2 CAMERON COUNT! PRESS. H. H. MUL.LIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OK SUBSCRIPTION. f'cr year t! (*• r paid in advance 1 • I>u ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at Hie rate of oni' dollar per square (orotic insertion and fifty cents per square for each subsequent insertion Kates by the year, or for six or three months, arc low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. each subsequent inser tion !0 cents per square. I.ocal notices In cents per line for one inser scrtion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent consecutive insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, liiar riatres and deaths will be inserted free. business cards, five lines or ltss» :5 per year: over tlve lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 7.i cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The .lob department of the PKF.RS is complete •ml affords facilities for doint: the best class of work. PAKIICULAK ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW PKINTINC;. No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. Recent suits for divorce give evidence #f the growing independence of the American woman, Queer the greater de for Divorce. mands which sbe makes upon her husband as conditions of domestic peace, and the stern rein which she holds upon him. For in stance, relates the Chicago Tribune, a Des Moines man wished to join the masons. His wife wouldt have none of It. He was not made a mason until he had been divorced. Another exacting wife in Kansas City secured a divorce upon the testimony of two of her friends, showing that the husband re fused to wash his face "except once a week on the family wash day." A Des Moines woman complained that her husband came home to meals cross, ob jected to the food, and then did not epeak to her again until the next meal, when he would again complain. She sued for divorce and got it. Two other wives, one in Napoleon, 0., and the oth er in Cleveland, found their husbands too jealous. One complained that her husband threw her false teeth in the fire find hid her switch in the pigsty to keep her from attending social affairs In the neighborhopd. An Evansville tnan would not let his wife goto any parties, and she obtained a divorce. Mabel Prime, the wife of Dr. Henry Prime, of Cleveland, complained of her husband's laziness. She proved that he wouldi never answer a patient's call at night, and that he spent most of his time during the day lying on a sofa reading novels. Now and then a man objects to the discipline of his wife. Such a case was found in Atlanta, Ga., where a husband proved that, his wife was in the habit of horsewhipping him «t regular intervals in the presence of the neighbors, whom she would call in to show how to tame a husband. A man who has played many parts La Mr. P. B. Wessels, who has been acting as a sort of honorary Trans vaal ambassador to the United States. He is a cultured and enlightened Boer, eays a London paper, with a wonder fully versatile turn of mind. Here are a few of his various vocations during the last half dozen years: He had a typewriting business, which succeed ed only moderately well. Then he owned Cooper's carriage works, near Cape Town. As this did not pay, he took up agricultural machinery and Bold plows and steam threshers. Then he became a partner in Horckenha gen's printing business at Bloemfon tein. Afterward he was the agent for the sale of American notions, and combined with this life, fire .in;} acci dent insurance agencies, together with an interest in a tea shop and the pro prietorship of a few cabs. These are but a few examples of his various business moves, and, considering his experience, it is rather strange that he is, comparatively, a poor man. The Wellington (Kan.) Mail lately gave the new editor of the Oxford Bee the following complimentary send-off: He has filled every position from devil In a country weekly up to managing editor of a big daily newspaper. He has also had exj>erience in mining, breaking wild horses, working roads, driving Rocky mountain stage whacking bulls and running a sawmill. He is a dead shot with any kind of a weapon from an elm club to a 13-inch gun. He has been rolled under a sawlog, thrown down a moun tain by a bucking broncho and hugged by a grizzly bear. In short, he knows just how to run a country newspaper. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of lowa, of the wajs and means committee, in the house of representatives, is perhaps best known by his peroration on the question of admitting American pork Into European markets."l hope the time will come," he said, "when the American, hog, with a curl of content ment in his tail aiwL a smile of pleas ure on his face, may travel untram meled through the markets of the world." It is refresning, says the- Chicago Record, to find a case of consistency where money is at. stake. The Haineß Gauge company of Philadelphia de clines to furnish apparatus for the ships of the United States navy on the ground that the proprietors are members of the Society of Friends and tire opposed to war. This is the first case of the kind on record. BLf - PIECES. Sli lien Ki _».. d Dozen* Injured, Some Fa'ally, by the I', v plo»lon of mi Oil 'I unk. Parkers- burg. VV. Va., July The most hor -ible calamity that this city p\er witnessed occurred Wednesday morning in which five men were blown to atoms, one other so badly injured that, lie soon died, two more probably- fatally injured, and more than 50 persons more or less seriously hurt. TJhc yards of the Ohio River railroadi are spotted with pieces of torn ' .sli and sprayed with blood. The drawl: J. H./Hamilton, general superin tendent of the Ohio River railroad. A. LaJlime, master mechanic. Chcirlis Mohler, yardmaster. G. Q.j Shannon, extra train dis patcher. Bradley Reeves, freight brakeman. George ( hallc, a fireman, died about noon at (St. Luke's hospital. A tank ear containing 6,000 gallons of oil was on the yard track for ship ment. Engine No. ~G, with Will Carr as engineer and George llupp as lire man, Mas pulling a train of fast freight, southbound. Engineer Carr saw that the main track was open and came slowly toward the yards. The switch was open and the train ran into the sidetrack, colliding with the tank car. The collision caused a hole to be bored in the top part of the tank and the oil ignited. This happened at a few minutes after 3 it.m. Master Mechanic Lai lime and General Superintendent Hamilton were called upon to devise some means of ridding the track of the burning tank and extinguishing the bla?e. Pouring water on it had no effect. While some of Ihe men were group ed near the tank after 7 o'clock an explosion occurred, caused by the fire igniting the gas that had formed from the burning oil. It. came with a flash of fire and a deafening report. Home people who were utanding near ivere not affected by it at all. These saw the bodies of men living in the air and saw others knocked to the ground by the concussion of the air is the tank went through the air. It had parted and went in two direc tions. There were numbers of per son knocked down by the force of the air. Those who were killed were struck by the flying tank, which went in a southwesterly direction, it was 200 yards distant from the victims and came to the ground near the shops alongside of engine No. 01. where all of the fatalities occurred. The piece which went 50 yards in the other direction killed no one. PLUNGED INTO A GULCH. A Trolley Car Drop* 100 Feet and 3D I'erooiiN are Killed and Dozen* In* Jured. Tacoma, Wash., July 5. —Nearly a hundred people, passengers on a ear bound for this city, were plunged Sown a gulch at Twenty-sixth and C streets Wednesday morning. Those tvlio were standing on the platform dropped off, only to be bruised and wounded by the heavy body of the coach, while others inside were killed and maimed before they knew what had happened. The ear jumped the track and was smashed to kindling wood in the bottom of the chasm over 100 feet below. The dead already number 36 and there are at least 60 of the passengers on the car now in hospitals and under the care of their own physicians. It was one of the most appalling accidents that has ever occurred in this city and it came at a time when it was least expected. Here were happy people, residents of the nearby towns—Edison, Lakeview, Parkland, Lake Park and other places —coming to Tacoma full of joy and patriotism to spend the Fourth of July. Their journey was nearly at an end when death interfered and claimed them as his own in a most frightful manner. He gave no quarter. Neither man, woman nor child was spared. Ropes were quickly procured and the victims of the wreck were drawn carefully to the top of the gulch and their wounds attended to as fast as it was possible for the physicians to work. Every doctor in the city was called on for his services. The Fanny Paddock and St. Joseph's hospitals were soon crowded with patients. FOUR LIVES BLOTTED OUT. Kx|>lohion of l'lre*vork» Brinji* Dealb to I'liiladelpliia Children. Philadelphia, July 5.—A blank cart ridge. fired at close range by a small colored boy into a large collection of fireworks yesterday cost th> lives of four children, the probable death of three others and severe burns and lacerations to 20 other persons, only two of whom were adults. The dead are: Carmel Dianno, aged 11 years. Charles Feruzzi, aged 11 years. Two unidentified children. The explosion occurred in front of the bake shop of Antonio Mammarel lo, on Eighth street, in the most thickly populated section of the Ital ian quarter. The fireworks were on a stand on the pavement and consist ed largely of giant lire crackers, tor pedoes, rockets and chasers. A crowd of children was clustered about the stand. The colored boy, Isaiah Har ris, was seen to point the pistol in the direction of the fireworks, and fire. The force of the explosion which followed shattered the win dows of many stores and residences in the vicinity. .tlany Death* in Storm*. Berlin, July 5. —Hurricanes, cloud bursts and thunder storms are re jjorted from a number of places. Warzerburg, Bavaria, was visited Wednesday by a hurricane which de stroyed a large building and killed six persons. A hurricane did great damage iu the vicinity of Elberfeld. Several lives were lost. In the vital ity of Cassel cloudbursts destroyed the harvests and drowned several peasants. Lightning struck eight la borers in Crojanten a*id also struck and killed a whole family named Mi kow6k:, n'.-ar Duntzic. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1900. SILVER REPUBLICANS. rii<-> \omliialr Itrvau for President und A. IS. Mi'vctiNon lt»r Vic»* Presi de nt. Kansas City, .Inly 7.—After a long and exciting debate, (luring which it. looked several times as if Charles A. Towne wonlil be non iftitecl tor vice president in spite of his protest against such action, the national con vention of the silver republican party yesterday adjourned sine die without, making a nomination, the whole mat ter being referred to the national committee with power to act. \Y. J. Bryan was made the unani mous choice of the convention tor president during - the morning session and it was the intention to complete the ticket in the afternoon by the nomination of ex-Congressman Townc. The action of the democrat ic convention, however, in placing Adlai E. Stevenson in nomination took the delegates off their fe*'t, but most of them asserted their determi nation to nominate Mr. Towne, not withstanding. For two hours Senator Teller, ex- Congressmen Chafroth, of Colorado, and Cheadle, of Indiana, and others made speeches in favor of endorsing the democratic ticket, but it was not until Towne himself appeared and ap pealed to the convention not to nomi nate him, but to concentrate their forces, that the delegates calmed low i) and 1 he vice presidential nomi nation was referred to the national committee. The national committee of the sil ver republicans organized by electing T>. C. Tillotson, of Kansas, chairman, and (Jen. E. S. Corser, of Minnesota, secretary and treasurer. The selec tion of an executive committee was deferred. Senator Dubois offered a resolution asking the support of the silver republicans for Adlai I". Steven son. but there was opposition and ac tion was postponed until after a con ference with the committee appoint ed by the democratic convention. A protracted meeting of the confer ence committees of the democratic, populist and silver republican parties was held at Lyceum hall last night, lit which the vice presidential situation was discussed, with a view to bring ing about, if possible, an agreement between the three partes. The mem bers of the democratic committee urged the populist and silver republi can representatives to use their influ ence in anting their parties in sup port of Bryan and Stevenson. Tt was finally decided to hold an other conference later between the democratic, committee and sub-com mittees from the populists and silver republicans, the result to be reported to the full committee of the two lat ter parties for approval. It.was decided at the conference that the parties work in harmony so far as possible in every state and con gressional district. An advisory com mittee of three members from each of the three parties was appointed and this committee will, wherever possible, work to effect fusion on (state anil congressional tickets. A meeting of the silver republican national committee was held imme diately after the close of the confer ence and it.was voted unanimously to place Adlai E. Stevenson in nomina tion for vice president and to co-op erate in every way with the demo cratic party for the success of the ticket. FINANCE AND TRADE. A *mali Crop of KllMllie** Failure* During (lie I'lrKt ilallol TIIIM Year. New York, July 7. —R. (i. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Failures in the first half of 1900 were 5,362, with liabilities of $100,570,131. There were 30 failures of banks and financial corporations for $25,822,082, leaving 5,332 commercial failures with liabilities of $74,747,757. Had it been predicted that the vast iron industry would be thrown from unprecedented activity into great de pression. with many works closed and prices reduced fully a quarter, with out failures, amounting in all to $30,000, it would have been thought impossible. Vet the six failures in that department for the last quarter were in all for $28,395, though Besse mer pig has fallen from $25 to SIS and the average for iron and steel products has declined just 25 per cent, since January 10. Some further decline is now expected before things are adjusted for another active sea son, and efforts to arrange wages are progressing. The Fall River committee has de cided to close their cotton mills for a time and some of the largest woolen works have been closed or much re duced in force. A large share of the boot, and shoe force is inactive and no change in prices has resulted since those of some weeks ago which, ac cording to later accounts, were made b\ fewer of the manufacturers than was at the time believed. Cotton has reached 10% cents, with a lively prevailing feeling tha* the sufficiency of the next yield cannot be determined so early as this. Because it is late the crop is more liable to be affected by vicissitudes of weather, which have compelled great changes in estimates regarding wheat. to IK* llcdiiced 20 Her Cent. Pittsburg, July 7.—Notices were posted Friday in the plate mill of Mooreliead Bros, at Sharpsburg an nouncing that beginning on Monday next there would be a 20 per cent, reduction of wages throughout the plate mill. Employes of the mill were told that in order to meet com petition and continue in operation the cut was necessary. Tlx- LIONA 1M 82,100,000. Xcw York, July 7. —The fire at the Standard Oil Co.'s works at Bayonne, .\. J., was practically under control at 6 o'clock last night. The official estimate of the damage is $2,100,- 000. The coni|i*my insures its own property, a fund being set aside for thai purpose. A Cyclone in lou i. Ehlora, la., .Inly 7.—-A small cyclone rushed over the northern part of Har din county yesterday. Trees were uprooted and buildings upset. The loss to crops is enormous. Xo loss of life is reported. THEIR LAST FIGHT Foreigners in Pekin are Hommod in by Murderous Hordes. Allied ililiMr) Force* arc Inahle to Force TUeir Way Throiiuh the Army (lial Kara Their Pros rem* to the Capital and Hie Lcgatlonx' Member* are Doomed. London, July 4. —Couriers who ar rived at the seats of the government of the southern viceroys from their agents in I'ekin give vivid but frag mentary pict iires of what is being enacted in the capital. These cour iers seemingly left Pekin a day or two later than the messengers of Sir Robert Hart, the inspector general of customs, who started on the night of June 24. They report, that the heads of some of the captured legation guards were being borne through tin streets on top of spears, followed by zealots chanting "Kill the foreign devils; kill, kill." The city's millions have been roused to patriotic fervor, breaking out into the wildest excess es, while over half the city could be heard fighting around the legations. Sir Robert Hart's runner, who was interviewed by the correspondent of the Express at Shanghai, suppK-.'nents the tragic sentences of the dispatch he bore by a narrative of some things he saw. He says the foreigners w 're making a last stand in the extensi e buildings and enclosures of the Brit ish legation. They had many dead and wounded. Among them were some women and children. All were short of food, even of the commonest necessaries. The women were starv ing, as they gave a part of their small allowance to the children. Shanghai, July 5. —Three Chinese servants of foreigners have escaped from Pekin. They report that all the foreigners, 1,000 in number, including 400 soldiers, 100 members of the Chi nese customs staff and a number of women and children, held out till their ammunition was exhausted, in the British legation. The legation was finally burned and all the foreign ers were killed. London, July 5. —The commanders of the allies in Tien Tsin inform the correspondent* that it would be sui cide to attempt to reach Pekin with the troops now available, in the face of the colossal force of imperial troops and Boxers occupying the country between Tien Tsin and Pekin. This telegram has been received: "Shanghai, July 4. —Tien Tsin city fell on the morning of June 30." It is understood that Shanghai un doubtedly referred to the native city of Tien Tsin, from which the Chinese have been bombarding the foreign quarter, and the dispatch is taken to mean that the allies are more than holding their own. Taotai Sheng, of Shanghai, issued a proclamation on Wednesday which practically forbids foreign warship approaching the Yang-tse-Kiang, say ing that if they do so the Chinese authorities will not hold themselves responsible for the consequences. It is considered that the Chinese offi cials are preparing a way to evade responsibility if an outbreak occurs. Even Li llutig Chang is suspected. The foreigners are simply aghast at the extent of the Chinese armaments. London, July 6. —The story that all foreigners in Pekin were murdered on June 30 or July 1 appears to be circu lating simultaneously at Che Foo Shanghai and Tien Tsin. Yet as it is not confirmed bv official dispatches and not traceable to the southern viceroys, who are still in communica tion with Pekin, Ihere is a basis for the hope that it is untrue. Two Manehus who have arrived at Shanghai certify to the truth of the statement that Prince Tuan visited the palace and offered the emperor and the dowager empress the alterna tive of poison or the sword. The em peror, they say, took poison and died within an hour. The dowager em press also chose poison, but swallow d only a portion of what was offer ed her and survived. London, July 7.—The Russian gov ernment announces that it will give Japan a free hand to apply military force in China. The terms of this con sent are summarized in a dispatch from St. Petersburg, under date of July 6, in reply to an inquiry from the Japanese cabinet, regarding the sending of Japanese troops to China to render aid to the foreigners in Pekin, the Russia]} government de clared that it. left the Japanese gov ernment. full liberty of action in this connection, as the Tokio cabinet ex pressed its readiness to act in full agreement with the other powers. It is in consequence of this, no doubt, that Japan is preparing to embark 30,000 more troops. Recitals of further horrors in Pekin are gathered by correspondents at Shanghai from Chinese sources, espe cially of the slaughter in the city of thousands of native Christians. The capital reeks with carnage. The ruthless thirst, for blood is spreading in all the northern prov inces. and wherever there are native Christians the scenes enacted in the capital are reproduced in miniature. From these stories nothing further comes regarding the legation forces. The correspondent of the Express sa.vs there is no longer any doubt that disaster has overtaken the Rus sian force of 3,000 men that left Tien Tsin for Pekin on June 11. The Rus sians had a full field gun complement. Kntlland'* I.ONheN 111 Hie liner War, London, July 4.—The war office has issued a return of the British casual ties in South Africa since the begin ning of the war. The total losses, exclusive of sick and wounded, have been 29,700, of which the killed in ac tion were 254 officers and 4,043 non commissioned officers and men; died of wounds, 25 officers and 010 non commissioned men; missing and pris oners, 65 officers and 2.(124 men; died of disease, 133 officers and 4,204 non commissioned officers and men; in valided home, 844 officers and 18,433 officers and men. PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL. There is a young woman in Washing ton society who sells her wardrobe as soon as she finishes with it, and gives all that is obtained in this way to her favorite charity. The original manuscript of the speech favoring the admission of Kan sas into the union, made by William 11. Seward, has been secured by the Kan sas State Historical society. A Massachusetts man has just taken out a patent for a music typewriter. Music copying has come to be a profes sion, so much of it is demanded for or chestras, choruses and bands. Li Hung Chang, the Chinese multi llionaire, maintains at his own ex pense a well-equipped force of about 9,000 soldiers, all devoted to their ven erable chief and ready to do his behest, be the same what it may. William G. Nash, of Weymouth, Mass.,ist bought to be the oldest grocer in the United States, he having en tered the business as an employe in 1831, and having conducted a store of his own for the last 67 years. A Washington optician is exhibiting in his window a curiosity in the shape of a horn-rimmed monocle, with cord attached, which was worn by Lord Cardigan, when he led the charge of the light brigade at Balaklava. "McKinley and Bryan are men of im mense and enduring physical power," says John J. Ingalls. "Their vitality has not been impaired by riot or excess. Both have the stature and tempera ment that indicate and accompany longevity." The invitations which have been re ceived in XewYork city for a fashionable wedding which is to be celebrated out of town consist of enough cards to puz zle the average recipient. They even in clude a card to show to the ticket chop per at the ferry and one which entitles the liolcFer to transportation on the train whii"h is to be run for the wed ding guesf. K . ONE MISTAKE HE MADE. Tlie Always Correct >lnn Told the roilceuian That He Didn't Own the Shoes. He is a revered husband and a re spected father and he merits all the respect and admiration which is lav ished, upon him, for he never makes a mistake. If he does approach such a thing occasionally it is only near enough to make his family realize how much more worthy he is than other men, and the pedestal upon which he is installed becomes only more solid than than before. But the other day the revered husband and respected father made a slight blunder. It was a warm evening and he was sitting on the front steps. This happened in Brooklyn, says the Chicago Chronicle, where people sit out on the front stoop in the evening and talk across to their neighbors on the next stoop. The man on this par ticular evening was tired, the evening air was refreshing- and he sat out long after the family had retired. It was so comfortable there in the dark that he thought he might be even more comfortable, andi he slipped off his shoes. He had worn them all day and he had been too tired to change them. But all pleasant things must come to an end, and finally, feeling re freshed, he, too, retired and.in a mo ment. was sound asleep. It seemed to him that he had hardly touched the bed, when he was aroused by a long ring at the door bell. He was angry and, going'' to the window, put out his head and called, in a surly tone: "Who's there?" "An officer," said a voice below. "Are these your shoes I have fotmd on the steps?" The early dawn was beginning to show and he saw a po liceman below holding a pair of shoes in his hand. The idea of waking a man from a sound sleep for a ridiculous thing like that! "Xo," he called back. "I don't keep my shoes on the front steps," and in a minute he was in bed and asletp again. But when the "getting up" bell rang a few hours later a strange thing hap pened. He could, not find his shoes anywhere. Then he remembered the officer's call, he remembered removing his shoes on the stoop the night be fore and when he went down to the police station to identify and reclaim his property he was apparently in a most amiable frame of mind. "We have the most careful officers in the city on our block," he said to the sergeant in charge, in a friendly tone. A Divided Church. In a little/ western town, originally settled' by Quakers, stands a church in which the practice of seating men and' women apart still prevails. A few years ago. a newcomer mustered courage to cross the aisle and sit be side. his bride. The second) Sunday an other man committed the same of fense, and the tliirdi Sunday saw a gen erous sprinkling of bared, head's along side spring bonnets. The aged min ister, with outraged sense, of propri ety, chose for his text: "Let destruc tion come upon him at unawares; and let his net that he hath hid' catch himself;" and' minced: no words in ex position. The men who had dared to stray from established custom rebelled at being eternally doomed for sitting beside their wives, and; left the church in a body. The result is that to-day in that little town stand two church buildings side by side, counterparts in size and paint and outlook: but in one the sexes are divided by a mid dlle aisle while in the other "promis cuous sitting" prevails. The trivial ities which hinder Christian comity may travel far for an apter illustra tion. —Youth's Companion. ilignesii. Dreams of bigness are not visions of gfreatnegs.—Ram's Horn. JOKE GAINED HIS POINT. A. Mlcblgan SlntiMnnn's Clever Kbit Worked on h Committee on Penfiioua. Not long ago Congressman "Hank" of the Second Michigan district, worked a joke off on the house committee on pensions. It should be explained, says the Chicago Chron icle, that this committee is not the one which has charge of the pensions which grew out of the civil war, says a correspond ent. Its functions appertain to the granting of pensions to the widows and veterans of the Mexican and Black Jl.iwk wars and other ancient unpleasantnesses. It should also be pointed out that one of their rules is that no widow's pension shall be larger than £8 a month. This proceeds upon the theory that any widow who survives a veteran of these wars must be a comparatively young woman and that she must have married the veteran in his dotage to get his pension. The new member from Michigan appeared before the committee at its last meeting arid in ari incidental and smiling way alluded to the rule. "That is a fine rule," said he in a guileless sort of way. "I sympathize with its purpose and believe it should stand. But just to show good faith I am going to propose an amend ment. I move that it be amended so as to read 'except in the case of widows over 100 years of age.' " The members of the committee are always in favor of a joke and the proposition was adopted with a unanimous laugh. And thereupon "Hank'' produced from hi» pocket a bill to grant a pension of £512 a month to Mrs. H ixon, of Clinton, Mich. .She had just passed her one hundredth year. It was not necessary to explain that her hus band had served to within one day of the time requisite tc get a pension in the reg ular manner. The committee reported the biil favorably. In spite of the fact that the varieties of stamps now current in the world number 13,811, every now and then another small boy starts into make a complete collection. —Somerville Journal. One Woman's Letter SAYS "1 doctored with two of the best doctors in the city for two years and had no re!ief until I used the Pinkham remedies• **My trouble was ulcer ation of the uterusm # suf fered terribly, could not sleep nights and thought sometimes that death would be such a relief« " To-day # a'm a well wo man, able to do my own work, and have not a pain. " I used four bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and three packages of Sanative Wash and cannot praise the medicines enough m "— MRS. ELIZA THOMAS, 634 Pine St., Easton, Pa, Mrs. Pinkham advises suffering women without charge. Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lvnn, Mass. : New : • r 1 Railroad to j • « | San Francisco j • « • € • « • Santa Fe Route, by < • « J its San Joaquin J J Valley Extension. J • « * The only line with * • « • track and trains under • • * 2 one management all J, • the way from Chicago • • < • to the Golden Gate. * • « • « • Mountain passes, J J extinct volcanos, Jj • petrified forests, «. J prehistoric ruins, J J Indian pueblos, J • Yosemite, Grand * • « J Cation of Arizona, J * en route. i • «■ • • (I • Same high-grade « • ; service that has made J 2 the Santa Fe the J • r * • favorite route to « • i J Southern California. J • < 2 Fast schedule; Pull- J • man and Tourist • J sleepers daily; Free J J reclining chair cars : J « Harvey meals « o « • throughout. J • < • > General I'assenfrer Office , • The Atchison. Topeka & Santa fe R*y 112 * * • 0 CHICAGO. 4 * * maniMATisiw maUO l'nTll|HH3lnj 1 the only positive cure Past ex PK nPI I nerlem-o speaks furltselt l)cix. ■ ■■l fa a ' California Ave.. CUica* c
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers