2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per y«ar 00 If paid In advance t "0 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate ot ene dollar per square forone insertion und tlftj cents 1 er square for each subsequent insertion. Rates by tlie. year, or for si* or three months, •re love and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legitl and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. 12: each subsequent Inser tion i 0 cents per square. Local notices 10 cents per line for one iriser gertion: 5 cents per line lor each subsequent consecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements ot births, mar riaees 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 pet Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department or the I'KKSS is complete and affords facilities for doing the best class ot Work PAKHcTT.AU ATTENTION T'AIDTO LAW PRINTING. No paper will bo discontinued until arrear- Kcs are paid, except at the option of the pub her. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. In a paper read recently before the British association for the advance ment of science Lord Kelvin called for a volunteer to submit to a novel ex periment to benefit the scientific in vestigation of digestion. It was pro posed that the subject should remain for several hours in a bath at the ele vated temperature of 106 degrees Fahrenheit. So far thero has been no rush of candidates for the half-boiling process. The two most exalted members of the British army the king and the prince of Wales —are hard smokers of cigars and cigarettes respectively. Ix>rd Roberts consistently sets that ex ample in temperance in every form which has had such a splendid result in tie army, and there are a number of other distinguished officers who fol low in his footsteps. Sir Redvers Dul ler, Sir W. F. Gatacre and Sir William Cutler, for example, are non-smokers. Mexico has a clever bird called the mala narpes, which has discovered a new use for the telegraph pole. At the foot of the post this bird makes a large hole, in which it rears its family; somewhat higher up the post it makes an observatory, from which bored holes permit it to observe the horizon in every direction; still high er this sagacious bird makes its store house, and thus the pole serves as ita home, fortress and warehouse. At Beaverton, in northern Ontario, another peat machine is in operation, consisting of a press, dryer and spread er—a most ingenious machine —• for it cuts, pulverizes and spreads the material at the same time. This reduces the moisture 50 per cent., and the balance is taken out by the drying process. The plant has a capacity of 20 tons a day, and the demand for the fuel is such that it brings $3.25 a ton at tie plant anil is retailed at Toronto at $4.25. Up to the time of the Prussian-Aus trian War, the old fortress of Bayeni a of the German Confederation was be yond doubt the most cosmopolitan city in the world. At that time the official language was German, the law French, the government Hesse-Darmstadt, the church Roman Catholic, the adminis tration Austrian, the military comman der Prussian, the garrison mostly Ital ian. the Postoffice Tliurn and Taxis:, the gasworks Baden and the telegraph Bavarian. The queen of Italy is caring for 50 children, all boys, whom sue is educat ing. and will have them taught a trade. An enterprise of a somewhat similar character is being backed by the dow ager empress of China, who intends to establish a girl's school in the palaco at Peking. Ten daughters of princes will be the students. A female teaen er will instruct them in English, tnat they may act as interpreters when the empress entertains the wives of for eign ministers. Queen Alexandra is an expert ama teur photographer. In a small studio near the Sandringham road, at Hun stanton. there is to be found on most days of the week the old gentleman who taught the queen this accomplish ment. which includes he developing and printing of her "snapshots." The queen's tutor is Mr. Rolph, who was at one time usher t»f the servants' hall at Sandringham, and is now a royal pensioner, as well as a photographer. He is more than seventy years old. Prof. Herman V. Hilprecht, noted scholar and excavator of Babylon and Nippur, has returned to Philadelphia. In a mound at Nippur, which is the biblican Calneh of Genesis, Hilprecht systematically excavated 20.000 in scribed tablets, forming a small part of a library destroyed 4,000 years ago, about the time Abraham left his homo in Chaldea. Only one-twentieth of the mound has been opened, so it will be seen that the ancients were great library builders more than twenty centuries before the Chris tian cru. The lessening of the time consumed in the making of trans-Atlantic voy ages of late years has only been ac complished by a considerable Increase In the amount of the fuel bills. Much has been said regarding the speed of the German Atlantic greyhounds. Not enough, perhaps, has been said regard iliK the cost ot this speed The lati**t creation of tin- North German Lloyd, ♦he Kaiser Wllhelm 11.. Is ilwlnneil to do 24 knots an hour, at an expenditure „112 40 11011 indicated horn powei But the Kaiser Wllhelm will burn 760 tons of coal pel day. THI DIVIDED DEMOCRACY. lliuiitM'M for National !>«<•<•(•»* of 11*«• llpinocriilic I'nrty Sevef \\ erf l'oorer. Accord in,af to ex-Senator Allen, of Ne braska. "the outlook for the national democratic party was 1 never more hopeless than it is at the present ti me." That astute politician is frightened and angered over the great number of democratic states which are rejecting or evading the Kansas City platform and candidate. After looking over the field with some care he believes that the general rejection of the latest na tional deliverance of the democratic party by democratic conventions in the past two or three months "precludes the possibility of defeating the repub lican party in 1904." The author of this judgment, is pretty well remembered by a large cle ment "112 the voters;, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, lie was among the m'ost strident of the whoopers for Bryan in 1890 and 1000, and he is- a T'ryanite still, lie is a populist, or was in those campaigns, though we believe lie lias called himself a democrat re cently. At any rate, lie has* a right to denounce the faithlcs- - democrats who. in many of the states, are abnnd<- oning their gospel of the two recent canvasses and repudiating t heir leader of those days-. \lle-n shrewdly sees that this split in the democracy means the defeat of that party in 1904. It is clear from his expressions that he will not support a man in that year who rejects the democratic creed of 1900 and IS9G. Of the democratic state conventions which have been held this year a little more than, half have either rejected Bryan and the Kansas City platform utterly or have ignored or evaded them. The division is so near the mid dle. however, that it is particularly ominous. The Bryanites retain very nearly half of the states, notw it ing the frantic efforts of the reorganiz es in the past 12 months to efface the democratic leader of 1890 and 1900. Probably Bryan will not lie the candi date of 1904. The chances, in fact, are that he will not try to pet the nomina tion. Hut he will be a powerful factor in his party in the convention of that year and in the campaign. The pres ent prospect is that no nvan who sup ported Bryan with any sort of enthusi asm in either IR!MS or 1900 can pet the nomination in 1904. On the ot her h.and. if anybody should be nominated in 1904 who opposed Bryan, in either year, or who, like Hill and Oiirman. accepted Tiim in the second of those years and secretly rejoiced when he was defeat ed., Bryan and a good many powerful members of his branch of the democ racy will take the stump against the ticket. From whatever point the situ ation for 1904 is view ed the out look for the democracy is dark. PROSPERITY IS GROWING. Secretary Slna»v'» Statement* lle- KunliiiK tile I*'l na nvlii I Statu* oft lltteil State*. At tiie laying of the corner stome of the new custom house in New Vork, Tuesday. October 7. Secretary of the Treasury Shaw was present and in an address to the people said: "Our fori isn commerce, like the produc tive and consumptive capacity of our peo ple, has increased more rapidly than our population. Since ISO) our population has multiplied -"2. while our foreign commerce has multiplied' by "> 1-3. Thus our prosper ity redound* to the advantage of those across the s* as, who supply that which we not produce. "Not only is this true, but ti c public rev enues are u pendent in a great measure upon our prosperity. In ISU4 we had a deficit in roui.il number.- of STO,O'M«o. 1 have had the actuary of the treasury de partment cart fully estimate the probable result if the conditions existing in IMM were repeati c. and the people of the I'nlted States were to prod'uee. to import and to consume lr. the same proportion per capita that they dJdi In that year, ar.d of the same class of good-, and he estimated our annual deficit under the present revenue law s of the t'nit e<i States, at approximately "We labor under a disadvantage, as com pared with some other countries, lr. our standard l of weights and measure-. Sooner or later w e must come to the metric systt m, and>, in my judgmt nt, the sooner the better. But we have the advantage over all other great commercial countries in our monetary denominations. 1 wish I might say in mone tary system. Hut the dollar, dime, cent and mill are the natural complement to the mi trie system of weights and measures. "The reei nt acquisition of territory be yond/ the seas cannot but help to advance our commercial influence, and our com merce can but benefit the people of these islands. "t'nited States' money followed' the flag to Porto Rico and It w ill not lie many y» ars until the prici s current of the surrounding islands* will be written therein and all bal ances settled on exchange In this city." The secretary contended that com merce with the south American repub lics was not w hat it should be, and he recounted some of the disadvantages to which he attributes this fact. Jn conclusion he said: "Give us a currency as secure, a banking policy as elastic, a system of weights and measures .1- convenient as our rivals; give us nonpartisan support to such measures as will est ibiish Hi es of steamship communi cation Willi coin tries In South America, South Africa, and the Islands adjacent; give us THE Isthmian canal, HI d w> might to be able to maintain such illations 10 th>- commerce of the world)as will conserve the peace and good will of all nations, while we carr\ beneath every sky 11 Imguag. that breathe* liberty am.' patriotism ar.d the ob ject leson of a Hug thai stands for equal rights und. justice according 10 law." IT?" Lest we forget, it may lie as well to recall once, in nwhile that in his letter accepting tin* renom inatioti of tin* republican party. President McKlnley said: "( onibina tlonn of capital which control the market iu commodities neecs*ar\ to the general use of th. people, by suppress I nff natural 11 n< I ordimirv competition, thu* enhancing prices to the general coti-unier, ore uhnoxliitl* to the common law and the puldic welfare. They are iliiiifri-rotiH con t|jiriicltH again! the public good and should In- Hindi the subject •if iiro hibitory or pcual legislation." ,N. 'J eb grain. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1902. THE ISSUE THAT IS FOREMOST Prosperity I* the Keynote of tl«e l'rmrnl < nnipalK'n, All Over (lie Country. The voice of an eastern observer, who *peaks with some authority, has been raised to remark that there is a widie difference of opinion among re publicans as to what is the foremost issue of the present campaign, says the Chicago Inter Ocean. This is a mistake. The foremost isl - of this campaign is prosperity. It covers and includes all other issues. It is the beginning and end of them ail. No intelligent republican is blind to the>e facts. This foremost issue involves reci procity with Cuba and other lands, be cause. as Mr. McKinley declared in his Buffalo speech, reciprocity is necessary to keep the wheels of our industry turning at full speed. This foremost issue includes also the preservation of the tariff from any general revision, because general tariff revision would disturb the fixity of conditions that have contributed to our prosperity and.are necessary to its continuance. This- foremost issnie covers also the questions of retaining our sovereignty and our market in the Philippines, and promoting our commerce in the Pacific area. This foremost issue comprehends the necessity for the early construc tion of an isthmian canal on a routs where American control will go hand in hand'with American foreign trade. This foremost issue is wide enough also to embrace completely President Roosevelt's policy toward the trusts a policyValculated to prevent the ship wreck of \merican enterprise in a de luge of in 11 a t ion, speculat ion. and debt, and to hold the nation's business and industry to the recognized lines of safety and permanent progress. This foremost issue is an inherited issnie. Even as set forth on this day, it came to President Roosevelt a ml the republican party from President Mc- Kinley and his administration. It isas good and live and strong now as when the great prosperity president was with us. In t his sign the republican party goes forth to cou<|Uer. for it is the sign r,f signs, and they who march in its light do not suffer defeat. PROTECTION IS THE WORD. The Majority of the People Advocate tlie Policy 'l'lliil linn llroiiiclit ProKiicri t y. The Montreal -fiazette points out a condition in this country whose exist ence the advocates of tariff abolition or reduction are ignoring. It says, af ter remarking that President Roose velt "is anxious that the tariff should be taken out of politics and its purpose —the protection of the industries of the United' States—be made purely a matter of business:" "The presto nt's proposal le fffundedMipon the as sumption that both of the groat political parties- In the TTnltfdi States ar» firml\ wedded to protection, an'that what ever free trade sentiment exists is of so de sultory anl insignificant a nature as net to be entitled to any consideration. In th!e he Is tiuite correct. The people of the Cnited Static believe In the protection nf Cnited States ini'.'ustry as unitedly nrdias unanimously as it is possible fur a people to believe in any one thing, Proceeding from this he points out that, being: thus agree it is most unwlsi*to every few years disturb the course of business by tinkering at the tariff with Its admitted principle of protection simply for the sake of the gain which may arise to the party In po«er. Continual sweeping: changes in such a tar iff. touching so intimately the commercial interests of the nation, cannot fail to be dis astrous." That the majority e>f the people of the Cnited States believe# ill t lie pro tection nf Cnited States industry, irre spective of the partisan' affiliation of its individuals, is beyond doubt, says the Albany Journal, democratic tariff reduction agitators who believe that they have the rank and file eif their party at their heels are fooling them selves. The citizen whose natural in clination i.to vote the democratic ticket remembers as well as his repub lican fellow citizen the disastrous r**- >llll-- of the last experiment with tariff reduction, and appreciates as-well the benefits thr.t have grown out of tho complete restoration of the protective system. And he will not let regard for partisan interest overrule his regard for personal interest and for the inter est of the country which lie loves. PARAGRAPHIC POINTERS. Clt is pretty generally admitted that the democratic party has hael teio much lirvan. How will it be with Johnson?— Host on Herald. crW'hrn Kditor Bryan sends out a consignment of his political views for use at democratic conventions they should be marked: "Perishable! I tush!"—Chicago Tribune. C -".Not one of the advocates of abo lition <if the tariff to kill the trusts ha.seven at tempt edl to explain how trusts manage to live in Kngland, which has no tariff.—Albany Journal. fTlie New York democrats have their eyes on the treasury surplus. If there is anything the average demo crat hates it is si surplus, audi when ever lie is given a chance, he proceeds lo dis.ipatc it without dt lay. putting a deficit in its place usually.—Cleve land Leader. 0 '"The immediate revision of the tai iff is the supreme duty of the hour," says the \i « York democratic plat form. With that proposition staring him in the face, business men will be slow to support the democratic can cii ate for emigre* St. 1.i.jl- (.lobe- I >i in' -erat. C lli- ' ■ mocratie pintf• rm if New York Rflvactln Mtlotral owner-liip of tin operation of coal mines on the] ground that "fuel, like wuler. is a pub- : lie tie- e»> i 1 y Thi i« tin first time j a demon 'ic c. im-n t!■ n I i ter ret- \ fr.i/i wi tcr inn public ijtie»fily i J uil.nl. A TRIPLE MURDER. Enraged Husband Kills Wife's Parents in Michigan. 1I« AI«o Sllootn Him I.title I)nii|r|itcr und AI te inptn l« Take 111* Owu Ltle-Sii'qiii'l of a Null for IH« vorce - The .llnrderer l» Arrested. 'Mount Pleasant, Mich., Oct. 17. —As tin* bloody sequel of a divorce suit Archie Woodin, 23 years old, is under arrest here, charged with a triple •murder and this community was shocked yesterday by a bloody tra gedy in which Mrs. Woodin's parents and the prisoner's IS-months-old .daughter were shot and killed. Wood in was overpowered just as he turned the weapon upon himself and had in flicted a wound that is not expected to prove fatal. lie visited the courthouse Thnrs ! -day morning and looked over the pa | pers in a suit for divorce which his | wife instituted October 10. From there lie went directly to a hardware store, where he purchased a revol ver. There was no interruption in his career of crime from the moment his hands let goof the legal papers in the courthouse until his viet ms lay dead in two farm houses six n...es apart. 'Having secured the weapon ! he first rpde his wheel to the fiuliclc | farm. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Oulick bc i ing the first victims. Mr. (iulick was shot twice, once above the heart and once in the right side and was in stantly killed. Woodin then turned upon his moth er-iu-law, who was sitting in a rock ing chair and shot her in the throat. She ran lnto'the kitchen and fell up on her back. Woodin followed and emptied three chambers of his revol | ver into her breast, killing her. A 14-year-old daughter of (lulick came I in at. the sound of the first shots and | seeing the blood on her mother's i neck, ran to the neighbors and gave j the alarm. While running down the road she heard the last three shots. The murderer then dashed madly to his mother's home, six miles away. Tie rode his wheel for one mile, then tearing off his coat and throwing it with his bicycle into a fence corner, ran a mile and a half through the fields. Tie made the last four miles 011 a borrowed horse. Passing the time of day with a group of apple pickers 011 his mother's farm, he en tered the house as though nothing unusual had happened and picking up his little girl carried her into an emp ty room. In a moment a shot rang out. Woodin's wife was Miss Anna M. j (iulick and they were married March ; 2.", 1900. Woodin was also in the Cu | ban war. At the jail he refuses to ! talk except to express regret that he failed to kill himself, lie was la« | boring under the impression that his wife's parents had caused the divorce proceedings, though his wife's bill of complaint charged personal violence. TERRIFIC ERUPTION. Both (rater* of Sonlrlero Are Again Active. Kingstown, St. Vincent, Oct. 17.—A ! terrific eruption of the Soufriere vol cano commenced Wednesday night. During the preceding day earth tre mors apparently too slight to be con -1 sidered important were experienced in the central and northern parts of the island. At 8 o'clock Wednesday night there j were indubitable indications of an ' eruption. Rumbling noises were heard, they increased until 9 o'clock, j when the roaring volcanic giant j belched out its deadly contents. This I eruption was followed by a brief. lull. Then, from 10 o'clock until 4 j o'clock Thursday morning the up heaval continued. The outbreak was accotnapnied by an incessant and con fused cannonading. There were in [ candescent clouds and sparkling mat ter was ejected. 'Both craters of the Soufriere were apparently active; they were steam ing all day Thursday. Sand fell heav ily everywhere from 1:30 until 2:30 Thursday morning. At southern points the sand is half an inch deep, tile depth gradually increased to wards the vulcanic cone, where there were showers of large stones, pebbles and cinders. Will Approve tlie Treaty. Havana, Oct. 17.—Business men who have been called into consult with President Pal ma on the pro posed Cuban-American commercial 1 treaty feel assured that the cabinet will approve tin- proposition of the ! United States and that it will be sent j to congress within a few days for | adoption. The commercial treaty sub- I mitted to Cuba by Washington is ! practically the Bliss tariff schedule, which was drawn up just before tin? American military government with drew from the island, and which leaves the present duty in force against all other nations, but given the Cnited States a differential of 1 from 20 to CO per cent. < llMlleime ICt-cel veil and |HlH|>||. iNew York, Oct. 17. —Sir Thomas Upton's third challenge for the | America's cup sent by the lloyal I'ls ter Yacht club, was made public at the New York Yacht club last night, after having been read and accepted by a committee appointed for that purpose. The first race Is to be sailed August 20, 19o:t. Boston. Oct. 17. The final sessions of the Christian Kmleavorers were ! held last night and -o great was Ihe i gathering in Trcmont Temple that overflow meetings were held. A reno i hit ion was adopted attesting apprecl | ntlon of "tin' patriotic services of the : beloved president of our country for hi* per-evcring endeavors endeavors that have now seemingly met with succc - to establish peace hi t ween the coal operator* ami the coal min erl-. and that we reaffirm our un nhulf. 11 confidence In the iflorbitiN gos pel of the bit ted O -•! t> h«nt of all civic and iu<Ju«triul prubb-iuii. M The Man of Importance. Once upon a time there was a man who was exceedingly grave, and who tried to impress his acquaintances with his serious ness. His sedatene.-s naturally caused re marks. and his evident feeling of impor tance brought a smile to many lips. "He apparently feels that the world re solves around him," said one of his friends. Moral.-—A man is sometimes serious enough to suppose that he is the center of gravity. —X.l . Herald. Thought lie Hrmcmhered, Society Beauty—l fear you have forgot ten me. colonel. Social Lion —Indeed, no, madam. We met, if I mistake not, at that monkey party in— "Sir." —Chicago Tribune. It's a mistake to imagine that itching pile? can't he cured; & mistake to suffer a day longer than you can help. Doan's Ointment firings instant relief and permanent cure. At any drug store, 50 cents. One trouble with white lies is that they require too much whitewashing.—Chicago Daily News. Ts It a nirri? Use Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. A cut? Use Dr. Thomas'Eclectric Oil. At your druggists. Shelley—The more we study, the more we discover our ignorance. IN A BAD WAY. Night after night with rest and sleep broken by urinary troubles. Painful passages, Frequent calls of nature, Retention, make the clay as miserable as the night. Man, woman or child with any wrong condition of the bladder and kidneys is in a bad way. Don't delay 'till dangerous Dia betes comes. Cure the trouble before it settles into Bright's Disease. Bead how certain are the cures of Doan's Kidney Pills and how they last. John J. Scharireliug, a retired farmer, residing at 474 Concord St., Aurora, Ills., says:"Three years ago I was a sufferer from backache and other kidney disorders and for months exhausted all my knowledge of medicine in an endeavor to ob tain relief. Doan's Kidney Tills cured me, and time has not dimin ished my estimation of this prepara tion. Not only did Doan's Kidney Pills cure me at that time but al though over three years have elapsed there has not been a symptom of a recurrence of the trouble. I con sider this preparation to be a won derful kidney remedy and just as represented." A free trial of this great Kidney medicine which cured Mr. Sehnrscliug will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. Address Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents per box. TOE BEST POMMEL SLICKER ..IN THE WORLD \Z/T/s '// // ' * EAW THIS ™ APE OFTEN IMITATER "%AS A SADDLE COAT SGS-* IT HAS NO EQUAL EVERYi* CATALOfiUCS rßtt SHOWING ruhk hINC or CARMINTS and mats. A J.TOWia CO., BOSTON. MASS. 44 nDHDGV NEW DISCOVERY: give! If - ¥ quick relief ami cures worst Book ft testimonials ami 1 O Ouv*' treatment Free. I»r. H. H. (IRISH'S SONS, Box Q, ATLANTA, i.a. CDCC HENRY C. BLAIR'S" TEETHING NECKLACE ■BHBBHBi on trial. Aft«*r ft) days' M-nrt It Lack or Rend SO cents in stamp*. HHOSE who subscribe at once to The Youth's Companion for 1903 will receive all the issues for the remaining weeks of 1902 free from the time of subscription, in addition to the 1903 Volume. (SEE OFFER BELOW.) The November and December Issues will contain a number of noteworthy arti cles and stones by prominent writers, a few of whom are mentioned below : THEODORE ROOSEVELT contributes nn article J of unusual public interest on The Presidency. JThi.i highly important anisic was written before Mr. C. A. STEPHENS, That Merry Ooldea Wedding. THE DIKE OF ARGYLL, The Ventures of Robert Bruce. JUSTICE DAVID J. BREWER, The Supreme Court. SARAH ORNE JEWETT, A Thanksgiving Story. T. P. O'CONNOR, Prime Ministers' Wives. W INSTON SPENCER CHURCHILL, M. P.. COPVUIOMTIO •• >■» " ,c f~' ao k of the Army. ~ HENRY VAN DYKE. Keeping Christmas PROFESSOR SIMON NEWCOMB. Are Other Worlds Inhabited ? SARAH BARNWELL ELLIOTT, A Christmas Story. h\ill lllustniteil Announcement of the trto.V Volume sent with Snmiilt Conten itl the I'iifet to mny Mtldrt <«, l ice Annual Subscription Offer. Every New Subscriber for IQOJ who will cut out this slip and send It at once with name and address and $1.73 will receive: FREE Alt the issues of The Companion (or the remaining weeks of 1901. FREE - Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Double Numbers. The Companion Calendar (or 1903, lithographed in u colors and gold. And The Companion (or the fifty-two woeks o( IQOJ, more than J«U stories, 50 special articles, etc., till January, "1904, for 11.75 n.KK | N . BOSTON. MASS. ! ST. JACOBS I I OIL j | POSITIVELY CURES | Rheumatism Neuralgia 0 Backache Headache | Feelache All Bodily Aches § g AND 5 CONQUERS| 1 PAIN. ! 5 o £HXH><H>S«HXI OO O OOOWOOOOOOO s3assise shoesm W. L. Douglas shoes are the standard of the world, j IV. Fj. Don it Ins made and sold more men's Good® year Welt illand Sewed Process) shoes In tlie first six months of 1002 than any other manufacturer. <rl n nnn REWABI> nlll he paid to anyone who VI I UiUUU ran disprove this statement. W. L. DOUGLAS $4 SHOES CANNOT BE EXCELLED. $1,108,8201 lSt°l"J.7i.. 52.840.000 Best Imported and American leathers. Heyl's Patent Calf, Enamel, Box Calf, Calf, Vlcl Kid, Corona Colt, Nat. Kangaroo. Fust Color Eyelets used. Caution ! rho fr®nulno have W. L. DOUGLAS' nnme and price stamped on bottom, &tu>es by mail, 25c. extra. Jllun. Catalog free. W. L. DOUGLAS. BROCKTON, MASS. FREE ELECTRIC BELT OFFER I?-! At J «££?!? 0W " * ,on,e » w « runilih thefretiotnc and only HKIUKLRERQ ALTERNATING CTKRENT ELECTRIC HELTB to any reuder of this paper. No noifiln advance; urr low eoit?po.tti,e*a«r:.nter. COSTS ALMOST NOTHING v itn most all other treatment?. Cure* *li<-n allother efec« trie belli. Appliance* and remedies fell. QUICK CtRK for more than 60 allmcntk. Only tar© cure for all nerToua dUeasea» wcukiieMra iuhl diaordrr*. for complete cuta* losuc, rut tlil* ud. out mid mail to uk. SEARS, ROEBUCK &. CO., CHICAGO. nsgaEaßasrzajaasiaß^^ SI 1 11 11 [| j' t If y»'"' t b>n>"ti"tg ha.*^ ii0 * ■ ii'lv x aed' bhOk i?- l.KNii. or lI.VZ.VICIt ■ HIJACK, and be agreeably ilylpgilß aw***
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers