Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, March 10, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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    BY THE CAR LOAD.
Belief Supplies are Being Sent to
Cuba.
Central Committee at New York Report*
Wonderful Success In tlie Collection
of Food, Clothing mid Medl
clneM for Destitute Keg
dents of the Inland.
Washington, March 4, —Secretary o
the Navy Long said last evening that
no word had been received from the
court of inquiry and that no orders had
been or would be given as to the move
ments of the court from Key West, as
the court was fully authorized to shape
its own movements. The original or
ders to the court were issued by Ad
miral Sicard as commander of the fleet
to which the Maine belonged, and it
has the technical status of an admiral's
•ourt, reporting directly to him. both
is to its movements and as to its final
report on the cause of the disaster,
rile understanding here is that the
.•ourt has not concluded its work, but
will return to Havana to take testi
mony which has been delayed by the
difficulties in the way of the divers.
Arrangements are being made for
the trip of the cruiser Montgomery and
gunboat Nashville to Cuban ports with
relief supplies. The navy department
was advised yesterday that the Mal
lory line steamer leaving New York
next Saturday would carry free of
•harge 75 tons of supplies to be trans
ferred to the Montgomery anil Nash
ville at Key West. The Mallory steamer
is expected to take about four days in
the run down the coast, so that the
transfer to the warships their
start to Cuba cannot be made before
next Thursday. The two warships are
poorly adapted for carrying supplies,
having scant quarters for their own
supplies. It is only because they can
make the run in daylight that any at
tempt is made to carry the 75 tons ol
supplies.
The relief measures are proving un
expectedly successful, the supplies run
ning into the carloads and hundreds ol
tons. The state department has had
notice from the Cuban relief committee
at New York that there were shipped
on March 1 from New York to Santiago
100,000 pounds of relief supplies: on tlit
2d to Havana "5,000 pounds; yesterday
to Matanzas 100.000 pounds, and tc
Sagua la Grande 100,000 pounds. In
these shipments are #OO,OOO grains ol
quinine consigned to each of the ports
except Havana.
Chairman Harton, of the central Cu
ban relief committee, has advised the
state department that "donations art
coming forward in great abundance,
not only in money, but more particu
larly in the form of provisions from al
directions. The Oregon committee
promises ten car loads and possibly 20
and Omaha, Minneapolis and othei
western committees arc offering ship
ments by the car load.''
The Maine relief fund under Mrs.
Long's management has reached a tota
of 83,131.
The only telegram relating to the
disaster that came to the navy depart
ment yesterday was the following froti
Commander Forsythe at Key West
"liache arrived. Brought one body
unidentified, and Paul Loftus, marine
Jeremiah Shea, coal passer: John Heff
ner, ordinary seaman; Thomas .1
Waters, ordinary seaman, wounded,
from Tortugas. The wounded will b<
sent to the army hospital."
In the course of the inquiry into the
naval resources of the United States
an order has been issued to make a tes"
of the machinery of the old war mon
itors at the League Island navy yard
These are single-turreted crafts armei
with big smooth bore guns, in turrets
that could likely be pierced by the
modern high powered ritles on th<
battleships, but they would still be o:
service in an emergency. There are
eight of these monitors at League
Islanel and the government owns sev
eral others that are loaned to the nava
militia.
FROZEN ON THE TRAIL.
Klondiker* l>ie While Returning to Civi
lization with WIOO.OOO.
Victoria, 15. C., March 4. *"eporl
has been brought by the steam • Isl
ander, from Alaska, that s. days
ago two Canadian mounted police
marched into Skaguay with two sleds
in tow, over which were strapped twe
dead men. The attention of the
mounted police at Taguish was at
tracted by the howls of a dog. A few
moments' search on the trail anil thej
found the bodies of two men who had
been frozen.
It is said they were returning Klon
tlikers, and they are reporteel to have
had in their possession 8100,000 in papei
and gold dust, one $1(0,000 and the
other $70,000. Their names are not
known.
The death rate at Skaguay averages
15 daily, one of the latest victims bet
ing the postmaster.
It is stated by passengers on the Isl
antler that the I)yea trail is strewn
with deail mules.
Kiot Follows a Strike.
Muskegon, Mich.. March 4.—One hun
dred stevedores employed on the Orand
Rapids & Indiana steamer Osceoln
struck yesterday. They have been re
ceiving 15 cents per hour and demand
ed 20 cents. When a new force of men
was put to work a brief riot occurred
in which one of the latter was severely
injured. The new employes are now
working under police protection.
Campaign Managers Named.
Washington, March 4. —The execu
tive committee of the republican con
gressional committee was named yester
day, as follows: Representatives Hull,
of Iowa; McCleary, of Minnesota; Can
non, of Illinois; Louilenslager, of New-
Jersey; Pearson, of North Carolina:
Murcer. of Nebraska: Senators Proctor,
of Vermont; (iallinger, of New Hamp
shire, and Wilson, of Washington. Rep
resentative McCleary, of Minnesota,
will have charge; o.' the literary de
partment of the committee. This is an
important post, as a large amount of
republican literature will be circulated
throughout the country.
LONG'S REMARK.
Secretary Alger Tlilnk* nn Injustice
In Done Ilia Colleague.
Washington, March 3.—The Wash
ington Post prints the following inter
view with Secretary of War Alger:
"The statement of Secretary LOIIK that
Spain's 'olfleial participation in the dis
aster' to the Maine had been 'practically
eliminated' was merely an expression of
personal opinion on his part. It Is an injus
tice to him. as well as to the administration,
to Kive an official signilicance to his »x
--pression when ho was particular at the
time to emphasize the fact that he was
speaking simply as an individual. In the
absence of official facts —and I can repeat
what has been said heretofore, that th»
public is equally oi well informed as the
government—no member of the administra
tion can, of course, make official declara
tion touching Spain's responsibility, moral
or otherwise. There is not an lota of in
formation as to the cause or origin of the
explosion upon which the government can
at this time form a conclusion or base a de
cision. The verdict of the court of inquiry
on that point must patiently be awaited."
Beyond this Secretary Alger would
not be quoted, but he authorized the
l'ost to state most positively that no
official information was being withheld
from the public; that the administra
tion was adhering strictly to the policy
adopted by Secretary Long with the
approval of the president, at the start,
to give the fullest possible publicity to
all facts coming officially to thedepart-
UNITED STATES CRUISER MONTGOMERY—SELECTED TO CARRY PROVI
SIGNS TO STARVING CUBANS AT MATANZAS.
ments bearing upon the loss of the
Maine and the 250 brave seamen.
A commander for the monitor Mian
tononiah, which was ordereil into com
mission Tuesday, was selected Wednes
day in the person of Capt. Mortimer
Johnson, who is at present on waiting
jrders. Secretary Long says that the
Miantonomah with the ram Katnhdin
w-ill remain in the Delaware for tlie
present at least. With the commission
ing of these two vessels there remain
only the cruisers Columbia anil Minne
apolis on the Atlantic coast for immedi
ate service in case the department
should decide to commission more ships.
The Atlanta at New York could be made
ready in the course of three or four
months and the Chicago in six months
in case emergency orders for their re
pairs were issued. There are a num
ber of good ships on the Pacific coast,
however, whose repair is under way,
such as the Charleston, the Philadel
phia, the Yorktown and others, and the
pay rolls of the construction bureau at
the Mare Island navy yard have now
UNITED STATES CRUISER NASHVILLE SELECTED TO CARRY PROVI
SIONS TO STARVING CUBANS AT SAG LI A L.A GRANDE.
amounted to the large total of SOO,OOO
per niontii for wages alone.
It is said in the navigation bureau
that there is a pressing need of able ma
chinists for the navy, caused by the
heretofore unnoted fact that every one
of the machinists on the Maine lost his
life in that explosion. Moreover, all
the firemen but one were killed. The
bureau has invited enlistments from
men who have had naval service before
in the engine rooms and, as it is said
that a number of these men are now en
joying the three months' period of time
between enlistments, during which
they may come again into the naval ser
vice without loss of service record, it
is hoped that some of them will come
forward to fill the place vacated by
the Maine disaster.
There is no unusual stir of activity
about the bureaus of the quartermaster
general or the commissary general of
the army, where more than anywhere
else the preparations for a warlike
emergency will be apparent. The offi
cers of these bureaus say no extraordi
nary accumulation of supplies is taking
place and that no contracts for extra
supplies are in contemplation.
Havana, March 3.—The city is quiet,
but the public and private greetings to
the Spanish cruiser Vizcaya, which ar
rived here Tuesday night, have not
lessened in fervor.
VICTORY FOR STRIKERS.
MlclilK»n S»nt« Hoard of Arliitrnlloli
IJeclileH Dlviiute nt llio City.
Detroit, Mich., March 3.—The state
board of arbitration met here Wednes
day and reviewed the testimony taken
in the matter of the strike of the rivet
ers employed in Wheeler & Company's
ship yard at Day City. The board's ver
dict is that the t!-.97 rate be paid to all
employes, and the riveters'and setters'
w:i ,r es to be $2.50 for a ten-hour day.
The rate offered by the company was
$2.2.1, but both sides had agreed to stand
by the result of the arbitration.
CAMERON COUNTY I RESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 189S.
ON AN ERRAND OF MERCY.
Cruiser Montgomery Selected to C«r«
ry rrovUloiiN to Culm.
Washington, March 3.—Secretary
Lonsr has decided to send two naval
vessels to Cuba at once with 40 or 50
tons of provisions for the relief of the
suffering reconcentradoes. The vessels
will goto Matanzas and Sagua La
Grande. It is said an emergency exists
that makes it necessary to dispatch pro
visions at once in order to succor the
starving. The vessels to he sent will
be the Montgomery to Matanzas and
the Nashville to Sagua La Grande.
The decision of the navy department
to send two ships to Cuba with supplies
for the suffering reconcentrudoscaused
some commotion in official circles until
the real purport of the visit of the ships
came out. It is explained at the navy
department that this action was taken
at the instance of the Cuban Relief as
sociation, organized through the efforts
ov the state department for the relief
of the destitute noneombatants in
Cuba. It was represented to the de
partment that great distress prevails
among the people in the vicinity of
Sagua La Grande and Matanzas on the
northern coast of the island and that
considerable difficulty is experienced in
sending supplies there because of the
infrequent visits of the merchant ships,
On this account and because of the im-
mediate demand for supplies at the
points indicated, the officers of the as
sociation requested the secretary of
the navy to authorize the use of one or
more of the war ships at Key West in
the transportation there of food sup
plies contributed by the charitable peo
ple of the United States in response to
the appeals of President McKinley and
Secretary Sherman. Secretary Long
conferred with the president on the
subject and it was decided to comply
with the request. The Montgomery
and the Nashville were selected as most
suitable for the service and the neces
sary orders were dispatched to Admiral
Sicard. The Montgomery will goto
Matanzas and the Nashville to Sagua I.u
Grande with the understanding that
they will remain in those ports only
long enough to deliver the supplies to
the agents of the association for dis
tribution where they will do the most
good. Although the mission assigned
to the war ships will take them both
within u short distance of Havana, es
timated at from two to four hours, it is
stated that neither vessel will visit the
Cuban capital.
WAS A CUBAN VICTORY.
SIIUIIIHII LDNI* 1,000 Killed and Wound
ed ut 11 oln 11 i it.
New York, March 3.—lieports of the
recent battle ut Ilolguin, province of
Santiago de Cuba, have been received
in New York. Instead of the battle
being a Spanish victory, as represented
from Havana, it was a disastrous de
feat, followed by a retreat 011 the part
of the Spanish forces. This information
comes through Cuban sources, and is
the cause of a great amount of rejoic
ing in Cuban circles, because the guns
and ammunition shipped from l.ong
Island less than a month ago were used
in the light.
Owing to the character of the coun
try less than 2,000 of the Spanish troops
could be brought into action when the
Cubans opened fire, and the Cuban force
of less than 1,000 men could not be
dislodged. Gen. Garcia's command did
not reach its full strength until the
fifth day after the lighting began. On
this day the Spanish columns retreated
in contusion, carrying the wounded to
Ilolguin and leaving 200 dead 011 the
field. The Cubans' loss in the five days
lighting was less than 50 killed. The
real Spanish loss will never be known.
Tlie \ew St. LliuU HrldKe.
Washington, March 3.- —The board ol
army officers appointed to pass 011 plans
for a bridge across the Mississippi rivei
,at St. Louis has made its report to the
war department. It does not approvt
of some of the details of the plan sub
mitted, but recommends changes in tin
interest of navigation, mainly as to the
height of the structure. The recommen
-1 dations are concurred in by (Jen. Wil
j son, chief engineer of the army, and ap
| proved by the department. The com
\ pany lias been notified to make the
j changes in accordance with the recom
mendations of the board.
DROWNED LIKE RATS.
Nine People I. OH#* Their MVCK During H
<lale on the Florida ( oimt, Owing to the
Capsizing of a Schooner.
Key West, Fla.,March 4. —The schoon
er Speedwell, from Marco, Fla.. for Key
West, was struck by a squall while off
Marquesa, 18 miles from here, yester
day.and capsized. Nine persons were
drowned, out of !•> on board. Among
the victims were the three children of
('apt. Collier, aged 4, 0 anil S years, and
the entire Nichols family—Bradley
Nichols and his wife, their son an .l the
latter's wife and two grandchildren.
The family was from Bridgeport, Conn.
Those saved are ('apt. Collier, Samuel
C'ates arid Jesse Green, deck hands, and
It. W. I Sates, of Myers, Fla., a passen
ger. The Nichols family is said to
have been well-to-do. All had been
staying for a month or two at a small
hotel kept by Capt. Collier at Marco,
and they were on their way home.
About 7 a. m. ( apt. Collier was at the
wheel and the Nichols family and Col
lier'schildren were in the cabin asleep.
Suddenly a squall came howling up
abeam. Cates and Green rushed to
take in sail.
As the jib flapped loose the squall
caught the schooner and blew it over
on the port side. Collier, the deck
hands and Mr. Bates were swept into
the sea, but caught the rigging just in
time to save themselvs. The wind,
rain and waves drowned the dying cries
of the imprisoned Nichols family and
the Collier children. The men lashed
themselves to the rigging. After be
ing there two hours the sea subsided.
Then they got the dingy loose, baled it
out with a hat, broke a thwart in two
pieces and with these for oars, rowed
toward Marquesa. After going three
miles they were picked up exhausted
by a fishing sloop and brought here
about 4 o'clock last evening.
AN INTERNATIONAL BANK.
A HIR Project tliat Aims to Relieve Amer
leans from Dependenee on Kuropean
Caplt:ll i t ■*.
Chicago, March 4.—The Daily News
says: "A financial corporation, to be
known as the International American
bank, with branches throughout this
country. Cuba and South America, and
with offices in London and possibly
l'aris, will soon be doing business on a
capital stock of s'-15,000,000. Advices
from Washington to certain western
organizers of the project indicate that
the senate and house, committees on
foreign relations will report favorably
a bill introduced in the senate within
a fortnight by Senator Foraker, to
carry into effect a plan to create an as
sociation to be known as the Interna
tional American bank. The scheme is
of international importance.
"The passage of the bill will imply
that the United States and the south
ern American countries will no longer
be dependent upon Europern banks for
monetary transactions on the western
hemisphere south of the Canadian
line. The headquarters of the Inter
national bank will be in Washington
and New York. Simultaneously there
will be foun' 1 * ,l uinrht Viranches
in this country—to be located in Chica
go, Baltimore, Pittsburg, New Orleans,
Minneapolis, Denver, St. Louis and
San Francisco, and one in each of the
capitals of the South American coun
tries."
AN IMPORTANT ADMISSION.
A Naval Oltlrer Says tlie Court of Inquiry
liot'B Not l)«':mml Kntlrely I pon tin? Testi
moiiy of Divers.
Havana, March 4.—A naval officer
here in reply to a suggestion yesterday
that it was a pity such an important
decision as the verdict of the court of
inquiry into the Maine explosion should
rest solely upon the testimony of the
divers, who seemed men of only aver
age intelligence, replied: "The court
of inquiry has not had to depend upon
divers' testimony alone." Then realiz
ing that he had said more than he in
tended. he resumed his reserve. It is
believed that the testimony of Lieut.
Wainwriglit was highly important, as
bearing on the question of the exist
ence of submarine mines.
The government has employed an ex
pert photographer who will send to
the naval department in Washington
photographs or armor plates and dif
ferent portions of the wreck immedi
ately upon recovery from the water.
If the Spanish court of inqui'-v has a
definite plan of action, wh eh seems
doubtful, it has not been mane public.
The Spanish divers will 1-3 port the re
sults of their observations to the Span
ish court of inquiry, but when or where
has not been made known.
CLOSER TO SALT WATER.
Canadian* are Gradually Moving the
lloiindar}' Lino of ALANKU Went ward.
Seattle, Wash., March 4. —Five steam
ers arrived yesterday from Alaska.
The Queen brought the latest news,
having left Skaguay last Sunday. The
most important news was a confirma
tion of previous reports that a Canadian
official has raised the British flag on
what is regarded as American soil, and
trouble at Skaguay with longshoremen,
who objected to Indians unloading
freight from steamers. The presence
of United States troops alone prevented
serious trouble. It is feared that seri
our trouble will grow out of the Cana
dians' attempt to collect duty on the
summit of the White I'ass and Chilkoot
pass and the Americans will resist the
payment on what they consider Amer
ican ground.
Lust summer the boundary line was
at Lake Bennett, then at Linderman,
and now at the summit, of the moun
tains, which is only 12 miles from salt
water.
from Oillce.
Springfield. <>.. March -1. —The circuit
court yesterday issued a decree ousting
Mayor .lohn M. Good from office. The
proceedings were brought under the
Garfield election law, which requires
candidates after e left ion to tile sworn
statements of all their expenditures.
Judge Adams said the testimony
showed that Mayor tlood spent $283.50
in the campaign which lie failed to in
clude in his sworn statement of ex
penses. and which included only $45.
( >-' the above amount S'.tl was spent for
beer. Mayor Good also promised to
appoint a union man on the board of
public affairs, which is asniinst the law.
PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL
—The late William Terriss left a for
tune which is estimated at from S2O
)l)0 to $;i0l>,000.
—John Millais, a son of Sir John Mil
lais, is at work upon a biography oj
liis father.
—The earl of Mansfield is the only
man living who has sat in the house oi
lords since the first parliament of Wil
liam IV. lie is 91 years of age.
Miss Kdith Pond, daughter of the
well-known major, has established in
New York an entertainment bureau for
the purpose of supplying artists for so
•ial functions.
—Adelina I'atti's "farewell concert"
is still an event of the impenetrable
future. She is to appear in Stockholm
early in April, giving a series of con
certs. for which she will be paid at the
beggarly rate of $2,780 for each per
formance.
—M. I'lanc, who founded the Ca
sino in Monte Carlo, was a man
of much eccentricity in dress and
habits. It was said that he was
never known to gamble except upon
one occasion—an occasion which proved
i costly experience.
—Mrs. Gladstone has just celebrated
her eighty-sixth birthday. The elder
of the two daughters of Sir Stephen
Glynne, she was married to Mr. Glad
stone on July 25, lS.'it). Her sister. Miss
Mary Glynne, on the same day became
the wife of Lord Lyttleton.
—Sir John Gilbert, the late presi
lent of the Royal Water Color society,
left a personal estate of $1,150,000.
LOT*I Leighton left, $240,000, and Sir J.
1". Millais $4H5,000. Mr. H. Armitage,
B. A., who died in 1890, left personal
property valued at $1,000,000.
THE CAMERA IN SURVEYS.
Most Important I «e for rliotiiKrajihy
That HHS lleen Vet DeviMCit.
Something like 50,000 square miles of
the mountainous country of western
Canada has been surveyed with the
camera. Nothing comparable to this
in the way of photographic surveying
has been accomplished on any such
■scale anywhere else in the world.
The causes of failure on the part of
many who have tried the method and
discarded it in disgust are chiefly two.
One of these is a defective knowledge
in descriptive geometry and perspec
tive, which are essentials of the plot
ting of photographic surveying. The
other difficulty lies in the manipulation
of the photographic apparatus itself
and the making of a proper negative.
This is by no means the easy thing it
seems, since photographs that would
be highly acceptable to the average
photographer, professional or amateur,
might be useless for the purpose of the
surveyor. For example, the surveyor's
picture, in order to be of use, must
be taken with the camera in precise
ly the horizontal position, tilting never
a hair's breadth in one direction or
another; the lens he uses must be an
anastigmat, and absolutely
that the image may not De in the least
distorted; and the plate must be of a
special kind, and adjusted in the cam
era with a degree of nicety of which
the ordinary photographer has no con
eeption.
Mr. Deville, who had in charge the
Canadian work, points out in a prac
tical way how many of tlie worst dif
ficulties may be easily overcome. Thus
the simple device of having a net sus
pended between the legs of the tripod,
in which stones are placed to steady
tlie camera, would save many a nega
tive in windy weather that now is 10. t
through the vibration of the instru
ment. And the care which is counseled
in determining the exact period of
proper exposure for a given plate, lens
and light, even if carried out with far
less scientific precision than is here
suggested, would enable many an ama
teur who now wastes several plates for
every good negative to reverse the pro
portions of failure and successes.
One curious feature of the photo
graphic surveying, which the amateur
would not care to follow ordinarily,
hut a knowledge of which might prove
of service on occasion, is that the atrial
perspective, making the distance hazy,
is practically eliminated by the use of
orthoehromatic plates, which are little
affected by the blue rays, combined
with the use of an orange-colored
s-creen in front of the lens. The result,
of course, is a picture devoid of at
mosphere, and hence defective from
the artistic standpoint, but probably
more valuable for the purposes of the
surveyor, who very likely has taken the
picture solely to show the exact loca
tion, altitude and contour of a distant
mountain.
use of these methods of restrict
ing me light necessitates very long ex
pov *e, and this in turn makes requisite
tli.j use of plates coated on the back
witn a light-absorbing material (so
c&ljed nonhalation plates), else the
I'ljnt reflected from the back surface
the plate would fog the film. Mr.
D« ville is careful to point out that this
ijoating must be in optical contact with
"lie surface of the glass; in other words,
actually painted upon it.the nit re plac
ing of a black cloth or paper against
the back of the plate being of no serv
ice whatever.
When all these technical difficulties
of photographic surveying are made
clear, it no longer seems so str:-»ge
that the method has been but slowly
adopted by surveyors, even in those
districts where its advantages wouKI be
most marked. The surveyors who tried
it usually failed to get any available
results, and they did not realize that
the fault lay with themselves and not
with the method. — X. Y. Sun.
A Wonilerf::l Msin.
T'rof. Snore, of the University of Tex
as'. while writing a lir.-e in one of the
b«\vs' copybooks, heard two of the boys
wTiispering, so he said to student Tom
,\r. Jerry:
"Thomas, you are very much mistak
en if you think I don't know what's go
ing on. T can write with one eye and
I hear with the other."—X. Y. Wor'd.
SSOO Reward
The above Reward will be paid hr fee
fbrmation that will lead to the ami ni
conviction of the party or «W
placed iron and alabe oa the track at the
Emporium k Rich Valley R- R-> MM,
the east line of Franklin Homsleir'i Aum,
on the evening of NOT. 21 at, 185'1.
Übnbt Aucm,
88-tf.
FINE LIQUOR SIORE
—nr—
EMPORIUM, PA.
THE ondenl|B«d bee opened * lirt
olaas Liquor etore, and invitee (to
trade of Hotela, lUstanrante,
We ahall carry none but Ihebutiaw
leu and Imported
WHISKIES,
BRANDIES.
GINS AND
WINES,
BOTTLED ALE, CHAMPAQIIE, El*
OketeeUaoaf
Bottled Goods.
r addition ton? larv* toe
•nitutt; la ftock a Ml line of
CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
•VPool and Billiard 8008 ta mm• HMtaf.*
O*LL AJtD BXB MB.
A. A. MoDONALD,
FBOPBXSTOB, BMPOBIUM, PA.
& F. X. BLUMLE, V
X BMFOBIUU, rjL. A I
W Bottler ef sad Paalar to L t
& BEER, |
& WINES, 9
& WHISKIES, &
M And Llquora of All Kinds. < ■
Q Tbe beet of goods alwajra Jj
<Sr carried In atook and every- J| j
y thing warranted aa repreeenfe- .
& **" 112
« Eapedal Attention Paid te I riall
riall Orders. *
W EMPORIUM, PA. |f
/ GO TO S
SJ. K slnsler's,t
J Broad Street, Hnpoiima, Pi„ 1
J Wkan yea can pt urtnlii( fo. want i> C
C the liaa of #
s Groceries,
C Provisions, ?
P FLOUH, SALT BEATS, X
C SMOKED MEATS, \
J CANNED 60&B8, ETC., >
) Tm, Ceftts, fmltt, Ceafettlonerj. /
\ MICH UI Cljtri. v
\ Ooodi Delivered Pre* any /
/ riace In Town, i
/ ciil in see u w en prices. \
? KM r. * I. BENT (
EHrORIVM
Bottling Works,
IOIIN MCDONALD, Proprietor.
Bear P.AM. Depot, Baaporloaa, Pa.
dm
Bottlar and Shipper a#
Rochester
Lager Beer,
BEST BUnS OF EYTOET.
The Mannftctnrar of Safl
ttrlaka and Daaler la Okotot
Wlneaand Pure Liqnor*
— —
We keep none bnt the very beat
B<rer and are prepared to fill Order* 9m
thort notice. Private famillee Barred
daily U dealrad.
JOHN MCDONALD.
Cavoata, and Trade-Malta obtained and all
irat bueiaeea conducted Ur MODCRATC fita.
|<Ou«omci la Opeoerrr U. 8.
Sard *tcin(Ku>i pateatia laaa taao than taaaa
remote (rota Wajhlnjton. ... .
Soad modal, drawing or photo, with deeertp
! rico. We ad TIM. if patentable or not, free oI
{charre. Our (aa not duo till patent ia ee«.ur«d.
'i a PAMPHLET " How to Obtain Patent., wMfc
loo* <>? eajnein tha U. 8. aa£ iorei«n counutaa
|eaot free. Addreaa,
C.A.SNOW&CO.
jp aa. parrwr JPyriot.^WaeH'woTow .
"S oV F*LK™N CHICACO
(v NEW YORK OTTicaa %
LH. KELLCOB HEW«P# P EB CQa
3