- Successors to We are How Prepared to Please the Farmers and the Gcl..i i.Jablic by being ready at all times to Accom modate them. Plenty of Water to run the Mill Day and Night if Necessary. A Full stock of the Best Brands of Flour Seal of Minnesota is A No. I. Try it. Washburn's Gold Medal, Arnold's Superlative. Feed, Meal, Mid dlings and Bran. Buck wheat F our in its Season a Spe 'alty ! I I OnlorH Iff t nt, the Mill for delivery will receive prompt iittrntinn. iBioro liming Milford, PiUo Co., Penna. DO YOU EXPERT TO BUILD? THEN SEE A." D.. BROWN and SON, Monuf .titciirer and dealers In ail kinds of Lumber, Contractors and Builders. Estimates made ; personal atten tion given and work guaranteed. OFFICE, Brown's Building, Milford, Pa. T. Armstrong & Co., Successors to BROWN & ARMSTRONG. Wo offer a lino of UNSURPASSED Our point is tlint you need not go awrty from homo to supply iill.your hcoiIh, or to sonuro bargains. We expoct to satisfy yon in both particulars. DRY GOODS, new niU stylinh. GROCERIES, fresh and goo,l. HARDWARE, BOOTS, SHOES, AND CLOTH ING. Any thing in any lino nt bo'tom prices. To accomplish this end wo have adopted a now eytstem. All our pricosvare fixed on a bii iis of cash payment. This obviates tho necessity to allow a margin for had debts and nterest. To accommodate responsible parties we cheer fully open monthly accounts, and expect prompt, payment monthly, as our prices will not enable us to carry accounts longer. Statements rendered tho Hrst of every month, and if paid within three days from date of bill, a cash discount of 2 is allowed. Tho same discounts nivon on all cash pur chases exceeding ?1. 00. Good.-, sent out will be C. O. D. unless otherwise previously arranged. T. ARMSTRONG & CO., Brown's Building, 652 stock of goods slued at $i,buo,uuaoo We own and occupy the tallest mercantile building In the world. We have over 1,000,000 customer. Sixteen hundred clerks are constantly engaged filling out-of-town orders. OUR GENERAL CATALOGUE la the book of the people It quotee Wholesale Prices to Everybody, haa over f.ooo pages, 16,000 Illustrations, and 60,000 descriptions of articles with prices. It costs 7a cents to print and mail each copy. We want you to have one. BEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show your food faith, and we'll send you a .MONTGOMERY WARD & Millinery Largest and finest selection (if Mil linery. Our designs are tha latest, and prices lowest consistent with good work. . COMPLETE LINE OF INFANTS WEAR. HAIR SWITCHES AND BANGS IN ALL SHADES. All orders promptly attended to and ; satisfaction guaranteed to all our pa trons.. SALLEY S EfifllS, 79 Pike Gtroet, Jervis Gordon Constantly on Hand. now Bpring Goods, A fiflt COMPLETE. Milford, Pa. g v: from 10,000 to 86,000 ietten very day copy FREE, with an charges prepaid. C0.",chi'anHS'Mao,",,'e, Parlors Go Port Jervis, N. Y HOIUPA'S ALLIGATORS. HUNTERS ARE FAST THINNING THEM OUT. In Another Year or Two the Timid Plcanlnny May " Wade Into the Stream Without Fear of Being Eaten Alive. One of tha chief attractions of Flor ida, the alligator, is becoming extinct Certain it is that the creature is grow ing less and less, until it Is predicted that lu a decade or two tho timid pickaninny may wade Into tha slug gish streams without fear of being eaten alive. The tremendous onslnught of peo ple who hunt the alligator for differ ent purposes has brought about this condition. The reptile Is being carried around the earth in the shape of handbags, belts and pocketbooks, un til there are few left to tell the story of his past greatness. Not only this, but the little ones ore taken from the nest as soon as they pip throtiRli the eggs. In this primitive and miniature state of their lives they are sold to tourists, alive, and are shipped or carried to erery section of the north. A little fellow, scarcely six inches of dark, wriggling animation, brings from 60 cents to $1.50, and on up to much higher price9. Many people make a living robbing the nests, which have been made on the sand and where the eggs exposed to the sun hatch in course of time. They are placed in a big box, where a hundred may be seen, the casual observer noticing no life until they are disturbed, when the whole mass begin to scramble over each other. A little fellow is Imprisoned In a cigar box and shipped according to address or whim of the purchaser. Catching the alligator for his hide bas, more than anything else, decimat ed the tribe. These are made Into trav eling bags and belts and many other kinds of leather goods. The horned back hide brings the highest price, and an ordinary sized pelt of this kind brings $4. Others vary from $2 up. Many of the skins are bought for the purpose of hanging them up in rooms adorned by sports, who have a weak ness for displaying trophies, alleged sometimes, of the hunt. None of these hides are tanned or dressed here. They are sent north and come back to meet a ready sale at greatly advanced prices. For a time other uses were made of a dead alligator. His Jaws were made to produpe bushels of teeth, which are manufactured Into all kinds of articles cufT butions, charms, stick pins and they are strung together in a yard or two of wth chain. The supply, however, became so great as to mako them a drug on the market. The demand fell off until a barrel of them could be bought for a song. In other years the alligator fur nished no end of sport for tourists who came down the St. John's River. He could be plainly seen from a steamboat deck, swimming about the stream, when all kinds of guns would be brought to bear on the black ob ject, until the poor fellow had no Show for his sluggish life. In time, however, the state stopped this prac tice, and now the game must be taken according to the provisions of the Btatute. The alligator, animate and Inani mate, has been made to serve the queer fancies of millions of visitors to Florida. As has been said, they were bought alive, but It Is the chis eled, carved, painted, molded and stuffed alligator that most loosens the purse strings of the souvenir buyer. A dealer here says that Imitation alligators are the articleu most sold hero. There are three leading favor ite souvenirs on which the choice of a buyer is at once centered. The first Is the alligator, offered in more than a thousand conceits of a resourceful designer. Then comes the coat of arms which was found cut In the stones of the ancient city gates. The third choice is the orange knife, but on the latter a carved alligator Is often made to do service for a handle. Perhaps no tribe of idolaters ever worshiped an Inanimate object, per chance the costly work of the skilled magicians and artisans, as do the great mass of people who come down here and carry, wear or ship away this ugly, repulsive representative of animal creation, Exchange. Gambling Houses In London. There were in 1824 in London alone S5 well-known gambling houses. Near ly all our most respectable West End clubs were originally gambling houses, ss the Cocoa Tree, which is still flour ishing as a club at No. 64 St James' street. One night late In the last century there -was a cast at hazard, the difference of which was 180,000. That present pink of perfection, White s," was perhaps the most ap palling gambling hell In Europe. "The young men of the age," says Walpole, "lose there 10,000, 15,000, 20,000 In an evening." The play at this club is only for rouleaux of 50 each, and generally there was 10,000 in gold on the table. The gamesters began by pulling oil their embroidered clothes and put on frieze garments or turned their clothes InBide out for luck. They put on pieces of leather to save their lace ruffles, and to guard their eyes from the light, and to pre vent tumbling their hair wore high- crowned straw hats with broad brims, and sometimes masks to conceal their emotions. Almack'a afterward was known as the Goose Tree Club a rather significant name and Pitt was cue of its most constant frequenters, and there met his adherents. Gibbon was also a member, when the club was still Almack'a, which, indeed, was the name of Its founder and original pro prietor. Saturday Review. Torturing skin eruptions, burns and sores tire soothed nt one) and promptly healed by applying Ue Witt a witch hazel halve, the best known cure fur piles. Beware of worthless counterfeits. This is the season when mothers uro alarmed on account of croup. It is quickly cured by not minute cough euro, which childreu like to take. MARRIAGE BY FORCE. Giant Indians of Tlerra del Fuego and Their Strength. Dr. Frederick Cook tells of a little known race of aborigines In an arti cle In the Century Magazine for March on "The Giant Indians of Tlerra del Fuego," whom he visited on the Belgian Antarctlo expedition. Of their marriage customs he writes: Marriage, like almost everything Ona, Is not fixed by establishing rules. It is arranged and rearranged from time to time to suit the convenience of the contracting parties. Women generally have very little to say about It. The bargain Is made almost sole ly by the men, and physical force la the principal bond of union. For ages ihe strongest bucks have been accua loiiitxl lo steal women from neighbor ing tribes, and from neighboring clans of their own tribe. The Onas, being by far the most powerful In dians, have thus been able to capture and retain a liberal supply of wives. A missionary who has been In con stant contact with these Indians for thirty years has given It as his opin ion that a plurality of wives Is en tirely satisfactory to their peculiar emotions and habits of life. The relation to one another of the women who possess but one husband In common In the family wigwam Is of novel interest. As a rule, they are no more Jealous than are the children In a civilized home circle. The prin cipal reason for this Is that the sev eral wives are often sisters. A young man takes by force, by mutual agree ment or by barter, the oldest daughter of a family. If he proves himself a good hunter and a kind husband, the wife persuades her sister to Join her wigwam and share her husband's af fections. Frequently, when a girl la left an orphan, she Is taken Into a family and trained to become the sup plementary wife of her benefactor In after years. In the hut each wife haa her own assigned position, always resting In exactly the same spot, with all her belongings about her. The wealth of the household Is not com mon to all occupants. Each woman has her own basket of meat fragments or shellfish, her own bag with imple ments, needles, sinews and bits of fur, and each wife has her own assemblage of children. The work of the man Is strictly limited to the chase. He carries his bow and quiver of arrows, and his eye Is ever on the horizon for game; but he seldom stops to anything like man ual labor that is not connected with the chase. He kills the game, but the wife must cary it Into camp. In moving the women take up all their earthly possessions, pack them In a huge roll, and with this strapped across their backs they follow the lead of their brave but ungallant hus band. Tbus the women carry, day after day, not only all the household furniture, but the children and the portable portions of the house. The women certainly have all the uninter esting detail and the drudgery of life heaped upon them, but they seem to enjoy it. In defense of the men It should be said that they are worthy husbands. They will fight fiercely to protect their homes, and they will guard the honor of their women with their own blood. It Is a crying sin of the advance of Christian civiliza tion that this red man of the far south should be compelled to lay down his life at the feet of the heart less pale-faced invaders to shield the honor of their home. Women In Washington. That good women have, by proper appeals and the presentation of causes In their true light to congress and executives, attracted their attention and caused reforms and favorable considerations, there Is no doubt. But in the general acceptance of the term and the appointment of women by any organization to Influence congress or executives to do this, that and the other thing, no greater mistakes could be made, or greater indignity offered. For many years we have had an op portunity to know the effect upon members and senators of such at tempts to "Influence them," resulting always In bitter opposition to the measures advocated. Designing men have employed women aa unscrupu lous as themselves .to try to accom plish their schemes, but as a rule they have signally failed, aa few women are astute enough to play such parts successfully. What man In the United States would not be Influenced by Clara Bar ton, should she approach him In be half of the great work she has been and is doing? It has been difficult for the sturdiest statesman this country has bad to resist the appeals of that noble woman, Susan B. Anthony, and her colleague In behalf of woman suffrage through national legisla tions. The noble women who have gone before the committee of congress soliciting appropriations for charity for the unfortunate are the women who have influenced such guardians of the treasury as Allison, Coekrell, Thaddetis Stevens, Uolman and Can non of Illinois. It Is more the object and the righteousness of the cause than the sex of the advocates that In fluences men In the right direction. I have always resented the reflection upon my sex and the honesty of the opposite, .when it bas been claimed that womeu could influence legislation. Mrs. John A. Logan, in Frank Let He's Popular Monthly. fiunny Slope, Cat, enjoys the dis tinction of being the largest vineyard In the world. It Is situated amid tha most beautiful scenery of that favored laud, two miles from San Gabriel. Of total of l.UOO acres, 735 are devoted to grape vine, the remainder being distributed amoug orange trees (of which there are 12,000), lemon and olive trees. Rutnn the bicycle dealor and re pairer has reduced the price of rent ing and repairing bicycles. A few Bargains in wheels from f5 up. Ouus rented and repaired, tihopon broad street Milford Pa. tf Press making in all branches. Will go to the bouse or do the work at home. Addres Mary Ludwkj, opposite fcawkill Mill, Milford, Pa. 0SIAS BARMY Till story Is true of New York and Hungary. Only the names are chang ed: When Oslss Itnrnny became the hns band of Sarah Klingmnn all their ac quaintances on the enst side said it could not lead to happiness. She was nearly twice his age, and he, sc arcely more than a boy, was too handsome and Impulsive, they said, to be proof against the temptations of the life he had been leading. But then, he had been virtually on the brink of starvation, and what tliouch the Widow Kllngman had a danghtor neay eleven year old men have clutched at a Ftraw on slighter provocation; snrl nobody could sny that Mrs. Kllngmnn was not good look ing, and her worst enemies had to con cede that she was rich. Esther, the daughter, disliked her stepfather, or, rather, she despised hi in. It was plain to her that he had married for money; and never once In five years did she address a word to film beyond what ordinary civility re quired. One day Bnrnay received a letter from his mother calling him home. It was now six years since he had left Budapest, Hungnry, by the stern de cree of his father, who had grown tired of paying debts and squaring scrapes for him. But now the father was dead, and the heart of the mother yearned for her boy again. Oslns had never gone into details to his wife concerning his antecedents. When she saw the palace his mother dwelt in, and saw the host of servants bowing and scraping in greeting to their long-absent young master, she felt like the bride of the story who had married a pauper and discovered, Just as she was getting ready for a life of drudgery, that he was a prince. Esther, too, was overwhelmed with surprise, and began to regard her step father in a much more favorable light Again two years elapsed, when who should loom up In New York but Osias Barnay. He was haggard and pale, and seemed to be laboring under some great worry. On day shortly after his nrrlval he said to bib friend, Andrew M under, a lawyer: "I need your help. Can I rely upon you i "To the drop of the flag. Just tell Uifc how 1 can be of service." "I want a divorce. I must have It" Mnnder was thunderstruck. "Why, your wife is in Hungary with your mother. You never mentioned any wrongdoing. Has your wife de ceived you?" "No, a thousand times no! My wife Is the best, the kindest and the noblest of women." Before he left the office Barnay told Mnnder this story: "My wife's daughter, Esther you re member how gawky and ungainly she was, and how she hated me well, she Is new eighteen, and accounted one of the most beautiful young ladles In Budapest. "When she saw my mother's house, and recognized that I was, after all, not a 'beggar's brat,' she became more respectful, and in time we got to be quite chummy. "One night about a month ago, when we returned home from a concert, tho cnrrlage collided with a wagon and was wrecked. I was the only one In jured. Not very seriously, but enough to keep me in bed for two weeks. Dur ing that time Esther was almost con stantly at my side. Her presence made me happy. I had a vague, un defined yearning for ber when she was away. "Once, when my bruises gave me Intense pain and I mooned, Esther bent over me and, clnsplng her arms about me, exclaimed: " 'Oh, if I could only suffer Instead of you! I love yon so!' "And then I knew that I loved her, too; loved her with a boundless love that consumed me, tormented me. To check It was too late. The only salva tion lay in flight, and flee I did as soon as my wounds permitted me. And that's what brought me here." Some weeks after this Interview the war with Spain broke out, and Barnay was one of the first to respond to the call for volunteers. He enlisted In the Forty-seventh regiment, aud served with such distinction that he was pro moted from the ranks to a lieutenancy on the field of battle. At the conclusion of the war he re turned to New York. His wife and Esther bad also come from Hungary to look for him, alarmed by his long silence. But although he knew they were here ho did not go near them. His heart was still in a turmoil, and he felt that his love was too mad to be trusted. And so he pined away, each day's agony leaving him less and less strength to battle with his passion, un til at length he was worn away to a mere shadow. One day be did not appear at break fast. And when his landlady, after waiting an hour, went to see what was the matter she smelled gas coming from his room. When they forced the door they found him dead. The gas burner was turned on and the cracks In the door and window calked with paper. Over his heart. In his clasped bands, was the picture of a beautiful girt' Irving R. Baron. Wise and Otherwise. Some r'omlsiug young musicians are nnable to fulfill their promises. After winning a woman's hand a man sometimes finds himself under her thumb. No man can be happy who bas more time and money than he knows how to use. An Irish philosopher says the only way to keep a baby quiet is to let it howl. Investigation la the art of hunting np a lot of blame and putting it on souie body else. A man's wife ia apt to get him Into a bad scrape when she uses his razor to sharpen a lead pencil. Ignorance Isn't to blame when a man has to make bis murk in the world because of his Inability to write his name. It's an easy matter for a young man to support a wife if she doesn't object to changing from one knee to the other occasionally. For Sale. Tha noted Sawkill House property About two and a balf lots on corner of Harford and and fourth street and running back to alley in rear of barn. Inquire of J. C. C'hamhkklain Real Estate Agent, Office on Harford street. dl A fine assortment of outiug Ian uota at W. & U. Mitchells, tf ;l I7AILR0AD TIME TABLE. Corrected to Date. Solid Pullman trains to BiiIThIo, Nlng urn Knits, (hnutnmpin Lake, Cleveland, Chicago and Cincinnati. Tickets on sale nt Port .Tervls to nil points in the West and Southwest nt lower rates than via any other urst-clnsa line. Trains Now Lfavr Pout Jrkvis as Follows. EASTWARD. No. 12, Dully F.xpress 8 24 A M. " 1(1, Dully Express 6 2M " " 1, Daily Except Sunday . 0 S " " 28, ' " " 7 111 " " G0H, SundnvOnly 7 -Ifi " " 8K, Dully Except Sunday. . 10 20 " " fi, Dally Way Train . 12 loP.M. " 80, Way Except. Sunday... 8?i " " 8, Daily Express 4 25 " " 620, Sunday Only 4 ho " " 8, Daily Express 5 2n " " 18, Sntnlayonly 5 411 ' " S3. Daily Except Sunday.. tVtti ' " 14. Dailv 10 UQ " WESTWARD. No. 8, Dally Express 12 80 A M. " 17, Daily Milk Train 8 06 " " 1, Daily Express 11.83 " " 11, For tlo'diile E'pt Sun . 12 III P. M. " (. Daily 5 15 ' " 27. Dnily Except Sunday. . 5 Wt " " 7, Daily Exnress 10 15 " Trnins leave Chambers street, New York for Port Jervis on week days at 4 no, 7 80, BOO, 15, 10 80 A. M. 1.(10, 8 00, 4 80, 6 80. 7 30, fl. 15 P. M On Sum! iv. 4.041. 7 8n, H 10, a. in.; 13.30, 8.80, 7.80 anil H 10 P. M. I. I. Rnlirrts, General Passenger Agent, New York. KQAGLAND'S Big China IN Store PORT JERVIS, N. Y. Largest Stock. HEADQUARTERS For Sets of Dishes, Lumps and Glassware. Occupying the entire floor of Building. We buy Butter, Eggs arid Grain. Hoagland's, PORT JERVIS, N. Y. UP TOWN. itSBasTBifgiirEgimHTmii nMva iroi amv- aiuaaa jga - a9i isa ;A.oniNaM 'ail lASinon v'AS NIVW M IES6N9- ODSAajmoD'onv parpen Ajn3a$ )jauo jo istv5'fi u! iuiodAut'ox; siavnG nnj v aoa dms niw 3aa onv0oC$ sn anas 'AMOUNax woaj 11 aaoao AMIA AM3A1H3M rtlilNVM AOA JIV" CHURCH DIRECTORY MILFORD. First Pkksbytkkian Ohukcij, Milfiml Sabbath wrvici'H at 10.3(1 A. M. unii 7. W0 r U Sabbath Ki lliiol ImimttiiltU-lv afU-r tnornina servirH. Prayer nit'etmir Wecl nesilav at 7. m P. M. A cordial wt'lcnim will tw extrntlMl to all. Those not at- tnchud to othwr churches am especially in vited. KKV. Thomas Nh'Hol.H, rustor Chuwii or thb (joou Shki-hkhi), -Mil ford: Services Sunday at ln.ao A. M. anti 7 30 P. M. Sunday Bcliool lit 1SJ.IKI M. Week-tlav service r ridny at. 10 A. M. Holy Communion Sunday nt 7.45 A M . Senti tree. AT: are welcome. KIV. CHAS. 11. UAM'KKTKH, Hector M. K. CHtint.ll. Sen ices at tho M E Church Sundays: PrcacliiHK at Kl.ilO a. in. slid at 7.0 p. in. Sur'lay school st ll:4np. in. Kpworth league at H.4a p. m. Weekly prayer meeting o.i ettni'Miays at 7. HO p. in. Class meeting couducul by Wm. Annie on Friday at 7.;m p. in. Au earneht invitation is extended to anyour woo may desire to wop-hsp with us. KKV. C ft. M'UUllKIC, h'astor. MATAIMORAS. Khwoiith M. K. Cm Hi ll, Mutumorai, Services every annatn ut lu.dti a. in. auu D. m. Sabbath school at S '). C. K meeting Monday evening at 7. HO. Clas meeting Tuesday evening at 7.30. Pravei meeting Wednesday evening at 7. Ml Everyone welcome. Kbv. T. G. Si-KNCKIt. Horn Evangelical Ciiukcii, Matu moras. Fa. Scrvict s next Sunday as follows: Preaching at 1O.H0 a. in. and 7 p. m. Sun day school at H p. m. Junior C. K. befon and C E. prayci meeting afu;r thu even tng service. id-week prayer meeting every Wednesday evening at 7. Ho. Seat fret. A cordiul fr.elcome to all. Come. Rkv J A. W'ikgano, Pastor. Secret Societies. MiLroitu Low . No. 344, F. & A. M.: Lodge meets Wednesdays on or Is'for Full Moon at tht Sawkill House, Milford Pa. N. Kiuery, Jr.. S4crctarv, Milfoni John C Westbrook, W. M .. Milford. Pa. Vas Ueu Ma iik LmxiK, Ho. uh, l.o. '.. F: Meets every Thursday availing at 7. HO p. lu., Pawn's Huilding. 1). H. Horubeck, Sir y .lannu Mol.'aity, N. (i PHL'DKSCK KKBKBAH LuUttK, 1117, I O (). F. Meets every eMnl and fourtli Fri days In each month in Odd Fellows' Hall, Brown's building Mnu. Katharine Klein N. (i. Miss WllUclliilno beck, bou'y. C h e a p e st Clothing H ouse i n Port Jervis ! CANNON & MULLIGAN, 5 & 7 FRONT STREET. EYEIY HOUI Is an effort put forth to deserve, obtain and retain your pati onage. GOME with your very best $10 suit thoughts and se cure one of these Men's Winter Suits at $6.98 Broken lois of Men's Winter Ov ercoats reduced to less than cost. GUNNING & FLANAGAN, Cor. Front and Sussex St's. Port Jervis N. Y. Stoves and Ranges. THE Round Oak For Wood and Coal. Best Heater and Fuel Bnver in the Country. New Era Radiators, Two Fire In one HARDWARE. C1TTI.KRV, TIN, AOATS WARK, KTC. TIN ROOriNO AND PLUMBING A SPECIALTY. Jobbing promptly attended to T R. Julius Klein. BROAD STREET A11XFORD, PA AGENTS WANTED In Every County to Supply tho great popular demand for AMERICA'S WAR FOR HUMANITY TOLD N PICTURE AND STORY, COIV PILED AND NMRITTI S EV Senator John J. Irgaiis, Of Kansas. The most brilliantly written, most pro I'usely and artistically illustrated, and most intensely popular hook on the sub ject of the war with Spain. Nearly 200 Superb Illustrations from Photographs. taken specially for this great work. Agents aru making fsi to (too a week selling it. A vciitablu bonanza for live canvassers. Apply for description, terms aud territory at once to N.B.Thompson Publishing Co. ST. LOUIS. MO OrN-V.CIty. Look for the Warning. Heart disease kills suddVnl;, trat never without warning. Tha warn ings may bs faint ana brief, ov may be startling and extend over man years, but they arc none t'oe ltss certain and positive. Too often tno victim la decaived by the thought, "it will pass away." Alas, It never passes away voluntarily. Once in stalled, heart disease never gets bit. ter of itself. If Ur. Miles' Heart Cure Is used in the early stages re covery it absolutely certain in every case where Its use is persisted In. "For many years I was a great suf ferer from heart disease iMtfure I finally found relief. I waa sublet to fainting and sinking spoils, full ness about the heart, and was fable to attend to my household duties. I tried nearly every remedy that wee recommended to ma and doctored with the leading physicians of this section but obtained no help until I began taking Dr. Mil an' Heart Cure. It has done me mure good than ail the medicine 1 ever took." lias. Ahxa Hollowat, Geneva, Ind. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure ia sold at all druggists on a positive guarantee. Writ for free advice aod booklet to III. iLuoe iUditil Co., lakiuut, 10. Ladies' sh irt waists nil styles and prices at T. Armstrong & Co's,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers