i Easiest Way Keepin Style — voman would wear dresses, or , or stockings of a color that's lly out of style or faded, if all knew how easy it is to make fresh, crisp and stylish by the nagic of home tinting or dyeing, ody can tint or dye successfuls 1 true, fadeless Diamond Dyes. - with them is as easy as bluing, eing takes just a little longer, tylish colors appear like magic, ver the old, faded colors, Dia- Dyes never spot, streak or run, aire real dyes, like those used he cloth was made. Insist on nd save disappointment. new 64-page illustrated book, Craft,” gives hundreds of saving hints for renewing and draperies. It’s Free. Write ow, to Mae Martin, Dept. D-143, 1d Dyes, Burlington, Vermont. Dead Notes n Geraldine Farrar was a little Medford, Mass., and first began v her musical talent, she drove ighbors frantic with her bud- ocal efforts. you really have to do that?’ a oy in the neighborhood asked > day. course I do,” declared “Jerry.” iful - music always seems to me !” t's because you murder It decided the wag and the future opera star crossed his name off —Los Angeles Times. [i LO S if NW mn WW a D FOLKS SAY DR. CALDWELL WAS RIGHT SO CO (44 basis of treating sickness has not 1 since Dr. Caldwell left Medical in 1875, nor since he placed on rket the laxative prescription he d in his practice. reated constipation, biliousness, es, mental depression, indigestion, omach and other indispositions by means of simple vegetable s, herbs and roots. These are o basis of Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup a combination of senna and ild herbs, with pepsin. impler the remedy for constipa- e safer for the child and for you. you can get results in a mild ‘e way by using Dr. Caldwell’s Pepsin, why take chances with drugs? tle will last several months, and use it. It is pleasant to the entle in action, and free from s. Elderly people find it ideal. r stores have the generous bottles, e “Syrup Pepsin,” Dept. BB, llo, Illinois, for free trial bottle. n—The doctor said he'd put my feet again in six weeks. h—And did he? n—Yes, I had to sell my car to 3 bill.—London Express. orn Made Into Starch than 70,000,000 bushels of eorn country were converted into in the last year. . we think long and seriously n we suddenly discover that arent regard of some one for ncere. L KEPT SING WEIGHT . E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ompound Built Her Up ey, Mont.—“I was working o years—clerking in a store— and seemed to he steadily losing in weight so was forced to give up my work. A neighbor recom- mended Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound to me and 1 have now taken six bottles and can’t tell you how I have appreciated um feeling better and stronger day. I recommend it to all girls and if any Lave the same > and will write to me I will answer.”—Mgs. Emm H. 8, Box 476, Scohey, Montana. v Splitting and shaving shingles — pioneer stylemfo By ELMO SCOTT WATSON FTER being “lost” nearly one hundred and fifty years, the historic town of Schoenbrunn is to rise from its ashes and to live again. The res- toration on its original site is already under way and only the other day state officials and the citizens of Uhrichs- ville, Dover and New *hiladelphia, Ohio, gathered near the latter town to dedicate the replica of the original Schoenbrunn schoolhouse, which had been erected there July 29, 1773, the first school building in that state. That the dedication of this particu- lar bnilding and the whole plan for the restoration of Schoenbrunn has more than local interest was attest- ed to by the fact that hundreds of visitors from other states attended the ceremonies and that the plans for the renaissance of this historic town are being followed with appreciation for its significance by many outside the borders of the Buckeye state. For Schoenbrunn, established as an for Indian mission, was the first town built by the whites in that part of the Old Northwest territory which was later to attract so many settlers to its fertile lands; in it stood the first church and the first public school building in that part of the territory and there, too, was organized the first peace and temperance societies west of the Alleghanies, It is these facts which give it importance in our national history and when the restor- ation is completed, the new Schoen- brunn will stand as a monument to the spirit of the pioneer missionaries who, with their Bibles and Christian teachings, did their share in winning the West as truly as did those other pioneers who carried into the wilder- ness the rifle and the ax. , The story of the Moravian Indian mission at Schoenbrunn and its sis- ter mission towns of Lichtenau and Gnadenhutten is a story of Christian heroism, a tale o° romance, pathos and tragedy. All of it centers around the names of two great missionaries, John Heckewelder and David Zeis- berger—and most of all, Zeisberger. From 1737, when he was but sixteen years old, until 1808S, when he died, he gave every day of those seventy- one years to the one consuming pas- sion of nis life—that of bringing Christianity to the Indians of the Middle West. Early in 1771 Zeisberger crossed over into Ohio and on March 14 of that yea arrived at Gekelemul:pe- chunk, the principal town of the Dela- ware tribe (now Newcomerstown, Ohio) where he preached the first Protestant sermon ever delivered in Ohio. He came back again in March, 1772, and, the chief of the Delawares having suggested that he establish a mission among them, Zeisherger be- gan to look around for a suitable site. While doing this he discovered a sparkling spring which he gave the name of Schoenbrunn (Beautiful Spring) and resolved to establish his mission there. So he went back to Pennsylvania to return two months later with 28 Christian Indians and work was begun at once on the build- Ing of homes, a church and a school. On. August 23, 1772, Rev. John Heckewelder and Rev. John Ettwein with more than 200 Christian Indians arrived and the next day the mission- aries and their Indian helpers laid out the town of Schoenbrunn and formulated the first civil code ever adopted in the state of Ohio for the governr.ent of their town. By the middle of September the church was finished and services were held in it. For awhile the mission was pros- perous and peace and contentment reigned in the town. The Indians The “Ohio Road” Do you remember the old finger post at the corner of Main street and the Ohlo road? It was a simple board cut to a long, flozer point, and mounted on a tall post; once upon a time it had been painted white, with black lettering. Probably that was as long ago as the time when that name for the road had some meaning, for since the mid Site of Schoenbrunn Spring. This spring supplied the water for the town of Schoen- brunn, founded May 3, 1772. ¢ 11:4 TU. r school house, Sept.-Oct., 1927. Schoenbrunn Me- worial Park, near New Philadelphia, Ohio. g 1358 . e The Schoenbrunn Cemetery was discovered March 12, 1927. Forty-four Indian graves were found. Burials from Dec. 29, 1772 to Jan. 24, 1777. This is the oldest cemetery in Ohio. First cabin rebuilt at Schoenbrunn, first town in Ohio. Built 1772. rebuilt June-July, 1927. Indian Cemetery in the distance. ©1928 LU were not only instructed in the Chris- tian religion but they were shown how to cultivat: the land and to raise live stock. Visiting Indians were am-~zed to see these Indians content to re- main in one place and to work. But trouble soon came to the peace- ful town of Schoenbrunn, stirred up probably by the surrounding tribes who resented the influence of the whites in changing the lives and hab- its of their red brethren. A certain clique in the town plotted to over- throw the missionaries and, although Zeisberger saw the rebellion brewing and attempted to stem it in time, his efforts were fruitless. Finally he called a meeting of those who re- main loyal and there on April 19, 1777, he held the last services, after which he ordered the church to be torn down that it might not be dese- crated by the apostates who had plot- ted against him. Soon afterwards the missionaries and their faithful Indl- ans deserted the town and the .ouses were burned down and the fields laid waste by the “pagan” Indians. From that time on Gnadenhutten was the center of the Moravian activity. During the Revolution the Moravian Indians tried hard to maintain a strict neutrality but this attitude won them friends on neither side. The British charged them with aiding the Amer- icans and it is true that they did aid them by ransoming captives from hos- tile Indians and by warning the offi- cers at Pittsburgh of impending In- dian But as time went on she Americans also began to suspect the Moravian Indians of being pro- British. The hostile Indians used the Moravian towns as convenient “half- way houses” when starting on or re- turning from a foray against the Ken- tucky or Pennsylvania settlements and there they got shelter and re- freshment which the Moravian Indi- ans dared not refuse them. Finally a party of Pennsylvanians, led by the notorious Col. David Wil- liamson, set out with the avowed in- tention of wiping out the Moravian attacks. towns. They arrived at Gnadenhut- ten on March 7, 1782, and gathered the unsuspecting Indians in tw houses, the men in one and the wom- en and children in the other. Then they told the Indians that they were to be put to death. The next morn- ing the butchery began. The whites Ohio Road,” was merely a memory. That rc d was laid out in 1745, and local travel up the river was as much a part of the life of the road as the western traffic. It was the road over which both Davic Zeisherger and John Heckewelder left Bethlehem and trav- eled toward the setting sun. with an ax in their equipment for clearing a path through the woods and chopping wood for camy fires. The missionaries there came from Jethlehem, and here in Bet 'ehem are dle of the last century the name, “the their reports, their diaries and their ® entered the cabins and cold-bloodedly put to death the ©3 defenseless men, women and children—an unexcusable massacre and in many respects as re- volting a crime as ever the most sav- age Indians perpetrated against the whites. Irom that time on the surviving Moravian Indians were wanderers in Canada and Ohio. All that time Zeis- berger continued his work among them and when he died in 1808 at the age of eighty-seven he was buried, at his own request, in the Indian cemetery among the people he had served so long and so well. When the inrush of settlers flooded Ohio after the last Indian wars in the Old the early settlers of Tuscarawas coun- ty completed the work of destruction of the towr of Schoenbrunn. The land was farmed over and the site of the village was indistinguishable from the surrounding fields. It became a “lost” city until the efforts of Rev. J. E. Weinland of the Moravian church at Dover, Ohio, who made many trips to Bethlehem, Pa. where he pored over the archives of the Moravian church, resulted in finding the data which led to the town's “rediscovery” | in 1923. Excavations made on the site revealed the exact outlines of the church, the schoolhouse, Zeisberger's house and the houses of a number of the Indians. The. a movement for the restora- tion of the town was started. The | Eighty-fifth general assembly of Ohio appropriated $10,000 which enabled the Tuscarawas Historical society to purchase most of the land on which | the town stood. The next general assembly added $7,500 for three ad- joining tracts and the last general as- sembly provided a $25,000 appropria- tion for the actual work of restora- tion which is being carried on in the 165-acre Schoenbrunn Memorial park by a committee appointed by the Ohio State Archeological and Histor- ical society. One of the log cabins, that of John Joseph Schibosh, Zeisherger's assist- ant who married an Indian woman and whose eldest son was the first person killed in the Gnadenhutten massacre, was rebuilt last year. The rebuilt schoolhouse was dedicated July 29 of this year and the dedica- | tion of the church has heen announced for October 21 of this year. history. There is a diary of a journey from Cuyahoga to Bethlehem by John Heckewelder in 178%. Such titles re- lating to Ohio can be found by the dozen. The veteran Heckewelder gave an interesting account and a map of the Connecticut elaim, One of the most valuable recent finds was a plan by Heckewelder of the first settlement out there, Zeisherger's village, with the location of each house ard the name of its occupant.—Elizabeth My- ers in the Bethlehem ‘Pa Dally Times. Northwest, | and wonder. Where had the child come from and what was he doing { and told him not to go near the brook, | where the windows are all out, THE PATTON COURIER . @® ® ® © BROOK © S © © Ol} DEOOOPPPPEOOPPPONPPROORODE D J. Walsh.) ARRIET GLENN leaned over her kitchen windowsill look- ing at the brook. It seemed to be talking to itself in a (© by low, monotonous, discontented w It flowed slowly, too, but unceasingly, fretted by celandine and fern. May- be it wanted to stop and couldn’t. It must be so tired after all the years it had been doing the same thing. Let's see, Harriet had fallen into the brook when she was two and somehow she remembered the wetting and the ex- citement of her mother. Since then she had paddled in it, fished in it, iived in it. And she was nearing mid- dle age. Ob, it must be so tired by this time! The kitchen was small and dark and clumsily furnished. There was a smell of ‘dampness about it. Her mother had been gone for several thousand days and her father, too. The house, the farm, the brook were hers. She was the old maid, Glenn, who worked hard, lived alone, put money by for no purpose and was rated reticent and odd by her nearest neighbors half a mile below. Thin, dark, sallow, she looked into the brook and found herself possessed of troublesome, dark thoughts. It was just that she had worked too hard during haying when she had three men to feed and do for. Well, that was over until another year. Some- times she wished—her eyes followed the brook down to the old trout hole under the snag. The water was quite deep there even at this season, three or four feet, deep enough—for any- thing. She drew back, hastily closed the window and went on drying dishes. But she couldn't shut out the sight or sound of the brook. It came to her that it came from miles away aad went on for miles into the river, yet all she knew of it was that eighth of a mile where it crossed her land. Suddenly from outside there was a queer quacking and splashing. Her ducks! She flung down the dish towel and ran out of doors. Her brood | of young ducks had just got out of their little yard and had gone to the brook. They were going up the brook as fast as they could a fleet of them paddling against the cool current, She ran after them, calling, coaxing. but they went on. Where were they headed for? Did they know where they were going? She scrambled over a wall, her boundary wall. The ducks sailed on. She followed for half a mile until she came to a piece of woods. Hurry | as fast as she could the ducks went faster; no heading them off. In the | woods the brook spread suddenly into [a quiet pool and the ducks began to | dive and gobble. They were finding food. In that case they would prob- ably not go on much farther. She | would sit down and watch them. It was a lovely place, a mountain rising sheer and dark beyond, rocks, | ferns and white birches that leaned together, in groups like ladies whisper- Upon a convenient rock ing secrets. Harriet lay down, cooling, soothing, getting her breath back. The tired little brook seemed to be resting here for a moment, Underneath the low bank at the brook’s edge she heard soft barefoot steps and saw a childish head bobbing. She remembered the old name for light-haired youngsters, at the same time feeling a troublesome perplexity here alone by the brook? Oh, he had seen ducks. It was the ducks he was after. He was trying to get them, wading right out into the water. “Come back here!” Harriet sprang up and went scrambling down the bank. The child looked over his shoul- der at her, tottered, lost his balance and fell with a spiash into one of the dark pools. The water was so deep that he went out of sight. Harriet plunged in after him anq scooped him up in her arms, Drip- ping, with his hair flung back from his little white forehead, she held him by the heels until the water he had swallowed ran out of his mouth. When he was able to ery she pressed him to her, quieting him with tender words. “Davy! Davy!” A woman's call rang down the brook and the woman her- self came running wildly, a young haggard thing in a rag of a gown. “Here he is! I've got him. He's all right,” Harriet responded. “Oh he’s been in the brook!” the girl cried with a sob. “I've told him house and we went in. little money we had and so we go some food in the last village we wen through. every night.” The old house had heen abhandonec for years. It was ready to fall down Harriet scarcely considered it safe tc unhesitatingly, There was a hemlock boughs in one corner of the room and upon it lay a man whe woman, home with me. demanded of the man, “I—1 guess so.” Harriet reached down and helped him to his feet. It was hard work getting him down to her home, but she did it. The girl -arried the baby. On the way learned all about them—how David Horton had fallen ill, had to give up work and how the final disaster had overtaken them, “Julia and I both worked in the factory. That is where we met,” David explained. “I suppose I oughtn't to have married her, but I loved her, I didn’t know it was going to be like this.” He choked. “She's been keep- ing us going by working; she's serubbed stairs.” He choked again. “I'd scrub all the stairs in the city just for the sake of being with you David,” Julia said. Harriet had a family on her hands. She put David to bed and doctored and fed him herself. Julia proved to be eagerly helpful; the baby’s face grew round on milk and home-made bread. The poor young father had some comfortable weeks before he died. And he left Davy and Julia to the kind friend that had been raised up to protect them. “Bear up, my dear. see your boy raised to be a grown man,” Harriet said over and over again. “It's going to be a big job for both of us,” she added. During those weeks of acute sorrow You've got to Julia loved to sit beside the brook gazing wistfully into its chattering current. As for Davy, he loved the stream and found his greatest amuse- ment in it. It was a happy day for the house- hold when Harriet helped Davy pull his first fish out of the deep about her neck and kissed her. “1 love you, Aunt Hatty,” he cried, That night Harriet stole out to the brook alone. The moonlight lay upon it and danced with sparkles. “How different it looks and sounds.” Harriet said wonderingly to herself. “It makes me think of Davy-boy, all life and joy and innocence. Davy must have a chance; college, maybe. I've got money enough, praise be.” Her thoughts began to carry her into the pleasant future. At her feet the water leaped and glistened and murmured. The tired little brook was tired no longer. End of French Dream of American Empire Miquelon and St. Pierre, two recky islands off the southern coast of New- foundland, are the only possessions of France in North America, the Pathfinder Magazine The National Geographic society says these tiny is- lands are now peopled by about 4,000 sturdy fisherfolk of Breton and Nor- man stock. These islands were first occupied by says the French in 1660. The British cap- tured them in 1702, but gave them back to France in 1763 as a fishing sta- tion. Thus they are the sole remnant of the great empire which France once had in North America. tance is due to their proximity to the Great banks, which makes them the center of the French fisheries. These fisheries are kept up by an elaborate system of bounties by the French gov- ernment, which considers them im- portant for training sailors for the navy. Had English Charter chamber of commerce of the state of New York was formed in 1768. The charter granted by King George III of England was to “the Chamber of Commerce in the City of New York in America.” When the United States was ‘established, the as sociation was reincorporated and the name changed to the “Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York.” The chamber, however, is not a state- The wide institution, but is local in char- acter, Glacial Periods C. L. Dake, professor of geology, University of Missouri, says: “Though several theories of the cause of the but he's possessed. He ran away, too!” “Where do you live?” Harriet asked. She had known of no such woman as this in her locality. “We're just squatters,” the girl an- “We are in that old house We've been there a week. We had to go somewhere.” She offered an apology “You see, we were burned out in the eity without any insurance, and my husband is sick anyway. I think he— he isn't going to stay with me long.” She was crying now. “Come, Davy, we'll go home.” “I'm going with you,” Harriet said “How did you get out of she asked. “We rode some of the walked some of the way. We walked one whole night. I had to carry the haby for David wasn’t strong enough. swered. the city? way and glacial period have been proposed, no one has received general acceptance. The existence of glacial periods in past geologic ages is well established. Whatever the cause, the ice sheets formed and advanced. The time since the close of the Ice age has been variously estimated, average estimates being around 20,000 years.” Worthy Life That man is a success who lived well, laughed often and loved much ; who has gained the respect of intelligent men and little children ; who has filled his niche and accom- plirhed his task; who leaves the world better than he found it; who never lacked appreciation of the beauty or failed to express ig, who looked for the best in others and gave the best he had.—Haines (Ore.) Ree- ord. vile thought m:yhe he'd ing werk, dat Their impor- | he gave out when we got to the old i ® We saved a tL t We've had a lovely campfire 1 > walk across the floor, bue she entered pile of ) turned a white face upon them and tried to rise when he saw the strange “Look here,” Harriet said shortly, “you folks pick up right now and come Can you walk?” she He smiled faintly, she pool. | That was the time he flung his arms | Ll ie TL TIT LL feb Ud TRI EES LCE 11 dA K-R-O is relatively harm- less to human beings, live- stock, dogs, cats, poultry, yet is guaranteed to kill rats and mice every time. Avoid Dangerous Polsons K-R-O does not contain arsenic, phosphor= ous, barium carbonate or any other deadly poison. Itsactive ingredient is squill as rec- ommended by the U. S. Dept. of Agricul- turein their latest bulletin on “Rat Control.” —eeteemss ime Kili Rats Without Danger + A New Exterminator that is Wonderfully Effective yet Safe to Use! Many letters testify to the great merit of K-R-O. “One of my customers put out a package of K-R-O and the next morning he PickedupS2 full grown rats. Hisdog gota ood rtion of the K-R-O bait butit did not hurt im.~The Gist Pharmacy, Sparta, Tean.'’ SOLD ONMONEY-BACK GUARAN. BE. 75cat your druggist or direct from us at $1.00 delivered. Large size (four times as much) $2.00. K-R-O Co., Springfield, Ohio. K= R= KILLS-RATS-ONLY Cuticura Soothes Burning Aching Feet Bathe the feet for several minutes with Cuticura Soap and warm water, then follow with a light application of Cuticura Ointment, gently rubbed in. For tired, hot, irritated feet this treatment is most comforting. Cuti- cura Talcum is cooling and refreshing. Soap 2c. Ointment 2% and 0c. Taleum 2c. Sold everywhere. Sample each free. Address: “Cuticura Laboratories, Dept. B4, Malden, Mass.” IME Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c. “Bridge” Not Russian Bridge was first known as Biritch, or Russian whist. This gave rise to | | { | has earth’s | the idea that it was a Russian game. Dictionaries of the Russian language do not contain the word. It seems more probable that the game is Lev- antine, since ft known in Con- stantinople and about 1870, long before it invaded western Europe. was Greece Salable “An honest confession for the soul.” “Yes, and the magazines are buy- ing 'em.”—Louisville Courier-Journal. is good Taxi Driver I use Champion Spark Plugs because they help to make my service more dependable, Champion is the better spark plug because it has an exclusive silli- manite insulator spe- cially treated to with. stand the much higher temperatures of the modern high-compres- sion engine. Also a new patented solid copper gasket-seal that remains absolutely gas-tight under high compres. sion. Special analysis electrodes which assure a fixed spark-gap under all driving conditions. CHAMPION Spark’ Plugs Toledo, Ohio Dependable for Every Engine Where Woman Leads Another thing a woman can do that a man can't when they give a quiet little dinner and hire a man for $2 and all he can eat to wait on the table, is to act as if they always had a butler.—Ohio State Journal, colored Girl who “only wants a drink of wawter,” doesn’t please a young man who wants to spend his money. APPETITE Pp IMPROVED ye» » QUICKLY Carter’s Little Liver Pills Purely Vegetable Laxative yim, | move the bowsls free from pain and unpleasant after effects. . They relieve the system of constipa. tion poisons which dull the desire for food. Remember they are a doctor's prescription and can be taken by the entire family, All Druggists 25¢ and 75¢ Red Packages, CARTERS Sa DR.J.D.KELLOGG’SASTHMAREMEDY for the prompt relief of Asthma and Hay Fever. Ask your druge gist for it. 25 cents and one dole lar. Write for FREE SAMPLE Northrop &Lyman Co.,Inc.,Buffalo,N.Y A] Dental Advice Ain't science wonderful? Science tells us that the teeth of a gorilla are set so deeply in the jaw that they cannot be pulled. So if you have had any thought of pulling the teeth of a gorilla you may as well call it off.— Houston Post-Dispatch, Candid Avowal “What do you think of aviation?” “I don’t think of it at all if I cam help it. I'm too easy scared.” “Beautiful,” murmured the flapper tourist as she gazed upon the image of the Sphinx, And as an after thought she added, “but dumb.” TURE THEATER 0; corner location vil- n in Pennsylvania; in- dwelling; no competition; reasonably, cluding owner main street L000-3830,000 invoice; $6,500 Pittston, Pa.; ior veen according to yearl required, priced DRUG STORE Plymouth, old established, splendid paying bus 33a n and heavily stocked; illness mpels ; $9,600 required, A ROOM Located well known resort city Pennsyl- van open May-November; doing $17,000 yearly price sale. ps right for quick FOR FURTHER DETAILS SEE EMPIRE S. INC. 152 W. 42) AGENTS WANTED—To sell our leader Assortment of Christmas Greeting Cards and Folders all steel engraved and lith- ographed in colors. 100% Profit for you. Costs you 50c¢ ; sells for $1. Sample box including postage 65c: Mounted sam- ple, including postage 90c. I. ROBBINS & SON 203 Market Street - Pittsburgh, Pa. ~~ WARNING No more removing ¥ NO batteries from ears for EZING, Cc ri to Distributors, and 13 1¢ batteries The Osiris Battery and Fluid Co., Euclid Ave,, Cleveland, Ohio, | IS MEAN YOU? righ - nan a home, 10 (or n their er whol 1g about. Wr ite for our you PEQUOD NURSERIES Yalesville eee a. we Conn. mallest Bible on Earth, Ney ¢ nt sample 10c, L Clarkson Ave [ pri Tr re materials, | The J. A. Trotter Co., East Liverpool, Ohio, boc - For Sale—My old fast eared coon { & um hot fast open | ass tree er or out, re St lays trial, Noble Cross, Mayfield, Ky. Home Making Handtoole Simple, easy quick, W Is, material. A legiti- iculars. Ro= Ind. the Thriving Town Kknowr 1 estah- West ’, Brok- S Calif. Leather Co., Box 25, Fort Way ne, Jewelry Store Le of Hollister, ted in Well rey Pico, nteed Salary and Commissions selling 1 to merchants in t at Posi Prevent Premature Wri lz Jor Ny s Tone up skin, adies lot after shaving, g 1. B. KLYVER VA. 100 10 t owns, 8, successful ocean beach, rna, Fl Is n nel Write J J JON la Men Over 40, mals, write f he your life, Dr, § for You, T My plan f rer les, list tie ete AVERDR § VILL CO., Dept, 240, B X 1 Havana, Cuba ADDRESSING ENVELOPES. Experience un- necessary; $1¢ during spare " D MOND Harbor, Ind I MPAN'Y JOIN ME BUYING PRODUCING OIL Wells while low priced. Pay for them from oil 1 T BOX «lw eel. CISCO, TEXAS. AGENTS WANTED—40 to 50 comn Box assor nt and personal cards Ww for details, I ARTISTIC CARD COMPANY, TSS W. N. U,, PITTSBURGH, NC. 36--1928.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers