j->etinsylvania RAILROAD. PHILADELPHIA AND ERIE RAILROAD DIVISION. In effect May 28. 1904. TRAINS LEAVE EMPORIUM EASTWARD 810 A. M.—Week days for Sunbury, Witkesbarre, Scrautou, Hazleton, Pottsville, Harrisburg » nil intermediate stations, arriving at Philadelphia 6.23 P.M., New Y0rk9.30 P. M., Baltimore ti 00 P. M., Washington 7.15 P. M. Pullman Parlor car from Williamsport to Philadelphia and passengercoaches from Kane to Philadelphia and William sport to llalti inoreand Washington. 12:25 P. M. (Emporium Junction) daily for Sun bury, Harrisburg and principal intermediate station*, arriving at Philadelphia, 7:32 p. in.; New York, 10:23 n. in.; Baltimore, 7:30 p. in.; Washington, 8:38, i>. in. Vestibuled Parlor cars and passenger coaches, Uufl'alo to Phila delphia and Washington. 8 20 P. M.—daily for Harrisburg and intermediate stations, arriving at Philadel phia, 4.23 A. M., New York 7.13 A. M. Baltimore, 2:20 A. M. Washington, 3:30 A. M. Pullman sleeping carsfrom HarrisburgtoPhil kdelphia aud New York. Philadelphia pas seugerscan remainiu sleeper undisturbed un til7:3o A. M. 10 30 P. M.—Daily for Sunbury, Harris burg and intermediate stations arriving at Philadelphia 7.17 A. M., New York 9.33 A. M., weekdays, (10.38 A. M. Sunday;) Baltimore 7.15 A. M., Washington 8.30 A.M. Pullman sleep ing cars from Erie.Buffaloand Williamsportto Philadelphia and Buffalo, Williamsport to Washington. Passenger cars from Erie to Philadelphia and Williamsport to Baltimore. 12:15 A. M. (Emporium Junction),daily for Sim bury, Harrisburg and principal intermediate stations, arriving at Philadelphia, 7:32 a. in.; New York, 9:33 a. m., week days: (10:38 Sun days); Baltimore, 7:25 a. m.; Washington. 8:48 a. m. Vestibuled Buffet Sleeping Cars and Passenger coaches, Buffalo to Philadelphia aud Washington, I WESTWARD. 6:10 A. M. -Emporium Junction— dally for Erie, Ridgway, and week days for Du- BOIH, Clermont aud intermediatestations. lO 30 A. M.—Daily for Erie and week days for Dußois andintermediatestations. B '23 P. M. —Week days lor Kane and intermediate stations. RIDGWAY AND CLEARFIELD R. R. CON NECTIONS. (Week days.) SOUTHWARD. Stations. NOBTHWAKB r. M A.M. A.M. P.M. P.M. P.M. ..... 9 50| 4 41 ...Driftwood 4 05' 11 05 .... 10 25 5 10 Emporium June 3 23;10 38 H 20 11 05 fi ,V> .... Kane 12 25 300 8 25 3 36111 23 6 13 . ..Wilcox 12 02 . 2 40 804 8 48 II 43 6 25 .Jobusouburg.. U 47. 2 2K 7 41 1I I I I II 4 0.5 12 05 650 ...Ridgway,.... 920 210 730 i'isi'i 16 701 ..Mill Haven... 90U i'sß|7 20 4 26112 241 710 .. Croyland.... 9 00: 149 709 4 84112 821 719 ...Blue Rock... 8 sl| 140 701 4 38 12 35 7 21 Carrier 8 47; 1 37! 6 57 4 48 12 45 732 .Brockwavville. 837 1 27. 647 4 53.12 30j 737 ...Lanes Mills.. 8 34! l 23; 643 4 671 17 41 .McMinns Sm't. 8 30: | 638 8 Ol! 100 745 Harveys Run.. 825 1 15 | 635 605 105 750 ..Falls Creek... 820 1 lOi 630 6 201 1 as| 8 01 ... Dußois 8 6 10! 1 15! 765 ..FaUB Creek... 653 115 «80 627 129 808 .Rej-noidsville.. 63912 52 6 15 « 00; 156 8 a l * ...firookville... 80512 21 539 B 45; 238 9 20 New Bethlehem 11 44 4 50 7 25 3 20 10 00 ...Red Bank 11l 05 4 05 10 10 530 12 35 ....Pittsburg ; 9 00 1 30 r. M.|P. M.'p. M. A. M.!A. M. P. M. BUFFALO St ALLEGHENY VALLEY DIVISION. Leave Emporium Junction for Port Allegany, "Mean, Arcade, East Aurora and Buffalo. Train No. 107, daily, 4:05 A. M. Train No. 115, daily, 4:15 P. M. Trains leave Emporium for Keating, Port Allegany, Coudersnort, Smethport, Eldred, Bradford,Oleanand Buffalo,connecting at Buf falo for points East and West. Train No. 101, week days 8:25 A. M. Train No. 103, week days 1:35 P. M. Train No. 103 will connect at Olean with Chautauqua Division for Allegany, Bradford, Balamancs,Warren, Oil City and Pittsburg. LOW GRADE DIVISION. EASTBOUND. ... STATION*. ' 109 113 101 105 107 051 i : I 1 I A. M. A. M. A. M. P. M P. M A. M. Pittebnrg,..Lv ; 16 15 t9 00 fl3o *505 * 9 00 Red Bank, ! j 930 11 05 405 7 55. 11 10 Lawsonham ! 9 47 £lllß 4 18 8 07 11 23 New Bethle'm. 1 10 20 It 44 4 50 8 37 11 55 Urookville tO 05 11 10 12 21 5 39 9 22 12 41 Reynoldsville,. j 639 11 42 12 52 6159 50 114 Falls Creek....! 653 11 57 1156 30 1005 129 Dußois, 7 oo tl2 05 125 6 40 1015 * 1 35 Babula 7 12 J 37 6 53 Pennfleld, 7 30 1 55 7 15 j Benneiette,.... 8 04 2 29 7 47 Driftwood 18 40 f3 05 820 *ia P. & E. Div Driftwood.. Lv. '9 50 13 45 Emporium, Ar. FlO 30 +4 10 IA.JM. A. M. p. m.'P. M p. M Ip. M, WESTBOUND. . . .. . STATIONS. ! 108 106 102 114 ! 110 952 | I I I I I ! j ! Via P. &E. Div A. M. A.M. A. M. P. M. P. M. P. M. Emporium, Lv.j t8 10 13 20 Driftwood, Ar 1 19 01 14 00 ViaL. O. Div | Driftwood, Lv +5 50 flllO |+s 50 Bcnnezette, . .' 6 25 11 45 6 25 fennfleld 7 00 12 20 7 04 Babula, I 7 18 12 39 7 23 Dußois —6 05 7 30 12 65 fS 00 7 35 14 10 Falls Creek 1 0 12 7 55 1 15 5 10 7 42 I 17 Reynoldsville...' 6 30 8 08 1 29 5 27 7 58 4 30 Urookville 7 05 8 &■> 1 56 6 00 18 30 5 00 New Bethle'm 7 51 9 20 2 38 fi 45 5 45 Lawsonham, . 8 21 9 17 13 06 ' 7 14 ... . 6 18 Red Bank. Ar.. 8 a - . 10 00 3 20 7 25 6 30 Pittsburg, Ar.„>U 15 11235 15 SO 11010 19 30 A. M. P. M. P. If. P. M. P. M. P. M. "Daily. fDaily except Sunday. [Sunday only. 11-lag Stop. On Sunday only train leaves Driftwood 8:20 a. m., arrives at Dußois, 10:0u a, m. Returning leaves Dußois, 2:00 p. m.; arrives at Driftwood, 8:10 p. m.. stopping at intermediate stations. For Time Tables aud further information, ap ply to Ticket Agent. J. R. WOOD. I'ass'gr Traffic Mgr. W. W. ATTKRBURY, GEO. W. BOYD, General Manager. Gcn'l Passenger Agt. [if j I You are not familiar with the excellence of the Cameron County Press as a FAMILY news paper, why not sub scribe for it now. We are certain that yon will be pleased. The cost is nominal, I $1.50 I>cr CARBOLIC ACID ANTIDOTE. Turpentine Has Been Found to Be Ef fective and Useful in Several Recent Cases. A remarkable discovery has appar ently been made by a Dublin veterin ary surgeon named Allen respecting au antidote for carbolic acid poisoniug. Some time ago his attention was drawn to two horses which were evi dently suffering from poisoning. On examining one he noticed that mucous surface of the mouth was blanched and that the animal was staggering There was a general twitching of the muscles, the eyes were staring, and the animal was rapidly assuming a comatose condition. Mr. Allen asked for some oil, liaseed for preference, if, not, any kind of oil that was handy. Some was brought, and about two wine glassfuls administered to one of the animals, the effect being, to quote the words of Mr. Allen, miraculous. For the first time he then noticed that the "oil" which had been given to the horse was the ordinary turpentine of commerce. So satisfied was he with the result that he gave the second horse a dose, although at that tlmo the animal was unconscious. In about ten minutes it recovered, and both horses were at work the nest day, aa if nothing had happened. Not long after this, by a peculiar coincidence, Mr. Allen was asked to look at a blacksmith, who, after drink ing a glass of stout, had become very 111. In the forg* the veterinary found the smith In a condition of coma, a strong smell of carbolic acid pervading the premises. Ultimately he discovered that the man had drunk out of the wrong vessel, and imbibed a solution of the acid instead of the stout. A doc tor was at once sent for, but in the meantime Mr. Allen administered a dose of turpentine that happened to be on the premises, and the man not only quickly recovered, but resumed his work within an hour. Turpentine as an antidote in similar cases has been previously unknown, and a representative of the Daily News recently sought out an expert with a view of getting a medical opinion upon a matter of so much importance. "The symptoms in the case you mention," he said, "are distinctly those of car bolic acid poisoning, and so successful does the treatment appear to have been that further experiments in the same direction are well worth trying. If subsequent experiments confirms the oil of turpentine treatment, then on every packet or bottle containing carbolic acid should be printed this simple antidote." —London News. TESLA'S WIRELESS TOWER. Unique Structure on Long Island Will Be in Touch with All Parts of the World. The Tesla central power plant and transmission tower for the transmis sion of wireless world telegraphy is nearing completion. It is located at Wardenclyffe, L. I. The structure is a pyramidal tower of octagonal shape. The height Is 185 feet, and its promoters declare that it emits a transmission wave complex of a total maximum of 10,000,000 horse power, one per cent, of which would encircle the globe. This is but the first of a number of towers to be placed over the world, each one to be near some great com mercial center, for the transmission of t WIRELESS TELEGRAPH TOWER world messages. Each tower can op erate hundreds of millions of pocket size instruments that can be set up anywhere on ocean, mountain, or des ert, and there will receive any mes sages intended for it. The entire pop ulation of the world will then be in direct communication. The value of such an instrument can be better understood when it is rea lized that if it fulfills its claims it will entirely do away with the possibilities ] of Uobinson Crusoes on desert islands. Hereafter no explorer will be cut off from civilized communication as were Livingstone and Stanley in darkest Africa. The Klondikers and the Intrepid I'olar explorers will soon be In constant communication with the I entire world, as will be all vessels In | any sea. The completion of the system will revolutionize military tactics. Th« Russian-Japanese war may mark the end of the old way of fighting. The next war may be entirely based on the use of the Tesla wireless telegraphy lowers. -■ * < 1 tr -.TCK,' . -Ir.lrz' CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1904. WONDERFUL SEARCHLIGHT. It It Provided with an Illuminator of What Is Known as 316,000,- 000 Candle Powir. Some Idea of tho great illuminating power of this Instrument may be gauged from the fact that it is of 316,- 000,000 candle power. If it were pos sible to set the giant upon a hill or tower 200 feet high its rays could be easily detected 70 or 80 miles away; indeed, it is almost impossible to tell how far its rays could penetrate, as no actual demonstration has been made. It was built by the famous Schuckert company, of Nuremberg, who have given considerable attention to the manufacture of searchlights. This lirm built the 20,000,000 caudle power ; -- BIGGEST SEARCHLIGHT KNOWN. searchlight recently Installed in the Heligoland lighthouse. The search light under notice is fitted with an Iris shutter. It has a diameter of six feet six inches, and was adopted in order to make the projector light-tight at any moment desired; it is operated in much the same way as a shutter in modern cameras. The leaves of th 9 shutter slide within a fixed diaphragm located in the axis of the ray of light. The whole device is electrically con trolled by two levers. One of thes® controls the motor mounted in the base of the searchlight, which operates the projector in a vertical direction through a train of gears, the other starts or Btops the electrical motor which controls the horizontal move ment of the beam of light. THEORIES ABOUT THE SUN There Is No Immediate Danger That the Great Orb of Light Will Burn Itself Out. The current theories concerning the sun and the planets are that the sun was once vastly hotter than it is now, and that for a long period it has been slowly but steadily cooling. The doctrine is built on the notion that the sun is a mass of fire in progress of intense and fierce combustion, and that, like any other fire, unless its fuel is replenished, it must burn out and become extinguished. Some astronomers teach that the sun is supplied with fuel by vast quantities of comets and meteors that are shoveled into it by some process of nature, but other astronomers like Sir Robert Hall reject the possibility of any such sys tematic supply of fuel, and they believe that the sun as it burns out shrinks in size at the rate of 220 feet of its diame ter in a year. As the mass of the sun is something like 880,000 miles in diameter, it is calculated still to last for a good long time, but there is something extremely melancholy and saddening in the idea that our grand luminary will one day burn out with a spasmodic gleam and a whiff of ill-smelling smoke like the snuff of a candle. It is with great satisfaction that we are allowed to believe in the possibility that the sun is made of radium, and that it can continue to give off heat and lifilit for an inconceivable lapse of ages with out being in the least diminished either in size or capacity to warm and illum inate us. The idea that it is not losing 220 feet of its diameter yearly Is particu larly consoling. There is another suggestion which would enable our solar system to con tinue Its operations without either suf fering an instantaneous conflagration or being consumed by slow combustion, and this is that the sun and various bodies which revolve around it consti tute an electric dynamo and an incan descent lamp on such a scale as could ba designed and created by combined om niscience and omnipotence, to goon its beneficent course forever. Such a notion meets only the contempt of science, which insists upon the existence of actual fire In the sun, that must sooner or later burn Itself out to complete ex tinguishment. Until, however, astron omers like Prof. Langley shall make a flying machine without balloon attach ment that will enable human beings to fly, their vagaries concerning the play ing out of the sun may well be neglected by all except full-ficdged scientists. Sapphire Fields in Montana. Prof. Elrod, of the University of Mon tana, gives a striking description of the treasure that his state possesses in sap phires. The only systematic mining for these precious stones in the United States is done in Montana. The annual output amounts to 450.000 or 500,000 carats, including the stones that are suitable for cutting as gems and those that are only useful mechanical pur poses. It Is said the lapidaries in Helena do finer work than is done on the stones that are sent to London to be cut. Per haps somebody will suggest that Mon tana should be called the "gem state." in view of the fact that her output of pre cious stones exceeds the production in that line of dU the rest of the United States. --'—' LIKE A "THIN RED LINE." Jtnks' Red Flannel Underwear Looked Like a String of Coral Beads. t.omicbody told Mr. Jenks that red flannel l worn next to tlie skin would cure the rfleu | matUm from which he suffered. So he pur chased several sets of red flannel undergitr ment». The clerk assured him that the firm guaranteed the goods in every particular. About two weeks later, says the New York ! 'limes, Mr. Jenks revisited the shop, sought out the proprietor and told Ins woeful story. "The goods are the best in the house," de clared the proprietor. "Of course," he i>aid, in the reasonable tone used on unreason able persons, "of course the shirts may have shrunk or faded a little—" I "Shrunk! Faded!" bellowed Mr. Jenks. "What do you think my wife said to me when I came down to breakfast yesterday ; with one of them on'/" j The proprietor looked bored. "Well, sir," said the aggrieved Jenks, i "sh« looked at ine a minute, and then said; ; 'What is that little red line round your neck. John.? It isn't the baby's string of coiai | beads, is it?' " HE LIKED TO* "SUCCUMB." Brewery Man Wore the White Ribbon Because He Was Tempted and Treated. Mrs. Robert J. Burdette tells a story about | the white ribbon which is the sign of total abstinence. "There are some persons," said ; Mrs. Burdette, according to the Chicago I Daily News, "who don't wear the white rib bon with sincerity. They wear it, perhaDs, [ about as hypocritically as it was worn by an employe of a certain brewer. This em ploye. after years of dissipation, appeared one clay at the brewery with the wtute rib : bon on his breast. ; "Nothing was said to him and he wore the ribbon for some months. Then one day tlie bead ; of the firm, happening to notice the man's badge, approached him. 'Why, Frank,' he said, 'it i» strange to see you, a brewer, wearing the white ribbon.' 'lt does look strange, sir,' the man admitted. | "'Well/ said the brewer 'why do you do it?' 'lt i 9 like this,' said the workman. '1 I wear the ribbon because it makes men like to tempt me, and when I'm tempted 1 suc cumb, iir.' " Just Wanted to Arrive. After Eugene Field'a return from his first trip to Europe, where he "spent his patri ! mony like a prince," and before he went to Denver, he had a little close personal ex | perience with hard times. One day he walked into a leading St. Louis hotel, and, squaring himself before the register, in scribed his name in his well-known copper plate chirography. The clerk had never heard of him, Dut he read the name with a quick glance, and said: "Do you wish a room, Mr. Field?" "No," was the answer, j "Dinner?" "So." "Then may I ask what you do what?" continued the clerk. "I just wanted to arrive," replied Field, solemnly; "I had not arrived at a good hotel for many j months. I feel better. Thank you." and he stalked out with long, heavy stride*.—San Francisco Argonaut. Kansas City Southern Ry. Special Excursion : Sept. 13, 20 and 27, Oct. 4 and 18, 1904, tr> Arkansas, Indian Territory, Louisiana i and Texas, very low one way and round ! trip rates. For further information, write to S. O. Warner, G. P. Si T. A., K. C. S, lly., Kansas City, Mo. An Exception. "Pat," said the philanthropist of the neighborhood, "there is not a living crea ture but what appreciates kindness." "I axes your pardon, sor, but iny nose : wore as straight as ony man's till I troied I to brush off a horse floiy thot was stingin' the hind leg of a mule." —Detroit Free Press. I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumptior | saved my life three years ago.—Mrs. Tho ; ltobbina, Norwich. N. Y. Feb. 17.1900. A good deal of the money that makes the mare go is invested in wild oats, • Puck. Russians never meet without exchanging hard words. —Indianapolis News. Yesterday is dead, to-morrow is unborn. Distribute your bouquets to-day. The price of structural iron is the lowest in ' four years. If you find meat and bread too expensive for you, try structural iron.—ln | diauapolis News. A Chicago man has taken out a patent on ; a new-fangled bread-basket. Whether this is for the use of bakers or dyspeptics the specifications fail to specify.—Puck. A Jersey City nine-year-old boy, arrested for throwing potatoes at pedestrians and : breaking a window, was sentenced by the judge to be taken to the public bathhouse and washed. Horrible! "It do seem," said Uncle Eben, 'Mat some mighty disagreeable people manages to | prosper. Mavbe it's because dey doesn' waste so much time bein' sociable an' tellin' funny stories."—Washington Star. "Don't you think he lacks aplomb?" a-ked Mrs. 01dca* , tle. "Well." replied her hoste>s, "I don't know, but at the dinner the other ■ night it did seem to be a> though he couldn't get enough peaches."—Chicago Record-iler ald. "What mo' does yon want," asks a colored philosopher, "than cotton ter ■ lothe you, corn ter feed you, a shelter, w'en ; it's rainin', en a fiddle ter make you dance w'en \on feels lonesome?"— Atlanta Consti , lution. In looking over the effects of a M.i-sacliu : setts millionaire recently, his executors, who | had handled vast sums until they grew to seem rather commonplace, "discovered per sonal property, hitherto unknown, to the amount of a million ntid a half." The inci dent helps one to realize bow large a large fortune is. And yet the emotions of these executors were only such as poor folk may experience. Who has not known the joyful surprise of finding a dime or a nickel in an . unused pocket?— Youth's Companion. Two Kinds. ( "In politics, aren't you?" "Yes." "ll'm! Are you a point wilh-pride or a Tic w-with-alarm?"—Puck. For lufauts and Children j., C * # The Kind You Have Always Bought \ _ IN •»NT*U» ••MPMIT. ft ItWMAT HT* ness and pain, says Miss Alma Pratt, if they will only have faith in the use of Lydia E> Pinkham's Vegetable Compounds "DEAR MRS. PINKJTAM:— I feel it my duty to tell all young women now much Lydia E. Pinkham's wonderful Vegetable Compound has done for me. I was completely run down, unable to attend school, and did not care for any kind of society, but now I feel like a new person, and have gained seven pounds of flesh in three months. " I recommend it to all young women who suffer from female weak*, ness." Miss ALMA PRATT, Holly, Mich. FREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO YOUXO QIRLS. All young girls at this period of life are earnestly invited to write Mrs. Phikham for advice; she has guided in a inotlierly way hundreds of young women; her advice is freely and cheerfully given, and her address is Lynn, Mass. .Tudglnf* from the letters she Is receiving from no many younjr girls Mrs, Pinkham believes that our girlß are often pushed altogether too near the limit of their endurance nowadays in our public schools and seminaries. Nothing is allowed to interfere "with studies, tlie girl must be pushed to the front and graduated with honor; often physical collapse follows, and it takes years to recover the lost vitality,— often it is never recovered. A Young Chicago Girl Saved from Despair. "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM: I wish to thank you for 1 lie help and ben efit I have received through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and Liver Pills. When I was about seventeen years old I suddenly seemed to lose my 4 usual good health and vitality. Father said I studied too hard, but the doctor thought different and prescribed tonics, which I took by the Ysjr quart without mliof. Reading one day in the paper of Mrs. Pinkham's great cures, and finding the symptoms described an \"!g> s swered mine, I decided I would give Lydia / P E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a > ssa|§BWwk trial. J did not say a word to the doctor; 1 * a_- j bought it myself, and took it according glefci to directions regularly for two months, W ancl 1 found that I gradually improved, iL and that all pains left me, and I was my !Sw v / f1 ff 112 old self once more. LII.LIE E. SINCLAIR, ' 112 ' 17 E. 22<1 St., Chicago 111." Lvdla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the one sure rem edy to be relied upon at this Important period in a young girl s life; with it she can go through with courage and safety the wortt she must accomplish, and fortify her physical well being so that ber future life may he insured against sickness and suifering. All" AAA FORFEIT I ' we osnnot forthwith produce the original letter, and clgsattttM ei Vhllllll obovo teatuuonfau, which will prove their absolute genuluenetn. iDwUUU J.ydia K. Plukham Medicine Co.. Lynn, Mu«. ™*fim ; 't ESS! 53.30 BHOES 3£. ■•£& w ~ L - Douglas makes and sella more men's ' 93.A0 shoes than any other manufacturer 1 X «£■■ r -0 «hoe» are tti» Ua %%&-'■ ioilfcru in tli« t\orld is because of their excellent sty!*, ea, y fl'iinj* and •uuerior qnalitlwi. Ir I 00aid «liow vA you the difference nttween the snoet made In my factory and thoie of other makes and Iji* leathers used, you IjvT ] would understand why \V. \„ Douglas fs,6o shoes cost niois AT /< to make, why they hold tholr shape, fit better, wear longer, j fir /'-I fg\ and are of ttreater intrlnslo mine thun any oilier Sa.GO shoe jy fc, ' j y 1 n lnarkf t to-day, uinl \rhy the s:.les for the year ending / ** $6,263,040*00. 8 j >^k.** : Ji W. L. Douglas guarantees their value ly stamping hlr nnme C • y l!V>* . ;frrg* land price on the bottom. Look tor it—taLe do subitlt# *. « by etio® dealers everywhere. J<ist Color Eyelets ujcJ S l/j Superior in Fit, Comfort and Wear. q \ JL <£?£*■ u I hare irornW.L Doutftos $3.59 rhrrs for the last twelve year§ \l /Sl. >' i vsi''-0 fe r, A tcilU absolute satis/action, j jlwi them superior inJU%cotryort IK .JH .0 /iM&S. 1 and mar to others costing from to $7.00,' ' /d3''%i \ i '~' s ' *Un* Vept. Cull.* I'.X, Jut. /itvenue* RxchmondiYa* Yrnrff r XV. L. n«os Corona Coltikln Jn hi» 83.50 Corona Colt is conceded to be tiio lluebl JoRL^ **" 108 CATA,OOCIE OIVIMO FOT.L INSTRCCTI 01:8 GREATEST SHOE KAKEf? Ws Lm UOUOLAS, Brockton, Mjuw, A.N. K.-C 2G4 Bull II ST EE P. Illlil RANGES THE RELIABLE MAKE Correctly built of the right materials, they save fuel and give years of satisfactory service. Sizes for all requirements. CATALOG FHEK The Born Sfeef Range Co. Originators of the Steel Range, CLEVELAND, - - OHIO Strawberry and Vegetable Dealers The Passenger Department of the Illinois Central I tin 11 road Company liave recently issued a publica tion known as Cucular No. 12. in which is described ! the best territory in this country ■ lor tho growing of early strawberries and early j vegetables. Every denier in snoh products should I address a postal*-a ft tothe undesigned at nrtiutjtK, I iowa, requesting a ropy of "Circular No. 12." J. F.BTttUIIY. Asst. Uen'l l'ass'r Agent. Ml Att&KESISSIJS & Mil ■_ mr 11. I lin.l I'IMITIVK Mr I I n % ».Y « l!HIS WLKN. ■ ■■ for free guniplo addreaa 3 II fclto W "ANAKI nm - TrU>- ™ "" ' Ui« bulltlluu. iVew Vorfc. hH UURkS WHfcßt ALI ELSE FAILS Ed M Uest Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. rfl Ccl In tifne. Sold bv druggists. ivfl 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers