I ' 2\l—r mwmr mri iw i ->-- r ., P ,,|, m Whole No. 2555. A NEW STOCK OF Cloths, Cassimeres AM) VESTI N G S , Has just been received at the Lewisfov.'r/ Emporium of Fashion, which will be made un to order by experienced workmen. jrjGent!emen art requested to call. WM. LIND. Lewistown, April 21, 1859. BLYMYER & STANBARGER. FROM! & COMMA MEROKAITiES, Year Canal Basin, Lewistown, Pa, •Will purchase every description of Produce at current priees. ALWAYS OX nAX D , i'LAST': h\ SALT, FISU\ STONE COAL of as-sorted sizes, LlNEfit UNEUS' u- SLACK SMITHS' COAL. GEO. BLYMVEII, dcA C. C. STANBARGER. AC'ADE M "X". rpilK Secoud Session of this Institution 1 will commence on MONDAY, February 20th. New classes will then lie formed ascir omstaiices require. Particular attention will k given to those preparing to teach. TboJ wishing to study and practice Music may fee assured of the best advantages. Mks S. E. VAN DOZER will continue to give : iastriMions upon the Piano. Hates of Tuition, $3.00, $4.50 or $6.00, ! according to the grade of studies. ForfuitiAr information address uuvlT M. J. SMITH, Principal. IciLISTERYILLE ACADEMY Juniata €ofinty, Pa. GEO. F. MrPJJiMXn, Pnncyal &,■ Proprietor. Lit, Pmf. of Alai'icnaiics, Jyc. S". CRIST, Teacher of Music, S,'c. I ession of this Institution com ' c 2Gth of July, to continue 22 rits admitted at any time. .urinal Department ni which w ill afford Teachers the \ ty of preparing for fall examina- j rTAfIATUS lias been purchased, crs engaged, &c. urms— Boarding, Room and Tuition, per •tss: hi, jjjto jtj!). Tuition aloiie at usual rates. sent free on application. BERT W. I'A'ITO.N, SOI Til SIDE OF MARKET STREET, M.HTSrOWN, I\\. If A> .j ust received and opened at his es>- 11, tablhhment a new supply of Clocks, Watches, Jewelry, Fancy Articles, &e, Err' w " i: ' di.q. <se of at reasonable prices. .* ■ ites ;il! ;<i give him a calf and examine t: vk, which embraces all articles in his Mid i< sufficiently-large to enable all to ' v; hv-., -lions who desire to purchase. Ai.l'AllilXG neatly and expeditiously ■ga'd t-i. and all work warranted. • ii'k.u! for the patronage heretofore re he respectfully asks a continuance of • '•■•' lie, and will endeavor to please all who • I:,Vor him with their custom. feb2 EDWARD FRYSINGER, SOLESALL DEALER & JIA\T FACTCRER # OF tins, mm, aim, &c., &c., ®rs promptly attended to. jelG Fall and Winter Goods. t firm of McCOy | a a ■ ued frOrr the city Etd Groc&rif purchased for cah, te-nn. T "1 'ic at a small ad lillI ill a • iiic ' stoCli of Dry Goods em 'a descriptions of jjf AND WINTER GOODS Umf n LadieS ' Gentlemen and Children, ffilD y new patterns. lli 3 &toccnro i Cm°fMr Sugarß ' Molasses ' Java , ltio i Nad ci ; su Perior Teas, &c. Also, Net QsJ, 0 * 8 ' Queensware, and all other NomeiW h UD | l i m c ßtores —all which ; F*tal ?irr. • , m aD public p ral are invited to examine. i kfiih so H " F ELLIS, b ' a -t, I laster and Coal alwav- on SStn^ a^, re<>eiTed as " Bua l and the I tlie refor. K 22, 1850. SI-OAKS!—I have on PtH Sfr... ge sto p' £ °f good German and I ;u' ' * ani Be lh n g very low t, i?', Egress Tobacco of good F.J.HOFFMAN. | wx ®a@s®a ffamanjaiHEa wrmsswms 9 wsmwx wmswx 9 3>& THE MINITm. iHE ROCK. BESIDE THE SEA, Oh. tell ino not the woods are fair it-' i. W "~T r ' n " ' s " u her way : ' Well, well 1 know how bright] V there in joy 'lie young leaves play; How sweet 011 winds of morn" or eve, 1 lie violet s breath may bo. let ask me. woo me not to leave My lone rook by the sea. I ho wild waves' thunder on the shore, 1 ho on now < restless? cries, flu' my watching heart are more f 1 ban all earth's melodies. ''', V ba.-k my ocean rover, come! tii . e s l,llt one place for me. I ill I can greet thy swift sail home, My lone rook by the sea; iom&miGious A Religious Belief. J he following lines were taken from Sir 1 lumphrey Davie s Salmonia: " I envy no quality of mind and intellect in others be it genius, power, wit or fancy—but if I could choose what would be most delight ful, and, I believe, most useful to me, I should prefer a religious belief to any other blessing; for it makes iitc discipline of goodness; breathes new hopes; vanishes and throws over decay, the destruction of existence, the most gorgeous light; awa kens life e\en in death, and from corrup tion and decay calls up beauty and divini ty; makes fortune and name the ladder of ascent to Paradise; and far above all com bination of earthly hopes, calls up the most delightful visions of palms and ama ranths, the garden of the blest, and securi ties of everlasting joys, where the sensual ist and the skeptic view only gloom, decay, annihilation and despair." Time and Eternity. \\ e step upon the earth ; we look abroad over it, and it seems immense—so does the sea. R'hat ages hau men lived—and knew but a small portion. T hey circumnavigate :t now with a speed under which its vast bulk shrinks. Rut let the astronomer lift up his glass, and he learns to believe in a tut.u mass ui matter, compared with winch this great globe itself becomes an impon derable grain of dust. And so to each of us walking along the road of life, a year, a day, or an hour shall seem long. As we grow older, the time shortens; but when we lilt our eyes to look beyond this earth, our seventy years, and the few thousands of year* whieh have rolled over the human nice, vanish ?nto a point; for then we are measuring Time against Eternity. True Contentment. fn tliis age ol restlessness and wild spec ulation, when so many are searching ea gerly fur happiness, sighing after numerous disappointments, ' Who will show us any good V it is refreshing to meet with a con tented ( hristian heart, which lias found true peaca by living in constant commu nion with God. !u one of our exchanges we find the following :—Said a venerable farmer some eighty years old, to a relative who had lately visited him, —"I have liv ed 011 this farm for more than half a centu ry. 1 have no desire to change my resi dence as long as I live on earth. 1 have worshipped the God of my fathers with the same people for more than forty years. During this time J have rarely been absent from the sanctuary on the Sabbath, and have never lost one communion season. I have never been confined to my bed by sickness for a single day. The blessings of God have been richly spread around me, and I made up my mind long ago, that if 1 wished to be happier, I must have more religion." Natural History —The Flirt. This brilliant insect of the butterfly i species is common to all latitudes, but j flourishes best in a warm climate. It rev els in the atmosphere of the ball room, the uiatine, the artistic reunion ; and while it loves publicity, it is not lothe to lurk in i shaded alcoves or to nestle among cushions 1 in quiet corners. The plumage of the female Flirt is very ' dazzling. It is clad in the most radiant i smiles, and compliments of the softest and most delicate shades, while its eyes have a strange, deep and penetrating lustre. It diffuses a faint yet thrilling perfume caught from crushed flowers, sceut-bags and billetdoux. Its music is a low, persua sive hum. It can be true to no tune, but sings snatches, and at the piano, runs over the keys with light and tremulous touch. The volatility of this insect has long peplexed naturalists. It baffles pursuit. Strange to say, it dissolves to the touch, and when caught, is a handful of ashes cold and colorless. The sting of the flirt is very severe.— Some say it is poisonous. Instances have been known where it has proved fatal to happiness and hope. It is inflicted with perfect impartiality, but seems to strike deepest into fresh aud honest hearts. The Flirt languishes at the first chill breath of sorrow. When storm is in the air it is pitiful to see it seeking shelter, its gay plumage so beaten and soiled, and the color and perfume gone, and the low invi ting music changed to a despairing plaint. The flame that it flutters around gener ally burns it at last, as is the case with many a poor moth.— Vanity Fair. EMoraoni The Monsoon in Ceylon. May is signalized by the great event of the change of the uionsoon, and all the grand phenomena which accompany its ap proach. It is difficult lor one who has not resid ed in the tropic to comprehend the feelimr of enjoyment which accompanies these ' periodical commotions of' the atmosphere : in Europe they would be fraught with an noyance, but in Ceylon they are welcomed ! with a relish proportionate to the monoto ny they dispel. Long before the wished for period arrives, the verdure produced by the previous rains becomes obliterated by , the burning droughts of March and April. I The deciduous trees shed forth their lbl ' i ;, n c > the plants cease to put forth fresh leaves, and all vegetable life languishes un der the unwholesome heat. The grass withers on the baked and cloven earth, and red dust settles on the branches and thirs ity brushwood. '1 he insects, deprived of j tluir accustomed food, disappear under ! ground, or hide beneath the decaying bark, . the water-beetles bury themselves "in the . hardened mud of poo!.-, and the /''li es re- ! : tire into the crevices of the stones or the j : hollows, amongst the roots of the trees, j closing the appcrtures of their shells with 1 | the hybernating epipragm. Butterflies arc no longer seen hovering over the flowers; the birds appear fewer and less joyous; and the wild animals and crocodiles, driven by the drought from their accustomed retreats, wander through the jungle, and even ven ture to approach the village wells in search of water. Man equally languishes under the general exhaustion ; ordinary exertion becomes distasteful, and the native Singha lese, although inured to the climate, move with lassitude and reluctance. Meanwhile the air becomes loaded tosatur : at ion with aqueous vapor drawn on by the : augmented force of evaporation, acting vi"- ; orously over land and sea; the sky, instead of its brilliant hue, assumes the sullen tint i of lead, and not a breath disturbs the mo tionless rest of the clouds that hang on | the lower range of hills. At length, 'gen ! orally about the middle of the month,' but frequently earlier, the sultry suspense is j broken by the arrival of the wished-for change. The sun has by this time nearly attained the greatest northern declination, and created a torrid heat throughout the lands of southern Asia and the peninsula of India. The air, lighted by this high temperature and such watery vapour as it may contain, rises into loftier regions, and is replaced by indraughts from the neigh boring sea, and thus a tendency is gradual ly given to the formation of a current bring ing up from the south the warm humid air of the equator. The wind, therefore, which reaches Ceylon, comes laden with moisture, taken up in its passage across the great Indian Ocean. As the monsoon draws near, the days become more over east an 1 hot, banks of clouds rise over the ocean to the west, and, in the peculiar twi light the eye is attracted by the unnsual whiteness ot the sea-birds that sweep along the strand to seize the objects flung on the shore by the rising surf. At last the sudden lightnings flash among the hills and shoot through the clouds that overhang the sea, and with a crash of thunder the monsoon bursts over the thirsty laud, not in showers or partial torrents, but in a wild deluge, that in the course of a few hours overtops the river banks, and spreads in inundations over ev ery level plain. All the phenomena of this explosion are stupendous; thunder as we are accustomed to be awed by it in Europe, affords but the faintest idea of its overpowering grandeur in Ceylon; and its sublimity is infinitely increased, as it is faintly heard from the shore, resounding through night and dark ness over the gloomy sea. The lightning, when it touches the earth, where it is cov ered with the descending torrent, flashes in to it, and disappears instantaneously; but, when it strikes a drier surface, in seeking better conductors, it often opens a hollow like that formed by the explosion of a shell, and frequently leaves behind it traces of vitrification. In Ceylon, however, occur rences of this kind are rare; and accidents are seldom recorded from lightning, pro bably owing to the profusion of trees, and especially of cocoa-nut palms which, when drenched with rain, intercept the discharge, and conduct the electric matter to the earth. The rain at these periods excites the aston ishment of a European; it descends in al most continuous streams, so close and so dense, that the level ground, unable to ab sorb it sufficiently fast, is covered with one uniform sheet of water, and down the sides of acclivities it rushes in a volume that wears channels in the surface. For hours together, the noise of the torrent, as it beats upon the trees, and bursts upon the roofs, flowing thence into rivulets along the ground, occasions an uproar that drowns the ordinary voice, and renders sleep impossi ble. B@B.Lemon juice is now being used in Europe with excellent results, in rheuma tism, especially in eases where several joints are affected. 31. Lebert begins with fjur ounces a day, and gradually rises to eight, giving it by tablespoonfulls. This remedy was first used by American physicians. THURSDAY. APRIL 12, 1850. Northwest Explorations. Immediately after the discovery of gold in the Irazer River country an expedition was set on foot by Chicago and ."St. Paul merchants, to explore the region and val ley of the Saskatchewan river to see if there were not a direct and feasible pas sage to the diggings, which might be made available to the tide ot travel and business which was expected to flow thither from the States. The party started in the ear ly part of the summer of '59 numbering about a dozen or fifteen in all. The party was under the loud of Col. Win. H.Nobles | Haul. Arriving at Fort Ellice, a . Hudson's Ray trading post, situated eight hundred miles east of the Rocky Moun tains, Col. Nobles with six or seven eoni j pan ions, decided to return to the States, | but the remainder of the party, eight in number, determined to push on, and ac complish if possible, the objects of the ex pedition. The returning party reached i the States in safety, late in the fall. Ry a recent letter from Oregon, wc learn I that the heroes who were true to their mission they had undertaken, reached Port land about the last of December in a sad plight, but all alive, and suffering not be yond recovery from the fatigue and dan | gera through which they had passed.— i None of the party hau ever been on the j plains before, and the dangers of the jour- i uey were enhanced by the late period at which it was commenced. They were poorly provided also and without a guide, traveling only by compass and imperfect di rections. From, Fort Ellicc they proceeded to the South Saskatchewan, following that j river to Row river, and up Row river to i Kelly river. About ninety miles up Kel ly river, they left the liver and "took a southwest course, expecting to be through the mountains in a week, but when they got into the mountains they got lost and wandered about in the snow for three weeks, when they came across an Indian, who was : nearly frightened to death by their dread- i ful shouts, cheers, and crying. If they had not met the Indian, who was a friend ly member of the Kootonais tribe, not one o; the party would ever have beet, heard ' of, although they were then only fifty miles ; from Fort Benton. Putting themselves under the guidance oi the Indian, the party reached the liouu dary Pass, and subsequently the Kootonais village, at the western entrance of the pass. The road from Kootonais to Fort Colville is the worst that can be conceived of, mountains all the way, and full of fall en timber. The whole route they traveled is probably the worst there is for emigra tion. We can but regret that Mr. Marble did not continue with the expedition to the end, as he would then have had a subject worthy of his pen and the pencil of the artist, and a very valuable addition might have been made to our limited knowledge of the physical features of the interior of Northern America. 3lr. W. 11. Thompson, irom whose letter we have quoted, makes the following remarks in regard to the country through which they passed. The country through which we passed is, I think, the poorest en the American continent. There is 110 wood between Fort Ellice and the mountains, except oc casional clumps of Cottonwood trees on the liver bottoms. The soil from thirty miles before we struck the Saskatchewan to with in seventy five miles of the mountains is the poorest I ever saw. It is a mixture of clay, sand and gravel, and don't produce a tiling. Some of our animals died of ac tual starvation. Several times we struck out from the river in hopes ot finding food for our poor animals, but were as often driv en back on account of the scarcity of wa ter. I he ground is all cut up by buffalo trails running down to the rivers, and is cover ed with dung, and looks like a waste cattle yard in the wilderness. We passed through millions of them every day, and killed a great many, but they were so poor and tough we could not eat them. It seems like traveling over plowed ground. For hundreds of miles there is not even a sod on the ground, and the buffalos had eaten all the grass there might have been, so our ! poor animals had to suffer. The water all through this country is al kaline. The Saskatchewan is quite a wide i stream, and is filled with sandbars, which are continually shifting their positions. Its bottoms are very wide and extensive, and are generally lrom 150 to 200 feet below I the level of the prairie. We were forced j. down to the liver every night to camp, by the scarcity of water on the prairie. It would generally take us about an hour cv- 1 ery night to got to the river from where we began to descend, and the same length of time to get back on the prairie again in the morning. We couldn't make more than five or ten miles travel per day— hence our prolonged journey. This coun try abounds in game of all descriptions. ! There is not a point between Pembina and Walla W alia, on the route we came, where a town site or settlement could exist. A LANTERN CANE. —One of the most unique of recent inventions is a cane, which is also a lantern—a stout, elegant walking-stick, and a brilliant seady light. The lantern is set in the body of the cane, about six inches from the top, so as not to disfigure its proportions of beauty, and can be lit at pleasure by pulling the cane apart, or borne along dead, when the cane, without close observation, is undistinguish able from an ordinary large-sized walking stick. It is a useful invention for doctors, watchmen, editors of daily papers, young men who 'sit up' late with people who ain't their sisters, and all other classes who have to be out Lite o'nights. What Should Be Taught. Common schools would have done a great deal more good to the people if they had paid more attention to the physical and mathematical sciences. Probably four fifths of the pupils of common schools arc destined to make their living in some of the mechanical arts, or the workshops of the country. Vet how very little does the practical training they receive at our schools fit them for eminence in their professions. Natural philosophy is ignored just as much us if no such knowledge existed. Roys leave shool to work at trades, knowing noth ing at all of the principle* of mechanics, which lie at the foundation of their r>rofes- sions. Great care is taken with them in elegant and ornamental penmanship, but not a single hour is devoted to the drawing of mathematical figures, or lomakin_ prac tical draughtsmen of pupils. Geometry is scarcely touched, grammar and geography being considered move important. Ilcnce much of the information which the pupil spends the earlier periods of !::* life in learning, is of but little use to iiii.i wlu-n he leaves school, and is forgotten entirely. unless his after pursuits require it. That which would havebeen practically useful to him, and which would have made Ids la b rs in his profession a source of pleasure and of solid acquisition, instead of being a task to Lc got rid of as soon as possible and never thoroughly comprehended, is not learned at all. The true value of educa tion is the uses to which it can be put, and that would seem certainly to be the best education which enables the pup.il to put the knowledge gained at school to im mediate use in maintaining himself re spectably and independently in society.— Not simply himself but the world, would receive the benefit ol an educational sys tem which would substitute physical and mathematical science for a great deal which is now taught, or at least divide the time of study, so that the most useful should have at least as fair a share of attention as that which is less so. Three Pugilistic Deacons. The Cleveland riaindealev says the fol j lowing is a true account:—ln a small neigh j borhood in Geauga county, Ohio, lived f three deacons. The first is a Methodist, ! the second a Presbyterian, and the third a Baptist. All live quite a distance from their res] eetivc meeting houses, and as traveling is excessively bad at this time of ttic year they concluded to hold meetings in the little red school house in the neigh borhood. The question then arose which denomination should hold the first meeting. Ihe Methodist claimed the privilege of opening the ball. The Presbyterian de manded it. The Baptist insisted upon it. Ilere was 'a fix.' They wrangled over the matter until the anger to each deacon arose to feverish heat, and each vowed he would hold a meeting in the red school house the very next evening, which happened to he Friday last, and on that evening at early candlelight the school house was crowded with Methodists, Presbyterians, Baptists, and several world's people. The Presby terian commenced reading a catechism. The Baptist, at the same time, arose and commenced reading a tract on immersion. The Methodist, at the same time, struck up an old fashioned hymn, shouting it at the top of his lungs. The effect was ludi crous. It apparently struck the mixed congregation so, for they all commenced laughing. The Baptist was wheezy, lie sunk exhausted into his seat, while the Presbyterian and Methodist continued. All at once the ludicrousness of the scene struck the Baptist, and lie indulged in a protracted horse laugh. This displeased the Presbyterian, and forgetting himself, lie dealt the Baptist a stunning blow under the right ear. The Methodist threw his hymn book down and rushed to the Bap tist's rescue. He arrived just in time to receive Presbyterian's iron fist between his eyes. The Baptist and Methodist rallied, and together attacked the Presbyterian, but he was to*much for them. She scene that ensued, beggars description. Chairs were overturned. Window-glass was bro ken. Women shrieked. Men yelled.— We have no wish to make fun of an affair which has caused profound regret among the veil- k>u> j ; ■ ; Geauga. We mere ly relate the tacts. The matter is in litiga tion. C CULTIVATORS, Cultivator Teeth, Culti- J vator Plates and Bolts, for sale by mh29 F. G. FRANCISOUS. HOES, Rakes, Spades, for sale by nih29 F- G. FRANCISCUS. G1 ARPEN SEEDS of every variety, some r very superior, just received and for sale by mh29 F. G. FRAVPTSGVS. SPAIN'S Parent Churns ; i run . ill sizes, at very low rat^s. mb29 F. G. FRANCISCUS. New Series—Vol. XIV, No. 23. The Free-Banking Law- The following are the main provisions and safeguards of the bill to incorporate a i system of Free Ranking in this Common j .. o i wealth. 4 A certificate stating the particulars as to the Rank to be established most be drawn up, approved by the Attorney Gen | oral, published in the newspapers, recorded in the courts, and a.copy deposited and re corded in the Auditor General's office. ' The Auditor General has the notes en j graved and printed. Every note must bo j signed by him or by his clerk, numbered and registered, and have stamped on it'se- I cured by the deposit of public stock.' 4 'The stocks deposited must be either of this State or of the ( nitcd States, and the ! amount of notes issued to the bank by the i Auditor General to the market value of the j stuck less five per cent, provided that this is never to exceed ninety-five per cent, of j the stock. 4 Twenty per cent, in specie must be | paid in before the bank can begin business, and it must always keep in its vaults, in specie, twenty per cent, of the amount of I not. - i n;, ], as a security additional to the sti > t in the hands of the Auditor Gener 'Th c. pital stock cannot be less than fifty thousand nor more than one million of dollars. No note less than live dollars to be issued. 'As soon as a bank stops the payment of i ' o Auditor General appoints three citi:'< n i" make inquiry, and if they report that tile bank is suspended, he is to ap point a receiver, who is to turn all the as sets into money and pay, first the note holders; second the depositors; third the other debts; and fourth to distribute the remainder among the stockholders pro rota. ''l he condition of each bank must ho published monthly in the newspapers, and on each semi annual dividend day state ment is to be made on the oath of tho President and Cashier, which is to be sent to the Auditor General and published, set ting forth minutely the condition of the bank. Existing banks may come under this bill. ' Defideation is to be punished by im prisonment in the penitentiary for from one to ton years. 1 A tax is to be paid on dividends to tho State of from eight to thirty per cent.' Who Have the Offices? The New York Tribune lias made a ta ble ot the birth place of each individual holding an appointment at Washington. Here are the totals : High officials and clerks born in Free States, 3SG High officials and clerks born in Slave States, " 534 High officials and clerks born in for eign countries, 78 Messengers, laborers, and watchmen bom in Free States, 27 Messengers, laborers, and watchmen born in Slave States, 97 Messengers, laborers, and watchmen born in foreign countries, 33 Clerks, Ac., appointed from Free States 405 Clerks &c., appointed from Slave States 593 Messengers, Ac., appointed from Free States, 11 Messengers, Ac., appointed from Slave State's, 124 It will be seen that in every grade of of lice, the Slave States have the majority— that of the aggregate, the South has IJ4B and the North 82'.), or more than one th'rd less. So long as this disparity exists in favor of the South, it is hardly probable that there will be any serious efforts to dissolve the Union —is there? None in the least. The Democratic doughfaces of the North, themselves, are beginning to discover this, and will not again be deceived. FRTJIT TxtEESi HAYING accepted an agency for the Mor ris Nurseries, West Cheater, Pa., I am prepared to order and furnish all kinds of Fruit and Ornamental Trees, Apple Trees for Summer, Autumn or Winter, Pear Trees do do do Dwarf Pear Trees, Peach Trees, Plum Trees, Apricot Trees, Ornamental Trees, Grape Vines, Strawberries, Gooseberries, Raspberries, Lawton blackberrry, &e., &c. As the Morris Nurseries are near our own latitude, trees from them are well calculated for this climate. Those desiring Fruit Trees, &c., wiil do well to call and examine descrip tive catalogues, rnh I F. J. HOFFMAN. / f ARDEN SEEDS!—A good supply of vX fresh Garden Seeds on hand and for sale by [mb 1J F. J. HOFFMAN. HUNGARIAN MILLET or Honey Blade Grass Seed at 81 per bushel, for sale by mhl F. J. HOFFMAN. Estate of Dr. Moses T. Mitchell, dee'd. NOTICE is hereby given that letters of ad ministration on the estate of Dr. MOSES T. MITCHELL, late of Armagh township, Mifflin county, deceased, have been granted to the undersigned, tho first named residing near the larmor's High School, Centre coun ty. and tho latter at Milroy, in said town ship. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate pavmcat, and those having claims to present iheni duly au thenticated for settlement. JOHN II MI rCHELL, Admr. mlo MARIA B N I TCH ELL, Admx
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers