2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. frr year 12 00 If paid in advance 1 M ADVERTISING BATES: Advertlnfments are published at the rate of ene dollar per square for one insertion and fifty cents per square for each subsequent insertion Rates by the year, or for six or three months, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Le«al arid Official Advertising per square, three times or less. t£: each subsequent inser tion L 0 cents per square. Local notices 10 cents per line for one inser •ertion: 5 cents per line lor each subsequent consecutive insertion. Obituary notices over five lines 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards. Ave lines or less. 15 per year; ever live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PHSSS is complete and affords facilities for doing the best class of worU. PAKTICLI.AU ATTENTION PAIDTG LAW P HINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear- Kes are paid, except at the option of the pub her. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. Bunker Hill chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, has decided to mark the spot from which Paul Revere started on his historic mid night ride on April 18, 1775, to warn the inhabitants of the towns between Boston and Concord that the British were coming to destroy their stores and munitions of war. Henry If. Faxon, a temperance ■worker in Qtiiney, Mass., believes in r.pending his money for a good cause us well as talking for it. There are 23 ministers in Quincy, and to each of them he has mailed a check for SIOO to bu used "in promoting the moral, rpiritual, social and political welfare t>f the people of the city." In his opening address as presiding Officer at the twelfth annual confer ence of the Physical Culture associa tion the other day in New York Dr. Dudley Sargent, of Harvard, declared his belief that "lawn tennis, golf and cycling have done more to win women away from tight clothing than all the past century's lecturing and writ ing." From the latest othcial reports in the I'ritish war office it is ascertained thai the total killed, wounded and missing among the army during ac tions in South Africa tip to March 31 1,993 officers and 27,952 noncom missioned officers and men. In addi tion 711 officers and 16.981 noncom missioned officers and men have died <jf wounds or disease, making the to tal casualties foot up to the enor mous total of 47,637. Dr. Thomas D. Crothers, of Hart ford, Conn., says: "Cocaineism, alco holism and morphineisin are the Ihree scourges of the world." He con siders cocaine the most dangerous, and condemns its use even as a local an esthetic for surgical purposes. Large importations have decreased 'lie price of the drug from six dollars per ounce less than five years ago to 75 cents per ounce, and the lower price has largely increased the consumption. Among the second lieutenants of the marine corps ordered to Manila is young J. P. V. Gridley, the son o late Copt. Gridley, who comman ihe cruiser Olympia in the ra . ' b> fight at Manila, and tg wh.'mi Bc ;v --cy addressed the famous command: "You may fire when you are ready, Gridley." Young Gridley has been in the service only a year and a half, but he has conducted himself in such a manner as to win the highest praise. President David Starr Jordan, of Stanford university, who has accept ed f»n offer from the United States fish commission to take charge of an expedition for the investigation of the fish of the Hawaiian islands, will devote two months to the investiga tion, following wliigli a report will be made out ana forwarded to Wash ington, to be used as a basis for a general plan of extending the work of the federal fish commission to the islands. The Massachusetts senate by an overwhelming vote has decided not to correct the error of punctuation which accidentally crept into the state's liquor law and changed its entire meaning. The measure is known as "the semi-colon bill," because the •wrong and unintended use of a semi colon makes it unlawful for hotels to serve liquors to their guests after 11 o'clock at night. The state has de cided that the blunder is a good one, and the law will stand. People of a ruperstitious turn oi mind who believe that ill luck is asso ciated with the number 13 may per haps derive confirmation of their opinions from a study of the history of the Irish Hunt corps, which formed part of the Imperial yeoroanry. The Hunt corps was mobilized in Dublin on January 13. 1900. On March 13 it sailed for South Africa and on arrival at the ( ape was attached to the Thir teenth battalion of Imperial yeoman ry. In their first encounter with Boers 13 men of the corps ivere killed and the rest were forced to surrender. 'Ahe preparation of a simple and cheap artific.al stone is becoming* an important German industry and like ly eventually to supplant brickmak ing. The ingredients are only lime and sand in the proportion of from four to six parts Ci the former to be tween 96 and 94 parts of the latter. The materials are thoroughly mixed end shaped into blocks of the desired eisw j . The lattfr are then putin a boil er. which is sealed, and submitted to a steam pressure of from 120 to 150 pounds to the square inch. This gives » flinty character to the blocks. NATIONAL PROGRESS. Vice President Roosevelt on Ac hievements of Republican Rule. DifflrnM Prol»lem* Solved anil Fi nancial Stability Strengthened lit' Wine Policies—Calm nntl the Philippines. The feature of the annual banquet of the Home Market club in Boston, April 3C, was an address by Vice Pres ident Theodore Roosevelt. I'nusual importance was attached to the vice president's statements, as the address had been submitted to President Mc- Kinley for approval and therefore could be considered as a declaration of the administration's views and pol icies. The fact that this was the first speech on national affairs delivered by Mr. Roosevelt since his taking the office of vice president made it espe cially significant, and his hearers con strued it as having llie sanction of the executive. Mr. Roosevelt reviewed the events of the last four years, drawing atten tion to the share the republican party has had in the advance made by the country anil to ~the manner in which the national government has faced the grave problems which developed and shouldered the duties imposed upon the republic. As to the futrure the vice president predicted that all knotty points com ing up will be met in the same way and the republican party will guide the nation into an era of prosperity, lie dwelt, upon the needs of reaching into the markets of the world and told of the manner in which the United States had taken its place already as a world power. The subjects of China, Cuba and the Philippines were given atten tion and the course of the administra tion explained. ItOdKcvelt on Nation's Dnly, Vice President Roosevelt said: "In reading the profoundly interesting and suggestive biography of the great scientist, Huxley, one cannot but be struck by his constant Insistence upon the need, not merely of telling the truth, but of doing it. That is-, of facing facts—recog nizing actual conditions—the better to grap ple with tin m. "With individual and nation alike suc cess of the kind which is alone worth hav ing must come from obeying the laws that tell both for our moral and our material well being. We cannot afford to follow that sordid teaching which would bid us pay heed only to the body; nor, on the otli(» , > band, can we afford in any way to net;' * the questions ot material prosper ity. "112 te excellent persons seem to thir.k th> rgument of material prosperity is a bu argument; whereas, of course, such Is i>jt the case any more than it is base in a man to teach his son that it is a prime duty to be self-supportir.g. But to argue only from the standpoint of materia! pros perity would be base. A good man always hopes to see his son do more than earn his own living. Even each of us should desire to see America become more and more a name of pride, not merely because it sym bolizes vast material prosperity, but also because it stands for lofty and generous aspirations, high effort ar.d unyielding resolution. Four Years of Prosperity. "During the last four years this nation has so conducted Itself as not only to add immensely to our material prosperity, but also to add to the heritage of honor which we are to leave our children. A little over four years ago business disaster hat! caused such widespread panic, among our people that in addition to ihe real misery from which we were suffering we were threatened VUh adoption of a govern mental policy which woiila hay; drigpcd the nation through the ashes of humilia tion, put an Indelible stain upon our good hu.ne, ar.d inflicted a telling blow upon our reputation for shrewd ccmnion sense. At the same time the situation in the great Island of Cuba, lying ai our doors, was such as absolutely io demand our inter ference. I'r.dcr President McKlnley we entered upon an era of constructive pol icies. Our leaders had to show not that they could criticise, which is easy, buT that they could actually accomplish things, which Is hard. We had to build up a legislative and administrative system un der which our domestic well-being should be re stored, while at the same time we were pledged to solve in foreign affairs a more intricate problem than had hitherto been presented to the nation for solution, olitli fuels-- were accomplished, and wire accom plished fo successfully thai there is actual ly some little tendency to forget alike their difficulty and their importance. The dan gers were so completely overcome that, fol lowing the'universal habit of mankind, we tend now to ignore the fact that they evur existed or that those who solved them have a lasting claim upon the gratitude of ail of us. "Before treating of the new duties that have come to us in the larger national life upon which we have entered, I wish to say a word upon the extraordinary domestic prosperity which has been brought about in such large part by the policy tor which the Home Market club has so preeminent ly stood. Exactly as a man cannot do much for his neighbor unless he first of all earns his own livelihood and sees to the wtll-being of hH; own household, so our domestic well-being must ever be of prime importance in the eyes of our public men. "You, of this club, have been unswerv ing in your devotion to sound economic thought. You have, with heartiest enthus iasm. upheld the finally successful effort to put the gold standard upon as safe a basis as it is possible by legislation to put it. You have steadily advocated a tariff policy which in its actual working has vindicated Itself by a success whlc r h is lit erally astounding it has benefited not. merely the manufacturer ar.d the wage worker, but the whole population. As lor the gold standard, ever, its opponents are now but half-hearted in their opposition tc it. Dutivx In Other I.IIIMIK. "For good or for evil, we now find our selves v.ith new duties in the West Indies ar.d r.ew duties beyond the Pacific. We cannot escape the performance of these duties. All we can decide for ourselves is whether we shall do them well or ill. More over '.lie duties affect us each and all. I speak to you to-night not merely as men Of Nv-w England but as Americans and eager tor the greatness of every portion of our common country. Whether we dwell hi the interior or on the coast of the Atlantic or of the Pacific, we are bound in every V'ay, by every tie of patriotism, by eveiy consideration of thjit loftier kind of self-lnt.*Jest which looks far into the fu ture, tc. help in all measures which tend to upbuild any part of the nation, con fident that thereby w can most surely up build the nation in its entirety. "Our interests, whether in the gulf of Mexico, in Central America or in the Phil ippines, whether as regards the nations of Europe or the ancient peoples of Asia, are to be looked at always trom the standpoint of our people as a whole. "As regards China, i need say little, for it i hardly worth while wasting breath or. the few who criticise our Chinese policy. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1901. We have simply performed our part hi a bit of International police duty. "fiider the greatest provocation, our government refused to yit Id to the clamor tor more revenge and rt fused to Tike part In or connive at any effort to partition China. "In Cuba we have had to face a harder because a less simple task. We were pledged to bring peace, freedom and inde pendence to the islands, and we have be« a resolutely bent upon keeping that pledge, riot merely in the letter, but in the spirit. To have driven out the Spaniards and then immediately withdrawn our own forces would have meant the breaking of our own pledge, for it would have thrown the Islands into a chaos but one degree betttr than the tyranny which it succeeded. Moreover, such a course would have meant the absolute certainty of our being speed ily forced to interfere again. We would commit a grave wrong to our own people if we permitted the great Island which is our neighbor once more to become a plague spot of civilization; a still graver wrong if we permitted the possibility of its ever being used against us by some strong alien power. Our business was to h< ip in the development of those qualities in the Cubans which would render them able to solve the difficult problem of self government; to further every movement for decency in the island, and to Kive our aid to the new Cuban commonwealth as it strove to walk alone. Iletterment of Culm. "Compare what Cuba now is with what it was three years ago; compare the peace and order and justice of to-day with the unspeakable misery, the bloody jumble of anarchy and tyranny of three years ago. Think of the strides made in the school system and the courts; think of what has been done towards the cleansing of the cities, towards stamping out disease. Ke mt mber that the change is solely due to the fact that we dared togo to war for a right eous cause. If ever in history an action has justified itself, our action in interfering in Cuba has thus furnished its own justi fication. "Finally, we come to the Philippines, where the difficulties were greatest of all. Perhaps few better tests of our worth as a nation have ever been offered than this Philippine problem. The temptation was great to shirk it altogether. The first thing to be done was to restore order by putting a stop to the insurrection. This has at last been practically accomplished. "The record of the struggle in the Phil ippines for the last two years and a half is one which should make all Americans proud because of the firmness and the mercy, the justice and the fearlessness with which their representatives in the islands have acted under as trying condi tions as have ever been faced in a similar case. "In developing these islands it is well tc kei p steadily in mind that business is one of the great levers of civilization. It is immensely to the interest of people of the islands that their resources should be developed, and therefore it is to their Interests even more than to ours that our citizens should develop their industries. The further fact that it is our duty to ste that the development takes place under conditions so carefully guarded that r.c wrong may come to the islanders, must riot blind us to the first great fact, which is the need of the development. Honesty Must He Observed. "It is to the advantage, both of America and of the islands, to have any merchant or business man start ar.d develop a legit imate business enterprise of any kind in the islands, but no public man should have any share in such business, and public opinion should not tolerate for a moment such action among our public men. As lor the offenses that are at times bound to oc cur in connection with the public service in the islands, we should, on the one hand, see to it that the most prompt and severe punishment is visited upon the offenders; and, in the ni xt place, we should remember that it is simply silly to treat such an offtnse as In any way a condemnation of our policy. "We talk much, and, on the whole, we talk truly, of the future greatness of our people. L.et us see to it that our deeds make good our words, that we take advan tage of our manifold opportunities, and do without flinching our manifold duties. We are not to be excused if we fail to do all that is ree;uired of a great nation', stand ing as one of the great powers of the earth; and least of all are we to be excused if we fail to keep in mind the principles that underlie all greatness—the principles of justice ar.el of mercy—of courage and of honesty, that goto make up a national rec ord of clean living ar.d true manliness." AGUINALDO'S PLAC£ ADDRESS luliuportnnt l t(erance« of n DeMpic* able Figure in tlie lilipino Itelielliou. Aguinaldo's address to the Filipinos is a contribution to peace, but it is not of supreme importance. The war was over lonfr ago by the writer's own confession. The cause of peace, he says, "has been joyfully embraced by the majority of my fellow country men, who have already united around the glorious sovereign banner of the United States." Then to make the confession still stronger he adds: "The country has declared unmis takably in favor of peace." These admissions are interwoven all through with panegyric of the conqueror, whose rectitude and gen erosity now seem entirely satisfac tory to the man who confused them so short a time ago with tyranny anil oppression. It would be idle, therefore, to pretend that there was anything edifying in the exhibition, even if it have a political effect that is advantageous to the United States. Aguinaldo is not the kind of patriot over whom it is possible to grow enthusiastic, whether his mood is de fiant or submissive. lie bad absolute ly no ability as tin administrator, was a contemptible soldier and general who left all the fighting to others while he was in continuous retreat, ami in the retrospect he cannot be credited with a single heroic action. To call such a vain and thoughtless agitator another Washington is lit tle less than sacrilege and the mis take will never be made again. His true measure is fixed forever in the address, which forbids comparison with any of the men of iron will and consecrated lives who have devoted their great hearts to a great cause and proved its greatness >.n their persons.—Chicago Record-Herald. other president of the United States within the experience of the present generation of voters has had such evenly distributed support, re gardless of sectional geographical lines, as was given to William McKin ley in November, 1000. His greatest gains, compared ,'h 1S!)G. were on the Pacific coast- 19,000 in California. In I'tah the McKin'.ey vote increased from 13.000 to 47,000; in Colorado, from 26,- 000 to O.'i.OOO; in Montana, from 10,000 to 25,000; in Idaho, from 0,000 to 27,- 00. at.tl in Washington, from Sfc.tiU) tc 57,000.—X. Y. Sun. THREE BEFORE VICTORIA. None of Ibc Tbrer King* Did Any thing to .Halt- llrlKn (.real or Ulorloim. Victoria ascended the throne at an inauspicious moment. Kingship had fallen into a miserable disrepute. The last three monarchs who had sat upon our throne had done little to make their office easy or glorious, says Blackwood's. George 111. had ob scured whatever virtues were his by an obstinancy of opinion which lost us a vast co>lony, and which might well have enslaved us to foreign power, George IV. had died unwept and unpitied. As he had made his distinguished office a scandal, as he had made his throne ridiculous by a deplorable levity of taste and eon duct, so he had forfeited the affection of his people, and alienated their sympathy long before death overtook ■him. "There never was an individ ual," proclaimed the Times but a few weeks after his death, "less regretted by his fellow-creatures than this de ceased king. What eye has wept for him? What heart has heaved one throb of unnecessary sorrow?" And the Times expresses in these bitter words nothing less than the popular judgment. Nor can it be said that William IV. graced the throne of l'ritain. Loved for his homely vir tues, he raised a smile of kindly con tempt by his lack of dignity, and his frank misunderstanding of kingly ceremonial. On the day of his ac cession he escaped from his council and was found throwing shillings to a noisy crowd in a back street, and never did he acquire the rudiments of tact, which should be the first wis dom of kings. ?1«0 Reward fIOO. The readers of this paper will be plrased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in nil its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh (Jure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution arid assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its cura tive powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. .1. Cheney &■ Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Sleep, llnliy. Sleep, "See here," exclaimed Mr. Popleip?», "I don't propose to have that burglar a'-arm in our bedroom. We'll put it downstairs in the hall." "Nonsense!" replied his wife. "Theft we won't hear it when it goes oil ." "Neither will the baby. That's the main point/'—Philadelphia Press. Cnn*e for TliatiUfulncßn. Tommy—What yer so sore about? Jimmy—Aw, it's pooty tough on a fe"er ter have ter wear his big brudder's pants. "Cio'on! Yer oughter he glad yer tig brudder ain't a sister an' wore bloomers."— Philadelphia Record. Charged.—"Dear," said Mrs. Spendlntz, by way of preliminary, "would you consid er an opal unlucky:" "I would if I got a hill for one and had to pay it," replied her husband, sternly. "Ah! I'm so glad I or dered a diamond ring instead."—Philadel phia Press. The Trouble at Troy. "The trouble at Troy," said the professor, "appears to be that a feeling of inaction seemed to take possession of the Trojans. They were, so to speak, seemingly under the influence fc- a fate from which there was no escape. Tills '.v<is pbiniy ultown when the wooden horse was u».covered outside the wall-. What is it, Mr. Blinghorn s I undeio'.and it, sir." s.*. 1 Liie bril liant young ja"**:: , "Just as soon as they got the „_n horse inside, all the Trojan „ dincn rushed away to get 011 their loveliest .clothes, and all the men toddled off to get their tall hats and their Inverness over coats." "And why should they d<? that?" cried the astonished professor. "Because they thought it was a horse show," replied the bright youth.—Cleve land Plain Dealer. TUe Very Man. A Glasgow gentleman recently recom mended to the notice of a city merchant a young fellow who was looking for a clerk ship. Some few days later they met again, anil the gentleman asked if the selection had proved a wise one. "Not at all." replied the merchant. "Dear nie!" said the other. "I thought he would have suited you down to the ground —so full of go." , "Yes," responded the merchant, "he was too full of go. Why, he's clean gone, and a thousand pounds of my money, too." "You don't say so! Why, I thought he wa» exactly the fellow you were looking for." "So he is," was the emphatic reply— "so he is."—London Answers. Tess —"Is that Miss Waite? She's getting awfully big and stout, isn't she?" Jess— "Yes, ridiculously so." Tess—"Ridicu lously? Why do you say that?" Jess— "Her firsc name is 'Birdie.' " —Philadelphia Press. "Don't you know you've been a bad girl?" "\eth, ti.ir." "Do you know I'm going to spank you?" "No, thir." "Why ain't I?" "Cauth you can't catch me."— Midianapclis News. 112 COME AND GO | JL Iti many forms JL | RheumatLm | | Neuralgia t | Lumbago :j: 4 Sciatica ♦> make up a large part of human «£♦ fcufTcrirß. They come suddenly, «£♦ y but they go promptly by the ♦j* use of y | St. Jacobs Oil ! •J* which is a certain sure cure. y There I* a CTiun of People Who are injured by the use of coffee. Re cently there has been placed in all the gro cery stores a new preparation called GRAIN'-O, made of pure grains, that takes the place of coffee. The most delicate stom ach receives it without distress, and but few can tell it from coffee. It does not cost over } as much. Children may drink it with great benefit. 1.1 cts. and 2.1 cts. per pack age. Try it. Ask for GRAIN-O. A Sign. Patience—What is the sign when a man kisses a girl on the forehead? Patrice—l should say it was a sign that he was rattled.— Yonkers Statesman. Career and Character of Abraham Lincoln, An address by Joseph Choate, Ambassa dor to Great Britain, on the career and character of Abraham Lincoln—his early life—his early struggles with the world— his character as developed in the later years of his life and his administration, which placed his name so high on the world's roll of honor and fame, has been published by the Chicago, Milwaukee k St. Paul Railway and may be had by sending six (Gj cents in postage to F. A. Miller, Gen eral Passenger Agent, Chicago, Hi. Mot nn Kxpert. Miss Modderne— I thought you under stood French? liluflington Well—cr—not fluently. Puck. You Can CJet Allen'* Foot-Kane FREE. Write to-dav to Allen S. Olmsted, Leroy, X. \ ~ for a FREK sample of Allen's Foot- Kase, a powder to shake into your shoes. It cures chilblains, sweating, damp, swollen, aching feet, ft makes New or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Corns and Bun ions. All druggists and shoe stores sell it. 25c. "Maud never wears rubbers." "Why not?" "She'd rather say she couldn't get a pair small enough to fit her."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Brat for the How—l*. No matter what ails you. headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. Cascarets help nature, cure you without 11 gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped uii it. Beware of imitations. It remained for Love to laugh at a lock smith and still keep a straight face in the presence of a minister "assisting!' at a wed ding.—Detroit Journal. A dyspeptic is never on good terms with himself. Something is always wrong. Get it right by chewing Reeman's Pepsin Gum. |. | AVfcgcfablePreparationforAs- 3 similatingtheFoodandßcgula- MB ling the Stomachs andßowels of mi njiawjiiiifeiiitmimjß | ! Promotes Digestion, Cheerful « ness and Rest.Contains neither s® Opium, Morphine nor "Mineral, fog KOTNARCOTIC. af OIdJirSAMLTLPITCIWi % Sail- ' V' Mx.Saina * 1 2® &<*«w § Aate &id <■ I "W } Harm Sfed - 1 t (larifxtd. Jtfhtoyrwn rtnvor. / A perfect Remedy for Cons Ispa- ;*f lion. Soar Stomach, Diarrhoea -J| ; Worms .Convulsions, Feveris- p« i ness and loss OF SLEEP. # i Fac Simile Signature of \ NEW' YORK. a [EXACT COPY OF WRAFPER. jB W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & $3.50 SHOES 1 The real worth of my #3.00 and $3.50 shoes compared with M 389 other makes Is *4.00 to JK.OO. My 04.00 (lilt Edge Line cannot bo sll equalled at any price. Best in the world for men. \ /'// I make and mcII more ux n'o lino nhom, Goodyear •' J (Hand-Hewed Prorenn), I hun any othe- manufne- ifeawlf"' turer in the world. 1 will pay sl,o4M>touuy one whocua 1 prove that my ntuieincnt in not true. ..*/| (SiKucd) W. T<. Tlonslaa. ' I Take no *ub«tttnte! Insist on having W. L. Douglas shoes with name and price stami>ed on bottom. Your dealer should '•" /. §g^ keep them ; I give one dealer exclusive sale in each town. If '■? /lASSkx he does not keep them and will not get. them for you, order AJHMHtV direct from factory, enclosing price and 25c. extra for carriage. —-i-Q&Jk Over 1,000,000 satisfied wearers. New Spring Catalog free. 'f v ' F«*t Color Ey«let« u«*d exclusively. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, MaSC. flfkLßwSvtrk A Poor Woman | has just as much right to good health as a rich woman. Dr. Greene offers free of charge to every woman, the advice that leads to health and strength. Write to him at J5 W. 14th St., New York City, and tell him all about your weakness. The special advice of the discov erer of Dr. Greene's Nervura cannot be bought for money, but it will be given to you free if you will write. \ INDIVIDUAL TREATMENT ■ for obstinate chronic diseases can be secured at a comparatively small cost by addressing the Interstate Physicians League. h Thi8 d association ' s com P ose d of prominent and experienced specialists in W H The servicesof leading specialists in our line are in this manner procurable. M We treat all chronic diseases such as nervous dyspepsia and other digestive H and kidney diseases, constipation, chronic diarrhea, Bright's All sufferers from'chronic diseases of long standing and obstinate character should by all means secure the services of a specialist ot our association. ■ Wrttm for particular* and full Information. y MitiA jjli iSI ' I CIN CINN AT iJOHIOJU^S. A/ \ M' ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills., Must Bear Signature of See Fac-Slmlle Wrapper Below. Veary null ud as easy to take as sagab IrAOTTD'cl FOI> HEA OACHE. LKO FOR DIZZINESS. IPLTTLE FOR BIUOUSNESS. OIV F R FOR TORP|D LIVER. ■ PFI LS FOR CONSTIPATION. : I ■■ FOR SALLOW SKIN. JJ— IFQR THE COMPLEXION - . . OEHl'ima Muwmvt fIPMATVWC. _ 2SCM& I Purely ~JI ~VH utv CURE SICK HEADACHE. T«-P»y'» Ikurrt. In making it ready Burnham's Hasty Jellycon will ho highly approciated : nothing to do but dissolve it in hot water and set | away to cool. The flavors are: orange, lemon, strawberry, raspberry, posch. wild ! cherry and unfavored "calfsfoot"' for j making wine and coffee jellies. Uet a | package to-day at your grocer's. ■% m VPtIVA without fen un- K■ IS fj Sn UTV lens successful. ■Dp MM S DOI ■ Send description; ■| H Ska IW K%# FItKK opinion. ■ MILO M. STEVFNS & CO., Estat. IHFi. Dir. 3, Sl7 14th Street. WASHINGTON,!>. *.'» WrajiLti (jflico.s: cUicaffC: Cleveland ujid DytiulU ! A lnan l 'V large Manufacturing House; Avaifal in <*a.sh puid f<»r 12riays trial; pro motion and permanent position if satisfactory. Ad dress G. H. P. CO.. IZi Chestnut Kt.. Philadelphia. I A. N. K.-C 1864 I For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the / < Signature / (V ' n f\r Use U* For Over Thirty Years CASTOBIA ' THE CENTAUR NEW YOIIK CITY.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers