Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, March 10, 1904, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMiKUIi UUUMTI I'MS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
P'-r ye»r t" 00
It paid ID advancs 1 -0
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rate of
•ne dol.ar per square for one Insertion and llfty
tent* i cr square for each subsequent insertion.
Rates l)V the year, or for six or throe months.
•re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
applicat.on. •
Leg:;l ar U Official Advertising per square,
three limes or less, >2; each aub.seque.it inser
tion 10 iCi ts per square.
I.ocal notices lo cents per line for one lnser
icrtioti. 5 cents p<;r line for each subsequent
•oasecutlve insertion.
Obituary notices nr»r Are lines. 10 cents per
lice. Simple announcements of births, mar
riage* :>n'l deaths will be inserted free.
Business curds, five lines or loss. t5 per year:
oven live lines, ut the regular rates of auver
t'n'ng
No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per
•sue.
JOB PRINTING.
The .Tob department of the PKMS IS complete
and affords facilities fordoing the best class of
Work PAtn ICLI.AK ATTENI ION PAIUTO LAW
PRINTING.
No paper will be discontinued until arrenr
r.gcs are paid, except ».t the option of the pub
isher.
Papers sent out of the county must bo paid
tor in advance.
The value of nil animals exported
from this country during the year 1903
was $42,551,174. This Includes cattle
to the value of $37,725,452. hogs to the
value of $58,180, horses to the value
of $3,142,731, mules to the value of
sheep to the value of $1,153,-
770, and all other, including fowls, to
the value of $121,265.
The countess of Warwick intends to
establish agricultural settlements in
different parts of England, where wom
en who are expert in horticulture,
dairy farming and poultry raising can
work on the co-operative principle.
She believes that the problem can be
solved by training intelligent and edu
cated women to these callings.
The business of the New York post
office increased by $1,158,997.08, or 9.31
per cent, in 1903. The gross receipts
were $13,582,829.62, against $12,423,-
831.96 in 1902. The approximate net
revenue for 1903 is given as $8,945,000.
The money order business was $219,-
686,527.57, an increase of $43,639,099.53.
Superintendent Elliott purchased over
$30,000,000 worth of foreign exchange.
Cardinal Ferrari, who attended the
German Catholic congress, took back
with him to Milan as a present the
bones of the three kings, Melchior,
Gaspar and Baithasar, which were
the most famous relics in the Cologne
cathedral. The legend is that the rel
ics were taken away from a Milan
church by Frederick Barbarossa's men,
and the gift is intended as a restitu
tion.
The report of the French govern
ment commission, which has for more
than two years been investigating yel
low fever in Rio Janeiro, gives une
quivocal confirmation of the epochal
investigations of the United States
army officers. Reed, Carrol and Azra
monte, in Cuba, in regard to the mode
of infection by the mosquoto stego
myia fasciata and methods of its pre
vention.
The luxury in which some New
Yorkers live is simply amazing. Not
£o long ago a member of a well-known
and wealthy family applied to the
courts to have his allowance made
$50,000, declaring that he could not
live on less than that amount and
keep up to the style in which he was
brought up. This is not a single in
stance, either, of what it costs to live
Instate in Gotham.
Recent experiments in France show
that white biood corpuscles, or "leuco
cytes," besides absorbing foreign bod
ies destroying worn-out cells, absorb
ing liquid poisons, and carrying food
substances to the tissues, also fulfill
ft very important function in distrib
uting medicinal drugs to all parts of
the body and carrying them in par
ticular to the location in w'lich thvy
will do the most good.
Vodka, a drink that is as popular
■with the Russians as beer is with the
Germans, slivowitz with the Hunga
rians, ale with the English, or high
balls with the Americans, is very
much to the front just now down in
the Russian quarters. Vodka is very
stimulating, and there's need of
something with which to keep up cour
age these days. l„ike the Hungarian
slivowitz, the Russian drink is of an
extremely high proof, which makes
it dangerous for anyone but a Russian
to take aboard anything but a moder
ate quantity.
small steam yacht to the emperor of
Uapan, detailing some Rritish blue
jackets to the duty of instructing the
Japanese in the management of that
class of vessel. The Japanese under
took to handle the craft before they
■had thoroughly learned their lesson,
and on the first voyage, when they
•wanted to stop they discovered t-hat
'they had forgotten how this operation
was performed. They, therefore,
steamed 'round and 'round until the
fires died down, and then the yacht
was towed home.
The wages of a common soldier In
the regular army of Russia do not
amount to more than 1 cent a day,
though his food, clothing and equip
ment are provided by the government.
His regular allowances for spending
money for all purposes is just a little
more than a ruble a year, but extras
of various kinds bring the grand total
up to a little less than s■!. This sum
is supposed to cover all his expendi
tures for tobacco, spirits and luxuries
of every kind. The enlisted men in
the United States army are paid more
than *hree times that amount per
month
HOW ABOUT THIS PAIR "3
Probability of n Rayner and Hearst
Ticket in the Democratic
Campaign.
A new democratic presidential nom
ination possibility has been suggested.
This Is Isidor Rayner, who has jus!
been elected a senator from Maryland
to succeed Louu E. McCotnas, repub
lican, who retires in Mr.rch, 1905. The
Baltimore Herald tells us that h
Rayner and Hearst club has been
formed it, Baltimore, and that steps
are about to be taken to start clubs
of this sort all over the country.
Hearst, when his name is coupled with
Rayner's, is intended for the second
place on the ticket.
The Rayner nomination movement is
a new slap in Gorman's face, says the
St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Gorman
was opposed to Rayner for the senate,
and worked to the end in antagonism
to him. The conservative element of
the Maryland democracy, however,
stood behind Rayner, and he ultimate
ly won. His victory naturally was in
terpreted all over the country as a
defeat for Gorman. His added promi
nence since his election, as shown by
the boom which has just been started
for him for the presidential candi
dacy, is another blow to the Maryland
boss. If Hearst be favorable to the
coupling of the two names, with
Hearst in the second place, there is a
chance that Rayner will get a good
deal of advertising in the next few
months, as Hearst has a literary bu
reau which is in fine working order.
But how will the old-line democrats
like this association of the names Ray
ner and Hearst? Rayner is theoretic
ally supposed to stand for pretty near
ly everything in politics that Hearst
antagonizes. He was a gold man in
the days when the gold issue came up
in a burning shape. It was said in
1896 that Rayner voted for McKinley.
He was strongly against Bryan, and
the Bryan element of the party turned
him down In politics. Hearst at that
time and in 1900 supported Bryan with
all the resources at his command. His
paper was the only journal of any
consequence in any big northern city
which was on Bryan's side. Recently
the man who is running his literary
bureau said that Hearst was always
secretly against free silver coinage. If
he was a gold man, his views on that
point were kept so secret in those
years that nobody ever heard anything
of them or could guess them. It is cer
tain that the gold ingredient of the
democracy is against Hearst now.
Possibly he may be tolerated for the
second place on the ticket with an
old-line democrat like Rayner.
THE REPUBLICAN DUTY.
Victory of the Party This Year Is
Vital to the Interests of
the Country.
" It is the duty of republicans In this
year 1904 to have unity in purpose and
harmony in action. This is a duty be
cause essential to success, and the
achievement of success is an obligation
resang upon the republican party, says
the Troy Times.
Republican success is necessary be
cause it means American prosperity.
Republicanism has protected and built
up the industries of the country, has
shut out a debased currency, which
would have been false on its face and an
outcast in the world's markets; has
through the warfare of diplomacy and
the diplomacy of warfare held for
thi3 country's producers the strategic
points of the world's commerce, and has
raised the Stars axid Stripes over out
posts that mark the skirmish line in the
contest for trade.
A policy is safest in the hands of its
friends. To the fostering care of the
republican party, the parent of such
grand projects as supremacy in the mar
kets of the world, channeling the isth
mus between North and South America,
reestablishing a mercantile marine on
the high seas and reclaiming the arid
plains of the interior, can best be given
the perfecting of those great intentions.
Because of the past and the future,
therefore, the victory of the republican
party in the national elections of 1904 is
vital to the progress of this country.
How About Harmony P
United States Senator Stone, of
Missouri, hitherto one of the most
faithful followers of Bryan, has
turned against the Nebraska leader
and it is spoiling for a light
against the Nebraska crowd. Thia
would not be particularly significant
but for the fact that the national
convention is to be held at St. Louis,
in Senator Stone's estate, where
Bryan has heretofore been especially
si rong. But it will not be safe bet
ting that the rank and file in Mis
souri think less of Bryan than they
do of Stone, or that Bryan and his
friends will not control more than
One-third of the convention, to the
great embarrassment of a gathering
which adheres to the old two-thirds
rule.—Troy Times.
C" Judge Parker's nomination would
unify the democratic party by th" nat
ural process of freezing.-—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
ICTlie democratic party asking
the country for another trial. The
democratic party has been tried and
convicted so many times that it seems
a fit subject for an habitual criminal
act.—lndianapolis Journal.
C"Mr. Cleveland," says Mr. Bryan,
"ha=s secretly mortgaged himself to
Wall street. His career has shown
how completely the conscience can be
separated from the mind in the per
formance of official duty." These lit
tle advance notes of harmony indicate
a;i interestino: time at the St. Louis
convention.—St, Louis Globe-Dcmo
crat.
CAMERON COUNTS P*\KSS, THURSDAY, MARCH io, 1904.
THE EXISTING DIFFICULTY
Between Cleveland and Bryan tb<
Democratic Party Is In for
a Hot Time.
While the republican party is prepar
ing for iho inevitable conflict, it is not
only wise, but a pleasant relaxation, ti
take note of the marshaling and pha
lanxing and the platformizing going or
in the ranks of the enemy. For pur
poses of illustration, says the Cincin
nati Commercial Tribune, it may be as
sumed that two gentlemen are so prom
inent in the race for the nomination a'
St. Louis that, all others, even G. Fred
Wins., are distanced and that the con
vention will find that it could be mucli
happier with either were 'tother dear
charmer but away. But between the
Sage of the Jarsey Flats and the Bound
ing Orator of the Platte, the convention
must choose —either choosing in person
or blindly accepting whomsoever thf
dominant gentleman may determine to
cram down its gaping throat.
It is true that Mr. Bryan has been
twice licked, and that Mr. Cleveland has
plainly intimated to St. Clair McKelway
LL. 1)., that presidential campaigns have
lost their charms for him. Yet since
Mr. Cleveland has so recently said that
"fhere is an opportunity for democratic
success in the coming presidential elec
tion," and since Mr. Bryan has caustic
ally supplemented the statement by th*
other statement that there is an oppor
tunity for success with anybody but
Cleveland, it may be fairly assumed that
the battle is on and that it will be a
fight to a finish—or a flush.
Mr. Cleveland further says that the
campaign of 189 C was a disaster. There
in Mr. Bryan coincides, since he was the
gentleman who met the disaster, but in
sists that it was because of Cleveland
ism. Mr. Cleveland insists that free sil
ver was not only ephemeral in its very
essence, but a crime in its very nature.
Mr. Bryan insists that sixteen to one is an
eternal principle, vital and altogether
the one thing on which are to hang the
eternal destinies of the democratic
party. Mr. Cleveland insists that any
compromising with unsound money
would result again in disaster. Mr.
Bryan retorts that Mr. Cleveland's com
promise with goldbugism has taken
him to the very farthest rear of democ
racy, and that there he must sit in
sackcloth and ashes until his financial
sins have been purged and burned
away.
Mr. Cleveland looks upon Mr. Bryan
as an archdemagogue, though not quit.-
so plainly expressing himself. Mr.
Bryan regards Mr. Cleveland with the
scorn which none but a virtuous demo
crat can feel for one who has monkeyed
after false financial gods until he has
become a veritable octopian child of
Wall street —and so it goes for quality
and for quantity.
If Mr. Cleveland should control the
convention Mr. Bryan will bolt. If Mr.
Bryan should dominate the giddy throng
at St. Louis Mr. Cleveland will wash his
hands of the consequences and go
>-fishing. Scylla and Charybdis wen: as
ftothing to the democratic situation.
I> is either in the belly of the Cleveland
whale or the maw of the Bryan shark.
Yet the democratic party somehow has
a faculty of getting together, and the
wisdom of republicanism will be in the
selection of a leader and the adoption of
a platform which will make it a matter
of indifference whether the democrats
continue to split or bo come together in
peace and amity.
IN THE POLITICAL DRIFT.
lt>'"Our fighting forces," says Mr.
Cleveland in his latest letter, "will re
spond listlessly and falteringly if sum
moned to a third defeat in a strange
cause." That is an olive branch
stripped of its leaves and well laid on.
—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
E? In a brief editorial paragraph of
a column or two Col. Watterson turns
the helm of the democratic 'craft over
to Bryan and Hearst and disclaims all
responsibility for ihe shipwreck he
sees just ahead. Can nothing be done,
colonel? Chicago Tribune.
t "Wisconsin has a democratic pres
idential candidate in the person of one
Wall, formerly national committee
man and state chairman. Has Mr.
Wall got one of the Commoner's union
cards? —Indianapolis News (Ind.).
republican party will have a
candidate and a platform for the cam
paign that will deserve and will re
ceive the cordial allegiance and sup
port of the pens and the voices of the
exponents of that party's principles.—
Troy Times.
C'Mr. Cleveland used to be rather
noted for rotund and sonorous periods.
Lately he seems to have adopted a
style of concise cynicism. Recently ho
was asked morn questions about Judge
Parker, who has oeen mentioned as a
possible democratic nominee for the
presidency, and at first appeared un
able to place him, but finally replied
that he recalled him as a gentleman
to whom he had once offered the posi
tion of fourth assistant postmaster
general, of course the implication be
ing plain that Parker was not of such
commanding importance as to merit
serious consideration as a presidental
candidate.—Troy Times.
who once spoke with some
disparagement of the late Senator Han
| nn are now wondering whether Ohio
Can produce a man to take his place.
—Washington Star.
ICMr. Bryan appears to have gone
deliberately to work to expose the
hopeless lack of integrity in his party.
His offer of a SIOO prize for a demo
cratic platform which ten conserva
tive party organs ho names could col
lectively indorse has had no other ef
[ feet. Nobody can win that prire, and
| he has thus proved that his party is
1 absolutely unable to get together.—
1 Indianapolis Journal.
OVER 50 FEET HIGH.
(*orsc in tlm Siik«| cicltaniK
Itlvcr <«( Spins B*«.
Harrisburg, l'n M March 5. The Sus
quehanna river here lias risen to 20
feet above low water mark nnd is ris
ing at the rate of one foot an hour.
The Pennsylvania railroad tracks.at
High Spire are covered with four
inches of writer for a distance of one
mile. The (racks oft lie Central Penn
sylvania I raetion Co. at High Spire
are also covered with water for a
short distance. The ice is gorging in
the lower end of Jtarrisburg and
ma'iy of the manufacturing' establish
ments in that locality have closed
down. The islands in tlie river op
posite this city are under three feet
of water.
At High Spire the gorge extends
clear across the river and is over 50
feet high. The water has reached a
point within five feet of the Bodmer
house, which is one of the highest
points in that region. Cellars of
dwellings are rapidly filling with
water and the greatest danger threat
ens matiy of the people.
1 lie. Pennsylvania railroad is send
ing no freight crews east from Har
risliurg. Four large locomotives with
Know plows were sent from here Fri
day to push the ice off the tracks be
tween St eel ton and Middletown. Sev
eral freight trains are stuck in the
■water and ice in the vicinity of High
I Spire.
AVilkesbarre, Pa., March S. —The
ice in the Susquehanna river is break
ing between here and Tunkhannock,
a distance of 30 miles, though it has
not yet started to move out. Last
night the river measurement showed
16 feet above low water mark.
REVIEW OF TRADE,
KiiMlnrftH of the Country Improve*,
Dewpite the Had \V<-atli< r.
New York, March 5. R. G. Dun &
( o. s Weekly Review of Trade says:
Business continues ro improve, de
spite the difficulty of low tempera
ture and high prices. Weather con
ditions have been singularly unpro
pitioiis, deep snow retarding dis
tribution of merchandise and exces
sive cold delaying the opening of
spring trade and structural work.
et retailers are making extensive
tpreparations and plans are sub
mitted for numerous building opera
tions. Prospects have improved on
the Pacific coast, where much needed
rain has fallen, and reports from the
south indicate exceptional prosperity.
Buyers continue to arrive at the lead
ing markets, but the volume of trade
is restricted by high prices, particu
larly for cotton goods.
Railway earnings for February
were 2.2 per cent, less than last year,
bad weather restricting traffic.
Jt may be said with some degree
of assurance that the iron and steel
industry has made further progress
in the right direction, and the pros
pect is brighter than it has been at
any time during the winter. Gains
are small, it is true, and there are
several disturbing features, yet the
presence of purchasers in all divis
ions of the market promises to re
store activity.
Failures this week in the United
Stotps are 236, against 22!) the cor
responding week last year. Failures
in Canada number 27, against 10 last
year.
STORY OF HIS LIFE.
It In Told In Court by the Altered .1!ur»
derer of J us. §». .lletmiii, the lftor*e«
inn ii.
St. Louis, March s.—"James S. Har
rington," on trial for the murder of
James P. MeCann, the well known
•horseman, gave testimony in hi.s own
behalf yesterday, lie testified that
his real name is Frederick Augustus
Barrington Seymour; that he had
never posed a.s an Knglish nobleman,
that he was born in India and had
spent a number of years in that
country, and that lie was a war cor
respondent during the South African
war. lie denied emphatically that he
was Burton, an Knglish crook, or had
gone under the alias of "Burgoyne."
"Harrington" then related his story
of the disappearance of MeCann. llis
testimony was to the effect that Me-
Cann hail invited him togo to Honlils
with him on tin' night of June 17,
1903, to meet some friends. At Bon
fils, when they left the car and start
ed down the path, somebody whistled
and Met arm whistled in response.
Suddenly they were set upon by as
sailants and both were knocked
down. Harrington fought with two
a.ssailants in the dark and was knock
ed senseless and lay iu that condition
until dawn. Me could not find Mc
< ann and proceeded to walk to St.
Louis, where he went to MeCann's
home and told Mrs. MeCann of tha
assault.
Train* Hurled In Know.
Lewistown, Mont., March s.—Some
where between here and Lombard,
nobody knows just where, three
trains, one freight and two mixed
passengers, have been buried in snow
drifts for two weeks. For three
weeks the railroad to Lewistown, tlie
famous "Jawbone" road of central
Montana, running 115 miles through
Fergus county, has been completely
blocked. Snow plows with big gang's
of men have been bucking the drifts
night and day, but snow falls almost
daily. The missing trains have not
been reached, and it is probable they
will not be found nnril a thaw set's
in. The two mixed trains carried
about 20 ipassengers. The crew of
the freight train managed to reach
Harlowton and procured provisions.
Ate I'oiKoned Candy.
Pierre, S. D., March s.—Miss Rena
Nelson, who lives with her parents on
a farm six miles north of this city, is
believed to have been fatally poison
ed from eating candy sent through
the mails. The box •containing the
condv was mailed at Boone, la., nnd
according to reliable chemists the
prison used was corrosive sublimate
Miss Nelson accuses a married woni
jii residing at Boone of being the
sender of the candy, and gives jeal
ousy as a reason for the act. The
sheriff will goto Boone, and an ar
rest is expected to follow.
DOCTORS FALL IN LINE.
Practicing Physicians recognize the unfailing reliability of Doan's Kidney Pills
by Prescribing ttiem for Backache, Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Disorders
a tribute won by no other Proprietary Medicine. Four cases cited from "Notes
of Hi.} Practice," by Dr. Lelcud Williamson, of Yorktown, Ark.
FOSTKR-MILBURN CO., Buffalo, N. Y. YORKTOWN, ARK., Mar. I, 1904.
Gentlemen: —l have been engaged in the practice of medicine in this
section for ten years. '1 his is a very sickly climate, on the Bayou Bar
tholomew, near the Arkansas River. It is particularly malarious and
miasmatic; we meet with many and various abnormal conditions of the
human family, prominent among the cases in which I have been called
upon to prescribe is kidney disease. Many of these disorders manifest
themselves by pains in the back, often extending to other parts of the
body; sometimes headache is present, caused by unemic or chronic uric
acid poisoning, soreness in region of kidneys, cloudy, thickened and foul
smelling urine, discharges of pus or corruption; inflammation of the
kidneys, extending to the bladder, is caused by excess of uric acid and
decomposition of urine. Hemorrhage is sometimes met with, caused
| by high state of inflammation or congestion.
, 1 here is no class of diseases a doctor is called oftener to treat than
the variety of kidney diseases, in many of which the patient will have
chills or rigors, followed by fever, a result of the kidneys failing to elim
inate the uric acid poison from the system. Such cases require the
kidnej s restored to their natural functions, then the poison and foreign
substances are removed—shock to the nervous system averted, and nat
ural health restored.
I have, for some time, been using Doan's Kidney Pills in these
many manifestations and with uniform success, curing most cases. I
can further say that even in hopeless cases where they have waited too
long, Doan s Kidney Pills afford much relief and prolong life. I can
recommend the pills in conditions of excessive or deficient secretion of
urine, as also in convalescence from swamp-fever and malarial attacks,
as verified by the following cases in my practice.
CASE I. CASE 3.
THOS. ORELt, Bear, Ark., age 60 Pain BROWW EAKS, Wynne, Ark., age 21,
in back for several weeks, then chills, severe cose of malarial hoemataria,
irregular sometimes, severe rigors, fol- ® r swamp fever. Gave necessary liver
lowed by fever. Gave good purgative of medicine, calomel and padoph, and
calomel and padoph, and Doan's Kidney morpli.-sulpli., to relieve pain, and
Pills. After taking four boxes of the ordered Doan's Pills for the high state
pills, patient up and enjoying good congestion and inflammation of the
health for one of his age. kidneys. Recovery resulted in two
weeks. Prescribed Doan's Kidney Pillf,
CASE 2. to be continued uutil the kidneys were
xfrc c«#thoroughly *treutfthened and all pain
Mrs. SMITH, Tarry, Ark., age 29. IN BACK SUBSIDED .
mother of four children. Had femnte
complaint and kidney trouble, manifest CASE 4.
by pain in back and urine irregular; ELIJAH EM.!OTT, Tarry, Ark., age 34.
sometimes very clear, changing to Pain in back and legs and headache,
cloudy, and with mych sediment on Uric-acid poisoning. Prescribed Doan's
standing in chamber. Gave local treat- Kidney Pills. After taking several
ment for female complaint and pre- boxes pain subsided urine became
ecritied Doan's Pills; after using six normal, or natural, and patient able to
boxes she regards herself as cured. resume his work.
These are a few of the typical cases in which I have used Doan's
Kidney Pills. In a great many instances I use them alone with cura
tive results, while with some others indicated remedies are associated.
believe that by the judicious use of Doan's Pills many serious
complications are arrested and many hopeless and incurr.ble cases of
Bright's disease prevented.
I have often found that one box of the pills is all that is required to
effect a cure, but in some cases I continue their use until all symptoms
arc entirely absent and the cure effectual and permanent. Yours truly,
A free trial of this grent Kidney and -
Bladder Specific can be obtained by ad- A /
d'essing Foster-Mi lburn Co.. Buffalo, cCJf* S7
N. Y. Tl.e regular *i*e is 50 cents *
box. If not for sale by your druggist or
deiler, will be sent by mail, charges
prepaid, on receipt »T price. YORKTOWN, ARK.
Cores Colds, Sore Throat, Cronp, Influ
enza, TV hooping C&upn, Bronchitis and Asthma.
A certain n:rc lor Consumption in first stage®,
ana a sure relief in arivanoed t-tagct. Use at once.
\on w,!i Bee the excellent effect after taking the
first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Lanr#
bott.ca io cents and 50 c^nte.
W. L/'DOUGLAS
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shoes liave by their /112
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ns those t !i;ti cost you
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Look for name and
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i» r.te for Catalog, W.L.Douglas, Brockton, Mass.
mmIMIT
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k ISAM TIME.
Mwk ememt>er thii when you buy Wet
tgsi} Weather Clothing and look for the
'iCyJf name TGWER on/the buttons,
raw This sign aid this name have stood
jf)l for the SEST during sixty-seven
.years of increasing sales.
If your dealer will not supply you write for
free catalogue of black or yellow water
proof oiled coats, slickers, suits, hats, and
horse goods for all kinds of wet work.
A. J. TOWER CO. THS «fOiWEt?'o
BOSTON. MASS.. U.S.A. .SIGN r I^--.-.^
TOWER CANADIAN CO..
TORONTO, CAN. tUMtTIiJ. #W£RMV> ?f
Worry wont cure a cough. When
you lind a cough holding on—
when everything else has failed—
try
Tsni C Luns
It is guaranteed to cure. If it
doesn't, we'll refund your money, i
Prices: S. C. VEILS & Co. 4 \
250. Wc. sl. N'.Y., Toronto, Can. |
P&YCSFC&SSS ELECTROTYPES S
{ In (rrcdt varlity for wile at the Jowest prices by 1
B i« K. L»!l«pg Se«r-p*por Co., 71 Ontario St., flcvrland. U
F«— taatfOMnni wreaths*
PiiTIS" lUTQ •»Sl„ l pc look F!IM.
M H La BTJ 0 li 1*? hc.'t references.
WTZGBIIALD & CO., Box I£, Washington, D. C.
(Wostorn Department
Chicago, 111.
Chainless bicycles equipped
with two-speed gear ami
coaster brake.
I Pope
Manufacturing-
Compasiy
The acme of bicycle con
struction, giving the maxi- 1
mum comfort and durability. I
Eastern Department (
Hartford, Conn. 1
POTATOES 2
& 500,000 BUSHELS fl
m|!pß ! SALE ji CHEAI>^
| ft, largest seed potato groktrs in the trorldt /Sp
®1 F.lcnant 6toek. Tremendous yields. •(£&
j JSIS I'roru 400 to 10GO bushels per aero.
$S FCftS 1® CENTS m
52J and this notice we pend yon lots of farm Pffi
gpt Befrt Bumi'lon and lig catalogue, telling Effl
* ,labo "t TeoEinte. Ppeltz, P«-aoat, Aerid
if n<l ,?arlc y. Wttcaror.l Wheat, UroruuH,
Karliest C&no, etc. bend for same today.
ONLY 2 CHANCES
March Ist ar.d 15th.
TEXAS, $lO CNE WAY; sls ROUND TRIP
FROM ST. LOUIS AND KANSAS CITY, - sls
From Chicago, $25; From Des Moines, $19.75
From Cincinnati, $29 40: From Indianapolis, $26.85
The one way tickets are second e!a»:<, but ffood in
Touii-t Sleeper*; the round trip ticket* are fln-t
--elaKs and nermit-stop-overs on p«»injr trip, south of
Windsor. Mo., within transit limit of i:. davs: (lnii 1
limit,2l days from date of sale. Never before lias
there been such n chance to *ee the South wot in nil
it-4 prosperity. One-wny second-class tickets will »«
bold »nmo days at a reduced rate. Never au'uin will
the rates bo so low. (JO N< »\V. for
particular#, write or call oil
WWII GEO. NORTON
/.yESffyTi o. i\ A., Knt.v nidi?.,
ST. LOUIS, WIO.
A. N. K.—C 2011
Myf ARE YOUR
§f OCE.LARS TO
\y.£" Are they In sal'o hands, brincrinfryoo satl*. e\\J
factory returns 112 ttcntl f>»r our book,
/112 4i BANKING BY MAIL" B
[= ft 'hows how YOU T*eud UK your wirings 1»T ma<|
1= no matter wnero you live, ami we pay you £
\1 5% PER ANNUM' |