Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, March 20, 1902, Page 7, Image 7

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    SOME WONDERFUL CROPS IN
WESTERN CANADA.
The Territorial Government Report*
Show Krsiiits Beyond Belief.
Retina, Assineboia, ranucla, January
JOtli. —At the Agricultural Statistics
Branch <>f the Department of Agricul
ture for the Territories, reports are
now being received from grain thresh
ers throughout tlie Territories, for
statistical purposes. The reports are
somewhat delayed this year, owing to
the extensive crop and the delay in
getting it threshed. The Department
of Agriculture is leading the way in a
new departure, with regard to the
collection of crop statistics. In the
older provinces, crop estimates are
based entirely on the opnion of per
sons interested in the grain business
who ought to be, and no doubt are,
well posted upon the probable yields.
Still the reports are simply a matter
of opinion, in which a mistake may
easily be made. The Territorial De
partment, however, has adopted the
system of returns of crops actually
threshed, upon which to base their
reports. The accuracy of the reports,
cannot, therefore, be pninsaid, for,
they represent a compilation of actual
threshing results. In this connection,
it. might be mentioned that the De
partment is organizing a system of
growing crop returns, which will be in
operation next summer. The infor
mation thus obtained, with estimated
acreage, will be available for business
men, banks, railway companies, and
other interests which have to discount
the future in making provision for the
conduct of their business.
The crop reports already to hand
show sonie remarkable cases of ab
normal development. In the Pegina
district, many returns are given of
crops of wheat running from -JO to 45
bushels to the acre.
J. A. Snell, of Yorkton, threshed
2®.000 bushels of oats from 4fio acres,
an average of 03 bushels >er acre for a
large acreage.
W. T{. Motherwell, of Abernethy,
threshed 2,0"i0 bushels of wheat from
a TiO acre field, an average of 53 bush
els per acre.
In the Edmonton district, T. T.
TTntehings threshed 72S bushels of
wheat from a ten-acre plot, an average
of nearly 73 bushels per acre.
P. Xorinan threshed G. 0.'0 bushels of
oats from GO acres of land, an average
of 116 bushels per acre.
The publication of the actual yields
of grain threshed will likely open the
eyes of the people to the great capabil
ities of the western Canadian prairies.
PAIR OF GIANTS TO WED.
Missouri <jirl i:islit I'Vrt One Inoli
Tall to Harry Jloutaiia Cowboy ol
lUjilit r««t.
The marriage of the largest man
ami woman in the United States, if
not in the world, will take place at
Helena within the next few weeks.
The contracting parties will be Miss
Kiln. Murray, of Missouri, who is
eight feet one inch tall and weighs
over 400 pounds, and Kdward Beau
pre, "the Montana cowboy," who tips
the scales at 307 pounds, and is eight
feet in height.
Miss .Murray's father, it is said, has
tried for some time to induce some
one to marry her, offering a home
and liberal expense money.
Beaupre is 21 years old and has
never been out of the state, lie wears
!Xo. 22 shoes and has never had a
glove on his hands.
Oi-iilni! A lout: In Venn,
The emperor of flermany has cele
brated the twenty-lifth anniversary
of his service in the guards, says the
•Chicago 'lteeord-Herald. Some people
insist, however, in believing that he
Is still young and flighty.
F~- -i
i 20 MILLION BOTTLE 3 1
| SOLD EVERY ITSiUR,
1 mark. S
;i zsr- |
J Happiness Is the absence of pain, and mil- }
112 Hens nave b" A n made h ;;y t ; - • 'i \ • j
S cur-vl by ST JACORS OIL of RHEUMATISM, ]
( NEURALGIA. TOOTHACHE-. HI-AD- J
J ACHE. LAMENESS. SCALDS. BURNS, J
t SPRAINS, BRUISES and all pains for which 1
j an external remedy can be applied. It never J
J fails to cure. Thousands v/ho have been de- J
2 clared incurable at baths ar.d In hospitals have ]
112 thrown away their crutches, bcir.e cured after j
¥ using ST JACOBS OIL. Directions in eleven J
k lancuaces accompany every bottle.
i CONQUERS|
! PAIN|
IN WET WEATHER 1
A WISE MAN
S~T~\ WEARS
> WATERPROOF
op P- CLOTHING
' ' ftLACR 03 YELLOW
'WIIL m? YCU DRY KOK ELSE WILL {
•TAKE NO .'.UB3TITUTE3 • CATALOGUES FREE- I
•SHOWiU'o PULL LINE OPGARMENTS AND HATS
I A.d.TQWER CO.. BOSTON. MA3S. |
lllenrs PJleerine B&Sv©
tl »*s I lirnnlf I leers, IIHIIP I Iffrk. Mrrofiilun* rirrri. Varlm*?
rrri. ln<«ol*nt I'crrt. Ilrm rlnl I'lcrr*. Whit* HwHllnp, MllW
•m, F*»«rSorr». *ri4 all aorek of lonp "landing. Iu»ll|«rlv D 0
Bj mail, Ql« »uU tOe. J. i\ ALLEN. St. Paul, Mi»a.
The nation has felt the blows struck in the United States senate
the other day, and thoughts on fists and statesmanship are unpleas
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ antly forcing their way to public
t EICTC 1/C + attention. Admitting that all con-
I ♦ gressmen (senators especially) are
♦ C TI3 TP C 1111 MCU | P ♦ statesmen (a very reckless admis
♦Wl ill 1 LwJViniiWnlr x s ' on to ~IC "finds of some), the
♦ ■ * question arises as to when the
£ By wiuiiis s. EDSON, ♦ statesman, by a STRIKING dis
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦•♦♦♦ ♦♦♦ play of his powers, entitles him
self to classification among the KNIGHTS OF THE FIST. States
men with the graceful wave of the hand emphasize their argument,
and with the clinching of the points made, the fist reenforces the forc
ibleness thereoi as it thunders 011 the desk before it. But let that
same fist and sail". 1 energy be directed toward the physical identity of
the opponent, with a little of Billingsgate thrown in as garnishment,
and you have a scene which makes L'ncle Sam and fair Columbia
blush with shame and the American eagle scream with indignation.
My bull pup is a fine specimen of dogdom, for although he has
but one eye, his square-set jaw and well-knit muscles, together with
his dignified and pugnacious bearing, a heritage of pedigree, entitle
him to high classification. My neighbor's cat is also an animal of
which she is deservedly proud. Her silken hair and bushy tail care
fully groomed make her a sure winner at any bench show. But it
chanced one day that my neighbor's cat with the bushy tail and my
bull pup with the square-set jaw got into the same room in the house,
and after an exchange of a few preliminary pleasantries in the shape
of vowlings and growlings they came together in the violence of ar
gument, and when they had been separated and put out of doors where
they belonged, with a high fence between, they were no longer the
sleek and dignified looking animals they had been before their un
fortunate meeting.
Now, while the incident was to he deplored, the friendly rela
tions existing between my neighbor and myself were not very se
verely strained, for we realized that it was the nature of the beasts
to fight, and 110 amount of grooming or associations of refinement
could alter the inbred tendency, but we were taught a lesson and saw
to it that thereafter the belligerents were kept out of doors and at a
safe distance apart.
But to apologize for the digression and return to the thread of
our narrative, as the novelist says, which in this case is a matter of
fists and statesmanship. However much we admire both in their
proper place and sphere, in conjunctivitv there is dire calamity. Dry
den says: "A knockdown argument; 'tis but a word and a blow." Ik
is certainlv effective for the time being in eliminating the opponent as
a contending factor, hut it is not convincing. It does not prove that
the otic is not a liar and the other not a thief, but it does demonstrate
that both arc not worthy the name of statesmen and have forfeited
the respect of the country at large, if not of their own constituency.
Such scenes have been enacted before in the halls of congress during
the strain of intense political excitement when the country faced a
national crisis, and in a measure was excusable, but this is the first
time such direct personalities and individual animosities have chosen
the senate as an arena in which to settle differences by means of brute
force and unreasoning passion. Curtain and oblivion.
TO MAKE A DOG COUNT.
The Owner of u Scott*h Collie Ex
pluiiiN lion ibo Tkiiitf May We
ACC'OIII plisli etl.
Noting the profound interest dis
played in the trieks of u Scotch Col
lie dog known as Jio/.y.ie 11., and the
j interesting account of the demon
■ strations of her powers so honestly
j set forth in the columns of tlie Trib
[ une, 1 make bold to give my analysis :
! of the phenomenal cropping out of
! canine intelligence in this certain
species, writes F. C. Keighter, of ( hi-
I cago, to the editor of the Tribune.
In August of last year I purchased
a Collie puppy, then three months
old, whose pedigree could not be
compared with any of the baser met
als, but was of the "pure gold"
stripe, whose mother was Fanny ( la
sou, and whose grandmother was
80/zie 1., and, thinking that perhaps
the same degree of intelligence
might be innate with this puppy as
of its ancestors, I set about at once |
to develop, if possible, whatever pow
ers she possessed. The first thing 1
did was to secure lier strict atten
tion by a kindly caress or pat upon
the head and at the same time give
the firm, sharp command of "tell
me" and alyo "how many," coupling
| with each of these I woul.l imitate
the bark of a dog. holding her at
tention all Ihis while, until at the
end of perhaps two weeks of patient
endeavor I succeeded in getting her
to understand what I wanted.
Finally, whenever I gave the com
mand "tell me" or "how many," she
would bark several times after either
!of them, never in any instance re
warding her with a morsel of food,
: but made her understand that when
I 1 made use of one of these phrases
in Ihe tone of command I demanded
t obedience, and it was her part to
obey —namely, to "speak" several
i times.
You will readily appreciate that I
; did not make use of the command
j "speak," as I could not with this
j word ask her a question in arith
metic, in order to show off her ac
complishments before any one. 1
; then began by holding her attention
| fixedly with my eyes, having a stern
J facial expression, asking her a sim
'■ pie question, as "How many are two
; and two?" .lust, as soon as she
j would hear the words "how many"
' she would start to bark, and, imme
; diately upon her barking four times,
I t.lie correct answer, I would relax
i the muscles of my face or brow, and
| she would immediately stop. And
likewise in asking any question in
sTritlimetic I would compel her to
| look at me, couple one of the key
! phrases with my question, and at the
I same time frown, no matter how
j slightly, and as soon as the correct
number had been barked, the relaxa
tion of my facial muscles would
cause her to cease, and this would
not. he noticed by any one looking
on, no matter how shrewd or how
keenly they may have watched, and
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 20. 1902.
this could lie repeated time and
again without detection, astounding
one and all alike.
.Now you can readily see that a
slight motion of the foot, a slight
cough, a light tap of the finger, a
i snee/c (forced), a wink of the eye,
opening aud closing the hand, and
many other unnoticeable signs could
lie substituted and used to cause the
| question and the manner of asking it
I could lie varied innumerably, making
it appear that the animal'actually
does "read the mind" in many in
stances. 15111 the key to it all is in
the key words, "tell me" and "how
many," or any other signal which
starts the dog to barking, or a look
will sometimes cause the animal to
begin, and then use the "air brake"
signal.
Of course, I do not wish to be mis
understood. I do not deny that this
particular "trick" exemplifies a high
order of canine intelligence, brought
about by a long line of ancestors
whose constant companion was man
for century upon century: but 1 do
deny that there is 1 lie slightest trs».-e
of "mind reading," "mental tele
pathy.or "thought transferrcnce."
nor can it lie vaunted forth as a
"psychological phenomenon." It is
a "trick," plain, pure and simple.
"I also taught my dog many other
"tricks" too numerous to mention
here. My main object is to state
that I do not believe there is a "mind
reading," "calculating" dog. It is a
ease of obeying the signals of its
master.
IleiKlit <<> Which Bird*
The aeronaut llergesall of Strass
burg saw, in one of his ascensions, an
eagle at a height of ::,()()() meters and
in another, two storks and a buzzard
at 900 meters. Larks have been seen
at 1,000 meters, and crows at 1,400.
Hut these are exceptional heights.
ISirds are rarely seen above 1,000
meters and very few above 400. Ilirds
have been released from balloons at
heights varying from 900 to 3,000
meters. In a clear atmosphere they
flew directly downward, remaining
near the balloon, however, if the sky
were cloudy. Pigeons were released
from a balloon 30 miles away from
home in cloudy weather. The first
pigeon returned home in three hours,
the second in four and the last took
nearly a day. In clear weather they
reached home from that distance in
about 45 minutes.—Science.
Merely Keeping Mi* I'rciaitae,
Weary Walker No, ma'am; I ain't
dirty from choice. I'm bound by hon
or. I wrote a testimonial fer a soap
maker onet an" promised "to use no
udder."
Mrs. Housetop—"Well, why do you
not use 1 hat?
"liecause. ma'am, dat firm failed jist
after ile civil war."—Catholic Standard
and Times.
The New Ilrooiu,
A new broom may sweep clean, but
the trouble is that after the Aral
round it loses its newness.— Chieag 3
Daily News.
SOLDIERS LIKE HIM.
Gen. Lloyd Wheaton Is Simply Idol
ized bv His Men.
All Sort* of I'lcnxnnt Little Slorlfi
Are T'olil About Ills ( ournne ami
Conniricrnt ion of l*ri\uteft'
Comfort.
Gen. Lloyd Wheaton, whose frank
ness in expressing his opinions has
stirred up a number of senatorial crit
ics, will not ask for defenders. Prac
tically without exception the men who
| have served under him, whom they
; fondly call "Dad" Wheaton, would
| fight for him to the last ditch against
j any odds. Even among the general o'-
| fleers of the United States army, in
cluding so many men of dauntless cour
| age and splendid character, there are
j few who rank with Wheaton in person
'■ al popularity among the enlisted men.
In appearance he is the ideal soldier,
j tall and straight as a pine tree. His
| thick hair is jet black and the lower
| part of his face is covered with a black
I beard, set off by a pair of long and
| fiercely-pointed black mustaches. On
■ horseback especially he looks the part
i of a pirate king, and his voice is a deep
! bass of tremendous power that can
| be heard at great distances.
II is a favorite joke •with the soldiers
in the islands that "Old Dad" 110
staff because lie can make himself
J heard half a mile without straining
] himself. Most endearing of all, from
' the standpoint of the common soldier,
Gen. Wheaton never spares himself,
and many a little outpost, hard pressed
by an overpowering force of the "nig
gers," has been inspired by the roar
ing command of "Old Dad"—"Go in,
! boys! (io in!"—while he himself, rid-
I ing like a centaur, led the charge far
j in advance of the advancing column.
Even his presence is inspiring. In
many a hot skirmish, when the men
| have become tired and scattered, his
i tremendous voice, bellowing in the dis
tance, has had the effect of a trumpet
call or the arrival of a regiment of re
| enforcements.
"Brace up, boys," the call will go
across the scattered lines, "here comes
f'
X j
GEN. LI.OVD WHEATON.
(One of the Most Popular Commanders In
the Army.)
'Old Dad,'" and then rushes into the
fight the big bay horse, topped by the
big, fierce man, with his black beard,
and all is over but the shouting.
Enlisted men returned from service
in the islands tell all sorts of little
stories of Gen. Wheaton. For instance,
there was the night after the landing
at San Fabian. Six gunboats, says the
, Chicago Tribune, had gone down the
| coast to cover the landing of a lot of
men under (Jen. Wheaton, who were
i loaded on a couple of army transports.
While the gunboats shelled the town
Wheaton got his men into launches
and other small boats and waited for
the first chance to get ashore. Once or
twice his eagerness led him to push
ahead within range of the gunboats'
fire, and each (ime he had to face about
and retire, much to the amusement of
the men, bobbing about on the swell in
! their little boats. Finally the party
landed, under a hot tire from the insur
gents, and rushed (lie town. After
pickets had been thrown out and all
: arrangements made for guarding
! against a night, attack. Gen. Wheaton
i started to turn in, with the idea of
catching a few hours' sleep. He and
his orderly went into a native house
on the square and opened the door
leading into the corner room. As they
did so a couple of privates, who had
I already lain down to sleep on the floor,
| rose speedily, came to attention, sa
! luted and started to leave the room.
"Here you!" roared "Old Dad," in his
1 terrifying voice, "you boys need sleep
just as much as I do. Lie down again
and goto sleep."
So the commanding general and a
i couple of privates went to sleep side
by side on the floor, liut early in the
morning, before any one else was
awake. Gen. Wheaton got up and went
! out all alone 011 a reconnoitering tour.
He closed the door, and it locked be
hind him with a spring lock. Several
times during the night stragglers had
j come pounding on the door, and had
been ordered away by the somewhat
J sulphuric orderly. It happened that
; the orderly had .just got into a sound
sleep when the general returned and
knocked for admission. The orderly,
who had no idea that Gen. Wheaton had
gone out, woke up hot and angry.
I With all the resources of his pie
; tures<|iie vocabulary he cursed the
man who had disturbed him and or
dered him to goe.way under awful pen
alties. "Now, you clear out of here
and let us sleep, or I'll come out and
| kick your head off!" he roared.
"All right, sfegeant," sounded the
dee)) voice of "Old Dad," "all right, I'll
clear out. Hut won't you please let
| me have my field glasses first?"
CONGRESSMAN HOWARD.
Of National Reputation are the Men Whs
Recommend Pe-ru-na to Fellow Sufferers.
A Remarkable Case Reported From the State
of New York.
CONGRESSMAN' HOWARD. OF ALABAMA.
Hour.e of Representatives. )
Washington, Feb. 4, 1H99. (
The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus,
Ohio:
Gentlemen "I have taken Peruna
now for two weeks, and find I am very
much relieved. / feel that my curs
will he permanent. / have also taken
It for la grippe, nnd I take pleasure in
recommending Peruna as an excellent
remedy to all fellow sufferers. "
M. W. HOWARD.
Congressman Howard's home ad
dress is Port Payne, Ala.
MOST people think that catarrh is n
disease confined to the he;ul and
nose. Nothing is farther from
the truth. It may be that the nose and
throat are the oftenest affected by cn
tarrh, but if this is so it is so only be
cause these parts are more exposed to
the vicissitudes of the climate than the
other parts of the body.
Every organ, every duct, every cavity
of the human body is liable to catarrh.
A multitude of ailments depend on ca
tarrh. This is true winter and summer.
Catarrh causes many cases of chronic
disease, where the victim lias not the
slightest suspicion that catarrh has any
thing to do with it.
■ The following letter which gives the
experience of Mr. A. C. Lockhart is a
case in point:
Mr. A. C. Lockhart, corner Cottage
St. nnd Thurston Road, Rochester,
N. Y., in a letter written to I)r. Hart
man says the following of Peruna :
"About fifteen years ago I commenced to be
mlllng. and consulted a physician. He pro
nijinued my trouble a species of dyspepsia, and
Conatunt.
Alice—Oh, no! Cfiolly isn't engaged! lie
is true to his first love.
May—Who is that?
"Ciiolly! Puck.
Nothing ii so infectious as example.— |
Charles Kingslcy.
An infallible characteristic of meanness
is cruelty.—Johnson.
Blobbs "I shall have to wear glasses.''
Slobbs "Areyoutroubled wtih your eyes?''
Bio I >bs "Wnat did you think I was j,oing
t" wear liicin lor bunions?"- Philadelphia
Record.
Mistress-—"Do you know, Carter, that I
can actually write my name in the dust on
the table!" Carter "Faith, mum, that's
more than I can do. Sure, thero's nothing
like education, after all!" Punch.
Two \ :ews.- "Mister," began the beggar,
"it's pretty hard to lose all your relations
ond —" "Hard!" snorted the crusty indi
vidual. '"Why. man alive, if they're poor
relations it's impossible!" Philadelphia
Press.
Mi-s Koy (in street ear) —"It's- really very
kind of you, Mr. C'rabbe, to give me your
seat." Mr. (.'rabbc "Not at all. We men
are getting tired of being accused of never
giving up our seats except to pretty girls."
—Philadelphia Press.
Too Late. —"When I was your age I didn't
have the advantage* you have." said the
father, sanely. "Well, father," replied the
son, "it's too late to kick about it now. You
should have thought about those things at
>.he time."—Ohio State Journal.
"Wlmt!" exclaimed the woman who had
just started a boarding house, "twcntv-live
for those string beans? ' "Them ain't string
beans," said the huckster; "them's butter
beans, an' —" "H'm —butter beans. Maybe 1
you've got some oleomargarine beans that'd
come cheaper." Philadelphia Record.
Knives Before Forks. —Mr. S; it: gum—
"By the way, Sharpe says he saw you in the
I'ongtong cafe yesterday." Mr. Nuritch
(add —"Yes; but 1 cut him. Did he tell
you that?" Mr. Stinguni 'No; Imt he did
remark that he expected every minute to
see you cut. yourself."—Philadelphia Press.
1,213 BUS. ONIONS PER AO3E.
Salzer's New Method of onion culture makes
It possible to grow 1,200 am) more bus. per acre.
fcSj|||rji ; seizing same at Sue!
' r 18c. nod this
John A. Salzer Seed
fiyyißoW Co., I.aCrosse, Wis.,
will mall vou their mammoth cataloß. together
With 150 kinds of flower and vegetable seeds.
Market-gardeners' iist, So postage. K
advised me, after he had treated me xbnzit
six months, to get n leave of absence from mf
\ business and go into tlw country. / did so mid
got temporary relief. I went hack to work
again, but was taken with very distressing paint
\ la my stomach.
' "I seldom had n passage of the bowels natu
rally, I consulted another physician with ao
belter results. The disease kept growing cn me
until / had exhausted the ability of sixteen of
Rochester's best physicians. The last physician
advised me to give
up my work and go • 1 • J
south, after he had t ~i*v , n *
treated me for one 7 |
''/ was given a 112 "*i_ V r-i;" 112
thorough examlna- J gfiggaT l&r nii I
tinli with the X-ray. T ijSSHBiMI ?
They would not tfet® m a gi' "112 *
even da'ermine (J ffr* ' .V-..»
what my trouble t , V ft >
was. Some of your 112 RSgtrg 4
testimonials lit the 112 |B|§y§l »JjgajHa 1
Rochester papers • ' >
seemed to ntef i
worthy of cons id- 112 fc'S* Ik > / i : 'l;'
eratlon, and I made J wtmH *
up my mnid to try * [•;*', I
a bottle of f'eruna. ® V*' '' iff' Ol' *1
Before the bottle j Mr vv j.p eter Son, oil
w ; as '"'" £ ooe ' I Morris, 111., suvs: i
t'ced a change for • .., was n ,. ;irl y a-aOI
the better. !am . W j l i l catarrhal dvspep-T
no*'on the fifth bot- R j a an( j am now a well I
tie, and have not an , msin better, in fact, I
ache or pam any- r than I Iniyo been fori
where. My bowels , lw , n (y years or more. I
move regularly ev- . »Since 1 got cured by 1
ery day, and I have , y o „ r p ( . r una 1 have bc«-n J
taken on eighteen . consll i tC Q hy u orcut J
pounds of flesh. I raan y people. "—"W. P. I
have recommended ? T,
Peruna to a great * 1 clt ' _ ?
many and they rec- • • • 1 * • ' * ■ * <
ommend It very
highly. I have told several people thai It they
would take a bottle of Peruna, and could then
candidly sav that II had not benefited them, t
would pay tor the ™d,clne." c
Rend for a free catarrh book. Address
i The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, (X
IBig* Four
I ROUTE
TO THB
WORLD FAMED VIRGINIA
Hot Springs
Alagnificent Train Service,
Dining Cars, Pullman Sieepers,
Observation Cars.
THE NEW
Homestead Hotel
Entirely rebuilt of lirlck, Stone
and Iron, Fire-proof, will be
opened on March ioth, 1902.
Reduced Rate Tickets now on sale.
For full information
call 011 agents of the
BIQ FOUR ROUTE.
or address the undersigned
WARRFN J. LYNCH, W. P. OtPPt,
Gcn'l PUSH. & Ticket A fit. AHHI. Q. I*. & T.l
CINCINNATI, O.
WpAZARO
Homo morn rodent re<rortT*
wit h H I'ow
at tlio Jeffor
IBBHBBBBB of tholS) targets shot at.* Mr.
Chan. 11. Rpi.'prat the January Shoot held at Breiv
hum, Texas, won the \V. J. (irahor trophy ; killing
'i'i out of 32 hirda t<hot at. Such work proves the tin
; nerioritv claimed for llazai «ISmok«!» ss powder—
It in second to none—Get it from your deaJcr.
GUN POWDER
P3R SALE: Two improved farms; 8. r » and USaoMB
I miles from city; also 100 city properties. It*-
i quire of WILLIAM Met 'ON A MY, New Cast le. Penn.«\ ItAr.i^;
! WHEN WKITIXO TO ADVUK i
pleaio Mate thut yon taw the AtlvttrU«o>'
|fll:cat In this pupcr.
A. N. K.-C 1908
In time. Sold hy drncßintfl. SI
ASNBEOKIAABGII^:
7