Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, March 23, 1899, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION.
f«M" ?!
If pal< In advanca ' ••
ADVERTISING RATES
Advertisements are published at the rate ot
•as iollar per square for one insertion anil fifty
•«sts per square for each subsequent insertion-
Rates by the year, or for sii or three months,
•re low and uniform, end will be furnished on
•■plication.
Legnl and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less. each subsequent mser
liin bO tents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for one lnser
jertlon. 6 cents per line for each eubsequent
•epsecutive Insertion.
Obituary notices over fire lines. 10 cents per
Use Simple announcements of births, mar
riages and deaths will be Inserted free
Business cards, five lines or less. »5 per year;
jTer tlve lines, at the regular rates of adver-
No' local Inserted for less than 75 cents per
Issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PKBSS is complete
*c<S affords facilities for dointf ihe best class of
Work PAKUUCUK ATTWIION PAIDTu Ll»
PftlNTinO.
No paper will be discontinued ntll arrear- |
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub- j
Usher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
lor in advance.
There are now about 40,000 men in
the three-year regular service and the
way is open for the recruiting of 25,000
more. For youpg men who wish to see
something of the world and get the ad
vantages of a healthy, disciplinary life
at- fairly good pay the opportunity is
worth considering:.
No wonder some of the Spanish offi
cials are asking why the war was not
fought out. It has been discovered that
Gen. Weyler alone stole $10,000,000,
and that 50,000 false names were car
ried on the pay rolls of the Spanish
army in Cuba, in order that the officials
might rob the government.
The city of Brevsmitelen, Germany,
is advertising for the whereabouts of
Theodore Kuntze, now supposed to be
in this country. Kuntze has fallen heir
to SIOO,OOO and the city is getting tired
of holding the stakes. We are willing
to accept the money and keep it in trust
for him, ever* if he does not sail for it
for 50 years.
It is perhaps not generally known,
that the German emperor has a paper
published and printed exclusively for
himself and for the empress. It is the
Imperial Gazette of Berlin, containing
a clear and concise daily summary of
the world's news. The edition of this
paper consists of two copies, doubtless
the smallest edition of any paper pub
lished.
AmongtheresidentsofXew York city
are seven former cabinet oflicers. Cor
nelius X. Bliss has recently reitired as
secretary of the interior, William M.
Evarts was in the cabinet under both
Johnson and Hayes, Gen. James was
•with Garfield, Gen. Fairchald with
Cleveland's first cabinet, Mr. Carlisle
and Mr. Larnont with ltis second cabi
net and Car! Schurz with Hayes.
The maj or of Boston has given orders
for the extermination of the English
sparrows, which, it may be recalled,
were imported into this country in
spite of the warnings of some dis
tinguished ornithologists. But Boston
has a fob ahead of her. The English
sparrow so ems to be able to increase
and multiply faster than a man with a
gun can decrease and subtract.
Art does not seein to be deteriorating
in America, if the demand for Ameri
can picture® can be accepted as an in
dex of conditions. At the recent sale
in New York of Thomas B. Clarke's |
collection of American paintings some !
400 pictures sold for an aggregate of
$300,930, a landscape by George Inness
bringing $10,150, the highest price ever
paid at an auction for a picture by an
America" artist.
Floyd Edward Whiteman, a student
who is totally blind, is the most in
teresting' figure at Cornell university
in Ithaca, N. Y. He is taking the regu
lar law course of three years, having
entered two years ago. A fellow stu
dent reads all his books for him and the
blind youth has such a remarkable
memory that he knows them all nearly
by heart. His examination papers are
typewritten by himself and are marvels |
of neatness and accuracy.
"Uncle" Edmund Parker, the faith
ful old negro who stood guard ait Wash
ington's tomb for 25 years, diied a few
days ago. He was barn in Js27, n slave
of Mrs. John Augustine Washington..
I>uring the civil war he was cook for
the Ellsworth zouaves, and sinoe then
Ins been the guard at the Washington
tomb, ani office which this old slatve con
sidered the highest honor thart could be
conferred on Iritn. He has been suc
ceeded by another ex-slave who is 74
\ears old.
According to the- New York World
Dr. C'hauneey Depe'.v is at present chair
man of the board oi the Vanderbilfclines
and a director in the New York Central,
■Bake Shore, Michigan Central, Nickel
Plate, Big- Four. Chicago & North
western, Vanderbilt leased lines, Equit
able Life, Mercantile Trust company,
Union Trust company, Western na
tional bank and Western. Union Tele
graph. It is surmised that he accepted
the position of senator from his state
just to have something with which to
occupy his leisure time.
Seldom does a high promotion meet
with such unanimous assent lis docs
the elevation of George Dewey to the
rank of a full admiral of the United
States navy. Americans of every age
and rank agree that the promotion is
deserved. The unanimous vote by
which the bill was passed to reestablish
tli* rank of admiral for Dewey's benefit
is in itself a rare tribute to the esteem
in which the victor of Manila is held by
the na.t.ion. Furthermore, by a. pro
vision of the bill that gave him this
rank, he is exempted from retirement
,jor ten years.
A POLICY WANTED.
The Democrat* \re Feelinff Around
for burnetiiliiif to
Stfiiuft tin.
With little more tlian e .year before
the next national convention of the
Jemoeratic party it is necessary to do
something to jirovide a platform on
whieh nun stand what remains of that
party. Senator Jones. <>f Arkansas,
says that the next national convention
must aflirm the Chicago platform of
IS9O. Mr. Croker says just, the other
tiling, and the democrats of Xnv York
state at their last convention practical
ly disowned Bryanism and all its
worlds. The colonel of the Third Ne
braska is opposed to accepting the re
sult sof the war in national.growth. Hut
other democrats who were leaders of
the party before Bryan was a \oter.
say that, it will not do to repeat the
declaration of the national democratic
convention in ImJ4 that "the war is a
failure."
The hope of a minority party in con
gress is in unity in the expectation of
dissensions in the dominant party, and
the consequent opportunity for insert
ing a disrupting wedge. Hut these con
ditions have been exactly rever.-ed in
the present congress. The republican
party has been united in the support of
the war and peace policies initiated
with so much wisdom In President Mc-
Kinley. On the other hand, the demo
crats have been unable to agree on any
important question before the public.
The democrats have not been able even
to obstruct. The party has collapsed
in the ring, and has not had strength
enough to answer the call o£ "Time."
The very fact that the democrats of
the house have called a caucus in the
last week of the session to determine
the policy of the party with regard to
the Philippines witnesses to the fact
that thu party has been without a
policy on the floor of the house. It is
an attempt to substitute a caucus dic
tum for public action, and togo out of
congressional halls and before the
people with a statement of what might
have been done instead of a record of
performance. The deathbed protesta
tion "if 1 had my life to live over
again" does not alter the verdict of his
tory on the individual's record. Fail
ures are not the best, credentials to
confidence.
The democrats in congress have been
badly led. In fact, the party has
seemed at times unable to decide who
was its leader, and the republican
party has been compelled to settle the
matter. Bailey, of Texas, is a young
man who lias oratorical capacity, but
who lacks entirely the tact and discre
tion necessary to successful leadership.
He lias suffered stinging humiliations
in the camp of his alleged followers.
Whatever the democrats may <lo
will be better left undone, be
cause the purpose is to unite upon a
negative policy, and this is a time for
affirmation. The position of the mi
nority party in this country parallels
that of the similar party in England.
It is a condition of divided counsels, in
decision and general nervelessness.
The dominant, party has shown the
courage, the promptness, the capacity
todealwith new problems as they arise,
and has strengthened itself with the
country, which demands deeds and not
words.
The republican party has stood to its
guns. It has completed where it has
begun. It has put another successful
war for humanity to the credit of a re
publican administration. It has car
ried on in the spirit, of the founders of
the party and in line with the acts and
proclamations of their successors the
duty to fulfill American destiny. In the
face of such fidelity and success demo
cratic promulgations after the battle
are merely curiosities of literature.
They are confessions that the-future of
free silver ha." been followed by the
failure of stunted Americanism. —Troy
Times.
COMMENT AND OPINION.
V7~ Dry a n is just boarding around
among the democrats, who are giving
banquets in his honor. It is easy for
some men to make a living.—Cleveland
Leader.
C?Tlie Fifty-fifth congress, though
not republican in both branches, had
the good judgment to stand by Presi
dent MeKinley. This will be its best
credit mark. —St. Louis Globe-Demo
crat .
(CTIow would it do to make the dem
ocratic ticket liryan and Aguinaldo?
The latter will evidently be in harmony
with that party on the question of our
ort'upancy of the Philippines, and could
swallow the sixteen to one. —Decatur
(111.) Republican.
C .'Leading financiers say that the
business boom now on the country is
likely to continue. There is no reason
why it should not, for nothing is apt
to occur to change the conditions that
have brought about the unprecedented
prosper it y. —Cleveland Leader.
C?One of the many tilings which Mr.
William Jennings liryan will find it dif
ficult to explain later on is the advance
of ten per cent, in the wages oft he iron
workers of the United Stales under the
debauching and degrading influence of
the gold standard.—Chicago Inter
Ocean.
IT?" The record of the Fifty-fifth con
gress is now history, and it constitutes
one of the most notable chapters in
American annals. Perhaps 110 other
congress had presented to it questions
of more vital concern to the interests
and welfare of the nation, and. with few
exceptions, ihese were wisely disposed
of.—Omaha Pee.
ICThe United States coiigress ad
journed with Mexican silver dollars
worth 47' [cents each in the Xew York
market. Th« Mexican dollar contains
more silver than the United' States
standard silver dollars, yet every one of
tl-.;»:e standard dollars is-worth 100 gold,
cents, merely because they are based
on the goid standards—lowa State l!eg
lst *r.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1899.
M'KINLEY'S TWO YEARS.
Slnc«» III* r.lertloti (he Country Hum
CjirowiiiMT M«re I*ron
peroua.
The administration of President
McKinley is .just entering its third
year. It is, therefore, a fitting season to
inquire if. in a general way, the good
results claimed by those who advocated
his election have been realized by the
country. When he was nominated for
the office of president, the treasury was
fighting to retain its gold reserve, but
without success. His predecessor had
made two issues of bonds, ostensibly
for that purpose, but the proceeds were
largely used to make good the deficits
of the Wilson-Gorman tarWT. More than
'M> percent, of the revenues were being
paid in silver funds. The "endless
chain" was being used to get the gold
out of the treasury, which timid peo
ple were hoarding away, or it was being
exported to pay for American securities
in Europe which the owners were anx
ious to get rid of. The party which
nominated the president promised to
maintain the gold standard.
His election put an end to all doubts
about the possibility of the country
passing to a silver basis. Confidence
came. The endless chain ceased to run.
Gold flowed into the country, and the
mines increased their output, but it
was the confidence which came with
the election of Maj. McKinley that
turned the tide. Industries began to
pick up slowly, and business bright
ened. Scant crops abroad called for
largeexportations of breadstuff*, which
gave a large balance of trade in our fa
vor. Then came the prompt passage of
the Dingley bill, which returned busi
ness lost by the Gorman-Wilson tariff.
To equip railroads, which came into an
unprecedented business lifte in 1897, a
great demand for steel sprang up. start
ing the iron industry into an activity
before unknown. This activity quickly
extended to other industries, because
better prices on the farms and in many
factories quickened the consumption
of nil the products of the country,
reaching at last the depressed cotton
manufacturing industry of New Eng
land. One w ill look in vain for a.period
when so many advances in wages in so
many industries have been announced.
Now nearly 00 per cent, of the revenues
of the country are paid in gold, while
the certainty of the gold basis causes
the present volume of silver dollars and
certificates to lie accepted as being as
good as gold. Conditions have been fa
vorable, but they have only tended to
help the work which the republicans
promised in ISOC to do, and which the
administration has helped along. Fa
vorable conditions could not have
turned back the disaster which a tri
umph of liryanism in 1896 would have
brought to the countrv.
The war with Spain and the immense
responsibilities, involving new condi
tions. were not dreamed of. So far as
the president has been called upon to
assume these responsibilities it is ad
mitted by all. except those w'hose polit
ical hopes make them critics, that he
has displayed that wisdom and patriot
ism which belong to exalted statesman
ship.—lndianapolis Journal.
THE CONGRESS JUST OUT.
A Itc<*or«l Wliirli Coming Hodlei
Muy Well He I*ron«l to
Km ii In (i*.
The Fifty-fifth congress has closed
its labors and, unless the president
calls a special session of the Fifty-sixth
congress, the country will have nc
more national legislation until next
winter. Most of the work properly be
longing to the congress elected in 1890
was completed. In some instances it
was unsatisfactory. In one, it was in
finitely worse. As a whole, however, it
commands appoval and will stand out
in American history as evidence of
statesmanship and patriotism which
could rise above partisanship.
In the special session, called almost
immediately after President McKinley
was inaugurated, the senate led the
way in exalting patriotism above party.
It- was not a republican body, yet it
passed the republican tariff which
came to it from the house, and that, too,
without partisan amendments. It
recognized the fact that- the people
wished to have the Wilson tariff re
pealed and a bill affording ;» higher
degree of protection passed, and it.
acted accordingly. The senate of the
Fifty-fifthlcongress deserves a popular
vote of gratitude for iv part in mak
ing the Dingley law. The house did
only what it was bound by every con
sideration of political honor to do. btvt
the senate rose superior to ordinary
political motives.
In the magnitude of its appropria
tions this congress made an unprece
dented record. Hitherto the billion
dollar figure has been regarded as a
high-water mark, but this congress
pushed the appropriations up 1o a bil
lion and a half. However, the increase
was not due to extravagance. It grew
out of the war, and the country cordial
ly approved every item of it.
The congress which has now passed
into history did more than turn a new
leaf in our national annals. It began a
fresh volume, and wrote the opening
chapter to its end. The Fifty-sixth con
gress can take up the legislation for
«iur new teritorv unembarrassed by
any enactment of its predecessor. The
policy of meeting great questions only
as they actually arose was steadfastly
adhered to by the Fifty-fiftli congress
from first to last in regard to both the
war and its results. The highest duty
of a legislative body is to meet the re
quirements of the situation as they
arise, but hardly less important is it to
refrain from touching matters which
lie beyond the field of present respon
sibility.
Ilappy will it be for the couniry if
the ii"xt congress leave as good » rec
ord as that spread upon the pages of
our history by the congress that car
ried us through the war with Spain.—
Chicago Inter Ocean.
DISASTERS AT SEA.
The CuMtlllan and Oawrilrj
tio A»lior«* on Koilty I uh>l» Murlra
of the « retv of the Pavonia.
Halifax, N. S., March 13. —The new
Allan line steamer Castilian, from
Portland for Halifax, went ashore at
Gannet Rock light, near Yarmouth, at
4:30 Sunday morning at low tide, in a
dense fog, her compasses being de
ranged. Two compartments are full
of water and tugs have gone from
Yarmouth to the scene. The Castilian
arrived at Halifax from Liverpool ten
days ago on her maiden voyage and
went to Portland to load cargo for
return. She is 8,200 tons net register,
being the largest Allan line steamer
afloat. The steamer was due to em
bark mail and passengers hn-re for
Liverpool.
The steamer began leaking as soon
as she struck, but the best discipline
prevailed among the passengers. They
returned to their berths and were
called out again to don life preservers,
which many were wearing when they
reached Yarmouth on tugs last even
ing. Fifty passengers and the crew
all saved their baggage. The steamer
went on at low tide, which will be in
her favor. The place of the disaster
is a few miles from where the Mora
vian, of the Allan line, was lost some
years ago.
Crookhaven, Ireland, March 13. —The
British steamer Oswestry, from Nor
folk. Va., for Manchester, stranded in
the fog Sunday morning in Dunlough
bay.
Part of her crew soon reached shore,
but others were missing for several
hours, and there was the greatest anx
iety as to their fate. Eventually the
missing men reached Crookhaven,
many having had miraculous escapes.
The local people displayed great
bravery in saving life. The Oswestry's
cargo is washing ashore and the ves
sel is a total wreck.
Liverpool, March 13.—The ofiicrrs of
the steamer Pnvonia, from Liverpool
for Boston, which was towed into St.
Michaels on February 1, disabled, and
which arrived here Saturday in tow of
two tugs from l'onta Del Gadu, Azo
res, maintain the utmost reticence re
garding the steamer's experience.
it was gleaned from the crew, how
ever, that the Pavonia passed through
a terrible ordeal. Her troubles began
with a terrific gale on January 30. For
three days the engines were slowed
and mountainous seas tossed the Pa
vonia like a shuttlecock. Then her
boilers began to move in their cradles
and to bump against each other. It
is not true, however, that they bumped
her sides, for if this had been the case
the crew say she would not have
floated long.
Eventually the engineers, after the
most arduous labors, secured the boil
trs with ropes and chains, and the
bumping.ceased; but it was found that
We steam pipes were broken.
The crew never lost confidence,
though they assert that the vessel
railed so tremendously that it would
have been possible sometimes to walk
on her inner sides. Three boats were
lost, part of the port rail and the gal
ley were carried away and the bake
house was stove in. Altogether, as the
Pavonia now lies at the dock, she pre
sents a pitiably damaged condition.
SNOWED UNDER.
Ili'tlilcntk of l'ppcr l'ppcr I'enln
hi Sillier from it llli//.Hril'ti Visit.
Detroit, March 13. —Nearly all points
in the upper peninsula of Michigan re
port railway traflie completely blocked
by snow storms. A special from Bes
semer, Mich., says:"The heaviest
snowstorm in the history of the snow
belt prevails. For 48 hours all trains
have been snowed in at different
places. All streets are blocked with
banks of snow from four to eight feet
deep. This, with former storms, will
make a total fall of snow about eight
to twelve feet deep on an average. In
some places the drifts are from the top
of one roof to the other. Telegraph
wires are down and all communications
are by private lines."
A special from Houghton says: "A
howling blizzard for 24 hours has tied
up everything. All trains am cancelled
and no railroad communication with the
east has been had since Saturday. A
double header sent out Sunday morn
ing over the Mineral Range railway to
try aiid open communication with Cal
umet, struck a snow bank 12 feet high
one mile west of Hancock and a gang
of snow shovelers was dispatched to
shovel the engines out.. Snow drifts
eight feet high are in the streets."
Ishpeming, Mich., March 13. —-Snow
has been falling here for 30 hours. In
places the snow has drifted from 10 to
15 feet. Railway trains are abandoned
and street cars are stalled. A north
bound passenger train on the Chicago
& Northwestern line is stalled at Little
lake. Two engines with a large plow
went to the rescue but were stalled
between Swansy and Cascale.
11 ii ft >o Stale Keliglon.
Washington, March 13. —Much inter
est was manifested yesterday in re
ports to the effect that the Japanese
government is discussing a plan to
adopt Christianity as the state relig
ion. So far as could be ascertained,
however, the statement lacks founda
tion in fact. The published report was
shown to Jutaro Komuro, the Japan
ese minister, who was asked to make a
statement on the subject. ?n reply
he said: "The statement that Japan
is discussing a plan to adopt Christian
ity as its state religion is not true and
there is no possibility of this being
done. The Japanese government has
no state religion."
Stewart'* Gift*
Xew London, March 13. —The will of
Herbert Stewart, a wealthy Xew York
engineer and contractor, bequeaths
$50,000 to establish the Herbert Stew
art scientific fund at Yale university.
Its purpose is to assist deserving young
men who need aid to secure a higher
scientific education.
Iron Work* Burned.
Lancaster, Fa., March 13.—The plant
of the Gray Iron Casting Co., manu
facturers of iron novelties and shelf
hardware, at Mt. Joy was completely
destroyed by fire Saturday night. Los*
about $60,000; partly insured.
PERFECT womanhood depends on perfect health.
Nature's rarest gifts of physical beauty vanish before
pain.
Sweet dispositions turn morbid and fretful.
The possessions that win good hus-
bands and kceptheir love should be guard- V
ea by women every moment of their lives. mmm ML C# m
The greatest menace to woman's per- mm*** mm m mm
manent happiness in life is the suffering WW m
that comes from derangement of the
feminine organs. urn %JC9O
Many thousands of women have realized —— «
this too late to save their beauty, barely in time to save their
lives. Many other thousands have availed of the generous in
vitation of Mrs. Pinkham to counsel all suffering women free
of charge.
MRS. H. J. GARRETSON, Bound Brook, N. J., writes: "DEAR
wate
the room without help. After giving up all hopes of recovery,
I was advised to use Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound and wrote for special information. I began to improve
from the first bottle, and am now fully restored to health."
LOST FAITH IN HIS TAILOR.
A Grntlrmnn of the Old School
Wboaie Clothe* Were a Trifle
Too Loud.
Col. Tarker is a staid old West side citi
zen who has made a fortune in land. He is
an aristocrat of the old southern school,
courtly and impressive. His collars are
made in the fashion of 50 years ago, and his
neckties the same. Withal the colonel is
what Xew Englanders call "a bit near." He
has his clothes made by a cheap tailor. They
are always a modest, respectable black of re
markable pattern and (it. But they suit the
colonel, fine day last week he walked over
to visit his daughter living on Prairie av
enue.
"What makes you look at me so serious
ly?" he asked, presently, guiltily self-con
scious.
"Why, father, what have you been doing
to yourself?"
"Nothing, daughter, nothing. I—l have
on a new suit of clothes."
Sure enough, the colonel had on a new suit
of clothes. The effect was gorgeous and
startling. The trousers were a loud check,
very tight and a trifle short. The coat was
a short blue frock, mottled with dark red.
He wore a cheap red tie. The ludicrousness
of the situation finally overcome the
daughter's gravity, and she laughed until
ahe cried.
"In heaven's name, father, where did you
get those clothes?" she asked, at last.
"Wartz made them. He—he said checks
were stylish, and the cloth came cheap, and
I—l said I wasn't particular, you know;
never am."
The mild and dignified old gentleman had
transformed himself into a comic valentine
without knowing it. ilis faith in Wartz is
now somewhat shaken, and he has donned
an old suit. —Chicago Inter Ocean.
"Doctor," said he, "I'm a victim of in
somnia. I can't sleep if there's the least
noise—such as a cat on the back fence, for
instance." "This powder will be effective,"
replied the physician, after compounding a
prescription. "When do I take it. doctor?"
"You don't take it. (Jive it to the cat in a
little milk." —London Tit-Bits.
Something very soothing in the use of St.
Jacobs Oil lor Neuralgia. Subdues and cures.
Putting a watch under one's pillow will
not make a bed tick. —Christian Work.
Sudden weather changes bring Soreness,
Stiffness. St. Jacobs Oil brings a prompt cure.
Some actions, like frescoe work, only re
veal their color after they have been ilone
awhile. —Ram's Horn.
Bad, Worse, Worst Sprain. Good, Better,
Best Remedy—St. Jacobs Oil.
Science Recognizes $
I RHEUMATISM |
fj a.s a Disease of th« Blood i
JT There is & popular idces. th&t this disease
is caused by exposure to cold, and th&t W
<Vp some localities &re infected with it more w
A th&n others Such conditions frequently im
W promote the development ot the disease, W
but from the f&ct th&t this ailment runs
rjy in certain families. it is ®>hov*n to be hered-|fi\,
VM it dry, &nd consequently & disease of- they)(
blood tW
[Qy Among the oldest and best known residents of Bluffs, 111., is Adam fcjJ
IV/ 4 Vangundy. He has always been prominently identified with the interests
of that place. He was the first President of the Hoard of Trustees, and for jnjl
VAr a long time lias been a Justice of the Peace. He says : "I had been a suf- Iw/
jl\\ ferer of rheumatism for a number of years and the pain at times was very WA
WJ intense. 1 tried all the proprietary medicines I could think or hear of, but f J J
nV received ne> relief. jJ
"I finally placed my case with several physicians and doctored with lA\
Ail them for some time, but they failed to do me any good. Finally, with my Jmy
(f/Z hopes of relief nearly exhausted I read an article regarding l)r. Williams' Y/Jf
\W Piuk Pills for Pale People, which induced me to try them. I was anxious /Aj
Xli to get rid of the terrible disease and bought two boxes of the pills, I began y*4i
(»U? using thrm about March, 1897. Alter I had taken two boxes I w*i» com- ftJy?
\wl pletely cured, and the pain has never returned. I think it is the best medi- Ajr/
Mi cine I have ever taken, and am willing at any time to testify to its good jML
lM merits." — Biujfs (AY.) Times. AVy
jjj per box r^
\ What do the J!
I Children Jl
I Drink? Jl
Don't give them tea or coffee. T
F Have you tried the new food drink #
# called" GRAIN-0 ? It is delicious 112
■ and nourishing and takes the place m
4 The more Grain-O yon give the i
J children the more health you distri- 5
5 bute through their systems. .
J Grain-O is made of puregrains, and J
5 when properly prepared tastes like W
w the choice grades of coffee but costs V
* about as much. All grocers sell ■
4 it. 15c. and 25c. a
#TryQrain=o! *
0 Accept no imitation. M
THE GRANT FARM FENCE
AS LOW A.9
16 GENTS PER ROD
The STRONGEST and CHEAPEST FENCE
ever offered. Made of No. 7
and No. 9 Galv. Wire.
SEND FOR OUR 40 PAGE
Illustrated Catalogue, FREE I
SHOWING A FULL LINE OF FARM,
LAWN, and LINE FKNCKB.
[ GATKS AND POSTS
AGENTS WANHO IN tVLRY TOWNSHIP.
CRANT STEEL FENCE CO.,
WILLOUCHBY, OHIO.
MM«
| FOR 14 CENTS |
x We wish to gain tb if year
1 pkg. l.'J Day Kariiah, Idc W
1 Pkg. Karly Kipa IJjjc €
A telll 1 " LongLightn'r Cucumber 1«'o £
x I " fNalzer'aßeet Lettuce, l;>c X
X!'• ■'- Tr BBWw 1 " California Fig Tomato, 2uo X
l " K irly Dinner Onion, luo •
3 Brilliant Flower Beedi,
9 Worth » 1.0(1, for 14 ctnlt, slj u •
® AbnTe 10 pkj?s. worth SI.OO, we will J
V L T mail y-»u free, together with onr •
Hi n gr»>at I'lant a 0
iKV o inTita your trade and Z
Ml U »eeilwyouwillueTergetalonpwith- *
a lb. Point ore i«t •
jOlff A. RAI./.FR MBEI» to.. IA t ROSSK. *> is. Z