Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, June 20, 1901, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
fer year K 00
U paid in advance 1 uO
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rate of
•ne dollar per square for one insertion and fifty
•ents per square for each subsequent insertion
Rates by the year, or for six or three month*,
•re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legal and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less, >2; each subsequent inser
tion :0 cents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for one inser
•ertlon: 5 cents per line for each subsequent
consecutive Insertion.
Obituary notices over five liner 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, n:ar
rinßes and deaths will be inserted free.
Business cards, five lines or less. S5 per year;
Over five lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local inserted for less than 75 cents per
laaue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PHESS is complete
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
•work PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO LAW
PRINTING.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear-
Rgi s are paid, except at the option of the pub
sher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
(or in advance.
Bishop Joseph C. Hartzell, mission
ary bishop of the Episcopal church
in Africa, says thr.t the troubles in
that country have just begun, and
that on every hand lie and the mis
sionaries who report to him can see
sig-ns of a rising of the natives
against the whites.
The law of the last legislature of
Kansas making it a misdemeanor to
steal a ride on a train has caused the
hobo army to leave that state. A
Jew years ag'o Kansas was the para
dise of tramps, but this law and an
avowed purpose of the authorities tc
enmpel them to work in tlie harves'.
fields have caused them to leave.
A London dispatch says that paint
ings worth thousands of dollars hav<»
just been found in an old shop wher»
they were doing duty as fire screens
Every time ati artist becomes pressec
.for funds, he pulls up some moth eat
en picture from a basement, "finds" it
5n an old attic, or does something of
that sort and sells it to the gulliblft
public.
There was much amusement anion#
the friends of Justice Brewer, of the
supreme court, at his expense, becatisr
lie procured a marriage license in thv
District of Columbia, which is not
valid outside the district, in order to
be married in Vermont. Thus a man
most learned in constitutional law
may be perfectly ignorant of local
statutes.
i —————
I Judge Danforth, of the Maine su
preme court, had this to say in con
nection with the case of a defaulting
bank cashier recently sent to prison:
*'l wish that the law permitted me to
send with the accused every one of
the bank directors who, through a
loiif? term of years, expected you to
do your work, live respectably, bring
up a large family and be honest—all
on a salary of SOOO a year."
The population of Ireland lias
been reduced nearly 4.000,000 in the
last 50 years. It was 8,196,597 in 1841,
fell to 0,574,275 in 1851, and is now but
-4.456,546. This depopulation finds no
parallel in modern history. While the
Irish emigrants have found homes in
till parts of the world, they have been
mostly attracted to Australia, Can
ada and the United States. It is es
timated that there are 2,000,000 peo
ple of Irish birth now in this coun
try.
The numerous expeditions to the
north pole or thereabouts, either
planned or under way, goto show
that the game is fully as popular as
ever. It is not that the explorers
care a rap about the pole, or what is
to be found there. I tut it is safe to
assume that they are fond of adven
ture, and without doubt they are fond
of notoriety. Hence the money ex
pended and the risks taken for a pur
pose thsit promises no great material
benefit to the world.
The American Hall of Fame has tlie
following dimensions: Length of col
onnade, 504 feet; height, 20 feet;
breadth, 10 feet; length of museum,
200 feet; breadth, 40 feet; height, 10
feet. Tablets now are: Washington,
Lincoln, Webster, Franklin, Jefferson,
Clay, Adams, Grant, Farragut, Lee,
Marshall, Kent, Storv, I'eabody, Coo
per. Fulton, Stuart, Morse, Whitney,
Audubon, (iray, Edwards, Mann,
Beecher, Channing Emerson, Haw
thorne, Irving and Longfellow. Five
tablets are to be added every five
years.
The supreme court of Ohio having
declared constitutional the law of
that state which makes a county re
sponsible for injuries committed
against persons by mobs, it is not
probable that lynchings will be of
frequent occurrence in that state.
The law creating such responsibility
was enacted in 1896. A year later a
negro was lynched at Urbana, and
under this law his heirs brought suit
against the county. The lower court
awarded the heirs $5,000 and costs,
and this decision the supreme court
has affirmed.
A Pennsylvania doctor says that ap
pendicitis, with which women were
■jntil recently seldom afflicted, is now
almost as common among them as
among men. lie ascribes this increase
of the disease among them to the use
of the bicycle, to golf ami other out
door sports. What are the women to
do, poor things! First, they are tear
fully and prayerfully urged and im
plored jo engage in outdoor sports for
the sake of their health; then they at e
told that if they do so they will have
appendicitis. Life, as regulated by
doctors, has complications.
THE SITUATION IN CUBA.
Coni|>liniiee nllh the I'lntt Amrnd
m< at Must He tlie Out
co me.
Tlie new hitch in the Cuban case is
to be regretted, but it has been
brought about by the Cubans them
selves, and doubtless will soon be re
moved by them. In the acceptance of
the I'latt amendment by the Havana
constitutional convention there was
an addenda which gives a different in
terpretation to one or two of the pro
visions of the amendment than the
letter of that measure will permit.
The visiting delegation of Cubans mis
understood Secretary Hoot in his ex
planation of some of the provisions of
the I'latt terms, and their notion got
into the proceedings of the convention
nt the time the terms were accepted.
They evidently supposed that the pres
ident and the secretary of war intend
ed to remove some of the rigors of the
stipulations as set forth in tlie amend
ment, and they gave this idea to their
colleagues in the convention. In this
way the constitution framers obtained
an erroneous view of the situation, and
this is reflected in their acceptance of
the terms.
What the Cubans have been told
now by Secretary Hoot is that tlie
~ CUBA-" PATCHED ONE'S IS BETTER' N NONE, ANYWAY."
Piatt amendment will have to be ac
cepted as it stands. Neither the presi
dent jiur the secretary of war has any
authority to alter it in the slightest
degree. Their relation to it js to en
force it according to its obvious letter.
The function of interpreting the
amendment if there be any doubt as
to its exact meaning rests with the
courts. Congress has the authority
of making the terms and has the pow
er to change them in either direction
if it chooses. Congress is the only
power which can do this. The func
tion of the executive is to execute the
laws according to their letter, or ap
parent letter, and if there be any need
for an interpretation of them so as to
clear up any doubt as to their exact
meaning that work will have to be
done by the judicial branch of the gov
ernment.
'I lie course for the tubans is clear.
They must agree w> the Piatt statute
in its strict terms. There can be no
mental reservations or equivocations
on this point. Their official accept
ance must be so plain and so explicit
that there can be no possibility of
any hedging by them hereafter. That
they will meet the new situation in
the proper spirit is probable. The
necessities of the case have been
pointed out to them by the author
ities at Washington in a frj •ndly way,
and they have been told that the
terms must be agreed to as they are
laid down in the statute. The con
sequences of their rejection, or of a
delp.y in their acceptance, can readily
be pointed out to the Cubans. The
American troops will remain in the
island until a government which will
m«et American ideas is established,
and this cannot be done until the re
lations between Cuba and the United
States are agreed to by the Cubans
on the exact lines laid down in the
riatt proviso. It was the expecta
tion that a Cuban republic would be
in operation by the end of !!KII at the
latest, but if there is to be any ob
structiveness on Cubr.'s part this out
come will be delayed. Probably an
amicable agreement will be reached
soon. At least this is the hope of all
Americans. Until this is effected,
however, the United States soh'.iers
will remain in Cuba and the United
States Hag will fly over Cuba's prin
cipal cities and its fortifications.—
St. Ln/.i Ci'olio Democrat.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1901.
TRAITOROUS AGUINALDO.
Secret Archive* Captured In Laio*
Tell (he Story of Ilia
Pertld y,
Murnt Halsteael has made an anal
ysis of the Filipino archives captured
when Aguinaldo and his cabinet fl< d
from Malolos in the spring of 1899.
The result of this study is a revela
tion of Aguinaldo's character that
places him before the American pub
lic in an entirely new light. Among
the documents captured were many
of Aguinaldo's private papers and let
ters from the Spanish authorities in
Manila, written after Dewey's vic
tory and before the capture of the
city. There are the minutes of the
so-called Filipino republic, proclama
tions, private instructions and offi
cial reports.
These various papers prove from
Filipino sources that Aguinaldo plot
ted treachery against the United
States anil in favor of Spain before
the fall of Manila, that he was in
correspondence with the Spanish
Cien. Augustin. 'i here are letters
proving that Aguinaldo wrote after
the battle of Manila and before the
capture of the city that he had the
hope of preserving "from the ship
wreck the sovereignty of Spain in
these islands." That is the kind of an
ally he was of the United States.
There are letters showing that
while the Amreican troops and Fil
ipino forces wer laying siege to Ma
nila, the Spanish army inside the
city was supplied with fresh meat
through the Filipino lines on passes
signed by Aguinaldo.
There is a letter from Aguinaldo to
the Spanish governor general ex
pressing a wish to enter into a "con
tract" for mutual advantages.and the
letter was written on the day that
Admiral Dewey supplied. Aguinaldo
with 7,000 guns to be used against the
Spaniards.
Documents signed by Aguinaldo
weeks before the insurrection broke
out on Feltrauary 3, 1899, gave mi
nute directions for the assassination
of American sentries while profess
ing to be on friendly terms.
The captured archives also furnish
the details of the agreement under
which Aguinaldo for a cash payment
of 600,000 pesos agreed to' drop the
rebellion against Spanish authority
ii» 1897. The money was paid to
Aguinaldo, and with cabinet officers
he proceeded to Lingayan, where the
entire party boarded a Spanish mer
chant steamer and were taken to
I 'ong-Kong.
More than this, the programme was
so arranged that, it was not until
Aguinaldo was ready to sail that lie
telegraphed orders to his generals to
lay down their arms and surrender
their forces. —Chicago Tribune.
(E?"There is one thing about Presi
dent McKinley's trip that made it dif
ferent from the average presidential
"swing around the circle." The pres
ident being no longer a prospective
candidate, it could not be construed
as a vote-getting tour. Perhaps this
will make the enthusiasm of the peo
ple all the greater, although Presi
dent McKinley is a man who always
arouses enthusiasm. In the western
cities and towns he will undoubtedly
receive the greatest welcome ever ac
cord) <1 any man.—Troy Times.
tTMr. Bryan sliouiu endeavor to
break himself of the habit of using
tin 1 word "must" in discussing plans
for the democratic future. He may
keep it up until he incites somebody
to refer to him as Old Musty.—Wash
ington Post.
A MASTERLY ADDRESS.
Raeretary Hay Pleads for feme I*e
tiveen lite Nation*.
Buffalo, S. Y., June 14.—The pres
ence of men of national prominence
and the sports in the stadium at ract
ed thousands to the Pan-American
exposition yesterday.
Secretary of State Hay was the
guest of honor at a dinner given ln»-t
evening by the directors of the exposi
tion to the National Editorial associ
ation. One thousand covers we.-e
laid in the dining room in Statler'?
■hotel. Secretary Hay spoke as fol
lows:
"Last night 1 looked from my win
dow at this marvelous creation, mil
to-day as I have walked through the
courts and the palaces of this incom
parable exposition, the words of the
prophet have been constantly in my
mind, 'Your old men shall dream
dreams; your young men shall see
visions,' This idea of the brother
hood of the nations of the western
world is not a growth of yesterday.
It was heralded when the country
was young by Henry ("lay; it was
cherished by Seward and Evarts, by
Douglas and by Blaine.
"Twelve years ago we held the first
reunion of the American republics.
Much was said and done, destined to
be memorable in our history, opening
and blazing the way along the path
of peace and fraternal relations. We
have made steady progress; we have
grown day by day to a better under
standing until now we are looking to
our coming conference in the City of
Mexico, in which we have the right
to hope that with larger experiences
and profounder study of the great
problems before r.s, results still more
important will be reached.
"There have been statesmen and
soldiers who have cherished the 'sricy
in past years of a vast American
army recruited from every country
between the Arctic and Antarctic seas
which sliail bind us together in one
immense military power that, might
overawe the older civilizations. lint
this conception belongs to the past,
to an order of things that has gone,
I hope, forever. How far more in
spiring is the thought of the results
we see here now; how much more in
keeping with the better times in
whose light we live, and the still more
glorious future to which we look for
ward is the result we see to-day of
the armies of labor and intelligence
in every country of this new world,
all working with one mind and one
will, not to attain an unhappy pre
eminence in the art of destruction,
but to advance in liberal emulation
in the arts which tend to make men
happier and better, to make this long
harassed and tormented earth a
brighter andfmore blessed abode.
"God forbid that there should be
in all this the slightest hint of vain
glory, still less of menace to the rest
of the world. On the contrary, we
cannot but think that this friendly
challenge we send out to all peoples
convoking them also to join in this
brotherly emulation in which the
prizes are after all merely the right
to further peaceful progress in good
work —will be to the benefit and
profit of every country under the
wide heaven. Every great achieve
ment in art, in science, in commerce,
communicates to the universal human
spirit a salutary shock which in ever
widening circles spreads to regions
the most remote and obscure; to
break at last in lingering ripples on
tne ultimate shores of space an( l
time. Out of a good source evil can
not flow; out of the light darkness
cannot be born. The benign influ
eii.'es that shall emanate trom this
great festival of peace shall not be
bounded by oceans nor by conti
nents.'*
A TEN PER CENT TAX.
It l« Proposed to tlulif file Trail mi' an I
Tiiiic* Pay a Share of"the Coot of the
U a r.
London, .Tune 14.—Sir David Bar
hour, whom the chancellor of the ex
chequer, Sir Michael llicks-Beach,
sent to South Africa to investigate
the sources of revenue of the Trans
vaal and Orange River Colony, with
the view of estimating how much
they should contribute towards the
cost of the war, reports in favor of a
10 per cent, tax on the profits of the
mines, yielding, on the basis of the
profits of 1808, £450.000 yearly. After
paying this. Sir David Barbour con
siders the mines will be better off
than before, as they will save £600,-
000 per year on dynamite, owing to
the abolition of the monopoly in that
commodity.
The Orange River Colony will he
unable for some years to meet the
ordinary cost of administration and
pay its share of the cost of the con
stabulary. "It cannot, therefore,*'
says Sir David Barbour, "so far as
can be foreseen at present, pay any
thing toward the cost of the war."
Sir David proposes to apply all
revenues derived from the sale of
lands or mining rights to the war
liquidation.
Flnaiirlal I,«>**e* Led to Suicide.
Baltimore, June 14. —lit-.ivy finan
cial losses incurred rn speculation, .i.
is asserted here, caused the suicide in
Pittsburg of Dr. Daly, former sur
geon in the l*nited States army, per
sonal friend of (!en. Miles and orig
inator of the "embalmed beef" scan
dal. It was given out that the sui
cide was the result of melancholia
brought on by the death of his wife.
From reliable sources it is learned
here, however, that Daly had invested
largely in local securities and lost
$75,000.
Wabauli Will r.iilor Pltf«?,nrsr.
Pitt:burg, Junel4. —President Ham
say, of the Wabash railway, has au
thorized Engineers Patterson and
Dollar to advertise next Monday in
the Pittsburg papers for proposals
for the erection of a bridge across
the Monongaheln river at Kerry
street and the construction of 12
niiles of railroad south from Bridge
vil'i for the Pittsburg A' Carnegj."
• ailroad. ihe total cost of these
two portions of the line will lie
000. COO. Contracts will stipulate that
tne work be completed by November
1. 1902.
CHARGES OF FRAUD.
iTiff are OTade In Connection With
tlie *ale ol (Government Property by
Soldier* at San Fraud* o.
San Francisco, June 14.—Capt. A.
\V. Kimball, post quartermaster at
the Presidio, made the following
statement yesterday in regard to the
alleged frauds in the sale of quarter
master's supplies belonging to the
govern meat:
"I am the officer that is concerned
in this matter, but no one has yet
made any inquiry of me. lam the
only bonded officer at the post, and
the only disbursing officer. If there
has been anything irregular I would
[ be pleased to give all the assistance
in my power in the search for the
guilty men, if there are any.
"All the government things sold in
the pawnshops are sold by discharged
soldiers from the returning volunteer
regiments."
Col. .1. B. IJawles, post commander,
said: "All this talk of fraud is per
fect rot. People have been nagging
for a year on the same subject. 1
have been aware of the soldiers sell
ing their clothing for a long time.
One of the perplexing things in army
management is to keep the soldiers
from selling their clothing. 1 am
confident that no quartermaster's
sergeant or civilian employe is impli
cated in tlie selling of even a shoe
string."
A warrant has been issued for the
arrest of Abe Abrams, son of Louis
Abrams, the second hand dealer, who,
with another son is in custody. In
fective Reynolds reported to the fed
eral authorities yesterday that he
found 20 pairs of government shoes in
a Sacramento street store Wednesday
night.
(apt. Seymour, of the local detec
tive force, said: "No one can say,
in view of all that has transpired
within the past two days, that frauds
have not been going on. Detective
Reynolds reports to me that the in
vestigation has made a stir among
the second hand stores and those
who deal in the class of goods stolen
from the army, and that those who
have not yet been visited by Col.
Maus are hurrying to cover what gov
ernment goods they have. The quan
tities which the Abrams family were
able to supply their customers makes
it seem conclusive to my mind that
there is some one having access to
the quartermaster's department in
collusion with them. They will have
a hard time explaining away the evi
dence against them."
HE SNUBBED WANAMAKER.
Ill* Protest A<iain*t(living Away Hall
way Fraiichiaea lit litnorfd by tlie
Mayor ol' Philadelphia.
Philadelphia, June 14. —The latest
move in the matter of the granting
of street railway tranchises by city
councils was made Thursday when
ex-Postmaster General John Wana
niaker sent a lette'r to Mayor Ash
bridge offering to pay to the city $2,-
500,000 for the rights and franchises
granted and intended to be granted
by 14 ordinances of council awaiting
the mayor's approval. '1 hese ordi
nances give to a number of capital
ists who are friendly to the dominant
faction in the republican party of
this state the right to construct un
derground and elevated railways on
streets now occupied by surface rail
way companies, and to build surface
roads on those streets not occupied
by other companies. The speed with
which the enabling acts were passed
by the legislature and the passage
by city councils in three days of the
14 city ordinances aroused opposition.
Mr. Wanamaker, in his letter *ay«
he believes the franchises granted by
these ordinances are of enormous
money value; that the people will get
nothing for the iranchises; passen
gers wnl have no cheaper transporta
tion. and that the only gainers w.ll
be those financially interested in the
projects. He urged the mayor to
veto the ordinances in order that new
ordinances may be drafted conferring
the franchises'in question only upon
the payment of a sum into the public
treasury commensurate to the value
of the grant.
Mayor Ashbridge last night signed
the ordinances granting franchises.
He refused to talk about Mr. \\ ana
maker's protest.
BULLETS FOR TWO.
A Montreal Woman and Her Son Lom
Their Live*.
Montreal, June 14.—Mrs. J. J. Bed
path, one of Montreal's society lead
ers, is dead in her handsome resi
dence on Sberbrooke street and her
son, Clifford Kedpath, died in Boyal
Victoria hospital with a bullet in his
brain.
About 6 o'clock last evening the
household was startled by the noise
of two revolver shots from Mrs. Bed
path's room. On rushing in the ser
vants found Mrs. Kedpatli and her
son lying on the floor, bo'.li uncon
scious. Physicians were summon -d,
who pronounced their wounds fatal.
Mrs. Itidpath had been ill for some
time, suffering greatly fr in insom
nia. The surmise'is that while tem
porarily mentally deranged M 's. Ned
path attempted to end her life and in
attempting to prevent he.' tlie son
was shot.
■CI ick Smallpox Kill* Indian*.
El l'cno, Okia., June 14.—Dr. White
has returned from the Kiowa and
Comanche country, where lie had
been sent to investigate smallpox ru
mors. and reports that an epidemic
of black smallpox, fatal in nearly
every instance, is raging among the
Indians.
A Ki:r Wining Combine/
Chicago, .Tunc 14. —Chicago capital
ists arc behind a movement for the
consolidation of ail the coal mining
companies of Indiana. Options on a
seroe of Indiana mines owned by Chi
cago firms were secured Thursday by
John S. Bays, of Sv.llivan, lnd., and
the combine, which is to have a cap
ital of $15,000,000, will be formally
launched in a few days. The Chron
icle says:"The combination of the
Indiana mines is but the fori run.ler
of a greater coal trust that is :em
brace practically all of the coai pro*
dueling states.''
A GLORIOUS SIGHT.
Flelda of Wheat In Which the Slock*
Were So Thick It Wan Impossible
to Drive Uetvreem Them.
To the Editor:
A gentleman from Duluth made a
trip through a portion of Western
Canada last summer, and writing of
what he saw, says:
"Wheat, for instance, will average
twenty-live or thirty bushels to the
acre. I saw shocks so thick in the
field that it would be almost impossi
ble to drive between them. Winters,
it is said, are longer than near Duluth.
but the Japan current, warm chinook
winds and dry atmosphere make the
winters comparatively mild."
Thousands of such testimonies are
to be had from settlers who have
taken advantage of the low-priced
lands of Western Canada. During the'
present year new districts will bei
opened up in the Saskatchewan Val
ley, and advantage should be taken of
this at once. Information can be had
from any agent of the Government,
whose advertisement appears else
where in your columns.
Yours truly,
OT.D READER.
First Broker—"Say, did you hear about
that new railroad combination?" Second
liroker—"No. 1 ve been out to lunch tor
the last ten minutes."—Town Topics.
All AMonlnhcd,
If people are too conservative they are
very apt to find cause for astonishment
when some person they have overlooked
does something worthy of praise, or some
familiar medicine effects a great cure. Such
was the fact in the ease of Mr. Nimrod Price
of Milford, Ohio, who wrote: "My wife,
myself, and all our neighbors are astonished
at the wonderful effects of your Lotion in
curing a distressing eruption on my wife's
face, it having done what no doctor, or oth
er medicine, had done before." If your
drngeist hasn't it. send to Solon Palmer. 374
Pearl St.. New York, for sample of Primer's
Lotion and Lotion Soap.
Stern Pater—"Johnny, what must you do
first of all to have your sins forgiven?"
Johnny—"Commit the sins."—Yale Record.
Htw Fast Train to Colorado
via MlnHOiirl I'arlftr Railway*
The Missouri Pacific Railway is now oper
ating double daily service from St. Louis
and Kansas City to points in Colorado. Utah
and the Pacific Coast. Trains leave St.
Louis !» a. m.and 10:10 p. m.; Kansas City
6 p. m.and 10 a.m.. carrying through sleep
ing cars between St. Louis and San Fran
cisco without change. Excursion tickets
now on sale. For further information ad
dress company's agents. H. C. TOWNSKND,
Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agent, St. Louis, Mo.
Heaven often smites in mercy, even when
the blow is severest".—Joanna liaillie
Help for Women
Who Are Always Tired.
"I do not feel very well, I am so
tired all the time."
You hear these words every day ; as
often as you meet your friends just so
often are these words repeated. Mere
than likely you speak the same signifi
cant words yourself, and no doubt you
do feel far from well most of the time.
Mrs. Ella Rice, of Chelsea, Wis.,,
whose portrait we publish, writes that
she suffered for two years with bear
ing-down pains, headache, backache,
and hud all kinds ot miserable feelings,
MRS. ELLA EICE.
all of which was caused by falling and
inflammation of the womb, and after
doctoring with physicians and numer
ous medicines she wit's entirely cured by
Lydia E. l'inkham's Vegetable Com
pound.
If you are troubled with pains,
fainting spells, depression of spirits,
reluctance togo anywhere, headache,
backache, and always tired, please re
member that there is an absolute
remedy which will relieve you of your
suffering as it did Mrs. Rice. Proof
is monumental that Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound is the
greatest medicine for suffering women.
in 3 or 4 Years an Independence Is Assured
If ? ou take upviuir homes
■DHIIO Western 112 lie
"J rj land of plenty. Illus-
I* t ruled pamphlets, giving
PV«lfl experiences of farmers
KM Vf> in growing wheat, reports
Tvh AM of delegates, etc and full
1 w /* ||information as to reduced
railway rates can he had
application to the
rnder-icned. who wlil mail yon atlases, pamphlets,
etc.. free of cost. F. PKDLEY. Supt. of Immigrat
tlon, Ottawa. Canada; M. V Mr!NN ICS, No 2 Merrill
Blk . Detroit. Mich : K. T. HOLMES, Room C, Bitf
Four Bldg., Indianapolis. Inc.
READERS OF THIS PAPER
DESIRING TO BUY ANYTHING
ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS
SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING
WHAT THEY ASK FOR. REFUSING
ALL SUBSTITUTES OK IMITATIONS.
1 a JFgfc AMAKESSS SS?£
P!<J •£ H wL_ lief nivl POSITIVE
fcC E I |SS TSk I.Y <IT RES PII.KN.
I nJSi For free Kamp'r iirtclresi
■ ■lnfcV
lllliril matism
U ULH I ilie only positive cure. I'asiex-
Bra Nir 1 I |ierieuceii|ieuks for inelf. Mcpot
I fi £ 1m 83 s L ' ullloruia Ave.. Chioa«o.
*. N. K.—C 1869
#qwas!if"#
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use W
IVJ In timo. Sold by orucgißta. |»1