2 CAMERON CODNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. rtr jsar In advanca I M ADVERTISING RATES Amortizements are published at the rate ot #ae dollar per square tor one insertion and llftj stats i er square lor each subsequent Insertion Ba'es iv ihe year, or for six »r three months Arc low and un.form, ami will be furnished oo aapUcai.on. Legal a> d Offlclal Advertlalne per square Ikree times or iess, <2. each subsequent inser ts:! 50 cents per square. Loral notices lu cents per line for one Inser sertion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent sen- ecutive Insertion. Obituary notices o*er fl»« lines. 10 cents per Hue Sni p!e announcements of births, u.ar riates ind deaths will be Inserted free. Bu.-lne.NS cards, five lines or less, »5 per year. pyr r live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. N" local Inserted for less than 7S cents per Issue JOB PRINTING. The l"b de; artment of the PKESS is complete sr.d .rf■ Td- facilities for doing the best c.r.ss of WORK PAHIK;UI.AH AXTCMIIOM HIUTU L.A» FKINTINI. Nl> paper will be discontinued ntll arrear fifis an paid, except at the option of the pub- Isher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance An American admiral's flag is a blue field with four white stars; and Ad jniralsj I'orter and Farragut are the onlj* Americans who ever raised it be fore Dewey. The first Sunday law enacted in ihis country was passed in Virginia in lIT. It provided that the man who did not attend church on Sunday should be lined two pounds of tobacco. Arbor day is celebrated in 44 states of the union by the voluntary planting of trees by the people. In Arizona. Col orado, North Dakota, Wiscons-in, Min nesota and Wyoming it is a legal holi daj'. Chicago now has an auto-mobile am bulance that rune 10 miles, per hour. It was presented to the Reese hospital by live prominent business men. The nineteenth century was the aire of electricity, 1 lie twentieth, will be the auto-mobile age. On our new Island of Guam flour is scarce, but there is plenty of chickens, eggs, pigs, yams, sweet potatoes, corn, bananas, cocoanuts, breadi fruit, small oysters, venison, wild turkeys and plover. The menu will answer until Guam is Americanized. The major of Macon, Ga., is collect ing subscriptions for supplying at least one paper to each family now without one. He believes that this is in the interest of law anil order and wisdom and sobriety in the community, and the local press unanimously agrees with him. All the snow plows which have been given a trial in Wyoming this winter have proven to be rank failures. The. kind of snowstorms in vogue in that country demand a plow having the bur rowing disposition of a gopher, com bined with the staying qualities of the ordinary wharf rat. The French government, reports the completion of one of the greatest light house- in the world at Cape Grisnez, on the French coast of the English chan nel. The light is of 1,500.000 candle power, during ordinary weather, but when a fog lowers the candle-power of the light is increased to .'1,000,000. On a clear night ihe light can be seen for 43 miles. The claims- of American citizens against France for the seizure of their vessels in French ports, assumed by the United States in a treaty made early in the century, have not yet been paid, but congress has at length made provision to do so, appropriating sl,- 055.C00 for that purpose. The matter has been before most of the congresses of the past 80 years. According to the latest issue'of the Naval Itegister there are 254 vessels of all grades, serviceable and unservice able, in the United. States navy. There are under construction eight first-class battleships, one submarine torpedo boat, one gunboat, four monitors and If, torpedo boat destroyers. Omitting pailing and receiving ships, tugs, col liers and supply ships, and unfinished torpedo-boats, we have in commission 134 war vessels. A new a!#oy has been discovered hicli is said to be a wonderful substi tute for gold. It consists of 94 parts, of copper to six parts of antimony. The copper is melted and the antimony is added, together with a little magne sium and carbonate of lime to increase the density. The product can be drawn, wrought and soldered like the precious metal to which it bears a striking re semblance when polished. The cost of manufacture is about 24 cents a pound. The Spanish government hasordered for the use of its army 25.000 \merican made bugles'. The dons' evidently be lieve that it was the clarion notes from the American trumpets that, gate our brave boys the heart to face the deadly Mausers and sweep all before them at San Juan and HI Caney. As usual, the dons are wrong. It was the American schoolhouses, books and newspapers that furnished the inspiration. The Spaniards would do better to order 25,- <X.O American school-teachers. The war department, according to a Washington dispatch, has undertaken the compilation of a photographic his tory of the war with Spain. All officers in the service arid all others wlio have taken war pictures have been request ed to send them to the department in order that t hey may be copied. 'I he de tire of the department, as announced in the letter, is "to produce in a single volume every obtainable picture and photograph bearing on this subject." ]t will be the first, book of the kind ever compiled, und will be of great historic al value. WAGES AND THE MILLIONS. tniler tin- I! <• nul> 11 < n n I'ollcj the Ad vance In Mit n y Intliiatrlea (ioc» .Merrily Oil. A feiw items, of the kind which demo cratic editors would naturally hide in remote places and small type, have greater interest for three-quarters of the people than all ot liens. They show that at Fall liiver and Providence and Lowell the cotton mills, at various east ern points, the woolen mills,, at. Spar rows' l'oint ami some others.and in the valleys, the iron mills, and in West Vir ginia and southern mines the coal min ers have been advancing wages. The advance's in all the cases observed w ere apparently voluntary, and not demand ed! by the workers, though it has been generally understood in several indus tries that better wages would be paid asi isoon as a definite improvement in business was established. It may bo roughly estimated that over 100,000 hands were all'eeted by the advances re ported on one day alone, and these advances average about ten per cent., s>o that the influence upon the purchas ing power of wage-earners was not in considerable. More extensive information than most readers 1 have at command is neces sa.ry in order to appreciate the relative importance of such movements, and yet all can understand that an advance so general means better times for the workers, and, becau.se they are thus enabled to buy more liberally, larger business for traders and manufactur ers, Still,, it should be added that the cost of living: is at present lower than it has ever been at any previous time of general prosperity, and materially low er than in 1892. when conditions were on the whole more favorable than ever before. If wages have not in most cases advanced beyond the level then at tained, they are worth more to those who receive them because the selling prices of commodities are on the whole much lower. It is not to be forgotten that the condition of the working mills is even more l greatly improved, with over 100 hands employed instead of bo most of the time in recent years, atd 100 in 1892, the year of greatest pros perity hitherto. No one can measure the influence of this change in the circumstances otf the great majority of voters. It is never safe to forget that the voters of this country are in the main wage-earners— not members of organized bodies which embrace less than a thirtieth of the workers for wages, but men whose daily earnings, with the subsistence and the comforts of their families, de pend upon the relation between the prices of commodities and the wages received. When wages are high but commodities relatively high, the mil lion.- are apt to be dissatisfied. When wages are low and the lar,gc proportion of the willing hands are out of work, as in the years between 1892 and 1897, gen eral and profound resentment is sure to show itself in elections, and a change of national policy is demanded. lint when better wages and lower prices of commodities, with increased employ ment of labor, goto help every family of the 24,000,000 depending upon na tional welfare, the people are apt to ex press their approval as they did in No vember, It may be fairly inferred that the later events, goto strengthen the re publican national policy, because it steadily and materially improves the condition of millions of workers. To judge otherwise is to suppose that the millions have not enough intelligence to realize when events are actually working in their favor. American his tory furnishes many proofs that such changes in the- condition of the work ers. for better or for worse, are swiftly and almost invariably answered by the ballots cast at subsequent elections. Better wages under republican laws naturally produce larger majorities for the republican policy, and it would not be creditable to the people to expect anything else. Whatever the theorists and the. demagogues may say will al ways count for lessi than the balance of accounts at the end of the month.— N. V. Tribune. POLITICAL DRIFT. CTTlie business activity promised by the republican party in 1890 is in every respect bigger than the promise.—St. Liiuis G1 o be-Democrat. S.- r "The robber tariff" is still bowl ing along, increasing wages of work ingmen and committing other repre hensible acts against the peace and dig nity of the democratic party.- Kansas City .Journal. IT?"There is no better reading matter in the daily journals than the an nouncements that wages are being raised in many places. This is the best proof of the good times pudding.— Cleveland Plain Dealer (Dem.). ICIt is a tribute to President MeTvin ley for the masterly way in which he has managed things during the first half of his administration that the na tion by an almost unanimous vote ap proves his taking a little vacation, and enthusiastically declares he has well earned it. —Troy Times. ICA letter written by Mr. liryimon the issues of 1900 refers to plutocracy, the initiative and referendum and gov ernment ownership of railroads, but images no mention of silver. The date of the letter is 1897, indicating a dis covery some time ago that the para mount issue had gone under. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Clf anybody wishes to know the in tentions of the United States govern ment in the Philippines, he may be re ferred to the closing sentence of Pres ident McKinley's instructions to the United States commissioners sent to the islands. These representatives were commissioned "as bearers of tin good will, the protection nn.d the rich est blessings of a liberating rather than a conquering nation." Freedom find not conquest Is the aim.—Trov Times. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1899. PEOPLE AND PRESIDENT. MoKinlrj's Coarae Clinractarftmed by l*it t riot Imin, mp I omit < y iin<l Sin t«* M>IIII nwh 1 1». With half bis term behind him. President. McKinley faces ihe other half confident of the consciousness of the support and approval of his coun trymen. lie has bad to deal with mo mentous matters. Questions of import have presented themselves for solution and have been solved wisely and patri otically. Other problems are before him which he will meet in frank bravery and dispose of witln fearless ability. That he will have a free hand in handling' those matters of immedi ate necessity coming up for considera tion in the near future gives the coun try no concern. Public faith in the president is strong', popular confidence firm. There is some partisan depreca tion, but that many thousands of his fellow citizens outside his own party trust Mr. MrKinley's wisdom and pa triotism completely is beyond'success ful controversy. In evidence is offered as an example Ibis excerpt from the Brooklyn Daily Ivagle, democratic: "In IWI the question was McKinley or Bryan. Most Americans, we are sure, are glad it was McKinley. He had the ex perience In rongri ss and the experience in politics which enabled him to obtain nec cessary legislation in a great enu rgi ngy. He had the knowledge of men which en abled him to put at every point of peril or of emergency agents who were i<iual to what was required of them. He has had the conciliatory, yet firm, thv quiet, yet in sistent, temper which has enabled him to have his way at last, by permitting all oth ers to have their say at the first. He has wisely used, on well chosen occasions, a rare capacity for luminous public state ment and for moral appeal to the people who have made up their minds in his favor against nil criticism and casuistry and as persion. He has maintained the organiza tion of his party intact, and he has estab lished for himself a hold on the homes and hearts of plain Americans that cannot be mistaken, and that can well-nigh be com pared. to the hold which Abraham Lincoln himself had under circumstances anal ogous to those In which Mr. McKinley ha-s been placed." It is an evidence of good judgment as well)as good feeling, that thisdemo cratic authority so frankly bears testi mony to the president's fine character. The ICaglc speaks the truth —no more, no less. Yet. it is something to find a democratic paper dealingso fairly with a political opponent. The latter half of President McKin ley's term will but emphasize the teach ing of the first half that in statesman ship, diplomacy, patriotism and execu tive ability he is worthy the great trust the American people have re posed in him. He represents Amer icanism. In that will they indorse him, partisan opposition to the contrary notwithstanding.—Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. DESPONDENT DEMOCRATS. Tlie Outlook for 1000 IM Anything Hut Enrouraging for tlie De mocracy. Never before were the leading spir its of a great party on the eve of a na tional canvass, so despondent- as many of those in the democracy are at this moment. The Charleston News and Courier, in referring to a foolish pre diction of a South Carolina congress man that the democrats would carry tlie country "in the near future," asks: "Is 1 there ground for any such hope?'' and answers in the negative. That pa per declares that, "it is melancholy and mdrtifying to reflect" that the party which elected Cleveland in 1802 "has lost, all reasonable hope of regaining power during the present generation." True, the Charleston paper belongs to the Cleveland element of the democ racy, and is angry at the repudiation of that leader by i lie larger faction of tlie party. It has a reasonable assurance, however, that the section o£ the de mocracy which seized the machinery of the party in IbOGis likely to remain in the ascendant in the party for many years to come, and that consequently the democracy is tolerably-sure to stay in the minority in the country at large through that time at least. Its forecast, therefore, represents the judgment of a large number of the clearest headed men in the democratic party to-dav. Conditions, of course, sometimes change quickly in politics. But there is no possibility of any change in the next year and a half such as would (rive the democrats a fair prospect of car rying the country at that time. Any alteration in the situation which would give the democrats' a chance to win in 1000 would be a political miracle, and miracles are not wrought in tJiese (lays for the benefit of the democratic party. The democracy is on the discredited side on silver. It is on the wrong sid on national expansion. Hundreds o. thousands of them, perhaps millions, will oppose it on its isolation policy. From the present indications the demo cratic standard bearer of 1900 wMI be beaten harder than any otiier candi date of a great party since Seymour or Greeley.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. tTTOne fact sticks out prominently from any fair review of the work of the Fifty-fifth congress, and that is the rccorcV of the republican party rela tive to .ill measures affecting vital American interests. With that record, and the record made individually by President McKinley. the republican party can go before the people in 1000 with a clear conscience and the con sciousness of having worked well and faithfully for the promotion of the na tional welfare and the maintenance of the national honor.—Albany Journal. IT?"The democratic papers are howl ing themselves hoarse about the ex penditures- of the late congress, but they are not mentioning the fact that, deducting the war expenses, the ap propriations of the Fifty-fifth con gress nre not materially larger than those of its four predecessors. The democratic press has a peculiar faculty of only seeing just enough to start s howl about. —lowa State Register, COAL COMBINE TO BREAK. Hocking Valley < ompany IM to be l»l»- «i>lvt-<l on A|>rll I t Kate Uar Will Duiihlli'iH Folliiu, Toledo, March 2:»—The General Hocking Coal Co., the largest soft coal combination in the country, will cease to exist on April I. All the mines are located on the 'locking Valley rail road. The output of these mines has been 1,500,000 tons a year, the individ ual operators selling their product through the combination. The trouble which has resulted in the dissolution of tin: company has arisen on till sides. There are complaints from every quar ter aWI an attempt to renew the eon tracts which expire on April 1 has proved futile and much bitterness is expected over a settlement. It became known last night that the downfall of the Hocking company has been evident for several months, but there has been a geiieral desire to keep the matter quiet a* long as possible. The near approach of the close of the contracts lia< made the individual members anxV>us 4o get placed in the larger cities where tlie Hocking valjey coal is handled before competition is opened the matter to the public. It is said tlie entire output of the mines will be handled individually. The probable effect of this is the immi nence of one of the greatest coal wars the Hocking valley lias ever seen. This is evident from the fact that charges and counter-charges of partiality have been made and there is a great amount of feeling among tlie various firms. The only influence that lias kept up the rates of soft coal will be removed with the dissolution of this combina tion. Each of Ihe mines will increase its output and prices are almost sure to lie forced down in the fight. An attempt to form a combine of opera tors among some of the larger mines recently met with defeat and it seems a complete dissolution cannot be pre vented. POWDER MILLS EXPLODE. Three Men Killed |>y nil I'.xploftloll lit < arney Point, \. J. Penn's Grove, N. J., March 23. Over 3,000 pounds of smokeless powder ex ploded yesterday at the I". I. Dupont powder works at Carney Point, near here, and opposite Wilmington, Del., instantly killing three workmen and injuring a number of others slightly. The dead are: Isaac l.ayton, aged 50 years, married. William Ford, aged 40, married. John Magill. aged 30, single. The bodies of the dead were black ened and disfigured by the explosion. The cause of the accident has not been determined, but it originated in one of the drying houses, where Layton was at work. The shock from this explo sion shook tlie country for miles around and in this town heavy panes of glass were broken in many houses. Across the Delaware river, in Wilming ton, the noise of the explosion was also heard. Immediately following the first ex plosion came several others in small store houses. lioth the drying house and the store houses were demolished, and other small buildings about the works were damaged. Francis H. Du pont and his nephew were at work in the laboratory at the time of the ex plosion and were slightly injured by pieces of glass, but personally directed the care of the other injured and the recovery of the dead. AN AMERICAN PLATFORM. It W ill Form tlie lt:i«is lor a Sew Po litical I'n ri) in Porto llieo. San .Tuan. Porto Pico, March 23.—The leaders of the radical party have decid ed to organize a republican party in Porto llieo with a thoroughly Ameri can platform. They will endeavor to unite all factions. The platform will be submitted to a meeting to be held to-day and it will endorse the policy of President McKinley. will pledge fidel ity to the American flag, liail tlie pros pect of annexation to the United States, express the belief that the Porto llieo courts can be trusted with the civil government of the island, but will de clare a willingness to await the action of congress. The platform will also favor free suffrage, public schools, re form in taxation, free trade with the United States, the establishment of a gold basis for the currency, the Ameri can system for the judiciary and will pledge the party to lend every effort towards civilization and to teach the inhabitants to become loyal to the United States. FINDERS GET HALF. All I ni'fiie Salvnce <'a«e Im llei iileil by a I'eilerill Court. Boston, March 23.—1n the United States district court yesterday the unique case of W. 11. Lowell and oth ers. of Gloucester, owners, master and crew of the schooner W. 11. Cross, \s. 90 gold coins and other valuables, dere lict on the high seas, was decided, the property being divided among the li oellants. The valuables were picked up bv the master and crew of the schooner August 17 last, some distance from the scene of the Iturgogne disas ter. They were attached to the body of a man and were estimated to be worth $1,050. The body could not be identified and had to be buried at sea. No one appeared to claim the property and the court was asked to award the amount to the salvers. The court divides the property in half, holding one-half as salvage, of which one-third is togo to the vessel's owners, one-third to the master and t>£"-fhird to the crew. The other half will be held by the govern ment. Will Sell to |{riti*li riiiiini'lorn. Cincinnati. March 23. A meeting of the American stockholders of the pro posed Black Diamond route, a railroad to run from Ohio to Port Boyal. S. C.. was held here Wednesday for the ;mr pose of completing the sale to English capitalists. W. P. Dickinson, of Wash ington.was authorized to transfer Ibe franchises and rights to the British financiers. Mr. Dirf<inson will leave for England in a few days. It is ex pected that the construction will begin in a few months. The first portion to be built is that running from Clay, Ky., to Port Koyul, 550 miles. Daring the Solo. The Man —.Anyway, her singing drowns conversation. The Maid—Hear me! I always under stood that drowning was an easy death.— N. Y. Journal. Matty I'eople Cannot Drink coffee at night. It spoils their sleep. You can drink Grain-O when you please arid sleep like a top. For Grain-O does not stimulate; it nourishes, cheers and feeds. Yet it looks and tastes like the best coffee. For nervous persons, young people and children Grain O la the perfei t. drink. Made from pure grains. Get a package from your grocer today. Try it iu place of coffee. 15 and 25c. Paternal Finesse.—"My son is taking an exhaustive coutse in political economy." j "VVhat's that for?" "I had to do some thing to keep him out of iny business."—Chi cago Daily Record. STAT:: or OHIO. CITY or TOLEDO, | I.U*'AS COUNTY, Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of One Hundred Dol lars for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed iu my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. ISSti. A. W. GLEASON, [Seal] Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and nets directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the svstem. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills nre the best. A high-toned young man —The tenor singer.— Christ ian Work. Plant Line. Five sailings weekly. Port Tampa to Havana. Choice of routes, either via Key West or direct ships. Apply to L. A. Hell, 205 Clark Street, Chicago. A bang-up affair—An artillery salute.— ■ Christian Work. Where's it gone? Ask St. Jacobs Oil. It cured that bruise—gone. j No man is too worthless for some wom an to get stuck on him. —Washington (la.) j Democrat. "It's gone," he said. "10 years of rheuma j tism. St. Jacobs Oil did it." Upon a man stating that he owned a mule, I friend asserted that it was a case of self possession.—Boston Watchman. To Core a. Com In One Dsy Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. j The bigot is always dead sure of some j thing he knows nothing about.—Chicago Daily News. It is easy, sure. It will vanish. Use St. Jacobs Oil for Neuralgia. It's done. Often a man gets out of the rut only to jet into the ditch.—Town Topics. i "Sale!" exclaimed the faded little wom an, animatedly. "Why. they sold grippe | cure at eight cents a gallon, and 1 over i heated my-self iri the rush and took such a | cold that 1 used the medicine all up inside of ! a week!"—l'uek. Best of Beagons.—Young Bride— "l didn't accept Tom tin- lir.-t time he proposed." Miss Kyval (slightly envious) "1 know you didn't." Young Bride —"How do you know?" Miss Kyval—-"You weren't there." —Boston Traveler. lie Had Ceased to Worry.—"Yes," said j the young doctor to Ins wife, "I kit great ly worried until the climax was passed." "Will he be out soon?" "No," said the young doctor, "not until the day of the funeral." —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Not Dismayed.— She —"I deem it my duty tn tell you that papa has lost all. He (her affianced) —"Well, don't worry about that. I have no doubt 1 can get an other girl with good prospects who will marry me."—Philadelphia North Ameri ca n. The moderator-elect of the Church of Scotland bears the name of Pagan-John Pagan. In any references he may make to fori igu missionary work he can, we suppose, without seeming to be uncharitable, refer to the urievangclized and unconverted as "Pa r .#ii, heathen."- < i.ngr<-rationalist. A I ianwrous Customer.—Salesman—"You have a Mr. Davis residing in town here who oivcs us quite a bill. Would you think it ad visable to draw on him for the amount?" Alkali Iki—"Well, pardner, unless yer mighty (Juick at draw in' I'd advise ye not j ter, 'cause he'd hcv ye covered afore you'd ' git your gun out." —Philadelphia Record. That ignorance may exist side by side with knowledge is proved by the fact that the key to the door of the minister's room in Appleton chapel, Harvard university,un til recently bore, and perhaps now bears, this inscription, written by the janitor: "This is the chappel does room." —Longre- g&tionalist. MANY a dutiful daughter pays in pain for her mother's ignorance or perhaps neglect. The mother suffered and she thinks her daughter must suffer also. This is true only to a limited extent. No excessive pain is healthy. Every mother should inform her- I self for her own sake and especially mmmm%m mm fAf V for the sake of her daughter. Write ifW&JC/JLt»t,lwf to Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass., ■ i for her advice about all matters mwM%P a Lllw | concerning the ills of the feminine 1 organs. Many a young girl's beauty is wasted by unnecessary pain at time of menstruation, and many indulgent mothers with mistaken kindness permit their daughters to grow careless about physical health. Miss CARRIE M. Big Beaver, Mich., writes: " D£AR MRS. PINKHAM—A year ago I suffered from profuse and irregular menstruationfoy-:.y -i.,,..11. 1^ wftaw ■ and leucorrhoea. My v Vlff&a appetite was variable, Stomach sour and bowels ar were not regular, and fir -l was subject to pains like % -m*. colic during menstruation. . P* I you and began to are natural and Vegetable Compound has V done my daughter. She ! 'i suffered untold agony at j/J J 'ML but the Compound has / relieved the pain, given her a better color, and she feels Stronger, and has improved every way. lam very grateful to you for the benefit slie has received. It is a great liiediciuo for young girls." THE ROUGH RIDER, BUCK TAYLOR. Sflys? "Pe-ru-na (s the Best Catarrh Cure oa Earth—lt Has Cured Me." Sergeant Buck Taylor. Sergeant Buck Taylor, one of the famous) Rough Riders, is a personal friend of Governor Roo<&cvelt, of New York. He accompanied Governor Roose velt on his great stumping tour through upper New York state, lie was' promoted through gallantry ia the fie.ld during the late war. The Sergeant has the following to say of Pe-ru-na: "I think there is no better medicine on earth than I'e-ru-na, for catarrh. It hasi cured me. lt> would take a volume to tell you till the good it has done me. Pe-ru-na is the best catarrh cure on earth, and I know, for I have tried nearly all of them. Respectfully, "Buck F. Taylor." Winter weather causes catarrh. Ev erybody knows this. But everybody does not stop to think that winter weather delays the cure of catarrh. It takes longer to cure a case of catarrh in the winter generally, than in the warm season. Spring is here. Now is the time favorable to the treatment of old and especially situbborn cases of catarrh. Send for book entitled "Facts and Faces." Sent free by The Pe-ru-nsy Drug M'f'g Co., Columbus, O. i Cures Colds Coughs, Bore Throat, Croup. InStf wita. 'Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma, A certain cure for Consumption in first stages and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at onoe Tou -wilt see the excellent effect after taking th» first dsse. Sold fay dealers everywhere. Price, ti ltd 40 ce jt» per bottle. Couslilng Leads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the Cough at 1 onee. Goto your druggist today and get a sample bottle free. Large bottles 25 and 50 cents. Go »t once; delays are dangerous. Was n Poker Term. "Did your rich aunt l«ave you anything?" "Not a cent." "Well, well! So she wasn't even a penny auntie to you, eh?"— Philadelphia North. American, i.ane's Family .Medicine. Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head ache. Price 25 and 50e. "I," said the orator, "am an American of the good old stock, rooted deep in theseil—" "The only stock I ever heard of that rooted deep in the soil," said the farmer in the audience, "was hoes." —Indianapolis Jour nal.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers