ratx3 or Aovrstrisixok On. Bir. on. Inch, m inmrtinm . . (n. 1 nr on. inf-h, on. nrtnbh..,, 100 (n hquara, one tnoh, tbrM months.. W h. Hqiiaro, on. inoh. ou mtm, 10 "HI Two H(nr on. jmnr 1 Of V"r?r Column, ori jsr..-.. "- half Column, on. ywir to 00 One Column, mi. yar . . IK) HI l.cal dTrtimDa ant pr 1U vk InMFtion. ilsrrmri-e and o"ath not loo. frlrt. Ail bills for T-ri7drr',lirtint eoB4 LICAN qnrtrlv. 1 .iiiptfrmry sdvertieemeats i . rA., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 9, 1895. SI. 00 PER ANNUM. Ir. iio in aarano. Job work oih on dd'.varv. m , i of , at U . he had , nmulate. joncerned, took in new ' oy it to dress tie tnly hotel cck. It wasn't hotels go these .ed Miss Biltun ; nd being an in ho liked to hare ig and going, she . satisfactory. It m much as $3 n , ro there than if she a. Wiggius'a board- Susan Ann was not ime to hor own com ; moo. It was a groat ; doubt, when she felluuis, for. now she ms of hor own house ji in the country. er woman than she glad to have become mi, and it cannot be de- . on the first Sunday that the .irs. Nellums walked down the . of tho church she carriod her , a few notches higher than the and lowly doctrines taught in difioe every Sunday really re d of her. That was the woman er, however, end it may be ex J under the circumstances. It a great thing to be Mrs. Joram inniB, and Susan Ann Hilton was r t the only woman in Squan Neck o thought so, although Husan Ann the only woman who knew what .fas from actual experience. The happy couple went away on a bridal tour to be gone two weeks, and it was a sore disappointment to Susan Anu when Joram out it just half in two, giving as an excuse that the busi ness of the farm had rory unexpect edly called him back. Like an obe dient w ife she aocepted his explana tions and his promises that they would go to the city as soon as the crops were laid by, and tbey would stay there as long as she cared to stay. For a month after their return, t, ian Ann laid great store by her ex d position in Squan Neck society, mebow there was an ever present -nortunity to use it to ex x was busy, or Joram was MB 'had something elte or forty dozen other oram back of them in r plans. Thus a year that time Susan Ann jnwork and house as some indication doing the washing rospect that tailor - one tr two of the added to her other .lly Joram had some it economy, but be r of extravagance, y savin', Susau Ann," one day, "but I'm iat you aiu't great the fact began to radually that there the mauuer of Mrs. T life and' that of Ulton. She would 'f ranking dresses them, with the f her earnings as in some particu :ng as doing two ai Nellums with- yoars" she dis iug clothe, that rself with had adge, and a new nuet were abto when Joram sat e morning in a breakfast was a ely by herself, ') .wanted sonie ttve him a little was needed, a Ann," he ex pand th ic. I've o't much oil savin', everything. Why, ill oost -d . . . eit ' after the . i the kind of man he was. then breakfast wnsover Susan Add not much nearer the desired goal iBn before, and she was in a bad inmot bopldes, with an addition in , he shape i( a disappointment in Jor- she bad been trying for a long : to stave off. I ho end of a week ho gavo her , I told hor that he could not ither cent. onnt remember, Susan Ann." "that I ain't a millionaire. if I was, I wonldu't en itrovagance in a woman. It's era nnvwikv. and if ther cit - . - - - nee 'with mouey they never ( aio stop lotting it go. , lonths after this lecture from i le got anothor when the ne ; f the case drove her to him .' air of shoes. ; Susan Ann net down to think ' 4 situation, and it is tafe to nny je did some veTy tall thinking. f women might have wept, bnt l Ann was no weeper. If she had to shed, she did not intend to dd them in a cause of this kind. .omothmg harder than tears was the 'emedy, and Susan Ann was not long n getting at it. That night at supper Joram didn't like the coffee. It was more like beans, he said, bnt Husan Ann hadn't much to say, and Joram thought she was sullen because Lhe had talked judiciously to her on the subject of extravagance. The bad coffee continued a week and then Joram notioed that the meat was not as good nor was the bread, as it had once been. He complained, but Susan Ann hadn't inuoh to say. On the following Sunday when they 1 1 .1 A A 1 1. T L- - ' - Bturwu out to cuurcu uuuu wr i Susan Ann wai a sight Jnr, out he didn't say anything for fear she might come back at him about the dress and the shoes. It was the first time since they had been married that Joram had not felt a pride in the appoaranue of Mrs. Nollums and it made him think just a little. On the way home he spoke of it and suggested that as ho had made a little something on wheat the week before, maybe he could let hor have that mouev for a new dress. "Indeed, no, Joram," she replied, "I don't want- it. I only thought I did. I can get along just as well with what I have at present and we can save that Every little oonnts, you know, Joram, and we are too poor to go to needless expense." He insisted mildly that she should take the money, but it was not diffi cult for hor to oonvinoe him that it was extravagant, and he aaid no more about it. The dark bread and the weak coffee and the bad meat oontinuod, and there were added other things less attrac tive to the palate than formerly, and one day when he wanted to know why she did not use the meat in the smoke house that he knew was as good as any that had ever been cured, and he prided himsolf on curing meat, she surprised him by putting quite a sum of money down by his plate and tell ing him she had sold it for as good prioe because she thought it was more economical to eat less expensive meat. Joram began to talk, but she was so pleasant and. practical in her argu ments that he hadn't the heart to argue and gave up to her. lie also put the money in his poo ket One day when he went into town on his wagon some boys made rude re marks about the clothes he wore, and . when he told Susan Ann about it, and said maybe he had ought get some thing better, she flew all to pieces and gave the naughty boys such a raking over that Joram was sorry he had said anything about it, and went on wear ing the same old clothes. , A dosen or more times during the winter Joram sat shivering before a miserable Are beoause Susan Ann in sisted that fuel was too expensive and that they must save until they had plenty to indulge in luxuries on. Day by day the table became poorer and pooer ; the good ohina was put away and the old cracked kind brought out; the little silver things that had been given them for wedding pres ents were locked up, and Susan Ann was cutting down expenses in a way that nobody would have expected of her. Several nights Joram almost froze for lack of cover, but Susan Ann was cheerful and told him that newspa pers were warmer than blankets if ho would only make up his mind to think so. He kioked, however, on this and was only pacified when she gave him $'20 that she had received for the fruit she had put up and didn't care to use. He thought it was extra stock that she had, but later when he wanted some and she told him she had sold it all, and there waou't anything for des sert now but dried apples, Joram be came rather demonstrative, and it was all her good temper could do to keop him from boiling over. Ail this time Joram was doing somo thinking as well as Susan Auu wan, and between shivering at nights and half starving during the day, he was getting in a cT"''tion to go to a luna tic asylum. One day the final w"'-.-i arrived. When Joram oame in from work the big easy chair he hud paid $25 for in a freak of extravagance just before bewas married was gone, and with it all the carpets. "What does this wean, Susan Ann?" he auked, trying to appear cool. "Are you houaecleauing?" "Why, Joram," laughed Susan Ann, "how you talk. You know this aiu't ouseeleauiug tiiuo. " 'Yell, where's the chair ahd oax u?" are, Joram," and tho . "Ue ides the money ud cheap car pets In their ploco, and they'll be hero in the morning. Now go on and want) your face and hands; supper's ready." Joram obeyed and wont to supper; and it was the meanest supper he ever sat down to. That evening he shiv ered before the fire of slack and rnb- bish and that night he had too little cover, but he could hear the money jingling in his pockets. At breakfast he appeared looking as blue as an ague patient and shaking like two. "Suaan Ann," he said, "I'm going to town this'morning. You haven't sold the horse and buggy yet, have you?" "No, Joraro," she answered, "but there's a man coming to look at it to day. We don't need it, and it costs a mint of money to keep a corriage any how." "What time's the man coming, Susan Ann?" he asked submissively. "He .aid he'd be here at 10 o'olook." Joram Nellums gulped as if some thing were choking him, and he looked at Susan Ann. "Susan Ann,"hesaid slowly, "here's a check for 1000 and yon can tell the man that's coming to go to grass. I'm going to take yon to town in tbo buggy and we are going to buy every thing we want and have a nice time, and when we come back, I'm going to make yon cashier of the business and you can do as yon please. Economy's all right, Susan Ann, but there' a limit to it that somehow I never see before until yon showed it to me." Then it was that Susan Ann broka down and Cried, because she thought the oocasion appropriate, and the tears that fell from her face fell upon the face of the check in her hand, but Joram actually laughed and kicked up his heels like a boy. Detroit res Press. IIott Scissors Are Hade.' . Though no complexities are involved in the making of scissors or mnch skill required, yet the process of manufacture is very interesting. They are forged from good bar steel heated to redness, each blade being cut off with sufficient metal to form the shank, or that destined to become the cutting part, and bow, or that whioh later on is fastened into the holding portion. For the bow a small hole is punched, and that is afterward expanded to the required Bize by ham mering it on a oonioal anvil, after which Both shank and bow are filed in a more perfect shape and the hole bored in the middle for the rivet. Tho blades are next ground, and the handles filed smooth and burnished with oil and emexy, after which the pairs are fitted together and tested aa to their easy working. .They are not yet finished, however. They have to undergo hardening and tempering and be again adjusted, after which they are finally put together again and polished for the third time. In oomparing the edges of knives and soissors it will be noticed, of course, that the latter are not in any way so sharply ground as the former, and that in outting, scissors crush and bruise more than knives. San Fran cisco Chroniole. Chinamen Buying liuns, A unique sight at the present time is the number of Chinamen who can be seen in the various gun stores purchasing firearms. . In one ttore on Broadway, New York City, could have been seen the other day a dozen Mon golians, each carefully examining a rifle, and in their way expressing themselves as to the peculiar merits of. the arm in question. As a rule, they were solicitous as to the mechan ism devoted to breech-loading, but onoe in a while an enthusiast would raise the rifle to lus. boulder and in bis imagination think of tho result. Dealers aay that considerable quanti ties of small arms, as well as rifles, have been bought ostensibly for the purpose of sniping to China. Gen erally the assemblage of these China men attracts a crowd of Caucasians on the sidewalk, who look with wonder ing or philosophical eyes, according to the temperament of each individual, upon the curious- picture displayed before them. Hardware. Ab Sling's Littlo Trick, -"An amusing thing occurred while I was at Yokohama," says a recently returned traveler. "An offloiul notice of tho Government had been pub lished in the Japanese nowspaperr Raying that all Chinese who wished to depart must do so by a certain date, or else remain until the war was over. Thereupon, Ah Suing, ajig olothing dealer of 16 Water street, called all the Chinese together and they all agreed to go. They got their goods to the dock, and finally aboard the steamer,, with themselves, and the steamer pulled out. At tho last mo ment it was fouud that the wealthy merchant had held his goods and tdipped back to the city, lie at onoe resumed business, having got rid of all opposing merchant, and is now rolling in riches, because of the great business he hi doing." Detroit Free Press. StrouKfst Jlan iu Kentucky, Tom McMuuogal, of Brandenburg, Ky. , was said to be the strongest mat iu Kentucky. It was an easy job foi To iii to lift a barrel to Lis mouth and drink out of the bung hole. Tom wai a married wan, and afterward ntovec to Harrison County, Indiana, living acroes the river about three milei from Uraudeubnrg. The first in crease in his family was twins, tht next time it was triplets aud then hi wife presented him with eight boys, four at a birth. These eight boys al. grew up to be men, and tho emallusi of them weighed 105 pounds. One oi the Brat quartet, Mr. MeMunegal, now lives in Hmudeuburg, and is I well known ' "l that GUlity.- Atlanta Con - ( m A FIRE ENGINE HOUSE. INOHNIOXTS DBVICE9 WHTCH SAVE TIME WHEN FLAMES THREATEN. Only a Kew Seconds Nreded After tho Alarm I Bounded Knowing Horses The Ktrpmen's Quarters. A VISIT to an engine house is full of interest to every ob server, and his interest l swells to entbniam asbe eee on every side tho appliances which en able the firemen to respond instantly to an alarm and begin at once their beneficent IoboM. Attention is firpt attrncteJ to the harness npnnded from the ceiling and hanging just over where the horses are hitched ou each side of the tongue or polo of the en gine and hose carriage. This harness is light and simple, yet very strong and supplied with every means for immediately fattening it upon the horses. The collar is not put on the animal's neck by a nerie of tngs and twists, but, hinged at tho top, it fastens at the throat with a strong spring catch, just as the bracelet", which were so extensively worn by the ladies a few years ago, were clasped around tho wrist. The bridle jj always worn, and, ex cept when feeding, the bit is kept constantly in the animal's mouth ; the traces are never unhooked from the whifiletrees, and there are no breeohen straps to be fastened; consequently, tho process of harnessing is an ex tremely simple one. It is only neces sary to let the harness fall upon the horses' backs, snap the collar together, clasp the lines to the bridle and hook the belly strap. Whenever two parts of harness have to be fastened to gether the use of the time-delaying buckle is carefully avoided, snap hooks and spring clasps being substi tuted to effect the saving of even a few seconds. The harness is suspended from the coiling by ropes and weights, much the sane as windows are hung in houses. When the horses are in position beside the pole it is arranged by a clever device1 that when the driver on his seat lifts the reins, which lie loosely on the dashboard, the weights are released and the harness falls di rectly on the .torses' baoks. In the rear of the apparatus are tho stalls, the front end of whioh is hung on binges and fastened to a powerful spring so that when the pin in tho hasp is released this door is immedi ately thrown open and the sagacious animal of his own acoord runs at once to his place in front of the en gine. The striking of the large brass gong, whioe is a prominent feature in every engine house, accomplishes much more than merely calling the men and hoi sen to their stations. The electrio onrrent in its circuit to the gong passes through a magnet which is fas tened high up on the wall bock of the stalls, and thereby releases a weight to which wires are attached leading to the halter ropes, aud to the brass 'pins, which fasten the stall doors. As soon as this weight drops, the pin is jerked out of the hasp on the door, which is immediately thrown open by the pin before described ; at the same instant, the halter rope is unolaeped and the animal has no difficulty in making his way out of his stall. Then ensues the proooss of hitching up, after which the men take their positions on the engine and reel. But suppose the four large doors to the bouse are olosed ; they must be un locked and opened. Not, however, by the slow process of nnbolting each door and swinging it wide separately. A more instantaneous method is adopted. As the driver on his .box lets the harness fall npon the horses by the simple act of lifting the reins, so also ho has at hand easy means for throwiug open t ha -heavy entrance doors. Just beside bis seat, to the right, depending from the ceiling, is a rope, one pull of whioh unbolts the doors and releasoa the heavy weights hung in the wall, which are attached to them, so that the doors swing apart as if of their own volition. Tha sooond floor is the nome of the men. The front room is the sleeping apartment, where single iron bed steads are placed in rows alonside of the side walls, leaving a wide aisle in the centre. Near the front and rear of this room two brass poles project from the engine room below, and a hole is cut in the floor of sufficient size to allow plenty of room for a man to slide down one of them to the first floor, for if any of the men are in the upper room they cannot spare time to run down by the stairs at the sounding of the alarm, but adopt the seoonds aving method of vertical descent. Ordinarily the opening through the floor around each of the polos is olosed by two ecmi-oircnlar doors bolted to the ceiling of the apparatus room, but the same device whioh loosens the halter ropes and pulls the pins out of the hasps o the stall doors also releases the fastenings of these coverings and they fall open of their own weight. Many of the engine bouses are fitted up with a gymna sium, library and reading rooms, the furuibhiags of which an presented by appreciative citizens as testimonials of their interest in the welfare of the brave men who are ever ready to face danger and even risk their lives to protect persons and property in peril. The rooms as well as everything else around are models of n atuuss good order must and does prevail iu an eugino house. There is a place for everything, aud everything cau always be fouud in its acouslomod place. WashiuKtou Star. The New York Advertiser says; "There is a horriolo rumor that tha word 'obey' is to be put iu the mail's part of the nmrriH ceremony. The wouiuu must really not go too tar. The luuu are hard to iaud a. it is." SCIENTIFIC AM INDUSTRIAL. No bird of prey has the gift of song. It is estimated that the crow will de stroy 700,000 insocts every year. Astronomers claim that there ere over 7,500,000 comets in the solar sys tem alone. South American agriculturists are experimenting with an electrio drying machine for wheat. Mosqnitoes inject a poison into the wounds they Inflict in order to make the blood thin enough to flow through their throatf. Ii is said that the flesh on the fore quarters of the beaver resembles that of land animals, while that on tho hindquarters has a fishy taste. A new garbage crematory has just been successfully tested in Chicago in the presence of some New York ex perts and the Mayor of Chicago. Cast iron blocks are being tried in ome of the most frequented streets of Paris, instead of the granite blocks usually placed alongside tramway rails. Voluntary muBolos are almost al ways rod ; involuntary muscles ere generally white, the most notable ex seption in the latter case being the heart. Professor Weinek, of the Imperial Observatory at Prague, devoted 225 hours to his drawing of tho lunar crater Copernious. It is from a nega tive made at tha Lick Observatory, California. Hiram Maxim, the flying machine man, says he will not consider his in vention complete until he can have it nnder perfect control at a point so high that it oan neither be seen nor heard by gunners underneath. Cellar moul Is on apples often un noticeable consists of more or less poisonous fungi. Physicians say they have traced cases of diphtheria to the eating of it. - AH fruits and vegetables should be carefully cleaned, or peeled, at least, if to be eaten raw. Flammarion, - the French astrono mer, remarks that our planet, if it were as near to the sun as it is to the moon, Wonld melt like wax nnder the heat from the solar surface, whioh is composed of "a stratum of luminous dust that floats upon an ocean of very dense gas." A butterfly, whioh was found in a dormant state under a rook in the mountains of California, and whioh is believed to have lived thousands of years, or since the close of one of the later geographical periods, is now in the Smithsonian Institution. When found it was believed to be the only living representative of its species in existence. It has been decided to nso petro leum as locomotive fuel on the Baltio Railroad, whioh is significant, be cause this line is almost the most dis tant of any in Bussia from tho oil wells. Great reservoirs are to be built in St. Petersburg and Beval and three other stations, whioh will hold in the aggregate about 5,000,000 gallons. Dr. Foehner, of Berlin, has exam ined some 70,000 eick domestio ani mals in the past seven years, - and of this number only 281 suffered from tuberculosis. The parrots were re latively the most frequently affected, twenty-five per cent, of those coming nnder hit care being tuberoulous. Of the cats, only one per cent, showed symptoms of the disease. A Horse's Sense ol Locality. About the year 1856, says the Lewis ton Journal, a little colt was born on a farm in Aroostook County, in the State of Maine, a oolt that was son sold away from the place,'' to oome. shortly after into tho possession of a physician in the t6wn of Houlton, who at tho Opening of the Civil; War went "to the front," taking with him for cavalry servioe the oolt, that had now reached maturity. Through all the vicissitudes of a five years' campaign this horse followed the fortunes of his master, being wrecked on the lied Biver expedition and suffering various other disasters, to return at the close of the wax to the State of Maine, across whioh be carried his master horseback until the town of Houlton was again reached. On the journey through Aroostook County the road traversed lay past the farm where some ten years before this horso was born. Neither his life between tho shafts of a doctor's gig nor five years of war campaigning had caused Lim to lose his bearings, and when he reached the lane that led np to the old farm house he turned up to the houso aa confidently as though he had been driven away from it but A half hour before. Disiuleetiug Room. A writer in the Medical Magazine who has witnessed the Berlin method of dkinfeetiug a room describes the cleansing of an apartment in which a child had died of diphtheria: "Four men were engaged. After everything thut could be subjected to steam with out detriment had been removed to the disinfeoting statiou, all tho things were removed from the walls, and tho men began rubbing these with bread. Ordinary German loaves are used, forty-eight hours old. The loaves arc cut into substantial chunks about six inches square, the back of each piece consisting of the crust, thus allowing of a good purchase. The walls tiro systematically attacked with strokes from above downward, aud there cau be do question as to its efficacy iu cleaning them, nor does the operation take as long as ono would iinoginv. The crumps are swept up and burtiod. After this the walls are thoroughly sprinkled with a nvejieroent. carbolic auid solution. The floor is washed with a two per cent, carbolic acid solution, end all tho polishud'wood work aud ornament ait veil." AS HI3 MOTHER USED TO D3. no crltioir.od her patellars, nnd he found fnult wl'.h ber enk Flo wlnhnl she'.t tmko such biscuit as hi irother uwd to mnke ; She didn't wash tbo dishes and she dl.ln't mnkfl a stew, Nor even mend bis stockings, as his mother Died to do. His mother hnd sit children, bnt bf nfcht her work wns done ; His wifo seemed drudging always, yet she only had th.one. His mother always was well dresrod, h!s wife would be so too, tf onlrshe would manage as his mother used to do, Ab, well 1 She was not perfect, though sbe tried to do her best. Colli at length she thought her time had oome to have a rest ) Bo when one dav be went the simo oU rig marole all through, She turned and toxel his ears, Just es his mother used to do. Koboboth Sunday Herald, HUMOR OF THE DAY. A blanket mortgage furnishes bnt a poor house-warming. Puok. Alice "Beauty is bnt skin deep." Maud (spitefully) "Who told you?" Puck. The man that rifles your pockets should te shot-gunned. Dausvillo (N. Y.) Breeze. A man may be beside himself, and yet have no idea how ridiculous he looks. Pnck. .The man next door always has ono advantage over me. That's in his neighbors. Puck. "The Missing Link" The one the dog stole in the bologna sausago fac tory. Dansville (N Y.) Breeze. The virtues made of necessity al ways appear as it the material oouldn't have been very abundant. Puck. We all believe in letting wVA enough V- ' stal as to tv "L. ?Oh, no, it is her owu , it." Pittsburg vv An! now the buy on... Will find one duty mi , Whene'er 'tis cold he'll bav i.. "Come back and closa the dou. (Jhlcago Inter-Oseai,. Mr. Plamil"WhpTA woro vnn last v night?" Mr. P. "At a stag porty, my dear." "I thought so when I heard you staggering upstairs. " Philodcl- 1 T5 -J puia xvewru. Friend "Are you superttitious? Do yon believe in signs?" Successful , Merohant "No; newspaper adver tisements are better, and cheaper." Printers' Ink. ' A man may think he adores a wo man. But his lovo is put to a terri ble strain when she asks him to but ton her shoes with a hairpin. New York Herald. Tailor "I hear that you have paid my rival, while you owe ma for two suits." Student "Who dares to ao ouse me of suoh a preposterous thing ?" Flieaende Blaetter. "Does your wife wear a high hat when she goes to the play?" "I should say she does," replied the man who always looks weary. "It costume $27." Washington Star. Figg "Yes, I allow that her sing ing is something terrible ; but I guess wo shall live through it." Fogg "That is the most terrible thing about it." Boston Transcript. Trivvet "Yon knew Charlie Dam mit, didn't you?" Dicer "He went West and was lyrtched." Trivvet ."Is that really so? Well, Dummit al- o WBy wos high etrung. liarlom fcife. ' Olne littlo girl in the slums "Wot yer say she died of?" The othor one , "Bating a tuppeny ice on the top of 'of pudden.' :' The first montioned "Lor I what a Jollj dealh."-!-Tid-Bits. Tough "Have you got pull enoogh in Washington to git a patent fur me?" Patent Lawyer "What is your invention?" Tough "It's a pneu matio tire fer perlioe clubs." Good News. . McSwatters "Is Clanghorn a fin ished author?" MoSwatter "Yes, you see, he called o l Woolly, of the Howler, and called him a liar ; and well, you know Woolly." Syracuse Post. Old Friend "Seems to me you are paying your cook pretty stiff wages." JimBcm "Havu to; if I don't she'll leave, and then my wife will have to do the cooking herself." New York Weekly. Clerk "Here's somo of tho fresh cracked wheat. Would you like a paokage of it?" Wrs. Newcosh "Young man, when I want damaged goods I'll let you know." Chicago lcter-Ooean. Mrs. Workaday "Ob, I do so like to see a good, strong, determined man." Mr. Workaday (straightening) "So do I, my dear." Mrs. W. 'John, the coal hod is empty." Bos ton Courier, "You are charged with having votod five times in one day," said tbo Judge, sternly. "I am charged, am 1?" repeated the prisoner. "That's mighty odd. I expected to be paid for it." New York Sun. MiosDc Fashion ( few years hence) "You are wanted at tho telephone." Mrs. De Fashion "Oh, dear ! I pre sume it's Mrs. De Style, to return my telephone call. I hope she won't talk long." New York Weukly. a le, (pleadingly) "Why can't we bo ulilt tW;i right away ?" She (coyly) "Ok, 1 can't bear to luavo father aloiio just yet." Ho (earnestly) "Jvut uy darlinp, he has ha I yon sdolia.loug, loug time." Hho (frecj-iugl-'Sir I" Cruuklyu Life.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers