Bemorra atc, Bellefonte, Pa., June 7, 190l. FARM NOTES. —Grow a crop of carrots and provide a suitable place in advance in which to store them for use next winter. They are not equal to some foods, but they provide suc- culent material and are relished by all classes of stock. —When the limb of a tree is removed the wound should be covered. Coal tar is excellent, and will serve to prevent the en- trance of spores or dirt. When small branches are removed it may not be neces- sary to apply the tar, but for large cuts it should never be overlooked. —Plant more peas for a succession or late suppiy. Late sweet corn may be planted up to July, and beets should also again be put in for a second supply. As the crops in the garden do not produce seed, being utilized before reaching maturity, two crops may be grown of a large proportion of the varieties of vegetables. —Tests made with alfalfa in the Eastern States show that it will grow on almost any soil that is not too wet, and that it is bet- ter on very light soils than clover. It has been grown on the whitesand lands of New Jersey and gave good yields. After the first year it seems to be able to take care of itself so far as climate is concerned. —But few weeds are found on well culti- vated farms, for the reason that if they are kept down and not allowed to produce seed they must consequently decrease in number until the farm is clear of them, and when they are seen on a farm it is evi- dence that the owner has not done his best to destroy them in the past. —The prices of beef cattle are higher now than many years ago, and the breeds are better. If it paid farmers in former days to raise cattle it should pay now. Even if steers gave no profit in market, the manure will he a valuable item. The quantity of corn fodder wasted every year would sup- port enough cattle to supply the Eastern markets. —The farmer who diversifies his crops will not always be met by overproduction in the markets, as the seasonable condi- tions are not favorable to all crops at the same time, consequently if the market is well supplied with one article in abun- dance there may be a scarcity of something else. Diversity of crops is also better for the soil and assists in maintaining fer- tility. —After the day’s work every night the shoulders of the work teams should be thoroughly washed and dried. It may be that yon are tired and that the chores will keep you busy until late, but it will pay to leave the fields half an hour earlier and groom your team. You will have better and truer horses and better and more work out of them. Wash the inside of the col- lars and pound the padding into shape. —Such crops as beans, melons, sweet corn, squash and tomatoes will not make much growth during the cool nights that prevail, while the weather conditions have been very favorable for the operations of cut-worms. Seed planted now will make as early crops as those planted sooner, as the warm days of summer will enable the plants to grow without being kept back by cool nights. It is probable that garden crops will be later than usual this season. —Buckwheat is a profitable crop and _ thrives on profitable soil. It is what may be termed a summer grain crop, as the seed is broadcasted in June and the crop harvested before the frost. It is grown as a green manurial crop or for the grain. If provides an abundant forage for bees when in blossom, though some do not claim the honey therefrom to be of the highest quali- ty. Being of rapid growth, buckwheat crowds the weeds and prevents them from growing, and as it shades the soil if is re- garded as one of the best crops that can be grown for that purpose. —With all the remedies suggested for blight on pear trees, the difficulty still ex- ists, and many pear orchards are destroyed every year. At one time it was believed that by keeping the orchard ground in grass the pear trees would escape, hut, while the rapid growth of the trees seems favorable to attack of blight, and although the grass may retard attack, yet the trees sooner or later succumb to the disease should it find its way into the orchard. The spraying of trees, or treating the trees at the roots will confer henefit, but there is no sure remedy for blight. —Thistles can he eradicated by shallow cultivation of the ground. They are prop- agated from the roots and from seed. Every time the plowing is deep the roots of the thistles are broken, and every piece of root detached from the main root sends out another thistle. The easiest and best meth- od of destroying thistles is to grow some crop that requires the use of a hoe, or that needs only shallow cultivation, for if the thistles are cut down as fast as they appear above ground they will die. After the crop grown upon the land has been remov- ed turn sheep on the land, and they will give the thistles no chance to more than show above ground. —Soils that are unfit for cultivation can be used to advantage for poultry. A sandy location is always dry, and the fowls can find more or less green food that would be insignificant in quantity for cattle. It is safe to claim that in this section of the country there is no soil that does not con- tain growth of some kind, even if but scant, and as fowls prefer the young and tender plants that are just appearing above ground, whether weeds or grass, they can at least find all the green food necessary. The advantage of a sandy location, how- ever’ is its dry soil. Fewer diseases occur on sandy soils, and the fowls will require less care where they escape mud and damp- ness. With good shelter and attention in feeding the fowls a plot of sandy land can be made to pay. —Farmers who at one time abandoned sheep are again bringing them on the farms. They are also learning that there is more money in mutton than in wool. A few sheep can be kept with but little expense on any farm. They are dainty feeders, so far as cleanliness of food is concerned, but they will consume a great variety of foods and will accept kinds that some animals reject. Bean vines, which do not seem to find favor with cattle, will be eaten readily by sheep, and they will consume anything in the shape of provender that is fit for food. On the pasture they are industrious in seeking as delicacies young weeds and other growth that would take possession of the field but for them, also making the land more fertile with their droppings, which are uniformly scattered and trampled in. A dozen sheep on a farm should cost the farmer almost nothing for food. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Shirtwaist neckwear is just now hother- ing womankind. Here are a few of the pretty fixings that are being worn. Linen collars with black ties, tied in the tiniest bows. The new point is the really diminutive size of the bow. Choker and tie of white lawn, with little turnover collar, both collar and tie having narrow hemstitched edges in color. These tied in a butterfly bow in front,are decided- ly dainty and will undoubtedly have great vogue. Pique stocks with tie having ends drawn through a buckle in front. Ribbon tied in all manner of ways. But when ribbon is used it generally corre- spouds with the color note of the hat. Heavy pique or madras choker and tie, known in man’s parlance as the Ascot puff. Addison regarded cleanliness as the fos- ter-mother of beauty, declaring that ‘‘Beauty commonly produces love; but cleanliness preserves it.”’ Consequently we will take it for granted that our girls are exquisitely clean. The hair demands careful attention. brush ; shampoo it twice a month. Singe the ends every three months, and have the scalp massaged occasionally. The forehead—Don’t cultivate wrinkles by talking with your eyebrows. If your forehead is lined prematurely use lanoline and massage it, first in the opposite direc- tion from the lines, then in a rotary move- m~nt. Three months will not be too long to eflect a cure. The eyes—Never tamper with your eyes. Wash them very often, keep the brows well shaped and nature will do the rest. The nose may not be purely Greek, but it need not be coarse and red-veined. Steam will remove black-heads ; mas- sage improves the circulation, and helps rout the veiny appearance so often seen in full-blooded girls. The mouth can be kept sweet by care of the teeth and stomach. A wash of camphor and myrrh is very dainty. The lips can be kept scarlet by taking lots of exercise, walking and keeping the blood pure and rich. The chin is prevented from growing a twin or triplet by sleeping upon a very small pillow and never forgetting to hold the head well poised upward. ‘‘Fat’’ girls should never use any pillow. The throat and neck are especially lovely possibilities in a girl. Steam, carolene and exercise will make the scrawny neck as- sume plump proportions, while the last named and massage will reduce undue tis- sue quickly. The arms—Pretty arms are talents. We can do much to delight other eyes if our arms are lovely. Exercising the biceps for ten minutes each day, and scrubbing them with a nail brush from top to wrist will do wonders in keeping them in order. The hands—Poets have always stolen woman’s hands as themes of beauty. They are—if beautiful. An ill-kept, be-ringed hand is the maximum of ugliness. A hand that shows daily—aye, almost con- stant—vigilance, with rosy, oval nails, im- maculately white as to the rest, will be an eloquent witness of beauty’s daintiness. The form is quite too long a story for a paragraph or two, but one can but urge our girls to avoid leanness as carefully as obesity. They should do this intelligently and not be guided by vanity or impulse. The feet natually end this story. Be as careful of your nails upon the feet as on the hands. Never wear tight shoes or poorly made ones. Wear dainty stockings and change them daily. The conventional white bedspread, the Marseilles quilt, has had its day and now must make way for its more dainty suc- cessors of white linen lawn. These are hand- embroidered. Every thread is drawn by hand and the designs are very elaborate. Rose sprays trail across them and the edges are elaborate with Mexican drawn work. These new spreads are cool and airy af- fairs and add much to the beauty of the hedroom that the Marseilles could not. Their prices range from $12 to $50. The approved outline of the fashionable skirt in Paris, according to the latest news from over the sea, is exactly that of a re- versed lily. The calyx fits as tightly and closely as possible around the hips, and the petals swing out from just above the knees, swirling widely around the feet. This ar- rangement renders it very troublesome to hold up a skirt effectually, and yet it is almost impossible to walk in it without lifting it, except by a slow, gliding move- ment, pushing the skirt before one’s feet, as it were. Besides the inconvenience of this sliding manner of progression, consid- erations of hygiene and cleanliness, forbid trailing a wide skirt in thestreets. Only on a well-kept lawn or in the house can the newest cut of jupon be worn with any pro- priety and comfort, sweeping its full width around the wearer. Feathers and down are expensive, but if you know a bank where the cat-tail grow, you can make down pillows galore for the mere making, You must know that the fluff of the ripe cat-tail, which may be gathered in August, makes a pillow equal- this year, and if you live near a lake or pond, get you a harvest of cat-tails for fut- ure use. You will find them the most in- expensive and satisfactory material you can employ for the purpose. If it should be your fate to live in a section of the country where cat-tails do not grow, then substi- tute the silk from milk-weed pods. Gather the pods in the fall of the year, hang them away in paper bags to dry and they will can be made up into pillows in the early spring. Angel Food.—Beat the whites of seven eggs very light with a pinch of salt. When stiff add a cup of sugar, a teaspoonful of essence of almond and fold in lightly a cup of flour sifted three times with a teaspoon- ful of cream of tartar. Pour this batter into an ungreased tin with a funnel in the middle, and bake in a steady oven for forty minutes. Do not move the cake while baking. When baked turn the pan upside down over a towel, and when the cake is cool it will slip ont. Cover with a white icing. Black velvet ribbon is wonderfully pop- ular on all the millinery of the day, and, as it is exceedingly becoming, you may welcome the news gladly. The authori- ties are trying very hard to induce us to patronize the hat that bears a perfectly flat, plate-like crown, is tied at the back with a black velvet bow, and boasts as its.only trimming a bandeau beneath the brim in front made of flowers. Brush it every night with a perfectly clean |. ed only by down itself. So be provident burst open before the winter is over and The Origin of OIl Scientists Divided as to Which Kingdom Produces It —Kerosene from Menhaden. At the United States Geological Survey the recent discoveries of oil in Texas, Wy- oming and California are regarded with complaisance not only because they will add millions to the visible wealth of the country, but because they furnish addi- tional fields for investigation into the source and origin of the various grades of ‘‘0il’’ says the Baltimore Sun. With all the study and original research which have been going on for many years in connection with petroleum there is much ignorance on the subject. Where it can be found, whence it comes and its origin are all unanswered questions. When a gusher is struck it spouts a black fluid known as “oil.” This may be a compound of 50 or 100 different oils, which have to be sepa- rated as far as possible before being market- ed. The qualities and characteristics of oil vary not only in the different wells, but often in the same well, the yield from one stratum being different from that of anoth- er lower down. The oil of the United States is entirely different from that found in Russia, Java or Peru, which fact sub- stautiates the theory that the several oils have different origins. One of the theories as to the source of oil is that it comes from the fat of animals or fish which had been squeezed out or dis- tilled through countless ages to be collect- ed in the oil sands. : Experimenting on this line in an effort to verify the theory Warren and Storer took menhaden oil and, through distilla- tion, produced a kerosene, which they marketed without its artificial nature he- ing discovered. In 1888 Engler distilled under pressure half a ton of menhaden oil, froma which he obtained petroleum dis- tillates. The distillate was brown but fluorcscent. Sixty per cent consisted of saturated hydrocarbons, from which he isolated and identified a number of oils usually contained in the products of cer- tain oil fields. He also purified the pro- duct and made good kerosene oil. Not satis- fied with this he went farther and showed that other fats, as olein, will yield petro- leum, so that fish oils are not essential. Another theory that the oil is from vege- table matter is apparently sustained in the case of the Russian fields, where the oils contain a substance similar to the distilla- tion products of coal tar, such as henzole. The theory has been advanced as to the origin of the Pennsylvania oil fields that the petroleums of Pennsylvania owe their origin to the effect of heat upon the under- lying lime stones and shales of the Silurian age. It is claimed that the same force which caused the Appalachian chain to up- lift, passing through the lime stones and shales of the Silurian age at a modified temperature, distilled the oil already con- tained in these shales and conglomerate sands of the Devonian age, where it was condensed and filtered, and found its home in the open, porous conglomerates which characterize the Catskill, Portage and Chemung periods of the Devonian age. It, therefore, seems to be an open ques- tion as to whether oil is of mineral, vege- table or animal origin, and it will doubt- less remain open for some time to come. Little Matters Worth Remembering. Bathe every inch of the body either in water or sun every 24 hours. If you eat lobster, made dishes, pastry and fried foods prepare for bodily coarse- ness. Eyebrows give character to the face. Scanty brows are increased by vaseline and cocoa butter. Hair grows, but dirt is not its natural soil. Keep the scalp clean and brush the hair nightly. Coarse pores require a weak solution of benzoin, with gentle, deep massage. Ten minutes daily spent in stroking away wrinkles will conquer them in 10 weeks. Full-blooded Warm water and Veiny noses are hideous. folk have them. Cure: abstinence. Beef arms denote bad circulation. Swing them vigorously and batbe with weak alcohol. Breathe through the nose for beauty and for health. Breathe as deeply as possible. ‘Rich blood makes beautiful women.” This is made by hygienic foods and sane drinks. Bitter apples and rum (half-pint of rum to one pint of apples) is the finest hair tonic. Meat eaters have more vigorous hair than those who eat little flesh.” Yours be the choice. Keep chemicals away from your hair un- less you are silly. Don’t talk with your forehead; use vour mouth solely for speaking. The odor of perspiration may be entirely deodorized by coming baking soda. A Golden Rule Horse Advertisement, A gentleman who has a Christian spirit and a horse for sale advertises as follows in a Minnesota paper : We have a good fawily driving horse for sale, providing you carry insurance. He is not over particular as to feed. In fact, he prefers our neighbors’ haystacks and corneribs to our own. ‘We feed him whenever we ean catch him, which is seldom. He is partly gentle. The other parts are not, and you must govern yourself accord- ingly. We will throw in the derrick and tele- graph pole combination which we use to hitch him up with. If you are fond of driving we would ad- vise you to engagea cowboy that owns a fast horse to do your driving, and be sure and get on top of the barn before he begins to drive the horse. For price and coroner’s address apply to the owner.— Chicago Record. SEVEN YEARS IN BED.—‘Will wonders ever cease ?’ inquire the friends of Mis. L. Pease, of Lawrence, Kan. They knew she had been unable to leave her bed in seven years on account of liver and kidney troub- les, but, ‘Three bottles of Electric Bitters enabled me to walk,” she writes, ‘“‘and in three months I felt like a new person.” Women suffering from Headache, Backache, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Melancholy, Fainjing and Dizzy Spells, will find it a priceless blessing. Try it. Satisfaction is guaranteed by F. P. Green. Only 50c. ——-Edward Kelley and William Wynn have been arrested on information made by the Clearfield County Game Protective Association for dynamiting Lick run for tront. They were held in $200 bail for court: Doctors and Editors. The Mighty Difference in Their Prpfession and Pro- fits. The doctors are all friends of ours. We expect them to stay with us until death. Yet, at the risk of incurring their displeas- ure, we reproduce the following : We don’t know where it came from, any more than we know whose rainspout the doctor’s medicine comes from. We find it in a paper credited to ‘“Ex.”” If we knew the author we would gladly give his name, because the article is really good. Here it is: The doctor from Algona said that news- papers are run for revenue only. What in thunder do doctors run for, pnyway ? Do they run for glory ? One good, healthy doc- tor’s bill would run this office for six months. An editor works a half-day for $3, with an investment of $3,000; a doctor looks wise and works ten minutes for $200, with an investment of three cents for catnip and a pill box that cost $1.37. A doctor goes to college for three or four years and gets a diploma and a string of words the devil himself cannot pronounce, cultivates a look of gravity that he pawns off for wisdom, gets a box of pills, a cayuse and a meat saw and sticks his shingle out a full-fledged doctor. He will then doctor you until you die at a stipulated price per visit, and puts them in as thick as your pocketbook will permit. An editor never gets his education fin- ished. He learns as long as he lives and studies all his life. He eats bran mash and liver; he takes his pay in turnips and hay, and keep the doctor in town hy refraining from printing the truth about him. We would like tolive in Algona and run a newspaper six months and see if the doc- tor would change his mind about running a newspaper for revenue only. If we didn’t get some glory out of it we would agree to take one of his pills, after first saying our prayers. If the editor makes a mistake he has to apologize for it, but if the doctor makes a mistake he buries it. If we make one there is a law suit, tall swearing and a smell of sulphur, but if the doctor makes one there is a funeral, cut flowers and a smell of varnish. The doc- tor can use a word a foot long, but if the editor uses it he has to spell it. If the doctor goes to see another man’s wife he will charge the man for the visit. If the editor calls on another man's wife he gets a charge of buckshot. Any medical college can make a doctor. You can’t make an editor. He has to be born one. The editor works to keep from starving, while the doctor works to ward off the gout. The editor helps men to live bet- ter, and the doctor assists them to die easy. The doctor pulls a sick man’s leg, the editor is glad if he can collect his bills at all. Revenue only? We are living for fun, and to spite the doctors.—Medical Journal. ——Booker Washington says that during the earlier days of freedom almost every negro who learned to read would receive ‘“‘a call to preach’’ within a few days after he began reading. He tells of a colored man in Alabama who one hot day in July, while he was at work in a cotton field, sud- denly stopped, and looking towards the skies, said: '‘O Lawd, de cotton am so grassy, de work am so hard and the sun is so hot, I b’lieve dis darky am called to preach !”’ ——We blame others for slight things and over-look greater in ourselves. Castoria. ‘ AST O R 1 A cC A ET" OR I A Cc AS T 0 BR I A Cc A'S T 0 BR I A c A BT O BR I A cece BEARS THE SIGNATURE OF BA EeeeeeeaeietaieareieesiieetuTrs Seusraseirasenaste trata tanann KIND ' YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGH1 In Use For Over 30 Years. ccc C C Cc Cc > neRNen Hass 000000 ow Bp ccc ed ed po fed ped fon 46-19-1y The Centaur Co., New York City. PorT NEGLECT A COLD. Don’t neglect a cold, if you do, it may cost you your life. “A cold at- tended to at once can easily be cured if you have a remedy, naturally, you want the best, and that is KIL-KOLD Guaranteed to cure you in 24 hours or money refunded. Price 25cts, Take no substitute. Take our word for it, there is nothing just as good ; refuse anything else ; insist on KIL- KOLD. At F. P. Green's or will be sent post paid for 25¢ts. U. 8. ARMY & NAVY TABLET CO. 45-39-3m No. 17 East 14th St., N. Y. Money to Loan. MSE TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, 45-14-1yr. Att'y at Law, McCalmont & Co. VJ cCALMONT & CO.— 0 ———HAVE THE—— Olecerersivrscsariierinssrninsussnssinenseissstisenseinsnsie 1aO S— Ney? { LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE } (errrrsenrnsesattnstistettenuatittettnttennniieittinnasionsnes 0 — Nf — CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. . Their prices are right and their guarantee is behind the goods, which means many a dollar to the farmer. The more conservative farmer wants to see the goods before he buys, and buy where he can get repairs when needed, for he knows that the best machinery will wear out in time. Goods well bought is money saved. Money saved is money earned. Buy from the largest house, biggest stock lowest prices ; where the guarantee is as good as a bond ; where you can sell your corn, oats, wheat hay and straw for cash, at the highest market prices, and get time on what you buy. All who kuow the house know the high standard of the goods, and what their guarantee means to them. SEE WHAT WE FURNISH : LIME—For Plastering or for Land. COAL—Both Anthracite and Bituminous. WOOD—Cut to the Stove Length or in the Cord. FARM IMPLEMENTS of Every Description. FERTILIZER—The Best Grades. PLASTER—Both Dark and Light. PHOSPHATE—The Very Best. SEEDS—Of all Kinds. WAGONS, Buggies and Sleighs. In fact anything the Farmer or Builder Needs. The man who pays for what he gets wants the best his money will buy. There is no place on earth where one can do better than at 46-4-13 McCALMONT & CO’S. BELLEFONTE, PA Jewelry. | Real Estate. Weonve GIFTS snes 0) Flimutugen STERLING SILVER. COMBINE BEAUTY, USEFULNESS AND DURABILITY, for these reasons nothing else is quite so fitting for the occa- sion. Articles for every use in the best expression of taste. es [ ] ree F. C. RICHARD’S SONS, High St. BELLEFONTE PA Williams’ Wall Paper Store. 41-46 OU INTEND HOME BEAUTIFYIN JIS SPRING Certainly you do and we wish to call your attention to the size and quality of our stock of It consists of 50,000 rolls of the most beautiful and carefully selected stock of Wall Paper ever brought TO BELLEFONTE 0 SPECIALTIES 0 Our specialties consist of a large line of beautiful Stripes, Floral De- signs, Burlap Cloth Effects and Tap- estries. Are right, ranging in price from 5c. to $1.00 per roll. We have a large line of Brown Backs at 5¢. and 6e. per roll with match ceiling and two band bor- der at 2c. = yard. Also a large assort- ment of White Blanks 6c. to 10c. per: Jol and matched up in perfect combina- ions. ‘ Our Ingrains and Gold Papers are more beautiful than ever before with 18in. blended borders and ceilings to mateh, in fact anything made in the Wall Paper line this year we are able to show you. ii SKILLED WORKMEN... Are necessary to put on the paper as it should be put on. We have them and Ae gle to do anything in the business. e do Painting, Graining, Paper Hanging, House Decorating, ign Writing, Etc. Sraseiint TRY US AND BE CONVINCED... Also dealer in Picture and Room Moulding, Oil Paintings, Water Colors, Window Shades, Paints, Oils, Glass, Etc. S. H. WILLIAMS, 46-12-3m High Street, BELLEFONTE, PA’ JouN C. MILLER. Pres. J. THomas MircueLL, Treas. REAL ESTATE, LOAN AND TITLE COMPANY —OFel CENTRE COUNTY EpMUND BLANCHARD. Sec'y. Real Estate and Conveyancing. Valuable Town and Country property for sale or rent. Properties cared for and rents collected Loans Negotiated. Titles Examined. Certified Abstracts of Title furnished upon application. Sof Fon have & Farm or Town property for Sle or rent place it in our ands. ou wish to buy or rent a Farm or ouse consult us. If If you wish to borrow money eall on us. Is your title clear? It is to your inter- est to know. It is our’s to assure you. Office Room 3, Bush Arcade, BELLEFONTE, PA. 45-47-1y Telephone connections Green’s Pharmacy. Botti li... ath nec 0 cert st tc cert tn. al allel grey £ gage (OTHER HEADS 4 $ MAY ACHE, r £ i but yours needn’t after the hint we F give you here. Green’s Headache E Cure always cures headache. It E = cures any kind of headache. 8 More than that, it relieves sleep- § lessness, melancholy or dejection. 5 Can’t harm you, no matter how : long you continue them, if F you follow strictly the directions. - : It is worth something to have on { hand a remedy that so quickly £ and safely cures pain. v PRICE 25 CENTS. F 3} { GREEN’S PHARMACY, L i : = HigH STREET, F 1 } £ BELLEFONTE, =- PA. og £ 26-1y ! ] B ee Eg. yg: od Meat Markets. GH THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, Loom thin or gristly meats. I use only the ; LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply my customers with the fresh- est, os t blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no higher than poorer meats are eise- where. ; ; I always have ——DRESSED POULTRY, Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. ; ; Try My SHop. 43-3¢-Ty ° P. L. BEEZER. * High Street, Bellefonte. AVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. There is no reason why you should use poor meat, or pay exorbitant prices for tender, juicy steaks. meat is abundant here- abouts, because good cattle, sheep and calves are to be had. : WE BUY ONLY THE BEST and we sell only that which is good. We don’t Ploiise to Five it away, but we will furnish you - OD MEAT, at prices that you have paid elsewhere for very poor. —GIVE US A TRIAL— and see if you don’t save in the long run and have better Meats, Poultry and Game (in sea- son) than have been furnished you. GETTIG & KREAMER, BELLEFONTE, PA. ~ Bush House Block. 44-18
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers