r r i i I ' i "iflWWWIWIlfcKWlBllwniii n i ami an .. lii ill a ... . - - - - j'm mm mm fret fill MIT : ii ivni1 V ir rt in Id M If;..- .1 The whole art ok Government consists in the art of being HONEST.Jenerson. smr 10. 'Published by Theodore Sckoch. TERMS Two dollars ncr annum in advance Two dollars and a "quarter, half yearlyand if not paid before the end of xiw.ycar, two dollars ana a nan. l nose who receire their papers by a carrier or stage drivers employed by the proprie tor.'-wiU-bc charced 37 U2 .cents, per vear. extra. No.papcrs discontinued until all arrearages arc paid, except Biujc opium or iik; uiiur. IE3Advertisemcnts nbt exceeding onefquare (sixteen lines) will be' inserted, three weeks for one dollar, and twenty-five cenis ior every subsequent insertion. The charge ior one anu enrce insertions .tne same. A liberal discount maue to yearly aaveruscrs. mAll letters addressed to the Editor must be post-paid. JOB PRINTING. Hiring a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and orna- raeniat Type, we are preparcu io execute every description of Cards, Circulars, Bill Hcdas, Notes, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER . , PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms AT THE OFFICE OF THE , Jefferson ian Republican. Thou'lt Come no More. I 'think of thee ! those orbs that roll In yon soft sky so blue and blight, jBring nightly to my pensive soul One heavenly dream of lost delight. At eve the stars come back to heaven, .And sparkle happier than before ; To tne, alas I no joy is given ; I weep to think thou'lt come no more. I bate the songs I sang of old, Though they were dearest then to me ; Icannoi bear the world, so cold, Should hear those songs I sang for thee. When summer's fled the earth is lone, The wild bird's silver note is o'er, And thus with me, when thou art gone, I weep to think thou'lt come no more. -RoiFon, resistless time! Thy wing - - Thall never change the spirit's bliss ; ' And if I could, 1 would not fling Away a dream of love iike this ; Yet-when my shattered bark hath passed The waves, of life's dark ocean o'er, If thou, loved one ! art found at last, . In Heaven I'il rest, and weep no more. Prayer in the Bail Room. (a one of the interior counties of Pennsylvania a young man whom , for the sake of distinction, we shall call B , was convicted of sin and led to inquire anxiously the way to be saved. He was the son of one of the most respectable and wealthy inhabitants of the region of country, but his father was unhappily a bitter opposer of the religion of Christ. Pecciving the state of his son's mind, he determined to leave no means untried to divert his mind from the subject, lie hurried him from business to pleasure, and from pleasure to business, with strong hopes that his serious im pressions might bo driven away, or, at least, that he might be prevented making any public profes sion of the change of his views. But all these efforts wero vain. Tho Spirit of God had laid hold on hia soul, and did not desert him. He was brought to the dust in submission, and found peaco in-believing in Christ. About this time a splcnded ball was got up, with every possible attempt to display, and the youth of the village and surrounding country were all excitement lor ttio iesttvo nau. d was invi ted. He at once declined attending, but his fath er insisted that he should go. Here was a strug gle for.the young convert. On the one hand were the convictions of his own conscience, as well as the desires of his heart. On the other, the com mand of a father whom he was Btill bound to obey. The struggle was long and anxious. At length it was: decided he determined to go. His father Tejoiced at his decision. His friends congratula ted him on having abandoned his new notions and become a eian again. The evening at last arrived. The gay party were, gathered in the spacious hall. There was beautv. and wealth, and fashion. The world was ihere. Every heart seemed full of gladness, every .v.oice twae one of joy. B appeared among the ?est,'3vitn. a brow that spoke the purpose of a de termined soul. He "was tho first on the floor to lead off tho dance. A cotillion was formed, and asj the circle- stood in the centre , of tho room, with every eye fixed on. them, what was tne as innishment of the comoanv when B raised ". i 'his hands and said, " Lei us pray.1' The assem blv was awe -struck. Not a word was uttered. Jt-wa8,as, silent as the grave, while B poured out-ills heart to God in behalf of his young com panions; his parents, and the place in which they lived: With perfect composure ho concluded his pyrand, all had left the room silently, but one. Aoungjlady whom, he had led upon the floor as his partner, stood near him bathed in tears, They leTtrlheoom together, and not long afterwards, sbft.vPds'lejSTto the foot of the cross, having been first awakened by, her.partjner's prayer on the ball floor. They wero soon married, and are still liv ing, active, devoted members of the body of Christ. "H'iii.'ig sn elder in one of the churches near the city ofNew York. Cyclopedia of Moral and Re igious Anecdotes. t 1 I I- ' ' . r, i, . ' ' - -'flgjr'A poor shoemaker havingr plunged- into the water . to save the life of a miser's 'cjiild, the latter .0ls ;p'rto.fus.c in thanks. ' yfyjat do 1 not owe you !" said. he, 1 owe ouieverything.?' Very- well, you njay just pay me ten dollars ojk,iKy.,,,; fM the other1. " and I will wait till yge.t .ready to discharge tho remainder of tho j debt1 Tlx? rn.i?$r sloped. , WL- STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, Advice to an Old Maid. My dear Miss Tafly, very affectionately said Mrs. Scruggins the other day to a particular friend, 4 J have an idea you would'nt object to committin' yourself into Matrimony, purvisoned you had a good chance. It's no use sayin' you wouldn't. I know old maids never want to marry ! I never know'd any one of them that said she. had any idear of surh a thing. They wouldn't marry for the world ! Yet it's straordinary how wonderful quick they'll jump at the first proposal as is made at 'em. I don't mean to say you would. I'm talkin' now about old maids, and you ain't more than thirty-two, I reckon V Miss Taffy vowed that she was ten years and two months younger. Oh, I know, but isn't it a great pity how you ain't a buxom widder. like myself I I've often wondered how it was, that bachelors that ain't afeared of widders ; are allays so dreadful fright ened at old maids ! After studyin' the thing a long time, I have come to this conclusion; the blessed state of singleness, and therefore, the bles sedness of the single state isn't no blessedness at all, cause it ain't right oughtn't to be. And so 1 told Mr. Skindle that it was contrary to the pri mary rules of nater, to old maids should be old maids, and that bachelors should keep on being bachelors. Miss Taffy, if you want ever to get married c. w . ivuu ,.B a umulx iu say yuu are i U :j:u i rf r 1 c . - r ry 1 r f tits lMln lnM A A .. i uiu iiiuiuisu . 11 you are lonu 01 cats, nurse em when you are by yourself, don't for anything do it in kumpany. If you take snuff, don't forget your self, and pull out your box before the lords. if you wear a wig, never get4n a passion and throw it at the servant cause servants will talk, if you have get false teeth for goodness sake have them fixed in tight, so they won't drop out, like I seen a set once when a famine was lauglnn.' If you are fond of gossipin' do it in a quite kind of way. If you find any gray hairs beginning to come in your head, pull em out and don't fuller Judge M's plan go to sperimentin' and burnin' your hair off to see if it won't cum out black agen ; and if you are an old maid I fervidly hope you ain't don't pre- tend to be very nice and prim in your talkin' and bread, as if he was 'feared it would be all gone and was aeterminect to mane tne mosi oi 11 wnite it lasts. 1 know'd an old maid once who was so Honey sawit he malic you penscy, which means evil to them that thinks evil,1 and I say so too. Miss Taffy, if you have enny idear of ever ketchin' a lord never prim yourself up as stiff as starch can make you. I like to see people look nice, but there is a boundaiy to everything a' most. Why man would as leave court a purcupine as one of them nice femines. Mr. Skindle ses he'd as leave'kiss a statute as one of them kind, and I don't blame him. ' If you ever are foutunate to get married, Miss Taffy, you'll find the double state is a heap the happiest ; it's such a consolidation to have some one to please if nothin' else, and then you have a standin' in tho world which femines and lords can never arrivo at in a slate of single blessedness. There is three pints in a feminine's life to look forard to with distressive anxiety ; first is the time when she makes her debult, as the French call comin' out, the second is the marriage, and the next in, the responsibilities Miss Taffy fainted. Unacountablc Trick with a Bottle. The following singular feat was lately performed t by Professor Anderson before Queen Victoria, during the festivities of Prince Albert's birth-day. It is called ihe " Inexhaustible Bottle." On re ceiving the royal cammand to perform it, the Pro fessor called for a champagne bottle, and handed a large, number of glasses round, and asked Lord Portman what he would drink. His Lordship re- nliprl whisknv whiskev was noured out. Mr . . . ... . .. t , j plaster of Tans, pipe-clay, or chalk, and having, i turns the most deltcions viands aDOUl in nouse uovereu ; mjc cuuiui. i u, ee j indeed as j. , ag m ffi . j The man lhal fa meir naKeo oaens : as wr. oh.noie says in iiiin . Dalatable swcetness. and thev are often colored does not live out half his days, Anderson preferred brandy, which he got. Seve-1 Parlies aSreed 10 emPloy a wn Jprn Philabel ral demanded wine, which passed freely, and one ! Phia Alderman to put on the tackling. He com of the proprietors of the royal distillery, Mr. Begg'' menced lhe ceremonies by remarking that, "it was thinking to baffle the Professor, asked him if he ! customary on such occasions to commence with would give him a glass of his best Lochnangen l,ia"er' Put he believed he W0.uId omit that SM on whiskey. No sooner said than done ; and the i tieinS lhe km,t' he said' "U wa3 cstomary to give Tt,o, ,K;ei,o hnramo in rrt Hmsnrt 4 the married couple some advice, but ho believed large numberof additional glasses were distributed, j and some called for Irish whiskey, numbers bran dy the Highlanders patronized Mr. Bogg, and a noble lord who was present, wishing to try the wizard's skill, asked for a glass of rum, which was immediately supplied, and his lordship pronounced it excellent. The London portion of the domes tics and police called for gin, which was freely poured out of this exordinary bottle ; and the wiz ard was returning to his seat, when his royal.high ness, anxious to test the bottle presuming, as he was :ieturning, it was exhausted asked if more i n . , r ah. . i ! used for thresmg machines, a balance wheel cpn her Majesty and Prince. Albert, and, on being i .... . u r. 1 , , J. , j u , , nected w th the horse power by shaft and coup- asked what they preferred, requested Begg's best, , -' , , . nn nrm nf r , . . . - i- . , r .u ju ng rons : the pitman attached to one arm of the Lochnanger, which immediately ran for b, and her , ' ' ' , , . aMi ru , . . , u n- . . iii .wheel. The saw plays horizontally, merely fas- Maiesty and the Prince, tasting it, acknow edged , , 1 . hm, u , u J . . h. tonoH nt nnf. nnd to he Pitman, lhe logs to be IlS'PUrHy , aiui uic wuuu gave uuiiiiu iu iiic Prince and asked him to look if it was empty it was. oir. Anaerson urougni some- water, ana A t I ! - 1 n the Prince's hand, filled it, ordered glasses, and asked the Prince what wine he preferred. Port, and then sherry, then milk, then campagne, thep broke the bottle, and in it was discovered a beau tiful turtlerdove Caledonia Mercury. According to the Conatimtion of Kentucky, preachers are o be deprived of the privilege of holding ofriicei under the State Government. Kissiuff no Robbery. Oh quit get out now don't you I really wish you wouldn't ! Oh ! quit will you ! Oh, get out ' You knew you ought to shouldn't. I There now, you've got itoh, be still !-. You shan't have any more '. You've got oh, take your face away "- What no man has got before. One more there that will do oh, don't You've rumpled up my hair ; If you'll but quit, I'll give you one Now take it llterc there there J Curious Facts relative to the Effects of atiiir Sugar. The French people are great eaters of Sugar, always carrying some of it about with them in their pockets and reticules, and generally putting five of six large lumps into each cup of coffee. M. Rhossat reports that sugar, when used as the exclusive or principal article of diet, produces quite opposite effects in some persons, according to the differences in their" system ; for, while it fattens some, it creates bile which induces a diarrhoea and wasting of the solids in other persons. The cel ebrated Bolivar had, by fatigue and privations, so injured the tone of his stomach, that he was una ble at times to take any other food than sugar, which in his case, was easy of disgestion. His , friend assures ug lh t - some of - j ,ast 1 campaigns he lived-for weeks together upon sugar alone as a solid, with pure water as a liquid ; but. probably, in nine hundred and ninety-nine cases out of a thousand, thi3 diet would soon have brought the person adopting it to his grave ; for, on those whose digestion is feeble, a large or exclusive allowance of sugar adds to their griev ance, because the excess of nutriment, not being generally absorbed by their weakened system, be comes converted to bile, and causes nreat debility ! amJ wastjng of ,he bo(Jy In geventecn experi. I pnts mafip nn HmTtJ. M CMt nhrvoA that when the sugar diet fattened them, there was a general tendency to constipation meanwhile, and, on the contrary, when it produced an excess of bjle n Qther dog3? bowelg were relaMd . , , , fi . chiefly owing, however, to those delicacies being composed of the refuse starchworks, mixed with with gamboge, and sometimes with red lead, ver digris, and other mineral poisons. Every where, the beasts of the field, the birds of the air, the reptiles, the fish, and insects, are found to. have a great liking for sugar and honey. Mr. Martin says he has tamed the most savage and vicious horses with sugar, and has seen the most ferocious animals domesticated by being part ly fed upon it. The tamers of lions and tigers owe their power over them chiefly to a judicious use of sugar and other sorts of sweets, and also of j lavender-water, and various other perfumes, of which feline animals are remarkably fond. In the sugar season, in tne .vest inaies, tne norses, mules, and cattle soon acquire plumpness and strength by partaking of the leavings of the sugar aflerthe manufactllrcr has done with them. In Ctfchin-China, the elephants, buffaloes, and . horses afe aU wUh sugar Wfl Jearn from the 4 memoirs of Dr. Edw. Cartwright,' (1843,) that that ingenious man used to fatten sheep on sugar. To birds this diet proves so nourishing, that the suppliers of the European poultry markets find that sugar, along with hemp seed and boiled wheat, will greatly fatten ruffs and reeves in the space of a fortnight-. Omitting too Much. A green, goodnatured, money making, up coun j try Jonathan, who said every thing drily, got things Iueu' anQ 5irucK UP a oar&a,n Ior niainmony f I 1 l ' C . lm fin cr nr nort ?rnlr r rorrnrd fnr iinnparnnroc flip u.i. ai.g ..w ,u...wv..u -ri he would omit that; it was customary to kiss the bride, but he believed he would omit that also Tho ceremony being ended, Jonathan took the al derman by the buttonhole, and clapping his fingor ms UUiU' ba,u' "t i.uu,..ai j w ... I. : : .1 A . rr i fiin mameirtin iitfd rmi lira n n r i irnnin i'il omit that !" Wood Sawing. A correspondent informs us that "a machine h in operation at Jefferson, Asbtabula county, Ohio, for sawing wood, consisting of a horse power, of the same construction, only smaller, than those I sawed lie on a kind of Stationary carriage, and are moved with levers as the blooks are sawed off. To hands, and a boy to drive with two hor ses, will put up from one to one and a half cords of wood per hour, this is thought. to work quite a saving both of time, and wood." P. G. , LpyB.Take a bit of icq,- a: bit of heart, a bjt;of wit, a bit of paper, a littlotime, a little license,, mix it, and put it into two persons of rank, -and .. you will get a very gopd specimen- specimen of French love, DECEMBER 27, 1849. Criminal Abuse of Health and Wealth. The Boston Journal reports an admirable leciure hefore the Mercantile Library Associa tion by the Hon. Horace Mann ihe worthy successor of Mr. Adams in Congress. Tho following extracts are worthy of all attention : " Tho young man walks in the midst of temptation to appetite, the improper indulgence to which is in danger of proving his ruin. 'Health, longevity and virtue depend on his re sisting these temptations. The Providence of God is no more responsible, because a man by improper indulgence becomes subject to disease, than for the picking of his pockets. For a young man to injure, his health, is to waste his patrimony and destroy his capacity for virtuous deeds. Should a man lovo God, he will have len times the strength for the ex ercise of it, with a sound body. Not only the amount but the quality of a man's labor depends on his health. Tho productions of the poet, the man of science, or the orator must be affect ed by his health. Not only lying lips, but a dyspeptic stomach, is an abomination to ih Lord. The man who neglects to control his appetites, is to himself what a state of barbar ism is to society the brutish part predomi nates. He is to himself what Nicholas is to Hungary. j Men buy pains, and the purveyor and mar ket man bring home disease. Our pious an cestors used to bury ihe suicide where four roads meet; yet every gentleman or lady who lays the foundation of disease with turtle soup 01 loboter-salad, as really commits suicide as if ihey used ihe rope or the pistol ; and were the old law revived, how many, who are now honored with a resting place at Mount Au burn, would bo found at the cross roads ! Is it not amazing that man. invited to repast worthy of the gods, should stop to feed on gar bage; or when called to partake of the Circean cup, should stop to guzzlo with swine ! if young men imagine that tho gratification of appetite is ihe great source of enjoyment, they will find this in the highest degree with industry and temperance. Tho epicure, who seeks u in a dinner which costs five dollars, will find less enjoyment of appetite than the laborer who dines on a shilling. If the devo tee of appetite desires its highest gratification, he must not end for Buffalo tongues, but climb a mountain or swing an axe. Without health, there is no delicacy that can provoke au appetite, wnoever uesitovs nis healtn. into ipecac and aically wicked and ho is not half alive while he does live. However gra cious God may be with the heart, he never pardons the stomach. Let a young man pursue a courso of tem perance, sobriety and industry, and he may re tain his vigor till three score years and ten, with his cup of enjoyment full, and depart painlossly ? as the candle burns out in its socket, he will expire. But look at the opposite. When a man suf fers his appetites to control him, ho turns his dwelling into a lazer house, whether he, lives in a hovel, clothed with rags, or in the. splen did mansions and gorgeous clothing of the up per ten. Let every young man look on this picture and on that, and tell which he will choose. Society despises the wretch who debases him self, and treats him as tho wild horses do their intractable members, get him inside, of a ring, and with heads kick him out, to death." Tho pursuit of wealth for the mere sake of wealth, and not for the-'opportunities it affords of elevating ourselves arid those around us, was another topic on which the speaker 14 wreaked" the energy of hia diction. The gods of this world, said he, are fast dying out, and one deity alone is worshipped wealth. Were it currently reported that the river Jor dan was bedded with gold, the church and ihe world wquld vie with the Jews in their strife for the Holy Land all faces would be directed to Jerusalem insiead of San Fraircis- I j, 1 .!-., co. in tlie nope oi homptning more sterling man salvation. Mr. Mann disclaimed all intention of wag ing war against the accumulation of wealth. It is the duty of a young man to labor for a competence. But while'all below a competence is a rntsfortuno all beyond is mischief. Inher iteH'r)vvtialth is often far orher'than'a blessing. When' the devil clutches the father for hoarding and the son for spending, he proves the best speculator of the threo, because he doubles his capital on the same investment. ' Pisenoniena of the Brain One of the most inconceivable things in the nature of the brain is, that the organ of sena tiori'tfhould itself be insensible. To cut the brain gives nu pain, yet in the brain alone re sides the power of feeling pain in any other part tf the' body If the nurve which leads from it to the injured part be divided, it becomes instantly unconscicus of suffering. It is only by communication to the brain that any kind of sensation is produced, yet ihe'org'an jisolfts iusenMble. But there is a circumstance more wonderful still. The bratn itself may be re moved, may be cut away down to iho corpus calasum, "without destroying life. The animal lives and performs all its functions, which are necessary to simple vitality, 'but no longer has a1 mmd ; It 'cannot think orfeel ; it requires that the food should be pushed Into the stom ach ; once there, it is dgosted, and the animal will even thrive and growTat. We infer, there fore, that ihe part of tho brain, ihe convolutions, tV simply intended for the-' exercise of the intel lect usl ' faculties, whether T)ftrfe low " degret? caHdB'insiiribt; or exalted kind; besTdweiT'on I'mamme gut or reafun.-- H , . .... i : r -1 . f , f 'jszr:. ... ,- . i. . p ' pvagauou mc q..cu..ru uiu mum. No. -20 Two gentlemen belonging to Montrose have just returned from Fife, and have communica ted the following curious particulars regarding a supposed witch, who lived near the seat of the far famed Maggie Lauder, and died only a few days ago: Martha More, was a woman well advanced in years, and had long been in the practice of calling at Anstruiher and tho neighboring villages, where she received a half cod from ihe fishers, who fully believed in tho supernatural powers of Martha, and wero as fully persuaded that good luck depended upon giving her a cod when she came to the boat's side. A short time ago Martha was taken ill ; but independently of being supposed to be a witch, she was reported to be suffering from cholera, and none of ihe neighbors went to see her. One of her neighbors, a kind, balf-witted man, gave her potatoes and herrings boiled to gether as a medicine, putting a little brandy into the mesa. Whether this was Martha's bane or not, it may be hard to say : but she died and the news of her death produced a deep sensa tion, many of the fishermen lamenting that they would never again have an opportunity of giv ing poor Martha a lucky half cod. When Martha's poor and thinly attended funerel was over, her house was cleansed out and among other things her chest was examined, wheu, tied up in one bag, 2,000 sixpences were found; in another, 1,020 shillings ; in another 9 gold sovereigns, and in another 1 in bank notes. After finding this, it may well be believed that every hole and corner was earnestly searched, and such was the success that, in addition to the 117 just mentioned, another 40 was dis covered, making in all 157, which Martha had saved by her lucky half cods which she got from the superstitious fishermen. It is also worthy of observation, that although Maitha had no friends before her death, not even bo much as a feeling neighbor to attend her death bed, friends and relations are pouring in, show ing how nearly they are related by blood to Martha More. London dispatch. A Ne?y Zealander's Deire to be ateu. " I've been among the New Zoalanders," quoih Jack, " and there they used each other for frosh grub as regular as boiled duff in man-of-war's mess. They used to eat their fathers and mothers when they got too old to take care of themselves ; but now they're got to be more civilized, and so they only eat rick ety children, and slaves and enemies taken in battle." " A decided instance of the progress of im provement and march of mind," said I. " Well," replied Jack, " its a bad thing for the old folks. They don't take to the now cus tom. I never see'd tho thing myself ; but Bill Brown, a messmate of mine, once told mo that when he was at the Bay of Islands, he see'd a great many poor old souls going about with tear in their eyes trying to get somebody to eat them. One of them came off to the ship and told them thai he could not find rest in the stomachs of any of hi kindred, and wanted to know if the crew would'nt take him in. The skipper told him he was on monstrous short allowance, but he couldn't accommodate Him. The poor old fel low, Bill said, looked as if his heart would break There wete plenty of sharks around the ship, and the skipper advised him to jump overboard ; but he couldn't bear the idea of he ins eaten raw. Blackwood's Magazine. Congress Furniture and .Hannera; A Correspondent of the Commercial says : u The comforts of a Turkish divan could net be greater than those of a republican represen tative. Some appear to understand this. They will uplift their legs, and rest them upon the top of the desk, as if they, were in the dirty of fice of a lawyer, or ihe room of a collegian, in stead of being in sworn and solemn council of the nation. One man will stretch himself out on a sofa, to gain the sleep he lost the night before, or to indulge a constitutional indolence. Another will even smoke in the anti-p&c without the columns, to tho annoyance of the decent and decorous-people, whereas tho prin cipal smoking room is the post-office of tho House ! Meanwhile, all these things are fully observed by spectators in tho galleriet, mnny of them ladies, and they go away with no vety exalted ideas of "honorable courtesy.'1 Many there are, however, of a different stamp of character and manners, who would be an honor to any circle, public or private. The modern practice of sitting with hats off, tends to pro mote order in the Houe. But (ho truth ia, we have men from all quarters, of all sorts and sizes, all modes pf thinking, and ail ways of acting; men moral and immoral, magnanimous and mean, merciful 3nd rmschiveous, rude and polished, proud arid meek; we have lawyers, doctors and ministers, and generally these mc,rt are ihe types of the constituents' region whence they are sent forth. They generally, reflect, with a considerable degree of fidelity, thevaen timcnt of the people whom they represemr--Thus when the infidel sentiments of Owen-, of Indiana, became known to his constituents, they dismissed him from their confidenceaVil support at the next election, and put in hi plate Judge Embree, a pious Methodist." , JjyFhe last resource to raie the ,viiid U that of a shrewd and unscrupulous Yank eg, who bought a bushel of slio.e. pegs, and ,oi dis covering thoy were made of rotten wood, shar pened the other end and sold them for. ua:3i. . ... California Official SALARifes.TItepw constitution fixes the salary ofihu Ooveffiftrvif California at $1.0,000. per annum, .nd mr-iiw if thqXegisjatiire are to have . $.16 per diem 'nh.R SecretatV; of Sate; i:to receive fSjOQ. yoTp. M' .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers