2 CAMERON COUNTY MS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. ■rt'.RMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. fer year « «• II paid In advance » APVERTISINa RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of •ae dollar i>er square forone insertion and lift* Kent, per square fur each subsequent insertion Raies by the year, or (or six or three montlia, sr e low anil uniform, and will be furnished on application. Lesul Official Advertlslnf per sminre. tbreo times or less, each subsequent .nser (ten !0 cents per square. Local notices 10 cents per line for one lnser- I #erti<>n; f> cents ptr line for each subsequent j •cnsecutive Insertion. Obituary notices oyer five lines, 10 cents per line Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be Inserted free. Business cards. il»e lines or less, »5 per year, #ver 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 PRRSB IS complete •nd affords fucilltles lor doinj; the best class ol Work PAUTIOUL.SK ATTENTION PIIDIO LAW rKINTJNO. No paper will be discontinued until arrears •tea aio paid, except at the option of the pub lisher Papers sent out if the county must be paid lor iu auvanre. Sailors Were All English. Tn- 1 late Gen. H. V. Boynton, ths Washington correspondent,'used to tell or. tnc Fourth of July a good story about a British captain. This captain, alter being defeated in a sea fight iu the war of 1812, inspected the ship lo which he had surrendered. "But. hang it all, half your sailors are Eng lish, 'he grumbled at the end of his in spection. "And had you not all Eng lish?" said the American captain, calmly.—Cleveland Leader. Kept Him Deid. Rider Haggard heard that a ballet based on "She" was to be produced In Hungary. He wrote for programs and photographs. The reply of the manager was that the illustrious "llerr Author ' was dead. Mr. Haggard asked for A denial, but the manager replied that the editors refused to insert it. as they believed it to be an unscrupulous at tempt to obtain free advertising for the tallet Berlin Exposition. From June 21 to 26. 1906, a lanje agri cultural exposition is to be held at Ber lin, which will also comprise a special division for preserved food articles, such as products of the dairy, dough, po tatoes, fruits, wines and extracts, meats, beer. etc. Money prizes, diplomas and medals will be awarded. In order to test the preserving capacity of these ex hibits they will be sent to tne tropic. The Bard Retorts. "Want to give me those poems for a year's subscription to my paper?" snapped the editor of the rural weekly "Why. they are worthless." "I know that,' 'retorted the long haired bard. "You don't think I'd wan: to trade them for your paper if they weren't worthless, do you?"— Chicago Daily News. Fooled Soldiers. While some regiments of London vol unteers were engaged in a sham fight in the suburbs the other day a man on a coach, passing along a neighborhood road, sounded "Cease firing" on his bugle. The call was passed along ihe lines and the battle was suspended till the joke was discovered. Jap Hotels in Frisco. There are 85 Japanese hotels in San Francisco, 60 restaurants. 16 intelli gence offices, nine shooting galleries. 11 billiard rooms and 75 house-cleaning offices. These are all licensed, and ■there is a large number of unlicensed cobblers, butchers, janitors, porters and domestic servants. Vanity Punished. They tell of a Coolidge girl who got in front of a mirror and practiced and practiced until she had acquired a sweet, pathetic look in her eyes. Then one day her mother saw the look and took her to a doctor who gave her calomel,— Atchison (Kan.) Globe. Chewed Their Health. A newly married Swiss coupla climbed to the summit of Mount Nora for the wedding breakfast. The cham pagne was then found to be frozen Folio So the health of the bridal cou ple was chewed instead of drunk. Brazen Client. While defending a case in court at Oarlow. Ireland, the other day, an at torney was surprised and grieved to see on the feet of his client a pair or boots thai had been stolen from him some time before. Ore on Justice Fuller. Chief Justice Fuller of the United Stales supreme court was mistaken lor an itinerant German musician at tn« P>avoy hotel, London, recently, and a poor room on this account. The mi.i lake was rectified. Spouting cf Whales. The whale's nose Is on top of the h»ad at least, thit Is where the nno inls are sitt ated, thrnigh which it rend* th" columns <f water when "■pouting." Whales only spout while feeding. Mtu:y Sick Soldiern. Out of a total ol : I;; ; ,| S i men lii the Brit sh armv is : ,". x oi 758 1 'i I.'HW wer. ad: .if d (•, ti »*p|tai iii lito;, >ass (he aimirtl r j. irt ot u»« army m< lira! <!e; <t m nt French Birth T. tt Th< national a!!t» : •> 112, r larreuim ihe I» I TIIAII'M *■ I I * l . Vr:im• is in. th «ny to i, . i«• th , dHHrf |,..wer, o< IHi I 1 the I ilnlihltirf bin ii rate. MORE THAN MAGNANIMOUS Uncle Sam, Prosperous Beyond Com pare, Gives Everyone Work Good Wages. Under the operation of the Dlngley law Uncle Sam has sold abroad $4,1)00,- 000,000 worth of goods more lhan he has bought. "That's a drain we cannot stand," says the foreigner. "We must, not repose in fancied se curity that we can forever sell every thing and buy little or nothing," says the revisionist, half quoting McKlnley. Well, let lis look into it, suggests the American Economist. What has be come of the $4,000,(100,000 balance in j our favor? What are we doing with the $400,000,000 balance in our favor last year? Draining our customers and holding it In our strong box? Not a dollar of it. We have spent, it or given it out, right among them. We have not a cent of it.in our treasury. Some $200,- 000,000 of it we pay in freight.charges. Fully $100,000,000 we spend in having a good time abroad, bringing home in ex- j change only pleasant memories. Mil- ; lions more are sent to the old countries j by our prosperous immigrants to those j Inft behind. These millions are gifts j of gold, for which we get. nothing in return. Other millions goto pay divi dends and interest on foreign invest- j mentß. So every dollar of our balance stays right among our customers. It is well ' that both they and we should under- j stand this. He is certainly a magnan- j imous merchant who, after selling 1 goods in a town, spends all that is due him in buying other goods, in sightsee ing, in food and drink and presents to old friends. Uncle Sam is the most fjpnerous, the most magnanimous merchant in the world. Ho not only takes care of his own people, but after selling more goods than any other salesman he buys liberally and then scatters what is due him among his customers. This is ideal reciprocity indeed. Much more than $100,000,000 is being spent by American tourists in Europe every year in pleasures that are consumed on the spot and not brought home. Why, from $5,000,000 to $10,000,000 are given by liberal tourists in tips and gratui ties alone. And besides all this liber ality it is said thai we give these for eign customers an occasional bargain when we can, selling them goods below cost or at an unusual discount, just as the department, stores do at the end of the season. A very prosperous merchant is Uncle Sam. And well he may be, for he is prosperous beyond compare, always busy, fully employed, well paid, used to the best of everything, lots of money in the i ank, well insured and well pro tected in every w ay. And so he is able to welcome each year a million of those who want to enjoy his opportunities, and to these he gives labor and good wages, and soon they. too. help to scat ter his wealth throughout Ihe world. What a pity it would be—what a crime it would be —to alter a tariff with such beneficent results to all man kind. BARKIS IS VERY WILLING. Nothing Slow About Bryan When a Presidential Nomination Is in Sight. Mr. Bryan's felicitous if not alto gethcr novel remarks at the Jefferson ian banquet will be read with interest. Especially do those sentences com mand our admiration in which Mr. Bryan graciously conveys to an await ing world the impression that he will not resort to extremes to escape an other nomination, says the Chicago Post. Many imaginations would be unequal to the feat of constructing a picture of Mr. Bryan bt ing pursued madly around his farm by a committee charged with the duty of throwing a nomination about his neck. There are those, in deed, wiio have believed that he could be approached without danger and even that he would stand while the "honor" was being fastened upon him. There should now no longer be any hesitation over the matter, and a com mittee may be made up to push Mr. Bryan's candidacy in the full assur ance that, lives will not he sacrificed. Mr. Bryan announces that he expects to remain in politics for 25 years, whim places beyond any doubt his Willingness to run for the presidency on tiie democratic ticket, and, as is necessary in that ease, to keep running ] lor a generation or so. it should be noted in this connection that Mr. Bryan is about to start on a trip abroad, where it may be assumed ho will interview prospective citizens, who in the course of the said 25 yiais may be iu a position to support this candidacy. Mi . Bryan's peculiar brand of "dem- Otiacy' has its strong hold among the late arrivals. l-'lf the free-traders think there is a great demand for revision of the tariff why don't they wail until after ihi' next congressional election and see how many congressmen are return u on a free-trade platform?—Salem (Ore.) Statesman. C Mr. Bryan has very few comment* I to ofTer on public affairs. To i el like I uimplimi nting lite administration I 1 plea uiit but Ii hampers originality. Washington Star. u l b de uil of John It McLean, usually of \Va hi - o.i aid . mettmen of ('in innatl, wii t-:< ing to till o for I the purpose of conducting the dcuio | rraiV* campaign wa. unnec -.try. M< i Liiii ioiiducii'l a campaign in Ohio 1 when he believed he might be ele fed 1 govtrnor, and since that time toe state appears to have lout all Interest fur him aHI a political possibility. -I'ltU bur,, lii hi lad.). CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1905. NOT A PRESENT NECESSITY Democratic Counsel Can Bo Dis pensed With by tlae Re publicans. The assumption that the party must now decide whether it will nor will not revise the tariff, aud when revision shall be undertaken, is purely an arbi trary act without authority. The party may not elect to do the bidding of the revisionists, says the Trenton (N. J.) Gazette. The truth is. the matter was passed upon at the last national convention, 'i he national platform does not lea.e any issue to be "compromised." The revisionists sought to have that done, but the convention declined. The attempt to force the issue now i 3 nothing more than a bit of personal politics uixjn the part of certain ambi tious but discontented republicans who hope to profit by promoting factional ism in the party. When the necessity arises congress will revise the tariff. That necessity does not. now exist. To force it is to invite commercial and industrial ca lamity. It is to be conceded the demo cratic leaders do not concur in this view, but the republican party has never taken democratic counsel with advantage. It is difficult to understand why cer tain republican papers are so solicitous to camp on democratic ground. They must know such a course could only wreck the party and place its political opp'onets in power. What has the coun try or the republican party to gain by such a sequence? Every argument for Immediate rev! sion has been threshed over and proven untenable. The country has not forgotten the plea that a protective tariff is a "shelter for monopoly," nor the Cumminsesque statement that "the consumer is more entitled to competi tion than the producer is to protec tion," nor the other ephemeral propo sitions, all borrowed from the demo cratic pandora IH>X. None,of them has been Incorporated in the republican creed by the national conventions, and none will be. The coutnry continues as prosperous as ever under the present policies, and there is no sane reason for the party to shift, its attitude on these questions. The duty of republicans is to main tain their organization intact, avoid ' schism and stand by the national ad ' ministration. FINANCIAL IMPROVEMENT. Democratic Soothsayers All at Sea Regarding the Treasury Condition. With a third of September ended, the government's income for the month iias been $1,200,000 in excess of its out- For the first ten days of Septem ber, 1904, the balance was on the other side to the extent of about $20,000. Expenditures for September thus far have been slightly above those of the corresponding time last year, but the revenue has made a much larger in crease Customs and internal revenue have each made gains in this month, as compared with a year ago, but the receipts from miscellaneous sources have fallen off somewhat, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Some of the democratic papers a week ago were figuring on a treasury deficit of $50,000,000 for the fiscal year which will end on June HO next. They j were saying that the treasury officials, from Secretary Shaw down, were get j ling uneasy over the outlook. The sit uation at. that time did not justify any fears. Since then the situation has Im proved. It is safe to say that neither i .secretary Shaw nor any other treasury i official is feeling the slightest uneasi i ness over the financial prospect. From the beginning of the fiscal year | 1900, which started on July 1. 1905, Ihe deficit lias been $17,000,000. For t the same period a year ago the deficit was $24,000,000. That $24,000,000 of a r.hortgge at the end of the first third of September, 1904, remained unchanged |to tlie close of the fiscal year on June 'iO, 1905. The deficit for the year was | $24,000,000. On the same basis of cal culation the deficit for the year which j will dose at the end of next June wouia be about its present figure. sl7 - | 000,000. It may vary a few millions | irom this amount, but there is as good a chance that it will be below this mark as above it. In any case nobody is alarmed. In September. 1914, poor ; Parkei and some of his associate dupes ; were proclaiming, on the basis of th" | deficit along to that time, that the 1 short ape at the end of the year on I June 30, 1905, would be $150,000,000. llt was $24,000,0'0 instead. The sooth savers who have been foretelling a ! $50,000,000 deficit for the current fiscal year are likely to be nearly as far astray in their forecasts. tt''The time to revise the tariff ia when revision is r®ally needed to pro motet he business, industrial and farm ing Interests of the country. That con dition does not exist now. And re vision may safely come when protec tion is so universally recognized as ihe settled policy of the Fnited States that the democrats, or free-traders, will not make It a party Issue.—Burlington Havvke> e. B The statement that the democrats and prohibitionists have decided upon a fu. lon in Pennsylvania l.s a plain hint that the lid is to l,<- kept Inn eon tunt lute of agitation. St. I.ouis Globe-Democrat. i IT we \vi re 'o adopt the prlnclp.e ihut our tariff must be trimmed down i ) curn spoud with tariff colli < »louu runted by other countrli how, then, | would we deal with Great lirl iln. which Imposes no tariff at all? Hbou.« we not, in nil fulln.- and eoiiH|sten< v, be ( impelled i<> remove our tariff al lui (... .iiipuru Irom Oreat isrlt I iiiu? RAN TOGETHER UN A CURVE A PAY TRAIN AND COMBINATION PASSENGER AND MILK TRAIN COLLIDED. FIVE RAILROADERS WERE KILLED ■ The Accident Occurred on the Reading Railway at Mount Holly Springs, Pa., and Was Probably Caused by a Misunderstanding of Orders. Harrisburg, f'a., Sept. 22.—Five men were killed and eight others seriously injured in a collision between a pay train and a combinat ion passenger and milk train on the Philadelphia, Harris burg & Pittsburg branch of the Phila delphia ic Heading railroad at Polish's curve, at Mount Holly Springs, Thurs- | day afternoon. None of the passen- ' gers was injured. The dead are: Ephriam MeClary, engineer of milk train, of Harrisburg. C. J. Shearer, fireman of milk train, ! Harrisburg. John Hill, fireman of pay train, ' Reading. Edward Lauchs, paymaster's clerk, Reading. Thomas Marion, conductor of pay i train, Pittsville. Hill died on the way to the Harris- ! burg hospital; the others were killed outright. The seriously Injured are: John E. Amole, engineer of pay train, Reading, fractured skull and contusions of back. D. B. Sellers, time keeper, Lebanon, fractured skull. Alfred Hawn, pay clerk, PhiladeK phia, lacerations of shoulder and scalp. Isaac McHose, paymaster, Reading, fractured skull and both arms severe ly crushed. Robert Richwine, trainman, Mount Holly Springs, fatally injured. George O. Davis, train master, Har risburg, injured about arms, legs and face; may be necessary to amputate one foot. The pay train, consisting of a loco motive and one coach, was going west to pay the men along the division. The combination train, composed of a loco motive, combination coach and two passenger coaches, was coming east. The two trains ran together on a curve, which is a sharp one, and is flanked by a heavy clump of trees. Amole jumped from his engine and landed at the foot of a 25-foot, em bankment. MeClary was found on his engine with the whistle cord in his hand, it having been pulled clear off the machine and all the brakes on the train set. The pay car contained about $50,000 in checks, which were scattered about the tracks. The checks were picked up by trainmen and turned over to John W. Wetzel, attorney for the com- ; pany at Carlisle. Officials of the com pany say the accident was probably due to a misunderstanding of orders. PACKERS PAY BIG PENALTY. Officials of a Chicago Firr>- Pleaded Guilty of Accepting Rebates from Railroads and Paid $25,000 Fines. Chicago, Sept. 22. —Four officials of the Sclnvarzschild & Sulzberger Pack ing Co., of Chicago, were fined an ag- ! gregate of $25,000 by Judge Humphrey \ in the United States district court \ here Thursday. The fines followed a plea of guilty to indictments charging | conspiracy to accept railroad rebates. 1 Tlic defendants were: Samuel Weil, j of New York, vice president of the company; P. S. Ousey, traffic man ager; Vance D. Skipworth and Charles E. Todd, assistant traffic manager. Mr. Well was fined SIO,OOO, the other three $5,000 each. With the entering of the plea, the declaration was made that unless at least one of the cases is immediately settled, the life of Samuel Weil, who is vice president of the company and was one of the defendants, is in jeopardy. He is said to be a nervous wreck and fears were entertained for his life if , be had been allowed to continue under j the strain of a trial. The plea was en j tered, it is declared, after a complete understanding had been reached be tween counsel for the defendants and Attorney General Moody. The plf>a made Thursday does not in in any way affect the charge of inter ference will, government witnesses made in a previous indictment return ed against Cusey and" other Schwarzs child t'i Sulzberger men. The fines carried with them a pro vision that the defendants he conflnec in jail until the fines were paid. The fines, however, were paid immediately Max Sulzberger giving his check for the total amount, $25,000. The check, nP . being duly certified, was accept ed as payment of the fines and the de fendants then left the court room. From the books of tin- government It Is shown that to collect evidence nmilnst the four defendants and bring about their Indictment the government spent slfi,ooo. The ensi s against Armour & Co. and others wore continued until next Wed uesday. Dan Patch Mtkes a New Record. Allentown, Pa., S< pt. 22. Dan Patch paced bv two runners, with H. He ey driving, went a mile in 2:<>l ye frdav at t!i< Allentown fair. An li ttr later Han Patch, hitched to a ••oiid wiiviin, pic 1 a mile In 2:«. V The time .! "I madi .tv Han Patch beat' the woii i n pacing record for a half mile irack. A Fa»al Riot. V '< York, Hi f>r. 2.'. One man was Kllhd, a policeman seriously Injur >d and tv>o other pi i 'Hi r hoi in au En«l isiih riot last 'Muht. | ARE ACCUSED OF FRAUD. Officers of the Western Life Indemnity Co. Are Charged with Misappropri ation of the Funds of the Concern. Chicago, Sept. 20. —Charges of fraud, | misapplication of trust funds and at tempts to transfer assets to another concern are made in a suit for a re ceiver and an accounting, filed yester day against present and former of -1 ficials of the Western Life Indemnity j Co., an assessment insurance com- I pany. E. I. Rosenfeld and W. H. Gray, | the latter being the organizer of the association, are prominently mention ed in the bill in connection with al leged fraudulent voting of funds to | themselves. The hill was filed in the United States circuit court by Attorney S. Levinson, representing numerous pol i icy holders. Later Attorney Levinson went before Judge Pethea with a mo tion for the issuance of a restraining order stopping a meeting of officials of the company to hi? held Thursday. The motion met with resistance by the de fendants. Gray is alleged to have secured I proxies from thousands of members and thus controlled the directors. By securing this control, it is alleged, | Gray had passed a resolution voting i him the right, by contract, to draw one j dollar for each SI,OOO in insurance is- I sued. This was done in secret, and although the complaining policy hold | ers recently learned of it they were refused information by Rosenfeld, | Moulton, Gray and others. Besides these many thousands of dollars alleg | ed to have been improperly taken, it is declared, Gray and his associates by other fraudulent means took many | other thousands of dollars from the | concern without the knowledge of the policy holders. The complainants are Allen W. Field, Jesse B. Strode and Addison S. Tibbetts and the defendants beside the insurance company. Rosenfeld and Gray are George M. Moulton, John A. Crawford, L. M. Martin, C. T. Drake, ; I). D. Bramble, A. B. Huston, E. D. Moore and A. N. Hislop. Each of the j defendants are residents of Lincoln, I Neb. The defendant company is the successor of the Knights Templar and i Masonic Life Indemnity Co., organized in 1884, and has more than $20,000,000 in policies outstanding. AN ALLEGED LAND GRAB. Chicago Officials Claim that a Steel Company Has Appropriated Land Worth $4,000,000. Chicago, Sept. 20. —Action to re claim $4,000,000 worth of land which city officials assert has been appro priated by the Illinois Steel Co. at the mouth of the Calumet river, was started yesterday by Commissioner of Public Works Patterson. State's At torney Healy and Corporation Counsel Lewis were asked by Commissioner Patterson to proceed in the courts to recover 200 acres of submerged land which it is alleged the steel corpora tion has added to its property in the past four years by encroaching upon Lake Michigan and the Calumet river. ; The clai.a is made that the title to the lands legally rests in the name of the ' people of the state of Illinois. With the development of the plans I for legal action upon the part of the | state and the city came the suspension j of Richard O'Sullivan Burke, who for ! five years has been the city's harbor ■ engineer. Commissioner Patterson ; charges Burke with "neglect of duty | and inefficiency." Burke is accused of ' having failed to inform the city offic ials regarding the encroachments of I tile steel corporation, and of having I been unfamiliar with the situation, al though it was clearly within his duties. Removed from Office. Washington, Sept. 20. —The depart ment of commerce and labor has is ' sued an order removing Edward Boltz and Charles W. Stevenson. Chinese in spectors in the immigration service. They were charged with assisting in smuggling four Chinamen into the j United States at Buffalo and with ; swearing falsely at the hearing of i these Chinamen, whose cases are now I before the United States commission !er at Buffalo. This is the first time ! since the government has been en j forcing the Chinese exclusion act that an inspector lias been found guilty of such an offense. - Ellis Yarnall Dies. I Philadelphia, Sept 20—Ellis Yar nail, one of the founders of the Union League of Philadelphia, died , here on Tuesday, aged 87 years. | Only two of the founders of the years. Only two of Ihe founders of the Union League are now living. Mr. Yarnall was a member of the delega | tion that went to New York in Janu ary, ISO", to organize the Union i League in that city. He was a nephew ol" Lucretia Matt, tlw famous aboli tionist. During the lvhelliwn he went to England in the interest of the , northern cause. Fireman Killed. Toronto, Out., Sept. 20. —One fire man was killed, another seriously in - 1 jured and two others slightly hurt in a fire that destroyed the Brown flour 1 mills yesterday. Within ten minutes j after the firemen not to work on the I building the main floor collapsed, ! burying four of them. C'apt. Worrell was instantly killed and ('apt. Sargent pro'mbly fatally injured. Firemen Rob ' liison utul Fox were cut and bruised. A National Bank Fails. Wu hingiou, Sept. 2". Announce ment of the closing of the Minot na tli .ial hank, of Minot, N. I)., was in:.do | Tin •■'lav by tin comptroller of the curie: i\. F. It < h'ipman, national i bunk examiner, lias been appointed receiver. It lias deposits of about j sl-l',ll' .1, A Very Fatal Accident Montreal, Qui , Sept. 2", —Three rn< i wcc killed and two fatally lujijr ed > e:.l .Tilav by the collapse of a t'uffold In the new parish church of I 3«. Cut • "tide, u suburb of this city. GOOD BLOOD FOR BAD Rheumatism and Other Blood Dis eases arc Cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. •*ln the lead mines T wits at work on my knees with my elbows pressed against rock walls, in dampness and extremes of cold," said Mr. .T. G. Meukel, of 52975 Jackson avenue, Dubuque, lowa, in de scribing his experience to a reporter, " aii'l it is not surprising that I con tracted rheumatism. For three years I had attacks affecting tbe joints of my ankles, knees and elbows. My ankles and knees becaino so swollen I could scarcely walk 011 uneven ground and a little pressure from a stone under my feet would cause me so much pain that I would nearly sink down. I was often obliged to lie in bed for several days at a time My friends who were similarly troubled were getting no relief from doctors and 1 did not feel encouraged to throw money away for nothing. By chance I read the story of Robert Yates of the Elauer Manufacturing Co., <># Dubuque, who had a very bad case of rheumatism. I decided to try Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills for Pale People, the remedy he had used. In three or four weeks after beginning to use the pills, I was much better and in three months I was well. The swelling of the joints and the tenderness disappeared, I could work steadily and'for eight years I have had no return of the trouble. My whole family believe in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Both my sons use them. We consider them a household remedy that we are sure about." What Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.did for Mr. Meukel they are doing for hundred* of others. Every dose sends galloping through the veins, pure, strong, rich, red Wood that strikes straight at the cause of all ill health. The new blood restores regularity, and braces all the organs for their special tasks. Get the genuine Dr. Williams' Pink Pills at your druggists' or direct from the Dr. Williams Medi* cino Co., Schenectady, N.Y. Don't talre to eating in- M 1 nll fl I ▼a'.ids' food and going w%£ U without the good things of life because constipa tion has disordered your P3a ■ Btomach. Ce'.ery King, sL fw the tonic-laxative, regu- Ip fi gj 1111 lates the bowels and keeps 112! them right. It "Obts 25c. VOTED BY NATURALISTS. Some insects are born, now old, and die in the space of 24 hours. Blizzards and vultures can scent their food at a distance of 40 miles. Silk is produced by more than 200 Insects, though very few of these are of any practical value to mankind. All carnivorous animals lap up wa ter with the tongue. Herbivorous ani mals, as the horse and ox, suck it up. The elephant lias so delicate a sense of smell that it can scent a human being when the latter is 1,000 yard® off. Horses in their wild state live to the age of 36 normally, being still fairly fresh and hearty at that age in the desert. The largest Insect known to ento mologists is a Central American moth, called the Erebus strix, which ex pands its wings from 11 incites to 18 inches. There are at least 112 species of California poppies (Eschschoiizia). ac cording to Dr. E. L. Greene, who haa published a description of them ID the June number of Pittonia. The air bladder of lishes Is the provision within their bodies which enables them to rise or fall in the wa ter. According to the dilation or contraction of the bladder they may regulate the depth in the water at their pleasure. A shark's egg Is one of the oddest looking things imaginable. It is un provided with shell, but the contents are protected by a thick, leathery cov ering almost as elastic as India rub ber. The average size is two inches by two and three-fourths inches, and the color is almost pure black. GET POWER. The Supply Comes from Food. If we get power from food, why not strive to get all the power we can. That is only possible by use of skillfully se lected food that exactly fits the re quirements of the body. Poor fuel makes a poor Are, and a poor tire is not a good steam producer. "From not knowing how to select the right food to fit my needs, 1 suf fered grievously for a long time from stomach troubles," writes a lady from a little town in Missouri. 'lt seemed as if I would never be able to find out the sort of food that was best for me. Hardly anything that I could eat would stay on my stomach. Every attempt gave me heart-burn and tilled my stomach with gas. 1 got thinner and thinner, until I literally became a living skeleton, and in time was compelled to keep to my bed. "A few months ago I was persuaded to try Grape-Nuts food, and It had such pood effect fro n the very begin ning that I hive kept up its use ever Slnre. I was surprised at the ease with which I digested It. It proved to he just what I nc led. All my unpleasant symptoms, tho heart-burn, the inflated t< eHng which gave me a. much pain »1' ipxoared My vei:*ht gradually lner< • .-d fr< m 9# to H«# Ins.. my figure rounded out, my strength care bifk and I am now able to do mv housework and enjov It Th« Grape N it-, food did li " Name given by Postuni Co., Battle Creek. Mich A ten da<H' trial will tihow anyone some facts alMHit food. "There's a reason."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers