OPENING OF CHEYENNE RIVER INDIAN RESERVATION. The General Land Office at Wash ington has designated Le Peau and Aberdeen, So. Dak., on the Minneapo lis & SL Louis S. R. as registration points. There will be about 7000 quarter sec tions allotted to settlers. Who May Secure a Homestead. Under the homestead laws of th« United States any person, male of fe male, who is not the owner of more than 160 acres of land In any state or territory, who is a native born citizen of the United States, or has been naturalized, or declared his in tention to become a naturalized citizen of the United States (1. e., one who has taken out his first papers of citi zenship), who is over the age of 21 years or the head of a family, may make a homestead entry of not exceed ing ICO acres of any of the unoccu pied public lands of the United States. FOR WET FEET. The Chick—What's the matter? The Duckling—You'd cry, too, if your ma made you wear overshoes when you went swimming. Care In Preparing Food. In recent years scientists hare proved that the value of food Is meas ured largely by its purity; the re sult Is the most stringent pure food laws that have ever been known. One food that has stood out prom! nently as a perfectly clean and purr food and which was as pure before the enactment of these laws as it could possibly be Is Quaker Oats; conceded by the experts to be the Ideal food for making strength of muscle and brain. The best and cheapest of all foods. The Quaker Oats Company Is the only manufacturer of oatmeal that has satisfactorily solved the prob lem of removing the husks and black specks which are so annoying when other brands are eaten, if you are convenient to the store buy the reg ular size packages; if not near the store, buy the large size family pack ages. 1 Strictly Businesslike. He —American girls who marry for eign titles don't deserve any credit. She —They don't ask any; they pay cash. Important to Wlother3. Examine carefully every bottlo of CASTOIiIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Signature of In Use For Over JJO Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought Her string is soon worn out if a girl has too many beaux. IF YOUR CHILD NEEDS A TONIC —if your little bey or girl is deli cate and sickly—go to the nearest druggist and get a bottle of Dr. Do J siyne's Tooic Vermifuge This splendid tonic has been successful for four genera» tions in making sickly children strong and healthy, and effec tively expelling worms. It is likewise a natural tonic for adults, and restoreslastinghealth and strength to "run-down" systems by toning up the stom ach and other digestive organ;,. Sold by /ill Druggistt— -2 sizes, SOc. and. 35c. Dr. D. Jayno'a Expectorant Is th» most reliable remedy for Coughs, Colds, Croup, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis *ud Pleur iuy. DYOLA DYES lfi fast, bp.atulfn! colors. 10c por package at dealers II not in stock, .vnd us 10c staTin# color desired. OKE DYE FOR ALL GGGDS Color car land book of directions free by writing Dy-o-la, Burlington, Vermont. DYQIA IYES C^-P^EUJCj^ FOR THE PROMPT RELIEF OF ASTHMA & HAY FEVER J/OUR. DtiUGG/Sr FOR ft hcgs roa ntl mwu kjktwh* 4 ummi lu auri%a.u DEATH CLAIMS E. H. HARRIMAN GREAT ORGANIZER OF RAIL ROADS SUCCUMBS TO AN IN TESTINAL DISORDER. HARD FIGHT AGAINST DISEASE Mr. Harriman Died Peacefully and Al most to the End His Brilliant Mind Retained Its Integrity. Arden, N. Y. —Edward H. liarrlman, the greatest organizer of railroads tlio world has ever known, met the only lasting defeat of his active life September 9 at the hands of death. Secluded In his magnificent home on Tower Hill, surrounded by members of his family, physicians and nurses, he succombed to an intestinal disorder after a fight against disease which will rank for sheer grit with liis remarkable struggles in the iiuan eial world. The exact time of his death is known only in that limited circle of relatives and associates who had so effectively shielded Mr. Harriman from all outside of annoyances during his last illness. The time was given to the world as 3:35 p. m., but Mrs. Mary Simons, sister of the dead man, said that the end had come at 1:30, more than two hours previous. Mr. Harriman died peacefully and almost to the end his brilliant mind rotained its integrity. After a relapse on Sunday he sank steadily and soon after the noon hour September 9 there came a relapse which marked the ap proach of tlio end. His wife, his two daughters, the Misses Mary and Carol, and his sons, Walter and Boland, who have been constantly with him, assem bled at the bedside and a carriage was hastily dispatched for Mrs. Sim ons, Avhose home Is here in Arden, three miles from the Tower Hill man sion. Driving hurriedly up the moun tainside Mrs. Simons entered the great silent house in time to be pres ent at her brother's death. \t "V. * \ v ilm ■ WXSPZZ'./J E. H. Harriman. While the policy of reticence that prevailed during Mr. Harriman's ill ness 'was maintained by most of his relatives and associates aftor his death, Orlando Harriman, whose home is in New York, discussed the funeral arrangements briefly. He said that Mr. Harirman would bo buried in the. family plot in the little graveyard be hind St. John's Episcopal church at Arden. He will rest beside his eldest son, Edward H. Harlman, jr., who died 22 years ago, soon after the family first came to Arden. Services will be held September 12. Mr. Harriman was born In Hempstead, 1.. 1., February 23, IS4B, the third son of Rev. Orlando Harriman, Jr., rector of St. George's Episcopal church at Hemp stead. His mother name from an old and aristocratic famllj' of Now Brunswick, N. J. The family were In humble circum stances and the youth, who was to be come a multimillionaire, knew no luxuries and worked hard for'the little education he received. At 16 he found employment as an errand boy In a broker's office In Wall street. He developed into an astuta lad always looking for a chance to better himself and In 1870, before he was S3 years old. he had bought a seat on the New York stock exchange and paid for it with $20,000 he made In speculation. During the years he had been an errand boy and later as a broker's clerk, he had never forgotten what his early years of privation had taught him—that each dol lar represented 100 pennies, each with a purchasing powor. He learned his elementary lessons In finance In the school of Jim Flsk, Jay Gould and old Commodore Vamlerbilt, and emerged a broker on his own account de void of sentiment In business, as waa shown later when he fought and ousted from the presidency of the Illinois Cen tral railroad Stuyvesant Fish, » man who had probably done as much to help young Harriman on In his career as any other man now living and wh» had years be fore made him vice president of the road. When the insurance scandals of 1905 broke, Harriman was a director of the Equitable Life Assurance society of which his friend, James Har.en Hyde, owned a controlling part of stock. Recent esti mates of Mr. Harriman's personal wealth have varied all the way from $50,000,000 to $100,000,000. Murdered by Thieves. Chicago.—Thieves are believed to have been the murderers of an uni dentified man, whose body was re covered from the river here. Two deep gashes in the victim's throat showed the manner of his death. Terrible Destruction Wrought. Mexico City The destruction wrought by the floods and tornadoes throughout the state of Tamaulipas has been firightful and may even rival that in Monterey, according to a state ments given out here. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1909. VALUE PAINTED ON. Well painted is value added wheth er the house be built for one thousand dollars or ten thousand. Well painted means higher selling value, and high er occupying value for there's an additional pleasure in living in tha house that is well dressed. National Lead Company assist In making the right use of the right paint by sending free upon request to all who ask for it, their "Houseown ers' Painting Outfit No. 49." This outfit Includes a book of color schemes for either exterior or interior paint ing, a book of specifications and an Instrument for detecting adulteration in paint materials. Address National Lead Company, 1902 Trinity Build ing, New York City, and the outfit will bo promptly sent to you. Consumptives Need Not Leave Homo, Consumption can bo cured, or ar rested, in any section of the United States, and the percentage of cures in the east and the west is nearly the same. Any physician, therefore, who sends a person to the southwest with out sufficient funds, or in an advanced or dying stage of the disease, is guilty of cruelty to his patient. Renewed efforts are being made to stop this practice, and to encourage the build ing of small local hospitals in every city and town in the country. At tempts are also being made in South j crn California and In Texas to ex clude indigent consumptives or to send them back to the east. Enough Till Eternity. The biggest marble quarry In opera tion in the world lies almost within a stone's throw of the heart of West Rutland, Vt. Around Its mouth is a I stock of 12,000 pieces of finished mar ble. There is a great gap lu the hill side. The marble crops out as bare of soil or vegetation as a billiard ball. ; You can walk over that hill and never step on anything but marble, and aft er two score years of blasting and drilling they don't know how deep thedeposlt lies. Itseems there's enough marble in that one hill for an eternity. "Chickens a Nuisance." | "Chickens a nuisance," declares the ' Charleston News and Courier. What, fried? —Baltimore Sun. Chickens a nuisance? Yes, when all they leave of your garden is a ! reminlscmce; yes, when the young ! cock, full of the joy of life, rouses ! you in the early dawn; yes, when some low-browed, vulgar fowl whips | the very life out of your blooded pet; I yes, when the pip or other ailment j worries the amateur breeder. But I when fried? Never! Too Conscientious to Rest, "And where do you go for your Bummer vacation?" j "To the assembly grounds." "What a delightful period of rest and relaxation you must anticipate." "Oh, not at all. We always make It a point, to attend every lecture."— i Cleveland Plain Dealer. ! Wasn't Settled. Caller —Why is your servant going about the house with her hat on? Mistress —She only came this morn ing and hasn't yet made up her mind whether she will stay or not. —Har- per's Weekly. At Rip Van Winkle's Hotel. "What time do you want to be called. Rip?" "In about 20 years." Many a woman has her modiste to thank for it. SENSE ABOUT FOOD Facts' About Food Worth Knowing. It is a serious question sometimes to know just what to eat when a per son's stomach is out of order and most foods cause trouble. Grape-Nuts food can be taken at any time with the certainty that it will digest. Actual experience of people 1B valuable to anyone interested in foods. A Terre Haute woman writes: "I had suffered with Indigestion for about four years, ever since an attack of ty phoid fever, and at times could eat nothing but the very lightest food, and then suffer such agony with my stomach I would wish I never had to eat anything. "I was urged to try Grape-Nuts and since using it I do not have to starve myself any more, but I can eat It at any time and feel nourished and satis fied, dyspepsia is a thing of the past, and I nm now strong and well. "My husband also had an experience with Grape-Nuts. He was very weak and sickly in the spring. Could not attend to his work. He was under the doctor's care but medicine did not seem to do him any, good until he be gan to leave oft ordinary food and use Grape-Nuts. It was positively surpris ing to see the change in him. He grew better right off, and naturally he had none but words of praise for Grape- Nuts. "Our boy thinks he cannot eat a meal without Grape-Nuts, and he learns so fast at school that his teach er and other scholars comment on It. I am satisfied that it is because of the great nourishing elements in Grape-Nuts." "There's a Reason." It contains the phosphate of potash from wheat and barley which combin® with albumen to make the gray mat ter to daily refill the brain and nerve centers. It is a pity that people do not know what to feed their children. There are ,-nany mothers who give their young sters almost any kind of food and when they become sick begin to rour the medicine down them. The real way is to stick to proper food and be healthy and get along without med icine and expense. Ever rend flie nl>ove letter? A new one nppenrm from time to time. They ore Pennine, true, and full of bmiUß latere* t. White Steamers Use Kerosene as Fuel TOE WHITE STEAMER WHICH MADE A SUCCESSFUL PUBLIC DEMONSTRATION OF KEROSENE AS FUEL ON THE RECENT 2650-MILE GLIDDEN TOUR. The most Interesting announce ment ever made in connection with the automobile industry was un doubtedly that made a month or two ago to the effect that the new models of the White Steam Cars could be run on kerosene, or coal oil, instead of gasoline. Everyone at once recog nized that the use of the new fuel would add materially to the advan tages which the White already pos sessed over other types of cars. There were some people, however, who were sceptical as to whether or not the new fuel could he used with complete success, and, therefore, the makers of the White Car, the White Company, of Cleveland, Ohio, deter mined to make a public demonstra tion of the new fuel in the 1909 Gild den Tour. From the standpoint of the public, no test more satisfactory could have been selected. First of all, the dis tance covered on the Glidden Tour, from Detroit to Denver and thence to Kansas City, was 2Giio miles. This was certainly more th&n sufficient to bring out any weaknesses, if such had existed. Still more important was the fact that the car was at all times while on the road under the supervi sion of observers, named by those who entered other contesting cars. Therefore, it would have been impos sible for the driver of the White to have even tightened a bolt without the fact being noted and a penalty in flicted. At night the cars were guarded by Pinkerton detectives and oould not be approached by any one. NOTHING DOING. He—l'd kiss you If I dared. She —Well, don't you dare to 11 that's the way you feel about it. GOVERNMENT HOMESTEADS One and one-half million acres of farming and grazing land will be opened for settlement in the Chey enne River and Standing Rock Indian Reservation October 4th to 23d. Past daily through trains direct to Pierre and Aberdeen, S. D., the registration points, via the Chicago & North West ern Ry. Write for descriptive pamph lets giving maps and full particulars to W. B. Kniskern, P. T. M. 112 C. & N, W. Ry., Chicago, 111. Brooklyn Flag Factory. One of the biggest official flag fac tories in the world is in the Brooklyn navy yard. Between eighty and one hundred women work there all the year round making flags for the use of Uncle Sam's fighting ships. They use up 120,000 yards of ' jnting a year and fashion 418 differer * kinds of offi cial flags. The flag 3 cost $90,000 a year. Do your foot ever feel tired, achy and pore at night? Rub thorn with a little Hamlins Wizard Oil. They'll be glad in the morning and so will you. It's too much to expect cross-bred dogs to be amiable. Mr*. Wlnalow'i Rootblnir Syrup. For cbtldron teething, aoftens tho gum, reduce* ID kmuiUai. allay 6 imla, carat wind collu. 25c ft bottla. A guilty conscience is apt to be lta own excuser. The complete success of the new fuel while on the 2650-mile public test and the advantages gained through its use were well described in the following dispatch which the correspondent of the New York Sun sent to his paper at the conclusion of the tour: "A feature of the tour which was watched with special interest was that the White Steamer used kero sene, or 'coal oil,' as fuel instead of gasoline. The new fuel worked splendidly throughout the 2GGO-mile journey, and all claims made in its behalf were fully proven. First of all, as regards cheapness, the White driver secured kerosene all along the route from 6 cents to 10 cents cheap er per gallon than was paid for gaso line. Secondly, the new fuel was handled without any precautions, and it was not unusual to see kerosene being poured into the fuel tank while the crew of the car and an interested crowd stood by with lighted cigars and cigarettes. At the finish of the tour, the White was the only car per mitted by the authorities to enter Convention Hall, where the technical examination took place, without draining its fuel tank. Thirdly, the new fuel proved to be absolutely without smoke or smell. Fourthly, kerosene could be purchased at what ever part of the route was most con venient, and not once during the trip through the ten States of the Middle West was there found a grocery store where kerosene was not readily and cheaply obtainable. Finally, the SICK HEADAGHE - . n - rr „< n Positively cured by CARTERS thcse Lltt,e Pl,ls " P'li - They also rclieve Dl 9" KjfjjEjj ITTTfI F tress from Dyspepsia, In- Itfl 111 S" digestion and Too Hearty 53 lif fc_ K Eating. A perfect ren- Jjuw! mi |g |% edy for Dizziness, Nau» ffjj PI LLvi sea, Drowsiness, Had Taste in the Mouth, Cuat- IKwCEI'SSaI Tongue, Pnin in the ■SSiSKES! I Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. [PADTFBCI Genuine Must Bear ™ Fac-Simile Signature LOTITTLE - ° J pYlis. I™B REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. DEFIANCE Gold Water Starch makes laundry work a pleasure. IB oz. pkg. 10a. LAST CHANCE TO GET 160 ACRES OF LAND FREE! IyjP&ERYATIO^ 3,000,000 Acres of good land will be thrown open to Settlers Oct. 4th to 23rd, *O9. The General Land Office has designated Vt\Yvll ~ Le Beau and Minneapolis & St, Louis R. R. □U (112 For rate*, etc., -write or ask any agent of the lowa Central or W A. B. CUTTS, General Passenger and Ticket Agent -jryJjf ■ amount of fuel used on the trip showed that kerosene Is at least fifteen per cent, more efficient, gallon for gallon, than gasoline. The car la other respects made a most creditable showing, and there was the usual riv airy among the observers to be as signed to the White so that they could ride with the maximum of com* fort. The only adjustments or re pairs charged against the car during the long trip were tightening a lubri cator pipe and wiring a damaged mud guard. These penalties were not li> flicted until more than 2000 miles had been completed with an absolute- Iy perfect score." A particularly interesting feature of the new White Steamer is that either kerosene or gasoline may be used as fuel. The necessary adjust* ments so that the fuel may be changed from kerosene to gasoline, or vice versa, may be made yin a couple ot minutes; but BO completely successful has kerosene proved to be, that It le not believed that any purchaseia will care to use gasoline. The White Company report that the demand for their new steam care —both the S2OOO-model and the ?4000-model —exceed their most san guine expectations. It Is evident that the combination of steam —the pow er which everyone understands and has confidence in—with kerosene —• the fuel which everyone has on hand and can handle without any danger —is thoroughly appreciated by up-to-date purchasers cf autom» biles. This Trade-mark Eliminates AH In the purchase of TBP paint materials. JrgSsJSy- "~J "i> an absolute guarantee of pur- B lty and quality. or ' rour own ipy it is on the side of VJj&jj&jr every keg of white lead y ""10**1 IEAO COMPANY '«sjr 1902 Trinity Eulldlag, Hew Tort Sticky Sweating Palms after taking salts or cathartle waters —did you ever notice that weary all gone feeling—the palms of your hands sweat —and rotten taste in your mouth Cathartics only move by sweating your bowels —Do a lot of hurt—Try a CASCA RET and see how much easier the job is dono how much better you feel. flag ; CASCARRTS ioc • bo* for a week's treatment, oil druggists. Biggest seller in the world. Million boxes a month. ! W. N. U., CLEVELAND, NO. 37-19091 7