2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. y«ar 12 00 If Mid In advance 1 W ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of •ne dollar per square for one insertion and fifty MDta per square for each subsequent insertion Rates by the year, or for six or three months, •ra low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legul and Omctal Advertising per square, three times or less. »2; each subsequent inser tion M) cents per square. Local notices lo centa per line for one lnser •ertlon: 6 cents per line for each subsequent •onsecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per tine. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. *5 per year; •rer live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising No local inserted for lesi than 75 cents per Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pmcss is complete •nd Hffurds facilities for doinif the best cltss of Work. Pahticulab attention paidto Law Puntino. No paper will be discontinued ntll arrear age* are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. Planted now on the eastern coast of China are Russia, Japan, Germany, Eng land and France. It is a new sort of hap py family and beats the concert of Eu rope for possibilities. Speaking of German Rhine wine, the New York Tribune says: "A good deal of stuff is sold here under the name of Rhine wine which would eat the lin ing out of a blast furnace in about 20 minutes." A party of American argonauts who went to Venezuela have returned with the report that they "struck some gold, but mighty little of it." Many a Klon dike pilgrim will come back with a similar story. The concert of Europe has vanished everywhere except on the coast of China, where the musicians are play ing solos in discordant keys. But the harmonic effects are no worse than they were in Greece. A Yale professor says "poetry has failed of its mission when its language, like that of diplomacy, is used to con ceal thought." But perhaps it is dif ferent when, after a diligent examina tion, no thought is found. Capt. Isaj' undoubtedly means well, and further than that he undoubtedly tells the truth, but Uncle Sam might as well make up his mind that nothing is evident from the report of the United States government's representa tive in Alaska that the gold region is in the had condition of a new country without law. This is dangerous because of the temptations which covetousness offers to violence, and because of the lack of ample sustenance for life. HOW SILVER MEN STAND. ir'lTortn to llrliiK Alxinl a Single Sil ver Simula rn. Since the silver resolution has been passed by the senate anil beaten in the house, it seems in order to ask its ad vocates what they have guined They have not disturbed the money markets i;or alarmed public feeling in regard to the condition of the treasury. They have made no progress toward bank rupting the govew'jiuent or forcing it to a silver basis. They have not shown greater strength in the senate than was expected, and in the house they have fallen much behind their expectations. The solid resistance of the republican majority in that body shows a much firmer adhesion to the principles of the republican platform than any of the silver men anticipated. What has been gained in this latest campaign against the gold standard? Nothing in votes, and much less than nothing in argu ment, for the debate in the senate left the silver men in a less defensible posi tion than they have ever before occu pied. There is no indication of increase in the popular demand for silver coinage. On the contrary the prevailing temper in all business centers, even at the west and south, has been steadily turning against the advocates of that policy. The monetary conference at Indianap olis showed a much stronger support from lowa and other western states than appeared a year ago, and even from the south there came abler and more fully representative delegations from commercial cities. The truth is that the silver men are concentrating the opinion of the whole commercial world against them, and they do not appear to be gaining outside of com mercial centers. Neither the farmers, who want something better than 40- eent dollars for their wheat, nor the wage-earners, who prefer honest dol lars for their wages, are leaning toward the free-silver policy. In the western mining camps it retains its hold, but everywhere else it appears to be losing. This is natural, because the silver in terest has broken away from its bi metallic associations. The light of the silver men has in large measure ceased to be an effort for bimetallism, and has become more openly an effort for sil ver monometallism. It is no longer denied, even in debate in the senate, that the purpose is to bring about pay ment ot debts in silver, without regard to its depreciation in value. Not long ago it was always claimed by silver men that they desired no debasement of the monetary standard, and believed that free-silver coinage would lift sil ver to par with gold in the world's mar kets. That pretense has been almost wholly abandoned, and instead there appears the claim that the 40-cent dol lar may be properly paid to creditors because coin, and not gold coin, was nominated in the bond. Efforts for international bimetallism are greatly embarrassed by this new attitude of the silver forces. It can no longer be claimed that they are seek ing a union of commercial nations on a bimetallic basis. Instead they are visibly leaning toward abandonment of every such effort, and toward prefer ence for a silver monetary standard alone. It is already plain, too, that this change in the attitude of silver men has its influence upon the tone of public opinion. Many thousand men who were earnestly in favor of bimetallism have found themselves altogether hos tile to the more recent attitude of the silver men, because they are com pelled to realize that the efTort of the silver party is no longer for bimetal lism. but for silver monometallism.— N. Y. Tribune. OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. silverites have found out that McKinley believes in honest money, despite their blandishments. —Toledo Wade. cy President McKinley, amid the jingoes and the juntas and the De Louies, keeps the calm way of rig-lit. Jt takes a grtat deal of courage to do that much.—lowa State Kegister. Bryan admits that he needs the support of populists and silver re publicans. The lirst, however, have flocked by themselves, and the latter are non-existent. —St. Louis Globe- Democrat. t>"Altgeld has just arisen and an nounced that he has not repudiated free silver. This is a sad disappoint ment to many people who had begun to hope that iu o.'.ilition to keeping quiet All geld was uecumulating knowledge. —Cleveland Leader. IC7A democratic paper complains that "Great Britain, France and Ger many are responding to American tar iff restrictions on their goods by set ling up their textile plants in America." This is supposed to work a hardship by introducing foreign capital and labor, a new kind of free trade argument, but not much worse than the others. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat. ICTTIie president and the republican party have taken a decided stand be fore the country, that of keeping every dollar of its currency equivalent to gold. The democratic party naturally opposes this polisy. as it does all repub lican policies, upholds the semi-flat theory of the free coinage of silver, and appears to be preparing to adopt the theory of pure fiatism in the issuance by the government of unlimited and irredeemable paper currency.—Cincin nati Commercial Tribune. democratic bourbons, learn ing nothing and forgetting nothing, have patched the rent banner of free silver and nailed it again to their flag pole. No flag that is not starred and striped like the national ensign can wave over public property in these United States of America. So' the rag must come dtwn, and every election from now on must help to bring it down. The democratic party has forced the issue. The challenge is accepted. The banner of degradation must be made a degraded banner.—Trov Times. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY,' MARCH 3, 1898. PROTECTION TRIUMPHANT. It li Trapliing Furrlßn Manufn<-111 r«-r» u Seeded l.riwiiii. The culminating triumph of the sys tem of protective tariffs applied to American industries is that it haa taught the old world that low wages do not of necessity insure low cost of pro duction. It is simple truth that the manufacturer of iron and steel poods in the United States pays from 30 to 80, or even 100, per cent, more for his labor than his European rival, and that, though he has to haul his raw materia* ten times as far from the mine to the furnace and shop, he produces a better article at a lower cost. In its beginning protection increased the cost of some articles to the American consumer, but this was during a short stage of com mercial existence. Protection stimu lated output, and stimulation of output involved fierce competition for posses sion of the home market, and that re sulted in low prices. At last the AtiTer iean output has exceeded all possible demands of the home market, and for eign trade has become a necessity. To the astonishment of Europe it is proved that goods made by men who earn from $1.50 to $1 per day can be sold as cheap ly as those produced at a labor cost of from $1 to $3. America is teaching Eu rope a lesson in sociology. The low-paid laborer of Europe often is a tool rather than a mechanic. He works as he was taught to work by his father. He improves upon nothing; he discovers nothing. He eats, he sleeps, he works; he does not think. The bet ter paid artisan of America is better educated, more ambitious and infinite ly more inventive. He is paid far more than the European, and he lives upon a far more liberal scale, but he produces far more and of better quality, al though he works fewer hours in each day. The European plan has worked to the degradation of the workman, the American method has worked to his betterment. Thus we now are able to produce pig iron at from two to three dollars per ton less cost than rules in England, and this saving pays ocean freight and leaves a margin of profit on foreign sales. We are selling steel rails to London, and covering the roads of Europe with American bicycles, and are putting American sewing machines into European shops and houses. We are furnishing Japan, China, Australia and British Africa with steam war ships, locomotives, electrical appli ances, and all materials of railway plants. It is, paradoxical as it may seem, to the high wages that our protective sys tem fostered that our success in foreign trade is due. Competition for possession of the largest and most profitable home market of the world stimulated inven tion, and the intelligent ambition of our artisans made thein specialists nnd inventors. Protection insured us a home market, arid commercial activity in that wide area lias strengthened the arms of our commerce and manufac tures till they have become able to, reach out for and 1o grasp a large and increasing share ot the trade of the world.—Chicago Inter Ocean. PAY IN GOLD COIN. Hxtract from nil Addrenn Delivered by Ex-CJov. Ilontwell. Ex-Oov. Hontwell, who is now 80 3'ears old, in an address a few days ago, spoke in part as follows concerning gold, silver and bonds: "As early as 1809, in my first annual re port to eonpress, I recommended what be came substantially the act of July. IV7O, for the reissue of bonds, under which act all the bonds issued have been passed or issued. "fn that act It was provided that the bonds of the United States should be pay able in coin of the then present weight and fineness. "The question whether they should be paid In silver or in gold was not the sub ject of consideration. In 1569 and 1870 the silver in a silver dollar—if one could have been found, which ir fact was then im possible—outvalued the gold which was In a gold dollar. "Therefore, there was no reason for dis tinguishing that they should be paid in silver, but as a matter of fact they were made payable in coin,' and technically and legally, perhaps, it must be admitted that they who oppose the payment of these bonds in gold have some foundation on which to stand ar.d therefore we may as well admit the fact. "Now It happens that In these 30 years silver has been depreciating until upon the present value a silver dollar Is worth only 43 cents in gold. What Is our an swer to this? "X think it must be that we mean to be an honest people; that this catastrophe upon silver has come wihout any agency upon our part, whatever they may say. The real culprit—the man who is respon sible for all this apparent and real disor der in the commercial world—is a man who lived in the city of Pittsburgh, Charles Hurlelgh, who invented the power drill by which mountains have been penetrated, the bowels of the earth have been laid open and silver extracted in vast quan tities such as could not have been com manded if wo had had at our service the men who built the pyramids of Egypt or the Coliseum of Rome. "Now, are the American people to take advantage of this contract, or are they to say, to be sure the word 'coin' Is used In the bond, but we would do what we would have done by us. We have taken your gold, we will pay gold. And I know in Massachusetts—this Massachusetts of ours —that In the peril of the war, when the light of day was like the darkness of n'.ght, Massachusetts paid the interest on her bond.sin gold, and the gold that went out of the treasury sold in the markets of the world for 150 and lfiO and 180 per cent, premium, and no man whose face 1 have teen or of whose observations I have heard ever complained that an act of superlative honesty in one critical time would not tend to plant a similar honesty in the other. "Now let us goto the country and say: No matter what is in these bonds it Is coin, but we will pay in gold coin. It shall not rest upon this great country with close to 100,000,C00 population, with resources such as no other country has ever seen, resources of which no half crazed enthusiast ever dreamed—that thi9 country of ours with centuries of a future shall carry down to coming ages the taint that in those days of prosperity she sought to shirk from the performance of an hon est duty." (C Horace Boies says that within 15 years the banks will hold the purse strings of the nation. Well, if Uncle Horace and his friends arc not stopped the strings will be about the only thing in the purse worth holding.—Chicago Times-llerald. THEY DIE IN THE STREETS Tlkkihjiiklm of People In MatariKan I'roilnce IVrisli from Starvation. Santiago tie Cuba, Feb. 24.—While the I'nited States cruiser Montgomery was at Matanzas recently a board of officers was appointed to inquire into the condition of the people eif that province. The report sets forth that there are 14.000 people absolutely with out food and cle»tliing within the city limits. About 8,000 of these live in small huts of palm branches. These? huts form three separate villages be yond the built tip portions of the city. The other 11.000 unfortunates live in the streets of the city anel are abso lutely without homes or shelter. These 14,000 pe>oplc are of the labor ing' class who have been elriven inte> the cities from their country homes, which have been destroyed in the war operations. Most of them are women anel children anel they are all emaci ated, sick and almost beyonel relief un less they can have the benefit of regu lar treatment in the hospitals. As it is, they are elying in the streets for want of fooel. AetM»reling to statistics gathered from official sources the number e>f de'aths in the province e>f Matan/.as from star vation is 50,000 anel the number of starving people at present in the prov ince is estimateel at 98,000, e>ut of a total peculation of 358,61 (Sin December, 1891, and the number of starving people is rapidly increasing. In the city of Matanzas alone there have been about 11,000 eleaths during the past year and the number is in creasing daily. The death rate at pres ent averages 4'! per day. CHANGES IN THE MAP. Kx-Henator lugallH Sa.VN Tliey are About to Come a» a Hesult of a tieneral Con flict. Atlanta, Ga., Feb. 24. —Ex-Senator Je>hn J. In pal Is, of Kansas, believes that a general upheaval is near, when the map of the entire earth anel fron tiers of nations will undergo a change "I believe we are on the brink ot tht most tremendous explosiejn that has been known in the world's history," he said in an interview Tuesday night. '■There is a universal crisis at hand. There are many causes which contrib ute te> this crisis—the gigantic arma ment of the European powers; the ter ritorial encroachment of the rival pew ers in the Orient and in Africa; the war of the laboring masses against their own ce>ndition and the accumula tion of wealth by the other class. "All are prepared for a conflict. 1 can't but believe that a struggle for the readjustment ejf fre»ntiers is ne>t far off. We will ceime out of it all right, I feel certain, and I believe that civiliza tion will be aelvanced, but it will work a change in the map of the world." WAS NOT AN ACCIDENT. Evidence that Shown the KxploHlon in Ha vaim Harbor whk the Work of Spaniard*. Havana, Feb. 34. The situation, which may be changed any moment by fresh eliscoveries, may be summed up as follows; The elivers having elisee>v ereel cases of brown hexagonal powder for the ten-inch guns unexploded, and believing also that others unexploeled will be found in the ten-inch magazine on the starboard siele forward, the con viction grows that this magazine diel not blow up. If this be se> conviction is forced that the explosion which wrecked the Maine came from the out siele e>n the port bow. American officials here are confident thatn board anel will be landed in Cuba. Two Spanish spies, detailed to locate the expedition that left i'ascagoula last week, were bound and taken on boarel the tug and laneled in Cuba, prisoners to Gen. Gomez. The feeling against spies is so great that any one proved to be a Spanish agent will be in danger e>f violent handling. Kumoreri I„ohh of (iold Seeker**. New York, Feb. 24. —There is a pe>s sibility that the bark Agate, which sailed from here last week, bounel tc the Yukon river, may have been wrecked. The Agate carried 40 men who were going to the Klondike, in addition tei the crew of 10 men. The steamship Kingslanel, which has ar riveel here from South Aiderieun ports, when 20 miles southeast of Barnegat fell in with a quantity of wreckage marked "Agate." Hart lteiteutenccd. Philadelphia, Feb. 24.—John D. nart, president of the Hart Steamship Co.. was yesterday sentenced to the eastern penitentiary to serve the sentence im posed upon him a year ag'o by Judge Butler. Hart was at that time con victed of nieling a Cuban filibustering expedition on the steamer Laurada anel was sentenceel to an imprisonment ol two years and to pay a line of SSOO and the costs of the trial. A Itattle with a Maniac. Chicago, Feb. 24. —Charles Konneck er, a traveling man of New Orleans, and formerly a commission merchant eif that city, was yesterday elcelared insane and sent to the detention hos pital. Konnecker became -ie>lent at the Auditorium hotel anel attempted to kill himself. After a terrific struggle with five policemen, the man was strapped to a chair. Konnecker ele clareel he was Hex, king eif the Mardi (Jras, anel that a conspiracy existed to kill him. He also insisteel that he owneet all the wheat in the world, and has more money than Monte Crista ever had. THE ILL-FATED MAINE. Description of tho Battleship De stroyed in Havana Harbor. Regarded '>>' Expert* n« One of the Muit Effective Wnrnlilpw in the l\tt) —Her tout EMlmnted at f2,SUO,UOO. The Maine was regarded as one of the most effective vessels in the American r.avy. In speaking of her just after she was putin commission a naval officer said that she "is not a cruiser, but a fighting ship, a floating fort. She is meant strictly for business." The keel of the Mnine was laiel in the Brooklyn navy yard, in October, 1888. The dimensions of the hull were: Length over all, 324 feet 4% inches; at water line, 310 feet; breadth of beam, 57 feet; mean draught, 21'/i feet; dis placement, 0,048 tons. A sail area was allowed of 7,135 sejuare feet, to be used barejue-rig. Work progressed slowly, for a plant had to be built up. The vessel, without armor anel fittings, was launched No vember 19, 1890, in the presence of a great crowd anel with much ceremony, her sponsor being Miss Alice Tracy Wilmerding, granddaughter of Secre tary Tracy, then at the head of the navy department. Her official trial took place in October, 1894. The Maine was a twin-screw, armored turret vessel of the belted cruiser type, that is, having an armor belt to protect the vitals of the ship, even though the other parts of the construction should be riddled with shot. The Maine hael fe>r protection against an opponent's projectiles an armor belt 12 inches thick, tapering to seven inches below the water line. The ends were unprotected by side armor, but at both ends there were transverse armor bulk hends of sufficient thickness to deflect nny projectiles that might reach so far. A curving steel deck protected the en gines and boilers. The barbette armor "-as 12 inches in thickness and the tur- BATTIJESHIP MAINE. (Blown Up in Havana Harbor on thr Evening of Feb. 15.) ret armor plates were eight incliea thick. As a fighter the Maine was a formid able ship. Her main battery consisted of four 10-inch breech-loaeling rifles in the two turrets and six C-inch brcecli loatling rifles. The secondary battery consisteel of four 57-millimeter anel four 47-milliineter rapid-fire guns, four 47- millimctcr revolving cannon nnel four Catlings. There were also three tor pcelo tubes below water and four on the berth deck. Two torpedo boats CI feet long, elrawing 2'/ 2 feet, e>f 14 2-3 tons displacement, were- part of the equipment. The turrets containing the 10-incli guns were arranged en echelon, so that all four eoulel be trained elirectly ahead or astern, with a range arc of 240 de grees. This arrangement of guns was most effectual in the case of the Jap anese fleet at the battle of the Yalu river. The G-inch rifles were planned to be worked by hand, anel were pro tected by steel shields two inches thick. The weight of a broadside of the Maine would have been 2,700 pounds, exclusive of the%eco:idary battery. The Maine had eight steel horizontal boileVs, vertical inverted cylinder elirect acting triple expansion twin screw en gines of 9,000 indicated horse power. She carried 822 tons of coal, with which she could steam 2,770 knots at 14.9 knots an hour, or 7,000 knots at 10 knots itn hour. She has a double bot tom and numerous water-tight com partments. The full complement of men carried by the Maine when she was putin commission was 306, besides the officers anel 40 marines. The Maine, though of a type of con struction vastly improved upon.wasone of the best vessels of America's new navy. She cost, all told, $2,500,000. Sagar Cane In Nutrition*. It has been remarked that the ne groes in sugar-cane regions depend to a considerable extent upon the juice of the cane for nourishment. By the use of Mosso's crgograph, I)r. Barley founel that sugar promoted muscular power wonderfully. On a fasting day it in creased his ability to work 01 to 76 per cent. Taking ordinary meals, he found that eight and three-fourths ounces per day increased his work capacity 22 to 30 per cent. In these days, when ath letes are so much inclined to use special stimulants for immediate preparation for their contests, it might be interest ing to try sugar as a substitute for the possibly injurious preparations some times in vogue. TVaa n t'nlon Ofllcer. Col. Emil Frey, formerly president of the Swiss republic, and for five years Swiss minister to Washington, is at present elirector in chief of the interna tional telegraph system of Europe. He fought in the union army eluring the civil war anel was for a time a prisoner In Libhy prison. MAVOIt OF COLCMDt'9. lb* Cxecntlve of the Cnpltal Clt 112 ofi Ohio Sipraki. ' ' HON. SAM IKL L. 11l ACK Executive Department, > City of Columbus. 112 To Whom Tt May Concern; I can most cheerfully recommend Pe-ru na as of the very greatest possible benefit, in cases of catarrh and other diseases of the mucous membrane. This remedy has estab lished itself in the minds of the people as of the greatest possible worth and genuineness. I have known Dr. Hartman for a number of years and am pleased to say that he is one of the leading c itizens of this city, a man of the very highest standing and character in the community. Respectfully, Samuel L. Black. The old saying that "a prophet is not with out honor save in his own country," does not hold true of Dr. Hartman's great catarrh remedy— Pe-ru-na. Pe-ru-na is in great re pute, riot only in the city of Columbus, where it is made, but in the county and the State. The city officials, county officials, state of ficials of Ohio have given Pe-ru-na the high est endorsements that words could eonvev. It is the greatest known catarrh remedy, lit cures catarrh wherever located. Send for a copy of the National Witness, which is filled with home testimony concerning Pe-ru-na as a catarrh remedy. Address The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing Company, Columbus, Ohio. _ lilnqnli 11 tied. "Oh, yes, Miss Birdling is a cultivated singer, hut she will never pass for a great artist, you know." "And why not, pray?" "Because she can sing in nothing but Eng lish." "Oh, dear! Is that so?" "Yes, and it is abominably good English, too. You can understand every word she says."—Philadelphia Bulletin. STATE OF OHIO, CITT OF TOLEDO, 1 „ LLCAS COUNTT. { ' Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that saia firm will pay the sum of One Hundred Dol lars for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th dav of December, A. D. ISSfi. A. W. OLKASON, [Seal] Notary Public. llall'sCatarrhCure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the svstem. Send for testimonials, free. F. ,T. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. No Room to Tarn. "Did you ever turn over a new leaf the first of the year?" "Gracious! no; we live in a flat."—De troit Free Press. Ask Yonr Friends Abont It. Your distressing cough can be cured. We know it because Kemp's Balsam within the past few years has cured so many coughs and colds in this community. Its remarkable sale has been won entirely by its genuine merit. Ask some friend who has used it what he thinks of Kemp's Balsam. There's no medicine so pure, none so effective. Large bottles, 25 cents and 50 cents. Sample bot tle free. The Iluck-11l ter. "The back-biter," remarked the observer of men and things, "is usually somebody who has been frustrated in the attempt to get white meat off the breast."—Detroit, Jour nal. News for the Wheelmen. The League of American Wheelmen num bers nearly 2,000 below the 100,000 mark within the last few weeks. In spite of this startling diminution, the maximum of health may be attained by those who use the comforting and thorough tonic, Hostet ter's Stomach Hitters, which promotes di gestion, a healthy flow of bile, regularity of the bowels, and counteracts kidney trouble. It is, moreover, a remedy for and preventive of malaria and rheumatism. Almonds and Smllax. A good deal is said and written about society, but all there is to it is salted al monds and smilax.—Atchison Globe. To Core n Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. There are people who think it is a big thing to play no cards but whist.—Washing ton Democrat. ConKhine Lt'ttilN to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. (Jo to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Large bottles, 50 cents and SI.OO. Uo at once: delays are dangerous. However sad a man may feel, he loses his look of sadness when eating a good dinner. —Atchison Globe. Actors, Vocalists, Public Speakers praise Hal e's Honey of Horeliound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. You can tell a good deal about a man by the kind of team he drives.—Washington Democrat. When did you arrive—not to know St. Jacobs Oil will cure a sprain right off. It is astonishing how many people criticise things they know nothing about. —Washing- ton Democrat. Disability is made ability to work from The cure of Lumbago by St. Jacobs Oil. Love —A game the result of which is often a tie. —Chicago Daily News. It is a knock-out when St. Jacobs Oil cures Sciatica promptly. A writing teacher never knows anything about grammar.—-Washington Democrat. Very Painful Could Not Move without Croat Suf fering— Hoed's Curod. "My shoulders and arms wero very pain ful with rheumatism so that I could hardly move them without great suffering. I have taken four bottles of Hood's Sarsa parilla and now find myself free from rheumatism." MRS. MART A. TCCK.BR, 454 Ninth St., Red Wing, Minn. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. II; six tor |fc Hood's Pills cure sick headache. Uo.