Zt&ir)<zru)r) Satisfy |^i»e.ss. EKT*ulisiied by 0. B.aOULD. HENRY H. MULLIN, Editor and Manager. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY TURMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: Per year $2 00 If paidintulrance $1 60 A.DVBBTIBINQ RATES. Advertisements ■>• pobllahedat the rata of one lollar per square for oneinaertlon and flfly cents per «4u»re for each aubeeqaentlnaertlon. Bates by the year or for alx or threemonths are Off and uniform,and will be furnished on appli oaQon begat and OSclal Advertising per square. Imesor Iras, |2 00; eacb subsequent Insertion 50 oetttsper square. I/oca! noticesten cent* per line for onelnaertion, are centspcrllne for eacnsubsequentcouaecutlTe Insertion. OMtuary noticea orer five lines, ten easts per tine. Hirapleannouncements of births, marrlajps •ad deaths will be inserted free. Easiness Oarda, five llnee or lew ffi.M per year over fl vellnes, at the regular rates of advertising (To local inserted for leas than 7B eta. per issue. JOB PBINTINO. The Job department of the Pssss is complete, and affords facilities for doing the beet class of «(k. PABTIOUUI iTTMTION PAID TO Law ftuting. Ho paper will be discontinned nntil arrearages «rep<Md, except at the option ofthe publisher. Papers sent out ofthe county must be paid for In advance. 49* No advertisements will be accepted at less k»n the prioe for fifteen words. 4VBelfcl ous notices free. Oangerß of a Cold and How to Avoid Them. More fatalities have their origin in or result from a cold than from any other cause This fact alone should make peo ple more careful as there is no danger whatever from a cold when it is properly treated ia the beginning. For many years Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has been recognized as the most prompt and effectual medicine in use for this disease. It acts ou nature's plan, loosens the cough, relieves the Inngs, opens the secre tions and aids nature in restoring the sys tem to a healty condition. Sold by L. Tnigart, .7. E. Smith, Sterling Run; Crum Bros., Sinnamahoning. When the cold winds dry and crack thi skin a box of salve can cave much discomfort. In buying salve look for the name on the box to avoid any imitations, and be sure you get the original De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve. Sold by R. C. Dodson. Clear up the complexion; cleanse the liver and tone the system. You can best do this by a dose or two of DeWitt's Little Early Risers. Safe, reliable little |>ills with a reputation. The pills that everyone knows. Becommended by L. Taggart. '•They like the taste as well as maple sugar" is what one mother wrote of Ken nedy';. Laxative Cough Syrup. This modem cough syrup is absolutely free from any opiates or narcotic. Contains Honey Tar. Conforms to the National Pore Food and Drug Law. Sold by R. C. Dodson. Mothers who give their children Ken nedy's Laxative Cough Syrup invariably indorse it. Children like it because the taste is io pleasant. Contains Honey and Tar. It is the Original Laxative Cough Syrup and is uniivaled for the relief cf croup. Drives the cold out through the bowels. Conforms the Na tional Pure Food and Drug Law. Sold toy R C. Dodson. Neaaly every person who is subject to attacks from the stomach suffers from a ui. rbiiJ dread of a dietetic treatment for relief, that is three-fourths starvation, add one-fourth toast and milk. On the other hand you can eat as you please aud digest the food by the aid of a good digest,int, thus giving the tired stomach equally ns much rest Eat what you please and take a little Kodol for Indi gestion after your meals. It digests what y i.i eat. Sold by B C. Dodson. Williams' Kidney Hills. Hmvc you neglected your kidneys? Have you overworked your nervous sys tem and caused trouble with your Kidneys ami Bladder? Have you pains in the loins, till :, back, groins and bladder? Have you a flabby appearance ofthe face, especially under the eyes? Too frequent d>'-ire to pass urine? If so William's Kidney Pills will cure you. Sample free. By mail f>o cents. Sold by I!. C. Dod fon. Williams M'f'g. Co., Prop's, Clevc and, 0. 9-ly. For any disease of the skin we can r command Chamberlain's Salve. It re ii< -es the itching anl burning sensation instantly and soon effects a cure. This s,ilve is also invaluable for sore nipples. L Taggart; J. E. Smith, Sterling Run; Crum Bros., Sinnamehoning. Cut this out and take it to L. Taggart's drug store and get a free sample of C imb rlain'B Stomach and Liver Tablets. Ttiese tablets are far superior to pills, to' iog easier to take aad more pleasant in effect. They correct disorders of the 6t< mach, liver and bowels. Sold by L. Taggart; J. E. Smith. Sterling Run; Cium Bros.. Sinnaniahoning. Food don't digest? Because the stom ach lacks some one of essential digestants or tho digestive juices are not properly balanced. Then, too, it is this undigest ed food that causes sourness and painful ii.digoMion. Kodol for Indigestion should be used for relief. Kodol is a solution of vegetable acids. It digests what you ' at, and corrects the deficien cies of (lie digestion. Kodol conforms to the National Pure Food and Drug Law. Sold here l>y R. C. Dodson. j Xatcet Countv Correspondence. FROM OUR REPORTERS. STERLING RUN. Revi.al meetings began here Sunday evening. The new year is a good time to begin a new life. Make yonr vowsj and keep them. _ Doraey Spangler was quite sick a couple of days last week. The schools commenced here on Mon day. Glad to see the school mam's in town again. Genevieve Frank returned to her school at Perth Amboy, N. J., Tuesday. She visited her parents here during the holidays. Minnie and Jim Furlong of Pittsburg, are visitors in town. Jessie V. Strawbridge, who has been olerking at Jersey Shore, returned home Wednesday. Mrs. H. M. Foster of Renovo, spent Christmas with Thos. M. Lewis and family. B. L. Sterling, of Williamsport, is spending a few days with relatives here. Dorsey Spangler spent Christmas with relatives at Altoona and Beaver Springs. Mrs. Delia Reamer and familv of Renovo, spent Christmas with her par ents at this place. The Christmas tree in the M. E. church was a grand success. The reci tations and music were lino. Old Santa Clause appeared upon the scene and made every one glad with a box of candy, be sides numerous presents. Blanch Kissell has been on the sick list the bast week. Edwin Darren and family of Ridgway, are visiting their parents here. Nellie Whiting returned to Williams port Wednesday. Xiraena Brooks and mother were St. Marys visitors last week. Mabel Wylie, who is teaching at Al toona spent the holidays with her parents John Kissel spent Christmas in Coud ersport.. What is the attraction John? Clarence Howlet spent Christmas at Hicks Run. We hear there were over 100 souvenir post cards sent through the post office here the 24th. BLUE BELL. SINNAMAHONING. Joe Council of Tyler spent Christmas in town. Ilerm Krebs and family visited friend l ! here last week. Walter Drum and wife visited their parents at Laquin last week. Mrs. Ceo. Batehelder and daughter Eula visited friends at Driftwood Sun day. Master Lile Jordan aud sisters Hellen, Grace and Ruth spent Christmas with their sister Mrs. Geo. Batehelder. Pap Blodget has a new talking ma chine and can sell you a machine or rec ords at the lowest price. Dr. McFarland shook hands with 144 children between the ages of two and 12 years and gave them all a Christmas treat. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Silin, a daugh ter, Dec. 23. Alonzo Bailey who has been very low j with aema is improving. Stella Gibson of Nisbet is visiting here j during the holidays. W. H. Metzger and family visited | friends at Williamsport Christmas. The bear hunters have been quite busy. They followed a bear for five days and as his feet were bleeding, took pity on him give up the chase. Pap had a sore toe and was unable to take up the chase. Charley Scudder has some very re markable dreams about hunting, but saye | he can wait until next hunting season. I Sinnaniahoning Lodge No. 1138,1. O. j O. F. celebrated their first anniversary j with an oyster supper, 7'i plates being j laid. Camp 122, P. 0. of A. held their in- j stallation Tuesday evening. Several of the woou bundlers get too j much bug juice on Christmat eve, and j two of them got laid out. One of them was found about twelve o'clock and taken to the boarding house, the other one was not found until Christmas morning with his hands aud feet frozen and was sent to the Williamsport hospital. The license laws say that liquor dealers must not sell to a man of intemperate habits. Bridge contractors are putting in an irou bridge up on the Fork this week. DEBSE. The Grip. "Before we can sympathize with others, we roust have suffered ourselves." No one can realize the suffering attend ant upon an attack of the grip, unless he has had the actual experience. There is probably no disease that causes so much ; physical and mental agony, or which so succesfully defies medical aid. All danger from the grip, however, may be avoided bv the prompt use of Chamber lain's Cough Remedy. Among the tens of thousands who have used this remedy, not one case has ever been reported that has resulted in pneumonia or that has not recovered. For sale by L. Taggart; J. E. Smith, Sterling Run; Crum Bros.. Sinnaniahoning. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1907. FIRST FORK. ' There was a bad wreck on the B. &S. I near Cross Fork Junction on the evening : of Dec. 31, on the passenger train from Qaleton to Austin. Henry Page, engin eer, Lew Brawn conductor in which only one p«r«on, an Italian, name unknown was killed, and six injured. Engineer Page having his legs broken six times and otherwise injured. He will probably die The train was abandoned and no mail from .that way arrived until the morning of Jan. Ist. Mabel Edwards of Emporium and little niece Mildred were visiting friends here a tew days last week. Mrs. Beulah Logue who has been hay ing a severe attack of rheumatism is re covering. NUK SED. NORTH CREEK. Evyln Brundage, who is siok with typhoid fever, is «ome better at this writ ing. Willis McClenahan, the great hunter and trapper, has given up his trade and gone to lumbering. Mrs Laora Taylor and daughter of 1 Mina, were visiting their parents here j during the holidays. Lylah Berry visited her parents at Sterling Run, Christmas. Wayne Hamiltan was soon on our I streets last week. The boys said come I again Wayne. Mrs. Alice Heckman of Cross Forks, j visited her parents. j A box social held at Willis McClena | han's was a grand success, j Blanch Moon returned to school after 1 a week's vacation. Frank Craven and wife were sleigh < riding Saturday. MEDIX RUN. Mrs. George Hill of Grove Hill, was , visiting her sister, Mrs. Rosa Hill here. Thos. Ford, wife and daughter Hazel I of Millers Run, were visiting friends in ! town. j C. R. Barr was a Millers Run visitor i one day last week. Ruth Itoss, Maud Rockwell, Virginia ; Ore, who have been to Lock Haven ! Normal came home to spend Christmas. Frank Williams of Dents Run, was j seen on our streets one day last week.! | The school children had an entcrtain ' ment at the church Christmas eve. The Medix Run school is closed for a I two weeks vacation. Prof. Knarr, our | teacher, has gone to his home at Allen | town. j Minnie Barr of this place visited her | sister, Mrs. Roy Harrison at Dents Run I over Christmas. Mrs. Geo: Ingersoll of Providence, R. ( I.,was visiting friends in town a few days ! ago. I Mr. and Mrs. Havey of Austin, was in , town one day last week. Albert Russell of this place has gone ! to Williamsport. Wm. Miller, of Grantonia was calling lonI on friends in town. i Mr. Bresnec was a caller in Weedville | recently. We understand there is a few cases of 1 diphtheria at Caledonia and two children ' have died with it. | Clarence Hobart and wife of Osceola, j spent the holidays with John Callahan and wife. Sammy Garety, who fell from a lum ber pile at the mill yard some time ago is better at this writing. Morris Bresnic was a Benezette visitor Friday. Ilellen Hacket, who is going to school at Driftwood, came home to spend the holidays. Mrs. Hattie Barr of Lirder, is visiting friends here. The Standard Wood Co., at this place, expect to have the lath mill runniug i soon. Jack Warner and wife were Penfield i visitors Christmas. Thos. Shannon, one of the P, R. R. j brakomen, came home to spend the holi- > days. Margie Staecter of Michigon is visit- i ing her parents. Rnth Madgolds is visiting at Port ; Allegany. We hear that our pastor Rev. Engler \ is going to hold revival meetings here j soon. Katie Hacket was a Dußois visitor re cently. John Daniels spent Christmas with j friends in St. Marys. H. S. Ford is visiting his parents at ! Millers. DEW DROP. A Jamaican Lady Speaks Highly of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Mrs. Michael Hart, wife of the super-1 intendent of Cert Service, at Kingston, j Jamaica, West Indian Islands, says that 1 she has for some years used Chamberlain's ' Cough Remedy for coughs, croup and whooping cough and has found it very ! beneficial. She has implicit confidence ' in it and would not be without a bottle of it in her home. Sold by L. Taggart; J. E. Smith, Sterling Run: Crutii Bros., ; Sinnamahaaing. • CAMERON. Miss Susie Killeen,of Chicago, 111., ar rived here Sunday and will spend the holidays with her parents. J. M. Olsen of Clearfield, is spending a few days with his son-in-law, E. D. Krspe. H. H. Rockwell andjdaughter Ada of Renovo, spent Sunday his mother Mrs. Rockwell. Harvey Lord and family of Ellens burg, Wash., arrived here Saturday to spend the holidays with his parents, who he has not seen him in over 20 years. L. F. Zanor of St. Marys, spent Christmas with his mother. The Christmas entertainment for the children of this place given in the K.G.E. Hall, Mbtiday evenitig was very nice and' well gotten up. The older ones as well as the young enjoyed themselves. The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Kep ner is quite ill at this writing. Mrs. Killeen is again quite poorly and seems to be growning worse slowly, the last few days. James Leonard spent Sunnay with his family returning to his work at Huntley Sunday. A party of Penna. Railroad officials were inspecting the new interlocking plant here Dec. 2G. Jack Lovendesky returned from Denis Run, Friday. Grant Woods ofGrampion, was a busi ness caller in town the latter part of the week. Our* townspeople say that merchant Schwab had the finest assortment of Christinas goods ever seen in the county. Operators Page and Svllivan were business callers in Sterling Run Saturday. Referee Samuel J. Tilden Barr in forms us that he lias a drawing card for Friday evening. He has two parties from out of town to give a sparring ex j hibition but will not tell their names. 1 However, it is suspected that at least one jof the parties is from Sterling Run as I Sammy was seen buying a pair of spiked I training shoes at Schwab's store the other j day. Sammy is non-committal and car ries a pen behind his ear. J. F. s. HUNTLEY. | Operator F. Morrison and J. F. Sul \ livan, Jr., called on A. VV. Smith Fri ; day. I About five o'clock Thursday morn ! ing, as Wesley Barr was coming past | the camp of A. W. Smith, in Wylie j Hollow, he was attacked by a large | black bear and being unarmed he made ! for the camp with the bear in close J pursuit. Mr. Smith came to the rescue I with a gun, but owing to the darkness I he failed to hit the animal when he j fired and the bear got away, j A. VV. Smith has purchased the registered hog from J. F. Sullivan and j intends fitting it for the Potter County Fair next season. It is a full blood Ayrshire, with three white feet. Mrs. E. M. Summerson and brother A. W. Smith, spent Christmas with their niece, Mrs. Johnson iSmall wood,on FiratFork. Alfred says he can taste that dinner yet and will dream of it for months to come. He says when it comes to cooking the Smith family still hold the belt in this section of the country. Sunday School was held in the church, Sunday, Dec. 30th, and officers were elected for the new year: Presi dent, Mrs John Jordan; Secretary, C. J. Miller; Mrs. Chas. Collins, organist. The teachers were Miss Anna Helm breight, Miss Nellie Logue, Master George Carson, usher; Grace Logue and Rena Carson will distribute the phamplets and papers. The many friends of Miss Helm brecht will be glad to learn that she has recovered from her recent illness and is able to resume her teaching. Relief Operator Morrison is relieving j the operators at St. Marys this week. Dan Kilbourne has returned from j West Virginia where he has been for the past three months. Mrs. Jonli Johnson is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Asa Collins, Conneaut, O. Mrs. Geo. Collins is attending the house in her absense. 1 B. J. Collins was a Sterling Run call er Monday. Lumber contractor Eastman, ofSterl ing Run, was a pleasant caller on friends in town Monday. Jesse Johnson is building a large camp at the head of Big Run, where he has taken a large tie job from B. J. Collins. W. R. Smith and family, of River Terrace, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Levi Smith of the East End. Mrs. Henry Laytou, who was injur ed some time ago by falling is still in a very bad condition and her recovery is very slow. Her many friends ox- ! tend sincere sympathy. Rev. Miss Etta Heyward is conduct- ' ing ;i quarterly meeting at Castle I Garden this week. Samuel Barr the popular P. R. R., I bridge watchman was a welcome caller in town Monday evening. Aanstant Foreman, A. T.Smith, has returned from a visit with relatives in ' Berwick, Pa. j. v. s. Subscribe for the Punas, and read j the county news. A Mollier'n Arffnment. "The most to be regretted act of my ! l!fe," says a commander of the navy, j "was a letter I wrote to my mother when about seventeen years of age. She always addressed her letters to me as 'my dear boy.' I felt at that time I was a man, or very near it, and wrote saying that her constant ad dressing me as a 'boy' made ine feel displeased. I received in reply a letter full of reproaches and tears. Among other things, she said: 'You might grow to be as big ns Golinth, as strong as Samson aud as wise as Solomon; you might become ruler of a nation or em peror of many nations, and the world might revere you nnd fear you, but to your devoted mother you would al ways appear In memory 111 your lnno ■*«nt, unpretentious, imself conceited unpampered babyhood. In those days when I washed and dresswl and lcissed and worshiped you, you were my Idol. Nowadays you are becoming part of a gross world by contact with It, and I cannot bow down to you and worship you, but if there are manhood and maternal love transmitted to you, you will understand that the highest com pliment that mother love can pay you Is to call you "my dear boy."'" Some Old Ttm? Giaula, Oajanus, a Swedish giant who was nine feet high, was on exhibition in London in 1742, and several old hand bills still exist which set forth the measurements of this freak of nature. Thirty years later we have Charles Byrne, who was eight feet four inches in height in his stockinged feet. He, however, died young, at the age of twenty-two, from hard drinking. Cot ter O'Byrne, another Irish giant, fol lowed a few years later. lie was born at Ivinsnle in 17<S1 and at the age of fifteen was eight feet high. This by the time lie was twenty-three had Increased to nine feet four inches, and then he changed Itis name to O'Briun in order to make people think that he was descended from King Brian Bo rolhme aud went on exhibition. At that business he, of course, soon real ized a very comfortable fortune and re tired, dying at Clifton 011 Sept. 8, 1804. His will especially provided that his body should be thrown into the sea in order to prevent the surgeons from cut ting it up. No Itliymr For Tlpprrary. A poet once jumped to the conclusion that there was 110 rhyme to Tipperary and said so, whereupon an indignant Irishmau, who chanced also to be a bit of a versifier, pounced upon him and poked fun at him in a lengthy poem, every other line of which rhymed or Was supposed to rhyme with the place In question. Thus: A bard there was in sad quandary To find a rhyme for Tipperary. Long labored he through January, Yet found no rhyme for Tipperary: Toiled every day In February, But toiled in vain for Tipperary: Searched Hebrew text and commentary, But searched in vain for Tipperary. And so on through many scores of stanzas, ending up with: He paced about his aviary. Burnt in despair his dictionary. Blew up sky high his secretary, And then in wrath and anger s%vare he There was no rhyme for Tipperary. Ulii.sMPK nn<l tlie Eje*. Every one knows that in using a field glass it is necessary to adjust it to a proper focus. Supposb that you put one of the tubes at your focus and the other tube at a focus that suited some one else and then you looked through both tubes' You would have j a more or less blurred vision, and if you kept 011 looking the chances are that you would feel giddy and get a headache. Now. the two eyes are sup posed to have an equal natural focus, and when by any chance that focus is unequal a headache results. The rem edy is a pair of glasses or a single glass to make the eyes equal in power. Tlie Dnnen. The Danes, or Northmen, first be came prominent in European history In 783, when they began to ravage the north coast of France and south ern shores of Great Britain. The dar ing of these hardy seamen was re markable, for in their small ships they even penetrated the Mediterranean and became terrors to the seaboard popula tion of Italy, Sicily and Greece. The first king of Denmark is said to have been Skioid. IK) B. C. All It Needed. "I made this potato salad for you viysclf," smiled she. "Isn't it deli cfous?" "It would be," assented her husband, "if you had put a little more oil and vinegar and pepper and mustard seed and horseradish iti the dressing and introduced a sliced egg or two and a few white onions and left half of the potatoes out." Tolerance In Japan. Westerners seem to find it incon ceivable how the Japanese can main tain allegiance to different creeds at one and tin? itrnne time. One broad ex planation of this is that we as a nation are tolerant in mind, especially in mat ters pertaining to religion. Japan Times of Tokyo. 'l'Jie Wroner Jam. Haskell—What's Bobby crying for? Mrs. Haskell—Oh, the poor boy caught his finger in the pantry door. Ilaskeli —H'111! ile evidently didn't get the jam he was looking for that time.— Plck-Me-rp. lietflnß nark nt Him. Hewitt—l got even with the doctor who vaccinated inc. .lowett-How did you do it? Hewitt lie ran for o'lloe. and I scratched him. Flattery is telling a 111:111 to his face that which was intended only for his tombstone - Dallas News. Tlie Awful Carlb Fl»h. A traveler in Venezuela gives an In teresting description of the fish of the Orinoco country. He says the party several times came in contact with the carlb fish, which are the most ferocious Inhabitants of the water known. The fish are not over fourteen inches long, but they travel in schools. Their teeth are three cornered. Any living objeel which attracts their attention Is at tacked with fury. Mr. Thompson tells of an Indian woman who entered tht water to fill a bucket. She wits at tacked by the fish and reached short only to die in fifteen minutes. The flesh was literally torn from her body Mr. Dart, who was with Mr. Thorop son, caught one of the fish and pulled It upon the bank. He held the carlb under his foot while he pointed at the peculiar teeth with his finger. With a quick movement'the carlb flopped out from under Mr. I>art'B foot and seized him by the finger, cutting that membet to the bone. The fish frequently havt been known to bite ordinary fishhooks In two. P'HMM- of DralUtrr. •- •'• i Though dentistry became a science under the hand of Professor ltlchard Owen as late as 1839, there are evl dences that It was practiced In a crude way by the ancients. Herodotus refer? to treatment of the teeth by the Egyp tlans, and evidences of attempts to supply artificial teeth have been dis covered in ancient skulls and mum mies. Galen was the first physician to speak of treatment of troublesome teeth, and Ambroise Pare, in his work ou surgery in 1550, makes mention of the preservation of the teeth. It is only since the middle of the last cen tury, however, that dentistry has be come a branch of surgical science. Be fore that time bad teeth were extract ed, and mere tooth drawing constitut ed dentistry early in the nineteenth century. The first dental school in the United States was erected at Balti more in 1839. In 1845 Cincinnati boast ed of a similar institution, and in 1850 a dental school was erected at Phila delphia. A Gentleman of the Old School. Lady Dorothy Nevill in her reminis cences tells a story of her father, a gentleman of the old school, "In nan keen shorts, with white stockings and a brass buttoned blue coat, with big collar, over a beautifully embroidered waistcoat." But he swore, after the manner of tl.e age. "He was traveling at night on the continent alone in a post chaise when the postboy, while passing through a forest, began to drive like a man anything but certain of his way. My father's wrath soon rose, and the explosion of strong lan guage which issued from the carriage so alarmed the driver that, murmuring, 'Je no veux pas conduire le diable' (I will not drive the devilj, he pulled up and, having expeditiously unfastened the traces, made off with his horses at a gallop. My father, I believe, passed the whole night alone in the woods." \ \ v \ \ N X N V \ \ \ \/■ SECOND TO NONE. $ | ADAM. r ✓ MELDRUM & F ANDERSON CO. | ty 396-408 Main Street, / % BUFFALO, N. Y. \ \ I i I | Change of | Management Sale | FINE SUITS, I I COATS | AND SKIRTS | p? % To meet the ideas of our new / J Suitand Coat manager we will 1 1 2:. % sacrifice all our beautiful gar % ments at from ] to .! less than gf regular values. These are all fk % new goods and worth full regular. | $22 SUITS | ». Tl,ese nre ltle most popular suits in the house—suits that you would not hesi- '/ y tato to pav *25 for. They are in brown if. % and grey mixtures and are all this sea- '/ son's goods that have (hi r r\(~\ W: never sold less than *22 (pIO.UU \ $35 SUITS | H We recommend these suits to be one of A the best bargains ever offered in Buf- ■ y, falo. Most of them are in the very § popnlar greys. They djQft CA K are good values at $35 tpeCilCi. OU / I* Also 50 fine black suits worth from $25 to sls to SSO I 1 COATS HALF PRICE | One rack of #6.50 coats in fancv plaids % % mixtures $2.75 > % One rack of coats made of fine materials £ in fashionable grey mixtures, plaids gi and checks for less than $12.50, sls, $lO f,\ up to *22.00; now 112 % Half Price \ 21 j 22 long coats in fashionable plaids and & herringbone mixtures;thevalues range & S, from $lO to sls d>£s % Your choice IpO.OU 1 $6 SKIRTS I About fifty skirts in good checked ma" A ferials, mostly %• % iu large sizes tpiO. / O g I = | J ADAM, § » MELDRUM & ANDERSON CO. T American Block, Buiralo, N. Y. /\\\\\\ \ \ \ \ x
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers