Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, October 20, 1904, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
T'er year 12 no
r paid iu advance 1 W
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements nre published at the rate ot
en? dollar per square tor one Insertion and llfly
cent* per square tor each subsequent insertion.
Rates by the year, or for six or three months,
•re low aiid uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legal and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less. J'-'; each subsequent inser
tion 112 O cents per square.
Local notices lu cents per line for ons Inser
serilon; 5 cents per line for each subsequent
•ou-.eeutive Insertion.
Obituary notices over Ave lines. 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, mar
riai.-e* and deaths will be inserted free.
Business cards. Ave lines or less. 15 per year;
over live lines, at the regulur rates of adver
»i»tng.
No local inserted for less than 75 cents per
Issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the Puns* is complete
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
»<>rk. PAHXICCLAH ATTENTION J'AIDTO LAW
Pkiktino.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out ot the county must be paid
for In advance.
The total quantity of rubber export
ed to Europe from the Amazon river
during the year 1903-'O4 was 36,061,-
482 pounds, against 33,643,537 pounds
during the previous year, and 33,253,-
109 pounds were exported to the Unit
ed States, against 32,112,116 pounds
during the previous year. The total
export figures are 67,314.591 pounds
for 1903-'O4 and 05,756,048 pounds for
1902-'O3.
From Tzaritzyn, a town on the Vol
ga, comes the report that a new in
dustry has been discovered, that of
making caviar from the spawn of a
large species of frog which is found
there. It is stated that in appearance
and taste there is no difference be
tween frog's caviar and the best prod
uct of the sturgeon. A big inland
trade is going on iu this article, and
it will soon bo exported.
The average quantity of wine pro
duced in Spain annually in the last
ten years is 557,251,000 gallons. In
1900 the product was 596,866,000 gal
lons. This decrease in the vintage
represents a loss of nearly $30,000,-
000 a year to the wine growers, which
explains the crisis in the wine-produc
ing districts. Fortunately, this year's
vintage promises to be abundant and
to compensate for past losses.
A contrivance which enables otia
to catch the gamest trout with a mir
ror has been patented by a man in
East Greewich, R. I. The idea of the
invention is to make the fish see him
self in a mirror behind the bait. Im
agining that the bait is to be snapped
up by another fish, he hastens to se
cure it himself, and the hook at the
same time. At present there is no
testimony to the value of the inven
tion In practice.
The long-pending plan to connect
Singapore with Penang by railroad is
about to be carried out. Part by
part the road has been built through
the Federated Malay States, but un
til recently the sultan of Johore,
whose sultanate separates the Feder
ated Malay States from the Island of
Singapore, has not favored railroad
connection. The sultan's objections
having been overcome, it is expected
that the road will be completed with
in four or five years.
Realizing that a crowless rooster
was a long-felt want of poultry lovers,
Farmer Charles Ross, a Burnwood
(Pa.) farmer, has risen to the occa
sion and bred a crowless rooster, or,
rather, a mute male fowl. Farmer
Ross has two samples of the crowless
bird, both full grown and silent.
Neither has made any other unseem
ly noise up to date. Whether they are
deaf and dumb Ross does not know,
but they can't, don't or won't crow.
In all other respects they are like oili
er roosters. The crowless fowls are
hybrids.
Dogs trained to catch fish are
among the features of everyday life
on the barren shores of that distant
part of Labrador which belongs to
Newfoundland. The cod fisheries
along the 1,100 miles of Labrador's
coast yield about one-fifth of New
foundland's total catch and furnish
employment annually to thousands of
fisher folk. They fish with lines from
150 to 200 fathoms long, two men to
a boat, and each man using two hand
lines. The usual bait is capelin.
When fish are plentiful it takes a very
short time to fill a boat with cod.
Over a copper wire in the house of
a Portland man is apparently sent a
•dear, distinct image of a living face
whose original is a dozen yards away.
It is an attachment to a short tele
phone line, and by the complete ap
paratus it is possible to talk over the
wire and at the same instant see the
movements of the lips that are fram
ing an answer in the next room and
the expression on the face of the
speaker. In truth, it is seeing by
telephone. J. 15. Fowler, the inventor,
after 28 years of application, has par
tially perfected the apparatus.
The great importance of Prof. Pick
ering's photographs and the conclu
sions he draws from them is that they
show the possibility of life on the
moon, because, if th<'.v are correct,
they prove that the moon has an at
mosphere containing the vapor of wa
ter. In other words, if the moon has
snow and clouds it may have organic
life —vegetation, as he believes —and
if vegetation, then animal life. This
idea, in itself, is revolutionary, for the
moon has almost universally been re
garded as an absolutely and hopeless
ly <!e ad, frozen, asphyxiated world
MAKING THE RECORD.
_ - '
LITTLE BITS OF HISTORY.
A Few Events by Wliich to Measure
Candidate Davis' Protracted
Experience.
The Chicago Tribune seems to be deep
ly impressed by Candidate Davis' long
life. By it it is reminded of many things
that happened many, many years ago,
Just as thousands of others. Do you re
member, for instance, that —
In 1823—Henry G. Davis was born.
In 1824—John Quincy Adams was
elected president.
In 1830 —Henry G. Davis was seven
years old; James G. Blaine was born;
Webster and Hayne bad their famous
debate; William IV. ascended the Eng
lish throne; the first locomotive was
built by Peter Cooper.
| In 1837 —Victoria became queen of
j England; Chicago was incorporated
! with a population of 4,170; Michigan was
admitted into union; Henry G. Davis
was 14 years of age.
In 1844 —Rutherford B. Hayes and
Henry G. Davis cast their first votes;
the first telegraph line was established.
In 1848—Zachary Taylor was elected
president; the free soil party was
formed; gold was discovered in Califor
; nia; Henry G. Davis was 25 years of age.
In 1852—Alton Brooks Parker an-l
1 Charles W. Fairbanks were born; Henry
G. Davis was 29 years old.
In 1858—Pony express was established
from St. Louis to San Francisco; Tlieo
. dore Roosevelt was born; Henry G.
Davis was 35 years of age.
In 1871—Chicago was burnt; the Ger
i man empire was established; Paris
I capitulated; Henry G. Davis became
! United States senator.
In 187G—Alton B. Parker and Charles
i W. Fairbanks cast their first votes; R.
B. Hayes was elected president; Henry G.
Davis was 53 years of age.
In 1880 —James A. Garfield was elect
; ed president; Theodore Roosevelt cast
his first vote.
In 1883—Two cent postage went into
! effect; Henry G. Davis retired from the
senate.
PICKED UP HERE AND THERE.
ir-'The American workman has no de-
I sire to return to the democratic break-
I fast, food which he had on his table for
eome years.—Lowell (Mass.) Mail.
lerMr. Parker's letter serves not so
much to advance his party's interests as
| to bring out in the strongest light both
I his own and his party's weakness and in
; coherency.—Chicago Chronicle.
tc" According to the bedding odds in
| New York, the democrats are absolute
' ly certain that Parker is going to win.
but they have conscientious scruples
\ against gambling.—Chicago Post.
! tt-'Thanks to the Dingley tariff, Amer
i ican manufacturers now make practic
ally all the corsets worn in this coun
try. There's nothing like a protective
tariff to improve the national form.—
| Springfield Union.
to the Philippines, Judge Par
ker has nothing more to propose than
the United States is already doing, which
is to prepare the Filipinos as rapidly as
possible for the fullest blessings of lib
erty.—Troy (X. Y.) Times.
C>'What is democracy? The St. Louis
platform declares that "protection is
robbery," but the vice presidential can
didate says:"l believe incidental pro
j ted ion to our industries is right and
proper."—-Burlington Hawk-Eye.
tr~Now that Clark, of Montana, has
given SOOO,OOO to the democratic cam
paign fund, the practical New York
; politicians are entirely reconciled to
! Grover Cleveland's refusal to take tlio
| stump.—Chicago Tribune.
n- The democratic campaign hand
; book does well to remind the people of
| the constitution; but, as a partisan ex
pedient, is it wise to remind them, also,
that on at least one notable occasion the
republican senators defended it against
a contemplated desecration ?—Washing
ton Post.
c The republican candidate for vice
president is doing energetic, effective
| and excellent campaign work and
I accomplishing valuable results. Hisad
dresses possess abundant variety, inter
i est and force, and they are received en
| thusiastically wherever he goei.—N. Y.
i Tribune.
The Summer Engagement.
Sweet Maid—You must remember that
1 ours was a summer engagement.
The Man —That means if you see any
| one von like better you'll break it?
"Yes."
"And if I see anyone I 1 ike better—"
"I'll sue ; ou for breach of promise."—
Boston Traveler.
Appropriate.
Geraldine —Our literary club will take
| up Lamb and Bacon next winter,
i Reginald—Then why not call it the
Hash club?— St. Paul Globe.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1904.
WHICH ONE OF THE TWO?
Why Wise Voters Will Not Hesitate
to Elect Roosevelt Instead
of Parker.
The "fierce light that beats about the
throne" is a penny dip when compared
with the electric searchlight that is
turned on any citizen who is nominated
for the presidency.
This is entirely correct, and no light,
not even an X-ray, is too great to bring
to bear on the one it is proposed to ele
vate to the greatest positien of respon
sibility and power on earth.
We have before us at this time, say?
the American Dairyman, two gentle
men, one of whom is to be placed in that
exalted station, the other necessarily
relegated to comparative obscurity.
One of these has been prominently be
fore the people ever since he came to
the age of manhood, and is one of the
best known citizens in this country, who
has filled subordinate or minor political
positions in such a manner as to inspire
his fellow-citizens with confidence in his
integrity and ability, and, who, finally
reaching the highest one in the land
through an event that was truly de
plofable, brought to that most trying of
all possible positions an ability that
commanded the respect of even those
who were the most opposed to the prin
ciples of his parly.
He is a man of brains, of education, of
ceurage and of experience. The inter
ests of the nation are safe in his hands.
He is an ideal American gentleman,
with faults of his own, not a demi-god.
but true and faithful to every trust, and
worthy of the confidence and esteem of
his countrymen.
Opposed to him is a most estimable
gentleman, of fine personal character,
against whom as such not one word can
be said. He is a student, and one who
has had the ambition of winning respect
as a careful, itprigto and capable judge,
which he has already attained. With no
special knowledge of or experience in
executive positions, and with a reputa
tion of being negative rather than pos
itive. he has been stated as possessing a
"judicial" mind, one so evenly balanced
that he cannot be a partisan. Whether
these are qualifications to fit him for the
presidency is very properly a question
to consider, and when the environments
of the two candidates are looked at,
the personnel of their advisers and the
principles of the two parties they rep
resent, and the very probable disastrous
consequences that would follow a
change in the policy of the government
are considered, it is not too much to pre
dict that the voters will select the one
who has proved himself capable rather
than one whose experience and training
have not been such as to prepare him for
the heavy responsibility of the office for
which he is a candidate.
Democracy in Sad Plight.
What we may know for sure is that
the country does not regret any of the
leading achievements of the past eigl.t
years of republican rule. Wespeakthus
confidently, for the democratic party
now stands confessed before the coun
try as having been in error in its oppo
sition to the most important of these
measures. It is seeking the election
with a platform which virtually con
fesses that the party was wholly wrong
in the last two presidential campaigns.
It has a candidate who openly confesses
that it.was wrong in every vital partic
ular. It comes pleading that it has seen
the error of its ways and that as a re
formed bungler it can safely be trusted
with power. It has no argument or
charge to make against the general sum
of republican politics.—Kansas City
Journal.
What Mr. Davis Has to Say.
The sum and substance of Mr. Davis'
letter is that what the country needs ia
not a change in policies, but a change
in parties. Mr. Davis rejoices in the
things that have been done and are be
ing done by the present administration,
but. he seems to fancy that the demo
crats ought to be given a chance to show
that they can hold office without dis
turbing the machinery of state which
the republicans have got into such fine
running condition. Mr. Davis is dream
ing beautifully, and the voters will be
careful not to waken him.—Chicago Post.
Candidates Cannot Agree.
And now the head and tail do not
agree. Judge Parker swallows the dem
ocratic platform whole, including tho
plank which declares protection to be
robbery, while Mr. Davis, the octoge
narian candidate for vice president, who
comes from West Virginia, where tariff
sentiment is strong, is out for "inci
dental protection." The American peo
ple. who believe in protection out and
out, will settle it by rejecting both and
electing the republican candidates, who
are agreed on this as 011 all other ques
tions of great public concern.—Cleve
land Leader.
TRIAL OF A LABOR LEADER.
THE PROSECUTING WITNESS IS
GUARDED BY DETECTIVES.
Weinseimer's Trial Brings Out the
Fact that Defendant Threatened to
Kill the Man Who Paid Him
$2,700 to Call Off a Strike.
New York, Oct. 14.—George J. Essig,
I the complaining witness in the extor
| tion charge against Philip Weinseimer,
| in the trial before Judge Newburger, is
| protected by a guard of county de
| tectives.
That. Essig has been threatened
j with injury and was bodily assaulted
| became known Thursday. Essig said
! that shortly after Weinseimer's In
! dictment In August he received threat
! ening letters and that since his testi
! mony against Weinseimer more letters
have been received. About three
| weeks ago he was assaulted by three
i strange men near his house, beaten
l over the head and seriously injured.
The story of a threat alleged to have
I been made by Weinseimer to "use a
I gun if anything happened," was told
j Thursday by Essig in the court of gen
j eral sessions where Weinseimer is on
■ trial. It was on a complaint brought
I by Essig that Weinseimer was arrest,
j ed, and it was during the cross-exami
nation of tho chief witness for the
! prosecution by Weinseimer's counsel
! that the story was told. Essig had
told of his alleged dealings with Wein
seimer, claiming that he paid the de
fendant $2,700 for calling off a strike.
The last payment, he said, was made
I in Weinseimer's office in marked bills,
the day the labor leader was arrested.
After the transaction had been com
| pleted and while they were going
; down the elevator from Weinseimer's
| office, Essig said, Weinseimer turned
to him and said: "I've got a lot of
friends, and if anything happens they
will make the people responsible
sweat for it. I can use a gun as well
as anyone else." Essig said Wein
seimer was very much excited at the
time and before the elevator had
reached the lower floor, again turned
to his companion and said: "You
know that you are as guilty as I am."
When they stepped from the elevator
detectives were at hand, and at a nod
from Essig they placed Weinseimer
under arrest.
A NARROW ESCAPE.
The Duke of Connaught, Brother of
King Edward, Is Thrown Out of an
Automobile.
Edinburgh, Oct. 14. —Tho Duke of
Connaught, brother of King Edward,
while driving in a motor car from Ed
inburgh to Gosford House, ihe seat of
the Earl of Wemyss, had a narrow es
cape from death and suffered painful
injuries, from which he was for a
time unconscious.
The automobile in which the duke
was riding with his aide-de-camp,
Maj. Murray, in passing a street car
; collided with a cart. The overhanging
portion of the cart struck the rear seat
of the automobile and literally carried
away that section of the vehicle. The
duke was thrown out with great force.
As soon as the automobile could be
stopped Maj. Murray went to the aid
of the duke, whom he found uuconsci
i ous and bleeding from wounds about
| the head. A second automobile, carry
ing members of the duke's suite, came
up and the duke was taken back to
j Edinburgh in it. By the time the au
tomobile reached Edinburgh the duke
; had recovered and was able to walk
I into the hotel. After two stitches
! were taken in his ear and his hurts
| had been examined by physicians it
: was announced that the duke would
| suffer no serious consequences.
Chicago to Have the Biggest Hotel.
Chicago, Oct. 14. —Chicago is to
have the largest hotel in the world. It
will cost $10,000,000, be i! 2 stories high
and dwarf in size and magnificence
any structure of tho kind ever erected.
The owners will be a syndicate of Chi
cago and eastern capitalists headed
by Otto Young. The hotel will occupy
property measuring 400 feet in length
by 171 feet in deplh in Michigan ave
! nue, two blocks south of tho Auditori
um. Steel construction will be used
in building the new hotel, which will
be the highest building in Chicago in
point, of stories, with the exception of
tho Masonic Temple.
Schooner Driven on a Bar.
Chatham, Mass., Ocl. 11.—A terrific
sea, the result of a three days' north
easter, drove onto Chatham outer bar
at S o'clock last night an unknown
three-masted schooner, which the life
savers were unable to reach and which
at a Into hour last night they feared
I would goto pieces before morning,
j The vessel had lights in the cabin
1 when she struck the bar, but the life
! savers were unable to get any re
-1 sponse to their hails, nor answers to
their signals. The schooner went
ashore at low water.
SIOO,OOO Fire Loss.
Kansas City, Mo., Oct. 14. —Fire yes
terday destroyed three buildings of
! the plant, of the United Zinc and
Chemical Co. at Argentine, Kan., a
I suburb, causing a loss of SIOO,OOO.
! Thousands of fish in the Kaw river
1 were killed by acids and chemicals
that escaped from the plant into the
j stream.
j Redmond Tells of Success in America.
Dublin, Oct. 14. —When John E. Red
mond, newly arrived from his Ameri
can tour, reached Dublin last night he
was escorted to the rooms of the Uni
ted Irish league by torch bearers and
enthusiastic crowds. Addressing a
meeting of the league, Mr. Redmond
emphasized tho unexpected success
that, had attended his visit to America.
He said he believed there was nothing I
the Irish party could not ask from
America so long as they avoided dis
sension and pursued a sensible policy J
In pressing towards the great goal of |
independence.
THE UNITED STATES "WILL SOON
KNOCK AT THE DOORS OF
CANADA FOR WHEAT.
A Crop of G0,000,000 Bushels of
Wheat Will Be the Record
of 1904.
The results of the threshing in
Western Canada are not yet com
pleted, but from information at hand,
It is safe to say that the average per
acre will be reasonably high, and a
fair estimate will place the total j-ield
of wheat at 60,000,000 bushels. At pres
ent prices this will add to the wealth
of the farmers nearly $60,000,000. Then
think of the immense yield of oats and
barley and the large herds of cattle,
for all of which good prices will be
paid.
The following official telegram was
cent by Honorable Clifford Sifton, Min
ister of the Interior, to Lord Strath
cona, High Commissioner for Can
ada: —
"Am now able to state definitely
that under conditions of unusual diffi
culty in Northwest a fair average
crop of wheat of good quality has been
reaped and is now secure from sub
stantial damage. The reports of in
jury by frost and rust were grossly ex
aggerated. The wheat of Manitoba
and Northwest Territories will aggre
gate from fifty-five to sixty million
bushels. The quality is good, and the
price is ranging around one dollar per
bushel."
Frank H. Spearman, in the Saturday
Evening Post, says:
"When our first transcontinental
railroad was built, learned men at
tempted by isothermal demonstration
to prove that wheat could not profit
ably be grown north of where the line
was projected: but the real granary of
the world lies up to 300 miles north
of the Canadian Pacific railroad, and
the day is not definitely distant when
the United States will knock at the
doors of Canada for its bread. Rail
road men see such a day; it may be
hoped that statesmen also will see It,
and arrange their reciprocities while
they may do so gracefully. Americans
already have swarmed into that far
country and to a degree have taken
the American wheat field with thein.
Despite the fact that for years a little
Dakota station on the St. Paul road
—Eureka—held the distinction of be
ing the largest primary grain market
in the world, the Dakotas and Minne
sota will one day yield their palm to
Saskatchewan.
Historic Spot for Sale.
A British camp, dating back prior to
the Roman invasion, is advertised for
sale. It has an area of 20 acres, and
is more than 300 feet above tho sea
level. It served the troops of Caesar,
the Saxons, Ethelred, Alfred the Great,
and the soldiers of Cromwell. The pro
prietor asks SSOO an acre.
Lose Whiskers in Race with Death.
A wild ride through the blazing for
ests from the Hastings Sawmill com
pany, near Sliaman, B. C., cost every
man 011 the train his whiskers and
many of them lost their hair and
clothes. They ran a race with death,
aud their escape was marvelous.
WHAT ROME THIS
THE POPE'S PHYSICIAN ENDORSES
AN AMERICAN REMEDY.
Dr. I.npponl r*e» Dr. William** Pink Pills
In His Practice liecause Results
Meet Ills Expectations.
Dr. Lapponi, the famous physician to
the Vatican, whose name has recently
come so greatly to the front on account
of his unremitting attention to His
Holiness, the late Pope Leo XIII, and
tho high esteem and confidence with
which ho is regarded by the present
Pope, His Holiness Pius X, is a man of
commanding genius. Ho is more than
a mere man of science; ho is a man of
original and independent mind. Ull
- by tho "etiquette" of tho
medical profession and having used Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People in
his practice with good results, ho freely
avows the facts and endorses the value
of I bis remedy with an authority which
no one will venture to question.
Dr. Lappor.i's Letter.
"I certify that I have used Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills in four cases
of tho simple anaemia of develop
ment. After a few weeks of treat
ment, the result came fully up to my
expectations. For that reason I
shall not fail in tho future to extend
the use of this laudable preparation
not only in the treatment of other
forms of the category of amemia or
chlorosis, but also in cases of neuras
thenia and tho like."
(Signed) GIUSEPPE LAPPONI,
Via dei Gracchi 332, Rome.
The "simple anaunia of development,*
referred to by Dr. Lapponi, is of course,
that tired, languid condition of young
girls, whose development to womanhood
is tardy and whose health, at that period,
is so often imperiled. His opinion of
the value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
for Palo People at that time is of the
highest scientific authority, and it con
firms the many published cases in which
anaemia and other diseases of the blood,
as well as ne»'Vous diseases such as ner
vous prostration, neuralgia, St. Vitus'
dance, paralysis and locomotor ataxia
ha-e been cured by these pills. They
are commended to the public for their
efficiency in making now blood and
utrengtheniug weak nerves. After
such an endorsement they will be ac- 1
cepted by tho medical and scientiiio 1
World at their full value.
MEXICAN
Mustang Liniment
for Man, Beast or Poultry.
A NEW FLYING MACHINE.
Brazilian Rival of Prof. Langley Wilt
Test His Contrivance Shortly—No
Balloon Used.
A flying machine designed by the
Brazilian Alvarez has been completed
in London and will be tested shortly.
It consists of two winglike aeroplanes
40 feet in length from tip to tip, with
a total surface of 400 square feet
These are attached to a bamboo
framework by wire.
The motor is two horse-power, run
by petroleum, and there are two pro
pellers five feet in diameter, and twe
rudders, one with an up and down
motion and one which moves frorc
right to left. The entire machine
weighs 150 pounds.
No balloon of any kind is used
The machine will be taken aloft 5.00 C
feet by a balloon and then released.
It is asserted that when the problem
of supplying sufficient motor power is
solved the duration of the machine's
flight will be no less certain than the
run of a motor car.
ALL BROKEN DOWN.
No Sleep—No Appetite—Just a Continual
Backache.
Joseph McCauley, of 144 Sholto St.,
Chicago, Sachem of Tecumseh Lodge..
6ays: "Two years age
niy health was coin-,
pletely broken dowi».
My back ached and
mSFaTi was 80 * amo that at
times I was hardly
uie6 /'{Srj a ble to dress myself
m y appetite and
xJ///. was unable to sleep.
i There seemed to be
no relief until I took
Doan's Kidney Pills, but four boxes of
this remedy effected a complete and
permanent cure. If Buffering 1 humanity
knew the value of Doan's Kidney Pills,
they would use nothing else, as it is the
only positive cure I know."
For sale by all dealers. Price 60cents:.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
It Cnrcs Colds, Conqhs, Sore Throat, Cronp, Influ -
enza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma..
A certain cure for Conenmption in first Btnge«„,
and n sure relief in advanced etagce. Use at once.
Yon will see the excellent effect after takiDß tlis
first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Large
bottles ii cents and 50 cents.
MORTH-SOUTH'EAST'WEST!
mernt*, irew wihb nw®
W
fk i "
A S'SH
/A WATtRPROer
A'-V4 OlfctP CkOTHIMC
M: fctLRYWH&Rt.
jrvrn -r-~ y The best fntrterid^illedworlmcrxand
®3t*ty -.seven .wiri fAperieivce htwemwfc |
TOWER'S flicker! Coab end Hub i
famous the worM over They ans mode inl
■ black or .yellowfor all kinds of wet work, j
IvSffO w*levei7jarmentbeorinjtheslGNOf
■ TMC Ff5H isflimnteedtooivex*
ijfoctron. All reliable dealen jell then,
ill ATMM ' A.J.TOWtt Ca.MJIM.HASS.OiA.
J All PlltP TOfftl CAKAtIAH CO. bmWTOBOHIQ.CAN
Western Canada's
Magnificent Crops
for 1904--=«
Western Canada's Wheat Crop
Tu this year will he OO,O<»O,<M>4)
bushes, and wheat at nrosontis
f&flF worlll a bushel.
The oat ami barley crop will
Qlm&l also yield abundantly.
Splendid prices for all kinds of grain. cattle and
other farm produce lor the growing of which the*
climate is unsurpassed.
About Americans have settled 1l
Western Canada during the past three yearn.
Thousands of free llonicEteads of 1 AO aereseacfe*
still available in the best agricultural districts*
Tf has been said that the United States will be
forced t«» Import wheat within a very few years
Secure a farm i u Canada and become one oJ those
who will help produce it.
Apply for Information to SrPEWXTESUENT 0»"
Im mh;ua nox, Ottawa, Canada; or to
11. 31. MiI.MAMS, l.aw Rnlldlnf, Toledo, Ohio.
Authorized Canadian Goverurreni Agent.
~irsn *i\ migar i-.~ ■ - ttbt n ,«r jaraga&orA.r?u
Big Four |
Route
TO
St Louis'
4 'The Way of the World"
to ths
World's Fair
For information as to rates, hotels 112
and boarding houses, address ;
nearest Big Four Agent, or
WARREN J. LYNCH,
MEXICAN
Mustang Liniment
cures Cuts, Burns, Cruises.