2 CAMERON COUNTY MS.' H. H. MULI-IN, Editor. Published Kvery Thursday. TKHMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. f'erjrear *1 1° j r paid In advance 1 ! ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate ol «ne dollar per square furone insertion and tiftj e.ents per square for each subsequent insertion Rates by the year, or for six or three months, are low aiitl uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square three times or less. each subsequent, inser tion . 0 cents per squar* Local notices lu cents per line for on? Inser sertion; 5 cents per line tor each subsequent •onsecutive insertion. Obituary notices over five lines 10 cents per ' line. Simple announcements of births, uiar ringes and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, die lines or less ?5 per year; over live lines, at the regular rates ot adver tising. No local inserted for less than 7S cents per Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pke« s Is complete and affords facilities fordoing the best class of m.rU. Particular A t"i kkiton paidto Law Printing. No paper will be discontinued until arrear rgf-s arc paid, except at the option of the pub sher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance On its property, 50 miles west of Tanipico, on the Mexican Central rail way. a Mexican petroleum company has about 15 wells in oil anil several others sunk to within a few feet of the oil sand. These can be brought in as soon as sufficient tankage has been supplied. Several tanks with a ca pacity of 35.000 barrels each are Hear ing completion. Civet is 11 pasty, yellowish sul>- stance that is taken from a pouch, near certain glands, of the civet cat, which is found in Abyssinia. It is first of a yellowish color that gradu ally turns darker. It has a strong musky odor thai to many is very dis agreeable, but by many of the women of this country it is considered an in dispensable article iti the perfumery line. It may be surprising but doubtless gratifying to the public to know that the Bible is still the world's best-sell ing book, the announcements of secu lar publishers to the contrary notwith standing. Recent reports show that the British Bible society has since its establishment distributed 180,000.00!) copies of the Scriptures, while the Am erican Bible society has added more than 70.000,000 to the flood of volumes poured into all the countries of the world A London wholesale haberdashery concern has introduced a species of paper undershirts and hosiery, sam ples of which series are now being shown in the New York market. These goods are offered at popular prices and save laundry bills. Japan ese paper handkerchiefs* are selling more freely than formerly. A special ly constructed "wallet" is on sale to go with them. Separate divisions are provided for clean and soiled 'ker chiefs, the latter being burned. Naturalists can not fail to be sur prised at the weight of some of the deer caught in Vermont woods this season. These scientific gentlemen have been laboring under the impres sion that about 225 pounds was the maximum weight of any deer ever found in this section of the country. In Windham county this season one specimen weighed over .'IOO pounds, two others at least close to that figure, and nearly all the bucks brought in were in the 200 class or over. The entire diamond output of South Africa is exported from the Cape of Good Hope to London; yet, strango to say, it finds no place in the British official publications showing the im ports into the Cnited Kingdom. After South African diamonds leave the Cape of Good Hope all official trade record of them seems to be lost. The only record of the exports of theso diamonds is the attestation of thu Cape of Good Hope customs officers that over $20,000,000 worth are annu ally exported to London. Three buildings for the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York will be completed in six months. Superintendent. Simon Flexner has studied the most recent methods of scientific research in Europe, and tho most approved facilities and equip ment will be installed. Water cure for skin and eruptive diseases will bo among the first things investigated, and elaborate baths are provided for the animals to be experimented on. Photographic records of till experi ments are to be kept in the build ings. The application of electricity to gen eral agriculture has been successfully made in France and has been followed in Germany on an even greater scale. Power is provided from a central plant and motors for threshing grain, grind ing of flour, pumping of water, etc., are rented to proprietors, who find that the work can he more quickly and cheaply done than by horses. The ap plication of electricity to growing seeds has been found exceedingly ad vantageous. such use having been first made by the experiment station at Am herst, Mass. A chemist in Odessa has just finish ed some interesting experiments with petroleum secured in the Caucasian mountains. He began his experiments with the idea of finding out the best method of purifying it for use in tha automobile industry and in the opera tions. he says, he discovered a very re spectable quantity of radium, far easier of extraction, naturally, than when it is in combination with metals. Tha chemist says that he believes this will prove to be the secret of reducing tho cost of the precious element to com mercial limitations. OUR "IMPF.RIALISM" WINS. The People of Porto Rico Are Well Satisfied with Government of Americans. These who regard (he annexation and retention of the Philippines as a hideous national crime must regard our treat ment of Porto Rico as v crime still more horrible says the Chicago Inter Ocean. For most of the Porto .Hicans seemed to be entirely contented under Spanish rule. They had repeatedly proved their loyalty by aiding Spain in her wars. They had never asked any othc r nation to deliver them. They had sometimes resisted despotic governors, but had never rebelled against Spain hersell. America tcok the StiO.OOO Porto Ricans and began to govern them without go ing through any sort ol' form of getting their consent. We changed many of I their laws and institutions out of hand. ' We set their children to learning an j alien speech. One of the things we rev- j ohitioni/.ed first and most was their 1 school system, with which they had j seemed contented for generations. ! We found 88 per cent, of the Porto Ricans wholly illiterate. There were; about 500 public schools, mostly with teachers so incompetent, and occupy- : ing such wretched quarters, and with ] such poor attendance, as to prove that j public interest in education was prac- j tically dead. There was not a single | building in the island erected for public school purposes. We took hold of this situation in the most imperialistic manner. We told the people that their chiltfren had togo to school. Within three years we had 8:55 effective schools in operation, with 40.- 000 children enrolled. In another year 1 we had Mo,ooo of these singing Ainer- j lean national hymns in English and 25,- j 000 of them reading anu speaking Eng lish. We took 27 per cent, of all the pub lic revenue for education. We induced the people to give so much land for school sites that not one of the hundreus ot sehoolhouses btylt and building stands on purchased ground. Strange to say. and directly contrary ; to all the ideas of anti-imperialists, the Porto Kicans evidently like our high handed imperialism. They are cheer- 1 fully paying the bills for everything.) even to free books and school materials for every child. They a r c sending their children to school bo regularly that the j attendance percentage equals that of Massachusetts, which leads all the states of the union on..his poirt. Not only do the Porto Ricans like our I imperialism, but it is giving them at ( least one advantage not >njojed by most American chili.ren. It tee.-hes both . English and Spanish in the schools. In j two or three generations practically every Porto Rican will be equally at home in the two most widely spoken langauges of men. "One who knows two tongues," it has been said, "has; four eyes, four ears, and four hands." That is, he ha.-practically double the access to knowledge and the power it brings of him who knows but one tongue. The Porto Ricans are be ing putin that tortunate position. That , is what American "imperialism" is do- . ing for Porto Rico. PARAGRAPHIC POINTERS. j It- The democratic party is anti- j everything. And the country is anti- ; democratic by a large majority.—Troy ! Times. t-Judge Parker can have the calru assurance that the gold standard is still safe, anyway.—Chicago Record- 5 Herald. e .'"Hill is a mackerel statesman," says 1 the Memphis Commercial-Appeal. Then i Salt river is exactly the place lor him. — | Chicago Tribune. t 'lt should be remembered, however, 1 that reorganizing the democratic party j is no small matter. It took a war to do ! it once. —Chicago Inter Ocean. 1 1 c "But why not. Mr. Bryan, have re- I organization, like charity, begin a' ! home? There's a beautiful field lor such ! talents in Nebraska.—lndianapolis News (Ind.). in Parker did not carry his own pre cinct and therefore should have the sympathy of Bryan, who knows now that is himself. —Chicago Daily News (Ind.). Everybody knows exactly what the democrats should do next, but the democrats will probably be sensible enough not 'o do it —Chicago Record- Herald. It "Little Rock's republican jollifica tion points the way '.it the speedy com j ing of republican Arkansas to keep com pany with republican Mi >.-ouri.— St. Louis Republic. c Mr. Bryan appeals to have con cealed from the general public the l'aet that as a candidate for United States | senator in Nebraska be was beaten more 1 emphaically than Judge Parker was for president.—Chicago Chronicle. tu'The democratic newspapers at the ' east which bolted Bryan and supported Parker have now reached the conclu sion that "the party cannot endure half democratic and half socialist." This would appear to be an unfortunate ex pression. Most of the real democrats | of the country voted for Roosevelt and ] the socialists appear to have voted for | Debs. The democratic party .so-called, is all populist.—Chicago Chronicle. t Now that the election is a thing of the past and four more years of repub j liean policies are assured, business cir | cles are stimulated to still greater ac j tivity. u The democratic platform in Cleve land's time asserted the tariff prevented j the sale of American goods abroad in j competition with foreign manufactur- I ers. Now democratic orators declare the j tariff enables American goods to be sold : abroad in competition with foreign inan- I ufacturers. As an argument for demo- I cratic success, one statement is as good I as the other, but they cannot, both be 1 true. —Brooklyn Standard-I'nion. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1904. NI.W CONGRESS OUTLOOK. | Republicnn Majority a Little Top- Heavy, But Speaker Cannon Will Balance It. In both the senate and *he house the republicans will make gains as a result 01' the election. Losses instead of trains were looked for by the re publicans in the upper branch, be cause their majority has been very j large, and because nearly all there- I tiring members are republicans, says] the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Five | of the March 1 next s thirty vacancies , have already been tilled by election. I The results in the states siiil lo elect ] show that the republicans have more 1 than held their own. A republican ' will be chosen to succeed Coekrell \ from Missouri, and a republican, j probably ex-Senator Carter, v. ill be; chosen in the place of Gibson, demo- j crat. of Montana. On the face of the I returns at present the republicans will I gain one and the democrats lose one j in the senate, leaving the division 58 j republicans and 32 democrats. There will be a republican lead of more than 100 in the house which en ters on March 4 next, as compared with one of 30 in the present cham- | ber. This will be the largest majority [ since the republicans made their clean sweep in the congressional elections | of 1894. in the middle of Cleveland's ! second term, when the people repudi- ; ated the democracy and all its works, .lust how far beyond the 100 mark the j majority will go cannot be told defi nitely at present. Cowherd, of Mis- ! souri, the. chairman of the democratic : congressional committee, amused his 1 democratic friends in the recent can- j vass with fairy tales about the tre- 1 mendous majority which they would \ have in the coming hous?, but that | majority, including Cowherd himself, has gone glimmering. This is a fortunate circumstance for I the republicans. They will have a [ free hand in the control of the govern- ; ment at the outset in Roosevelt's new ! term, and the chances are that they | will retain ii in the critical midterm ! congressional campaign of l9U(i. There I has now b?en an uninterrupted series ; of republican victories in elections for | the house of representatives since ! 1894, including that year. This breaks all records since 1874, when the re publicans were beaten for congress, and when the democrats gained the j first victory fo* the house of repre sentatives which they had won since 185(1. when they got control of the j house that entered with Buchanan.' The republican majority in the com- j irig house looks a little top-heavy, but Speaker Cannon will see to it. that the ; party retains its balance. TARIFF'S COOD EFFECTS. Statistical Facts Show Advantage to This Country Derived from Protection. The protective tariff is bringing about the condition of things anticipated increasing experts of manulactured ar- 1 tides instead of raw materials and farm \ products. The figures of the bureau of j ' tatistic; indicate that the percentage > of manufactures exported during the \ calendar year 1904 will be larger than 1 ever before, while that of agricultural \ products will be smaller. Another pleasing feature, says the 1 Philadelphia Press, is In the increase in the imports of materials in a crude j condition for use in domestic indus tries. In the nir.e months ending with September ever 33 per cent, of the im ports were of raw materials for use in manufacturing. In the corresponding months of 1895 the percentage of such ! imports was a little over 2(5 per cent. | There was an increase this year over ; last year, demonstrating the growth ol ! such manufactures. Agricult jral products formerly ex- ; ported are now consumed at home. In- : stead of supplying them to workmen in ! Europe, who manufactured articles for j use in this country, those products are consumed in a much larger degree in the United tates, where are produced j the articles formerly imported. That i is immensely to the advantage of this I country, increasing its wealth and pro- ' ducing power. The advantage of the protective tariff j so clear that it is difficult to see how 1 I intelligent men can support, the demo- \ | i-rat it- party which declares that pro- \ I lection is "robbery," and seeks to put I the nation on a free trade basis, at a time when even Great Britain, with | its narrow territory, is sericusiy con- j -iderir.g the abandonment of that pol- j icy A Big Blunder. The democrats should have waged this campaign, so far as the tariff is con cerned. against the abuses, not against >he policy of protection, it was a big. bad blunder to declare that "protection is robbery." It cut the party loose from j any bond of sympathy with republican i tariff revisionists, and it declared a doc- | trine that is foreign to the views ant! ' feelings of a majority of democrats. All the conservative utterances thai fol lowed the "robbery" declaration in the text, of the platform and in Judge Par ker's frank deliverances cannot antidote that outburst of passion.—Washington Post. K "It takes the democratic party a long time to find out that c rowds hanging on the lips of Bryan don't do the electing.- Cincinnati Tribune. 11 -"John Morley's declaration in his speech at Delmonico's that "In your new president you have got a man—a man who has behind him the American peo ple." puts tne result of the election hap pily and forcibly. It is the verdk t. also of a man —a man who has long enjoyed the respect anil honor of England and America. As an ambassador of good will. John Morley ranks second to none of the eminent Englishmen who havs visited our shores.—N. Y. Tribune. POWERS SHOULD BE ENLARGED PRESIDENT'S VIEW ON INTER. STATE COMMERCE COMMISSION HE EXPECTS CONGRESS TO ACT, The President Believes that the Com mission Should be Given Authority to Decide Whether Rates Are Reasonable or Unjust. Washington, Dec. 10. —Enlargement of the powers of the interstate com merce commission is one of the ques tions which will be pressed vigorously at the present session of congress. It can be said that, in the mind of Presi dent Itoosevelt, no problem more im portant than this to all the people of the country is likely to engage the at tention of congress this winter. In conferences with members of both the senate and the house of rep resentatives the president has em phasized the arguments he advanced in his message in favor of an exten sion of the powers of the commission. With several members he discussed the subject yesterday, earnestly advo cating the recommendations contained in his message. To two paragraphs in the message he has directed par ticular attention. In a talk with Rep resentative Graff, of Illinois, he indi cated these points of the message: "Above all else, we must strive to keep the highways of commerce open to all on equal terms; and to do this it, is necessary to put a complete stop to all rebates. "I believe that, as a fair security to slippers, the commission should be vested with the power, where a given rate has been challenged and after full hearing found to be unreasonable, to decide, subject to judicial review, what shall be a reasonable rate to take its place; the ruling of the com mission to take effect immediately and Lo obtain unless and until it is revers ed by the court of review." t'ntil 1897 the interstate commerce commission exercised the power to regulate railroad freight rates, but the supreme court then decided that under the law the commission had no such authority. Western members of con gress, especially, have urged, on be half of their constituents, that the power raiseil by the president be con ferred by law on the commission. They have told the president that 110 question is of greater importance to the people than this, and that they really are more interested in it than they are in the proposed revision of the tariff. The president is in entire agreement with this view. BUSINESS BULLETIN. The Flurry in Wall Street Did Not Af fect Legitimate Business. New York, Dec. 10. —R. (5. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Wall street's severe reaction was not due to any setback in the commer cial world, all measures of legitimate trade showing wholesome progress, and confidence in the future is un shaken. Railway earnings in Novem ber averaged 9.2 per cent, greater than in the same month of 1903, and the distribution of merchandise is suffici ently heavy to produce freight block ades at several points. Manufacturing plants report in creased output in almost every in stance, except where inadequate water supply provides a temporary interrup tion. This difficulty is most severely felt at coke ovens and paper mills in Pennsylvania. Seasonable weather has stimulated retail trade in wearing apparel and holiday goods are in great, demand. Each week there is an increase in the number of steel mills and iron fur naces in operation, output steadily in creasing. Failures this week numbered 239 in the United States, against 331 last year, and 20 in Canada, compared with 20 a year ago. A Sensational Story. Laporte, Ind., Dec. 10. —Abram Mul len. who is in jail at Knox, charged with the murder of Charles Haines, has revealed what he declares was a plot to kidnap Dr. W. W. Brown, a wealthy Lafayette physician, confine the doctor in a cave and demand ran som. The plotters, Mullen declares, were Charles and George Haines. Mul len refused to become a party to the conspiracy and reported it to State's Attorney Courtright. This came to the knowledge of the Haines brothers, and Mullen's attorneys claim that when Charles Haines forced an en trance to Mullen's house it was to murder him. Mullen seized a shotgun and shot Haines dead. An Appeal to the President. Atlanta, <!a., Dec. 10. —Mrs. Julia A. Young, who gives her home address as Boston, Mass., has made a direct ap peal for help to President Roosevelt. She has telegraphed the president as follows: "I am a prisoner in the jail in this city at the mercy of a person who holds my daughter under control and has threatened me. 1 ask protec tion at your hand." Fatal Accident in a Mine. Joliet, 111., Dec. 10.—One miner was killed and seven others were badly hurt, one probably fatally, in an ele vator accident at Mine No. 1 in South Wilmington yesterday. Assaulted a Would-be Briber. St. Paul, Minn., Dec. 10. —Attorney Doran, who was appointed referee in bankruptcy by Judge Lochren, of the United States district court, in con nection with the affairs of a local firm of woolen merchants, was approached yesterday by a member of the firm for information as to what report he would make to the court. Mr. Doran informed him that the report must be unfavorable. Mr. Doran's visitor re turned later and handed him a roll of money, whereupon the referee knock ed him down and kicked him out of the office. AN INVITING PROSPECT. Will Canada In the next quarter of a century take the place of the United States a3 the great wheat exporting section of the western hemisphere? Everything points that way. In the opinion of experts the United States haa reached high water mark as a wheat exporting country. The increasing population over there has reached the point when home consumption Is be coming annually greater lu proportion than the increase in wheat production. As a matter of fact wheat production Is decreasing over there as the land be comes more valuable and by reason of the demand for other forms of produce for home consumption. It Is said that the wheat crop this year Is not more than 70 per cent, of the crop of 1901 and much below the crops of 1902 and 1903. It Is estimated that this year the United States surplus for export will not be over 100,000,000, which Is less than any year since 1878 with two ex ceptions. Not only is this the case, but a considerable quantity of the best Can -1 adian wheat Is being Imported into Min nesota and also Chicago. All this tends to keep the price of wheat near the dollar mark, and "dol lar wheat" Is the loadstone that will at tract farmers to the Canadian North west, where land la cheap and can be farmed on a wholesale basis, particulars »112 which may be had from any agent of the Canadian Government, The re duction of American exports will have the double Influence of increasing Can adian production and keeping up the price. It constitutes a roseate prospect for this country, and needs no exercise of optimistic enthusiasm to foresee the near expansion of the Dominion into the actual position of the "granary ol the empire." irrrENIOUS INVENTIONS. A clever Swiss Inventor has originat ed an Instrument which tell 3 the exact condition of th« air In a room—that is. Its degree of impurity. A practical folding umbrella con structed on the telescopic plan has been evolved. The 28-inch size folds up to 18 inches, and the other sizes In proportion. A Norwegian named John Eggen has invented an electric apparatus for indi cating the presence of a school of fish In the deep. It consists of a metal plate and a microphone In the water, connect ed by wire with a telephone on board ship. Swiss watchmakers have now added a phonograph to some of their wonderful watches. A small rubber disc Is putin the watch and arranged in such a way that the record Is repeated every hour. Anything can be put on the record that the owner wishes. A new invention for Insuring dry seats on electric cars In wet weather has been displayed In Edinburgh. As ex plained by the Inventor, the new ar rangement Is a simple one, and can be fitted to any style of garden, tramway or ship's deck seat. It Is practically a wooden covering for the seat, can be lifted In wet weather, the ordinary movement of the back rest of the seat locking It In position. When raised, it forms a shelter for the back of the pas , senger. In dry weatirer, the cover forms J the ordinary seat. Glass that can be heated white hot and then plunged Into cold water with out breaking seems an Impossibility, but It has been recently made an accom plished fact. It Is made from Brazilian quartz pebbles heated red hot and then thrown Into distilled water. Then the I purest pieces are selected and welded ; with the oxyhydrogen blowpipe Into long stems like straws, from which glass j vessels of any shape can be made. Thus ; far the quartz glass has been employed chiefly for making laboratory appara tus. A test tube made in this way will not break when a white-hot coal is dropped into it. In a Kurry. "T»'hy does Wheeler always speed his automobile so fast along this street?" j "His tailor lives on the corner." — Kansas City Star. r The Pffis That Cure Sick Nerves Mrs.Doraß. Frazier, No. 140 Althea St., Providence, R. 1., has been cured of Nervous Prostration by the use of Dr. Williams* Pink Pills For Pale People. She 6ays: " I suffered for three years and was several times at the point of death. My weight went down to seventy-five pounds. I was afflicted with nervousness, dizziness, suffocating spells, swelling of limbs, sleeplessness and irregularities. I had a good doctor but ho could not help me. The first box of Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills did me pood and I continued their use until I was cured. I am now perfectly well." These pills are a specific for all disorders of the nerves from neuralgia to partial paralysis. Sold by all Druggists. ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVE For New York Central & Hudson Hlvav Railroad Company. Bpt-rd 07 Tea Lleetrlo Locomotive The most powerful electric locomotive in the world lias just been completed for the New York Central & Hudson Rive* Railroad in the shops of the Ueneral Kleo trio Company and the American Locomo tive Works at Schenectady, N. Y. This locomotive is one of between thirty and fifty which will be used by the Rail road Company for hauling the through passenger trains within its Electrical Zone from Grand Central Btation through the Park Avenue tunnel to Croton on the Main J.ihe, a distance of 34 miles, and to White Plains on the Harlem division, a distance of 24 miles. This will be the heaviest steam railway passenger service which has ever been handled by electric locomotives. With one of these low/motives trains of ten or more cars will be hauled at express speed of GOto 70 miles per hour, and the de sign and method of control are such that two or more locomotives can be couplect together and operated by a single en gineer from the leading cab. so that the size of the train that may be under the control of one engineer is practically un limited so far as the question of motive power. in general design the locomotive is dou ble ended and symmetrical in construc tion, so that it can be run in either direo-, tion with e'iual facility. Mounted on the main frame of the lo comotive is the steel cab in three divisions, in which ere located the various device© for operating the locomotive. The locv motive is equipped for both straight and/ automatic air braking, signaling devices, bell, whistle, headlights, air-sending de vice, electric air compressor, etc., being as complete in every way with respect to op erating devices as a steam locomotive. < Anatomical Note. Mrs. Nolan had made some disparaging remarks about the costume of her hus band's bosom friend, Mr. Herlihy, and they were promptly resented. " 'His hnt is turning green wid age ' i» it?" said Mr. Nolan, with fine scorn, ''and 'his boots is rustv and eracked-lookin',' did 1 hear ye say? Listen now to me, Mary Nolan. If ivery man's hat an' boot* covered as warrm a heart as f'helun lierli hy's there'd be more proud wimmin in the worrld!"—Chicago Record-Herald. It Cures Colds, Couchs, Sore Throat, Cronp, Influ enza, W hooping Cough, Bronchitis anil Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first siages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once, lou will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Large bo'.ilea cents and 60 cent*. Ogri A leading physician of 15 <fn B this city says:"l never knew a bilious man who was a good man." It la certain enough that a ■■ man cannot feel good |t|l Q n when he is bilious. Celery 1 I 11 King, the tonic-laiativo, ■ ■ II ■ cores biliousness. 26c. is the sign of irritation of the air passages caus ed by a cold. Shiloh'» Consumption Cure, the Lung Tonic, will cure you. Thousands of people know it. Your money back if it doesn't. MO 25c., 50c. and SI.OQ CONTAINS 25,000 NE.W WORDS, E.tc. New Gazetteer of the World New Biographical Dictionary Quarto Pajor New l'lates. 5000 111ustradoas. Should be in Every Home, School, and Office Itev. L.ymnn Abbott, I>.D.» Editor of Tlie Outlook, says: Webster hat always been the favor ite'xw our household, and I have seen no reas >n to transfer my allegiance to any of his competitors. FREE, "A Test in Pronunciation," Instructive and entertaining. Also illustrated pamphlets. G. Cf C. MLRRIAM CO., Publishers, Springfield, Man. The FARMERSFREE HOMESTEAD LANDS ILjIJUI JFI«J| 'IPi I Of WKSTEKV (WAIKI r*S*CTIJ I curry the banner for yields oi I Wheat and other grains for lUO4. tSffl 100.000 FARMERS receive Is.xooo.qpu as a result of " I their Wheat Crop alone. Tho returns from Oats, Hurley unci othrrgrains, »» well as cattle and horses, odd considerably to this. Secure a Free Homestead at once, or purchase ( from pomerellablo dealer while lands are selling ad present loir prices Apply for Information to SUPERINTENDENT OF Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to N. M. Wi i.i.iam ß, Law lildg., Toledo, 0., Authorised i Govci iimcnt Agent. I J'itu.i my vihtre you ■ w tMI aJwHwimrt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers