2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Eelitor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per je*ur 12 00 IX paid lu advance I *>" ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at th>> rate ei\ ®m- d I ar per s<iu;iru for one insertion ami tiny cents I er septan? for each subseepieat iiiierti'ia Rates "V 1 lie year, e>r for six or three months, »re low a 1 1 1 uniform, and will be furnished on ■ p: lie-in. on. Leg; I anel Ofllclal Advertising per square, three times or less, 52: eaah subsequent insbr tio 1 U . cuts per vqnaro. i.eiral notice s la cents per line fur one inser «eni 11 ce nts per line for each subsceiuent ce-.-i ecative insertion. Obituary notices over five lines 10 cents per line, sluiple announcements of births, mar riaj-'i-v 11,1 deaths will be inserted free. Ilie-lness cards, tive lines or less. i 5 per year; over live iin- s, at Uie regular rate s of adver tising. N" local Inserted for less than 75 cents pe; issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pit ess Is complete arti fl..ril> facilities f->r doing llie best class of V, rk. pAßlle t'LAIt A't'TENIION PAIDTO I,AW Printing. No paper will be dlseeintiniieel until arrear ages are paid, except at the onion of the pub ii*l.er. Papers sent out. of the county must be paid fe,r in advance. The Illinois state historical society has decided to petition the legislature for an appropriation of $250,000 for the erection of a state historical libra ry. It also wants the legislature to devote ?'io,ooo of the St. i.ouis exposi tion appropriation to the equipment of a historical panorama in the Illi nois building. Champagne, 111., is be ing talked of as the site for the pro posed library. Miss Anna C. Wallberg, of Iloston, who for a number of years has been devoting her time to spreading a knowledge of Scandinavian literature in the United States, through trans lating the principal writings of the authors of that country into English, has collected much valuable jewelry centuries old, including a unique ring presented to an ancestor by the queen of his era for valuable service in bat tle. A fund of $50,000 representing ono third of the amount necessary for the completion of the Chicago art insti tute, has been secured, and work will soon be begun on the remaining wing of the structure, which has been ten years in building. The addition will be in the form of a long corridor, which will connect the two wings of the present building, completing a hollow square. The new corridor is to be known as sculpture hall. Mrs. Harrie Brownell, of Providence, R. 1., has devoted herself, for several years to the collection of china, tea pots, and now owns 1,400 specimens, which she has gathered together at an enormous cost. Many of them are very valuable by reason of the his toric association connected with them or because of their exquisite work manship. The teapots are arranged on shelves which cover Mrs. Brown ell's dining-room on all sides from floor to ceiling. The most remarkable flower of the coronation year will be a quaint intro duction from Central Asia, which has for its sponsor in England, a Hol •born firm. According to the import ers. it grows on a saucer, without sail or water anel without showing leaves or roots, the bulb shoots out a red brown flower, with red and yellow tip sometimes two feet long. When the flower is off it prefers to retire in to the soil and to be well watered, when it follows up with a three-foot umbrella leaf. The Georgia commission has in formally agreed upon Alexander 11. Stephens, the congressman, and Dr. Crawford W. Long, the discoverer of anaesthesia, for the subjects of the state's two statues to be placed in statuary hall in the capitol at Wash ington. The selection can not he de finitely ratifieei until a meeting of the commission, to be held in July. The commission wished the state- to make an appropriation for the statues, but Attorney-General Terrel said this can not be constitutionally done. Samuel McCuns Lindsay, assistant professor of sociology in the universi ty of Pennsylvania, who has been nom inated for commissioner of education in Porto Rico, was born at Pittsburg, Pa., in 18fi!), and was graduated Ph. B. from the- university, afterward study ing at Berlin, Halle, Vienna, Rome anel Paris, Prof. Lindsay was special agent of the senate finance committee, to report on wholesale prices of Eu rope-, in 1S!)2, anel export agent of the United States industrial commission, to report on railroad labor, in 1899- 3900. An interesting demonstration is now being given at the examination hall of the Royal college of surgeons, Lon don, of a wonderful machine invented by a Belgian doctor for preserving the dead against the natural law of decay. His apparatus effects a sub tle chemical change in the tissues of the dead body, which make it im pervious to decomposition. What the change is scientists can not exactly say. They know enough, however, to assert that It delays almest indefi nitely the dissolution into dust aiid ashes. Paris gave up this new year's, after many centuries, the Red Mass in the Sainte Chapelle for the jiietges of the higher courts. This was done by or der of the minister of justice on ac count, of the inter-meddling with po litical affairs; of the religious orders. The ardent Catholic judges and law yers attended instead a mass cele brated by Cardinal Richard in the church of St. German L'Auxerrois, op posite the Louvre, whose bells gave the signal for the massacre of St. Bartholomew. Many were present at the mass. ROOSEVELT'S MEANING. Amti- \ Frcfond to Mli ull <l<» r* lit ml Hint on tin* Phil ippine UueMdon, President Schurnian in liis reply to the criticism of (Jen. Wheat on said: "President Roosevelt paid in Ills mes rage to congress that we wire to do for the Filipinos far more than any other na tion has done for a tropical people, and that we were to tit tin.in for pelf-govern ment after the fashion of the really free nations. 1 am with President Hoosi velt and against Gen. Wheaton. And 1 go further, uad say that, ai~ the American |K*ople have not yet |),ish (1 upon the ques tion of a tinal Philippine- policy, it is as proper for me to advocate eventual Inde pendence as for (Jen. Wheaton to recom ini nd colonial servitude like? that of Java or India." Mr. Schurnian in this statement did not express the opinion that President Hoosevelt had intimated la vas in favor of the ultimate indepen dence of the Philippines. In fact, he said explicitly that he went further than the president and advocated eventual independence. lint some of the anti-expansionist newspapers, says the Chicago inter Ocean, have found in Mr. Seliurmnn's statement warrant for believing that President Hoosevelt in iiis message expressed views favo-.', ble to the ultimate independence of the Philip i pines. What the president really did say follows: "In dealing with the Philippine people we must show lioth patience and strength, forbearance and steadfast resolution. Our aim Is high. We do not desire to do for the Islanders merely what has elsewhere been done tor tropic peoples by even the t'i st foreign governments. We hope to do for them what has never before been done for any peoples of the tropics—to make them tit for self-government." Commenting on this, a Chicago newspaper asks: "What do the president's words mean? They are utterly inconsistent with the Interpretation of the annexationists. The president does not say that we hope to Americanize and assimilate th> Filipinos, to give them self-government and freedom under the flag after the fashion of, say, }i awali and New Mexico. He does not say that we hope to give than a terri torial status and the prospect of statehood. His words have no such mi anlng. What, then, do they mean? Kxactly what Mr. j Schurman construes them to convey—ulti i mate independence: perhaps under some , form of protectorate, some sort of 'Piatt ; amendment.' " If there is a plain spoken man in the world, that mail is President Hoosevelt. Never before has an anti annexationist pretended to misunder stand hi in. I tut here is a Chicago newspaper which has opposed all the "Hoosevelt policies, seriously eontend | ing that when the president said: I "We hope to make the Philippine people fit for self-go\eminent after the fashion of the really free na tions," he meant that we were to sur render the islands and grant them in dependence. Of course the people know that, Mr. Hoosevelt from the first has been ! a most strenuous advocate of the an ! nexation of the Philippines, lie was in advance of President McKinley and . more positive 111 his utterances. He I was nominated for vice president 1 largely because of his boldness in 1 this respect, and as if to remove all j doubts he said in his letter of ac ! eeptanee: "The question now is not whether we j shall expand—we have already expanded; i but whether we shall contract; to-surren j der the Philippines would be to surrender I American territory." Defending the annexation of the i Philippines, Mr. Hoosevelt -aid: "T/Ouisiana territory was acquired by treaty and purchased exactly and preeise , ly as the Philippines wore acquired. The ; consent of the governed was not ask-d in the case of Louisiana; the great majori ty of the Inhabitants w< re bitterly oppos- d to the transfer, and United States soldiers had to be sent Into the territory to pr< - vent insurrection; years lapsed before the right of self-government was granted them. . . . As soon as order Is estab lished. It will be possible to give the Phil ippines a larger measure of self-govern ment than Jefferson gave to Louisiana." Xei one could have misunderstood Mr. Hoosevelt at that time as te> what he meant by self-government. He used the case of Louisiana to I make clear his meaning, and when he said in his message that "we hoped to make the Filipinos I'll for self-government after' the fashion of the really free nations" he meant just exactly what he- meant when he used the same words in his letter of acceptance, and in his subsequent speeches of the campaign. Certainly lie) one misunderstood him when lie saiel that he looked forwarel to the time when Filipinos, Peirto Hicans, anel Hawaiians would lie- fomiel in the American army, serving as loyally under the (las' as the people of the several states in the war e>f IS9B. PRESS OPINIONS. of Colorado, used to slieel real tears ove-r the- sael fate of silver. He has now shifte-el his affections to the Filipinos. Teller always has to love something.—Cleveland Leader. CTlicrc are in the United States many de-moe-rat.s whose sons are serving in the Philippines. It will he* hard te> convince them that the pol icy of denying shelter anel protec tion te> America 11 soldiers is a sound democratic " issue.—St. Louis (ilobe Democrat. C7*The "indepenelent" organs of greed are gradually working into the congressional contest in this elis trict. for "all there is in it"for the organs, and for all that can In gained foi; democracy by stirring up strife between the republicans.— lowa State Register. tt•*'Headers will search in vain for any allusion to 10 to 1 in democratic papers. Five years ago little else eemlel la* found. At last the- ele*mo cratic organ lias discovered that 1(1 to I is not a vote-winner. In six years more it will discover that cry ing down the work of the United Stales in the Philippines is not a vote-getter. Indianapolis. Journal. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1902 COUNSELORS OF AGE. You 11 k n Are Ciood Tnlkern Jlat l'oi it icu I U I.Hilom CuaiCN Only willi Year* n ml Kxpericiico, A number of democratic papers seem vre-ll pleased with Senator IJol liver's declarations in favor of a re vision of the tariff, but they forget that the senator is so young that he has had but one experience with free trade, and appears to have nearly forgotten the unequaled losses forced upon the people of the United States by the free trade agitation from IS'.iO to 1 stifj and the* free trade tariff tin kering that resulted in the enactment <if the Wilson tariff bill of 1894. The men who remember the- disasters-and losse-s of other fre-e trade eras are opposed to any tinkering with the tariff at the present time, anel there is no doubt that, their counsel will be heeded. The younger men lack the experience by which the future should be guielcd, but they are learn ing' and they will yield to the counsel of the republican leaders who have aided in making the Uniteel States the greatest nation 011 the earth dur ing the past , r io years. The lowa State Register coincides with the opinions of Speaker Henderson, so cogently stated in the following extract from his re-ply to a petition, signed by 70 republican business men of Waterloo and (Velar Falls, requesting him to favor a revision of the tariff by the present congress: "My judgment is that It IF more Im portant at this time, in th interest of this country, to reduce taxation upon ours; lve s and stop to a proper degree the Influx of th" people's money into the public treas ury With the country in an unparalleled prosperous condition, I cannot believe it wise to begin a reduction which inevitably will open up the whole field of revision ar.el thus put a seri ous check upon the business of the- coun try. The moment the country understands there Is to be a revision of the tariff, Job bers. will suspend large purchases, h pint; tei buy at lower prices. This will ceimpel the manufacturer tei reduce his busln-ss; anel this will e-ompel a reduction of the pay rolls, ar.el serious business calamity might 1 nsue." That briefly states the exact situa tiein; it is the position favored by >nearly till the republicans of the I niteel States; anel it is the only pol icy by which the general prosperity of the people can be maintained. Urging revision of the tariff i.s pleas* ing te> all the fre-e' trailers, but it is a danger which should be avoided at all hazards. The over abundant rev enues e-an be decreased by repealing the* war taxes, and there is no rea sem why the- people of this country should be paying war taxe-s whew, the- only warfare the- government i» engageel in is with a few sejuaels of Filipinos. Speaker Henelerson is right, as will be preived by the* ree-- eirels when the present term of con gress has adjourned. The young men are good talkers, but it is the ceitin se-1 of the eilel nie-n that will assure the- safety e• 112 t lie* government and the ntinueel prosperity of till the* people who are willing to work for labor's rewards. PRINCIPLES LACKING. Cowardly KviiMion liy Demoe-mtH oI tile 110 11 Ml* of Any Open lle-e-liirn- I iem of l"nrt> I'll!til. The failure of the democrats eif the house to make any declaration regard ing the 11a 111 re of democra tic principles very natura'.ly attracts attention be cause. whatever may be the cause as signee! for siie-h failure, everybody, or nearly everybody who gives attention to political affairs know that it is due to the inability of the minority to agree upein any definite declaration of party faith. The resolutions of Mr. Me- Cle-'ktn, eif New York, written b\ Tam many's candidate for mayor and ap proveel by Mr. Croker, were entirely lost sight of in the performance, which may lie accepted as evidence that Tammany's leadership is not accepta ble to any otlie r democrats than those who are electe d from Xew York e-ity. The resolutions presented by a south ern democrat, which reaffirmed th» Kansas ('in platform with an anti-ex- j pansion and anti-Philippine attach ment. would deiubtlcss have suited the ; majority of the members of the minor- I ity. but only 19 members of the caucus ! went on record in favor eif them. This j means that the democrats in the house did not care to come tei a square vote on the question of declaring the Kan sas City platform the latest expression of democratic faith. The large major ity of the caucus thought ,it expedient to ! dodge the whole i|iit stion by declaring I that the- democrats in the house have j no right to assume tlie- responsibility of declaring the party principles, and would not assume a function which did not belong tei them, says the Indianap olis Journal. This is a cowardly evasion. The dem ocratic party in the house lias timeand again declared the party views upon public i|iie-stion with the emphasis of the- dogmatic law-giver. While Mr. Cleveland was preside nt the last time the democrats, by resolution and vote, declared in favor of the unlimited free coinage- of - ilve-r, which was kept out of the platform.of 1592 upon which Mr. C - veland was nominate el. Before the mee ting of the- Chicago convention in ls'.ifi. th,- democratic party in the house declared by a decided majority the party faith in the silver issue, as e ffe ct ively as if it had been proclaimed by re-■ sol 111 ion. 1 11 the fe-ar that the party in the house would appear to be bopc essly divided, the managers did not even dare to declare that the Kansas Ci:y platform stands as the latest ex pression of democratic principles. While one-fifth eif the caucus voted te> reaffirm or indorse Mr. Bryan's plat form. four-fifths declined tei go as far that. Tiny preferred tei stand be fore- the country without an attempt lo prese nt a declaration of principles lest it slioulel bp discovered that there is now a greater variety of opinions held by democrats than at iuiy either period in the history of the country. A MORE PERFECT UNION. A of (lie Federal I'urly In the I'liilippines Im I'rekcntcil to rem lire**. Washington, Feb. 13.—The memo rial of the- fe'ele-ral party eif the* Philip pine* islands was transmitted to tin* senate yesterday afternoon by the secretary of war, together with a letter eif transmittal by Gov. Taft, in whose charge the document was given. The memorial was aelopted tit an extraordinary session eif tlie- fed eral party lie-lel in Manila in Novein- I ber. It s<-t.s forth that the- perfornt iine-e of that obligation eif the* tre*aty of Paris which gave the* Uniteel State-s congress authority to fix the status of the* Philippine islands has been tleferrcel to this tinie* because of the attack of the* Filipinos upon the sov erignty of the- United State-s, an act brought about, the memorial says, through a misunderstanding and not through hatred of the American sovereignty. The* memorial prejper is elivieled in tei two parts. The first eif these- is a petitiein for annexatiein anil a pre sentation of the form of government desire-el. in Ili is sub-elivision the feel e*ral party sets forth that it litis made an exhaustive stuely of beitli the Fili pinos anel the* Americans anel con cludes that from the mass eif data collee-teel it is "the- intention eif the two peoples that they should never be- disunited." The memorial then pt'oceeels: "To make eif the Philippines a eeileiny of the* United states, or tei grant iiieii-- penelene-e* tei the Philippines woulel be* to hand the islands over to diseirdcr anel anarchy, to destruction anel to e-baeis. Philippine independence with eir without a protectorate, means a heilelitig eif peiwe-r by all the- terrible elements which predominate, anel woulel predominate still feir some years, until the* ange-r eif Filipinos toward Filipinos shall have been com pletely calmed, e-ducation beceimc general and the fanaticism we have inherited from Spain e-xiled. Federa tion or annexation woulel settle- all these eliffieult.ies by concentrating the interest eif the Filipino people upon education anel labeir." The memorialists then "pray a declaration by the- congress of tlie* Cniteel State's tei the effect that the Philippine islanels, as they are elc scribeel in the treaty of Paris anel the subse(|ue*nt convent ion with Spain, are an integral part eif the- I*ni t e-el States, tbei saiel Philippine islands constituting a territeiry with tlu rights anel privileges which the* cein stitutiem of uie Uniteel States grants tei the either territories, such as that of becoming a state eif the Union." The* seconel part eif the* memeirial se-ts feirth the aspirations eif a so cial anel economical character. RAILS SPREAD. Cleveland and ><-« York Flyer oti SCrle* Kiiilreiiiit IN U re-e-Ileel. Cleveland, ()., Feb. i:t. —Train Xo lit. the famous Cleveland-New York flyer eif the Erie Railroad, was elitcheel by spreaeling rails between Phalanx and Mahoning stations Wedneselay after noon anel erne man probably fatally hurt ami over a score ejf other pas sengcrs more or less seriously injured. The train left <«'evcland at 1 o'clock on time and the accident happened tit •: o'e-leick while the "tlyer"' was making lul speed. 'Hi" rear portion of the train was completely wrecked, the day coach, which was the last ear eif the regular • ortion eif the train, anel the private • ~ r of President .leise-ph Ramsey, of tin- Wal ash anel Wheeling A Lake Erie ra'■ Iroaels, which was at the extreme e-i;el of the train, being tippeel eiver, Youngstown. 0., Fe'b. 14. — Askeel f.ir a statement regareling the- cause i Weelneseluy niglit.'s wre-ck on the I. i" railroael near Phalanx, Superin tendent 11. X. Donalelseiu saiel:: "It is impossible to tell henv the* aee-ielent occurred. It may have been one eif several things, but we have only the* teirn up trae-K anel the eleraileel e-ars tei look at. It was one eif those tin explainable affairs that some-times happen in winter. Up te> that time the track seemeel in goeiel shape anel also the cars, as they are till care fully inspected before tlie-y leave Cleveland. 1 elei neit know how it eic eice-urreel." The speed indicator in President Ramsey's private car sheiweel the train was running (10 miles tin hour at the time eif the ae cielent. All the injured are reportee! ns eleiing well. Fatal liiidliis of a Quarrel. Xew York, Feb. 14.—Pliileimon Cr -lin, a spe-e-ial officer at Milburn, ne.ir Orange*. X. J.. at bis home last night shot bis daughter, Mrs. Fergu son. anel liimsedf, and e-ause*el the ' eleatli eif his wife. Father and elaugh le-r are e-xpee-teel to elie-. Tueselay uight Cre-lin liael a quarrel with his wife anel tried to stab her with a carving knife. The daughter inter- j fe-re-el anel saved lie-r meitlier's life*. Cre-lin tlu-n threatened tei kill Mrs. Ferguson. When he went eiff duty hist night lm brought his rcveilver home with him. While all the fae-ts are- not known at pri*sent, it seems likely that In* first slieit his daugh ter. She- was struck by two bullets, line of which e*iite-rcil her abelomen anel Ihe- either the left breast. Cre lin. it is thought, then attempted to slieiot his wife, but she was suelelenly se-i/.eel with a hemorrhage eif the lungs anel fe-ll tei tlie- fleieir ele'ael. The officer then shot himself, the* bullet striking 'lll the regiein of the heart. Drove 'D'he-in From t an*p. Fleirenee, Col., Feb. 13.—Weirel reache-d he-re freun •Chaneller late- lase night that a niol> of white nie-n tit- j tucked and practically demolished j tlie boarding heiuse* occupicel by Ja- j pane-se- laliore-rs and drove the* latter freun t lie* cam p. Tlie- of BMiH'eriii Diem, I.emelou, Fe'b. 13.—The Mnrt|uis eif Duffe-rin. former governor general I of Camilla, and who had tilled many | high diplomatic posts in the English service, elieel Wedneselay at his resi dcne-n in i hii.d'-boye, County Down, Ireland. Miss Marion Cunningham, the Popular Young Treasurer of the Young Woman's Club of Emporia, Kans., has This to Say of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. " DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM : Your Vegetable Compound cured mc of womb trouble from which I had been a great sufferer for nearly three years. During that time I was very irregular and would often have intense pain in the small of my back, and blinding headaches and severe cramps. For three months I used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and aches and pains arc as a past memory, while health and happiness is my daily experience now. You cer tainly have one grateful friend in Emporia, and I have praised your Vegetable Compound to a large number of my friends. You have my permission to publish my testimonial in connection with my picture. Yours sincerely, Miss MARION CUNNINGHAM, Emporia, Kans." SSOOO FORFEIT IP THE ABOVE LETTER IS NOT GENUINE. When women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness, leucorrhoea. displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, bloating (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous pros tration, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all gone," and "want-to-be-left-alone" feelings, blues, and hopelessness, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the best. Mrs. Pinkiiam invites all sick women to write lier for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. Worthy of n llo»toarn«-. A young parson while dining at the house of a family of his congregation presumed to entertain the table with a dissertation upon life. "And after all, what is life?" he asked, and paused for oratoiical effect. "I know." a small voice exclaimed and all eyes were turned to the end ot the table, where the youngest son of the family sat in a higii chair. "1 know,"he piped. ' Herbert Spen cer says that life is the definite combination of heterogeneous changes, both simultaneous and successive, in correspondence with ex terna! coexistences and sequences."—Chi cago Chronicle. York, Pa., Nov. 28, 1001. We consider I'iso's Cure for Consumption a household necessity, and cannot speak too highly of it.—J. J,. Bower, 4 North Water Street. A Canine Hero. De Style—Why did you tie that medal to your dog's collar? Gunbu>ta—He saved my life. "In what way?" "Had he bit me I would have died from hydrophobia." "What has that to do with saving your life?" "He never bit inc."—X. Y. Herald. Society is like politics. When a man once gels in lie forgets all the cynical remarks ue used to make about it.--Judge. People in books are so good to the poor.— Atchison (ilobc. | I I mmm ANcgctable Preparation for As - ji similatiTig (lieFoodandßcgula- M : ting the Stomachs aiutßowels of m , Promotes Digeslion.Chcerfuf- jf ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral, ;|j: KOT NARC OTIC . /hripe afCh£J]rSAI4Un.PiTCJIER || i Z\iwpf;m Seed" v silx.SrM/ta * ilk IwthtUe S*llS I ytniwSced + taj Jtpjxrnwit - . ' Jil CottfOfUtk-Kan » V y JiSnttfSefJ - f/arxfuvt. fcmr T ; hkilrrpwsst Wxryor , m A perfect Remedy far Conslipa- w, I Hon, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea jfi Worms .Convulsions .Feverish |j, I ness and Loss OF SLEEP. j| I Facsimile Signature of dL&ft i! __ NEW YOI? K. a I"" ' | ' EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. ,«J IL I CUM POWDER I DROPSY SKIES! I caseu. iJi.ok i.t testimonial* ami 1« <luyn' --at men* I i rcc Or* li. 1L ouisiurb ao*t». u«x |). ailZSu. Ui. : Wny of tlie World, J "I see that Mrs. Uptardeight is address- J ing the Mothers' Scientific club this after j iioon on ''i'he Care of Children.' " j "Speaking of children, who was that i youngster that broke into Snoop's candy store last night and robbed the till?" "That why. that was Mrs. Uptardeight'* youngest."—Jial t imore News. The Kenl Tiling. "All the mechanical toys you make seem to be very .successful." "Yes," said the inventor. "I've only had one failure." "What was the matter with it?" "Too realistic, I guess. It was a toj i tramp, and it wouldn't work."—Philadei* j phxa Press. In I>onlit. Bilriad—Did the size of her pile make you 1 hesitate? i Perkins —Yes. For a long lime I didn't ! know how much she had. —Detroit Free Press. "Funny about young Spenditt, wasn't it?" said the Observing Man."Was it?" asked the Man of an Inquiring Mind. "Yes; he lost his money raising Cain in Europe, and then made another fortune raising cane in Louisiana." —Baltimore American. Too many things are done well that are not worth doiuij at all.—Chicago Daily News. The modern version—What are the sound I waves saying?— Puck. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bough! Bears the «. Signature //a w a iIF (\Jr se For Over Thirty Years THE CENTAUR COMPANY* NEW YORK CITY iMPmim&iswwwwMPssm Doable, Busii 5 Trailing ! SWEET PEAS e *v"o7 i MX out support. Striped, ' Lor* I enderand lJrown-rod. Tlie3fl>'i-th forlOe. I All 12 Ports,one )>ackct each for -Or., post pa Id. llUlt OREAT S I.OGUE ..f Fl.»- irnud Vcgotablo Seeds, Riillis, Hunts mid Hare Now I'rult'i, l»t l»i\;1 tof UM'lv ill (1 rftU'd,larjre rolornfl piati-s,i- itKh. ; JiiUX ],eWl« «:HU.I»S. Floral Pnik.S.V. Alien's UleeriiES Sake ! Ciiros Chronic I loom, Honr tlrer*. Rrrnfuloiu Cl«rr«, ' I Irrra. Intlolrnt t'lrrr*. Iltrrnrlikl I'lron, White SwHUn*. llilk I!.«•*, rufr Sorm. and nil t.on>» of Inn* %<nnrtlnir. I'Mlll'fl; N | failure. IXj mall, ilie and JOc. J. I*. ALUiN, bt. P*uJ, MiOtt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers