Cent Breakfast in . - uunutes! What a boon to the busy housekeeper! Two Shredded Wheat Bis cuits, heated in the oven to restore crispness and served with hot milk, make a com plete, perfect meal, supplying all the strength needed for a half day's work at a cost of four or five cents. The rich r est man in America can buy nothing better. Contains more real nutriment than meat or eggs and is more easily digested. Made at 14-YEAR OLD CASK IdfcTKD Among the cases listed for the February Common Pleas Court which will go over until Monday a week for trial will be the assumpsit action of Henry J. vs. Annie Harman, executrix for John C. Harman. That case which has dragged through the courts for fourteen years was prominent before Judge Kunkel ascended the bench. He was once retained as counsel in the case. EXTREME WEAKNESS AND SUFFERING Read How Mrs. Good ling got Relief and Strength. York, Pa. —"I have used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and ' 111111111111111111111 l found it to be all you ' say it is. I was so sick that I could not Kgstand at my sink to HE JB wash dishes and I »igff -j? could not sit without miv |[ a pillow under me. I had the doctor i& 4 every few days but ? / since I have taken the Compound I rlon't have to send —— for him. I have had three children and could not raise any of them, but since I have taken the Com pound I have a bright baby boy. I advise every suffering woman to try it and get relief. It has done wonders for me."—Mrs. CATHARINE GOODLING, 138 E. King Street, York, Pa. When a medicine has been successful in bringing health to so many, no woman has a right to say without try ing it N " I do not believe it will help me," There must be more than a hun dred thousand women in this country who, like Mrs. Goodling, have proven what wonders Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound can do for weak and ailing women. Try it and see for yourself. If there are any complications you don't understand, write J.ydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass. NUXATED IRON rVBSEHSEKH Increase* strength hof delicate, nervous, liC FIT! TITII rundown people iiuii eft IK I I P er cent, in ten days IB till EM in many instances. W * IOO forfeit if it falls as per full ex- IVl1»mh J planation In l&rgs article s °° n to a P" Ask yojr doctor or druggist about it. Croll Keller, G. A. Uorgau always carry it in stock. Coal Situation There is plenty of good coal to be had now, but the sup ply of the future is uncertain owing to controversy be tween miners and operators. Even if there shouldn't be a strike, the granting of con cessions demanded by the miners will mean still higher coal. Let Kelley fill your bins now and be sure of your supply of good coal for at least another winter. H. M. KELLEY i CO. . 1 North Third Street Tenth and State Streets Efficiency INCREASE tlie profits of your business by aiding your skilled help ers to make the l>est use of their time. Use tlie proper blanks, blank I looks, stationery and ad vertising matter. Get the right, kind of designing, engraving, printing and binding at the right price* from The Telegraph Printing Co. Federal Square MONDAY EVENING, „ KiaRRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 28, 1916. WOMEN'S INTERESTS WHAT HAPPENED TO JANE By Virginia Terhune Van de Water B.T VIRGINIA TERHUNE VAN I>E WATER CHAPTER MX (Copyright, 1916, Star Co.) The village of Milton had a sensa i tion compared with which all other ; sensations It had ever experienced t'aded into Insignificance. A ugustus Reeves, wealthy farmer anrl resident, had been found dead ! in his bed, with his throat cut from > ear to ear. i Reporters from city papers ap ! peared In hordes. Here was some | thing that promises to make a i thrilling mystery story. The facts were sinister and in j some respects, baffling. Augustus Reeves' housekeeper had been awakened about 3 o'clock In the I morning- by hearing a door open | and shut. As the wind was blow ing fiercely at the time, she thought little of it. Then, as some other noise (she i did not know what it was, but | thought it sounded like a groan) came to her ears, she was startled • and, springing up, dressed hastily and went to the room in which Mr. ! and Mrs. Reeves usually slept. She found their door wide open, al ! though she had heard Mr. Reeves j shut it at bedtime. She called, received no reply and went into the room. The light she carried showed her the body of her employer, the throat horribly gashed. She screamed and ran Into the adjoining room where Mrs. Reeves had gone to sleep that night, but. the bed was empty. Downstairs she found the front door open. She was sure that the wife had arisen on hearing the same sound that had awakened her, the housekeeper, that she had gone into the large room to ascertain who the intruder was, and that the sight that met her eyes there must have "crazed her, for she evidently rushed from the house with no cov ering except a wrapper thrown over her nightdress. Mrs. Baird had run out to the barn where the man-of-all-work slept, roused hlni and told htm the shocking news. Unwilling to re turn to the house alone, she waited in the barn while Jake hur ried off to the neighbors to ask for assistance and to send someone to seek for his distraught mistress. Jane Is Delirious The wife was found at her father's house, where she had ar rived in a state of exhaustion, faint ing as she' reached her old home. She had not recovered consciousness but had been in a delirious condition ever since then. The village phy sician said that she had brain fever, brought on by nervous strain and shock. The weapon with which the crime had been committed was found at. the side of the murdered man's bed. It was a long carving knife. It had probably been taken from the kitch en by the murderer on his way up stairs. If his object had been rob bery he was frightened away: for the few banknotes that the wealthy farmer had in the pockets of his clothes, amounting to less than twenty dollars, remained untouched, and his watch and chain were found tinder his pillow,' where he had placed them on retiring. Thus the city newspapers alleged. In Milton itself excitement ran high. The inquest and the examination of Mrs. Baird and Jake Titus (the housekeeper and the man of all work) brought to light no new facts, except that Jake was sure the knife belonged in the kitchen of Mr. Reeves' house, and Mary Baird WHY DO YOU SUFFER PAINFUL TWINGES? Backache, Headache. l«#m» Lame Bade. Rheumatic Palm, Stiff or Swotlc* joint! and Urinary Ditordm Qriddy YMd to mm GUARANTEED TREATMENT FOR KIUNEY COMPLAINTS Soto* goo right to the Mat of the trouble, aiding the kidneys to paaa off the Urfc Add aad potionou* waste that rami Rheumatic twinges and other painful tymptomk Soothe* and heals the bladder and quickly tod* all kidney dkonien MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS Leading Druggitu Emorvha*, lodadiog H. C. Kennedy Everyone Should Drink Hot Water in the Morning Wash away all the stomach, liver, and bowel poleona before breakfast. To feel your best day in and day out, to feel clean Inside; no sour bile to coat your tongue and sicken your breath or dull your head; no constipa tion, bilious attacks, sick headache, colds, rheumatism or gassy, add stomach, you must bathe on the inside like you bathe outside. This is vastly more important, because the skin pores do not absorb impurities Into the blood, while the bowel pores do, says a well-known physician. To keep these poisons and toxins well flushed from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, drink before breakfast each day, a glass of hat wa ter with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate In it. This will cleanse, purify and freshen the entire alimen tary tract, before putting more food into the stomach. Get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from your pharmacist. It is Inexpensive and almost tasteless, except a sourish twinge which Is not unpleasant. Drink phosphated hot water every morning to rid your sys tem of these vile poisons and toxins; also to prevent their formation. To feel like young folks feel; like you felt before your blood, nerves and muscles became saturated with an ac cumulation of body poisons, begin this treatment and above all, keep It up! As soap and hot. water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and purifying, so limestone phosphate and hot water be fore breakfast, act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels.—Advertise ment. agreed with him that perhaps it dl< At first she had hesitated to admit this. Was she trying, gossips won dered, to fix the crime upon some one outside the house, thus attempt ing to shield some member of the Reeves household? It was said that no further inves tigation would be made until the dead man's wife was able to give testimony. But it was suspected that detectives were stationed in Milton and that the police had some persons and places under strict sur veillance. • Dr. Monroe, the village physician summoned in frantic haste by Ezra Hardy, knew that Jane Reeves hands had been stained with blood when he first saw her In the gray dawn of that Spring morning. The sleeves, too, of her wrapper had splashes of blood on the edges. How did these get there? He had known Jane from babyhood and was fond of her. He would not let himeslf think that she had been driven to a horri ble crime. She was not capable of such a thing. There was some hid eous mystery here. He would hold his tongue until more was revealed. His conscience did not hurt him for doing this. A country physician learns to maintain silence about many things. The Funeral Goes On Meanwhile the young wife tossed to and fro on her bed the little white bed that had been hers in girlhood in the room in which she had lain so often and dreamed her dreams of love and happiness. She did not know where she was, but babbled foolishly of silly things, or. when her fever ran highest, called aloud that something was following her, close upon her. The trained nurse from Pattonville listened pityingly to the agonized moans for help, to the monotonous counting of footsteps or of the tick ing of an imaginary clock—some times it was one, sometimes the other. "One, two one, two," the girl would whisper. Again and again the nurse re solved that, no matter what hap pened, she would never repeat cer tain sentences uttered by her deliri ous patient. Day after day passed. Augustus Reeves' lawyer came from Patton ville and made all the funeral ar rangements after the coroner had fulfilled his duties. The farmer's body was laid beside that of his first wife in the little cemetery back of the church. The curious crowd that followed it to its last resting place wondered morbid ly whether the girl whom he had married less than a half year ago would soon be laid here, too. Well, she had paid dearly for her ambi tion to become rich! And she had always been so sweet and simple before her marriage! Ruth Crosby sobbed convulsively as she tried to speak of the tragedy. Poor Jane! She had not been happy —Ruth was sure of this now. The resentment she had felt toward the young wife was forgotten in this new horror. For, it was whispered in the vil lage, if Jane Reeves should live, she would be arrested for the slaying of her husband. (To Be Continued.) BOLERO EFFECTS ARE WELL LIKED Checked Materials With Plain Bandings Make Pretty Spring Suits fiy MAY MANTON jj| p wit 8857 (With Basting Line and Added .Seam Allowance) Gown with Plaits for Misses anil Small Women, 16 and 18 years. One-Piece frocks are greatly in demand for the younger contingent and this one with its bolero suggestion is peculiarly at tractive. In the picture, it is made from a light weight wool material* woven with a check ana trimmed with plain banding, but you could think of it copied in silk or in gabardine or in poplin or indeed in any similar material. It would be a very handsome frock or a very simple one as one or the other is chosen Broadcloth in light weight, with trimming of velvet would make a very handsome dress, whi.e serge would make a very durable one. Below the bolero-like portion or deep yoke, the body portion and the skirt are cut together, piaited and held by means of the belt at the waist line. For the 16 year size will be needed, yds. of material 36 in. wide, yds. 44 or 54 in. wide, with yd. 44 in. wide for collar, cuffs and belt and yds. of banding. The pattern No. 8857 is cut in sizes for 16 and 18 years. It_ will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Depart ment of this paper, on receipt of lea cents. FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. (Copyright. 1916 'jy Alfred W. McCann.) CHAPTER 25 Wonders of plant and animal life, which commercialism Ignores in preparing- the denatured food stuffs that it now sends to market. In the bodies of animals and plants the twelve food minerals are built up Into many highly complex com binations and as they are being built up they are also being broken down. In disease they break down faster than in health. • As the tissue is destroyed by daily wear and tear it is transformed into simpler chemical compounds and passedout of the body. In order that the living body may replace its broken down cells It must find a constant new supply of the elements from which those cells are evolved. These elements, as we find them In the soil, can be called non-living mat ter. The chemical processes which transform this non-living matter into living tissues are th'e same in plant and animal as we have seen with this one difference. Plants are capable of taking the non-living matter from the earth and compounding it or organizing it into the wonderfully complex substances which form their structure. We have already seen many instances of this. Animals do not possess this power. Animals depend for their existence upon foodstuffs prepared from the non-living matter of earth by the plants that have the power to pre pare them. Otherwise man could cat earth, stone, or clay and thus obtain all the elements necessary to his existence. We have seen why he can not do this. Plants obtain the energy which en ables them to perform their myster ious work of organizing the non-living matter of earth from the sunlight, and only in the presence of sunlight can they carry on the upbuilding pro cesses which give them their tissues. Green grass will not grow in the dark. We know that under the Influence of sunlight plants are capable of com bining the carbonic gas and nitrogen of the air with water and the mineral salts of the soil into such substances aa starch, fat, and albumen. They always do this in the presence of the food minerals. Their ability to bring about these changes depends upon the presence of a chemical substance which is found in their green part and is called clilorophyl. We know that chlorophyl requires exposure to the sun's rays in order that It may be able to perform its serious work, but of the processes by which it does that work we know little. We know that various parts of the plant and various organs of the body contain substances that can be ex tracted. These substances are called enzymes or ferments or vitamines. Some of them are pepsin, trypsin, pty alin. There are many others which need not be mentioned here. These ferments and vitamines are found in the grains, in the marrow of bones, in egg yolk, and other foods and are just as indispensable to the health of the body as the food miner als. We now know positively that in the human body they' serve the pur pose of assisting to form the various foodstuffs which are furnished to the animal by the plant into substances that can be absorbed and built up into animal tissues. Ordinary bakers' yeast is a. ferment having the.power to transform starch and sugar into alcohol and carbonic gas. It possesses the power to rear- POISON FOR ONE IS FOOD FOR ANOTHER So Says Dr. Dixon in Dis cussing Differences of Individuals People are just as different as loco motives or machines and what is good for one person may not be good for another. Each one should have what suits him and we can not transgress what nature has laid out for us with out feeling and consequences. We must measure individual characteris tics and do what is best and avoid things that do not agree with us. These are views of Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, State Commissioner of Health, in discussing the difference in people and the importance of looking after one's health. He says: "Engineers will tell you that no two locomotives are ever exactly alike. They may be turned out to an exact ness that defies the most modern in strument for measurement or weight to show any differences. Put into service, each machine will develop in dividual characteristics, one often be ing superior for its purpose. This same unknown quantity is experienced in sea-going vessels. The trial trip is the only test of their efficiency. "The medical man never linds two human beings with the same disposi tions, mental or physical strength, yet we ore created after the same model, but owing to dissimilar nerve forces or the life of our tissues, each indi vidual has certain differences and some, have real idocynacrasies. "There are broad rules of nature to our physical welfare which we cannot transgress without evil results. ■ iltV/illfcM; LJPOWDER J MHFM !n • : range the molecular composition of sugar and starch. it is a strange but interesting fact I '(hat formaldehyde and wood alcohol' j which are deadly poisons, contain ex i actly the same elements as those : which make up the composition of i | grain alcohol and acetic acid, whisky,' ; and vinegar. Starch, cane sugar, glucose, lactic acid, and carbolic acid also contain I the same elements exactly—carbon, | hydrogen and oxygen. The only dif ference among them is In the propor | tions and arrangement of them. It is J this arrangement which makes some ol them beneficial foods and some of Jthein deadly poisons, j Ordinary starch can be converted I into sugar by the action of ferments, j Sugar can be converted by the action of the other ferments into lactic acid, j alcohol, and acetic acid, depending entirely upon the character of the fer | ment employed. In other words, there are good and I bad ferments. That we sometimes allow the bad ferments to develop and | kill off the good ones with so-called | "harmless" preservatives will be j shown as we proceed. It was thought at one time that the j ferments found In the digestive glands | were the only ferments to be found in the animal body. Accordingly our | knowledge of their conduct in the pro i cesses of digestion was limited and in i the treatment of many diseases the symptoms alone were treated for the reason that the cause was never sus j pected. It has been determined in recent [ years that ferments are of many | kinds and they are,present in every ! cell and are intimately concerned in I all the manifestations of life. As many as a dozen different fer i merits have been found, for example j In the liver cells. It has also been demonstrated that ' for the maintenance of life in the i case of the higher plants the organ j ized ferments are of profound import | ance. Through them the higher plants 1 obtain their nitrogen from the air in la form which they can utilize. ! So it is seen that even in the pres ence of all the necessary food min erals, if the ferments be absent or de stroyed or decomposed, vegetable or animal life cannot be normal. Each of these ferments has a spe | cial function to perform. In the I animal body for Instance, some of i them, such as pepsin, can act to ad | vantage only under acid condition, j Others, such as ptyaltn, require an j alkaline condition. Still others can act under add, alkaline, or neutral conditions. Fixed laws control them. Certain ferments will act only upon certain definite substances and under the proper conditions, i Fat-splitting ferments, for instance, , will act only upon fat; diastase fer | ments will ac t only upon starch and sugar: proteolytic ferments will act 'only upon albumen. J Of their chemical composition little I is known that is definite and just as I little Is known of the equally import ant vitamines. We do know, however, [that food of the wrong kind, food I badly prepared, food which has suf | fered an unnatural loss of some of its i elements, can set up conditions that J are hostile to the action of these fer | ments, and that in setting up these ! conditions we are inviting physiologi cal discord which means disease. It is imperative that we do not in terfere with the normal conditions that control the conduct of these little workers in the body. As we go along all this will be explained so simply and so fully that many of us will doubtless wonder why we ever toler ated the food conditions that are about to be described. Likewise there are certain things which the majority of us can do with out putting any unusual strain on our physique, but here begins the ques tion of the adjustment of the indi vidual piece of machinery. We must study our physical limitations and lind out just what scope we have. Be cause one man can live or almost exist on an exclusive meat diet, It is no reason why the next fellow can. Men and women often ruip t.helr health by trying to do things simply because others do them. Bach should get his own measure. "The question of age must enter into consideration. It is well to bear in mind that exertion wliich does not, seem a strain at one period In life may be dangerous in later years. "These same principles apply in matters of diet. There are foodstuffs wholesome enough to the average in dividual; which seem to have a dele terious effect on the few. "We must measure our individual characteristics and avoid those things that do not agree with us. "All of these things should be ob served and taken Into consideration. They are the results of weaknesses or peculiarities in our living machinery and to reach and maintain efficiency; they must be recognized and respect- M DEVELOPED 14 DAY TREATMENT I if jy FR E E f j V . My big three part treatment J is the only one known that S l/i y°o I S W FULL DEVELOPMENT j [ without bathing, massage, f % netc. Using it la a reel pleas- Xv. ■ { Mutv. I send a REAL 14 dsy treatment prepaid by parrel P°®t. in plain wrapper, if you enclose 25c (coin or stamps) to help pay expenses. EXTRA!!! Bend now and 1 will nclude a large Alumi num Box of ray Peerless Beautifying Cream. j I not only tell you how—l give you the I treatment to do it. READ MY GUARANTEE If what you receive Is not worth $2.00, or you are not MORE than satisfied, your 25c back promptly, without question. DO IT NOW. Ad dress Madame Williams, care of T). A. Sanative Co., Buffalo, N. Y. FLORIDA $31.80 R ?S™ $31.80 Jacksonville From Philadelphia every Wednesday and Saturday. Including meals and choice of. state room accommodations. All outside rooms. Fine steamers. Best service. Tickets limited to May 31. Mercliniit* A Miner* Trans. Co. City Ticket Office, 105 S. 9th St.. Phlla., Pa. Consult any ticket or tourist agent. IftiHMlllliM Non-greasy Toilet Cream Keeps the Skin Soft and Velvety In Rough Weather. An Exquisite Toilet Prep aration, 25c. GOHGAS' DRUG STOKES 1« W. Third St.. and P. R. «». Station Thin Men and Women Can Put on Flesh by Getting 100% Efficiency from Their Food Failure to Ahuorh Flesh Making >latrr lalu In Dally Mf«l» Keep* Welxht Down. How to Make the Food Work and Stick. Most thin people eat from four to six pounds of good solid fat-making food every day and still do not Increase In weight one ounce, while on the' other hand many of the plump, chunky folks eat very lightly and keop gaining all the time. It seems all bosh to .say that this is the nature of the Individual. It isn't Nature's way at all. Most thin people stay thin because their powers of assimilation are defec tive. They absorb,just enough of the food they eat to maintain life and a semblance of health and strength. Stuffing won't help them. A dozen meals a day won't make them gain a single "staythere" pound. A great part of the fat-producing elements of their food just stay there in the intestines until they pass from the body as waste. What such people seemingly need is some thing that will so act upon these fatty food elements that their blood can absorb them and deposit them all about the body—something too, that will multiply their red blood corpuscles and increase their blood's carrying power. There Is a preparation known to re liable druggists almost everywhere which was designed to aid In supply CONSERVATION OF CHILD LIFE URQED Dr. Funk Points Out Responsi bility of Church at Cliapel Dedication Conservation of childhood is one of the greatest responsibilities of the Christian church to-day declared Dr. W. R. Funk, general manager of the Dayton, Ohio, Publishing House of the United Brethren Church, in an ad dress yesterday afternoon at the dedication of the new primary and junior Sabbath School chapel, of Derry Street United Brethren church, Fifteenth and Derry streets. Dr. Funk pointed out the import ance of training up the child in the way it should go from babyhood and severely criticized parents who are rearing their boys and girls under the theory that they must tfait until chil dren are well advanced in years be fore instructing them in the great truths of life, of love, and of God. Following his address Dr. Funk de livered the charge of dedication to the pastor, the Rev. Dr. J. A. Lyter and to the board of trustees giving the keys to the chapel to E. S. Nissley, president of the board. The entire day at Derry Street Church was devoted to the dedication. Dr. Funk preaching at both morning and evening services. In the evening the classes of the Sabbath School at tended the service in bodies. About a thousand dollars was raised during the day toward the payment of the chapel's erection. WESTERN^JNI^ Sets the Miles at Naught A business campaign of Day Letters and Night Letters will quickly prove dis tance an imaginary barrier and clock time only a comparison. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. 40c to 60c Per Ton Increase In Coal Cost will result if the coal miners' demand for 20% increase in wages and an eight-hour day is granted. April 1, 1916, the agreement between the operators and the miners will expire. The miners' purpose making 20 new de mands upon the coal producing companies as a condition for their continuing to mine coal after April Ist. Every increase in coal mining costs will be added to the final costs to you. The coal operators deserve your support and sympathy if present prices are to remain. We are advising our customers to prepare for a suspension of mining operations on April 1 by having an ample supply of coal on hand. . United Ice & Coal Co. \ \ I / / Knritfr A Ovndi'ii X\\v"*TW/ / Third A IloaM Hummel ,t Mulberry Y COAL\ Also Steeltun, Pa. ing the missing elements needed by the digestive organs to help them convert food into rich, fat-laden blood. This Modern treatment Is called Hargol and it aims through regenerative, recon structive powers to coax the stomach and Int'-stlnes to literally soak up til® fattenlnjr elements of your food and pass them into the blood, where they are carried to the starved, broken down eelh; and tissues of your body. You can readily picture what result this amazing transformation should pro duce as with Increased weight, the cheeks fill out. hollows, about neck, shoulders and bust disappear and from 10 to 20 pounds of solid, healthy flesh is added to the body. Sargol is sd solutely harmless. inexpensive. effi cient. G. A. Gorgas and other leading druggists of this vicinity have It and will refund your money if you are not satisfied us per the guarantee found In every large package. Why not make this test. First weigh yourself. Then take Sargol Just one tablet at every meal and before you go to bed for two weeks—then weigh again and note the difference. Let the scales tell the story. The tablets are small, easily swal lowed. produce no disagreeable effects, contain no habit drugs, and are not at all expensive as compared with re sults obtained. j HOT TEA BREAKS j A COLD-TRY THIS } Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea. or. as the German folks call It, "Hamburger Brust Thee," at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon It, pour through a sieve and drink a teacup full at any time. It la the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking a cold at once. It is inexpensive and entirely vege-« table, therefore harmless.—Adv. BIG FLEET TO MANEUVER AT PHILA. DURING MEET Special to the Telegraph Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 28. The dreadnaught Pennsylvania, christen ed last year by Miss Elizabeth Kolb, whom Governor Brumbaugh called "the sweetest girl In Pennsylvania," will head a fleet of battleships, cruisers and torpedoboat destroyers and sub marines which will maneuver in the Delaware River off the Navy Yard in the week in which the Associated Ad vertising Clubs of the World will meet in this city—June 25 to 30. NEW PASTOR CHOSEN Special to the Telegraph Mt. Joy, Pa., Feb. 2"B.—The Rev. G. A. Kercher, of Norristown, was unamt ously elected pastor of the Lutheran church of Mount Joy, at a congrega tional meeting held yesterday morning at a salary of SI,OOO, to suceed the Rev. J. Howard Kern, who was elect ed pastor of the Lutheran church at Mahanoy City. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers