2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. Per year ®J Xf paid tn advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisement!* are published at the rate of •ae dollar per square for one insertion and fifty IUM 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. L«gal and Official Advertising per square, tbree times or less. t2: each subsequent inser tion cents per square. Local notices 10 cents per line for one lnser •ertlon: 5 cents per line for each subsequent tousecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be inserted free. Harness cards. Ave lines or less. »5 per year; •ver live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local Inserted for less than 7o cents per laaue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PKKSS IS complete and affords facilities for doinf the best class of work. PAKUCUUU ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW P«ZNTINU. No paper will b« discontinued ntll arrear- Kes are paid, except at the option of the pub her. w . Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. Women in France have just secured a slight addition to their legal rights. They may henceforth be valid witnesses to registration of births, marriages, and deaths, and to the signatures in legal documents. The Charlotte Smith who wants to have Boston girls enlist for the Cuban war is the same person/ who desired to have marriage made compulsory. Chat lotte ought to b».< put under bonds to keep the peaee. Prof. James E. Keeler, who has just been elected director of the Lick ob servatory to succeed I'rof. Edward S. Holderi, was the discoverer of the fact that the rings of Saturn are composed of small satellites. A gun tested near Washington recent ly threw a shell over ten miles, which means that a hostile ship would be tin der fire for 20 miles in passing a bat tery. Such target practice will make it interesting for the ship. Candles, candles everywhere. That is the lighting custom in Sweden, where one firm turns out for home use an nually about 23,000,000 of candles of all sizes, from two to seven feet in length. In the larger cities electricity has been introduced to a limited extent, but among the people candles are as much as ever a necessary household conven ience. An official declaration as to what a "torpedo boat destroyer" is would re lieve the uncertainty in the minds of many persons who are unable to decide whether a torpedo boat destrojer is a boat that destroys other boats by means of torpedoes, a tiling that destroys tor peric boats, a torpedo boat that destroys anything, or simply a torpedo that de stroys boats. When the men of science get squarely down to business they will doubtless be able to show that the human family mainly lives on bacteria and the mi crobe family. A London professor has just solemnly announced that "the aver age human being consumes 30,000 mi crobes daily." The chances are that he has been doing that ever since Adam was in the (iarden of Eden. A little girl in a New York school screamed at the sight of a mouse. The children became panic-stricken and rushed screaming out of the room, the teacher ordered a fire drill, a lire alarm was rung in, distracted parents fought to enter the building and save their children from the supposed flames. And all for one small mouse. Hash is the man that dares to laugh at the feminine fear of a mouse! Though 30 years have passed since Maximilian was shot in Mexico his brother, the emperor of Austria, al ways holds memorial services on June 19, the anniversary of that tragic event. At the castle of Miramar, near Trieste on the Adriatic, the rooms occupied b Archduke Maximilian before leaving for the new world are kept, by the em peror's orders, just as his brother left them when he went to his death. So much interest is at present being manifested in the United States army and navy that the relative rank of olli cers in the two branches of service is herewith given, lineal rank only being considered: General with admiral, lieutenant general with vice admiral, major general with rear admiral, brig adier general with commodore, colonel villi captain, lieutenant colonel with commander,major with lieutenant com inandcr, captain with lieutenant, first lieutenant with lieutenant (junior grade), second lieutenant with ensign. The attorney-general of Colorado has furnished an opinion that there is no law for women in that state dropping their maiden name on the simple ex cuse of a wedding. The question call ing for the decision came from a woman notary public who was recently mar ried. She asked under what name she should continue to exist officially, anil was gratified with the announcement that she must sign all documents as be fore marriage, for, the attorney-general nays, "there is no authority for a change of name at marriage or any other time." 11. O. Weaver, of the United States commission of fish and fisheries, has sent a report to Wisconsin fishermen on the fisheries of Lakes Michigan, Huron and Krie. lie says that the herring catch of Lake Michigan for the Inst year was over 22,000.000 pounds. This great ly exceeds the production of any pre vious year covered by the commission's reports, and lor the first time in the history of the great lakes surpasses the herring catch on Lake Uric, where tin yield was slightly under 20,000,00t ! pounds. The trout catch has been light the past season. THE POWEROF CREDIT Sound Money Essential to American Enterprise. decretory (inKo Dhcourneii 1 IIOD the I* rime 11 <* —\o ( linniec of Stn inln ril. The chamber of commerce of Pitts burgh g-ave its annual banquet Satur day. March 11*. at which Lyman J. secretary of the national treasury, was present as the pfiiest of honor and prin cipal speaker. In his speech Mr. (iag*e touched upon the many questions as follows: "Should a visitor from some alien planet, where the conditions of life did not require that man should eat his bread in the sweat of his brow, come to our country; should he here obtain a vantage ground where his eye could command its whole extent ; could he thus observe the detailed movement of multiplied human activities, he would, if an intelligent and reasoning being, find oc casion for both wonder and reflection, lie would see everywhere, men toiling in the field, in the shop and in the factory. He would see trains of cars being loaded with the product of the forest, the mine, the fac tory, and the farm, or speeding away to discharge at some distant point their enormous burdens. In short, he would find our land a hive of industry. "If this visitor were a reasoning being he would want to know how all this enor mous exchange of labor for products ar.d products for labor was accomplished. If he asked one of our inhabitants this question —even one of more than average intelli gence -the prompt answer would probably be: 'Why, money does it. All these things are exchanged for money, and money i<* ex changed for all these things. Everybody wants money, because it will buy all these things, and everybody wants more or less of these things, and money will buy them; therefore everybody wants money.' "Money is rot the main active agent that operates to accomplish this enormous vol ume of production and exchange. It is true that all exchanges are effected in terms of money, but the real operating ag< nt is cred it and the instruments which embody or represent it. I'ower of Credit. "Tt is my purpose to emphasize the su perior power of credit in the affairs of men, and to consider briefly those influences which hinder or help its action. There is in sight in our country a volume of money— gold and silver alone considered, all forms of paper money themselves being credit in struments—something like $1,0(K),000,000, but in fairly prosperous times, like the present, the volume of credits, operating in pro ductivity and exchange, is equal to at least $15,000,000,000. If we can picture it as a stream or a river, we can fairly say the rise and fall of this stream registers indus trial expansion or contraction. It is fed— this energizing stream—not from physical waters coming down from snowclad moun tains. Its sources are in the minds of men. "It is not a misuse of language to say, credit, with its multiform instruments, is the real money of commerce. As transac tions increase, it increases; as industry halts, its volume is reduced. It is created as transfers of goods and wares take place. It expires or is canceled in final settlements through the bank or the clearing-house. It is always sufficient to itself. "Whatever disturbs these general faiths nr.fi confidences unsettles commerce and disturbs industry. I'nhapplly, the disturb ing influences are numerous, and by their interposition from time to time, suffering and ruin result. Wars, the fears of war, crop failures, widespread industrial re volts, shocks arising from the betrayal of (Treat fiduciary duties—these are some of the adverse influences But none of these, nor several of them associated, are as harmful as are the doubts and fears which arise from the apprehension of a radical change in the money standard, to which all commodities and all credits stand final ly related. llnslH of lloi-trliir. "And yet we find a great party, in blind disregard of this fact, placing, as a founda tion stone to their political doctrine, a proposition charged with the most destri#- tive consequences to our commercial and industrial life. This proposition is urged upon the people with a fanatic zeal which would inspire admiration if enlisted in a useful or noble cause. But it is a zeal born out of nonreason, stimulated by prejudice and fed by j>assion. "The farmer must employ labor, and yet carry the risk of droughts and floods and take his chance of the markets for his ulti mate realization. The manufacturer must embark his fortune in his buildings and ma chines. Tie must employ labor and provide for its payment. The merchant is subject to the same general rules of action. The banker's relation—not less important—is perhaps more delicate and more Involved than either of the others. Popularly sup posed to be a dealer in money, he is so only in an incidental and necessary way. He is really a dealer in credit. "And yet it Is against these that the poet ical leaders of discontent fulminate their burning denunciations. They claim that the money standard, to which for 00 years our industrial affairs have been related, is an opnression and a hindrance to prosper ity. They charge that its maintenance is the result of a conspiracy born of 'insati able sordid greed.' They seek to push our industrial social fabric from the good foundation of the world's money onto the shifting, uncertain sands of an obsolete sil verism. Ern of Progress. "In spite of the unsettling influence of their doctrines, which have again and again alarmed the forces that make fr>r progress, which have more than once sfnt capital into hiding, crippled industry, and sent, labor into idleness, the evidences are everywhere that we are In a state of progress, net decadence. I.et me cite a few of the evidences: Within 2"> years (accord ing to them, the period of our decline) our population has increased <",2 per cent. Wealth has increased in a ratio three times as great as the population. That the dis tribution of increased wealth has been gen eral is proved by the savings hanks, the number of whose depositors and their ag gregated accumulations having grown ratable with the increase of wealth. "Our foreign commerce—now well onto 12.000,(100,000—has increased in its ratio to population. During these 2f> years the for eign commerce of Great Britain increased 13 per cent., that of the United States 51 per cent. Compared with Mexico, the idyl lic land of the silverite, our export trade has increased IIS per cert., against an in crease in Mexico of 27 percent. "What of our domestic affairs? Our rall hoads have increased in mileage from 70,- 000 in lS7:i to nearly 200,000 miles in IVP7, with a reduction In ccst of freight carriage of (in per cent. The mileage of telegraph lines has, during the same period, increased from 154.000 miles to over £OO,OOO miles, with an average reduction in message toll of 40 per cent. The production of raw iron has Increased from less than 2,000,000 tons per annum to about 12,000,000 tons; coal, from 47,000,000 tons to 180,000,000 tons: petroleum, from 0,000,000 barrels to 00,000,000 barrels. I'ulley of Wisdom. "Bo not the most common prudential considerations dictate adhesion to a money standard which has been contemporaneous with this great progress, if not an efficient factor therein? Benton and Jackson, more than 00 years ago, argued its superiority, and by their efforts the gold standard came into practical use with us. Are we who seek to preserve the good they seeured to be condemned by their alleged followers? "Second only in importance to a sound currency is a banking system adequate or CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1898. capable of s< lf-adjustment to the public needs. "Can we not barn useful lessons from others? Is thr experience of the world to lie despised? Can Ihe stern decrees carried by the laws of our economic life be suc cessfully cliallf njred? Can they bo rescind ed or reprab >1 by the wild impulses of the Inconsiderate? "In a free social state the individual man is clothed with the power and responsibility of self-direction. His well-being depends upon bis ability to comprehend and his willingness to obey the physical ami moral laws with which nature has environed him. In a government like our own a similar power of self-direction exists. It is a high privilege and carries with it groat responsi bilities. Like the individual man, the na tion's well-being depends upon its ability to discern and obey the economic and moral laws which environ it." PROFESSOR MOMMSEN. I'ecnllurltlea of the Great German Scholar. Many of the stories about the extreme absent-mindedness of some unnamed German professor ha;l their origin in tales actually told —perhaps with not much care in verification —of Prof. The odor Mommsen, of Berlin, a great Ger man historical scholar and liberal poli tician. Although the lierr professor recently passed his eightieth birthday, he is said to be still in the height of his product iveness, active and energetic, a writer, a teacher and a causeur. He adopts the axiom of Goethe, which is not popular with most old men: "When a man is old he must do more than when he is young." He is certainly no more absent minded in his old age than he was when he was younger. He has a family of ten living children and several grand children, and has always been fond of them all and not averse to taking care of them; but woe to any infant of whom he might have charge if his mind be came seized by scholarly preoccupa tions! It is related that when his first child was a baby it was in his charge one day in his study. Wishing to make some in quiry from his library, he deposited the baby in the waste basket and forgot all about it; but presently the baby began to cry loudly. At last the sound disturbed even the absent-minded student,whose thoughts were, and remained, on his study. Con scious only of a loud noise, he seized a quantity of loose papers and carefully covered the child with them to muffle the sound! On another occasion—so the story goes—Prof. Mommsen was going in a street car from Berlin to Charlotten burg, taking with him his little son. By and by the boy began to wriggle about and make a great deal of noise. By this time his father was meditating profoundly. The boy's racket soon dis turbed his meditations. It seemed to the professor that it must be an ex tremely ill-bred child that would make a disturbance in a public place; he would see if he could not quiet him; but first he would find out who he was. "Little boy," he said, sharply, "what is your name?" Naturally the small boy thought it strange to be asked his name by his own father, but he responded, politely: "The same as yours, sir." "The same as mine!" The professor's attention was now aroused by this ap peal to his ego, and the spell was broken. He took up his progeny, to the tremendous amusement of the people in the car. and gave him a good shaking. —Youth's Companion. NOBLEMAN AND FRONTIERSMAN The tirenteßt II uu t liivr Expedition on Itecord. Sir George Gore, a wealthy Irish sportsman, began in 1855 a hunting ex pedition among the Rocky mountains which occupied two years and exceeded anything of the kind ever seen on this continent. The outfit consisted of 50 persons, including secretaries, a stew ard, cooks, flymakers, dog tenders, serv ants, a train of .'lO wagons and numer ous saddle horses and dogs. "Old Jim Bridger" was Sir George's guide and interpreter, and no man on the frontier knew the glens and passes of the mountains so accurately as he did. Though illiterate and as uncon ventional as an Indian, Bridger was honest, kind, generous and shrewd— just the man to attract, the Irish sports man. In his "Old Santa Fe Trail" Col. In man describes the companionship of the two men —one a rich, educated, whole-souled Irish nobleman, the other a man who from boyhood had lived on the plains, depending on his tact and rifle for food and life. Sir George would lie in bed until ten o'clock in the morning: then he took a bath, ate his breakfast and set out generally alone for the day's hunt. It was not unusual for him to remain out until ten at night, and he seldom re turned without "meat." Hisdinnerwas then served, to which he extended an invitation to Hridger. After the meal was over Sir George was in the habit of reading from some book and drawing out from liridgerliis ideas about the author. The Irishman usually read from Shakespeare, which Hridger "reckin'd was too highfalutin" for him. "Tliet thar big Dutchman, Mr. Full stuff," he commented, "was a leetle too fond of lager beer." Sir George read the "Adventures of Baron Munchausen'' to Hridger, whore marked that "he be dog-goned ef he swallowed everything that thar baron said." He thought he was "a liar," vet acknowledged that some of his own ad ventures among the Blackfeet would be equally wonderful "if writ down in a book." Hridger thought Sir George a success ful hunter, an opinion justified by the records of the two-years' hunt 4O grizzly hears. 2,f>"o buffalo, numerous antelope and other small game.— Youth's Companion lilvalM. Perdita —We have discovered that we are rivals, you know. Tom Barrry—Ah, you both love the same fellow? "Oh, no —but the satn° fellow loves both of us."- Ainslee's Magazine. ADMIRABLE CONFIDENCE. The announcement of the Pope Manti facturing Company last week that they guaranteed to maintain list prices on Columbia, Hartford and Vedette bi cycles, as published in their 1898 cata logue during the season ending October Ist, had a clarifying effect upon the trade atmosphere, and relieved the feel ing of uncertainty and anxiety that had existed for some time, among l>oth buy ers and sellers, as nothing else could have done. That a company which holds undis puted leadership as regards financial strength, the amount of capital invest ed, size of their plant, and the quantity and quality of their product, should at the very beginning of the season pub licly proclaim their confidence in the outlook for the year's business and their belief that a discerning public would demand and be willing to pay for the best product of the cycle builder'* art, is a fact that has given the trade cause for self-congratulation through out the land, and will have a tendency to put to rout the pessimists w ho have been rushing into print with state ments to the effect that no one knew where the bottom of the eyoie market was. The public has had experience with these calamity howlers, and will not let the Spring slip by, with its beautiful days and fragrant air, waiting for low prices that can never come on the best wheels. The bicycle has become a staple article of commerce; to the vast majority of cyclists, a necessity, not a luxury. Just as there is a demand for jeans pants, shoddy made clothing, brogan shoes and calico dresses, there will also be a limited market for cheap and poorly made bicycles. But the great middle class of American citizens, who can afford meat three times a day, and sugar in their coffee, those in the higher walks of life, and the leisure class, will look below the enamel of bi cycles before purchasing. To these, quality will appeal as strongly as price, and they will only buy bicycles made by manufacturers whose reputation, facili ties and business methods give stability to their guarantees. Coming from the Pope Manufactur ing Company, this unequivocal agree ment to maintain list prices on their 'DB product throughout the season, probably carries more weight than it would from any other source. By 21 years of fair dealing, the Pope Manufac turing Company have gained the full confidence of the riding public. The public has come to understand that this Company never acts rashly or unadvis edly, that th*7 carefully weigh th« •'pros and cons" of anv step before tak ing it, but once having adopted a policy they have the ability and inclination to carry it out to the letter. Thinking cyclists will therefore,conclude that the Pope Manufacturing Company must have p.mple and substantial assuranca that there is a healthy demand for high grade bicycles built of the best mate rial and manufactured carefully and correctly as to mechanical detail, by the most modern and improved machinery and well paid labor. When it is known that rip to March Ist, the Pope Manufacturing Company have shipped to their customers, over 3,000 Columbia Hevel Gear Chainless bicycles, this conclusion becomes a cer tainty. THE INGENIOUS MAN. Ilia Invention Wan Forgotten In '11m» of Need. He wan a very ingenious man. lie had made an invention which was of great value. He thought so, at least, if the world did not, and he had his invention patented. It was a combination camp-stool, cane and um brella. The cane was the usual form of the invention. At a big parade nothing could be more convenient, and for an ordinary, unex pected rainstorm, what could be better? A man is sure to have his walking stick with him. It was not so very long after the invention had been perfected that the man was out walking with his wife, and a sudden shower came up. There were no cars accessible, and the only thing to do was to run, and the unlucky pair did this with a vengeance, reaching the house hot, uncomfortable, ana prettv wet. "Well, we are here at last," said the man, drawing a long breath of relief. "Yes, said the wife, disconsolately, "but I think I have ruined my new bonnet. And, John Smith," she added, suddenly with a little scream, "what do you think you have done? You had that old invention of yours cane-camp-stool-umbrella affair—in your hand all the time ready for an emergency, and forgot to use it." The man tells the story, and thinks it ia a great joke.—N. Y. Times. EE MEANT WELL. Itut Ills CnrcU'nanriia Got Illm Into Trouble with Ills Girl. A young gentleman, whose gallantry wat largely in excess of his jiccuniary means, sought to remedy this defect and save the money required for the purchase of expensive flowers by arranging with a gardener to let him have a bouquet from time to time in re turn for his cast-off clothes. It thus happened one day that he received a bunch of the most beautiful roses, which be at once sent off to his lady love. In t-ure anticipation of a friendly welcome he called at the house of the lady the same evening and was not a little surprised at the frosty reception he met with. "You sent me a note to-day," the young ladjr remarked, after a pause, in the most frigid tones. I—a note?" he inquired, in blank aston ishment. "Certainly: along with some flowers. "To be sure I sent you some flowers." "And there was a note inside—do you still mean to deny it?" With these words she handed the dum founded swain a scrap of paper, on which the following words were written: "Don't for get the old trousers you promised me the other day."—Tit-Bits. Kougli! Klondike Soubrettq—Say, I'm getting tired of diing my dance here, on gold dust every night. Haven't you any sand? Stage Manager—Sorry, Maude, but it's all gone. Did hev a big box lull, but ther boys used it for chasers after swallowing frozen whisky. N Y Journal She Took H;m Up. lie —I will love you through time and eternity. (live mo hope. She—All right, come around again in a couplo of thousand years.—N. ¥ World, A STEER'S STRANGE DEATH. His Horm Grew Through His and Killed Him. A squatter in the back blocks of New- South Wales had a young steer with horns so perfectly turned that they formed two artistic loops at the sides of his head. One day "Boss" straved with a mob of store cattle into a piece of wild country infested only by kan garoos and the out-station boundary riders' families. These cattle are rounded up and otherwise handled but once a year. Before this annual yarding took place "Boss" had become a fractious terror to every animal and man in that range. He had terrified and scattered the herd that was once his mates; he had charged madly every kind person who was wont to pat him. Because his horns curled like those of a sheep he was called "Sheep Head." His mild, tractable nature added to this delusion of likening him to a lamb. Six months after his entrance upon the range he began to act strangely. A wild look shot out of his eye under the points of the ingrowing horns, whose shadow fell heavier and heavier upon the re tina. He constantly shook his head, as if trying to rid himself of some annoy ance. Then "Boss" would stand and stare at the points which were pressing the pupils nearly up against the sock ets. lie became more irritable and un friendly. He roared, stamped, shook his crazed head and stared at the creep ing things before his vision. At lust "Boss" went mad and bel lowed through the night like an en raged demon. He chased everything in sight, and viciously dashed himself against the forest trees. The mere tramp of a foot angered him. The points of the horns were cruelly press ing his helpless eyes back in their sock ets, and every jar upon the ground tortured his brain and enraged him. "Boss" had scattered the mob of his ruminating mates and had so terror ized the few people about that fences did not give a sense of security. Women and children lived in mortal dread of the unfortunate beast. At length his maddened roar was heard no more. About a month after that the out-boundary rider went out with dogs and a Winchester rifle to end the suffering of "Sheep Head Boss." After searching for two days the bul lock was found. "Boss" was dead. He was lying under a clump of acacia, less sweet than their blossoms. He had evidently been dead for a week or more and had been blind for months. The horns had grown into the eyes and al most touched the bone of the skull be hind. The head of the poor beast was as strange an object as ever was seen. The horns of "Boss" were never curved by any art. They grew as na ture directed their fatal tips, and, un less sent to the Royal College of Veteri nary Surgeons, England, the preserved head still hangs upon the door of the Darling out-station, where "Boss" lived and died. —Washington Star. Whenever we hear the women talk ir>- dignantly because another woman is spoiling her husband, we hunt him up to uougiutu ite him.—Atchison Globe. Success is a swinging door; it tins no knob, nrul you ran only get on the other side by having "push."—Detroit Free Press. Dixon—"l don't believe young Shortleigh is half as extravagant as pronto say he is." Hixon —"Perhaps not, but I've noticed that he bus a suit of clothes for every day in the week." Dixon—"ls that so? Why, he al ways had the same suit on every time I met him." Hixon —"Well, that's the one." — Chicago News. At the Play.—Kippax—"You serm very much affected at the tragic fate of Juliet, Miss SnifFon: I thought I saw tears in your eyes." Miss Sniffen— "Yes, Mr. Kippax, it dors seem so sad to think that the lady who played Juliet is not really dead!"—Truth. Diggs—"lTanks doesn't seem to have any pity for the unfortunates of this great city." l'iggs—"From what do you judge that?" Diggs—"l saw him put a 40-page Sunday paper into the slot of the hospital box."— Harlem Life. There is not plenty of room at the top; and it takes an acrobat to stick on after he gets there.—Detroit Free Press. The Duelists' Danger.—"We'll sthandbaek ter back, count tin, walk sivin stitis, thin tur-rn roun' and foire." "Thot's all roight cnuff, Doolin, but whot guaranty hov Oi yer. won't kick me when me back's turned?" —Life. "That man Williams never lost his head in a football game yet, did he?" "No, I think not. He s lost an ear, part of his nose, eight teeth; but I do not remember ever hearing of his losing his head."—Tit-Bits. Mrs. A.—"l think your husband is a very quiet dresser." Mrs. B.—"H'm! You might change your opinion if you hoard him looking for his clothes some mornings."— Browning, King & Co.'s Monthly. Another Question. —"He has a bright fu ture ahead of him." "But do von really think he'll ever catch up with it?'*—Puck. Some people are so slow that thev irritate other people to po too fast and fall over board.—Detroit l'ree Press. A DOCTOR'S DIRECTIONS. They save a daughter from blindness. VT hen a father writes that yours •• is the best medicine in the world." you can allow something lor seeming extrava gance in the statement if you know that the medicine so praised, cured a loved daughter of disease and restored to her the eyesight nearly lost. The best med icine in the world "for you is the medicine that cures you. There can't be anything better. No medicine can do more than cure. That is why John S. Goode, of Orrick, Mo., writes in these strong terms: •' Dr. Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the best med icine in the world. My daughter had a relapse after the measles, due to taking cold. She was nearly blind.and was obliged to remain in a dark room all the time. The doctors could give her no relief; one of them directed me to give her Ayer's Barsaparilla. Two bottles cured her com pletely." The thousands of testimonials to the value of Dr. Ayer's Sarsaparilla repeat over and over again, in one form or another the expression: "The doctors gave her no relief; one of them directed me to give her Dr. Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Two bottles completely cured her." It is a common experience »o try Dr. Ayer's Sarsaparilla as a last rcacxt. It ii GAINED 22 POUNDS IN 5 WEEKS From the By-Btander, Macomb, 111. Alderman Louis W. Cainp, of our city, hag quite astonished his friends of late, by a re markable gain in weight, lie lias gained 22 pounds in live weeks. Those of his friends who do not know the facts of his sickness will read with interest the following: "1 was broken down in health and utterly miserable," said Mr. Camp to our reporter. "1 was unable to work much of the time and so badly afflicted with a form of stomach trouble tbut life was a veritable nightmare. "1 tried various remedies, but during the mix months of rny sickness I obtained no relief. 1 had always been a robust, healthy man and sickness bore heavily upon me. "About two years ago 1 was advised to try Dr. Williams' I'ink Fills for i'ale J'eople. I purchased one box and received so much benefit that I used five more and was en tirely cured. I gained twenty-two pounds in five weeks. Since 1 stopped taking the pills I have scarcely had an ache or pain. Interviewing the AMerman. "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills restored me t» health, and 1 most heartily recommend them." L. W. Camp on oath says that the fore going statement is true. W. W. MELOAN, Notary Public. Following is the physician's certificate a» to Mr. Camp's present condition: I am a regularly licensed physician of Macomb, McDonough County, 111. I have very recently examined Mr. tW. Camp as to his general physical condition, and find the same to be all that could be desired, appetite and digestion good, sleeps well, and has r.'il the evidences of being in a good physical condition. SAM'L RUSSELL, M. P. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 30th dav of September, 1807. W. W. MELOAN, Notary Public. A REALLY INTELLIGENT JURY. The Verdict Wna In Accordance wltli the Evidence. "It was the funniest thing I ever saw in a courtroom," laughed the veteran of the bar, who was enjoying an informal smoker with his brethren. "I was in the new west then, trying to get a gouU start. One of the resi dents had mysteriously disappeared, and his wife was arrested under a suspicion that she might be responsible for the fact. I defend ed her. "On the stand she was simply irrepressi ble. I only got to ask her one question. That was more than plenty. She talked precisely as though she were wound up and could not stop until the mainspring was completely relaxed. In the midst of her tirade she was interrupted by an inquiry by one of the jurors. " 'Who are you talkin' to. Bill Spripgins,' she shouted. 'I don't 'low no cattle like you to be quizzin' me. Ef you don't know how to treat your betters, I'll learn you, you pin-headed coyote. Ef my husband was here he'd perferate you mighty quick, and I know it. But I kin take care of myself ef I am a lone woman. I'm here to tell what I know, and Fm coin' to do it if it spills blood.' "There was no staying her deluge of words and the judge was at last driven by sheer desperation to tell the jury to retire and do the best it could with the facts in its posses sion. "When the jury came back Bill Spriggins, SK foreman, stood un. to give the verdict. 'We find,' he said, 'that this here man Meekham has diserpeared at the han's of some persing or persings unknown. We find further that we are unanermous in surspect in' as how he mighter been talked to neath by his said wife.' It took the sheriff and all his deputies to hold her."—Detroit Free Press. NOT AN ART ELEVATOR. One Girl Who Wn« Satisfied to Paint I'lctures. The art student shook her head in whim sical protest. She has lust eonie back from six years' study in the Paris studios, where she had the reputation of being a talented, conscientious and ambitious worker. "I am glad to be at home again," she said; "but everybody takes things so seri ously over here. At least the girl art stu dents do. They haven't the pluck to get down at the bottom and dig away on first principles in a way that every Frenchman thinks perfectly natural : but they are awful lv busy with ideals. They belong to clubs for elevating all sorts of things. I've been buttonholed on every corner by people who want me to join clubs. The day 1 got into my studio pome of my old friends came to see me, girls I had worked with before I went abroad. They all looked deadly seri ous, and of them struck a Curtius-dedicating his-life to-his-country pose and said sol emnly: " 'Margaret, we need you. You must help us elevate American art.' "I just tucked a pillow behind my head and said: 'l'll be hanged if I do. I'm going to paint pictures.' "They are terribly disappointed in me. T don't breakfast until ten. I can't do honest hard work, with my best force, on less than ten hours' sleep, and so I take it; but it stems nobody can elevate art and sleep in the mornings. I'm willing to give up my swell studio and go over on Tenth avenue to live in one room and work as I please rather than paint things 1 don't believe in because they would sell; but I'm using what nerve force I have on my work, and so the girls think I am unregenerate. Club me up clubs. My club is a maul stick." —N. V. How many petitions have you signed without knowing what they were all about? —Rural New Yorker. a common experience to have Dr. Ayer'« barsaparilla prescribed by a physician. It is a common experience to see a " com plete cure" follow the use of a few bottles of this great blood purifying medicine. Because, it is a specific for all forms of blood disease. If a disease has its origin in bad or impure blood. Dr. Ayer's Sars aparila, acting directly on the blood, re moving its impurities and giving to it vitalizing energy, will promptly eradicate the disease. The great feature of Dr. Ayer's Sarsapa rilla is the radical cures that result from its use. Many medicines only suppress disease—they push the pimples down under the skin, they paint the complexion with subtle arsenica 1 compounds, but the disease rages iti the veins like a pent-up fire, and .~»ome day breaks out in a vol canic eruption that eats tip the body. Ayer's Sarsaparilla goes to the root. It makes the fountain clear and the waters are clean. It makes the root good ar.d the fruit is good. It gives Nature the elements she needs to build up the broken down constitution—not to brace it up with stimulants or patch it up on the surface. Send for I>'. Aver's Curebook. and lenrn more about the cures effected bv thi» remedy. Ji's sent free, on reuuest. bv the J* C. Ayer Co.. l,uwcll, Mass.