2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. PIT year . no If paid in udvunce 100 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of one doliar per square forone insertion and titty cent-, per square for each subsequent insertion Rates by the year, or for six or three months are low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. I.egal and Official Advertising per square, threo times or less. each subsequent luser tio i iO i cuts per square. Eoc-al notices it) cents per line for one inser •ertlon: f> cents per line for each subsequent coc-ecutive insertion. Obituary notices over Ave lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar rinees and deaths will lie inserted free. Bin-iness c ir.ls. live lines or less. *5 per year; over live lines, at the regular rates of aiivur t.sing. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per Issue. .JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pbksr is complete and :• 17- rds facilities for doing the best class of w<.rk. Pahthti.au attention i*at ll to Law Phixtinu. No paper will bo discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid tor in advance. W. li. Plunl.ett, of Adams, Mass., a wealthy manufacturer, lias ordered a private trolley car. which will cost him $15,0(i0. He is planning trips over Massachusetts, Connecticut and Now York wherever connections arc estab lished. A bill is to be introduced in the New York legislature to carry into ef fect the recommendations of the su perintendent of state prisons that any felon who shall come up for sentence t ie fourth time shall be sent to prison for life an as incorrigible criminal. Utah has adopted amazingly dras tic legislation with regard to tobacco and opium. A law has been passed providing for a fine of $5 or five days' imprisonment for any pne under IS years of age who even has in his or her possession a cigarette, a cigar or any other kind of tobacco, or any opium. Some thrifty citizens of New Hamp shire are reported to look with disfa vor upon the proposition that the staO accept Daniel Webster's birthplace, in the town of Franklin, even as a gift from the present owners, because of the expense to be incurred in its maintenance and protection from van dal hands. A new use for the motor car has been found in Wiltshire, England, where the finance committee has bought an automobile for the use of the surveyor, the officer of health, the •education secretary and other officers who are obliged to travel much. It is believed that a considerable saving in railway fares will result. Roanoke (Va.) college will celebrate its semi-centennial in June. Its presi dent, Julius IJ. Drelier, has been at the head of that institution for 25 years, and has been a member of the faculty for 32 years. He is the senior college president in A'irginia in time of service, and graduated at the insti tution of which he is now the head in the class of 1871. Electricity lately has been pressed into the service of the housewife, the Budapest newspapers announcing the invention of an electrical washing ma . chine by Josef Nagy, of Szegedin. With this machine the use of soap is dispensed with, the electric current being intended to take away any stain or grease. The machine will wash 300 pieces of linen without the assistance of a man. Those ever-ingenious people, the Chinese, are great at fish farming, and one of their little dodges for hatching young fish is most ingenious. Taking a fresh egg they suck the contents through a tiny hole, and refill the egg with the tiny eggs of the fish they want to hatch. The hole is then seal ed up and the egg placed under a set ting hen. In a very few days the fish ova are so far advanced that one has only to break the shell into mod erately warm water and tha little fish spring to life at. once. A Sioux City cattleman is consider ing the advisability of interbreeding the Arctic musk ox with cattle of the temperate zone, believing that the stock so produced would be better able to withstand the severe winters of the west. He has been in corre spondence with Lieut. Peary, and.the arctic explorer is favorably impressed witn the project. The vast loss of the present season among herds on the western ranges emphasizes the neces sity of trying to infuse hardier blood into American cattle. When Prince Henry of Prussia visit ed the United States persons were sur prised to see how quickly he picke-1 up American idioms. To those asso ciated with him it was not. uncommon to hear such phrases as "made him feel like 30 cents," "out o' sight" and "go 'way back and sit down," with other current slang. Therefore no one -here is surprised to learn that in speaking of a statement he deems particularly direct and appropriate, Baron von Sternburg frequently says: "It's bully—right off the bat." Naples doctors are studying the ex traordinary case of a young woman, a victim of hysteria, from whose body pins and needles have been issuing for some time past. An examination by means of the Roentgen rays shows that tiiere are still a large number of needles and pins in the young wom an's body. The doctors are at a loss to explain the phenomenon, but. it. is supposed that the girl eats the pins and needles when in a hysterical fit. Admitting this, it is still difficult to ex plain how they find their way out at /.her extremities. THE TARIFF AND TRUSTS. A Free Trill!r (rj Tlmt ltopn Nol Mia li'uii tJii' American People, President Roosevelt, in his speeches at Milwaukee and Minneapolis, gave some attention to the "take-oIT-the turiil" solution of the trust problem and clearly showed its folly and insincerity, says the Chicago inter Ocean. "The general tariff policy to which this country is committed," as the president said, "is fundamentally based upon ample recognition of the difference between the cost of labor here and abroad, and of the need to see to it that our laws shall in no event afford advantages in our own market, to foreign labor over our own labor." American standards of comfort, in brief, require higher wages for labor than are required by European standards. American consumers, as a rule, while just as keen after a bar gain as Europeans, ar<? willing to pay, if necessary, the higher prices re quired by higher wages. Americans realize, as a rule, that all consumers are also producers, and are willing to sacrifice momentary cheapness for the sake of permanent prosperity. Americans wish ever man to get the largest possible share of the product of his labor that he may be able in turn to give to every other man (lie largest possible share of the product of his labor. The policy of reserving the home market for home industry—the policy of high prices and high wages, rather than of low prices and low wages has been deliberately adopted by the American people, because they be lieve in equality and in leveling up— not in leveling down. Put because this tariff policy, adopted for the interest of the coun try as a whole, sometimes prevents certain sections or industries or groups of people from buying certain things as cheap as they would like to have them a cry goes up to lower the tariff. And because certain great corporations whose products are protected by the tariff use unfair business methods and destroy com petitors or oppress the public, an other cry goes up against the tariff. And a discredited political party, groping blindly for an issue to win on, taking up these local discontents and clamors for the abolition of the tariff as "the mother of trusts," re gardless of the truth in the presi dent's statement; "Yon can put an end to ihe prosperity of trusts by putting an end to the prosperity of the nation, but the price seems high." Furthermore, the American people see too clearly the insincerity of those who ask them to put down the tariff in order to curb the trusts. For they have seen those same men. with their mouths full of professions of sympathy for the Cubans and Fil ipinos, steadfastly refusing to help the Cubans and Filipinos by lowering tariffs not needed to protect any home industry against Cuban and Philippine competition, though need ed to protect it against European competition. The American people are too intel ligent to be fooled by the "tnke-off the-tariff" cry. They know that the trusts can be curbed and are being curbed without abolishing the tariff. REVISION OF THE TARIFF. Pre*i«lont Koospvplt n nil Secretory Hoot Relieve It Won't Heat the TriiNtM. President- Roosevelt said at Minne apolis: "If a tariff law has cn the whole worked well, and if business has prospered underlt and Is prospering, it may be better to en dure some inconveniences and Inequalities for a time than by making changes to risk causing disturbance and perhaps paralysis In the industries and business of the coun try. The fact that the change In a given rate of duty may be thought desirable (foes not settle the question whether It is advisable to make the change immedi ately." Whenever congress attempts to change a given rate of duty in one schedule a demand l will be made by somebody for a change in every sched ule. Arguments will be. made in sup port of the proposed changes. Busi ness men will be put on the anxious seat and will be kept there until the discussion is over. Should all the changes asked for be made there will be a general upsetting of schedules, and"the effect upon the business in terests 'of the country," says the presi dent, "will be ruinous." Changes may be needed in tariff schedules, but they must not be made in the president's opinion, "until the need for them outweighs the disad vantages which may result, and when it becomes necessary to make them they should be made with full recog nition of the need of stability in our economic system, and of keeping un changed the principle of that system which has now become a settled policy in our national life." The Minneapolis address of the pres ident and the speech made by Secre tary Root at 'the banquet of the Bos ton Home Market club define with precision the views of the administra tion concerning the question of "tariff revision, says the Chicago Tribune. They make it clear, also, that the ad ministration has no faith in the con tention that the trust problem enn be solved by tariff revision. President Roosevelt argues that tariff changes which work injury to the large cor poration will de.-t roy its small compe titors, will relieve it of their compe tition, and will expose it to that of foreign rivals, which it will seek to meet by cutting down the wages of its workmen. The blow aimed at the trust will fall upon labor. No satis factory answer to this argument has yet been made. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1903. UPON WHAT BASIS? The Ih'iniiprncj'* V lulniiiiry Itlrn «l llir l< ciliii lil 1.1 t(i tii«>it of tin- I'lirty. It is llie publicly expressed belief of the Troy Press that "one of I lip hope ful signs of democratic rehabilitation is •the reinstatement of Arthur l\ Gor man in the senatorial leadership of his party." The Press goes onto guy that Mr. Gorman's reinstatement marks the repudiation of the free trade fal lacy, "which has been a source of dem ocratic division and defeat from the time i't was forced to the front as ::n issue. Mr. Gorman is a protectionist, and under his guidance the party will not. again antagonize the great man ufacturing and labor interests of the count ry." Hut it is well known thai a largeand strong faction of the democracy looks for democratic rehabilitation to grow out of reorganization of the party un der the leadership of GroverCleveland, who is not a protectionist, to say the least, and under whose guidance the democratic party might be expected again to antagonize the great manu facturing and labor interests of the country, says the Albany Journal. Also it is w ell known that there is a third large and strong faction of the democracy which cannot bear to hear talk of reorganization of the part} - un der either Cleveland or Gorman, or under any other democrat who did not. support Mr. Bryan as a candidate and the Kansas City platform. Here we have, then, three principal divisions of the democratic party—the sound money and protection faction, the sound money and free trade fac tion, and the Kansas City plat form fac tion which is still in favor of free coin age of silver and of tariff abolition. No two of these factions are in accord, and because of the nature of the prin ciples to which they respectively ad here it is virtually impossible for any two of them ever to come to an agree ment, let. alone all three. The desire to cherish the hope that there may be rehabilitation of the democratic party.under the leadership of one democrat or another is natural, but where is the basis for such hope? DEMOCRATIC HARMONY. Ilrjnn HIM] Cleveland Scent to Be Able to Keep DeiiKK'racy Gue«aliiK. William E. Curtis, who is a demo crat, lets in a little more light upon the sort of harmony which now pre vails in the democratic party, says the 1 roy Times. In a Washington dis patch Mr. Curtis says it is true that Mr. Bryan aspires to the chairmanship I of the democratic national committee, and during his last visit to Washing ton conferred with ex-Senator Jones, of Arkansas, with a view of ge-tting thi t gentleman to retire and permit the selection of Mr. Bryan in his stead. Mr. Curtis affirms that though Air. Bryan aid not meet any openly ex pressed opposition to this scheme lie found 1 no encouragement, and adds: "He was reminded of tho custom of thA party which for generations has been to leave the selection of the chairman of the national committee with the candidate for president, and was advised that it would be better for him to wait until the new committee had been selected and the can didate had been nominated before wasting much time or effort in securing support. "But Mr. Bryan does not wish to wait until the new committee is chosen and the candidate is nominated. He would like to be made chairman of the present commit tee, if Mr. Jones would resign in his favor, in order that he may superintend the or ganization of the next national convention and call it to order. Just what he expects to accomplish by that arrangement ts un certain, and Senator Jones is not alto gether willing to retire in his favor until he has an opportunity to consult with other members of the committee. "Quite a number of the democratic lead ers here are opposed to the retirement of Mr. Jones and the substitution of Mr. Bryan on the committee. They declare that Mr. Bryan can be more useful to his party and contribute more to its success if he will retire to his farm in Nebraska and let things alone. If Mr. Cleveland will also seek the seclusion that Princeton grants it is thought that he might pro mote harmony and success also. It is re called that for 20 years these two men have occupied the front of the stage. Mr. Cleve land was the presidential candidate in ISSI, ISSB and IS'J2, and Mr. Bryan in ISUO and ISCO, and both have exhausted, their use fulness." Instead of retiring from active par ticipation in democratic politics Messrs. Bryan and Cleveland seem de termined to be near enough to what is going onto "keep them guessing." COMMENT AND OPINION. Surely Mr. Cleveland can never j resist Col. Watterson's pathetic ap- 1 peal to get off the earth.—lndian apolis News (Ind.). Bryan's references to the prodigals always recalls the fact that he has had a pretty extensive diet of political husks himself.—De troit Free l'ress (Dem.). leading paper of Berlin says: "It was due to President Roosevelt's prudence and the circumspection of | the Washington government that the Venezuelan affair passed off without serious disaster." or thirty years hence Col. Bryan will be following the ex ample of ex-President Cleveland and announcing that his retirement from politics lias been indefinitely post poned.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. ICT'The speeches the. president is making will form a valuable political handbook for republican campaign speakers next year. Like some con centrated foods they will bear con siderable diluting and still be nour ish ing,—Indianapolis Journal. (ET"Tbe country is enjoying the ut most prosperity under the Dingley bill, the demand for a reduced tariff is purely political and ephemeral, and there is no adequate reason for attempting an experiment which has never been productive of anything but evil in the past."—Senator Frye. " OFFICIALS EXPLAIN. Tliey Toll tt'liv the Prinrnilli>na ol Ariu> mill Navy Ollli i-rm lor Niiiiie l!""E Were Ulicon tinned. Washing-tun, April 10. —The atten tion of i Ik' officials of the depart ment of just ift* was called yesterday to the (lispatoh from San Juan, I'orto Hieo, that the United States attorney here had declined to prosecute crim inally a number of army and navy officers for alleged smuggling, ex plaining his action .by the statement that he was acting under instructions from Washington. The following statement was made by the depart ment: "The treasury department ap j proved a settlement in one of the ! pending eases, on the basis of relief from criminal liability upon payment of a fine equal to double the amount of duties. Instruction to this effect wns given to the United States attor j iley at San .loan 1»v the solicitor of ; the treasury, and the subject was I brought before the cabinet, and it | was directed by the president that I Secretary Moody and Postmaster i denera 1 Payne should investigate the I subject their arrival at I'orto I Tlico, and that the eases should be j dealt with in accordance with their recommendation. "The recommendation was that all criminal proceedings should be dis missed upon the payment of the civil obligation, as above indicated, i In accordance with this recommenda tion the attorney general directed the United States attorney for Porto ISico to dismiss pending cases and to present no more cases to the grand jury until he was otherwise in structed. Postmaster General Payne, when bis attention was called to the mat ter, dictated the following state men: "It seems that certain officers had brought to San Juan articles for per sonal use which were subject to cus toms duties, especially cigars and some liquors, and it was said that a I present of some of the cigars was j made to a local club in San Juan. , There was no charge of importing | anything upon which it was proposed , to make money, or to sell for profit— simply personal ert'eets for personal , uses." San Juan. Porto Itico. April 16. The grand jury yesterday called many witnesses in the smuggling cases in which officers of the United States navy and other prominent men are involved, and secured from the I court commissioner who presided at the former hearings a copy of the testimony taken. The prisoners who are confined in the penitentiary for smuggling have I presented a petition requesting that i they be pardoned and released unless others guilty of the same offences are punished. A GREAT BLAZE. One Hundred and Seventy Oil Ids:* Destroyed at llcuuiiioiit, Tex, Beaumont, Texas, April 10.—A I careless workman kicked over a lan tern at one of the Caldwell oil wells on Block IIS, 11 ogg-Swayne tract, on Spindle Top yesterday and started a fire that resulted in the loss of prop erty valued at SI,OOO,UiH) and the ■bankruptcy of 20 or more of the smaller companies. There were 175 wells on the three blocks of the tract and only five of the derricks and pump houses are left standing. Every company that had property in the Hogg-Swayne tract is a loser. The fire swept the t.hrce, blocks, covered with derricks and pump houses, clear of all its buildings. The derricks left are on the edges and are few and far between. None of me companies had a cent of insurance. The fire started near the southern edge of Block .18 and spread three ways. Pumping stations, derricks and pipe lines all fell before it. Large engines and thick pipe melted in the heat. It is estimated that 170 of the •wells sustained an average direct locs of SI,OOO. This is exclusive of $500,000 more, the aggregate loss on production and other indirect dam ages. Fifty or more wells probably are ruined by the dropping of tubing into them as a result of the fire. Among the losers are: London Oil and Pipe Line C-0., Cald well Oil Co., Spindle Top Power Co., Central Power and Equipment Co., Pumping Station Dividend Oil Co., Detroit-Beaumont, Palestine-Beau tnont. Sun Company, Advance Oil Co., Queen ( itv, Queen of W'aco, Drum mers, Alamo. Buckeye, Groundfioor, Manhattan. Borealis and Buffalo. All pumping rigs, derricks and pipe line equipments were destroyed. Ex tensive losses were sustained by owners of drilling rigs, among whom were TT. B. Ford, Cartwright Oil Co., John Markham and ,T. W. Ennis. Mr. Ennis estimates his loss at $15,000 and others at from SI,OOO to $4,000. The Texas. Sun, London Oil and Pipe Line, Guffey, Biggins and other companies lost heavily through dam age to their pipe lines. The Heywood tract was saved only after hard work. Floods 111 Maryland. Baltimore, April 10. —Incessant heavy rains for the past four days have swollen Maryland streams until several rivers and creeks are out of their banks, and much damage has resulted. At Cumberland the Poto mac is far out of its banks and is rising. The mountain streams are rushing down like torrents. Ilagers town reports the Potomac and tribu tary streams very much above their normal level. The Monoeacy, at Frederick is high and those residing near its banks fear a general over flow. jtlade a $50,000 Appropriation. Albany. X. V., April 10.—The bill appropriating $50,000 for the ex penses of the trip to the St. Louis fair on April 27. of Gov. Odell, his staff and a regiment of state mili tia, was pusscd by the state .senate yesterday. The measure had pre viously passed the assembly. The adjutant general will now make ar rangements for the selection of 1,000 picked troops from the national guard, all of whom shall be selected for their soldierly appearance, who shall act as Gov. Odell's personal es cort to the exposition. SECURE A FREE HOME IN THB FERTILE WHEAT FIELDS OF WESTERN CANADA. To the Editor: The emigration of well-to-do farm ers from the United States to the Canadian Northwest has assuuiet such proportions that organized ef forts are now being made by inter ested persons and corporations tc stem the tide. The efforts are being initiated chiefly by railway and rea estate interests in the States fron which the bulk of the emigratior takes place. The movement of popu lation has taken from numerous states thousands of persons whose presence Along railways in these states made business for the trans portation companies. The move nient has also become so widely known that it has prevented the set tlement of vacant lands along these lines, parties who might have loeat ed there, being attracted to the free end more fertile lands of Canada The result of the movement has beer ! that the railway companies not onlj ! see the vacant lands along theii lines remain vacant, but they alsc see hundreds of substantial farmers who have helped provide business foi these railways move away and sc cease their contributions. The farmers have moved to Canada be cause they were convinced that it would be to their financial interest to do so. In moving they have beer inconsiderate enough to place theii own financial interests before those of the financial interests of the rail way corporations. In addition to the railway corpora tions, rekil estate dealers are work lng to stem the flow of emigrants Ot course every emigrant who goes tc Canada means the loss of com missions on land deals by real cs tate dealers. Now a person has but to know what tlx; interests are that are trying to stop the flow to know what motive is influencing theii course. The emigration means finan cial loss to railway corporations am to real estate men. These interests therefore are not directing their op position efforts out of any love foi the departing emigrants or out o1 any high patriotic motives either They are doing so purely from self ish interests. It is a matter of dol lars and cents with them. They arc so patriotic, the - are so consumec by love for their fellow citizens thai they want to prevent these fellov citizens going to Canada and getting fiee farms of the best wheat land ir the world; and instead they want tc make them stay on high priced farms in the United States where they wil continue to pour money into the pockets of these railways and rea estate men. One of the. methods employed bj these interests to stem the tide is the distribution of matter to news papers, painting Canada in the dark est colors. These articles emanate chiefly from a bureau in St. Louis They are sent out at frequent inter vals for simultaneous publication. A writer is employed at a high salarj to prepare the matter. Moreover, statements absolutely al variance with the truth have lately been published broad cast. These ap pear chiefly in what purport to be letters from persons who are allegeei •to have gone to Canada and become disgusted with it. Only a few of such have been published and they con .tain statements that are absurd in their *alsity. Whether the parties whose names appear in connection with these letters have ever been in Canada and if so, their historj while there, is to be thoroughlj .looked into. The discovery of their motive, like the discovery of the mo tive of the interests who are en gineering the opposition, may prove illumining. In the meantime, however, it may be pointed out that only a few of such letters have appeared but since 1897 over 87,000 American set tlers have gone to the Canadian West. Can any reasonable person suppose for a moment that if Cana da was one-rjuarter as bad as repre sented in these letters the 87,000 Americans now there would remain in the country; or, if the Canadian West had not proved the truth of all that was claimed for it, the papers of every State in the American North west would not be filled with letters saying so? Imagine 87,000 aggressive Americans deceived and not making short shift of their deceivers. The fact is the 87,000 are well satisfied and are encouraging their friends to follow them. Anyone who sees any of these dis paraging letters should remember that it is railway and real estate in terests who have from purely selfish reasons organized a campaign to stem the flow to Canada. If Canada were half as bad as represented there would be no need of such an organi zation. The fact that such exists is of itself a magnificent tribute to Canada. Finally it should not be for gotten that the letters published are brimful of falsehoods and that 87.000 satisfied Americans in the Canadian West constitute a living proof that such is the case. The Canadian Government Agent whose name appears in advertise ment elsewhere in this paper, is au thorized to give all Information as? to rates, and available lands in West ern Canada. Wis I* (Irouml Im- Otvoroe. The widow of a wealthy landowner, who married an impoverished count, Kits obtained a legal separation at Berlin after three'weeks of marriage on the novel ground that her husband wears >a wig. She received such a shock at the sight of his bald head that she took a violent antipathy to him and appealed to the court for a separation, pleading that it' she had known the count wore 'a wig she never would have married him. The judge held that the plea was valid. TWO SIGNALS* colored and showing 1 "brick-dust-like'* deposit. Urination is infrequent, too frequent or excessive. You should heed these danger signals before chronic complications set in—Dia betes, Dropsy, Bright's disease. Take- Doan's Kidney Pills in time and the cure is simple. J. F. Wainwright, of the firm of Bones & Wainwright, painters and; contractors, Pulaski, Va., says: "Four or five times a year for the past few years I have suffered with severe attacks of pain in my back, caused from kidney trouble. During these spells 1 was in such misery from the constant pain and aching that it was almost impossible for me to stoop or straighten, and it really seemed as if the whole small of my back had given away. At times I also had difficulty with the kidney secretions which were dis colored, irregular and scalding, ar.d I was also greatly distressed with headaches and dizziness. I used' a number of recommended reme dies but I never found anything so successful as Doan's Kidney Pills.; \vhen I heard of tl.em I Lad an at tack and procured a box of them. lea a few da3 - S' the pain and lameness dis appeared, the trouble with the kid r.ey secretions was corrected and my system was improved generally. X have every confidence in Doan's Kid ney Pills." A FREE TRIAL of this great kid rey medicine which cured Mr. Wain wright will be mailed to any part of the United States on application. Address Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all druggists, price' 50 cents per box. UNION 112 ■ W. L. Douglam makes and aellm tnore men's Goodyear Welt (Hand- Sewed Process) shneo than any other manufacturer In the world. $25,000 REWARD will bo paid to anyone who can disprove tb is statement. MSI Because W. L. Douglas is the largest manufacturer he can buy cheaper and?.' / ■'£)} produce his shoes at a /y lower cost than other con- . jmiiku cerns, which enables him ,1 to sell shoes forS3.soand yL 53.00 equal in every way to those sold else where for S4 and $5.00. Sjpffi y The Douglas secret pro- IImSSmA viny^Y/iB ceaa of tannini? tlio bottom solos produces abso lutely pure leather; more flexible and will weal longer than any other tann npo in the world. The sales have more than doubled the past four yeara,whicn proves its superiority, why not give w. L. Douglas shoes a trial and save money. Notice Increase fiß99 Sales: •*£,2oU,Mfc:i,Sl In Uurtneni \l9o2Sale»: #r.,oa 1,3 IO.OU A gain of 8«,BSO, l, r >G.7l) in Four Years. W. L. DOUCLAB 54.00 CILT EDCE LINE. Worth s6.ooCompared with Other Makes. The best Imported and American leathers, Heul\ Patent Calf. Enamel, Box Calf, Calf. Vici Kid, Corona Colt, and National Kangaroo, Fait Color Eyelets. Palltinn • 11,8 genuine have W. I* DOUGLAS UuU null • name and price stamped on bottom. Shoes by mail, 25c. extra. Jllus. Catalog free. IV. 1,. UOLULAN, BBOOKTO.II, MASS. WESTERN CANADA Is attracting more attention than any other dis trict in the world. "The Granary o! the World." "The Land o! Sun* •hine." The Natural Feeding Grounda for Stock. Area under crop in 1902 . 1,987,330 acrea. Yield 1902 . . . . 117,922.754 bushels. Abundance of Water; Fust ■MfIRfTpVJTIJ I Plentiful; Cheap Building Ma uf/l.fUfjTfSK'l terial; Good Grass for pasture J and hay; a fertile soil; a Kutli cient rainfall and a climategiv- I ln * au assured and adequate I season of growth. HOME* ACKKS FItKK, the only charge for which is 110 for entry. Close to Churches, Schools, etc. Railways tap all settled districts. Send for Atlas and other literature to Superintendent of Immigration,, Ottawu, Camilla, or li. M. WILLIAMS. Hoom 20,. Law Bldg.,Toledo. Ohio; authorized Canadian Gov ernment Agent, who will supply you with certificate* giving you reduced railway rates.etc. free to women VARJIII J| To provo the healing and! BrflT.lllt U cleansing power of Pnxtlne jUy'i'NuH 'Collet AiitlHeptir we will. RWHaH mail a large trial package' jf book of Instructions' I nbnolutrly free. This Is Mk j3a I not a tiny sample, but a large I package, enough to convince I anyone of Its value. Women i LI all over the country are fa praising Paxtlne for what It I BXiiiJUEMimtSfc has done In lorn! Ireat litem of frmulp Ills, cur- Ingall inflammation and discharges, wonderful as a cleansing vaginal douche, for sore throat, nasal catarrh, as a mouth wash, and to remove) tartar and whiten the teeth. Seed to-day; a postal card will do. Hold l»y d ruegl.t. or nent postpaid l>y ni, ftfl rent., hiinc Hutl.tixlloii rimi'iiiilrr'l. B 1 AITON f'O.. Vol Coiumbui Av llo.lon. Mass. ' TO HOMESEEKERS H with productive soils can be se \J \> \J I# cured on the Nashville. Chatta* nooga & St. Iyouis Railway in Tennessee,Kentucky,Alabama, Georgia. PRICES REASONABLE. Climate healthful, never very cold or very liot. All marketable crops grown and bring better prices than In tin- North. Rainfall ample and well distributed. CORRESPONDENCE with Real Estate Agents in the North invited .... For pamphlets write to H. F. SMITH, Traffic Manager, NASHVILLE. TENN. i , V- y . | |KifE WANT YOUR TRADE j I Vmw You can buy of us at whole- ft H sale prices and save money. 9 H Our 1,000-page catalogue tells H rathe story. We will send it upon n jsj receipt of 15 cents. Your neighbors ■ 9 trade with us— why not you ? a The house that\ • the truth. J|
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers