i f crms of Publication. ! ;iic Somerset HeraM, ; ..hiihe.lcvr Wednesday morning at ts . annum, if rail In advance ; olhenri j)l invariably be euanced. Xo tmbKriptloo will -iatwiiintied nUI J1 graces e paid P- Postma-ters neKleetlv n..ttif us ben fol.reriber. do m take cat r.rm'T,,,,M r,,r " : frali-crlber. removing from one rV-rtUBee to , ? ... .,. me of the f.iruier : fe er sbuuld jrlve B" ine nam ......... irllaMlieprcreatofliee. Address The Somerset Herald, 1 T kooser. ATTOKNEY-AT LAW, Somerwt, Pa. H ATTORNEY AT LAW, S.itnewt, ""a, ii. ENDS LEY. ATTORN EY-AT-I.AW, JSntneract, Pa. 4 ti forger. s i ll. I ATTOKXEYAT-LAW. Somerset, T. aV ,j-Ki:'rn. Vjll.WI'll- II-' : fi-.FFI.oTII & linTEL. .J, AHOKNEYS AT LAW. aHLufinciM. entruted to their care will ! a, in. I -On Iiiuiuutta lilwk. 4 -- II' ATTt'KNEY AT LAW, ! P I n. ....it- and Pension A?-nt, Souii-rnei, Ck-i-e lu'Maiunsotn lilwk. 1 LENT. XK HAY. ' Al TOUNEYATLAW t n.l Dual T I" R Estate. Niiim-rsi. Pa., wll 'nl I" all l.aioe-ntrustedt.. his care will jjf ?iitiii-i,i n!ii !i.l liiy. J oll . KIM MEL. ATTORN EY-AT LAW, S.nictwt, Pa. "will Btteni to all l.u.iti!" Titruft'd to Ms rut' i. ,.t"-t n. adiMlning ountiif with promiN at-j no.! tllrllty. j. . l:o ly Oitiiv hi 31 mu Ciof ' rvct. I k .:.i!-.i:x. l..'.c(l iioi:y COLIJOKN. j ATroKNI f All l.a.lnrs entrusted rroKNEYS AT LAW. Mt.i tn their care will be J ct.lilv anil punctually attested lo. i'o, , ;."f-!n liaur s Wuck. I i.suiri. innw If. I'lIL. ATltiliNEY-AT LAW. ..incrwt. Pa.. : Will pnmiptlv attend to all Im'inew entrnteil i iiiiu. Money alTaiired on collections, Slo. Of I v iu .Mmiiiuutli liuiMini;. i I.'.OCLK. ATTORNEY"-AT LAW, i Somerset Pa., j I'mtesidonal linslness fnlruFtnl to my cure t- ..lei u uli iouiptness and tiaetiiy. I'OTTKI:. ATTOKN EY AT LAW, Ji lllcrs Mi pmlessional services u the pului.'. .h and loans negotiated, and nil oilier lerul sa.-meKi. attoiuled l with proiuptneaa and fidelity. C- lie-lions a fiecialty. liuuci tw. ; t . J. l:.l it. ii. L. liAint 3V AKi: iV: U.VEIJ. ATTOliXEYS AT LAW, a fcomerfet, l'a., I Will iira'nice in Somersirt and ad pining c.iantirt. sV I liUMiiese entrusted lu them will be promptly a: fcll'teil to. TJ1.L1AM II. KOONTZ, ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW, tsomem-t, Pa., Will itive iiniiimt attention to business entrsst- 1 to lii. eare In hoiueritet and adjoining mantlet). V ilea iu Printing H"Ue Jijw. 3 (;llN i:. scon. ATI'OKNEY AT LAW, Somerset, Pa. ( itli-e In the Coort IIoae. AlM'nslness entrust as to his care attended :o with promptnefs and aiielity. AMKS L. riCll. ATTORN EY-AT-L AW. SoUierMjt. Ta. 1 t I'li.-e. Mammoth HI..:-. ut stairs. Entrance, , .iu t'r.ns etrtvt. Collections made, estates r ai':le.l, titles examined, and all b-inu nuines i t)'"ii'i.:d to with promptness and h.lclity. 4 i sj M. KIMMTI.. "VI' V f ii. S. kIMMF.L. U. J -l. Il...'li.u j KIM MEL it SOX .1 tender their prolcsslonal services to me citi aeiisof Somerset and vicinity, Ofteof the mcin r ol tlie lirm can at alliuics. unless protesslon kSyenvaireil.be lound at theu- olbi'e, on Main ssr. cu .east ot the Diamond. D"-U.J. K. MILLElt 1ms iK'nua uently liK-ated in lterlin lor the practice of hi- protetttoo. Ullie vpifjsuc Charles Kri."io?r- .- (tore. air. 'Ii, lo-tL TVi:. II. KHl l'.AKEIi tcndoTs his J f....f."-l se tIccs to ths cltlrens of Sum sjj et ntid TiclrJO'. i' mice in rciidence on Main t cet,welo. uio Diam.ind. I D . A. C. MILLLU. .'ilVSPJlVM SUKtlEO.N, ' 11 is removed to South Bend, Indiana, where he , it in be cocMilied by letter oroiherwisi. i W ILLIAM COLLINS. IiEN 1 1ST, SOA1E1ISET, PA. i i in Mammoth lilock. ab.ive Itoyd's I'rog i .re. where he can at all times I Ii.uno irepar i tTiiio all kinds of work, such as hlling. reiiu. fciiinir. eitractlna-. Ac. Artllicial teeth ot all kinds. aj U.l tlie lesi material inserted. Oiratis f .irranted. Y!:. joiix r.iLi.s. XJ KENT1ST. o:h -e above Henry Hemey"s store. Main Cross a)" 'et, oinerset. Pa. FUNDENBERG. ATE RESIDENT SURGEON, Ksi Yort Eye aai larlifaary.i I Ins locuV''! l't riMaiK'iitlv in tlio hv ..f ( TMKEULAXI, Mrirylnii.l, i irtli.' EXCH'SIVE tnntniont of ill lisf:iM S f tht' Eyi ::nl Ear. iii luIin; tin so of tlif Nost' n:itl Throat. I'liir:- X.i. lIlSu'.iTii Center Strc.-t. pKNSlON AGENCY. P Sweliicrof Sand Patch, Somerset county, S l'a. Ju;tce of the Peace, surveyor and claim Jfi.Kcnt wul promptly collect all Bounty and Pen j...n eltluis entrusted to him. Persons wishing jii'.y inlvriiistion will address Mm at the alnive ii .inJ place, enclosing discharge and giosuge , .iu.ji mi reply. BROTHERS,: i PAINTERS, Somi:iis;:t, I'knna. AUCTlOXKEli. IKT1ES needing itt service on Real or Per "ial tjitnte. or anything to be disped oi at "."nV"-"1" nn' 1 f'v entlre'taUslactiou. All leu.Tf ,y mall pMniptly attended to. W. A. KIKINTZ, lK-c-l- Connuence, Pa. lAMOMi IIOTEI. NTOYSTOWN, l'lONN A. I Ti if .nlnratrd well koown Ihm ha lately tw tkofuviftilT and Dtlr rt-tittti vUb all new ; ! V ol ,u"t", which has tnadr it a rm i 1p tahl mm . . t iB i. a. fm clau uith a large public ball 'attached the same. i i. i ... . -"" . dim lanr KE.l rOOmV StalilllUr ; irn elans l.rrtlcg can be had at tbe Uiwest iu- "l l,pn..,l y ike week, day or meal j . t,m . . . . 1 . ' - - KAMI ELCI.'STER. Prop. tj. E. t ..r. Diamond. fSivxstown, pa . 1 Lie VOL. XXIX. NO. 5. NEW GOODS! Casebeer k Co. bare jut received from the East- era cities a very Urge Stock of Gods which they . are now offering at extremely Ixm Price. THEIR STUCK OF DRESS GOODS, i. very larte. and a. they had .aid on tueir old atorkst i "D"DTMTr'T,T 'DTJTr'TQ! U VJXJ-U XJ.LXU.LJU, i They now have on hand an entirely NEW and i well SELECTED STl C'K ; of the very of PKKSS UOOPS j LATEST and EEST SHIES Foond In the Eastern markets which they sell at prices to rait all. Tlieira' is a general mock, conf lftiug of in inv ;Mrs, notions, ii.vnmvAUK, HATS ntid AI'S, I'AINTS ami ol! , . KlHf, CAlirKTS. Jl'KKNSWA l!K. (;i:oT.nii:s, TABLK & FJ.OOU OIL CLOTHS, WALL & WINDOW PAPER. &c, Ac, Ac Fr"in the long estahllshed refutation for lair dealtngtt.ts hrtn han gained, the fullest confidence can lie pl.ieed in all representations made by any Ierion cpoHed with the stre. 1 hey now have on hand ths LARGEST ASSORTMENT IN TOWN. W hen yon come to town, call and see for your- sen. CASEI3EER & CO. Somerset Pa., i Aptlr llvmo1 Arc not 'nvt.il to tUt lino, hut ye! TO REDUCE STOCK A liir.iro l'.iii- nf cavli trr.ido will Ik- nHVreU fr-im t'-il;iy, June Till, AT TEX TO FIFTEEN t OTS LESS lVr viirJ than irt'vinis iiricos ofi this Wilson. CHINA MATTINGS Tlie fiiH st iiiijiurU-J. and all (.ii.r)R. lr.m.1 H. M'CALLUM,- 77 FIFTH AVENUE, 1 1 ABOVE VOCD STREET. PITTSBURGH, IA.. CHARLES HOFFMAN, (Above 3 lonry J Iellloy'a St;.re. LATEST STYLES ail LOWEST PRICES. Z2T SATIS FACTION GUARANTEED. lus constantly on hand at his distillery PURE RYE WHISKY Fur sale by tlie barrel or gallon , suited for CMPETSri MERCHANT TAILOR ;;meeal am mechanical PURPOSES. Ordert addressed to Berlin, Pa., will receive prompt attention. Mar. hi 1m0. WHITER ANDERSON, COR. WOLD ST. AND SUTH AVENUE, KO. 226 LIBERTY STREET, PITTSBURGH, lel18 PA. JVO. BICES. LA ars K. HICKS. ipts&FlreaiilllliisMce, 1 JOHIi HICKS & SON., SOMEIISET. PA.. And Real Estate Brokers. ESTABI JS1IED.1850. Persxis who desire to sell, buy or rirhange priierty. or rent will bnd it to tlKdr advantasre to register the .leserlptlon thereof, as no charge is made unless .ild or renutd. licnl estate business generally wilibs promptly attended to. au 19 S. T. LITTLE & S OXS, ': 108 BALTIMORE STUKKT, Ci;MliEHlNI, Ml. WATCHES, VBAISS, SOLID SILVERWARE, DIAMONDS, AMERICAS CLOCKS, rRESCll VI OCES, SlLVtR PLATED WARE, JEWELRY, -c. HOLIDAY" PRESENTS I ' Wktche and Jewelry Repaired hj BkilM Workmen arxl returned by Kxpross Free of Charge. No extra i charge lor Engraving. Goods war- i ranted as represented, j oct li A MONTH guaranteed, ill a day Capl:alD-rrnlrdi ws will start you. Men. women, beys and girU make mooer faster at work IVir u : thaa at aavthing elsa. The work is light aad ' t"""1: mai ai any.i. can go Those who aro wise who see this woUra rtvbt at. , , . . . 'lh,er? Bd TV tbemeelvea. . Vi. 7 7 i tnr' U, lh ' i h, a. vlio am arlM artwi bm f hla MfitW villi Mn. Address TRITE k CU Aogasta, Mates. Jbd 11 llCflMT TAILOR, AoriA NEW BANK Somerset County Bank, CHARLES J. HARRISON. Cashier and Manager. Collections made In all nana oftba Vnlted States. Cbarfet moderate. Batter and otner check! col lected and cashed. Eastern and Wefternexchanc always on hand. Remittances made with prompt' tta AcomnU solicited, Parties desiring to parchas lT. 8. 4 PER CENT.- FUNDED LOAN, can be acoommo- mt thl' Bnk- Ths eirapotu are prepaid In I ! denominations of 60, loo, MO and 1.000. 1. H- ZIMMEB.MAX. G FA). SKY WEB SOMERSET F 0 UNDRY, Zimmerman &snyder, All kinds of casting made and for sale, consist ing in part of !k-;ak ;uatks. I SToVK I.IN1VCS, j SI.KDSoI.K-S AND UJIATES, PLOWS, i AN1 SHEARS, Ac, t The U I A Z. ST N EK and JIECLA Nos 3, 4 i and 6 ! HEATING STOVES : Made and for sale. AUklnds of Castings made to order at short notice. A MACHINE SHOP if attached to the Foundry in which all kinds of Machinery will be repaired promptly. We are doing a general FOUNDRY BUSINESS. And solicit all kinds of orders in our line. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. Nov. 28 SPRING, 1880. CABPETS A Large and Choice Stock of In grains, Tapestry Brussels, Body Brusssls, Marqueits and Axmin sters, with Bugs and Borders to match. Also Oil Cloths, Linoleums and Lignums. IjllVMaj wbwwia Uo. 39 Fifth Avenue, PITTSBURGH, FJ, MORGAN'S WOOL-EN MILLS. ESTAlil JSIIKD 1812. Having for the past year or two. been entirely j nnable to supplv the increasing demand for my gooos 1 nave ouui an atiaiuon to my mill ana put in a large amount of NEW AND IMPROVED MACHINERY and thereby almost doubled my capacity for man ufacturing. I have now on hand a large stock consisting of BLANKETS. CASSIMEHES,- SATINETS, JEANS, K EP ELLA NTS, FLANNELS, COVERLETS, CARPETS, YAENS, fcC, which I wish to T2AEE FC2 WOOL. Fanners, I bare the kind of goods yon need. I want your WOOL ! to work up RIGHT IX 10UR OWN COUNTY, and in order to reach all my customers in good time, I have employed the same agents I bad last year, and in addition Mr. Joseph L. IJaugherty, who Unit Introduced my goods into many parts of this countv. 1 will strive, an In the past, to give first class goods and fall value to alL Arf-New customers and those we failed to find last year, will please address card to WM. S. MORGAN. QuemahoTiinsi, l'a. Apr T A Search Warrant. allows an officer to go through your bouse from cellar to ararrat, ami LlndSOV'S BlSOd Searcher l warranted to go through your sys m lrom u.p to toe and drive out all blood diseases. Its earas an wonderful ana certified to by doctors, ureachers and oeonle. Scrofula. Mercurial llls- ! eases, Erysiiwlas, Tetter, Ulcers in the Lungs or on ine rin, lions, r impies, stc , we warrant u w cure. It is a purely vegetable Compound and Powerful Tonic For sale by all ItTUggists. See that our name is on the bottom of the wrmjer. K. E. SELLERS A CO., Prop rs, Pittsburgh, Pa C N- BOYD, Agent Somerset, Pa- TO 4aoo A "V r. A R, or i to $M a day in your own locality. No risk. Women do as well as men. Many make more than the amount stated above. No one can tail to make money fast. Any one can do the work. You con make from 50cts.to 2 an hoar by devoting yoar evenings and spare time to the business. It eosts nothing to try the business. Nothing like It for money making ever offered before. Business pleasant and strictly honorable. Header, if you want to know all about the best paying business belore the public send us your name and we will sendvou lull particulars and private terms free ; samples worth i also free ; you can then make up up your mind for yourself. Address GEoRaESTINSONfcCO.. June 11 . Portland. Maine. A WEER lu your own town, and no cap ital risked. V ou eaa give the business a trial without expense. The best oppor- nllll tunitv ever offered lor those willing K Y W work. You should try nothing else untiJ you'see lor yourself what you can oo at the busi ness we oiler. No room to explain here. You can devote all your time or only your spare time to the business, and make great pay for every hour that you work. V'omen make as much as men. Send forsnecial private terms ami particulars, which we mail free. 5 Out fit free. Doo't complain of bard times while yoa bare such a chance. Address H. HALLETT, Portland, Mains. June 1L SELLERS' LIVER FILLS Have been the Hm4ard remedy for th cure of Liver 'saapllBta, CssllTsuna. Fr si Axae, tik Msasarlis. and mil de- rangenMsiU f tba stonuMb and liver lor over fifty ftmrt. Read this: "SfHrrs' tfiwr Pillt cured me of an attack ot Ltrer oomplaiut of eight years standing "Wm. Kvans, Joliet, Ills. Price, cts. a box. R. E. Sellers A Co propr's Pitts burg, Pa. Sold by all drugglsu. JXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Estate tf Tobias Shaffer, lata of Somerset Twp. . - deceased. Letters testamentary on tlie above estate having been granted to the andersimed by the proper au thority, notice Is hereby given to all persons in debted lo saiil estate to make immediate pay ment, and those having claims against it to ire sent the same at the otbca of Jas. L. Pugb. Som erset, Pa., on or before Saturday. July 17, 1880. JAak U PL UH, Executor. CAROLINE TIBBY, jun Z Executrix. Taaw.Trssaa Its mitmij aBj will preralL TbouaaiMU whs bar used and i. nr.i u. iirin. UnMutki tn:t stm statement, that lELLfB'fl LIVE0 PILLS arttj rt-itKth v.d- ALMi.r tluaaiilkTiit- m u ... . , i ...fw... , t iHiw.n.Tra, nvmmrttw .iw.m .uwii i-m, mm. UoaMipaUon. LHsalneas aad all disorders r suiung IrvuTa dlMras-4 liver. For aula by all B. E. SELLERS k OO, Prap'rf, PttUburgh, Pa C- S. B0Y0, AfMt Ssatarmtt, Pk- RflYHnfflftfill 1500 omer After the Burial. BY JAM EH BCSf-ELL LOWELL. Yt-s, faith i a pootlly uiicIkt; When skies are su et-t a a )iiim At tlie bow.i it lolls so stalwart, In Muff, liroaJ-sliuuUlt'red calm. Ami, when over brvakcrstoktwartl The shattered sunres are lmrletl, It may kp our head tothetemjiest With itn grip on the lia.- ofthe world. But after the shipwreck, tell me What held in its iron tkews, Still true to the broken haw er Deeji down among sea weed and ooze? In the breaking gulf of sorrow When the helpless feet stretch out, And find iu the deeps of darkness No footing so solid as doubt Then lietter one spar of memory, One broken plank of the past. That our human heart may cling to, Though hopeless of shore at lat. To tiic spirit its splendid conjectures. To the flesh its sweet dsepair, Its tears over the thin, worn locket, With its anguish of deathless hair. Itiiniorial ? I feel it and know it Who doubts it of such as she? But that is the Jiang's very secret r Immortal away from me. There's a narrow ridjre in the graveyard Would scarce stay a child in its race, Hut to me and my thought it is wider Than the star-sown vague of Space. Your logic, my friend, is perfect Your morals most drear'Iy true; Iut since the earth clashed on hereotlin I keep hearing that, and not you. Console if you will I can lx-ar it ; 'Tis a well-meant ulins of breath ; But not all the preaching since Adam Has made Death other than Death. It is Pagan ; but wait till you feel it, That jar ofthe earth, that shock When tlie plowshare of deeper pas.-ion Tears down to our primitive rock. Communion in Spirit? 1'oregive me. But I, who am earthy ami weak, Would give all my incomes from dream land For a touch of her ham! on my cheek. And that little shoe in (he corner So worn, and wrinkled, and bmwn- With its emptiness confutes yon. And argues your wisdom down. THE SECRET OOt'XCIL. Whilst all other capitals have gradually increased, antl are increas ing every day in every direction, Ve nice, surrounded by itd inland sea, attained several centuries ago its present size and shape. The l'iazza San Marco has been since then its Forum ; successive generations have daily repaired to it in quest of news, of sunshine or of friends; and will continue to walk under its arcades, to cross it and recross it in every di rection, as long as the Dumo and I'rocuratio wall it round, as long as the golden angel on St. Mark's Tower shines far above the silent city. Its glory and its power have disapjKared; the Queen ofthe Seas is now only a small provinchd town. But however fallen from a diplomat ic or commercial wint of view, Ve nice has and will always possess a jHt-uliar, thrilling interest. Every stone has its own legacy of romance; every dark gate is haunted by its fa miliar ghost; every recess, every cranny, whispers its old weird story. The official annals of the Most Se rene Venitian Republic contain in numerable instances.? of secret ar rests, secret trials, followed almost always by still more secret execu tions; but, besides these, many a terrible drama has taken place with in the stone walls of the state pris ons. Conveniently situated under the Ducal Palace, and with their Uoors slightly under high water mark, these " Wells" as they were called on account of their dampness very seldom gave up a victim, ex cept as a corpse. Silent and dark as a grave, they were a fit instrument for a stern and mysterious tribunal. The severity of the Council of Ten, the swiftness with which it reached both high and low, the secrecy of its nocturnal sittings and of its sen sentences, created a universal felling of awe, that has not yet thoroughly disappeared. Amongst the poocr classes there are many who still believe in the existence ofthe Secret Council, and who exjiect it tore-appear some day ; they abstain, therefore, from any di rect allusion to it. mentioning it only when absolutely necessary, by the vague term of Iji Serenissima. We may smile at this childish fear, but it proves very clearly the terror it must have inspired. The following legend, that was whispered to me a short time ago by an old gondolier, will show by what means this result was obtained. Though I cannot vouch for the accuracy of every de tail, there is no doubt in my mind as to its general truth, because the grandfather of my informant lived at the time it occurred, and would not have dared to repeat any tale against the Serenissima unless he was sure of it. With this proviso I will now relate the legend, as I heard it whilst I was quietly lolling in a Venetian gondola. It was toward the end of 1700, when one night an English king's messenger reached Mestre, waiting to cross over to Venice Sir John Haws4 such was his name was young, brave and very highly con nected; and as such perhaps, he had been chosen by tht Minister to convey some trifling message to King George Ill's representative in that town. After a delay that would seem enormous to our modern ex press train travelers, a gondola was manned, his luggage loaded in it, and at last it began to glide toward the city. He reached Venice jtist before dawn ; and after a hurried toilet and a still more hurried break fast, Sir John delivered his packet, and began exploring the lanes and alleys of this incomprehensible town. Being tolerable proficient in the language, he soon found his way to the l'iazza San Marco, and was duly astonished by its peculiar as-IKt-t, Then, as now, the Piazza was the heart of the city. Laws and edicts were promulgated in it ; sen- tenecs was pronounced from the balcony of the Ducal Palace; whilst beggars, singers and others of simi lar caste gave it a strange anima tion. Thoroughly enjoying the freedom set ESTABLISHED, 1827. SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY, of waikintv after his Ion? journey by coach and pondola, Sir John indulg - 'ed his rambling propensities to the jfullextcxt. Whilst he was doing so a crowd collected, in front of the ; j7ur;ii i iiiuce. .;uux?uiy curiout and having nothing rise to do, he i hastened to the spot, 'arid elltowed I.. I I i . . x . ii : . I his way to the center. ' - By the red pillar of the balcony fin usher was ; roaumg out the sentence oi some un- j known felon, with all the pompous ! circumlocutions so much in favor in ! those days. The wretched prisoner just brought out of a dark cell, seem I ed scarcely to realize the scene, as his eyes, unused now to the light of the sun, gazed vacantly on the ex cited mob that that surrounded the low ' scaffold on which he was standing. i The sentence having been read, the prisoner was taken back to jail ! where he was to undergo the term of : imprisonment to which lie had just J ecn condemned ; and the crowd, the sight being over, gradu ally disjicrsed. . This incident was in itself very j trifling, and Sir John, would proba jblehave forgotten it within a week ! had it not been for its strange conse quences. hilst pUohing ami el bowing his way in the crowd it seems that some clever pickpocket had robbed him of his lace hand kerchief. It is certainly very un pleasant to be robbed .even of a val ueless article : but in 'this case the j thief had. obtained a, valuable prize; j and besides, there was for Sir John j Hawser the additional sting of hav jsng been robbed by an Italian. He would have been less angry if it had hapiie-ncd in London ; the pick pockets there were so clever that there was no shame in being their victim; but to have been plundered by a clumsy Venetian was too much for his equanimity, . and he burst out in a torrent of abuse. Sjieaking mostly in Italian, but mixing a few English anathemas in his speech, he related his loss to the bystanders, and was advised by them to complain to the police, or rather to those oflicials who, under the ; Serenissima, fulfilled the present du j tics of the police. Though without i great faith in this" ptnn, lie followed it, and gave notice to the authori ties, lie was assured by a very stately official that he need have no fear, and that his property would soon be found and restored. to him. Forced to be content with this vague consolation, lie went home to his supper and bed. For three or four davs afterward he continued visiting tlie principal monuments and churches, but with out receiving an)' further informa tion about his lace handkerchief. I have said that Sir John was young and brave ; as a consequence he was impetuous and fiery ; whilst being lorn and Tired in. a free-thinking, free-speaking country, he was apt to express his thoughts as they came to his mind, without reflection and without fear. It is not surprising, therefore, that one night under the arcades ofthe I'rocuratio, while re lating his loss to a few friends, lie ! should have said what he thought of! the vaunted secret police of Venice. I They were, he said, a stupid set of fools, very pompous anil very state ly, trying to hide their ignorance and incapacity under very high sounding phrases, but the meanest London detective was worth the lot of them. As to the Secret Council he did not believe it existed at all; or, if it did. it was no better than the rest. Ah, Sir John! if you must needs sjKiik so irreverently ofthe Serenis sima, why did you not use your own language? Why did you express 3'our rash thoughts in Italian ? Did you not know that walls have cars, and that every stone in Venice is a spy? His friends, astonished by his sud den outburst, attributed it at first to those last glasses of riuomnlo they hail been drinking together, but knowing full well the jealous care of Serenissima lor its reputation, they instinctively shrunk from him as from a dangerous man, they disap peared around dark corners, down side alleys, and very soon Sir John found himself alone. Alone 1 At least so he thought; but a silent figure had been follow ing him for sometime, and was now eagerly and stealthily dodging him. So earnestly it walked, so noiselessly it stepped, that for a long time Sir John did not notice this unwelcome shadow, and even when he did he attached no importance to it. But at last he began to feel some doubts about this follower. Nothing could be guessed from his appearance; completely wrapped up in a dark cloak, and with a wide fiat shading and concealing the part of his face. A man who "would not have lieen recognized by his own brother. It was only the" peculiar way in which he followed, and the ability with which he availed himself of every nook and corner that implied a danger. Fearless still, but somewhat an noyed, Sir John pursued his way through the maze ofthe alleys that led from the Piazza to his temjiorary home. Determined . to try to throw off his masked companion, he quickened his step ; but at tlie next turning a glance back showed it was no use. Having by this time reached the Pont San Afoist one one ofthe innumerable bridges that cross the minor canals of Venice he stopped on the steps to see what the shadow woidd do. Astonished at first at this new ruse, the man hesitated a second, but a second, only, and then disapreared in the shadow of the church, Our hero vainly strained his eyes in trying to find out whether he had really gone, or whether he was only hiding behind the columns and watching. He certainly Iegan to find an intense interest in this new chose, in which he seemed to Ikj the game hunted down. Then, convinced that he had seen the last of hi silent friend, he decided on continuing his way home ; and was just going to move, when a cloak was thrown over his head and chest, completely gaging him, whilst several strong arms entwined them selves around his body and effectu ally pinioned him. Before he could recover his senses, a voice whispered in Italian in his ear : "You are a JULY 2, 1SS0. I jirisoner of the SerenLwima ; resist - lance is of no use!" Even after these von1-t tlio im. j port of which he dinilv guessed, Sir ! John would have tried to strike .it ' i i . . - . . i icrusi one iilow lor nis lite or tor his ! liberty ; but the cloak in which he !had been wrnmntl im n an nrtiafi. I callv and so securelv fastened that he could not move a muscle or utter a cry. Ihere was no help for it, and he doggedly waited his fate. The voices around him seemed to hold a short conference, and then they lifted him from the ground, antl, carrying him a short distance, de IKisited him in what he felt to be a gondola. The iournev was not long, though to him it seemed to lie an age, and very soon the rocking motion ceased. Thev evidently had reached their destination. A few seconds more and he was landed in the same unceremonious manner. After depriving him of his sword and securing his hands, his captors released him of themantle, in which he had been almost choked. He found himself in a very small pas sage, dimly lighted antl intensely damp. The low ceiling, the strong stone walls, the massive iron doors that lined it, reminded him at once of all he had read about the state prisoners of Venice, and his heart sank within him. Without, how ever, giving him much time for re-fh-ction, or asking him any questions, his captors opened one of the cells, thrust him in and bolted the door. Left alone in the most absolute darkness, our friend groped around until he found a stone bench, on which he dropped, completely un manned by the horror ot' his posi tion. He had heard of prisoners being kept in these state prisons for months, even for years, without light, with just enough of the coars est food to keep them alive, and without the shatlow of a judgment. Others had been tried ami executed within these walls, and their friends outside had never known their fate. Was he going to be dropped into the "Canal grande?" Or was he to linger in his cell until his youth, his strength, and perhaps his mind were gone; to be released only a wreck of his former self, as a warn ing to others ? There were many in Venice, ioor shattered being, heart broken, half-crazed, shunned by even-body, who had once been the leaders of fashion, of science, of pol itics, until an anonymous note drop ped into the Li tin's mouth had caus ed their arrest, and their trial less de tention in the underground or rather underwater prisons ofthe Serenissima. But, then, who could have de nounced him? Who could have an interest in destroying him in this cowardly fashion? Allthepeo ho knew were alnive suspicion j and vet even the Serenissima would not have arrested an Englishman, a king's messenger, without some good reason. In that dreadful si lence, broken only by the quiet splashing of the water tin the stone walls in which he was imprisoned, his memory particularly vivid, recalled to his mind all the inci dents of his study. At last he re membered those few hot, foolish words he had used that very night; they, and they alone, could lx the cause of his present condition. This however brought no relief; it aggra vated only his fears and his despond ency, since he well knew what awful punishments were inflicted on those who, to use the Venetian phrase, 'blasphemed the government.' Having settled the cause of his ar rest, he gradually fell into a dull, drowsy state of half-unconsciousness, staring blindly in t'.-.? darkness,, listening vacantly in the vain hope of catching some sound, however faint, of that outside world he had so recently left. The silence was as complete as the darkness that sur rounded him, and hours passed without bringing anv change. Now and then a muffled sound reached his ears. Was it a footstep in the passage? Was it a wave a little higher than the others? Was it on ly a plaintive cry of the scamew ? Or was it the dying gasp of a fellow prisoner? He could not tell. After a very long time, of which he could not even guess the length, he dis tinctly heard a noise as of lolts and key at his prison door ; sudden ly it opened, and a lloixl of light illuminated every corner of his dis mal cell. Dazzled at first by the glare of the torches, he could not see the men by whom they were car ried; but gradually, as his eyes grew accustomed to the light, he saw they were all armed; all mask ed, and all dressed in black. In the meantime his hands had ln-en re leased of their fetters, and his guards had quietly surrounded him. With-; out a word, w ithout a sound, thev led him on in their midst. Through dark halls and narrow staircases, through crooked passages and low beetling arches they marched as noiselessly as a group of ghosts sur rounding a mortal man. At last their goal is reached ; a door is flung open, and Sir John is ushered into a spacious room. At and scribes are motionless as if thev had been stautes. and not human beings. The first glimpses, of the dawn struggling through the paint ed windows, powerless as vet to supersede the wax candles, srave to; one end, on a raised platform, sit! take de vacant place, an' de big ; 'rc oi " "y-" ten judges, all masked, all draped in I world will move along jist de same j f' the fight Lar.y m the .lay the large black cloaks. Bv their sides J as if sich a man had never moved ; sergeants horse yvas struck square i P i-xii. i i it ' i. lo o ,.I.,K .- .ln lnn the forehead bv a bullet, and out a nine lower uown. are me i aiu"s ." . .a.., rk: !.. .;k.,i t.,.1., i li. in Pidoo-'e Men nrn what tlev dropiied dead in his tracks, lt w; ( 1 Hint 1 1 1 1 1.1 ."ill III II ll'llllall. t till : iiv t v ' , - J 1 -.... . , , . i 4t... -..-l..l., (.norm 1.A H...r..l LllK 111 MI1U n CIIC Ll 1 UllKl IICIICU n i... : u. n i. vuiaiuf. ail was pktduix, and no sound reached the inmates offbUbr.H to remind then, tW iK.werful city, a numerous popula-! uder men, dat while a ten fwwan' of four companies of the Sixth. : loelin, iu, wagor, start up bene,?,, tion surrounded their silent aQc.j dollar diamon' -kin be carried in dei Hiese things may seem . very f.l.sh ( hin?, a foot of iron on ta.j As soon as the several actors in! vest pocket, it takes a big vehicle to! ! but there was a tune when ajhrake. The horses simrt arnl rea. this strange scene had reached their , tote along a score of empty barlsj'lihers dream saved Gen. Inland surge; the harness nitt.e fr iT .... . ...:ti t.- , '....-I, o..;.. - nek's life: when a dream changed dust arises, the load creaks agrun. and dressed in the same dark hue, Ix-gan in a monotonous slow tone to give his evidence. Though muffled by the folds of his mask, his voice 1 - - - r T " - , yvas peculiarly distinct and clear, : and Sir John at once knew it as be-! ing the same he had heard when he j was arrested. Bold and pitiless as ; steel, without a tremor and yvithout j a pause, the voice repeated all the . words used by the culprit when, in his rash burst of passion, he had de- ' M.ULJ.IL.LJI., eral-d ! ritletl antl mocked the knowledge and the power of theSerenissiiiiiL tsinu-lv n.l nxrulnrlv tlP wnnl f..l - j lowed" each other as the links of a! i Ii-nfhv rli.-tin. ns stfti.lilv -a tin- i . . . ' . - drops of rain on a winter's dav Ihe pens ofthe scribes, creaking they hurrietlover the par, ma.Ie a fit accompanied to this ret itaL Ex - cent for them, all was as motionless. as sua as it no human hearts were beating under those black silk man ... . . ' tles. It ended at last ; and with a sense of relief Sir John strained his senses to see, to hear what would follow. After a short pause, the judge who sat at the centre of ihe table stood up and addressed him in these terms: "You have heard the evi dence against you ; now follow us and hear your sentence." No cross-examination, no defence was allowed by the laws of this Council. Rising together as if mov ed by a single mind, the funeral pro cession followed its leader, and left the hall by the door through which Sir John had entered it. Again through the same winding passages, again down the same winding steps, silently and noiselessly they glided like ghosts returning to their graves. Surrounded by his guards, Sir John followed immediately after the last of the judges, wondering all the time what was to le his fate. When they had reached the lowest floor of the building, and werenearing again the loathsome cell from which he had so lately Imh n taken, the cortege divided, and Sir John was brought face to face with the senior judge. " You have insulted the Serenissi ma ; you have denied its power of punishing crime, lxcause you have been robbed of a paltry handker chief, anl it has not been immedi ately found and given back to you. Now look!" As he said these last words the masked judge stepped to the side anil directed Sir John's gaze to a darker corner of the dark pass age. There, hanging against the wall, the rojie that encircled his neck disappearing through the stone, was the corpse of a man. Entranced by this sight, and thinking that perhaps he also was going to be hanged in the same man ner by an unseen hand, Sir John felt rooted to the spot. Altera short silence the judge con tinued : ' This man was the thief; in his right hand you will find your handkerchief. Take it. Asforvou, we ought not, perhaps, to be so leni ent; but in consideration of your youth and of the high position you hold in j our country, we will over look your fault. You are forgiven. Outside the gate a gondola waits for you ; it will take you to Mestre, and thence you will be conveyed to the frontier. Go! But remember always what you have seen to-night." Seining with a trembling band the lace handkerchief that had been the cause of so much trouble, Sir John wanted to speak, wanted to thank this unknown judge; but before he could recover his voice the phantoms had disappeared, and two jailors only were by his side. Without a word, and apparently without an effort, these two men opened a secret door leading to the canal, and helped the now liberated man into a gondola that was moored to the steps, and in the forepart of which lay his luggage. No word was said, no order was given ; the two gondoliers seemed to know their duty, and they silently paddled away from the palace in which Sir John had spent that dreadful night. At Mestre a coach was waiting for him. In a few hours the frontier was crossed. Then only did he begin to breathe freely. But for a long time afterward he avoided any allusion to his Venetian adven ture; and for many years he could not bear to speak of it. Now the Serinissinia is gone, tlie cells have leen sacked by an infuria ted mob, and innumerable tourists visit the hall where the Secret Coun cil held its nightly sittings; but even now I cannot help feeling relieved when I have left behind me Venice, its dark canals and the darker mem ories that cling to them. Joined Ihe Silent Majority. Men die an' ar' known no nioah," began the Itcsidcnt of the Limekiln Club, as stillness reigned throughout the hall. "It am my painful dooty to inform this club dat de Hon. Cum back Slathers, an honorary member residen' at South Bend, has passed over the dark ribber. He has visit ed dis club an' worked on the twenty-ninth degree wid us, an' he was calkerlathv to remove to dis city nex' month an' enter upon a vigor ous career of whitewashin'. turn back Slathers was not a great man. He wasn't a man who would cber save de kentrv or ruin it. He neber sot in de Iegislatur', an' he was no orator. He had no horn to toot an no ax to grind. He was simply a plain man one of de common peli oles on de shore of time's great ocean waiten' to be gathered. Outside of a little circle of friends no one will miss him. Some uder man will walk in de paths hollowed out by his footsteps. Some uder iiebble will be washed uion de shore to I am, an' dyin doan put angel s wings ! on de shoulders of sinners. lA l me simply sav oi our ueau anu gone brudder dat he used men just a biiii M-riii-h i a Tirinemle a 111! ....... u.-w. ....... dat knocks de golden rule SkV-hlrh t ! nnf il.u in rid T f.tllml llilO ! v...;,.wf m4Kfnt .n .. U.O .. v n. -"' -. ....... """..-u uumiui, viiuw,wv, v i 'was a man who fully realized de' i faek. when formin' an oninvun of i ... Play de fiddles slow and softly, Let your voices all lie low. Death has reaped anoder harvest Chant de reimietu soft an' low. Through de dark an' misty valley O'er de libber dark an' wiile ; Jinin wid de great piirseshun Marchin :to de uder side. I . . 1 a" . t a 1 The usual resolution of sympathy , y-usn-r 9 jana iu. i ... anu me uuge - was then passed, ths brothers account dreani prevented ( ,en Tolbert s , f.lsU.r.. An instant may h url t squared on the books, and the Glee . canm from a surprise and capture ; ; Wagon down the valley with rhiH Hnr.r . and when a dream gave Gen. hvn- struggling tram a mad rush to i. e WHOLE NO. 1513. I . !Som' SOLDIERS" DREAMS. Remarkable Work that are Saitl to bo Siin-rptihle of IriHr. A week previous to the battle Fair Oaks a New York volunteer who passed the night in a tent of a mem Tmrd Mkhigan in tint rv , . , j fj p, . , , ? . i ... - trltini and downhearted, and when rallied about his fancied homesick-; ness he said : "I have only a week to live! I ; had a dream last night which ha: settled the business for me and lots ' of others. A week from to-day a i battle will be fought and thousands j will lie slain. My regiment will j live over a hundred men, and I shall be killed while charging across a tiei.i." ; Thi men Imit.-tIiihI 'it hi.1 imvxlv t spirit, but he turned to them andlthedocti said : " Your regiment will also be in the . Uen known to cause death, fight, and when the roll is called after! While roast, I toiled and broiled the battle you will have nothing to j chicken, mutton chop, and bet f steak be merry over. The two sergeants j have long held a recognized jKisitiori who were in here last night will Iein the invalid's bill of Cire. the merits killed among the trees. I saw them ; ,,f ;l veal sweet bread have been o er lying dead as plainly as I now see j looked. "When properlv cooked it you. One will le shot in the breast it is a delicious dish, and may tempt and the other in the groin, and dead ; a. capricious apatite that has grown men will lie thick around them." j weary of other viands. A sweetbread The battle took place just a week ! should be parboiled for a short time after. The dreamer was killed in i lmtil quite soft, and then fried in a full sight of even man in the Third . little butter to a delicate brown. It In-fore the fight was an hour old, 'maybe served with gravy or white and within twenty minutes after the i sauce. two sergeants and six of their com-1 Delicious oatmeal gruel mav be rades were dead m the woods, hit exactly where the sergeant said they would be. More than fifty men will bear witness to the truth of this statement Just before the battle of Cedar Creek a camp sentinel who was off duty temporarily and trying to put in a little sleep, dreamed that he went out on a scout. A mile to the right of our camp he came upon a log barn, and as it began to rain just then he sought shelter, or was about to, when he heard voices and discov ered that the place was already oc cupied. After a little investigation he discovered that three Confederate scouts had-taken up their quarters for the night in the place, and he into small pieces, and thesugar mix therefore moved away. The senti- ed with it. I-ast of all the requisit. nel awoke with such a vivid remem- amount of water should bo add. I. brance of details that he asked per- Orangeade may be made in th" mission to go over and confer with same way as lemonade, using less one of the scouts. When the log sugar. They both should Ik- ieed. barn was described for this man he Imperial drink is being made hv locatcd it at once, liavi ig passed it a adding a small teaspoonhil of tartar dozen of times. The dreamer tie- dissolved iu boiling water to i :u it scribed the highway exactly as it pint of lemonade, was, giving every hill and turn, and In some diseases it is impossible the scout put such faith in the re-jto give anything containing acid, mainder ot the dream i;;t ! took j and then the ingenuity of tlie nurse four soldiers, onenfwi. nn . as the j is tested to provide some leverage at dreamer, and set out for the place. ; once cooling and palatable. Iced Three Confederate scout were asleep in the straw, and were taken with out a shot being itred. Ihe dream j and its results were known to bun-; tlreds of Sheridan's cavalry, audi have leen alluded to at re-union.-, j 1 he night U tore tlie cavalry tight at Brandy Station a trooper who! slept as hiis horse jogged along m column dreamed that a certain cap tain in his regiment would be un horsed in aright next day, and while rising from his fall would be wounded in the left knee. Everything was so clear to the dreamer that he took an opportunity to find the captain and relate his dream. "Go to Texas with your croak la a a ing!" was all the thanks he received, but he had his revenge, first charge, next dav. In the very uie captain was unhorsed by the breaking ofthe girth, and was pitched head-over- heels into a patch ot briars. As lie j m)ri places is precipitous. A balk v struggled out a shell killed his horse horse, or a fractured wheel, er a antl two men, and one of the Hying j Hijht carelessness in handling ihe pieces of iron mashed the captain's j n.j7lS) m,sht easily send a carriaa. left leg to abl.iodv pulp. He isnow (a,i 0f ',,,,,1,. t,", destruction and a resident of Ohio, and his wooden ; an awful destruction, leg is indisputable evidence that , The path is wide enough foro..e dreams sometimes come to pass. : jiajr f wheels only, but at intervals While McClellan yvas U-seiging j lt broadens so that teams can pass Yorktown the fun was not all on out- e;u., other. side. The Confederates had plenty1 ' Tlie huge lumber teams that earrv of shot and shell, and they sent them W(MMi from the mills in the mount- out with intent to kill. One morn-', inga Michigan man who yvas in the trenches walked back to a spot on ! drivers always seem easy and imn whieh three officers were eating j thalant. First, there is a large ..ur- breaklast, and warned them that they were m great lienl. On the night previous he had dreamed that he had looked at his I watch and marked that it yvas a quarter of seven, when a shell hit the ground behind him and tore up tlie earth in a terrible yvav. It yvas now twenty minutes to seven, and he be sought the officers to leave the sjxit; at once. His earnest manner in- i uuceii iiieni to eoiiquy, uitti tney had only reached cover when a( on- l i t t i .t federate shell struck the earth where; they had been ground and made an excavation into which a horse could have been rolled, with room to spare. three davs before the atlrnr at Kelly's Ford a corporal in the Sixth Michigan cavalrv dreamed that a brother of his, who yvas a sergeant in another company, would have his horse kilh'd in action, and would al-' most immediately mount a dark hay i horse with a white nose. Within ' five minutes both horse ami rider would lie killed by a shell. This ! dream was related to more than a is scarcely three minutes l fore a white faced-horse, carrying a blood-stained ; r I halted. He remembered the dream ' ami refused to mount the animal, ' 0 1 1 1 I I A (rnllnlaU.1 T1 II T kTriii aCi, 1 r w ,iii i. i .... ii...t. a"" soon wiier pieKeo up n oinciv norse. nit' yviiiie-noscu annua- was . ! mountou bv a soconI con-oral m . , , 11 another regiment, anil horse and n-ler were torn to piect s by a shell in full .bin mnro owiiiit bnriwledirp of iPnrlv'a forrn-a than fill the scouts. ' thirtv-one days. ; t A man's appetite is his best priV on the staff of life. I f.. .Iit-o - wlw.n' I it . 1 . ...l.....lj Inm lut.T ;in-i Sick Room Cookery. From an interesting paper on this I suhjert in the (7iViit l'n!iii,br I Miss K. II. Sovil, ofthe Massachu setts General Hospital, we cti'l the following hints and recies: The pure juice may fe extracted from beef in two ways : First, by 'cutting the meat in simll ph-ces. ! putting them in a tightly forked bot tle, immersing it in hot writer, and lioHing for several hours. Second. ; by taking a thick piece of juicy i steak, broiling it nn a gridiron over a ch ar tire for a few moments, then .tutting it in strips and pressing it in !a lemon squeezer. The juice thus I obtained may be given either hot or 1 cold. It mav be frozen, broken into lumps, and given like cracked ice. A little salt should k added before ! using it. An invalid who is tired of hot beef : tea n ill sometimes drink it cold or of; ieed with great relish. Enough isin glass or jelatine may be added t ! Cred whh si -rfV. r - , V -' the juice to make a jelly, which may essence ot itieiit may fancv. Raw meat is very nutritious and may be prepared by shredding the beef extremely tine, removing even as I particle of skin and frit. a:d mixing it with cracker t.iiiul.s. A luti salt and pepper may be added and the mixture rolled into tiny balls. In conveleseenee after typhoid fever the greatest care should ! i taken in regard to the food, and no new article ot met should ie given without the express permission of or. Even so slight an iin- prudence as eating a niw apple !iw j made by stirring a cupful tf oatmeal i into a fowl of water, allowing it to stand for a few minutes until the coarsest particles have fallen to the bottom. pouring "of the water and repeating this once or twice. The water must then he boiled, stirring it constantly until it is suf ficiently cooked. Few persons understand properly the art of making lemonade. The lemon should le lirst rolled Utwecn the hands until it is quite soft, the skin removed with a sharp knife, antl every pip extracted, the lemon being held over a tumbler that no ljuieemay be lost by the operation. , The pulp should then be divid tea and coffee are excellent Wilt n taken Bar- g ttVO thev are liked, and may be either with or without ley water is made by ounces of pearl barlev Weil washed, for twenty milk. boilin previously minutes in i a pint and a half of water. It is then strained and flavored tvith lemon peel and sugar to taste. This may be alternated with flaxseed tea. Steep haif an ounce of unbruised flaxseed in a pint of boiling water. Ix't it stand in a covered jar near a hre tor three or strain and flavor. four hours ; then t illirornia, Jehus. Tlie California ranchmen iae Wonderful ntititiidc for ilrivirt". rind ont. conic nrettv i-ood c xanmlcs ;an,,,ng the lulls, i tie road down tjlt. illl(nnt on otIt, tin is entirely ungraded the outer edtre. and the d scent in ains to the vanls in the valley are ; w,-.;,ri. ,;!r.l to rnrnm.-e ". t t in j 1 wheeled oaken truck with i a seat in front ten or twelve feet above the ground ; behind it is another truck, someyvhat shorter, hut still enormous ly stout. These are fastened together and loaded with ten to fifteen tons of freshly sawn lumber boards ami joists. This mass is drawn bv six or eight mules or horses, guided bv reins and a nrtidi'-ioiislv loiv whio. The n - " . .' . firstt v;i"on has a : li-iirtViwl bv- fi Intl. jioweriul make, iron lever bv the driver on his seat. The driver is a man fi nerve and courage. It yvill not do for him to take fright, evi .1 if in imminent danger, and he mr.-t know to a hair's breadth where' he can go and where he cannot. ' But a behold r ignorant of tie danger that constantly surrounds him would say that his yvoi'k was simple, and that In: maiiag' d mr.t ter with ease. True, it seems so. With his sinewy hands holding t!:e reins with carelessness, his legs out stretched, with one foot feeling t.'.e all-important brake, he jogs onward with his monster charge without trouble or concern ; the lu lls u; on the horse's breasts jingle a little Mne. the great wheel.- crush the stone- the path ; the load creak-1 like a ship's hull in a sudden gust : wild birds sweep down into h.tzy, sunny depth In-low ; yet the driver seems t lu lane no neett. j;ut let a "scare" take plat e; let a herd of runaway cattle aor-car at a . . . 1 ..1,1 . . . .:. . "."ii i .,( and Set Hie Horses y ii:, ano then see what yvill n.ipixn. ine day dreamer will become a giant m strength ; he is up in a flash : he shortens his hold on the liii'-s, and. ..(. - ...;,! nf ho ir.tv may end ai Sr. .i b.irriblp tilun-TC. Muscle, eye. ; brain, skill are then orougm Is! v together that t the i ril is averted, and tlie I 'f1'- who knows not tlie lar of the land. regard. the teamster with pro-ouu-. resjiect thereafter.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers