SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN. W M, CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. X. Tlie population of Greece is increasing at a greater ratio than that of any other European country. Lunacy appears to have increased in Scotland to a startling extent. In 1858 there were 5824 lunatics on the register of the Lunacy Commissioners, but now there are 12,595. The British Government proposes to build a very extensive barracks at Hali fax, which, in case of war, would be oc cupied by troops oa their way to India by way of the Canadian Pacific Railway. The site for these barracks has already been selected. One of the greatest modern industries, asserts the San Francisco Chronicle, is the product on of beet sugar. Its crea tion has given employment to a vast number of persons, and has so cheapened sugar that it is within the reach of the lowest-waged workman. The farm products of Vermont this season will realize $30,000,000, which, declares the New York Commercial Ad vertiser, is the best year's showing for the Greea .Mountain State farmers since the war. Improved methods of culture are largely credited with the prosperity. Thetcivilized nations of the earth have agreedUo co-operate in taking a photo graphic chart ot the heavens. Some twenty telescopes are to work four jears, and will result in mapping proba bly twienty-five millions of stars; with longer>exposu.es probably two thousand be photographed. An expert {Hoard's Dairyman) says: "The cow is winning her way into the hearts oltthe Southern people. One in stance in (proof thereof is the first con signment of cheese ever received in St. Louis d'rom Arkansas, which reached that market lately from tho Grand Prairie Dairy Compauy, at Stuttgart, Ark." Canndmgivus to its geological survey only §60,000 a year, while, contrasts the Chicago Herald, the various geologi cal surveys in.our own country absorb nearly annually. Yet Can ada makes a line showing with this modest sum. The annual geological records are in part records of original discovery and research, and, with their fine maps-and photogravures, arj as in teresting as many books of travel. Can ada contains the,largest unknown areas ot the. American continent. Savage or Iwlf-civilized princes often prefer death to exile in a foreign coun try. Malietoa, the King of Samoa, jumped overboard when the Germans took him to the Gilbert Islands, and was not rescued writh his own consent. Three chiefs of the Comoro Islands, off the East African coast, were taken away from home three months ago on acoount of the revolution which they headed against the French. They were very uu happy on board ship, and when the ves sel reached Obock they tried to jump overboard, and'were placed in irons to prevent further suicidal attempts. It is said that a few years ago some of the members of foreign legations in Washington gave the police no end of trouble. Thsy knew that they could not be punished for any ordinary misde meanor, and frequently raised a row on the streets. When arrested they had to be released as soon as identified. Fi nally the police tried a new dodge. They had a few sluggers loafing around the station, who made it a point to pitch into the foreigners, and give them black eyes and bloody noses. This quieted the riotous members of the legation, and for some time past they have given the po lice very little trouble. Californians now engaging in the cul tivation of prunes tiud the profits very tempting, being about one dollar a tree, or SIOO the acre. This rate increases as the tree grows older until the fruit each year is worth almost two dollars. Ex- Secretary of State Thomas Beck has given up everything else to engage in the cul tivation of tho prune. The Pajaro Land and Fruit Company was recently formed for the purpose of raising this fruit in large quantities. It has bought 600 acres of land in Pajaro Valley, aud will plant an orchard of French prune trees. They will bo from four to six feet in height when put into tho ground. The stock of these tices is to be two years old and the graftiug one year. Next year they will begin to yield fruit. The uv •rMft thirty year*. E-LIM-IN-A H-DO. 'fwu h the bazars of the Smyrniotos That we heard the lingering call. With its mellow-, musical, bell-like notes, And its rhythmic rise and fall. It soared o'er the camel-driver's shout. And the bale-bent porter's angry flout— "O—O E-lim-in-a!t-do!" There were the figs of Omoorloo, Large and luscious and bursting ripe; And from a cafe near there blew The tempting scent of tho water-pipe. But Tireh's grapes would have hung in vain Upon the vines had we beard that strain— '•O—O E-lim-in-ah-do!" Amber, clear as a prisoned ray Of the morning sunlight, was forgot; Bugs, rich with the huos of dying day. Prom the looms of Persia, lured us not. While the motley Smyrna world swept by, Wo hung on the sound of the witching cry— "O—O E-lim-in-ahclo!" Then out of tho jostling crowd ho came With his crook-necked flask and his clink of glass; As keen of eye and supple of frame As a Lydiau pard we saw him pass- Saw him pass, and above the roar Caught the lilt of his call once more— * "O—O E-lim-in-ah-do!" Who can measure melody's power? It sways the soul with the same strange spell On lovely lips in a lady's bower, Or those of a vagrant Ishmael. And still floats back, with its thrilling bars, The strain from the Smyrniote bazars— "O—O ' 'E-li m-in-ah-do!" —Clinton Scollard, in Atlantic Monthly. DOROTHY'S DIAMONDS. BY HFI.EN FOIUtEST GRAVES. "You can't bo in earnest, Dotty!" said Ralph Inray. "But I am in earnest," protested Dorothy, his wife. -'Why shouldn't I be in earnest?" Mr. Imray laid down the pen with which he had been following a long column of figures. lie was a bank ac countant, and sometimes eked out his small salary by bringing home the books of neighboring firms to post after his regular day's work was over. He looked intently at Dorothy. Nor was she by any means a disagreeable object to behold, as she sat by the shaded lamp, stitching away at a piece of yellow China silk which emphasized her purple-black masses of silky hair and the jetty light of her long-lashed eyes. borne people, to judge by appearances, are bom kitchen-maids; others are princesses. And Dorothy Imray, albeit her father was a master carpenter and her husband a bank clerk, was ono of nature's aristocrats—slim, taper-lingered and swan-throated, with a delicate com plexion and a profile that xeminded one of a Roman cameo. "Why shouldn't you be in earnest?" repeated Ralph. "Because, Dotty, there's a fitness in all things. A poor man's wife has no business to wear diamonds." "Mrs. Clifford wears them!" petulant ly retorted Dorothy. "And Job Clif ford doesn't get any higher salary than you do." "Blither father is a man of means, Dofty." "And Luella Dixon has the loveliest lace-bar! She showed it to me yester day." "Dixon aDd I differ materially in our financiol ideas," observed Imray, shrug ging his shoulders. "If a man owes money, I, for one, don't regard it as a very smart thing for his wife to be flaunting around in costly jewels. Come, Dot, give up the idea. Twenty years from now I may be able to give you diamonds." Dorothy pouted. She sewed away with little, swift jerks of the needle. "Twenty years from now I shall be an old woman," she uttered. Mr. Imray laughed. "I'll risk that," said he. "No, Dotty, if my wife were to come out in a pair of diamond ear-rings, my employers would be quite justified in scrutinizing my ac counts. The topaz ornaments I gave you at our wedding were good enough for you then. Why can't you be con tented with them now?" Dorothy answered not a word. The needle seemed like a scimetar in the lamplight; the rose-red lips were tightly compressed; and Ralph resumed his pen, with a sigh. Dotty had "got into society" lately, and the little home had never recovered its pleasant old-time aspect since. Mrs. Job Clifford aud Luella Dixon were her models now, instead of kind Aunt Rhoda and the rector's pretty young wife. The next day Mrs. Dixon called, dressed in a fantastic combination suit, with a French hat, and a real lace scarf "twisted loosely around her neck. "Well, Dorothy," began she, "What did he say?" Mrs. Imray's pretty face gloomed over. "Just what I expected,'" said she. "Of course he won't give me the dia monds. I might have known that be forehand." "Don't bo discouraged, dear," said Mrs. Dixon, with a furtive glance. "I can suggest a plan. Are we quite •lone?" Dorothy looked surprised. - ••YM," said ih«. "Bridget has gone LAPORTE, PA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1891. to market, and there is no one else on this floor." Mrs. Dixon drew her chair close to Dorothy's sofa. "Listen!" she whispered. "How much money have you?" "Twenty dollars of my own," Dor othy answered, "and forty that Ralph left to pay the agent our rent. That's sixty. And there's fifteen that Aunt Rhoda sent me to match her old broc aded silk with." "Seventy-five!" said Mrs. Dixon, er ultingly. "Dorothy, you shall have your diamonds!" "It's impossible!" breathed Dorothy. "But it is possible, and I'll tell you how. Come closer, dear; not a soul must know of this. Dixon has helped a shipping merchant on the docks to get his cargo in—Dixon knows a man in the aus torn house, you see—and lfe has given U3 a point. There was a Brazil schooner came in last night, laden with bananas. The captain has friends iu the diamond mines up among the moun tains." "You don't mean—" Mrs. Dixon laughed—a shrill, excited laugh. "It's really quite interesting to visit those odd little foreign vessels," said she. "I'll take you there, dear, if you'd like?" "Is that the way you got your dia monds, Luella?" "Ask me no questions, and I'll tel! you no lies," merrily retorted Mrs. Dixon. "You have the same chance that I did. It's tho duties on these luxuries that makes the cost. Captain Sazeda is in a hurry to get back to Rio Janerio. If we go at all we'll have togo to-night." "But it's Ralph's late night at the bank!" hesitated Dorothy. "AH the better*. Ho mustn't know a word of it- Men are so ridiculous about such things. I never would havejbreathed a word to you if I hid supposed you would betray me!" "I won't! I won't!" cried Dorothy, her cheeks flushed, her dark eyes spar kling. "Oh, Luella, do you think my poor little seventy-tive dollars will buy anything tit to look at? "Great bargains are sometimes ob tained in that way," nodded Mis. Dixon. "But, good gracious, is that eleven striking? And me due at my dressmak er's at half-past ten. I must go, Dor othy. Remember I'll call for you at seven. Not a minute before dark, you know. Sazeda will send up the cabin j boy to show you the way. Put on your | waterproof, and wear your oldest hat and ! veil, and make some excuse to Bridget. Mind, sharp seven!" All day Dorothy Imray went about ! her occupations like one in a dream. ; The strange, fantastic nature of the ad venture appealed to the romantic side of her being. She longed for diamonds as a deseri wanderer longs for cooling fountains. I She could tell Rilph that she had hired i them, that some of their relations up in | Canada had bequeathed them—she could | make up any sort of a story to pacify him. The rent must wait. Aunt Khoda would surely be in no haste about her black brocaded gown! And Dorothy fell to thinking in what shape the stones—precious sparklers from far Southern minos—should be set. Seven o'clock came—a raw, smoky twilight, tilled with iine, drizzling rain i —and Dorothy and Mrs. Dixon were ] picking their way along the narrow, I half-lighted streets on the edge of the : wharves, where the wind was full of : saline odors, and the crowded masts and [ smoke-stacks seemed to overshadow them like some outlandish sort of forest. A stunted lad in tattered garments trotted along in front of them, whistling as he went, and now and then casting a backwack glance to make sure that they had not lost their way. Presently he plunged into a crazy old house which seemed to balance itself on the black tides below. Mrs. Dixon followed—so did Dorothy Imray, after one startled glance around. They descended a flight of ruinous stairs, crossed a rude gangplank, and found themselves on a stupenduously dirty vessel, smelling of tar and onions, and rocking back and forth with the swell produced by the ferry-boats that came and went at intervals.. A humpbacked little man in tarnishod velveteen sat on a bucket turned upside down, holding a lantern which he swung toward a cabin door beyond. "Ila, Giacome!" he uttered, "Ze sig nora she come to see ze parrot an' ze cockatoo! She is welcome. Walk zat way, please." And Dorothy and her friend descend e:l into a low-ceiled, dirty place lined vrith cages of numberless shrieking foreign birds, and a jocund-looking jorjng man with a mandolin slung around his neck was leisurely picking out a tune by the light of a smoke-blackened lamp. He looked at Mrs. Dixon, who nodded her head, while Dorothy stood trembling and a little sea-sick at her side. He laid down the mandolin, bowed not ungracefully, to Dorothy, and clos ing the doors with vigilant care, opened a shallow cigar box which lay on the table. All at once the air seemed to flash into scintillations of light. Dorothy started back with a slight exclamation. Not a loud word was spoken as, guid ed by Sirs. Dixon's advice, Dorothy selected Ave many-faceted stones and | laid down her little roll of baukbills. Her heart beat loudly, her pulses seemed to race in a mud scamper through her veius as she thrust the diamonds iuto the bosom of her dnut, She did not bear what Sazeda was saying—tho murky cabin swam before her eyes. "I'm afraid you feel the swell of the waves, dear," whispered Mrs. Dixon. "Let us get out as quick as we can." In the same instant a curious expres sion passed across Sazeda's handsome sardonic face. The cigar box vanished as if by magic—the captain disappeared also. "A custom house fellow," whispered the littlo hunchback, madly swinging his lantern to and fro. "All ashore! Quick, signoras!" lie thrust the cage of a drooping white macaw into Mrs. Dixon's hauds. She nodded shrewdly, and pushed Dorothy across the plank toward the stairs. In her haste, however, the young woman stumbled. "Quick," cried Luella "quick 1 What's the matter with you?" "I'm—l'm afraid I have sprained my ankle," wailed poor Dorothy, growing white and sick. "Oh, Luella, wait—" And that was all she remembered. * » * * * * "Diamonds, my dear—diamonds?" echoed Auut Rhoda. "Just cut glass, and nothing more. Bright pebbles that one can pick up anywhere." "But Mrs. Dixon—" stammered Dor othy. "Don't talk, dear," said Aunt Rhoda, with a wave of her hand. "lialph made me promise not to let you get excited. But I think it's best to tell you the whole story at once. They've cut and run, the lot of 'em—Dixon and his wife, that Sazeda fellow and all. They palmed off a lot of those false jewels on people who supposed they were buying smug gled diamonds, and the ship was found deserted the next day. Where did we lind you? Why, fainting away all aloi c on the dock steps. I had followed you. I had come in that morning, and was in the next bedroom all the time that wo man was putting her falsehoods down your throat. "And I knew, in Ralph's absence, that it was my business to look after you. Bridget was with me, aud together we got you home. Much that other woman cared whether you lived or died! She has left you to your fate. No, Dotty, no; don t look so grieved! It was a false step, but the Lord has mercifully preserved you, and now we'll wipe off the old scores and bogin again." And Dorothy had just enough strength left to press her lips to Aunt lihoda's withered hand. ".Ralph," she said, when sho was qu.te recovered, "if ever you are able to buy me any jewels—" "Which I certainly shall do, dot, one of these days." he gaily interrupted. "Dou't let them be diamonds. I hate diamonds! I never want to see one again. Turquoises, amethysts, whatever else you please, but not diamonds!" "Well, it shall bo as you please,"said Ralph. "Your bright eyes, love, are all the diamouds I want!" "Oh, Ralph," sobbed Dorothy, "ho<v good you are to me! How I love you!" A Church Bnilt of Coral. The Seychelles Islands, which are sup posed by many to be the site of the Eden of the Old Testament history, form an archipelago of 114 islands, and are situated about 1400 miles east of Aden, and 1000 miles from Zauzibar. They rise steeply out of the sea, culminating in the Isle of Mahe, which is about 3000 feef above the level of the ocean, aud is nearly the centre of the group. All these islands are of coral growth. The beaches which surround thtm are the most beautiful in the world, and are of whito calcereous sands inclosed in coral reefs of the most subtile and varied structure. The reefs form a sort of wall arouud the island, and when the sun's rays fall slanting on the sands the shore reflects here and there light-tinted rainbows of the most exquisite shades. The houses are built of a species of massive coral hewn into square blocks, which glisten like white marble and show themselves to the utmost advantage in the various tinted green of the thick tropical palms, whoso iinmcnso fern-like leaves give pleasant and much needed shade. The palms grow as high as 100 feet and more, overtopping both the houses and the coral-built church. They line the seashore and cover the mouutains, forming in many places extensive for ests.—Boston Globe. Curiosities About Gold. Gold i3 so very tenacious that a piece of it drawn i&to wire one-twentieth of an inch in diameter will sustain a weight of 500 pounds without breaking. Its malleability is so great that a single grain may ho divided into 2,000,000 partj and a cubic inch iuto 9,523,809, 523 parts, each of which may be dis tinctly seen by the naked eye. A grain and a half of gold fay be beaten into leaves of one inch square, which if intersected by parallel lines drawn at right angles to each other and distance only the one-hundredth part of an inch, will produce 25,000,000 little squares, each of which may be distinctly seen without the use of a glass. The surface of any given quantity of gold, according to the best authorities, may be extsuded by the hammer 310,184 times. The thickness of the metal thus extended appears to be no more than the 568.020 th of an inch. Eight ounces of this wonderful metal would gild a silver wire of sufficient length to extend en tirely uround the globe.— JiehobotU Sun day Herald. Upside down—The uioiuUohfe Terms—Bl.2s in Advance; $1.50 after Three Months SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Germany leads in paper-mills. Coffee mills are run by electricity. Instantaneous photographs show lip movements. The experiment is about to be tried in Chicago of running double-decked street cars. A street railway system, to be operated by compressed air, is to be inaugurated in Leavenworth, Kan. The power will also be applied to factories. The phonograph has been applied to the telephone, go that any conversation coming over the wires during the day may be readily reproduced. Phosphorus is now being made by decomposing a mixture of acid phos phates and carbon by the heat of an electric arc within the mass. The latest innovation in car decora tion is a sew material called "sili chrome." It can be used also for depot or other interior decoration. On the eastern frontier of the "Dark Continent" coal is so plentiful that by lifting a shovelful of clay off any particu lar spot it may be reached. But there is no means of transporting it to market. The range of naval guns is rougtly one mile for every inch of calibre foi guns less than ten inches, bi * last year a 9.2 inch broach-loading rifle attained a range of twelve miles. The pneumatic gun has fired a dummy shell two miles and a half. It is said that the loosl steam trains between St. Paul and Minneapolis have all been taken off, beiug unable to com pete with the electric road, which is running trips every eight minutes, and is expected soon to change to live minute schedule. About twice as much energy is re quired to stop a moving object as to start it. In order to relieve its horses of a great deal of work, the London Gen eral Omnibus Company has adopted an ingenious device by which springs are wound up when the omnibus stops. The amount of energy which is thus stored up 111 the springs is utilized for starting the vehicle agaiu. A smokeless powder has been prepared at the Newport (R. I.) Torpedo Station which is credited with having given a rifle bullet the astounding velocity of 2860 feet per second. Moreover, it is Etated that at a distance of 500 yards the report of the gun was not heard nor was any smoke visible. Gun cotton pulp is reported to be the base of the powder, but the other ingredients and their ma nipulation are a Government secret. A lake has a wonderfully tempering effect on the climate. Thus, according to M. Forel, the quantity of heat accu mulated in the Lake of Geneva, Switzer land, during the summer of 1889 was equal to that given off by the combustion of 31,000,000 tons of coal, or the amount carried by a coal train 1120 miles in length. The greater part of the heat is discharged into the air of the valley dur ing the cold season, thus producing a milder temperature in autumn and win ter. Dr. Brown-Sequard in one of his lec tures dwells with great emphasis on the importance of general knowledge in the matter of checking coughing and sneez ing. lie states that coughing can be stopped by pressing the nerves of the lips in the neighborhood of the nose, and sneezing may be stopped the same way. Pressing in the neighborhood of the ear, or right in front of the ear, may stop coughing. It is so also of hiccough ing, but much less so than for sneezing or coughing. Pressing very hard on the roof of the mouth is also a means of ar resting a cough, and the will Itself is often found to be a wonderful preventive. What Becomes of All Old Hats J "What becomes of all old hats ? "Wc have about 200 old hats strewed along under the counters and in the back room," said a South Clark street hatter. "From teu to twenty-five tramps como in daily aud ask for a hat, yet our refuse supply seems undiminished. The tramps are glad to see cool or rainy weather at this time of the year. They know that it will drive in the straw hats, and they will fall heir to them. Aftei these straw hats have done service all summer the tramps wear them all winter. For a summer hat the tramp gets the cast-off winter hat. lie reserves the fashion. A great majority, hdwever, take their old hats homo and lay them up for a rainy or a snowy day. Some people will wear a straw hat two sea sons, but the great majority give them to the poor. We send a large number to the charitable institutions. A great many hats aro left to be called for. It' not called for within thirty days we giva them away. Sometimes sharpers attempt their little games on us. A small man left his hat here, buying a cut-off crown hat. The one lie left was out of shape, had lost its gloss and color, and was worthless. He did not say that ho would return for it, nor did he say that he would not. We put it aside, but when he called for it wc could not find it at the moment. He then claimed that it was a good hat and demanded $5 for it. We made a thorough search, found the battered tile aud handed it to him. Seeing that his scheme had failed he threw the old hat into the street."— Chicago Times. A Western man says this is a "tough world," and it is his opinion that very few who are in it now will ever get out of it alive.— jf/iarnuiceultcul Era. NO. 9. CHORES. Jed Dorcum always used to say When we asked him to come and play With us boys down to Harry More's, '"l've gotter stay and do the chores." No recreation would he taku For all his wealth in jelly cake; No glad fun in or out of doors. He had to stay and do the chores. We drove a woodchuck in the wall But Jed he paid no heed at all; A circus passed through Lower Town But busy Jed, he couldn't go down. The elephant went tramping by And shook the earth and touched the 6ky; The tiger howls, the lion roars, Jed stays at home and dees the chores. Much like Jed Dorkum are we all Who long for great things and do small* We moil among the trivial sods Within the gardens of the gods, While the dark clusters hang above Rich with the juice of life and love. We cannot reach and pull them down, These fair pomegranates of renown; Whose juice life's early hope restores. For we must work and do the chores. Above us sternly loom forever The mighty Mountain of Endeavor, And whoso on their summit stands Looks on the sun-kissed table lands. We grasp our mountain stair to climb Their sky-enshrouded peaks sublime. Up where the crystal torrent pours— And then we pause to do our chores. We start with courage in the heart To try the endlessness of art. In hope that we may speak some day The word the Spirit bids us say, But ere we speak the word aright The shadows come and it is night. Put out the light and closo the doors. For good or 111 we've done our chores. Sam Walter Foss, in Yankee Blade HUMOR OF THE DAY. Cast iron—Quoits. Men with well knit figures are seldom worsted in a fight."— Pittsburgh Dispatch. The girl who has had a faithless lover should be sharper the next time—she is a cutlass.— Lowell Courier. " Financial embarrassment." is the only kind that ever troubles young America.— Boston Courier. A ring around the moon is a sign ot rain, and a ring around the eye is a sign of blow.— Texas Sifting). The crank with a theory is like a dog chasing his tail—it's nothing new when he grasps it.— Columbus Pott. "Ah, yes,'* said Aunt Sary, "Jennie's a great singer - some day she'll be a reg'- lar belladonna!"— Columbus Post. The ocean wearily exclaimed, Incessantly I go; I wonder that 1 aon't get corns Upon my undertow. If the world, as it is, owes everybody a living, the world, ought to get a mort gage on itself to pay its debts.— Texai Sittings. If men were half as wise in their ac tions as they are in their minds, the word "fool" would be out of use.— Atchison Globe. The peacock may not be inclined to gossip, but he loves to spread a highly colored tail about the neighborhood.— Elmira Gazette. In looking for causes, the little thing under our nose is hardest to see. Just try to cast your eye on the centre of your own moustache.— Puck. "Why is it so much easier to contract debts than to pay them?" "Because we run into debt, but usually have to crawl out."— New York Herald. Facetious Tourists—"ls it true that your canton is full of idiots?" Merry Swiss Peasant—"Yes, sir, iu summer. 15ut they don't stop long." Carrnthers—"Of what use is a family tree, anyhow?" Waite—"Why, to cast one's -leighbor's into the shade, of course."— New York Herald. Ethel—"l am sure now that George thinks mean angel." "Maud—"What makes you so positive?" Ethel—"He asked me to -fly with him."— New York Haald. "Why do they ring the bell in that railroad station in that style? Itsounds like it was tolling." "Probably it is— for the passing of the dividend."—Balti more American. "Mrs. Garrill fell down stairs and bit her tongue in two." "Poor Garrill! If that woman has two tongues, heaven knows what will become of him!"— Harper's Bazar. Mrs. Blacklot—"Yes, my boy's doin' well to Harvard. He's study in' fer a doctor now." Mrs. Nextdore—"Dear me! Can't the doctor do his own study in'?"—Boston Post. Bride (in anticipation)—"l shouid like to give my intended a little surprise before our marriage. What would you advise?" Female Friend—"Hum! pre sent him with your certificate of birth." Fliegende Blaetttr. "Can you help me?" said the tramp, addressing the doctor, who was riding past. "Perhaps I can," said the doctor humorously. "I'm a physician. What's your trouble?" "I think, sir, I need a little change most." He got it.— New York Pre*s. Joachim, the musician, was having his hair cut, and strenuously insisted that it should no*, be very short. "Well, sir," said the barber, losing patience, "if you, as a gentleman, don't miud being taken for a foreigu musiciau, I'm sure I don't cure."— Christian L'riioit.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers