" WOMAN'S WORLD. A NEW YORK GIRL SHOOTS A BIG BEAR IN MAINE'S WOODS. ®ainty Merning Gowns— Women as a Race. A Tribute to Southern Women—Straw Home Goods— West Virginian Women. ; Materials For Winter Gowns. A New York girl has killed one of the biggest bears ever slain in the Dead river region of Maine. ards, the daughter of a Grand street dry goods merchant, who lives at 130 West Eighty-sixth street. She is stil in Madne’s deep woods hunting and fishing. It was left toa close friend of the family to tell of it. He gave the facts upon receipt of a long letter from Miss Richards describing her remarkable achievement. Mr. Richards left Neav York recently with his family to spend six weeks in his handsome camp 2¢ Chain of Ponds, on the Megantic fish and game pre- serves, which oonsi&t of 250 square miles of the choicest hunting grounds in Maine. Miss Richards carried a rifle that had ‘been made expressly for her. She is fa- miliar with the use of firearms and has often brought down deer, but this was the first time she had had a chance to tackle a bear. Suddenly there was a oud cracking of the underbrush, and »ooking in that Airection she saw a huge black bear coming toward her. Bruin trotted along in blissful igno- wance of the presence of the young wom- MISS HATTIE M. RICHARDS. wm with rifle raised waiting for him. When he had approached to within 200 eet of her, she fired. The bullet struck ghe bear in the neck and made a bad wound, which caused the animal to grow very savage. It made a rush for the girl, but when it was about 70 feet sway Miss Richards’ rifle cracked again, snd the bullet hit the bear behind the ar and killed it. The bear was an old fellow and weighed more than 400 pounds. Guides said it was the largest killed in the Dead river region in years. The head mnd skin are on the way to a New York taxidermist, and when mounted will be sent back to Maine to adorn the floor of the Richards camp, which is called Camp Rustic. As a sportswoman Miss Richards has few equals. She is 28 years old, of athletic build and spends her summers dn the woods with rifle and rod. The members of the family are fond of out- door life. Their home is filled with trophies of the hunt, and they have a fine collection of firearms.—Boston Globe. Dainty Morning Gowns, ‘Everybody should bear in mind that she most essential point in attaining a well dressed appearance is to study con- gistency and becomingness, as well as the latest modes in cut and fabrics,” writes Mary Katharine Howard in The Woman’s Home Companion. *‘The gown for the morning may be of the ost expensive material, yet if it be of $abrics designed for evening wear and made after the style of a street or re- seption costume both time and money have beer thrown away in the effort to make something suitable to the time. **The morning house gown, and es- pecially that of thin, airy, flowing ma- terials, has an irresistible fascination for the sesthetic woman. If she isa success in this negligee dress, she pretty well understands the art of selecting, in color and style, the gown that best harmonizes with her surroundings and her own individuality, and she wears it with the air of never having considered the effect at all. *“The morning gown affected by the women of today is less the wrapper and more the dainty dress in which one can appear with all propriety outside the door of her own boudoir. In it she is aporopsiately gowned, and, while it is not stiffened with benes, stays and interlinings, the contomsr of the figure is not entirely hidden, as in the days when the * Mother Hubbard wrapper went swirling in wneven fullness and slovenly fold about her feet and waist. » Not that we wholly condemn this com- fortable lounging gown, which, when used in that capacity, is a comfort giv- ing garment, but let its use be confined to the lounging room, and not as the breakfast table or for the reception of morning callers. The woman who is “carefully and becomdngly gowned in the early momming not only adds greatly to her appearance from the point of good dressing, but ‘takes on a more youthful appearance, and the effect she has upon those around her is by far more pleas- ing than if she has the look of having had just time enough to throw on a wrapper and reaci the morning room to snatch a bite with the rest of the house- hold. “At no time is the morning house gown more appreciated than in warm weather, when even the most comfort- able of outdoor garments seems unbear- able. Its very daintiness makes one This daring | oman is Miss Hattie M. Rich-' are used with the laciest of trimmings the delight of the wearer is only equal- ed by the pleasing effect the tout en- semble has upon others. Inantumn and winter months the house gown, while quite as dainty, takes on a more sub- stantial and close fitting air, suggesting warmth and coziness. Richer and warm- ir colors are generally used, though | many women cling to the dainty, deli- vate tints and pure white all the year round. ’’ Women as a Race. All women have fathers as well as mothers. That is a fact of natural his- tory which we do not suppose the most advanced of the crowds who are now writing about women and their prog- ress are prepared definitely to deny, but they would certainly like to deny it if they could. The assumption which un- derlies all their views is that women are not only different from men phys- ically, intellectually and morally, but that they belong to a different race, which may, as time advances, have a destiny of its own. They write as if the great Hindoo legists, who hold that fe- male property should descend only to females, had perceived part of a great truth, which is that women are contin- uously separate from men, inherit noth- ing from them and are forever advanc- ing upon a line of their own which will in the end, or, at all events, may in the end, after what Mrs. Green calls an an- archic period, develop in them some- thing probably superior to anything in men, or, at the worst, something rad- ically different. The human race with these writers is male, but women are female and therefore something quite other than human. Their strength and their weak- ness, their virtues and their failings, belong to themselves, and no more be- leng to a common humanity than the qualities of cattle and the qualities of the felide belong to a common animal nature. They have a different line as well as a different law of progress, and will in the end develop into beings en- tively separate from men, probably auch higher, but at all events so differ- cnt that to reason from the progress of one sex to the progress of the other is as futile as to reason that because wolves have in the course of unnumbered ages developed into dogs therefore cats must in the course of countless ons develop into dogs also. In the violence of their recoil from the Tennysonian idea that woman is but lesser man the more fa- natic writers attribute to her qualities, faculties and, above all, a future fate which would, if their assumption were true, prove her to belong to an essen- tially different species, which resembles man only for a moment when, as it were accidentally, she is level with him in a race in which she is destined to be far the first. The fact that, as all men are the sons of women, they must share in any inherited excellence, or even change, which their mothers may de- velop is not so much denied as ignored and the whole question treated as if all men were the descendants of Adam and all women of Eve, not by a license of poetic speech, but in prosaic fact.—Lon- don Spectator. Glowing Tribute to the Southern Woman. But that voice of hers! It may be because of the associations of my own early life. I can still re- member the broad arms and capacious lullaby rest of the old black mammy who brought me through from babyhood to boyhood, or it may be because those and succeeding days accustomed my ears to the cadence of the liquid voices of the south, but certain it is that today there is no sound that escapes human lips'so grateful as are the soft tones of a southern woman. This sweet soul, with her velvet .tread and touch, had doubtless a sad history of her own—a shattered past—nothing left but a few graves, the whereabouts of some perhaps unknown to her. Since those cruel days there had come privation and bitter poverty and that dread loneliness which sometimes takes possession of the help- less. And yet nothing had disturbed her eyquisite patience or robbed her of the marvelous restfulness of manner and re- finement which distinguishes the south- ern woman of today. If this gentle lady had suffered pone of these things, I am all the more glad for her sake. And yet, all the same, I think I have read her signs aright, the indications are al- ways so plain and so many of her sis- ters have trod the wine press, too, and till do. Yet nothing has ever imbit- tered the sweetness of their natures or cramped their generous hospitality. What they had they gave—gave cheer- fully and graciously—and so they do yday.—F. Hopkinson Smith in Scrib- {i Straw Home Goods. It has been a work of time and pa- silent experiment for the chemists to discover the different pigments and sub- stances that would successfully dye straw and grass fiber, but they have congnered the problem at last. The bulk of the manufacturing of vaskets made from willow peelings is tone in Germany. The im ctus that has come to the dealers in fancy and millinery goods of straw has also affect- 'd the basket dealers, and novel combi- nations of stitches and plaitings and peantiful studies in color make a collec- tion of esting. The improvements in the dyer’s art have made it possible for the makers to avail themselves of many patterns and designs that only needed the har- monious touch of color to make them salable. Workbaskets, whisk broom hold- srs, candy boxes, photograph holders, music and paper racks, jewel holders and catch alls for desk and toilet table can all be secured this season in any color that the buyer fancies, and some tops and panels to these accessories look far more like cloth than like straw. An ap to date baby hamper in dainty col- wed straw puts the self colored recep- ool, and when the thinnest materials latest made baskets most inter- i ticle that our mothers prepared for the little stranger's advent away in the shade, so far as artistic excellence is | Persian literature. soncerned. Only the practical old mar- | ket basket remains undyed and undec- orated, except in a mixed crude red, bur+he market basket may bloom out vet and keep up with the high grade of improvement in household belongings. —Exchange. West Virginia Women, Women cannot hold office in West Virginia. It is stated on apparently good authority that Governor Atkinson gave a notary public's commission to a young lady of Wheeling, being under the impression that he was appointing | a man, since the letter recommending her for the place gave only her initials. As soon as the governor learned her sex he asked for the return of the commis- sion, and it was promptly canceled. During the administration of Governor McCorkle the same mistake happened, only in this instance the woman wag appointed on the governor’s staff. She, too, lost her military status just as soon as her femininity was revealed. The last legislature tried to give women some show in acts establishing a girls’ industrial school and a home for inva- lids by declaring that the boards of di- rectors of each should be composed of an equal number of men and women. It appears, though, that the acts are not constitutional, since that instrument asserts that no persons except citizens entitled to vote shall be appointed to any office in the state, while it also lim- its the franchise to male citizens.—Bos- ton Woman's Journal. Materials For Winter Gowns, | The popular fabrics for winter cos- tumes will be satin cloth, serges, chev- iots, Scotch homespuns and tweeds. Fancy designs or plaids are not as pop- ular as they were. Velvet and velveteen will be more worn than ever before, while for visiting and dinner dresses black satin maintains its vogue, though satin brocades, either in one color or in soft shades that harmonize, are also counted good form. The colors favored are dark navy blue, gray, a very deep golden brown, a darker green than em- erald, a pretty dark red and royal pur- ple. Buttons are profusely used, but they are chiefly the large, fancy shapes in horn, gutta percha or mother of pearl. The various braids and the narrow sat- in ribbons, especially in black, are used to produce original effects on skirts and bodices, a decoration fancied being a contrast obtained by means of an out- lining with white braid. For street wear the suit—that is, the costume in one color—continues to obtain. The jacket blouse is the new bodice of the season.—Isabel A. Mallon in Ladies’ Home Journal. Women Clerks of the Bank of France. "A CLEVER WOMAN. Wemen Veterinarians. Several women are planning this fall Mrs. Arthur Henniker, President of the to enter the New York Collego of Vet. English Society of Women Journalists. erinary Surgeons, with a view of taking Mrs. Arthur Henniker, the clever the three years’ course and qualifying novelist, has recently been elected pres- | ith the degree of D. V. 8. ident of the Society of Women Jour. | nalists in England. Mrs. Henniker docg | not claim to be a journalist. In fact, she devotes her time and energice chief- ly to writing short stories. She asserts that she can make more of them than of a larger piece of work and that there is not so much trouble with the plot. Indeed her health would not permit her to stand the strain of heavy work. Mrs. Henniker is a great admirer of Thomas Hardy, and she considers ‘‘The Well Beloved’ his finest work. She has had ample opportunity to study } Hardy and his method of working she is the only person with who has ever collaborated. Mrs. Hennik deems Miss Braddon a marvel not only because of the amount of good work she turns out, but because of the extraor- dinary amount of knowledge, both gen- eral and special, that she possesses. The English author has little sympathy with the ‘‘ problem novel, ’’ and she con- siders the essay rather than the ‘novel the proper medium for their discussion. Mrs. Henniker’s taste in literature is catholic. She is especially fond of poet- ry, and all the standard writers attract her. She is a strong home ruler and spends much of her time in Ireland, and she believes that the standard of morality in the Emerald Isle compares very favorably with that in the sister countries. Among her hobbies are the Ladies’ Working guild and a hospital for suffering animals. Mrs. Henniker has a charming home in Sloane gardens, London. —Chicago Times-Herald. A Woman Shoemaker. Of late years women have gone into all sorts of fields formerly occupied ex- clusively by men, says the Philadelphia | As the result of long and careful ex- periment the governor of the Bank of France has now Intrusted the work of detection of forged bank notes and of debentures with altered numbers entire- ly to a special corps of women clerks. He declares that the keen sensibility of their finger tips enables them in han- dling anote to distinguish the difference, | however slight, between the forged and | the real article. The means adopted for | bringing to light the falsified numbers | on debentures are rather more elaborate and consist mainly in the distinction of the difference in the symmetry of the figures and of the ink used, magnifying glasses being used for the former and chemical preparations for the latter. The German Empress. The German empress bestows a diplo- ma with her own signature, accompa- nied by a gold cross, on all German fe- male servants who have remained con- tinuously in one family for 40 years. During the last eight years over 1,000 domestics have received this honor, which is naturally very much prized by the recipients. Her majesty is known to take the gr¢ (est interest in the servant question, aud she has often pointed out to those avout her the importance of treating domestics kindly and well. She is adored in the royal household, and her six sons and little daughters are taught to be as considerate to their in- | feriors as to their mother herself. Dorothea Klumpke. Miss Dorothea Klumpke is one of the most talented of women astronomers. Five years ago she was admitted to the Paris observatory, the only woman who had ever been a pupil’ of it. She now has charge of the eastern tower of that observatory, with a staff of women as- sistants who are under her manage- ment. She is equally talented in her observations and in her mathematical work. A London woman has been killed in | the crush at a bargain sale at which 22 policemen were employed to hold the crowd in check. The verdict of the cor- oner’s jury was, ‘‘Deceased died from syncope caused by the exertion and ex- citement of getting into a bargain sale, and that such death was due to natural causes.’ The bishop of Hereford having ex- pressed himself very strongly on mod- ern female costume, an English lady turns on him in this way: ‘* Why should a bishop put on so feminine a garment as an apron if a yyoman cannot put on a vest? '—Transcript. ra —— | Mrs. Alice Freeman Palmer has been appointed president of a corporation of influential men and women who are de- termined to build up Mrs. Alice Gordon Cusick’s International School For Girls | in San Sebastian, Spain. The Finnish women enjoy the right of suffrage. In fact, they have invaded {every field. They have entered the pro- hangers, manufacturers, ete. Mrs. Elizabeth A. Reed of Chicago has been elected a member of the Royal Asiatic society of London, this in honor of her successful work in Hindoo and Press, but Philadelphia enjoys the dis- tinction of having a woman shoemaker. She began in a small way, but has pros- pered abundantly and now has an estab- lishment that is patronized largely by women of the most exclusive social set. This shoemaker is a practical worker. She does the measuring, draws the dia- grams and gives detailed instructions to the journeymen in her employ. She for- merly did the cutting up of the leather and can do so still when necessary. When asked how she came to go into a business that men have always monopo- lized hitherto, she said: ‘I never liked to have men handling my feet when measuring my extremities or fitting a pair of shoes, and I concluded that there | were hundreds of other women who felt the same way. I was convinced that all such would prefer to patronize one of their own sex. So I learned the trade and went into the business of shoemak- ing. Iam glad I did, for I have made myself independent. *’ Independence. There are very many reasons for women going to work, and not the least common of these is a genuine desire for They will form the first woman's class in a veterinary college in this country, though France has one gradu- ate and there area few in Germany and Russia. Phe names of five young women have already been enrolled in the institution, and letters of inquiry are being received from others every day. Dr. E. N. Leavy has been assign=d by the faculty to form the class. From the letters which Dr. Leavy has received it ‘appears that most of the young women who intend to study will do so with the idea of earning a living. As for the prospect ¢f making an in- come, Dr. Leavy says that veterinarians charge $2 a visit. The bureau of animal industry in the agricultural department at Washington pays inspectafts $1,400 a year and assistants $1,200. In 87 state agricultural stations veterinary surgeons are employed at from $1,500 to $3,000, and nearly all city health departments employ gradun- ates of veterinary colleges as meat and milk inspectors. No woman is now employed in these places. Dress Reform. The women who long for emancipa- tion, yet who cannot bring themselves to appear in gbbreviated skirts or Tuark- ish trousers, can at least help the good cause along by making a practical pro- test inst the slavish observance of prevailing fashions. The women who impress us as being always suitably attired are seldom ar- rayed in garments made according to the latest mode. Their choice in dress is usually governed by fitucss and mod- eration. It may make very little differ- ence to one who by reason of wealth or social position is a recognized leader of society, if her taste in dress is charac- terized merely by refinement and sim- plicity, but it does make a great deal of difference to her poorer or more timid sister, who has been accustomed to look upon wealth as the basis of social dis- tination or who has not the moral cour- age to dress within her means. No woman is exactly the keeper of another’s conscience, but she should at least help the great work of education by living as if the soul were ‘‘more than raiment,’’ and not a thing to be satisfied by a mousquetaire sleeve or godet plaits.—Housekeeper. A Professional Auctioneer. That ‘woman has not a sense of hu- mor is contradicted by a woman in Eng- land who has taken up a profession which should rank next to that of the professional comedian. She has become a professional auctioneer. If an auction- eer can keep his audience laughing, the better sales he is apt to make. Miss Ada Hammond, who is the young woman auctioneer, does not lay any stress, how- ever, upon this part of her work. She says it is a business which keeps its fol- lowers talking, and for that reason it is eminently feminine. She had an ambi- tion to take it up, made application, found that she could do it and has been at work several years. She is very suc- cessful, has wit enough to get the best of people who try to talk her out of countenance when she is at work and seldom loses money at her sales, al- though there is always a risk, with heavy expenses to balance the profits. Miss Hammond does most of her work in the country districts, and it is hard work, for she is accustomed to make ‘‘one night stands,’’ doing business in one town on one day and in another on the next.—New York Times. An Army Nurse. Mrs. Richard E. Nash, chairman of the Army Nurses of the G. A. R., says independence. New Orleans women are among the last to succumb to this in- fection, but from every aspect the con- dition is one come to stay, and in con- sequence—unless the occupation is a confining and not altogether a congenial one-—upon every side one may nate | handsomer, more purposeful, healthier women than of yore. With much in { hand to accomplish, duties impending and insistent, a compensatory fee at the week’s end, there is no wonder that a worker is a happier, better regulated, more ambitious and sensible Ling than the idler with many useless schemes for personal aggrandizement socially, the flabby mind with a reception only for too easily digested literature. The wom- an who dreams and aspires and longs vainly spends too much of her time that «way. It is a fact that the more one is obliged to do the more liable one is to do.—New Orleans Times-Democrat. Cora Hirtzel’s Appointment. Corporation Counsel Thornton of Chi- cago recently selected Miss Cora B. Hirtzel as one of his official assistants. The appointment was not made because Mr. Thornton is partial to women bar- risters, but simply because she showed peculiar fitness for the duties of the of- fice. Her strong point appears to be the readiness and accuracy with which she pan prepare cases for court. A native of Mlinois, Miss Hirtzel studied law at Oakland, Wis., and ten years ago went (to Chicago. ting the regular course at the Chicago College of Law, she was | graduated in 1890, and two years later | lent work in | she began independent work, making a | specialty of bricfing. She has prepared | briefs for many of the ablest lawyers in : Chicago in some of the most important | cases in the country. The Women's Vote. | The New York Tribune says: The women’s vote seems to have been much larger than usual this y«~»in the school of the striped and plaided and dotted | fessions, they are carpenters, paper elections of Long Island country dis- (triets, with an increasing number of | women trustees. Westbury reports 56 voters, of which 29 were women, and a woman school trustee was continued. In Port Washington there were 89 vot: ers, of which 19 were women. Flower Fu elected a woman school trustee. the Buffalo Times, is one of the few nurses who served in the field hospital, the most dangerous post for women. During her one year of service she was present at Williamsburg, Fort McHenry and Fair Oaks. Mrs. Nash has a red and gray balmoral shirt worn at Fair Oaks and which was completely riddled with bullets. It was from this same bloody field that she carried her wound- ed husband, the late William A. Moss, for a mile on her back to a place of safety. During the long marches over rough log roads her bed was a soldier's blanket at the foot of a tree. Of the kindness of the boys of the One Hun- dredth New York regiment Mrs. Nash speaks warmly. Never a single confis- cated chicken roost but she was allowed generous rations. Last, bat not least, is her remembrance of the faithful watches shared with her by the white bonneted sisters of charity in the float- ing hospital on the Pamunky river. An Ambitious Organization. An association to be known-as the Young Womén's Settlement of New York City has been incorporated with the secrete y of state at Albany. This organization is formed to promote the physical, intellectual and spiritual im- provement of women and girls in the crowded portions of the great cities of the United States, and especidlly in the city of New York, by n 3 of ed | tional and industrial classes and simil agencies and to train young women, es- pecially college graduates, for nevo- New York city. di- rectors are Murdock Howell and Grace F. Porter of Montclair, N. J.; ¥. Mason North, John 8. Huyler, William H. Rowe, Jr. ; E. Louis Fox and Isaac P. Coals of New York city. Japanese Progress. According to foreign papers the sue- cess of the proposed university for women in Tokyo is now assured. The principal officials and nc s of the en pire are greatly interested in the project, and the emperor and empress have not only used their influence in its favor, but have contributed a considerable sum of money toward its endowment. About 300,000 yen (£175,000) will be needed to start the institution. | bubbles all the morning, tived of play | | FOR LITTLE FOLKS. ' In a Minute. Ethel was out on the long plank { wharf when the dinner bell rang. She was feeding the cunning little baby "ducks with cracker crumbs. “I'll go in a minute,’ she said to | herself as she broke another cracker in- | to tiny pieces. But the baby ducks were | hungry, and it was such fun to feed them that Ethel forgot all about her dinner and the big brass dinner bell, just as she had done ever so many times before. She hell only one cracker left when Bruno came running down the wharf to see her. The old mother duck spied him as he came bouncing over the planks. “Quack!” she called loudly, and what do you think? Every one of those baby ducklings scrambled and scrabbled, and into the water they went with a splash! “Quack!” said the mother duck again, and all the little duckies swam hurried- ly after her and disappeared among the rushes that grew by the edge of the pond. “Why,” explained Ethel in astonish- ment, ‘‘they didn’t wait to gobble an- other piece! They minded their mother the very first minute she called them!” Very still stood for a second, thinking, and then sho gave her basket to Bruno and ran quickly up the wharf, acr the street and into the house. “Late, as usual,” said Brother Hal as Ethel came into the dining room and took her seat at table. **It’s 20 minutes, instead of one, that you waited this noon,’ he continued as he glanced up at the clock. “But it’s the last time I'll be late,” said Ethel decidedly, ¢‘ 'cause—'cause —it is!” And Ethel kept her word. She had learned her lesson and learned it well, and nobody but the big white mother duck knew who taught it to her. And I'm very sure that she will al- ways keep her secret. Because why? She can’t tell it, that’s all!l—Margaret Dane in Youth's Companion. Sidewalk Games, The leg muscles and equilibristie ability of the ris ng gereration are being developed by games that make parents grow dizzy in their contemplation. Baseball is a modest form of the na- tional sport. The player ids below the point 2b in the diagram and throws his chip. A home run counts one score. If the chip is thrown on the three bases and home run successively SNAIL BASE BALL® it counts four runs. To throw the chip outside of the diamond means one out, and on the other spots as indicated. When a player scores three outs, he gives up the chip, and the one making the most runs wins. In snail hopscotch the rough outli e of a snail shell is drawn on the pave- ment and divided into about 26 spaces. The player must hop into each space and back without touching one of the lines, which gives him the privilege of writing his initials in any space he de- sires. Other players may not hop on his ini- tials, but he may. When all of the spaces are marked, the player having his initials in the greatest number wins the game. This game is also known as “‘spider.’’—Atlanta Constitution. Colonel Grumpy. He was a darling little boy, With sunny eyes of blue, And happy as the day was long Unless he had to do Some task that did not please him much, And then he was so cross His mother thought her boy was gone And grieved so for his loss, And said, “It was a dreadful case That here in her own dear boy's place Was surly Colonel Grumpy.” Instead of Colonel “That Colonel Grux A little s Then, clas “Good The Good Little Boy. A little boy who had been blowing | {and suddenly growing serious, said, ‘Read me that story about heaven; it’s so gloriouth. “1 will,’ said the mother; ‘but first tell me, did you take the soap out of the water?”’ “Oh, yeth, I'm pretty thure I did.”’ The mother read the description off the beautiful city, the streets of gold, the gates of pearl. He listened with de- light, but when she came to the words, “No one can enter there who loveth or maketh a lie,’ bounding up, he said} “1 guess I'll go and thee about that thoap. "’—Outlook. : The Big San, Eight-year-old—Don’t you know that the sun is ever so much bigger 3 1t the earth? Six-year-old—Then why doesn’t keep the rain offP—Philadelphia Times. troul with Turk maps woul place old I thro one’s brou an aj hand begal empi tute is n hous wher and | cial parti book ency shor foun The it w bom him ter I the 1 the my meat that I kn T pos: volt mal wor Bou seat mar atel, opel wer red and exe the dent and the rvel gkil late art | Eng
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers