2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. K. M ULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Cer y»»r * •» M paid In advance I W> ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of n« dollar per Kqviare for one insertion and llfty •CBti per square for each subsequent insertion Rates by the year, or for si* or three month*, •re low and uniform, anil will be furniahed on Application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. 12: each subsequent inser tion :0 cents per square. Local notices 1U cents per line for one lnser •ertton: 5 cents per line for each subsequent •onsecutlve Insertion. Obituary notices over fire lines. 10 cents per line Simple announcements of births, mar rlages and deaths will be Inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less, 15 per year; ever live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local Inserted for less than 7S cents per Usue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRKSS IS complete and affords facilities for doinc the best class of work. PaKHCULAH ATTENTION PAID TO LAW PaiNTING. No paper will be discontinued ntll arrear ages are paid, except at the option of the pub- Usher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. A Fm.NCII naturalist warned GallfQ has made the discovery at >l' raes that if a sparrow is putin the same cage with finches it will soon learn to imi tate their sonir like a mocking bird; also, the chirping of a cricket. A KT SSIA.N nobleman. Count Rambnn sky, has written to Mayor Warwick, of Philadelphia, saying that he has a good-looking son. 34 years of age. who wants to make a Philadelphia woman his wife and a countess. All he requires is beauty and a dot of SM. (too. 000. AN agent of an American firm has just been in England, and with but little difficulty obtained orders for ti,ooo golf sticks. The American sticks are better made and finishid than the English owing to improved machinery and advanced methods of manufacture. THE richest gold mine in the world is located under the thriving town of Ballarat. Victoria, Australia. It yields but half an ounce of standard gold to the ton, and yet the Band, Barton and Albion mine has yielded more than $150,000,000 of frold since it was opcucd SO years ago. THE prince of Naples is compiling an illustrated work on the coins of Italy, modern and mediaeval, and is anxious to have all persons who pos sess rare Italian coins communicate with him. lie has a collection of 18,- 300, but there are 30,000 yet to be ac counted for. OFFICIAL reports have been received from Capt. Kay, who was sent to the Klondike country by the war depart ment. Capt. Kay's report is one that will serve to keep people out of the country, as he says of all who have gone there in two years but 7 per cent, have earned a living, the others being destitute. Miss MAKY PROCTOR, the astronomer, •*ave a lecture a few evenings ago in the lecture course provided by the board of education of New York city. Her interesting subject was:"The Great Planets, Comets and Meteors. '* Miss Proctor has just been the recip ient of a beautiful three-iuch tvle scope, presented by Mrs. Floyd, of Boston. VANCOUVER is enjoying a boom that presages a bright future and a verifi cation that that city is the future trreat metropolis of British Columbia. Every vacant house has been rented, and to meet the demand others are in the course of construction. The 40 hotels in the place are filled with argonauts, and all the boarding-houses have as many guests as can be accommodated. THAT New York and Philadelphia will eventually be *;ounect'jd by a trol ley line seems to be assured. There are electric power lines now in several of the intervening cities and towns, and connections between them could be made in a comparatively short time. There is a line in operation between Jersey City and Newark, and this could be extended to connect with the Railway and New Brunswick lines, which, in turn, could be carried onto Trenton, and then to Philadelphia. PRESIDENT MCKI.NLKY has it in his power to have a curious an 1 unequaled record made a part of the United States navy history. Tlios. 12. Selfridge, a 14-year-old aspirant for naval honors, has made application for a cadetship at Annapolis. Should ha bj appointed three generations will be borne on tin; navy register and 80 years intervening between the first and the last entry. Thos. O. Selfridge. grandfather <>f the youthful applicant, is the sole survivor of all the officers who were in the na\ v in ISIS. WHEN the big department stores of Denver lately undertook to dictate ad vertising rates to the newspapers there and stopped advertising in order to en force their demands the small stores took advantage of the boycott and ba ffan to advertise. They got immediate results, one house having to call tor police to keep back the crowds, while the large places were practically empty. A little dry goods firm that had never been heard of before turned away a thousand people for want of room to receive them inside. Tlifc moral is obvious. A NET of spiders' webs is being man ufactured at the professional school at Antananarivo, and will bj used as a a experimental covering for a navigable balloon by M. Itenard, tlie head of the French military balloon school at Cha lais. The thread of several spiders is wound on winders, the quantity pro duced by each spider ranging from 15 to 40 yards. The covering of the wob is removed by repeated washings, tlie web made into a thread of eiglit strands, which, when spun, is easily woven into a gauze very tine but ex ceedingly stronir. SOMETHING HE OVERLOOKED.] Ilr>ftit*» 111 ff nnd Denrrlptlon Mexico 39 111 stiver— I'nited States $S 78 Mexico 7 "0 In paper— Vnited States tS 90 Mexico 32 Total money— I'nited States 524 03 Mexico & 41 Evidently there is a cog loose in Mr. Bryan's logic again. Instead of having, thanks to the free coinage of silver, a greater amount of money per capita than the United States, Mexico has only about one-third as much money per capita as this country possesses. Besides, every dollar of United States money, under the gold standard, is worth twice as much as a Mexican dol lar. So that, if we take purchasing power into consideration, we find that our $21.03 per capita is worth $48.06 in Mexican money, as against an $8.41 per capita in Mexico. If it is a good thing to have a large circulation, then free silver, as shown by the experience of Mexico, does not supply that benefit, nor does the free antl unlimited coinage of silver in Mex ico add one pe'.nv of value to the sil ver when it is coined. After that metal is minted it is worth no more or less, under free and unlimited coinage in Mexico, than it was worth as bullion. Tlie free and unlimited coinage of sil ver never did make 50 cents' worth of silver worth 100 cents, and never will, Mr. Bryan to the contrary notwith standing. While Mr. Bryan is sounding the praises of Mexico's financial system that country is striving to abandon it, and in a few years we will see our southern neighbor take its rightful place among the progressive gold standard nations of the world.—Cin :innati Commercial Tribune. DRIFT OF OPINION. l7Mr, Br3 - an is undoubtedly one of the men who are ahead of their times. Ihe only date to which he pays atten tion is 1900.- —Washington Star. the "investigation" could only have been held before the election Banna's majority would have been much larger.—Cleveland Leader. "Bryan and Altgeld democ racy" presumably has warned all per sons of the name of Buck Ilinrichsen to keep eff the grass. —Chicago Kecord t Ind.). tightening grip of Dingleybil". results on the windpipe of the calam ity howler has reduced that organ to the vocalization of a piping treble. — Philadelphia Press. C-"*"Bryan's satirical telegram to the Maine cotton mill strikers is in keep ing with his calamity record. When he sees a sign of prosperity he keeps quiet.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. e-y-The Curse of Gold" is described as a f.ee silver melodrama. It will be remembered that "The Cross of Gold," which had a short run in '9O, was a roaring farce. —Chicago Times-llerald. Ey'l'he promptness and vigor with which the republican house killed the Teller silver bond resolution shows the scrupulous faith with which the re publican party keeps its pledges.—St. Leu is (i lobe-Democrat. C7 - Never was a robber or assassin caught in the commission of his crime condemned to swifter execution by public indignation, or more promptly gibbeted and buried out of sight and smell than the Teller resolution, with all its infamies on its head, was sent to its just doom by the house of repre sentatives. —St. Paul Pioneer Press. (C"Hryan says:"The democrats of the United States have put their hnnds to the sixteen to one plow, nnd will not look back." Well, perhaps they won't. There is nothing very pleasant "to look back" at. Bryan firing oil' speeches with hair on end at the rear of a Pull man car,.ar.d defeated when the vote was counted, doesn't make n historic picture for any democrat to enthuse over.—Chicago Inter Ocean. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1898. WAGES AND MONEY. Facia \\ 111 ell Knock Oat the l'r»- teiiNCN of Free Sftlverltew. A bond sale recently took place in this state which shows the extent to which the price of money has fallen In the past few years. The bonds were Missouri state securities, amounting to $350,000, bearing interest at four per cent., and they sold at a premium. These bonds are to take up bonds draw ing six per cent, interest. Twenty years ago the latter were hard to sell at par, and they replaced bonds that drew ten per cent, interest, which sold for 75 cents on the dollar in 1860, at a time when the repular currency of the country, greenbacks, which the repub licans brought up to the gold line in 1870, was worth only 75 centson the dol lar in gold. Of course the interest rate for private loans in Missouri has also fallen to nearly the same extent in this time. This is a little different sort of a story from that which the silver orators tell. They pretend that interest and fixed charges for farmers and others remain the same as during the war pe riod, while the prices of farm prod ucts and the wages of labor have gone down. The figures here given, how ever, show that interest in Missouri is much less than half as high as it was 25 or 30 years ago. Allowing for the premium now on public bonds and the discount then, the present rate of in terest is only about a third what it was at that time. Ex-Gov. Stone, like his friend Bryan, has often shed meta phorical tears over the crime of 1873, by which "half of the country's money was struck down and the value of the other half enormously enhanced." Gov. Slone and every other person in this state, and in almost every other state, no matter how poor or obscure, who has acceptable sucurity to offer, can borrow money for half what lie would have had to pay for it in 1872. The facts k nock out the rest of the sil verites' pretense also. Prices of many farm products have dropped in the past 20 years, though wheat at its present price in 100-cent dollars is about as high as it was 25 or 30 years ago, if the cur rency of those days is reckoned on the geld basis. Beef and pork have also changed in price but slightly. On the other hand, the farmers' machinery and tools, the interest on the money he bor rows, the price of the clothes he wears and his general living expenses are in the aggregate only about half what they were at that time. That is to say, the farmer has been a great gainer by the change. The same is true, of course, of the average wageworker. An ex haustive examination made bv the I'nit ed States commissioner of labor a few years ago showed that a dollar would buy 27'/JJ per cent, more of the neces saries of life in 1891 than it would have bought in 1872. a year before the great "crime of the century" was perpe trated. and the average laborer got ten per cent, more wages in 1891 than he did in the earlier year. The thing the wage worker had to sell, his laoor, went up in price, and everything which he had to buy went down. His condition has vast ly improved in the past quarter of a cen tury, and so has that of the farmer. The deposits in the savings banks of the country nnd the reduction in the amount of the farm mortgages are con clusive on both these points. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat. On tlie Defensive. The Tippecanoe club, one of the largest permanent republican clubs in the country. has been sued to prevent its board of directors from ex pelling four members who took part in the effort to prevent the election of M. A. llanna to the United States senate by the Ohio legislature. These four members, who figure as plaintiffs in (he ca=e, are Mayor McKisson, the sena torial candidate, put up in opposition to Senatorllanna; Speaker Mason and Representative Bradley, of the Ohio house of representatives, and Senator Burke, of the Ohio senate. The rules of the club stipulate that every mem ber shall stand by the nominees of the republican party. The four plaintiffs claim first that Senator llanna was not the nominee of the party in the sense intended by the rules, and that as the club is a stock company and the plain tiffs are owners of stock, they cannot be deprived of their shares. Upon proper application, Judge Ong, of the common pleas court, granted an order temporarily restraining the club from proceeding with the trial of Mayor Mc- Kisson and his colleagues, now in prog ress. The case will be heard on its merits later. —Chicago Inter Ocean. "(■old I.>CBI>OiMm/' Something must be said about the phrase "tyranny of gold," implying that gold is a cruel despot and an in jury to mankind. It is strange that we never heard of this tyra.nt until silver fell below par. II the despotism of gold is so cruei to the human race it is strange that all other nations one by one are rushing to its embraces. Since the controversy became hot in the United States, Italy, Austria. Koumania, Chili, .Japan, Russia, and even San Do mingo have welcomed the tyrant, and now India is taking steps to the same end. The tyranny of go'.d is of the same nature as the tyranny of railroads in. comparison with lumber wagons, of telegraphs and telephones in compari son with postboys, of gas and electric lights in comparison with tallow dips, of the United States in comparison with Mexico and China, of coined money as against wampum, of civiliza tion in general as against savagery.— N. Y. Post (Gold-l)em.) IP'From 1834 until the present mo ! mcnt gold has been the standard of all values, and if it is a "tyranny" it is not | the work of the men of the present day j The statesmen who established it have j (ong since passed to their account, nnd ! their names are honored wherever | American history is read. It was an act : of beneficence and not of tyranny when ; they reformed our coinage laws and j established the standard of gold. —Chi ! cago Times-llerald. I Mil Explosion in Havana Harbor Wrecks an American Warship. Scores of the Crew Killed and Wounded—Exact Cause of the Disaster Not Yet Fully Determined. Spanish Na> aland Military Author!- ties Assist In Caring fcr the In jured- -One of the Worst Catastrophes in the An nals of Our Navy. Havana, Feb. 16. —At 9:45 last even ing a terrible explosion took place on board the United States warship Maine in Havana. Many were killed or wounded. As yet the cause of the explosion is not apparent. The wound ed sailors of the Maine are unable to explain it. The explosion shook the whole city. The windows were broken in all the houses. Several of the wounded sail ors say that the explosion took place while they were asleep, so that they can give no particulars as to the cause. The wildest consternation prevails in Havana. The wharves are crowded with thousands of people. Jt is be lieved tlie explosion occurred in a small powder magazine. At 10:45 p. m. what remained of the Maine was still burning. Capt. Sigsbce and tlie other officers were saved. It is esti mated that over 100 of the crew were killed, but it is impossible as yet to give exact details. Admiral Manterola has ordered that boats of ail kinds shall goto the assistance of tlie Maine and her wounded. Gen. Solano and the other generals have been ordered by (ien. Blanco to take steps to help the Maine's crew in every way possible. The correspondent of the Associated Press has been near the Maine in one of the boats of the cruiser Alfonso XII. and seen others of the wounded who corroborate the state ment of those first interviewed that they were asleep when the explosion occurred. Capt. Sigsbee says the explosion oc curred in the bow of the vessel. He received a wound in the head. Orders were given to the other officers to save themselves as best they could. The latter who were thrown from their bunks in their niglit clothing, pave the necessary orders with great self-pos session and bravery. At 11:30 the Maine continues burning. Many officers of the Maine were ashore at the time of the explosion. Admiral Manterola believes the disas ter was caused by the throwing of a grenade from the navy yard, near which the Maine was anchored, onto the deck of the American warship. Washington, Feb. 10.—The secretary of the navy received the following tele gram from Capt. Sigsbee: ' "Maine blown up in Havana harbor at 9:40 and destroyed. Many wounded and doubt less more killed and drowned. Wound ed ami others are cu board Spanish man-of-war and Ward line steamer. Send lighthouse tenders from Key West for crew and few pieces of equip ment still above water. No one has other clothes than those upon him. Public opinion should be suspended until further report. All officers be lieved to be saved. Jenkins and Mer ritt not yet accounted for. Many Span ish officers, including representatives of Gen. Blanco, now with me and ex press sympathy." The officers referred to in the above dispatch are Lieut. Friend W. Jenkins and Assistant Engineer Darwin R. Merritt. From the wording of the dis patch the navy department thinks it possible that they were on shore at the time of the accident. The secretary of the navy received another dispatch from Key West at the same time, but its contents were not made public. The orders for the lighthouse tenders were at once sent to Key West. Secretary Long received Capt. Sigs bee's dispatch but a few seconds before the press dispctches from Havana were handed to him. Ilis first act was to comply with Sigsbee's request that as sistance be sent from Key West. He immediately wired Capt. Forsythe at Key West to proceed with the naval tender Fern to Havana. The Maine was a battleship of the second class and was regarded as one of the best ships in the new navy. She was built at the Brooklyn navy yard and is 111S feet long, 57 feet broad and 0,652 tons displacement. She carried four 10-inch and six 6-inch breech-load ing guns in her main battery and seven G-pounder and eight 1-pounder rapid fire guns and four Gatliugs in her sec ondary battery, and four Whitehead torpedoes. The Maine was built in 1800 at a cost of 53,588,000. She had a steel hull and a complement of 874 men. Arbitration Hill Favorably Reported. Washington, Feb. 16.—The senate committee on education and labor has decided to report favorably the bill prepared by the trainmen of the coun try and recently introduced in the sen ate by Senator Kyle, providing for the arbitration of railroad strikes. Caught by a Cave-In. Pittsburg, Feb. 16.—Terror was spread yesterday by a report that a section of tlie ruins left by the Pike street fire disaster of last Wednesday night had fallen and buried ten per sons. mostly boys. Soon afterwards 50 volunteers went to work to discover what the falling mass had buried. A driver of a coal wagon, a 15-year-old boy and two horses were extricated, being more or less injured. After the men had worked about two hours and those in charge bad been convinced no others had been caught by tlie the falling brick, the work WHS aban doned. THE DEAD NUMBER 2oU. Pen Picture of the Tragedy In Ha vana Harbor. Kxplonfoii on tlm Maine W'ai Followed by a Willi Knsli of Sailors to Iteach thy Deck-Few Knceeecled Deserip* tlon of the Appcttrtniceof ilie Warship After the Dlnastrr. Key West, Fla., Feb. 17.—Capt. Sips b®e's message to Commandant For sythe, of the naval station here, re ceived yesterday, reads: "Advise sending American vessel at once. The .Maine is submerged except the debris. .Mostly work for divers. Jenkins and Merritt are still missing and there is but little hope for their safety. Those known to have been saved are the officers and 24 uninjured of the crew. Eighteen wounded men are now on board the Ward line steam er; in the city hospital and at the ho tels 59 so far as known. All the others went down onboard or near the Maine. The total lost or missing is 258. With several exceptions no officer or man has more than a part of a suit of cloth ing and that is wet. The officers saved are uninjured. The damage was in the compartments of the crew." New York, Feb. 17. —A cable to the World from Havana says: "l have just seen 29 sailors of the Maine silent ly enduring the torture caused by pow der-skinned faces and bodies, broken bones and mangled flesh. They were being well cared for in the San Am brosio military hospital here. The less severely injured men are on the steam ship City of Washington. The severely wounded men will have the best of at tention from the men and women of the American colony. All the injured men show great grit. "Out in the bay lies the wreck of the Maine. Her steel upper deck forward has been completely lifted and turned over on her starboard side. None of the big guns in the turrets are visible. The Maine is slightly listed to port and all forward of the massive cranes for unloading ship's boats has disappeared. The big funnels lie flat upon the twisted iron braces and pieces of steel deck. From the funnels aft the ship seems to be intact. She has settled until the water has covered the top of her superstructure and the stern searchlight and the rapid-fire gun look over the water just below them. "Most, if not all the bodies will be recovered. Two bodies were recovered yesterday forenoon. They were those of Lieut. Jenkins and Assistant Engi neer Merritt. A vigilant lookout is being kept for bodies. Out of 59 in jured not over four are likely to die. All but five officers will goto Key West. All the slightly wounded and all the able-bodied men will go also, with the exception of a few who will be kept here to identify bodies when they are secured by divers." Out of 354, the total number of the crew of the Maine. 90 were saved. A special copyright cable to the Evening World from Havana says the officers of the Maine state the explo sion was in the central magazine and that the Maine was raised out of the water and then went partially to pieces. The dispatch continues: "All but the surgeon were in the ward room at the moment of the explosion. Then eaine the stupendous shock. All the officers below rushed on deck, but could get no further forward than the middle superstructure on deck. Only a very few of the :>SO jackies ever got from below. The water rushed over them and many were stunned and drowned, but not mangled. "The officers on deck narrowly es caped. In the junior officers' mess all had to clamber out through water and wreckage waist deep. One ladder from the after torpedo compartment was jammed with men struggling up for life. All agree that a double explosion occurred from the natural result of an underwater explosion of the maga zines." On board the Spanish cruiser Alfonso XIII. 26 of the wounded were treated, and SB were succored on board the City of Washington. The crew of the steamer Colon saved two wounded men. The Maine, at the time of the explo sion, was anchored about 500 yards from the arsenal and 200 yards from the floating dock. The explosion put out the street lights near the wharf and blew down telephone and telegraph wires in that vicinity. Admiral Man terola and Gen. Solano put off to the Maine soon after the explosion and offered their services to ('apt. Sigsbee. Lieut. Commander Wainwright be lieves the explosion was due to the short circuit dynamo. The passengers on the City of Wash ington gave up their state rooms to the injured men. An iron truss from the Maine fell on the pantry of the City of Washington, breaking the table ware of the steamer. Lieutenant Comman der Wainwright, of the Maine, was smoking in his cabin next to Capt. Sigsbee, when the explosion occurred and put out the electric lights. Wain wright then lit a match and went to Sigsbee's cabin. The captain had been thrown from his bed, but was unin jured. They went on deck and gave orders to flood 2,500 pounds of gun cot ton which was on board. The order .vas carried out. but the men who ful filled it never returned. Havana, how ever. was saved from a still more terri ble explosion. Four boats were low ered. all manned by officers, and one of them was lost. Strainer mid 8? Lives Lost. Teneriffe, Canary Islands, Feb- I". The French line steamer Flachat. bound from Marseilles for Colon, was totally wrecked on Anaga l'oint, this island, at 1 o'clock Wednesday morn ing. Her captain, second officer, eleven of her crew and one passenger were saved. Thirty-eight of the crow ano 49 passengers were lost. Kilt I)e Lome. New York, Feb. 17.—Dupuy De Lome former Spanish minister to Washing ton, sailed yesterday on the steamship Britannic for Liverpool. Compliment !»ry resolutions were presented to bin; on board by a delegation of Spaniards. Rheumatic Pains Confined to Her Bed, but Hood's Sareaparilla Cured Her. " I was taken with rheumatism and suf fered a great deal of pain, and at times I was confined to mv bed. I obtained only temporary relief from medicines, and a friend advised me to try Hood's Sarsa parilla, which I did, and it cured me." MRS. P. P. HAT, Centralia, 111. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. (1; six for 16. Hood's Pills cure sick headache. i!6c. Ilrllurat I umiul lie turtu by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness la caused by an inflamed condition of the mu cous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal con dition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for r.ny case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. .J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Kamilv Pills are the best. Then lie Quit*. Prim—Man is born to rule the world. Prone —But sometimes he gets married.—* Up-to-Date. CaoKhlng Leads to Comamptlon. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Goto your druggist to-day arid get a sample bottle free. Large bottles, 50 cents and SI.OO. Go at once: delays are dangerous. We wonder why a hammer driving a nail on Sfinday always sounds jo much louder than on week days.—Washington Demo crat. 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. Kline. 933 Arch st., Phila., Pa. I.ooktnK Forward. Sh—And you will always love me? He—Do you think I'm a prophet?—Up To Date. Land and a I.lvinc Are best and cheapest in the New South Land $3 to $5 an acre. Easy terms. Good schools and churches. No blizzards. No cold waves. New illustrated paper, "Land and a Living," 3 months, for 10 cents, in stamps. W. C. lIINEARSON, G. P. A., Queen & Crescent Route, Cincinnati. Some men have such a horror of debt that they become narrow. —Atchison Globe. Lane's Kaiuily Medicine. Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headach*. Price 25 and 50c. The inventor of suspenders that would never break would be assured of a fortune. —Washington Democrat. I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs bv Piso's Cure for Consumption.— Louisa Lindaman, Bethany, Mo., Jan. 8, '9l. j baIL ! 1 CHOCOLATE! X Celebrated for more than a X * century as a delicious, nutri- • * tious, and flesh-forming bev- X * erage. Has our well-known * { YELLOW LABEL | X on the front of every package, X X and our trade-mark ♦ | "La Belle Chocolatiere" * X on the back. X J NONE OTHER GENUINE. J X Made only by X | WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. | | DORCHESTER.HASS. I £ ESTABLISH ED 1 TSO. | iceoe— oeeesxee FOB 14 CENTS | 1 Pkg. l.'iDay Radish, 10? * 1 Pkg. Karly Spring Turnip, 100 W 1 " Knrliest Hod Beet, 10c W 5 " BiamarH* Cucumber, 10c # A i * " JumbcTtiinnt Onion, 16c 2 y y 8 " Brilliant Flower bauds, 16c Jr 1 Worth SI.OO, for 14 cent* J 2 ifv# HS worth we will 0 9 wfj kV and Seed Catalogue £ J yf mm upon receipt, of thin notice and I4c. W 6 Iw lM poßtftjfe. We invite yonr trade and V 9 *1 m *uow when you once try Salter's W « £» Iff! -.Beodsyou will never get alone with- A A out thein. I'otntoen at $ 1.5U £ Q n. lib I. Catalog alone 6c. No. kH X X JOHN A. SAL7.ER HERD CO., LA CROSNR, WIS. Z $6.50 To California! This is the berth rate in the Tourist cat from CINCINNATI to SAN FRAN CISCO, via the ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD. For particulars address, S. Q. HATCH, D. P. A., 123 Vine Street, Cincinnati, O. finßßlKfll nM ' l Whiskey llnMt . hmmi 1 £ BSD E&ti ut homo wttnoutpHln. Book of UrIUM t