Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, February 09, 1899, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
112« ;<" •* 2
If MU In advancs 1 M
ADVERTISING RATES;
Advertisements are published at the rate ol
986 4ullar per squsre for one insertion and fifty
easts per square for each subsequent insertion.
Rates IJV the year, or for six vr three inonthe.
•re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Lefiil and Omclal Advertising per square,
three times or less. *2: each subsequent inser
tion 50 cents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for one tnser
(•rtlon: 6 cents per line for each eubsequeut
HBsecutive insertion.
Obituary notices orer Bre lines, 10 cents rer
Mae Simple announcements of births, mar
riages and deaths will be Inserted free
Business cards, five line* or less. tB per year;
•rer five lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising
No local Inserted for lese than 75 cents per
Issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PRKSS lscomplete
»a< * fiords facilities for doing the best class of
Work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PA ID TO LAW
FMINTINO.
No paper will be discontinued nttl arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub-
Eher.
Papers sent out ot the county must be paid
for in advance.
A Chicago court is uuving trouble to
find a receiver for a Klondike railroad.
The receiver will probably have just as
hard a time to find the railroad.
There is a man in Illinois who has
started 15.'! newspapers and is still in
pursuit of it long-felt want. It would
probably destroy his happiness to over
take it.
American furniture w;:s exported last
year lo the extent of $3,700,000, and the
amount imported was almost nominal.
Our machinery has turned the scale in
this as in many other lines of manufac
ture.
Mrs. Mary Sawyer Peters, of Hender
son, N. 11., celebrated, her one hun
dredth birthday by taking a sleigh ride
with the thermometer standing at 20
below zero. When will these girls get
ever their foolish and dangerous
habits?
For 20 years Missouri has been rep
resented in the national senate by the
same two men. Senators Coekrell and
Vest, the former having been first elect
ed in 1875 and the latter in 1579. Sena
tor Coekrell has just been elected for
his sixth term.
The voters of Minnesota at the recent
election approved a good roads amend
ment to the constitution by 70,043 to
38,017. This is the tirst popular vote
taken in any state on the good roads
question, and is an important test of
public sentiment.
The soldier in Manila say that
the Spaniards and natives there invaria
bly turn to the left instead of to the
right in passing"Others on the sidewalks
and in the streets, and consequently
there are numerous accidental col
lisions with Americans.
It took Tom Sharkey almost an hour
to thrash Kid McCoy in New York the
other day, and he only received $15,000
for turning the trick. It may be that
it is this lack of adequate financial re
turns that is keeping so many of our
brightest and. best young men from en
tering the roped arena.
Miss Mary Gregg, of St. Louis, being
desirous of marrying Joseph 11. Dillon,
and being heiress to a considerable
fortune, left her by an uncle on condi
tion that she does not change her name,
the difficulty has been neatly solved by
the changing by legal process of the
name of the prospective husband to
Joseph 11. Dillon Gregg.
The British colonial system is evi
dently misunderstood by many who re
fer to it as opposed to the ideas of home
rule. Eleven of the 40 distinct Hritish
colonies have elective assemblies and
locally responsible governments. No
two colonies are exactly alike in the
extent lo which they are allowed to reg
ulate their own affairs.
There died the other day at New York
an inventor named Bisel, who supplied
several ideas from which others have
acquired wealth, lie invented the re
volving bookraek, from which he got a
few thousands while others got for
tunes. He invented concrete for pave
ments, for which he received SO,OOO,
while the company that took it up made
$6,000,000.
There is a remarkable condition of
affairs in New Jersey. Without, any di
rect state tax there is a surplus of over
$1,000,000 in the state treasury, and this
is increasing so steadily that Gov. \ oor
hees finds it proper to call the attention
of the legislature to the matter. The
receipts last year were $2,354,022, al
most all of which came from the taxes
on corporations, t he collateral inherit
ance tax and the fees turned into the
state treasury.
A cablegram from Dublin-says that
John Daly, the famous Irish political
prisoner, who was released from Port
land prison in 1806. after having been
sentenced to life in 1884 for complicity
in the alleged plot to blow up the house
of commons while in session by throw
ing a dynamite boinb from the visitor's
gall'ery, has been elected mayor of
Limerick under the new Irish local gov
ernment act. Daly was elected by an
unanimous vote.
Another tradition has. been swept
away. In a train accident il has been
supposed for years that "on seeing dan
ger the engineer whistled 'down
brakes.' reversed the lever and jumped
off." Hut now comes an iconoclast who
says the engineer does not do this, and
has not for many years. What he does
do is to "shut off steam, apply the air
brakes, open the sand box, and jump."
If he is afraid to jump he is either killed
or becomes a hero.
REPUBLICAN GAINS.
OlffiiKlli Nenrly Ihiitbled In IIIPMITI
liilC Stutca Within (he I.nNt
Two Yriira.
Tlic mining group of states is usually
made to incude Colorado, Nevada, Utah,
Montana and Idaho, Colorado, Nevada
and Utah arc silver states, Montana ex
ceeds all others in the product of cop
per, and Idaho ranks second among the
states in the product of lead. The re
lation of minerals to one another under
modern methods of mining is such that
the production of one metal goes hand
in hand necessarily with that of anoth
er, and as a consequence both Idaho
and Montana have large silver prod
ucts. All live of these states in the St.
Louts republican convention of 18%
were favorable to the consideration of a
silver plank in deference to their local
interests, and in them there was n
formidable revolt of the silver repub
licans, as they call themselves. In that
convention the votes of these live states
were cast solidly against the platform
adopted, and on the balloting for pres
ident the Colorado delegates, the Idaho
delegates and some of the Nevada,
Utah and Montana delegates refused to
participate, withdrawing to take part
in the silver republican convention,
which indorsed the nomination.of l!ry
an and Sewnll. In rtie election succeed
ingl liryan carried Colorado by 1.'i.",000
majority; Idaho by 16,000 in a total
vote of less than 30,000; Nevada bv 6,500
in a total vote of 10,000; Montana by
32,000 in a total vote of 53,000, and Utah
by a plurality of 51.000 in a total of
00.000.
These five states, under such condi
tions. did not furnish a very encounter
ing outlook for the republican party at
succeeding elections, the first defection
of populists from the republicans hav
ing been followed by a subsequent and
larger defection of republicans to the
silver republican party, the votes of
which made possible the large majori
ties in tlie presidential election of 1890.
Though without influence upon the re
sult of the presidential election of lh9(i,
these five states have ten of the I'nited
States senators, besides six representa
tives in congress in the lower house.
The obstacles to republican success in
them seemed two years ago to be al
most insurmountable, but the republic
ans, adhering to a determination to re
gain the ground which they had lost,
set themselves about the task of re
storing their broken column by recov
ering former supporters or gaining
new recruits. In Colorado there was,
in 1897, an election for judicial office
only. Vn Idaho there was no contest.
In Montana Hiere was no election in
1897; neither was there one in Nevada
or Utah. The republicans had therefore
two years to recover lost ground, and
how well they did it is to be seen in the
following table of votes in these five
states, comparing the republican vote
in each in the presidential election
with that cast for the republican can
didate for the head of the state ticket
in 1898:
1R96. 1898.
Colorado 2'"..271 fin,Bßo
T'tah J3 29.361
Idaho 6,324 13,794
Montana 1u.491 14,823
Nevada 1.938 3,r.4S
Totals 68,511 112,406
A gain from 58,000 to 112,000 is very
nearly, though not quite, 100 percent,
in two years. When this gain is con
sidered in connection with the fact that
the election of 1596 was a presidential
contest, at which a full vote was polled,
and that the election of 1898 was a
state contest, at which congressmen
were the only federal officers voted
for.i( will be seen thai the republican
vote was even more important than it
seems otherwise, and shows a diligent
determination of the republican lead
ers in these five states, whose forces
suffered most severely from the "silver
craze," to put themselves in line with
their party associates before the next
national presidential election, and in
advance of the next republican national
convention; and they have done so in
what may be called great style.—X. V.
Sun.
CURRENT COMMENT.
C7Mr. IJryan asserts that "leaders
die, but principles do not." True.
Many of the leaders of the republican
party have passed over, but the grand
old organization still lives.—St. Louis
Star.
E7A free trade paper argues that the
vast growth in our foreign commerce
is not healthful. It is a malady, at all
events, that all the other countries are
trying to catch. —St. Louis Ulobe-Dem
ocrat.
Bryan is making a suspicious
number of speeches protesting that the
silver issue is not dead. lie never
thought it necessary to make one such
speech in 1896. —Louisville Courier-
Journal (Dent.).
tv'l'he American people were never
co united and so cordial on any great
proposition as they are to-day on ex
pansion. It is what they want above
all else. If submitted to a popular vote
there would not be enough aiiti-expan
fdonists to cast a shadow.—Saginaw
(Mich.) Courier-Herald.
t "The more the democrats attempt
to get together and agree on a policy
of opposition to expansion, the more
they disagree. There is wisdom enough
It ft in the party to perceive the sui
cidal folly of committing it to an un
patriotic and reactionary course.
Whether wisdom is in the majority re
mains to be seen. —Troy Times.
Kansas City Times deserfs
Bryan and hoists for its presidential
candidate in 1900 Senator Coekrell. "an
old-fashioned democrat, who stood for
what the Chicago platform contains
long before that platform was promul
gated." In other words, the Times
hoists Coekrell as a man who is afflict
ed with permanent political insanity,
as against the men who "lost their
heads" at the Chicago convention of
1890. —Milwaukee Wisconsin.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1899.
SILVER A LOCAL ISSUE.
Ktelmrd Croker Cornea Oat In An
other Declaration AuculnKt
Sixteen to One.
In a recent interview in a Tain in any
paper Richard Croker says:
"The sixteen to one question is a
dead issue. This was proven conclu
sively by the expression of the will of
the people ill 2b9f> when they elected
Mr. McKinley president of tlie United
Stnt< s.
">"ow, the democrats of the west
and other sections of the country are
trying' to foist this dead issue upon the
democratic party, and to make the old
dead cry of 'sixteen to one' the demo
cratic slogan in ISKIO.
"Why should we carry a dead weight
in that campaign? The times of four
years ago are past. To-day the times
are different and the issues are not the
same.
"Speaking for this section of the
country, I say that if the sixteen to
one question is again brought before
the people there will be felt again
throughout the nation the same dis
trust that prevailed in ISOO. During
the fall of that year, while the cam
paign was in progress, every man with
a dollar of surplus, whether he was a
millionaire or workingman, hoarded
his savings; in fact, locked them up so
securely that there was actually no
money in circulation.
"As a natural circumstance, the times
then became well-nigh desperate. Look
back at the winter of 1890, and see what
the mere rumor of silver coinage at the
ratio of sixteen to one did to this coun
try. You could r.ot get money in the
banks. You could not raise money on
any kind of security, and the result was
the very hardest kind of hard times.
"From the south and west there al
ways comes the hue jind cry against
New York, because it is the money cen
ter of the United States. But when
ever there is any great public improve
ment to be made in any section of this
country, the first look for help is to
ward abused New York. They rush to
our great city to raise the money.
They come here for the means to build
their railroads, to construct their water
works, to erect plants for gas service,
and bond their cities for any kind of im
provement. Then, no matter how much
benefit is derived from this section cf
the country, there is always the same
howl against the great city, because it
is the money center—that very center
without which public improvement
would lie an impossibility.
"If this silver question comes again
before the people, and is made a fac
tor in the national platform, the mon
eyed men of the east will look for in
vestment outside of this country, and
the banks in other states in the union
will be unable to borrow money in the
east. The result will be that the poor
will be the greatest sufferers.
"The free silver issue is merely a lo
cal issue. In the sections where free
silver will benefit the residents it is but
natural for them to declare for sixteen
to one. However, in my opinion, tli*»
money question should be settled by
congress. But here in New York we
must see to it that the position of our
party on Ihe money question must meet
the requirements not of any one sec
tion, but of every section of the United
States.
"When in convention assembled the
majority of the delegates demand a
certain standard or a certain reform,
New ork will, as it ever has, fall faith
fully in line, without a moment of op
position or a murmur of protest. But
the democratic platform of 1900 has
not yet b<-'en written." —Washington
Star.
SENATOR GRAY ON M'KINLEY.
A 11 a11(Imi in e Tribute to the I'reHiileni
from n Democratic
Statesman.
Some democrats have sneered at
and reviled the president. They have
not been as bitter and malignant, how
ever. as the mugwumps. They declare
of McKinley that "there is no good in
him." Some of them call him "feeble,"
a "pliant instrument" in the hands of
bolder men. Others charge him with
pursuing knowingly and voluntarily a
course "fatal to the liberties of the re
public." When any republican defends
the president they call him a time
server, a flatterer who hopes to be re
warded. In pleasing contrast to all
this abuse is the statement concerning
the president made by Senator Gray in
his remarks at Wilmington a few days
ago. lie was one of the commissioners
who negotiated the treaty of Paris.
That brought him into close relations
with the president. As a result of his
intimate knowledge of the man he says:
"I belong to a different political party, but
T should be false to my sense of justice and
to that pride which 1 feel as an American if
X did not declare my confidence in the patri
otism and purity of purpose of William Mc-
Kinley. He is no usurper of power, no
■stranger to American institutions, but one
of the American people, called to his high
office by (heir suffrages, and it would be
strange indeed if he did not share to the
fullest extent in the love of our constitution
and the principles that underlie it."
This is handsomely said. It is true.
When the dust and smoke of the pres
ent conflict over the Philippines have
cleared away and that question has
ceased to be "in politics" nearly all
men will admit cheerfully the caution,
wisdom and prudence displayed by the
president in dealing with the issues
arising out of the war with Spain. He
has moved too slowly to please some
;it the time. He has moved too rapidly
to please those who did not want him
to move at all. The final verdict will
be that he advanced thoughtfully and
judiciously, keeping even pace with the
wishes of the people, waiting only tc
learn their will and then executing it
when he found out what it was. —Chi
cago Tribune.
lE?"Tite Bryanites claim now that ant
democrat who persists in prospering
in business is a traitor to his partv.—
I Buffalo Commercial.
LIFTED THE VEIL
New Facta About the Treaty of
Poaco Become Known.
I'lan to Acquire \II of (lie Hhlll|>|»l»c»
w» file Iteftiilt of Occtlrrelleen
In l'arln After the IHplomum
Arrived 'i'liere.
Washington, Jan. 31.—The president
has sent to the senate the correspond
ence on file in the state department
bearing upon the peace treaty and it
was read in Monday's executive session.
The correspondence was sent in re
sponse to the resolution introduced by
Senator Iloar and includes most of the
letters and cablegrams from the com
missioners to the president and from
the president to the commissioners in
the way of instructions. One of the
first cablegrams from the president in
structed them to demand the cession
of Luzon island.
The decision to take the entire group
of islands was made by the commis
sioners to the president as the result
of occurrences at Paris after the ar
rival there of the commissioners.
Much stress was laid by the commis
sioners upon the probability of future
trouble with Spain. With Luzon under
American administration there would
sue i be such a vast improvement, they
wn e, that the other islanders would
soon grow more and more rebellious
and with Spain's oppressive methods
of government we would soon again
find that we had another Cuba at an
other door. Furthermore there would
be constant filibustering and we should
find ourselves spending millions to pre
serve a state of neutrality, just as we
did in the case of Cuba prior to our
declaration of war on account of that
island. Cien. Merritt's testimony on
this point was cited and was made the
reason for much of the argument in
favor of taking the entire group.
The president does not appear to
have at any time given explicit instruc
tions to consummate the bargain by
taking all the Philippines, but rather,
after hearing a full explanation, to
have left the matter to the discretion
of the commissioners. The entire con
troversy was practically over the Phil
ippines and the question of assuming
responsibility for the payment of the
Spanish bonds for which the Cuban
revenues were pledged.
The Spaniards from the first insisted
upon an indemnity for the Philippines,
and the correspondence shows that af
ter the proposition to pay $20,000,000
was made the negotiations proceeded
much more smoothly and were soon
brought to a close.
The American commissioners appear
to have been of one mind as to the wis
dom of taking over all tin- Philippines
with the exception of Senator Gray,
who. notwithstanding he signed the
treaty, held out to the last against the
policy of acquiring these islands. Tn
one notable dispatch he pleaded zeal
ously against the policy as unpatriotic,
un-American and inconsistent with
probity and good statesmen ship.
AGAINST BOUNTIES.
A Minority Ifcport to t'onurcKw Con*
demon tlie Hill I'rovidingf for Pay
ment of Sub*idieK to Ship Oiv ner*.
Washington, Feb. I.—The minority
report, on the llanna-Payne shipping
bill was filed in the house Tuesday.
It is a severe and somewhat personal
arraignment of the ni«i.-ure and those
who would receive bounties under it.
The report oays:
"This bill is one that was brought to
congress by a voluntary committee of
ship owners and ship builders repre
senting 'the gentlemen who will re
ceive the bounty which the bill pro
poses to give from the public treasury.
The bill as reported to the house is in
almost the exact form and grants to a
penny the bounties demanded by the
gentlemen who are to receive them.
The bill is therefore entirely satisfac
tory to the interests which have organ
ized this movement to secure the vast
sums carried in the bill as a gratuity
to be used in carrying l on their private
business and enlarging the profits
thereof. The bill provides not simply
for bounties, but for bounties which,
once granted, cannot thereafter be tak
en away. If this bill be passed the
contracts will lie quickly made and
once entered into no future congress
can 411 honor break them."
THE DEADLOCK IS BROKEN.
Jokepll V. (lnarlrN M ill he lCleeted to
the IHited Staten Sellate from Win
cousin.
Madison, Wis.. .Tan. .11.—The senator
ial deadlock was broken last night.
Joseph V. Quarles, of Milwaukee, was
nominated in the republican caucus to
succeed John L. Mitchell, whose term
expires on March 1.
Joseph V. Quarles is a native of Wis
consin. having been born in Kenosha
years ago. In lsf>2 he entered the
University of Michigan, but left his
studies during the rebellion and enlist
ed in the Thirty-ninth Wisconsin in
fantry, being made first lieutenant of
Company C. At the expiration of his
service he returned to the university
and graduated with the class of IKC>6.
Later he studied law and was admitted
to the bar in ISGS. Mr. Quarles was
elected district attorney of Kenosha
county and mayor of Kenosha and
also represented his district in the leg
islature as assemblyman and senator,
lie practiced law in liacine for a num
ber of years and removed to Milwaukee
in ISNfc, since which tin l .'he has carried
on a successful law practice.
A \eiv ICailvvuy ICnlci-prifte.
Pittsburg. Jan. 31.—The shortest rail
route from the great lakes to the sea
board is the latest project which Pitts
burg capital is now furthering. A
company has been organized and the
contract let for the first 50 miles of this
road. The new line is called the Krie
Eastern. It will run from Krie to Ti
usville, 50 miles. At the latter point
t nil! connect with the Western New
York A Pennsylvania railroad and the
Dunkirk, Allegheny Valley tV- Pitts
burs'. At Mill Village, 20 miles froic
•'•h'ie, it will connect with the Erie rail
■vay syst/ ui.
Reword of fitO.OOO offered.
A wealthy lady recently lo&t a satchel eon
Uining jewels worth $150,000, and now offers
a reward of $-0,000 cash to the tinder. 'J he
loss of health is far more serious than the
loss of jewels, awl yet it can he recovered
without paying big rewards. A little money
invested in llostetter's Stomach liitters will
restore strength to the weak purify the
blood, establish regularity of the bowels and
help the stomach to properly digest the food
taken into it.
A Reason.
She—l don't see why f.hey can't let the
women vote?
lie Ueeau.e, my dear, they are trying to
keep it a secret ballot.—Philadelphia Bul
letin.
Ever thug—heirs to aches and pains. St.
Jacobs Oil's the doctor.
"Truth lies at the bottom of a well."
Rut how can truth "lie" anywhere.—L. A.
W. Bulletin.
COUKIIIIIB LeadH to Connnmptlon.
Kemp's Balsam will stop the Cough at
once. («o to your druggist to-day and get a
sample bottle free. Large bottles 25 and sf.
cents. Go at once; delays are dangerous.
THANKFUL TO MHS. PINK HAM.
Earnest Words From Women Who Have Been Relieved of Backache
—Mrs. Pinkham Warns Against Neglect.
DEAR MRS. PINKHAM :—T have been thankful a thousand times, since I wrote
you, for what your Vegetable Compound has done for me. I followed your ad
vice carefully, and now I feel like a different person. My troubles were back-
headache, nervous tired -
the above are constantly being re- |7V £
fered free to all suffering women
If you have Uackache don't neg-
of the trouble, and nothing will 112
do this so safely and surely as 112 '
Compound. Backache is accom- Jj\jjjjjl
and wearying sensations, but
they nearly always come from the same source. Remove the cause of these
distressing things, and you become well and strong. Mrs. S. J. SWANSON, of
Gibson City, 111., tells her experience in the following letter:
" DEAK MRS. PINKHAM: —Before using your medicine I was troubled with
headache and my back ached so that I could not rest. Your medicine is the best
I have ever used; it has relieved me of my troubles, and I feel like myself agaiu.
Thanks to Lydia E. Pinkham.
" I would advise any one troubled with female weakness to take your medi
cine. I shall also recommend it wherever I can as a great reliever of pain."
A Million Women Have Been Benefited by Mrs. Pinkham's Advice and Medicine
A 112 t © r<-
Effects
J Grip is > treacherous disease. You think it //M1
is cured a;id the siidhtest cold brinds on & I \(yJj
relapse. ilyX]
Lts victims are always left in a weakened YJoV/
(S\y condition— blood impure and impoverished; (nf
w)) nerves shattered. Pneumonia, heart disease
and nervous prostration are often they/
fM result.
W Or Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People will /Ny
yi> drive every trace of the poisonous germs from W))[
SiS the system, build up and enrich the blood vyii
and strengthen the nerves. A triil wiU
prove this. Read the evidence*. (wV
Jxt When the grip last visited this section Herman H. Sveler, Clw/
II cfNll VV. Main .St., Jellcrson, Mo., a well-known contractor and
yyTJVi builder,was one of the victims, and ho lius since been troubled
l(IW\ with the after-effects of the disease. A year ago his health he- (mil
Jiyjljl gan to fall, and he was obliged to discontinue work. That he lb IIL
(nrsV/ lives to-day is almosta miracle, lie says: ly^jJ
"I was troubled with shortness of breath, palpitation of the A\V
yy\7 heart and n general debility. My back also pained mo severely. t*\V
fr'AII " l 0110 doctor after another and numerous remedies /YM}
SuVl suggested by my friends, but without apparent benefit, and
ir\ I began to give up hope. Then I saw Dr. Williams' Pink Pills II
U_J 1 for Pale People extolled in a St. Louis paper, and after luves- IwJ
/>r*jL tigution decided to give them atrial. JITVi
/A\/A\ "After using the tirst box I felt wonderfully relieved and IrXjA]
inV 1 was satisfied that the pills were putting me on the road tore- |iy«yi
lr/9\\ II covery. I bought two more boxes and continuedtaklngthem. |/AOCy
111 , "After taking four boxesof I)r.Williams'l'ink Pills for Pale InNM
/AW// People lam restored to good health. I feel like a new man, and IIV/Ml
l(\yLy having the will and energy of iny former days returned, lam jWAj
capable of transacting my business with Increased ambition. Ifsl[y\
INriX "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peoplenre a wonderlVl lift—'tl
II eJY| I medicine and any one suffering from the after-effects of the 1/1/ II
I grip will find that these pills are the specific." H.H.KVEI.KH. UVOZ'
Y~\C) / Mr. Kveler will gladly answer any inquiry regarding this if
I stamp is enclosed.— FromCole Co. Democrat, Jefferson City, Mo.
AKSv Look for the full name on the package. At druggists or
if jP) direct from the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N.Y. VrX)/
Ik\» "%%'•& »
What do the %
Children \
Drink? £
Don't give them tea or coffee.
Have you tried the new food drink r
called GRAIN-0 ? It is delicious •
and nourishing and takes the place J
of coffee. i
The more Grain-0 you give the >
children the more health you distri- 5
bute through their systems. *'
Grain-O is made of pure groins, and J
when properly prepared tastes like
the choice grades of coffee but costs •
about \as much. All grocers sell 0
it. 15c. and 25c.
TryGrain=o! g
Insist ttißt vonr jjroccr gives you QRAIN-O W
Accept no imitation. 9
Wheat Wheat
r-fWBBMI J|II m> "Nothing but whent :
WHWStf »
rnMrnm
gmmam. wmmmm TKKlUK.Ottawii.C an.iUu
r to M. V. McINNES, No. 1 Merrill Block
Detroit, Mich.
Give the Children a llrlnk
«lled Grain-O. It is a delicious, appetizing,
•ourishing food drink to take the place of
loffee. Hold by all grocers and liked by all
who have used it, because when properly
prepared it tastes like the finest coffee but
is free from all its injurious properties.
Grain-0 aids digestion and strengthens the
nerves. It is not a stimulant but a health
builder, and children, as well as adults, can
drink it with great benefit Costs about iaa
much as coffee. 15 and 25c.
Tl.e nißlit War.
"And you say you ate horse steak in Parii!
How was it served?"
"A la cart, of course."—Cleveland Plaia
Dealer.
On In—li t 1-2 InohcN Long?.
The Oat marvel—what will 500,000 such long
heads per acre weigh? 15,.'i06 lbs.—lßo liush
els! Such a yield pays big!
Cut this notice out and send 10 cents post
age to JOHN A. SALZER SEED COM
PANY, LA < ROSSK. W IS., and get their
great catalogue and 10 Farm Seed Samples
free; including liromus Inermis, the great
est grass on earth. Potatoessl.2oa Bbl. [n.J
The little dog always tries to bark as big
as he can.—L. A. \V. Bulletin.
•MMMCMMteMftM* StM(
•C\ FOB 14 CENTS }
? W© wish to gain this year2oo,iK>o Z
X , // \. new customern, and heiioo otfer ?
1 Pk*. 13 Day Kadish, luc •
1 Pkg. Early Ripe Cabbage, 10c #
S,' " A \. 'WM 1 " Salzer'a Bent Lettuce, l.'ic X
2 A&\tuHv*KW I " California Fig Tomato, Uoc *
5 1 " Early Dinner Onion, 100 J
** " Brill taut Flower Beedi. l-'»c #!
Worth $ 1.00, fop 14 cents, sl.vii C
ZitVm Above 10 pkfcs. w<>rth sl.Ufl, wcwill J
W jUrjf Hsfl mail y.»u froe, toother with our #
9 twl HA g rt at Plant and seed Catalogue 9
a k?j KJ upon receipt of this notice A lie M
Z W§ MM We invite your trade and m
X Li| H icnow when y«»u once try Salzrr'tt 7
2 wm m »ce€l»yoti willuever get aloTigwitli
-9 IB .i. outtli'Mii. Onion Sei'd (»Sc. ami *
"l> u lb. I'otiiiocN at
rh ii libl. Catalog alone ftc. No. 14. '
£ JOIIN A. SAI.ZF.It SFHI t 0., I.A t ItOSSK. WIS.
gggjj|M^
in C hatches and nev«»r before saw an Ineulmtor. V
sell this an.l all other Incubators we inake on !l
DA YH TIC I A 1,. Send •»«; for No. mt'ataloK'
UUCKKYK INt'UIiATOK <'<>.. Springfield, Ohio.
is the only sure cure In the world for Chronic t
cers. Itone I'Utm, Scrofulous Ulcers, \ a
cose ('leers, Oitniceene, Fever Mores, nnd
Old Mores. It never fails. Draws out all pots
Saves expense ami suffering. Cures permam
lie st halve f«ir Abscesses, l"ll«>«, linens, Cu
and all Feesh Wounds. Ily tnull. small. la»
KJe. Hook free. .1. I*. A1,1,1\ Mi i»l< l.
C0.,M1. I'uul, Minn. Mold by Urugglsii