2 CAMERON COUNTY PKESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor Published Hvt'i'j Thursday. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. f'cr T» nr 112 ft ( paid in advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisetnenls are published lit the rate o' •no dollar per square forono Ins Tiiu.i and flftj rents jer square for men subsequent Insertion Rates l>v the year, or for six or three months »re low antl uniform, arid will be furnished on •tptllcition. Legal and Official Advertising per square three times or less, each subsequent insei • tio i • 0 cents per i-quari'. Local notiees in cents per line for one inset acrllon: ft cents per line for each subsequent eon -ecutive insertion. Obituary notices over Ave lines. 10 rents pnt line. Simple announcements of births, mot • rinires and deaths will be inserted free. Bu.-iness cards, five lines or less, 15 per year; over live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local inserted for less than To cents pet Iksuo. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pnrss Is complete end affords facilities for doing Uie best class of W. rlt P.Mi'l ICl;l.AB ATTENTION PAIOTO EAW PKINTIN'.. No will be discontinued until arrear ages arc paid, except at the option of the pub- Usher. Papers pent out of the county must be paid for iu advance. During 1905, 172 climbers lost their lives on the Alps. But as 150,000 per sons made ascents the percentage of loss was small. Only 10 per cent, of the accidents, fatal or otherwise, wero due to unavoidable causes. The re.<t were due to carelessness or foolhardi ness. "Colored rain," in the shape of mil lions of little red, green and yellow insects, fell recently at Angers, France. The phenomenon lasted sev eral hours, and so numerous were the insects that they choked the water pipes in the town and were shoveled up in the streets by the cartload. Pharmacy and medicine were first made separate professions by the monks and priests of the tenth -and eleventh centuries. The father of the apothecaries seems to have been Con stantino Afer, of Carthage. Their preparations and potions were sold to the rich and given to the poor. Xo apothecaries are mentioned in France prior to 1484. The lowest temperature ever re corded on the earth was taken "at Werchojansk, in the interior of Sibe ria, January 15, 1885. It was 00 de grees and a fraction below zero. Werchojansk is in the latitude of the pole of cold. There the earth is frozen to a depth of about 100 feet, and in the warmest season it never thaws. Insurance came from medieval Italy. It is believed to date from the 16th century, and at that time it was known in Florence. The Romans did not know insurance. The nearest they came to it was the practice of a com pany supplying the army to require a guarantee from the state against the loss of ships. But this was soon abandoned, because damages had been collected for sunken ships too worth less to float. Talus, the Greek, is said to have in vented the saw from having once found the jawbone of a snake, which he employed to cut through a small piece of wood. In early periods the trunks of trees were split into boards ■with wedges, and though these boards were not always straight, they were regarded as much better suited to construction than sawn boards, be cause they followed the grain, and lasted longer and were stronger. According to the Biological Society of Copenhagen a very interesting ex periment is shortly to be made in the northern portion of the narrow straits called the Little Belt, between the Baltic sea and the Cattegat. Electric lamps are to be fixed at the bottom of the straits, in order to prevent ths conger eels from making their way out into the open sea. The eel shows a marked fear of light. The conger eel even will not migrate to the open sea when the moon is at the full. In India assaults on British sol diers toy natives have become so fre quent of late that tho press is direct ing the serious attention of the gov ernment to the matter. The Civil and Military Gazette asserts, "on trust worthy Information, that in the north ern command alone such assaults oc cur as often as once a week, with a marked tendency to increase." This is regarded as an aftermath of the triumph of tho Japanese in the far east. Hail IR a mystery. Nobody knows how it is formed, though there are several theories. A hailstone is made like an onion, of a series of concentric coats. These coats of ice are appar ently put on in succession, by repeat ed freezings, but In what manner is unknown. Ono notion suggested is that the frozen rain-drop, which is the nucleus, I:- alternately attracted and repelled b« tween opposing storm clouds, of positive and in - t e elec trification ri'Spgctlveb , ami 111 - it irwlull) Increases in siie us it is carried to and fro. The little v» ei lilit in i, i' xvns of Australia ;|v llveii rand ruon a'"l- Hlve of n.uh other than the "Ktel.'-ra" and "leonocl't t of \n><- lean i tier ti i i I 1.: it i (> r t , rl 1 |0U 1 !ia ■ ■ I:t • i! .r i, ; ill li> (' .n ti ability > in 'ti i po*lt mi pa . rand all connect el wltu ■ • I tin till.: ft lit- I a! dtli] I' • > and provide a wtei.lv feast of run and billlii --- tt•, and liiw proprietors t.f i t -dsl i.ii ||i«« ti*j •;• i «a: 112 ttl»ryiiiK popui.tr <<p 'ta li '" 1 ' tJ> )i li.»li t! •iii i.i ... PROMISES OF DEMOCRATS. The Party Will, If It Gets n Chance, Do Some Wonderful Things —YesP It is the privilege of a minority par ty to tell of the great and good things it will do if the peopli will but give it a commission to make and execute the laws. Therefore, says the Chicago Chron icle, Mr. Williams, of Mississippi, the leader of the minority in the house of representatives at Washington, was acting within It Is rights when he took two hours to tell ha.f of what the Democratic party would do on the condition stated and reserved the oth er half to tell next day. It was his privilege to make his boasts in his own way of what his party would do if given a chance to put its armor on, but one may venture to suggest that in soliciting public fa vor a representative of the Democratic party would be more likely to succeed if he should exercise moderation in view of the record that party has made for itself and of certain notori ous facts regarding the present in gredients of the broth in Its Kettle and caldron. It is hardly wise to call attention to these things by confident ly promising what everybody knows the party can never agree to perform. Addressing the Republican side of the house, Mr. Williams said: "If you don't revise the tariff we will. If you don't admit Oklahoma and Indian ter ritory we will. If you don't, pass a Just and reasonable rate bill we will." These confident boasts convince no body. They only remind people of things. They remind people that the Demo cratic party was intrusted with power in 1892 upon an unequivocal and doubly emphasized pledge to revise the tariff and that the result was sat isfactory to no one. The party came into power on the 4th of March, 1893. An extra session of the Democratic congress was held the following summer, but the tariff was not touched. It was not until the summer of 1894 that a tariff bill was passed. The bill passed was a nondescript. It was based on no principle. It was protective in the main and free trade In spots. It differed from the tariff it displaced mainly in that it changed some of the special beneficiaries and favorites. Some that had been lifted up it cast down and some that had been cast down it lifted up. It changed northern favorites for southern fa vorites without regard to any general economic principle. It was so unsatisfactory that the Democratic president would not con nect his name with it, but left it to become a law without-his signature while he inofflcially reproached the leading- Democrats in congress with Infidelity both to principle and to sol emn party pledges. Who will believe Congressman Wil liams when he ventures to promise that such a party will revise the tariff in a way that will ba acceptable even to a respectable minority of the American people? That the Democratic party will, if it gets a chance, make three states out of four territories in such a way, if possible, as to make two of the three states Democratic we may readily be lieve. In a matter of that kind the Democratic factions can generally get together. But when Mr. Williams ventures to promise a "reasonable rate hill" on behalf of his party he particularly in vites attention to the present state of that party. He will be in a better po sition to make promises when the Democrats in the house and the senate come to some sort of agreement as to what a reasonable rate bill is. As matters now stand he merely directs attention to the fact that Mr. Tillman could not induce a single Democratic member of the senate committee in charge to sign his report on the rate bill and that they have failed to get together on any important question involved In that bill. The promises of Mr. Williams are provocative only of derision. POLITICAL PARTY NOTES. Bryan is of the opinion that travel is a valuable tiling. Keep on traveling, William, but don't run again for the presidency.—Boston Budget. O'Tlie c.'iestion of tariff revision may be said to be in the president's hands. If he declares for revision at the next session or by the next con gress It will come. Otherwise It will be deferred until 1910, and it will not come then unless the one party finds itself in power In the executive office and in both branches of congress.— Dubuque Globe-Journal. t-'The organization known as the American Reciprocal Tariff league, whatever unique kind of a "tariff league that may be, appears to be ac tive just at this tinif In promoting the kind of "reciprocity" for which the or ganization stands. Their Idea of reci procity soeins to be the tearing down of tariffs that nre Intended to afford protection against unjust competition, and inviting what they are pleas to term "reciprocal trad " In competing product? Amerhan Economist. s-"As we expect most favored nation treat merit from Germany, we h!i< nl i give it t i her In return, which hh tn» tlio abrogation of all treaties w 1 Ich ' prevent it,—Burlington (X. J.) l-Jui<->'. prlse. S 'lt Is not going to very ereit '"i,"'lis to describe the PMM'.nine t ' 1 M<i\ orate*. Hii 1< r . f«srely desirous of helping tli>> • j||. i plum. If anybody want- <o help IW 1 p. iphi til' '« MM Mm II I I , , • j f> • lt« Vijs than pa i tjj a bill v.h h ! tli itt jtit'fc* to A merle iu iaus- i trloa,— iiM{ifuru '1 Iftii*. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1906 MARKET THAT IS CHEAPEST How Free Trade Would "Improve" the Condition of Domestic Workers. Mr. Henry M. Whitney, leading tar iff smasher in Massachusetts, has an article In the inter-Nation arguing for tariff revision. He repeats with child like candor and credence some points that the free trader clings to in tue face of facts that overwhelm adult minds of the ordinary quality, says the Buffalo News. Mr. Whitney says that not over 400,- 000 workers in agriculture could be af fected by foreign competition if all du ties were removed. That would leave over 20,000,000 wage-earners, three fourths of all in the United Slates, "whose condition, everybody must ad mit, would be improved by being able to supply their several wants in the cheapest market." This threadbare assertion is not meant by Mr. Whitney to be funny. He is as serious as ever in his life when he assumes the continuance of current American wages in the face of free trade with countries whose labor is producing everything that Ameri cans use and yet is paid 01m scale of from a quarter to a half of the rate paid in the United States. He express ly says that his figures "show that 91 out. of every 100 people would be able to buy more and better things if there were no tariff at all." All this is on the assumption that free trade would not affect wages. But if it did affect them, and nobody was ever so brave as to maintain that it would not, Mr. Whitney does not tell how the money to buy things is to be earned on the scale he imagines. And if manufacturing industries went to the wall, with the cutting in half of the buying power of the industrial part of the country, what would be the ; gain in cheap foreign prices after do mestic savings had been spen'. Germany has just had an exhibition in Berlin in which things of beautiful workmanship were shown. But when the empress of Germany saw them and was told that the wages paid to make them were one cent an hour she went away with tears in her eyes, and no wonder. That is the kind of market Mr. Whitney would send Americans into to buy. This is the kind of market he would reduce Americans to at home. For the wages paid in Germany are Ihe highest in Europe except in the j British Isles, and even England is filled with the starving poor out of employment. ACHIEVED BY ROOSEVELT. Vigorous Initiative nnd Consistent Advocacy in the Railway Rate Matter. It must not be forgotten, white the ; refinement of discussion of the details | of a railway rate-regulation bill is in j progress in the senate, that congress is ! pledged to the passage of sucti a bill, j which is already sure of becoming a law, says the Troy Times. The prin- ! ciple of rate regulation has been es- j tablished and has been accepted. It ' is only the application of the principle j that is now under discussion. It was not so very long ago that the j acceptance of ihe principle itself was j hotly contested. There were many i prophets who predicted that the na- j tional congress would not consent to j endow a commission with power to I prohibit excessive rates of transporta- \ tlon. What has brought about the general acquiescence in the wisdom and pro priety of such legislation? Nothing but the vigorous initiative and consist ent advocacy of President Roosevelt himself. The president knew not only that there must be tome curb placed on oppressively discriminating rates for the carriage of freight, but he saw also that the people would mpport measures looking to such repression. It was not only an aet of general jus tice but one in harmony with -he pub lic conviction that he advocated, when in public address and message to con gress he declared that this question must be settled in agreement -.vitli the principles of equity and in behalf of the people at large. The house of representatives promptly and almost unanimously act ed upon the president's recommenda tion. The senate, a more slowly mov ing body, has gradually como to the name destination and is now consider ing methods for making the principle operative. The extent of this victory of the president, which necessarily has been achieved by the slowly advancing pro cesses which even the most righteous truth must await, can be appreciated fully only when the general acceptance of the president's idea is compared with the opposition which existed not so long ago. Mental force, political sagacity and the power of a righteous det -rmlnatlon have seldom been illua trated In so conspicuous a manner as in the way by which the executive ad vice has converted a more or less un willing legislature into a eoo)«eratlve factor. In estabiishln; as a rovern mental rule of action the rlpht of the people throuch their officers to fix a limit beyond which the rates Imposed by carriers In inter, tate commerce cannot go. How lie Stood. Minima \V! wciU you like tn dinner, Willie " Willie Ai»> till»i but company. 1 don i uii} 'it ::i* then. —H'Vlcn Tranm ript. t I'll Mi |«| . . |: • , call u c a sic ux i » lh> tariff, They ctittfd ■ ■ • ' ■ .»itt# iljelr i wn. I'm i* ('union jnl Pnyiii* wer rh hi when they faile I |o • •'■i --rv# r.iiv i!j-.i"l . I. niiiud Iwr r«j »U|ou.—J'litaburg tHiJinlfbi $2,000 BRIBE Was Promised to Insur ance Commissioner. BY THE EQUITABLE. Commissioner host, of Wisconsin, Tells a Sensational Story to a Legislative Committee. Milwaukee, Wis. —The most sensa tional testimony which has been presented to the special insurance in vestigating committee of the Wiscon sin legislature was given Wednesday when Insurance Commissioner Host, of the Wisconsin department of in surance, testified before the commit tee that on June IG, 1903, the day on which the hearing in the case of the state of Wisconsin against the Equi table Life Assurance Society for a compulsory distribution of the sur plus of that company to Wisconsin policyholders was to be held by him, Secretary of State Walter L. Houser entered the insurance commissioner's office and said that if Mr. Host would render a decision in accordance with a slip handed by Mr. Houser to Mr. Host, which would have been a deci sion favorable to the Equitable com pany, that the Equitable Life Assur ance Society would give $2,000 to ward a campaign fund for a renomina tion of the state officers in the next campaign. The slip which Commissioner Host testified Secretary of State Houser handed to him was presented to the commissioner and contained on it these words: "Petition is denied and same is dis missed for the reason that a determi nation of the subject thereof requires the exercise of a 'judicial function that cannot be exercised by the defendant. "It Is further announced as a rule of this department that no similar proceedings be entertained until a final adjudication of the same is had in the courts of the state." Mr. Host testified that he told Houser that he would think the mat ter over. Host's decision was against the Equitable Life Assurance Society, which afterward took the case into the courts and obtained a rule adverse to Mr. Host's order for a compulsory distribution of the surplus on deferred dividend policies. Mr. Host also testified that Robert Luscombe, who for years represented insurance companies before various legislatures, telephoned to him three times between June 16 and July 31, 1903, and asked Host to come to Chi cago, saying he had an argument which would convince Host that the law in question was not compulsory. MEDAIS AND MONEY. They are Awarded by the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission. Pittsburg, Pa. —Twenty-one awards of medals and money were made by the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission at its meeting Wednes day. It is expected the medals will be | ready for distribution about July 1. j Among the awards are: To the widow of Michael Gismondi, ;of Mt. Pleasant, Pa., a silver medal and death benefits amounting to SOOO. ■ Gismondi lost his life while trying to i rescue a 14-year-old boy who was in an unfinished well in September, 1905. A silver medal and $1,200 to liqui date indebtedness on his property was awarded William Watkins, a coal ! miner of Edwardsville, Pa., for res | cuing three miners from death by gas j in an explosion in the Kingston Coal ; Co.'s mines, in September, 1904. | A medal and a like sum for the 1 ssune purpose was given Timothy E. Heagerty, a lake pilot of Ashtabula, 0., who in April, 1905, rescued the captain and crew of the schooner Yukon in a gnle on Lake Erie. A ; bronze medal and SSOO was given ! Robert W. Simpson, the engineer of the tug of which Heagerty was pilot. This award is made in connection with the same rescue. Michael Sasso, the fireman, also of Ashtabula,, is given a bronze medal and SSOO. George H. Williams, of Elizabeth, Pa., in October, 1904, lost his life in trying to rescue a man from electric cables which were burning hin> to death. Williams was knocked off a bridge and fractured his skull. A sil ver medal is awarded his sister. A .'liver medal to Walt...T H. Mur bach. of Elyria, O , for the rescue of a school boy from drowning. Harry E. Moure, a railroad con ductor of Alliance, 0., lost part of his arm in trying to rescue a man that had fallen aslet ;> on the track unit he was awarded a bronze medal and dis ablement benefits of SSOO. Congress. Washington.—On the IGlh the sen fl'nlshed consideration of the rail road rate bill in committee of the whole. Th" house completed Its dc bull of the naval appropriation bill. An Embezzler Is f'hi y< line, Wyo. \V. A. Prrrh rrs, larm r fe.ier ,1 disti i aitln BK''Ut at Cti.-por, Wyo., pleaded nlity 111 Ihe I 'till- «t Suites district const j ben Wednesday to a char»-o > t em ln'/./.|. tnent mi l was sent« need by Jtidt'e Hitter lu three yearn' imprisou meat. Cert. John McArthur Diet. • hie:.. ~, Hi. <:* n. MeAr thtir, i . nier jMi; trnmt. r vt t'hlea««- and a major n< ral .luring ih<- civil ' war, died here Wednesday, ni(. 4 "; I yearrf. He bud been 111 for two j.sr* ' HE PROVES IT Garfield's Report Con victs Standard Oil AS LAW BREAKER. The Complete Report of the Com missioner of Corporations Is Sent to Congress. Washington. D. C. President Roosevelt on Thursday transmitted to congress the complete report of James R. Garfield, commissioner of corpora tions, -of the investigation which he has made into the operations of the alleged oil trust. A full synopsis of the report, accompanied by a message from the president dealing with the facts developed by the inquiry, was sent to congress on May 4. The report of Mr. Garfield covers 500 printed pages. In support of the various allegations made by him, he prints in the report copies of way bills, letters of railroad officials bear ing on transactions with agents of the Standard Oil and 'independent oil companies, special oil tariffs of var ious railroads, bills of lading, blind bills of lading and secret understand ings and agreements of the several railroad companies named with the Standard Oil Co. In many instances, according to the copies of the way bills, the rate paid by the Standard Oil Co. was only 33 1-3 per cent, of the amount stated in the bill. The testimony of employes of rail roads is given in confirmation of the bureau's charge that there was a con cealment of rates granted to the Standard Oil Co. Although, it is al leged, in the case of the Chicago & Alton railroad the general tariff offi cers admitted the existence of a se cret rate and that the purpose was to conceal it from other railroads and not from the shippers, one of the lead ing clerks of the Alton is quoted as testifying that the secret rate was in tended only for the benefit of the Standard Oil Co., and that had any other shipper inquired for rates he would not have been given the low rate accorded the Standard Oil Co. The report further shows the estab lishment of rates from small, in consequental and in many instances obscure points near large shipping centers and the filing of the tariffs with the inter-state commerce com- j mission as evidence that the rates | were not secret. But Mr. Garfield maintains that by this arrangement the rates were effectively secret, be- j cause any shipper other than the Standard Oil Co. in applying for rates would bo given the published rates from other places in the vicinity \ of the small points referred to, which 'in every case were considerably I higher. He declares that the railroads recognized the irregularity of the ar : rangement "and that they designed to hide the rate from all shippers except the Standard Oil Co." fOR LAND AND LIBERTY. Russia's Parliament Makes Demands on the Czar. St. Petersburg, Russia. —The lower | house of the national parliament has finished consideration of the address In reply to the speech from the throne, which was adopted substantially as it I came from the committee. The lower house's demand for am- I nesty, the most pressing point in its | address, was altered at the last mo ment by the commission itself, which in response to criticisms of indefinite ness in the expression "full political ; amnesty" substituted "amnesty for all ! crimes committed from religious or political motives as well as agrarian j offenses." The commission also ac ; cepted a new clause to meet the | wishes of the discontented in the army and navy, asking the emperor tore ! vise the conditions of sen ice on the basis of right and justice. Most of the other amendments pro posed in the closing hours of the de j bate fell by the wayside, only one out of 31 proposed alterations of the ( proposed agrarian paragraph, for ex ample, being accepted. The discussion Cf this plan lasted 112 iur hours, prac tically every peasant In the house tak ing tU«? rostrum to voice the demands of their constituents for "land and lib erty." | The last feature of the debate was an attempt to introduce a declaration in favor of peace and pan-Slavism as I ihe guiding principle of the empire, but an amendment commending Em- I peror Nicholas for his peace mani festos and pledging the government to cherish ih<> aspirations of the Slavoni an people outside the empire, was re jected. Congress. Washington.- On the 17th tht scn iile devoted its session to a review o{ the amendments to the railroad ra'. b 'l. The h use passed the naval :ij>- propriatlon bill. Cas'ro to Control. New York. The • learns from u source of infor. inutiou rl<> ely alli d to ihe Venv iel an government that Pr- sldent < will rnww control or Ma eflta on May 23 and on that day will grunt a general amnesty to political pri, uiTi, A Disastrous Explosion, Kcnnton. Pa \» explosion of i.as lu the Diamond uiin> on i hur lay burned si* men, thru* of! (b«M 'I T-.e 111 l II »•. . I ■ | , ii fHI ti |i ,tlon when the mint ,-m i b« i M > (united. No one is himself when hi* nerve ren ter* an; exhausted, whether from rxies m« use or from lack of proper food. The quality of ones thought, ambition, en "r«y. aims f»fi«l ideals in largely a matter ol health.—Success Magazine. ♦— Garfirld Tea overcomes constipation sick headache, liver and kidney diseases. Some.men make such n big fuss about planning for big things that they over look the necessity of attending to the | little details. Lots of us bow to the inevitable with* out a formal introduction. Complexion bad? Tongue coated? live*' deranged? Take Garfield Tea. Genius is seldom bothered with book keeping.—Life. Be patient; card houses are built in an hour—cathedrals take centuries. CORDIAL jNVITATION ADDRESSEDTOWORKING GIRLS Mlsa Barrows Telia How Mrs. Pink ham's Advice Helps-Working Girls. Girls who work Day i n anf l day V.- * out the girl toils, and she is often the bread-winner of the family. Whether she is sick or well, whether it rains or shines, she must get to her place of employment, perforin the duties exacted of her— smile and be agreeable. Among this class the symptoms o? female diseases are early manifest by weak and aching backs, pain in the lower limbs and lower part of the stomach. In consequence of frequent wetting of the feet, periods become painful and irregular, and frequently there are faint and dizzy spells, with loss of appetite, until life is a burden. All these symptoms point to a de rangement of the female organism which can be easily and promptly cured by Lydia E. Finkham's Vegeta ble Compound. Miss Abby F. Barrows, Nelsonville, Athens Co., Ohio, tells what this great medicine did for her. She writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkliam : "I feel it my duty to tell you tho good Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and lilood Purifier havo done forme. Before I took them I was very nervous, had dull headaches, pains in back, and periods were irregular, I had been to several doctors, and they did me no good. "Your medicine has made me well and strong. I can do most any kind of work without complaint, and my periods are all right. 7, 1 am in better health than I ever was, and I know it is all due to your remedies. 1 recommend your advice and medicine to all who suffer." It is to such pirls that Mrs. Pinlc ham holds out a helping l hand and ex tends a cordial invitation to correspond with her. She is daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising sick women free of charge. Her long record of success in treating woman's ills makes her letters of advice of untold value to every ailing working girl. Address. Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. Kemp's Balsam] Will stop any cough that | can be stopped by any | medicine and cure coughs | tbat cannot be cured by any | other medicine. It is always the best | cough cure. You cannot B aliord to take chances on | any other kind. KEMP'S BALSAM cures S coughs, colds, bronchitis, I grip, asthma and cousump- | lion in first stajjcs. Twenty-Five Bushels sf Wheat to the Here ncans a productive ! 'i ll soil 1 an>!. \vM~V p I ftHJ lias cost the farmer , ftj 112 s"HHliinK. but tin-price u;i - ,is The Canadian Government civcs absolutely free to every Kttllf 160 acres of such land. lands adjolllaf can be purchased at fromM to fio per acre itma railroad and other corpora tions. Alreadv 175.000 farmers from the United States have made their homes in Canada. For pamphlet "Twentieth Century Canada" »nd all infoimation apply to Srr].;<i>rj .\i»i:nt ik Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, nr to tl:e ollowinx authorized Canadian Goverumcat \geuts : 3 M. WI 1.1.1 A M.*, Law Bolldlng, Toledo. O. MttUiun thit pnpet gf^~- " i " " ' ! • - r v.-,, £• * i { • .TV* t. . M< >l BEST AXLE GREASE EVER HADE Something I! ail! fur better than the I »• put ■wt kjf Hi.- «,:.i KtutionulU . 1 - ii • and ik v i«r 1 " r K i'" Axl * or#a ««' i' MONARCH MfQ. CO., Tctdilo, O.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers