“town. HOLDING FAST Oft when the tide of joy is at its’ flood, ‘And hope and zest of life are sailing home, There creeps an alien bark with blackened hull Into the harbor of my corsciousness. This stranger craft whose portent none can tell s but my startled fear of life’s mischance, ‘A worldless, trackless dread of coming ill, Obtruded on my hour of happiness. But for a moment does the pang endure. ‘And then rebounds my heart with joy untold, That He who rules the deeps of earth and life Sends only ships of good unto my sou 4 —The New Idea Woman’s Magazine, OR TRL, Gn PR 3 a EE EE SE ee EEE SE EEE TE SESS TH 2,000,000 BU reeset) RRO. A TRUE STORY ® "HE FINDING OF THE FAMOUS BUNKER HILL MINE By *. G. MOORHEAD. EE A a A a A ED Ef Frei EE EE EE SE EE EE EE EE EE EE SiS Dutch Jake tells the story with his feet against the window sill of his private office on the second floor of the most famous—some call it the most infamous—music hall in the West. The genesis of “Biil,” the $12,- 000,000 burro, is shrouded in mys- tery. The important thing is that about the time he was sweet sixteen he belonged to a firm of Westerners by the name of Cooper & Peck, who considered it a good risk to grub- stake one N. S. Kellogg, burning with ambition to tramp around in the mountains of Northern Idaho with a pen in one hand and a hammer in the other, hunting for gold. Kelivgg had a hunch and he wasn't the sev- enth son of a seventh son, either. But he could tell when he saw eolnor of gold and if somebody would only see to it that he had enough to eat while he was out by himself in the wilderness he'd find gold or hast. That was the sentiment; Keliogg's words were a trifle more emphatic. Dutch Jake tells the story first- hand, because he was around when it all happened and there isn’t a man living who knows more about it. He tells it in a broken Dutch dialect—- his last name is Goetz and he’s Dutch clear through—but the story's the thing, not the dialect. *‘It happened back in ’85,” says Goetz, “I was then at Murray, in the gold belt of the Coeur d’Alenes, where my partner, Harry Baer, and I had a saloon. We were partners, too. in mining deals and did a iittie gambling on the side. I was about thirty years old and had something like twenty-five thousand dollars. it was easy come, easy go in those days. Say, I was the real thing as a pioneer, having gone into the Coeur d’Alenes in ’83 on snowshoes with twenty feet of snow on the ground and helped open up a lot of towns: Murray, Mullen, Eagle, Burke, Ilel- logg and Wardner. “I. fell In early with Phil O'Rourke, an old Colorado miner, who was counted the best prospector in those days, and Baer and 1 grub- staked him to prospect for us. Dutch Jake has always been pretty lucky, yes. : “O'Rourke and I'd been out iook- ing at some claims early in ’85 and when we returned we met Kellogg, who had been provided with 2 burro and $18.75 worth of provisions by Cooper and Peck and toid to hunt around until he found color or never show his nose in civilization again. The $18.75 worth of grub didu't jast long, but the burro's geing down in history. You sees it was this way.” *Dutch Jake” invariably takes an extra long puff on his fat cigar and perches his black sombrero farther back on his head. ~ The burro did ity that’s the ad's truth. Kellogg had been plugging around in the mountains for a £004 long time and hadn't hit on anything that looked good to him, till he was plumb disgusted. He was for getting back to the settlement, where there was always something doing, even if the grubstake hadn’t panned out. S he made his last camp up in the Coeur d’Alenes, ‘tied the burro *“Bill” to a rock and hunted around for another slice of bacon that’d make him thin ci home aua mother. “The burro whiffed the hacon and began to think about his own anpe: tite. He gnawed thoughtfully 0a the rope that held him, but gava it up in ‘disgust. He wanted something to eat just’ as much as Kellogg did. Finally he got so blooming mad he snorted and reared around, pawed up all the loose gravel and bowlders and then let out with his heels zs though he'd kick the lining out of the sky. Kellogg gulped down his bacon and wandered over to see what , ailed Bill. “I guess Kellogg never did think to give that burro anything to eat that night. He even forgot his own hungar, for Bill had uncovered a ledge of iron-galena ore that certain- 1y looked good to Kellogg. There it was, plenty of it, riches for every- body, but Bill, the burro, was just as hungry as ever, “The next day Kellogg got into ) He showed his specimens to Cooper and Peck and they asked John M. Burke about it. Burks had a great ‘rep,’-but a man's got to make mistakes now and then. Fle said it was only a smelting ore. not worth bothering about. Coopar and Peck tock his word for it and if Kel- logg couldn’t find gold he could eat up the rest of that $18.75 worth of grub in one meal and look for an- other job. Kellogg ate, but Le didn’t have to look far. “It was just then we came on him. le showed his samrles to O'Rourke. It didn’t take Phil but a noment to see that it gave promise of pro- | ducing some galena or carbonate like the ores that made Colorado fa- mous. Phil called me to one side and said we couldn’t do better than to go cahoots with Kellogg in staking that ground. I agreed, turned over our cayuses and grub to Kellogg and Phil and they struck right off for the find. “I guess they didn’t let any grass grow under. their feet. They wore out one pack horse and lost another and while old man Kellogg went in search of it Phil started up Milo gulch to look for the place Kellogg had described. At the head of the creek he found some galena float and though it was dreadful hard work to get through the brush and fallen timber, he climbed up the hill about five hundred feet and there he stumbled upon the great Bunker IIill ledge sticking right up out of the ground. There vas nothing to it but glittering galena, and Phil knew he’d found the greatest thing ever dis- covered in the Northwest. He was so excited he sat right down and never said a word or took his eyes off that galena for a half-hour. Fin- ally he rushed back, found Kellogg, and the two staked out the claim. “Next morning the two men start- ed up the gulch about two miles to make the location, but their cayuses had strayed sway. And what do you suppose they saw, not a great ways from the Bunker Hill ledge, which they’d given that name because of the battle in the Revolutionary War? Nothing but that ornery, kicking bur- ro, Bill by name. He was white originally and still white enough to show up against the black and drown and green, and there he was pawing round-bellied cigar by this time and without a word arises and beckons his''listener to follow him into the music hall. Above the drop curtain is a large painting, well illuminated by a circle border of electric lights. ‘“That’s the picture,” he says proudly, with a wave of his hand. “I ain’t much of an artist myself but 1 sketched it out and I had a’ first- rate painter do the rest. That's how it looked.” : > E ; The painting shows the famous Bunker Hill and Sullivan mines of Northern . Idaho as they appeared twenty-three years ago, the distant mountains snow-capped, the green of the pines. adding color to ‘the “scene, To-day that spot is one of the busiest and most productive on earth. Divie dends averaging cne hundred and, eighty thousand dollars a month are paid to the owners out of the ore brought to the surface by the eight hundred miners at work all the year around, their wages aggregating one hundred thousand dollars a month. The mines have already paid a total of approximately twelve million dol- lars, the few shares to be had .on the market being held for thirteen dole lars each. They've been productive of trouble as well. The Harry Orch- ard story of the blowing up of the concentrator and the trouble at the Bunker Hill and Sullivan mines need not be re-told. But wealth has made men forget hardships, danger and toil; and wealth the spot has certain- ly ‘produced in abundance. The mines were sold eighteen years ago for a million and a half dollars, but to- day they're valued at twenty million dollars, and not for sale. The credit is the burro’s; that much has been positively settled. Af- ter the lucky find there was the in- evitable dispute, which was carried into the courts. Cooper and Peck heard their burro had been with Kel- logg and O'Rourke, and though they hadn’t cared enough for Bill to give him food, shelter or even a pleasant word, a lawsuit could be based on his participation in the find; it was worth trying, anyway. Cooper and Peck tried, and won, The case was tried in Murray, Idaho, before Judge Norman Buck and a‘ jury. Cooper and Peck wanted a half interest in the whole find. The jury listened intently and brought in a verdict for the defense, digquali- fying the burro entirely. ‘But the judge shook his head and had the last word. It is recorded in the Idaho scrolls of justice: “From the evidence of the wit- nesses this court is of the opinion that the Bunker Hill mine was dis- covered by the jackass, Phil. O’Rourke and N. S. Kellogg; and as the jackass is the property of the ee it is remarkable how hard bine business with pleasure. mapped out as follows: pair of bars. Dismount. Take have reached the pasture lot. will do it all over again. the Newark Evening News, HOW A BOY WORKS. rec I have had this discovery horne upon me by noticing frequently during recent years the laborious operation of going after the cows with a bicycle. have studied the innovation considerably and have come to the calm conclusion that there is in it more work than fun. This conclusion, however, is not universally reached, and I have only recently scen cowboys doing the trick and thinking they’ were having enjoyment. A bicycle ride after the cows ‘may be A hundred feet on the road to the first ride through. Dismount. Walk back six yards and put up the bars. Mount and ride two hundred feet through the first lot, the path as rough as ever a road to Dublin. At the next pair of bars and the next and the next, unto seven times, repeat the exercises of dismounting and mounting, and then maybe you biackberry bushes and rocks and get the herd together. mount and dismount, race, chase, holler, swat and threaten till you have got the cattle up to the read. Does it pay? Watch the line of cattle file into the barnyard, and behind them on the hard road that easy lad on the wheel. about the rough places. That last one hundred feet of smooth riding has repaid him for all his labor. To-morrow morning he “Consarn” the boys, anyhow.— From <y <3 some people will work to com- In fact; 1 down all the bars. Mount and . APAPAPAPADAPAPADAPADAPARARA BA PADABARAI AR Now fly around among the Then He never says a word and kicking around right where he'd made the big find, just as if the fever for prospecting had got in his veins, too. You see when Kellogg had quit Cooper aud Peck he'd just turned the donkey locse, Bill ‘net belonging to him and not being wanted any more. Cooper and Peck hadn't bothered about old Bill, and he'd wandered disconsolately back up the mountain- side till Kellogg and O'Rourke found him, and seeing as how. nobody seemed to claim him they just appro- p-iated him themselves. “The sight of the samples those two men had set the camps crazy, but nobody knew just where the lucky find was located. Phil took me off to one side and advised me to locate the extension to the Bunker Hill. He thought I'd better take Con Sullivan along, Con being a sort of side partner of Phil's. That night at 10 o'clock we set out in a furious rain, without even a pack horse. We thought we could locate the mine by the directions that O'Rourke gave us, but as it turned out he made a mis- take in describing the location and we took the wrong hog-back and had a, dreadful time. We wandered around for four.days and got com- pletely lost and had nothing to eat or drink two days but some snow that had lain in a gully from the last winter. Sulivan was pretty nearly done for, his tongue sticking out and he could hardly move. You see we were walking all the time, day and night, except for the littie rest when we would sit . down to get our bear- ings. We wandered around almost in a circle in those mountains and at last came out in the south fork of the Coeur d’Alene a little above Kingston. My, but I thought we would drink that river dry! “A half-breed woman on a ranch gave us something to eat and we went on up to Jackass prairie. By that time we knew where we were and Sullivan went over and located the extension.” ‘““Duteh Jake” has finished his | I plaintiffs, they are entitled to a half interest in the Bunker Hill mine and a quarter interest in the Sullivan claims.” The case would have been ap- pealed, but the disputants came to- gether on a chance to sell out. Coop- er and Pack compromised on $76,- 000; Harry Baer and Dutch Jake got $200,000 in cash in a lump sum; Phil O'Rourke more! Kellogg, $300,- 000 and Con Sullivan $75,000. The burro got—a square meal three timés.a day for six vears. Kel- logg bought Bill and paid a man at Forest Grove, Oregon, $5¢ a month to care for him. Bil lived in’ clover till he died aged twenty-one years, and his grave is marked with a stone to-day. Dutch Jake didu't learn of his death in time or he'd have bought the skin and stuffed it. He showed his appreciation by having twostained glass reproductions of the “scene where Bill kicked up pay dirt put over the bar in the Coeur d'Alene sa- loon in Spokane, where no patrot can possibly miss them. The other characters in the drama have gone their ways. ‘Old man Keld logg died a few years ago, having lost all his money. Phil O'Rourke went to Alaska but returned and is now living in Kellozg, Idaho, being cared for by philanthropic” people. Harry Baer and Dutch Jake erected a handsome office building in Spo- kane, at a cost of $230,000 and the next year lost it in the fire which destroyed the entire business district of the city. They took their $70,000 insurance money and built the fam- ous Coeur d’Alene music hall, which is ibe next thing to a gold mine.— Outing Magazine. Pr —— te tr— The Jewish Women’s Foreign Re- lief Association of Los Angeles, Cal., has opened a new settlement house, It is named for Moses Mendelssohn, grandfather of the composer. Mr. Francis Darwin asserts that plants have intelligence. LBL LILI LIRD LIED 2D LD PLD LD LILI LD LP LD LIL £ THR, HONEYMOON, } It seems strange, considerjng all the honeymoon experts there are, that no one has as vet volunteered to give a few simple directions as to {the manner in which a honeymoon ‘should be conducted. Let us do this at once, in order that all those going on honeymoons may reap the bene- fit, ; After securing what in your opine fon is a desirable person to take on a honeymoon, go at once; to your bank and make as large a loan as possible. Remember, there are two kinds of loans—call and time. A call loan is one which is likely to be called when you least expeet it. a call loan on your honeymoon. When you are sitting with your loved one under Niagara Falls, holding hands under your rubber overcoats and having your throats sprayed while you gaze through the fog at trusty eyes upturned to your own, it is ex- tremely annoying to have a bank messenger tap you oa the shoulder and tell you that all is over. Make a time loan, therefore, and make it as long as possible. Have it cover not only the period of your honey- moon, but the rest of your married life as well. This will save you the trouble of renewing it from time to time. : The next point to consider is the place, or places, you will visit on your honeymoon, and should be ar- ranged in the following manner: Make out a list of all the possible places to visit. Do this alone, un- aided and in secret. For this is an important matter, and your judg- ment needs to be clear. When you have finally selected the exact spot to visit, break the news to your coms- panion and arrange at once to go to the place selected by her family and herself, at the same time doubling the amount of your loan. Rapidly but unostentatiously leav- ing the hired hack at the railroad station, and shaking the rice out of your clothes, you should at once con- duct your bride to her seat in the parlor car in full view of all the passengers. You will then begin at once to pass her water from the tank in front. Every bridegroom passes his loved one a glass of water from the tank at least every fifteen minutes during the first round. Do not smoke for the first week. No man can do hig best work with a cigar in his mouth. Besides, it is a waste of good tobacco. Arriving at the hotel you have corresponded with, take the clerk aside confidentially and tell him your secret. He will appear surprised and embarrassed, but do not let this dis- concert you. Ask him frankly for the bridal suite. When he informs you that this has already been ar- ranged for, do not reproacn him with deceit. Nemember that he has only done this to spare your feelings. Adopt a frank, nearty, bluff man ner toward your bride in the pres- ence of others. Always bear in mind that you did not originate the honey= moon idea, and that no blame for your actions should be attached to you. This thought should sustain you at all times. Hold her hand freely, call her the usual name, and in general act as if you didn’t realize that you couldn’t get-away from her in a lifetime. . . No matter where you go, always buy your return tickets. This will insure your getting back home with- out cabling your father-in-law. To cable your father-in-law on your honeymoon is extremely bad form. It may handicap you later; when you really need the money.— From Life. WORDS OF WISDOM. No man is a really artistic lover who hasn't enough dramatic instinct o forget all other women while he is hi love to one. - There is something about a wife's tears that washes all the color and starch out of a man’s love. : When married people can’t come to terms marriage should come to a termination. : THe woman who makes a man per- fectly happy is the one who cares just enough to respond when he is inter- es. _d and not enough to be interesteu when he doesn’t responc. A married woman is always impres- gionable, because she has become so used to a total abstinence from flat- tery that a compliment frem a man goes to her head like wine to the head of a teetotaler. Refinement is what makes a man turn on his heel and go off to th? club instead of staying at homes and hav- ing a good, old-fashioned row with his wife. Cultivated taste is what makes a man turn from the sporting page or the joke column to the editorials— when he notices anybody observing him. Take a spoonful of violet perfume, a pound or so of lace, a dash of music, and serve under a summer moon— and almost any man will call it “love.” A wife corresponds to a man’s three square meals; the “other woman” to a banquet with fancy dishes and champagne. Even though the dulcet iciness in her voice cught to be more effective than a shriek of warning, a man will go right on telling his stout, blond wife that she ought to dress like the 3lim brunette next door.—Helen Row= tand, in the New York World, Avoid, .therefore, any appearance of’ PENNSYLVANIA Interesting Items from All Sections of the Keystone State. LET REA}. GAME ESCAPE Under Heavy Fire, Man With the Money Outwits Foreigners. Butler.—Armed with revolvers . 20 foreigners held up four men in a car- riage near Bredinville and had it not been for poor’ marksmanship two of the men, who escaped, would likely have been killed. Two who could not get away were terribly beaten, but a large sum of money the foreign- ers evidently kngv was being carried by one of the men, was not secured. George K. Kummer, who had spent the day in Bredgnville, was returning to this city with Albert Kummer, William Connor and William Man- nox. A mile from Bredenville, a for- eigner jumped from the bushes and stopped the team. A signal brought a band of foreigners from conceal- ment. With drawn revolvers they demanded money. Connor escaped with a volley of bullets whistling past his head, and running to Lynrode notified Constable Jesse Miller, who hurried to the scene. George Kummer, who carried over $300, escaped under fire and sec- reted himself near a creek. Mannox and Alhert Kummer, who were cap- tured before they could leave the car- riage, were beaten and were found half conscious in the road. MEDICAL COLLEGE SOLD West Penn Institution Is Acquired by University of Pittsburg. Trustees of the University of Pitts- burg have purchased the West Penn Medical College for $100,000. The transfer of the property, which is con- sidered a valuable accessory to the University of Pittsburg, will date from July. 1. This addition makes the university one of the most complete educational institutions in the state. Raised Figures in Bank Book. Monongahela.—William Stevenc, a Monessen negro, deposited $5 in the Monessen National bank. In the ac- count book he is said to have raised the amount to $55. With a check book Stevens entered five stores here and, making small puichases, paid for them with checks. He is said to have secured $29, showing the raised figures in the bank bcok to gain confidence. He has not been located. Cylinder Head Blew Out, Philadelphia.—Two Italians were killed and five others seriously in- jured by the blowing out of a cylinder- head on a locomotive drawing a New York express train on the Pennsyl- vania railroad, mear Bristol The accident cccurred at a point where a8 gang of laborers were at work on the road bed. Fraficisco Bolando and Antonio Rogo were killed. The train was running at ihe rate of 350 miles an hour. Robs Store and Then Starts Fire. Indiana.--Early in the morning J. H. Rhoumm, proprietor of a clothing store at Homer City, was awakened by the smell of burning ciothing and hurried to his store to find if had been robbed and then set on $Hre. The clothing was blazing and the thief had carried away a large part of the stock hefore setting fire to the build- ing. There is no clue. Mr. Rhoumm’s loss is heavy. Plow Turns Up Old indian Cave. Washington.— While plowing a field in South Franklin township, M. M. Moore discovered an cid Indian cave. It is about six feet high. The plow share caught cn a stone and Moore was thrown to the ground. An inveés- tigation showed the stone covered the mouth of a cave. Arrows and stone implements of warfare were found. These will be preserved by Moore. Contractors Are Exonerated. Punxsutawney.— Acting Coroner J. E. White investigated the death of John Mazuen, who was killed when the walls of a ditch caved in at Beaver while excavating for a sewer. He pronounced death accidental and exonerated the JLucias Contracting Company of Pittsburg. Store and Residence Burned. Washington —Wazen Tony Ralph re- turned with his family to Sturgeon he found that whiie they had been- at- tending a picnic at Rock Springs his store and residence had been burned. The origin of the fire is unknown. The loss is $2,600. The Comptroller of the Currency approved the application to organize the Farmers National Bank of Leech- burg, with a capital of $50,060. The application was made by W. F. Hill of Huntingdon, Pa.; A. H. Beale, J. H. Park, P. A. McCracken and J. D. Flude. 7 . Somersct.—The 22d annual Somer- set county Lutheran reunion was held in connection with the Chautaqua at Edgewood grove. The program was given this morning. Addresses were delivered by a number of natives. Monessen.—Fire of unknown cause destroyed the six-room frame dwelling of George Clemency. The loss is $3,- 000 with $1,500 insurance. Olive Seed Causes Girl's Death. Sharon.—Mildred, . the 11-year-old daughter of Stephen Evans, choked fo death on an olive seed which became lodged in her wind pipe. She was a well-known musician and had won several medal prizes at Elisteddfods. Somerset.—Engineers in the em- ploy cf the State highway depart- ment are surveying the old Somerset and Johnstown turnpike, preliminary to macadamizing it. The road is 28 miles in length and will be a splendid autemsiobile route to Johnstown. . avenue, Mars. DROUTH CAUSES SHUT-DOWNS Nearly All Big Coke Plants of West: moreland County May: Be Forced to Close. Greensburg.—The greatest drouth” in 15 years has made the guestion of water supply a grave one to hundreds of Westmoreland county residents. At Crabtree: water, is being carried into the town by railroad, oil tank cars being utilized. The coke works there are closed because of lack of water. In Unity township there have been no heavy rains for six weeks and the Bessemer Coke Company plant is shut own. The past 20 years have seen most of the timber in that sec- tion cut into lumber and this is blam- ed for the frequent drouths. Refore- station, it is declared, remedy. It is asserted that if heavy rains do net come within the next week, nearly all of the big coking establish- ments will be compelled to suspend. The Pennsylvania Railroad Compa- ny is supply the Hecla region with water. for drinking purposes. Several Hurt at Wednidg. Latrobe.—At Derry No. 6, several men were injured, following a wed- ding celebration. Dan Tresina was stabbed in the back. Tony Mora- sky was seriously burned about the body when a companion playfully ap- plied a lighted match to the tail of his shirt. The blazing garment was finally torn off and thrown into a cor- ner when it set fire to some rubbish and the house narrowly escaped de- struction. Thirty forcigners were arrested. $10,000 Fire in Butler. Butler.—Fire destroyed the J. A. Criswell livery stable, Dale Walters undertaking establishment and B. Pierson plumbing shop, in Railway Twenty horses were saved with difficulty. The blaze started in the rear of the plumbing establishment and is of mysterious origin. The loss is $10,000. Cris- well had purchased the Walters es- tablishment, but the legal transfer was postponed until today. Receiver for Foundry. Allentown.—On application of Louis R. Albright and the Texler Lumber Company, court named F. J. Wenner as receiver of the Allentown Foundry & Machine Company, one of the old- est local industries, dating back to 1837. The plant is valued at $200, 000 and produces $300,000 worth of material annually. A strike three years ago and the recent depression led to the receivership. The com- pany has liabilities of $155,500. Fire Destroys Lumber Mill. Oil City.—A large mill and a gener- al store, owned by the Grandin Lum- ber Company at Eagle Rock; were de- stroyed by fire. A million feet of sawed lumber, close to the burning buildings was saved by a detachment of the Oil City fire department, rush- ed to the scene with a steamer and a hosecart on a special train. The loss is estimated at $25,000, partially covered by insurance. Wants to Be a City. Washington.—A petition will be pre- sented to Washington council asking that the question of forming the bor-. ough into a third class city be subs- tituted to a vote of the Ggitizens. A fimilar petition will be presented to East Washington Council, it being the intention to consclidate the two municipalities under one city charter. Meets Death in Runaway. New Castle—Thomas Boyle of Ma- honingtown, died at the hospital here from injuries sustained a few hours before in a runaway. He was re- turning from the country when his horses became frightened. An hour later he was found in the road uncon- sclous. He was 55 years of age, and leaves his wife, four sons and a daughter. Three Dead. West Chester.—Benjamin Degildo of Philadeluhia shot and instantly killed Benjamin Defelix and seriously wounded Pasquelo Defelix, father of the slain man, here and then, to es- cape capture at the hands of an in- furiated mob, committed suicide by shooting himself. Another Plant Resumes Operations.’ Leechburg.—Two hundred men re- sumed work at the plant of the American Sheet & Tin Plate Company after being idle since last November. District Manager A. H. Beale has given orders to have the plant at Saltsburg made ready to resume. = Another Furnace Resumes Work. ,, Sharon.—The Hall blast furnace of the Republic Iron & Steel Company rorine Sond after several months’ idleness, affordinz e - ment to 100 mer. : poy W. A. Campbell of Allegheny county, has been appointed a mining engineer in the Geological Survey at a salary of $2,700 per annum, Beaver Falls.—The farmers com- mittee of the Old Home week to begin here September 13 will hold a poultry and pet stock exhibition Thursday, Friday and Saturday in connection with the Beaver County Poultry As- sociation. Washington. —Tony Marienne of Charleroi, is in the Memorial hospital at Monongahelt, with probably fatal Injuries sustained when he investi- gated a delayed blast in a stone quarry. His skull was fractured and ore shoulder broken. is the only The that | their ° Other them, ters t possib -receiv sand yore, still b The strate vertic She mer c fearle struct good to ro Wi _ will cottag for Wher ing t and b the s § : Our Cut-out Recipe) islan Orne and gerer * naval porta An busin Comp taste Sal son I throu “Yr wond Such ly co They them: else | girls 7] Amer tatior the w every and t porti: tility any 1 Unite tract! devot hand ward
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers