Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, December 21, 1905, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULI.IN, Editor
Published Kvcry Tlnn'stlay.
TKItMS OF SUUSI'RIPTION.
PtT VBRT.. f'JOO
If paid in tulvuneo 1
A DVERTISINO RATES:
Advert isemonts nre published at the in foot
cue Uol.ar per square foroue iiiscrtion ami tlfij
cents i t*r Kijtiari' 112 ir eiieh subsequent inserl ion-
Rates liy the var. nr fn.- six or three mouths,
tre low and uniform, and will be furnished on
t.prlieatton.
Ix-eul and Official Advertising per square
three times or less, ?2; eaeli subsequent inset
no i:0 cents per -uui.r.'
I.oeal notices In cents per line for one inser
isertion: ft cents per line for eucli subsequent
consecutive insertion.
obituary notices over five lines 10 cents per
|in •. Sitiiple iitinouncements of births. u:ar
tliifc'es and deaihß will lie inserted free.
Husiness cards, tlvo Hi es or less. >.ft per year:
over live lines, at the regular rules of adver
tising.
No local inserted for less than ?."> cents per
issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The .lob department of the Press is complete
and affords facilities for doing tlic best class of
W rk J'Allll. I I.Alt ATTE.NIION I'AIUTU I.AW
Phintinu.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear-
Bg.'s are paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
fcr in advance.
i . I
Our Standing in Science.
The comparison of American and
European scientists has been made
by Prof. Waldeyer, professor of anat
omy in the University of Berlin, in an
address before the Royal Prussian
Academy of Sciences, a few months
ago, suggested, no doubt, by his visit
to the St. Louis congress, in 1904.
The United States has easily led
the world in all mechanical matters
tending to increase material wealth,
and the impression has been very
widespread that we arc so occupied in
the struggle for the almighty dollar
as to have no time for the arts and
sciences. In spite of the fact that
the people of a new country are occu
pied in opening up and developing their
resources and in laying foundaiions,
it is not at all unlikely, observes
American Medicine, that in propor
tion to our numbers we have always
accomplished a fair share of the
world's scientific discoveries, and
have done a goodly work in other di
rections. Waldeyer points to a long
list of eminent American naturalists,
economists, jurists, philologists,
philosophers and historians, and he
might have added physicians and sur
geons. He has apparently been
amazed at the rapid strides of tho
last decatle, as though we had just
started on the superstructure of our
national work. His intimate knowl
edge of Americans and their work
gives great value to liis statement
that it is now time for European stu
dents and teacners to come to Amer
ica to learn, in the same way that
Americans formerly went abroad. We
have worked out our own salvation,
and have therefore cut new trails, so
that it is now necessary for foreign
workers to know what we are doing
and how we are doing it, if they are
to avoid narrowness.
When the boundary between Michi
gan and Wisconsin was drawn the sur
veyors were evidently in a bit of a
hurry, for it now turns out that some
250,000 acres of land supposed to have
been included in Michigan's acreage
is beyond it and belonging to no
where. The territory in dispute is
big enough to form a fair-sized prov
ince in Russia, and more than one
bloody war has been fought in Europe
to conquer a strip of land smaller
than Ihe "derelict territory" of Michi
gan. Here it was not missed for a
generation. The United States geo
graphic survey found out the mis>
take of the original boundary makers
only the other day.
Viewed from all sides, farming is a
great business. And it is as a real,
live, substantial and serious business
that the farmers should regard and
conduct their affairs. Fortunately,
fcystem is rapidly revolutionizing the
business. In the golden northwest ihe
Miccessful farmers are managing their
estates like great manufacturing
plants. There are no leaks, no slip
shod methods. They are piling up
magnificent crops and are making for
tunes. Through Kentucky and the
Fouth, too, the farmers are beginning
to look upou their occupations as a
sure-enough business and not as a
speculative pastime.
H-vman Yon Wetter, a young Ger
man whose title is baron i:i his own
country, was married a few days ago
in Stamford, Conn., to Miss lionise
Hurlbutt. The groom, a strapping fel
low 26 years obi and six feet two in
his shoes, gave up his title on coming
her" lo wed the girl «.f his i h lice and
will start out for himself as an elec
trical engineer lie up; Mis; Hurlbutt
in Dresden, where ttie was 'idying
art. He takes much prid in ill fad
that bis a' rundli.th r. Uaron \on
Wet'er-K'. nthal, ' < an ail to
Waji»ti>i-fo» l.i the v .ir of the revolu
tion.
Mi s AH >a New in, a teacher of
tilU.' I I.:111 ' ' '.'ill. las till > 1 111
iim:i:t ' i ' i QfM I I iM I MIMSi MIMSi
fmflwH 1 ' ' •n®* l, A '
upetiin" - i tl>« on ho wai rho.<en
i a : i i it an. l'.i.> U* a r»
mar'. ably >* • lui • ' ' 1
tin * « of ; 4,51 r '
liigber i,n.- to a uUti. in th« bI«U
Jt'oooi #ll4 10 *irui*thr» tie >».
TRUE BILLS
Of Indictment Against
Eight Offenders.
THE REBATE CASES.
Shippers, freight Agents and Common
Carriers Before the United States
Grand Jury in Philadelphia.
Philadelphia, Dec. 15. —Kinht Indict
ments were returned by the federal
grand jury yesterday against shippers,
freight agents and common carriers in
the rebate cases brought to the atten
tion of the grand jury by United
States District Attorney .1. Whitaker
Thompson. The indictments returned
are as follows:
Great Northern Railway Co., for of
fering a rebate to R. D. Wood & Co.,
of this city, on a shipment, of 1,500
tons of iron piping to Winnipeg.
C. E. Campbell, local freight agent
of the Great Northern, same charge.
T. W. Lake, of New York, general
eastern agent of the Mutual Transit
Co., granting and giving a rebate to
the Wood Co.
Walter Wood, George Wood, Stuart
Wood and Richard Wood, members of
the Wood Co., accepting and receiving
rebates.
Paul .1. Diver, local agent of the Mu
tual Transit Co., of this city, on a
shipment from Philadelphia to Minne
apolis, August 4, 1905.
Mutual Transit Co., offering rebate
in the same transaction.
Paul J. Diver, offering and giving
rebate (two counts) to the National
Essence For Coffee Co, on a shipment
from Philadelphia to Winnipeg, April
17, 1905.
Mutual Transit Co., offering and giv
ing rebates (two counts) in the same
transaction.
WILL STAMP OUT HAZING.
Two Midshipmen, One for Hazing, and
Another for Failing to Report
It, Are Suspended.
Washington, Dec. 15. —Hazing of :
every kind, it was announced yester- !
day, will be stamped out of the naval
academy, regardless of the number of
dismissals from the brigade of mid
shipmen necessary to bring about this
result. Two midshipmen will be dis
missed from the academy within a few
days by the secretary of the navy
Briefly these are yesterday's devel
opments in the movement against haz
ing at the naval academy. When Sec
retary Bonaparte reached the navy
department yesterday he received an j
official report from Admiral Sands, an
nouncing the suspension of Midship
man Trenmor Coflin, jr., third class
man, for hazing Midshipman Berdone j
Pettus Kimbrough, fourth class man.
by forcing him to stand on his head i
until he became unconscious, and of j
Midshipman Waren Abbe Van Der- j
veer, second classman, because while j
on duty he observed the occurrence j
and failed to report it. The superin
tendent called attention to the fact
that Midshipmen Coffin and Van Der
veer were guilty of violating a well
known regulation for the government
of the naval academy and recommend
ed their summary dismissal in accord
ance with an act of congress approved
March 3, 1903.
MANY MEN WILL BE BENEfITTED.
Independent Woolen Manufacturers
Will Raise Wages.
Boston, Dec. 15.—Independent wool
en manufacturers in this state, Rhode
Island and Connecticut, employing
about 5,000 operatives, announce that
they will follow the action of the
American Woolen Co., which recently
decided to advance the wages of the
30,000 bands in its 3« mills, 10 per
cent, on January 1.
Yesterday notices announcing the
advance were posted in the mills of
the Fair Alapaca Co., of Holyoke, em
ploying 1,700 persons; Coronet
worsted mills, of Mapleville, R. I.;
Wiekford, R. 1., worsted mills; Plain
field woolen mills and Central yarn
mills, ol' Centraville, Conn., all em
ploying about 1,000 hands.
The Leominster Worsted Co., of
Leominster, this state, lias also given
notice of the increase to its 200 oper
atives.
The Centerdalo Worsted Co., which
owns mills in CenteMale, Stillwater
and Manton, R. 1., will post notices to
lay granting the 10 per cent, advance.
The company employs 350 hands. The
Saxonville Mills Co., of South Fram
Ingham, employing 000 hands and sev
eral other Independent concern, an
nounce that they will follow the ac
tion of the American Woolen Co.
Four Deckhands Drowned.
Brownsville, Pa., Dec 15. —Four
persons were drowned in the Monon
gabi'la river yesterday, as Ihe result of
the passenger steamer Rose Hlte col
tidily? with the towboat John F. Klein,
and sinking in I I feet of water. All
the dead were employed on the steam
er as deckhand
An Automobile Accident,
Washington, Dec. If., hi an auto
mobile accident In tin- outskirts of
Wa hlngtou lato yi terdav afternoon
Walti r licauprc I'ownley, counselor of
the Miiiisli tiuilm , sum lined minor
Injuries and lilh wife. Lady Hi. sat.
Townley, was knocked unconscious
and lmul> brill •■<! about the head.
Man Killed. Wife Serlouriy Injured.
Nolan, W. Va,, Dei. 15 Henjainln
Knil!< itt Has sho* and In mitly killed
and his wit. wait K'riounly injured las'
nil in b> l-i d and Uow«r | Trlppvtt
and in: »i et youi. , u»an.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1905.
;<OOS£VELT THEIR CHOICE.
Managers of the Democracy Looking
to the President as a Pos
sible Leader.
Democratic senators and represen
tatives "have been flocking to the
white house for several weeks past
offering allegiance to the president,"
says the Washington correspondent
of the Chronicle. And his statement
is corroborated by the dispatches of
all other Washington correspondents.
This spectacle of the national lead
ers of the opposition party accepting,
or rather soliciting, the leadership of
the leader of the party in power is
extraordinary, but it is neither inex
plicable nor wholly unprecedented.
The democratic party managers
wanted Gen. Grant for their party
leader in 1808. True, Grant was not
then president, but it was well un
derstood that he was to be the nom
inee of the republican party for the
presidency that year. Again in 1872
they accepted the leadership of Hor
ace Greeley, until then the most con
spicuous republican perhaps in the
country, against Grant, the man who
had refused to be their leader. So
much for precedent.
As for the explanation, It is the
same now that it was in 18C8 and
1872. Then the democratic party was
not a coherent organization. It had
no principles upon which different
factions which claimed to be demo
cratic were agreed. These factions
were agreed only in their hostility to
the republican party and in hunger
for office and power. They were
ready to admit that their party was
discredited and that it had no leader
who enjoyed the confidence of sane
and patriotic people. Therefore they
were ready to borrow from the re
publicans a leader who was known
to believe in something and to be
worthy of public confidence.
That is the case to-day. The demo
cratic party is a fortuitous aggrega
tion of discordant factions having
nothing in common but an appetite
and an irrational hatred of the party
in power. It has no leader whom
these factions can agree to follow and
who also enjoys the respect and con
fidence of the rational public.
Hence the readiness of the mana
gers togo once more to the republic
ans for a leader and this time to the
chosen and official head of that
party.
What we sec is a repetition of the
tactics which failed at the inception
in 1808 and at the pojls in 1572 and
which amounted then and amounts
now to a confession of the unworthi
ness of the democratic party and its
leaders.
The eagerness of the managers to
make a democratic leader of Presi
dent Roosevelt is merely a recognition
of his phenomenal popularity. It
does not mean that the democratic
party is growing better or that it ac
cepts the principles by which Presi
dent Roosevelt is actuated or that it
has any use for him or for anything
about him except his popularity, and
for that only as an instrument to rake
democratic chestnuts, mostly wormy,
from the fire.
Democrats were originally attract
ed to him, it is said, by his utterances
on the subject of railroad rate regula
tion, but that was not because they
were satisfied with the legislation he
proposed. It was because they
thought that legislation would be
merely a first step toward the realiza
tion of the communistic project of
government ownership of all the
railroads.
That is to say, they wanted to fol
low him because they thought he was
going to destruction, but he is not
going that waf On the contrary, he
proposes rate regulation partly be
cause he believes it to be right and partly
because he believes it will head off ihe
movement in the direction of govern
ment ownership.
His direction, therefore, is diamet
rically opposite to theirs in this re
spect as in others. When they come
to see this they will want no more
of his leadership. His general direc
tion is toward a harbor of safety;
theirs is toward the breakers and the
reefs where there is certainty of ship
wreck.
If they choose to follow in the direc
tion he is leading well and good, but
there is every reason to believe they do
not. They may depend upon it that he
will never lead any party to the mani
fest destination of the democratic
party.
COMMENT AND OPINION.
It 'Free traders howl for tariff revi
sion, because they are ashamed to ac
knowledge that they are free traders
and opposed to any protection in a
tariff.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
112 President Roosevelt pushes the
coun ry up to congress with a di
minished public debt and a comfort
able balance tin the right side of the
cash look. This is <■> rtalnly a healthy
financial condition, albeit congress
may proceed to hit the surplus with
a sandbag. St Louis Globe-Democrat.
4 Thi' president has laid out work
enough to keep cougress busy for
many months, unit i the unanimity re
sulting from abnormal democratic
support of the administrate>» proves
to be destructive of due •!• llb>-.atlon.
s' I'lie exports of mniiufaciiirrd
good-; under the Dinghy law, which
free trad* rs claim would Injure our ex
port trade, are j>e > double what ih'-y
were under a d muriatic tariff de
sinn"il for the c.|)r> s purpose of en
counting a d« \ lopmest of our expo •!
trade according to tti" accepted logic
of th» fr«e trade tariff tciorin huol
—-bi4til« Post liitcihfci u< ■•■r
CONGRESS IN SESSION.
Body Which Insures Support to the
President in Carrying Out
Policies.
The assembling of the Fifty-ninth
congress in regular session is an event
of more than usual interest. The body
is representative of the issues which en
tered into the memorable campaign of
last year, and a large proportion of the
membership may be truly said to have
been elected as a result of the Roosevelt
tidal wave. That fact undoubtedly will
go far to strengthen the support which
the president will receive in his efforts
to carry into effect policies to which
he is committed and that have been ap
proved so overwhelmingly by the peo
ple of the United States. The republic
an party has the largest majority it has
ever had in the legislative branch oftho
government, and that should be fresh
assurance of wise and effective legisla
tion. The responsibilities resting upon
that majority are great, says the Troy
Times, and there is every reason to be
lieve they will be fully and satisfactorily
met.
The organization of the house of rep
resentatives was quickly accomplished,
and was in accordance with conditions
which had long been manifest. Speaker
Cannon, a veteran statesman of most
honorable and acceptable record, who
served with distinguished ability as pre
siding officer of the house in the last
congress, was reelected without the
slightest opposition and with such en
thusiastic and unanimous loyalty by the
republicans as to make the choice a
foregone conclusion long before the
vote for him was actually cast. Such is
his popularity among all his congres
sional associates that but for political
considerations there is hardly a doubt
that he would have been favored for the
place by many democrats as well as by
those of his own party. The exigencies
of the situation compelled the democrats
to retain as leader on the floor the bril
liant but somewhat effervescent' Wil
liams of Mississippi, who received ihe
empty honor of a nomination for the
speakership.
The prompt manner in which congress
has "got down to business" gives ground
for the hope and expectation that much
excellent work will be accomplished, fo
the benefit of the country and with the
approval of the people. Some momen
tous questions will come before the
body, and the members, fresh from the
ranks of American citizenship, should
bring to the discussion well-defined com
prehension of the public interests and
wishes. With the legislative branch in
political accord with the executive, and
with the administration as well as the
leaders in congress pledged to economy
and efficiency, the sum total of thp acts
of the present session of congress should
be most gratifying and praiseworthy.
PROSPERITY OF UNCLE SAM
Never So Rich and Finances Never
Before in Such Excellent
Shape.
Last year the deficit in the first five
months of the fiscal year was about
$25,000,000. It is less than $12,000,000
so far for the fiscal year beginning last
July. The national expenditures arc
being kept down to about the level
reached last year. There is a constant
gain in government revenues, says the
Cleveland Leader.
The increase is chiefly in the customs.
The unprecedented prosperity of the
country is shown in heavy purchases of
foreign products, both for immediate
consumption and for use in manufac
tures. In November the net gain in rev
enue "was over $2,000,000, compared with
the corresponding part of 1904.
Such expansion of the nation's in
come leads some high authorities to be
lieve that by the end of the fiscal year
the United States treasury will reach
the fortunate state of an even balance
between well-guarded expenditures and
growing receipts. Panama canal fi
nances, of course, do not come under
this general head. They will have to be
provided for by the sale of bonds for that
express purpose.
Uncle Sam was never so rich, and his
finances can be adjusted readily to
whatever needs lie may feel like recog
nizing. Two per cent, bonds are rapid
ly being issued in exchange for four per
cents. The four's redeemable in 1907
have lately sold at prices which would
net the purchaser less than six-tenths
of one per cent, a year—to be exact, 30
cents on every sloo—if he kept the
bonds until they can be retired at the
will of the government and the premium
extinguished. That means a wonderful
state of national credit. It shows the
plethoric pnrse of the American people.
No wonder that Christmas trade is
booming. No wonder immigration is
heavy, for the time of year. No wonder
business statistics exceed all former
records.
(t "Poor William Jennings Bryan. He
tried to buy the war stool on which
Admiral Togo sat when he attended
the jubilations over his victories, but
as the chair had been used for that
sort of ceremony for ::oo years, it nat
tirallv did not happen to be for sale.
And now Mr. Bryan knows it Is as
diffb uit to buy a chair of state abroed
for mere money as it is to purchase
one in tills country by oratory.—Haiti
more American.
E The (Utile districts of the west
are finding no fault with President
Itoo■ii'velt'H treatment of the Mas.stchn
setts politicians who called to
about placing hides on the free list.—
Kansas City .1 ou in a I
c In IM»2 ihe democratic try of
tariff reduction caught (lie ear of ibo
voters, and Ihe democratic ticket was
si! till. Voters retail ihe industrial
disaster to the country which followed
an enforcement of the democratic prim
el pie, and bi catiM they do remember It
there Is no danger < t catching ihe
At'i rium voters by it for years to
«oui- Albany Jonnnl.
WHITE KING.
His Mantle Falls Over
Southern States.
RAIN AND SLEET.
Arkansas, Maryland, Tennessee and
Kentucky Visited by Storms
Wires Down in Louisville.
Louisville, Ky., Dec. 16—The Gulf
storm which has been causing heavy
precipitation In Texas and Louisiana
for the past two days has moved east
ward, bringing snow into Arkansas,
rain and sleet in Tennessee and rain,
sleet and snow in parts of Kentucky,
while unsettled conditions prevail
generally in the entire district south
of Ohio and east of the Mississippi.
Louisville's annual visitation of sleet
arrived a month or more ahead of
time, and yesterday was causing seri
ous delay to all wire communication,
while street car service in the city
was interfered with more or less.
Frederick, Md., Dec. 1C. —An unusu
ally heavy snow fell here yesterday,
the ground being covered with four
inches up to noon. The weather is
very cold.
Baltimore, Dec. 16. —The first heavy
snow storm of the season began here
yesterday and at 1 p. m. about two in
ches had fallen. The weather bureau
calculates that the fall will be four
inches.
Hagcrstown, .\ld., Dec. IC.—The
first snow storm of the present winter
raged here yesterday. Snow fell heav
ily and there is a covering of several
inches on the ground.
Philadelphia, Doc. 16.—The Mari
time Exchange wires to the Delaware
Breakwater are clown, as a result of
the storm which appeares to be in
creasing in severity along the coast.
Early reports from the breakwater
and reporting stations in Delaware
Bay stated that a large fleet of vessels
of all kinds bad sought shelter in
Snug Harbor, this side of the break
water. A 50-mile gale, driving a wet
snow, forced ships in the Delaware
river to drop anchor, as it was impos
sible for pilots to see through the
heavy veil of snow.
HOCH TO BE EXECUTED EEBRARY 23
Illinois Supreme Court Affirms Lower
Court's Verdict—Lart Hope Gone
Unless Governor Interferes.
Chicago, Dec. 10. —The supreme
court of the state yesterday affirmed
the verdict of the lower court, which
condemned Johann Hoch to death for
the murder of his wife, Mrs. Marie
Welcker Hoch, and the date of his
execution has been set for February
23.
The first news of the action of the
court was received here by a tele
phone message from Assistant State's
Attorney Barnett, who is in Spring
field. He communicated the informa
tion to State's Attorney Healy. A mes
senger was sent to Hoch with the
news and found him in the visitors'
cage, talking with the last of his many
wives, Mrs. Fischer Hoch, the sister
of the woman for whose murder he
was sentenced to death. When he re
ceived the news Hoch became greatly
excited, and pressing his face against
the wire netting he shouted: "You are
a liar, a liar. It is not true. I do not
believe it."
He quickly became more composed
and asked for a verification of the re
port. When the messenger came back
a second time Hoch took it very
quietly. The action of the court yes
terday destroys his last hope unless
Gov. Dineen interferes.
R. G. DUN & CO.'S TRADE REVIEW.
Retail Sales in Holiday Trade Sur
passes All Records.
New York, Dec. 10. —R. G. Dun's
Weekly Review of Trade says:
Holiday trade has become the prin- j
cipal commercial feature, retail sales j
surpassing all records, while it has |
been found necessary to place liberal I
supplementary orders. Yet this aetiv- I
ity in specialties detracts little from j
the steady movement of staples, and
in jobbing and manufacturing depart
ments there is unprecedented prepara
tion for the spring season. Little ma
chinery is idle and the outlook for the
future is brightened by several an
nouncementß of higher wage scales to
become effective January 1. Building
activities are scarcely retarded by the
advancing season.
Failures this week numbered 239 in
the United States, against 270 last
year, and 27 in Canada, compared with
25 a year ago.
All on Board Saved.
Norfolk, Va„ Deo. 16. —After a
struggle of IS hours with winds and
waves, during which the crew had no
time for eating or sleeping, the Bel
gian steamer Antigoon, ('apt. Eugene
Calimetta, went ashore at Little Isl
and, about 12 miles south of this place,
early yesterday. No lives were lost.
Steamer Ran Down a Schooner.
Bridgeport, Conn., Dec. io.—The
steamer City of Lowell last night ran
down tli< lath laden schooner llasuto
land, Chatham, N. for New York%
alf South Norwalk. The schooner WBM j
cut to ihe * liter's edge ami was abau
doited. The crew escaped in boats to
the Lowell.
Three Children Cremated.
Travi rue City, Mich., Dec. IC,—
fhiee chililn n of Mr. iiml Mrs. Albert
Ingi iMill are dead, us the result of «
lire thai il- stroyed their home, near 1
lift- I u« Mich, I
Laundering the Baby's Clothes.
Many mothers are not aware that chaf
ing and much discomfort may be caused
by the strong alkalies in the soap with
which the little garments are washed.
Hence, the work should be done under
the mother's direction and only Ivory
Soap utcd. ELEANOR R. PARKER.
0
When friends urge ,vou to come and sea
them "any time," it requires some figur
ing to find out just when that time ia.
You can cure Neuralgia, Toothache, or
Headache in a few minutes by applying
Dr. Bayer's Penetrating Oil on cotton t»
the 6eat of pain. 2oc a bottle.
A girl can stand having the weather
make her feet cold, if il gives her a nica,.
rosy complexion. N. Y I're.-s.
When you ask for Mrs. Austin's Pan
cake flour, insist upon having it, and eajy
Mrs. Austin's and no other.
The man who has no business of his.
own is a mighty poor man to engage to
1 attend to your business.
AILING WOMEN.
Keep the Kidneys Well and the Kidneys.
Will Keep You Well.
_
Siclt, suffering, languid women are-
learning the true cause of bad backs
nelies hurt me so I
£*% /KB Spells of dizziness
and sick headaches
P the action of the
* kidneys was irregu
lar. Soon after I began taking Detail's
Kidney Pills I passed several gravel
stones. 1 got well and the trouble has
not returned. My back is good and
strong and my general health better."
j Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
> Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
THE BEST COUGH CURE
In buying a couc;h medicine, re
member the best cough cure,
Kemp's Balsam
costs no more than any other kind.
Remember, too, the kind that
cures is the only kind worth any
thing.
Every year thousands arc saved
from a consumptive's grave by
taking Kemp's Balsam in time.
Is it worth while to experiment
with anything else ?
Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c.
I —-
For family Colds
A reliable Cough and Cold cure should
be always in the house ready for use the
moment the first symptoms appear.
It is always easier, cheaper and bettcs
to check a cold in the very beginning.
It is safer, too.
Shiloh's Consumption Cure, the Lung
Tonic, has been tested for thirty-thre®
years, and tens of thousands of homes ia
the United States and Canada to-day ara
never without it.
*' We are seven in family. We have boughs
many bottles of Shiloh's Consumption Cure. It is
Kood and we would not be without it. —Mufr
JVlary E. Apple, Gouverncur, N.Y."
If it were anything but the best would
this fee so > Iryit in ycur ov/n family..
If it does not cure, you gei back ail it cost
you. We tak= all the chances. Neither
you nor your dealer can lose. Isn't that
fair ? 25c. is die price. Ail dealers in
medicine sell
SIB.OO en Acre
NAJGG!IFARAP P > OF CANADA <*•
L ' IE ain»>unt many farm
jj W ers will REALIZE from
F /& their wheat crop thi»
A 25 Bushels to the Acrt
I* l -! * ,E Average
Yield of Wheat.
The LAND that this was GROWN on cost many OF
the farmers absolutely nothing, while those whe
wished to add to the 160 acres the (loveniinent
grants, can buy laud adjoining at from *0 to sll
an acre.
Climate splendid, school convenient, railways
close at hand, taxes low.
Sen \ for pamphlet 44 20 th Century Canada ' *
and FULL particulars regarding rate, etc., t«
SUPERINTINIUNT T»F R 1 MMIOKATINN. Ottawa
Canada, or to the following authorized Cauadias.
Government Agents :
II M. W11.1.1 A vs. Law UuiMintf, Toledo. O.
Mention this paper.
tbcir tex, H3 a doucho id mtrvelou JTytac
ccs;lu). Thorojgklyclcaos.'s, killsdiseasogerms,
■tops discharges, he-la lallaoiniaticn azl lxal
soreness, curtbioucurrlitEa and natal catanh.
l'axtinc is in powder lorm to be dissolved in pur,
water, and is f.ir mote cleansing, healing, germicidal,
tud economical tlua l.quid antiseptics (or alt
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
1 druggists, W cents a box.
Trial Hoc and Hook of Instruct Inn* Pr*a.
TK( R. PAXTOM COMPANV BOSTON. HIH>
< a Day Sure SrHS
O 112 r. *«
tfce «hr >. 14 Irr v •. 1.« ».«.•
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ftUllL MAM I- Alt I U'.SU IU„ LAI 1370 !»• trau, MA.
PATENTS r"';r:
rmi.M.Ai.li.l IU , llua la. Watltlualou. it. U
MOLES AND WAR . TO * 1 ■ , " iin
11 Mi. !• I. M. 1t..-l - l£N#AltV .O. it'i- Il ><-r.N \
A. N. K.-O j || .
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