THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURCi, PA EOHDfcNSfcD DISPATCHES. (table Kvm of h Watlc Briefly Chronicled. The mipreme court hns decided that 4MmHhlp companies must pay for lost The Mnnehurlnn convontlon Is snld O hare been signed by China nnd KQMln. The Philadelphia cricket team was waten by five wickets by Marylcbone jtaycrs In London. A hotel mnn at Buford, N. D., was ot, suppom-dly by an escaped convict tm Glasgow, Mont Cotton has reached the highest price t year, nnd grent excitement pre vailed on the New York exchange. Captain Christmas has renched New -Means from Honduras. He reports hat ex-President Arias Is chained to h floor of a prison in Tegucigalpa. Taemlnr. Jon 8.1. ' Shamrock III. now has her racing para stepped and will take a trial spin ?turda.v. For the murder of Maurice Ahearn Ywmcesco I'ofn hns been arrested near Xew Itochelle, N. Y. Albert 0. Twenlng, cashier of wreek 4 Asbury Tnrk bank, has Jumped 1,000 ball In New Jersey. Wholesale attempted blackmail by tWermen has been charged by a Scran on (Pa.) ruilwuy promoter. No reason has been found for Snnd "ord Nortlirop's tmiclde In St. I.ouls be yond melancholia und business worry. Coroner Scholur has ordered an au tpsy on the body of Mrs. Snyder, ousekecper for Councllmun Foxball of .ISSUiC, N. J. ' The trial at Hongkong of the tnnr lerexs of a Chinese reform leader has hown. It Is said, that the Chinese government hired them. Charles Frohman has completed nr--angements for the Joint appearance mder his ninnagemeiit of K. II. Soth rn and Julia Marlowe for three con 'ecutive seasons. In the chancery court at Richmond, a., Judge (irlnuan lias dissolved the j 'njunetion restraining the United States i uovernment from taking possession of ! he cruiser Cnlvestmi. Elmer Heath, who murdered his sweetheart. Kate Adkins, and uttcmpl d suicide ut Salisbury, Md., was hur dedly removed from the Jail there to jrevent his being lynched. The royal order for bonnets at the .Iolyrnod court has thrown the mllil lery world into a small commotion. This fact, combined with Queen Alex indra'H well known preference for this ilnd of headgear, makes the revival of be bonnet a strong probability. On the Spokane Falls and Northern, lear Spokane, Wash., a runaway train it sixty cars loaded with coal without m engine rushed four miles down rade through town, demolishing a dwelling house, wrecking the Crystal anndry, killing at least four people, In uring eight others and piling up a tan ked mass of debris nearly fifty feet igh. Monday, June 22. Six navul militiamen were saved "rom a capsized boat In New York har wr by the crew of a revenue cutter. Postmaster General Tayne has no hought of resigning because of the caudal in' the post office department. Work for all the unemployed negroes a the south will solve the race prob ers, says Clark Howell of Atlanta, On. Saratoga's season has opened with ! 11 gambling houses closed and the j mention of keeping them so still un settled. By the explosion of a bomb twenty ersons were injured, seven of them everely, and the front of a building de frayed in Chicago. "Dr. Zollo," a palmist, has been nr ested In Klmlra, N. Y., on complaint f a Baltimore woman, who alleges she vas robbed of $800. The Rev. Dr. R, S. MacArthur has Tenounced the policy of the labor un nns in the building trades strikes In ew York as reckless and ruinous. Sandford Northrop, until recently the ecretary and genernl manager of the unerioan Refrigerator Transit eompa y, has committed suicide at St. Louis. Senator Ilanna has reiterated his re mt statement that he was not and ronld not be a candidate for vice pres lent and If nominated that he would cllne. Major General Charles Comyn IOger n, who has been In command of the "unjab frontier force since 18!)'.). has een Hppolnttd to the command of the '.omalihiiHl expeditionary force. Marie Kelas, a young married wo lan, drowned herself in the river at assaic, N. J. She had been acting trangely for several days and was be eved to have been temporarily Insane. Lightning struck a hut containing ;.KK) pounds of dynamite at the new (.line now being opened near Seneca i ille, O,, killing six men and Injuring a core of others, besides ruining the m'.ne haft and breaking nearly nil the win ,)ws of Senecaville, a mining town iilf u mile from tins mine. FHlurday, Jnne SO, The number of harvest hands that "111 be needed this year In Kansas Is S.100. Steamship companies may place do actives on board big liners to catch ard sharps. The body of A. G. Spiegel, a well 'nown restaurant man of Bostou, was .'ound in the Charles river. Otto Thornert, an electrical expert 'rom Gernmny, was killed while In specting a switchboard In Philadelphia. American riflemen who are to com rete for the Palmn trophy have arrived ;t Loudon and proceeded direct ta HIs- 'X William Hodewald lias been found -.ullty of murder In the first dtgree. Judge Knise sentenced tho prisoner to .leatli. Ten person wera burned to death la a lire which destroyed tne greater part of the village of Moetilch-Klrchen, low er Austria. The state department of the 0. A. It. favors having Memorial day on a Sun day to prevent It from being a mero day of holiday sports. The Chinese foreign office In reply to a demand from Japan for opening of the ports of Mukden nnd Taltungchou, snys circumstances are not favorable. Ixml Grey of the British South Af rica company has expressed regret at Booker T. Washington's Inability to (Co to South Africa und make report on natives. The last link of the Commercial Pa cific cnble will be laid between San Francisco nnd Manila and the t'nlted States will have direct communication with its Philippine possessions by the 80th of Juno. Molly Pnterson, n colored timid, has admitted having stolen $5,000 worth of Jewelry from her mistress, Mrs. James McCulluni of New York. The plunder was found secreted behind a panel In her bedroom. Twenty chorus girls of the "Pousse Cafe" company playing at a Cleveland (O.) theater were seized with cramps during the performance and were com pelled to call for medical service owing to poisoned food. Frldny, Jnne 10. Russia Is said to be making hostile moves In Tibet as well as In Manchuria and Korea. Dr. Lapponl, the pope's physician, states that the pontiff Is wonderfully well for a man of ninety-four. The Allan line steamer Norwegian, after being five days on the rocks at Cod Roy. N. F.. hns been floated. A great review of troops will be held at Aldershot July S and will be attend ed by President I.oubet of France. Lieutenant Hamilton Foley, Fifth cavalry, will be tried by court innrtlal at Manila for embezzlement and on other c harges. An unidentified negro fainted on the platform of an Fast New York elevated station, fell In front of a locomotive and was killed. , The San Diego (Cal.) Union has an nounced that I'. S. Grant Is a candidate for the Republican nomination for the vice presidency next year. P.ob Fitzslnimons, the pugilist, will marry Miss Julia Gilford, one of tho singers In "When Johnny Conies Marching Home," at Chicago. The Niagara Falls (N. Y.I police au thorities prevented Martha Wagonfuli rer from making her proposed trip through tho rapids In a barrel. Theodore Cross, a mine promoter, charged with Traud in a $.ViOi,000 min ing deal in which his commissions are declared to have been $200,000, has been arrested In Chicago. Postmaster Dorousso of Camden. N. J., who disappeared, has been found at the home of a friend in Baltimore in "a bad physical and mental condition." His books are In a muddled condition. Dr. John Wilson of Poughkeepsie has removed a bullet that had been in his head for five years. He felt a soreness in his throat, and lie removed the bul let with forceps. It had entered the bend at the left of the nose while he was examining a rltle. William Hardee, tha condemned mur derer, who, with three other prisoners, escaped from the city Jail nt Glasgow, Mont., nfter killing one guard and bent lug two others almost to death, has been shot nnd killed In the Bail Lands after a desperate battle with a posse. Thuraday, Jane 18. The Catskill Creek House, n summer hotel at South Culro, N. Y., has been destroyed by fire. William Donne of New York was fntally hurt by being thrown from an auto In Hackensack, N. J. Captain S. E. Mott of Glens Fnlls, N. Y., was knocked senseless at Camp Odell by a kick of a horse that had thrown Lieutenant Colonel Charles H. Den ike. Militia was called out at Dubuque, la., to suppress rioting that followed an attempt to run street cars with non union men. Kroushevnn, the notorious Jew bultet nnd the editor of the untl-Semltlc or gan In Kishinefi, was stalled in tho neck by a Jew and seriously hurt at St. Petersburg William A. Keating was knocked out of a bunk on his yacht and Into tho river at New York by a tug striking his boat and careening It. Harbor po lice rescued him. James T. Metcalf, for many years superintendent of the money order sys tem of the post oflice department at Washington, has been removed from office by the postmaster general as the result of an alleged indiscretion. The unbeaten yacht Reliance hni met with her first mishap. Two min utes after the start for a thirty mile race the topmast of the latest Herre shoff boat was carried away about ten feet from the masthead, practically putting her out of the race. The kaiser prize nt the Baltimore saengerfest was won by the Juugei Maeimerchor of Philadelphia. The Arions of Brooklyn, the present holder of the prize, were a close second, tho Columbia of Philadelphia was third and the Brooklyn Saengerbund fourth. The Joint board of the hotel strikers' union at Chicago has voted to recede from its former position and to recog nize the Restaurant Keepers' associa tion and nsk for arbitration. It la generally believed that their action will be acceptable to the employers ami that the end of the strike Is in sight. The high court of Scotland has con firmed u Judgment in favor of Spain for $337,500 aguiust the Clydebnnk En gineering and Shipbuilding company for failure to deliver torpedo boat do stroytirs on contract time in 1R!)7. The uttorney for Spain claimed this was tha causo of hor defeat In the Spaulsu Auicrlcau war. THE GOSSIP OF CHICAGO i Digest of What Is Doing in the Western Metropolis. Salvation Army I.nxnle Try to Cons teraet the Work of the Hire The FerrU Wheel Sold (or m Sons. Chlcsjfo. There was recently dedi cated In Chicago the first sanitarium for consumptives erected In the city. In several ways it is a pecu liar building. Itsmost peculiar feature Is its lack of corners. There is not a square corner in the en tire building, nnd for this reason it is as nearly duct proof as It is pos sible to make a building in this dust ridden city. I I Hospital lor Coniump-ttres. Where the walls, floors and ceilings meet they are rounded so there ma- be I no possible place for dust to accumu late. Kvery room is somewhat like the inside of a sphere. Every room has an outside window thnt extends from ceiling- to floor, and the building- is so sit uated Ihnt the sun shines into every room each day. More than this, it sets in a ten-acre lot, so that other build ings cannot encroach nenr enough to shut out the sunlight and air. His heated in winter and cooled In summer by means of fans which keep the air constantly circulating. All around it at every floor ire wide verandas where patients will be kept as much as possible. It is a Catholic Institution, built by popular suliscrint ion, nnd is ur der the direction ufnne nf the Cath olic sisterhoods. Before the completion of this hospi tal, which wiil accommodate 250 pa tients, there were but live hospitals in the city which would receive a con sumptive patient, though city health authorities estimate that 0 per cent, of the people of the city or a filleted with tuberculosis, and 12 per cent, die of this disease. here Immoriillty Ttelvna. The dives of Chicago are like the proverbial cat, only more so that is, they have a preater n u m ber of lives. K v e r y few m ii ii t h s a moral s t r euk strikes the police d e p a rtment and the worst of the dives are closed, only to reappear nirain in a new sec tion. A dozen years ago Twenty-second street, east from State, was The J3oor to Hade, one of the aristocratic business sections of the city. To-day its dens of infnnniy are the cause of more crimes against morality than may be found in any other section of the South side. It Is crowded with cheap dance halls under the name of "Dancing; Academies," and with tough saloons with partitioned rooms. The dance halls into which women are- admitted with or without escorts at the small price of ten cents each, are attractive to a class of girls who po there with no intention of Inten tional wrong-dolnp, but who find in them, as a rule, the first step in a down ward course which hag no end. These places are patronized exten sively by servant girls and by shop pirls, young' things of 20 and less. Many of them are pirls from the coun try drifted cityward in hopes of find ing opportunities that will place them socially above their home companions. Once they have entered the doors of these places but few ever return to their homes In the country. These Twenty-second street dives, made famous by half a dozen divorce cases in Chicago courts, are but typ ical of those to be found in other sections of the city, though it is on the South nnd North sides of the city that their doors have the great est amount of gilt, and it is the gild ing which makes them dangerous. In New York one evening a friend compared that city and thicupo by snying: "New York is fast and Chi cago is tough." That, I think, ex presses it. New York, with all its boasted wickedness, would not per mit such places to run. There Is vice there, but It is not so flaunted in the eyes of the innocent as it ia in Chi i capo. Work of the Snl vntlonlxtn. There is one class of pirls who enter these dens und emerge from them without becoming tainted the Sal vation Army las sie. The amount of pood the women workers of the nr iny accomplish In' this city is Ines timable. No placo is too vile for them to enter If by so doing they can accomplish n work of rescue; The Amry Ussie. none are so vile that the taint of them ever clinps to their skirts. , The army in Chicapo has leased new and larger quarters thau auy they fiave ever before occupied here. A pari tf these quarters are devoted to the use of a training school for women officers, and the requirements for ad mission and promotion are quit? as strict, in their way, as Js Uncle Snm'i . military establishment. A committee I passes upon every candidate foradmls- sion to this school. She must have pood henlth; her character must be above question, and she must have i more than usual intelligence. The j course at the school occupies not less j than 16 weeks, and during that time : she gets nothing save her board, and must cook her own meals. The course includes theology, oratory, letter-writing, the preparation of reports, the rules and regulations of the army, cooking nnd general housework, and the general work of the. army, such as Its rescue and charitable features. , After they have graduated from the school they are placed ou the army pay rolls for the small amount given officers, nnd out of this they must pro vide their living nnd clothing, nnd fot I this small wags must labor In tlu' streets collecting funds to carry on the work; must sell War Crys In the business ofllces, stores and saloons; must hold street services; must go into the poverty-stricken homes of the poor, and assist in the housework of invalid mothers. It is women with such a trnnlngns this who go into the slums nnd dives of the city and dra? from them the comparatively few who nre rescued, j The Ferris Wheel (Joins. For 10 years the World's Columbian exposition hns been passing, nnd the end Is not yet. The fair was not a money maker for anybody. In fact it brought financial disaster to ninny, and another chap ter to the long drawn out story of losses w as add ed when a few days ago the Fer ris wheel was sold under the ham mer for the insig nificant sum of Attraction o( the Midway. $1,M)0. leaving behind it a list of cred tors with claims aggregating some thing like S4mi,()0li. The wheel was bought by a firm of junk dealers, nnd at the end of the present summer it is to come down und po Into ehe scrap pile. It cost $:Ui2,(l(IO to erect the Ferris wheel in the World's Fair grounds, where it stood as the star attraeti-m of Ihe Midway. After the fair several efforts were made to dispose of it prof itably. At one time it was expected the Brooklyn Rapid Transit company would purchase it. to add to the at tractions at Coney Island. The late. Gov. Flower was interested in this scheme, but died before it wns enr ried to completion and the whole thing w as dropped. When the court snle occurred a few days apo it was expected that both J. D. Rockefeller and Joseph I.eitrr would bid for it. The former, it wan said, wished to remove it to Coney Island, while the latter was supposed to desire to take it to St. Louis as features of the Louisiana Purchase ex position. If cither had contemplated bidding for it both repented before it was too late. Chicagonns have never taken to the wheel. In its last location on the North side it has been visited each summer by a number of people visit ing the city, but not in suflieient num bers to make its operation profitable, nnd it did but little except to pile new debts onto old ones. The cost of dismantling the mam moth structure will be in the neigh borhood of $30,000, but it is expected that the boilers and engines and the immense quantity of steel which it contains will more than recompense its purchasers for this expense. SHAPED HIS DESTINY Career of Senator Ncbon an Inspir ation to Young Men. o. roor Norrtralnn Dor Who Itoae from Deepeat Olmeurlty nnd Holt I One of the (areat Statesmen of the Hour. The life of Senator Knute Nelson, of Minnesota, has in It the elements of a purpose novel of twofold Intent. The themes, which are closely Interwoven, are the powerful influence which the early inspiring of a definite ambition hns in shaping a life, and how success is gained despite the most untoward conditions. These points are clearly brought out hi a clever little sketch, contributed by Antoinette Van lloesfn to the Cosmopolitan. A foreign-born American, Knute Nelson came to this country from Nor way with his widowed mother when he' was less than five years old, and earned his first money selling newspapers upon the streets of Chicago. Later, when he and his mother were settled on a little sandy farm outin Wisconsin, bis life was given a definite direction by one Mary Dillon, who taught the district school. Miss Dillon was a cul tivated woman who came with her fam ily to this country from Belfast, Ire lnnd, to mend their broken fortunes. She becaijie interested in the little, virile, eager-minded .Vorweginn boy, nnd, nt stated intervals, invited him to her home. There, for the first time he saw the table-nnpery in use and a tea table ornamented with flowers. On one of these occasions, in tnlking witlT him of the famous personages of his tory, Miss Dillon said: "You, too, mny become a distin guished man, Knute. You've a pood mind, nnd all you have to do Is to be in diistrious and persevering. You can't be president, for you were not born in n Golnar to a Fire, Chicago Is classed as the worst city In the world for the fire department driver Tn th (I I d o w n t own dis . V. P I trict he encoun ters a greater con gestion of traffic than any other city of the coun try knows; within this district he has more obstruc tions to look out for In the way of street cur tracks nnd elevated road structures; out- Penl ot the Fireman. Kide of the busi ness center lie has worse streets than are to be found in other lurge cities, and above all the city gives him no legal right to the right of wuy. The tire engine, tho hook und lad der or the stund pipe truck, tile hose wagon, that go clanging down the streets in a wild race to u fire, have no more legal rights on the streets than lias the horse und wagon of the ped dler. Should the pecdler drive like mad through the streets und run over some pede.strian the law would hold him responsible. So, too, the law would hold the fire department driver. There is no law upon Ihe statuie books of the city which says to the citizen, "keep out of the way of the fire en gine." Another danger vMcli threatens the department drivers are the saving bridges over the river. On dark, fug gy nights It is practically impossible for the drivers to tell whether or not the bridges they have to cross and re cross ure open or closed, yet the rules of the department bay the ponderous machines must go rushing onward, and thu driver must take his chuueeM of going over or into the water. ' The Chicago fire department has the best drivers in the world, and it uetija tbem. WniGIIT A. PATTERSON. HON. KNUTE NELSON. (Statesman Who Succeeded Despite Most Untoward Conditions.) thia country, but you can be a United States senator." This was long before there was a "New Kdueation," but one of its foundation methods was used by Miss Dillon in thus relating young Nel son's life to the vital facts in the lives of men of success. From this time on he studied them with keen personal in terest, seeking to find just how they had achieved, lie realized that the first Btep was to learn more than a country district school taught. Senator Nelson tells that he jour neyed in an ox-cart of home construc tion, the wheels of which were sect ions of a big log, to the little village acad emy from which he grndunted. On this enrt was a large wooden chest which contained, in addition to his scanty wardrobe, sullicient provision from the farm to last him half the term. He did his own cooking, living as sim ply as did Daniel when he was in train ing to stand before Babylon's triumph ant king. At this time he bore, with out the slightest thought of relinquish ing his object, the constant slights and ridicule of his fellow students. Senator Nelson's personality an nounces the staying qualities which enabled him to realize the ambition inspired by his first teacher. He walks short, sits tall, and has the sturdinesn of those not easily overthrown. His wide, firm mouth closes evenly; his iron-gray hair and beard are cropped to coordinate with the square-turned lines of his head and face; and his ear, which, according to de Maupassant, in dicates one's origin far more accurate ly than any ceitifieate of birth, is siz ablo, with elaborate, well-defined con volutions. In a small way he entered the arena of politics shortly nfter he hnd fin ished his nendemfe course, nnd has filled almost every office in the gift of the people, once or more, up to theone he now occupies. Meanwhile, he found time to serve as a soldier during the civil war, and to become an uble law yer. The woman who opened the world of books to the senutor, and the scarcely less important world of the amenities of life, was a puest nt his home while he was a congressman. After her death, lunong her effects was found, carefully dated and arranged, almost every thing that hud been published, up to that time, about him. It is one of the regrets of his life thntMixs Dil ion, the inspirer of his attainments, did not live to see him n senator. Walks Pnveil with Corncob. A man who has been traveling in Iowa has hit upon an odd use of corncobs. He says: "I made a trip through a big part of lowa recently, and I found sev eral grain shipping towns that hud corncob sidewalks, in spite of what one would think about it, oobs muke a pretty good walk. They ure a lit tle roujrh nt first but when the cobs become trampled down the walk it rmooth. Why Sunday Schools Tail- Chicago Profetion Say Their Methods art Behind the Timet. That the majority of the Sunday schools of the present Hay are ineffect ive education :lly, are lagging far be hind the public schools in pedagogic methods and are standing almost on the level of the old district school, so far as scientific teaching is concerned, are the charges made by Professor Ernest DeWilt Burton and Professor Sfiailer Mathews of Chicago. These statements are made in a volume just published from the Uni versity of Chicago press on "Principles and Ideals for the Sunday School." The book is the result of years of study and experience on the part of both the authors in Sunday school work. The Sunday school, it is asserted, is essentially an educational institution not a place for direct exhortation to certain lines of action. Faulty methods of the teaching and illogical selection of the subjects taught arc blamed for the decline in interest and final dropp. ing out of pupils as they grow beyond the years of childhood. Professors Burton and Mathews advocate making the Sunday school in many respects exactly like a public graded school, where the children of the different grades are taught different subjects, according to their capacity. LOW RaTU TUUK TO UESVEE. Via Pennsylvania Railroad, Account Chris tian Endeavor Convention. For the benefit of delegates and others desiring to attend the Twenty first International Biennial Conven tion of the United Society of Christian Kndeavor, to be held at Denver, Col., July 9 to 13, the Pennsylvania Rail road Company will run a petsonally conducted tour to Denver and return, leaving Philadelphia, Lancaster, liar risburg, Tuesday, July 7. going via Chicago and arriving Denver Thurs day, July 9. Returning, the tour will leave Denver Thursday, July 16, ar riving Philadelphia, Saturday, July i$. Special trains of the highest grade of Pullman equipment will be run on a fast schedule. Y.zch train will be in charge of a tourist agent, chaperon, and special uniform baggage master. Round-trip rate, covering transporta tion to Denver, Colorado Springs, or Paeblo and return, Pullman berth, and all necessary meals in dining car to and from Denver, will be as follows: Harrlsburg, $67.25, two in one berth, $57.25 each ; Round-trip rate, cover ing all necessary expenses on going trip and railroad transportation only returning, on regular trains until Au gust 31, will be as follows : Harrisburg, $54.25, two in one berth, $49.25 each ; Proportionate rates from other points. Pullman accommodations and meals are included only while tourists are using special trains. Special side trips fiom Denver at reduced rates. For reservations of space, tickets, and tull information, apply to nearest Pennsylvania Railroad Ticket Agent, or direct to Geo. W. Boyd, General Passenger Agent, Broad Street Sta tion, Philadelphia, Pa. at. Catarrh and IIav Fever. Liquid Cream Balm is becoming quite as popular in in ny localities as Ely's- Cream Balm solid. It is prepared for use in atomizers, and is h'ghly prized by those who have been ac customed to call upon physicians for such a treatment. Many physicians are using and pciscrihing it. All the medicinal properties of the celebrated Cream Balm are contained in the liquid form, which js 75cts. including a spraying tube. All druggists or by mail. Ely Brothers, 56 Wnrren M., New York. GETTYSBURG. Fortieth Anniversary ot the Great Battlt Forty years .ago the citizens of Pennsylvania were anxiously waiting to see what fortune the chances of war would allot them. At that time everything looked bad for the Union forces, but the events of the next few days, culminating in the Historic Bat tle of Gettysburg, virtually declared 'The Union one and indivisible." It is claimed by many historians that this battle fought July 1st, 2d and 3d, 1863, was the critical, deci sive engagement of the contest, and the "high water mark," showing the extreme point reached by Pickett's Virginians in their famous charge, is in reality the high water mark in the tide ot the rebellion. Thereafter it was all ebb tide with the Southern cause. To accommodate visitors during the Anniversary days, the Philadelphia & Reading Railway lies arranged to sell Excursion Tickets from all ticket offices in Pennsylvania at rate of single fare for the round trip. Tickets for sale and good going June 30th to July 3d inclusive and good to return until July Cth inclusive. For time of trains, rate of fare, etc., consult any P. & R. Ticket Agent. SlartliiK Htitlit. In every great race much depends itpun lilt start, "(jetting awny" with the whole system tingling with confidence in the strength to win is half the battle. In the race of life the start each day is at the breakfast table. A dish oi "It", the new cereal, served with milk, in vigorates the body and refreshes the brain. "It" makes the start right. "It " 's cooked and ready to eat Young and old like "It You can eat "It ' any ti'"ei At jjrocers everywhere. a-ia iy
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers