Whole No. 2636. Jacob C. Blymyer & Co., Produce and Commission Mer chants, LEWISTOWN. PA. Car Flour and Grain of all kind* pur- Chased at market rap-a, or received on storage and shipped at usual freight rates, having (itorehousee and boats of their own, with care ful eaptains and hands. Stove Coal, Limeburners Coal, Plaster, Fish and S alt always on hand. Grain can be insured at a small advance on cost of Storage. n0 22 AMBROTYPES AND Miixmrnrnm, The Gems of the Season. fIMUS is no humbug, hut a practical truth 1 The pictures taken hy Mr. Burkholder ire unsurpassed for BOLDNESS TUUTII FULNESS. BEAUTY OF FINISH, and DURABILITY. Prices varying according to size and quality of frames nrid Cases. Room over the Express Office. Lewistown, August 23, 18G0. i)ib J. LHS 'O 1 LL o / iIT ICE on East Market street, Lewistown, * ' adjoining F. (J. Franciscus' Hardware •Store. P. S. Dr. Locke will be at his office the lirst Motiduy ot each month to spend the week. uiy3l D 3.. A.7. ATKINSON, aA\ING permanently located in Lewis town, offers bis professional services 11 the citizens of town and country. Office \\ est Market St., opposite Eisenbise's Hotel. Residence one door east of George Blymyer. Lewistown, July 12, 18U0-tf Dr. Samuel L. Alexander. Has permanently located at Milroj, TJr and is prepared to practice all the branch- Cm es of his Profession. Office at Swine liari'a Hotel. niy3—ly EDWARD FRYSINGER, WHOLESALE DEALER k IHiIUFACTURER or CIIiARS, TOBACCO, SMJPP, &€., &C , SMEWSSHTOWH* IPiio Orders promptly attended to. jelG GEO. V7. ELDEJt, Attorney at Law, office Market Square, Lewistown, will at tend to bu-iness in Mlffiin. Centre and Hunting don counties. my2G NEW REMEDIES FOR SPEttMATOR It II (EA. J [WAKI> ASSOCIATION. PHILADELPHIA, A It lUiii ri,te)it Institution established by special Kruioic w-ar t-.i the Relief of the Sick ami iJistress'd. afflicted with i. dent and Chronic Duecses. ami 'specially for the Cure u< I> s i<ce of the Sexual Organs. MKUb ML ADVICE givn grati*. Kvllie Aetingßor gf-nn. \ AH ABLE REPORTS on Spermatorrhea®, and oth 'J,'', I '.'- '"" "H *h- Sexual Organs,ami the NEW REM- j ..I'll.- employed in the Dispensary, sent in sealed • rut-lopes, fret- of charge. Two or three stamps for Pot u•; aeeeptable. Address. DR. J. SKILLIN •• i I 1*• N. Howard Association, No. 2S. Ninth St., i lulad. Iphia. Pa. je6 a. 91 &a i, UAYIXG in connection with his Groeery | and Notion business, commenced the Manufacturing of Confection ery in its various braucbes, and employed a prae j tical workman, notifies the public that he in- j Sends to keep a well assorted stuck uf the • above goods on hand, which will be warrant >'d to give satisfaction, and be equal to any ' mfectioneries that can be bought from any i eastern city, which he offers t* wholesale mer j chants and retailers at city prices, with cost st carriaga. He therefore solicits the cus tom of the surroundiag country, and re quests them to send in their orders or call and examine his goods, which will satisfy all •hat they can be accommodated with a selec tion which will recommend itself. CAKES, BISCUITS, fcc., constantly on hand. Also, Pound, Spunge, Bride, md Gold Cakes, in the best style, baked to or der, on the shortest notice. mh2B Glassware. Stands with and without covers. . Butter Dishes " " " hugar Bowie. Goblets and Preserve Dishes, ditchers and Tumblers. All to be sold at the lowest figure by H. ZERBE. 11 WW k STONE Fruit Jars, best in use, * \J *J at prices cheaper than has ever been offered, at Zerbe's Grocery sod Stone ware depot. jyl® Large Stock of Furniture ou Hand. A FELIX is still manufacturing all kinds •of Furniture. Young married persona a o'i others that wish to purchase Furniture will find a good assortment on hand, which will be sold cheap for cash, or country pro duce taken in eicfcaoge for same. Give me a call, on Valley street, near Black Bear Ho- H feb 21 LUMBER! LUMBER! ~ A LARGE and complete assortment of Lumber for sale cheaper than the cheap est, by F. G. FR^NCfSCVS. ggfflmrami ggramgiaiss: s-g ©IB®IE@IS jra-ffsssraaiß, raswassiNmsrs, HnnmLaxr THE ILWm, MEOW GOES THE KITTY. AIR -.—Pop goes the Wta-iel. My hat is newr, my boots are too, My girl is young and pretty; My cares, alas! they would be few, But meow! goes the kitty. All an/<rod the country town, And all around the city, How sweet to hear the DCIA-SIT sound, Meow! goes the kitty. Lewistown girl# are wondrous smart, The boys are wondrous witty; But all, aliis! are sick at heart With meow! goes the kitty. All around the country town, Ac. Some sounds are dull, a few are sweet, And more are harsh and gritty; But all the yells of devils meet In meow! goes the kitty. All around the country town, Ac. My vow is made—l seize a stick— I'll form a osr. committee, And put a stop most wondrous quick To meow! goes the kitty. All around the country town, Ac. Edited by A. SMITH, County Superintendent. For the Educational Column. Very Practical Suggestions to Teachers. 1. Have good order. —lt is impossible to have a really good school without good or der. It is a mistake to suppose that the sole object of school is to give children a knowledge ot Arithmetic, Grammar and so on ; it is equally important that scholars should form correct habits of conduct, and such habits are acquired only in a well-or dered school. Instant., unquestioning, cheerful obedience; diligent, thorough, in telligent study; thoughtful, sympathetic regard for one another's happiness; strict., conscientious loyalty to truth; all these habits teachers should seek to form in scholars, and the first requisite of success is good order, such order as arises from a clear understanding of what good order consists in and of the incalculable benefits to be secured by it. This requires the suppression or strict regulation of whispering—that plague of schools—the careful classification of schol ars, the systematic arrangement of ail school exercises, the furnishing of some kind of employment to every scholar. Alii these challenge the attention of teachers conscientiously ambitious of success. —. One tinny at a time. Very few per sons possess such comprehensive minds that they can direct or perform more excr cises than one at the same time. Those men who have accomplished the most for science and literature, or in business, have concentrated all their energies upon single objects in succession, and have thus wrought their seeming miracles. Teachers should not only have a time for everything, but should keep that time uninterrupted.— While hearing a recitation of any kind, they should permit no questions or disturb ing movements from scholars unconnected with the recitation. Their undivided at tention should be given to the exercise, to render it as useful and interesting as it can be made. This is necessary both for the best result of the recitation, and for that order which is essential to all success.— This, also, is a point that claims the notice of teachers, as it is a direct criticism upon the practice of not a few. 3. Be rigidly thorough. Teachers are powerfully tempted to neglect many com paratively unimportant points, through dis like of the labor which they involve and a feeling that, alter all, slighting is not very bad. But it should be constantly re membered that only by thorough, careful, persistent drilling can the foundation of good scholarship, of excellent intellectual discipline, be well laid. It is not the accu mulation of facts, but the clear compre hension of principles, that teachers should labor to secure for their pupils. It is not fluency or verbal accuracy in recitation, but a Arm grasp of the essential ideas, that scholars should be taught to seek. I doubt if one third of advanced pupils in Arithmetic can write readily and cor rectly all kinds of numbers, integral and decimal; if they can give a satisfactory ex planation of the common arithmetical signs, and can solve and analyze examples in Re duction, Fractions and Percentage in a precise, business-like manner. The same may be said of Reading; few scholars can explain and illustrate the significance of all the marks that occur in reading-books or in newspapers; few can readily define, and exemplify the meaning of inflections, emphasis and enunciation. To put it in one word, teachers cannot be too thorough. \ Be expeditious. Not a few teachers seem to labor under the delusion that slow ness u synojaymo-u.a with accuracy, and dia patoh is the same as superficiality. It may not be invariably true that a dull school is a poor school, and a lively school is a good school, but it is so nearly true that every teacher should studiously seek to have a lively, that is, an active, prompt, outspoken school. In most country schools there arc so many exercises that teachers need to employ all dispatch, but never forgetting to be critically thorough. Work to good WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1861, advantage, know just what to do, and then do it with vigor and expedition ; use the time as fully and profitably as possible.— There is no conceivable merit in dulness. 5. Be a •model. A teacher ought to use language so perfect that scholars can form no bad habits of speech by imitating him. This requires granmiatic accuracy, correct pronunciation, and a care to employ only good words. Many teachers are greatly i j fault in this respect, allowing themselves to violate the plainest rules of the lan guage, and exhibiting a culpable deficiency in knowledge of the accent and meaning of words that every teacher should under stand. It is no high credit to any person that he uses correct, appropriate language; but it is a positive shame for teachers to use incorrect, inelegant language. 8. NAHM, HIIIORT. The Towhee Bunting, or Ground Robin. I bis bird is also called ehewink and swamp robin. It generally keeps close to the ground, and frequents thickets and sheltered spots, scratching among the leaves for worms and larvae. It is quite a famil iar bird, and will suffer a person to walk round the bush or thicivet, where it is at work, without betraying any signs of alarm, and when disturbed, uttering the notes tow he, repeatedly. At times the male mounts a small tree, and chants his few simple notes lor an hour at a time. They are loud, but not unmusical. He is fond of thickets uear streams of water, and is found gener ally over the United States. The nest is placed on the ground among the dry leaves, and is large and substantial. He shows great affection for his young, and i- remar k Ale for the cunning with which he con ceals his nest, sometimes nearly covering it with dry grass. In Virginia lie is called the bulfinch. This bird is eight inches and a half long; of a black color above, and white below. 1 be eye changes in color—the iris being sometimes white and often red. 'There are various others of the bunting genus in the United States, as the white crowned bunting, the bay winged bunting, the black throated bunting, and Ilenslow's bunting. The Summer Redbird The changes of color which this hird is subject to, during the first year, have de ceived European naturalists so much, that four different species of tanager have been formed out of this one. The female differs much in color from the male. The food of this hird consists of various kinds of bugs, and large black beetles. During the sea son of whortleberries they seem to live al most entirely upon them. In Pennsylva nia they are rare, hut in New Jersey they may he generally found. The note of the male is a strong and sonor us whistle, re sembling a loose trill or shako on the notes of a file, fre uently repeated; that of the female is rather a kind of chattering, ap proaching nearly to the rapid pronuncia tion of cliiclcy-tuikj tuck, when she sees any person approaching the neighborhood of her nest. She is, however, rarely seen, and usually mute, aud scarcely to he dis tinguished from the color of the foliage at a distance; while the loquacity and brilliant red of the male make him conspicuous; and when seen among the green leaves, he has a most beautiful and elegant appearance. The summer redbird delights in a flat sandy country covered with wood, and in terspersed with pine trees, and is more nu merous on the shores of the Atlantic than in the interior. In both the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida, they are numerous; in the northern parts they are very rare. McClellan and Beauregard in Mexico. Doing guard duty on one of these clear frosty nights is what I call a ' big thing.' Standing before a huge fire, whose glim mering rays shoot into the dense pine for est which surrounds you as if they, too, had partaken of the spirit of vigilance, and were searching for some hidden foe, one's mind naturally is affected, and every shad ow and tree has an association which awak ens the soldier to a full appreciation of his seutinel duties. But such a night as last night—dark, dreary, wet, and disagreeable in the extreme —has an entirely different effect and we cluster around the fire, piled high with Secesh rails, which at times seemed to exert its best light and most gen ial rays to spread humor and life among those who stood smoking around it. Then as if exasperated at the failure, it would splutter and crack, contending furiously with every drop of rain, and hiss out a strong reproof at the element which was making the sentinels so uncomfortable. — But the"guard must be vigilantly maintain ed through the night, and we dare not sleep; for you muftt know, Mf- Editor, that sleep courts the soldier's eyelids as sweetly under the dropping rain as it does in his tent, if, perchance, he has a gum blanket lor a bed, and bis knapsack for a pillow, I proposed a song, but the only music that could be raised wa3 made by a little corporal, who doled out in a most melan choly style, ' Some must be dark and dreary.' This seemed to be the onlv song that the corporal knew, and the only one of that kind which we wanted to hear. Under these auspices, I proposed a story, and the sergeant of the guard, an old Mexican sol dier, 4 up and told' the following story, j which I quote, as nearly as 1 can recollect, in his own words : Seated in my tent one evening, just be fore the battle of the city of Mexico, the captain came to me with, 1 corporal, ] have been requested to send a trusty non-coui • missioned officer to the general council to ■ night as a messenger. Will you go?' I ' replied in the affirmative, thanking the captain for his confidence Our company was, at that time, detached from its regi nient, and was doing special duty at Gene ral Scott's headquarters. In the discharge of that duty, I had made a point of being : specially attentive, and had thereby gained the confidence of our captain, and once or ' twice was commended by old 4 Fuss and leathers himself. 1 brushed up mv old clothes, and brightening my shoes and brass | plates in the neatest manner possible that i evening, presented myself to the Adjutant | General for instructions. I found that the council about to meet for the consideration : of General fecott's plans for taking the city, was to be composed of all the colonels in the division, and that my duty would be to go errands, and attend to bringing charts, paper, or whatever might be required. Well, the council met, aud I was at my post. It was the finest body of military men 1 had ever seen together, aud when they assembled around that tabic, and the old general stood towering high above the rest, I could not help but admire him more than ever. After the customary salutation and organization, they sat down in regard to rank, beginning witli General Wool, and succeeding each other in seats, as sen iority of rank gave them privilege. It was no time fur delay, and the General spoke rapidly and with earnestness, occas ionally referring to some one on the right or left for information or corroboration.— Thus carefully and explicitly were the movements and marches, the sallies, and sorties, the whole plan developed, so that all seemed to understand. 15ut presently a plan was discovered, something waswrong, and I saw by the perplexed look of those around the table that a very serious mis take had been made, but from what cause, ■ my knowledge of military affairs did not , enable me to judge. A dispute arose be j tweeii some colonel and the engineer in chief, in regard to the position and strength of some battery, and the topo graphy of the surrounding country. The colonel said that frequent reconnaissance of the ground, from the fact of his being j encamped near the place in question, led i hi in. even indirect opposition to the chart of the engineer, to pmrest against its truth fulness, ami he would urge upon the general to make himself sure of the state of affairs before he fully completed his plan. Put this would not do; it was necessary that j very important and vigorous movements i should take place, or no action could be car- I ried on with safety or certainty. Itseemed, j in fact, to be a main point, at which posi- j tive success would have to fall to the ! American forces. Finally, the colonel said that there was a young lieutenant in his regiment who had a correct chart of the defences, and the map of the demesne there to adjacent. The engineer-in-chief sneer ingly said, 4 Very well, sir, you had better send for your authority, and let us see this great map.' The general nodded his ap porval, and the colonel gave me the name and address of the lieutenant. The en campment was not very far away, and I mounted my horse and rode off in haste to the regiment headquarters, and found the j very man I was in search of in the col onel's tent, with draughting paper on a ta ble before him, and sketches of the city and its surroundings scattered everywhere. I handed him the note, which lie read and hastily tore up, asking me if I could wait until he could borrow a horse. I told him I could, but had not long to wait, for he came back in a few moments, and careful ly wrapping up his surveys, he placed theui in a long tin case, and, mounting, prepa red to follow me. On the way he convers ed with so much earnestness, and in such j a mild, interesting manner, that I felt en- j couraged to talk and chat, contrary to my | usual practice when on horseback. He j informed me that he was a graduate of West Point, and that he had there fallen ! so much in love with the science of geoic- ■ etry that he had made it an almost constant i study, and that now he found it very in teresting, in the interval of duty, to make sketches and surveys of the city. When we arrived at the general's quar ters again, the lieutenant was introduced, and, at his colouel's request, produced his charts. The party was astonished at their finish and fcue execution, and when, after examination, they were found to be per- ; fectly correct, General Scott came forward j and grasping the young lieutenant by the ! hand, personally complimented him on his j skill, and thanked him for his efficiency. The chief engineer, somewhat chagrined i at this display of earning on the part of his young rival, sneeringly said : 'Gene rd, perhaps this young man. has some plan by which this part of the defences may be attackecV Upon inquiry, it was found that he had a plan, which was produced some degree of reluctance and laid before the assembly. It was road and criticised, and corrected, and finally, to make a mrig story short, adopted with sonic amendments by the council. This displeas ed the engineer, who seemed to think that the lieutenant, though but a very few years his junior, had no right to display so much knowledge of a science which did not beLng to his branch of the service. ' 1 need not tell you,' continued the cor poral, 4 that in the taking of Mexico a few days ufter, the plan offered by this lieuten ant was of'signal service, and that he was breveted soon afterwards.' Ilere the story ended, and the sergeant relapsed into his 4 pipe and silence.' We all looked for a while into the fire, when one of the sentinels asked him what the name of this young lieutenant was. He slowly puffed the smoke from his mouth, and answered: 'I believe it was George —GKOßGK B. MCCLELLAN.' 4 And who was the engineer?' 4 I believe his name was George, too — GEO RUE T. BEAUREGARD.' And we all smoked and looked into the fire, until the sentinel called out— 4 Grand rounds I Turn out the guard !' 1 \ushtng(on Republican. Unexpected Meeting of two Sisters [From the Hannibal 'Mo.) Messenger.] Last week while Mrs. McNutt, wife of Gov. McNutt, of DougLsville, 111., was huckstering in Camp Looinis, Mrs. Keener, wife of Capt. Keener, came out of her tent to buy something. Mrs. McNutt had fre quently visited the camp before, huckster itig, and thought that Mrs. Keener's coun tenance looked iamiliar to her. Ho on the day mentioned, when Mrs. Keener came out, Mrs. McNutt observed to her, that she thought she had seen her before, and the longer she looked at her the more she be came convinced of the fact, and observed again that she must have once known her. Mrs. Keener also thought that she had seen Mrs. M before. Mrs. M. then asked her it her Christian name was not llachel. Mrs. K. rcpled it was, when they both re cognized each other as sisters, and with low shrieks and tears of joy, rushed into each other's arms, and greeted each other after a separation of twenty years. J here is quite a romance connected with the two families, Gov. McNutt having been reduced from opulence to stringency by the extravagance ol his sons, who ended their career by entering Walker's N'icara guian expedition, and captain Keener left the dragoon service some years since and went to preaching. He was stationed at i'ilot Knob at the breaking out of the pres ent troubles, and was driven away bv the rebels because of Lis I nion sentiments.— He went to Illinois, raised a company and is now in for-the war. Since the recognition, the two sisters have spent much of thei • time together. If war has its sorrows, it likewise lias its joys, of which the above is only an instance. Millionaire Butcher of London Mons. We}', a French writer of distiuc tion, who passed some weeks in London, has recently published in Paris his impres sions, under the title of' The English at Home.' On the occasion, while riding in an omnibus, he formed an acquaintance with a fellow passenger, fioin whom he de rived many explanations of the strange things he saw. One of these we give: 1 I addressed a few words to him con cerning a carriage which drove by. ft was too fine to be elegant, and was drawn by two magnificent horses. On the box, adorned with beautiful fringe, sat a black coated coachman; there was not a wrinkle in his white cravat —his snowy gloves were spotless. In the vehicle, on downy cush ions, carelessly lounged a man without a coat, his arms bare, his sleeves turned up to the shoulder; an apron with the corners turned up served him as a girdle—so that the coachman looked like a gentleman dri ving a mechanic in his working dress.— Mons. W. asked his neighbor who and what was the strange looking occupant of the dasliiug carriage. 4 The richest butch er in London,' was the reply; he is return ing in his carriage from the slaughterhouse to his residence. His forefathers were in the huisness; his father left him a fortune of more than two millions, and he, out of modesty, follows his profession—a very honorable old custom. This gentleman butcher possesses four millions.' A Devout Advertiser. We notice, in a religious newspaper, a displayed advertisement for a wife. We give it a gratuitous insertion, but no one need address this office as we are not ac quainted with the advertiser: A WIFE WASTED. A MISSIONARY'S home has been rent by the death of a beloved mother. lie needs a comforter, a counselor, and a friend. The vanity of this world, and the things of it, put them all together, and they will not make a helpmate for man. They will not suit the nature of the soul nor supply its needs, nor satisfy its just desires, nor run par allel with its never-failing duration. There fore, it being not good for man to be alone, God created woman, to bo a help mate for iiim. See Genesis ii 18; Prov. xviii , '22. Tim applicant must possess a healthy body, practical piety, domestic habits, acompetency, and. if possible, a musical talent. Address ' MISSIONARY,' at this office. If any healthy, pious, domestic woman New Series— Vol. XVI, No. 5 with a comfortable fortune, but 110 ear for music, has a longing for this connection, it seems that she need not he deterred by j the wants of the last qualification, as that will not be insisted upon, although 4 if pos sible' she should add the throat of a warbler to the sum of other attractions.— N\ e suppose that it must be the just sensor of ' the vanity of the world' which induces the advertiser to ho so easily satisfied in a partner for life. Good health, piety, do mestic habits, and a competency, it seems, are all that would be indispensable to his gratification, although a musical talent, thrown in, would be highly appreciated.— lie is as easily contented as the child who : summed up her simple wants in the desire for 4 nothing but victuals and raiment, and pretty good clothes.' — Journal of C'onu mcree. A Fighting Negro A correspondent of the Chicago Tril une, describing the battle of Belmont, says : 4 During the thickest of the fight the body servant of Gen. McClernard, a mulatto named William Stains, of Decatur, exhib ited conspicuous courage. He was close by the General, during the whole engage ment, cheering the soldiers. Many of us laughed heartily a the fighting darkey, while bullets flew like hail about us. In the course of the fight, a Captain, of one of the companies was struck by a spent ball, which disabled him from walking.— I lie mulatto boy, who was mounted, rode up to him and shouted out, 4 C;q tiin, ifyou can fight any longer lor the old .Stars and I Stripes, take my horse and lead yon men.' lie then dismounted and helped the wound ed officer into his saddle. When he was walking away, a rebel dragoon rushed for ; ward at the officer to take him prisoner.— ; The darkey drew his revolver and put a ball through the rebel's head, scattering his brains all over the horse's neck. 4 I relate these little circumstances so : that merit may he justly dealt with; even ; ii the hero is a 4 nigger,' as some people i would call this brave fellow.' menagerie was recently destroy ed by lire, at Boston. The building in which the beasts were kept was a large two story one, with horses, wagons, Ac., on the first story and the wild animals in the second. A watchman was on the premi ses, but while he was in one part of the building, incendiaries, it is thought, appli ed the match to combustible material in another part, and the flames spread so rap idly that everything was lost. No person heard a single growl or groan from the ani mals, and, as they were all found dead af ter the fire had been extinguished, the. probability is that all were smothered to death before the flames reached any of the cages. Among the animals lost was a roy al Bengal tiger, said to have been the lar gest and best specimen in this country, and the most valued of any single auicial in the collection. The other animals were all fine specimens, and numbered three lions, four leopards, two African tigers, two bears, a hyena, jackal, African goat, musk cat, leopardcat, horned horse, about foity monkeys, two trick mules, three trick pon ies, five horses, anu several watch dogs, all of which perished. The animals aioue were valued at about §IO,OOO, and proba bly could not have been purchased for that sum. Besides this, the loss in wagons, harness, Ac., was of considerable amount. Things that I Have &'cm. —I have seen a farmer build a house so large and fine that the Shorifl turned him out of doors. 1 have seen a young m,.n sell a good farm, turn merchant, break and die in an insane hospital. I have seen a farmer travel about so much that there was nothing at home worth looking after. 1 havß seen a rich man's son begin where his father left off—wealthy; and end where his father began—penniless. I have seen a worthy farmer's son idle away years of the prime of his life in dis sipation, and end his career in the poor house. 1 have seen the disobedience of a sou 4 bring down the grey hairs of his father to the grave.' Generosity consists not in the sum given, but in the wanner and the occasion of its being bestowed. New Arrival and Low Prices t* HENRY ZEBBE has just received 10 bbla. Sugar House Sugar 7 0 bbls. light P. It. do 8 0 " best Brown do 9 0 " B White do 10 0 " CP White do 12 Which wiil be sold at the lowest Cash pri ces. JUST received and for sale, a large lot of Clearfield county shaved Lap and Joint SHINGLES, 24 and 2G inches long, best quality, at WM. B. HOffFMAM'S. Lewistown, July 7, 86. OIL LAMPS, Shades, Chimneys, J Brushes, Burners, &c., for sale by febl4 JOHN KENNEDY k CO. IIHDS. Sugar Cured Ham, of own curing, t) at 12j eta. per lb, for sale by jyO JOIIN KENNEDY & Co.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers