2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, j H. H. M U 1.1.1 N, lidilar Publlnliod K\ <>ry Tliurstluy. TKKMS OK RCHSCUIPTIOV. f»rr ff«r (? H | r paid In acHuuri! . I• w' , ADVKRTIHINO RATES: Advertisement* nre published at the rate nl •nr dol.ar per sgiiar' forone Insertion ami i ft j rents ler si pa re fur AMU subsequent if v ft lot] Hates by ' in-veur or fo> six or tltreo ,• mill* »rr luw ail i.n form, ami will be turnilUMd »pi lieatioi Legal ami Official Advertising per sqn» three time* or lea*. »S each »übsi'ijiu nt in t Ho i • o i oot* per squari' Local until • s ill rents per line for one Inser ®ertion; Ti cents prr line for eachKUliscque.il 01111 ecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over fl»e lines 10 cent* pot line. Simple nniintinrementa of births, n:ai rmpes and death* will be inserted frt »• llii-lncss cards, five lines or less. :f> per year-, ever live lints, at the regular rates of advtr tla'ng. No local Inserted for less than ~S cents pe' tksue. OB PRINTING. The Job depi. '.merit of the PRESS ID complete •nd afford*. fui 1 It: for doinj; the bi si cias- - 112 Work. J'AU il< t I.AK ATTUM ION FAIHTU LAW PIONTtN'. No p.'o?r will be discontinued until arrenr ui'S are paid, except at the option of tho pub lisher. l'apers sent out of the county must he paid for in advance. Cure for Crows Feet. The following little sermon may he taken to heart by man as well as woman. In business or the home life i It is equally applicable and breathes of the best spirit to be preserved in ail j vicissitudes of life: "Be sunny" has , grown to be something of a catchword, ' but it is a pretty good all-around motto for everyday life as well. The cook may have gone away in a tem per on the very day of your dinner party—it's a way cooks have —or the dressmaker may have failed to send j home your new frock in time for Mrs. j So-and-So's reception, but frowns and tears and grumblings will not help mat ters in either case. It may be tiiat the world contains other cooks, or even that the same one may be in- i duced to return in time to save the day. And if not, why not pitch right in and do the best you can yourself with the best grace you can muster? If your dinner does not turn out quite as well as you would like, just make a joke of the whole affair and let your ' guests laugh with you. Bless you, 1 they too, have troubles of their own and they will relish almost any sort of a repast that is served with laugh ter sauce. And as for the dress that I did not come, why, since you must do without it in any event, just do with out it cheerfully. ,You have other | frocks, possibly, and if you furbish : one of them up a bit and wear it with your lightest heart and your gladdest smile, people will simply wonder why they never knew before how pretty you are and how tastefully you dress. \ That is, the people who count for any thing. And as for the others, who cares about what they think, any way? There are recipes by the score for eradicating wrinkles arid keeping crows' feet at bay; but a cheerful j mind discounts all of them. It isn't easy to be cheerful when things go wrong, you say. No; but it doesn't help any to be grumpy, does it? Then, in the expressive slang of the day, "'forget it." Cheerfulness is a habit, Just as much as worrying—only it is a good deal pleasanter for yourself and everybody else. Get the habit, ' then; and the first thing you know the worries will have taken flight. They ' can not stand sunshine. In a cheerful | atmosphere they find themselves so ! distinctly "out of it" that they prefer to make themselves scarce. Therefore, ■ be cheerful. It may cost you something j at first, but it will pay in the end. j How to manage it? Look out instead 1 of in. You are not the only human creature who has troubles. Every woman has them—and most men—so i you can not lay claim to exclusiveness j along this line. But the world is a j pretty good world, on the whole, and you will enjoy it more than you do ! now when you begin to look out on it with unclouded eyes. Leave the house or the office or the schoolroom behind you once in a while and take a breath ing spell out in the open. And when you do go out, do not always go shop ping. Don't bother with bargain days unless you really want something that \ you can't buy any other time. And j even at the bargain counter be sunny. It may seem difficult, but it isn't near ly as difficult as it seems if you only j start trying it. Discipine of Failure. The best skating is always on tftin ; Ice—we like to feel it crack and yield under our feet; there is a deadly fas- I cination in the thought of the 20 or i 40 feet of cold water beneath. Last | year's mortality list, says a writer in The Reader, cuts (dare I do it?) no ice with us; we must make our own experiments, while Ur. Experience I screams himself hoarse from his bin- i fire on the bank. He has hefd many r.n inquest on this darkling shore ot the river of time, and he will undouut edly live to hold many another; uut thus far we have not been the ul>- ! Jerts; ;and when r comes to the mi-,- takes of others w»* are all dcliglred to serve on the coroner's Jury. It isn'i well for u to be saved from too many blunders; we nead the dist Ipilne <; failure. It is belt -r to f;til than never to try, and I lie man who can contem plate the grave •, a r>| of his • ~ii h< j, ; without hltterneu will not alwayi be Ignored by the cod of succ CHIEF OFFENDER ATTACKED Pipaidfnt Roosevelt's Method of Deal ing with Enemies of the People. It is characteristic of President Roosevelt's uo'irage that In lea'dlng the people's attack against the law less he has selected the offender that ! is chief in power and In pernicious in fluence. It is characteristic of the president's directness that he has mentioned that offender by name, and it is characteristic of his fidelity that he proposes to use all the available power of the government to undo the misdoing and to punish the misdoer. It has been the general belief, says the Troy Times, that the Standard Oil company has been amassing great wealth by crushing out competition, and by the employment for this end of illegal combinations and agreements. Tho thorough and untiring investiga tion made by Commissioner Garfield, of the bureau of corporations, has amassed facts which prove that, secret rebates granted by the Standard Oil company and oppressive discrimina tion in open rates have given to that enormous corporation a decisive and overwhelming advantage over com petitors. It is shown in illustration that rates only one-third of what was charged to other shippers were given to the Standard Oil company in this state. President Roosevelt has informed congress of the facts and justly de scribed the situation as a "character istic example of the numerous evils which are inevitable under a system in which the big shipper and the rail road are left free to crush out all in dividual initiative and all power of independent action because of the ab sence of adequate and thorough-going governmental control." The president rightly holds that so outrageous a breach of equity in the encratehment upon popular right and so gross a violation of the principles of'business fairness constitute a blow at the people and a menace to the pur poses which the American govern ment was established to maintain and defend. The president suggests, there fore, that to an administrative agency be given power to control and check the treacherous abuses of such a cor poration as the one under review, and plainly indicates his willingness to use all the means open to the execu tive to attack this organized injustice and to protect its victims among the business interests and the individual consumers of the country. Great offenses deserve heroic reme dies, and, as the president says, any injustice which may be predicted of an administrative commission would not begin to be so outrageously cruel as what has already been proved tgainst one of the big corporations of this country. A LIVE ISSUE CERTAINLY. From Present Indications the Tariff Will Be Much in Evi dence. If saying so would only make it so, there would be much cause for gratifi cation in the opinion expressed by the Pittsburg Press. "The tariff involves at most no fundamental principle. It is merely an administrative question, within certain lines. Not even the most em phatic revisionists have the temerity to demand free trade. All they want is a readjustment of schedules. They admit that the country is prosperous and that the protective principle un derlying our tariff policy should not be disturbed. Manifestly, then, the tariff is a question which can and will wait. There are a dozen other matters more pressingly in need of regulation. Tariff revision talk now would induce sleep anywhere, from a crossroads political meeting to the president's cabinet." Nevertheless, says the American Economist, there is much tariff re vision talk going on right now, and the talkers are not talking in their sleep, either. They,at least, are very much awake. It is the published pur pose of the American Reciprocal Tar iff league to secure the election this year of the largest possible number of Republican congressmen pledged to Immediate tariff revision. Cummins, Guild, Foss, McCall ami the rest of the "progressives" will help all they can. If this purpose should succeed In, say, 50 congress districts—and it will succeed in more than i>j districts if the friends of tariff stability are not alert—the way would be open to a general attack on the Dingley sched ules. From present appearances the tariff will be an exceedingly live is sue in the campaign of 190 C. CTIn her controversy on the tariff question Germany was handling a double-edged weapon, and her states men were wise to recognize it as such. —Portland (Me.) Advertiser. former years Col. Bryan in variably Insisted upon writing his own platforms. Now lie has decided to turn over a new leaf by taking the nomination and letting the 'other fel lows do the platform tinkering.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. tt"-'*lf Great Britain were managing this republic of ours her statesmen would advocate that if wo have com merce and labor enough for our own people, sufficient to keep everybody constantly employed—wc had better hold onto It. —Des Moines Cap!till. E 'They are wise friends who know when they have a good tariff-a bet ter tariff thin any Ih:it would | Jf . tln l;ered up by "reformers" and "pro g: -slves" with as many ('ifferent no tions as the.' ar.* holders or those r lions. They are wise friends who It. iow when to le« a good tariff alone —Amt'i icioi &ououii»L J 0 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 31, 19c/) ' TARIFF REPEAL NOT NEEDED Snn Frnnclsco Should Not Us He built with Steel from Abroad. We do not believe San FrancAco la a party to the cry for a repeal of the tariff on structural steel while the city is rebuilding. There Is no occasion for such repeal, says the Pittsburg Ga zette. American manufacturer can supply the demand. Pittsburg mills can do It and would set other work aside If necessary that, rebuilding should not bo retarded. Th ! s at prices hardly greater than would be paid for foreign material if the tariff should be removed. In a recent hear ing before the committee on merchant marine and fisheries, Judge Oary, chairman of the United States Steel corporation, quoted the prices in this country and abroad. By that state ment it may seen the export prices of Great Britain, Germany, France, Aus tria and Belgium on structural shapes range from $1.25 to $1.45, while the American price is about $1.60. Add ing freight, the price, delivered, would give no appreciable advantage to the San Francisco builders, but might take much money from this country. President Roosevelt rejected foreign contributions to the relief fund and it would be a remarkable exhibit on the part of contress to extend an Invita tion to foreign manufacturers to sup ply the material for rebuilding the city. While Germany is building its tariff v ill higher and is paying a bounty on steel exports, to enable her manufacturers to quote low prices, there is no call for the United States to open the door even in the face of calamity. Great Britain is not in po sition to furnish the material more promptly than this country can, and having a higher production cost anil no bounty, could not compete with Germany in the bidding. Should material be brought from abroad it would benefit neither the railroads nor the industrial concerns which have given so liberally to the sufferers. All would come direct. Jjy water in foreign bottoms. San Fran cisco would be ashamed to rebuild with foreign steel. The members of congress who introduced the bills de clare that they did so under the nV apprehension that American mills could not supply the demand. That impression having been corrected, there is just one proper course to take. That is to withdraw the bills and let the matter drop. No hardship will be imposed thereby on the San Francisco rebuilders. , DEMAND NOT POPULAR. Change of the Dingley Schedules Not Called for by the People in General. No Republican from Wisconsin, Massachusetts, lowa or anywhere else who has assailed the tariff this year has voiced the view of the Republican party. The Dingley act has been in operation nine years. It has had a longer life than the Wilson-Gorman law which it displaced. Also it has lived longer than did the McKinley act, which the Democrats repealed when they put the Wilson-Gorman law on the statute book. So, likewise, it has been with us for more years than was the act of 1883, which the McKinley law succeeded. Dingley's tariff has had a longer career than any other law in its field since .Mor rill's, which was passed in 1861. But the Dingley act continues to give a good account of itself, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, it furnishes both revenue and protection, and the Wilson act provided neither the one nor the other. Nothing that any Dem ocrat has ever said against the Ding ley law has been ns severe as Clever land's denunciation of the Democratic Wilson-Gorman act, the "party per fidy and party dishonor law," which Cleveland contemptuously refused to sign, but let it get on the statute book through the expiration of tho ten days' time limit. There is no popular demand among the Republicans for the repeal or material modification of the Dingley tariff. On the contrary, any tampering with that act at this time would arouse Republican hostil ity all over the country. No Repub lican who assails it can long main tain his standing in the party. A Democratic assault on either the tar iff or the flag in the Philippines in the congressional canvass of 1966 would insure a Republican majority in the elections which would make all the off-year Republican margins since 189-1 look narrow. tcrDemocrats are inclined to say that as the speaker opposes revision and says that congress must represent the desires of the American people, he in effect makes tariff revision the is sue in the coming elections, placing the Republican party absolutely in the stand-pat attitude and the Democrats for revision. Whether this be so o;- not it is fairly certain th:it there will be no tariff revision at this session 01 congress. Let well enough alone seems a good enough adage to steer by.—Oswego Times. c-'ln the meantime Col. Bryan in in blissful ignorance of the fact that hi , articles on the Philippines are attract ing practically no attention. The:-' are so many things happening of real interest now.—Kansas City Journal. c And, pray, what pert or part.; o the tariff would the Democrats revi •? Our Democratic brethren of the West Virginia pies have 11 > •-;>• ■« ifi<- com plaint so In l - a ib" intelligencer can see. hi tli-y, for Inst nee, want to (hop the tariff tr.>i»i coal, from lum- i her, from giass or from puitery? \v ■ pause for a reply,—-Wli-vling lutein 1 giucer. LIMB RAW AS PIECE OF BEEF. Suffered for Three Year* with Itching Humor—Cruiser Newark U. S. N. Man Cured—Speedy Cure by Cuticura. "I differed with humor for about three yenr* off and on. I finullv mnv a doc tor mid he gave me remedies that did nie no good, no I tried Cuticura when my limb below the knee to the ankle wim I of beef. All I uxed was the ( utn iira Soap and the Ointment I bathed with Cuticura S<np every day, and used 11 bout six or seven boxes of Ciit'icura Ointment. I was thoroughly cured of ihe humor |in three weeks, and haven't been affected With it since. I use 110 other Niap than Cuticura now. 11. .) Myers July AosV' S " NCWark ' NeW V " rk ' Prince Von IJuiow, the German chancellor, who was overcome by a fainting spell while delivering an ad dress in the relchstag recently, is a political personality scarcely less in teresting than was his great prede- [ cessor Bismarck. In spite of his well- i known and ardent patriotism his courtesy to France on one occasion drew from another member of the ' relchstag the remark that "Herr Von I Bulow thinks In French or Italian and ! then translates into German." He was twice offered the of prince before accepting. How Luxury Relieves Fatigue. When traveling long distances nothing ia more essential to comfort than exquisite decorations, elegant woodwork and pleas ing color effects in tapestries. All such de tail, electric lights, periodicals, papers and 1 the latest books make the trip to California via the Union Pacific a rare pleasure in stead of a tiresome journey. For illustrated booklets about California, j rates or tiny information address W. G. j Neiinycr, (j. A., 120 Jaeksca Boulevard, Chicago, 111. What Has Reason to Do with IIP Joe —But, my dear fellow, is your Income enough to justify your mar rying? Fred —I'm afraid not. "Then what reason have you for taking so serious a step?" "I have no reason. I'm in love."— Stray Stories. Garfield Tea purifies the blood, regulates the digestive organs, brings good health. TOLD OF THE TITLED. Lord Charles Beresford Is said to be contemplating reentering the field of politics. Sir W T alter Raleigh was responsible for the introduction of the potato into Ireland. It was a native of Chile and Peru. King Alfonso and Princess Ena are both descendants of Mary Queen of Scots, as is every monarch in Europe except the king of Sweden and the Bultan of Turkey. The sirdar, Sir Reginald Wingate, is an excellent linguist, speaking, besides several European languages, Arabic and Hindustani. His hobby is the collection of dervish weapons. Lord Leconfield, who has just cele- 1 brated his thirty-fourth birthday, is a nephew of Lord Rosebery. He served with distinction in the Boer war, owns about 100,000 acres of land, and has a rent roll of $450,000 yearly. Sir Edward Clarke, the brilliant member of parliament who is making his presence felt by denouncing the Idea of a tax on meat or corn, started as a jeweler's assistant in his father's store. Now his income as a lawyer Is $150,000 a year and he is one of the few men who have refused a Judgeship. Sir John Fisher has been promoted to the rank of admiral of the English fleet. He practically created the pres ent British navy, and has impregnat- j ed it with the scientific spirit, and it j Is due to him that the naval officers of to-day must, in addition to being seamen, bo gunners, soldiers, engineers ; and men of science. BREAD DYSPEPSIA. The Digesting Element Left Out Bread dyspepsia is common. It af- \ fects the bowels because white bread is nearly all starch, and starch is digested 1 in the intestines, not in the stomach ! proper. Up under the shell of the wheat berry | nature has provided a curious deposit | which is turned into diastase when it is j subjected to the saliva and to the pan ! creatic juices in the human intestines. ! This diastase is absolutely necessary j to digest starch and turn it into grape- j ; sugar, which is the next form; but that { | part of the wheat berry makes dark j flour, and the modern miller cannot ! readily sell dark flour, so nature's val- I uable digester Is thrown out and the j human system must handle the starch as best it can, without the help that na- j ture intended. Small wonder that appendicitis, peri- j tonitis, constipation and all sorts of trouble exist when we go so contrary to nature's law. The food exports that perfected Grape-Nuts Food, knowing these facts, made use in their experi- j ments of the entire wheat and barley, | including all the parts, and subjected 1 tbem to moisture and long continued 1 warmth, which allows time and tho ! proper conditions for developing tho diastase, outside of the human body. In this way the starchy part is trans- ' formed into grape-sugar in a perfect- i ly natural manner, without the use of ' chemicals or any outside ingredients, j The little sparkling crystals of grape- ' sugar can be seen on the pieces of Grape-Nuts. This food therefore is I naturally pre-dlgcsted and Its use in place of bread will quickly correct the troubles that have been brought about i by the too free use of starch in the food, and that Is very common in the human race to-day. The eeffct of eating Grape-Nuts ten ; days or two weeks and the dlscontln- i uance of ordinary white bread Js very ' marked. The user will gain rapidly In strength and physical and mental health. "There's a reason." There has ust been deposited In the Inject house nt the Cincinnati Zoo a specimen of the blrd-oatlng spider, which earns It h name by occasionally j including In its menu some of the lirll lancy hued humming birds and vari colored finches of the South American ' tropics. The boatmen of Holland measure distances by smoking. The distance between two named points Is ex pressed as so many pipcfuls 'if to bacco, meaning, of course, that one would smoke so many pipes while covering the distance mentioned. Hol i land's colonies are 60 times as big as the mother country. Radium Is a substance millions of times more powerful than dynamite. It Is estimated that an ounce of ra dium would contain enough po er to raise 10,000 tons a mile above the earth's surface. The energy needed to tow a ship of 12,000 tons a distance of 6,000 sea miles at 15 knots is con tained in 22 ounces of radium. When the pope received the French bishops recently they could not. un derstand his disclosures, so strong is his Venetian accent. But it is the thing now in the Vatican to speak with a little of that accent. Venetian dishes are in vogue, and In the houses of rich Romans Venetian antiquities are made prominent. In England no arrests may be made on a Sunday, except for treason, fel ony, or a breach of the peace; and freedom from arrest at any time on civil process is a privilege enjoyed by members of the royal family and their servants, bishops, peers and peeresses, and members of parliament during the sitting of parliament and 40 days be fore and after each session. There are two sorts of tattooing in use among tho women of the Congo. One is common to all the members of the same tribe,"and indicates the ori gin and birthplace of the subject. It is an infallible and perpetual certifi cat of birth ami nationality. Tho other sort of tattooing is simply fan tasy and coquetry. The women mark upon their bodies the epochs of their existence. The early Greeks and Romans rode horses bareback. They regarded it as unmanly to ride in a saddle. In fact, the modern saddle with pommel, crupper and stirrups was unknown to the ancients. Nero gave out fancy coverings to his cavairy, and the bare back riders of the German forests used to laugh at them. Saddles with trees came into use in the fourth cen tury: stirrups three centuries later. The greatest, dental operation on record was performed upon an ele phant. in the City of Mexico. The ach ing tooth was 12 inches long and 14 inches in diameter at the root. After Mr. Elephant had been securely fastened with chains his mouth was pried open and a quantity of cocaine applied to deaden the pain. When this was done a hole was bored through the tooth and an iron bar inserted. Then a rope was twisted around the bar and four horses at tached and started, and the tooth gave way like pulling stumps. All the automobile endurance con tests are thrown into the shade by the remarkable performance of Emil Boul hours, of Paris, who rode a bicyclo 815 miles and 291 yards in 24 hours, at the remarkable average rate of 34 hours an hour. When one consid ers the delays and the stops entailed in such a race it means that for hours the rider must have been pedaling his bicycle at the rate of 50 miles an hour, and sometimes even faster than that. The strain on the system to with stand this must be severe and certain iy felt by the rider. Horseshoes, such as we have, are also rather modern. The Greeks and Romans used to cover their horses' feet with fiber cloth in cold weather, or when urging the horses through muddy and miry places. t Nero's horses were shod without nails, but with silver. His wife's were shod in gold. The shoeing of horses by driv ing nails through their hoofs was in troduced into England by William the Conqueror. But even in the middle centuries horses were shod only on special occasions, which was done more for style. G.SCHMIDT'S,^ . HEADQUARTERS FOR f|l FRESH BREAD, J popular sl.fi' n NUT $ CONFECTIONERY Daily Delivery. Allorders given prompt and ttkilll'ul attention. WHEN IN DOUBT, TRV They h»»e tfwd the t«t of re*. ; *k OTDflUf* m and h*v« cured thousands •>* mm I O I lIIIHO Aa / m iim j ' ||k , T - . Jf y J * o*b!!'Mr # DunnoM, Sleeplcsi m Pn) lAfI Ii I '* jf 'Jr w oeu »»d V aricc-cclc.Atrophy.Ac. a ijo ft'jrtlii I(o 4??" iVi'T"Yi,"''*'? /I j , . . . , ... perfect, ar.d impirt a beitiliy gfcJL JM v ' :or t» th»- whol« bclnj All Jrnut and lour. «r<! eherkul ftr—tntntlr. Unlr»» paticnu W "' c<l "•'lwi- Hrlrc |i p er bo»; 6 Lwirs, wltu Iron-tUd Ug ,! » u .ir» A 1 1', tun or Itfuud lH<" TtSß* H. »*i un.uc,r.l s W. beud torlre« book. AOtlicit, fUL UkfllClKs CU, CitilluA^ Vd Ml* bj ft. 0. Uudar u. PruggUt, tin v«. turn, Ft. ohbbpbhbhbbbbbbbbhmbbhil THB » Windsor Hotel Hftwwn 12th and 13th Hti., on Pllb«rt St. Philadelphia, Pa. Three minutes WALK from the Reading Terminal. mmmm Five minute* WALK from the Penn'a R. R. Depot. r • European Plan #I.OO per day and upwards. American Plan |2.00 per day. FRANK M.BCHEIBLEY. Manager. pTbePlateto'Baj Che»p S 5 J. F. PARSONS' ? T" o promptly obtain I,". H. ami Send model, sketch or photo of inventlf n ft.r 5 < freereport on pntentabilitv. For free book, \ I a——Oß» ■niaflam F K»i»h. Deaiiil I A safe, certain relief for Suppressed B ■ Menstruation. Never known to full, t'afo! ■ ■ Hurt! Speedy! Satisfaction Guaranteed ■ ■or money Refunded. Sent prepaid for ■ ?I.OU per box. Will send them on trial, to H ■ be paid for when relieved. Samples Free, p fl UNITED MCOIC«L CO.. Bo« T4. L»«C»»1EP P« P fcWBHBMEffIBMBSBMPBBBMWMWI Sold in Emporium by L. ITaggart am R. C, Dodaon, on. mmworn Safe, speedy regulator: 2f> c*nt*. Druggists or mail' Uookieifree. DK. LAFUAN CO. Philadelphia, Pa. V-IYT Tin Ami coaraaM if yoo gf PILES Suppositonj B D. Mfttt. Thompatt, Stipt. B Qr»d«4 B'honla, BtfttwlUe, N. C., vrtUa : "I can atj B ih«y '• all TOU olaiaa for thoan." Dr. B. 11. Deror*, B Rock ,W. V®., writes : " Tktj five «nlTerial aatl*- B factlau," Dr. H. P. MoOIU, Clarkabarg Tena., wrlt«e: B " Ib a prudM of 13 7«»ra, I hire fonad no ramed? to B aqu.l j our a." Pa.ni, M Cairo. Htmp'.ca Frew. fe#ld B brbfat«i»t.. anawt,x WUOY, i«HC>«TIB, PA. g Bold la by I>| Tkgtul uul a. Q DodKML EVERY WOMAN Jfcw-J*.sa Sometimes needs a reliable fin i monthly regulating medicine. 3c* DR - PEAL ' S PENNYROYAL piLLS, Are prompt, safe and certain In result. The genu ine (Dr. Peal's) never disappoint. SI.OO per bojv Sold by R. O. Dodson, druggist -j For Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Fine Commercial Job Work of All Kinds, Get Our Figures.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers