. jflj Readiiv[ and all ike fornix; jpltl HANCICAP IN EDUCATION CAN BY ELLA WHEELER WILCOX Perhaps there is no more pathetic situation in life than that of the man or woman of adult years who, through sudden rise of fortune, or through marriage, finds a neglected education a barrier to happiness. An attractive exterior and a kind heart often blind a man to a woman's deficiencies in education until she is placed in daily contrast to his more cultured relatives and associates. Then his pride and the sensitive feel ings of the wife are constantly wound ed. A man of wealth (both of purse and heart) recently asked me how he could overcome his lack of educa tion. improve his language and en large his fund of information without the humiliation of placing himself under teachers. He had acauired fortune and influ ence In the business world, and had become the husband of a cultivated young woman. He was conscious of being at a disadvantage when in the presence of her relatives and friends. To this man and to every man and woman similarly situated I would offer this advice: Write a Page or Chapter of Emerson's Essays Every Pay Procure the works of Washington Irving, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Thack eray and Nathaniel Hawthorne. Begin perhaps with Emerson. Obtain a blankbook and make a rule of writing a page, or a chapter, from Emerson's essays each day. Xo matter how unprepared your mind may be for this work, keep at it until interest is awakened. Copy the words with precision and exactness. Consult a dictionary when any word which is not familiar is encountered. Try to master the meaning of every phrase; but even if it escapes you "copy the words and pass on to things you do understand. However dull this task may seem, you are surely and certainly forming the habit of correct phrasing. Added to this you are familiarizing yourself with good literature and with the thoughts of great minds. Do not try to do too much at first. Work slowly and patiently. BUT "WORK EVERY DAY A LITTLE. Never copy more than one essay in a day, and be satisfied if you only copy one printed page. You will be surpris ed to find how much you will accomp lish in a few months by this per sistent practice. When you begin upon the novels do not attempt to write down the en tire book. Read all the chapters care fully, but copy only those pages which seem most attractive to you, or such thoughts as appeal to you. After you have advanced enough to feel your improvement, take up Fashions of To-Day - By May Manton . A 'T'HIS is one of the most 1 charmin K frocks that could be shown. It is made of blue cctton voile and it is trimmed with the same f material in Paisley colors. You could find nothing more fash- FV ionable and you could find nothing more charmingly child /i ilk-" XPU *'k e ' alt 'iough, as a matter of I \ YtmFZIS&A course, you could copy the de ll 1 S ' gn a &reat man >' different j materials. If you want a'more U \\ I ll] sturdy dress, you could make it I II I gingham or of a light weight \ / ' inen anc * the collar of a thinner material. If you want Av something warmer for imme < /It l diate wear you could make it j HI of serge with the collar of char liVT fit 1111 meuse satin and perhaps a little /fl'fl 111 'ln in soutache braid or a little em /I m 111 II n broidery used for the trimming. IIVI |l(j Jr t | Jl ll If you want a simpler dress you II ft Jrajragjra) i\ could omit the trimming on the lil IrrlFlmJ H U skirt, leaving it plain. For the_ 12 year size will be /vf j v needed, 3yards of material / / | I inches wide, 3yards 44 J / I I (jr J nfl h /i / I I The May Manton pattern J I [ 934° is cut in sizes from 8 / / /v \ //// fl to H years. It will be mailed / / VvA nium to any address by the Fashion few *MXDI3I Department of this paper, on \y receipt tifteep cents. Absolutely No Pain jf Mr ■ J Mr l**Mt Imp rayed apply jjr /• JVrjKVII Bncfi, liclntlic u oxfrgft- .y Utd air iw*rttu, makes , > VI J eitractinf Hi all ieatl VV k J itrark forithfly palaleaa -A* KunfHu la perfectly harm- _V V'J im. (u M y EXAMINATION ~ FREE S ,ss!i. , rsNS alloy DO* lUfWml VV CT ?, TT "* Oraduan * VX ▼ d work $3, *4, $5 *—T Otlce open dally Bi3o HK (*l< ■. .IBJIO AT to • . . Hon, Wei J aad Sat.. Ull 0 p. aa.i Sum %. lara, 19 i. a. ti 1 p. au bkli, raoxß saaa-R. urr terms of JSft!|P^ At PA7M4.VTI A]U|ya 520 Market St. Harrlaburg, Pa. tt fcvrt (Mt Use Telegraph Want Ads! FRIDAY EVENING, KARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 16, 1917. Shakespeare, Milton and Goethe, and follow the same methods. After one year of persistent work for even an hour daily, along these lines, your efforts will satisfy you that you are on the right road to mental culture. Your mind will be as trans formed as a garret which careful hands have changed into a boudoir, by removing rubbish and replacing it with wisely selected furniture. To read the leading magazines keeps one in touch with current events and with the new discov eries and inventions of the day. Se lect perhaps two monthly magazines and make a rule to read them through each month. Avoid slipshod habits of reading. Never undertake to speak of an article you have read unless you are able to give a clear idea of it. earn the great gift of being silent un til you are sure of having something of Interest to say. Practice the art of drawing other people out and leading them to talk. Listen well and meditate upon what you hear. If you are listening 1 to the educated and cultured you will he able to learn something of the man ner of expression, even if you obtain no real information. Educated and cultured people do i not always impart information. Not infrequently they are mere : parrots, repeating what they have heard or read instead of what they have thought and learned by ex perience. Avoid the Errors and Emulate the Ac eomplisluucnts of Other People Do not imagine education nieans ! infallibility of judgment or keen sense iof justice. But it usually does mean | correct expression. Notice the errors made by others l in speech and in manners only 10 avoid them. Notice their accomplish* ments to emulate them. Try to learn something new ! every day. Carry a little notebook and ; if you hear a word which is not fa j miliar keep it in mind until you can , jot it down. Tf you read the word do! | the same and before you sleep, find its! ! meaning. The next morning think it I ; over until it is added to your vocab-1 I ulary. If you have leisure an-d means, look up some school of correspondence and take a course of study. Almost every city has a school of this kind and they are excellent substitutes for colleges. Rhetoric, mathematics, literature are all things which can be taught by correspondence. There is not the slightest necessity for any human being to-day remain ing ignorant. Indolence, lack of am bition and lack of application are the i causes of ignorance, not clrcum- I stances. j Whoever will, may acquire educa tion and culture. TfceGo dso/ , Copyright by Frank A. Munsey Co. (Continued.) j One by one she sent them through the secret panel Into the room beyond, and when the last had passed from the j chamber where we stood In wide eyed | amazement she turned and smiled at | us and then passed through herself, leaving us alone. CHAPTER VI. Thuvia. EOR a momeut neither of us spoke. Then said: "I hoard the fighting beyond the partition through which you passed, but I did not fear for you, 1 John Carter, until I heard the report of a revolver shot. I knew that there lived no man upon all Barsoom who could face you with naked steel and live, but the shot stripped the last ves ; tlge of hope from me, since you I knew to be without firearms. Tell me of it." I did as he bade, and then together we sought the secret ]V.nel through which I had just entered the apart ment—the one at the opposite end of the room from that through which the girl had led her savage companions. To our disappointment the panel eluded our every effort to negotiate its secret lock. We felt that once beyond it we might look with some little hope for success for a passage to the out side world. The fact that the prisoners within were securely chained led us to believe that surely there must be an avenue of escape from the terrible creatures which inhabited this unspeakable place. Again and again we turned from one door to another, from the baffling gold en panel at one end of the chamber to its mate at the other, equally baffling. When we had about given up all hope one of the panels turned silently to ward us, and the young woman who had led away the banths stood once more beside us. "Who are you," she asked, "and what is your mission that you have the temerity to attempt to escape from the valley Dor and the death you hare chosen?" "X have chosen no death, maiden," I replied. "I am not of Barsoom, nor have I taken yej the voluntary pilgrim age upon the river Iss. My friend here is jeddak of all the Tharks, and, though he has not yet expressed a desire to return to the living world, I am taking him with me from the living lie that hath lured him to this frightful place. "I am of another world. I am John Carter, prince of the house of Tardos Mors, jeddak of Helium. Terchance some faint rumor of me may have leaked within the confines of your hellish abode." She smiled. "Yes." she replied; "naught that passes in the world we have left is un known here. I have heard of you, many years ago. The thems have oft times wondered whither you have flown since you had neither taken the pil grimage nor could be found upon the lace of Barsoom." "Tell me," I said, "and who are you aiwl why a prisoner, yet with power over the ferocious beasts of the place that denotes familiarity and authority far beyond that which might be ex pected of a prisoner or a slave?" "Slave I am," she answered, "for fif teen years a slave in this terrible place, and now that they have tired of me and become fearful of the power which my knowledge of their ways has given me 1 am but recently condemned to die the death." i She shuddered. "What death?" I asked. "The holy thorns eat human flesh," she answered me, "but only that which Ms died beneath the sucking Hps of a BETTER THAN CALOMEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a Harmless Substitute Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets—the sub stitute for calomel-~are a mild but sure laxative, and their effect on the liver is almost instantaneous. They are the re sult of Dr. Edwards' determination not to treat liver and bowel complaints with calomel. His efforts to banish it brought out these little olive-colored tablets. These pleasant little tablets do the good that calomel does, but have no bad after effects. They don't injure the teeth like strong liquids or calomel. They take hold of the trouble and quickly correct it. Why cure the liver at the expense of the teeth? Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the gums. So do strong liquids. It is best not to take calomel, but to let Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets take its place. Most headaches, "dullness" arid that lazy feeling come from constipation and a disordered liver. Take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets when you feel "loggy" and "heavy." Note how they "clear" clouded brain and how they "perk up" the spir its. 10c and 25c a box. All druggists. I Looked tc See Her Torn to Pieces. plant man—flesh from which the defil ing Mood of life lias been drawn. And to this cruel end I have been con demned. It was to be within a few hours had your advent not caused an Interruption of their plans." "Was it then holy tberns who felt the weight of John Carter's hand?" 1 asked. "Oh, no: those whom you laid low are lesser therns, but of the same cruel and hateful race. The holy therns abide upon the outer slopes of these grim hills, facing the broad world, from which they harvest their victims and their spoils. "Labyrinthine passages connect these caves with the luxurious palaces of the holy therns, and through them pass upon their many duties the lesser therns and hordes of slaves and pris oners and fierce beasts—the grim In habitants of this sunless world. "There are within this vast network of winding passages and countless chambers men, women and beasts, who, born within Its dim and grew some underworld, have never seen the light of day—nor ever shall. "They are kept to do the bidding of the race of therns; to furnish at once their sport and their sustenance. "Now and again some hapless pil grim, drifting out upon the silent sea from the cold Iss. escapes the plant men aivl the great white apes that guard the temple of Issus and falls Into thu remorseless clutches of th therns. <•, as was my misfortune, il coveted fty the holy thern who chances to be upon watch In the balcony above the river where It Issues from the bowels of the mountains through the cliffs of gold to empty Into the lost sea of Korus. "All who reach the valley Dor are, by custom, the rightful prey of the plant men and the apes, while their arms and ornaments become the por tion of the therns, but if one escapes the terrible denizens of the valley for even a few hours the therns may claim such a one as their own. , "And again the holy thern on watch, should he see a victim he covets, often tramples upon the rlchts of the unrea soning brutes of the valley and takes his prize by foul means if he cannot gain it by fair. "It is said that occasionally some de luded victim of Barsoomlan supersti tion will so far escape the clutches of the countless enemies that beset his path from the moment thiU. he emerges from the subterranean passage through which the Iss flows for a thousand miles before it enters the Valley Dor as to reach the very walls of the tem ple of Issus. But what fate awaits one there not even the holy therns may guess, for who has passed within those glided walls never has returned to un fo,d the mysteries they have held since the beginning of time. "The temple of Issus Is to the therns what the valley Dor Is Imagined by the peoples of the outer world to be to them. It Is the ultimate haven of peace, refuge and happiness to which they pass after this life and wherein nn eternity of eternities is spent amid the delights of the flesh which appeal most strongly to this race of mental slants and moral pygmies." "The temple of Issus Is, I take It. a heaven within a neaven," I said. "Let us hope that there it will be meted to the therns as they have meted it here unto others." "Who knows?" the girl murmured. "The therns, I judge from what you have said, arc no less mortal than we. and yet have I always heard them spoken of with the utmost awe and reverence by the people of Barsoom as' One might speak of the gods them selves." (To Be Continued.) FIRST COUSINS TO SOARING POTATO Other Foods Have the Same Properties and Cost Con sumer Much Less Said Bridget to Pat, "Faith! Do ye sense that? The price of the spuds doesn't fall Said Pat with a grin, "Begorra, we win! We won't eat the divils at all." A few days ago when a bag ol' po- i tatoes arrived from the store out of j mere curiosity, I counted them—jtis; j twelve. Twenty-ttve cents for a dozen j potatoes—two and a fraction cents j each! Everything else had taken! wings, loaf bread was shrinking under \ one's very eyes and now even potatoes, j the great daily staple, had swung into ! line on the uphill march. To the j average housewife a dinner without | I potatoes is like a pitcher without a! j handle. Well, then, we must learn to j i take a firm grip of the rim and tip j i the handleless pitcher anyway! First, it is wise to see just what are > the food values found in the potato. These are chiefly starch, a carbohy- I drate, and liquid. Therefore any | starchy vegetables cooked in plenty iof water could be used as a substi tute. Among these are rice, hominy, I spaghetti, noodles and macaroni. The 1 next question is to tind palatable | ways of preparing these dishes. Either : one boiled until soft and served alone i forms a flat tasting, unappetizing, starchy mass. They are first cousins | of our great American standby but it j jis very evident that they lack the I I potato's flavor and satisfying attrac-1 Itlon. Then the housewife looks, I about her for combinations capable of j suiting the palates of her family. A few of these I have gathered from ; various sources and give below in the I hope that they may be of some use. Fried Rice I Blend 2 cups of cold boiled rice j with 1 tablespoonful lemon juice and ' mold into balls. Fry in deep fat until i a golden brown and serve very hot. Baked Rice Loaf Boil rice in chicken stock. When j 1 done, drain and press into a mold, j i When iirin, remove l'roni mold, brush j ! over with egg yolk, sprinkle with j grated cheese and brown in the \ oven. Serve with tomato sauce. French Rice Fry together a finely chopped j ! onion and seeded and chopped green I pepper. Remove from lire, add a tea spoon lemon juice and pour over hot j rice. Rakc<l Romin.v I Soak, boil and drain 2 cups big i hominy (samp). Add 1 can tomatoes. ! Mix together in baking dish. Dot over top with cheese and cook until partly ; dry. Croquettes of Hominy j Add 2 tablespoons milk to 2 cups cold boiled samp. Heat slowly. Re move from fire and add salt, pepper, celery salt, a dash of powdered clove and the beaten yolk of one egg. When cool, shape into croquettes, dip into white of the egg, roll in crumbs and fry in hot deep fat. Spanish Spaghetti Fill a baking dish with alternate layers of boiled spaghetti and any left over meat chopped tine. Season each layer with chopped onion and chopped red peppers. Pour over all the liquid j from one can of tomatoes. Season j with salt, paprika and celery salt. ! Sprinkle cheese over top and bake. Swiss Spaghetti Boil and drain the spaghetti and mix thoroughly while hot with grated Swiss cheese and a little melted but ter. Season with salt, paprika and celery salt. Set in the oven until the cheese melts and blends thoroughly. Serve very hot. Fried Xoodles Boil large noodles in salted water until tender, drain and cool. Dip each piece In batter and fry in hot j fat. Serve with cream or tomato I sauce. Noodles and Tomatoes ! Mix thoroughly one can tomatoes 1 and one package boiled noodles. Sea ] son with salt, pepper and diced onion. Put into baking dish, dot over with [cheese and bake until firm. Macaroni in Peppers or Cheese Shell Scald sweet green peppers, remove seeds and fill with boiled and broken macaroni. Dot over tops with cheese 'and bake. Or if one has the shell of a pineapple or edam cheese on i hand rill with the macaroni, sprinkle top with crumbs and bake. When in the course of human events I the hearts of the wholesale dealers | soften toward mankind, we may be I able to e.at potatoes again with an easy mind (and purse). When that glorious day arrives, we can blow ourselves and serve them in new and odd styles just for the joy of it! Devilled Potatoes Wash and bake six large potatoes in their jackets. Remove a slice from one end and carefully scoop out i the white. Mix this to a soft foamy consistency with milk and one well beaten egg. Flavor highly with salt, cayenne, mustard, onion juice and celery salt. Stuff the skins with the mixture, adding a piece of cheese in place of the slice cut off. Stand up right in a pan and put into oven until the cheese is thoroughly melted. Enslfsh Potatoes Fry thin slices of cold boiled potato until brown and on each slice place a : piece of hard boiled egg. Pour over the platter before serving a sauce made of 1 cup water, 2 tablespoons ' browned flour, salt, peper, 2 tea spoons vinegar and chopped, parsley i to taste. Potatoes and Bacon Brown one cup cold chopped pota i toes with one-half cup diced bacon. , Beat separately the yolks and whites of 3 eggs (the Powers grant they will II be cheaper by then!). Stir eggs into the potato mixture and season with i salt, pepper and celery salt. Cook in ( frying pan slowly liek an omelet, fold ing over If desired. 1 ANNA HAMILTON WOOD. | Kittatinny Camp Fire Girls Royally Entertained Mechanicsburg, Pa., Feb. 16.—Miss Mary Koller delightfully entertained * the Kittatinny Camp Fire Girls, of which she is a member, last evening at her home in East Main street, with a valentine masquerade party. The i rooms were gay in heart decorations and favors of valentines were given ' the guests at the conclusion of sup per. In attendance were: Misses 1 Miriam Zufall, Rachel Shelly, Marjorle [ Baum, Florence Orris, Elizabeth Hurst, Miriam Orris, Elizabeth Craw ford, Etta Miller, Ruth Miller and Mary Koller. Special guests were: Miss Margaret Blackburn, Miss Elsie Lenker. Miss Francis Koller and Mrs. William Koller. Copyright, 1913, by Doubloday, Pago A Co. (Continued.) "Johnny," said I in a strangled little voice, "I've rot to Rive back MeGlynn's change. Mr.i *. to go with me?" We tiptoed around the corner of the building and fell into each other's arms with shrieks of joy. "Oh,'' crieil Johnny at lasi, wiping the tears from his eyes. "n!!ey's no trouble!" After we had to some extent relieved our feelings we changed my gold slug Into dust—l purchased a buckskin bag —and went to find McGlynn. Our way to his quarters led past the postofllce, where a long cue of men still waited patiently and quietly In line. We stood for a few jioments watching the de meanor of those who had received their j mail or who had been told there was j nothing for them. Some of the latter j were pathetic and looked fairly dazed j with grief and disappointment. We found Yank and Talbot still at the edge of the hotel veranda. "Look here, Tal," said Johnny at once, "how aie you going to finish all this business you've scared up and get off to the mines within n reasonable time? We ought to start pretty soon." "Mines?'* echoed Talbot. "I'm not going to the mines: I wouldn't leave all this for a million mines. No; Yank and I have been talking it over. You boys will have to attend to the mining end of this business. I'll pay Frank's share and take a quarter of the profits, and Frank can pay in j in addition half his profits. In return for the work I don't do I'll put aside $220 and use It in my business here, and all of us will share in the profits I make from that amount. How does that strike you?" "I don't like to lose you out of this," said Johnny disappointedly. "Nor I." said I. "And I hate to lose the adventure, boys," agreed Talbot earnestly. "But, honestly, I can't leave this place now even if I want to, and I certainly don't want to." I turned in that night with the feel ing that I had passed a very interest ing day. CHAPTER XI. Off For Sutter'o Fort. TWO days later Yank, Johnny and I embarked aboard a small bluff bowed sailboat, waved our farewells to Talbot, standing on the shore, and laid our course to cross the blue bay behind an island called Alcatraz. Our boatman was a short, swarthy man with curly hair and gold rings in his ears. He han dled his boat weil, but spoke not at all. After a dozen attempts to get something more than monosyllables out of him we gave it up and settled ourselves to the solid enjoyment of a new adventure. The breeze was strong and drove even our rather clumsy craft at con siderable speed. The blue waters of the bay flashed In the sun and riffled under the squalls. Spray dashed away from our bows. A chill racer in from the open Pacific, diluting the sunlight. After a journey of several days we came into u wide bottom land country I with oaks. The distant blue hills had grown and had become slate gray. At noon we discerned ahead of us a low bluff, and a fork In the river, and among the oak trees the gleam of tents, and before them a tracery of masts where the boats and small ships lay moored to the trees. This was the embarcadero of Sutter's Fort beyond, or the new city of Sacramento, which ever you pleased. Here our boat jour ney ended, and we set out to cover the three or four miles to Sutter's Fort. Sutter's Fort was situated at the edge of the live oak'park. We found it to resemble a real fort, with high walls, bastions and a single gate at each end through which one entered to a large inclosed square, perhaps a hundred and fifty yards long by fifty wide. The walls were not pierced for guns, and the defense seemed to de pend entirely on the Jutting bastions. The walls were double and about twenty-five feet apart. Thus by roof ing over this space and dividing it with partitions Sutter had made up his barracks, blacksmith shop, bakery, and the like. Later in our investiga tions we even ran across a woolen fac tory, a distillery, a Millard room and a bowling alley! At the southern end of this long space stood a two story house. Directly opposite the two story house and at other end of the in closure was an auobe corral. The place was crowded with people. A hundred or BO miners rushed here and there on apparently very impor tant business or loafed contentedly against the posts or the sun warmth of adobe walls. In this latter occupation they were aided and abetted by a number of the native Californlans. Perhaps a hundred Indians were lead ing horses, carrying burdens or en gaged in some other heavy toll. They were the first we had seen, and we ex amined them with considerable curi osity. A good many of them were nearly naked, but some had on por- tions of battered civilized apparel. Very few could make up a full suit ofi clothes, but contented themselves with either a coat, or a shirt, or a pair oC pantaloous, or even with only a hat, as the case might be. They were very iwarthy, squat, villainous looking sav ages, wlili bis heads, low foreheads, coarse hair anil beady little eyes. We stopped for some time near the rentry box at the entrance, accustom ing ourselves to the whirl and move ment. Then we set out to find Mc- Clellan. He was almost immediately pointed out to us. a short, square, busi nesslike man, with n hard gray face, dealing competently with the pressure. A. score of men surrounded liiiu, eaclt eager for his attention. While we hov ered, awaiting our chance, two nieii walked In through the gate. They were uccorded the compliment of al most a complete silence on the part of those who caught sight of them. The first was a Californian about thirty-five or forty years of age, a man of lofty, stern bearing, swarthy skfu, glossy side whiskers and bright super cilious eyes. He wore a light blue short jacket trimmed with scarlet and with silver buttons, a striped silk sash, breeches of crimson velvet, met below by long embroidered deerskin boots. A black kerchief was bound crosswlso on Ills head, entirely concealing the hair, and a flat crowned, wide, gray hat heavily ornamented with silver completed this gorgeous costume. He moved with the assured air of the aris tocrat. The splendor of his apparel, the beauty of his face and figure and the grace of his movements attracted the first glance from all eyes. Then immediately he was passed over in fa vor of his companion. The latter was a shorter, heavier man, of more mature years. In fact, his side whiskers were beginning to turn gray. His costume was plain, •. but exquisitely neat, and a strange \ blend of the civil and the military. The Jacket, for example, had been cut in the trim military fashion, but was worn open to exhibit the snowy cas cade of the linen beneath. But no body paid much attention to the man's | dress. The dignity and assured calm of his face and eye at once Impressed one with conviction of unusual quality. Johnny sta.red for a, moment, his brows knit; then, with an exclamation, he sprang forward. "Captain Sutter!" he cried. Sutter turned slowly to look Johnny squarely in the face, his attitude one of cold but cowrteous inquiry. John ny was approaching hat in hand. I confess he astonished me. We had known him intimately for some mouths and always as the harum-scarum, im pulsive, hail fellow, bubbling, irrespon sible. Now a new Johnny stepped for ward, quiet, highbred, courteous, self contained. Before lie had spoken a word Captain Sutter's aloof expression had relaxed. "I* beg your pardon for addressing you so abruptly," Johnny was saying. "The surprise of the moment must ex cuse me. Ten years ago. sir, I had the pleasure of meeting you at the time you visited my father in Virginia." (To Be Continued.) I MM I aßtP\ Sold in 2, 5, 10, 25 ud SO lb. cotton b>n and in 1, 2 and S lb. cartoiu, packed at the refinery Apple pie for din- 1 ner? You'll find A Franklin Sugar for every use Granulated, Dainty Lump*, Pow- RUBS SILVER OV-NOT OFF IliUMiMfl OAWfrA M TO. CO.. HIP- ■) O*DM T. H. V. O. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers