7 uiin-down People -!NeedVINOL ,. ( : the modern, strength creator and body builder Many people right here In this vi cinity are all run down and hardly able to drag about don't know what ails them. "Such people need Vinol, our cod liver preparation without oil, which contains in a highly concentrated form all of the medicnal and strength creating elements of cod liver oil ac tually taken from fresh cods' HverR, but from which the useless oil to eliminated and tonic Iron added." We ask every man, woman and child In thia vicinity who is run down, tired and debilitated to try Vinol on our offer to return money if it fails, Stoke & Pcicht Drug Co. Straightened Out the Blunder. Beef was very scarce in I.ndysmith during the siege, but General Sir Inn j Hamilton, then a colonel, insisted that '"horse is not half bad when proper'y j cooked and when one Is used to It. In fact," he said, concluding a discus I iou, "I have a joint cooked tonight, , .which I hope you will ull sample. Of ! course, there's beef, too tonight!" Ev ery one at the table preferred the bopf. with the exception of Colonels Ward and Ian Hamilton, who oxtcvi'n " nH carved generous slices 1 tin- "'i irsc flesh." The dinner wii ne-ul" over when one of the servants whi -:ii:l a communication to Wind. t' he .!!;' ig. "I'm distressed, gentlemen," be an nounced, to the startled co'npa'.i:-. "A silly mistake lias been !.!.' ' . These Joints were mixed tip s,i;u:-!s .v, and you have been eating the horse. I'm 'really annoyed But 1 hope ymi'll lw convinced now that the meat is : ;ilen dld eating. I'm sure you all seined to enjoy it." Olanrts were exchanged: mustaches were twirled. Nobody seem ed ready with a response. Then a Sice from the bottom of the table piped up: "Oil, don't distress yourself. Ward! I thought some mistake had been made, so I just changed those tlisbes as they stood on the sideboard. It was you aud Hamilton who had the horseflesh all right!" The Oyster and the Cockle. If the average person were asked fchnt was the strongest living thing it la probable that he would mime the lion or some such huge denizen of the forest and would not even think of the unassertive bivalve. But so great is he power possessed by tho oyster that to open It a force equal to 1.U1D.3 times the weight of its shell-less body is re quired. The sheli-less limpet pulls 1,984 times ltaown weight when In the Ir and 'about double when measured In the water. The Mediterranean coc kle (Venus vurrucosa) can exert a pull ing power equal to 2.071 times the Hvelpht of Its own body. If the human being possessed streugth as great In proportion as that f lie average man would be able to lift the enormous eight of 2,976.000 pounds, pulling In i the same degree as the limpet. And if the man pulled In the same proportion ate degree as the cockle he won!'1 -unto In a weight of no less than 3.10(1,500 pounds, t- ' Our Bodiet Are Machines. How many people, I wonder, ever pause to consider that their bodies are merely machines to do work, furnaces fn which necessary fuel is burned, Workshops in which woruout parts are upplied and atorerooms in which fuel and food are laid nway for use when eeded? Further, like any other pisoe f apparatus, the body works better under certain circumstances. Us firc.i kurn better with fuels of certain sorts, mixed In certain proportions, and It cannot keep In perfect condition unless furnished with proper materials. Mun thinks he eats because he is hungry; he really eats 'because his lody is cry ing out for building materials with which' to repair the waste that Is al ways going on and for fuel to keep it self warm, and it is rather "finicky" an to the supp'y It wants for each of these purposes. At a pinch it can nse almost anything digestible for either, but It groans and complains and pun ishes Its nnfortunnte possessor if it Is not properly treated. Crittenden Mar riott in St Nicholas. gJIALLEtlGE! We chsllcnae anyone to produce a Case of Eczema or other' sUn dls caw tliat DifoTaylor'a ECZEMA REMEDY vftt riot cure. I it is the only absolute panacea for ill blood diseases end skin eruptions. Thousands of toulimontabj to show you. B?nd for photos of recent cures. " Cold under absoluta guarantee to Cure or money refunded. Not a -ancle Inetanee of failure. It yoa wouia ue curiro itut "i oi bvSt'ikea'ml Kelrht Dni Co.. Ib-rn- uJsville. Ask lor free Illustrated booklet. How It Swept This Country Early In the Last Century. v EVERYBODY WENT SILK MAD. An Insane Pai-sion to Raise Mulberry Trees Seized Upon All Classes of People The Crash That Came When the Bubble Was Pricked. James I., who almost lnancly hated tobacco, was determined that silk worms should be reared in Virginia mainly because he thought he could thus destroy the tobacco culture, which he ordered to be abandoned. For a time silk culture met with great success In Georgia. In 17o9 10,000 pounds of raw silk were thenee exported to England. Connecticut was, however, the ceuter of the Industry. As late ns 1823 the culture of silk was very general there and also flourished In Massachusetts. Silkworms were fed on the white mulberry (Morns alba) until 1SIS0, when there appeared tho Chinese mulberry, or Morns tnultlcnulls. It was predict ed that by its culture two crops of silk could be raised annually. Soon all the agricultural literature and the newspa pers of the country became surfelfed with descriptions of this wonderful tree. Many documents relating to'Berlcttl ture were publl died by congress. The legislature of nearly every state pro vided for the payment of liberal boun ties for planting mulberry trees and raising cqcoona. Thus It was that a speculative furor, a veritable madness, seized upon all classes of people and particularly upon the shrewd, calculating Yankee. It raged like an epidemic. Not only Agri culturists, but doctors of divinity, law ?'td medicine, sehflnnj,tnii!esmen and mechanics, men nil women, old and voung. were imjut ied with an Insane passion to nil: mulberry trees. Kvery om,'! bought the glorious da" was dnwjii.ig when each farm would In"- a nursery for the young trees and every house have its cocooneries aud jU sill; worms yielding two or more '.rops of cocoons yearly. The farmers' vires and daughters when not feeding :li worms were to reel the silk, which would become ns cheap as cotton,' ev ery woman having at least a dozen sill; '.reuses. Tho large protits anticipated iu pro hieing silk were insignificant compar ed with the fortunes that all exnectel o make by raising tho new mulberry tree. In 1834 trees of a season's growth were sold for $3 to $5 a hundred, but '.hey soon sold at $25, $50, $100, $200 and $.")00 a hundred and sometimes $7 apiece. There is recorded an Instance of two :rees of one season's growth, raised by one Elder Sharp In North Windham, Conn., which were sold at auction. The first brought $108 and the second $100. Further sales were then withheld be en use the bidding was not considered t ) be sufficiently spirited. When the craze reached Its height but little silk was produced, for every one was busy raising the new mulberry tfe. Men expected to make fortunes In a few months buying land ami planting mulberry slips, niid'tho silk companies almost without exception sank their capital In this way, many fully equipped mills being closed. One farmer planted $1,000 worth of trees In three-quarters of an acre and sold them the next year for $0,000. In 1830, Just before the people came o their senses, a nurseryman sent an agent to France to purchase several ::iillions of young tree lie carried iSO.CuO in cash as a first payment. When the trees arrived the Inevitable crash had come, and the nurseryman failed for bo large an amount that he could never reckon up his Indebted His trees were offered in vain at "1 a hundred for pea brush. When the fever was over and the 'iciple realized that their capital stock rns suddenly worthless tbey pulled up all the mulberry tree In a rage and ottrned them as brushwood. la 1844 a violent storm, following a jpueraj blight, destroyed most of the ramnliilng Moms mnltleaulls trees and even the more hardy white mulberry '.rlety. This w:-s the finishing blow, and thus silk culture In America prac tically ceased to exist. No Industry ever In this country received such a crushing stroke. Scientific American. Jutt Escaped the Madhouse. If old Mme. Daguerre had been ,as quick to act as she was to suspect, Louis Jacques Daguerre might have died In an Insane asylum, and the world might have waited a century longer for a means of preserving fam ily likenesses on bits of paper or glass. Up to the early thirties of the last cen tury M. Daguerre had behaved ns any well balanced decorator and scene painter should have behaved, and then he began to experiment with-liquids and attempted to fasten sun sbadowa on glass or copper sheets. He talked of a wonderful day when he could make portraits of his friends without either brush or pencil. In great trepi dation Mme. Daguerre hurried to a doctor and, weeping, told these symp toms. To the doctor'! mind they spell ed nothing less than insanity, and in 1838 they aet about preparing M. Da guerre for a visit to the asylum at Bicetre. But just then the unsuspect ing victim of this plot succeeded In fastening the shadow on 'the copper plate, and the art of photography was born. New Yortc Bun. The ordnaaca surrey department of Great Britain makea use of camerai carrying plates 45 by 30 Inches. Gladstone 8pck In the Rain. One day as Mr. Gladstone was speak ing from the terrace rain began to fall. With tho first few drops came a voice from the crowd, "Put on your hat, Mr. Ulndstone." "No," blandly responded the veteran; "some prefer their hats on; I prefer mine off." As the rain fell more heavily Mrs. Gladstone step ped behind her husband and held an umbrella over his bare head. He was over eighty at the time. Mr. tSlad stone went fluently on, expounding the merits of rabbit farming, but after a time even he noticed the rain and the umbrella. Turning to Mrs. Gladstone, ho said, "I will put my own up, my dear," aud he did so. Again the elo quent voice galloped on, while the rniu became heavier and heavier. Present ly Mrs. Gladstone threw a light mackin tosh over her husband's shoulders. The moment be felt it he turned quick ly round and with some asperity said, "I won't have It." He shrugged his shoulders, tho mackintosh fell, and Mrs. Gladstone stepped back. For live minutes more In a deluge Mr. Glad stone weut on; then he stopped, nnd wo all fled. Manchester Guardian. The Onion Er.ter. "Most of us," said n man who. eats plenty of onions, "eat too much meat and grease and butter and bread and not enough vegetables, and the conse quenco Is our systems get clogged up with grease and starch, our livers get out of order and we grumble nt our wives, and scold our children, and fuss when tho baby cries, and quarrel with the street car conductors, anil get Into rows at tiu olllce nnd lose our jobs, not because we me naturally sulky or quarrelsome, but because we are bil ious. Why are we bilious? Hecnuse wo don't eat onions. You uever saw a dyspeptic liian eating onions. He thinks they are poison, but, in fact. t.vey are the medicine that he most needs. Whenever you see an onion enter yon see a whole soulcd, open hearted, Jolly good fellow, who knows ivhat he ought to eat to keep hint good lii iiiored. Talk about the stalf of life, why, bread Is only a crutch. There is n'.iire nourishment in an onion than hove is In a roll. The onion lovers i eep tlte world moving, to say nothing f providing It with much of Its fun." St. Louis Globe-l'einocrnt. Lost and Wen at 3hilah. Many ,iii iiuiiisin , Incident of oruiy life is given iu Lew Wallace's autobi ography. For example, he writes thus of a tented 'paradise" which was lost and won tt the battle of Hhiloh: "With in our lines there was a drinking teut en which was written i'aradise.' It v.r.s taken by the Confederates iu the lirst day's fight,- nnd the victors wrote beneath Its imme 'Lost.' I'.y Beaure gard's order all camp furniture was left Intact, ns he expected to possess tho whole field In the morrow's strug gle. The Union army recovered their ground by the second day's battle, the pleasure tent was retaken and to tho two names was added the word He- alned.'" The Violin's Scroll. The "throwing" of the scroll, or head. of a violin betrays the muster's style ic same ns handwriting. To nil nma .r," all violin heads may appear the srne nut tne connoisseur Knows a fr :tl." Amttti or Gunrmvlns nt otic :'::! I t!v ji'iysio .".lony of the scroll. T;.'s !: . i lue:i !.:;e:;cd to Uie paint 'l 'S : r. c'l-thi.t is. difficult to Imilnt so. n !) dec-he il l;- w.'u i tb-.e -Highly con vert:.: with .::.. Iii;!!v!!nnl work; of t'l" great masters. Cirefe. ' Pretence of Mind. , c:'.;itii:v.i 'i miiis.i of!lcer on beiug !.! fort li to execution asked for a glass- o. wilier before lie died. On receding It lie t.e)ke.t uneasily around, as tt ::!'.-.:'.C f r.as.-viiiilloa. Jrl::k," said the .ii'iauinder. "No harm shall come to I've until thou hast ib'u.ik that water." lustautly the couiuianoer's word was ;;veu the prisoner das'.ied the v.m;ct oa the sandy ground anil thereby saved: his life. ' EVERY RHEUMATIC INVITEDTODAY TO TEST URIC-0 FREE! 75-Cent Bottle Given Free To All Who Apply It then are itlll any sufferer! from Rheoma- ttint In this county or wherever this paper reaches, that have not ret tried the wonderful Bheumatto Bemedyt Urloo-O, we want Ibem lo try It now at our eipeme. We (Irmly believe that there U not a ease of Rheumatism In the world tbat will not yield to the wonderful effects of Urle-O, and wa want to prove II to every doubter beyond all possibility. The best way to do Ihli b to (Ire a large trial bottle of thli remedy outright to every suffer and let him teit and try It to bts own satisfaction. If yon or any of your family suffer from Rheumatism, no matter what form, just out this notloe out of the paper and send It together wltk your name and address, also the name of your druggist, to toe Smith Drug Co., Syracuse, N. and they will send you by return mall a liberal trial package tree of all expense. There It no reservation to this offer. Ton take tbe reasedy borne and use Itaeeordlnito directions aatU thoroughly sat bled of Its merit. We could not afford to do this If we did Dot know that after you are freed from this dreaded disease that yon will recommend It lo all your friends who bare rheumatUm, We know from experience that personal reoommeodailoa from eoe person to soother b tha most valuable ad vertising, and tbat to the way we Intend to ac quaint tbe world with DrieO. Deal put off willing because Una offer will soon expire, and then It wul be too late. Do It to-day aod start yourself upon the highway to perfect health and happiness. Rend for Crlo-O, no matter when you live. II Is sold by Druggists alt over this country, and we want you to tar a bottle tree. Urlco-O Is sold xiid r.u 'inin 'i"trd In Ret noldsvllla by S' lie & Feicbt Drug Company. MAKING FEATHERS GROW. How Japan's Long Tailed Fowls Are Fed and Coaxed For Results. That the long tailed fowl was early in Japan is credible from tho legend, evidently of abysmal antiquity, of Ama Terasu, the sun goddess, who, having retired Into a cavern, to the in tense discomfort of the world, was nearly enticed out again by the crow ing of a long tailed cock to remind her, no doubt, that it was her usual hour to appear. Another somewhat ghostly evidence of the antiquity of the breed has been cited In tho ho-o bird, which was pictured In Japan ns early as the eighth century. This fab ulous bird resembles both pheasant and peacock, but It has clearly the tall, and a very luxuriant one, of the fowls of Tosa, In which every feather, as the poeticnl Japanese remarks, resembles a leaf blade of the mystical bamboo. It Is known that in many kinds of birds certain feathers continue to grow until they are lost by molting, nnd in all birds it happens occasionally that a feather may bo molted at nn Irregu lar time. Accordingly it follows that If fowls can be secured which are ir regular In the period of molting, let us say, the tall feathers, these will con tinue to grow longer for the reason that they have had a longer time In which to grow, t'rojii this beginning It Is now possible to Infer that by a process 1 of carefully selecting and breeding from these fowls In which the molting season Is suppressed In certain parts of the body it would be possible to obtain a variety In which the tail feathers would be much longer than in other fowls. A second but very Important part of the process consists In feeding tho bird to the maximum degree in order lo stimulate the growth of Hie feathers. At the same time the bird should not be nllowed to dissipate Its energy by leading nn active llfo or to run un necessary chances of breaking the con stantly growing feathers. Thus 1 learn ed from the fanciers at Tosa that It Is customary, to confine the birds in rela tively small cages aud to feed them often and with peculiar food. Details of the latter I was unable to secure, although certain bints were given mo ns to the virtue of boiled tinhusked rice, of an occasional scrap of eel and of diakon (giant radish) leaf. I fancy, though, that tiny kind of poultry food may be used. But in this regard one j Is cautious lu drawing u hard and fast conclusion, because It Is known that feathers are subject to modification in various ways dependent upon food. Thus the color of the feathers of cer tain parrots has been strikingly chang ed by the south sea islanders, who feed tho birds upon, the fat of a peculiar fish. And canary birds are given a red dish color under special conditions, as by the fanciers in the Ultra mountains. In many cases, lu order to avoid ac cident to' the long feathers, each fan cier finds It, I am told, convenient to eoll up the longest feathers and wrap and tie them carefully In soft paper, so that the bird runs a minimum chance-of breaking them. High perches are emphatically advocated. I have been told, not on the best evidence, however,, that In some cases the bird Is Confined lu a tight cage, so that it Is not possible for it to shift its position. In this cramped way, with the tall hanging down behind, a bird Is said to be kept penned up miserably for pe riods of months. Certain it is that un der favorable conditions the growth of the tail feathers can be forced by tho fancier. Under ordinary conditions a cock, whose tall measures five or six feet will rarely grow longer feathers, for,, by active life, it is probable that a gradual molting of these long feath er takes place. On the other hand, molting Is more apt to be suppressed by the unwholesome living of a bird dAiring the process of overfeeding. If, accordingly, a cock whose tail feathers are- of the normal maximum length is taken lu training by a skilled fancier, be can, I am told, stimulate a growth til these feathers at the rate of about six uiches per month. Professor Bnsh fonl Dwm in Century. Tne Coat of Many Pockets. "Did I ever tell you of the time mv friend the taltor gave me a clew t'- it enabled me to land one of tbe most dangerous shoplifters in the country?" asked the old detective. "Several years ago we were working hnra to catch an unusually clever shop flfter who was operating in the large department stores," he continued. "Every day reports would come to us of more articles stolen. Detectives were detailed especially to the depnrt netit stores to watch for the thief. They were unsuccessful. One day I met a friend of mine, a tailor on Wal nut Btreet. 'Say, Booher,' he said, 'I've got a funny customer at my place. He's having one of the queerest conts made I ever saw. It's nothing hut pockets.' "I went to his place and looked at the half flnudt.-Ml coat. There were pockets in the sleeves, in the armpits,, In the lining and even in the collar and lapels. When I looked at tbe coat, I made up my mind that the man who was getting it made was either a gician or a thief. I decided that . would be in the tailor shop when tbe aian called for the coat Well, when the man came I asked him about the coat He acted auspiciously, and I ar rested him. He proved to be the man we were all after. In his room were many stolen articles." Kansas City S'ar. No Bath For Him. Homeless Homer Dls here paper snys It's fine to take a sun bath. Brnkerod Baker A sun what? Wot's dnt? Homeless nomer A sun bath. You're a-taktn'. one now. Brakerod Pnker Help, Homer, help! Move m Uiter d shade !-Cleveland Leader, 1 THE TONGUE OF A BIRD. An Organ Which Varies Much In trie Different Species. Few people Uuve given thought to the subject of birds' tongues. Mauy. even of the amateur bird students, know little of the literature on the subject and still less from personal ob servation. Birds must use their bills as bands, and to some extent the tongues supple incut such use. Thus uut and seed eating birds exlruct tbe kernel from the shell, which is cracked between the mandibles. The full complement of" bones of tile tongue consists of eight. The shape varies considerably In different species, aud the comparative size very much more, although there Is a prevailing general resemblance. The size and de velopment of the various bones con trol tlie shape nnd utility of the organ. AVeli developed front bones mean a thick, llesliy tongue, such as we find In members of the duck family, while small forward bones usually accom pany u small tongue of less Importance to the owner, sometimes little more than rudimentary, like that of the pel ican. Among such birds as have occasion to protrude tho tongue well beyond the tip of the bill the hind bones are mar velously developed and greatly elon gated, for these are the bones on which the tongue Is hung. The edges of the tongues of most birds are more or less fringed, this fea ture being most noticeable In thin tongues. Most birds havo a greater or less number of papillae small fleshy projections, splnellko iu appearance and usually Inclined backward on the tipper surface of the tongue. These arc of service In working the food backward toward the throat Some of the sen birds have very sim ple tongues, which serve but little pur pose. The tongues of the honey creep ers have very fine and long feathering, while those of tho woodpecker are long, slender and pointed, aud the roots of some species curve clear around the back of the skull, up over the crown, and their tips rest at the base of the upper mandible. With tho exception of the sapsuekers the tongues of wood peckers are capable of great protru sion, nnd the tip Is barbed. The sap suckers, .however, Instead of having sharp, barbed tongues like those of other woodpeckers, have brushlike tongues as a result of the degeneration of the bristles on their surface into hairs standing out from the tongue rather than pointing backward. Birds with long bills do not always have correspond I hgly long tongues. The kingfishers, with their dispropor tionately large bills, bare short tongues. The outer edges of the very long tongues of humming birds are closely rolled up Into two tubes lying side by side, by means of which the birds are enabled to suck the nectar from' flow ers. New York Poet. Iceland From a Lava Wall. The general impression that Iceland Is a cold country Is a false one, says s writer In Travel Magazine. In Reyk javik, the capital of the Island, L one day perelied myself on one of the lava walls and looked at a scene of summer warmth and beauty. Familiar cows and cnts and hens were busy In' the sunshine. Children, thinly clad, were playing about with shouts of merri ment. Potatoes were In full blossom, and cabbage and various vegetables added to the sense of homelike comfort But such days are oases In vast deserts of rain, for If Iceland, in summer is not cold It Is not comfortable. Room Doors on the Stage. In real life room doors always open in toward the room itself. On the stage, however, room doors, as a rule, open outward, or away from the room. Exits are one of the most difficult parts of the actor's art,, and If he or she had to fumble with the handle, pull the door toward them, step round It and: pnss through they would probably make a clumsy dodge Of it. That 1 why, as a rule, doors are constructed; to open outward' at a push. Betty's Gift. A Lancashire vicar was asked by. th choir to call upon old Betty, who was. deaf, but who Insisted lu joining iu the solo of the anthem, and to ask her only to sing In- the hymns. He shouted into her ear, "Betty, I've been request ed to speak tx' you about j-ottr sin;," ing." At last she caught the word "singing" and replied: "Not to me be the praise, sir. It's a glft."-Pnll Malt Oazette. When your Watch Stops Yoa canDot Bake It go by shaking II. When the Dowels are constipated you can disturb them with cathartics but like the watch, they will not be able to do their allotted work until they are put into proper condi tion to do it One cannot mead a delicate piec of mechanism by vio lent methods, aad no machine made try man ia as fine as tbe hnmaa body. Tha nse of pills, salts, castor-oil and strong cathartic medicines is the violent method. The nse of the herb took: laxative. Lane's Family Medicine is the method adopted by intelli gent people. Headache, backache, indigestion, constipation, skin diseases all are benefited irajnediately by the nse of this medicine. Druggists sell it at a;e. and 50c. SHORT Ta-BY L. T. CdR.. NEKVO'Ja PTerronsness makes incrable. blue, and unhappy. The fiTnpthlnd toil , t night A wnrrV "c1i-j' hi h en- eiy y think mtpJ 4 ore the them i. Kid- muteJ A-'O Vr dis- e"soV J't "trouble, MKS, W. J. SCli-AUKHK. world. hotttcs ui trouper s iiew uiscovery. stomach in shnpe in three we' ,, this because I've snen it tricij Jn(j times. Then all nervousness, pear, I know this too, beciu it Imr-n'-n a thousand times, it. ter I the otlicr day: "My system was badly rim nuc my stomach ond nerves in an aw.pj, I oould not digest my food, wi,, tired und would often feel luint en i "1 had heard so much of vJ' . Discovery medicine that 1 bcfit.:t Kelicf and strength and hannincs... iound in the very first bottle and tle,. nt 1 have received from it has bees- wonderful. I am no longer ncrvot appetite and digestion are good and,t everything and sleep well." Mrs. Schaurer, 220 Guthrie St., Louisville We sell Cooper's New Discovery! makes tired, vi out,, nervous pe happy. Stoke-Feicht Drug Cd HEYNOLDSVILLE, PA. 647 ' ' WHAT 15 YOUR PRICE? Do you wisely limit your ex penditure for clothing to a certain price ? Anyy. ay, you ought to be a critical buyer anxious to secure the best lhat the price permits. The makers of Clothcraft aim at two points high quality and low price. The higher they make the quality and the lower the price the better pleased they are. All Clothcraft garments are all wool but the- all woolea mate- 1 r rials are shrunk by the special f? 55 Clothcraft process. Every bit of work the designing, the cutting sfj! 0 and the tailoring are each in 0 turn looked nsr d skukj q workers the highest paid Jouis 4 neymen who are as exacting In making the buttea holes, and hi ihaninr tbe collar as thev are r. in perfecting every other detail. That's whv Clothcraft Clothes prove the best to critical wearers, pi 0 The Clothcraft Spring Style 0 BookwiUbeghreayouifyoullcall. J Bing-Stolio Co. Reynoldsvifle, Pa. . :ubcrltc for The Star mi tstvUariK 1 n i w 1 tar ' ' j t th Nawef If you wan r ..
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers