life mid hoc 'ml hnn.)(n( : . .i nmlitr Pil '-71 whitLlitil nniiKdii h-t nv'l hoMtii in vnntli It' I nu 1 11 mi weuKnoi'H or coxual ooushpm, gut 4 . . " ' -- ... v -m iumt r.iuiuua jrcuimoui win pottiuvuiy i,j d uuru yuu. . 1 miO CURE-MO PAY n "J Itailvr, you need lit lp. Lurly abut o or bfli if A Inter exuet.iei nmy Lavs weakened you, IT. l.xpoKurs limy li.'.vo uro not mfe till r urod, li.'.vo dUcaiied you. Vou Ivj Our NewLIuthud s .1 will euro you. Vou run no risk. 250,000 CURED Vou UK Man You ere pale, feeble and Imuirardj nervouj, irritalilo and ex citable. You become forgetful, nmrofo, mid doiondont; blolc'jca nod iuiile. fun lieu cyeH, wriulllud face, atoopitiK torm nnd dowucast oounteuauce roveul the blight of your existence. WECUREWIICOCELE No niattor how terloua your cam may be, nr how Iuhr you may have had it, our iJMUW iUI'. 11UIU llUblVi. WIIIBfcH euro it. The "wormy veins" return to I 4 their normal ooudition and hencs tin, Ll aexual organs reoelvs proper noiirlrle i -J ueni. ins organs uccouio vituuzeu, silk 1 unuatural drains or lonoen ccune and (Vl wanly powers return, rio temporary benefit, tut a permanent euro iiHtmred. NO OUUK. NO HA V. NO OIMIKA TION NKi'fcSSUY. NO DISTEN TION FUOM BUSINESS. CURES GUARANTEED IS We treat and cure HYi'lllblM DLKET. KMIS.-H0NH. IMl'OTENCY. STHIUTUUK. VAIUCOCKLN. fcSICMI NAh LOSKKo, W.AKHKR AND K 1 1 NliY dineacei. (JO N KUIj'J' A T 1 0 N l'llKK. HOOKf) l'KEK. C1IAUUKH hf,l,l.U A'l'L' II ..n.,kl. In M il 1 tor a OWI'.KTlON 13 LANK ior UOMK TREATMENT. Kennedy Kergan 247 SUPERIOR STREET, CLEVELAND, O. 4- Tor 0S&M& I ".mi. i .inn ,iini Milium , I i a'. I I AVcgc table Preparation for As - slmilatli.g thcroodandKcguta ting lite Stomachs amlUowcb of ting UicSlon m maim PTOTnolc9T)igcsUon,Cricciful ticss and Rcst.Contalns neither Opium.Morphinc jiorUiiiaal. Not Nahc otic. Abt.Srnn Hottull, SllU -j4ru'se Srrd Jipptrtnint - ffotn Sctii R '(trifled Suqnr . l&yrmn tlOTVC Apcrfcct Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stoniach.Diarrhoca Worms .Convulsions Jcvcrish ncss and LOSS OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Signature of TTEW "YORK. EXACT COPVOP WBAEPEB. GGLE BO ! ore of America having over a million and a-half regular readers, j Any ONE of the BIGGLE BOOKS, and the FARM JOURNAL j YEARS (remainder of iRoq, 1000, 1901, tooa and 1905) will be cut by mail 5 to auv address lor a DOLLAR BILL. I fiumple of FARM JOURNAL and circular describing BIQQLE BOOKS ee. VILMCR ATK1NBON. CHAS. V. JENKINS. H I ( ' M H" K I . ' K k I OOKKKt'TKI) WRKKI.Y. HIITilL TKIORS Mutter pr lb $ .26 Eggs per dozen ..-6 Lard per lb .10 Haru per pound .13 Pork, whole, per pound ,cu Beef, quarter, per pound .... .07 wheat per busnei 93 Oats " " 43 Rve " " So Wheat flour per bbl 4-00 Hay per ton $12.00 Potatoes per bushel,. ...... .. .50 Turnips ' " 5 Onions " " 80 Sweet potatoes per peck 25 Tallow per lb 05 Shoulder " " 9 Side meat" " oq Vinegar, per qt 05 Dried apples per ID 05 Dried cherries, pitted 13 Raspberries ,ia Cow Hides per lb 3 Steer 44 4 " 05 CalfSkin 80 Sheep pelts 75 Shelled corn per bus .60 Corn meal, cwt 1.15 Bran, 44 1.00 Chop 41 1. 00 Middlings 14 1.00 Chickens per lb new . 1 0 14 44 44 old 10 Turkeys 44 44 iJ Geese 44 41 .14 Ducks " 44 ot COAL. No. 6, delivered t.fio 44 4 and s 44 3 85 44 6 at yard t.-f 41 4 and s at yard 1 fie PARKER'S II in DAI CAM riKin w Olsanws sua IwsutifiM t" naif. t'ruiilutOS S lujwiiini uwu.. Never Fall to Bfsto Oray Hsir to its Youthfu) Color. Cmi. 'slp itursma I' lisir UllniJ. .11.. ...il tl i.i.t IVn .lrlcli 11 ill 11 1 ll-23-4t.d. mm For Infanta nnd Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought j Hears tne Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought. TMI OCNTAUn COMPANY, NEW VOMN CtT. ssa M AAtT A Farm Library of unequalled value Practical, Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive Hand somely Printed and Beautifully Illustrated. By JACOB BIGOLU No. l-BIQOLE HORSE BOOK All about Horsea a Common-Sense Treatise, with over 74 illustrations ; a standard work. I'rice, 50 Ccut. No. 2 BIQQLE BERRY BOOK All about Rrowinff Small Fruits read ami learn how ; contains 43 colored life-like reproductions of all IrndiuK varieties and loo other illustrations, l'ricc, 50 Cents. No. 3 BIQOLE POULTRY BOOK All about 1'onltry ; the best Poultry Book In existence ; tells everything ; withas colored life-like reproductions of all the principal breeds; with-104 other illustration. I'rice, 50 Cents. No. 4-BIQOLE COW BOOK All about Cows and the Dairy Business ; having a Rrrnt sale; contains 8 colored life-like reproductions ol each breed, with 13a other illustrations. I'rice, 50 Cents. No. 6-BiaOLB SWINE BOOK lust out. All about Hogs Breeding, Feeding, Dutch, ery, liaen.ies, etc. Contains over 80 heniitilul half tones and other engravings. I'rice, 50 Ccuts. TheBICirjUB BOOKS are uuiqiie.origlnal.uscful you never saw anything like them so practical, so sensible. I'hey nnvuiK on enurinous bhic-i-.h.,, -. South. Kverv one who keeps a iiorse, uw, noK i j Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, oiiRht to seud right away for the BIUULU BOOKS. The . FARM JOURNAL I Is your paper, made for you and not a misfit. It is a year . old; it iB the great boiled-down, hit-the-nail-on-the head, I quit-after-you-have-said-it, Farm and Household paper in j the world the biggest paper of its siie in the fulled States . . .1 ,1 . - v.- . v r inl'DWt k FlllLADiT Uli .t I IIIIIIHIIIIIIIMHIIIMIHHI ' . 1 . , . You can save money on l'innos nnd Or K.ins. Vou will always find tlte lorges slock, liest makes and lowest prices. PIANOS, From $175.00 and Upwards. ORGANS. From $50.00 and Upwards We sell on the installment plan. l'iauoi $25.00 clown and 10.00 per month. . Or gnus, 10.00 down, $5.00 per month. Lib eral discount for cash. 4 Sheet music, atone half price J Musical merchandise of kinds. We handle Genuine Singer Hiyh Arm SEWIG MACHINES. 5.00 down nnd .1.00 per month. We also handle the Domorest Sowing Machine, from $.'9.50 and upwards. Sewing Machine Needles and Oil for all makes of Sewing Machines, liest makes of WASH MACHINES, FROM $4.00 UP TO $9.00. J. SALTZER. CiT Mudc Rooms No. 115 West Main St., below Market, IJIoomsburg, l'a. 311111.3 ENfWftOYAl PILLS "KKmrii ll''""'.!1") Oiiljr Oeuuln. r rii u'liti; i titles knulwm iu ui',1, uii'i uohi mtikiita bust., mst wilt blu. rltUon. l uke.oolhi r. UclWa naerous Nuh.lllolluna nd lailta. Min. Mux of your i)rum.i, ot mni 4. tm sa It, MoT for l.nJlra, n uutr. b, r. M,,aMUilij.j.M, HkilUoa fiuk, i'lliriTVjLr u-7-ita VT,vl4-4r.:ri.iW'to'tfi-iJ It i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers