' 'II T'V.'J.". '" ' . I,-'-' '-I'll VOLUME 11. REYN0LDSV1LLE, PENN'A., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1903. NUMBER 39. Wm THE MATRON'S SPEECH. ESIoiuetee That Qnrllpil Hlot la m Mllltnrr lloaultnl. Ill the "Memories of n Hospital Ma tron" n writer in the Atlantic .Monthly, who wt head of it Confederate hos pital ihirlug the war, relates this ex citing Incident: "Our steward, n meek little man, enme to me one day, pale with fright, uliil said that the convalescents lmil stunned the bakery, taken ont the tinlf cooked bread nncl scattered It about the yard. I, eaten the baker and threat enrd to hung the steward. 1 hurried to the scene to throw myself Into the breach liefore the surgeon slionld ar rive with the unnril and arrest the of fenders. I found the new bakery lev eled to the ground and 2(H) excited men clittnnriiiK for the bread which, tlv declared, the steward withheld from them from meanness or stole for Ills own benellt. "'And what do .von say of the ma lion?' I asked, rushing among them. 'Do you think that she, through whoso hands the bread must pass. Is n party to the theft? lo yon accuse me, who !iave nursed yon through 'mouths of I'lness. making you chicken soup when we had not seen a chicken for a year, forcing an old breastbone to do duty for months for those unreasonable fel lows who wanted to see the chicken; me. who K-'i'e you a greater variety In pens than wms ever known before and who lately stewed your rats when the cook vrfi.wd t i touch them? . And this Is your f!i'at'ilr.ile! You teyr down my bakehouse. I eat my hnkit' and want to Iiuuk my steward!' ''To my surprise the angry men laughed mid chm-rod. A few days later there came to me a 'committee' of two sli.-cplsli looklim fellows to ask my acceptance of a rlriu. Kach of the poor men . had subscribed something from his pittance, and their old ene my, the steward, had been sent to town to make the purchase. Accompanying the ring was a bit of dirty paper on which was written. 'I'or our chief ma tron. In hoijir of her brave conduct on the day of the bread riot.' " THE COOKBOOK. To prevent eggs from cracking when they are boiling, place a pin In the saucepan. If you fret too much salt In the gravy, u pinch of brown fiugni' will remedy the witness without hurting the gravy in the least. When onions are of too strong flavor to be pleasant for sauce, boil a turnip with them, but remove it before using the onions. ' Never fry mere than six oyster nt once unless you have a very large ket tle of fat. If more are cooked, they will soak grease and take a long time to brown. Don't forget that ' mincemeat la a great deal better to be made a week or ten days before It Is to be used. The ' gplcea and cider, etc., have thus time to percolate the upple and meat. I'ennut salad ds an excellent accom paniment for roast duck. Soak a cupful of peanut meats In olive oil, drain and mix lightly with two cupfuls of finely cut celery and a dozen pitted olives. Serve with mayonnaise dressing on let tuce leaves. Pica For the Woodea Shoa, "Wo have wisely tuken to wearing sandals,", says a Philadelphia physi cian. "I hope that before long we will learn the advantage of the wooden shoe, or sabot. Do you know that a great many diseases are due to leather shoes, due to the wearing all day long of tight leather that Is often. In bad weather, water soaked? And do you know thot by the wearing of wooden shoes, which keep the feet dry and which do not 'draw,' all those diseases . might be avoided? I have several pairs of sabots, and so have my wife and culldivn. 'They cost about 30 cents a pair and keep the feet dry, without cramping them or making them unhealthily tender. I believe that the wisest thing Americans could do would be to take up the sandal and the. sabot, discarding altogether the shoe of leather." Didn't Know A boat Cnahboya. Uncle rod u uL (shopping lu town, to saleBWoinani -1 How much fer them socks? Saleswoman Twenty-live cents a pair...-. ... . : . Uncle I'oJunk (putting bis hand In bis pocketi All right. Gimme a pair. Bales woman Yes. sir. Cusu, berel C-u-a-u-sh! Tue'.e I'odunlt Thunder and mud. woman' Ye needn't boiler It so dura loud!- I know 'It's cash here, an' ain't I fcelln' fer It as fust us I kin? New York Times. ' L.OVI A bora Tar. Towoe --Too? fellow! lie certainly does love ber for u II lie's worth, ; - Browi.e He loved ber even more than that today. Tuwne- How do you mean? Krowne - lie sent her a tea dolUir bunch of roses and borrowed the price from mer riiMadelplila Press. Men ore like sandwiches thero's notulug in Home of them, and the more there is til others the worse they are. Chicago News. A. ., BACON AND SHAKESPEARE. The Tat Men Separately and the Tai la Ona Delna;. Aristotle was an extraordinary man. IMato was an extraordinary man. Tlint two men each severally so extraordi nary should have been living at the same time In the same place was a very extraordinary thing. But would It diminish the wonder to suppose the two to, be one? Bo I say of Itacon and Shakespeare. That a human being pos sessed of the focultles liecessnry to make a Shakespeare should exist Is extraordinary. That a human being possessed of tin necessary faculties to make Itacon shoutaY exist Is extraor dinary. That two such human beings should have been living In London at the samo time was more extraordinary still. Hut that one man should have existed possessing the faculties and opportunities necessary to make both wonld have been the most extraordi nary thing of nil. Great writers, especially being con temporary, have many features In com mou, but If they are really great writ ers they write naturally, and nature Is nlwnys tfVivldunl. I doubt whether there arellve Hues together to be found In Itacon which could be mistaken for Shakespeare or Ave lines In Shake speare which could be mistaken for Riieon by one who was familiar wltb their several styles and practiced In such observations. James Speddlng's "Kssays." rhyslnlaatral Antoarrapha. Every human being carries with him from bis cradle to his grave certain physical marks which do not change their character and by which be can always be Identified, and that without shade of doubt or qucstiou. These marks are his signature, bis physiolog ical autograph, so to spcuk, and this autograph cannot bo counterfeited, nor can he disguise it or bide It away, nor can it become Illegible by the wear aud the mutations of time. This autograph consists of the deli cate lines or corrugations wltb which nature marks the lnsldes of the hands and the soles of the feet. If you will look nt the balls of your fingers, you that have very sharp eyesight, you will observe that these dainty curving lines lie close together, like those that Indi cate the borders of oceans in maps, and that they form various clearly defined patterns, such as arches, circles, long curves, whorls and so forth, and that these patterns differ on the different Angers. "I'udd'nhead Wilson." fttrnnu Vmmu For Mirrors. The celebrated Ileau Brummel dur ing the first years of his exile, whlla yet bis fame as a dandy was pre-eminent, hud the ceiling of his bedroom covered with mirrors so that even while at rest he could study elegunce and as sume a graceful pose. For such a pur pose a glass celllug Is, however, not unique, and the notorious Duchess of Cleveland had such another construct ed to grutlfy her vanity. For a far different reason a certain Yorkshire gentleman of the last cen tury had his celling paneled wltb mir rors. Ardently devoted to the sport of cocktlghting, he continued to the -last to enjoy his favorite pastime and even when on his deathbed his room was the scene of many an exciting fight, which, lying on bis back, he saw reflected lu the glass overhead. A Tender Hnaband. In connection wltb a slight affec tion of Mrs. Ulysses S. Grant's eyes a very pretty story Is told lndlcutlve of General Grant's tender devotion to ber. When he was president, she became somewhat sensitive about her eyes she suffered from strabismus and con sulted a specialist to see what could be doue for ber. The specialist told her be thought he could Improve ber eyes, but the operation would be pulnful. She consulted her huBband to learn whether be would advise the operation. "Don't have It done, dear," suld the general, pressing ber cheeks with bis two bunds. "Let those dear eyes stay Just as tbey are. If they were changed, I might not recognize my sweetheart." Distance Traveled by Odors. As an Illustration of the distance odors are carried it Is noteworthy that the fumes and exhalations from the sulphur springs of Colorado can be dis tinguished at a distance of fully twenty miles. The delicious perfume of the forests of Ceylon Is carried by the wind twenty-live miles out to sea, while In foggy weather travelers 100 miles from the laud have recognized their proximity to the coast of Colombia by the sweet smell brought them on a breeze from the shore. Ilia Inheritance. "And now," suld Professor Longhun ger as he greeted, Mr. Henry Peck, ."what shall we make of your little boy a lecturer? He bas a sincere taste for It" "I know be bus," replied the mala farent; "he Inherits It from his moth er." Schoolmaster. The savage regurded the first white man thoughtfully. "if 1 try to light him," he said, "be will exterminate me, and if I try to live lu peace with him he will cheat ma out of everything, and I will starve to death. Wbut chance have I got?"- - THE BRAVE WOLVERENE. Hot Llttls Walt, bat a Dls-alOcd Poraat Monarch. Not "little wolf," as the Ignorant thluk, Is the significance of wolverene, but something of greater dignity an etnlxidlmeut of tha terrible spirit of the wild fire of the prehistoric forests. Wonderful In Its strength and courage, a tree climber on occasion, not Immense of slse, but with limbs and claws great, out of all proportion to Its size, with a muzzle almost bogltke, but with great white fangs, the beast had still an element of the grotesque In Its makeup, with Its sweeping, bushy tall and the broad bands of yellow white upon Its back and Shoulders. Woe to the small er beast or the deer upon which It dropped from some great low hanging branch or before which It suddenly ap peared In the dense windfalls! Of all the continent, the Michigan peninsula was the chosen habitat of the wolverene, and he struggled long before backwoodsmen drove bltn from his heritage. So enduring was be, so desperately courageous, that bis name became a fynonym for pluck and prowess, and proudly the people of Michigan accept the nickname which has been given to him. Outing. What' la a Well Dressed Ilonaef "What In theatrical parlance Is a well dressed house?" said a dramatic writer, and after a silent pause he continued: "I went the other night to a show, and as I passed In the doorkeeper said to me. 'We have a well dressed house to night, sir.' I supposed ho meant that the audience was sporting Its best clothes, but I found on looking about that this was not true, and so between the acts I asked him what he had meant. He answered: 'I meant that the house bad been seated by the box otilce man very cleverly, so that It bal anced well, and so tlint the fact that It was not small was not perceptible. To dress a bouse Is to distribute an audi ence all over It so It looks full when It Is, as a matter of fact, fur from being so. Thcro are here enough people to fill about the first seven rows of the orchestra, but the house Is well dress ed, and on looking at It you have the Impression that It Is fairly well filled. Every ticket seller should see to It that his house Is dressed properly. That Is why you- so often full to get seated as far up front as you would like.' "-i-rbll-adelphla Record. Why Sliakeapeare Endures. What Interests us lu Shakespeare's plays Is not the plays themselves, but the (strictly Irrelevant) truth and beau ty that be poured Into them. We love them for their matchless poetry and their matchless ItiBlght Into the human soul. "Hamlet" Is for us nothing but the study of a contemplative man dis tracted by tho necessity to be up and doing, "Macbeth" the study of a noblo mind degraded by ambition, "The Mer chant of Venice" the study of racial strength against cou tempt and persecu tion. Nothing to us now tho actual framework of these studies; everything tho studies themselves and the lan guage In which they are set forth. Our pleasure lu the production of a Shake spearean play is uccordlng solely to the Illuminative Tightness of the conception of the chief character or characters and to the sonorous beauty wltb which the verse Is declaimed by alL Suturday Review. The SpanUh Schoolteacher. The teacher of any lund may be over worked. He may suffer from the par simonious policy of the powers and be underpaid even in our own enlightened country, but in few countries, certain ly not In the United States, could sueb a story us the one which follows be truthfully told: In the streets of a Spaulsb city, says tho author of "The Land of the Dons," a police ollloer stumbled on the corpse of a rugged und emaciated pauper. In making out his report be asked what he should enter us the dead man's pro fession. "What did he die of?" asked tho mag istrate. "Starvation," replied the policeman. "Put him down as a schoolmaster," replied the magistrate. . Tonallltls, An attack of tonsllltls can usually be warded off by painting the Inflamed tonsil with tincture of Iodine. If you are unsuccessful in the attempt und the tonsils ulcerate, swab them at oucu with gualacuin and repent lu five or six hours. 'J'lils I learned from u well known throat specialist of St. Louis, aud I Hud I tan utmost ulways recover without the services of my physician. Good Housekeeping. Am t ie Stork Sees It. First Stork -I Just left a baby at that millionaire's louse. Second Stork Funny things, these human beings! I've Just delivered three to one womun lu a tenement bouse, and ber husband's out of work, and they haven't a cent Brooklyn Life, All Klads. Customer (to grocer) How much la your butter a pound? Grocer Do you mean sweet butter, dairy cream butter, best butter, fine butter or butter? Stray Stories. . The man who doesn't amount to much usually has bis sign, out"-" 5atchinq CRABS. " Choplank River Kin tiers Land Tham tr nil Ingenious Method. Those who crab for mnrket on the Choptnnk river, Maryland, have an In genious method of catching crabs lu quantity. A rope about the thickness of a clothesline several hundred feet long Is kept coiled In a keg. At Inter vals of two feet along the entire length of the rope the fisherman has untwisted It mid Inserted between the strands ihort pieces of salted eels. The torsion of the strand holds them tightly In place. Kuoli end of the rope has a keg buoy attached, together with a heavy Itone. Arriving at the favored place, usually on oyster beds, be throws a keg overboard and pays out n highly scent ed rope ns he sails. When the other end Is reached, he anchors it with an other stone and throws out another buoy. After lowering his sail be waits a few minutes, then takes bis stand on the bow of his boat i Alongside of him Is his landing net, wltb a handle six feet long. Ho raises the buoy and stone and, hand over band, pulls bis boat along the line. When a crab, clinging to Its refreshment, comes in sight, be seizes bis liet. Joshes It under the crab and (lings It Into the boat The wary crab inn v loosen his bold and dive for tho button? but such Is the fisher man's dexterity tlint bis net Is swifter thnn the crab, one seldom gets away. Several hundreds fit crabs are often taken at each overhauling of the rope. When be has caught all he wants, he packs them In barrels and sells them to a local dealer, who ships tliem to mar ket Country Life In Amerlcu. . "Ilolnc" r.urnpe In Ynnr Mind. According to n Cairo contemporary, persons who wish to let their friends know that they are "doing" Europe on a princely scale the while they are liv ing In retirement for n time need only apply to an agency In Paris, which will undertake, to send your letters to prac tically any place In .Europe you may se lect and there to have them posted for you on any date yot may choose. The demnnd for such an institution arose out of the absoliito horror the Parisian of "high life" has of being suspected of remaining In Paris or its environs In the bathing sen sou. One fcaturo of the Joke is that you can not only get your letters posted from some distant spot, but you can get unawers received for you and ropustod to your temporary bid ing place. There nro great possibilities for American travelers In this. Why not stay lu America aud "do" Europe? New York Tribune. Insurance lias Ita llnraor. An enterprising Insurance agent In duced an Irishman to take out an acci dent policy for his wife. A few days later while conversing with a friend lu his office he was startled to see the Irishman rush In, brandishing fiercely a stout cane. "Ye rnscai!" ho yelled, springing to ward the agent. "Ye wanter cheat mo?" Fortunately tho enraged npui was disarmed and held fast by the agent's friend, who was a powerfully built man. Tho Irishman, struggling to get free, shouted: "Let me git at tho spalpeen! Thluk ov It, chnrgln' mo folvo dollars fer an acsbidcut ticket fer me ole woman, an' she JeBt broke her leg a-fallln' down shtulrs! Wot'a the good of the ticket anyhow?" Mala Blushers. One of the most ill founded of all popular delusions Is that blushing is the special characteristic of the female sex. As a matter of fact, except lb tho case of very young girls, men blush far moro readily than women. The well bred woman never blushes at all, whllo It Is p mutter of everyday experience tbat In the excitement of business or political discussions men's cheeks red den with very little provocation. What ever may have been the case a hun dred years ago, the modern woman shows ber emotion Dot by blushing, but by turning pale. London Tatler, Mathematics of Love. "Margaret," be began, "I have $3,700 In the bank. I own half Interest In a patent churn company that clears 700 a year. My salary Is $20 a week, with prospects of a raise to $22. I have an aunt who will leave me twenty-seven shares of a railway stock now quot ed at 63. Tell me, Marguret, will you be mine?" "Walt," sho replied, "till I get a pen dl." For she never bad been good at men tal arithmetic Newark Newt. The Hatha of Caracalla. The Itomuus appear to have been well off In the mutter of bathlug places lu the first und second centuries. In the baths of Caracalla 1,000 bathers could be accommodated at oue tlnio. Tho inclosed areu was 300 square yards, hut It Included u courso fur foot lacing. Tho bathing estub" 'uncut was 240 yards lu length by 12 ,vldo. The remains of the walls are 8 aud 10 feet thick and in some places as much a 00 toet high. Fame Is easily acquired. All" you have to do is to be lu the right place at the right time and do the right thing In the right way und then advertise It DroDerly. Puck. OVERPETTED PET8. Dos and Cata Spoiled fef Appetite For tiaaataral Tidbits. Possibly the dog world might afford better specimen of a living skeleton than one In the kennel next to the door of a boarding plnce for animals, but It would take a day's journey to find him. "What's makes him so thin?" was asked of the attendant "He won't eat," wns the reply "that Is, he won't eat hospital food. He's been spoiled. Ixts of dogs and cats thnt are brought here have been spoil ed. Their owners think It Is a sign of high breeding to cultivate an appetite for a peculiar and unnatural diet They train animals to eat all kinds of food that they would never touch of their own volition. This emaciated fel low has been taught to like fruit. He Is particularly fund of pears; but, In case he can't get them, peaches, apples and bananas are a fairly satisfactory sub stitute. Unfortunately, his present ali ment makes a fruit diet extremely dangerous, and since he Is deprived of his favorite food he is literally starv ing himself to death." The attendant passed on to a neigh boring cage and poked his finger spor tively Into the side of a lnrge gray cat that "meowed" plaintively In response to bis cheery "Hello, there, Ca!sar!" The cat had such a healthy, whole some appearance that the visitor In quired what meat he was fed upon. "Humph!" said the attendant "You've missed It there. He doesn't feed upon meat He's a vegetarian. lie likes onions better than anything else, un less It's melons. A good many cats like melons, and most of them are also partial to raw asparagus. The fact Is you might run through a list of all tho dishes that find a place on any up to date menu and you will find that some of oiir pntlents have acquired a tasto for them. This epicurean appetite may denote aristocratic tendencies on tho part of my boarders, but I don't ap prove of It. Most of these acquired tastes are a perversion of the natural animal appetite, and It Is likely to prove harmful In the end. The trick Is pretty expensive for us fellows that run cat and dog boarding bouses, and I'd like to put a stop to It" New York Times. APHORISMS. Liberality consists rather In giving seasonably than much. Cicero. Labor Is the dlvlno law of our exist ence; repose Is desertion and suicide. Mazzlnl. Unbecoming forwardness oftener pro ceeds from Ignorance than Impudence. Guvillo. Kindness Is a language the dumb can speak and the deaf can hear and under stand. Bovee. Every one complains of the badness of his memory, but nobody of his judg ment Itochcfoucauld. Ho -who has no Inclination to learn moro will be very apt to think that ho knows enough. Powell. It is not what he bas or even what he does which expresses the worth of a man, but what be Is. Amlel. Most pcoplo would succeed In small things If they were not troubled with great ambitions. Longfellow. Justice Is the Insurance we have on our lives and property, and obedience Is the premium we pay for it Penn. Cata of Ancient Es-rpt. By some persons the popularity of the cat In Egypt has been attributed to the fact that the animal was vain able In ridding the palaces of rats and mice and also In bunting fowls. There are several paintings In the British museum, executed by ancient Egyp tian artists, representing Egyptian sportsmou in boats on the river Nile, accompanied by large cats, sitting on tbelr haunches In the stern. Other pictures show the cats swimming wltb birds In their mouths after tho manner of retriever dogs. These pictures have greatly perplexed modern naturalists because the cat of today bas a strong aversion to water, and It Is difficult to reconcile such different traits even aft er the lapse of thousands of years. Food Wa Ought to Bat. It has been said that a man should be In very good health If he takes no more than three different kinds of food at any one meal. It should be served as nearly as possible In Its simple state. More food la required on a damp, raw, cold day than on a cheer ful, dry one. As a rule, It Is safe to assume tha what we crave for Is best for us, though In cases of Illness this point should not be strictly adhered to. Men require a good deal more food than women; those who work bard more than those who lead a sedentary Ufo; those who are growing more then those who have reached maturity. Aa Jack Saw It. Jack, who Is live years old, came home one day last week crying that an other boy had hit him. "Why didu't you hit him back?" he was asked. "I did." be answered. "I hit him back first" Now York Times. It la not the loudest church bell tbat brings the must money to the collection box.Wushington Post JUST LIKE MOTHER. Aa Barlp Mornlaa; Latter With Important Aeneneeemeat. That domestic ambulance corps of which mother or wife or sister has charge, being accustomed to all the ac cidents tli ;t befall heedless men folk, can sometimes deal with them at long rangn Thus the New York Mall and Ex proas tells how, at 0 o'clock In the morning of the wedding day, a post office messenger rang the bell at the home of the bride to be aud handed out a special delivery letter. It was addressed to the best man who had come forty miles to second his best friend In the ceremonv, and was, with several others, the jfaest of the bride's parents. The bust man was still sound asleep, but be Was promptly awakened on the supposition that the letter must contain something of Impor tance. It did, Ini'eed. Rubbing bis eyes In an effort to understand, he tore open the envelope and was astonished to find a sheet of letter paper, with a large needle of the sort men always choose when emergency compels them to sew thrust, through It and a foot of black thread doubled and trailing In loose tangle down the page. The best man thought It was a Joke, but be could not see it and be was about to become resentful when. Upon turning the sheet, be found this hastily written note: Dar nrothrr Mother says thera Is a button oft your dress coat It Is In your waistcoat, right hand pocket Sew It on. Crawling out of bed, the best man ex amined bis coat and laughed to see that the situation bad been accurately de scribed In the letter. "Just like moth er," be said. ' "She has probably lost a whole night's sleep thinking about that button." Later In the day four bridesmaids gleefully assisted In making the repairs, and this telegram went to mother: Button sewed on. Don't worry. A remarkable peculiarity of the red wood (Sequoia sempervlrens) Is Its man ner of Inert-use. which Is from dormant buds at the base of the stump as well as from the seed. When a tree was blown down or fell, as its period of ex istence was reached, several shoots pushed upward from the circumference' of the stump and, of course. In a olrclp. These in time became fully grown, six, ten or a dozen feet In diameter. In aft er years, as these trees have fallen, each would have a circle of trees sur rounding It rxrxixtxtx.ixttrrrr:i-cxgrri CARPETS ttvi BODY BRUSSELS TAPESTRIES VELVETS INGRAINS AXMINSTER GRANITE ROOM SIZED RUGS AND ART SQUARES Dandy Patterns . Good Goods Furniture, Kitchen Untensils, Bed ding, Gas Ranges, Go-Carts, Iron Beds, Lamps, Cradles. Anything Needed to Furnish a House OPPOSITE THE POSTOFFICE Abode fghijklmno pqrstuvwxyz ! These letters mean nothing at all in their present form, but they might mean dollars and cents to any business man who will use them to write a plain straightforward ad vertisenient and insert it in The Star. ' The cost o advertising is comparitively small and brings returns larger by far than any other Investment you can make. THE NUQQAR TANK. ' Tale Loathaoma Spat la On of tha aiarbta af India. One of the Innumerable curious sights of India Is the Nuggar tank of Ku ra dii. In former times the crocodiles which Inhabit it roamed the neighbor hood at their will, seeking whom they might devour, but so great were their depredations that the authorities were forced to build a wall round their haunt This Is a swamp, caused by hot springs, the medicinal virtues of which have been known from early times and are attributed to the sanctity of a Mohammedan whose tomb Is close by and to whom the crocodiles are sa cred. The tank, as It Is called. Is about 150 yards long by about half that dis tance in breadth. In this space one observer counted over 200 reptiles from ' eight to fifteen feet long and smaller ones Innumerable. They are so tame, In a sense, that It Is necessary to poke them wltb a stick before they will move. Buffaloes are always standing In the water and are not attacked, but any other animal Is Instantly seized. "The whole appearance of the place," says one writer, "with its green, slimy, stagnant water and so many of these huge, uncouth monsters moving slug gishly about, is disgusting In the ex treme, and It will long be remembered by me as tho most loathsome spot I ever beheld." Chambers' Journal. Doj t Sof e Throat Co to the nearest drug ttora imS get bottle of O Z O L I r J E The best family remedy In the world for Sort Throat, Sort Mouth, Hoaruiun and all diseases of the throat. A sure preventative of Diphtbtria a certain remedy for Quinsy Cure guaranteed or money refunded, a it mi. iter) OZO RKMKDY CO. Nw Brifftitm. r. . ixataiiuii irnxriuxixi i.rjixxrrxrrtTru.Lru - crrr; IN REYNOLDS VILLE, PA. i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers