THE WONDERBERRY. Mr. Luther Burbank, the plant Wiz ard of California, has originated a wonderful new plant which grows any where, in any soil or climate, and bears great quantities of luscious berries all the season. Plants are grown from seed, and it takes only three months to get them in bearing, and they may be grown and fruited all summer in the garden, or in pots during the win ter. It is unquestionably the greatest Fruit Novelty ever known, and Mr. Burbank has made Mr. John Lewis Childs, of Floral Park, N. Y„ the in troducer. He says that Mr. Childs is one of the largest, best-known, fair est and most reliable Seedsman in America. Mr. Childs is advertising seed of the Wonderberry all over the world, and offering great Inducements to Agents for taking orders for it. This berry is go line and valuable, and ■o easily grown anywhere, that every body should get it at once. Jack's Faux Pas. Maud —I noticed that you had Jacli Clubberly to church with you Sun day. Bell —Yes, and the poor heathen Is ■o unused to going that he wanted ths usher to check his hat and coat. HOME COUGH CURE. Goto your druggist and get o' --half ounce Concentrated pine compound, two ounces of glycerine, half a pint of good whiskey; mix it up, and use It In doses of a teaspoonful to a table ■poonful every four hours, shaking the bottle each time. Any druggist can ■upply ingredients. The Concentrated pine is a pine prod' net refined for medical use and comes only in half ounce bottles, each en closed in a round case which is air tight and preserves the fluid in its full strength, but be sure it is labeled "Con centrated." A prominent local druggist says he has filled this prescription hun dreds of times and has seen it work wonders. Wouldn't Take Him Seriously. He—But I need you in order to bs happy. She—l couldn't think of marrying a ■eedy person. SIOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to lean feat there is at least one dreaded disease that scienci has been able to cure In all Its stages, and that ta Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken in ternally. acting directly upon the blood and mucoua surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the dlMease, and giving the patient Strength by building up the constitution and aaslst tng nature In doing Its work. The proprietors have 00 much faith In Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it faU« to •ure send for list of testimonials Address F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo, O. Bold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hali'a Family Pills for constipation. Many a man lives a regular cat-and dog life. He purrs in the parlor and barks in the kitchen. ONLY ONE "BROMO QUIJfIIfE" That Is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look tat the signature of K. W. UKUVE. Used the Woril over to Cure a Cold In One Day. 26c. Arms and laws do not flourish t» gether.—Caesar. It Cures While You Walk Allen's Foot-K&so for corns and bunions, hot, sweaty callous aching lect. 25c all Druggists. A light heart lives long.—Shakes peare. E\\xvc°S Serna ads y POTATOES fast,-.. lYlMUnillk a two horMe planter plants them. A boy can cut a bushel every nvo minutes. No fake! If not satisfartx.ry money returned, l'rico 13.60. Send order or write for particulars. Agents wanted In every county. W.O. STOCKHAM COMPANY, Flqua, O. ~ B fn* time." Sold by druggists. SI "TO#?* CUBA AGAIN IN NATIVE HANDS GEN. GOMEZ IS INAUGURATED PRESIDENT OF THE RE STORED REPUBLIC. AMERICAN RULE HAS CEASED Gov. Magoon and Other American Of ficials Who Controlled Affairs Since the Latter Part of 1906 Leave the Island. Havana, Cuba. Maj. Gen. Jose Miguel Gomez was inaugurated presi dent of the restored Cuban republic at noon yesterday and within an hour after he had taken the oath of office, administered by the chief justice of the supreme court, the American offi cials who had been in control of af fairs since the autumn of 1906, had departed from the island. The American provisional governor, Charles E. Magoon, who escorted Gen. .xomez to the palace and there turned jver to him the reins of government, sailed on the new Maine. This feat ure of the program was entirely im promptu, as it had been expected up to the last minute that the scout cruiser Birmingham would call for the departing executive. The Maine was followed out of the harbor by the battleship Mississippi and the army transport McClellan. An im mense crowd gathered along the sea walls to witness the spectacle and a perfect swarm of yachts, tugs and small boats accompanied the ships to the open sea. A Cuban gunboat also accompanied the ships some little distance to sea with a band on board playing the Cuban national anthem. Large Cuban flags flew from the foremasts of the battleships and transport and as they passed the narrow channel entrance under the towering white walls of Morro the white clad sailors of the Maine and Mississippi manned the rails from stem to stern. The scene so filled with significance was a most impressive one, but the crowds ashore looked on in characteristic silence. Earlier in the day when Gov. Ma goon and President-elect Gomez were seated side by side in the carriage en route to the palace in the wake of a galloping escort of native cavalry, there was the same silence on the part of the holiday throngs who lined the sidewalks. Hats were lifted as the carriage swept by and the salutes were returned in the same manner by the governor and Gen. Gomez. The departure of Gov. Magoon and the military officers who served as advisers to the native officials dur ing the period of intervention leaves about 3,000 troops still on the island, under command of Maj. Gen. Barry. These will be returned to the United States as fast as the transport ser vice will permit, the last of the troops leaving on April 1. SUE FOR $2,000,000 DAMAGES White Star Line Wants Pay for Ship Sunk in Collision. New York City.—Just which ship was responsible for the collision in which the White Star liner Repub lic and the Italian liner Florida fig ured and which company shall pay the damages will be decided by the court of admiralty. Both companies filed suits yester day. That of the owners of the Re public claimed damages of $2,000,000 and recited in legal form the story of the marvelous sea disaster. The blame for the collision was placed on the Florida and the claim made that the last named ship was going ahead at "an immoderate rate of speed" when the crash came. The owners of the Florida also filed a libel suit and a petition for a lim itation of liability against the Florida. The petitioners asked that their lia bility, in case the suits are decided against them, be placed at $224,000, the damage value of the Florida. Later the Florida's owners applied for and obtained an order from Judge Adams in the United States circuit court, staying all suits for damages against the steamship Florida on the ground that their petition for limita tion of liability had been filed ahead of the $2,000,000 libel suit of the Oceanic Steamship Navigation Co. In their suit proper the Florida own ers allege that the collision was due to the neglect of the Republic's offi cers. Congress. Washington.—On the 28th the omni bus claims bill was before the senate during the entire session. The house considered and adopted the confer ence report on the bill providing for taking the census. Drew a Life Sentence. Helena, Mont. —Judge W. H. Hunt in the federal court yesterday sen tenced George Hauser, convicted of a sensational train robbery on the Great Northern road, to a life term in the military prison at Fort Leaven worth. Cavein Fatal to Three. South Bend, Ind. —Two workmen lost their lives in a cavein on the East Jefferson street sewer ex tension yesterday. A third is fatally injured. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY FEBRUARY 4, 1909. SEEMS ANXIOUS FOR TROUBLE BULGARIA ADOPTS A DEFIANT ATTITUDE TOWARD TURKEY. Dispute Over Indemnity to be Paid Turkey by Bulgaria May Lead to War. Sofia. —The Bulgarian government last night delivered a note to representatives of the powers com plaining of the irreconcilable and un compromising attitude of Turkey and declaring that the Porte must be re sponsible for the consequences. The note does not solicit the inter vention of the powers, but draws their attention to the tension of the situa tion. For several days past the relations between Bulgaria and Turkey again have been exceedingly strained by reason of the fact that Bulgaria had mobilized her reserves and brought up to its war strength of 25,000 men the eighth division of her army on the Turkish frontier. The present situation is a result of the failure of Bulgaria and Turkey to reach an amicable agreement con cerning the amount of the indemnity Bulgaria shall pay to Turkey for her Independence, which she proclaimed last October, and for the seizure of a portion of the Oriental railway. Tur key is willing to accept $25,000,000 as compensation for all her losses, but Bulgaria has offered to pay only about $16,000,000. London, Jan. 30.—The British rep resentatives at Constantinople and Sofia have been instructed to warn Turkey and Bulgaria of the danger of military action on the frontier and to exhort a peaceful arrangement of their dispute. According to special dispatches re ceived here from Sofia, the Bulgarian note to the powers takes a mandatory tone toward Turkey, declaring that unless the Porte promptly recognizes Bulgaria's independence Bulgaria will consider herself freed from the en gagement she voluntarily has under taken to negotiate with the Porte on the basis of pecuniary compensation. WEEKLY - REVIEW OF TRADE Dullness Prevails in Many Lines, Notably in Iron and Steel. New York City.—R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Some irregularity continues in in dustrial and mercantile activity. A fundamental factor of strength is the steadily multiplying evidence that stocks are so depleted as to render a !«' J | constipated you can J [ < > disturb them with ~ < t \ ■*/ cathartics but, like < » 11 the watch, they will ] j 11 not be able to do , , <» jjl \"y J\ their allotted work i» ] | VI fr J until they are put J [ 0 \h ? [ /\ 11/ into proper condi- , , < > w ML\ \ | tion to do it. < » !' One cannot mend ] [ < i flf / rNf a delicate piece of < , '' 11 /I 1 i» mechanism by vio- < i J | * lent methods, and J [ ~ no machine made by man is as fine < , 1 > as the human body. < 1 J * The use o£ pills, salts, castor-oil ] | i, and strong cathartic medicines is , , 11 the violent method. The use o£ < » j | the herb tonic laxative, ! | Lane's Family i! Medicine i; ! | is the method adopted by intelli- ! ! < 1 gent people. < > | J Headache, backache, indigestion, J | o constipation, skin diseases—all are benefited immediately by the use 1 > J | of this medicine. J | i> Druggists sell it at 25c. and 50c. < 1 Western Canada the Pennant Winner "The Last Best West" T«he government of Canada now gives 5' ft to every actual set ,/SQf>( tier IbO acres of wheat -jjpowimi land free and an TV additional 160 acres at $3.00 an acre. The 300,000 contented American settlers making their homes in Western Canada is the best evidence of the superiority of that countiy. They are becoming rich, growing from 25 to 50 bushels wheat to the acre; 60 to 110 bush els oats and 45 to 60 bushels barley, be sides having splendid herds of cattle raised on the prairie grass. Dairying is an im portant industry. The crop of 1908 still keeps Western Canada in the lead. The world will soon look to it as its food-producer. "The thing which most impressed us was tho . magnitude of tho country that is available lor agricultural purposes." Xationat Editorial Correspondence, IUUH. Low railway rates, good schools and churches, markets convenient, prices the highest, climate perfect. Lands are for salo by Railway and Land Com- Panics. Descriptive pamphlets and maps sent free, or railway rates and <>ther Information apply to Superintendent of Immigration. Ottawa, Canada, or tbo authorized Canadian Government Agent: H. M. WILLIAMS. Law Building. Toledo. Ohio. SICK HEADACHE 4* . Positively cured by CARTERS • b r L,,, " r '"'; Imm They also relieve Dli* Km STTI F tress from Dyspepsia, In- Lfß | iipM digestion and Too Heart j H I J" R Sating. A perfect rem* Ira D| 8E C e( *y for Dizziness, Nan- Mr I LLd a sea, Drowsiness, Bad Jjj ( , Taste in the Month, Coat* ' ed Tongue, Pain in th« T2555555 ISide, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. PADTED?I Genuine Must Bear UAmcno Fac-Simile Signature ■ittle - ° 112e R . ™Bl REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. Invest Your Savings In the leading Kali road and Industrial Stocks of Tills Country. We will buy for you on the Now York Stock Kx chantfo, storks from one share and upward at market prices. Write for our CIRCULAR A2O. Wo will send to those interested.cn request, our Railroad or In dustrial Records giving most detailed information of all tho leadinK storks of this country. J. F. PIERSON, JR.,fit CO., Members of the New York Stock Exchange, 6(1 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 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