Qui ing 1 a of th- nts ND and vith | treat. \n be at mail you ach case vllowing Weak- >d Dis- Disease, 1 other nature, AN. AT. ud tes- Penn’a. best is nu get a st every charge e Hiller expert alisbury samples. ied our 10t, you Price 1ggist, lale, Pa. -43 head ear-olds. Yoder, tf 0.W.P. the sea- at once. es, 630 tf 1 A a RR a RR RRB RBBB EERE Whiskey | | “CaspPER’s STANDARD” 10 Year old ally produced by honest Tar Heels in grandfathers a century ago. incorporated Under the Laws of N. C 000.00 and the Peoples National Bank (in stamps, cash or by check, ete.,) as list MUST BE ADDRESSED AS FOLLOWS: We claim to be the Lowest Pricep WHiskEy HOUSE. whiskey as low as $1.10 per gallon, and mind you ; distilled whiskey—not a decoction of chemicals—but of course it’s new and under proof. lina by the old time process. Every drop is boiled overopen furnace wood fires, in old style copper stills, in exactly the same way it was made by our First rate whiskey is sold at $5 to $6 per gal- lon, but is not any better than *“Casper’s Stanparp.” Itisthe best produced and must please every customer or we will buy it back with gold—we are . ton-Salem, N. C., will tell you our guarantee is good. This old honest, mild and mellow whiskey is worth one dollar per quart, but to more fully introduce “Casper’s Standard” we offer sample shipments of this brand at half price, (packed in plain sealed boxes) 5 Quarts $2.95, 10 Quarts $5.00, Express Prepaid Anywhere in U. S. All orders and remittances S. C. S. CASPER C0., Winston-Salem, N. C., 'U. S. A. Main Office and Warehouses: No's. 1045-46 Liberty and 1, 3, 4 and 5 Maple Sts, BRR RRB RBRER 2. Gallon. sound We really sell whiskey is a liquid joy! It is actu- the Mountain Section of North Caro- ., with an authorized capital of $100, and Peidmont Savings Bank of Wins- well as requests for confidential price ‘Whiskey $ Eo 14 Gallon. a A A EO OAR TAI Rogers Bros” have been finish and tained. It SPOONS, FORKS, KNIVES, Etc. made for over fifty years, steadily gaining in character of designs, general popu- larity, but best of all, the good old “‘Rogers’’ quality has been main- would be hard indeed to improve upon the wearing qualities first ex- silverware. Do not trying something that the test of time. Sher E25 Plsle [ial efix—*“1847.”’ Send to the makers NTERNATIONAL SILVER hibited by this brand, and 1847 Rogers Bros.” the most famous of all experiment by has not stood Buy “1847 goods, which have a well-known and well-earned reputation, and you run no risk. There are other ‘‘Rogers.’’ The original and genuine has the Sold by leading dealers everywhere. for catalogue No.6 containing newest designs. 1: 0., Successor to MERIDEN BRITANNIA COMPANY, MERIDEN, CONN. | Wes (B Desirable Real Estate For Sale. Tue Star is agent for the sale of a very desirable piece of real estate locat- ed 3 miles east of the thriving town of Salisbury. Said real estate consists of about 72 acres of land, part of which is in a fair state of cultivation, apd part covered with a large amount of timber suitable for mine props and ties. A very thick vein of most excellent lime- stone, easy of access, is opened on the land, as well as a vein of the finest pav- ing stone to be found anywhere. The famous Findlay Spring,one of the finest pure water springs in all Somerset county, having a volume of water suf- ficient to supply a town of several thousand inhabitants, is also located on this land, and the spring alone is worth a handsome sum of money. There is also a fine bearing young apple orchard on the place, and a good, new two-story residence and suitable outbuildings. The place can be bought at a very reasonable price, or will trade same for desirable town property. For terms and further particulars, call on or ad- dress THE STAR, Elk Lick, Pa. tf @ WEDDING Invitations at Tae StAr office. A nice new stock just re- ceived. tf. FOR RENT OR FOR SALE! The Best Stock Farm in Somerset County. I will offer my farm, known as the old John Peck farm. The farm is situ- ate at Savage (Pa.) postoffice. Four miles from railroad. The buildings thereon erected are as follows: A very good barn, 50x104 feet. A very good dwelling house, 26x38 feet; running soft water in the kitchen. Two tenant houses and outbuildings. Size of farm, 423 acres, about 230 acres being clear ; balance pastures and timber land. A good sugar orchard. Every field that has been plowed is sowed in clover and timothy seed,which is a very good stand. Will pasture 70 head of cattle. Also containing a THREE ACRE ORCHARD. Ope and one-half acres is a young or- chard, planted with Baldwin apples and peach trees—5 years old. Running water in every field on the farm but one. A limestone quarry is opened on the farm. Possession can be given either this fall or in the spring, just to suit the renter. Telephone connection. Address all communications to C.J. YODER, tf Savage, Pa. & HILLER-MADE SUITS are the most popular. When in need of a fine, neat-fitting tailored suit, be sure to get it from Hiller, the Reliable Tailor, Frostburg, Md., who also has a branch establishment in Meyersdale, in charge of Mr. Geo. Ruhl, an expert cutter and fitter. The same high grade work is done at both establishments. All cloth- ing guaranteed to give satisfaction, and charges very reasonable. : tf CAUTION NOTICE! I hereby give notice to all persons that my wife, Elizabeth, has left my bed and board without just cause, and I warn all persons that I will not be re- sponsible for any debts that she may contract. Those who extend credit to her in any form whatsoever will do so at their own risk, as she alone is re- sponsible for her transactions. 11-13 . ALYIX RODAMER, Notable for Their Durability. A most important feature of the flat, indestructable records used on the Co- lumbia Disc Graphophone is their dura- bility. The material used is a compo- sition exclusively controlled by the Co- lumbia Phonograph Company, pioneers and leaders in the talking machine art. While its peculiar character admits of its receiving the most minute vibra- tions, the composition is hard enough to resist wear. For this reason Colum- bia Disc Records outlast all others while they are vastly superior in qual- ity. Instead of being of being scratchy and muffled, they are smooth, clear, resonant and possessed of a volume that is truly marvelous. Only those who own Columbia disc machines and the perfected disc records of the Co- lumbia Phonograph Company, have a just conception of the progressthat has been made in bringing this type of ma- chines and records to the highest possi- ble point of desirability. | The Dise Graphophone is made in | three types, selling at $15, $20 and $30. | Seven inch records 50c each, $5 per | dozen; 10 inch records $1 each, $10 per dozen. The Graphophone and Colum- bia Records were awarded the Grand Prize at the Paris Exposition of 1900. The Columbia Phonograph Co., 615 Penn Avenue, Pittsburg, headquarters for graphophones and talking machine supplies of every kind, will send you catalogues on application. 11-6 et M&F FINE GUNS FOR SALE !—We | have for sale at THE Star office two very fine guns, received from the Ste- vens Arms and Tool Company in ex- change for advertising. One is a Ste- vens Ideal Rifle of 25.20 caliber, and the other a most beautiful Stevens Shotgun, single barrel, 12 guage, made strong enough for smokeless powder. Both guns are beauties and of the latest and most improved models. Don’t buy worthless and inferior guns when you can get the best in the world at a low price. Call and examine them. HA@ OUR GREATEST BARGAIN! —We will send you this paper and the Philadelphia Daily North American, both papers for a whole year, for only $3.70. Subscribe now, and address all orders to THE Star, Elk Lick, Pa. tf Dress Making, Quilting and Sewing. 1 wish to announce to the people of Salisbury and vicinity that I do sll kinds of Dress Making, Quilting and Sewing at reasonable prices. I guar- antee satisfaction and solicit your pat- ronage. Mgs. 8. C. Teprow. CHARTER NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that an applica- tion will be made’ to the Governor of the State of Pennsylvania on Tuesday, the 25th day of November, 1902, by Albert Reitz, Harvey H. Maust, Albert E. Livengood, Frank A. Maust,and A. F. Speicher, under the Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, entitled “An Act to pro- vide for the incorporation and regulation of certain corporatins,” approved April 29. 1874, and supplements thereto, for the Char- ter ofan intended corporation to be called The Improved Traction Engine Company, the character and object whereof is, manu- facturing and selling traction engines and other articles of commerce from metal or wocd or both, and for these Darhoses to have, possess and enjoy all the rights, bene- fits and privileges of the said Act of Assem- bly and its supplements. 11-13 KooNTz & OGLE, Solicitors. Somerset, Pa., Oct. 30, 1902. | | Foley’s Honey and Tar | Varcoiidvon sate, surd, No opigtes. OLD-TIME SONGS FREE! Every family wants the songs of long ago—the fireside classics which will live while time lasts. They are pub- lished in an artistic booklet, words and music at 50c, but we have decided fora short time only, to give these song books away FREE. Among the old fav- orite songs the book contains are: America, Annie Laurie, Auld Lang Syne, Battle Hymn of the Republie,Co- Iumbia, the Gem of the Ocean, Comin’ Through the Rye, Dixie's Land, Far Away, Flag of the Free, Flee as a Bird, Home, Sweet Home, In the Gloaming, Lead Kindly Light, Long. Long Ago, My Old Kentucky Home, Yankee Doo- dle, Robin Adair, Rocked in the Cradle of the Deep, Star Spangle Banuer, Swanee River, Sweet and Low, Swing Low Sweet Chariot, The Last Rose of Summer, The Blue Bells of Scotland, The Old Oaken Bucket, When the Swallows Homeward Fly, ete. The Literary Euterpean is a valuable dollar magazine devoted to Literatare, Music, Poetry and Tainting. It is handsomely illustrated and its contents please every member of the family. Remarkable opportunity for obtaining music at 5c. is printed in a coupon each month. For the purpose of introducing it everywhere, we propose to send it to any address for six months for 25 cents in silver or le. and 2c. stamps, and send a copy of “Old Time Songs,” as above, absolutely FREE. Sample copy 10c. Send quick, before this offer ig withdrawn, to tf Tae EurerpreaN, Galesburg, 111. WANTED !—A good, practical print- er. One who has only good habits and is not afraid of work. We have steady work and good pay for the right man. No bums or drunkards need apply. Good treatment, good wages and prompt pay is the policy we do busi- ness on. For full particulars call on or address at once Tue Star, Elk Lick,Pa. ————— CALIFORNIA LETTER. Promising New Gold Fields—The Great Deserts of California and " Their Dangers — Pen Pie- tures of Wild and Awe- Inspiring Seenes. GoLDSTONE, San Bernardino, county, Cal., Oct. 14, 1902.—While I am enjoy- ing my annual vacation and looking after some mining interests up here, I will take time to acquaint the readers of THe Star with something about this desert section of Southern California. Goldstone is a new mining camp, about 300 miles northeast of Los Ange- les, in San Bernardino county, the largest county in the United States, also perhaps the dryest, most rugged and richest in minerals. With the ex- ception of the extreme southwestern corner, where the flourishing towns of Redlands, San Bernardino, Colton, On- tario and Chino are situated,almost the entire area of this vast county, com- prising a domain about one-fourth the size of the state of Pennsylvania, is a succession of arid plains diversified by solitary buttes and immense chains of mountains that are almost impassable on account of the surpassing steep- ness and ruggedness of their slopes. In the southwestern part of the county is the lofty San Bernar- dino range, the highest peaks of which have an altitude of more than 10,000 feet. These mountains cut off the cool, moist breezes from the Pacific which give the coast regions of South- ern California their incomparable cli- mate. Beyond them are the Mojave and Colorado deserts, hemmed in and intersected by innumerable mountains of varying height and extent. At places the desert dips below sea level and beyond it the mountains tower to a height of 10,000 or 12,000 feet. In the greater part of this vast region rain seldom falls, but when it does, it usually comes in the form of cloud- bursts which scarify the precipitous mountain sides with immense gullies and send raging torrents down the dry ravines and canons, carrying immense boulders and various sorts of debris to the desert plains, portions of which are at times converted into inland seas, but from which the water quickly evaporates or is as quickly absorbed by the dry, porous soil. It is these occas- ional floods that afford moisture fo the growth of the sparse vegetation that covers the mountains and the greater part of the desert itself. Only the hardiest and most forbidding plants grow in this arid region, however. The most characteristic flora is the cactus family embracing scores of varieties from little prickly dwarfs no larger than the palm of a man’s hand, to the giant suaria as big around as a barrel and thirty feet in height. Then there is the ever present sagebrush and greasewood, chaparral, yucca palms and dry, coarse bunch grasses. The higher altitudes of the mountains, es- pecially the northern slopes, are cover- ed with scrub timber, principally juni- per, pinone and live oak. PROMISING MINING CAMP. It is on one of these wooded slopes of the Providence mountains that your correspondent’s tent is at present pitched. The city of Goldstone, which has sprung into existence since I was up here last February with a party of Los Angeles business men and miners on a prospecting trip, consists at the present time of five frame buildings constructed of rough boards—the mine superintendent’s residence, dining hall and three bunk houses for the men em- ployed in the mines—one tent occupied by myself and family, and ablacksmith shop. It is the camp of the Proyidence Gold and Copper Company, which, I believe, is destined to become one of southwest. The mountains hereabouts are seamed with great ledges of ore that assays from $10 to $300 a ton in gold, besides silver, copper, lead, iron and other minerals in less proportion. The company owns over 300 acres of the best of these mineral lands, known as the Goldstone group of claims—a claim being a strip of ground 1,500 feet long by 600 feet wide, following a well defined ledge or vein of ore. One of the essentials in successfully working a mine is an abundance of wood and water in proximity to the mine. The Providence Gold and Cop- per Company has these, there being several fine springs on its grounds and hundreds of thousands of cords of ex- cellent firewood. A good start has been made in the last six months for getting out the ore, of which, it has been demonstrated, there is an unlimi- ted quantity that can be profitably worked. Several shafts have been sunk to a depth of 100 feet and now a big tunnel is being driven to crosscut the veins. The next step will be to erect a mill to crush and separate the ore, which is free-milling, that is, will admit of being crushed and having the gold extracted without the forces of smelting—a condition very much in favor of economic operation. DEVELOPING A MINE. The cost of developing a mine like this is considerale. In the first place all supplies must be shipped from Los Angeles a distance of nearly 300 miles by rail ; then freighted across a burn- ing desert a distance of 25 miles by wagon ; then packed up a steep and tortuous trail a distance of one-fourth to one-half a mile on mule back: But the survey of the new Los Angeles- Salt Lake railroad runs within a few miles of Goldstone, and as soon as that road is completed, which it surely will be inside of the next two years, Gold- stone will be easy of access. By that time, also, I believe the Providence Gold and Copper Company will be pay- ing a handsome dividend on its $3,000,- 000 capital, or at least on such part of the capital stock that has been issued. It has been the policy of the company to sell only as much of its stock as was needed to raise money for development work. The first block of stock was put on the market at 2 cents a share on a par value of $1, but the office price at the present time is 25 cents. Enough has been sold to carry on development work thus far. Not being a capitalist, I have a very small interest in the company, but my confidence in its property and manage- ment are such that I have not hesitat- ed to invest all the funds I had to spare, in its securities. The interest which brought me out here, however, was to look after a claim that I have adjacent to the Goldstone group. In order to get title to a mining claim on government land, one must have done at least $100 worth of development work by the end of the first calendar year succeeding the one in which notice of location was posted on the land and filed in the office of the county record- er. My time will have run out by the end of the present year, and it is for the purpose of perfecting title that I am out here for a few weeks. I am also combining pleasure with business by having my family here to visit the family of the superintendent of the Providence mines, George L. Berg, who is one of the best friends I have on earth. : A MAN AMONGST MEN. Mr. Berg is such a man as the editor of THE Star would delight to know—a very giant in stature and strength and the equal of about four average men at any kind of work he sets himself to. He is a dead shot with a revelver,shot- gun or rifle and whenever the camp is in need of fresh meat he goes out and bags a mess of jack rabbits, cottontails or quail which are very plentiful within a few miles of camp. Berg armed me with a hammerless $125 Colt’s shotgun the other day and took me out on a hunting expedition. It was the first time I handled a shootingiron in about 17 years, but I managed to knock over one jack and one cottontail, while Berg bagged four big jackrabbits with a Winchester repeating shotgun. There is a band of bighorn montain sheep roaming the peaks here, but they are very wild and it is against the law to kill them, a fine of $500 being the penalty attached. The sheep came down to Berg’s well at night, this sum- mer, for water, and ate off his grape vines which he was nursing with great crae. Had he caught them at it, the camp might have had fresh mutton for a change, in spite of the fine, and the fact that the superintendent allows no shooting within sight of the camp. As a consequence of this inhibition, the shine more brilliantly than from these mountain heights. Here would be an ideal spot for an astronomical observa- tory. It would also be a good resort for persons suffering from pulmonary complaints. In the winter the moun- tains are sometimes covered by a light fall of snow, but winter or summer the clear, crisp atmosphere never loses its invigorating, health-giving properties. Last Sunday the entire population of Goldstone formed a picnic party and we trudged to the highest peak within easy walking distance of the camp. From the summit we could see a hun- dred miles in any direction, over moun- tains wild and deserts drear, while di- rectly beneath us lay the “Devil's Playground,” an immense basin filled with white drifting sand as fine as flour. In the center of this basin the sand is piled up in a huge drift, re- sembling a small mountain range, prob- ably 800 or 900 feet high, and looking for all the world like a large snowdrift. This basin evidently is the bed of an ancient inland sea, the white beach sand now being all that remains of it. The sun beating down upon the wide expanse of sand causes the atmosphere of the basin to become heated like a furnace, and the hot air to asscend as in a flue, while the cold air rushes down from the lofty summits of the ad- jacent mountains and piles the sand in fantastic drifts. Beyond the “Devil’s Playground,” we could see the Mojave Sink, where turg- id waters of the Mojave river, a stream of considerable size, lose themselves in the sands of the desert below sea level. Beyond this we could see the glaring surface of Soda Lake and still beyond the mountains of Inyo county, sur- rounding Death Valley, that most dread of all American deserts, and next to the Dead Sea, the deepest depression on the face of the earth. DANGEROUS GROUND. To wander through the “Devil's Play- ground” is all that a man’s life is worth. Even the desert between the Provi- dence mountains. and the Santa Fe railroad, which we had to cross in com- ing here, is dangerous, the temperature often rising as high as 145 degrees. It was comparatively cool when we came across, Oct. 5, but only a few weeks previously two miners who undertook to tramp from Fenner, the nearest railroad station to Goldstone, a dis- tance of 26 miles, nearly lost their lives. They started with only five quarts of water between them, and that was consumed before they got half way. Imagine walking in sand ankle deep under a broiling sun for hours and hours without a drop of drink and no shade or shelter of any kind from the fierce heat! Such was the predicament of these venturesome men. One of them reached Gladstone, after nightfall in a raving condition, his tongue so swollen-and parched that he could hardly talk. He threw his arms around the water cooler and laughed and cried with joy as soon as he came in sight of it. When he was refreshed he told about having left his compan- ion about five miles back in a dement- ed condition and unable to push on any farther. Superintendent Berg hastily saddled a mule and taking a canteen of water went to the rescue. He found the man floundering around among the cactus in an aimless man- ner, and arrived barely in time to save his life. ’ The desert is dotted with the bleach- ed bones of prospectors and travelers who died of thirst, yet the barren wastes bave a fascination for those who have once visited them that is al- most irresistible, and so long as the lust for gold lures men to their fate, so long will the desert be a sepulcher fill- ed with dead men’s bones. W. 8. LiveNGgoob. Anxious Moments. Some of the most anxious hours of a mother’s life are those when the little ones of the household have the croup. There is no other medicine so effective in this terrible malady as Foley’s Hon- ey and Tar. It is a household favorite for throat and lung troubles, and as it contains no opiates or other poisons it can be safely given. E. H. Miller. ee The Miserable. God pity the heart that is aching With grief for the loved and lost; And pity the heart that has purchased Its ache at a fearful cost; God pity the heart that is bleeding With shame for a brother’s fall— God weep with the heart that is lonely; Its ache is the worst of all. God pity the life that is worthless And, knowing it, burns with shame; O pity thé innocent children Who bear a dishonored name; God pity the world-weary sinner When all of his pleasures pall; But weep with the heart that is lonely— Its ache is the worst of all. birds are so tame that they will perch on one’s shoulders and the mountain quail feed with the chickens. IDEAL OUTING PLACE. We are camped at an altitude of about 5500 feet with mountain peaks towering several thousand feet above us. The climate is about as near per- fection as could be desired. The at- mosphere is clear and bracing without even a trace of fog, and for months at a time not a cloud obscures the deep blue of the sky. It 1s just warm enough by day to feel comfortable in shirt- sleeves, and cold enough at night to sleep comfortably under blankets. the great mining companies of the Nowhere have I ever seen the stars God pity the wealthy and idle Who've nothing to do but live; God pity the poor who would help them Though nothing they have to give; Give pity to unhappy people Wherever their lots may falls Then weep with thejheart that is lonely— Whose ache is the worst of all. —T.08 Angeles Herald. | Startling, But True. “If every one knew what a grand | medicine Dr. King’s New Life Pills is,” The Grapes that Make the Wine that Makes Good Blood. One of the oldest and most entensive industries in Passaic is that of the Speer New Jersey Wine Company. This business, begun in a small way by Alfred Speer over forty years ago, has grown until today its wines are sent to every state in the Union, and wherever they go Speer’s wines are known as the pure product of the.grape and are highly prized for medieinal purposes. In fact it was for ibe medical profes- sion that Mr. Speer first began the manufacture of his wine. The grapes from which his famous Port and Burgundy are made are rais- ed in his vineyard in Van Houten ave- nue, this city. There he has the only vineyrrd in this country of genuine Oporto grapes, the grape from which Port wine is made. The original plants for the vineyard were imported by Mr. Speer from Portugal and the vineyard was planted in 1867. The vineyard contains at the present time about fifty-two acres, the greater part of which consists of the Oporto vines. A few acres on the northern end of the lot are planted with Concord grapes. With these Mr.Speer supplies the local market and some of them are blended with the Oporto grapes in making clar- et wine. The vineyard is laid out with road arbors, under which one may drive run- ning in both directions. There are in all over two miles of these arbor drives in the vineyard. Between the arbors the vines are supported by wires strung on posts. miles of this wire which Mr. Speer purchased from the Western Union Telegraph Company some years ago. The grapes raised in this vineyard and the wine produced from them are rich in iron and very sweet. This Mr. Speer explains is a result of cultivation. The soil is rich in iron and this is shown in the grape, giving a dark, rich color to the wine and also giving it a medic- inal value. The extra amount of sugar in the grapes, making them much sweeter than those of the same variety grown in other vineyards, is the result of treating the soil with potash, by a method which Mr. Speer followed for a number of years. Hundreds of car- loads of German potash were brought here for the purpose and in addition to this loads of leayes which are rich in potasium,were gathered from the neigh- boring woods each fall and brought to the vineyard, where they were allowed to remain during the winter and decay, and in the following spring they were mingled with the animal fertilizer and spread over the ground. This treat- ment was followed year after year until the soil had become ideal to the pro- duction of the grapes. The grapes in the vineyard are now ripe enough for eating and the Con- cords are being picked for market, but before the Oportos are ready to be turned into Port and Burgundy they must remain on the vines until they are thoroughly ripe and have begun to “raisin” or shrink. Then they yield their full richness and sweetness,which is so noticeable in all the wines pro- duced by Mr. Speer. About the end of the present month the grapes will be ready to gather and the winepresses will then be started, converting the ripened grapes into rich Port and Bur- gundy.—Passaic Daily Herald, October 6th, 1902, Talk-0-phone THE LATEST DISC- TALKING MACHINE A fair comparison of the human voice. Indestructible record. Has many ad- vantages over other talking machines. $15. $25. $35. $45. F'MONOGRAT1 RECORDS 7-in. Records, £2 each, <= per doz. Ie-in. i nL o. £9 Salesmen Wanted. Trade Supplied. Write for Catalogue and Discounts. OHIO TALKING MACHINE CO. TOLEDO, OHIO, U.S.A. Mysterious in its Action! Marvelous in its Effects! Quick in Giving Relief! Used Externally Only! Unsurpassed in Curing RHETTMATIEM, Asthma, Sprains, Muscular Tenderness, Pain in the Chest, Sciatica, Headache, Toothache, LUMBAGO, Strained Tlluscles, and NETURALEGIEA. writes D. H. Tarner, Dempseytown,Pa., “you’d sell all you have in a day. Two weeks’ use has made a new man of me.” Infallible for constipation, stomach and liver troubles. 25 ceats at E. H. Mill- er’s drug store. E qually useful for MAN and HORSE. None genuine without the signature and portrait of D. DODGE TOMLINSON, 400 North 3rd Street, Philadclphis, Pa., on cach wrapper. Price 25 C18. | LINIMENT. There is over three hundred bh
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers