i f CAMBRIA FREEMAN .Vlvci"'.tl?5iriqr lintoM. TUe Lev Mid re!I'i!r etrentt.,-rr tb " r;i Frffit am w,n,n.ei.1 It t" tha ra..rrl owo pklTAtlon ef ir'.rtifrs. whui1 fa Tun wili be ia Ft-r!a at t Le luiioi- It k p w ratei : I PublUlied Wffclj l-FXSBURG, Cambria Co., Fa., -11 ij Y H. A. Mcl'IKK. ,rnnteed Circulation - 1,152. YtsiliB i ns? 1 i-.oti. S t imet 1 f, Vf 1".r., s.,- I"!. 10. n Wi.'iC S TVT!th m-Tihf 1 yjr 6 f irrti 1 yenr C timnthn 1 Trr D fl Ill-'PTh 6 Tr-ntb( i lBtfRirtl05 RTF". o W, one ywr. cwb in '3 ra.-'.".'" :: :: Xti:riti-"l If not yPrtr -r, n.;)"' ' 'Jful be charred to rent aMiliaaal P"r ' " ..I.."-- . h a .hove terma ri ile- S ' vpir M if- 1 6 ni'.iitlii 4"tfQ 1 1 rphr 75 0 .A'lmin'frrnt-'r'f flnd fcxecotr NoUett Aiiiti'vr'? Noi'." k re iMTnT kmI "iiTiUar At1r l.fc H!.-.no-a it'm frt in.j' "l V'C. r lire ; fjii ufpqui'tit inrltn S. irr line. fr o it-ft-, a:if -. evf ( ; -2 I i 'tr - f'f-n fo fli.v ncJ'rr n( U tilrd o- i 'rj ; ; in-rf Jon Piustino ff nil ktn1 neitl n1 finMUl oaslj exi'CuTci lowest j.ri-t? . loa'; t. u urir-t it. r mn l ih-e whn d.n t consult their .,.rei tir pnvfnir In advance mu" nnt ' r'j place I on t n"nmi font inn as those , I,, i in. ( 't t-.e distinctly understood i p tone f'TWHT 1 . I(F f.ir j-'iir prtotr before von "top it. If H. A. iMcPIKE, Editor and Publisher. "Tf IS A FRtKKAN WHOM THE TRUTH MAKES FKKB, AND AI.L ARE BLAVK8 BESIDE." SI.50 and postage per year. In advance. VOLUME XVI. EI5ENSHURG, PA.. FPJDAY, OCTOHETl 27, 1SS2. NUirEK 39. iul. nrjprtui acim wn no oi n- . t be a Scuiawa life l loo short. I . if vV3ll N irV i: INVITATION. Ftranjers passing through t!;e c'ty are cordially invited to visit the store, and make free use of its conveniences ; leaving their luggage und" check at any of the doors, ,jt in the Luggage Room in the Department of Public Com fort. Really we meant to have th:f important department in full operation before every ioJy got back from sea and mountain. It is made for strangers; and they seem D enjoy it, so far as it has rot. It consuts of a free Reading Kuoiu for gentle- r t tv rr.cn, a iree Kesting Koom Jcr ladies, free writing-facilities in both, closets, and other little conveniences; a soda and mineral-water fountain that isn't frea ; and a lunch room to be added. We make the great public welcome there, beyond the wont of any other house, so far as we knoy. We think it will pay us to look after Public Comfort a little, as a means of advertising. There's nothing sly or crook ed about it. We want vis itors to Iiiila h.-IpMa to have a good tinv i'.H.l connect cur store iciih it. New things are coming, and fall tr. Je is already beg:n. New thing-, do not come all together. They come-in a steady stream from now till Chi?:-t:-:as. And they go in the same way. They i .tve to. You may ::!)' behave it, when you sec our h-Mise full all the time, of com 's and of neo- tie tak-rg A. tivni awav. It wou!'.; he r -ii vort h yi- k- ir.g of so rb s a fa-t, but for the' r-orai : which is : Buy uLvn ;,o.i fiiid what yon want; tor Lo;:v-rrov son".e- tody else wili be after it. New tlvngs will crowd upen us r.nw ;or menLen every d. v. ( . ' . a few ..an St into the p; --ers, except m the most general way. It will be fair to ccme for whatever you want, and expect to find it. New foreign wrap i have come. There are i- rsev coat?, jersey i::-,ter. r--s, pelisses, and others. I he. writer of tin's ha.m't even seen them. He has only heard of the flatter they are going to mah., Wonderful silks have erne. Hut we must say rr.ore about the least ol taen tiian we have time for today. We have neither time nor Knowledge today to go into particulars. This is only an -?.r' noL'-ee that the store is f-img Up w;th goods for fall. We need to say further to vcu who live at a distance that you needn't go to the CgV'rvery time you want any-t-" . We take so much pains to send you v. hat you ttar.t, that you rid little in tvnting for goods. Let us k-ov, as nearly as you can, frhat you want, and we will send you samples and pricey cr take other means of find ing out exactly what you dc fc'ar.t. John Wanamaker. nut. Thirtrenth nA Market "tu, and Ciy-hal; skiar TO SH I. TPH '-.UJ Wrtii r, I mi ii . a u ........ TREASiiBYofSOXtt . - int i.i; A rich v.,i.ne.,' S.k is; 11. .-.oi It ft-2..V. Not s j. lrnitine! He.....-.,! ( " ' lici-.fwr r .jr t V'lit t .nr ." . . fret rni'TVt. 'St.::. r,rr !' I. 1. ' nt ;. 1.1- .!. 1 '. I. - It, i U . I i . ' .' 'T. a r'.ll ,,.,. :; I irir '' - . l i ., r I., l'. -. !. .. i. I'. I. I'r-.t. U . y. .-r-.Mn. ' t ,r '-.j vjtur with tjTf'it ..V- f'- !)' I. l -.,.,,,,,.,.... -I it. ...k.' '" " I'rof. '.. I ac Three BV h;,, '"'-' ;'." "c. frrt. A..l.ir-s3 -T. i't.ii..'1-.-li.i.m. l . "El'.i , , N r jjj 'H'1,.KY-AT -I.A W. ' r , . , l-'i so. Pa. e.nr.a.in how. rja Oil' r .trei. J '-'...'.. , ' '' 'l lwa'ili!iai,.. l-T,Tll-tr.j Suffer no longer from Dyspep sia, Indigestion, want of Appetite,loss of Strength lack of Energy, Malaria, Intermittent Fe-ers, Ac BROWN'S -KON BIT TERS never fails to cure all these diseases. Toston, November t69 i38x. Bsriw? Chrmical Co. Oentlemen : Fcr yea-i I have been a trreat sufferer from Lypepnia, and could get no relieihaving trie.i everything which was recommend ed) until, acting on the advice of a friend, who had been benefitted by Brown's Ikon Fitters, I tried a bottle, with most surprising roult. Previous to taking Luown's Iron Bitters, everything I ate di. tressed me, and I suffered greatly from a burning sensation in the stomach, whici W3. unbearable, i-ince rak ing Lrowm's Iron Fittbhs, all my troubies are at an end. Can eat any time without ar.y disagreeable re sults. 1 am practically another person. Mrs. W J. Ft. inn, 30 Maverick St., E. bote.n. BROWN'S IRON BIT TERS acts like a charm on the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic symptoms, such as tast ing the food, Belching, Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn, etc. The only Iron Preparation that will not blacken the teeth or give headache. Sold by all Druggist. Brown Chemical Co. Baltimore, Md. S tVnt ' Iron Fitter are made by Brown Chemical Co.. Baltimore, and hare crowed red lines and trade mark on wrapper. DEW ARB OF IMITATIONS. For NfirnIsrH In tl triiT9. ptmiach J.liy.l:-f '.-. I.i-t-! Vl.H N A.-'GtJrij t'Uit. -:.- .. - ',.tt- f t-k fch'T u. :. a-u.i;.,, .,.::, i S'laia, Shf -rrrif- t f i.r -aiM. Utke I'UM Va." I . r ' f :-t -iiic Usui ai;r rh, I-ron-t;s anfl 'I hrf.n t tnhe I'bki r .' " " i'y'-'.'N i" thrs J urcMt, nu.t IT.-Illtt, m l "... t :i f ii;.-. i, ii... kiwwn t" man. sJ.--: Not Fail to send for I our FALL Price-List forlSS2. Frre to any address upon . .? . - - L Mini' " appiica.iun. v.ontain : :e Ecripiioiis of evervtl.lng requirel for Personal or Family ur-e, w i .ii r-vrr 13,UOO illustrations. We sell all f oods at wholesale prices, in quantise to suit the purchaser. The only institution in America vlio make this their special business. Address MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., -tX mmd 0 Wsbmah Arenwe, Chlcam. Hi. AGENTS WAN T CD.. to ... nnr n;-liv U.ng our N E EOCKj SJflMGHT AND GASLIGHT Sbowinff tip th N. w l oi .; (,f t- with i pti.-m, crow-i. il tii.T-.uKhfftTfu. its rn-hir.y rivrni .1 tntii.--, it cjunt P'urhtj, i' ronwa u- m v tt-r- . ; ' vi i rr'inci j anrlte-nh-e tr4fijr. Its ohaiitit. ivrri in fnrt .r y jhs of life m th- (Trftt c!t v. Don't m nuir t; f it:r j aiow hooki, but nml f. r circulant trtvitt? fi. I tam.j f content, terms to AfFvv.t. Ac. pr tt tud Duw roviy ii'ib-ir.ien in (ifrnftrvi. A ; DOUGLA83 BEOS.. 53 N.Sventa 6t..Philadelphi,P CUSAP GUIT3 for TU2 PEOPLE. 3 f GREAT WESTERN s-9rGUN WORKS, 2 1 i. T--' rou",it.iLU' .--c. m Addnsa J. II. JOIIXSTOV, j 1J3 SniithfielJ street, Pittsburgh, Pa. IfratoWnitfd. Thr ( nlmlnAllngTrlnmph HOWtoLIVE! A tnn(iflf rTplor.l"' .1 Mmlnlr" fcr .l ; new ra.i v. otrilnir llh- If I o. nff flwl I Ixr s.r i e. I , l; l ti-. rated, airi-,j ujIm1 in aut ..or-i. :n. StM for I'r. - noo.-.-a anil ful par: n t.lars n.--. Oirfit and lntitru-. lien li.iwto,. o. free te aoial nvonta. Sac-ces,Ku.-triit ..-.I faltl.ful w.e ?',rp .Tp.--i-r,, if . ! ! l-r-iii.ry d-ir.'l. W. T houi porx. I'ubliabrr, l . Arch S.r ot, 1 .i aadphia. l a. ' e !.; '.in;.'-t ln.'tltuti..n fn th- Vnitei StHtes , i-.-t.-tu-.i e..te:iti..n r you n and ;..! t rnpu, T. literal M y tonp. t .r riv.;l , r vu. .j in ! , j tiri. -ni;ir i1,p. ...-'iii-i J. f. Mll H. A. M . I'mslHiruti. Y --Al:(.EHr, EFLIACLE U (' ?e!t Krnit Tree., (ir...e S'reri. Ko.'-s f. 4.0(l NAI.HII A.l lre- .it ..ii -.-. J. F. HLUiE, Rociisrcr. 5.T. i G . m. i:kadi:, -4 rroKN KY-A T I. W. tK-s:rr.(i, Pa. t .I . a t 'ontre i'.f. 'HI Pfr mmr. iJmi r nTT t jaC.4aJ 1 r t 'i'.l.l i"' J', 1! - . . ' I itr' ; " ;i'"r I"" '--- fi-v-r: i:.t ... Its , -11 .tC.rrn. 1 1 . .. i ,i r--,.IC , a If ..::r.5ri..-: ' ...! ,.; .., . i..i m . -n -.,; j . r t.,t-.- r ,t wa : n 1-,1,-r ' I -- ': t : m It or 5 M :..-:. i.i.-, v?t i :i I'.j-, i.tj , r' -Tiot'.i .tlr.-v ; . -t r. t.'uco!:n-!r j ' j vC'iifl'" a: . . r :...- -veer!! 1 I ." -st :e : - W.j.-t m ,' JJI j-lc-jT-p. . -.. .-t : -. , -.--ws..:-.u; r. j t i '-,tae "--, t m. .. : tit! TTv- -. - I -,:,.& , .- ' - ' ' - -. -..-. -.. . ' . t - -el' -..'--. , a--., i . : ,:. : - rj , : .-rlc-.ri i r.".'. r .. r . , :: z .?.va .-ii?! J , o,H.-d::-' '.-.;.. . ii ! 4-e i '.Tyou'..vP'.:L.frc;' irr".i"V,l),'' m I " f l( 1 1.1 'SlI Pfr'jrsita 8e!i j:v ' I ' : "j - s ' . . f S.w I-1 14 i NEW YORK ii 3 f ANTED A FEMALE JESSE JAMES. k TKtE STOKY OF LAWT F.SS LOVB LAW LESS HATE. The following straticr story of Iv1ps love and lawless hate ronr.ecteii with the haneiriff of Miry Sullivan by n mob tn Caldwell county, Ky., on the 2fith of Ppptprnhor, is liivfii in the LoniviH, Commercial : About ten years a so there lived in the bottoms alone Tradewater river, in ttie northern part of Caldf'pTl rv)Utitv, two families destined n the most terrible ends the Campbells. Rei1 ly, .1. B. anl Bndd ; and the Sultivans, Tom and bis sister Miirv. They were considered neither better nor worse than those aronnd them. They were ignorant and rather shift less, but so were many others in the neigh borhood. Soon, however, the country peo ple round about beean to say stranct? things of THE GIRL MART SCLLIVAN'. she was a britrht, quick girl of twenty, with lieht blue eyes, and a little; above the n.edinm in s;ze. No man for miles about could outlift her. With cm or pistol she v?!S n dead shot. On horseback there wasn't a boy in the conntry who could ride faster over roucher country, or whndnred to commit half the d ire .devil pranlcs that Mary constantly delichtd in. The effect of all this in a quiet country neighborhood can hnrdlv be imagined. . . ... ' Mary sn:iivan s name necame the nv-word for all that was infamous, and the staid country matrons lulled theirbabio, to sleep with stories of the horrible Mary and her midnight rites and crimes. Then rumor turned to other things. Mary was often seen with the Campbell boy, and on"e or twice she was seen with th"tn and her broth er late at night, dashing at, her nsua! hr"ik neck speed over the conntrv roads. About this time the most daring robberies lipgan to be committed in the nortl'ern end of the county. Farmers found their smoke-houses open night afrer right. Several stores were broken into and robbed, and, strange to say, no one knew who committed the crimps. One old farmer began to talk very frelv, saying that he recognized MarySu'ltvan at. the head of the Campbells break into his snioke-honsp. A day or so afterwards Marv gal'oped up to his house, called him out. and asked him what he meant by saving what he did. " " "Did you see me and the Cnmnbells at your s.noke-honse ?" asked she, at the same ; time pulling a big navy revolver and shov- ' Ing it under his nos. ; The old man stammered out an apology, and was never afterward hetrd to say a word against the Campbells. Among the j most bitter denouncers of the gang was an old man named Felkers, .who lived a few miles from them on the Tradewater- One night Just three years ago two men, after- : ward discovered to be T.im Sullivan and : Reilly Campbell, rode up to old man Felk- ers, took him and his old wife out. and beat tl.pm severely. They then rode off. This ; nffair caused the most intense excitement. ' A molt was hurriedly organized and some : forty men rode over to the Campbells Mary Sullivan had in some way heard that ; they were coming several hours beforehand. 1 She and her hrother Tom went over to the , little log but of the Campbells and hnrnead ; ed themselves. When the mob came up they i d. rnanded the Instant surrender of the : whole gang. Mary yelled out tauntingly : ! "Come on and get us, you cowardly j hounds." ; Fire was opened by the mob, and the Campbells and Snllivsns promptly returned it. After a little the besieged made it, so hot : for the moh that it had to retire. The on'y ! man hurt in the melee was Tom Sullivan, who was shot in the breast, but who soon re i covered. ! A BOM ANTIC EPISODE. j The gang beenme more bold after this and j robberies became more frequent. At this ' time an event happened which was destined ; to cause the entire destruction of the hand. ; Marv Suilivan met Crockett Jenkins. The ; meeting itself was romantic enough to merit 1 its b;ng told. Mary was riding along the j Tradewater onn spring day two years ago ' when she saw a man on the other side pre i paring to come over. The water was deep. ; the little river having been raised by fre ; quent rtins, and she yelled over to him not ! to attempt to cross there. He either did not , hear her or paid no attention, for h plunged i his horse in. The current was too strong j for the horse and be soon threw his rider off and tried to save himself. Then with his j heavy winter clothes on Jenkins would cer- tainly have been drowned bnt for Mary's j dashing out into the stream with her horse i and rescuing him at the peril of her life. j She brought the man up to her brother T om s to let him diy his clothes. A mutual admiration soon sprang tin, which quickly warmed into love. Jenkins, who lived sev erttlmiles away, moved over to Sul'ivan's, and the illicit, love of the two was the talk of the county. From that time on the gang had no more faithful follower than Crockett Jenkins. About a month ago, hox-ever, Jenkins got fired of Mary, an I began paying his attentions to another woman. For some time Marv was ignorant of what was going on. hut w hen she heard it her jealous hate was terrible. "I will kill Crockett Jenkins if he dares to betray me," she had said to more than one. At length the storm burst. One night about a month ago Mary accused Crockett of his itifidebty. lie laughed at her She was too i excited to get her pistol, but sprang at his throat. A struggle followed, and Mary would have strangled him then and there but for interference. Crockett left the house. Some time lefore this the hand had moved up from Tradewater bottoms, and ha., hired a little grocery some four miles away on a public road leading to Princeton. A day or so after the fuss betwe,.n Mary and Crockett a cri.wd of men from Piince- ton were riding by the little grocery, all ! drinking very freely, when one of them, in h moment of recklessness, fired off his pistol. The Campbell's thinking the mob was on them again, rushed out of the grocery and began firing. The men returned the shots and then galloped on to town. This created another tempest of excitement, and the next day a mob was got together to EXTERMINATE THE CAMPBELLS. The ifext night forty men, armed to the tt-etli. with masks on their faces and hatred in their hearts, swept down the road toward the lit tie log cabin where the Campbells kept their grocery. The leaders were picked men, and they were followed by some of the most desperate men in the country. It was resolved to do no half work this time, but to make a sure job of it. At a dead gallop tJiey rushed up to the house and in an in stant it was surrounaed. The fort men sat ou their horses like statues, arjd each man with a shot mm in his hand, the haniiner raised, finder on the triccer, ready for work. In the house was a family name.i McMurtry, an oVd man ami come small children. The only other inmates were Reilly Campbell an? his brother Bud. The leader of the mob cal'ed out to the MoMnrtrys to leave the house, which they Instantly did, stand ing out in the woods shivering and waitin g for what horror they hardly knew. Prepar ations were instantly made hy the two men in the hou-e for a fiu'ht to the death. Qnar- ter was neither asked nor given. The mob ' 1 ... An tlta t r. rvt-ioile O n - I, i r.l. 1 1 ,,Jt-'-l III,- fIMI Mir , "llll'i" : - ii them. Then the firing came, fierce and fast. A groan and muttered curse cine from the out-ide, and a little grout) htirried a man oft in their arms. It Wits 11'ce Johnson, a well-to-do, respectable farmer. Tie had a hn!l through his breast, and bled to death out on the road with the pistol halls flying over his head singing his requiem. Then a groan came from within, and Keilly Campbell fell in a pool of b'ood at his brother's feet cornse. Hut l;ud stood to n;s guns, dogged firing away into the i.iiiht whenever he saw a flash of an enemy's g'in. How long this wild warfare might have lasted no man knows. But Bud's ammunition cave out and his shots became less frequent. The mob closed in on him. Thirty-nine to one. surely it was madness toresist longer. Bud ..j rPsist, hr.wever, and. hai ricading doors ' j ani windows, he stood ready with a clubbed t gun fn hi-i ban. t to defend his life to the last, 'suddenly he began to smell sinoRe about , i,im. Then he knew the horror of his fate, ; -j-(P I MOTt HID FlTtRD thf CniN" Thirty-nine men stood ranted around, just out-Ode, with leveled guns, waiting for him. Death by fire within, death by the bullets without; which would he choose? The smoke became denser, he could hardly grope around the room. The blaze was leaping up around him like a mad wolf. The roof was a mass of fire. Then the door was hursf. open, aad out of the fire and the blimling smoke that man could not brea'he nnrj live, out of this ver- mouth of hell stag gered a man with singed clothes ami grimy face and bleared eyes, clinging to the end of a gun. Twenty pistols were leveled at him, but he fell before the hands tint were so anxious to pull the triggers c ,ul' move. A dozen men gathered around him, hound him har.d and foot, and dazed and tnlf dead as he was, dragged him down info the woods. A rope was quickly brought, and as the smoke of the burning cabin floi'ed through the trees it touched and moved the dangling body of Bud Campbell. Nobody knew where Mary Sullivan was all this time. More than one of the mob af terwards confessed thnt if Mary had been there the Job would not have been sii'-h ar. easy one. A night or so later some men re turning from a visit to a neighbor's thought they heard a man's voice pleading with some one for mercy. TheV were not positive, but i thought the person addressed wns rn.i ; i "Mary." Tiie next dav tho lifeless body of j Crockett Jenkins was found swinging from , the limh of a giant oak at the top of a tall ; hill. The mora! proof that Mary Sullivan ; committed the crime, assisted by her mother and sister, se.-tm-d to be conclusive, but there was no positive proof. And so when . Mary and her mother and sister were arrest j ed nothing con d be done to them. They ; were all discharged, and wh-n Mary went j back home she found j 1ETH'S FT-M NTITrC F3 glaring at her, warning her to leave the ; neighborhood. All the rest of h.-r friends were either dead or wounded or had left. ! Uud Campbell was dead ; Keilly Campbell was dead ; Crockett Jenkins was dead ; her brother Tom hail gone away to recover from his wound, which had begun to trouble him ! again ; her mother and sister had fled ; she j was an outcast and alone. But in spite of : all this the woman's indomitable courage i never failed her. She went out to make ar , rangements about selling some cows, primed ; and oiled her pistols and then wrote defiant , letters to her enemies. On the ilHih i f Sep. tem'ter she rode over to old firmer Huhh.-ll's . and asked for lodging for the night. S:ie had her little five year-old child wi!h her. j About ten o'clock a voi.-e called her to the I floor. H'-r usual prudence seems to have deserted her. She di 1 tl(,t ,,VH t;lk nr pistol, which for five years had never left her har d day or night. She reached the door. opened it and peered out. The niylit was , dark and windy. Ileaty. rairv clouds hid 1 everything, and she failed to see the five , men with pistols in their hands standing ! within a few feet of her. .She opened the : door and stepped out. Three strong pair of arms reached out. rr,,m the darkness" and in ; an instant, she was whirled away out to the public road. She knew what fate lay in ; store for her. hut uttered neither threats nor j entreaty, she said never a word, but walk : ed along quietly with her captors. They j bound her arms and feet, and, tossing lrr over a horse as though s, w as a me,il.siick ! they joined the mob which was waiting fur , them on the road. They rode on till Mary recognized w ith a tht ill of horror that they I were approaching the place where Jenkins ! was hung. Thej haited under the very tree and the leader, taking a rope from behind it. solemnly fastened the noose about the wo man's neck. She never flinched. They took her off the horse, dragged her to the foot of tne tree, threw the rope over the -""''"""" "men rocnett Jenkins had caoiA O...K r i . : u-i.Kieu a week i.eture and drew the woman j up A convulsive. horrHile i,,m.., through her fiame, hut she spoke tiv.-r a word. The wind moaned dismally through the blanches of the wood, whispering to the trees as it went thut a woman's 1m7v. ,...ih and stiff in death, was swinging fiom the j raiiesi .ranches of the old oak tree. A Faithful Doc. A touching instance ' cur,i'" "deiity n reported from Elkhart. lud. A dog that had linen trai 1 i a stable, t.efuse.1 to leave his post, though the stable was on fire. His remains, bearing evidence thai he had .bed in fearful agonj , wcie found in the entrance to the stabs.' There he had stood watch over Jllie horse, that peiish.-d with him. The exhibition of faithfulness is all the more notewoifhy from the fact that the .loir was not chained and the barn door was ooen. Wew Jersey Premium Wine. Physicians state that the Port Wine that took the premium at the Centennial, pro duced and off. ie.1 tor sale hy Mr. Allre.l oi-eer, oi -ew Jersey, is a n.u thai i... , sau-iy useu lor me.licina. iiurpo-.es liniiit. i pure and free rr.uu medication, and is inoie reliable than oi,.r Pot t Wines. It is espe- i Clally recount. ended for weaklv females hi,. I the aged. T,,e det-p cdor is due u, the ir!..! i from the lnun stone shale rock on winch i ri color is due u. ihe in... ; from the lnun stone shale rock on winch ' Uie grapes grow, w inch i rich iu iron. For i in?, and, tlmugh the color vailed from yel ale by E. Jan.es, Ebenshurg. ' low to white, fine drops of the same diame- sisi:lar phenomena. A scene suggestive of ye olden time was witnessed one day recently by some of the operators in a saw mill at Bedford. N. II. About four o'clock in the afternoon, when the sun was shining brightly, a star of re marKahle brilliancy was seen In the east, at a point about midway between the zenith and the horizon. It remained for about thir ty minutes, and then suddenly disappeared. A whi!e Since, about 11 o'clock, a. v.. n singular phenomena was visihie in tne heav- 1 em at Woodstock. X. B., and at. several oth- j er places. A Urge colored circle, like a rain- j how surrounded the sun, arcs of three other j clear white circles intersected one another j near to the colored circle. After remaining i visible shout aa hour they gradually faded I awr.y. The same appearance was noticed ! at .Sidney, C. B., and at Tictou. j ine ' St. Elmo's Fire," or electricity seen playing on the bayonets of marching armies, ami around the Fpars and masts of ships, I cones from the presence of a "charged" j ?1(,,ui 1,1 tli,! air f.ro"' wl'-'h pointed oi- pes draw the Iiyhtning. A splendid in st.mce of this same phenomenon was lately witnes.--d in Jura at .Si- Cergues, w he re -a " ""r "" P'" irees were seen to oe I aff,ow W!t'' ht like a phosphorescent sea ' ,n the ,rolcs- ' A "'under storm was raging ! ar ' hft timp' "" ftt pver' flash "f '".wbtning. ti.n ; 1 1 ... :. .: , the illumination disappeared, but very soon shown forth again until the next flash camo. i B.-fore the appearance of this St. Elmo Fire, heavy rains hail fallen and soaked the forest, so as to render it conductive or electricity and the thunder cloud overhead, heavily charged with electricity, had induced an op posite charge on the ground below, which discharged itself into tho air by the pointed boughs and needles of the pine-trees. Next perhaps to the famous "Dark Day" in Nf-w England in interest, were the ii.ei. dents of'that phenomenal wonder, the r r..r "sar.shower" of November, 1833 ; a night when so mat y meteors flew and flashed that the heavens seemed on fire, ami many ignorant people supposed that the end of the world had come. Said an eve-witness : "It was as clear a night as lever saw. I would fix my eye on a given star, and in a few moments it would seem to fall, owing, I suppose, to the fact that it was obscured by a passing meteor. The illusion was perfect." Some of (Mir readers may have heard the quaint anecdote of an old sailor w ho reform ed when he saw (or thought he saw) the "north star" fall. The story is given in the sailor's ow n words ; and the above reference to the optical illusion shows how natural his impression was. "l have spent most of ray life'on the sea, and have passed through many dangers. But I have never had to look death and eter nity so squarely in the face before. Yon know, parson, what sailors believe in the north star. Well, I saw that the other stars V, ,:,,lir"-. ,,ut 1 thought that as long as Tn nort,i star kept its place, all was safe. So I went out there and sat on the ground with mv back against the chimney fit was a rocK ctiimi.tv). and then I watched that; star, trying not even to wink. In a few minutes it cut lo-.se, and on it came. And ' then, parson, I got down on my knees and , did some of the tallest praying you ever ; he aid, and I haven't sworn an oat'.i since." i The follow ing incidentsseem very strange, bur nevertheless true, j During a heavy thunder storm at Median ; ic's Falls, Me., a little boy was sitting at the j foot fif a balm-of-gilea.l tree, which was ; sttuck by lightning. The tree was consider i ably splintered, hut the boy was uninjured J to all appearances. j Soon after this he was seized w ith nauscau when a physieiau was called, and on remov . ing the little, fellow's clothing, there was i found upon his stomach and chest an im print resembling the trunk of !.,. balm-of-gii. ad tree, its branches and buds a- perfect as could be drawn by the hands of a skilled ; arlist. j The likeness of a woman who has been j . dead more than twenty years, was lateivdis- covered on a pane of glass in a chamber ; i w indow in a house at Charlotte, Va. The likeness is distinct and accurate, and re-cm- : bit s a photogiapli negative. It is said that . ! the woman was stunned hy a flash of light- j ning many years ago, while s'.aii.llng at the j window, and the theory is that the outlines I ; of hei lealurf s were photographed on the window-pane at that time. A .siiiguiarelecfric.il phenomenon recently ) oecured at Celereus, Switzet land. There was a thunderstorm in the distance, when suddenly a tremendous peal of thunder shook the houses to tht ir foundations, and I there was a wonderful discharge of light- ning. A little girl near by a tree that was : struck was literally folded in a sheet of fire. , The vine dressers lied in terror from the ' spot. Six persons, in three groups, r.ear the I same locality, were enveloped in a luminous j cloud. They felt as though they were being , struck in the lace by hailstones or fine grav j els, and when they touched each other, little ! sparks of electricity passed from their finger j ends. None of the persons mentioned were j injured, though they had a sensation for 1 several hours after, as if their joints had j been violently twisted. j The Northern Lights have been used to j send telegrams, their electric force charging j the wires and working the marker without j a battery. On the other hand, science makes I lamp-light out of electricity, and one, case re j eently occurred of a lamp lit by the electri- city of the skies. j The Sixth Avenue, in fror.lof the St. Ower I Hotel, at Pittsburg, Tn., is illuminated by an j electric lamp at night. The lamp is not lit until dark, but one day passers-by were as- '"''ed see the ligtit burning with nn wonted brilliancy at six o'clock in the even ing. Tim illumination lasted about two min utes and then died away. Noone was mote surprised than Mr. Carpenter, proprietor of the hotel. He Immediately sent to the company who supplied the lamp to ascertain the cause. No power had been connected, and the only apparent explanation was, that the copper wire connecting the carbons had been struck by the lightning, as the illumination was eeen directly after a sharp flash. The engi neer of the Electric Lighting Company says tins is undoubtedly the case, and that the lamp burned as lung as the electricity lasted. A cut ious shower of sand and mud, coining from the south, once fell in Rome, and seem ed to be regarded as due to sand broughtiu a dust storm irom the Great Desert of Afri- " "'"i wan me ponen or some veit- ebtble, and held in solution by the which carried it. Yellow spots, al . .- , , , "" a ",t!l ' diameter. we on t,,t" PaPcr on which an artist was s cioud about a "'" on t,,t" PaPcr on which an artist was sketch ter fell all about the neighborhood of the city The cloud which brought it, though giving I out little or no rain, turned the sun, at 4 r. M., into the semblance of "a pale moon with greenish tint." Similar phenomena were no I unuui unsiaKen ior a rain ot Dlooii by tne j Roman, and regarded as prodigies of very I strange import Seory? JSancroft Grijlhh in. j Iiallov'$ Monthly. E-L00I) ON THE ROPE. A- OLD-TIME Tr.AGr.DT V..i ALI.ED AN OLD i CIRCUS MANAGER. ! ! A. small, weazened old man has been stanrf ! ing across the road for some time, evidently j wailing for some one. As he dings himself across the stiert I start and wonder if it Is , possible that he is Levi J. North? I thought j he was dead long pgo. In his day this bat I tered and shrunken old man was a power in I tho show business and owned the best circus j on the road, Let me think a moment. Ah, . yes ; I remember now. Tho scene is Little ; I-ock, Ark. The ciicus has come to town, iNOitn and a ,ady have arrived at a hotel, and j been assigned apartments. The lady id a tight-rope dancer of phenomenal ability, But she does not seem easy, and gazes fur- ' j tively aronnd. Noith notices her anxiety, j and tells her to go to her loom. lie then I gives instructions to the hotel proprietor to admit no one to her room under any circum j stances. The hotel keeper is a fair speci i men of the rugged border man of those days. IT. . . . ... 1 jib says uiai r.o one snail go to the lady's I rora an'1 North P003 out satisfied. About ten minutes after he is gone a man comes in evidently laboring under great excitement, and examines he hotel register. The hotel man is watching him, and as hemakesaruo tion to go upstairs, be demands his business and says lie cannot go up stairs. "My name is McFarlane, and I demand to I SPe tl,is ,adi'- 'Sne is mi' ! 1 calinot ll0,P tnat. You cannot go up ! s,airs " I ! n,,,!?t and will,' says McFarlane, and ; l'reak'ine past the landlord, has reached the J j first step, when the landlord catches him j j w'"1 ",is ''ft arm, and, drawing a bowie i Km,- cu "is throat from ear to ear. lie staggers, utters aery, and falls dead. The cry has aroused the lady, for she appears on the scene in time to witness her husband's death. She swoons at the sifht. Next day the lady has so far recovered that she has given a reluctant consent to ap pear in the circus that evening. The real facts of tht tragedy have not been made public, and the large audience assembled In the tei.t do not know her connection with it. They only know that through Indisposi tion she was unable U appear yesterday, but will appear positively to-night. North, leads the beautiful ladv out. nmid j the great plaudi's and cheers. She takes j her place ou the tight-rope, North attending ! her. She steps forward a few feet and conies "gain, zsne Hesitates. .North urges i ber fowar,, She fells him there is blood on ' ' 1 l'r"r,1MI i'""". orth humors her nnd pretends to wipe it ..... one starts iorwara again r rv f . . - . . . . . About half : way she stops and points to the end of the rope. North is at her side in less than a ino ! met.t. j "Eook !" she says, "there's Mac, and his i throat's all bloody. He's calling me !" And with a shriek, she falls from the rope into I North's arms, a raving maniac, j The star of Levi J. North set that day. j The boys in the business all knew McFar- : lane and liked him. They followed North i'P and covered his bill boards and irritated him in every possible way, until they had the satisfaclion of seeing him sold out by the sheriff. SOMi: REMARKS ON THE HARDER. The barber, children, is of an extinct sdo cies. The halr-dres-ser and tonsorisl artist j of the present day are supposed, however, to j be descendants of the barber in direct line 1 he barber is a treacherous creature. He i is never to be depended upon. lie has been ' known to cut his best friends. I He is remarkably sharp In his business j ttansactions, and he will shave yon if you . give him a chance. In fact, shaving may j be said to be I. is business. li.e barber is a strapping fellow, and is ever ready to razor row. I have frequently seen him tak-- a man by the nose without the least provocation. He always wants his hone way, and Is all ready for a brush. He has his shortcpni(b)ings, to be sure, and is apt to stir up your dander; but he has a very smooth tongue, and knows how to lay on the lather. I can't say that he was ever charged with murder, but a great many people dye in. his shop yearly. Formerly the barber was a surgeon also, and used to be paid for bleeding his custom ers. Nowadays he draws blood without ex tra charge. The barber sees a great many affecting scenes. There is a great deal of parting go ing on daily in his shop. I suspect children are afraid of the barber ; at all events they never call at his shop when their mothers send them for shavings. The barber is a true homeopath. lie be lieves in the doctrine of like cures like. When ho would remove the bristles from a man's face he always rubs bristles on to it. The barber is a very secretive fellow. You will find locks everywhere about his place. He has liltle recreation. Curling is his chief amusement. He always stands well in his profession. You will generally find him at the head. !Ie never i.iakes game of his work, unless hair dressing may be considered a rare bit of plea.sftntry. The barber has to stand a great deal from his customers. He does not care, however, how much cheek they display in his estal lishment, and the more chin they give him the Letter he likes it. I Tim hurher's w ife pocs shopping, iiist like other women, though she ought to be able to get hir sute at her husband's establish ment. She probably prefers to whisker round elsewhere. Though the barber may have no children to receive his inheritance, there are always many hairs apparent at It is shop. TAe barber's motto is soap on, soap ever. There are many more things I might tell you of the barber, children ; but he is a great conversationalist and amply able to speak for himself. Now the hungry little blackbirds to the southern rice fields fly. while the tree.iy granger's fancy turns to thoughts of pump kin pie. A CASE OF RLTKIIlt'TION. the sTonr mm ft a att'okset. A New York attorney relates the follow- j ing incident : Nearly a hundred years eo I Yorkshire peasant died in Eng and, leaving i a widow and eight children. Four of the : : children were children of a former wife. His ; , only fortune was a single sovereign. His I wife, however, had a li'tle foit.me oi twelve i ; pounds, received from her father. Soon after the husband's death, the oldest son, ".ho was then eighteen years of age, ', and had been apprenticed to a carpenter, ran away. As he v.:1s a skil id workman and his services were of value, his master was extremely arury, and oVehired he would punish, him to the lull extent of .the law, if he should ever return. The widow who was only a stcn niot!;er ! to tiiis boy -was most anxious and troubled ' at the boy's de!ii!.p;er.( y. She tried to up- i peae the wrath of his master, but in vain. t Knowing c f her little prop, rty, the man fin- i al'y .tTeicd to cat I the articles of annreii- ticeslup if the wid-w wot:ld ive lijoj (tpr ijt- ' tle s,"!l- 'd t ve!ve pounds, a,! that r-i e had : i between herself and poverty. This offer the honorable woman Consented to accept. Soon after this criminal liability had been cancelled, the boy appeared, not to help tne woman who had sacrificed so much for him j l'repat ing tne jvay tor me traveling agent, not even to thank her for her noble aet ; but "'"K't'e wa' B1: 1 success sure, if to demand the single sovereign the sole I 'l docs not make his nr-ion unnecessary, property left by his father. As it was Ids le- ' A business statement in Its eolumi.s iscoin pal right, the widow gave it to him. ITe im- n"':'(,-,'d .lo t!ie favorable regard of its read mediately left England for America, leaving rrs 'i""t!'? persua-ive force of an introduc his abused mother to fiyl.t poverty as est . tion h-' wari personal friend. And. oft she could, and was i ever heard of by his r-r'''d. wins its way by the miht of es English friends again. " '. tab'.ished irrepealabh' law. Upon arriving in this country, the boy im mediately found work at his trade. He was j C(,vctoi;s, and his ambition was to accumu late money. He worked for it as few mc-n ever worked, lie to k no rest. It was as though a demon urged him on day and night. lie became miserly, Soon ho allowed himself no comforts and .subsisted in the cheapest possible way. For more than fifty years he lived; hoarding, and feverish for j more gold. All through these j ears he gave ro sien that l e ever thought of returning : the twelve pounds to the woman across the water, to whom he owed filial rtspeot and j gratitude. j Finally the result of his excessive work showed itself in iiiflauitnato;y rheumatism. ' For seventeen years he lav on his bed, ' wii'.hing under the pain this diser.se inflicts. Still he gave no sign of grateful obligation to his mother, or made any e.Tort to restore ti e money. But the day of summons came. He had Me.. iu a most iicvaneeu age. i: !i senses i dulled, toward God and man, by his habits of ' c.ivetousn. ss, he died and pa.-sed to meet his j eai'liiy record in another world. j A search was instituted for his heirs. The ; 5 11 p-niotner nan long been dead. All of his i j own brothers and sisters were dead. Of his ' u.. is.eis cmiuren tn tne ! woman he had s., wronged three were liv - , ing and among then; the fuituneof the mi ser was justly divided. It amounted toniore than one hundred thousand dollars. The lawyer in whose hands the property had been placed, had the curiosity to reckon ; the interest on the twelve pounds for the , country gicat, and by whose toil treat cities years which elapsed before it returned to the j nu- j family. At the high rate of inter, st then ' An advertis. tner.t in the home paper rhal prevaihng the sum was found to ap.proxi- lenges the attention of the country business ! mate so nearly to the amount which ., "ian with a force it could uot have in a for- distributed anion the heirs s to m r-urprise, and to cause the question, "Was t his sln p'v a coincidence?" Unwittingly the man had worked end pinched and saved only to pay a debt which he never meant to pay. He had illustrated a truth which is not always apparent to the human vision. Injustice may do its wtetcl ed work r.-id triumph in its wrong, put some ti-e ar. 1 somewhere, in this life, or in the Hen."v thataw.:;ts with soleii.rj po, lent ail !, . . o events. Me wrong will he brong'.t t light, arid justice will he .bine. N.'it!.. r moral law Por physical iaw can be violated, with God and r.iit to uphold the:n, ai d the vio lator escape p nal'.y. Fut'f.'s Comjiair u. i MBltKI I A Fl.lltTATiON. To p'nce JOU U'chrelia in a rack indicates that it : about to char je owners. To open it quick ., in ti;.. .tre. t ifi.i i . -that somebody's eye is goin to be put t-ul. To si. nt it, that a hat or two is to be knocked off. An umbrella carrri-'d over I he woman, the man getting nothing t-ut I he drippings, . .. nifies courtship. When a man has the um'irel'l and : ee woman the drippings, it Indicates inairlage. To swing jour umbitlia over jour hea l signifies, "I am making a nuisance of my self." To wipe jour face with it means, "I have no handkerchief." This is a severe wipe. To put a cotton umbrella ! the side of a nice silk one signifies, "Exchange is no rob bery." To purchase an umbrella means, "I am not smart, but honest." To lend an umbrella means, "I am a fool." To return an umbrella means never mind what it mean" ; nobody ever d tes that. To earrj' an umbrella in a case signifies that it is a shabby one. To press an umbrella on a friend, sajing "Oh, do take it; I'd much rather you would than not," means that you are lying. To carry an umbrella from home in the morning mwatis, "It will clear off." A Clutch for Life. The following in ci'ient occurred a few j-ears ago within a short distance of this spot : A white cat watching on the shore for a fish breakfast was sighted by an eagle, w hich, mistaking it for a pig. or a lamb, made a sudden dart, seizing it. It sunn found the cat's claws iu its thighs, holding on with a desperate grip, the pain from which must have been sevcie as one continued cry and flutteiing of wing was brought In piay to get rid of the cat, but the higher the eagle sailed, the tighter pussy held on, and all his bellowing failed to con vince the cat that It was safe to let go. Every effort failing, suddenly the eagle drop ed to the water to try the ducking proctss, and was quickly relieved from his trouble, gladly, but still bellowing, flying in ore-direction, and pussy swiming in ahother, and she soon reached the shore, where she was found licking the bhtod front the wound o(. tne eagle's cla ws, not seriously hurt by the trip to the clouds. I think both showed some reason. Country Ctntlnnan. The first round dance originated with Adam when he sat down on a hornet. nvi a munis? x;i 1. In g'Mier.il, to give information . Specifically, to make known through the press. T. lis is the commonly accepted in. ar.ing, P.t'd :tfeis apecially to giving in formal Ion in regard t business of any k'.i.J. The chief ue of advertising i-. to facilitate the exchange of meid-andSe. T!.re things t,. ooetiiiol to n.er hat.t ile success. 1. The merchant mu:-t have something to se'.I that the j.,ip!e want son. ethir.g tor winch they me illing to exchange mom y or i!-. t .lent. J. He ini'-t he sv ;;;:t,g to seii ii for a rea-s- na'e j'l i.'C. 3. He must make tl.e-e facts known wher ever he wishes distill. -r-. To do this wisely he will choose sv,ch me diums .T advertising as will give this ii, for mation in the !et manner to the greatest number of customer and for the least posi sih! m.ni"! . The: is i ( thing equal to a vu ll-o. enducted new i-.j.-ir to edvertise any leg':t;mrvte busi ness, it is in persona', prt v. kes -io enmi ties, tells its story plainly and effectively, jg a tireless and slceples a.lvoc;ite, sneaking for the advertiser at the most opportune mo n.ents in tho.i-.and of workshops, business r'aes and homes, and is a John the Baptist He will not expett something for nothii.g or from nothing. Therefore, he will not ad veitise his wares in ephemeral or .tccasijnal puMical:' :is, : ;:.ted to be given aw ay in fabulous and ap.cl:ry ph.al number. Tapers that cost nothing are usually worth nothing, except for wa-'e papt r. The city daily papers are the l est medium for the city daily trade, for they are tiie home organs and hour the same relation to the lai ge city that the weekly bears to the small ' cit' vi!laC or town Hut f .r the wholesale trade and business enterprises outside the large cities, the country papers are more valuable and reach a great many more customers and reaoers than any dai:y of equal circulation in large cities. For these dailies hare a limited cir culation outside of these cities. The country papeis are the met thorough ly read. Every business man takes and reads his county or district paper. He scam .' the advertisements", for his own advertise ments is usually, if not always, displayed there. The count ry paper interest s ti 1 1 classes, and is read by all classes. The busii t-ss man no i tices it, because, besides the general and lo ! cal news, it contains the h al notices, the ! tax, Sheriff nnd auctiousu.es. And all class- es read it, because It describes the home life of the people in all their pursuits of business, or p'ea-ure, lecords the uiairiages, births and deaths, and fait hi ui'.y re pel ts their opin ions, feelings, s- tnpathies i,n. h. pts, m j(!yt and in sorrow, in health and in sickness, in life and in death. It is the best and the truest tjpe of the pet pie that made this cign paper. It is a deb ate compliment to the town in which it is published and to the bu-iness men In it a public tcsiim.ii.ial that the town ai.d the bustn.-rs jn-.en are wmtti cultivating. And they r.-!;:ri the coutlli mcl.t. j A Pa i flF-Ttc Love Story. A correspon. dint of the Philadelphia if-a'Jor writes the ; following account of a strap;;- P.u-eral he at- U ilI. d anu.i.g the D-rk.-hire !;;.:. Ma-schu-' setts : It. and I drove to t!. ehui.'.i and went down ioi'i t! e rl'.He i.ivin- behind j-. Here we st-"i( foT-awt.'le -i iih until we sw , slowlv use. i . lit. g the lull a soi-nm proees 1 sii.n. "Two huge even c::iee f.r:. drawing a wooden slid, on which was a rude cotlm cov ered wi'ii a black cloih. Ou either side of t he si.-.l v a'k -d t no rough cocnt rv ncn with , long til. ps ; immediately alter wa-ked ti e 1 near rela'.'v.s ol the d ad ft an. We joint d ! in the process!, n. ai. d s'-. t: lea' '.! a bcau - tifullv wooded kr.op j'.st the small ' cYarf v:.rd. 1 1 ere a s t ! e t t w ting grave, and as the patient b -t.-ts totieil lo ti e yawn ! ing hole, we formed in a circle around it ; The colli ii was lilted from the s'ed, and in silence lowered into i's last resting place, ; Not a word was spoken anU the oxen from 'time to time tamed their great heads as though to have one last look at the grave -of : their Piaster who ha t cared for tl.e-n in ail I the--" last years, a'-.d so Jovt d Ih.-in that ho desired they should carry Inn to his tiave. i All stoo l sj";..;.t as the caitli was .hvehd in hy the sturdy, eo!'.-ss teen; otov the rush ing torrent d the moui.tn n stream near I y, and an occasional bird note in the stillness. At last th work was completed, the spades laid upon the sled, ami the huge beasts were Slowly turned into the path, we following until we reached the little h 'mestead at the foot of the tavine. The oxen were unyoked j and quietly walked into the field and stood gazing on the procession as it woun.i p-si them on the piazza of the house. A few wouls were spoken, tfie kev turned in the door, and with n "Well, we shall mis, Uncle Ira," each went his homeward way. "And now for the strange story of the man whose ending was but in keeping w ith his huicly life. Fiity years ego a stout New England boy had accumulated acre by acre, and his savings had enabled hi in to build a comfort .!. le house and barn in one of tlte most beautiful spots in all IVrkshire. House and hoine were made ready for his wife, lie thought he had won the heart of a neighbor ing beauty, but it was the same old s'oty; a new wo w-r from the town carried off the faithless dauisel, and so for tftv years he lived alone 1,;. rally alone wt'b his ani mals. Not ut 'iitl.iee we.ks ago would he allow a woman to ootue near h. in ; then he had grown weak and worn with age aud dis ease. ll:s relatives called uponl ini from vearTto year at times, and h- was constat. tiv going to he village nnd doing all the good lie comd in his own peculiar way. An anchorite, but not a hermit, he lived out-t I ot the world, outside of the church, anil his last demands were that he would die as he lived. No clergyman was allowed t come near him, and tie selected the spot, outside of the grave yard for his rest't.fi place, a knoll overt, Hik ing his home, it was a curious epis,,d of steaitlast.'iess and sintp'icity on that beauti ful June morning among the aw ful hills. I. I". Dnkfhart, SHpt. of IV & O. ft. It- Go 's Hotels, (Con ductor on the Haltimote n'i.1 Ohio Railroad for L'S years, and previously a d roeost. ) writes:" "Cumberland, Md., I)-c. 17 lssi. I have used but one bout- ot VrnM ietet-n mvs. il and son. He had ibpl.therrtie Sore Throat, and is now well. As for n.vse.I, it his entirely relieved the dulip-s ffi my head, w hich has "been of long standing t tie r-su.t of Chronic Ma'aria. I never took rnything in my lite that cave me such general satis factio'u. Mv wife is now taking it also." Ask your druggist for the "His of Life, and how to cure them a book.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers