2 CAH a HJM C'JUMTY PHtSS. M. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Pr year •* °* pait U advance 1 M ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of ass djliar per square {or one Inaeriloi? and fifty Hita per square far each subsequent Insertion, 112 Rst.es by the year, or for six or three month*, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished oa Mullcation. Xe«nl and Official Adrertlslag per square, Biraa times or lesa, >2; each subsequent ms*r •a a cents per square Loral notleea lu cent* per Hoe for one lnser (•rtlon: 5 cents per line far each subsequent Sent'ecutlve Insertion. Obituary Dotlcea over (lva line*, 10 cents per H*e. Simple announcements of births, mar* fiefen and deaths will be Inserted free. Business earda. fire line* or lass. %6 per year; •Ter five lines, at the refular ratea of adver -11 slag No looal Inaarted for less than 75 cants far tesua. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of tho Pn*ss IS eomplal* M affords facilities for doing the best claas of work. Pahticulak attsktion piidto Law ImiTiiia. No paper will be discontinued until arrear- Eea are paid, except at the option of the pub her. Papers sent out of the county must be paid •*> In advance. r "Old Head*" the B**t. Some of the world's greatest states men have proven that it takes the ex perience and hand of old age to run i the machinery of nations. Gladstone ■was four times prime minister of Great Britain. Long after his fiftieth birthday he extended the island em pire until the sun never sets on Its dominions. He was guiding the ship of state when he was four score and ft was after that age he attempted the greatest task of his life, that of granting home rule to Ireland. African "Sundowner." There are many etymological ex cuses for drinking, as an "appetizer," or a "stirrupcup," or a "nightcap." The "sundowner" is peculiar to the west coast of Africa. It has nothing to do with the Australian "sundown er," who is a sort of tramp. All down the west coast of Africa is a quarter of an hour between the day's heat and night's languor, which comes with a chill. It is a sort of religious cere monial to share a "sundowner" at this time and ward off the chill. To Live Long and Happily. Make a habit of regular daily re laxation. If you are a woman and head of a home lie down in a dark ened room every afternoon, even if only for 20 minutes. If you are a man of affairs don't carry the affairs farth er than your home doorsill. Above all, don't allow yourself to become accus tomed to fault finding. Don't look on the dark side of life. Cheer up. "Dare-Devil" Jockeys. Absolute "dare-devilness" often wins races—riding for a fall, lifting a horse over the last fence when he is blun dering at them, and so on. It is fre quently suggested of jockeys who have lost some of the dash (or reck lessness) that they have lost their nerve. This is hardly a fair com eion. Politics and Religion. "Senator," said the interviewer, "It Is rumored that you intend to retire from politics." "Well, well," replied the senator. "It's queer how rumors start. I suppose this one grew out of the fact that I attended church with my wife last Sunday."—Catholic Standard and Times. Actors Might Show Gratitude. The man who built the first sauer kraut factory in this country is dead, and actors should join in some memo rial to the man who started the move ment to divert cabbages to a better use. The Human Owl. The cynic is one who never sees a good quality in a man, and never fails to see a bad one. He is the human owl, vigilant in darkness and blind to light, mousing for vermin and nev er seeing noble game.—Henry Ward 1 '.eecher. Split and Scratch. "Yes, it took all of five minutes to rcjlly get my ballot marked the way I vanted it. I never vote straight, any how. I'm sure to always split my ticket." "I see you are sure to split your infinitives, too." The Philosopher of Folly. "Robbing Peter to pay Paul never won and never will," says the Philos opher of Folly. "You can't cure a sore throat by wrapping a woolen sock around it if you have togo barefooted to do it." Worship. I've always thought thet -ef I had my choice, an' my life could express worship, I'd choose for it to be praise. —Sonny's Father, in Century Mag zlne. Good Will. Have good will to all that lives, let ting unkindness die and groed and wrath; so that your lives be made like soft airs passing by.—Edwin Ar nold, "Light of Asia." Surgical Operation on Raven. A raven in the London zoological garden recently was operated on for cataract and provided with spectacles, fastened to its head with a sort of hood. Hitch Your Name to a Comet. If you want to be immortal, don't write a book. Remember Halley and get your name hitched to a comet.- £omerville Journal. HAS HELPED TRADE PRACTICAL WORKING OF NEW TARIFF LAW SHOWN. November'* Imports the Greatest Ever Known In One Month—Whole Volume of Foreign Trade Shows Expansion. In the excess of 2eal displayed by many critics of the new tariff law, at the time of Its enactment, the asser tion was commonly made that the new schedule of duties was so high that It woulcf cut down the volume of Imports and defeat its own useful ness, as a revenue measure. The latest statistics of the foreign commerce of tho country made such prophecies absurd. November's im ports were the greatest ever known In one month, exceeding by many mil lions of dollars the figures for the best months of the spring, before the new tariff law took effect. The No vember record of more than $140,000,- 000 surpassed the Imports of the cor responding month of 1908 by more than $36,000,000 and exceeded by up wards of $20,000,000 the best previous total for the same part of the year. There is no hint of obstructed trade in such facLs. nothing to justify the assertions bo lightly made that the new tariff would prove unfavorable to the foreign commerce of the country. In November the total, for exports and Imports together, was over $334,- 000,000, which meant a gain of about $69,000,000 over the corresponding part of last year and far surpassed the highest figures for any November in the history of the United States. Much criticism of the new tariff law is certain to become grotesquely feeble and foolish, in the light of events since the act was passed. It will react against the enemies of the protective system and the Taft ad ministration, because the attacks which were most relied on did not square with the facts. The business of the country Is confounding politi cians who have sought to make capital for themselves and their parties and factions by bold assertions not war ranted by the letter or spirit of the new tralff law.—Cleveland Leader. Gen. Wood's Promotion. Formal announcement that Gen. Leonard Wood will sueeed Gen. Hell as chief of staff of the army next spring marks the climax of a career that has been meteoric. Signs have not been wanting that his progress has been the cause of heartburnings in the service. Criticisms implying favoritism upon the part of President Roosevelt have been based upon the association of the two friends in the rough riders, and the most has been made of it. Yet when all the facts are considered no one has ventured to dispute the record that Gen. Wood has made for thoroughness and effi ciency. His earliest exploit proved his personal bravery; his next readi ness to meet an emergency. While assistant surgeon he voluntarily car ried dispatches 100 miles through ? region infested with hostile Indians Later he took command of a detach ment without an officer when a*i en counter was expected with Geronimo. For which he was awarded a medal of honor in 1898. He was more or less overshadowed in the Cuban cam paign by the better known per sonality of his friend, but as gov ernor general of Cuba later and com mander of the Philippine division he measured up to his responsibilities. Whether he is equally fitted for his new post remains to be established, but his reputation of ability to cross bridges as he comes to them inspires confidence. A Practical "Trust Buster." Secretary Dickinson has ordered that the war department cease buying for army use oils, lubricants and oth er products marketed by the Standard Oil company. A similar order was is sued last summer against using in the commissary department tho products of th tobacco trust. Mr. Dickinson in this action proves himself a practical trust-buster. Against such tactics as his. If the people were to follow him, no trust could long endure. A cabinet member cannot properly rule out "112 his department products of a trust until it has been found to be one in a federal court. Such findings exist against both the tobacco trust and Stand ard Oil. But there is nothing to pre vent Individual consumers from act ing upon the common knowledge which the daily press has lorg fur nished—New York World. The Senate and House of Lords. Of course, the place of the senate and of the house of lords, in their respective national legislatures, is not alike In many particulars, and no such issue as now divides the British voters could possibly arise In this country in precisely the same way. The action which both the house and the senate have taken in providing for closer relations between congress and the executive in matters affecting expenditure has been taken without any serious debate as to the readjust ment of balance within the govern ment, which the change certainly implies But the fact remains that, historically speaking, the house of representatives, in the intention of the fathers, was supposed to dominate legislation affecting both the originat ing and the distribution of the public revenue. Said Uncle Silas. "How many weddln's did you ever attend that a bunch o' folks didn't whisper: 'I wonder why she threw herself away on him?'" CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1910 CRIMINALS MUST BE SOUGHT Public United in Demand for Punish ment of Guilty High Sugar Trust Officials. Five employes of the sugar trust, including a dock boss, have been found "guilty" by a New York Jury— guilty of swindling and defrauding the federal government. As to the guilt of the cashier, Bendernagel, the Jury disagreed, and apparently the evidence did not sufficiently connect him with the thieving by means of false weights and the bribing of the underlings. Counsel for the defendants pleaded with the Jury for their acquittal on the ground that they were mere tools in the bands of men "higher up," but of course the law cannot accept such excuse, though It may regard it as relevant. In a recommendation for mercy. However, the plea Is signifi cant. as the prosecution fully recog nizes. Punishment of the small fry among the sugar thieves will not sat isfy Justice or the community. It Is quite obvious that the gigantic sugar frauds could not have been conceived and carried on for years without the knowledge and approval of the higher officials and beneficiaries. If it Is possible to convict them, if the neces sary evidence Is procurable, no time should be lost, no energy Hpared, in pursuing the investigation and tracing the criminal and shameful conspiracy to its source. Since the federal government has taken up the sugar frauds various set tlements have been made and stolen money has been surrendered with some alacrity. But. aa Mr. Wicker sham has stated, these transactions can in no wise affect criminal prose cutions of willful thieves, whether they belong to the "meanest of trusts" or to its competitors. The federal government has promised togo high and probe deep; and the New York verdict is only beginning. Control of Railroads. In its report transmitted to congress the interstate commerce commission calls attention once more to needed changes in the lavj to make govern ment control of railroads more effec tive. For one thing, the commission urges again that provision be made for a thorough valuation of the physical properties of the railroads. Such a valuation would be of service in many ways, among others in making it easier to determine what are reason able rates for freight and passenger service. The commission urges also that con gress so amend the law as to make the consent of the commission neces sary to changes in rates by the car riers. At the present time the rail roads may increase their rates at will by giving the required notice, placing on shippers the burden of unreason able new charges until these can be shown to be unreasonable. The com mission insists that the presumption should be in favor of rates that have been long in existence and that the burden of proof should be on the carrier to show the need for the change before new rates are put into effect This reasoning appears to be sound. The interstate commerce commis sion long has been trying to benefit the public under unfavorable condi tions through the medium of inade quate laws. It is time for congress to give serious attention to the re quest of the commission that it be provided with additional powers to make its work more effective for good Roosevelt on Africa's Future. Col. Roosevelt's view of the future of Africa is significant. There are parts of Africa, particularly the east ern section where he is at present, which, he says, can be made a white man's country. No effort should be spared, he says, to make it so as speedily as possible. The greater part of the continent, however, can he the white man's only to govern. This he should do, Mr. Roosevelt declares, with wisdom and firmness, and, when necessary, with severity, but always with an eye singla to the interests and the development of the brown and black races, to whom by nature's provisions the land belongs. To do that, a task requiring sympathy and wisdom as well as brute strength, he believes that missionary and govern ment officials should work hand In hand, each the ally of the other In a common cause of humanity. Syndicating Central American States. The well-known present condition of Nicaragua and its Central Amer ican neighbors, as well as their re corded history, compels us to look to the future with some degree of anx iety and with forebodings of further trouble, though, as we have hitherto contended, these are likely to diminish, perhaps slowly, but none the less surely. Whether their ending will at last be found in union or in federa tion of the five states is a frequently recurring question, which Is at this moment at the fore. Plans of union have so often been broached and even tried without lasting success that any one might be pardoned for regarding their renewal with a degree of skepti cism: yet the desirability of such a consummation is so unmistakable that we cannot forego the hope that one day it will be permanently effected— New York Tribune. Congress at the present session is likely to take the first steps toward changing the presidential inaugura tion date to the last - Thursday in April March 4 will then cease to be a day of evil reputation in the health I reports of Washington. UNPROFESSIONAL Diner—Have you seen that a doctor Intends to inoculate himself with the cholera virus so that the he may have the results of the experiment. Isn't that fine? Proprietor—No, perfectly mad, I call it. Supposing 1 ate the same meals as my clients. BOY TORTURED BY ECZEMA "When my boy was six years old, he Buffered terribly with eczema. He could neither sit still nor lie quietly in bed, for the itching was dreadful. He would irritate spots by scratching with his nails and that only made them worse. A doctor treated him and we tried almost everything, but the eczema seemed to spread. It started in a small place on the lower extremities and spread for two years until it very nearly covered the back part of his leg to the knee. "Finally I got Cuticura Soap, Cutl cura Ointment and Cuticura Pills and gave then? according to directions. I used thern in the morning and that evening, before I put my boy to b©d, I used them again and the Improve ment even in those few hours was sur prising, the inflammation seemed to be so much less. I used two boxes of Cuticura Ointment, the same of the Pills and the Soap and my boy was cured. My son is now in his sev enteenth year and he has never had a return of the eczema. "I took care of a friend's child that had eczema on its face and limbs and I used the Cuticura Soap and Ointment. They acted on the child just as they did on my son and it has never re turned. I would recommend the Cuti cura Remedies to anyone. Mrs. A. J. Cochran, 1823 Columbia Ave., Phila delphia, Pa., Oct. 20, 1909." A Pessimistic View. Among the patients in a certain hos pital of I larrisburg there was recently one disposed to take a dark view of his chances for recovery. "Cheer up, old man!" admonished the youthful medico attached to the ward wherein the patient lay. "Your symptoms are identical with those of my own case four years ago. I was just as sick as you are. Look at me now!" The patient ran his eyes over the physician's stalwart frame. "What doctor did you have?" he finally asked, feebly.—lllustrated Sunday Magazine. Her Mistake. A lady overtook a little girl of her acquaintance on her way to school. "Do you like decimals, my dear?" she asked. Now the little girl had not gone very far in her arithmetic and she was unfamiliar with the word deci mals. She shrank from acknowledg ing her ignorance, so, after a minute, she stammered: "Yes'm, I like them pretty well, but not as well as peaches." New Tonic Mixture. At this sea on many people espe cially old folks need a tonic appetizer which will also relieve kidney and bladder troubles and strengthen the blood and tissues. A well known phy sician claims there is nothing superior as a winter tonic to the following taken three to six times daily in tablespoon ful doses. To a half-pint of good whiskey add one ounce compound fluid balmwort and one ounce compound syrup sarsaparilla. Just Turned About. "With my husband," said the wife of the busy man,"it is always a case of talking shop." "And with my wife," said the spouse of the bargain hunter, "it is usually a case of shopping talk." This Will Interest Mothers. Blother (iray's Sweet Powdere for Children, cure Feverishness, Headache, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, Regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. They break up colds 1b ti hours. Pleasant to take, and harmless an milk. They never fail. At all Druggists, 2f»c. Sample mailed Fit EE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, I>; Hoy, N. Y. A Slight Misunderstanding. First Man —I called on a couple of ladies last night. His Frienu (absently)—So? I'll,bet the other fellow held kings.—Ex change. Rheumatism Cured in a Day. Dr. Detcbon's ltellef for Rheumatism radically eur?s In 1 to S days. Its action Is remarkable. It removes the cause and the disease quickly disappears. First dona greatly benefits 75c Druggists. Those who claim that a woman isn't so apt to indulge in crooked work as a man evidently never saw a woman try to drive a nail. There's a difference between dignity and pomposity, but some people don't seem to be able to realize it. BARKING,BACKING, K.ASIMVO COTTGH can be broken Up quickly by Allan's Lung Hul.suui. This old. reliable remedy has been bold for over 40 years. Ask your druggist about it. One good thing about a fall that hangs on is that it keeps back the "beautiful snow" poems. ONI.Y ONK "IIKOJtO OCISINE." Thai is I.AXATIVK ItltOMu ytfININH I .tick for til.' siKnatiirr of 10. W. littoVH. ( M.i the World over to Cure a Cold in One l;ay. 25c. When you can't tell the truah, don't tell anything. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Colo/ more aooda brighter and faster colors than any other dye. Ono 10c oackaoe COIOM all fibers. The» dye in cold water belter than any dye. You can djt ODj garment without ripping apart. Writa lor Ires booklet-How to Dye, Bleach and M.x Color*. MONROE OfIUQ OO , Qufrtcy, W/nofs. COUGHED ALL NIGHT Till This Recipe Was Tried. Cure Followed in 5 Hours. A prominent medical man, who suf fered with a severe cough and cold on the lungs, often being kept awake all night, and weakened by loss of sleep, finally discovered a simple formula which will cure any cough In five hours by the clock. It is a lax ative tonic cough syrup which can be made at home by anyone and the formula is here given for the benefit of those who pass sleepless nights in painful paroxysms. Those who have tried it say it is magical and beats any high-priced, slow-acting cough medicine ever atild. Mix in a bottle one-half ounce fluid wild cherry bark, one ounce compound essence cardiol and three ounces syrup white pine compound. Take twenty drops every half hour for four hours. Then take one-half to one tea spoonful three or four times a day. Give children less according to age. This will tone up and rid the system of deep-seated coughs every time. For Celestials. I once visited a very rough boom town in Oregon, near Cottage Grove. In the leading saloon a man in a red shirt said to me: "Ye wanter carry yerself almighty straight In these parts, stranger. Go wrong the least mite and, by crinus, we'll lynch ye as quick as look at ye." I smiled. "Would you lynch me," I asked, "if I killed a dog?" "Would we?" he snorted. "Why, stranger, we've lynched fellers here for killin' Chinamen!" Coals of Fire. One Christmas evening a Sunday school pupil appeared at church, only to be surrounded immediately by a number of deriding playmates. "She's wearing her sister's coat!" cried one. "And she's got her brother's gloves on!" cried another. "Yes," was the retort that turned the tide of ridicule, "and I came with my mother's blessing."—Judge. Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Signature of In Use For Over JK> Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Very Funny. Borroughs—Mr. Merchant's out, you say? Why, he had an appointment with me here. That's very funny. New Office Boy—Yes, sir; I guess he thought it was, too. Any ways he was laughin' when he went out. — Catholic Standard and Times. IIKAI), HACK AND T.KGS ACITK? Ache all over? Throat sore, wit.h chills? That Is La Grippe. Perrv Daris' Painkiller will break it up if taken promptly. All dealers, 25c, 35c and 50c bottles. Seneca: Vices are contagious and there is no trusting the well and sick together. PII.ES ft'REII IN « TO 14 DATS. PAZO OINTM ENT Is guaranteed to cure nriT case of Itching, Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Pile* in Uto 14 tfn' sor money refunded. W)o. Remember that a sound argument doesn't mean loud talk. Mrs. Wlnilow'i Soothing: Syrnp. For children terthlug, softens the gums, redar®« in* flammatiou, allays pain, cures wind colic. 35c a bottle. Following cheap advice is apt to prove expensive. [k RESINOL O 1 a z o°jß X O 111 O THEYSAY ITISTHE VERY BESTOINTMENT MADE AND (n -r\ V) O 2 _S |- IT IS. 50 CENTS ALL DRUGGISTS OR SENT DIRECT ON IHO X X «0 J < RECEIPT OF PRICE, >3J < X S£ z RESINOL CHEMICAL COMPANY, BALTIMORE, MD. g> 5 8 O Eczemi. Erysipelas, Herpes, Poison Ivy. Scalds, Eruptions, r X O W Nettle Risb, Ringworm, Itch. Chafing, Burns. Erythema. O $125,000 net from 1200 acres grapes. $15,000 from 22 acres peaches. $3,200 from 20 acres raisins, in the San Joaquin Valley, California A cow and an acre of alfalfa will earn $l2O a year in the San Joaquin Valley. Grapes will yield from $ 100 to S3OO per acre; peaches and apricots, $l5O to (500; while oranges will produce from $250 to SSOO, and in many instances more than JIOOO an acre. There are ten million arable and irrigable acres here. You still may buy unimproved land for SSO an acre. Ten acres are enough to comfortably support a small family. Twenty acres afford a fine living, wi'.h money in the bank. Forty acres should make you rich. You pay from one-fourth to one third down, balance eusily can be paid for out of the crop*. Almost anything can be raised in the San Joaquin country—oranges and wheat. figs and apples, delicate grapes and hardy potatoes. Products of the temperate und semi-tropic zones nour ish side by side. I'lenty of wnter for irrigation drawn from the near-by Sierra snows. It In <■««> for one to make a «tnrt. Land be tween the rows can be used, while or chard is young, for many profitable crops. The point is to make every aiiuure foot bear Nomclhing. What nome fnrmrra bnve done: Frank Thomas, of Fresno, Cal.. boflght twenty acres of land live years ago. He Had but S3OB to start on. To day his place is paid for and he has an income of over $2,000 a year. William Shrayer. R. F. D. 7, Fresno. Ca!„ bought his first ten acres six years ago. Now owns sixty acres all paid for, and refuses $12,000 for his place, M. F. Tarpey, of Fresno, owns vine yard of 1,200 acres, from which he takes an annual profit of $125,000. / On the Harold estate, t wen t y Hp acres of peaches yielded u $15,000 crop. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine tinea in ten when the liver u right t]» stomach sod bawels we d§ht CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently bat firmly | | V pel ■ lazy h»* k^^H/>i{ypp|4v 4o b itipaiioa, if IIVER | w us tion, \\ . Sick "■' ' Hm dacha, and Diatraas after Fating. * " Pil. 3a«H Dm, Saal Pliu GENUINE must bear signature: KOW-KURE is not a "food"—it is a medicine, and tho only medicine in the world for cows only, Made for the cow and, as its name indicates, a cow CURE. Barrenness, retained after birth, abortion, scours, caked udder, and all similar affections positively and quickly cured. No one who keeps cows, whether many or few, can afford to be without KOW KURE. It is made especially to keep cows healthy. Our book "Cow Money" sent FREE. Ask your local dealer for KOW KUEE or send to the manufacturers. DAIRY ASSOCIATION CO. Lyndontille, Vt. No Matter what Lira/ or Bowal medicine you are stop it noso. Get a 100 box —week's treatment —of CAS CARETS today from your druggist sod loara how easily, naturally and delightfully your liver can be mado to uwrA, sad your tow« 6■ move every dsy. Thara's ntu> Bfm ia every box. CASCARBTS are nature's helper. You will M« thm diffanncvt W CT7T THIS OUT, mall It with your address to Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago, 111., and receive 9k handsome souvenir gold Bon 800 FREE. THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS that make a horse Wheeze, Roar, have Thick Wind, or EEL Choko-down, can be re- moved with or any Bnncli or BwelllnK. Jr\. L, J No blister, no W /V cone, and horse kept at W , work. 12.00 per bottle. ( A 'I Hook 3 F free. \ " ABSORB INK, .llt., for mankind, $1 und l*i. Reduces Goitre, Tumors Wens, Varicose Veins, Ulcers, Hy drocele, Varicocele. Your druggist ran supply and give references. Will tell you more If you write. Send for free bookand testimonials. Mfd. only by W. h. VOlXi, r. P. K., 510 Traipl* bL, Sprlo S riHJ. Mu».. HAJR R BALSAM jBBj Cl—n sod beautifies the hair. Ml Promotaa a luxuriant growth. ■KFwKr*,'- • %aJ3M NeT * ir to Reatore Orajr Hair to Its Youthful Color. fc^hidMaillafr n IfPIIM WaUenF.rolem;»n,W&afv pfltt IPi M I injton.D.C. BookMfree. High- I Sf% I I Vest reterenooo. Beat result* DATE IIT YOUR IDEAS. They may bring you • Hltni wealth, t'4-pagn Book Free. Est. 1880. Fitzgerald & Co., rat .AttyK .Hox K. Washington, P.O. Thompson's Eye Water W. N. U., CLEVELAND, NO. 2--1910. Carson Reed, Reedley. Cal., from a twenty-acre crop of Sultana raisin* netted $3,200. I know thin valley from end to end I have seen crop.s planted and harvest ed in every one of its counties. I hava interviewed farmers, ranchers and mer chants. I have collated the testimony of crop experts. All this valuable information is con tained in the San Joaquin Valley land folder issued by the Santa Fe Railway, Write for it. Riving full name and ad' dress. I will also send you our imnii / Journal, The Earth, six month* free. The Santa Fe employs me to help settle up its Southwest lines. The Com pany has no land to sell, but I will gladly refer your inquiry to reliable land owners who have. Loir fnrcn are offered by the Santa Fe daily. Comfortable tourist sleepers and chair cars. Tlie journey also may be made at other times for a reason able cfist. Santa Fe tourist service to San Francisco is quickest. C. L. SEAGRAVES, Central Colonization Agent A. T. & S. F. Rjr. Sjrttcm 1150 Railway Exchange Chicago, lIL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers