2 CAMERON CODNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. far yea r *2 "J ll t*" 1° advance ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of •ae dollar per square for one insertion and fifty testa per square for each subsequent Insertion- Rates by the year, or for six or three month*, •re low and uniform, and will be furuished oo application. Legal and Official Advertising 1 per square, Btree8 tree times or less. t2: each subsequent inser •n M) cents per square. Local notices 10 cents per line for one lnser •ertlon: 6 cents per line for each subsequent sonsecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over Ave lines 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar rlaees anil deaths will be inserted free Buslne.ss cards, Ave linea or less. »S per year; •ver five lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Phms Is complete •ud affi.rds facilities for dolnir the best cl&ss o( Work. PAIWICLI.AB ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW PHINTINO. No paper will be discontinued ntll arrear- Res arc paid, except At the option of the pub her- Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor In advance. Men and women who bad tli»- pood fortune to lie schoolmates of (leorge Dewey are making the fact known wherever a newspaper is printed in the English language. That o'.d Vermont sehoolhouse must have been an im mense structure, or else young Dewey spent the first 25 years of his life in ac cumulating schoolmates. The mayor of Fogia, Italy, recently granted a public: holiday to the villagers of the old town in honor oft he baptism of the chilren of a Signora Itosa Znrlo. who has presented her husband with four sons, all born on tiie same day, and who are to be called Dante, Pet rarch, Tasso and Ariosto, after the lour great Dalian poets. The large number of rejections of vol unteers lias caused much comment in the army medical corps. However, the physicians who have conducted the ex aminations say that outside of the ranks' of cigarette smokers there are even fewer rejections than there were ju the days of the civil war. Among habitual users of the cigarette the re jections are about 90 per cent. Admiral Dewey entered the naval academy at Annapolis in 1854. As u young ensign lie was in the service of the United States during the civil war and was part of the naval operations at Mobile and New Orleans. Hut he had to wait 44 years for the great opportunity which caine to him recently. He was at the time of the battle a commodore, but l.e was in fact an acting rear admiral. A correspondent having asked where are all tlie girl violinists who started out in the profession with such high promises ten years ago, the Chatterer of the Doston Herald replies: "Well, we don't know where all of them are, but t.he best one.shave married, and the fiddle and bow tei-4 in the IlarkneHM of a Tropical Region —Cap*. CslaHd Telia of the llattleghlp't I/OiiK V »yagc. Key West, May 27.—The battleship Oregon arrived here Thursday, ('apt. Clark and other officers of the Oregon came ashore and reported all well on board and the ship in good condition. The Oregon picked up the cruiser Marietta and the dynamite cruiser N'ictheroy between Kio Janeiro and Baliia, but parted company with them after a few hundred miles. Alarming rumors met the Oregon at every port. At Bio Janeiro her crew heard a report that dynamite had been found in the coal, and at Callao the officers were informed that plans had b ">n discovered to blow up the ship. All these reports proved groundless. During the entire trip the crew ex pected to meet the Spanish. Only onve, however, was there a call to arms. This was shortly after midnight on leaving iiio Janeiro. As the Oregon was plowing through the sea, a dark object was discovered ahead. The call to quarters was sounded, the men rolled out of their berths with the en thusiasm of boys on a circus day.and every gun was manned. The Oregon left her course, and circled around her black pursuer, only to find it a harm less bark instead of a Spanish warship. Back to their berths crept the men with mutteringsof disgust. At Kio Janeiro, ("apt. Clark was told that the Spanish torpedo boat Teme rario was following him. This report gave new interest to the trip for a day and a night, but at the next port of call he was informed that the Teme rario had gone into dry dock at Kio Janeiro after the departure of the Ore gon. The cruise through the straits of Magellan was interesting, it was at this far southern point of the Ameri can hemisphere that the crew expected to receive a visit from the Spaniards, in many places the channel is very narrow and crooked, with hidden bays and coves, and, back of them, moun tains tower into the clouds on either side. Moreover they were in the land af icy winter. The Oregon's 25 officers and her crew •jf 450 seamen were well and happy when the battleship cast anchor off Sand Key lighthouse yesterday. The Oregon is in first class shape and ready for another cruise as long as the one just ended. AN UNPATRIOTIC LETTER. Officers of the CnlverKHl Peace Ciilon Con dole with the Queen Kcjjeiit and Sagasta Hccause of the War. Philadelphia, May 27.—There was an outburst of popular indignation here Thursday, caused by the discovery that the I'niversal Peace union, which is permitted by the city to occupy rooms in Independence hall free, had for warded to the queen of Spain a letter expressing sympathy. The letter, which is signed by Alfred 11. Love, president, is dated Independence hall, Philadelphia, April 21, 1S!»S. and is ad dressed to the queen regent of Spain and Senor Sagasta, premier, Madrid, Spain, it says: "It is in our hearts to say, as the Universal Peace union, representing many thousands of friends of peace in all parts of the world, and from the United States, that we have appreci ated your many concessions in this Cuban trouble in behalf of peace, and we want you to hear from the people, the real representatives of the Ameri can heart, that we believe all that is desired could be obtained by peace ful means. "O, how you would elevate your na tion. What a contribution to this age of intelligence if you could send a message to America. Our hearts are full of sympathy for you, in your no doubt embarrassed position, but the right will sustain you. Our country would receive you if your people rebel in your efforts to avail of any opening to still avert war, and meet the de mands of humanity, freedom and peace.'' When this unpatriotic utterance was placed in the mails it was sent back from Washington to President Love, the postal authorities refusing to trans mit it. President Love, however, in formed a reporter that he had outwit ted the government and forwarded it in "a roundabout way." It was in the room of this society that the Spanish flag was discovered hanging in the center of the room. The flag was taken down after a newspaper reporter had called the attention of the author ities to it. THEY DESERVED DEFEAT. Captain of a Spanish CrtilKer D-stroyed lit Says Montejo's Fleet was In a Disgraceful Condition. Hong Kong, May 27.—Capt. Concha, of the Spanish cruiser Don Juan de Austria, destroyed at the battle of Manila, says that the Spanish com manders were quite aware that fight ing v/as hopeless, but were forced to it by the state of public opinion at Manila, lie and other officers wished to steam out of the harbor to meet the Americans, but Admiral Montejo forbade that move. (.'apt. Concha says the Spanish fleet was in a disgraceful condition. The engines of the cruiser Don Antonio ■le Ulloa were broken; the C'astilla was leaking and needed engines to keep the water under: the Don Juan de Aus tria had only two guns that could bo tired; the Marques Del Duero hail only one gun: while the Isla de Cuba and the Isla de Luzon had only their decks protected. Train ItnlilierN Kill Three Men. Albuquerque, X. M., May 27.—Under Sheriff Frank Vigil, Deputy Sheriff Bustamente and an Indian trailer were killed Wednesday by the two despera does who held up the Santa Fe passen ger train last Tuesday. The two offi cers with a number of Pueblo Indian trailers had surrounded the camp of the robbers on Alamosa creek. (15 miles west of Helen. When the robbers were ordered to surrender they opened tire with Winchester rifles with deadly effect. One of the robbers is thought to have been wounded, but both es caped. Vitalize Yc jr Bl )d Overcome That Tired Feeling. Get a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla and begin to take it TODAY, and realize the great good It is sure to do you. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. A ll druggists. " THIS IS A t 'HOT» ONET ~ Lake Crystal, Minn., July 31st, 1897. April sth, 1892, my little boy, just four years old, was terribly scalded by falling backward into a pail full of boiling water. He fell into it in such a manner that he re mained doubled up until his mother, who was in the next room, could come to his res sue. In tearing his clothing from him, the skin and flesh came off in strips, and the mother's hands were badly burned. The skin came off his body from above the middle of the back to below the calves of his legs. The burn was deep and the case desperate. For two months he was under the care of our family physician. We then took him to St. Paul and acting under his alvice called in one of the leading surgeons of the city, who took the case in charge. Other physicians were called in consultation; sixty pieces of skin were grafted at one time, yet notwithstand ing all the skill of the doctors and the most unremitting care, two months afterwards all hope had been given up. For months he had lain on pillows with his face down and suffered terribly. He had no appetite and could retain nothing on his stomach. The sores were indolent and for two months had lain perfectly dormant. My attention was then called to Allen's Ulcerine Salve, and in desperation, ready to try any thing that promised help, we commenced its use. Results were apparent at once. It at once aroused the sores to action and stimu lated a healthy discharge. We kept the boy's strength up with a preparation of beef's blood and wine, and in about two months he was well on the road to recovery, and we were able to remove him back to our home. Thirteen months from the time he was injured he was perfectly restored. It has been over four years since the cure was effected and the boy is perfectly well and remarkably strong and active. I believe that Allen's Ulcerine Salve saved his life, as when we commenced its use all hopes had been given up, and blood poisoning was ex pected to set in any moment. It was four months after he was burned before we be gan to use the Salve. Signed, H. E. WOODS, Traveling Agent for C. Gotzian & Co., Wholesale Boots & Shoes, St. Paul, Minn. Sworn to before ais this 31st day of July, 1897. (Signed.) W. P. COBB, Justice of the Peace. Sold by all Druggists. Price, 25c. and 50c. per bottle. Prepared by J. P. ALLEN Medicine Co., St. Paul. Minn. Ulcerine Salve is a sure cure for all kinds of ulcers and sores. Also best preparation for Boils, Carbuncles, Piles, Salt Rheum, P.urns, Cuts and fresh wounds. Be wise— keep it in the house. There are few sermons neither too long nor too short.—Rain's Horn. | A perfect type of the \ i highest order of ! ♦ excellence. * jWaMatottsl ! Breakfast I 1 @coa | ABSOLUTELY PURE. J ♦ Delicious—Nutritious. t | COSTS LESS THAN ONE CENT A CUP. | X Be sure you get the genuine article £ ♦ made at Dorchester, Mass.* by ♦ 1 WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. t ESTABLISHED ITBO. X |TryQraSn=G! it | Try Graf n=OI it X Ask you Grocer to-day to show yon J J 9 a package of GRAIN-O, tho new food < * a drink that takes the place o£ coffee. J [ J Tho children may drink it without J * C injury as well as tho adult. All who < * $ try it, like it. GRAIN-0 has that J t $ rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, ' * ♦ but it is made from pure grains, and ' I ft the most delicate stomach receives it « [ 9 without distress. | the price of coffee. ° r cents and 25 cents per package. * ► $ Sold by all grocers. J J % Tastes like Coffee J J 5 Looks like Coffee «► A Insist that yocr procer glvei you GRAIN'-O it ♦ Accep. no imitation. < h