This 1893 commercial invoice from the Moscow Steam Milling Co. of Moscow, Pennsylvania, documents a transaction with Mess S.M. Noble & Sons, providing a tangible record of the regional agricultural supply chain in the late 19th century. The printed letterhead identifies the proprietors as J. R. Loveland, F. E. Lear, and J. M. Noack, dealers in flour, feed, meal, and grain, with the notable assurance that Special Pains Taken With Custom Work, a marketing phrase indicative of the period's emphasis on personalized service. The manuscript entries, filled in by a clerk, detail the specific commodities purchased, including quantities of feed and meal, with corresponding prices of $19.00 and $6.00, culminating in a total of $25.00 on April 27, 1893, with a subsequent transaction for 1000 units of feed recorded for the following day. The document's structure, featuring pre-printed fields for itemization and a designated space for terms, exemplifies standard 19th-century mercantile bookkeeping practices. As a surviving artifact of commercial lithography, the invoice features a clean, functional typographic design intended for clarity and durability in a bustling mill office environment. The presence of the name Wm Smith in the ledger suggests either the clerk responsible for the entry or the teamster overseeing the delivery, adding a layer of human provenance to the business ephemera. Situated in Moscow, a borough within Lackawanna County, this milling operation was integral to the local agrarian economy, processing grains for both human consumption and livestock feed. The item serves as a primary source for understanding the material culture of rural industry, the economics of animal husbandry, and the distribution networks that supported farming communities in Northeastern Pennsylvania during the Gilded Age, making it a significant piece of American trade documentation and business history.