J-^ennsylvania UAII.KOAI). PIIILADELPHIA AND EUIE RAILROAD DIVISION. 111 effect May n, 1904. TRAINS LEA VK EMI'ORIUM KASTWARI) 810 A. M. Week days for Sunbuiy, Wilkesbarre, Serauton, llazleton, Pottsville, Harrisburff unti iuterniediatestfttionp, arriving at Philadelphia u.23 P.M., New Yoik9.3oP. M., Baltimore tl 00 P. M., Washinßton 7.15 P. M. Pullman Parlor car from Williamsport to Philadelphia and passengercoachesfrom Kane to Philadelphia and Williamsport to Balti more and Washington. 12:25 P. M. I Kinporiuoi Junction) daily for Snn bury, Harrisburg and principal intermediate stations, arriving at Philadelphia, 7:i12 p. 111.; New York, 10:2; p. 111.; lialtiuiore, 7::i0 p. in.; 1 Washington, 8:35, u. m. Vestibuled Parlor cars and passenger coaches, Bullalo to Phila delphia and Washington. 8 130 P. M.—daily lor Harnsburg and intermediate stations, arriving at Pliiladel- - phia, 4.23 A. M., New York 7.13 A.M. j Baltimore, 2:20 A.M. Washington, 3:30 A.M. I Pullman sleeping carsfrom llarrisburgtoPhil- ! adelphia and New York. Philadelphia pas aengerseanremainiusleeper undisturbedun- i ti17:30 A. M. 10 30 I'. M.-Daily for Sunbury, Harris hnrg and intermediate stations arriving at Philadelphia 7.17 A. M., New York 9.33 A. M., weekdays, (10.38 A. M. Sunday;) Baltimore 7.15 A. M., Washington 5.30 A. M. Piillmansleep ing cars from Erie, Buffalo and Williamsport to Philadelphia and Buffalo, Williamsport to Washington. Passenger cars from Erie to Philadelphia and Williamsport to Baltimore. 12:15 A. M. Emporium Junction),daily for Sun bury, Harrisburg and principal intermediate stations, arriving at Philadelphia, 7:32 n. m.; New York, 9:33 a. m„ week days; (10:38 Sun- j days); Baltimore, 7:25 a. in.; Washington, 8:*1(J a. in. Vestibuled Buffet Sleeping Cars and Passenger coaches, Buffalo to Philadelphia and Washington. WESTWARD. 6:10 A. M -Emporium Junction— diily for Erie, Ridgway, aud week days for Du- Bois, Clermont and intermediate stations. | 10 30 A. M.—Daily for Erie and week days for Dußoisandintermediatestations. 023 P. M. —Week days tor Kaue aud : intermediate stations. RIDGWAY AND CLEARFIELD R. R. CON NECTIONS. (Weekdays.) SOUTHWARD. Stations. NORTHWARD r. M A.M. A.M. I P.M. P.M. P.M. |ll 13 5 53|....5t. Marys ; 2 .1 61 3 20 11 05 5 55 ICane 12 25 3 00 8 25 3 36 11 23 6 13.. ..Wilcox 12 02 a 40 8 04 3 48 11 43 6 25 .Johnsonburg.. 11 47 2 2S 7 49 I ■ 40512 05 650 ...Ridgway,.... 9 2r» 210 730 41512 15 701 ..Mill Haven... 9 09| 1 ssi 720 42512 24 7 1 0.. Croyland.... '.l 00 149 7 0!) 43412 32 7 19... Blue Rock .. 851 140 701 4 38 12 35 7 21 Carrier 8 IT 1 37 6 57 448 12 45] 732 .Broekwayville. 837 127 6 17 45312 50 737 . ..Lanes.Mills. • 831 1 23, 643 457 7 41 .Mc.Minns Sin't. 830 fl 38 501 100 745 . Harveys Run.. 825 115 635 5 05 1 05 7 50 ..KalisCreek... 8 2' 1 10 6 30 6 20 125 8 0: Dußois 8 08 12 55, C 10 "610 115 7 55'..Kalis Creek... 653 115; 630 627 129 8 OSJ.Reynoldsville.. 6 12 52 615 8001 56 8 3»]... Brookville... C 051221 539 6 45 2 38 0 20lNew Bethlehem II 4 1 4 50 7 25 3 23 10 0)1...Red Bank 11 0" 4 05 10 10 530 12 3if.. ..Pittsburg 9 (JO 130 r. 11. P. W. P. M.| A. W. A. M. P. M. BUI'KALO & ALLEGHENY VALLEY DIVISION. Leave Emporium Junction for Port Allegany, Tlean, Arcade, East Aurora and Buffalo. Train No. 107, daily, 1:05 A. M. Train No. 115, daily, 1:15 P. M. Trains leave Emporium for Keating, Port Allegany, Coudersport, Sinethport, Eldred, Bradford,Olean and Buffalo,connecting at Buf falo for points East and West. Train No. 101, week days, 8:25 A. M. Train No. 103, week days 1:35 P. M. Train No. 103 will connect at Olean with Chautauqua Division for Allegany, Bradford, Balauiaucs,Warren, Oil City and Pittsburg. LOW ORADE DIVISION. EABTBOOND. i i i 1 .1 l STATIONS. 109 113 101 105 107 951 ! A. SI. A. M A. M. P. M P. M A. M. Pittsburg,. .Lv 18 15 t9 00 1130 *605 { 9 00 Ked Bank ' 9 30 U 05 4 05 7 55 11 10 I.awsonhuin,.. 9 47 s.lllß 4 18 807 11 23 New Bethle'm 10 20 11 4 ! I 50 8 37 11 55 Brookville +6 05 11 10 12 24 539 9 22 12 II Reynoldsville, C 39 11 42 12 52 6159 50 1 14 Falls Creek.... 653 11 57 1156 30 1005 129 Dußois, 7 00 +l2 05 125 6 40 1015 t 1 35 Kabu'.a 7 12 1 37 <5 53 Penntield, ! 7 30 1 55 7 15 Bennezette SOI 2 29 7 47 Driftwood,. 18 10 13 0a 8 20 via P. <fc E. I)iv Driftwood.. Lv. '0 50 T3 45 Emporium, Ar. 110 30 14 10 A. M. A. M. P. M. P. M P. M lp. M, WESTBOUND. i I i —i i i STATIONS. 108 100 102 114 110 952 Via P. &E.Div A. M. A.M. A. M. P. M. r. M P. M. Emporium, Lv. 18 10 13 20 Driftwood, Ar 19 01 14 00 Via L. Q. Div Driftwood, Lv 15 ro 11110 15 50 Bennezette, (i 25 11 45 6 25 Pennficld, 7 00 12 20 7 04 Sabula 71812 39 .... 723 Dußois *6 05 7 30 12 55 15 CO 7 35 J4 10 Falls Creek 6 12 7 55 1 15 5 10 7 42 1 17 Reynoldsville,.. 630 808 129 527 758 I Tin Brookville. 7 05 8 35 1 50 li 00 18 30 5 (0 New Bethle'm. 751 920 238 645 545 Lawsonlinm,.. 8 21 9 17 t3 C 6 7 14 ... 6 18 Red Bank.Ar.. 8 35 10 00 3 20 7 25 6 30 Pittsburg, Ar... 'll 15 11235 15 30 11010 ;9 30 A. M. P. M. T. M. I*. M. I'. M. P. M. •Daily. tDaily except Sunday. {Sunday only. gFlag Stop. On Sunday only train leaves Driftwood 8:20 a, m., arrives at Dußois, 10:G0 a. m. Returning leaves Dußois, 2:00 p. in.; arrives at Drittwood, 3:40 p. m., stopping at intermediate stations. For Time Tables and further information, ap ply to Ticket Agent. J. R. WOOD, Pass'gr Traffic Mgr. W. W. ATTERBURY, GEO. W. BOYD, General Manager. Gen'l Passenger Agt. i Y ott | are not familiar with t the excellence of the r I I Cameron [County Press| as a FAMILY news paper, why not sub scribe for it now. We are certain that you will be pleased. The cost is nominal, I $ 1.50 I>er Vear - j FRIENDS FOR A MINUTE. Levy and Cohen Try to Make Up, ; But Soon Strike a Discor dant Note. Levy an<l Cohen came out of the pyna- j gogue on New \ car's day. It way the day j of atonement, of forgiving, of making up, i relates the New Urleaiia limcß - Democrat. Levy approached Cohen and extended • I great flat hand. "Cohen," satd ho, "ve haf not shpoken for dvendy years. Come! \e make fredts." Cohen silently shook. "Now, Cohen," continued the reooneiii ant, ' ve go uter to liiniylehtiim s unt haf a drink." Arm in arm they crossed tlie street. Drinks were ordered and set before tlieni. Cohen, convinced at lust ol ilie sincerity of the otliei a advances, spoke for tiiu first time. . "Levy," he said, "1 am glad of it. I raise my glass to you, Levy. Vish me soinedingsT" . ! "Mit all my heart,' 'replied Levy, and raised fiis glass m turn. "Cohen, my dear frendt," said he,"l vish you siioost vat you vish nie!" _ The growing smile faded from Cohen's fate and he set his glass down with a bang. "l'y Abraham!" he exclaimed. 'Now you're sktarting it all over again!" Nothing Surprising. Mr. Nervey—l suppose you know the ob ject of my call, sir. To be brief, I want to marry vour danuhter— Mr. Roxlej I'.h? What! I'm that you should think of t'ich a thing, 'lhe ; idea! . "Nonsense! \on re prejudiced apmnst j the girl. She's all right. ' —Philadelphia Press. _ Wouldn't Tell R Lie. Teacher—The sentence, "My father had i money" is in the past tense. Now, Mary, ! what tense would you he speaking in if you said, "My father has money?" Little Mary—Oil, that would be pre tense.—Stray Stories. Shouting Their Praises. Friarpoint. Miss., Aup. 22 (Special).— Cured of Madder and Kidney Trouble af ter 20 years of suffering. Rev. H. 11. Hatch, of this place, is telling the pub lie the frood news and shouting the praises of the remedy that cured him—Dodd'* Kidney Pills. Rev. Mr. Hatch says: "I have been suffering from Bladder and Kidney Trouble for 26 years and I have tried everything that people said would do me good. Hut nothing did me any good except Dodd's Kidney Pills. "I haven't felt a pain since 1 took Dodd's Kidney Pills. Tliey gave me health and 1 feel like a new man altogether. Dodd's Kidney Pills arc the best .1 ever had." All Urinary and Bladder Troubles are caused by diseased kidneys. The natural way to cure them is to cure the kidneys. Dodd's Kidney Pills never fail to euro diseased kidneys in any stage or place. They always cure Backache and they are the only remedy that ever cured Blight's Disease. Not Quite Cured. Waiter—Roast beef or cured ham, sir? "Bring me some beef. The last cured ham 1 ordered here was only convales cent."—Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. For Your Perfect Comfort Attlie }St. Louis Exposition, which Is very severe upon the feet, remember to take along a box of Alien's Foct-Kase. a powder lor Hot, Tired, Aching, Swollen Feet. Sold bv all druggists, 35c. Don't accept a substitute. In the important matter of the arrange ment of its holies, the swordlish shows a great improvement on the shad. —Boston Globe. Fits stopped free and permanently cured. No fits after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Free $2 trial bottle & treatise. Dr. Kiine, 1)31 Arch at., I'hila., Fa. Even if you haven't an ax to grind, haven't you a ijiniil»tone t 0 sell?— Chic ago Tribune. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infalli ble medicine for cough's and colds.—N VV. Samuel, Ocean Crove, N. J., Feb. 17, lUUO. The pessimist always bites the spots on the apple first. —Chicago Tribune. TORTURING PAIN. Half This Man's Sufferings Would Have Killed Many a Person, But Doan's Cured Him. A. C. Sprague, stock dealer, of Normal, 111., writes: "For yffy \ two whole years I Wa S doi n g i nothing but b . l, ' y V'" mudi " M ' 7A s, Cincs to cure my i Mdne.vs. 1 tio ***', • no ' think that a "y man ever ;I suffered as 1 did \ < >if i' an( \ lived. The A.c. si'UAorE. pain in my back I was so bad that I could not sleep at night. I could not ride a liorse, and sometimes was unable even to ride in a car. My condition was critical when I sent for Doan's Kidney Pills. 1 used three boxes and they cured me. Now I can go any where and do as mncli as anybody. 1 sleep well and feel no dis j comfort at all." j A TRIAL FREE—Address Foster j Millmrn Co., Buffalo, N. V. For sale by all dealers. Price, 50 cents. j FREE to WOESIEFJ \ A Large Trial Box and book of ia= GtructioHS absolutely Free and Post paid, enough to prove the value of : Paxt ipeToiSet An!asepfic >«- Pastin-j Is In powder form to dissolve in water— non-poijonci.H ontJ * a » ""Parlor to liquid /wjilzT antiseptics containing B ' coho ' which Jrritatc:i f"UJfNf inflamed surfaces, nnd have no prop i El? er *le3. The contents evcy box nnkes k*W7A. "V* /nXtRrVT lroro Antiseptic Soiu */ TLON IUM'S longer— I feoes further— ha.i inoro ' u*es In tiiis fcinlly and JSsL <l<>esmorc|,food than any antiseptic preparation you can buy. The formula of a noted Boston pr.ysician, end used with great juccess as a Vagina! Wash, forLcucorrhcza, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal 1 Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, | end all soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatmont of femalo ills I'axltno 19 inyaluablo. Used as a Vaginal SVash wo challonKO the World to produco ita equal for thoroughness. It is a revelation in cleansing and healing power; it kills all genua which cause inflammation and discharges. All leading druggists keep l'axtiao; price, Mo. Obox; If youradoea not, send to usfor it. Don't taLo asu bsti Luto there is nothing like I'ajtino. Wrlto forthelTrco Bor of Pailinfl to-day. B. fAXTOW CO., 4 Popoßldc., Boatou, U&M. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER i, 1904 ► .. >:« j ])rvS/flSill 1 • fifs 111 I IjU Ll y L ' A HOME-MADE IMPLEMENT. Excellent for Smoothing Rough Fields, j Scraping Roads and Other Like Purposes. I have always wanted some sort of a tool that could be used to joint and smooth up a plowed field, scrape a rough road in the spring and meet other like demands; but the plank "granger," the flat log with a cutting edge and like de- j vices never quite filled the bill, and they j in some way all went into innocuous ! desuetude. It occurred to me that a , big iron ring with some sort of an in- 1 side cutting attachment would be the thing. A bar of st<el four inches wide and one-half inch thick and long i enough to make a five and one-half foot ; hoop was procured. Another bar of the AN IMPROVISED LEVEI.ER. Fame size was made into a triangle, just a fit, and put inside the hoop and riveted J at the angles. Ring hooks were put into the .-outer rim. to which a bale was fas- , tened, and then I had a most complete j tool. The cost was sr>, and we have found it of the greatest use. As a road smoother it is all that can be desired. , Every inch of its 33 feet of under edge i is either cutting, pushing or scraping j back to the center, filling as well as leveling, and a good team will pull ii j all day. For road smoothing—not scraping—it equals a big machine. I | is well to have a plank fitted on toi j so that in extreme cases the driver naaj j add his weight and do n little more com plete work. —John Gould, in N. Y. Trib- j I une-Farmer. TWO EFFECTS OF CLOVER. The Crop Acts Either as a Collector of Nitrogen or as a Sub-Earth Cultivator. The work of clover is rot always to j pet nitrogen from the air. There are ' j some soils that are rich enough in 1 nitrogen and yet need the presence of 1 the legumes. In a visit to Antioch, I j 111., the writer observed that the 1 ! soil is only a little acidy, and that it Is also rich in nitrogen. Clover is be- j j ing grown, but its work of soil reno- ! j vation is different from that it has to ! ! perform on some other soils, espe- j | cially those that are deficient in nitro- i ' gen. Here the roots go deep into the ; i eoil and help to improve the physical i . condition of the soil. It tips the stores j | of potassium and phosphorus that are hidden away in the depths of the ; earth and brings them to the upper ! layers of soil, where they will be with- I in the reach of the plants that do not ! have the deep root systems thai . j clover and alfalfa have. The clovers will be found to be use- ' fnl on almost si! soils where they will I grow, either as collectors of nitrogen or as subearth cultivators. They send I their roots deep into the soil and tun- ; j nel in every direction. The roots in | time die, leaving a multitude of pas- j sages in the soil. These act as drains ; and as air channels, by which the soil , is more fully aerated. As a nitrogen j gatherer the clover is of great use i \ .on millions of acres of our lands j from which the nitrogen has been ex- ! I hausted, and on millions of other j J acres it acts as a. carrier of fertility , j from the cellars to the upper storage | I rooms of the soil.—Farmers' Review. New Potato from TJraguay. Prof. Heckel, of Marseilles, France, ' discovered a few years ago, along the banks of the River Mercedes. Uruguay, a new tubercle, which seems to put the common white potato in the back ground, if reports are true. This won- ; ! derful potato need be planted but once, i as new tubercles and stems to branch j off in every direction all the year, and j after one planting the vegetable per- ■ petuates itself from the broken roots left in the soil. The flowers are abundant, and very odorous, and a perfume resembling jasmine has al ready been manufactured from them Enormous production, absolute imniu- 1 nity from common potato diseases, de- 1 licious flavor and easy culture are some of the features already claimed for this new discovery. A Crop of Antique Corn. Several years ago. in exploring an Indian mound in the southwest part of Missouri, a quantity of corn was found. Some of this corn was plant ed. and, to the surprise of all, it ger minated and matured. How long it had lain in the mound, on which large trees were growing, no one can con jecture—probably several hundred years. Last fall a citizen of James port, Mo., secured a handful of thij corn and now has a dozen hills of i growing in his garden. The grains ar about the usual size of field corn, bi« are of a deep brown, mottled wi;J yellow. RATTLERS MILKED THE COW. Vermont Farmer Makes a Discovery Which Surprised Him and Hi 3 Neighbors as Well. Simeon Johnson, a farmer of Tyson, Vt. made a discovery recently which so surprised him that he has spread the marvelous tale from one end of tha county to the other. For several months Sim has known that some one or something has been stealing milk from his pet Jersey cow. His good wife told him that the Jersey hail simply dried up and that he was "afflicted with a spell of Imagination." Sim, however, declared that he knew that he knew, and sat up nights to dis cover the thief. But he saw no invaders, and the more sleep he lost the madder he got. The Jersey was one of a herd of 20. and as her milk was richer than that of the others the supply was saved for fam ily use. She was quartered in a stall at the end of the cow stable and until three months ago pave four quarts morning and night. Then she suddenly cut down her morning quota to little or nothing. Sim would have agreed i with his wife if Bess hadn't furnished the usual amount at night and seemed ravenously hungry. It made no difference whether Sim watched or not; the milk was always gone in the morning, although it was several times established that at mid night the supply was normal. It wan this fact more than anything else that j bothered Sim and gave him creepy and | nncanny sensations when he kept his by the dim, uncertain light of an r old kerosene lantern. He couldn't fig ure out. why Boss should not give mlllc | in the morning when there was plenty at | midnight, or why she should be well | supplied at night and not at the early I milking. "I don't believe there is anything I mllkin' that cow," said Mrs. Johnson | one day recently, "but. if there is it . crawls, and you won't catch it unless | you clean out the bedding so you can see the stall floor." Sim allowed there might be some thing in this, and so he swept out the stall and made Bess lie on the planks instead of on a fine bed of clean straw. About nine o'clock he got his lantern and once more took up his post of vigil, i He had begun to doze when he heard Bess shift her position, and he held up the light. He was Just in time to see a long, glistening, sinuous form slip from | under the side of the reclining cow and elide down a rat-hole in the corner of the stall. At the same time lie heard a | familiar sound that caused his hair to I stand on end. "Rattlesnakes," he gurgled, and j grabbed a pitchfork. Bess jumped to her feet, and mooed ! contentedly as the farmer advanced ! cautiously and began a careful investi gation. Th«ro was but one rat-hole. This led to a pile of rocks under the j barn, and Sim retired to the house. In I the morning, with the help of the hired j man, the rocks were removed, and five 1 rattlers, each three times its natural ' size, were killed. According to the 1 number of rattles, all but one was young, but exceedingly large and fat. —* I N. Y. World. CALF FEEDING MADE EASY. A Device Which Enabled Its Inventor to Do This Work Without Soil ing Ilis Clothes. You have probably fallen often from I grace in feeding that irrepressible calf, ■ , . either with the spume 1,,, i[ | or froth with which he 'I I lathered your face or ruined a. good suit of aJSrHjJjv clothes. I have dc- vised a little plan —-which enables me to I feed a calf and still re main out of his reach. Cut a hole in the wall between the calf pen and feeding alley. Build a braced shelf, as shown in the cut. Hinge one edge of if to one j side of the opening, as shown at a. This shelf may be swung into the feeding I alley and the bucket placed on the shelf, secured by rope and swung out into the j calf pen, where it may be readily fas j tened-with a hook. When pail is re ' moved a button prevents the calf from getting his head out through the open : ing.—R. M. Winthrop, in Farm and Home. STOCK AND DAIRY NOTES. For hog pastures woven wire is tha best fencing material. ' For the first few days newly purchased hogs should be fed lightly, i No man should attempt to raise hogs without adequate fencing of yards aud pastures. The portable hog house is coming Into 1 very general favor, especially in disease Infested districts. Sweet cream butter is coming much > nto use in this country. This kind of butter is not made, as might be supposed from tlie name, from cream from sweet Diilk, but is generally made of ripened • cream. It is called sweet because it is ! not salted. A cow must be a very poor milker not to respond to good feed and good ! rare. Good feeding can greatly Increase the milk-producing powers of the cows | we have, but only to the limit of their I natural capacity. Many of our cows are ! being fed so unscientifically that they ! have never been brought up to their full | capacity.—Farmers' Review. When Milk Cans Get Rusty. Don't keep throwing away money patching rusty milk-cans, when at best ;hey will last but a little longer; such a practice in decidedly disastrous to tha quality of the milk. Throw them away and get some good, new cans, well tinned. Always empty them as soon as they re turn from the creamery; wipe dry after washing and give them a daily sun bath. Given this treatment, a good can ought to last seven or eight years.—MidlaixJ Jfarmer. Mrs. Rosa Adams, niece of the late General Roger Hanson, C. S. A., wants every woman to know of the wonders accomplished by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound* " Dear Mrs. Pinkham :—I cannot tell you with pen and ink what pood lijrdla E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound did for me, suffering from the ills peculiar to the sex, extreme lassitude aud that all pone feeling 1 . I ■would rise from my bed in the morning feeling more tired than when I went to hod, but before I had used two bottles of Ijydia E. J'inkham's ege> table Con.pound, I began to feel the buoyancy of my younger days return ing, became regular, could do more work and not feel tired than I had ever been able to do before, bo I continued to use it until 1 was restored to perfect health. It is indeed a boon to s.ck women and I heartily recommend it. Yours very truly, Mks. Rosa Adams, 819 12th St., Louisville, Ivy." Any women who are troubled with ir regular or painful menstruation, weak ness, leucorrliota, displacement or ulcer ation of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, back ache, general debility, and nervous pros tration, should know there is one tried and true remedy, L.ydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compoundi Ko other medicine for women lias received such wide-spread and unqualified indorsement. 2>o other medicine has such a record of female ciiv''s. " Peati Miss. Ptneham I am very pleased to recommend Lydia E. PiokhaJU's elec table Compound for womb and ovarian diUicul tii s from v. liich 1 have teen a sufferer for years. It was the only medicine which was at all beneficial, aiul within a week after I started to use it. there was a great change in ir.y feelings and looks. I used it for a little over three months, and at the end of that time I suffered no pain at the menstrual period, nor was I troubled with those distressing pains which compelled ;ne tog 6to bed, and I have xiot had a headache since. This is nearly a year ago. I always keep a Vottle cn hand, and take a few doses everv week, for I iiud that it tones up the system and keeps mo 112 eelings t rong/and I never have that tired out feeling any more. . " I certainly think that every woman ought to try this grand medicine, for it would prove its worth. Yours very truly, Miss Elsie Dahfoutu, 203 De Soto St. s Memphis, Tenn." FREE r.IEDICATj ADVICE TO WOMEN. Don't hesitate to write to is. Pinkliam. She will understand your case perfectly, and will treat you with kindness. Her is free, and the address, is Lynn, I\lass. woman ever regretted having written her, and she has helped thousands. sm> FORFEIT if ve cannot forthwith produce tl:o original letters and of Cn>|j| above testimonial*, which will prove their nbsihitc r^'iuineness. Lytiiii K. i'iultiiaui Med. Co., Lynn, Ts?a .8. Taking n Name. "t's nil nonsense about a man's being i able to make a name lor himself. Only j tt woman tan do that." "How do yon make that out?" ".She can select for husband a man whose name she fancies."- Town Topics. llcv/ Tourist Sleeping Car Service to California. On August 15th the Missouri Pacific Rail- ; way will establish a daily through Tourist Bleeping Car Line, St. Louis to San Fran cisco. Train will leave St. Louis daily 11:59 p. m. The route will bo via Missouri Pacific | Railway to Pueblo, Colorado, thence via Denver and Rio Grande to Salt Lake City and Ogden and Southern Pacific to fc'an Francisco and LOB Angeles. This is the ia mous teenic line of the world—through the picturesque Rocky Mountains. The service and accommodations will be up to date and w ill be personally conducted. Very low rates will be in effort from Au gust 15th to September lUth via Missouri Pa cific Railway to the principal Pacific Coast points and return. Also Low Rate Colonist one wav tickets will be sold from September 15th to October 15th. For rates, information and reservation of berths, apply to nearest representative oft lie Missouri Pacific Rail way, or address If. C. Townsend, G. P. & j T. A., St. Louis, Mo. • it would be something of a calamity if one of those floating mines should strike | tue sea serpent.—Washington Times. I FOUI* Route 3 TO Ste Lotus I 4 'The Way of the World'' to the World's Fair I For information as to rates, hotels and boarding houses, address j nearest Big Four Agent, or 1 WARREN J. LYNCH, I G. P. and T. Agent, Cincinnati, O. 1 | WHY MOT 1 | GO FARTHER I | V/hen you visiltho I World's Fair you ro half W3y The Southwest is inviting. The crops H are good; conditions and prospects were H never more favorable. Indian Territory. B Oklahoma and Texas are in need t»f (a people and ofTer plenty of oppcrtui; jtn*s g ior investments of capital and labor. H Kates are low. Round-trip tickets «11 w sale from St. J.ouis. August '> and and U tf] September 13 and 27, via M. lv. T. I<y., tj | as follows: g F Oklahoma City.\ A* O S r, Dcnison. ISf j a RE3 W jr.] H B Fort Worth....# V 1 R STT EIM □ I wico s .& I InLyy I g Austin f*V HK tf [3 E San Antunio....l * iSiIV-SsiESK 0 j Houston J Ls Ha? 9 Oalveston / u and all intermediate points, j *Froni Chiccgo $20.00 pj Liberal Limits—Stop-Overs Allowed ij I For something new in printed matter a about the Southwest, address " Kaiy," I I St. J.ouis. I R FAST TRAINS I St. Louis to Texas vssSja 9 : B] ** Katy Fair Special" ? L G fH at th Isa.in. / fl 10 "The Katy I'lycr" ftt 8 j S:3'«i p. in. " 4^W Vsgetabls Sealers i The Passenger Department of the JHinois Centra Railroad Coinpany have recently issu -.i a pit. ..1 tiou known as Circular No. 15, in which Is di erf bee | tho boat territory in this country for the growing r.f curly strawberries and 'm- 5 j vegetables. Kvery rica.'ur in se.«jh products c n<l«irebsa post a I card totbn n pder-'ijne.l at <•» tiJtK, ton a, requesting a eop v of "Circular N«». 1 ' J. F. M ISltlt V. Asst. Ccn . I'ass'r AjfenU HI ALL GLASSES OF IHVESTBS^T The Southwest STANDS PRE-EW!NE?iT AND WE CAP) GJVE YOU THE BERT. Per particulars address the BMTHWKST DKVF.LOPK-' "T A!l7> j KIrLURiTIuM CO., B-i 173, 4! jitqusrtae, S. U. j A. N. K.-c_ £Oi36 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers