SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN. W. M, CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. IX. A shipment of fifty-two natives o! East Africa arrived at Hamburg, Ger many, the other day, and will enter the service of the Woermann Line of steam ships as firemen. This is announced a 5 the first experiment in utilizing a semi savage people in this kind of labor. One can appreciate the perfection at tained by the modern science of Wall street rumor-mongering, soliloquizes the New York Commercial Advertiser, when be learns that the leading railroad manipulator of Wall street was shadowed on his recent Southern trip by a spy in the pay of the "bear" combination, whose duty it was to telegraph his employers any unfavorable news about the health of the tourist. The Indian Territory is not, protests the San Francisco Chronicle , as often supposed, chiefly inhabited by red men. The total population of the Territory is about 158,000, and of this number 107,- 000 are whites. It is only a questiou ,of time when a demand for a State Govern ment will arise, and there will be trouble, for all the land in the Territory is held by the Indians, who are not citizens of the United States, although they hold the realty. The complication promises to be a pretty one. One of the queerest problems with which a municipal government ever had to struggle, thinks the Chicago Neics, i3 now confronting the city officials of "Lon-. don. According to the authentic re ports that metropolis is responsible for the death of 5000 persons run over by horses and teams during the last year. As the traffic in the London streets is constantly growing there seems to be no show of an abatement of this mortality aud the "Mayor and the corporation" are scratching their heads desperately to discover some way out of the difficulty. The lake marine is undergoing great chauges, notes the Boston Transcript. Sailing vessels are fast giving place to steamers, and the new steamers aro larger than their predecessors aad are | steel. In 183(5 the net tonnage on the great lakes was 034,653; iu 1890 it was 526,360 tons, while the valuation of vessels rose from 830,597,450 to $58,- 128,500. Whereas in 188G there were but 21 propellers on the lakes of over 1500 tons, in 1890 the census expert found 110. There were 6 steel vessels afloat on the lakes in 1806, now there are AS, valued at 811,961,000. Of the lake marine 1153 were steam vessels, and 902 used sail power alone, or were employed as barges. "The census returns show one feature of American life which is not encourag ing,'' laments the San Francisco Chronicle "They prove that with the exception of France there are more childless married women iu New Englauil than in any other part of the world. Onc-flft'n of the na tive married women in Massachusetts have no children, while throughout all the Eastern States, where population is most dense, small families are the rule. This means that the increase of popula tion by birth is not keeping pace with immigration, and that the children of foreigners are outnumbering the progeny of natives, as the percentage of childless married women of foreign birth in this country is only a little over half that of Americans. According to a report of the Statisti cian of the Department of Agriculture about one-tenth of our agricultural prod ucts is exported. The sum is, however, made up from a very few articles. These aro cotton, tobacco, meats, breadstufls and cheese. Seven-tenths of the cotton product goes to foreign markets. All other articles except those above stated when put together are but three per cent, of the export. The exportation of to bacco is not increasing materially or so rapidly as home consumption. More cheese could be sold if its reputation for quality should be kept up and there were more disposition to cater to fastidious or peculiar foreign tastes. Butter exports could be made larger if they were of bet ter quality. Our great American crop— corn—is chiefly consumed on the spot, noc more than one-ixth, it is said, going beyond the boundary of the county iu which it is grown, and only two to three per cent, being now exported. Nearly two-thirds of this crop is produced in seven States—Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, lowa, Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska, few others producing more than is re quired at home, and the larger portion having a deficiency to be supplied by those seven States. LOVE'S PARTING. Be stood before her, and his eye« Ab summer stars shone bright and fair; The twilight deepened in the skies And leaflet stir was in the air. Within his own her pretty hand Lay, soft and sweet as summer rose; Her pensive brow, by zephyrs fanaed. Flushed crimson as the evening's clost. He stooped like some gay cavalier And kisstx 1 the lips of blushing red; He saw within her eyes the tear That told of merry hours now dead. "My love, you may not weep for me. Though darkness lingers where I stray- Be brave ami true; my love for thee Will fling a lightness o'er thy way." They stood till darkness, creeping down Veiled all the land in somber gloom; His hand caressed her tresses brown, His Hps upon her soft cheek's bloom. Then, as the moon danced o'er the hill, And starlight flickered on the stream. And one lono chirp awoke the still The holy calm of their young dream. He stole another parting kiss And sadly passed, nor dared look back; He knew that partings oft like this Left tears and sorrow iu their track. The leaflet rustled at his feet. And one sweet voice came singing low— "O heaven, be kind; until we meet, Guard my true love, where'er he go.™ —T. F. Rowland. lIOW I SAID "YES." BV AMELIA E. BAKR. My godfathers and my godmothers in my baptism called mc "Olive," and they lifed to be heartily ashamed of themselves far it, for never was their a child with a mlijre mistaken name. A belligerent state w%s my normal condition. Ido not re member my nurses, but I have grace enough to pity them. The mildest of my teaohers considered me "unruly," and you can ask Geoffrey what he thought of me a year ago. Now it is different. I have found my master, and I believe I rather like it. This is how it came about: Geoffrey had asked me three times to marry him, and three times I had said "No," in the most decided manner. But that never made the least difference to him. He only laughed and said I would know my own mind better next time. "I suppose," I said, "you mean to ask mc onec a quarter?" "Is that enough?" "Too often, a great deal, sir!" "Well, then, we will say once in six months, Miss Olive." And then he walked smilingly away, ! and began some nonsensical talk with i father about Doctor Koch and his be- 1 wildering theories. This last asking was just at the begin- ! ning of warm weather, and father, who thought Geoffrey's opinion infallible, j asked him where he would advise us to go for the summer. I had made up iny mind togo to Long Brunch and I said so,very distinctly; but Geoffrey proposed some out-of-the-way place in the Virginia mountains. Then j he painted it in such glowing colors that j nothing would satisfy father but a per- j sonal investigation. It was all Geoffrey's doing, and I told him so at the railway station. "It is your doing, sir," I said, "and I shall remember you for it." "Thank.-!, Olive," he replied; "there is nothing I fear but forgetfulness." I wanted to speak unmistakably to him. but the train moved, and I felt that it would be ouly waste material. At the end of the second day we got to our destination. It was a pretty place: I must acknowledge that. Nature had done all she could for it, but art and civilization had passed it by. The men were simply "frights," and the women , were—well, none too good for the men. The houses were log-cabins, through which daylight peeped and the wind blew as it listed. But there was, of course, a big white hotel—there always is. I have no doubt if we had gone to Stanley Falls or Guthrie we should have found a hotel and proprietor—the institution J .s übi quitary. We procured rooms, and ray trunks were, with some difficulty, got up the hill and the flight of wooden steps into the hall. "I suppose," I said, with a resigned look at father, "there is no use in taking them upstairs. I can have no use for my dresses here?" "As you like, Olive," he replied, in one of his meek and mild ways; "a3 you like, dear; that gray thing you have on looks pretty well, and it does not show the dirt." After this remark,of course,l had every trunk, bonnet-box and satchel taken up stairs; and the noise and confusion, and even the occasional bad word their size and weight called forth, were quite grate ful to me. "It is not my fault," I explained. "If people will build stairs like corkscrews, 1 am uot responsible." In this amiable mood we took posses sion, and I think, if Geoffrey had known what I was thinking about it, as I did up my hair and put on my white evening dress, he would have lost a trifle of his Keif-complacency —that is, if men ever do ..lake a loss of that kind. The first thing that pleased me was the supper. It really was good, particularly the ber ries and cream, which are a epecialty with ine. "But, sir," I inquired, "are there auy ; Christians here besides ouiselves?" "It is to be hoped so, Olive. I saw » , little church in the valley." LAPORTE, PA., FRIDAY, APRIL 10. 1891. "Pshaw, father! I did not mean church Christians; I mean society Chris tians." "Ah, they arc different, aro they? Well, what do you think of Augusta Pennington for a Christian?" "Augusta Pennington! Is ghc here?" I asked, amazed. "No, she is not, but her brother lives within two miles, and be has a daugh ter about the same age as yourself. Mrs. Pennington wrote them we should be here to-day; they will doubtless call in the morning." Well, I did not care if they did. The dresses in my trunks were sufficient to inspire any woman with comfortable as surance. Tho next morning I made a beautiful toilet, but neither Mr. nor Miss Lacelles called. Just after supper I heard a little stir and bustle on the stairs, a rippling laugh, the rustle of silken robes, and, leaning ou her father's arm, Miss Lacelles entered. She was beauti ful; I saw that at a glance; tall and pule and lady-like, reminding you of a fair white lily. We soon struck up a friendship—a girl's friendship I mean. Some one has said that there is no friendship betweeu the sexes, and somo one is mistaken, I think, for the world holds no safer friend for a woman than an honorable man. A woman's friend ship is very likely to be the result of convenience, contiguity, or of being, as ray father rather sneeringly remarked, "the only Christian within hail of cacti other." Mary showed me all her dresses and told me her secrets, aud I returned the compliment, mindful of Burns's ad vice to still "keep something to niysel' I wadna tell to ony." Life settled down into an unexciting but endurable routine. Mary and I vis ited each other and arranged our next winter's campaign, for I had invited her to pass the cold weather with me in New York. One day, in the middle of one of these pleasant chats, a servant came in and handed me a card. Tho name on it roused at once all the antagonism in my nature. It was, "GeoSroy Gardiner." Now it so happened that tho cxistcneo of this gentleman was tho one thing I had kept back in my confidences with Mary. So I had now to explain who and what he was. I wanted her to come into the parlor with me; but no, she would go home first and dress; but she prom ised to bo back to tea. I disliked Geoffrey, yet I was glad to see him. My mental faculties were rust ing for want of attrition. Father would not quarrel with me, and Mary was my only face card. I could not throw her away. Besides, I rather liked to see his great, handsome figure in the room. He was so full of life that he seemed to vitalize even the chairs and stools; they tumbled about and got out of the way in the strangest manner. I told him about Mary Lacelles, and warned him that he would lose his heart. He gravely told me he had none to lose. Imagine six feet two inches of man hood without a heart! We waited tea for Mary, but slio did not come till quite dark, and we had our tea. She said she had been detained by company, but I knew better thau that. She was dressed with reference to candle light elfect, and would not lose its in fluence on her first appearance. I never ( saw her look so lovely; her rose-colored i dress, with its broad shimmering bands i of white silk, wonderfully enhanced her 1 charms. Geoffrey looked delighted, and she gave him the full benefit of both her upward and downward glances. When tea was over, I left the room a I few minutes, and when I came back, i found Geoffrey and Mary sitting opposite each other, with the chess-board be tween them as an excuse for flirtation. The move had beeu so rapid that I wa< : astonished, and a little angry, too; and father did not improve matters by whispering, as I passed his chair: "Checkmated, Olive!" It was not a pleasaut evening for me, and it was the beginning of luauy un pleasant ones. "llow it came let doctors tell," but 1 1 began to like Geoffrey just sis soon as he ■ began to like Mary. I called up pride ' to the rescue, but it did not help me ! much, and I suffered a good deal in watching Geoffrey's attentions to Mary, ! and listening to her prattle about him. : I thought her supremely silly, aud I told j her so. She was astonished at my petulance, but I don't think she sus pected the truth. Only father did that, and he looked so: "Serve you right, miss," that 1 longed for him to be a woman for an hour or so, that I might | talk back to him. | One day, after Geoffrey had been a [ month with us, a riding party was pro j posed to the top of the mountain. ! Father and I, Geoffrey and Mary—that , would be the order, of course; and I was j prepared for that; but there is a last ' straw in every burden, and my last straw ! was this incident: They were mouuted j and waiting for me, when Mary dropped I her glove. From my window I saw Geoffrey pick it up, put it on the hand ' laid so confidingly in his, and then kiss I it. After that I was not going to ride ' i'or King nor Kaiser. I sent a positive 1 refusal to all entreaties, and as soon as J they were out of sight indulged iu a I refreshing cry. I cried myself to ; sleep, and woke about dusk with a new j born purpose in my heart which com j forted me wonderfully, the key-note of I which was: "She stoops to couquei." ' Yet I did not dress again. I knew they ; were to take tea at Mr. Lacelles's; so 1 threw my dressing-gown around me, and taking a novel iu my hand, I ordered a cup of strong tea and went into the j sitting-room. As I walked in at one door, Geoffrey walked in at the other. "I came to take you to Mr. Lacclles's, Olive," he said. "llow do you propose doing it, sir? For unless you bind me hand and foot, and get a couple of men to tote me there, I really don't think you will succeed." "I could carry you myself." "Could you? I don't think you would enjoy the journey." "Will you dare me to do it?" "Not to-night. I should like to insure my life first." "Olive, you have been crying." "I have not, sir," indignantly. "And if I have, what is that to you?" reproach■< fully. "A greal deal. Oh, Olive, you teas; ing, provoking, bewitching little mortal! How often must I tell you I love you I llow often must I ask you to marr^ me?" "It is not six months since the lasj time, Geoffrey." "I don't care; it seems like six years. And, oh, Olive, you know that you lovd me." "I do not." "You have loved me ever since yo<] were eight years old." "I have not." "Now you must take me forever ol leave me forever to-night. I have asked you three times before." "Four times, sir." "Well, four times, then. Odd num< bers are lucky; here is the fifth timej You know what I want, Olive— promise to be mine. Is it to be? Nov# or never!" I suppose every one has a good angel, Mine must have been at his post just then, for a strange feeling of humility and gentleness came over me. I glanced up at the handsome face all aglow witlj love's divine light; at the eyes full oc gracious entreaty; at the arms half J stretched out to embrace me. Yetpridu struggled hard with love. I stood up silent and trembling, quite unable to| acknowledge myself vanquished, until ll saw him turn away grieved and sorrow ful. Then I said: "Geoffrey, come back; it is now." That is the way I said "yes," aud I have never been sorry for it. If I live toj the age of Methuselah, I shall never be & meek woman; but still I suit Geoffrey, and I take more kindly to his authority than ever I did to paternal rule. Father laughs with sly triumph at Geoffrey's victory, and he sent me as a wedding present a handsome copy of"The Tam iug of the Shrew."— The Ledger. Mighty Small Hut Mighty Expensive. "What do you suppose is the most ex pensive part of those incandescent elec tric lamps which we see burning in that shop window?" asked an electrician. "You would naturally suppose it would be the glass bulb, or perhaps the brass fittings for screwing it into the socket, but you would be wrong. Those two little pieces of platinum wire,so fine that you can hardly perceive them, which pass through the glass stem up in the base of the lamp, to which the fine car bon filament is attached, enter more greatly into the cost than any other part of these now almost indispensable elec tric lamps.'' "Whj don't they use some other metal thau platinum for this wire?" "Because platinum is the only metal in which the expansion and contraction are the same as in glass, and a great fortune awaits the man who can produce a cheap metal or alloy in which this valuable property of platinum can be preserved. "The cost of platinum at the present market price in London is S2O per ounce, or about the same as gold, and the amount used for this purpose alone has grown to be enormous. This demand, together vrith the increased cost of production, has caused the prico to ad vance about 100 per cent, in eighteen mouths. In each sixteen candle-power lamp there are from four to eight grains of platinum. If six grains are taken as an average, one ounce will be used in eighty lamps. Based on the increased use of incandescent lights within the last two years, it is safe to state that the deinaud for sixteen-candle power lamps, or their equivalent, iu the year 1891 will be 10,000,000. This means a demand for 125,000 ounces of platinum, which, at the present price, will amount to con siderably over §2,000,000 for this item alone."— Washington Vest. His Impudence Cost a Watcli. General Bligh and his wife happened to arrive at a Yorkshire inn when there was only just so much in the larder as was sufficient for them, and, of course, they bespoke it. Some sporting gentle men presently arrived, and on hearing what had happened, asked who was tho guest. "An Irish officer," said the landlord; whereupon one said: "Oh, if he's Irish, a potato will do him. Here, j take my watch up to him - ' (a very hand- I some gold one) "and ask him what's ' o'clock." The inquiry had, doubtless, | some impertinent significance in those i days, which it has now lost; at all events it brought down the General with the ! watch in his hand and a pistol under each arm. "I am come," he said "to tell | you what o'clock it is. Whose watch is this?" Everybody hastened to deny any ! knowledge of it whatever. ' "Then I ; have made a mistake," said the-General, i"in the company. "I received an im- I pudent message, which I came down to i resent, but I find I have come to the ! wrong room." The watch, which would have paid the dinner bill fifty times over, i "he kept to his death, and left it by will to his brother, the Deau of Elpliin." —Argonaut. Terms— sl.2s in Advance; $1.50 after Three Months SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Sawdust is used instead of hair in mortar. Petroleum wells have been discovered among tho coal beds of Alabama. A machine for making shoe strings out of paper is a recent Philadelphia (Penn.) invention. A Cincinnati (Ohio) child has been re claimed from idiocy by the operation of craniotomy. A torpedo net constructed of inter locking steel rings is soon to be put to a practical test. If the sun were a hollow air ball, it would take 1,331,000 globes the size of the earth to fill it. Dry ropes immersed for four days in a bath containing twenty grains of sul phite of copper to a quart of water are for some time preserved from the attacks of animal parasites and rot. The Hungarian Minister of Commerce has under consideration a plan for the fastest train in tho world, to be run on an electric railway, and to carry passen gers from Vienna to Budapcsth, 156 miles, in two hours and a half. The principle of the compressed paper car wheels, which aro so widoly used throughout the world, is applied in France to the manufacture of pulleys for power transmission. The pulleys aro said to be very light, cheap and service able in every respect. Forty-three vessels were built last year in San Francisco, Cal., of which seven teen were schooners, fifteen propellers, six sloops, three steamers, one barken tine and one ship. Tho total tonnage was 11,671.47 net, which is largely in excess of the previous year. A new rolling mill in tho Krupp Works at Essen, Germany, is probably larger than any other in tho world. It will roll plate about twenty-eight inches thick and nearly twelve feet wide. The rolls are of steel. Each pair in their rough state weighed 100,000 pounds. Pyrogranite is a new brick, of Russian origin, that is being tried by English builders. It is made from a combina tion of fusible and infusible clay, and is strong and hard, resisting a crushing force of five and one-half tons per square inch. It takes a high polish, and the clay«»may be mixed to give a great va riety of colors. A patent has been granted for an elec trical drill for oil wells. The devise consists of a series of motors in tandem, connected in such a way as to make one motor. The design has been to get the power within a six-inch diameter, so that the entire mechanism, which much re sembles a common boiler, can be low ered in the well aud the power cau be ap plied at the bottom. The drill bits are firmly fastened ou the rod, which is worked rapidly in and out of a cylinder, after tho manner of a piston rod. Books One Never Hcanl Of. There is no doubt that there are hun dreds of books in circulation to-day ol which the general literary public has never heard books which have sold intc the hundreds of thousands aud brought their authors and publishers mints of money. These books are sold by sub- I scription aud never penetrate into the cities. They are sold to country families, sometimes a hundred in. a single small village. Not long ago I came across the list of a subscription publishing house which printed the number of copies sold of the books on their catalogue. The figures wore amazing. Of twenty-eight books not one had sold less than 50,000 copies, and several had exceeded 300,- 000. Yet I had never heard of one of the titles to the books. I recall the manuscript of a technical book on ma chinery being handed iu once into a large publishing house. The firm declined it, audit met the same fate at four other houses. Finally the author sent it to a large subscription house, and they snapped ut it. The publishers who had resected the manuscript laughed. But they lived to have the laugh turned on them. I saw the author's royalty state ments on that book about a year ago, which showed a total sale of 70,000 copies of that book in three years!— Nem York Commercial Advertiser. A New Dynamite Gnn. Louis Gathmanu, a maker of mill ma chinery, exhibited in Chicago, recently, a cannon of his invention, which, he says, is to be tested in tho presence of United States army officers at Fort Sheri dan within a fortnight under instruc tions from War Department officials at Washington. The weapon is nine and a half feet long, and is designed to be discharged iu rapid succession thousands of times without becoming overheated, throwing shells three feet long, filled with dynamite, nitro-glycerine, or any other high explosive, a distance of five miles, the projectile exploding by the concussion when it strikes the object. The chief novel feature is tho use of liquified carbonic acid gas, delivered au tomatically along the entire length of the bore at the instant of discharge, not only as an absorbent of the heat generated but as a "cooler" after tho charge has left the gun. By another new device pneumatic pres sure is produced with the use of powder. Mr. Gathmann claims to have already made satisfactory tests with a small model. Should the invention prove a success, he expects that the existing sys tems of coast defense particularly would be revolutionized.— if ail and Express. NO. 26. THE MAN OF OUT* TOWN. There was a man in our town Who would not advertise, And so, with me, you'll all agree He was not extra wise. But when he found his cash decrease. With all his might and main He set to work to figure up, And make .in increase plain. Says he, "My cash must not It painoth me full sore; / For 10, instead of getting less, J It should be getting more. Experience has taught mo this: The man who would be wise / Should advertise by night and day, And I will advertise." And soon this man of our town , Began to advertise; And so, with me, you'll all agree ; • That ho was very wise; And lo! the gold poured swiftly in. It overflowed the till; Since that time he has advertised — Is advertising still. —Montreal Witness. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Hard to beat—Your way. Manual labor—Compiling a textbook. Ringing words—"Will you marry mc?" Lithographer—"What color will you have your bill heads?" Morehant— "Duu color."— Buffalo Express. "That man has a wonderful memory." "llow does he show it?" "He never leaves his rubbers iu a restaurant." "It's all very well to talk of writing for posterity," sighed the poet; "but posterity isn't editing any magazines." Tho Boston maid refused his hand Because he knocked, und she Inquired, "Who is knocking?" and Ho answered, "It is me." —Judge. Belle—"Now, isn't that too bad! I de clare, it's enough to provoke a snint!" Nell (maliciously)—"llow do you kuow?"— Somcrville Journal. "Did the grocers make anything on sugar?" asked Lamkin. "Yes," said Broker Margin, "those who had any sand did."— Boston Commercial Btlletin. "To what do you attribute your longevity?" asked the investigator of a centenarian. "To the fact that I never died," was the conclusive reply.— Bazar. Husband (during a spat)—" You had better shut your ruoi*' l •- the fool-killer is around." Wife .<*.« n't care; you've got your life insured."— Men's Outfitter, I rather like to break a bill— I'm generous, yon see. But oh! 11 ike it very ill When'er a bill breaks me. —Chicayo Sews. There is an antidote to every poison, excepting the poison of malicious gos sip. The only remedy against t'jiat is to poison the gossiper.— Somcredle Jour nal. Miss A.---"Who is that dignified gen tleman we iust passed?" Mr. B.—"One of the profs." Miss A.—"What made you cut. him?" Mr. B.— "Force of habit."— Tale Record. Garrulous Stranger on u Train—"My wife's name was Woo J. What was yours?" Crusty Old Bachelor—"l guess mine's name was 'wouldn't.' I didn't get her."— Washington Shir. Bridget—"ls it the feller she's tryin' to make think she's rich that's in the parlor?" Thomas—"Naw, it's the fel ler she's tryiu' to make think she's young."— Munsey's Weekly. "Wo live in penitential zeal Our whole lives through," oxclaimod the seal, "For in our covering of hair A sort of sacque-cloth do we wear Washington Post. Peddler—"Do buy these eyeglasses,- sir! They're as strong as iron and you can't break them. Why, I've been thrown to-day out of three houses, and not a single glass was smashed."— Flicgende Blue Iter. A vegetarian chased by a bull Escaped; then thus enraged, to liini did say: "Is this your gratitude, you great big fool? From this on I'll eat beef throe timas a day!" —Judge. Aunt Rachel—"Yes, I like him well enough, Jerusha; but how did you ever happen to marry a man a head shorter thau you are?" Niece—"l had to choose, auntie, between a little man with a big salary and a big mau with a little salary."— Chicago Tribune. The rose and lily, side by side, Were in a bouquet pent; "Ah!" the roso exclaimed, "your fair to see;" And the lily said, "Of course—tee hee! But you cannot borrow aught from me. For I haven't got a scent." -l ick Me Up. The following is an excellent lesson in physiology, in which some of your read ers and the Jackson Township scholars might bo interested. The question asked by the teacher was:"ln what part of the body is the liver?" and she was a good deal surprised when the tall boy replied: "Sou:h of the lungs."— Myerstown {Venn.) Enterprise. Proprietor of Livery Stable—"Eleven carriages at six o'clock in the morning? What in the world do you want of so many?" Mr. Billus (in a tremendous rage)—" Just got a telegram from Mrs. Billus. She's on her way home from a trip east. She says, 'Meet me at depot at six o'clock in the morning.' There are eleven depots here. Mrs. Billus shall be met with a carriage at six o'clock to-inorrow morning, by jocks, if it costs a house and lat!"— Chicago lri bune.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers