Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, October 09, 1902, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION.
r»er year j®
112 paid in advance 1 ■ ,u
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rate ot
©ne dollar per square forone insertion and liftj
cents per square for each subsequent insertion.
Rates bv the year, or for six or three months,
are low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less, *2: each subsequent inser
tion iiO cents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for one lnser
■ertion; 5 cents per line for each subsequent
consecutive insertion.
Obituary notices over five llnea, 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, mar*
rinces and deaths will be Inserted free.
Business cards, five lines or less. S5 per year:
over live lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local inserted for less than 75 cents pei
Issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the Puesh lscomplet*
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
work. Paiiticui.au attlni ion paid to Law
Printing.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher. A _ ..
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
for in advance.
■ I i . .. - —■
Tt has come to be a maxim that
heroes are few*. And the question
arises, are all the
Common Conrnit'e , „ ~
rest cowards.' It
n I'lli lit: of Value. seems m>V( , r
cult to create a panic. Panic is not
alone a social evil, but individual as
well, though we generally speak of
sudden fright as a panic only when it
seizes a crowd. The malady is deep
seated and the evils that may grow out
of it are well illustrated by a tale told
in a late number of the Youth's Com
panion: She was everybody's Aunt
Mercy. She had a cooky for every
child, a lump of sugar for every horse,
a sympathetic ear for every troubled
woman, and sound counsel for every
struggling soul. Since she had neither
husband nor children of her own, her
heart expanded to take in every crea
ture within its ken. She laughed at
her own troubles, and sighed over
those of others. She met trial, and en
couraged others to meet it, with a sort
of brave amusement. "Keep up good
courage; the worst is to come!" was
ane of her favorite mottoes. She had
been good and done good all the days
of her life. Last winter a tragic thing
happened to this woman. In the vil
lage next the one where she lived there
were several cases of smallpox. The
people were well-nigh panic-stricken.
Almost too late, they took the strict
est measures for quarantine and
vaccination. Meantime, all the towns
near by caught the fear, although not
the disease. Friends looked askance
at one another. A headache was the
sign, not for sympathy, but for aver
sion and desertion. Human nature for
a few brief davs showed at its wo.-vt
...i .. an ter w inter morning Aunt Mer
cy found herself ill. In a flash she
thought of the danger of contagion.
She lived alone, but the grocer's boy,
who called early, spread the report
that "Aunt Mercy had her head all
wrapped up, and didn't want anybody
to come to see her." The mischief was
lone. No one went near her door. The
aid doctor, her lifelong friend, who
would' not have failed her, happened to
be away for a week. It would be cruel
•ven to try to picture how the hours
and days and nights passed for the sick
woman. At the end of the week, it
ivas gootl to reflect that she had found
rest. When it was discovered that she
had died, not of smallpox, but of ty
phoid fever, the village dared to
mourn for her. Soon the brief terror
passed, and the shamefaced men and
women knew how cowardly had been
their desertion. Each secretly thought
some one else responsible for the fail
ure. Hut old Silas Thurston, the black
smith, summed up the tragedy and its
lesson when lie said: "She was the best
woman this town ever knew, and we
let her burn at the stake because we
were scared. But we know more than
we did, and the value of plain courage
has risen considerable since she died."
The stream of immigration flows
mainly toward the grain fields of the
west, die timber lands of the north
west, and the orchards ami gardens
of the Pacific slope. Yet the south
needs labor for lier textile, wood
working. metal, phosphate and other
industries, and tbc outlook in agri
culture is, as a financial journal put
it, that "the south probably has as
good opportunities for the right kind
of a man who wishes to engage in
farming on a small scale, either rais
ing special crops or the usual sta
ples, as any part of the country."
That i.i true. Rut when the observa
tion is analyzed it yields no special
comfort to any section. Kvery state
yearn-; for"the right kind of a man."
Opportunities await him anywhere.
tradition says that the queen of
Sheba asked Solomon to thread an
intricately pierced stone, and that he
did so by means of a hair tied to a liv
ing worm. A long sewer in an Ohio
factory recently became clogged, and
a son of Solomon came to the rescue.
Tying a long ball of twine to the shell
of a inud-turtle, he put the animal into
the entrance of the sewer and turned
on a stream of water. The turtle bur
rowed his way through the refuse, was
"watered on" at. each manhole, and
■emerged victoriously at the outlet. A
rope attached to the twine, a swaband
strong arms accomplished the rest
swiftly and economically.
LOST, STRAYED, OR STOLEN.
Ko Tmrr In Left of the Democratle
Itrnv Head nnil lllooily floiiea
An t I-1 ■■■ i»e rla II * iu.
Anti-imperialism! What lias become
of it ? Only a few months ago hundred®
of spellbinders were vociferating their
fears that the United States was about
to become an empire. The bogy of im
perialism had taken possession of
many minds. A self-appointed junta
of six eminent statesmen kindly of
fered to relieve the president and con
gress of the duties of government. We
were told that the Filipinos who had
not. been exterminated were about to
be enslaved. We were also told that
the administration was building up an
empire on the ruins of democracy. Ap
parently anti-imperialism was to be
the issue in the congressional and in
the next presidential elections.
Lc and behold, anti-imperialism has
vanished, says the Chicago Tribune.
"Abiit, excessit, evasit, exupit." The
anti-imperialists have scuttled and
quit. They have not abandoned the
Filipinos, but they have given up their
issue. Not a murmur is heard on the
subject. The anti-imperialists have left
some of the republican oratory in the
vocative. Secretary Root, for instance,
was cocked, and primed, and loaded to
the muzzle on the Philippine question.
He was prepared to scatter grape shot
in all directions. Some of the orators
in southern Illinois were ready t«i vin
dicate the soldier boys on the firing
line. Now there is no one to attack.
VERY LIKELY.
" /*y 112 Q F*.
Yes, the Democratic Nomination for President Wi 1 Probably Fall Between Dave
Hill and Bryan.
no enemy in sight. Anti-imperialism
is dead and buried.
Almost the same can be said of the
silver issue. It. too, has gone into a
hole. Bryan still maintains a feeble
pretense of standing by his financial
principles. He still says that the sup
ply of gold has increased enormously
and silver lias decreased. Hut no one
pays attention to what he says. His
voice is like "the voice of one crying
in the wilderness," but it is not the
voice of a John the Baptist. Many cry
in the wilderness, and are not heard.
Nor are they forerunners of greater
ones to come afar. Free silver is done
for.
All that now remains is the tariff is
sue. Many democrats have been king
ing for a square fight on this issue. If
they could only get away from im
perialism and free silver, they said,
they would have a chance. Rut it must
be remembered that President Mc-
Kinlcy, in 1896. was anxious to have
a fight upon the tariff issue an«l no
other. He sought in vain to bring that
issue to the front. Now it is an issue
by the consent of both parties. No
body from it, since if a test of
strength is invited it might as well be
made now as any other time. Presi
dent Roosevelt has spiked some of the
democrats' guns. lie has stolen the op
position's thunder on the trust ques
tion. He has compelled the democrats
to say they are in favor of regulating
♦he trusts by national authority,
though in congress they have voted
against interference by the general
government instate affairs, and they
will do so again whenever the oppor
tunity presents itself. Now, as to the
tariff, they must favor taking up the
question piecemeal at the short se
sion or of reforming it on free trade
lines at the long session. If the lat
ter. they \\ ill have the people t•» reckon
with. President Roosevelt favors ju
dicious revision at the proper time. No
sensible man will advocate anything
different.
So the voters only have the issue of
moderate or radical tariff reform to
decide when it is presented to them.
There is nothing more comical from
one point of view than the sudden
disappearance of issue.- upon which the
opposition insisted most strenuously n
few month s ago anil the bringing to the
front of another which, at that time,
no' one contemplated as likely to be
the only subject of dls-.-usslon in 1002.
in' When Senator llanna talks, how
ever lightly, of retiring from public
life, many friends of the republican
party are much concerned. When Hryan
says anything which is taken to mean
that he intends to quit leading the
bourbons of the country, the enemies
of the democracy are worried. The
difference is a- wide a- that between
success mid failure. —Cleveland Leader.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9. 1902.
FREE TRADE WIDE OPEN.
The \< iv Text Hook of the Ilemoerney
Leaven No llooni for Doolit
on ttie Isaac.
In the preparation of the democratic
campaign text book at least, just is
sued by the democratic congressional
committee, Clevelandism has exercised
the prevailing influence. For the tirst
time there is made, for the democratic
party, a straightforward, unequivocal,
emphatic declaration in favor of free
trade, says the Albany Herald. There
is no talk about "tariff revision," "tar
iff reform" or "tariff for revenue
only;" reciprocity is simply declared
to be "a sham and a humbug," while of
free trade it is said that it "would
open our own markets to benefit our
own country. It is asserted that "the
greatest good to the greatest number
requires that there be no barriers in
trade in order that goods may be as
cheap as possible and the cost of liv
ing be reduced to a minimum."
That "goods as cheap sis possible"
would mean wages as low as possible,
ill it t the opening of our ma rket st o all
the products of foreign cheap labor
would mean destruction to our indus
tries, and that reduction of the cost of
living to a minimum would result in de
priving thousands of \merican work
ingmen of even the minimum required
to defray the cost, tire facts which the
democratic texl book ignores; but
which the American people have in
their minds.
The democratic congressional eom-
! liiittee is entitled to such credit a? is
1 due for frankness. While it proposes
■ I lie destruct ion of i ur prosperity which
has developed under the republican
policy of protection for home indus
tries, the pauperization of American
labor, the ruin of American capital, the
j enrichment of foreign nations at the
I expense of the United States, the ret
| regression () f this nation to the con
| dition of a debtor nation, it states its
proposition without circumlocution,
intended to befog the minds of the peo
ple as to the real purpose of the dem
ocratic party. Free trade, complete
abolition of the tariff, admission of all
foreign products to free competition
with American products—that is the
proposition which is squarely set be
fore the people of the United States.
American thought will instantly re
vert to the condition that was precip
itated by the election of Mr. Cleve
land in 1892, when nothing nearly so
j radical was proposed and when the tar
' iff law soon thereafter enacted by a
| democratic congress, the so-called Wil
j son law. was after all, though il made
| a reduction of the duty on many ini
j ports, as a whole a protective meas
ure.
The democratic declaration for free
trade, absolute free trade, will make
the question whether this country
will uphold the policy that has made it
prosperous or reject that policy and
| cast prosperity to the winds-, the par-
I amount issue in t he eongre.-s ion a I elec
' lions tlii- fall and in ilie presidential
I contest two years hence. The \mer-
I ican people made a terrible mistake
in 1892; they will not repeat it in 1902
or in 1901.
PRESS OPINIONS.
CTThe deinocratie party has received
another blow—Senator Teller has
joined it. I'hiladelphfn Ledger.
E*"-* I'residcnt Roosevelt has not vet
found the enemy's country. --Roches
ter (X. V.) Democrat and ( hronicle.
E" 't.'eorge Fred Wililams doubtless
wired Col. I'ryan something nbout be
ing baffled but not beaten.- Oinah.*
lice.
E,"lt will be readily conceded that a
Tom Johnson campaign is a moreHr
cuvtied- affair than ever a Ttryan hip
podrome. Washington Post.
in r T'ie democratic candidate for
governor of Wisconsin is named Rose.
The republicans will attend to the
plucking.- l'itt.-burg (ia/ette.
IT 'The Lan - ing prehistoric man i-t
not in it with those li\ing specimens
who still argue in favor of Hi to I.
Montgomery (Ala.) Advertiser.
u■' 11 begins to look us if David li.
Hill and Arthur I', florman might, by
joining hands, arrange for a monopoly
of democratic presidentiV.l nomination
prospects. Washington Star.
STARTLING REPORT.
An Immigration t'ommlaaloner Telia
of Alumca lliat Prevailed at Itllla
Inland-
New York, Oct. 1. —The annual re
port of the commissioner of immigra
tion at. this port, William Williams,
was filed Tuesday with the secretary
of the treasury and in the document
the commissioner criticises without
reserve conditions which surrounded
the landing of immigrants at Ellis
Island during the ten months previ
ous to the change of administration
there due to Mr. Williams' appoint
ment. He says:
"The chief inspector was allowed to
arbitrarily mark the word 'hold'
against the name of any immigrant
on the manifest, thus causing to lie
brought to hint certain picked people
to be disposed of as he thought best,
instead of allowing them to Vie in
spected in the regular way. 'Hie fact
that most of those so marked hid
fair amounts of money and that many
so marked were able-bodied people
with very large amounts of money,
arc points not without interest."
The commissioner says that the im
migrants were roughly handled and
addressed in rough language by gov
ernment and railroad officials; that
the detention "pens" were filthy, par
ticularly the dining room, where, the
report says, the immigrants were fed
without knives, forks or spoons; that
railroad and other passes used to be
demanded to a demoralizing extent;
that "ships after ships" brought in
cases of scab tliscases and eye disease,
both dangerous contagious diseases
unknown in this country until import
ed in recent years from Europe.
The commissioner says the con
stantly deteriorating quality of the
recent immigration calls for the exe
cution of the law in the most
stringent manner, and he states that
last, year over 2,000 aliens who had
arrived within the year became desti
tute in Xew York.
A MILLION DOLLARS.
Hurry Slriitton Nalitea Ilia Price lor
Dropping I lie Context ol Ilia Father's
Will,
Colorado Springs, Col., Oct. 1, —I.
Harry Stratton announced yesterday
that he had been approached by one
of the executors appointed by his
father in the will, with a proposition
to compromise the contest case, and
answered that he would withdraw his
suit upon a settlement of $1,000,000.
Attorneys for the executors, adminis
trators and the son were in confer
ence nearly all day and the announce
ment of young Stratton is believed to
be the conclusion that has been ar
rived at.
Proceedings against the executors
have been postponed. At the time ap- |
pointed for the executors to come he
fore Judge Orr, none of them had ap
peared, nor had they come an hour .
thereafter. Later 111 the day the at
torneys for the administrators tiled a j
reply to the sensational answer of
the executors, charging conspiracy on j
the part of the administrators. I
'.Messrs. niiu-Kmrr, llamlin and nrlmes I
vigorously deny the charges of "loot
ing (he estate."
Later the entire matter was taken
out of tlie county court and trans
ferred to the district, court, on a writ
issued by Judge Cunningham, of the
district court. This writ was secured
by the executors and was agreed to
by the administrators.
The effect of the order is that the
action of ihe county court is set
aside, that the case now stands just
as It did before the appointment of !
administrators by Judge Orr, and fur
ther that the appointment of the ad
ministrators is practically annulled.
It is a virtual victory for the execu
tors, who have been defending the
dead millionaire's will.
DURAND'S BROTHER.
■I« I* Selected to Head tile Demo*
eratle State Ticket In .filelilcmi.
Detroit, 'Mich., Oct. I.—-After an ani- !
mated discussion lasting nearly three !
hours yesterday, the democratic stjite 1
central committee selected L. T. l)u
--rand, of Saginaw, as the party's candi
date for governor. The new nomina
tion was made necessary by the with
drawal of Judge George 11. Durand, of
Flint, a brother of the last nominee.
Judge Durand was stricken with
paralysis five weeks ago and his con
dition has remained such that all
though! of his going through a cam
paign or tilling the office of governor
had to lie abandoned.
The fight yesterday lay between the
gold democrats, who favored L. T.
Durand. and the silver leaders, who
wanted to nominate State Senator J.
\\\ 'llelrne, of Adrian; Charles It.
friligh, of (irand Rapids, or some other
democrat who had come out as a sil
ver man in IS9G. Heline's friends I
stood by his declaration that the j
state convention should bo recon
vened to till Judge Durand's place on 1
the ticket and as he had declared that j
he would not accept a nomination at
the hands of the committee, his name ;
was not presented. On the second
formal ballot, the committee stood 11 j
for Durand and 10 for Sligh, the nomi- j
nation of Durand being immediately j
thereafter made unanimous.
Cowbor* Will Itaco.
La Crosse, Wis., Oct. 1. —James |
Bradley, of the Black Hills, Dakota, j
who i.s here, announces that, notwith
standing President Itoosevelt's prohi- !
bition of the cowboy race from the
Black Hills to Chicago, the event will
take place October 26. The amount of
money wagered is over .$.10,001).
Sc!eete«l the Nitew.
St. Louis, Oet. I.—Under a lowering
sky and swept by a chilling wind,
more than a thousand people, delega
tions from the different states, yes
terday witnessed the ceremonies in
connection with t he allotment of siles
for the federal and state buildings
at the Louisiana Purchase exposition
grounds. Sites for the government
t>llildings and the state buildings of
Missouri, Louisiana, Texas, Illinois,
Ohio, .New Jersey, Kentucky, Arkan
sas and Wisconsin were presented and
accepted. Each site was marked by it
red stalf bearing a flag facsimile of
the :>iate seal and a silk llajf.
FORTS CAPTURED.
America it Soldiers Are Success
ful in Mindanao.
Dntlle Coimlit In the Kwanipi-!(I»ro>
Opened Fire on Our Troop* Willi
u KruM fannou Twenty of
Them Were Killed and
Many Wounded.
■Manila, Oct. 2. —-The Maciu Moros in
Mindanao hove offered but slight re
sistance to the column under Capt.
Pershing, of the Fifteenth cavalry.
After a series of skirmishes on Mon
day and Tuesday of this week the
Moros retreated into six forts on the
shores of the lake.
The American column reached the
former camp at Maeiu Sunday night.
On Monday the Moros opened fire on
them with a brass cannon and rifles
from a series of new forts which had
been erected since ('apt. Pershing's
first visit to the place.
The battery under Capt. William S.
McXair scaled .1 ridge commanding
the position of the'Moros and shelled
them out. The engineers under Capt.
Jay J. Morrow had constructed a trail
over the swamp flanking the Moro
position. The men of Capt. Pershing's
column crossed the swamp by the
trail and captured and destroyed
three of the Moro forts. The Moros
stood but a short while, and ran as
soon as 1 lie artillery opened on them.
Capt. Pershing lias been ordered to
destroy the forts unless the Moros
make peace. Twenty Moros were
killed and many were wounded.
'l'here were 110 casualties among the
Americans.
Washington, Oct. 2.—The war de
partment officials are watching with
great interest the operations of Capt.
I Pershing against the Maciu Moros,
who are located near the. southeast
end of Lake I.anao, on the island of
Mindanao. The datto at Maciu has
proved to be one of the most power
fill and stubborn in his resistance to
the United States, lie lias perhaps
3,000 or 4,000 followers. It was the
Maciu Moros who last spring killed a
i number of American soldiers and cap
! tured stock belonging to them. All
unsuccessful effort was made to get,
, them to surrender the murderers and
ffive up the stock that had been taken,
! but their datto was obdurate and the
| war department determined on the
! compaign which Capt. Pershing ap
' parently has gone far towards bring
; ing to a successful conclusion.
G. A. R. ENCAMPMENT.
Oflhlal Program of tl»e W'nnhinatoii
Conclave In Announced.
Washington, Oct. 2. —The official
program of the thirty-sixth encamp
ment. of the Grand Army of the Re
public, which will be held in this city
next week, was issued yesterday. In
addition to the dedication of Camp
Roosevelt and the various army corps
reunions, which have been announced
| already, there will be many events of
! interest. The program begins with
religious exercises at Camp Roose
velt on Sunday and continues until
Saturday morning.
'Monday morning there will be an
automobile parade beginning at 9
o'clock, and .l regatta on tlie Pa
tomae river beginning at 10:30 and
continuing during the entire day. The
afternoon will witness the dedication
of Camp Roosevelt, with addresses of
welcome by Secretary Hay and Com
missioner MacFarland, and a re
sponse by Commander-in-Chief Tor
rance. At night there will be a gen
eral camp fire at Convention hall.
The principal event of Tuesday will
be a naval parade. A number of army
corps reunions will take place on this
date. In the afternoon Pension Com
missioner Ware will give a reception.
At night the Grand Army will be of
ficially welcomed at Convention hall.
On Wednesday will occur the gen
eral Grand Army parade, to which
the entire day will be given up. At
night there will be a number of re
unions, and an official reception by
the Woman's Relief Corps.
The meeting of the national en
campment will take place Thursday
and Friday. On Thursday the Wo
man's Relief Corps will hold a con
vention, as will the Ladies of the G.
A. It., the Daughters of Veteran's ami
the Women's Veterans' Relief union.
RIVAL INVENTORS.
Tliey Tent Their Alr*lilji» In the At
mosphere Above I.oni; hland.
New Vork, Oct. I.—Two airships
made ascents yesterday on Long Is
land which surpassed the achieve
ments of any other of their kind on
this continent. The airships were
the creations of rival inventors, Leo
Stevens and Edward C. Hoice, and
their performances were very much
in the nature of a competitive run,
both being in the air at the same
time and both faring about equally
well. The wind was light. It is
claimed that I lie Iloice airship ascend
ed to a height of about 1,000 feet and
; sailed a course about two miles in
j extent, the navigator finally alighting
1 by means of a ladder resting against
j a telegraph pole near the point of
I starting.
For the Stevens airship it is claimed
that the ascent was to a height of
; 4,000 feet. After making a flight of
1 about two miles the balloon in de
scending came in contact, with tele
graph wires and became disabled, but
the navigator succeeded in alighting
in safety and the airship was rescued
j without serious injury.
llcCitlloiiiili I* ICieetod <» over 11 or.
Montpelicr, Vt., Oct. 2.—The legis
lature yesterday elected as governor.
Gen. .101111 (J. MeCullough, republican,
of Itennington. At the polls (leu. Me-
Cullough failed to receive a majority
of voles, although receiving the larg
est number of votes east. Vesterday,
however, he received his majority,
having the support of 104 members of
the legislature. I'ereival W. Clement,
the high license local option candi
date, received ,1!\ votes, and Felix W.
Meliet t rick, the democratic candidate,
4."). /. S. Stanton, republican, of Rox-
I bury, was elected lieutenant govei*
1 n<>r.
MAY LOSE OFFICERS.
War Department Imniie* Nr» Ilecnla*
tloii (invrrul nt: Teaching of .Mill
lary Science by Ofllcera <>l tlie Uov
erniiien t.
The general order governing the
instruction under army officers at
schools and colleges throughout the
country will cause a good deal of
consternation at the institutions to
which these new regulations, pub
lished from the war department,
apply. The order is a result of re
ports made by the inspectors general
of the ariny, who have been visiting
the different schools, colleges and
universities where the government
maintains an army officer at public
expense as a professor of military
science and tactics, and to which the
war department sends each year a
quantity of quartermasters' supplies
and ordnance equipment for the une
of the students in the military de
partment.
It has been reported to the Wash
ington authorities that, at hardly any
of these institutions is the military
department regarded as of any im
portance. The army officers detailed
as instructors usually have to find
time for their lalxirs outside of the
college day, and there are numerous
annoyances ond inconveniences
placed in the path of the officer who
is sent to do this important work.
Some colleges receive under an old
law an annual sum of $24,000, with
the idea that they shall maintain
among other features a military de
partment. Few colleges pay any at
tention to this branch of the work,
and at some of them the drilling and
lectures on the art of war are con
ducted so as to discourage students
taking any active part in that work.
The war department has decided
that it shall establish certain require
ments and compel educational insti
tutions to observe certain rules, and
failure to live up to these regula
tions will result in the army officer
being withdrawn from the college as
an instructor. The order will arouse
a good deal of opposition and some
remonstrances from a few of the
colleges which have not taken kindly
to the detail of army professors, and
who only have accepted the presence
of army officers in the capacity of
professors in military science be
cause the service of such an instruct
or costs the college nothing and waa
an ostensible compliance witA the
law.
Jeiva of New York OUy.
The Jewish World publishes an es
timate of the number of Jews ia
Greater New York based on the num
ber of Jewish burials as recorded by
the board of health. These amounted
in 1901 to 7,9'J7, and as the death rata
in the most congested Jewish dis
tricts is little over 15 per thousand
this implies a population of 533,133 in
the middle of 1001. Since that time
no less than 39,225 have arrived at
New York and staid there, while by
natural increase of births over deaths
another 21,400 would be added up to
August 1 of this year, making a
grand total of 584,788.
A boon to travelers. Dr. Fowler's Extract
of Wild Strawberry. Cures dysentery,
diarrhea, seasickness, nausea. Pleasant
to take. Acts promptly.
To know mankind it easy; but to coi»
prehendany one man or woman .» impos
sible.—Town Topics.
Only one remedy in the world that will
at once stop itchiness of the skin in any part
of the body. Doan's Ointment. At any drug
store, 50 cents.
A small unkinilness is a great offense.—
Hannah More.
r>o O<HWO<KKH3<I <H^O<HWOO<»O<HC»
ST. JACOBS!
OIL |
| POSITIVELY CURES |
Rheumatism
Neuralgia
Backache
Headache
| Feetache
All Bodily Aches o
AND
1 CONQUERS
1 PAIN. 1
o o
i*OOO<H}OOO<HWOO<H}ooooooooos
DONT A
GET WET!'®?
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THE
SLICKErP
MADE FAMOUS BY A DEPUTATION
OVER MOPE THAN<fe
jd HALF A CENTURY.
TOWER'S garments and jgjj
VSjj\ Yv hats arc made of the best / b.—J
\ \ materials in black or yellow 4
\ 1 ' for e>l i kinds of wet work. ' ' '
SATISfACIIOH IS GUAWkNTttD If YOU 3TICK TO
THE SIGN OP THc PISH. 67
A. J. TOV/E3 CO.. BOSTON. MASS.
f%4 YEARS AGO 1
wo our present bu»l- H
IVSI N HOBS <<f L'.'lK rul in* r- ■
fry ■
fillj from 15 t»» 40 p«>r cent. W
Your neighbor* tra«l«> with u« why not ■
your Our 1900- page i-ntttlogu*' t<*ll* tlio story. R
We will vouu it upou rocoipt of tt w-u. ky
1 CHICAGO
The house that tells the truth.