"The Sinking Danmark’s Passen- gers Saved by the Missouri. Picked Up at Sea and Taken to the Azores, The 672 people who sailed from Copenhagen on the ill-fated Danmark March 26, and who were feared to be lost, are all safe. The glad tidings were flashed across the Atlantic cable to Punch, Edyo & Co. the New York agents of the Thingvalla Line, The cablegram they received read as follows: : Message received from Lisbon: Passengors and crew all saved. Brought to the Azores by steamer Missouri, Three hundred and forty passengers follow Missouri to Philadel phia. Remainder still at the Azores. This message came from Lisbon, Portugal, via Copenhagen, the information having been brought there from the little steamer which plies between that port and Fayal, in the Azore Islands. The Danmark, when she left Copenhagen on March 26, had 628 passengers on board and fifty-four officers and crew, The first news of the disaster was when the City of Chester, which arrived at Queenstown early in April, roported having passed the Danmark on April 8 in logged condition, and without a soul on board. All the boats were gone, and a chain dangled from the bow. It was thought at first that some steamer had endeavored to tow her and, finding that the Danmark was to sink, had taken her passengers and crew on board and abandoned her; but as day after day went by, and arriving steamers brought no news of the missing peoplaithe belief became gon eral that all had been lost after taking to the boats A cablegram from Lisbon, Portugal, gives the following particulars: Officer Lahan and forty-two of the crew of the steamer Dan mark are coming hore from the rOTCs he Danmark he shaft on April i, miles off Newfoundland. lhamediately after the accident Engineer Kass was found dead in the engine room, evidently struck by a wheel that had been freed by the breakage of the shaft, The officers acted coollt, and the crew be haved well. The vessel powerless. drifted in the tro { the sea, and a things look serious Distress s BOON brokas whon 1] leak astern mad amd the day after the accident the steamer Missouri cam up with her « ors volunteering to do all in their power toward relief. She made room for twenty cabin passengers, and fastening hawsers, began towing the disabled steamer After the first day's towir the began settling not It grew Foisexd Diagymark ad day ticoably. and ¢ dr ml In the interim the 700 steerage p were growing restive and hard to control and the officers Inaugurated military disci. pline, the crew’ obeying admirably, greatly assisting in preserving order in the steerage At the end of the third day after the acci- dont the officers of the Danmark saw that the water was continually gaining on the pumps and the after portion of the became untenable The Missouri had no more room for passens gers, but by moving her cargo managed to make room ig The mtion on the perate on the third day and the passengers were transferred, the boats of both vessels being used for the purpose, those of the Dar mark being afterward abandoned When the officers of the Danmark left her deck her bow was clear of the water and her stern almost submerged The Missouri sai 25 for Philadelphia i of her burdensome © nplement of gers, headed for the Azores as the nearest point. She arrived there safely and left passengers, fc ether the crew The first officers immediately started back to Copenhagen. The Missouri continued her voyage to Philadelphia with 340 of the Dan mark's passengers aboard, which port she reached without incident The Azore Isdands are about 700 miles west of the coast of Portugal. The spot where the waterlogged Danmark was sighted by the City of Chester was about 25 miles north west of Fayal, almost in midodean. The Danmark was in the trough of the sea. and bad apparently been abandoned some time, A HORRIBLE CRIME, A Family of Six Murdered and Their House Barned, worse veosel Danmark grew d« with the emergency Pasa n with Wheers and A horrible crime was reported from Macon County, N. C. W. P. Wood, an industrious farmer, lived in the country at miles from His consist] of his wife, three sons and two daughters Throw of the children were grown, and the other two wera aged twelve and fourteen years. Wood had saved some $00, and had always kept his money in an old trunk Wood was called away from home on busi ness. When he returned he was horrified to find lds house in ashes. A short distance from the ruins he found three axes and two bowie knives, all stained with blood, and the old trunk in which he had kept his money. The trunk was broken open, and its contents were one. Among the ashes charred hones were on showing that the entire family had fired least five any neighbors family been murdered before the hous was There were no clues to the murderers, VAULTS FULL OF MONEY, Counting the Millions in the United States Sub Treasury, Assistant Treasurer Ellis H. Roberts has begun his official duties at the United Stato | Bub-Treasury in Now York, and ns required law there isto be an official count of all motioy turned over to his charge count of the cash in the Treasury Yoults was begun by fifteen experts from ngtom, under the direction of Assistant Maline, of the United States ! Treasury. The work started with the count aggregate anit $25,000,000, Beside paper money there are S108 000. (00 of and $33,000 000 silver to be counted. in addition to United States bonds and other socuritis. The work of counting this fm- mense sum of money will oocupy from throes month, when the Assistant give his receipt for the amount QUEER BAILROAD WRECK, A Freight Train Sinks Into a Fallendin of the money, gold and diver cortifi. = and United fates Troasury notes, | THE NEWS EPITOMIZED, UED IN MIDOCEAN, Inti- | tude 48 north, longitude 87 west, in a water | Eastern and Middle States, GuNEBAL CHanres KiNNAmp GRATAM, of the United States Army, died of Fos monia, at the Laurel House, wood, N. J., aged sixty-five, Tue Conshohocken Worsted Company, of Philadelphia, bas made an assignment. The company operates three mills and the monthly pay-roll amounted to about $35,000, Liabilities $500,000, Mes. Russaar, of Pittston, Penn, over- come by grief, committed suicide by jump- ing into avessrvoir. Her son committed sui- cide a year ago, and her husband was killed by lightning last September, EX-PReEsioesT CLEVELAND has declined the post of one of the Commissioners of the New ligh Bridge Park, to which he was recently appointed bw a New York Judge. Dr. Bayurr W, Gross, the eminent phy- sician and surgeon of Philadelphia, bas just i died. GENERAL SEIGEL has sent to Commissioner Tanner his resignation as Pension Agent at New York city, to take effect upon the ap- pointment of his successor. | | Jupae WALLACK'S order dissolving the in” | junction of the Western Union Company was | | recorded in the United States Circuit Court. { On Mayor Grant's order the Bureau of In- | enmbrances, of New York city, tore down | the wires and poles on Broadway from Four. | teenth street to Twentieth, and were to cone tinue on until street was reached. TroMas F. BCANLAN, a piano manufac- turer of Boston and Roxbury, Mass, has Fifty-eighth | failed for $200,000, Tae ferryboat New Brunswick, which | plied between Now York city and the Penn- sylvania station in Jersey City, was burned to | the water's edge, causing a loss of $65,000 Wirtriax T. Meexix, aged nine, disd at Fall River, Mass, of hydrophobia. He was bitten on March 17, and the wound was al- lowed to heal without being eautorized. GexeraL Samvern Kexsxoy Dawsos, United States Army, retired, died at Orange, N.J., aged sixty. Heo was born in Pennsyl- vania, and graduated at West Point in 1840, Jaues Freros was fatally shot by his wife at Butler, Penn. Mrs. Fields was reading a book and her husband ordered her to come to bed. She refused, he struck her and the shooting followed. Before dying Fields exomorated his wife, saying she had shot in self-defense, When Mrs. Fields apggared at the coroner's inquest her face was mMihed al most beyond recognition, WaiLe engaged in removing wires and telegraph in New York city, under the supervis Bureau of Encumbrances, two men were pulled from a three-story wine dow and one, Early, was instantly killed Wa 8M. Carviesoen, the President of the Newark (N. J.) Insulating and Waterproof- ing Company, missing, with $400.000 of the company’s hs AT Farm shaft of mine, the caved In Eight 1 we mine and a dozen of them were partially covered with the fall. ing mass. Richard Ettinger was crushed to death, an deen, ¥ are teen men were in the Turns were twenty-five cases of smallpox in Nanticoke, Penn. The disease appeared to be spreading in all directic South and West, Ciaartes F. Harcu, President of the Wisconsin, Minnesota and Pacific Railway Company, and P., E Lockwood a real estate dealer and capitalist, formerly of New ‘ork, both committed suicide in Minneapolis, Tae Governor of Bouth Carolina has granted a full pardon to two colored lynchars convicted of murder, his ground being that thoy had simply followed the example of | white men, who h never ’ H from Loidon Mads i hite 1 who had ne been punished. vty revs 1 Eo | AXDEAY, a farmer over sixty years : near Ann Arbor, Mich. shot and us adult son in a drunken quarrel GUS SUNDERLAND, 8 colored boy, Hying at ges ¥ left by his mother to take r, and getting tired ound the baby's peck and hung it to the rafter of the house. The child was dead when found, A CYCLONE swept over Montgomery, County, Ala Two men were instantly killed by lightning and several others were shocked and seriously injured. Houses were blown down and damage done to young corn and cotton crops A TeERRLE forest fire in Patrick County, Va., swept everything before it One man, six borses, a large number of hogs and cattle, and about 200 dwellings and tobacco barns were consumed. Many poor people are left in a destitute condition James A. Sexvox has been appointed Post’ master at Chicago W. H. Perrir, aged seventy-two, his wife and his son, Washington, got into a fight at Kearney, Neb, over a loaded gun. The fight ended when the gun went off and blew the old man's head to atoms TE schooner Rio Lupton capused in AL bermarie Sound, N. C, The Captain and one of the crew were drowned CHARLES FUNK, a cigar manufacturer. of Kankakee, 111, shot his divorced wife fatally and then killed himself THIRTY-FIVE in Muir, Mich A WONDERFULLY rich discovery of ou Ppper was made at Duluth, Mion, by workmen excavating for a public building site residences and business houses were burned Tux Standard Oil Company bas purchased a controling interest in the Oblo Oil Come fans, thus coming foto possession of the dros oll fled IT is estimated that twenty-five lives were lost during the recent prairie fires in Dakota, L. Bravrorn Prixcr wan inaugurated as Governor of New Mexico NATURAL gas was turned into the pipes in Dayton, Ohio, for the first time. Extra sure was put on at the wells in Mercer Coun- ty and the gas traveled through the pi fortywight miles to Dayton in twenty-five minutes, AT Manates, Fia., lsase Jones (colored) as salted his four-yearwold danghter with a heavy irom bar, breaking every bone in her body and killing ber instantly.” Jones's wif who attempted to interfere, also received fatal injuries Peary Wise, a wellknown eoitizen of Brockton County, W. Va, was felling a tree, when it broke across the stump, demolishing | the house, and killing his wifo and three ohik i dren, i A racxaoe containing $15,000 in gold | mysteriously disappeared from the office of | the Northern Pacific Express Company in | Brainerd, Mion. Washington, Mean Apminarl Wintiam Roars Tay don, United States Navy, reti died in on, He was born at RL, November 7, 1811, and Atmel navy as a midshipman in 152%, Tur Chinese Minister gave was one of the Tus Nations) Acadany of Bolenos held a Prasnaont Vies- President for a similar term. BOPRRINTENDENT —————— TS A AU PAPI IA IAT the Supreme Court the resolutions of the Be on the death of Justios Matthews acd mad an appropriate speech, to which Chief Justices Fuller replied, and the resolutions were sprea upon the records, | Presipexr Hanrrisox, accompanied by Mrs. Harrison and her guest, Miss Murphy, of Minneapolis, and Becretaries Blaine and Windom, went down the Potomac for aday's ride on the lighthouse tender Holly, Httle vessel steamed for a distance of about forty miles, and then returned to the wharf, which was reached about six o'clock, Before leaving the President received the Chicago and All America baseball clubs in the East Room, Tur President has appointed William P. Hepburn, of Iowa, Solicitor of the Treasury, an] William H, Whiteman, of Mexico, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Territory of New Mexico, Upon the authority of Russell Harrison, the President's son, it is stated that the White House inmates suffer from a plague of red ants, Tre annual session of the National Acad omy of Sciences was begun in Washington, Tur United States Pension Agent, Bar- ger, of Columbus, Ohio, has just made the nes of the largest voucher ever paid to a privawsoldier. Philip Flood, of Elyria, is the beneficiary, He is to be paid at the rate of §8 per month from Nov, 14, 1862; 825 per mouth from July 4, 1864: 381.95 from June 4 1873; 80 per month from June 4 1874: $72 per month from June 17, 1878, making a total of $14,080. From this time on he will be paid $72 per month, THE President made the following appoint ments: Robert P, Porter, of New York, edi- tor of the Press, to be Superintendent of Census; J. W, Cunningham to be Assayer of the United States Assay Office, at Boise City, Idaho; William H, Calkins, of Washington Territory, to be . Justice of the Suprems Court ngton Territory: John B, Donnelly to be Marshal of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisians, and ex-Congressmoan Edward 8. Lacy, of Michigan, to be Comptroller of the Currenc ADDITIONAL nominations by the Marvelle W. Cox per, Appraiser of Mer New York: Marsha ATTORNEY-LIENERAL MILLER presantod nis 4d, tw be Col sw of Internal Bovenuo for the District of Marviand, an Joepens, of Rhode Island, to be Cols ” i stoms for the | t of Newport, sir Gamurt. Duosoxy tel rebellion br BE TIVed ag battles, and bhalf-breeds, urging them grievances upon the Canadian Gove AT Rustasn, Jamaica, West Ind Hobteon, bis wifs and hb young girl, al murdered by J Hochie the dex ding Kpecianl excitarnent an Mn. Panxnti ba the London Times { damages CroLERA is epidemic in th "hillippine Islands. One the , are reported, fatal AN explosion ooourey ing to the Rot Five men were kille Jured and dix misting Tw Hnbut Seotland. has decided. by a vo ght to five, to oon fer the freelam of the city on Mr, Parnell Hiery belong- a, Austria wo dangerously ine aD wets weft Wuag and Hondreds of persons A AMINE was raging at B Bistrite, Hungary were starving and dvit A “WHITE BOOK taine a savage rebuke | Consul Anapoe, the Gers RBamon. Prive Bismarck eon port by declaring that Germany has nothing to do with the internal affair: of Bamoa, The German mission in Samoa is restricted to protecting German citisens, and enabling them to develop thelr comunercial interests Tin Roumanian Parliament has voted a credit of 8,000,000 for strengthening and in- creasing the fortifications on the frontier, indes the A FATHER'S FRENZY, Frank Hancock, of Addison, N.Y, Kills His Four Children and Himself Mrs. Frank Hancock, of Addison, N.Y bedroom of ber house discoverad hor hasband's dead Luody suspended from a rafter, and four of their children lying domed In jrorols old bleed Ones of the hove only a vear oll, who was looping in the cradle. was unharmed, The father hind left a note found on the crais with a silver watch, in which be sald “1 leave my watel to baby. Care for him and when he grows up give him the watch and say it ie from papa. Bury me and the children in the cemetery at Sabinsvilie.” The fiendish father cut the throats of all the four children, and, not content with that die embowelod them, The oldest was ten and the younger four. The father’s body showed that Iie Tumdd stabbed linsoll twige in the alvdomen wivl gashed his throat. Thess wounds not being fatal, he slipped a rope around his nook aver a ral and stood upon soap box, and then kicked it from noder him and stranglod to death. An examination of the father's body showed that he stabbed himself twice with a buitehor knife and haggled his throat before hanging himself. At Coroner's inquest Mra. Han Fock ail Sut ao and ber husband had not t ving Aa that sho and hor separate on May 1, dividing the ch tween tom, BITTEN BY A MONKEY, A Princoss Going to Paris to be Treated on opening the ior to be The | | of eighty-five, nnd his wife ix still living, A HERO OF 1812. Death of John Fielding at the Ripe Old Age of 110 Years, John Fielding, a soldier of the war of 181 ) and a native of Virginia, died in Laurens County, 8B. C., a fow days ago at the age of ! 110 years, In 1787, when Fielding was cight years of age, his parents moved fo Bouth | carolina sud settled on the Tiger River, At the breaking out of the war of 1512 he volun. teared, and served until the war ended, married three thoes, the last time at the age Ho had three living children by his first wife, aod they are aged men, He wis a successful far mer, and although lmpoveriched by the late war, he leaves bis widow well provided Until within the past three years he has been remarkably active, and in 1%%4, when at the ago of 108, he walled four miles to vote the national Democratic tiekat Ons ar two of his sons, then middle-aged men, were in the Mexionu war, a — © — | 4 SON'S QUADRUPLE ORIME, Patricide, Arson, Assault and Suicide by the Same Hand, At West Farmns, a hamlet about five miles fromm Westfield, Mass, Joseph King, aged soventy-eight, a whip manufacturer for half a century, welltodo and highly respected, was shot while sleeping in his bed by his dis sipated son of forty four yi After shooting his father he attempted to kill bis aged maiden aunt, Miss Cynthia Tut- tle. He then burned down the house, and threo hours later, within a dozen rods of the burned buildings and within hearing of the neighbors who ware about to institute a search for the murderer, put a bullet through his own brain, Where had stood a pe aceful dwelling, noth ing but a few charred embers remained, and a few rods distant, in a small deserted house, lay the dead bodies of father and son. The father had pistol- wounds in chest, neck and eva, either of which would have been fatal, The son bad a ball through his temple, hy i THE NATIONAL GAME, Md Jie Harr manages the LOXY is captain of the Detroits, Boston tesa, JOE GERHARDT on ST Ac 3 will pit Tue Philad Tae President « Is 8 brewer £000 for refused Toxsny is considered He Droud ever had Kno pitching Uy rei] as eatcher ont head fired slider He is baserunner Louisville Kand H binson will do most of the or 3 go thi m, with Far- Dungy, of yd ollegre, is one of the 6 t fiedders in ur ar a Kixag w ou OX whderod the amats CraARLEY has got a out, up and down RIX runs on AcoOmp ished by azninst the Low recently in a game n font viers Spalding able to Or all countries visiled by the tourists, Italy apposed to be understand baseball Jonst Tare reasons John Morrill was released by the Bostons was hie refusal $0 captain the picked nine on Fast Day Ispiaxaroris, with Boyle, Whitney, Shreve and Durdick, will be very strong in the pitcher's box this season Maxaoen Harr fixes the total amount lost by the Western Association last year owing tn high salaries at $80,000 Prromen Ramsey, of Louisville, says be even now can't explain his curving: all he knows about it is that be can do it Joss K. Texen of the AllAmerions was badly wanted in Rome ae a model. He | was offered $2000 to pose for two months Basepart, cranks are plentiful in Cuba, Over 9X people traveled 140 miles to see a | game between Havanna and Matanzas, They | occupied three special trains, Frank Rico, the old eateher, who onon played with the Detroit, Pittaburg and Phila. | delphin clubs, took a dose of morphine at Kansas City with fatal effect Tur New Yorks, by winning. took the en tire gate receipts of the fit two games with Brooklyn. hey won over $5000, Brook | lyns captured the third and last game of the series, Tux Louisville press considers Pete Brown. | ing the greatest mystery on the ball field to | day. i out n day's | he walks out into left Seid and plays in pore After a winter's dissipation and with. practios or preparatory training fect style, A rrevLIAR thing happened in a game be- tween the Metropolitan and Commercial tears at J achawiven, NJ of the C twelve runs off in the first inning. Upon having his examined after the geme one of the bones ound to been split, “Mh a | He | for, : Eowix Boori has “sworn off’ smoking. Rose Eryxor is going sstaring through California. Dr, vox Burow will return to this country | next spring. Inving's profit outof '‘Macheth” isreckoned | at $2000 a week. Mire. Rura has made a Lit in her nev play “The Caso Vidal” TE transporiniion of the Wild West show from New York to Paris will cost $16,000 Migs Many AspuERsoN has landed in Queenstown, greatly improved in health and spirits, Ir is said that MM. Caguelin's acting in this country uctted him about $50,000 for ous Benson. Leona Dane proposes to astonish Paris by leaping from the Eiffel Tower during the coming exhibition. Bawan hor opinion Ellen Terry wus the most actress on the stage Ix Mrs. J. G. Blaine, Jy upHort senson will be H. B. Conway actor of high reputation. Pavey Harn the comic opera prima donna, has renewed her contract to appear with the New York Casino Company J. W, Beaxrax, the Irish comedian gan a three months’ tour of ten large cities of Great Britain, opening in “Shsun na Laun” Groce W, Conos, of the Ledger, surprised everybody by theatre s other night, for many year A xepw opera, 8" by Anton Rubinstein it st the Im. perial Opera « during the present season Asn Wenz with theatrical Orns mn is rin- erly all theat i year not one did Maxaoen ¥ contra Bruxuanpr sald recently that in perfect next Fae 4 Philadelphia r 10 this erferes 1s ile oom misan “Hone wing PROMINENT PEOPLE. Tax Empros : sof Az Tue Quosn of Gree Gexenat Boy Ex-Kixa Mn Dow, Rogxrr Ba & Insane wiles poetry, ANGER Is in bad benlth, AX ha o Palestine Neal the reform jehty.- four WXIixG the poet is poventy Prepsivest Hanson is a Httle dent in « anger a beay- xpressed a wish Brooklyn ofl man inveterate smoker as lard player ar reader of many the leading Amer REWEDAOTE Karacnonovrros oretender to the Serv. into a fortune represented at the Paris md som, George of Kentucky, has Fiarids BR Jr, of New York bachelor in the country Banxes Tf the const of ¥Y. commander of ever water oolor our fre ting much tine and attont a (German BAvY, Carrary Howannp Parrexsox, of New rk, will become Admiral of the Haytian Navy. 3 Tux King of Corea begins his work at 8 o'clock in the afternoon and closes at about 3 o'clock in the mom ng Tare wealthiest colored man in the South is a New Orleans sugar planter named Marie He has an income of $40,000 a year, Sexaron Quay is troubled with his old oomuplaint, insomnia, and bas gone to his home at Beaver, Penn, to recuperate, Sexaron Vasor is improving rapidly at his home, in Bancombe County, N. C., and bis remaining eye is stronger than it has beep for years Tue widow of the late President Barrios, of Guatemala, fs the handsomost young widows in New York, She is worth £7 000,000, Jonx McKnox, the Pennsylvania oil king, fs mid to have an income of nearly $25,000 a month, Nevertheless hoe is at work by 8 o'clock every morning one of Mans. Broxewary Jacreox fs described as | 8 "modest, Blackeyed and dark-haired little woman, rather inclined to portiiness, and de ! cidedly averse to notoriety.” Tan Dukedom of Pockingham has become | extinct with the death of the late Duke. The ancient Baridom of Temple, however, goes to | his pephow, Mr, Gore Langton, Roser GARRETT, he Baliimate aire, is great mp: . ow to Sootiand in Jupe to bunt on th of Winans, whose guest he will be, 3 SIack” Loan, the son of General John A. has an utter abhorrence of politics He is a stone 11 is a curious fact Deum. able to pallish of rage won't be if Dr. Brooks can OKLAHOMA BOOMERS, The Mad Rush of Settlers Across. the Cherokee Strip. Scenes and Incidents of the First Day's Exodus, ———— — - A dispatch from Arkansas City, Kan seribing the exodus of the boomers into Olas ways: Acting Departament, Aw under the orders fre United boomers 75) their oe Low 10 hora, War OOPS LT ms Ley Biates allowed the Cherokees outlet on WHY to reach the om the opaiing date, covered wag Hed slong mare beavily mr Oklahoma, so gs to enal border of the territor Miles of white the road but deep in the rs were, ts a rule lock in the morni Wg Laplal at the hend of his ex blast as a signal for 1 smnedis thousand ndred men, women and g nnd wearis acroms he ew 8 long tied baw start was made 1 chy 1c 3 ! # n of their pledge not to inter- indian vil- reservations. fences or and Pono “ns 0 Oklab Country, and that may be sold to wholesale and retail Higuor dealers, to engage in business there, under the ssane terms and regulations as in other States and Territories of the United States FIVE MEN DROWNED. in relation a, to be “indian special fax stamps A Whole Party Lost Through One Man's Lack of Nerve. At the Alabama Midland crossing of Cattabooche River, pear Bainbridge G two boats, with seven and eight gen ree spectively, were crossing the river, when one of the boats commenced sinking, and one of the men jumped to the other boat and cap sized both boats. Five men were drowned, They had been bresking rock for the Alabama Midland bridge, THE MARKETS. 10 KEW YORK. Bev ves vee B95 Milch Cows, com. to good... 25 0 Calves, common to prime... 4 00 bo bo tt - - - as oes HogwL1dve. ....ouines Dressed | Flour-City Mill Extra Patents = - ARNEL IIR 2UNES Lard City Steam, ......... Butter Elgin Creamery... . Dairy, fair to good. West, Im. Creamery ® # BES & wo SAGE Kkime— Ligh Eggs State and Penn, BUFFALO, Good Choose Renan Earuan ERSaR BEE ald of] ese AAA AE: SLE EER] EAE EERE EE SEE EE POSTON, Flour Spring Pat's. Qotn- Sete ssn 8 WA, «ovo s iA SORE WATERTOWN (MASE) CATTLE BEE AE RE Birth id BL EEE eb ussRena a REIS 21! I8SBES Douna3ug| 2222 E844 G63948R68 ASATAARES53366 3 Bis iy. .......4 80 cross
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers