NEW BUG COMES TO TORMENT POOR SLEEPERS IN THEIR BEDS. The Latest Handshake. No longer is the high band-shake led Jn the fashionable set at New port, R. I. Instead It Is the hand--hake at the height ot the waist ltne the woman, with a slight grasp f the hand, and for a brief period nly is the hand held. Such is the new style which was Med by Mrs. Leonard M. Thomas, formerly Mlsa Blanche Oelrichs, about he fashionable walk in front of the Newport Casino with a number of women and men who later were seen to use the waist line hand-shake with other friends. Cards of Admission. Cards of admission to church wed dings have bnen obligatory for a long ne. but the precautions to kopp un vited guests away from a recent wedding were unprecedented in New Tork City. The pews wero divided Into a certain number of seats, ac cording to their capacity, and every Slace was numbered as definitely as ' it were a theater seat. The holder of a card of invitation was allowed to sit in the seat for which he held the coupon and no other. Such string tut measures were never adopted be fore, but they were considered neo ewary to keep out intruders and see that the rules of precedence were ob served carefully. New York Sun. Babies Out of Place. Don't, if you love your baby, take him to lectures, to plays, to picnics, Or even to hear the finest sermon that was ever preached. If you cannot possibly stay at home with him your pelf, leave bira at home with some trustworthy person, even if you have to Impose the charge on some kind aunt or sister. If your own pleasure must come first with you, it is better to inconvenience grown people than your helpless babe. There is nothing more obnoxious to the little one tban any kind of public entertainment. The lights, noise and strange faces Stake him nervous and frightened. His Only pleasures in life are eating, sleep tog and lying in his little nest of a crib, kicking and cooing and growing. Have you ever thought what a cru Ity It is to take htm away from this, reee him up fussily, and take him church, there to sit through the long service In your lap your stiff, prim, grosgrain lap? He looks round in solemn wonder at the sea Of strange faces, and even mamma is trange with her perked up bonnet and her frizzly bangs, says Woman's Life. No wonder outraged baby na ture geta the better of him at last nd he makes .the welkin ring with his cries. Babies are a nuisance in public places, and public places are nuisance to babies. In the face of these potent facts, is it not strange that some women persist in taking In fants into society? The Clean Slate. Are you one of the girls who are giving to moping, to looking fearfully Into the future, or tp lamenting the past? There is no surer cure for these nnhappiness breeders than to cultivate the clean slate habit. What ia It? Live a day at a time. Start each morning with a fresh record to be made. This must not be muddled with the blues of yesterday nor the pos sible blots of tomorrow. The girl who gets the clean slate habit, realizing the value of living but a day at a time, determines to make that day as bright and helpful as she can. She seeks to write upon it only pleasant things. If the dis agreeable ones must go down, she looks forward to the morrow when they can be rubbed out. though per haps they must bo rewritten. The girl with the clean slate habit does not force early wrinkles by dread of the morrow. She takes all the fun of the present until it becomes a hab it; such a strong habit that even the worries as they come fail to blur the alate. Try It just for one day. Begin this morning to rub out of your recollec tion the things you failed to do and the things you may fail in doing. De termine, until you go to bed tonight, to live for the next thing as well and as chfcerfully as you can. If a day so Bpent is not entirely as you would spend It, at least the aver age of happiness Is higher than If you passed the hours in vain regrets and vainer forebodings until no strength is left for sane living. New York Times. . Traveling with Children. Blue serge has its uses, but it is sot the material In which to dresa ohlldren for a trip In Europe. There are too many frescoed surfaces there. A mother who relates her experiences In "Good Housekeeping" for June says that throughout Italy her children's blue serge suits looked as if they had played in a flour barrel. In art gal leries they loaned against-pillars and out of doors they climbed frescoed fen ces, and most of the time the blue erge was white. Medium weight wool in a flue brown and white check or wash goods strong fn. texture and neither very light nor Very dark in color are what this moth ,'er advises for the suits of wee trav elers. Tan stockings of American make are most serviceable; Wack tockings have the pamo affinity for Jreacoes Siat blue sorgo hae. For jthe small iegs that are alwaya get ting barked it is well to have a roll of pieces of old linen In the traveling bag, with a sponge bag, a sponge and a small cake of 'soap. Traveling with children la not diffi cult, says this mother, provided they have learned self-control. Of course, they must be allowed enough sleep, and their diet must be watched. At every Important railway stop fruits, sandwiches and hard-boiled eggs are offered for sale at the windows of the compartments, and sweet choco late is to be found everywhere, so a lunch for the children is never want ing. As to amusement for them, it is endless. , In Nuremburg and many other places delightful toys may be bought for very little. Parks abound in the cities, with ponds teeming with goldfish, pigeons to be fed and sand pits for the children to play in. ' Calling Card Styles. To possess always visiting cards of correct size and quality requires close observation, for so slight is the difference from season to season that a woman easily continues to use the same she ordered three or four years ago. This spring, for instance, visit ing cards have undergone a trifling change and are the merest shade smaller than those which were the ne plus ultra last winter. This differ ence is noticeable in men's cards, which have shrunk about one-half an inch In width. At present they are a fraction under three inches long and one and one-half inches wide. Any thing larger than that for a man should be avoided. Cards for married women are al most square, being three by two inch es. Pasteboards bearing the names of both Mr. and Mrs. are half an inch larger each way, the proportion re maining the same. Since cards as thin as a piece of writing paper were carried several years ago, the qual ity has slowly but steadily grown heavier, until now it is of appreciable thickness, without being actually stiff. It is pasteboard, however, and not bits ot paper. Old-fashioned script has been su perceded by old English and block. The script is permissible now only for elderly women, the theory being that they prefer to continue with that to which they are accustomed. The two styles row in vogue are more expensive than the script, and English costs a little more than block. For that reason it is not used as much, and is more elegant. An address of some kind should al ways be in the lower left-hand corner save when the day also is used. In the latter case the address should be placed in the right corner, the other being used for the day. When a woman lives In a small town and all her friends know the exact spot where ber house is located an address is still imperative. This is obvious when one remembers that women go away to visit, or travel, al most every year, and during that time will require cards with home ad dresses. The street is not necessary for the resident of a village or small town, only the name of the city. The name of the state is not necessary. Rosanna Schuyler in the Washington Star. Fashion Note. Some ot the new patent leather belts have insets of gold or silver brocade in front and back. Among the new bathing caps are those suggestive of a motor bonnet with a rosette at each side. Red is a favorite color for the col lar and cuffs of the white sailor and Russlon blouse suits for small boys. Tne sleeve cut in one with the cor sage is quite the rage in spite ot the fact that it is not generally becoming. In some of the new veilings some of the holes are so large that care is nec essary to prevent the nose from going through. Fancy slides, rosettes and oma mentatious are seen in pairs on belts and are arranged to rest at each side of the back. The blouses of the Magyar or peas ant type have insertions or motifs of lace or have lace chemisettes and net under-blouses. A favorite trimming for the Pana ma hat 1b a Bcarf finished with a rich ly knotted fringe. This hat is as pop ular as ever this season. There was a time when a tape measure In the ehepe of Billiken was the fad of the hour; now the chante cler has full sway. Voile coats, without linings, -' to wear over lingerie or other dainty cos tumes, are in favor, as are such coats of other transparent fabrics. T2ny handkerchiefs of colored lin ens with borders of white and the tiny initials alsb in white are among the novelties of the hour in fashion's realm. , The rough homespun linens do not wrinkle so badly as the smooth ones. This is quite an important factor to keep in mind when purchasing a linen for dress or suit. Sashes again on lingerie gowns is the latest order. They encircle the waist, are knotted at the side, and hang down in ends reaching nearly to the hem of the skirt Many of the large black hats are trimmed with supple ribbon bows of broad ivory white taffeta. Large blue hats and toques have bows of silk ribbon of creamy white. ICS The glass works at Baccarat, France, have produced glass chimneys of remarkable properties for lamps used in coal mines containing much Are damp. Ten of these chimneys were placed in water, slowly heated to the boiling point and then plunged into water at 69 deg. F. Not one of the chimneys cracked. Scientific American. It is announced In press dispatches that Sir William Ramsay t nan ad dress before the Chemical Society stated that he had succeeded In trans mutting alrconlum, thorium, hydro fluorsiliclc acid, and bismuth into car bon. The announcement, can hardly be credited until Sir William's com plete paper Is published. If true, the discovery Is fully ns important as the conversion of radium emana'tlon Into helium. Scientific American. Crelghton and Mackenzie ' have shown that radium has an effect on the decomposition of lohydrlc pctd. At temperatures below 24 do?;. C. t!ie quantity of Iodide liberated from a solution of lohydrlc acid kept In the dark is increased by the presence of radium. The acid Is not decomposed by sunlight nor by radium emanation in the absence of oxygen. These experiments show rhnt radium has the remarkable property of decom posing some compounds. Scientific American. Navigation experts the world over are just now greatly interested In a new device being tried out in Franco and on different French liners called the com pas azlmtital Ilertzlenncs, an invention of two officers of the Italian navy, whereby collisions at sea may be entirely averted by the system of wireless detection which the compass makes possible. The two inventors have had all the steamships of a French line placed at their disposal in order to perfect the delicate apparatus of the Instrument. Germany boasts that It has the largest weaving loom in the world. An engineering firm of Chemnitz, Saxony, the centre of the textile industry, has Just completed for a firm at Rode wlsch, in the same neighborhood, a hugh crank hook 77 feet long and CO feet wide. It stands 10 feet high and weighs 85 tons. The shuttle is of corresponding proportions and travels to and fro fifteen times a minute. This machine is capable of turnlnig out seamless disks of felt such as are used in paper mills up to 233 feet In circumference. THE WEIGHT OF THE EARTH. How It Is Determined A Cubic Foot of Earth and of Water. The earth weighs 13,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000 pounds. In a strict sense of the word the earth has no weight at all, because the weight Is really the pull of the earth Itself on any other body. And as the earth is thought to be pulling on all parts of itself equally in all directions the net result is, of course, no pull at all. But it a large pair of scales be fixed at some point of the earth's surface, and if the earth could be brought up bit by bit, cubic foot by cubic foot, weighed and then returned to its place it could be wenghed. And the result would be as given. However, when we talk ot the weight of the earth, we really mean Its mass. The possibility of finding the mass of the earth is due to Newton. For he taught that bodies pulled each oth er with forces depending solely upon their mass and their distance apart He showed the way and ten years af ter his death the first real weighing experiment was made. A succession of experiments resulted in the density of the earth being determined at 4 1-2. Then came the investigations of Mit chell and Cavendish, and finally those of Prof. Boys, who found that the earth has 6.624 times the density of water. ' The weight of a cubic foot of water is about sixty-two and a halt pounds. And the average weight of a cubic foot ot earth is about 850 pounds, or about five and a half times as much as the cubic foot of water. But this is quite imaginary, for specimens ot the earth can be obtained only by mere scratches upon its surface. It has been shown by the pendulum that the earth's pull varies at different points on its surface. By timing the same pendulum at different parts of the sur face It can be found out how the weight varies from point to point Chicago Tribune. Guns That Won't Shoot Loose. The old niuzzleloaders had one ad vantage that the builder of breech loaders has worked faithfully to over come. The muzzle-charged pieces had a breechpln, which wa-3 screwed in, where it probably rusted and . re mained forever no getting loose there. But the breechloader had to tip up to receive the shells, and the 'problem of the gun builder was so to construct the arm that it could bo opened find closed thousands of times without be coming loose. Making a joint where two irieccs of steel must grind together a (hundred thousand times without wearing look ed to be almost as much an i;iipo.i billty as inventing a perpetual motion machine, but we might say that mod ern Ingenuity has succeeded, and guns are now on the market that are guaranteed never to shoot loose. Recreation. Latest Addition to Night's Terrors Makes the Flea Seem Feeble. Another source of discomfort to the vacation boarder has been dis covered. All who are now planning to take a vacation in some country l'armhouso should take warning and examine straw mattresses before they sleep on them. If these be filled with new straw it may be well for the peace of mind throughout the re mainder of the vacation to sleep on the floor until other mattresses are provided. A mlts which lurks In straw that has b.e.i t:ie homo of oth er insect pests has . t. i;ly been dis covered in Philadelphia and many other places in the East and Middle West to be an enemy to man's com fort The bite of this hitherto little known creature Is so exceedingly an noying that, speaking conservatively, it may be said that the mosquito, the Ktiat and the Ilea are hnr.Ily to be classed as competitors. The tites of the latter ar as the grass of the field, winch today 11iur!sh?th, bi;: o niorrow wltherelh away and is for gotten. Not so the nip of this micro scopic, predaceous mite. It is not recognized today, but on the morrow begins to make itself felt, and l.efore the rash disappears the victim and his f hysician may think he has small pox. , When the rashlike spois appear the temperature and the pulse go up, and the f.atient feels nigh unto death from this combination, coupled with intense headache, los3 of appetite, nausea and rheumatic pains. The diagnosis of a case having such symp toms should include an examination of the mattress. If it has lately been filled with new straw, the probability is that the symptoms are not those of smallpox, but a visitation of this new ly discovered villain of the Insert world. In such case a cure is mo.-t quickly obtained by removing the bed and burning it. The story of th.s mite has just been fully told for the first time by F. M. Webster in a bulla: la of the Bureau of Entomology of the United States Department of Agricul ture. Sleuths on the Trail. The discoverer or this iilseit villain and the fastening of the supposed In fectious disease upon it was an In teresting piece of detective work, it was not brought to book until its ao tivity had been traced a third of the distance across the continent. A Philadelphia boarding hout-e-keeper was the first one to bring the malady chargeable to this post to public attention. This was in 1S9G. In that year the owner of the boarding house in question called on a physi cian of that city and told a story of financial trouble due to some mysteri ous disease which had appeared In the boarding house. Every one of the 75 boarders had been afflicted by a strange, rash-like disease. They sus pected the maittresses and Bald so in no uncertain terms. They even threat ened the tenant who kept the board ing house with bodily Injury. Then, with one accord, they took up their personal belongings and as one man went away. The discovery of a mite of microscopic dimensions in the straw dust and debris did, not change the feeling of the former boarders re garding the comforts of that particu lar dwelling place, and they refused to return. Thereupon the tenant re fused to pay rent. The real culprit es caped this time, for the investigation was not carried far enough to Connect the mite with th epidemic. Philadelphia was to continue to suf fer from this unfamiliar disease. In 1901, Dr. Jay F. Schamberg, at that time professor of dermatology and Infectious eruptive diseases In the Philadelphia Polyclinic, as well as a practising rihysician, published a short paper calling attention to and describing "An Epidemic of a Peculiar and Unfamiliar Disease of the Skin." He described a number of cases whli h had come to hi3 attention, but still the guilty cause was not discovered. It was not until last summer that any exact information regarding the cause of these so-called epidemics was j A Irnnn'M T Vi ! t. Ti" 3 ortTll 9 t '1 0 rl In UiOUU DIIU r ia . i i. .i ...... - - . a paper irepared by Dr. Schamberg and Dr. Joseph Goldberger, passed as-, slstant surgeon, of the Un.ltel States Public Health and Marine Hospital Service. Last spring the peculiar disease be came prevalent. in Phlladelph'a and neighboring towns. An outbreak among twenty sailors on a private yacht docked in the Delaware River attracted the attention . of ti e c-lty and federal health officials. Eleven officers and men of ithe crew did not have the disease. Their bunks had not been furnished with mattresses freshly filled with straw, as had tho;e of the men who were tUTs. New Straw Under Suspicion. At about the same time Information was received concerning an eruptive disease which had appeared among the sailors on four oUber lxats )lyii:g in the Delaware Klver. It was found u;; on investigation that the rufferars in these cases also had bnn U3ing new straw mattresac3, while tliose aloft upon old niati'.reocs had net been attacked by this strange malady. Seventy other cases were reprte:! from twenty different homes about the same time. In every casa it was found that the sufferer had elbhor slept u on a new straw mattress, or freely bandied one. No other persons lu these households were alllicted. All of the incriminating mattresses were traced to four leading mattress mak ers. It was found that all had ob tained their straw from a dealer In Salem County, N. J. Part of the straw came from New Jersey and part from Southern Indiana. A mattress was opened and the straw sifted through the meshes of a fine flour sieve upon a large litce of plate glass covered with white paper. Tho siftlngs were closely scrutinized under strong electric Illumination, A slight motion was soon detected. The culprit was on the point of being .dis covered, apparently. The moving par ticles were touched with a needle moistened In glycerine and trans ferred to a glass slide. Then the nii- crosiTpe was applied, and the parti cles were discovered to be mites ot exceedingly minute size. Several other experiments were then undertaken. Dr. (loldbeiger ex posed his bared left arm and shoulder for one hour between two mattresses. Sixteen hours after this application of vivisection to a human being those portions of his body which had bsen exposed began to break out after the manner of those who had been suf fering from the ailment. Then three volunteers slept upon the maVtrcses, and each one developed the same symptoms at the end of about the same period. Dr. Roldberger took some of the straw siftlngs and placed them in two clean glass dishes. One of these was held against a portion of the body for an hour. Sixteen or seventeen hours later the eruptions appeared on the area covered by the dish. The contents of the other dish were exposed to chloroform under a bell Jar. These siftlngs were ap plied to another portion of the body of the volunteer who had already submitted 'himself to the influence of the contents of the first dish. No lesions appeared at this point. What ever was responsible for the eruditions evidently was affected by chloroform. As a last experiment, five of the mites were fished out of the sirtings and placed upon a 'clean watch cry stal. This was applied to the armpit of another volunteer. At the end of about Blxteen hours five of the char acteristic lesions appeared on the area which had been covered by the crys tal. Many Regions Afflicted. The miscreant had been discovered, but the reasons for Ms attack on hu man beings were still unknown. This part of tho web Mr. Webster under took to unravel. The fact . that a similar but less extensive epidemic had been noted in Baltimore and that farmers In different regions reported a like disease after running their wheat through a tanning mill mldeu interest to the search into the life history of this predatory creature. In the course of the summer of 1908, al so, a great number of comp'aluts camo from the more elevated parts of Virginia, the upper Shenandoah Val ley and Wcut Virginia, and from East ern Ohio as long ago as 1904. The disease appeared among those engaged In thrashing grain which had been stored for some time In barns, and those who used this straw for filling bed ticks or as a substitute for felting under tarpets were like wise afflicted. In one case berry pick ers were attacked wnere such sttaw had been used as a mulch for berry plants. This straw, It was found, came from a field which had suffered se verely from an attack of the grain pest called the Joint worm. In one instance six men and the animals employed In connection with the un loading of a car of straw at Pittsburg were attacked by the same disorder. The infection has sometimes scared laborers so much that they have re fused to work where it has appeared, and It has become impossible to ob tain labor. It has been found by many experi ments and much microscopical exami nation that this mite U lacking In a discriminating Bense, so fur as food la concerned. It prefers tho juicy bod ies of the larvae of the Angoumo's grain moth in the East and the Joint worm in the wheat straw of the Mid dle West. One of the mites will get Inside the straw beside one of the larvae of theae Insects and will in crease rapidly In . numbers, t the point where it and its descendants kill the larva and any other parasite which nwy have entered to sup at the expense of the l:o?t. When all the livieg thiag3 in the cell In the straw have been oest.oyi.'U these predacious mlte3 rest from their labors, and, like Micawber, wait for something to turn up." They do not grow less hungry with waiting, and when that some thing turns up, whether It be animal or man, the colonies .pour forth from their temporary homes li the raw mid go nt the fresh food. The suggestions for the elimination of the pest are early thrashing or the lufeotcd grain before It has bo:n pla?ed in the bain, later sowing of grain in tho fall and a burning ever of the stubble in the fields where the grain pests and the mi'e which lives on them have Indloalcd their presence, Althoug'i decidedly unplossant while It lasls, the Itching malady whl ii f.V lows the bite ot the mite is not dan gerous and disappears in course of time. New Yoru Trlbnne. BRADSTREET'8 WEEKLY REVIEW Operations of Buyers Governed by Con ervatism Pending Crop Report. "Trade and Industry are still mark ing time, awaiting the passing of the vacation season and the progress ot the leading crops nearer to maturity. A fair number of buyers are in the leading markets, but their operations are governed by conservatism pending clearer views of crop outturn. Reports as to the fall trade outlook are optim istic in the southwest and central west, and the outlook In the northwest is fairly cheerful. Clearance sales stimulate final distribution of summer -goods, though results are still hardly up to anticipations. Trade at the south Is quiet, awaiting a clearer view there) of the resultB of excessive moist ure in the eastern belt. Collections range about fair. "Industrial reports point to quiet in most lines, pig Iron production is be ing curtailed and while specifications in finished lines are of fair volume, there Is a tendency to shade prices to get business. Cotton goods reports show the short y.me movement still prominently in evidence, and domestlo r wool is quiet pending the opening of the new season. "Iron trade Journals report smaller prospective takings of supplies by ship builders and other manufacturers along the lakes. The leather market Is quiet, though more business has been brought out by price concessions, and hides are are dull. .Eastern shoe manufacturers report small reserve or ders on hand. The clothing trade la quiet owing to the strike at New York. "In the flour milling trade It Is noted that foreign orders are not nu merous. "Business failures In the United States for the week ending July 21 were 215, Against 202 last week, 239 in the like week of 1909, 2G3 In 1908, 185 in 1907 and 171 in 1906. Business fail ures in Canada for the week number 34, which compares with 24 last week and 24 in the corresponding week ot 1909." MARKETS. PITT98URG. Wheat No. t red ...i Rye No. 2 Corn No a yellow, ear M 69 No. yellow, shelled 67 m Mixed ear 61 Oats No. S white 41 46 No. a white 43 44 floor Winter patent (80 6 0S Fanoy straight winters Hay No. 1 Timothy 1909 19 35 Clorer No. 1 1AM 16 N Feed No. 1 white mid. too .21150 29 no Brown miauling! H40J 2 n , Bran, bulk MOO MM traw Wheat KOI 111 Oat 9 0J i Dairy Products. , Butter Elgin creamery 11 ft , Ohio creamery... 24 28 Fanor country roll.... 24 14 Cheese Ohio, new M 17 New York, new 14 17 Poultr,, Etc. Hone per lb I IS 1 Chickens dreeeed tt M Bxge Pa. and Ohio, fresh u M Epulis anil Varinlahla Potatoes Fancy white per bu.... 4 4i Cabbage per too g no 9 00 Onion per barrel 71 to BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent I (60 (70 Wheat No. S red 9S Corn Ml led 64 M Eggs 16 27 Duller Ohio creamery a 24 PHILADELPHIA. Floor Wlntor Patent I (67 74 Wheat No. red 1 Of Corn No. 2 mixed M Oats No. white 44 41 Butter Creamery 24 27 Bgga PeonsjrlTanla firsts It St NEW YORK. Floor Patents M a 477 Wheat-No. red I Corn-No. t. W Oats-No. ( white ' JJ Butter -reamery M W Bgga State and Pennsylvania.... 36 m LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. CATTLE Eitra, 1450 to 1600 pounda 7 7 4 S00 Prime, 13U0 to 10U pound 71 7 7 Uood, J2W to l.iou pound 7 u 4 7 4 Tidy, loao to 11M pounds... 111410 Fair, MM to HIM pounds 6 .U 40 Common, 700 loUO pounds. 4 00 4 100 Dun too oa Cowa 'JOw W JU BOOS Prime, heary , g4i J 61 Prime, medium weight 9 1 4 U Mai heary Yorkers S) 9 s fight Yorkers. 140 4 HO 60 4 W ?ouh. T r Bt". (60 4 IW BUSINESS CXRQB, E. NEFF JUSTICE OF THE yEACK, Pension Attorney and RealtEstst Areas, RAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Brookvillk, Pa. M. JloDONALD, ATTOHKEY-AT-LATT, Real estate agent, patents secured, esv oilous uinupj-uuifUy. Ollrce In Byndloate "aiding, Koy jolojvllle, Pa. SMITH M. MoCREIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary nubile ami rel e-ante agent. ("Vj. KHIiuis will m e ye ur.imut attention, frftie h the lleyrioltlavltltt Uttrdware Co. bulltllnii fain mreel Koyuo-ldavllle, Pa. OU. B. E. HOOVEu! " , . DEXTIST, . Resilient danUM. In the lloorer btuidlal ' lain :ruet. Utni.leuces In operating. )lt L. L. MEANS, HHNTISf; OfTl-e on second fliKir of Uie First lattoaal anK bunding, Main street. ' DKNTIST, t, ' -A , offl -a on aeoond rlmir of Hie Syndicate built t ig, Mutu bireot, KeyuohUvtUe, l'a. ,-JENUY F1MESTEH UNDEHTAKEU. Hlatck and white luoeralcari. Mala itre UejuoUKvvUc, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers