\ 1 4 £8 REY. DR. TALMAGE. BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN DAY SERMON, “The New Song of Heaven." « BT: “And they sang a new song.” Rev, # early all the cities of Europe and Amer have conservatories of music and assoct- i whos ebject itis b ho Lt iO x use to resound with the musie of first-class who gave their services gratuitonsly to the masses, who came in with free tickets and huszaed at the entertainment, At Ber Hn at 11 o'clock daily the military band, with or a bundred instruments, discoursesat Opera House for the the . On Easter Sunday in Dresden the be ot cannon and the ringing of bells bring mul titudes to the churches to listen to the or gan peals and the exciting sounds of ry and drum. When the great fair day Leipsi asic c comes the bands of from yp flute and horn, violio aud bassoon. At seldorf once year tho lovers of music as- semble, and for three or four days wait upon —cups and vases of silver and gold, chestra and oratorio. well or play ekititully upon instruments are with vociferation and garianded by excited i is There are many whose most ecstatic de- t is to be found in melod and all the of celestial gates, msness of twelve meaner of fruits, and all the rush of floods from under the throne of God would not make a heaven for them if there were no great and song, excepting once for minutes; and, judging from the gS now iring in God's and the ever accumulating triumphs the Messiah, that was the last half hour St heaves will ever be silent. fact that this was a new sons. Sometimes Ibavein church been floated SWAY upon some choral, in which all our to mingle their v and I bave, in the glow of my d: “Surely this is music enough for ven.” Indeed, I do not believe that ymn,” “Corenation,” or “Old i " would sound ips or thrummed ere are many of our from fathers and mothers in glory who would be time harmonies, new Bat this we are told is a song. Some of our greatest anthems chorals are composi from tupes—the sweotest parts of them up into the harmony: and sometimes ought t this song’ partly made u west stoains of cri) music m a» in new This] do know, thas in sweetnes song. bo somethi the Ms Hl ] 4% h it & t endurance, add. ing a sweetness and pL to the triumphal strain. So the glorified mother will sing of the cradle that Soath robbed, and the en. spirit from the almbouse will sing of a lifetime of want. God may wipes away all the tears, but not the memory of the grief shat started them! Further, it will be an accoapanied song. Some have a great prejudice musical nstraments; and even among who like there is an idea that they are unauthor- I love the cymbals, for Israel in trinmph at the Rod Sea. 1 love for David struck it in praising ths Jove the trumpet, for we are told nal awake the dead, I love all inged instruments an! organs, for God demands that weshall praise Him on stringed instruments and orgels. Tharp jn in usic much to suggest the higher wo hy a Tha Tn, He had taken the book the four-and-twenty elders fell down before the Lamb, having every one of them » and “I heard the voics of the jag with their harps,” gotten the vi from the beast stand- ing On the sea of glass, having the harps of Yes, the is to be accompanied. You my that all Is figurative. Thon I sa prove it. Ido potknow how much of it A literaland how much of it is figurative, Who can say but that from some of the precious woods of earth and heaven there may not be mado instruments of celestial ac- cord? In that worship David may take the harp, anl Habakkuk the shizionoth; and when the great multitudes shall, following their own inclinations, take nun instruments sweeter than Mozart ever fin ered, or Schu- mann ever dreamed of, or Brethoven ever wrote for, letall heaven make ready for the burst of stupendous minstrelsy and the roll of the eternal orchestra! Further, it will be an anticipative song, Why, my friends, heaven has hardly begun yot. If you had taken the opening ploce of music to-day for the whole services you would not have mado so great a mistake as to suppose that heaven is fully inaugurated. Féstal choruses on earth last only a short while. The famous musical convoeation at Dusseldorf ended with the forth day. Our holidays last only eight or ten days; but heaven, although Shglag for so many years, has only just begun * new song.” If the glorified inhabitants recount past deliver ances they will also enkindle at to come, If at 3 dhelock, When the earch opened, you d ta eo fow who were scattered through fit ne wain audience, you would not have made s0 great 8 mistake as if you supposed thas the present population of ven are to be its chief citizenship. Although millions are al- ready there, the inhabitantsare only a hand. ful compared with the futures populations, All Borneo is yet to be saved. All Italy Is yet to be saved.” All Spaln is yet to be saved. All Russiais yet to be saved. All yet to be saved All America is yet to be saved. All the worldis yet to bo saved | After that there may be other worlds to con- | those spheres a mi There it] them out. God will not want to keep out. I bave sometimes thought that all the mil lions of earth that go into glory are but a i very small colony compared wi the influx | frum the whole univers: | heaven large enough not only for the uni | Yerss but for 10,000 universes. I do not know | Just how it will be, but this I know-—that ven is to be constantly augmented, and i and the procession is ng multi | plied. If beaven sang when Abel weat up— | ment by moment? Our happy gatherings on earth are chilial | by the thought that soon we must separate. kagiting and Christmas days come, and the rail trains flying thither are crowded | Glad reunions take placs. We have a time {of great enjoyment. But soon it is “Good. by" in the hall, “Good-by" at the door, “Good-by™ on the street, “Good-by” at the i rail train, “Good by" at the steamboat | wharf, We meetin church. It is good to be here. | sa the benediction pronounced, and the | audience will be gone. Bot thers are no | separations, no good-bys in heaven. At the | door of the house of many mansions Do | Rood-bys. At the pearly gate no good-bya | The song will be more t because we | arealways to sing it ightier song as our | other friends come in. Mightisr song as | other garlands are set on the brow of Jesua | Mightier song as Christ's glories unfold. | thoroughly to understand it and appreciate hensible than on the first da infinite rush of celestial spled. | more incom | Gazing on | pour themselves into the g. sat heart of God, | bow soon will we exhaust the song? | Never! | rows of the lost, used to lift up their hands { and shout, “The wrath to come™ “The | wrath to coms™ Today I lift | hands, and looking toward 2he grout | er, “The joy tocome™ “The bliss to come | Oh, to wander onthe banks of the bright river, and yet to feel that a little further shall find still brighter floods en- it! Oh to stand a thousand istening to the enchanting music of find out that the harp- my . . All ! Grand en that new Charles Wesley wings it. Our voices now may lelujah to hallelujah! “Until the day and the shadows fleo away, turn, my loved, and be thou liioarosor a upon the mountains of Bother ™ The Seville Cathedral. BY WILLIS STEELY. How subtle and fleeting are the charms of those abstract things, a square and a street, when you come to write about them! I cannot attribute the quality of bad taste to the numerous travelers who call Seville an’uninteresting desert; the city is a quiet pain, with a wonder- ful cathedral and a lofty tower to ac- centuate its general flatness. It makes no more lasting impression.on the brain of a rapid traveler than does the land- scape on the headlight of a locomotive, To us, however, who lingered away the winter in Seville, her cathedral and Giralda soon lost their prominence, while corners and triangles of streets, quaint unpretentions dwellings, “title squares, frowned upon by monotonous like { atures of home, ‘and became cur Sevi ., catiiedra’, hut in by the Alcazar and the archbi-hop's palace, made a de- ightful lounging p ace on warm morn- ings. It had no attractions in itself; a three-cornered piece of sandy grass, un- der fortress walls, with trees set in reg- uar rows, that grew feebly. Hard benches without backs formed a sort of fence on the three sides of the pants. But it counted one friend, au old fruit womun, who kept her stall there, and it could confidently expect to see, some time during the day, = priest in rusty soutane and wide three-cornered hat, who took exercise within its boundaries. Beg- this p'aza, but on Sundays and feast the cathedral. ought to have been a hermit, kept it, and sold his wares, or offered them for sale, to the worshippers who strayed from the grand ports! and the orange garden. These wares were waxen im- ages and tapers, pictures of saints, ros- used for funeral ceremonies, as wel as | nlar saint for the recovery of a person | or an afflicted member of the body. A | friendly understanding existed between { this o!d man and the fruit aunty. When { he went over to her stall and grumbled | at the malevolence of his rivals in trade, the old women at the church doors who | had driven him away from that coveted | she would begin to vituperate in her | turn, On ordinary days, as I have said, the { old woman alone shared the plaza with | time, and I think she Slapt under her bit of awning. It must have been the oranges and mixes sugary drinks in that | plaza to the end of time, the profit | can hardly keep her out of the alms. house. The Alcazar made no such dry im- | pression on us, though we visited it on June. The halisof the old Moorish | palace offered a better imitation to | winter than all the rest of Seville's | buildings combined, and its vaults, which some one has called the Maria Padilla, were unp'eassntly moist | and cold. ance beneath the pavement, that has played its practical joke on royal and other famous shoes, The calm brooding over this neigh- | The portal of the srchbishop's palace is | sometimes quick with dispersing priests. | The Alearar walls lose on familiarity | their resemblance to those of Bale!utha, and the counting-room of the Lonja | seems but to be sleeping an enchanted ( 8'eep, from which it will wake up to be | the centre of busy interests, and to | throb again with the ‘ quick pulse of | ." I know not how this impr gain n pres. sion of suspended vitality was conveyed by the dormant plaza unless the extrav- i | with it. A part of the charm lay there; t waking we | gazed uj on the plaza as on the face of | 8 sleeping child, content to imagine how it would look with its eyes open, | and we let it sleep on. | To the charm of the purlieus of the | throats cleared at last and our capacities en. | utter our voices as loudly as any of them, Those Batichs that have always been od for r capaci up their voices in that melod ] who have had much opportunity | hear the Germans sing will know what | idea 1 mean to give when I say that the i German nation will pour Eheir fous ull voices into the new song. Everybody knows the natural gift of the African for singing. No singing on this continent like Shas of Hi pn chuichas in the uth. Everybody going to Richmond or to Charleston wants rg Rd the Africans wi But when not only Ethic but all continent of darkness, lifts up its hand and all Africa pours her great volume p- voice into the new wong—that will bo musie for you. Added to this are all the sixteen thousand millions of children that are esti Hated 1 hate ih ito g , and the host you : t ter shall people tha we and inhabit the stars, On! the new song! Gather it all up! Mul tiply it with every sweetness! Pour nto it ever nie, A Rg it with now tit w av splendor | with every glory! Toss It to the height of majesty! Roll it to the ae of ctorpity '~and then have but the feintest conception of w John ex. perienond, when, amidst the fnagnifiomes of apocalyptic vision, he heard it—the naw 1 God grant that at last wo may all sing But if we do not the of Christ u carth wo will never sing it in heaven, sure thas Your hearts are now attuned for the heavenly worship. There is a cathe. dral in Burope with an organ at each end, Organ answers organ, and the music waves y. to greatest ey Well Tr tie time will ly A COMme parts of od heaven bir be badd lore one and Joy there! Jesus hero sud Jesus f ‘Sruuet to trumpet! Ouan wor an! { describe, a great delight was added by | the color which washed the whole, rich, | old yellow; painful to the eyes in the the | shade, Above this tapestry border the | cathedral towered, a masso heavy walls | springing to parapets, castellated tow. | ers, pinnacles, and spires, all moulded, | 88 it were, out of a Gargantaan eake of | chocolate. To the amateur’s kindling | eye, this jumble of confusing forms, | this jaundiced construction of incon. | gruous details, which are nearly the | words which architects use to describe | Seville with, stands a wonderful, mys | terious drama in stone which Time has | taken in hand, and collaborated with the builder to preserve the unities. The cathedrals we had already seen failed to prepare us for Seville. To name one Gothic cathedral of Europe sets the names of the others echoing, and I cannot call up one without being lost in a procession. Butthe cathedral of Seville is not included. Within the walls ot Seville we felt like humble Worshiphar: The dim, rich vastness of Seville, from the eur. tain at the door to the recess of the high witaz, was all » Holy of Holies, spell was not broken when we began to walk about, exami by potin because, owing to or ziness on the parte the vergers, we were left alone to discover for ourselves the genins of the place. To gun along the middle aisle, that infinitely ; to aloft into the 10 gaze octagonal dome, nearer heaven than to take lateral aisles, chapel by chapel, and linger in each as long as one wished without being ap of something better worth looking at far- ther on; to pore over the rich marbles of the choir and the carvings of the throne, just as one might over an illum- inated missal; to look at the pictures in the same spirit, without saying that one was good and the other bad; in brief, to see without criticising, to enjoy without judging—how delightful all th was, But it was one of the pictures that brought down my soaring spirit, 1had bg inl at them with simple won- der, like a child who believed that they wore portraits of saints, and not of air more or less spiritualized by poor diet. I had given a child’s cred- ence to the stories told of “The De- soent from the Cross,” a picture by Campana in the vestry of the sacristy; that it had frightened Pacheco in the dusk, and that Murillo had often stood before it, waiting until Joseph and his | companions should finish taking down I belicved every word of these tales just ay I believe the modern hisfory ot the destruction of the picture by Boult's soldiers and its restorstion. But I came ont of wonderland when we went to see Mnrillo's “San Antonio,” which has had a history almost asevent- ful. The figure of the saint was cut out, carried to New York, and offered for sale in the year 1874. The gashes of the thief's knife, though joined by skilful stitches, are still vimble. As} { looked at them, I remembered that ours is an age where child-like simplieity stands a very poor show. | the chapel where this Murillo deserving of more melancholy emotion than we are able to accord him. | We passed on, paraphrasing the ques- | tion Charles Lamb asked when a rambling through a churchyard, “Where lie the dignitaries who ruled it ii?” | spent in spelling out their forgotten { names, if it were not for the chapel be- hind the high altar: which concentrates | This sepulehral chapel, almost a church to the pile, and most of the royalties who had in their lives any good or evil to do to Seville are buried or have memorials here, Yet have the chapel | gates opened to receive the bodies of | some not royal, among whom is Maria | de Padilla, the gentle snd lovely, or vindictive snd blood-thirsty, aecording as one is for or against that unhappy | lady, doomed to extend her enemies | and lovers bevond the grave. A dim, foreboding gloom, not so { much darkness as privation of light, | creeps from the church over the pinna- { cles of the hugh altar, and gives birth to grotesque ideas. No doubt St. Fer- | dinand lies perfectly preserved in his | silver coffin; no doubt his son Alonzo has lost interest in metaphysics; no { doubt Blanca has given over his glib : sophistry; Padilla her tears, and all the company resigned themselves to their situation and to each other, No doubt to depart, a spent ray strock the spuu- gold hair of the Virgin de los Reyes, { endowing 1t with the appearance of life, we hurried away, without looking back, for fear we should see the kings beneath the recumbent marbles, and return to earth.--Godey's Lady's Book, a — A Filsh-Hawk's Nest, the elm is ever a source of admiration. times found! An old coat hung across ' a fence to serve as a scarecrow attracts the smaller birds, and that which was an occasion of terror to the crows be comes a cosey residence for a pair of Wrens OF Sparrows, Last summer, while cruising along ent of The Companion, we saw a fish- | onghfare, and were headed to the west- | ward, making for North Haven. Just | before we reached this place our atten- { tion was called to a “spindle” on the | starboard. | This “spindle” is a strong rod of | & dangerous ledge. 1t rises out of the | water to a height of rha | surmounted the rod contained a large nest constructed of coarse sticks and twigs, and on the edge, calmly secure in their domain, two fish-hawks were perched, watching for their finny prey. Hore, a mile from shore, safe above | the reach of angry billows, they had | built their home. It is interesting to | think of them when the sea was lashed to fury and the storm raged upon the deep, dwelling there between the sea and the sky. These birds usually nest in tall trees on oliffse—in places not to be reached by man without much difficulty, but instinct had led this pair to choose a home amid the waves, a home suited to the wild and wary mature that loves solitude so well, The owner of a new tire, made of bo', low spring steel, circular, oval, or square tiinks that it will succeed rubber tires for wagons or bicycles, It can be fixed on go that 1t can never ¢ me off, HOMEWARD. ———————— When 1 éome to my Father's house he will hear shall not need ith words implore wo a mute m hears will And my Fathers Roars wil) oa * One thonhy all the weary day hath caressed Though cloud-o'ereast Rep Tamron For er betide me; SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON, BUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 139, Jesus Entering Jerusalem. LESSON TEXT. (Luke 19 : 37-48. Momory verses: 37.34.) LESSON PLAN, Toric or THE QUARTER: Saviour of Men, Gorpexy Texr roR THE (QUARTER: He is able to save to the uttermost, — Heb. 7:25. Jesus the Lisson Torro: of Sovereignty. Aunserting the Right 1. The King Recognized, [ vs, 47-40, . LESSON OUTLINE: 4 > Ie King Grieved, vs. 3. The King Aroused, vs, 45-48, Goroex Text: Blessed be the King that cometh in the name of the Lord. — Luke 19 : 88, Davy Home Beapmes : M.-L ke 19 : 37-48 ing Jerusalem. T.—Matt. 21:1-16. Matthew's paral- lel narrative. W.—Mark 11 : 1.18, Mark’s paral- lel narrative, Jesus enter lel narrative, F.—Psa. 2: 1-12. Sovereignty de- creed. B.—Dan. 2 : 31-45. foreshadowed, B.—Rev., 11 realized. i -— LESSON ANALYSIS, | IL THE KING RECOGNIZED. 1. The Lord's Mighty Works: All the mighty works which they had i seen (37). | Whence hath this man... these mighty | works? (Matt. 13 : 54). | What mean such mighty works wrought {| by his hands? Mark 6 : 2), | A prophet mighty in deed and word | {Luke 24 : 19). | The multitude met him, for | had done this sign (John 12 : 18). Ii. The Lord's Splendid Welcome: Blessed is the King that cometh in the name of the Lord (35). The multitnde spread their garments in the way (Matt. 21 : 8). They that went before, and follow- ed, cried, Hosanna (Mark 11 : 9), Took the branches of palm trees, and went forth to meet him (John 12:13), Yea: I come quickly. Amen: come, Lord Jesus (Bev. 22 : 20). il. The Generous Welcome Justi- fied: 1-19, Bovereigoty ..he stones will ery out (40), Kiss the son, lest he be angry (Psa. 2: 12). Unto thee will 1 sing,....O thou Holy One of Israel (Psa. 71: 22). Cry aloud and shont, thou inhabitant of Zion (Isa. 12: 6), The stone shall ery out of the wall (Hab. 2: 11). 1. “To rejoice and praise God with a loud voice.” (1) The joyous multi- tude; (2) The worthy Lord; (3) The glad song; (4) The sm phatic utterance, 2 "The mighty works which they had seen.” (1) The mighty Work- er; (2) The mighty works; (3) The SupHeIne impression 3, ‘Master, rebuke thy disciples.” (1) The offended Pharisees; (2) The offending disciples; (3) The offen- sive mots; (4) The vindicating Lord. II. THR KING GRIEVED. | I. Jesus sorrowing: He saw the city and wept over it | (41). | A man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief (Isa. 53: 3). He... began to be sorrowful and sore troubled (Matt, 26: 37, Jesus wept (John 11: 35), In the days of his flesh, crying and tears (Heb. 5: | 1. Opportunity Lost: Now they are hid from thine eyes (42). J will not answer (Prov. 1: 28). The harvest 1s past, the summer is end- ed (Jer, 8: 20, He went away sorrowful (Matt. 19: 22). | The door was shut (Matt. 25: 10). ‘111. Doom Impending: | stone upon another (44). I will destroy man whom 1 have ere- ated (Gen. 6: 7). The Lord hath sent us to destroy it (Gen, 19: 13). (Ezek. 18:4). thief in the night (1 Thess. 5: 2). L “He saw the city and wept over it" (1) The Lord's outlook; (2) The city’s doom; (3) The Lord's toars, 2, “Now they are hid from thine eyes.” (1) Jerusalem's opportuni. ty; (2) Jerusalem's doom. (1) Op- portunity present; (2) Opportunity passing; (3) Opportunity gone, 8. "Thou knewest not the time of thy visitation.” (1) Jerusalem's op- portunity; (2) Jerusalem's igno- rance; (3) Jerusalem's doom. IL THR KING AROUSED, I. Cleansing the Temple: He entered into the temple, and. east out them that sold (45). Mine house shall be called an house of prayer (Ilsa. 56: 7). Jesus... .oast out all them that sold and bought (Matt. 21: 12 ci simaee (rg mo (Ma : 16), Hl of cords, and cast all out (John 2: 15), Il. Teaching the Truth: os was Senshing daly in the temple “ne art a boacher come 2. The whole counel s ught witgess inst Jesus;....and found it not (Mark 14:05). , The officers answered, Never man so spake (John 7: 46), The Pharisees also asked him how he received his =izht (John 9: 15). What do we? for this man doeth many signs (John 11:47). 1. “He... began 1 out them that sold.” 1) 1 ses of the temple; (2) Pollutious of the tem- ple; (3) Funiications of the temple. 2. “Ye have made it a den of rob- bers.” (1) A sacred place; (2) A base use; (3) A severe arraign- ment; (4) A summary restoration. 8. “They could not find what they might do.” (1) Plotting against Jesus, (2) Puzzled sbout Jesus. ci LESSON BIBLE READING, ROYAL HONORS, Bestowed on Joseph (Gen, 41 : 87.43). Enjoyed by David (1 Chron, 28:1 ; 29. 8, 4, 26.28), Absalom’s display (2 Sam. 15 : 1), Adonijah’s display (1 Kings 1 : 5). Bolomon's glory {1 Kings 4 : 25-28 ; 10 26-29). Mordecai’s honors (Esther 6 : 7-11), Daniel's honors (Dan, 2 : 46-49), Messiah's honors foretold (Psa. 24 : 7-10). 35-40). | The heavenly grandeur (Rev, 5 : 7-14)" a LESSUN SURROUNDINGS, IxrERvENING Evexrs.—Leaving Jeri. | cha, our Lord wits: his diseiples arrived | at Bethany “six days before the puss- { over” (John 12 : i). There a supper was made for him, at the house of | Simon the leper (Matt. 26:6 ; Mark {14 : 8), Martha, Mary, and Lazarus be- {ing present. Mary anointed the Lord, {the disciples murmured, especially | Judas, but our Lord commended Mary | (Matt. 26 :7-13; Mark 14 : 4-9; John 12 : 2.8). Matthew and Mark seemed to place this event two days before the passover, but it is easier to account for their inserting it later than for John's | placing it too early. | John also notices that many of the Jews came to Bethany, and that the enmity of the chief priests was aroused i against Lazarus On the morrow, as they went to Jer- usalem, our Lord sent two of his dis- ciples into a village (probably Beth- phage) to find a colt { with its mother) on | which he should ride, The colt was bronght; our Lord sat upon it; two parties of disciples were formed, as it were in triumphal procession, —one be- fore him, the other folowing. The lesson describes the rejoicings of these | disciples. According to Mark (Mark 11 : 11-15}, & day intervened between the events | recorded in verses 44 and 45 of the les- son. On the first day our Lord only | looked around about the temple, re- | tiring to Bethany in the evening. On the second day, he saw the barren fig- | tree on the way to Jerusalem; he also cleansed the temple on that day. Prace.—The scen opens “‘at the des- cent of the Mount of Olives,” east of Jerusalem. The road traveled was prob- ably the southern one, though tradition accepts the direct route over the sum- mit. Ata point on the southern road the city comes partially into view, and here the the hosaunas probably began (v. 87). Then the city is hidden, tut at a turn of the road comes nto full | view; here our Lord probably wept over Jerusalem (vs, 41-44). The scene of verses 45 and 46 is in the temple it self, in the Court of the Gentiles, True. —The public entry took place, most probably, on Sunday, the 10th of { Nisan, 783 A. U. C.; that 1s, April 2, A. | D. 30. The arrival at Bethany may be | placed on Friday or Saturday; the sup- | per there (according to John's order) probably occurred om the evening of Saturday. The temple was cleansed on Monday, the day after the entry. | Verses 47 and 48 refer in general to the earlier half of that week. Persoxs.-—Our Lord, with a multi- | tude of disciples; some Phsrisces who | murmured; the traders in the temple; the rulers; the listening multitudes. IxciprNTs, ~The crowd descend the | Mount of Olives; they break ont into | rebuke the disciples; he says the stones | when be sees the city, he weeps over it. Entering the temple, he drives out the traders. A general description of our Lord's teaching, of the hostility of the the attention of the peo- Panrarrur Passaors — Matthew 21 : 8-17; Mark 11 : 7-19, Littie Kingbirds. BY OLIVE THORNE MILLER No characteristic of the young king. birds was more winning than their confiding and unsuspicions reception of strangers, for so soon as they began to frequent other trees than the one the paternal vigilance had made com- paratively sacred to them, they were the subjects of attention. The English tree. He came near them, alighted, and began to hop still closer. Not in the least startled by his threateni manper, the nearest youngster looked at him, and began to Hutter his wings, to call, and to move toward him, as if expecting to be fed. This was too much even for a sparrow. Another curious visitor was a red. eyed vireo, who, baing received in the same innocent and child i also Dy fears)’ Woaried by Pr Diinded by tears, J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers