2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. P« r y<*ar f2 Oft If paid in advance 1 a 0 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of one dollar tier square fur one insertion and lifty cents per square for each subsequent insertion Kates I>v tilt- year, or for six or three months. ■re low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. ;2: each subsequent in.ser t oa ■ D rents per square. I.oral notices 10 cents per line for one inser- Bfriion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent consecutive insertion. obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line. Sitrlple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will tie inserted free. HiMness cards, live lines or less, <5 per year; over live lines, at the regular rales of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pnrss is complete and :«ff. rds facilities for doing th.* best class of Wlrk. PAHTH.Tt.AK ATTENTION PAIU TO I. AW I PHINTINO. No paper will be discontinued until arrear- | ag'-s are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. CURRENT TOPICS. A MANILA cigar company has 10,00 C employes. NEGRO oyster sliuckcrs at Norfolk have organized. WOMEN are not permitted to be pho tographed in China. LIT* 'KING if AM SHI KE, England, reports a plague of Irogs. TIIK second city of the British empire in size is Calcutta. THK German army includes more than 10.000 military musicians. Frogs and toads are gifted with a re markably acute sense of hearing. GEN. LAWTO.V, in a recent interview, declared himself a total abstainer. THE copper mines of upper Michigan are now giving employment to 13,551 men. CHICAGO has the smallest bonded in debtedness of any large city in this country. lIKKU KRUPP, the gunmaker, has the largest income of any manufacturer in Europe. THE assessed valuation of property in South Carolina has increased S:;,000,- 000 over last year. THE first Hebrew congregation in the Hawaiian islands has just been formed at Honolulu. IN all the capitals of Europe, except London, some theaters are kept up by government support. THE iiaroncss II irsch has given about £90,000,000 toward charity since the death of her husband. IN Dublin a fine system of electric trams makes it easy for any one to gel abottt from place to place. GERMANY now has an air ship that will lift ten tons and remain in the air for several days if required. TIIE University of Pennsylvania is about to confer the degree of LL. D. on President Diaz of Mexico. A A. POPE, who made himself a millionaire out of manufacturing bicy cles, never learned to ride a wheel. THE whole of the trade in cheap hos iery in Cuba is in the hands of the German and Catalan manufacturers. EVERY boy in Germany, from the crown prince to the meanest subject, is obliged to learn some useful trade. WASHINGTON firemen are provided with portable telephones, which may be connected with any fire-aiarm box. A NATlltAl. soap mine and paint mine are two of the latest curiosities which have been discovered in British Columbia. AMERICAN condensed milk is gaining a foothold in the Asiatic markets. It is rapidly transplanting the German product in Japan. A RECENT investigation has shotvn that more than half the families of Stuttgart have only one or two rooms that can be heated. EDWARD HAI.T, 21, escaped from prison at Canandaigua, N. V.. by sqeezinfr through a hole seven and a half inches square. THE marriage of Miss Cecil Miles, daughter of the general of the army and Mrs. Miles, to CoL Ueber, U. S. A., will occur in January. BOTTI.ES of perfume, still fresh, jars of pomade that had not lost its fra grance, have been recovered from Her culaneum and Pompeii. THERE are altogether 334 parks well stocked with deer in the different coun ties of England, and red deer are found in about thirty-one. BALTIMORE is said to contain the largest Negro population of any city in the world. The coming census is ex pected to show at least 125,000. CHEAP chemical dyes threaten to ruin the great indigo industry of lie bar. India, where hundreds of thou sands of families have found employ ment. A wF.1.1.-KNow.N specialist on ear dis eases has made the announcement that half the deafness prevalent at the present time can be traced to the prac tice of boxing the ears of children. AI.I. the emery used in the world comes from the tittle island of Naxos, near Greece. As it is one of the hard est substances known, ordinary quar rving tools can not be used to cut it out. THE military household of the czar is com nosed of 08 officers of various ranks, 82 of whom belong to the army and 15 to the navy. Nineteen members of tlie royal family are inc uded m the list. NATURAL <. r as conveyed in bamboo tubes was utilized in China years apo, and one of their writers mentions boxes which repeated tiie sounds of persons' voices that were dead —a ma chine sim lar to the phonograph. PAPER shingles have been introduced into Japan by an enterprsing lo.vyo firm as substitutes for the wooden arti cle. The new idea is a slab of thick tarred pasteboard, more easily man aged than ordinary shingles and costing only half as much. CONFIDENCE OF THE PEOPLE, j The Itcxult of the State Klecttoaa SIIOUM Aiiprovnlof the Preal detit'M Policy. Now that the result of the elections of 1899 is known the administration can go forward with the ansuranee that its policies have been emphatically ap proved by the people. The country has spoken and its verdict is that new na tional issues developed by circum stances have been faithfully and ably handled by President McKinley as far a 9 they lay within his province, and he has scrupulously avoided going beyond that, lie has been guided by 'he tra ditional upirit of Americanism and kept in the closest touch with the gen eral sentiment and common sense of the country. His policy is that of the mass of the people and his constant study has been the goof' of tin- whole country. President McKinley has no vagaries. His opinion 's made up cau tiously. He is far removed from the class of brilliant egotists who Ihink that conclusions carefully formed are too humdrum to be up to their political standard. Long experience in public life has taught him to view and hear all sides, and his temperament is that of a man well guarded from hasty emo tion or impulse. Since the election the president has remarked to some callers at the white house:"The more 1 see of the confi dence reposed in my administration by the people of the country the more I feel the weight of the responsibility rest ing upon me." The sincerity of the president's words will be admitted by all who have intelligent ly observed his character. He is not affected by the vanities of high station, but feels al ways the seriousness of the duties im posed upon him, especially those that require the shaping of policies under new conditions. Far more than a share of this labor has fallen to his adminis tration. The most perplexing question with which he was Ailed upon to deal, that of the I'hi'ippines. was absolutely unknown in the ranvass of 1890. A president with a greater pride of self assertion, or with a less sensitive re gard for the sober and substantial judg ment of the people themselves, might easily have made a mistake in mee'ing the complications of diplomacy and an unexpected war on the far side of the Pacific. But the voice of the country is that McKinley in every instance has done what was right and best. There are times when the nation ad vances with exceptional power and ra pidity. The present administration is one of the periods. It was elected to preserve a sound currency and bring back industrial prosperity. This was quickly accomplished, but is only one item amontr the important achieve ments. A foreign war was pushed through with remarkable success. An other war, the unforsecn sequel to the first, has been vigorously prosecuted until Ihe enemy no longer pretends to make a determined stand. The United States has expanded territorial ly in the greatest ocean of the world and which is nearer to us geographical ly than to any other great civilized power. President McKinley has met every crisis and every problem with calm balance, prudence, executive ca pacity and unquestioned success. The November elections are the ample proof that his labors are approved and ap preciated. Demagogues will rail as usual and partisan detraction will con tinue, but the country stands squarely with McKinley, and will see that he works out the mission so well begun.— St. Louis Globe-Democrat. PRESS OPINIONS. ICTCoI. Bryan said Kentucky was the pivotal state. The election figures from there must have given him a bad turn. —Chicago Tribune. he sustained silence of Chairman Jones in respect to the recent election is quite as significant as anything which Col. Bryan can say.—Milwaukee Sentinel. great victory was of the policy of expansion of the administration; the great defeat was of the. humbug and re actionary spirit of "anti-imperialism." —X. Y. Sun. O'Tlic anti-expansion issue was tried under fair conditions in lowa, and it was swept into the ash heap as if it had been struck by a prairie fire.—Memphis Commercial-Appeal. was in *o!!'that Bryan said "the gold standard fills our stri ets with men who are anxious to work, but find 110 op portunity." Time has put the leader of the 10 to 1 elan in a most ridiculous light.— I Topcka Capital. C7"lf it had been a presidential vote, the elections would have given McKin ley 145 electoral votes to 10S for Mr. liryan, and under some conditions \ ir ginia would not be certain for democ racy.—CiiK'innati Commercial Tribu 11c. CThc only state in which the demo crats made gains was Maryland, the only state in which t e democrats re fused to indorse the 1 nicago platform. Put that in your it wi'.l do to smoke until tin election a year hence.— Louisville Courier-Journal (Dem.). CAVhat do the democrats think of the result? Will they dare go before the people in a presidential campaign upon the issues that l ave been turned against them in the state elections? , Let it not be forgotten that the issue of expansion, upon which the republican , party will make it:- strongest plea, is ? yet in its infancy.— Kansas City Jour mil. j result of the November elec , lions, in the liplit of the more complete i returns, can be fairly claimed as an in- I dorsement of the expansion policy of the administration. So far as the op position made any national issue, they J made it upon this question, and . ) eially in Ohio, the home of the presi dent, where the democratic candidate for governor placed himself squarely upon tin "anti" platform, ignoring as 1 far as possible the monetary question. —Minneapolis Tribune. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1899. A BLOWN-UP BUGABOO. The ilult-Uolilln Pullry of ".\ntl-lin pt*riuliMin" Sll ufVi il Out nl tlie Polln. It is generally admitted that the anti expansion or anti-imperia list movement was generally condemned in the elec tions. Wherever hostility to the presi dent's policy wys made a special issue the president held his own compared with his remarkable vote in 1890 or his party vote in subsequent years. Some claim is made that the president was not sustained in Massachusetts because the republican plurality was not as large as it was last year. The demo crats in ls'.i.s nominated a more popular man for governor and the silver issue was ignored. The gold democrats de clared for him, and anti-imperialism was made the chief issue, yet t he demo cratic candidate received about 4.OMJ fewer votes than did the democratic candidate a year ago. The republican vote fell off' more thousand* because congressmen were not vof.il for.in Maryland, where the democrats won, anti-expansion was not hinted at by the democrats. In Ohio 100,1)00 men voted for Mayor Jones, who previous to the election had not said a word on the question of expansion. It is claimed that Mr. Bryan and ex- Gov. Altgeld carried Nebraska 011 the anti-expansion issue and on general op position to the president's policy. Such seems not to be the fact. Altgeld de clared in his first speech-that he was not, opposed to expansion, but was op posed to an increase of the regular army and the alarming growth of mili tarism under the president. In Ne braska there are. many voters who came to this country to escape military serv ice. Many of them do not read English, so the literature setting forth the dan gers of militarism and the speeches as sailing the increase of the army and the use of the military power were a real terror to them. On t-he other hand the republicans of Nebraska, did not lave speakers nor the means to refute the fallacies of Mr. Bryan and liisfriends. The expressions of the anti-imperial ist. press in the east, with one or two ex ceptions, are to the effect that the op position to the president's policy did not make itself apparent in the elec tions. The New York World, one of the extremest and most inveterate organs of the anti-imperialists, ronfessps that "the elections mean a victory for im perialism in a majority of the states vot ing," adding t hat "there is neither hon esty nor profit in denying this." The New York Post, the ablest and most strenuous opponent of the president's policy, expresses itself as follows: "Although nofederal officials wire chosen yesterd iv, ■ xc< i>t in four eongn ssionai dis tricts to till the vacancies in the house of representatives, a national aspect was Kiven to the campaign in so many states that the result may be accepted as a ver dict of the country on the-McKinley admin istration, and esj'i dally on its policy of ex pansion. The judgment of the people was so clearly expressed that no room is left for doubt as to the attitude of the nation." 1 112 the voters in the states which spoke by their ballots did not render a ver dict in favor of the president's policy, as declared by the New York Evening Post, they have seriously refused to re gard the bugaboo of imperialism.—lndi anapolis Journal. A VICTORY FOR LABOR. The Wnrliliiisnien of Olilo Vote for Km pi oynie lit mil! Pros perity. The laboring men of Ohio carried the election in t hat state for protection and the gold standard. Ohio is one of the principal manufacturing states, and it was that industry that saved Ohio to the republicans, in spite of the large number of republicans who voted lor "Golden Rule" Jones, who was merely a candidate in John K. McLean** inter est, as Jones' interviews since the elec tion fully prove. McLean had and has barrels of money, and he was willing to pour it out wherever he thought that it would servo his political ambition, liis income is said to be about SI,OOO per year, largely from trusts, and his house hold and family expenses not less than SIOO,OOO annually. That is the sort of a man t lie democrats of Ohio selected as their standard bearer this year, and he was selected solely because the demo cratic leaders in that state thought he had sutlicieiit money to buy the govern orship! l!ut they misjudged thC indus trious laboring' men of the liuckeye slate, all of whom now have the oppor tunity to work over time, in contrast to the majority of them being unable to find regular employment during the free silver and free trade hard times. It is said that there is not now an idle; mill in Ohio, and that nearly all of them are working over time, and that many of them are working two sets of men each day and night. President McKin ley opened the mills, the opening of the mills opened the mints, and never be | fore has there been such an unsuppiicd demand for laboring men in the tac tories of the United States. The labor ing men of Ohio won the. great victory in t ha t stale for labor and busine - *, and they will make their victory still more overwhelming in ]!K)0. for ihey are fully convinced that republican nil.* is abso lutely necessary to maintain the labot and business of the people of th* United States.- lowa State Register. C7*The anti-imperialists have denied that they are in any way responsible j for the continuance of the insurrection in the Philippines. They have pooh poohed the charge, but what are they to say in view <>f Aguinaldo's latest proclamationThe insurgent leader announces {hat the American emigre-s will meet in December and exhorts his men to so conduct themselves that the national legi.-lai n*s will consider tlr in worthy of independence. This piocln rnation fairly proves that the in«'v gents have bet n buoyed up by the hop:- that the in this count ;*v would prevail in congress. Without such hope they would have given tip the fight long ago.—Troy Time". A SPLIT IN THE RANKS. ■>l»*att»li<-d Vlniilicri ol aim Spanlnh. Har VCKNI im' Ahmm lallon I'iirni a Kilal Society. Washington, Nov. 25. —A split has occurred in the organization of the Spanish war veterans and a rival body was formed Friday to be known as the (Spanish-American War Veterans. Last week the original organization held a meeting in thin city and perfected its constitution and by-laws and at, that time there were rumors' of an impend ing split, but nothing was made pub lic officially about it. Yesterday's meeting was held in response to an urgent call of Adjt-. Gen. Liller, who »ives the following as the reason for ihe split: "General dissatisfaction —find an at tempt to place the organization in the hands of the Ohio representatives, making it appear as a move for politi cal purposes, and Ihe recent action of the committee who were in the mi nority assuming the privilege of elim inating and vacating oflices created by the national convention; making sev eral appointive officers, and a move to control the association generally and remove the headquarters to Ohio. Those who were present Friday are men who have made national reputa tions and are here to make the asso ciation a success and not use it for selfish motives." The new organization makes all those who served in the regular or volunteer army, navy or marine corps during the Spanish-American war and these who are now serving in the present Philippine war eligible to membership, provided they can show 111 honorable discharge. A constitu tion and by-laws were adopted and the units of organization are to be local camps, departments and a na tional association. A resolution was adopted declaring it to be the sense if the body that Admiral George l)ew sy be placed at its head and authoriz ing the adjutant general to convey to the admiral the information of his unanimous selection as commander-in ■bief. The names and number of those present at the meeting are withheld liy Gen. Liller. Following are the officers elected: Cominander-in-Chief- Admiral Dew ey. Senior Vice Commander-in-chief — Col. Theodore Roosevelt, New York. Junior Vice Commander-in-Chief —■ Brig. Gen. Irving llale. Colorado. Adjutant General —William Liller, Pennsvlvanla. Surgeon General- Maj. Edward C. I)a\ is, (ieorgia. Commissary General—Col. James Toryell, Pennsylvania. Inspector (leneral—Col. George W. Taylor, Virginia. judge Advocate General —Col. James 11. Tillman. South Carolina. Sponsor- Miss Helen M. Gould. Columbus, 0., Nov. 25.—Gen. Axline, adjutant general of Ohio, and repre sentative from this state in the coun cil of the Spanish War Veterans' asso ciation, said last night there was no truth in the statements made by Chris toplier Lillet* regarding an alleged at tempt to control the organization by Ohio members for political purposes. TO END WAGE DISPUTES. l'ali Uiver Cotton USUI Owner* and Operatives II liter Into an Agree ment. Fall Uiver, Mass., Nov. 25.—Itepre senstatives of the textile council and a special committee of the Mill Manu facturers' association entered into an agreement yesterday which will, when finally adopted by operatives and em ployers. result in a definite settlement of the present wage agitation and ulti mately, when a sliding scale is agreed to, will make wage disputes in this city a thing of Ihe past. An advance of 5 per cent, is offered to the operatives, togo into effect December 11, and both parties agret to take up in good faith the consider ation of a sliding scale of wages which must be agreed to within a reasonable time. Operatives and manufacturers hope, by means of this scale to place the industriaj conditions on such a firm footing as to guarantee steady employ ment, to labor at fair wages anil rea sonable assurances to the manufactur ers that they may enter into contracts for a period of at least six months without fearing a labor disturbance. Provision Is also made for a settle ment in conference of any question which may arise on either side. tloi'<* Trouble !n Samoa. Washington, Nov. 25. —Official ad vices from Samoa state that another dangerous crisis with the natives re cently occurred and preparations were made to land British marines. Some of the native chiefs, with their Mataa fan followers, assembled at Viines, not far from Apia, and began a disor derly agitation. The place is the home of Tamasese, one of the former aspirants for the throne, who used his inlluence to keep down the disor der. Several hundred natives were engaged, many of whom were roughly handled. Initliniii anil Novrltt Sentenced. Philadelphia. Nov. 25. Ellery P. Ing ham. ex-Cnited States district attor ney, and his law partner and former assistant, Harvey K. Newitt. were yes terday sentenced by Judge MelMierson to imprisonment, for two years and six months, and to pay a fine of $1 and the costs of their trial for conspiracy in attempting to bribe a. secret servic* 1 operative in connection with the re cent big revenue stamp counterfeiting conspiracy. IlejuerlN tl»e >!-i ;inir Ship. Manila. Nov. 25. Ilautista, president of the Filipino congress, presented himself to Gen. MneArthur yesterday and renounced all further connection with tlic insurrection. lie was one of the influent ikil Filipinos wlir hesitated at the beginning of the war as tc which side oil which to cast his lot. lie was offered a judge-hip of the supreme court, but declined. He now announces that he desires to accept the position and says the Filipino congress and cabinet are scattered, never to reas semble. Some of the members, he adds, have returned to their homes A "BLIND POOL." Thousands of Investors Therein Wero Victimized. A (•rami Jury IndirfN In .lluiiascri and'l'll)'}' l)i>a|>|i('ar l*ollc« Take l*o**<'Nsioii ol' Hie Coiiceru'ii llcathiuarli'm and Seize $15,00t) In (aali. New York, Nov. 25. —William K. Miller, head of the Franklin syndi cate which lias accepted ol'<? «ln;>fJriitss of thousands of persons in Brooklyn under promise of paying dividend* ut 10 per cent., a week, or 520 per cent per annum, and Cecil Leslie, tiis secretary, were indicted by the Kings county grand jury yesterday. Bench war rants were issued for the arrest of these two men, but. up to quite a late hour last night neither had been found, the police saying they had dis appeared in the afternoon. Last night, the police raided the premises occupied by the Franklin syndicate 011 Floyd street. There was a great crowd of people around the building and the police surround ed it. Inspector Brennan arrested Louis Miller, brother of tlie head of the syndicate, and the cashic • of the concern and took possession of SII.'JOO in cash. There were 40 employes at work in tin- odices and these were al lowed to go. Tt was stated by Louis Miller to the police that the oflices were then in the hands of ex-Sheriff Daly, of Richmond, to whom he said, the concern had assigned. The charge upon which Mill was indicted was that of conspiring to de fraud. The district, attorney's office in Brooklyn has been at work 011 the ease, for some weeks, so prominent have become Miller's opera* ions in that time. Miller had been engaged for the past two years or so in offer ing his glittering inducements to the people to invest their money for l.im to make use of, but it has been only within the last month that by ex tensive advertising lie managed t j at tract to his office hundreds of people daily, who gathered in a long liri" or fought with each other for the chance to hand out their savings. liven when the place was raided last night a number of those around the offices were waiting to deposit money, with the Franklin syndicate. The presence of the police caused great excitement. When thev entered the office they were informed that at (i p. m.the concern had made an assignment in the borough of Man hattan to James Daly, ex-sheriff of Richmond. Chief of Detectives Uoyn olds said the police were the assignees naw and put Daly off the premises. Daly lias been in the employ of Miller for some timt*. Of the $15,000 taken possession of by the ponce, something more than $5,000 in cash was found in the syndicate offices. From the record which the police had made on Friday's deposits, it was evident that a portion of tin; money had been removed from tie* otiiees, and Louis Miller, the cashier, wh > was arrested, was called upon to mnk * ail explanation. He at first refused, but on being threatened by the police lie said Miss Annie (lory, an employe of the concern, who lived in a house ad joining the offices, had been given pos session of a large sum of money in the morning by the head of the firm. The police went to the adjoining house, where they placed Miss Gory under arrest, and after a search they found nearly $9,000 concealed in an old lounge in her apartments. The woman then declared that she had this money in her possession to pay the employes of the syndicate. The police, however, took possession of the money and gave Miss Gory her liberty. William F. Miller began the Frank lin syndicate in a small way, locating his office among the poorer classes in Brooklyn and making one feature of his business the acceptance of very small sums of money and the alleged investment of them for poor people, lie claimed that by inside tips on the stock market he was able to pay a large percentage to his clients. He paid the interest on the principal each" week and his business increased. It is claimed that Miller was simply the representative of a syndicate which had been conducting blind pools for years. No syndicate has ever attempted to pay any such wonderful rates of in terest as the Franklin syndicate. The very fact that the newspapers and financiers began to make investiga tions aroused the public ii terest to such an extent that it is said within the last week Miller has received de posits of hundreds of people, aggre gating a daily amount of from $30,000 to $40,000. Not only were people living within the limits of New York large depos itors with the Franklin syndicate, but cities all over the country contribut ed the earnings of scores of their resi dents to swell the wealth of the syndi cate. Tne mail delivery tit Miller's office amounted to about three wagon loads and most of the letters contained money. It is an absolute fact Miller did not have facilities for takinr care of all of the gold and greenbacks whie.i poured in upon him. and empty bar rels were rougbt. up from the base ment of the building and thousands of dollars were dumped into the.-,e bar rels by the clerks emplovd by Miller. No evidence is forthcoming to show that Miller ever speculated in stocks. fVruilftild 'ffliiel t aptiired. Pittsburg, Nov. 25.—A bold attempt at diamond robbery was made last night. Three men entered the jew elry store of v. E. Siedle. W»iile two jof the men engaged the clerk and ! porter in conversation, the third opened a show case and transferred :;0 diamonds valued at about $(i,0:)0 from tli<* case to an apron he had sus pended about bis waist. An errand boy gave the alarm ami followed the man. The robber jumped a trolley car. but the conductor put him off and Detective MeGovern gathered him in after a. fierce struggle "He That Any Would ' Should have good health. "Pure, rich I blood is the first requisite. Hood's I Sarsaparilla, by giving good blood ar.d T ' good health, has helped many a man to I success, besides giving strength and I courage to tvomcn 'who, before taking T it, could not even see any good in life I > toivin. Remember I Sad Catastrophe. Mrs. Gol.lc NuKget—l cannot see any call ers Uwl.iv, Nanette. Nai:i*.te (live minutes later to caller) — Monsieur, 1 liaf ze plaisnrc to inform you /.at madame is liiinil to-day. Philadelphia North American. Winter in the South. The season approaches when one'a thoughts turn toward a place where the in conveniences of a Northern winter may he escaped. No section of this country oilers such ideal spots as the (Julf Coast on the line of tlic Louisville & Nashville Railroad between .Mobile and New Orleans. It pos sesses a mild climate, pure air, even temper ature and facilities for hunting and fishing enjoyed by no other section. Accommoda tions for visitors are lii>t-class, and can l»j secured at moderate prices. The L. & N. R. It. is the only line by which it can be reached in through cars from Northern cities. Through car schedules to all points in Florida by this line are also perfect. Write for folders, etc., to Jackson Smith, D. P. A., Cincinnati, O. "lie's a vegetarian, is he?" "Oh! the strictest kind, lie won't even eat oyster plant."—Philadelphia Record. Kemp's lialsam will stop the Cough at once. Goto your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Large bottles 25 and 50 cents. Co at once; delays are dangerous. Speaking of fruit, the first apple caused a lot of trouble for the first pair.—Chicago Daily News. Piso's Cure cured me of a Throat and T.ung trouble of three years' stan ling.—E, Cady, lluntingtoi, Ind., Nov. 12,1894, Tn Luck. —First Dear Girl —"I have no friends to speak of." Second Dear Girl — "Lucky friends."—Life. QRAIN-O THE FOOD DRINK. Grain-O is not a stimu lant, like coffee. It is a tonic and its effects are permanent. A successful substitute for coffee, because it has the coffee flavor that al most everybody likes. Lots of coffee substi tutes in the market, but only one food drink— Grain-O. All grocers; ISc. ai.d 25c. •'Botli my wife and iny*elf linvc been usliis CASCARETS and they sre the best medicine we have ever had In the house. Last, week my wife was frantio with headache tor two days, she tried someo! yom CASCAKETS, and thev relieved the pain In her head almost Immediately. We both recommend Csscarets" CriAS. Stedeford. Pittsburg Safo & Deposit Co., Pittsburg, Pa | CAN DV Plea«ant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. QooU, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 2dc. 6Uc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION, ... Sterling Remeifr Company, ('Hongo, Mcatrval, New York. 317 nnrt guaranteed by nlldrug k(# ■C# t_'ist.R in (TRK I'obaceo Habit ♦ Personally j | Conducted 112 ! | California § I Excursions | Via the Santa Fe Route. 9, Time times a week from Chicago £ and Kansas City. j* 9 Twice a week from St. Paul and If Minneapolis. $ , Qncc a week from St. I«ouis and 4 Boston. $ 9 In improved wide-vestibuled m f£ Pullman tourist sleeping cars. ft Better than ever before, at lowest possible rates. £ Experienced excursion conductors. % Also dailv service between Chicago 5 and California. ▼ Correspondence solicited. * if- T. A. GRADY. 9 Manager California Tourist Bervice, £ |! The Atchison, lopeLi & Santa fe Railway, $ 100 Adams Street, CHICAGO. & W. L„ DOUGLAS S3 Sl 3.50 SHOES Jjs§£ Worth $4 to $6 compared^" - \ ■ ysl\ with other makes. /' liulorsrd l»v over A Ik 1,000,000 wearers %i> ' Tit rgrn ?/ iti* have W. I ' i subsiitutc claimed to | m Your A »*><! hould keep them - - 1 m we will send a #V' xV# "A <n receipt of price. State ***«/ °* eather, size, an.l width, piain or »«t;> t«»e. Catalogue Ii fiee. i w. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. COUCH SYRUP i Cures Croup and Whooping-Cough Unexcelled for Consumptives. Gives quick, sure results. Refuse substitutes. I Dr. Bull's Pills cure Bihousntss. Trials 2oforsc.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers