—— I — constant repetition good coal has us our reputation. handle Lehigh Valloy Sullivan Ooal, Hard and § Wood and Steam Coal. Lohigh Ave.. Lockhart Building. Both Phones. . J. Kivu, SAYRE'S LEADING DRAYEAR. Bepecial care and prompt at- DEAL) HILL & BEIBACH LAWS & WINLACK, Attorneys and Counselors at Law. LAWS BUILDING, 119 DESMOND SY. Valley Phone 180-4. Sayre. SURGE AND REAL ESTATE. LOCKHART ET.. SAYRE. ‘N. L. TOWNER, M.D. Specialties. of Women and of the Rectum, I ty a BLOCK. ValleyPolephons 37x 118 Loskhat 84 E. B. DUNHAN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, - Ofigs:—Rooms ¢ and §, Kilmer Bloek, ~ Lockhart Street, Sayre, Ps. 4 00D DINNER will loose half its zest with ut § glass of good ale such as Stegmaier’s SIX SHIPS VIEW HUCE BONFIRE. Collision With Unkaewn Schooner Causes Disaster by Fire to Freight Liner, Which liuraned to Water Line and Sank. GREENWICH, Coun, Oct. 25. —In ibe presence bundreds of passen- that Lad Leen routed from their on five sound Huers the freight steamer Hastings. burning from stem to stern as the result of a cellision with an unknown schooner early In the merning, sank three miles off this port Captalu Van Eten and his crew of teh wen were rescusd by a lifeboat from the schooner Cumberland, which was ndar by. The schooner with which the Hast ings collided a three master. was (ry ing to fross the baws of the steamer, and the shock ef the mpact caused the oll lamps on the steamer to upset, Within a few minutes the Hastings was & huge bonfire. The thrilling spectacle attracted the steamer Puritan of the Fall River line the Maime of the Providence line, the Richard Peck of the New Haven line aud the of Lowell of the Naw London ling as well as the Middletown and schooner Cumberland. The great steamers fashed their lights ou the burning vessel while thelr passengers in scanty attire and crowded on the decks looked on. The Hastings quickly settled at the stern, then gave a suddea plunge and ppeared. ptaln Van Etten, who, with his balf dressed crew, was brought here, told a hair raising story of their escape and praledd Captain Littlejohn of the Cumbesiand his promptuess In suydine a boat to the rescue soa was very dark, the three ster suddenly loomed up ahead, and 1 & saw was a small red light,” said Captain Van Bttep. “I sigualed below to it but it was too late. The colli sion was ferrific. The vessel quivered a moment, then rolled over to star board, flinging every man oh duty ou his bands and knees and rolling the meu watch from their bunks - recovered myself I heard one of the crew shout that the steamer was afire. I looked aft and saw a cloud of smoke pouring from a hatchway iu the upper deck. I realized thea that the lamps had been overturned and that the kerosene soaked wood would burn like tinder “1 sounded the alarm, and the men respouded to a man. They all came piling from thelr quarters with white faces, and we soon had the bose at tacked und a stream of water playing on the Sames “I saw in n woment that the vessel was doomed, but we kept on fighting until the fire scorched our faces. The smoke was new becoming suffocating. I gave the oader to man the lifeboats. “We all cpowded into the lifeboat. The sound was choppy, and I really thought that we were going to be swamped, for the wind was blowing a gale. uy. B the Cumberland was sight Y her boat picked us up.” Compliment te the Hebrews, NEW YORK, Oct. 25 — “President Roesevelt's proposed appointment of Mr. Btraus to a place io bis cablpet Is most gratifying.” sald Jacob H. Schiff. “It Is a slogular and very agreeable colmcidence that the announcement co almost simultaseously with that oo appointment of General Plc who championed Dreyfus, to the portfolio of war In the new French cabinet. [I take It that Mr. Straus’ ap polutment Is not only a well deserved compliment to the man amd his quall- fications, but at the same time a de sire on the part of the president to recognize the good citizenship of the Jews of the United States.’ Battleship Minnesota's Trial ROCKLAND, Me, Oct. 28 — The first class battleship Minnesota, de signed as an 18 knot craft, exceeded the expectations of her hullders, the Newport Newh Shipbuilding and Dry company, and the government by averaging 18.87 knets au hour In her standardization trial here. Her best mile with the tide was at the rate of 19.412 kuots, which is nearly fifty poluts better than the best mile made by the battleslip Louisiana, the only other ship of this type which has been tried. Toronteninn nu Suicide. CHICAGO, Oct. 25 Willams 8. Btewart of Torouto committed sulclde at the Saratoga liotel. Stewart had been making 8 tour of the west with Mr. and Mra. D. O. Cloud of Noches ter, N. Y. He sccompanied them to a theater, and on bis return seemed to be nerveus. Shortly after Stew art retired Mrs. Cloud heard a shot and nmning to bis room fond him dead. Union Pacific Blockade Raised. CHEYENNE, Wyo. Oct. 25 The four days’ storm in this section his ended. The Union Pacific ratlroad has been blockaded for twenty-four hours between this clly snd Slduey, Neb. assenger trains are stalled In the youne yanls. Rotary plows are at work, and traffic will resumed shortly. be Stevens Gets Long Sentence, MORRISTOWN, N. J, Oct. 25 Hoary Bteveas, who pleaded non volt to the charge of having, while under PENNSYLVANIA WRECK. Eagine Jumped Track and West iste Ohie River, PITTSBURG, Oct. 25.-The Cleveland flier on the Pennsylvania raliroad was wrecked near Bellevue, Pa. The en- gine Jumped the track and went over the bank lato the Okie river. Two coaches following turned over ou their sides, and the other coaches were de railed, At least four persons were sericusly jnjured, and many others sustained cufs and bruises. The injured brought to Allegheny on a special tralia and tak. en to the Allegheny General hospital are: C. Ewing, engioeer of the Cleveland filer, olds, fireman of the flier, burned on the arity, a brakeman, left thigh broken and face bruised; B. A. Hayes flag: gagemaster, bad scalp wound. The trala was runulug at a speed of fifty miles an hour and was side hurt. The baggage car, with two pas senger coaches, was thrown across the rails. The destruction of the former was complete, but noue of the passen ger cars was badly damaged FOR EQUAL RIGHTS. Great Is Tammény, DUBLIN, Oct. an iaterview published in the Tele: graph Richard Croker, referring to Tammany Hall New York, and its al leged bad reputation. sald: “It is a case of giving a dog a bad position, does anything dishonorable Tammany is blamed. “The reformers never did auything for New York,” Mr. Croker continued. “The great bridges, the elevated rall- road, the public buildings and every- thing are the work of Tammany. If there was corruption, why did not the IN HOOSIER STATE Bryan Would Make John D. Feel Lonesome, ——— CHURCHES SHOULD BAR H!S MONEY Rockefeller Scored by Nebraskan In Indianapolis~Iis For Hearst and Hopes That He Will Win In New York. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, Oct Wil liam J. Bryan during his stamping tour through Indiana deilversd a speech at Wabash, in which Le referred to John D. Rockefeller Until receatly, he sald, the churches had been willing to accept money without asking questions about it, but one of the dewominations Lad wen stirred to iis very depths Ly a contro versy as to whether it should accept money from Mr. Rockefeller “I believe,” Le continued, “that if churches and charitable societies would stand up snd say to Mr. Rocke feller: ‘Keep your money. Yeu stole it from the public. We will net accept it!" they would come ncar to making him feel how lonesome a man can be in this world who has pothing but iy= -t Mr. Bryausheuasked foran expression on the polilleal situation in New York “I am for Hearst The Hall has succeeded entirely on its] merits “It Is the wost democratic institution in the world. If apythiug Is wrong with it, then something is wrong with the people themselves ouly for the poor man, but also for the foreigner newly landed on American shores. publican party that the should receive the bLenetits foreigner of the i § sible. It stands all around for equal! rights” HIS LIFE A LESSON. Senator Feraker Pralses Late Gen- eral Gibson ns Leader of Men. TIFFIN, 0, Oct. 25—-A monument } ! i i ' i and In summing up his life Senator Foraker at the ceremony said “A statesman and erator who active: ly participated io the fercest political strife the country has ever cxperienc- ed, 0 soldler who fought for hls con- victions iu ome of the bloodiest civil wars the world has cver witnessed and who was, therafore, iu both peace and war a leading antagoaist of all those of his neighbors and countrymen amd yet that was the precise truth as to General Gibson, “His whole alm was to upbold our government, (improve our Institutions and uplift humanity Although the whole great army rang with praise for his countless deeds of daring, he saw only the herolsm of his comrades, and net one word of pralse for himself ever escaped him “For generations to come the lessons of bis life will be studied and emvulat ed by the children of men.” Great Enterprise Incerperated, TRENTON, N. J, Oct. 25 — The Transalaska Siberian Rallway compa ny, with sm authorized capital of $8. 00,000, was incorporated. The com- pany Ksusk Station, ou the Transsiberian railway, to Bering strait, which is to bes tunueled to Cape Prince of Wales, Seward peninsulas, Alaska. The incor porators are Lolceq de Lobel, Paris; J. A. Waddell, Kansas City, Mo.; Johu Healy, Seattle, Wash; Willlam H. Black, Jersey City, and John R. Tur ner, New York Norfolk Clubman's Estate. NORFOLK, Va, Oct 25 ~The will of Edward Wilson James, a prominent clubman, who was found dead iu his study after belog missing for twelve days has been probated. The estate Is estimated at a quarter of a million dollars. Miss Mary Arclier Hooper of Farmville, Va, is bequeathed $20,000 Other Lequests amount to about $20, 000 for friends und relatives, and the remainder of the estate ix left to the University of Virginia, Death te Billboards Thelr (ry. MILWAUKEE, Wis, Oct. 25." Tax the billboards out of existence” will be the battlecry of the American Civic as sociation for the next year aus a result of plans decided on at its annual con: veution which has opened here. Ag. gressiveness against billboards charac terized all the addresses before the con- veution. Shaw and Mayer at Baffalo, BUFFALO, Oet. 25 -A Hepublican mass meeting was held at Convention hall Jast night. The speakers were Lasite M. Shaw, secretary of the freas- at Darernor Bruce and : sHegtesnta. I ani uot familiar local situation in New York aud don't care to discuss the politics of that state at any length” At Delphl Mr. Bryan sald: “I think the president was the bitterest oppo nent I had in 1804, but the moment he started out to do something for the In terest of the people | caliad ou him and told him 1 would help Lim just as far as my influence could reach. But 1 do not help any stand pat Republicans, for the stand pat Republican denies that the people need auy help “What does the dociy mean? Well as [| don't play cards 1 don't know the tes hinical meaning of the tern, but 1 think it Is appropriate that the Republican who has made a lol bits should ribe its I hope he will win ne of stand pat rey fay esx, ' | policy In this campaign Fred Schelly ed twelve umlie. Bryan, aud when skirts of the fell uncoascious cars old, walk: William J + reached the out ul Loguusport he sin exbiaustion snd $s la a critical osadition. Mr. Bryan hearing of fair, ordered that Schelly be taken to a private hospital and cared for at Bryan's expense From here Mr. Bryan goes to Ohlo where he will speak in the luterest of the Democratic ticket of that state erawd the Arisona Making War ou Trusts, PHENIX, Ariz, Oct. 20 —Alleging in maintain lng of combinations: in restraint of trade and arbitrary fixing of prices, the federal grand jury here retursed Indictments against the People's lce aud Fuel cowpauy aud B. W. Lount represcuting two ice concerns; the De the Chamber the Valley Lum Rider and H. P lain Lumber company, ber company, H W Demuud, all lumber dealers; P. C Hurley and SJ ‘Iritolet and the Phealx Wholesale Meat and Produce company WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 —~With the exception of a brief dispatch from Am bassador Wright, laclosiug certain clippings from Japanese newspapers showing the feeling of resentment Which the Japanese people are ex hibiting over the auti-Japanese ngits tion In California, the state depart such a feeling exists. Four Is expressed in ! sistence in the agitation way result In anti-American boycott in Japan jury iuflicted upon Awerican trade ln the orleut by the boycott in China Union Plekets Fired On, PORTLAND, Ore, Oct. 25 ~Owing to the firlug ou union pickets at the elevator of the Pacific Coast Elevator company Ly alleged cwplovees of that company a serlous setback has Leen given to the efforts which were mak: ing to settle the long continued strike of the grain handlers of this port. The unfon men will ask the arrest of cer tala persons alleged to have fired the shots aml wkich wounded one man and narrowly missed another, the bul- lot piercing his hat. Barlington Bridge Plant Ablase. RALEIGH, N. ¢, Oct. 25° Fire in the shops of the Virginia Bridge and Iron compauy at Burlingtou caused £00,000 loss The conflagration destroy ed one of the largest bLulldings and rulued its contents, lucluding a great deal of Improved machinery nud two spans of railroad bridge just completed and ready for shipment. The loss to the company Is $50,000 Canadian Engineer Dies of Paralysis, LANSING, Mich, Oet, William T. Jenning=, aged sixty vears, consult ing engineer of the city of Toronto died at the residence of Mansger J. IL. Elliott of the Michigan United rail ways in Lansing. Mr, Jeunings cawe here from South Beud, Ind, to luspect the railway lines of the system and was stricken with paralysis Old Time Operator Dead. BOSTON, Oct. 25 Henry Clay Sher man, an old time telegraph operator, who during the civil war was chief operator in General Butler's staff, is dead here ut the age of sixty one years. He was connected with the Western Union Telograph company In WITH ILL FATED MAINE. Weapons of Cuban Rebels Seat te Bettom of Havana Harber. HAVANA, Oct. 25—-The statement made by Secretary of War Taft on the eve of Lis departure from Cuba that be would put all the arws surrenderad by the insurgents where they would do ne! further harm was verified when a com | pany of the Cuban artillery under or | ders cast all the weapons given up by | the rebels into the sea from the outer | bastion of Morre castle. Thousands of | rifles and carbines were sunk In thirty, fathoms of water Some unrest continue2 {o prevail in | the provinces of Puerto Pe eipe and Santa Clara, where small Aned bands! are roving and committing oi dep | redations. The residents of Holguin! requested protection of troops against] a considerable Lody of ex rebels who! are reported to be giving trouble, and a battalion of the Eleventh infantry has reached Holguin | The mayor of the town of ia the proviuce of Havann ousted froin office, has been restored to] his position and has organized au| armed guard or escort of twenty five! men, alleging that he feared an attack] by the Moderates. Governor Magoon, however, has ordered Governor Nunez fo proceed to Aguacate and compel the) mayor to surrender the arms of his escort and bring the weapons to Ha vana i Aguacate who was YALE TRACK MEET. L. B. Stevens Takes Honors In Hun. dred Yards Dash. NEW HAVEN Coun, Oct 23 — Yale's annual fall treck meet was held at the nnlver=ity field ou a heavy track, and fast time was impossible Class numerals were awarded tosthe winner of each eveut, aud cups were given to those who sccured frst, oud and third places. The lotercollegi ate point winners by agreement did not enter, the purpose of the weet being te try out new material The hundred yard dash brought eut the best time and was won by LB. Stevens of the Law school in 10 2.5 seconds. The sum maries Hugdred yard dash, Btevens, L. 5S ; second, l.: third. F. E seconds Two hundred and twenty won by IL. B. Stevens. L. 8S; second W. R. La Montagne, 1%%; third, T. T Logle, 1008; time, 24 seconds One mile run, won Ly R. A. Spitzer 1004, second, G. M. Symes, 1910; third F. Womd, 1000, 3; time. 4 minutes 514.0 seconds Two mile run, won by W. H. Wood ward, 17; second, G. F Brown, 1900 S.; third, W. C. Dunham, 198, S ; tie 10 winutes 43 1-5 seconds Ruunniog high jump, wou by G. Case 1008. second, H Rell. wl won by I. B I. J. Lilley, 1900 Blanchin: time, 10 23 yard dash Martha Gorman at Latonia. CINCINNATI. O., Oct Martha Gorman, an odds ou favorite, won the free handicap, the feature of the ecard at Latonia, handily from Hector Marvel PP. third. Simon Kent, was as good as 75 to 1 in the betting easily won the opening event by four lengths from Toboggau, the odds on favorite. Falkland was third. Four favorites won. a= -t with which Hot Toddy at Jamalea, NEW YORK, Oct 25 Hot Toddy, the 7 to J favorite, wou the Southamp ton handicap, mile and a six teenth, at Jamaica Fhe Arst three horses flutshied heads apart iu wu terrific drive. Orllene the pace to the stretch, where the fleld began to close and in a Lard drive the favorite won Two favorites won at one set Marphy Controls Nationals. CINCINNATI, Oct President Charles Murphy of the Chicago Nation al League Basoball club has become the owner of the controlling in the club Car Workers Ase Sympathetic Strike BOSTON, Oct The striking car workers employed at the Allstou shops of the Bostou aud Albany railroad have voted to request a sympathetle strike of 15,00 car workers ou the New York Central line unless the of flelals of the Boston and Albany com pany couseut weetlng with a strikers’ comtulttee to consller griev auces of the Up to now the rallroad Las refused = -t interes! - 5 0 1 men In Trouble With Many Banks. HOUSTON, Tex., Oct. 23 --Clareuc« N. Hughes of Swalusboro, Ga, uged twenty two, who has given banks In all parts of the country trouble for severn) years, was convicted ou three counts of forgery nud given two years in each case. He escapes! from the Col orado state penitentinry and 1s also wanted ln Alabama, Louisinaa, Oblo, Peuusylvania, Maryland, Arkansas and 1Hnols Liere Lives With Broken Neck. DAYTON, O, Oct. 25 ~Alonzo Sons Hu's neck was broken here by a fall lug board at a wanufacturing plant where he was at work A surgeon happened to be wear Soushin's head and shoulders promptly placed in a plaster Forty-eight bours have elapsed, aud be is improv. | ing so rapidly that the doctor believes the patient will re vail were “1 wel Jolma Mount Vernon G. A, WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 Roosevelt was mustered in rary member of the of Farnsworth post, Gp the Republic, of Mount The ceremony took place ta the cabinet room and was conducted by General Horace Porter Rn. President 1% an hono ate Ww 1nd Vernon “SO oly Arty of N. ¥] Palmyra's New Foatmasier. WASHINGTON, vet, ~The presi. dent has appointed John E. Martin postmaster at Palyrs, N. J. | SEVEN DEAD IN MINE Explosion at Cambria Steel Company's Plant, TOMB THREE MILES UNDERGROUND Scene of Disaster (lose to Klondike Section Where Four Years One Hundred and Fourteen Men Perlsiied Ago JOHNSTOWN explosion in the mine of the Cambria Steel company here seven men ars dead and two painfully Lut not fatally burned Lhe explosion is said to have been caused | the Ignition of gax in set ting off a Mast of the victimy are foreigners Me explosion o~gur red In a beadipg three miles from the of the mine shaft Eigltee reported Imprisoned in the and after damp i= hampering the work of rescue An official statement given by the manager of the Cambria Bteel com pany says “By an explosion in the rolliog mill mine of the Cambria Steel company seven men are dead and two sre pain fully injured, but net fatally Up te the present only one of the dead bas been Mentified He is Aniericau winger named Sampson Luther ved the dead are al the two injured latter consist of tack and arms, the scalp and Pa, (xt 25 -By an € blast ign are out an bora It foreigners, as are I'he wounds of the ITE f face wounds of f the bade plosion took piace in heading wisiderable distance fron hiondike section, where their lives over fous ihe exact cause [8 pot it i+ supposed that the gas Ly thie putting off of a blast 1*when found bad thelr in proper trim, showing ident could not have bees J by neglect in that direction.” FARMERS CONGRESS i= hell other thi I fated 114 men ost Ail safe funps that the a. Cas Plan at Topeka (0 Untmancuver the Packing Trusts. Kan, Oct. 25. —~Plaus for packing companies and won dealers are under im by the farmers’ natioual IL we schemes L the force FOPERA apporsing the the fruit cot considerati Hiiss Cool Prulive Congress of the s de pat Lirvak trust” have been will Le Tok ing dad un and probably into ex ition Une that the farmers will try ug of the mest which they u themselves and will also cure meats for the markets Iie other plan will bi 10 Lave an agent in each county tc all the stock of the members and ship to another agent at the war ket who will sell direct to the packing hotnses of the to cure the is uietulbers HIRTESS arity handle here is no jotention to build a co operative packing house, The session was devoted to a general discussion of plans, and much sentl is wanifested In favor of gov erutient ownership of rallroads A resolution urging congress to take steps to have the states as well as the nation adopt more stringent pure food laws was passed Co-operative nent w Her Cooking Captivated Them, NEW YORK, Oct. 25. There appear ed before Magistrate Steinert In the fowbs police court Mrs. Augusta thirty-three sears old, whe wis charged with bigamy The pris yuer cheerfully admitted having four alive, from none of whom w was divorced, and sald she didu't why they wanted to have her ar rested, as she took turns living with them. Mrs. Breuning sald she map ried the men to “get rid of them,” they were all so fond of her cooking Breuning husbands «1 oo ne Gels (henper Gas nnd Car Fares, NEWARK, N. J, Oct, 25 —The Pub He Service corporation which coutrols all the trolley , electric aud gas plants ln northern New Jersey, an nounces marked reductions in prices of electric lighting and gas to begin Jan 1, 1908, and reduc tions lu car fares to begin Nov. 1 next. Dollar gas will be the rule throughout the entire wid electric lighting will be 10 conts pet Killo will be reduced to right to transfer Hight Hues system, reduced to Car fares with the an hour 5 cents Hliuols Tribute at Vicksburg WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 John CO Sceotleld, clerk of the de partment, has gone to Vi Ksburg. Miss to accept on behalf of the United States goverowent the handsome we wtrial erected ou the battietield there Ly the state of lllnols to comwem the of the of that state during the siege of Vicksburg in ISL The mew ill be formally presented to the United States by Gov. eruor Dineen of lliuois chile! Wat orate valor SOLS {al Pythiaus Change Their Laws. NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 25. —New In- surance affecting SO000 policy holders were officially adopted by the supreme Kuights of Pythias The features are: An In waximnm policy from SLO to 8&6 ui Increase ln the age Hinit Lb embers can be Insured from fifty to sixty years luws lodge, necting hore the aN) Cease in itowh Hoaton Clvie Fight to Be Hot One SEASONABLE Selections for Shrewd Shoppers Children’s Stockings For school and rough p° ay wear, exira heavy ¢ t on, usual prices, 18, 20 and 22¢, according to size. This week all sizes, special 15¢. Children’s Fleece Lined Hosiery All sizes, would be a bargain at 15¢. This week special 2 pairs for 2d¢. Wednesday Special Boys' and Girls" Hosiery A well known brand of hosiery in both fine and heavy ribbed, univer- sally sold for 25c. Special Wed- nesday 19¢. Black Sateen Waists Just one number, but worth $1.25. Specially priced 08. No Mend Hose The best 25¢ hose made linen kneo, tripla heels and all sizes at “The Globe." Ribbons = New line of Plaids and Persians. Both are very popular. Neckwear A new essortment of ladies’ stock collars ard tarn-vers, all the newest sty.es. Prices from 5c up. Leather Bags oh Newest and latest style shopping bags. All colors, leather and shapes and all at the “Globe Warehouse” usual low price. toes, Fabrics for School Wear Doubla fold plaids, all-new 12§c. Double fold suitings 19¢. & Double fold mixtures 25¢. All wool, all popular ¢ lors 25¢. 38 in. double f.ld suitinge, all woo! 374e¢ : Clos- 38 in. grey, ing 39¢ P “8 in. all wool anamas in plains, mixtures and checks 50¢. New Dress Goods We have added mere new greys and a line of finer imported blacks, all our own importations and conse- quently below the average relail prices. mixtures £0. races semper ntert sl Plaid Silks Our line of plaid silks represent the choicest patterns selected from the largest silk stock in this stats outside of Philadelphis and Pitts- burg. Ol2sowe Tho Scranton buyer is in touch with all that's new. He buys noth. ing but silks. His ro i you to know worth much to us. Moral—We want tat “If you get it at the Globe it's Black: Silks # Our 36 in. Black Silks are anteed. Take time to eee our Goods cheerfully shown whether you buy or not. Globe Warehouse, Talmadge Block, Eimer Ave. |VALLEY PHONY, LENIGR ARD SCRANTON COAL BOSTON, Oct. 2h ~The nomination | papers which have at the Democratic headquarters indicate that | the coming city campaign will be one | of the most bitterly contested in the of Boston. Up to a late hour wore than 30 papers had been issued fo wen desiring to enter the contest for the common covacil, been Issued At the Lowest Possible Prices. Ovdere ean be loft at Weet Rayre Stcre, both phones; or Ste or ered COLEDAY WASSIFR Read The Record.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers