REY. DR TALMAGR The Eminent Washington Divine’ Sunday Sermon. Subject: ‘Harbor of Home.” Texy: ®*Go home to thy frien's and tell them how great thines the Lord hath done for theo. "Mark v., 19, There are a great many people longing for some grand sphere in which to serve God. They & imire Luther at the diet of Worms, and only wish that they had some such great opportaaity in which to display their Chris- tian prowess, They aimire Paal making Felix tremble, and they only wish that they had some such grand occasion in which to preach righteousness, temperance and judg- ment to come. All they want is an oppor- tunity to exhibit their Christian heroism, Now the apostle comes to us, and he prae- tically says, “I will show you a place where you ean exhibit all that is grand and beauti- ful und glorious in Christian character, and that is the domestic cirole.” It one 12 not faithful in an insignificant sphere, he will not be faithful 1a a resound- ing sphere. If Petor will not help the erip- ple at the gate of the temp'e, he will never able to preach 3000 souls into the king- dom at the Pentecost. If Paul did not take pains to Instruct in the way of aalvation the sheriff of the Philipp'an dungeon, he will never make Fulix tremble, He who is not faithful in a skirmish would not be faithfal fo an Armageddon, The fact 8, wo are all placed io just the position in which we oun most grandly serve God, and we ought not to be chiefly *houchtful about some sphara of nsofuimess which wo may after awhile gain, but the all obsorbing question with yon and with me ought to be, “Lord, waat wilt thou have me (now and here) to do?" There #8 ono word in my text around which the most of our thoughts will to-day revolve. That word is home, Ask tea dif- fareat men the meaning of that word and they will give you tea dilfwont dellnitions. To one it means love at the hearth, it means pleaty at the table, industry at the work- stand, intelligaace at tha books, devotion at the altar. To him it means a greoting at the doorand a smile at the chair. Peace ho ver ing like wings. Joy clapping its bands with lughter. Life a tranquil lake, FPillowed on the ripples slesp the shadows, Ask another man what homes is and he will tell you it is want looking out of a cheerless fire grate aud kneading hunger in an empty bread tray. Toe damp aie shiveriag with courses, No Bibla on the shell, Childreo, robbers and murderers in embryo. Vile songs their lullaby. Ev-ry face a pleturs of ruin. Want in the backeronnd and sin stariog from the front. No Sabbath wave rolling over that doorsill, Vestibu'e of the pit. Shadow of infernal walls. Farnace for forg- ing everlasting chains. Fa gots for an un- end'ng funeral pile. Awlul word! It § spelled with curses, it weeps with rain, it} chokes with woe, {t sweats wilh the death | agony of de«pair The wort home in the one case means everything bright, The word home in the other case means «everything terrific I shail speak to vou of home ns a test character, home asa refuge, homs as a tical safeguard, home as a school and h as at y of heaven. And tn the first place I renark that home is a powerful test of character. The disposi tion in public may be in gay costume, while | in private it is in Jtishabille, As pinay actors may appear in one way onthe stage and may appear in another way be 1 private character may be ve publie character. Private char publie eharacter turned wrong man may receive vou foto though he werea disti lation vet his heart may be There ar business mild and eourte and genial an 1 life, keepinz yme men who al us patarad in ¢ mercial their frritab their tueir discontent, t at nig breaks and scoldio and froshets, Reputat ter,and av cast o very | to drop mw tion to Le as be sunbeams, an niflesnt show window of goods, There is affable in publ spheres who, in a ¢ aarer and his petalance them ia the domestic circle The reason men do display the tamper In public {8 becaus i t want to be knocked down, 1 men who hide the'r patuinnes and their irritabiilty just for the sam~ reason that they do not their no‘es go to protest—it does not pay. Or for the sane reason that they do not want a man ia their stock company to 8-1 his stock at less than the right price, lest it de- preciate the valae., As at the wind rises, 80 after a sunshiny day thera may be a tempestuons night, There are peop e who in public act the philanthropist who at home set the Nero with respect to their slippers | and thelr gowns, Andabon, the great ornithologist, gun and penoil went through the Amerien to bring down and to skeen beautiful bird-, and alter years of toil and | axposdars com pleted his manuseript and put | it ina trunk in Philade phia for a few days of | recreation ant rest and came ad | found that the rats had the maaaseript. but without any dissom- fosare and without any fr or bad temper, | & again picks! up his gun and pencil aa 1 visited again all the great forests of America and reproduced his immortal work. And yot there are people with the ten-thousandth part of that loss who are ulterly frrecon- ailable, who, at the loss ofa pencil or an article of raiment, wit blow as long and | sharp as a northeast storm, Now, that man who is affable in public and who iz {rritable in private is making a fraudulent overizssae of stock, and he is as bad a2 a bank that might hav. $400,000 or $500,000 of bills in circulation with no specie in the vault, Let us learn “to show plety at home.” If we bave it not there we have it not asywhere, Il we have not genuine grace in the family ecirels, all our outward and pnblic plausibility merely springs from a femr of the world or from th= slimy, patrid ool of oir own selfishness, 1 tell you the ome is a mighty test of character, What sou gre at home you are everywhere, wheth- er you demonstrate it or not, Again, I remark that home is a refuge. IAfe ia the United States army on the na- | tional road to Mexico, a long march, with ever and anon a skirmish and a baftie, At sventide we pitch our tent ani stack our arms, We hang up the war eap and lay our head onthe knapsack. We sleep until the morning bugie calls us to marching and ae- tion. How pleasant is it to rehearse the vie tories and the surprises and the attacks of | the day. satel by the still eampfite of the! home eirelat Yea, life is a stormy sen. With shivered | malts and torn stiles and hu'k aleak, we put into the harbor of home. Blessed harbor! Thers we go for repairs ia the drydock of ulet life, The can tle in tha window is to the tolling man the lghthonss guiding him into port. Children go forth to meet their Jathers aa plios at the Narrows take the hand of pists, os doorsitl of the home is the wharf where heavy life is unladen, There is the place where we may talk of what we have done without being charge | with self adulation. There is the piace where we may lounge without being thought un- graceful, There is the piace whers we may ex- affection without being thought silly, is the pisces where we may forget our annoyances aod exasperations and troubles, Forlorn earth piigrim! No home? Then aie, That is better. The grave is brighter and grander and more glor ous thau this world, with no tent from marchinigs, with no narbor from the storm, with no piace to rest from seene of greed and gouge and loss and gain. God pity the man or woman who has home (8 a politieal rm ity ho not 18 Are it sunset with yroats of the | back be built on the safety of thahcme, The Christinn hearthstone is the only corners stone for arepubdlie, Tho virtues cultured fn the family eirole are an absoln o nocessity for the state, If there be not enough moral principles to make too family adhere, thors will not be enough politieal principle to make the state adhere, “No homs' moans Asin, means the Numidians of Africa, changing from place to place according us the pasture happens to change, Confounded vo ali those Babels of {alquity which would overtower and destroy the home! The same storm that upsets the ship in which the fam- {ly salls will sink the frigate of the constitu. tion. Jails and penitontiaries and armies and navies are not our best defence, The door of the home is the bost fortress, House hold utensils are the best artillery, and the chimneys of our dwelling houses are the grandest monuments of safety aud triumph, No home. No republic. Farther, I remark that home ia a school, 01d ground must be turned up with subsoil plow, and it must be harrowed and re-har- rowed, and then the erop witl not be as large as that of the new ground with less culture, Now, Youth and childhood are new ground, and all the influences thrown over thelr heart and life will come up in afterlife luxuriantly, Every time you have given a smile of appro- bation all the good cheer of your life will come up again in the geainlity of your ehlii. dren, And every ebulition of anger and every uncontrollable display of indignation will be fuel to thelr disposition twenty or thirty or forty years from now--fual for a bad fire u quarter of a century from this, You praise the intelligence of your child too much sometimes when you think he is not aware of it, and you will see the result of it before ten yoars of ago ia his annoying affections, You praise his beauty, supposing ho is not large enough to understand what you say, and you will fiad him standing on a high chair before a mirror. Words and deeds and ex- nmple are the seed of character, and children are very apt to be the second edition of tasir parenis. Abraham begat Isaae, so virtue is apt to go down in the ancestral hue, but Herod begat Archelans, so iniquity is trans mitted. What vast responsibility comes up- on parents in views of this subject! Oh, make your home the brighteat on earth {if you woull charm your children to the high path of viriae and rectitude aad religion! Do not always turn the blinds the wrong way. Lot the light which puts gold on the gentian and spots the pansy pour inte your dwellings, Do not expec. the little feet to keep step to sn dead march, Do pot cover up your walls with such ploturas as West's “Death on a Pale Horse" or Tinto retto’s “Mass«cre of the Innocents.” Rather cover them, if you have pictares, with * I'he Hawking Party,” aud ‘ne Mdl by the Mountain Stream,” and “The Fox and “The Children Amid Flowers" “The Harvest Scene,” and * [he Night Marketing.’ hinto piace and Get vou no f cheerfulness from RTASS and rock whistle, Rares 18 stroamlet, ym the at tke mountain down to the meadow ferns if the steep comes looking for the whieh, top clear It all ever! skies bartled with wandered jatain nt the sting siorm and every frothing itself talk? and r the sea, mot the mouth thing buat oms blowing among the hills, and there thrill, nor waterfall's dash, bat oaly boar's ark and paather’s saream and woll's howl, b»n you well gather into your home. ily the shadows. Bat when God has siretrn the earth and the heavens with beau y , lot us take Into ¢ hom all brightness ur rirclesnil ion i ad all good cheer. boys and bad giris in preparation fo ka Can it mas of is Above all, my friends, t in any of the cor grogation the x 2. Ww : never ind ination? : # eaing fo bar » il Eislor, will ) vit you ars dead and ering the insoripid 3 ehildre: incaleats of your : warn t ! evil, and you do not invite them an i to God, aad they wander off iato dissi- ition and into infid«lity, and shipwreck of their immor deathbed and in tho day of judas will curse you! Boatel by ther stove, what if on the wall shot the history of your children’ W the mortal and immortal life o ones! Every paregt is writing toe of his chil ia is writing it, comp mg or tuning it into a groan My mind runs back to { early he Prayer, lika a r ace, like AD Atmos Te in it rsonifleations of faith in trial and in darkness, he two pillars of that sarthiy ed to dast, Bat shail ¥ 16m AZains sa heli linsse al sot one of Has, home lopg ago eras | aver forget that earthiv bho 13 flower forgets the san that warms mariner forgets, the star that Yes, when love has gone ne? ’ i» i. out guidea him, Then, bh forget father's tenderness, rals of our dead, interlocked arme, trees, making ehildhood, 1 family altar will of fn and a mother's volees of affection, the fun Father and mother, with my kindoess, thea 1 will forget thee; then, and only then. You kuow, my brother, that 100 times you have been kept out of sin by the memory of auch a scenes as I have besa de- goribing. You have often had raging tempia- tions, but you know what has heid vou with supernaiural grasp, I tell you a man who has had such a good home as that never gels over it, and a man who has had a bad early home never gots over that, Again, I remark that home is a type of heaven. To bring us (0 that home Christ salt his home, Far up and far back in the history of heaven thers came a period when its more {llusirious citizen was about to ab- soot himself, He was net going to sail from beach to beach, We have often done that, Ha» was not going to put out from one hemi- sphere to another hemisphere. Many of us have dono that, Bat he was to sail from world to worid, the spaces unexplored and immensitirs uniravelnl, No world had ever hailed heaven, aad hbsaven had never bailed any other world, I think that he windows and the balconies were thronged and that the pearly beach was crowded with those who hal eome 10 see Him sail out of the harbor of light into the oceans beyond. Out and out and out, and on and on and on, and down and down and down He sped until one night, with only one to greet Him, he arrived, His disembarka- tion so unpretending, %0 quiet, that it was pot known on earth until the excitement in the cloud gave intimation that somthing grand and glorious had happened. Who comesthere? From what port did He sail? Why was this the piace of His Aestination? 1“ question the shep- bers, I question the camsl drivers, I uestion the angels. J have found out. os was an exile, But the world has had Plenty of exiles, Abraham, an exile from r of the Cnaldees; John, an exile from Ephesus; Koseiusko, an exile from Poland; ni, an exile from Rome; Emmet, an ex- ile from Ireland: Victor Hugo, an exiie from France; Kossuth, aa exile from Hungary. Bat this One of whom I speak to-day had such resounding farewell and came into such chilling reception-—for not even a hos- tier went out with his lantern to hetp Him in—that He is more to bs eslebrated than RO urchor, 1 remark that saleguarl. The safeguard of the state must any other expatriated ons of earth of heaven. At our best estat» we arnonly pilgrims ang strangers here, ‘Heaven is our homa™ Daath will never knsez at the door of tha) mansion, and in all that eouniry there 14 pot a single grave. How glad parosats ars in holiday time to gather their home ngain, But 1 have noticed that almost always thore is a son or a daughter absent absent from home, perhaps absent from the country, perhaps absent from the world, Oh, how glad our heavenly Father will be whan He gots all His ehildrea homo with Him in heaven! Aad how delightful it will ba for brothers and elsters to most after long separation! Once they parte | nt the door of immortaiity. Ounce they saw only “through a glass darkly;” now it is *‘faco to face,” corruption, incorruption: mortality, ime mortality. Where ars now all thelr sins and sogrows and troubles? Overwhelmed in tho Rad Hea of death while they passed through drv shod, Gales of pearl, onpstones of amethyst, thrones of dominion do not stir my soul so much as the thought of home, Onos there, let earthly sorrows how! like storms and roll Hka snags. Home! Let thrones rot and one pires wither, Home! Let the world die in an earthquake struggle and be buried amid procession of planets sad dirge of spheres, Home! Let evarinsting ages roll in frrossti. blo sweep. Home! Ko sorrow, no crying, no tears, no death, but home, sweet homes; home, besutiful home, everinsting home, home with each other, home with angels, homo with God. One night, lying on my lounge when very tired, my children atl around about ma in full romp and hilarity and langhter-—on the lounge, half awake and half asleep, I dreamed this dream: I was (0 a far country. It was not Persia, although mores than oriental luxurinnee crowned the eities. It was not the teoples, althoagh more than tropical fruitfalness filled the gardens, It was not Italy, although mors than Italian softnsss filled the ale, And I wan- dered round looking for thorus and not tiles, but I found that nons of them grew there, and I saw the sun rise, and [I watched to soe it sat, bat it sank not, And I saw the people in holiday attire, and 1 sald, “When will they put off this and put on workmen's garb and again deivo in the mine or swelter at the forge?” But thay never put off ths holiday attire, And I wanderad in the suburbs of the city | to find the place where the dead sloep, and I looked all along the line of the beautiful hills, the place whera the dead might most blissfu'ly sleep, and I saw towers and ensties, but not a mausolsam or a monummnt ora white slab could I ssa. And I weat into the chanel of the great town, and I said, “Where do the poor worship, and where are the bard banches on which they sit?’ And the an- | swor was ma fo me, “Wao have nn poor ia this yuntry,” Andthen wanloerad out to flad | the hovels of the destitute, and I found man sions of nber and ivory and gold, | yald I see, not a | hear, and I was bowiidored, under the branche of a great “Whera am 1? Aad wheuce comes } And then out from tho fiowery paths ro came an ail this ng the leaves and across the a boaatifal group, and as I saw them I knew their step, and as knew their ¥ SOV Arraye ’ n 1 aut me, come [I thought 1008, {in wit- but thea they were so glor apparel, such as I hati ne re war be v1 their hand asd uted. Wale w s™ the mystery all sud that tires had g ye nod ye, and wa wore all together in our new home in heaven, Auadl around, and I Ara we all here?” and the voice of man eral responded, “All hers!" An oe tears of enks, and of the ahanon oodars heir hands, and the tows wore chiming their welcome, sr began to leap and shout . home, home!” ah asain he branches ra of the wa and AMERICANS OF FICHTING ACE. There Are More Than 10,000,000 of Them in the Uaifed States. snd, 1859. Missouri ;: Nehwraska, 1330; Nevada, ire, 138%; Nox Jersey, 46%: North Carolina, 53%; Ohln, SRS Peansyivania, B8%); Rbhole Is 7: 8cuth Carolina, 3734; South Dak 3: Tenaessen, 14821; Taxas, 2643: U ah, 03 Yermont, 73%; Virginia, 3137; Washingron, 864: Woat Virginia, BRI; Wweeconsin, 2612; Wyoming, 415; Arizona, 458; New Me 433: Oklahoma, 613; Massachaaselts, | Michigan, 2864; Miooesota, 2009; Misa {rey The report shows that New York 8 a total namber of mon avaliable for { daty of 500.000, Peansyivania has Ohio 650.00, California 205,000, faetta 419.000, Connectiost 105,000, 44,000, ritories of Ariz na, homa, which is 1594 strong, I8 no! included in the total of awove, nor their 81.80 men available for the military included in the grand total for the State, Now Mexico and Okla States given Are THE MONETARY CIRCULATION. The Amount of Money Has Increased by Millions In a Year, The monthly statement of moasiary cir. eulation in the United States issged by the Treasury Department shows that on Fabry. ary 1 the circulation par capita was 223 05, based on an estimated population of 72 268. 000. On that date the amonat of money in { oirounliation was €1.685,077.633, an increase of $76,257,081 over the amoant in circain- tion Febraary 1, 1803, The eirealation of gold eoin one year ago was $490 26) 680, while on February 1, 1897, it amounted to $645,568 492, Daring the month of January the increass in eirculation was $15,754,988, The gold eoin in the Treasury increased 89 461.765 during that period, while tha goid bullion there decreased by $2,278,623, Wages Increased in Japan Since the War, One of the most remarkable resulis of the Chino-Japanese war has teen the great in- ersase of wages in Japan, both skilled and ordinary. The eotion mills are driven to desperate moasures to secure operatives, sal one mill has gone so far as to abdaet work- men and place them under guard to prevent other mills irom retaliating. Ose Hiowo fastory has built quarters for nearly 2000 men and women, who are not allowed to see outsiders or to go off the premises. The polies have attempted to stop the abductions without success, American Yolunteers to Beoome Ministers, Hencoforth the commissionad officers of the Volunteers of America, the movement organized by Mr, and Mea Ballington Booth, will bo vested with all the powers ordinarily conferred upon ministers of the Gospel. Ten officoras will bs ordained at onde, They will have full anthority, legally and morally, to perform all the rites an ceramonies in common usage, including the solemnization of matrimony, the baptism ol infants and the administration of the holy sacrament, Prices of Terrapin, Maryland terrapin are now seiling at §70 EE PETS SPREAD DISEASE. Many Cases of Scarlet Fever, Diphtheiia and Other Maladies Traced to Cats. A common cause of the widespread of to an prevalenes infectious diseases has unusual and unsus- pected gouree it has been found that cats and other household pets are re sponsible for the scattering of the mi crobes of contagious disease Household pets are in the habit of wandering out of doors, even when the most careful vigilance is kept ovel them. Cats and dogs especialy are in the habit of taking nocturnal excur sions to garbag -laden alleys and into the very central point of disease and 4 ntagion. They have a peculiar pen ghant for making dally “calls at our neighbor's house, especially when en couraged to come for the sake of en tertaining a sick child Cats, more particularly on account of their more habits, have long been suspected wing a partial factor in conveying in fection. Physicians and students have f late begun a series of investigations wherewith prove well-founded Euspi And they have inaugurated v crusade against any sort of living thing in way of a pet, to prevent their incursion and excursion wher there is disease Careful investiga a great part of the di n the been traced than dogs, domestic of {to their IONS the and nearly heen vears ago Profes ¢ he desired 1 white cats for experimental in this connection, for it was Bell who first made the dis overy that white in reply to his firet advertisement over 100 cats were brought him. Of the lot he rejected all but three, though each cat owner was sure that his cat was white He soon satisfied them, however, that while the cats were to nearly all in- tents and purposes white, they were not pure white, in that thero were some hairs on them that were not white,” Washington Star, whe ised that *REOQT cats are deaf De'aware's Historic Bible. Since 1853 the Governors of Dela- ware have been sworn into office on a Bible which possesses a rare historic interest. It ig one of the original Ste phenus Bibles now in existence, printed in Latin in the year 1532. volume is in the possession ol the Societe d'Histoire in Pariz, in whose oma it ie kept in a glass cass durins the da¥ and is locked in a fireproof gafe at night. The Delawarcan (rcasure is Kept ia ant old pine desk, whose lock could be forced with a penknile. Por years gorved as a séat in a chair whith was too Jow to accommodnts a person site ting in front of a desk. Then it was piled up with a lot of old law reports, and not until three years ago was it placed where there was a semblance of safety. Bibliophiles regard the orig- ina! Stephenus Bible ag one of the rar. s¢! dnd most valuable volumes in the world of obsolete books.—Atlanta Con- fg. mnn thinks wore deeply th ito with whom hie comes {nto eoiita Lim a debt by virtue of that ves fou inmust not nth «an = aagepicanrns, who knows {11631 Kvery HALL’S Vegetable Sicilian Yop ation HAIR RENEWER i maid oe # { vm ber content beautifies and resto ray Of conrse, he need bypgece vv tnet. He the impossible, or expect turns for small ontlays, but he finds patience, ance, and SOW Zip weed ns appari In couversiation nity in valuable hints ano wi¢ onan often { roger thought or |REVOLVERFREE, WATCH FREE | 13d other ari.cics, Lostnotmng. Read our offer oops Whe rnin? Gar Bh 4 «and 1 ¥ gagiment, of Olntmenis for Catarrh Coutnin Mercury, Eeware That { the sense of ethewhaies as meareary will spinel and cot piviely wis entering thivouy flim faa af rUs & Much arvicies saould never b ui GEO il plion mt teoniable damage viey will do is tea f can pos Ably dev.ve frum LU Cure, manufacivred iy ¥ fo eln, O., conning no mer rually, actin Ly Jil 8 surely dedr oy Uerang slain rinces jt « od iry inte m Halil Giles FiROs of st’ntarrh Care Lo su It st Ken interanily, and Oils, by F. J. Cheney & Co Bold by Drugyists, pr Mali's Fauuiy 1Viils are Lue u i re Tt « WINSTON MFG, COL Winston, NN. €, | Money in Chickens Cascancrs stimniaste liver, kidne ana Yor 23¢, iu stamp bOoweis, Never s.c.en, veake. or grip. ix VAuL } ty ia practices 1 ings Ar y industr All 1 : pi Romie haa LE 1% ct to sloth ¢ PN LF i 1 Woe and cable, By diligence the pall nu iwo sos 4 Eel hinve not been wil t Piso Cure fog for 20 years laze reisburg, Pa, Con -umption i Ferur: sinite So p ELH ‘ Ur May 4, 1804, BE. MUOK Co, 131 Losward Sveet, REPUBLIC Ror OF CUBA Bonds AH ENLISTED and DE. BONDS and »TiM K~ Lenght ' HM. <sMYTHE, s = New Yerk JL rie JIE Y Fiber Can PLB Emil Ms arets, oaniy ca i regulator mane at # iy FAL LTED aud Produce wasdil. ® Exchange Bullding deme 250000666 Pu © SMOKE YOUR MEAT WITH . KRAUSERS LIGUID EXTRACT or SMOKE CiRcoUnn. E. KRAUSER & BRO. MILTON, Pa OPM "SI DRUNKENKESS ¥ Cured in 101620 ars. So Pay ull | Cured. DR. JL. STEPHENS, LERANOROTIO. { Vitex lions or enetis Wy calamari io plier fir ‘ Neuve llemrougs se, Mend ExU 7 io Ur. o CUBES WEEEE ALL tisk HAUS Best Cough Syrup. Jester Good Basie by droggiets a 1 * Kew York, &1* FPP wiresl, Can, STERLING EEMERY C0. Chicaca, Mr - fe and booklet Pree, Ad. a» GODOT OODOIFORPDOw PROP 0P00GPVP VEEL DOG OPP E0040 0000 * oe REASONS FOR USING Valter Baker & Co.’s Breakfast Cocoa. f { Be sure thm BAKER & CO you get the Ltd., Dorchester genuine sriiclke made by fass. [established 175850 WALTER pen LPP 000000 0000000000 D000 000 000000000000 TIPPER 00 04 VPP EPPVBPPRPVPBR IBRD ROR reseed | | | | | | A St, Louis paper hanger and contractor, in conmerating sore of his past troulsdes, said * My wife and 1 swear by Ripans Talmies, Many a morning 1 hare gone to work on a job and had to quit. 1 can't begin to tell vou all the suffering 1 have sone throush, 1 Jost my apiethe and Beocly starved myveelf in trying 10 work up 2 refish for food | bot indigestion. dys- pepsia, constination, billousness and headache comstantly attended me. | took bitters, tonics, pills, but they didn't cure we. My wife had also some trouble with her stomach and it was a {riend of hers who first told her to try RIPANS TABULES her to take them. * We started in A el appetite soon came back and 1 M welt ar Tor She oa her He %
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers