Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, October 27, 1898, Page 2, Image 2
2 CAMERON CODNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. CILYU »ia T»nc»:: 2 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements sre published at the rate ot ••• Jollar per square (or one Insertion and fifty •eats per square (or each subsequentlnsertlon Rates by the year, or (or six or three months, •re low and uniform, and wIU be furnished on ••plication. L.e».il and Official Advertising per equare, ftkreo times or less, 12: eaoh subsequent tlen :>o rents per square. Local notices 10 cent* per line (or one tnser 9«rtlnn: & cents per line for each subsequent ••Bseeutlve Insertion. Obituary notices orer flre lines, 10 cents per Bsc Simple announcements of births, mar riacen and deaths will lie Inserted free. Butlness cards, Are lines or less. »5 per year: •▼er hre lines, at tha regular rates of adver tising No local Inserted (or less than 75 cents per laaua. JOB PRINTING. The Job department o( the PB*SS is complete •ad aff'Tds facilities (or doing the best class o( *rork. PAHUCCLAH ATTENTION PAIBTU L.AW ■>HINTIHO. No paper will be discontinued ntll arrear- Kies are paid, except at the option ef the pub sher. Pspers sent out of the county must be paid (or In advance. CURRENT TOPICS. JAPANESE children are taught to write with both hands. ON an average the letters received for the lierman imperor number 000 a day. IT is stated that 1,000.000 bonnets •were sold in London during one week recently. THE University Press at Oxford has appliances for printing in 150 different languages. CASIIMKRE shawls are made of the hair of a diminutive goat found in Little Tibet. FIFTY pounds (5250) a year is devoted to dusting books in the library of the house of lords. GKX. MAXIMO GOMKZ has grown a beard, which he now wears in the style of Napoleon 111. VIKNXA policemen are required to understand telegraphy and to be able to swin and row a boat. ACCORDING to census taken by the Elaine bureau of statistics there are 1,577,252 hens in that state. No married man in Vienna is al lowed togo up in a balloon without the formal consent of his wife and children. ONE of the most eminent scientists has lately succeeded in taking no 112 w er than 2,01)0 photographs entirely in darkness. FOR the iiide of a full-grown giraffe, greatly sought after in Africa for whip and sandai making, the native hunters get from £:> to £5. L'XCI.K SASI is now maintaining 147 well-quipped boarding schools for In dians. There is an average daily at tendance of '.24,000. Anon' 100 years ago the use of starch for stiffening the frills round the neck was considered highly reprehensible, if not positively sinful. IT is said that the rubber tires on a carriage add 25 per cent, to the dura bility of the vehicle and decrease the cost of repairs 50 per cent. I.N a rt cently discovered Roman tomb the f-keleton of a woman was found which had a complete set of false teeth, beautifully wrought in pure gold. THERE are quite 100 roads of one kind and another over the Pyrenees between France and Spain, but only three of these are passable for car riages. A JAPANESE admiral receives, by a recent ordinance, 0.000 silver dollars a year; a vice admiral 4,000. while first class cantains get 2.499 and 2,20u re spectively. Two towns in Kansas. Lost Springs and Romana, have not an idle man or boy, or an unoccupied house, or a dog. Each town has a population of about 200. THE total length of the streets, avenues, boulevards, bridges, quays and thoroughfares of Paris is set down at about (100 miles, of which 200 are planted with trees. AI.MA SEGER, of Wichita, Kas., a pretty schoolteacher, was bitten by an ant on the face the other day. She went insane in a few hours and died shortly afterwards. '1 HE income of the emperor of Rus sia for one day is £5,000, that of the sultan of Turkey £;J,600, while the president of the United States only gets about £2O a day. LAST year the United States covern inent's profits on money orders amount ed to SBOO.OOO. When the system first went into force, in 1805, the govern ment lost 87.000. IN a ton of Dead sea water there are 187 pounds of .sait; Red sea, 93; Medi terranean. 85; Atlantic. 81; English channel, 72; Black sea, 20; IJaltic, 18, and Cas iau sea, 11. FROZEN milk is no longer a novelty in Europe. Milk is taken when fresh and frozen in bricks of different sizes and sold by size. The milk is said to be more hygenic than liquid milk. IT would be difficult to imagine more extraordinary digestive powers than those of the hyena. One of these beasts has been known to swallow six large bones whole without crushing them. AUSTRALIAN savages eat the green ants raw. They stamp upon an ant hill until the ants run up their legs, when they scrape them off as fast a.' they come up and transfer them to their mouths. THE 15 surviving members of the Washington Artillery, mustered into service in 1800 at Newport, Ivy., and never mustered out, will present claims to the state for 8185,050 for o0 years' service. A MOVING staircase will be a novel feature of the l'aris exhibition. It will consist of an endless belt in per petual motion, upon which it will be necessary to sten to be transported from floor to floor. MAII. is delivered in the I'hiiippin about a month after it is posted in the United States. The time depends on connections, especially at Ilony Kong, SIXTEEN TO ONE A MENACE. A Itrpetitlon of thr Silver Asllsdos In lUOO Will llurl the Whole Country. The free and unlimited coinage of 46 cents' worth of silver into dollars and the free and unlimited coinage of lies designed to bring upon the military organization of the country the con tempt of Europe are the issues which the democratic leaders of Indiana are making most- prominent. The leaders differ as to which of these issues is the most potential, but many of them believe with Altgeld, Teller and Sen ator Allen, of Nebraska, that sixteen to one is the better hope of the part}*. There is no possible excuse in the situation to thrust the silver mine owners' job before the people after its repudiation in 1890, when that re pudiation was followed by a revival of confidence and a marked improve ment of industry anil business through out the country. In 1890 there might have been a possible excuse for an hon est man being deceived by the claims and predictions of the Bryans and the "Coin" Harveys. They asserted that labor would have less and less employ ment, and that the prices of farm products would decline to a lower fig ure than ever known if the gold stand ard should be continued. The gold standard has been continued; tens and tens of thousands of people have found employment w ho were idle when Mr. Bryan was haranguing the coun try in 1596, and millions of dollars more are paid as wages. For year* the farmers have not received so good prices for all their products as during the years 1897 and 1898. The Bryan orators told us that con tinuing the gold standard would nar row the volume of money, make it scarce and advance the rates of inter est. The volume of available money was never so large as it li«s been Mince 1890, and the rates of interest were never so low. During the last year western banks have been carrying larger deposits than ever before in their history. This Is particularly true of the banks in such states as Kansas. Banks in western citiesi have had s*> much money that some of them have been discounting eastern paper. This marked improvement in regard lo the volume and ease of the money market began with the defeat of the silver agitation in November, 18'.i0. The improvement of business began as soon as the free and unlimited coin age of silver was no longer a menacii. And yet. with the good results of the defeat of the free silver proposition in IS9O, reckless politicians who now dominate the democratic party in 111 is and other western states insist on making the free coinage of silver the paramount issue in the campaign. In the east every democratic convention in states which the democrats have carried whenever they have elected a president bus hadi the good sense to ignore the sixteen to one issue. There Is every reason to believe that demo crats in Indiana who are businessmen would have the silver question ignored, but such men have no influence in the party councils. Those who will take time to con sider the matter must see that a repe tition of the silver agitation of 1890 in 1900 will destroy confidence in busi ness circles and paralyze industry. If that agitation should be as. aggressive and as formidable as it was in 1890 business will be paralyzed as it was then, arid thousands of men now fully employed will be idle. Whether the country shall have a repetition of the Bryan campaign of 1890 depends large ly upon the results of the elections in the western states this fall. With sixteen to one ignored in the- east by the democrats of New York, Connecti cut. New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and the defeat of the silver democrats in Indiana and other western states, the silver question cannot be made a menace to the industry and business of the country during 1900 ns it was iu 1890. Such being the situation, why should not all those whose welfare depends upon business confidence act in regard to this matter as they do respecting ol her mat ters affecting their interest Men employed in factories insure themselves against loss by accident connected with their employments; those having employment look ahead to make sure of it in the future; that they may have a good wheat crop next season, farmers have already prepared their land and sowed the seed. In fact, the prudent man is al ways locking ahead to protect or fur ther his interests. Knowing, a a all men of fair intelligence who are can did with themselves must know, that the agitation of the heresy of sixteen to one is a menace to the general pros perity which extends over the country, liovv can they do themselves and the country a better service than by going lo the polls and voting the ticket which is pledged to continue the present "sound-money" policy which has brought confidence and prosperity to the nation? Do not look upon voting to sustain "sound moniey" and to pro tect the country against the paralyz ing influence of sixteen-to-one agita tion in 1900 as simply a favorfoa party organization, but regard it as a matter of personal interest the same as pro» tecting an employment or trying steps to insure a good crop or a good busi ness next season.—lndianapolis Jour nal. CTree eoinr.ge at the ratloof sixteen to one would place the United States on a silver basis. We should then have the honor of being the second country in population which would he on a sil ver basis. But does the United States desire to be a second to China?—lndi anapolis Journal. CT'Mr. Rryan is reported to be look ing for a furlough. Mr. Bryan is hard to please The furlough which the people gave him .n IS9G has, not. ex pired a« vet. —CUJiiago Times-Herald. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1898. SENATOR HANNA'S OPINION. Importance of Controlling the Next IIoum« mid SußtfitnliiK I"re«l --deut Mc-Ktnlej. Senator Hanna, the chairman of the republican national committee, in con ference with the managers of the re publican congressional campaign, made some pointed and interesting comments on the political outlook. Among other things, he said: "One can appreciate the exact situa tion of the campaign when he recall# that in IS9G there were 60 congress districts in which members were elect ed by majorities of less than 1,000 votes. This was true of democrats as well as republicans. The majority of these districts were carried by less than 500 plurality, and you can see at once how important it is to arouse in terest and activity in these districts. The republicans must not let the dem ocrats get ahead of them in work. I have every expectation of a repub lican majority in the house, and it is to the interest not only of the repub licans but of the country at large that the next house should be ir. accord with the president, so as to carry out his policy and sustaiu him in great matters of state and government for the next two years. History shows that usually the congress elected in the middle of an administration has a majority adverse to the deminant party. There are many reasons for this, the chief among them being the apathy among the voters, the result of patronage. The offices have been dis tributer!, and the men who worked in the presidential campaign with the hope of reward afterward have either secured places or have been disap pointed, and they lose interest in the congress elections, or remain away from the polls because of their disap pointment. We do not want history repeated tlfc's year, and, as I have said, it is to the interest of the whole coun try to have the house of representa tives in accord with the president. "The republican party has carried out its pledges made at St. Louis so far as a senate opposed to us has enabled us to do so. The prediction that pros perity would follow the election of Mc- Kinley has been verified, and no one dares dispute it. The country is now prosperous because confidence has been restored, and tlie question at the polls this fall is: Shall we maintain that confidence and keep prosperity, (.r shall we unsettle conditions again? The war lias been successfully waged, and cur victories have been great and glorious. Ttere are tremendous ques tions y.'r to be solved, and the presi dent's policy in regard to these mat ters is to lie earrled out. Shall we have a congress willing to aid him in the wonderfully successful petfey he has already pursued, or will the people of the United States by their votes de clare our war a failure and refuse to sustain the president ? "There is another question also in the congress elections, and that is the financial one. By the republican vic tory in 1890 the country declared S<at< silver was no longer an issue. lis.* the democratic party is still declaring it is an issue, and in all the state conven tions held so far, except Connecticut, Xew Jersey and New York, the Chi cago platform has been reaffirmed. Senator Jones, chairman of the demo cratic national committee, in his speech in St. Louis in August last, stated that silver as an i4'-ue was not dead, and wo'jld not be until the dem ocratic party declared it so. He stat ed that the democratic fight would be made at this election on this issue, and would be continued as long as the dem ocratic party saw fit. With the official head of the democratic committee thus declaring the issue for this cam paign, it remains for the people again to show by their votes whether silver is really an issue in national affairs or not."—X. Y. Tribune. "Coin" Harvey Get* m Job. "Coin" Ilarvey, the newly-appointed manager of the free and unlimited sil ver coinagists, says in his first an nouncement: "My first work will be the raising of money to carry on the cause in which we have enlisted. Where shall we get the money?" lie* added: "From the people, I suppose." But he knows that the millionaire sil ver kings' trust will supply all the money that he will need. The mil lionaire silver kings' trust knows that its members would receive all the ben efits that would result from free sil ver coinage, and that free coinage would increase their profits at least 1,000 per cent, per day. The people of the United States have lost more labor, money and business by the sil ver kings* trust than by all the other trusts combined, and it is still more dangerous than all other trusts and calamities. While "Coin" Harvey is getting "the money" from the silver kings' trust every American should be doing everything within his power to vote that trust to death in this year's election.—lowa State Register. During the month of September the gold coin and bullion in the treas ury w ere increased by $25.3i:t.938, a sum irore than one-quarter as large as that which the Cleveland administration moved heaven and earth to keep as a reserve. This increase was not the re sult of artificial stimulation, but came as the natural result of the nation's prosperity. If the "endless chain" has been in operation lately it has very evi dently run just the opposite way to the direction it took when Cleveland and Carlisle were conducting their negotia tions with bond syndicates.—Troy Times. democratic state convention of New Jersey refused by a decisive vote to indorse the Chicago platform. Xew Jersey democrats thus put them selves in the same column with their brethren of other eastern states in re pudiating free silver.—Chi .'ago Times- Herald. HARVEY AS MANAGZR. Tlie Ureal i:\ponent of Cheap Money Getn a Chance to Work Ilia Uaft. "Coin" Harvey's appointment as "manager of the silver democratic party" does not meet with that chorus of joy from the party generally that might have been expected. The local lenders particularly do not approve, and it dazes them as much as the "or phan dodger" did. That "dodger" con tained nothing but what they professed to believe and to which they had over and over set their hands, but they nev ertheless repudiated it because it was unofficial. Xow they have an official act by the very highest moguls of the party that compels them to swallow the "dodger," and they growl again. Curses not loud but deep penetrate tiieir discourse, for. as one of the candidates said: "Here we have been straining every nerve to get the gold democrats into line and have succeeded, and along comes this blunder and promises to upset every thing. "There is only one thing more needed to put us in prime condition for de feat," said another, in a vein of satire. "We ought to have Gen. Coxey appoint ed assistant general manager." Har vey and Coxey would make a very at tractive and stylish team, and the way they would pull subscriptions out of the pockets of the gold democrats would be a great instruction to all po litical beggars!" Still more important considerations, however, seem to puzzle the heads of some of the local silver democrats. They themselves are "no slouches"—to use their own elegant style of speech— at political finance, but there are two things about this move they would like to understand. How does it come that Harvey was all cocked and primed <o spring his plnn of financiering the party at the very moment he was noti fied of his appointment; and second, and most important, what is going to be his "rake off?" He is laying plans to raise $2,000,000 in the next two years, and if ten per cent, of it—a verj- mod erate compensation, indeed—goes into his own pocket, 1 here are envious demo crats who think he has a pretty soft thing, and he will have if he raises the $2,000,000. There are those, too, who think, and with some reason, that the dollar sub scription business is only a cheap blind, and the money w ill come, if it comes at all. from the men who produce silver nnd are financially interested in itsfree and unlimited coinage. Xow that we have a bankruptcy law. it seems clear enough that nobody wants even cheap silver with which to pay his debts, so that none but silver mine owners are really concerned about free coinage. As for the rank and file of the demo cratic party, why should they give a dollar a month to a cause which if suc cessful would cut all their remaining dollars in two? In the end it w ill be the silver mine owners who will have to come down with the dust, and from this point of view those local democrats are right in thinking Mr. Harvey has a particular ly good thing.—Chicago Times-Herald. TESTIMONY OF A DEMOCRAT. I nprejudiced Evidence n» to the Treatment of I ncle Sam'n Soldlerx. The testimony given before the war investigating committee at Washing ton by Gen. "Fighting Joe" Wheeler is a complete refutation of the charges made by the yellow journals and dem ocratic papers that have been manu facturing charges for the sake of cre ating sensations and political ammu nition. Coming from a rock-ribbed democrat—and one of the southern kind that seem to have their democ racy bred in the bone at that—coming from the man who was a famous leader of the confederate cavalry in the civil war and who gallantly led the cavalry division of the United States troops at Santiago, and coming from a man who was born and raised a fighter and a sol dier, it can scai cely be said by the dem ocratic press that his testimony is "whitewash." His evidence may be summarized as follows: "At Santiago—Except In a few Instances ■upplies were adequate. On several occa sions this was due to the fact that the men going into action threw away their rations (three days' supply) and did not recover them. "The wounded were promptly cared for. "Only once was there a lack of surgeon**, occasioned by the illness of the surgeons themselves. "The men slept on the ground instead ot In tents, because the tents had been left on the transports so that no time would be lost in removing them. "The amount of illness among the troops was due entirely to the climate and to nec cessary exposure In the trenches. And to the further fact that' many of the volun teers did r.ot know how to take care ol themselves. "AH complaints were promptly remedied. "The plan of campaign could no! be im proved upou. "He returned In the transport supposed to be in the worst condition of ail ar.d found It comfortable. "At Montauk—Camp splendidly located Climate first-class. Good hospitals. Scarci ty of nurses at first, but a complete quoin obtained in five days. "Supplies, including delicacies, in abund ance." There hi the testimony of a man who saw five years' service at the front during tlie civil war and knows what a soldier is, and what a soldier requires for his proper care. In the face of this the sensational charges of the yellow press fall like houses built on the sauds, and when the whole truth is known the war department will be praised instead of censured, it was thus in the civil war and it will be thus in the Spanish-American war. —lowa State Begister. ItTSilverites in Xew York are reduced to a little tail-end faction whose vote will be fo%nd not far from the scatter ing column. The 40-eent uollnr has reached the debris of politics. —St Louis Globe-Democrat, PEACE JUBILEE PAGENT. I'urMile of Military Hiid Civic OrgnnlEnf lon* Ih Reviewed l>y President McKinley. Urn. Mllch and (>cu. Shatter. Chicago, fk-t. 20.—One brief gleam of sunshine has been thrown upon the ceremonies of the peace jubilee, it was a fleeting, short-lived burst of third-classsunshine, but it fell upon the president's reviewing stand just as the head of the great jubilee parade was approaching - , and the dense crowd which lined the streets accepted it as an augury of better things and cheer eel lustily, but before they were half through with their shouts the little shudder of light was gone and the cold, dark, dismal weather that from the first has dampened the jubilee fes tivities, was on again. Chicago has seen many parades greater than that of Wednesday, but she never lias seen one that pleased its people better, nor has there ever been a parade in this city which has been witnessed by so many people. There were more stands, anel larger stands erected for sight-seers than have ever been seen here before. All were filled to the utmost. Xotwithstanding the elaborate arrangements of the police department, the banishing of every street ear and vehicle of every descrip tion from the down town streets, in order that the crowd might have an unobstructed way, there were times when the crowd was 100 great for the police to handle anel at many places the crush at times was dangerous. The greetings extendeel to President MeKinicy were enthusiastic in the ex treme*. as were the plaudits showereel upon Gen. Miles anel Gen. Shaffer as they passed through the streets. The president in his carriage was sur rounded by members of the Chicago Hussars formed in square, and de tachments e>f the Grand Army and of Confederate Yeterans acted as an es cort. In the reviewing stand with the president were Gen. Miles, Gen. Shaf ter, both in full uniform; Gov. Tan ner, Mayor Harrison and Chairman Truax, of the jubilee committee. The advance <»f the parade after the presidential escorts had wheeled out of the line- of march was given to the veterans of the Grand Army, who were present in great numbers. He-hind the veterans came numerous civil societies, rank after rank until it seemed as though they would never end. Their gay uniforms anel their many banners of many hues, stripes and sizes made a brilliant and glowing pa nora ma. The First. Illinois, which gave more lives eluring the war than any Illinois body e>f enlisted men, set the people frantic. The Seventh infantry closed the parade. Directly the Seventh infantry had passed, the president left the review stand, going into the clubhouse. Three cheers were given him as he left. The crowd lingered in front of the clubhouse and called for the pres ident. lie was at luncheon, but the crowel woulel not be denied and the president stepped once more upon the reviewing stand and made a brief .peech. DIVERGENT VIEWS. A I>lffPerenee of Opinion is Kxpressed !>y Witnesses ISefore the tV»r t ommission in Kegard to the Conditions in Yttr on* Civnips. Jacksonville, Fin., Oct. 20.—The war investigating commission examined a large number of regimental and other officers yesterday. One of the most outspoken witnesses of the day was Dr. Frye, of the Third division hos pital. lie condemned some of the methods in vogue in the hospitals anel said that in many cases the contract physicians and members of the hos pital corps were incompetent. Dr. Frye expressed the opinion that in several instances convalescents had which he was connected before they were sufficiently aelvanceel to permit them togo in safety. lie thought these instances were due to insufficient su pervision, to ignorance of physicians and to a desire to clear the wards for new patients. He spoke in very un complimentary terms eif the men in the hospital corps, saying they had been picked up at random over the country and were "generally-a scabby looking lot." not fit to adorn any walk of life. He also spoke depreciatingly of the contract surgeons, saying he woulel not he willing to trust his fam ily or friends to 50 per cent, of them. Col. Dows, of the Forty-ninth lowa, followed Dr. Frye. and he was in turn followed by various members of his regiment. Col Dows said there hael been no deficiency in the commissary supplies. Speaking of the medical supplies. Col. Dows said a physician whom Gov. Shaw hael sent to the camp had spoken with surprise e>f the variety and quality of the medicine and medical appliances on hand. G.-n. K. D. Willision. in command of the First brigade of the Seventh corps, was questioned about various points, having been stationed at Camp Thomas. Montauk Point, Anniston anel other points before coming to Jack sonville. lfe said the principal objec tion he had to Camp Thomas, in Chick amauga park, was that it was impossi ble t<l have sinks more than two or three feet in depth. "Xever." said he,"was a prettier camp pitched in tlie United States than was that camp at Montauk." ITe said there were tents erected for 10.000 men before men arrived and all they had to elo was tei walk into them. He saiel that the camp was abundantly suplied with stores of all kinds. Argonauts in Hire DiwtreFfi. Tacoma, Wash., Oct. £0. —Charles Farnswortli. of Massachusetts, has re tnrned from Kotzebue Sound, where he went last April e>n the schooner Marion from San Francisco, lie says her voyage north with f>7 men aboard was something terrible l . Farnsworth's party became disgusted with prospect ing in August and returned to Kotze bue, where they found 800 hungry and for the most part penniless pros peetors, living in tents. Farnswortli says not one in ten had money to pay liis return passage and not one iu fifty had supplies tar the winter The Fall With its sudden changes, its hot days anA chilly nights, dampness and decaying' vege '.sttion, is peculiarly trying to the health. A good Full Medicine is hh important and beneficial as Spring Medicine. Hood's Barsapai ilia kee.is the blood pure, wards off malaria, creates a good appetite, gives refreshing sleep, and maintains the health tone through this trying season. Hood's Sarsapariila Is America's Greatest Medicine. Hood's pills "II liver ills. £5 cents. Am I:« I-ii, I 111 . ,I Tiresome Caller—How do you get rid of bores? Eminent Statesman—My valet generally knows them aud reminds me ol' some engage ment. (Tap at the door.) Well, Harris, what is it? Valet (thrusting his head in)—l beg your purdon, sir, but i think you have an engage ment to dine with (ien. Hogo in about 'arf on hour. —Chicago Tribune. In I'lnln Kn|[li*h. Johnny—What does the paper menn, pa, by saying that Mr. Tomlinson bore the loss of his handsome property by fire very philo sophically? Johnny's Pa—Umph! It means that he was insured.—Stray Stories. Deacon Pewser—"Don't see you at church of late, Mr. Noodle." Noodle—"No; the fact is it cost me so much for tickets to so cials and entertainments that I've made up my mind that I'll have to save my soul in some other way if i want to keep iny body alive a few years longer."—Boston Tran script. Ulv* the t 111 111 r I*ll a Drink called Grain O. It is a delicious, appetizing, nourishing food drink to take the place of coffee. Sold by all grocers and liked by all who have used it, Because when properly niared it tastes like the finest coffee but ree from all its injurious properties. Grain 0 aids digestion and strengthens the nerves. It is not a stimulant but a health builder, and children, as well as adults, can drink it with great benefit- Costs about ias much as coffee. 15 nnd 25c. The Flare to See It. Miss Sheafe—Oh! just look at that wheat! rising and falling in the breeze. How beau tiful it is. Mr. Cityman—Ah, but you ought to see it rising and falling in the corn exchange.— 1 it-Hits. Lnne'n Family Medicine. Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. Couldn't lie Murlced Twice. Lawyer—You have an excellent case, Sir, Client—But a friend of mine said he hat; an exactly similar case, and you were the lawyer on the other side, and you beat him. "Yes, J remember that; but I will see that no such game is worked this time."—Green Bag. St. Jacobs Oil cures Soreness. St. Jacobs Oil cures Stiffness. Justification.—"How dared you strike 4 woman!" he yelled, indignantly. "Well, there was no man around from whom I could borrow anything," pleaded the culprit.— Philadelphia North American. It is easy, sure. It will vanish. Use St. Jacobs Oil for Neuralgia. It's done. She—"V ou never sec my husband laugh at hiß own jokes." He—"No; hut you can't blame him for that."—Yonkers Statesman. -T-iirrrimMmn.n^^ fit Hangs 112 Qira If it was only health, vf might let it cling. But it is a cough. One cold\ IS no sooner passes off before H another comes. But it's the ■ same old cough all the time. ■ And it's the same old story, n too. There is first the cold, JH then the cough, then pneu- / £| moni.-; or consumption with the MB long sickness, and life tremb- , ling in the balance. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral EBBE— loosens the grasp of your cough. The congestion of the throat und lungs is removed; all iji 11.emulation is subdued; the fcpjf parts are put perfectly at rest Kl and the cough drops away. It has no diseased tissues on |M which to hang. Dr. Ayer's 1 Cherry Pectoral I Plaster ® draws out inflammation of the VV Advlco Free- S Remember we havs a Depart- ■ roent. If you have any complaint what- ■ ever and desire the best medical advice P you can possibly obtain, write the ■ doctor freely. You will rcceivo a M prompt reply. without cost. fta Address, DK. J. C AVER, A Lowell, Mass. j Stock Speculators! I I have valuable Information of a profitable V ii deal now under wav. Write for particulars 112 | K. P.J.. P. O.'llox 84 OT, New York. ■ DISCOVERY; gives U|\ it fe quick ittUvt aud cures wui>t fcenu lor book of testimonials* and 141 duyi' treatiueiit Free. i*>- li* UKkfcN t» SUNK,Atlanta,oa. tessirt