Front:
PENNSYLVANIA
COPYRICHT,(892
ARBUCKLE BR
Back:
GRIND YOUR No. 60.
PENNSYLVANIA.
COFFEE
HE claim of the Dutch to the soil of Pennsylvania rested on the
discovery of Delaware Bay by Hendrik Hudson in 1609. Seven
AT HOME. far as the Schuylkill, and ephemeral colonies soon arose along the
years later, Cornelis Hendricksen explored the Delaware River as
lower shores. Swedish ships entered the Delaware in 1638, and
their people founded the first towns in Pennsylvania. The Puritan
It will pay you well to keep a small cof- immigrants from Connecticut, settling on the Schuylkill in 1641,
fee-mill in your kitchen and grind your were ousted and sent home by the Swedes and Dutch
coffee just as you use it--one mess at a
When the brave Admiral Sir William Penn died, the British
time. Coffee should not be ground until Government owed him £16,000. In 1680, his son, William Penn,
the coffee-pot is ready to receive it. Cof-
fee will lose more of its strength and petitioned King Charles II. to discharge this debt by granting him
aroma in one hour after being ground Delaware River; and so the next year, Penn was made absolute
a tract of land in America, north of Maryland and west of the
than in six months before being ground.
So long as Ariosa remains in the whole proprietor of the new province. During the forty years after 1683,
berry, our glazing, composed of choice more than 50,000 Germans and Swiss settled in Pennsylvania.
After the death of the wise Quaker founder, in 1718, the govern-
eggs and pure confectioners' A sugar, ment lay in the hands of his kinsmen, John, Richard and Thomas
closes the pores of the coffee, and there- Penn, and their heirs, until 1776.
by all the original strength and aroma
are retained. Ariosa Coffee has, during States, Pennsylvania was strongly opposed to human servitude, and
Although contiguous to one of the most conservative slave
25 years, set the standard for all other its Quaker population took strong ground against the Southern
roasted coffees. So true is this, that institution. The battle of Gettysburg has made the peaceful little
other manufacturers in recommending Pennsylvania village of that name immortal.
The field where
their goods, have known no higher praise the battle was fought contains a large number of monuments,
than to say: "It's just as good as Ar-
buckles'."
ARBUCKLE BROS.,
Braddock's Defeat; Benjamin Franklin ; Penn's Treaty with the
Indians, 1682; Liberty Bell, Independence Hall, Philadelphia.
ILLUSTRATIONS.
NEW YORK CITY.
THIS IS ONE OF A SERIES OF FIFTY (80) CARDS GIVING A PICTORIAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES AND TERRITORIES,
DONALDSON SROTHERS, NY