Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, December 19, 1901, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H, H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TKUMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
f'er ye:ir $2 00
t paid in advance 1 oO
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisement s are published at the rate o\
one dol ar per square for one insertion and fifty
cents per square for each subsequent insertion
Kates li.v the year, or for .six or throe months,
are low at.U uniform, anil will be furnished oa
up- Ileal on.
I.e»;nl and Official Advertising per square, :
three times or less. i 2: each subsequent inst.r.
tio.i . 0 cents per square.
l.ocal notices PJ cents per line for oticlriser- :
sertlon: ft cents per lino lor each subsequent
consecutive Insertion.
Obituary notice-, over five lines. 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, mar
riages and deaths will lie Inserted free.
Kusiness curds, five lit "s or less. i 5 per year:
over live lints, at the regular rates of adver
ts ilk.'.
No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per
issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The .Tnh department of the Pkess incomplete
*nfi affords facilities for doillK the best class of
* rk. PAUIICI-f.AH A I I ENIION PAIUTO LAW
PItINTINU.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear •
«g"s ure paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers Rent out of the county must be paid
lor in advance.
CURRENT TOPICS.
Jules Verne, the author, has become
blind.
Parisian cabmen are prevented from j
Emoking when driving.
The Glasgow exposition has closed
"With a profit of $400,000.
r i nifty-seven thousand girls attend j
cooking schools in London.
The date for the coronation of King
Edward has been set Cor June "5.
A penitent has just sunt $18,699 to j
the government "conscience fund."
Greenland is one of the very few j
countries where infectious diseases
are unknown.
In Arkansas vast belts of forest j
lands still lie untouched by the ax of !
the woodman.
France's annual consumption of ;
wheat (including seed wheat) is 310,-
230,000 bushels.
About 173,000 persons are employed ;
in the postal department of Great i
Britain and Ireland.
Charleston will let the colored folks I
attend her exposition on the same
terms as the whites.
A Philadelphia bank teller contract- ;
ed smallpox by handling money that
passed over the counter.
Vienna has a school for waiters with j
a three years' course. AmOng the I
subjects taught is French.
About GOO®oo trees are planted each
year by the school children of Sweden,
under the guidance of their teachers.
At Salta in Argentina, a list of boys
and girls who have failed to attend
school is published in the newspapers.
The annual report of the controller
of the currency shows a big increase
in the authorized capital of national
banks.
Scotch whisky is now being manu- \
factured in New York and exported in
large quantities to South and Central
America.
The total sales at the art galleries
of the Pan-American exposition at Buf
falo amounted to l«:s thm $15,000, for
27 pictures.
Since IS7I Japan has built nearly
30,000 elementary schools, providing
room for 4,000,000 pupils, one-fourth of
whom are girls.
The ci.seks which pass through the
London clearing house in six weeks
are more than equal in amount to all
the coin of the world.
Dr. Daniel Freeman, of Beatrice,
Neb., owns and occupies the first farm
given away by the United States gov
ernment under the homestead act.
The camel path which for centuries
has formed the only connection be
tween Jerusalem and Nablus (Sychem)
has at last been made into a carriage
roatl nearly 20 feet wide.
Among the pets of the sultan of
Morocco are seven lions. These he
permits to range the courtyards of the
palace at night, to act as guards to
the royal harem.
The Charlestonians arc railing their
exposition grounds and buildings the
Ivory City on the banks of the Ashley.
The work of preparation is rapidly
nearing completion.
An automobile is being built in New
York that will make 70 miles an hour
on a level road. The next, and most
difficult task will be to find a level
road 70 miles in length.
Indian caste rules necessitate the
employment of extensive retinues.
During the recent official tour of the
viceroy. Lord Curzon, he had to carry
with him a train of 150 native ser
vants.
Abraham Slimmer, of Waverly, la.,
has given his handsome home and sur
rounding grounds of ten acres to the
Sisters of Mercy of Dubuque, to be
used for the establishment of a hos
pital.
Rev. Dr. Daniel J. Hauer, who died
in Hanover, Pa., recently, was be
lieved to be the oldest clergyman in
the United States. Ho was 90 years
old. and had been a Lutheran minister
for 75 years.
So valuable is coal in the Ponchamp
coal fields of France that it pays to
mine coal at a depth of 3.313 feet. A
steel cable, weighing seven tons and
nearly a mile long is used. The coal
is brought up in trains of six cars.
It, takes 5,000 unloaded bees to make
a pound, that is, when the bee leaves
Its hive in search of honey it weighs
on>y the 5,000 th part of a pound. VVlTen
it returns, however from the fields and
flotvers, it is three times that heavy.
Dr. Labordi has communicated to
th" French academy information about
a new writing instrument for the
blind, which will enable them to read
correctly what is written and will prob
ably supersede the Braille system alto
gether.
CONGRESS IN SESSION.
Economic Problem* Until Serious find
I'i'rplesliiK Are to lie
Sol\ t el.
The Fifty-seventh congress has
convened. The long 1 session with
its six months of legislative la
bor lies before it. The time is all too
short to dispose of more than a few
of all the grave questions which
await consideration and which it is
the popular desire should lie consid
ered maturely and disposed of saga
ciously.
The Fifty-fifth congress had a war
011 its hands soon after it met. The
skies are clear now. In all human
probability this congress will have
no military problems to demand its
attention, but there are economic
problems which are both serious and !
perplexing. They are problems which !
cannot be disposed, of satisfactorily
by men governed l>y their emotions
or their prejudices. Their solution
calls for the services of intelligent
and dispassionate men who are not
swayed by personal feelings or inter
ests, says the Chicago Tribune.
The number of persons who believe
that the great industrial combina
tions which have been organized of
late years and which are portent of
still greater combinations to come
should lie subject'to some extent to
federal supervision and control is in
creasing. Congress is expected to de
termine whether such control is law
ful, and, if so, to provide for the ex
ercise of it. The transportation ques
tion has not been disposed of by the
interstate commerce law, and the
pressure for its amendment so that
it shall be more effective lias not
abated. The latest phases of railroad
combination will attract the atten
tion of congress even if they do not
induce it to take action concerning
them.
The subject of the enlargement of
foreign markets for American prod
ucts is one which all farmers, and
cattle raisers, and a steadily increas
ing number of manufacturers are
deeply interested in. When Preside ut
MeKinley said at I'.ulTalo that "what
we produce beyond our domestic con
sumption must have a vent abroad,"
and that "reciprocity, the natural
outgrowth of our wonderful industri
al development," should provide that
vent, he gave them a sentiment they
heartily approved of. They look to
the Fifty-seventh congress for action
in this direction.
That congress finds upon the stat
ute books taxes which are producing
revenue far in excess of the legiti
mate needs of the government. It
finds there taxes which were imposed
to meet the expenses of a war which
ended three years a-go. These taxes,
all of them needless and some most
vexatious, cannot be wiped out too
soon.
The murder of President MeKinley
hns brought to the front a new and
difficult question. How shall anarchy
be dealt with? What can be done to
protect the man at the head of the
American government from assassin
ation because he is at its head? The
wisdom of congress will be taxed to
find an adequate answer.
Congress has 011 its hands the isth
mian canal question. The ratification
of the new Hay-Pauncefote treaty
will remove the last obstacle in the
way of the construction of a great
work. It has also to deal with the
Chinese exclusion question. It is ex
pected to meet the wishes of the peo
ple by reenaeting the existing law.
The important subject of freer trade
relations with Cuba will have to be
met. The increase of the navy will
demand attention.
Congress has more than enough
subjects to occupy all its attention,
and to put to the test its ability to
legislate wisely. The republican
party is in the majority in the senate
and in the house. It will be held re
sponsible if anything is done wrong
ly or if anything which ought to be
done is left undone. Therefore, the
old hands who "run things" will have
to avoid hasty and imperfect legisla
tion on the one hand, and to avoid in
curring popular displeasure by ig
noring the demand for legislation on
certain subjects on the other hand.
Much hard work confronts them.
MlmliiUc of tlie Democrat*.
The free traders who are shouting
for reciprocity under the impression
that it means the overthrow of the
protective tariff and claiming the late
President MeKinley as their cham
pion seem not to have read his last
speech carefully. In that speech he
did not favor an indiscriminate ex
tension of favors to other nations, but
"sensible trade arrangements which
will not, interrupt our home produc
tion," and a "system which provides
a natural exchange of commodities."
Those free traders who are extolling
the late president for his advanced
views cannot have read the following
from the speech they so loudly extol:
"if, perchance, foiup of our tariffs r.re
no longer needed for revenue or to i ncour
affo or protect our Industries at home,
why should they not be employed to ex
tend anl promote our markets abroad?"
These qualifications are very im
portant parts of lIIP views expressed
by the late president at Buffalo. Itcci
procity must be mutual exchange, and
it must not lead to unsafe arrange
ments which will deprive American in
dustries of protection.—lndianapolis
Journal.
ICMr. Ilichardson, the minority
leader in the house of representatives,
has announced what he thinks should
be the democratic programme during
the corning session of congress.
Summed up, it is simply this: Oppose
everything the republicans favor.
There is a discouraging lack of force
or originality in this. When has the
democratic party done anything else?
—Troy Times.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1901.
THE SAME OBSTRUCTIONISTS.
Democracy Mill Continue Its (>ld
Tactics of IllockiiiK Mrimurct
for Public Weal.
The resolutions introduced in the
house democratic caucus at Washing
ton a few days ago prove that the den,
ocratic congressmen will continue to
be obstructionists against every meas
ure that will be helpful to the labor
and business of the people of the
United States, says the lowa State Reg
ister. The present general prosperity
of the American people prevented the
democratic caucus from emitting the
usual wail that "the rich are (retting
richer and the poor poorer," but the
resolutions introduced oppose the
tariff; declare in favor of such "reci
procity treaties as will reduce, even
if they do not altogether remove the
unfair and oppressive burden of the
present system;" favor free trade
with Porto Rico and Cuba, notwith
standing no American citizen should
ask for free trade for Cuba so long as
the people of that island decide to re
main an independent country; oppose
the proposed ship subsidy, in the in
terest of the free trade that may lie
brought to the United States by the
subsidized ships of Europe; oppose
the incorporation of other lands or
the assumption of sovereignty over
them, "except as their inhabitants
may be fitted for self-government,"
and that at the earliest practicable
moment they be given "the same right
of self-government we now claim for
ourselves."
There is no indication of any
thought of the responsibility of the
government for the welfare and safety
of the people of the islands whose in
habitants have come under our pro-
tection and care by the fortunes of
war, which is the chief problem con
nected with those islands. The de
mand for"the consent of the gov
erned" was omitted, possibly be
cause of the fact that nearly every
democratic state has disfranchised or
is preparing to disfranchise the negro
voters. The free silver idiocy was not
included, but Congressman Ball, of
Texas, gave notice that he will offer
the Kansas City platform as a subst :
tute when the committee to which
the resolutions were referred makes
its report, and it is probable that
there will be another division in the
obstruction party when that commit
tee reports at the next meeting of
ihe house democratic caucus, with ti
probability that the majority of the
caucus will adopt the Kansas City
platform as the basis of democratic
action during the present congress
and in the congressional election
campaign of 1902. Fortunately, such
action will insure the election of an
other republican congress.
TARIFF TINKERING OPPOSED.
Main It o lut ion of tlie It4M*ii»roelty
toiii;ri'NM Favor* 11 Protective
Tariff.
At the first glance it may seem that
the reciprocity convention which met
a few days ago in the city of Washing
ton accomplished nothing worth men
tioning, since it made two specific rec
ommendations —that the congress cre
ate a department of commerce and in
dustries, and that a reciprocity com
mission be established, to be charged
with the duty to investigate the con
dition of any industry that may lie
likely to be affected by any proposed
reciprocity treaty, and to report the
result of its investigation to the con
gress; but a little closer study of its
doings will show that it declared it
self to be firmly opposed to any modi
fication of the principle of protection.
That declaration, coming from repre
sentative manufacturers, is impor
tant, says the Albany Journal.
One of the resolutions adopted by
the convention declared, in effect, that
the assembled delegates were opposed
to any reciprocity not compatible with
the true conception of a protective
tariff. The wording of the resolution
was that "this convention recommends
to congress the maintenance of the
principle of protection for the home
market and to open up by reciprocity
opportunities for increased foreign
trade by special modification of the
tariff in special cases, but only where
it can lie done without injury to any
of our home interests of manufactur
ing commerce or farming."
In other words, the convention de
clares that while there should lie nc
modification of the principle, modifica
tions of the manner of its ap
plication would be unobjeet ionable pro
vided that the result would be bene
ficial to American trade. In what spe
cific manner it may be possible tc
carry out the general recommendation
made in the resolution the conventior
wisely left to the study of the con
gress.
The essential feature of the conven
tion's recomendations is the declar
ation that there should be no tinkering
with the tariff.
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
must be treated as
the handmaiden of protection."—
President lioosevel't's Message.
Reed rules will stand. Ir.
other words, the house will transact
business. Cincinnati Commercial
Tribune.
last thing a democratic cor
respondent has found the president
doing is tlie building up of a machine
of his own. —Indianapolis Journal.
CThe democrats in congress prom
ise to be so divided that they cannot
even obstruct unless they obstruct
one, another.—lndianapolis News
(Intl.).
There are no signs that David B
Hill has as yet been impressed by th<
advantages which the present politic
al situation has to offer him.—Chic-i
go Inter Ocean.
THE HOUSE COMMITTEES.
Speaker llentlr.raon'a Announcement—
The l,i«,t of < lialrmon.
Washington, Dec. 11. —Speaker Hen
derson yesterday announced the
house committees. The chairmen are
as follows:
Insular Affairs —Cooper, of 'Wiscon
sin.
Judiciary—Bay. of New York.
Banking and Currency—Fowler, of
New Jersey.
(Merchant Marine and Fisheries—
Grosvenor, of Ohio.
Rivers and (Harbors—Burton, of
Ohio.
(Military Affairs—Hull, of lowa.
Naval Affairs— Foss, of Illinois.
Immigration and Naturalization—
Shat'tue, of Ohio,
Agriculture—Wadsworth, of New
York.
Foreign Affairs—llitt, of Illinois.
I'o t Offices and Post Roads—Loud,
of California.
Public Lands—Lacey, of lowa.
Indian Affairs—Sherman, of New |
York.
Territories—Knox, of Massaehu- j
setts.
Public Buildings and Grounds—Mer- j
eer, of Nebraska.
Irrigation of Arid Lands —Tongue, '
of Oregon.
Census Hopkins, of Illinois.
Coinage. Weights and Measures — j
Southard, of Ohio.
Invalid Pensions —Sulloway, of New
Hampshire.
Pensions—Loudenslager, of New j
Jersey.
Education—Grow, of Pennsylvania.
Labor—Gardner, of New Jersey.
Militia- Dick, of Ohio.
Patents—Reeves, of Illinois.
Election of President, Vice Presi
dent and Representatives in Congress j
-—Corliss, (if Michigan.
Eleceions Comriuirt.ee No. I—Taylor, i
oT Ohio.
Elections Committee No. 2—Olm- |
steil. of Pennsylvania.
Elections Committee No. 3—Weeks, 1
of Michigan.
Pacific Railroads —W. A. Smith, of j
Michigan.
Railways and Canals—Davidson, of
Wisconsin.
SEVEN LIVES LOST.
A ftrilisli Mii|> IN Itrlvrn Ashore on
Hie < oiiMt of Washington State.
Aberdeen, Wash., Dee. It. —Wednes- i
day night the British bark Pin more,
owned by Clink Bros., of Greenock, i
Scotland, bound from Santa Rosalia, j
Mexico, to Portland, in ballast, went
into the surf at the mouth of Raft j
river, north of Gray's Harbor. Thai
crew of 30 abandoned the ship and j
took to the boats, one of which was
capsized shortly after leaving the i
vessel, and six men were drowned.
The other boat reached shore safely
after being out 36 hours. One man
died from exposure.
The crew made their way by land
to Oyehut, where the tug Ranger
brought them to Iloquiam. One of I
the sea-men, P. Pearson, is nearly
dead from exposure, and is in the
hospital at Iloquiam. The crew re- (
port that the vessel disappeared, but |
it is believed she has been towed off j
by a tug from Astoria.
Capt. James says he was ofE the |
Columbia river November 22, but |
the gale blew him north. He worked j
back to tne Columbia on December 2, j
and was close enough for a tug or
pilot boat to reach him, when anothej
gale blew him north and he was pow
erless.
A TERRIFIC EXPLOSION.
Nine Hen Injured and .finch Property
\Vrecited at Month Sharon, l*a.
Sharon, Pa., Dec. 11. —An explosion
that shook the earth for miles j
around, shattered windows in hun
dreds of houses at South Sharon,
moved adjacent buildings from their
foundations and caused the injury of
nine men, two ,perhaps fatally, oc
curred at the Sharon Steel Co.'s plant I
Tuesday.
The expl'osion occurred in the cast
ing department of the "pig mill." The
metal was being poured from the
ladle into the casting machine, when
it came in contact with some water,
which caused a blast which was felt a
great distance. The casting house
was completely wrecked. Large
strips of heavy corrugated iron beams
and other material were hurled hun
dreds of yards by the explosion. The
easting machine and conveyor were
damaged almost beyond repair. A |
part of the conveyor was blown sev
eral hundred feet, while not a vestige
of the iron roof of the mill remains.
Windows in the office of the steel
company, several hundred yards away
from the explosion, were broken and
in Sharon and South Sharon the
shock was felt like an earthquake.
Will t'oiiMlrnct a Now Tunnel.
Philadelphia, Dec. 11. —The Pennsyl
vania Railroad Co. awarded contracts
yesterday for improvements involving
an expenditure of more than $1,000,-
000. The contracts include the con
struction of a new single track tunnel
through Ihe crest of the Allegheny
mountains at (iallitzin. The tunnel
will be 3,600 feet long and will con
tain a single track, the object being
to relieve the present, tunnel of one
of the tracks now running through it.
Schaefcr In 1 liampion.
New York, Dec. 11. —Jacob Sehaefer,
of Chicago, and ueorge F. Slosson.
of this city, met in the deciding game
of the international 18-inch balk line
billiard championship tournament at
Madison Square Garden concert hall
last might,, and the Chicago man won
by a score of 400 to 355.
Four Sailors are Drowned.
.'Halifax, N. S., Dec. 11.—Four sea
men belonging to the Norwegian
steamer Ella, lost their lives Monday
in an attempt to reach shore for as
sistance for their ship. The Ella
was bound to Sydney and when off
iSeatterie island lost her.propeller.
The captain called for volunteers to
man a boat togo to Louisburg for
assistance and five of the crew re
sponded. The boat was provisioned
and put off. A high sea was running
and the men could make but little
progress. A sea filled the boat at*]
one by one they sank until but one
remained. He reached the shore.
BUYS COSTLY PAINTING.
Boston Un*riim of Fine Arm Krcurri
I'ram Halo' *'l"ortr»it ol a Woman."
The Boston (Museum of Fine Arts
luis just purchased for $30,000, from
Mr. T. ,7. Blakeslee, of the Blakeslee
galleries, New York City, the import
ant Frans ilnls' "Portrait of a Wo
man." Jt is undoubtedly one of the
best of the few genuine examples of
Frans Hals'in this country. The sale
was completed the other day, and was
made after the unanimous vote of the
board of the trustees of the Boston
Museum of Fine Arts to purchase jt.
The dimensions of the"Portrait of a
Woman" are 40 inches by 50 inches.
It was probably painted about 1650.
Originally, it was one of the treas
ures of the duke of Buckingham's
collection. Some years ago it became
the property of Mrs. Whatman, of
Maidstone, England, and then passed
into the hands of Messrs. Lawrie &
Company, of Bond street, London,
from whom Mr. Blakeslee purchased
it. The portrait will hang in the main
gallery of the Boston Museum of
Fine Arts.
llnbby Yielded a I'olut.
Gilbert—l believe ill a man being
the master of the house. lie should
'have the say in everything.
iMason—(How about the naming of
that, baby of yours?
■Gilbert—My wife gave way to me in
a very proper and wifely manner.
'She said she didn't care what name I
gave the little fellow so long as it
was Henry. So that's the name I
gave him. You know, I felt, after the
hearty manner in which she deferred
to me, I ought to yield a point out of
appreciation of her humility.—Tit-
Bits.
In the millennium, of course, a woman
will be only as old as she thinks she looks. —
Town Topics.
He who rules must humor full as much
as he commands. —George Eliot.
Some smtles look as though they had been
soaked in vinegar.- Chicago Daily News.
♦ -
Most of us waste most of our time stand
ing around talking about nothing.—Wash
ington (la.) Democrat.
All of us think that we show a great deal
more consideration for other people than
they do for us. Indianapolis News.
Desirable Furniture.- "But these chairs,"
she said, "however fashionable they may lit*
are very uncomfortable." "Ah!" replied
the salesman, "that's the beauty of these
chairs, madam. When a caller sits in one
of these chairs, madam, she doesn't stay
long."—Philadelphia Press.
Loanedit —"Borrowit, didn't you get my
lawn mower last summer?" Horrowit —
"Yes, I'm the man." Loanedit—"Are you
thinking of bringing it home this winter?"
Borrowit—"Hadn't thought of it. I'm g->-
ing to lower the knives in that machine and
use it to shave the ice oil my sidewalk."—
Indianapolis News.
Tlie lie Could Do.
There was a clergyman (in Tangipahoe,
La., let us say) who was much annoyed by
tiie mischievous boy of a neighbor. He rea
soned with the brat, but witti no effect. He
laid the case before the boy's parents and
they showed him trie door. One day he told
his brother —a rough and vigorous man of
worldly habits—all about this persecution.
The brother bolted out of the door and
presently returned with tiie cheering word
that the boy would make no further trou
ble. "I told his father," said the
wicked brother, "that I w-iuld come blanic
ety near kicking tiie blanket.v stutling nut
of him and his blankety-blank-blankety boy
if he ever bothered you acgain."
"lint I hope you did not let even that
wretched creature hear such language as you
have repeated. Brother, you did not really
swear at him, did you?"
"Oh, not at all," said the wicked one, "but
I gave him such a cloi-e imitation of swear
ing that the whitewash on tiie walls looked
like blue calcimine before t was half
through."—N. Y. Mail and Exnress
for Infants and Children|[j
, Years
0f * The Kind You Have Always Bought
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CATALOG FUJEE. jjF
V W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
—ssssssssssszss —o——— ———am—a ■ ll
READERS OF THIS PAPER
DESIUINU TO BUY ANYTHING
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ALL SUBSTITUTES OH IMITATIONS.
_J i
NIB PA ANAKESIS
HJS H ■ BL_ iu-r a lift POSITIVE-
W"> a m |SB % i.vri isi * IMLEH.
§2 For free sample addross
M Bg Bra iflmi WW "ANAKEKIN," Trib
une building, New Yurk.
nDADCV NEW DISCOVERY; gives
O V quick relief and cures wonit
ca» e*. Hi -1. kii 112 t«btlmonfftlv and lo duva' **ratuieiit
JTrce. Or. M. U. OlUl'a bOHti. B» Mi, ATLANTA, «U.
PRINCESS VIROQUA, M. D.
Endorses Lydia E. Pinkham's
Yeeretable Compound After
Followiug Its Itecord For
Years.
"Dear Mrs. PinkiiAM :—lTealth is
the greatest boon bestowed on human
ity and therefore anything' that can
restore lost health is a blessing. I
consider Lydia 15. Pinkham's Veg
etable Compound as a blessing- to
State and Nation. It euros her moth
ers and daughters and makes them,
well and strong.
Practicing Physician and Lecturer.
" For fifteen years I have noted th&
effect of your Vegetable Compound iu
curing l special diseases of women.
"I know of nothing superior fop
ovarian trouble, barrenness, and it
has prevented hundreds of dxingerous
operations where physicians claimed
it was the only chance to get well.
Ulceration and inflammation of the
womb has been cured in two or three
weeks through its use, and as I find it
purely an herbal remedy, I unhesitat
ingly give it my highest endorsement.
—Fraternally yours, Dr. P. Vikoqua,
Lansing, Mich."— ssooo forfeit ifaboue tes
timonial is not genuine.
If you are ill tlonot hesitate to
get a bottle of Lydia 15. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound at
once, and -write to Mrs. Pink
ham at Lynn, Mass. for special
advice; it is entirely free.
9s Maid far
never has
I labors, and his s best social.
Va O and religious advantages.
G* | If E+JA ton ether with splendid
lands of Western Canada.
1 W hichcomprisesthegreat
grain and ranching lands of Manitoba. Assmsboia,
Alberta and Saskatchewan Exceptional advan
tages and low rates of fare arc |(iven tot hose de-.
sirous of inspecting the fall grant, lands. The hand-'
some forty-page Al an ol" Wentern Onnada
sent free to all applicants. Apply to F. I'EDLEY.i
Superintendent. Immigration. Ottawa, Canada,
or to JOSE I'll YOUNG, olfcfc State >t„ East, Colum-j
bus. Ohio; N. M. WILLIAMS, Toledo, O.; Canadian
Uoverniueut Agents.
■■■■■■■l mmamm mummm
HEAVY 'wadding LifimNDK
SHOT. UPS Ilazar.lH
Smokeleßn. THEN ON ltE-H
1 rSE3 A TO fl
FARM MORTGAGES
i MUM FOR SALE
Small mortgages paying fi per cent, interest on
irrigated farms in the Great Platte Valley of
Nebraska, where crops never fail. Write for
information. JAS. H. CASSKLMAN,
President ot The Irrigators' Hank,
SCOTTSBLU FF, N K BRA SKA.
ACTRESS. Mii
by mail. Opportunity of :t lifutiuif Tlio < omuopo! 11it m
Mchool ttrllrnuiutlc Art. 14 Wick Block.Cleveland.O,
Rypi SfMTisw &?,??£££«
BP® fi® II R the only positive curt*. Past ex
« ran u B porieneo speaks for itself. Depot
ROP MJ * '**• l Ave-. Chicago.
UfULIFOIIMA HOXKK." fiendfnrlUf. W no .t»r. Whllto.
y A Hoßtfron.fr?, Wl Market Bt., fcUN KKANUNCO, lALir.
A. N. K.-C I&V3
M ,RatOß Good. Use F|