E the Malian. , d itstiletta, SATURDAY, MARCH 7,1863, 13'.. WWII. MATHER & ABBOTT, No. 335 Broadway, New-York, are duly authorized to act for us iii soliciting advertisments, &c., cud receipt for the same. W The National Currency Bill, originated by Secretary Chase, and re ported to the Senate by Mr. Sherman, of Ohio, passed the United States House of Representatives by a vote of 78 yeas to 64 Mum. The beneficial effects of the measure are already manifest. Govern ment Stocks rose immediately, notwith standing the efforts of the brokers to keep them down. The leading feature of the bill is the establishment of one sound, uniform circulation, of equal val ve throughout the whole country, upon the foundation of national credit com bined with private capital. In this re spect the people will find in the measure' uniformity in their currency, iuiformity in security, effectual safeguards against 'depreciation, and protection from loss Eby iliscomit sod exchanges. , Once in etpastims tie bill will not fail to be so popular with the people that it , can never be repealed. ellr Two brothers, named Joseph and -John Fitzwalter; lived together with .their sister for a great ember of years, in Parlimeet street, Nottingham, Eng land, the sister acting in the capacity of housekeeper. Joseph, the eldest one, attacked, a few days, since, with bronch itis, and died three weeks ago, at the age of eighty-four. The surviving broth er was very much affected by his death .and expired one hour afterwards, at the age of eighty years. The death of two brothers to whom the sister was devo tedly attached, was too great a shock for her frame to withstand, and on the morning fixed for their interment, she also expired, at the age eightytwo ar A Union club has been organized tit Boston, embracing many of the lead ing citizens, noted for their patriotism. Bon. Edward Everett ham accepted the Presidency. The mansion of the late Abbott Lawrence, on Park street, has 'been purchased for the headquarters of the club, at the price of $50,000. The impose of the association is understood to be an unwavering support of the Go vernment in its efforts to put down the rebellion. Q The official - report of General itosecrans of the battle of Murfreesboro do published. The report states that the entire mumber actually engaged on the Federal aids was 43,400 and the loss do killed and wounded 8,778 or 20 per .cant of the whole force. The Confed erates engaged were about 63,000, and their loss, estimating from actual re turns in three divisions," is set down at 14,500, or about 27 per cent. It is stated that General 'Daniel Ullman, of New York, is to command a 'negro brigade in Louisiana. He goes out there with a .complete set of white officers for two regiments, the cank sad lile to be raised from the .contrabands. A son of Vice President Hamlin is to be one of the colonels, and the visit e the Vice President down East is said to be for the purpose of arranging the or sanization of these regiments. Or' In compliance with an official call v►` letter of Lieut. Gee. Scott, dated Oc tober 18th, 1861, has been sent to Con .gress. At that time the writer was •Generatin-Chief, and Geo. B. McClel .lan commanded the Army of the I'oto •mac. Gen. Scott complains of McClel lan's insubordination, and begs the Set .retary of War to put a atop to it. All cClellan's despatches will soon be sent .to Congress, and probably will be print ed in full. r lirG en. Hooker is the seventh corn louder of the Army of the Potomac.-- First, General Scott who was followed by McDowell, who was in torn followed by McClellan; the latter gave way to Pope—who established his headquarters in the saddle, after which he was sue. ceeded by the general whom he ousted in the . .first, place. Then conies Burn side, and now Hooker. lir Congress closed its labors on Wednesday last, after one of the most important sessions ever held. The amount of appropriations made by them, it is said, will reach the sum of more than $2,000,000,000. sr The , amount of money to be paid into the United States Treasury, for ea emition from military duty, by the Friends of Indiana, it is said, will 'amount to about two hundred and fifty /three' thousand dollars. per' Whe-bill-autharising the President to rousp'end -the :writ Ihatiess .corpus has passed :boob houses, and with the President shithtrs;*ill -become a law of the !and. or The Court of Inquiry, summoned at the request of General McDowell to investigate certain charges--made rath er by common report than in any more direct way—against him, has completed its labors, and its judgment has just been made public. The court acquits him of blame in any particular except one ; his having gone to Manassas on the afternoon or evening of the 28th of August, to confer personally with Gen eral Pope, on the appeal of the latter for bis views, whilst his command was on the march upon Centerville. It is mentioned that Lien, Pope, McDowell's superior, did not censure him for this ; of this tho court says : That the sep aration was inconsiderate and unauthor ized, but was not induced by , any un worthy motive." The charge of disloy alty, made by an officer of the rank of colonel, after being lately wounded in battle, in general terms, without defi ning any specific ant, is fully disproved by all the evidence bearing, on the point. The court denounces the charge of drunk enness against Gen. McDowell as ri diculous. It is only justice to an officer who has borne in manly Csaide an unex ampled weight of reproach and calumny to spread abroad the conclusions of the court, which has carefully examined into every charge, and now declares him innocent in intention, faithful to his .flag, and zealous to meet and beat the enemy. ar Thomas H. Seymour, the copper head nominee for Governor of Connecti cut, has been a bitter opponent of the war from its commencement. He made such an ostentatious and indecent dis play of disloyal sympathies, that he wa4 socially tabooed among his own neigh bors: His portrait was taken dowa from its place in the State Hall by or der of the Legislature. He was den mo oed as a miserable tool of Jeff. Davis by the Democratic press of New Ent, land, sod read oat of the party by Dew - ocratic Conventions. And yet this mail is now nominated for Governor by thos9 who spurned him - a few months since-- and nominated by. acclamation. The New London Star, a prominent Demo cratic paper of the State, bolts the nom ination, and says that thousands of toy al hearts will grieve to read some of the resolutions and speeches of the late con vention. plir Mrs. Jane 13-. Swisshelm delivered a lecture in Washington on Saturday, closing with the avowel—"Minnesotrt will never make peace with the SioelC Indians. Whenever they . get out from Uncle Samuel's wing we will hunt them, shoot them, set traps for them, put out poisoned baits for them, kill them by every means we would use to e.vtermin. ate panthers. We cannot breathe thi) the same air with these demon violators of women, crueifiers•of infants. Every Minnesota man who has a soul, and can get a rifle, will go to shooting Indian s and he ,whe hesitates will be black belle d by every Minnesota woman, and postiul as acoward in every Minnesota hose,). igir la Boston, the City Clerk has to giire a permit before a body can be 'bu ried in , a graveyard. The question bas arisen whether the permit had to bee r a stamp, and Commissioner Bontwell' de cides that it mast. So that a man Tan not be buried is Boston unless bis friends first pay a ten cent tax. Tb 1.13 Turning the revenue law "into the ground." ''lt is the positive opinion of Sen ators, who judge from the great number of written applications made to them. selves, that an African army a hundred. thousand strong could be officered with white men on a fortnight's notice.— Tbe blacks of New Orleans were the 'first to hear of the New Year's procla mhtion of freedom. *eV Another unhappy ballet girl has been seriously if not fatally burned on the stage. The accident occured at Sadler's Wells Theatre on theß;th. The poor girl's light gauze drost caught fire, and in an instant she<as enveloped in flames. She now li:es in an hospital in an Almost hoplest; condition, Cr The French Emperor has a silver vase in his bed-.:tom, which was lately found by tae diggers on the site of the ancient city of Alesia. His Majesty has pursuadod himself that it belonged to Julius Ctesar, and has taken an ex traordinary liking to it. er Gen. Hooker is - establishing a bakery in every division of Abe camp, and making arrangements .for serving out potatoes and onions with the daily ration. He is doing. everything possi ble for the comfort of the army in the prevailing mnd. ar Intelligence has been received of the death of Alei. Gilchrist, of the vi cinity of Pleasant Unity, and a member of the 166th Regiment, (drafted men.) He was found drowned in a well at camp near Newborn, N. C. liar Prussia contains a popUlation of 18,491,316. There are 11,298,275 Prot eStant, 6,907,000 Roman Catholics, 1202 Greeks, 13,916 Annabaptists, 16,283 Dissenters, - 254,785 Jewi. air, Brig. - Gen. John Cochrane has re signed_ his command, and has issued a - spirited parting,addreskto his soldieri, c•v-rd)TIIE MA.RIETTIAN. Short Scraps of News front our Exchanges. There is great activity in the coal trade jest now, and the increase in ton nage on the railroad and canal is con siderably increased over former years. The Reading Railroad Company are adding 2,000 additional coal cars to their rolling stock. The Schuylkill Navigation Company have already con tracted for 100 additional boats, which will be put on the canal as fast as they are finished. A captured letter of Major Wheeler, chief of cavalry in Gen. Bragg's army, shows the rebels like ourselves, have very sore troubles from desertion, in subordination;-and demoralization. We may well imagine, then, how it would be with them, if, instead of shooting and hanging offenders sr sternly as they do, they were to be as indulgent toward them as we,are. They wouldn't have, in three months, even the skeleton of an army. A Port'arid tailor advertidei a very bekut t .ful article of enameled steel shirtz cellars, at . Sliettelit England. They can hardly be distinguished froin'the paper collars, so fashionable, and will no doubt entirely supersede them. If they become soiled, - you have only to sponge them to restore their whiteness. The•nes of cotton in the manufacture of shirt•collars is at an end. Wilbert joslen, aged about twelve years, and residing near Girard, Erie comity, met with a singular accident a few days ago. He slipped and sail with an open knik in his hand, the point stri king in his right eye, perforating the tinder lid and piercing the ball. It is feared he has destroyed or seriously im paired Cas sight. General Grant hiva issued an order from his headquarters requiring all the bars on all boats in the Government service in-hie Department to be closed, and no spiritous, vinous, or malt liquors will be allowed to be sold on the boats or in the camps.. Card-playing and gaming are also strictly prohibited. During the reign of terroism in France a. speculator projected and published a your nal devoted merely to a list of the executed. Of this journal ten duodeci mo numbers, of thirtylee.ves each, were published, and the work is known to modern collectors as the Journal des Guillotine& A. letter from our army before• 'Vicks burg states that Jacob Thompson, BR cbanani Secretary of the Navy, was found in the river to-day, (31st) in. a skiff, in one of darinucketo boats, and compelled to heave to. Lie is now in care of Rear-Admiral Porter. A. letter bas been received from Gen eral McClellan. dated at Washington, and addresed to the City Councils of Baltimore, declining a proposed public reception. le sieys he appreciates the complimeht, but has already declined all public demonstrations. . A proposition is now before -the- Re bel Congress to sell into perpetual sla very every negro captured from the Union armies. This, is, however, an improvement ; the practice has heed to shoot all such. prisoners; William Wright, (Democrat) was on Thursday elected U. S. Senator by the Legislature of New Jersey, for six years from the 4th of March. He takes the place of J. W. Wall, a "Copperhead" of the most venomous sort. - An English paper recently stated that Great Britian shipped about 13,000,006 pounds (65-pound bundles) of gunpow der, directly or indirectly, to the South in the first three days of 1863. The Viceroy of• Egypt has, placed at eat the disposal of Prance. eight.hundred negro slaves. They are-to'be embarked in a French war steamer, and dispatched to Mexico. The court-Martial in the case of Gen. McKinstry results in a sentence that he be dismissed from the service, which the the President has approved. Major-General, Fremont, has, for the second time, we believe, urged* the Go vernment to give big! SOmething to dg —some act!ve service, • Paul•ildorphy has positively- declined to play the match proposed with M. Kol ish in Pails, and announces his intention to abstain from all chess play at.present. It is said that the French Emperor will send his cousin, Prince Napoleon, to attend as his representative at the marriage of the Prince of Wales. A nephew of Abd-el Bader, married to a Christian wife, is about to be bap tized in Paris and intend 3 to prbebed to the Sahara ati a missionary. • The Duke of Devonshire offered Xl,- 000 for the, bullet which was extracted. from Garibaldi's foot but faileA to ob tain it. Garibaldi does not yet leave his. bed, as the wound has not closed ;, but the cure is making rapid progress, Tike marriage contract of the Prince of Wales is published. The Princess is secured £lO,OOO a year. There are in Switzerland 1,483,208 Protestants and 1,040,469 Oatho Prince Alfred is Row a lieutooaat.iu th Royal navy. Sr Mayor Opdyke, of New York, sent in a special message to the Coun cil, vetoing the joint resolution of that body, tendering the hospitalities of the city r to General Fitz John Porter. His Honor, after reviewing the evidence of the court martial, and recalling the sen tence dismissing him from the service of the United States, says :—"That con duct is not of a character to enlist the sympathy of his fellow citizens, or to entitle him to municipal honors. On the contrary, it is such as must stamp his name with infamy and excite the in dignation of every unbiassed friend of his country. * * * Instead of cen suring the Government for its conduct in the case of Fitz John Porter, I think we should award it our highest praise, and ask it to meet out the same even handed justice to all officers guilty of like offences." sir About eighteen months ago, Mrs. Margaret Jana Taylor and James Silt lifr of Smithfield, near Brighton, Cana da West; were both arrested, charged with administering poison to James . Taylor, husband of the aforementioned Mrs. Taylor, with intent to kill. The • trial resulted in an Acquittal, since which time, although Taylor was not dead, Mrs. Taylor and Sutlif have been living together as man and wife. Her husbacid, James Taylor, was a paralytic, and on Thursday, the 26th ultimo, while in a helpless state, it is alleged she placed him against a hot stove, set fire to his shirt and a bed guilt she had thrown over him, and left him to perish in the flames. The unfortunate man survived until Friday, when death put an aid to his torments. ---arThe conscription inmany portions of the South. where the rebels away,- is prosecuted:with the.most relentless de termination and cruelty. In Northern Alabama there are many Union men, and the minions of Jeff. Davis are busy in their efforts to. force them into the Confederate ranks. The Union men have lain hid out in the woods and caves rather than -- to be taken as conscripts.— This induced -a novel hunt for them, and guerrillas and blood-hounds have been put upon their track,• and many a prior victim has been smelled out in this way. Not long since as a young girl, carrying food to her father who was hiding in a cave, was attacked by one of these blood hounds and torn to pie ;ea. sr The , paid system of negro labor on plantations in Louisiana—slavery having been abolished—is stated in late letters from New Orleans, to work with good effect. The negroes receive from $8 to $lO per month—one-half.at the , , . end of the month, and the other half at the end of the year. The rules adopted for their government are said to operate beneficially. Probably the proprietors, who were obliged by the military power to introduce this new system, will find it more profitable to pay for than to own their labor, to say nothing of getting rid of a vast deal of trouble. sr The rebeli - have been boasting of the number of vessels which have run the blockade, and even Mr. Mason put the numbei•as high as 'four hundred.— The report of the rebel:Secretary of the Treasury shOws the falsity of these boasts, for he puts the whole custom- house duties for ten months 'ending in December last at: only $666,556. The commerce that yields bat a little more than half a million of dollars _revenue for nearly a year 'cannot be very extol]. sive. This fact proves the blockade to be a little too strict for the rebel com fort and necessities. so- In the Church at East Canaan, N. H., on the 25th ultimo, at the mo ment Rev. Mr. Barron, a Universalist minister, rose from the sofa to pronounce the benediction, the chimney, weighing perhaps a ton, fell through the ceiling and crushed -through the sofa down to the ground, cradling the Bible. Mr. Barron was hit by some of the splinters and fragments, but escaped with his life. If he had, been a heterodox speak er and been crushed in his seat, what a signal special providence it would have been ! 44" The Daughter of Mr. J. Brehm, the celebrated English vocalist, was re . sently married, for the fourth time to Mr. Chichester Fortescue, Under-Sec retary of State for the colonies. She ie was married Frances, Countess of Waldegrava, 1- first marriage was to the Flon. ttapl; Waldegrave ; her sec ond to Geoilie Edward, seventh Earl Waldegraiie ; her third to Mr. George Granville Harcourt, son of Dr. Harcourt, Archbish4 of York. She is now 42 years of age. lar The Springfield Republican says : "Henry`Ward •Beecher was in the train with.. McClellan,. recently—in a front car, the hero behind. 4 Where is the General.r. inquired a companion:' 'ln the rear, as usual,' replied Henry Ward. Er The turtle and thetOrtoise belong to the same group of reptiles ; in fact,the turtle' is a marine to/toles with webbed feet, which principally inhabits the wa ter and is only found occasionaly on the land, . Or Victor Hap) has written. a trag edy of 'which pld John Brown is the ,hero; • C NUTRIA ON GARRISON DUTT.—Twen ty-foar soldiers, crippled in the defence of their country, offer (through the col nms of the Washington Star) to garris on forts, so that men more fitted for active service may be enabled to leave for the field. The offer has been made with the belief that there are many soldiers throughout the country in sim ilar disabled condition who will gladly volunteer for this purpose. This is a spirit worthy-of the days of Revolution. Had this same spirit animated the hearts and purposes of the entire North, the Government would not, as now be lean ing upon a slender thread. A _LONG LOST SON RETURNED. —M r. 'Samuel Krause, eldest son of .11r. John J. Krause, Sr., of Allentown, returned home unexpectedly last week from Li ma, Peru, in South America, after an absence of 27 years. For the last 17 years no intelligence whatever had been received from him, and his parents and friends had settled down in the belief that he was dead. Se returned to this country as Secretary of Legation from the Peruvian Government, and on Sat urday left Allentown for Washington to assume_ his duties. Buansroz's CRRED.--In his recent visit to Providence, R. 1., Gen. 'Burn side, with no ovation, becaiise he de sired none, appearing everywhere in citizens' dress;made one incidental re mark which is worth preserving, as cov ering the Whole giound, and showing the patriot and hero in one. When asked what be thought of this measure or that move of the - government, he -re plied "Illy creed is short. The go vernment =lst be sustained; the re bellion must and will be put dawn." or An upstart captain undertook to drive from his seat an old gentleman muffled in a cloak, in the cars between Washington and Baltimore, not long since_ The old gentleman bore the fel low'slinsolence as long as he could, when he threw off his cloak, revealing a major general's rig, and ordered the captain under arrest for ungentlemanly and llll eoldierlike conduct.. The old gentleman was Gen. Couch. - gir An absurd practice of would=be .. fashionables has been to publish with their wedding notices, "no cards"—in . dicating that no cards are sent. 'the thing is being' extensively "taken off", by fun-loving New:Yorkers—for exam ple : A recent marriage notice in a daily paper had appended to it, "No friends to send cards to ;" another one "No cards, no gloves;" a third announ ced, "Cake, but no boxes," fir They had a. kind of semi-public baby show in "Pooduc" (Cape Eliza beth, Me.) recently, and the mothers were requested, to , decide which baby should have the prize ILIS the smartest and handsomest.. When the slips con taining the votes were examined, it was found that each mother had voted her own the handsomest ! How very na tural to be sure ! I tar The Bedouins, says Kitson, are a most alert and military race, and yet it is an undoubted•fact that the quantity of food usually Consumed by the greater part of them, does not exceed six ounces ' a day. Six or seven dates soaked in melted butter, serve a mau a whole day, and he esteems himself happy when he can add a small quantity of flour or a little bill of rice. fur Mrs. Douglas has written a letter relative to the .reports that she was about to be married again. The follow. jug extract is published : "Although I live so quietly, the - world seems to talk about me. I have been, disturbed by rumors that I am-engaged. I hope you will think enough of me not to allow any one ever to say such a thing to you with out resentment. Sr It is stated that the Pennsylva nia Central Railroad has leased the Williamsport and Elmira Road, and will in connection with the Erie, and the Buffalo, New York and Erie Roads, make a direct passenger line between Buffalo and Washington, much shorter than any other route. There has here tofore been no running arrangement of the trains on these roads.. iss- The Boston Transcript says : "One of our largest publishing houses is about sending the stereotype plates of a bulky octavo volume to England to be printed, the cost of paper in America being so ruinously advanced that the work ,can be done cheaper abroad, reck oning in all the expenses of freight, du, ties and exchange. ea- A Mrs. Lyons, while attending a wedding at the house of •a Catholic priest, in Boston. lost $1,345, which she had tied up in a stocking, attached by a string to her hoop skirt. The stocking and precious contents hale not since been heard of by the unlucky owner. air Gen. Tom Thumb it is said is 25 years old, '3L: inches high and weighs .. 29 pounds; Miss Minnie Warren is 16 years of age, 25 inches high and weighs 19 pounds ; Commodore Nutt is 2t years old, 29' inches high and weighs 20 pounds. • sr The 37th Congress, Rae, by eon: stitetionspimitapon.,brAnght.An &close 41,11 Wertneederlestill.nreh 4th. • GEN. KEARNEY'S WILL.---The Will of General Phil. Kearney was admitted to probate in New York recently. The will is so originally dated at Paris, Jan uary Bth, 1861, but a codicil to the same is dated at Washington, March 17, 1662, and is witnessed by General Daniel But terfield and Wm. Forsyth, surgeon, of Washington City. Though the deceas ed was a resident of New Jersey, still a 3 he left property in New York, the will had also to be admitted by the surrogate of that county. The original will com mences. "I, Philip Kearney, formerly in the United States Army, a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor of the Empire of France." To his wife ho bequeathed the Sam of $4,000 per annum, with use of the real estate at Bell Grove, New Jersey, to his son Watts. To h is.datigh ter, Susan Kearney, ho bequeathed the sum of $lO,OOO. The settlement of the income of $BO,OOO, and the principal sum of $lO,OOO to his first wife, Diana litt, the testator desires; on her diciest', should revert to his children by her.— To his daughter Virginia, lately born to him, he bequeathed $5OO per annum un til she reaches her fifteenth year. The executor is his cousin, Edward Kearue7 of New York. " DARING LEAP ofd SLAVE GIRL.-- Thy . Nashville Dispatch of the 11th instant, says : Two colored women belonging to Mrs. Story bad rented a house and were living on the corner of Union and Cher ry streets. Two or three days ago Mrs. Story went to the house and said to the younger of the women that she must go with her to. Shelbyville. The girl said she did not wish to go. Mrs. Story said it made no difference—she must get her things immediately. The girl then went up stairs, and not coming down when directed, she was sent for. The girl then went out upon the top of the house, and being still followed, jumped from the top of the house to the ground with her child (which it may be men tioned is white) in her arms, injuring the child and herself severely. Mrs. Story caught her upon the ground, but after a struggle the girl effected her es cape. Tu Nliwr AT Pilii.ADELPtiiA.—The eommissioners for making trial of the gold and silver coinage of the United States, for the year 1563, are Professor Joseph Henry, Smithsonian Institute ; Charles D. Drake, Eiq., St. Louis ; Pro fessor •Agassie, Ilarvard University ; Hon. Edward Everett, Massuclusetts ; T. S. Bell, Esq., Lciu4ville, Ky.; Dr. S. M. Smith Columbus, Ohio ; Professor John Torrey, New - York ; and Profes sor J. ft Alexandria,' Baltirnore. The ex officio commissioners aro the U. S. Judge and U. S. Attorney for the Eas tern District of Pennsylvania, and the Collector of the port of Philadelphia. GEN. M LEI.L.AN!S 013E11.—Tbe hOll was bought in the name of Mrs. Ellen McClellan (the General's Wife). It was paid for with a check drawn by Ur. Samuel L. M. Barlow. The carpets furnished by Mr. A. T. Stewart, were .paid for with Mr. Bartow's check. The decorator, Mr. Marcotte, was paid with Mr. Barlow's check. The chandeliers, from Bailey's, were paid in the same manner. Mr. Barlow, therefore, seems to have been the moneyed man in the party. Who the .eontributors were not so well known. It is said by some ill-natured people that .1 heir ember was 290. FLOUT AT A FUNERAIL.:—.A. most out rageous and disgraceful affair took place on Saturday last, a few miles from Brownsville. An old gentleman died at the house of his nephew, and on the day of the funeral another nephew came is company with his wife, to pay their re spects to their deceased relative. A grudge existed between the two neph ews, and when the resident of the hones saw the other (who is his brother-in-law) he fell upon and beat him until others interfered and seperated them. The man who was assulted and beaten is over fifty years of age. TRIPLETS.—On Sunday last the wife of JaMes Moorehead, Esq., Treasurer of Indiana county, presented her husband with three 'children at one birth—two boys and a girl. If one child makes a man happy, Mr. M., must be thrice hap. py. He has had born to him eight chil dren at five births—having been pre sented once with twins and once. with triplets. The mother and babes are do ing well. DEATH OF A fiEHOINE.-L-AtilaiG ' Cadet Lee, the daughter and only child of General Lee, of the Rebel army, died recently at Jones' Springs, North Caro line, ah outcast from her home became she remained true to her flag under which her ancestors, won their laurels, and true to the Government which bad• always treated her father as a parent treated a favorite child. SINGIMAR.—:-The Georgetown Messen ger states that an old man named San& West was called' on to . pray in the M. E. Church, at Lewes, on the night of the 9th ult., which he did with unusual fervency, saying he hoped to meet hie children, in heaven Src. As he did not rise from-his -.knees when he closed one of the congregation approached, and was astanshed to find that he was dead. if" McDo-welihaa been sicgtat . te4 by the - Court Martitl 2
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers