2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. r,„. - enr 1100 112 i year. . » hj 112 j-»id In advance 1 w ADVERTISING RATES: Ad vtrV. omenta are published at the rate of dollar jer square for one ins rtion and flftj etntn I er square for each subsequent insertiou Rates by the year, or for six or three month®, tic low and uniform, and will be furnished ur» * P Leff'iV and Offlclal Advertising per square |bree times or less, 4*. each subsequent nsei tion . 0 rents per (-qunre. I oral notices 10 cents pel line for or.a lns>-r inrilon: fi cents |r line for each subbt-queul ccn-eeutive insertWn. Obituary notice# over fire lir.es 10 cents per line Simple announcements of births, mar ti: an a .letilhs will be inserted free. Hi lness cards. five lines or less. »6 per yur. eves- tive lints, at the regular rates of ailver ' No'local inserted for less than 75 cent* per Usue. JOB PRINTING. The Job AC pertinent of the Phkss Isrompleio and afford- facilUies for doing the best class e.f let rk. PAK'I ICUI.AIt ATI B.NTIOW fAU. ro I.AW No paper will bo discontinued until arrear- J>C"S are paid, except at the option of thu put- Papers sent out of the county must be pa'.O lor in advance Power of Money, It is safe to say (hut never befoee In the history of the- country were the springs of action, a3 well as the con dition of things, more closely examined than now. The revelations of theft in high places have apparently caused Krtat searchings of heart among üb. with a result of wrong emphasis at times, as in the case of the preacher in New York that considered graft the result of the extravagance of women. A sober view would hold the extrava gance of whatever kind is a result raiher than a cause, and certainly the examples of great accumulation and the manner of them contradict the no iion that it is for anything that money will buy tnat it is coveted. Great as our luxury is—greater perhaps than any that the world ever saw—the ex amples of monopoly and the history of exaction do not point to luxury as a moving cause. It is rather the simple love of money for itself —the develop ment of the miser's passion on a large scale. The Baltimore American sug gests that the passion has taken the place with us that chivalry once held, and that love of power held; or, rather, that the love of money typifies to us what those things typified in other times. Money is power now, so let those that love power put money in t.\eir purses. Going' Through College. In Columbia in the last college year E37 students earned $92,430. This is six fold the sum earned by students in the university five years ago. This is true in most colleges. When President llad ley was installed he spoke of the in creasing difficulty of paying for a college education. This is a mistake, comments the Philadelphia Press. It was never so easy 10 get a college education as now. The newspapers alone pay enough for college news to support a number of men. The work in the community by which a man can earn money while studying has greatly increased. Wealth has brought to college many stupid and idle boys, and their pay for "tuition" keeps a number of students going in the institutions for men and a few in colleges for women, as yet but little cursed by the student sent to college for "social" advantages. The colleges, too. have made it easier by requiring less. if a man can get. through col lege and play football he ought to be able to earn his living and go through college. Gloomy Outlook. A Missouri judge has indorsed the de cree of the Cook county judiciary per mitting a wife togo through her hus band's pockets while he is sweetly dreaming the happy hours away. This opinion has been defended also by some of the ablest members of the Chicago Woman's club, and up to the present time no married mannas been lound with spunk enough to coolest it. What the wife will do if she finds a hole in the pocket instead of money depends measurably on ihe nature of the woman. There is no telling to what extremities the man will be pushed if the judiciary continues to favor the women, but the time may come when we shall be obliged to pay our street car fare in checks. The bree*y.y correspondent of the Maine Woods who writes over the name Fly Rod combines njtes on love and fishing in an alluring way. In her last letter she tells of a honeymoon pair whom she met on July 2. last year, when they fished together and caught a ex pound salmon. She has just had a let ter from them, in which they tell with joy of the arrival this year on July 2 of a baby girl who weighed exactly tho tame as their last year's lish. Much prose and more fiction has been writ ten on the Maine lakes, but here is something that nearly approaches the idyllic. A reai daughter of the revolution lias just, died in Westmoreland county. Pa. Mrs. Sarah Atchison Ha;:-; was 98 years old and was the daughter of Thomas Atchison, who fought under Washington at the battle of Trenton, and the widow of Thomas Ross, a vet eran of the Mexican war. She was one of three women to whom were present * ! gold spoci.s by the national society l.ecau • of b.-! \sr daughters of m -n **lio JAPAN WANTS CASH AND LAND Her Envoys Notily Russia cf the Price She Has Fixed for Feace RUSSIA TO PAY COST Of WAR No Sum Is Fixed, toe Amount to be Arranged After Japan's War Ex penses Have Been Ascer. tained Russia Must Leave Manchuria. Portsmouth, X. 11., Aug. 11. —Redm- bursement for the expenses sustained in the; prosecution of the; war and the cession of the island of Sakhalin con stitute the main features of the peace conditions handed by Baron Komura to Mr. Witte at the conclusion of Thursday morning's session of the plenipotentiaries in the general stores building of the Portsmouth navy yard. The word "indemnity" is carefully avoided, the term employed being "re imbursement" for the cost of the war. No sum is fixed, the amount being dis tinctly adjourned for mutual adjust ment between the two countries after the Japanese expenditure has been as certained. These are the two all im portant conditions and those which the Russian plenipotentiaries find ab solutely unacceptable. The other terms are: The cession of the Russian leases to the Uaotung peninsula, comprising Port Arthur anil Dalny. The evacua tion of the entire province of Man churia, the retrocession to China of any privileges Russia may have in the province and the recognition by Rus sia of the principle of the "open door." The cession to Japan of the Chinese Eastern railroad below Harbin, thu main line through Northern Man churia to Vladivostok to remain Rus sian property. The recognition of the Japanese protectorate over Korea. The grant of fishing rfghts to Japan in the waters of the Siberian littejral northward from Vladivostok to Bering Sea. The relinquishment to Japan of the Russian warships interned in neu tral ports. Finally a limitation upon the naval strength of Russia in east ern waters. Portsmouth, N. H., Aug. 12. —Rus- sia's reply to the Japanese terms will be delivered by Mr. Witte to Baron Komura at !t:UG o'clock this morning. The reply is written, there being two texts, one in French, the other in En glish. Upon the two crucial points, indemnity and the cession of the isl and of Sakhalin, the reply is an abso lute non-possimtts. Other points are accepted as bases for eliscussion, while still others are accepted condi tionally. The reply is rather long be cause- in ennumerating the conditions upon which discussion is admitted and those upon which consideration is de clined, reasons and arguments are given. The Japanese rejoinder to the Rus sian reply is expected to he practically an ultimatum —a statement of their ii reducible minimum which they will ask the Russians to take or leave. As far as the cost of the war is concern ed. while the Japanese have mention ed no sum it is known that they esti mate the cost to date at $P5n,000,000. TALKED TO THOUSANDS. President Roosevelt Visits Wilkes barre, Pa., and Is Given a Very Enthusiastic Reception. Wilkesbarre, I'a., Aug. 11. —The president of the United States, who came here Thursday and made an ad dress to the delegates attending the annual convention of the Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America and the members of the United Mine Workers of America, was given a most enthusiastic reception. In fact, the entire trip through New Jersey and Pennsylvania to this city was a series of ovations. The president arrived here a! ' o'clock and was driven directly to the speakers' stand on the river common. Besides the president those who spoke were Cardinal Gibbons, Mayor Kirk endall, of this city: John Mitchell, president of the Miners' union, and Rev. J. J. Curran, eif this city. WAS CRUSHED IN THE ICE. The Fiala-Zeigler Expedition Wai Res cued After Its Ship Had Been Wrecked in the Arctic Seas. Honningsvaag, Norway, Aug. 11. — The Arctic steamer Terra Nova, which went to the relief of the Fiala-Zeigler Polar expedition, has rescued Anthony Fiala and all the others connected with the expedition, with the excep tion of one Norwegian seaman, who died from natural causes. The ship America, which took out the exiffedi tion, was crushed in the ice early in the winter of and lost. The 27 membere of the expedition who returned to safety are all in good health, despite their deprivations and trying experiences an*! their prolonged imprisonment in the Arctic, the expe dition having been severed from all communication with the outside world since July, 19'»3. Two Men Killed. Colorado Springs, Cel., Aug. 11. —In a freight wreck on the Rock island j railway near Limon Junction, Dr. ; Wright Andyman and Joseph Miller, i both of Omaha, were killed. The men I are said to have been riding on the j trucks. Johnson Confesses. Detroit, Mich., Aug. 11. —Harry I Johnson early this morning confessed to Detective McDonnell that Harry Parker r.itirdored Pavi broker Moyer |on .Tu!: L', while JoLrson rifled the pawnshop. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1905. RECIPROCITY THAT IS REAL ] Not the Kind That Seeks to UcCer mine the Prosperity of the Nation. No doubt the national reciprocity conference which has been called to meet in Chicago August 15 and 1C will be an interesting and important gathering, says the Tribune. The sub ject of reciprocity with other nations, looking to the extension of our trade relations and a mutually beneficial in terchange of products, is rightly re garded by the people of the United States as one of much moment. Hence close attention will be given to the proceedings at Chicago, and if out cf tiie conference there shall come re sults which will promise material ad vantages to this country the action taken will be certain to receive a large degree of popular approval. It will be well, however, not to be | too enthusiastic in advance over what the conference is expected to do. There are many indications that the elements which would make reciprocity merely a stepping stone to free trade are ex -1 ceedingly active and seek to control the deliberations of the conference. This is the more auspicious from the fact that these elements have not al ways been so conspicuously devoted to reciprocity. For instance, when the republican party declared for such reciprocity as might be carried into effect without seriously weakening : the economic safeguards which the na tion now maintains, many of the per sons now loudly shouting for reci procity were then much given to I scornful criticism. They promptly and vigorously affirmed that protection and reciprocity were incompatible and there was no limit to the ridicule they poured upon the idea of arranging for reciprocity while a high tariff was | maintained. This change of tune may be due to conviction, but it will be sure to evoke more of less skepticism. Reciprocity | within reasonable limits, such as those ! to which the republican party has pro | posed to restrict H, undoubtedly would j be a good thing. Reciprocity which in sidiously and deceptively seeks to un dermine the system under which this nation has so greatly prospered is some j thing very different. The real need of i reciprocity is greater in foreign lands J than our own. The continued and in i creasing extent of our exportation* and | especially of manufactures the most | highly protected of the products of the i United States furnishes ample te-ti i mony on this point. It may be well tc i have reciprocity, but it should not be | sought on such terms as will as.-ure the i surrender of the unquestionably great j opportunities Americans now enjoy in I exchange for those of doubtful value. THE NATION'S VOICE. ; People Still Think as They Did When They Voted Last Fall. The voice of the nation speaks in j Ohio when the platform of the repub i lican party in that state says: "No nation has ever known such widespread prosperity as the United | States lias enjoyed since the restora tion of the republican party to power by McKinley's election. Wage earners ! have had more work at better prices ! farmers have had the best home mar | kets, making the merchants prosper | ous, the factories busy and all com ; merce and transportation thrive. With j sound money, protection and other pru- I dent legislation comfort and happiness 1 have come to American homes, and no step has been taken that may imperii or threaten our good times. Every one remembers, says the I Portsmouth (N. H.J Chronicle how pub j lie confidence rose anew when Presi j dent McKiniey was elected in IS9O, and figures show from that day to this our volume of prosperity has increased without cessation and now j promises to continue so long as the | republican party is kept in power and ! remains true to the principles of the j protective tariff. The Kansas City Journal says in a recent issue: "The republican party cannot claim the credit for nature's share in produc | ing the bountiful harvests with which ! the nation has been blessed, hut it can [ make just claims to the credit of creat j ing the wholesome condition that have I assured prosperity in every line of trade and commerce and agriculture." It can claim more than this. It can claim by virtue of the protective tar iff to have made it possible for these vast crops to be sold at greatly re munerative prices. It can claim credit for defeating the traitorous so-called republicans of a single state, that Canadian wheat be admitted to this country on a "reciprocity" plan. The Chronicle has hitherto correctly defined republican reciprocity as that which gives a preferential tariff "on those ar ticles or products which we do not ourselves manufacture or raise." The state elections which will be held this fall are going to afford con clusive proof that the people have not changed their minds since they elect ed Roosevelt and Fairbanks a few months ago, and that they stiil appre ciate prosperity. The voice of the ca tion will speak in 1905. c Tariff revision is well enough to consider if a:ij \>?s needed anu \\ hen- I ever any revision shall be needed to preserve the balance of equal justice j to all but. \vh< n that time arrives the i articles to be revised will be consid | < red publicly and it will be made plain that such revision is made necessary ! and will inflict no injustice and will | not disturb tho principle of the pro j toctive tariff, that of equal and exact | justice and success to all the inter | est- involved by any changes thc.t may Le s J. —American Econc i mist. THE DEMOCRATIC REVIVAL. What Bryan Is Trying- to Throw In to the Comatose Party to Enliven It. The subject of William J. Bryan's address at Madison, Wis., was"The Revival of Democracy." "The revival of democracy," he said, "has been more pronounced the last few years than for a quarter of a century past." That was as much as to say that the democracy had been engaged in "reviving" itself for the last 25 years, if 110 longer, and that in its normal condition it was in need of revival at all times. Mr. Bryan, remarks the Chicago Chronicle, might as well have said plainly that the democratic party is in a comatose state, hovering between life and death, and never showing any signs of consciousness except under the influence of restoratives. Tliis estimate of the democratic party should be considered in con nection with what Mr. Bryan said about the republican party. He laid emphasis on the statement that the republican party had espoused all of the old-fashioned democratic poli cies. To prove this he enumerated several of them and applauded them. The inference is, of course, that the democrats have backslidden from their primitive faith and that the process of "revival" consists in try ing to become like the republican pra ty. If his position be that both par ties now have the same principles then the still more destructive infer ence must be drawn that the reason the people repudiated the democrats at the polls was that they did not be lieve the democratic party was hon est enough to carry out its own al leged principles. Mr. Bryan also delivered his cus tomary eulogy on Gov. La Follette, the greatest discount on whose repu tation is that he excites the extrava gant administration of William J. Bryan. The symposium appropriately wound up with the nomination of Mr. Bryan for the presidency in 1908, which might have been made still more "taking" by mentioning the fact that the republican party could be re lied onto bear all the expenses of his nomination and his canvass. AMERICANS ARE LENDERS. Changed Condition That Pleases the Country, But Worries Free Traders. The United States is not only the wealthiest country in the world, but it has more gold than any other, and this hoard is increasing. Taking the account for two or three years past, gc id is increasing in the United State 3 taster than the population, says the Burlington Hawk-Eye. Wars are cost ly. but this country has been financing most of the present conflict. We have been lending gold to both combatants, though not directly, except in a small degree. Paris and London have been promising the gold. The United States has been shipping it to those centers to make these pledges good. We have been shipping some on our own ac count. Ten years ago we were bor rowing gold to keep up the green bark redemption fund. To-day we are lending it, and despite the extent of our loans the home stock is kept up at high figures. The change in the situ ation pleases the country.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. True. Therefore let 11s by political intrigue, factionalism and in every way possible seek to change the con ditions. The country was never more pros perous than now. Let us revise the tariff and put a check upon manufac tures and all concurrent industries. The great west has developed won derfully under an untrammeled com mercial and transportation policy; we enjoy the best markets in the world, and farm values have broken all prece dents. Let us hasten to change these favoring conditions by giving the gen eral government the power to make rates and invite the adoption of a dis tance freight tariff as the final se quence of that policy. This country has gold to loan to the world. This is the sequence of the present conserving national policies. Therefore they must be pernicious. For whatever is is wrong. Let us has ten to adopt municipal ownership and general government ownership and the fruitage of applied socialism. And yet—. Better Slow Down. The best and most sensible method r>f remedying such abuses as exist is to get after the railroads and compel them to give uniform rates to all ship pers, to compel express companies to reduce their charges, to give the Standard Oil company and *the beef companies such an overhauling that they shall be compelled to come back to decency and togo lightly with the general tariff until the Panama canal is completed. Here in Maine we are enjoying great prosperity from the ex | isting tariff. It is for our financial interests to maintain present rates. — Bangor News. Bryan Bryan has been l°ss con spicuous than usual in the recent ! past. Possibly looking in the woods l for democrats. —Cincinnati Enquirer. u There is some comfort to be de ' rived from Mr. Bryan's reiteration that it. is too early to discuss a standard bearer of the party i:i 1908.—In dianapolis News (Ind.) n Prosperity lias continued for so 1 many y. ars that it no longer attracts attention under that name, and the advanced thinkers are now referring to it by hvperprosperity.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. DOZENS CAUGHT IN THE RUINS Big Building Occupied by a Depart ment Store at Albany. N. Y., Collapsed. WHILE REPAIRS WERE DEING MADE Thirteen Persons Dead and Two Prob ably Fatally Injured—Nearly All the Victims Were Employes of the Store—The Loss Is $200,000. Albany, N. Y., Aug. 10. —The col lapse of the John G. Myers Co.'s de partment store Tuesday, which result ed in the death of 13 persons and prob ably the fatal injury of two others, will be investigated by a special com mission. Yesterday afternoon, when the searchers announced their belief that no more bodies were in the ruins, Mayor Gaus called a meeting of the heads of city departments and decided to appoint three non-residents, two building contractors and one civil en gineer or architect, to inquire into tho cause of the disaster and report where to place the blame. To avoid the possibility of a preju diced inquiry, Mayor Gaus decided that all the investigators shall be out of town men. The discovery that the 13 bodies al ready taken out will account probably for all the victims of the accident is a surprise to Albanians, who until Wed nesday afternoon expected that at. least a dozen more mangled forms were buried beneath the ruins. So sure are the wreckers that no more bodies are there that they have sus pended their search and devoted their attention to demolishing the brick walls which overhang the debris and threaten to collapse. The small number of deaths, small when it is considered that nearly 100 persons went down with the wreck, Is accounted for by the fact that scarcely any of the brick walls fell and the de bris consisted mostly of large timbers and plaster, with only an oc casional iron girder. One of these iron beams crushed the life out of four young girls. Albany, N. Y., Aug. 9. —The middle section of the big department store of the John G. Myers Co., in North Pearl street, collapsed Tuesday, carrying down wiih it over 100 persons. The pillar which gave way support ed the ends of two great girders, and when it fell the main support of the center part of the building was gone. With a noise that could be heard blocks away and which shook the ad joining buildings, nearly half the great structure, from cellar to roof, and ex tending from one side wall to the other, came grinding down. Into this cavern slid scores of employes who were working on the floors above and lacked the warning which enabled ihose in the basement to escape. Some, however, were apprised of the danger by falling plaster and saved themselves by rushing to the front of the store or to the fire escape in the rear. The building which collapsed is owned partly by the Myers Co. and partly by the estate of the late David Orr. Tlie loss to the company is esti mated at between $200,000 and $300,- 000. The building was a very old one, but until now considered sound. A Terrible Experience. New York, Aug. 11. —Stratford Shoals light and perhaps the big Long Island Sound steamers which are guided by it, were saved last week through the heroic struggle which the keeper of the light, Merrill Hulse, made for seven days against an insane man, marooned alone with the keeper and determined to extinguish the light. The madman was Hulse's brother keeper, Julius Coster, who went crazy and tried to destroy his light. In attempts to get at the light Coster wanted to kill Hulse. A Strike of Job Printers. Detroit, Mich., Aug. 11.—Union com positors went on strike yesterday in three Detroit book and job printing shops, the R. L. Polk Printing Co., Raynor & Taylor and Winn &■ Ham mond. It was understood that the printers were preparing to demand the eight-hour day on January 1 all over the country. The Detroit Typothetae declared for the open shop on July 1, when the old contract expired. Yes terday tlie hiring of the first non union men resulted in a strike. A Policeman's Crime. Chicago, Aug. 11. —Oscar Benson, a policeman, yesterday shot and killed his brother-in-law, Matthew Mamer, 50 years old, fatally wounded Nicholas Ketten, 50 years old, a clerk in Mam er's. jewelry store at Harrison and Desplaines streets, and then commit ted suicide. The tragedy was enacted in Mamer's store. Thousands are Starving. Seville, Spain, Aug. 11. —The con dition of the farming community in this province is desperate. Thousands of laborers being without bread or other food, have been reduced to eat ing the roots of wild plants. Training Ship Ran Ashore. Mackinaw, Mich., Aug. 9.—The Uni ted States steamer Dorothea, the training shin of the Illinois naval re serve which is on her annual cruise, went ashore Tuesday at Old Point Mackinaw. The steamer is heavily I'.sted to starboard and is thought, tc be badly damaged. The Dorothea is lying within 150 feet of the beach. Trolley Cars Collided. Norfolk, Va., Aug. P.—One man wa: killed and 11 injured in a head-on col lision of trollev ears eight miles from this city last night. His SThare. Councilman— l've eoine to see, nir, if yoo will subscribe anything to the town ceme tery. Old Resident- Good gracious! I've al ready subscribed three wives.—Life. The Maintenance of Way forces of the Erie are now engaged in laying 350 milea of 90-pound steel rails on the main track. A larger mileage has never been laid in. any one year Dcfore. The Erie has al ways been noted for its good track, and the management finds that it is necessary to use a heavier rail on account of the weight of the several hundred new engines that have been purchased in the last two vears. Much of the rail being removed has onlv been in track four or five year* and will be used on branch lines. '1 lie characterization of tipping as in cipient "graft" hits the bull's-eye of tiutb squarely in the center.—N. Y. Tribune. Ladies Can Wear Shoes One size smaller after using Allen's Foot- Ease. A certain cure for swollen, sweating, hot; aching feet. At all Druggists, 25c. Ac cept, no substitute. Trial package FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. If 'twere only conscience that made cow ards of us all, there would be no lack ot bravery in the world. —Puck. Red Cross Ball Blue should be in every home. Ask your grocer for it. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents. It's really remarkable how often the one man idea arrives. "The Simple Life" Proper Food is Really the First Step in Right Living. One of the evils of our complex mod ern way of living, is onr unnatural and unhealthy foods. To have really good health and a good stomach it is necessary to eat simple nourishing food. EGG-O-SEE is the ideal food, and reaches the proper requirements in this direction more nearly than any other cereal now on the market. To make EGG-O-SEE the kernels of the choicest California white wheat are first cleansed by brushes, then thor oughly steam cooked, then flaked and crisped to a maple tint and delicately flavored with natural fruit juice and pure grain sugar. In these delicious flakes, lies the mighty strength-giving power of the whole wheat grain that evenly nour ishes every part of the hody, and gives physical and mental energy that means splendid health and successful en deavor. teL.A S' io s grocery iPi THE EGG-O-SEE CO. Qulncy, 111, SICK HEADACHE —; —i Positively cured by thcse kittle iiMF\ I Lt\o Tlicy also relievo Dls- MBH tress from Dyspepsia, In- STYLE digestion and Too Hearty H| | 2* Q Eating; A perfect rcta- I * Ll\ edy tor Dizziness, Nausea, M PILLS. Drowsiness, Bad Taste Jf-l gig * la the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Tain in the side, 35HH55 1 TORPID LIVER. Tiiey regulate tbe Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine Must Bear hh it l c Fac-Simile Signature pills! §™l iRFrUSE SUBSTITUTES. (*2O I ■ Colorado! AMD RETURN Via Chicago, Union Pacific and E North-Western Line. B Daily from Chicago. Aug. 30 to Sept. 4, I to Denver, Colorado Springs and I'ueblo, I account Encampment G. A. R. at Den- B ver. Colorado Special leaves Chicago M 7.00 p. m.daily, only one night en route. H Another last train leaves daily 11.00 p. 111. 8 Special Personally Conducted trains leave Chicago and the Ea«t September 2. ■ For booklets and full particulars address P W. B.Knisk«rn ■ Passenger C.&N. W. Rt. ■ Traffic Kgr, Chicago. troubled with ills peculiar to J'l their scs, uccd as a douchi is ms.rvefou.iy suc cessful. Thorouglilycloaaccs, killsdiseaogems, fteps discharges, heals ialiammatioa ar:.l loc£4 scteness, cures kucorrhcsa &ad nasal c<it. r;h. I'asti-.ie :in powder 112 >rm to bo d : olved i:i pnra water, and i 3 far mote cleansing, hen! :ig, Slid economical tliau liquid antiseptics J. 1' all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES l or sale at druggists, 50 cents a L-cx. Boc and Hook of instructions Prco. TMi n. Paxton CoupahY Bostgw, Mam.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers