Centre Street at Our August Blanket Sale Is In Full Swing. The wise house wile for miles around has learned to wait for this event as the supreme occasion ot the year to buy blan kets and bedding. But not one of the many who have been crowding: the store all week have failed to recognize this as an event which stands head and shoulders above all iormer ones of its kind. The assortment, larger and better than ever, is the result of months of preparation on our part, and means many dollars saved to all who take advantage ot it. Unusual Woolen Blankets Bought Lt Receiver's SaJe tt Very Unusual Prices. Some months ago the large blanket house of Keveny & McQuaid went into the hands of a receiver. With the excep tion of the six hundred pairs we secured, the entire stock was sold to the two largest retail stores in New York City. Our Mr. Smart happened to be in New York at the time and through his personal friendship with the receiver we were al lowed three hundred pairs ot each quality, white and plaid. These six hundred pairs we will offer during the August Blanket Sale at a price just about 50 per cent, of their value, namely, $3.90 a pair. 100 Pairs Cotton Blankets. Soft fleeced, io white, tan or gray, attractively bordered. Present day value 85o pair. August Sale Price 69c pair. 100 Pairs Very Large Blankets. Very eoft fleeced, io grey, white or tan, attractively bordered. Present day value $1.50 pair. August Hale Price $1.10 pair. Bed Comfort Are In This Sale. A lot of assorted grades Cotton Filled Comforts, slightly soiled, 331 per cent. off. All $2 Comforts $1.05. All $2 50 Comtorts $2 00. All $3 Comtorts $2 50. All $3.50 Comforts $2 75. 3 lb Sheets Wool Wadding covered with cheesecloth, $1.90. 3 lb Sheets Cotton Batting, 55o instead of 75c. STRENGTH Oil City . Trust Company, Oil City, Pa. FeJl Outfitting ! We now offer our trade the highest grade, ready for service garments for men, boys and children the country produces,, to gether with hats and shoes from the best makers and caretully chosen haberdashery, that's exclusive and entirely different. Everything Priced Moderately. We're asking lor your consideration, sir. Max Jacobs, One Price Store, Clothier and Shoer, 233 Seneca Street, - Oil City, Pa. The Home of the Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothes. alaa'alaaaalafc-aWafiri H J 8 I 19 pi ililJiM Second only to sun light. The clearest, steadiest and belt arti ficial light known. Get Family Favorite Oil at your dealer'e out of the original barrel direct from our refineries. Family Favorite will not imoke, loot or flicker; will not char wick or "treat" chimney. Cottt no more than Interior tank-wagon oils. WAVERLY OIL WORKS CO. taOMKdMt "eniiere, PITT1BURO, pa. Also maker Auto Oil and Elm, Oil City, Pa. 100 Pairs Heavy Blankets. Soft fleeced, io grey, white or tan, attractively bordered. Present day value $1.25 pair, August Sale Price 05o pair. 100 Pairs Beaeon Blankets The perfection of cotton .blanket weaving. In white, tan or grey, at tractively bordered. Present day value $2 00 pair. August Sale Price $1.50 pair. 1 1 S B r !! a 5 I JUDU mm m az - ot Waverly Special Waverlj Gasolines mill What' In a Namef The Into king of Plum had for a full nnnic Phra Unt Somdoth Phra Turn mlnor Malm Chulalongkorn Phra Cha in Chum Klo CUow Yu Hun, mid this docs not include his titles. A wng lu Bombay saw it in the paper when the ruler was visiting that city and was being received ly the British offlolnla nnd passed it over to n young Irish suliallern with the challenge that ho pronounce it. The young fellow look ed at it a moment and then handed it back. lie said he was not long enough winded, hut he was sure he could play it on the gnrrlson club piano if the in strument were n couple of octuves longer. Tho king's uncle, however, who whs also a prince high priest, had for one name alone the following col lection of letters: Pawaratsawarlya- longkaun. Any one who can get through this and not flat one of the notes has lived a long time where ho can look out of the window nnd see the gilded penk of a temple shimmer ing In the equatorial sun. Christian Herald. Starve a Cold. Nature, as n rule, takes the appetite away when one is coming down with a cold or other infectious disease, and nature is wise. Ion't coax Mary to eat when she has a cold. lou't nllow the neighbors to tempt Johnny with calfs foot Jelly or other dainties. When suffering from a cold the diges tive organs nre in no condition to care for food. The digestive Juices are al tered or entirely absent. One or tw days' comparative fast will often as sist in averting a severe siege of cold. A more convenient and enjoyable forn of fasting would be to subsist for on or two days upon fruit or fruit Juices perhaps, with the addition of a little toast. An exclusive fruit diet has all the practical advantages of complete fasting, while It satisfies the appetite and supplies sugar from which the liv er can manufacture glycogen to sus tain the white blood corpuscles lu their continuous warfare against mi-, croles.-Villlam S. Sadler in Designer. Giving Him Carta Blanche. A few years ago John Kendrlck Hangs, the humorist, told a number of his Broadway literary confreres that he felt particularly elated over an or der he had Just received from Henry V. Savage, the theatrical producer, for the libretto of a musical comedy. The play was produced a few months Inter. During the long period of re hearsals so much of Hangs' material was eliminated and so much other ma terial Inserted lu Us stead that when the curtain went up on the first night not more than half a do7.eu of the original lines remained. About n week later a friend, meet ing Bangs, asked him if he was writ ing any more plays for Savage. "Yes," replied Bangs. "Only an hour ago I sent him 5iK blank sheets of paper and told him to go as far as he liked." Irvln Cobb in New York Tribune. Anthony Trollope't First Earnings. A literary man recalls Anthony Trol lope's Httlo gloat over the first fruits of his pen. "I send you n copy of 'The Warden,' " he wrote to Lord Houghton in 18XJ, "which Mr. Longman assures uie is the last of the first edition. There were, I think, only 750 printed, and they have been over ten years in hnnd. But I regard the book with nf fectlon, as I made J 2s. Cd. by the first year's sales, having previously writ ten and published for ten years with out nny such golden result. Since then I have improved even upon that." Trollope, of course, "Improved upon that" in no uncertain fashion. West minster Gazette. It Wai Real. "My, this must have been exciting!" says Mrs. Bllniers, who is reading the paper. "A twenty foot boa constrictor escnped from the zoo yesterday and was captured after It had climbed halfway up a telegraph pole." "And I swore oft when I saw It as I went downtown!" growled Mr. Bu rners disgustedly. ,"Whot are you muttering?" she asked. t 'Nothing. I Just said it must have been a ticklish Job." Chicago Post As Good as Lost. "You're sure you can spnre this fiver, are you, Shadbolt?" "Dlnguss, If I had not been perfect ly sure thnt I can get along without it I never would have lent it to you." Chicago Tribune. Skeptical, Teacher Now, Johnny, what is the shape of the earth? Small Johnny I dunno. Teacher Why, I told you yes terday it was round. Small Johnny Yes, I know, but I don't believe every thing I hear. Chicago News. Not So Bravo. "lie was certainly brave to crawl under tho bed and enjjftgo in a life and death struggle with ttwt burglnr." "When ho crawled under the bed he thought the burglnr was in the bnsement." Houston Tost. For Good of the Community. "Have you ever done anything for the good of the community?" asked the solid citizen of the weary way farer. "Yes," replied the weary wayfarer. "I've just done a month." Sensible Man. Crawford Do you really like to please your wife? Crabshaw I can't nay that I do, but I've found out it's the best plan. Smart Set. There nre some who bear a grudge even to thoRe that do them good. PI! pay. Rocky Road to a Title. "Does Marie expect to marry the count?" "Not Immediately. There nre three questions to be settled first." "What are they?" "He must prove thnt he Is a count." "Well, that would settle it, wouldn't it?" "No. He must also prove that he is'a't married." "Well!" "Then he must provTj that he wants to uiurry Marie." Cleveland Flaln Pnnler. Making a Major. John Esten Cooke, who went into the war as nit enlisted man In a Itlch mond battery, was soon afterward np polutcd an otllccr on the stall of Gen- ernl J. E. B. Stuart. On Stuart's staff, Mr. Georgo Cury IOggleston says In "Recollections of a Varied Life," he distinguished himself by a certain laughing iiouchnlancc under fire and by his eager readiness to undertake Stuart'B most perilous missions. It wns lu recognition of some spe cially daring service of that kind thnt Stuart gave htm his promotion. The delightful wny In which the great boy ish southerner did It is best told In Mr. Kggleston's own words. "You're about my size, Cooke,' Stu art said, "but you're not so brond lu tho chest." "Yes, I am," answered Cooke. "Let's boo If you are," said Stuart, taking off his coat ns it for a boxing match. "Try that on." Cooko donned the coat with its three stars ou the collar and found It a fit. "Cut off two of tho stars," Stuart commanded, "nnd wear the coat to Richmond. Tell tho people in the war department to make you a mnjor and send you back to ino lu a hurry. I'll ueod you tomorrow." How It Feels to Be Run Over. "When 1 was run over," writes a correspondent, "I had not seen the car approaching. The first thing I knew was that I was ou the ground, kicking upward with my legs lu an effort to get from under tho car. Then I felt a wheel going over my chest, which bent as it passed over. In the Inter vening second or two I weut through several minutes' worth of feelings. I had the sensations of astonishment at being ou the ground, of wanting to rolt asldo and away, of bracing myself and my chest especially stiff to resist something, whatever it might be, while n lightning flash of fear was dimly there nnd a subconscious query, 'What on earth next?' Yet It wns hardly fear, because there was no time for such a durable sensation. It was rath er a sense of being suddenly confront ed with a grave reality, of doubtful, obscurely terrible Import." London Chronicle. Origin of Coal. Coal Is of vegetable origin. When vegetablo matter accumulates under water It undergoes a slow process of decomposition, giving off Its nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen and some carbon, tho result of which If carried far enough is the formation of a mass of carbon. Teat, found often In swnmpy trncts, is the first stage in the coal forming proves, and the further stages are formed by the burial of these vegetable deposits tinder great loads of sediment, where they become subject to pressure and sometimes to heat. This effects n scries of changes, consolidation nnd loss of oxygen nnd gives a series of products whose na ture depends on the degree to which the original vegetable matter hns been changed. The products arc known ns lignite, bituminous coal and anthracite cool. Mixing His Dates. There is a story of a man who was so transported with Joy ns he stood up at the altar rail to be married that his thoughts reverted to a day when he stood up at the prisoner's bar In a court of Justice to plead "guilty" or "not guilty" to a criminal charge. So powerfully did that, the most painful event of his life, obtrude Itself upon his mind that when the clergyman put the question, "Wilt thou have this wo man to be thy wedded wife?" nud so on, the poor distracted bridegroom an swered with Startling dlstlnctnesiannmlsslon In snld courts. Such Juris- "Not guilty, so help me!" From Tucfl ermau's "Personal Recollections." A Stubborn Opening. The head of the household was go ing through her husband's pockets the next morning. "What kept you out so late last night?" she suddenly demanded. "It was the opening of the cam paign, my dear," the lesser half re plied. "Well, It didn't take three cork screws to open It, did It?" And she drew the offending articles from his side pocket nnd waved them before him. Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Riot of Ink. Canon Nicholl used to tell how on one occasion he had visited the famous bouse of the Tli rules In that suburb of London where Dr. Johnson wns nt home. "Johnson," snld the canon In recnlllng his vhslt, "had occupied two rooms, nnd these were left ns he last used them. The sight wns an extraor dinary one, for Ink was splashed all over the floor and even on the walls. It was one of the doctor's hnbits to dip his pen In Ink and then shake It." . Teaching the Teacher. Teacher Johnny, what part of speech la 'nose?' Johnny 'Tisn't nny. Teach erAh, but it must be. Johnny May bo yours Is, because you talk through it, but tho only part of speech Pre got Is my mouth. Same Old Story. "Does he pay his alimony prompMy?" "No. lie has to be urged nnd threat ened every pay day; but, then, of course, I got used to that when we were living together." Cleveland Tlaln Dealer. Masculine Perversity. Men are funny creatures to cater for. A woman will buy the things she wants, but a man will only buy the things he needs. Exchange. When the fight begins within himself a man's worth something. Browning. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Points For Dyspeptics. Dyspeptics should remember that cocoa and chocolate are bet ter for them than coffee or tea, that potatoes are more easily di gested when baked than when cooked In other ways nnd that peas and beans should be well cooked in order to be easily assimilated. Knox Hvts for FaJl Styles Demand a radical change in men's hats for the com ing season. The hats we ask you to look at are the creations of the recognized standard hat makers of this country. Any hat bearing our label is proof absolute that the quality is the best and the wearer a man who wants and won't accept anything but the TAD correct idea in hats. If you buy your hat here you'll have nothing to regret. We sell only such qualities as measure up to our particular standard. $1.00 ip to $8.00 With extra values at $2.00, $3.00 and $4.00. Oil City, Pa. pltOPOSED AMENDMENTS TO THUS CONSTITUTION 81IHMITTKD TO THE CITIZENS OP THIS COMMON WEALTH FOR THEIR APPROVAL OR REJECTION. 11Y THE GENERAL A8 8KMRLY OK THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNS VLVANIA, AM) PPItLISH ED BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF THE COMMONWEALTH, IN PUR SUANCE OF ARTICLE XVIII OF THE CONSTITUTION. Number One. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing; an amendment to the Consti tution of tho Commonwealth of Penn sylvania, so a to consolidate the courts of common pleas of Allegheny County. Section L Be It resolved by the Sennta and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania In Gen eral Assembly met, Thnt tho following amendment to the Constitution of Penn sylvania be, and the same Is hereby, pro posed. In accordance with tho eighteenth article thereof: That section six of article five be amended, by striking out the said sec tion, and Inserting In place thereof the following: Section 6. In the county of Philadel phia nil the Jurisdiction and powers now vested In the district courts and courts of common plens, subject to such changes as may be made by this Constitution or by law. shnll be In Philadelphia vented In Ave distinct and separate courts of equal and co-ordinate Jurisdiction, composed of three Judges each. The said courts In Philadelphia shall be designated respect ively as the court of common plena num ber one. number two, number three, number four, and number Ave, but the number of snld courts may bo by law Increased, from time to time, and shnll be In like manner deslgnnted by successive numbers. The number of Judges In any of snld courts, or In nny county where the establishment of an additional court may be authorized by law. may be In creased, from time to time, and when ever such Increase shnll amount In the whole to three, such three Judges shnll compose a distinct and separate court as aforesaid, which shnll be numbered as nforesnld. In Philadelphia all suits shnll be Instituted In the snld courts of com mon pleas without designating the num ber of the said court, nnd the several courts shall distribute and apportion the business among them In such manner as shnll be provided by rules of court, and each court, to which any suit shnll be thus assigned, shnll have exclusive Juris diction thereof, subject to change of venue, as shnll be provided by law. In the county of Allegheny all the Jurisdiction and powers now vested In the severnl numbered courts of common pleas shnll be vested In one court of com mon pleas, composed of nil the Judges in -rihyaicuon ana powers snail exicna to nil proceedings ni law ana in equity wnicn shnll have been Instituted In the severnl numbered courts, and shnll be subject to such changes as may be made by law and subject to change of venue as pro vided by law. The president Judge of said court shall be selected ns provider' by law. The number of Judges In sale1 court may be by law Increased fron tline to time. This amendment shall tn! efTect on the first day of January sue ceedlng Its adoption. A true copy of Resolution No. 1. ROBERT McAFEE. Secretary of the Commonwealth. Number Two. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to section elshi article nine, of the Constitution of Penn sylvanla. Section 1. Re It resolved by the Sennt and House of Representatives of the('oi monwealth of Pennsylvania In Uenern Assembly met, Thnt the following Is pro posed as an amendment to the Constltu tlon of the Commonwealth of Pvniisylvn nla. In accordance with the provisions o tho eighteenth article thereof: Amendment to Article Nine. Section Eight. fioctlon I Amend section eight, artlrl nine, of the Constitution of 1'ennsylvunln which leads as follows: "Section 8. Tho debt of nnv onnnn city, borough, township, school district, or other municipality or Incorporated dls tiict. except as herein provided, shall nev er exceed seven per centum upon the as sessed value of the taxable property there in, nor shall any such municipality or district Inpur any new debt, or Increase Its Indeblrdness tQ an amount exceeding two per centum upon such assessed val uation of property, wltTiout tho assent of the electors thereof nt a public election In such manner ns shall be provided by law; but any city, the debt of which now ex ceeds seven per centum of such assessed valuation, may be authorized by law tc Increase the same three per centum, lr the aggregate, nt any one time, upon such valuation," so as to read ns follows: Section 8. The debt of any county, city, borough, township, school district, or oth er municipality or Incorporated district, except as herein provided, shall never ex oeed seven per centum upon the assessed value of the taxable property therein, nor shall any such municipality or district In cur any new dobt, or Increase Its Indebt edness to an amount exceeding two per centum upon such assessed valuation of property, without the assent of the elec tors thereof at a public election In such manner as shall be provided by law; but any city, the debt of which now exceeds seven per centum of such assessed val uation, may be authorized by law to in crease the same three per centum. In the aggregate, at any one time, upon such valuation, except that any debt or debts hereinafter Incurred by the city and coun ty of Philadelphia for the construction and development of subways for transit purposes, or for the construction of wharves and docks, or the reclamation of land to be used In the construction of a system of wharves and docks, as public Improvements, owned or to be owned by FSkl city and county of Philadelphia, nad which ahull yield to the city and county of Philadelphia current net revenue In ex cess of the Interest on said debt or debts and of the annual Installments necessary for the cancellation of snld debt or debts, may be excluded In ascertaining the pow er of the city and county of Philadelphia to become otherwise Indebted: Provided, Thnt a sinking fund for their cancellation shall be established and maintained A true copy of Joint Resolution No. 2. ROBERT McAFEE, Secretary of the Commonwealth. p) HOW MONT ALTO IS SAVING LIVES This Case of Young Man From Huntingdon Is Typical of Hundreds of Others. IS WELL AND WORKING Eighteen Months at the State's Free Tuberculosis Sanatorium, With Proper Care and Observation of Rules, Gave Him Back Health and Strength. The following news Btory, which was published In the Huntingdon Globe of Aug. 10, 1911, gives an excellent Idea of the kind of work that Is being done by the State Department of Health for Pennsylvania's tuberculous poor under the supervision of State Health Com missioner Samuel G. Dixon: Lemuel Adams, who was employed as a coatmaker in the tailoring estab lishment of F. W. Baldwin in Hunt ingdon, left here In April, 1909, pre sumably in the last stages of tubercu losis. He had fallen off In weight, was as thin as a match, as pale as death, and when he left here two years and four months ago none of his friends ever expected to see him In the flesh again. But Lem was In town on Monday, and he wasn't In a box, either. He was here in citizens' clothes, looking as brown as an Indian, and feeling as frisky as a colt. From Huntingdon Mr. Adams went to Mont Alto, Frank lin county, where he entered the state Institution for tubercular cases and be came an obedient patient under Dr. Johnston, the man in charge. For three months Mr. Adams occu pied a bed In the hospital, where it took mighty close watching to keep body and soul together, but Mr. Adams won out, and in midsummer he was sent to the camp, where he did noth ing but eat and sleep and breathe the fresh air of the South mountains. He remained there eighteen months, and was in the open all the time. Many a day he rose from his bed with the snow on his pillows and blankets, but he improved right along, and In March he was discharged. Mr. Adams is now selling lightning rods, which gives him constant out door employment He will never re sume the tailoring business for fear of a recurrence of his trouble. He now eats lrke a wood chopper, sleeps like a baby and is as strong and robust as a youngster In his teens. For years Mr. Adams' normal weight was 132 pounds. Now it is 137. When he left Huntingdon in April, 1909, he weighed 110. The splendid condition of our friend Is remarkable. Indeed, he is a living monument to the patience and skill of the men who have charge of the state institution at Mont Alto. Dr. H. C. Front z, of Huntingdon, sent Adams to Mont Alto, and on Monday when he gazed upon the shadow of two years ago he could scarcely believe his own eyes. NEWSBOYS RIOT Distributing Wagons of Dublin News, papers Attacked and Contents Scattered. Dublin, Aug. 22. The tiotiblo here between the newspaper proprietors and the newsboys which led to a riot Sunday night extenied yesterday to the afternoon .editions. Tho olllcea of the evening newspapers were be. Bitted by newt-hoys and hoodlums who attacked and emptied the dis tributing wagons and scattered tho papers. Clashes between the rioters and tho police were fretjuent and stones and clubs were freely used. The quarrel la duo to dissatisfaction of the newsboys with the prices they have to pay for tho papers. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Charcoal Cures Flatulency. Suffering from flatulence after meals may be cured by the Judi cious use of pure charconl. A small quuntity swallowed a short time after meals will nb sorb unpleasant gases aud aid digestion. T.A.P. Oil City, Pa. GIRLS LEAPS TO DEATH Jumps Into Chicago River After Dste perate Attempts to Restrain Her, i Chicago, Aug. 22. An iiiiid'ntlnVd young woman, thought to ho i visitor In the citv, pretty .mil well dressed, created wild excitement anions a crowd of persons on the Taylor street bridge, when, after a desperate Mm.!? gle with a dozen men who nl'empN-d to restrain her. rhe succeeded in hurl ing herself Into tho river. Sho was drowned. Before tho horrified ;ue of men and women passengers on street cars and pedestrians on tho bridge tin woman sprang from the rail of the structure, landing on the roof of the Baltimore & Ohio freight house, from which she jumped onto the plllns along the water's edge and thence In to the water. Every effort was made to save the woman's life, but she refuse 1 to take hold of the llfu preserver and ropes thrown to her from the bridge nnd pushed nwty would-be rescuers who rowed out into the water !n a boat. LEFT BABY WITH CONDUCTOR He Gave Chase In Qar and Made H Take Infant. Pottsvllle, Pa., Aug. 22. When Har ry Smith, a Vorkvlllo trolley car con ductor, curried a woman's baby off n car, the mother turned ami attempted to escape, and leave the baby in Smith's arms. An exciting chase took place, Stnllh getting In his car and following the. woman. He overtook her and com pelled her to take back tho infant un der threat of arrest. Pope Ha Slight Relapse, Rome, Aug. ?2 There was anothor heat wave here and In consequence the pope who was reported to be con valescing from his recent attack ol tout and heart weakness, suffered a slight relapse. He was weakened ta such an extent that he wns unable to go into the Vatican gardens as lie had intended. SECRET ORDERSTAKE NOTICE A beautiful 'Jx2S-Iim-Ii plr-torlal chart In elaborate ;itl rnlurj ami haihlHomrly framed, nf any eecret order, ntth flare for nii-aiber'a name anil full data. An honor to the nifuitft-r and a cmltt to your home, nimg a pU-tute on the wall. Ment anywhere, l-ru-e only II r0. Uaudsotnely framt-d with 3 3-4-ln-h (rami-, o'dy I..M. t'a-h. or a little down anil a little e,ery month. If you have a mrmty-r of any eei-ret order ti imr home. eurprlae and honor hlin with one of the"! beautiful pictorial rhart. A portal will bring full particular!. Write to-day. Olve name of eerrt-l order THE ART SUPPLY CO., WARREN, PA. , U. 8. A. LADIES! An old established Suit and Cloak House desires to secure Lady Agent to take orders for our Skirt in her own home. Man-tailored made to any measure. We help you to es tablish a splendid and pleasant busi ness. No investment necessary. Write ut today that you are inter ested, and for full information. Fashion Bulletin free on request. THE JONES DRY GOODS CO. PITTSBURGH, PA. Promptly obtained, or rtt RETURNED. SO VIARS' IXPiailNCI. Our OHARCIS ARC THE LOWEST. Soad model, photo or akeU-h fur inert aearrh and free report on patentability. INFRINGEMENT auita coildui'Uxl before all eourta. l'atonta obtained throinrh tie, AOVIR. TISEO and SOLD, free. TRADE-MARKS, PEN SIONS and COPYRIGHTS quickly obtained. Opposite U. S. Patent Offloe, WASHINGTON, D. O. WHY WE ADVERTISE IN THE NEWSPAPERS Because we want you to know of the class of work turned out in our estab-lir-hment. Jlocause we cator to the intelligent class and they read tbe papers. Because we can talk to more people through the newspapers, at a greater dis tance, in less time aud at a more reasona ble price than In any other way. Because newspapar advertising brings tbe best results when placed in a first, class medium. Because we know It is seen and read by almost everyone In the house where the paper goes, Morek Optical Co., OIL CITY, PA. First Natloual Bank Lenses for the Eyes Building. Exclusively. mm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers