2 CAMERON CODNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editer. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ADVERTISING RATES; A*»er»laemente are published at tha rata ot 0»e 4ollar per aquare for one Insertion and fifty aaau par square for each subsequent Insertion Rates by the year, or for ail or three monthe. •re iow and uniform, and will be furnished OD •■plication. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less, <2; each eubsequent inser llan f.O cents per square. Local notices 10 centa per line for one lnser fertlon; 6 cents per line far each subsequent •aatecutlve Insertion. Obituf.-y noticea oyer Are llnea, 10 cents per Use. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be Inserted free. Business curds, fire llnea or less. 15 per year; jrer Ore lines, at tha regular rates of adver- No* local Inserted for leal than 75 cents per laaue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRK*9 is complete aa4 sffurds facilities for doing the best class of *rork. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW F*INTI»O. No paper will be discontinued ntil arrear ages »re paid, except at the option of the pub- Kher Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance JiEARLY one-third of the members of the next house will be men who are not now servinging congress, the num ber of changes being 110. but some of the new representatives have had legislative experience in former eon presses. More new faces will be in the delegation from New York than any other state, the number being 18. Pennsylvania is second on the list with ten and Illinois third with nine. A KEAI. Spaniard, of ancient lineage, »nd thoroughly conversant with both the t'astilian and the English tongues, will be reckoned among the republic ans of the next house. He is no other than Delegate-gleet Pedro l'erea, of liernallilo, N. M.. son of one of the prominent men of the territory and hcion of a family that traces its ances tors back -">0 years, when the dons first set foot on the soil of that romantic section of the contineut. THKY allow women to wear male at tire in France, but they are taxed for the privilege. The I-'rench government charges women $lO to $12.50 per year for wearing the trousers. This how ever, does not give every woman who is willing to pay the tax a right to wear such garments. The government confers the right as a tribute to great merit, and makes it in fact, a sort of decoration given to women, its the ril>- bon of the legion of honor is given to men. TIIK most decorated man in Europe probably is Count August of Eulen berg. the marshal of the German court, who has o:> decorations. This record ■was not even equaled by the late Prince Bismarck, who had only 54 dec orations. Count von Moltke, another much decorated man, had 44. Among living men, (Jen. von Hahnke comes after Count August of Eulenberg, with a totiil of 52 decorations. He is fol lowed by Prince Albreeht of Prussia* who has 44. MRS. WIIJ.IAM ASTOR has a collection of diamonds worth a fortune. But the finest diamond in the world belongs, it is said, to Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt. It is a tiny affair, weighing one karat, yet it cost her husband $5,000. As the value of a diamond increases in an in creasing ratio with its weight, up to a moderate size, the Vanderbilt brilliant, if as large as the Koh-i-Noor (102 ,'4 ka rats) would be worth about $3,800,000. Mrs. Vanderbilt'* marvelous gem came from Sombulpoor or Golconda. A MEDICAL scientist is authority for the statement that children and old people especially suffer fnun a lack of lime in the system. Persons who hal>- itually drink soft water, while they may enjoy immunity from certain of the ills of life, expose themselves to others perhaps quite as much to be avoided. Hard water helps the teeth and the bones by furnishing lime, •which is necessary to health, growth and development. Old persons who drink but little lose their teeth more quickly than those who take a reason able amount of drinking water. A MILLION dollars for the education of their people is to be raised by lie brews of New York. These seven •wealthy men have already contributed SIOO,OOO, as follows: Louis Stern. $25,- 4)00; Jacob 11. Sehliff, $25,000; If. Alt man; $20,000; Wm. Solomon, $10,000; Isidor Straus, $10,000; Felix Warburg, $5,000; Louis Marshall, $5,000. Isidor IStraus announced the foregoing at the meeting of the Hebrew Educa tional Alliance at Temple Emanu HI, Fifth avenue. Mr. Israel Zangwill, tli« English novelist, spoke of the improved condition of the Hebrews in the past few years. FORMERLY the ashes on steamships •were gathered into great cans, hoisted to the decks with more or lessdifficulty und thrown overboard. Among the new devices for labor-saving in this direc tion is a chute into which a very strong air current is fore; d. The ashes are jplaccd in the chute as they accumulate and are almost instantly blown through this conductor into the sea. The amount of labor saved by this means can scarcely be appreciated by those who have not watched the weari some dragging of the enormous quan tity of refuse from the furnaces in steamships and large plants. THE monastery of Solovetsk, in Arch angel, Russia, is inclosed on every side by a wall of granite bowlders, meas uring nearly a mile in circumference. The monastery itself is very strongly fortified, being supported by round and square towers about *0 feet in height, ■with walls 20 feet in thickness. The monastery consists in reality of six churches, which are completely filled with statues of all kinds and precious stones. Upon the walls and the towers surrounding these churches are mount ed huge guns, which in the time of the Crimean war were directed against the British White Sea suuadron. THE FUTURE OF SILVER. A I-eeeon for Client* Money Admeatfi In the l.ate Klec tlona. There is no mistaking the significance of the fall election in its. relation to the democratic party ns a national organi zation which will not participate in an other general election for congressmen and legislative or state officers general ly until the presidential battle of 1900. The results of the voting tend, greatly to strengthen, consolidate and enforce the power of the radical free silver element, predominant in Chicago in 1896. and now certain to be in control at the national convention of 1900. Briefly summarized, the results in the south were more decisively favorable to democratic candidates than any similar elections have been since populism threatened democratic local supremacy in many southern states. The popu lists are again voting the democratic ticket, and the price of their continued alliance is adhesion to the radical prin ciples enunciated in the presidential election in the Chicago platform —the crime of '9O. In those of the eastern states in which a serious effort has been made, as in Connecticut, to attract the honest money candidates to the party whose allegiance they foreswore two years ago. it has failed utterly. In the states in which the policy of evasion of na tional issues has been followed. New York. New Jersey and Maryland, there has been no gain in consequence. In Massachusetts and Illinois, where the Bryan democracy reiterated its pur poses as declared at Chicago, its candi dates did better than they did a year ago. In the far west, in< Colorado, Utah and Idaho, what measure of suc cess the democratic candidates>attained was due chiefly to the aid of silver re publicans; and it does not appear from the returns from any state that the sil verites, whether democrats, populists or republicans, have any mistrust of the sincerity of the democratic organiza tion in its temporary muffled.advocacy of radical policies, or tlint the honest money voters of the country, demo crats, republicans or independents— there are no hrnest-money populists— had, or have, a particle of confidence in the professions made by some dem ocratic orators of their disavowal of silverite predilections and purposes. The effect of the elections has been, briefly, to tighten party lines with even greater firmness than was the cn.se two years ago. The national democrats, i so called, have been eliminated entirely. They now vote the republican ticket or they vote the democratic ticket. The middle-of-the-road populists, and there were nearly 230,000 of them in 1890, are again in the fold of the fusionists. In the south, the southwest and in the mountain states, the populists and democrats preponderate; in the east ern, middle, middle western' and Pacific states, the republican party is the party of the majority. There are no visible recruits to the democratic standard to be secured by abandonment of the prin ciples to which the party, as a national organiziition, is committed; there is the certainty of serious and positive losses in any attempted' abandonment of the issues of two years ago. Unquestionably, the present eco nomic conditions, as well as the polit ical relations of the two parties toward each other, the prestige of republican victory and the demoralization of the opposing forces, make almost hopeless for the democracy the renewal of the battle of two years ago; but. be the out look propitious or discouraging, the lesson of the late election is unmistak ably clear: The democratic party is committed irrevocably to the issues of 189 C.—X. Y. Run. Ilryanitcn Should Notice. In the states of New York. Pennsyl vania. Massachusetts, New Jersey and Maryland, where the democrats did all Ihey could, as a rule, to get away from the silver question this year, they gained 20 seats in the house of repre sentatives. In New York they cut a re publican plurality of 208,000 in the pres idential election down to about 20,000. In New Jersey, the reduction was from 87,000 to 5.000, and in Massachusetts, where there was more talk of silver, from 173,000 to 83,000. In Pennsylvania the change was from 295,000 to about 150,000 at best. The opposition was di vided. Maryland was republican by 32,- COO in 1896. This year it is close. If Col. Bryan and his followers will give these facts their earnest attention, in connec tion with the very different returns from states like Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota. Wyoming, Washington and California, where their party stuck to silver as the one great issue, perhaps they miy gain light enough to lead them to give the business world rest from inflation alarms for the next deeade or so.—Cleveland Leader. True Patriot*. The democrats have no luck at all in claiming all the national heroes as par tisans. Dewey, of Manila fame, turns out to be a republican, as is perfectly natural for a born and bred Vermonter. Admiral Schley says:"l am not a democrat; neither am I a republican. My polities is my country." And that is good enough polities for any fighting man. Gen. Merritt says he is some thing of a democrat, but is glad tha country is sustaining the administra tion, because McKinley is right. "Joe" Wheeler is a democrat who forgets pol itics when chasing Spaniards. And Hobson is a democrat, though he has been too busy serving the nation lately to pay any attention to politics.' As a whole, the war outfit seems content to leave government matter's in repub lican hands, wholly satisfied with the way things are done.—Troy Times. ETThe silver mine owners will not probably retain a lobby in Washington tny longer, and the few orators scat 'pred about under the name of silver epublicans will not be retained on the ,»ay roll.— Indianapolis Journal. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1898. ISSUES OF 1900. What Form of Oppoaltlon the Dlm urrntx Will Advocate la Hard to Drtermlne. The suggestion comes from Ohio, and is said to be indorsed by Senator llanna, that national expansion rather than free silver is likely to be the issue in 1900i Isn't it a little early to be fore casting the next presidential race, either as to eandiates, platforms or re sults? We are making important his tory rapidly, and it was never more true than now that no man can tell what a day, or a year, may bring forth. Free silver has undoubtedly received a heavy blow. The changes in the west arc extraordinary, and are to be as cribed to that issue alone. In 1806 the, silver men controlled the senate. They therefore had but to secure the house and r'ne presidency in the campaign of that year to write their issue into law. It will be different in 1900. The senate then will contain an anti-silver ma jority. So that immediate success would not be in sight even with the house and the presidency won for sil ver. This, and the change of sentimert in the west, must have its effect in 1900. Hut one should hesitate to dig t he grave and provide the ceremonies for silver yet awhile. But. counting silver out, what form will the issue of national expansion take in 1900? The expectation now is that the peace commission will make a treaty providing for the conquered Spanish territory in time to be sub mitted to the senate at its coming ses sion. Reasonably prompt action there ought to follow. The matter is one that cannot with safety be allowed to re main too long unsettled. At farthest, it is not likely to remain open longer than early spring. And when the treaty is ratified the issue of national expan sion as now understood and accepted will be closed. We shall then be in pos session of Porto luieo, Hawaii, Guam and the Philippines in our own right, and of Cuba as trustee for the people of that island. That will represent the policy of national expansion. What is sue can be made on that a year later? Who will seel* power on a proposition to undo it all and return to the main land? As matters are going it is n far cry to 1900. Sound money and national ex pansion seem safe enough, and thejvres ident is one of the most popular men ever installed in that exalted office. lint what form the opposition will take, or who is likely to lead it. may rot with ease be determined now.—Washington Star. A GREAT SENATE. There AVi 11 lie- n Controlling Mnjorlfy Agnlnut the Free Sil ver Ilcrenj'. After March 4 the republicans will have 53 of the 5)0 senators, which will leave 37 to the democrats and populists. For the first time since the free coin age of silver became an issue because silver bullion had fallen in price, there will be an actual and controlling ma jority against that heresy. It is quite as important that the changes which have mode the senate surely republican result from the fact that both senators from the states largest in population and richest in material resources will be republicans. Iloth senators from In diana. New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Ohio, Illinois, Michigan, Cali fornia and Wisconsin will be repub licans. From the Atlantic to the Missis sippi river, and from the Ohio and Ma son and Dixon's line to the lakes, no state will have a democratic senator. Kven Maryland atid West Virginia will have two. and Delaware and Kentucky one each of the republican faith. Mis souri. Georgia and Texas will be the only larger states that will be repre sented by democrats in the senate. The opposition to the republican party has little to hope from the group of states in which senatorial vacancies oc cur in 1901 after the presidential elec tion, judging from their voting at the late elections, as a clear majority of the 30 senators to be elected that year rep resent states which are carried by re publicans this year. Thus silverism seems to be balked in the senate for years to come. During the past six or eight years, it cannot be said that either responsible party could claim a majority. For six teen to cue there was a majority, but beyond that question no party had such a lead in the senate as to be really re sponsible for its conduct. The impor tant finance committee has been in the lands of the silverites. and other lead ing committees which shape legisla tion have been so divided as to be with out power. This uncertainty as to par ties has been responsible for the dis satisfaction of the country with the senate. Now that the republicans will have an assured majority ol' orthodox republicans, may not the country ex pect to see more definite action and less delay?—lndianapolis Journal. COMMENT AND OPINION. lE7Bank cleara?~*es furnish an argu ment that the ealamityites will hardly care to bump against. Cleveland Leader. 13"The democratic party is still hunt ing for one or two good issues for 1900, Is it afraid to try free whisky?— Ch icago Tribune. lETThe usual business boom followed republican success in the elections, and it was even more marked than usual. — St. Louis Globe-Democrat. (WTalk of a solid south. What is the u.atter with a solid Pacific slope? There are 11 congressmen and ten are republicans. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. CTOh. yes. free silver is still on topic Colorado. That's where they mine it. Colorado is not in politics exclusively for her health. Iler enthusiasm is for her pocket.—lJoston Herald (Int 1 Dern.l. WANT PAY FOR THEIR ARMY. Prominent tubulin tome to Whuliliik ton and M ill Ank I'nrlr Saill to "Mifll tint*' Tlom j lor liiMirifnl*. Washington, Dee. 1. —The members of the commission delegated to visit the I'nited States to discuss with offi cials of ttiis government the problems which confront both Cubans and Americans on the island arrived in Washington last evening from New York. The commission is headed by Calixto (iareia, the veteran soldier. With him on the commission are .lose Home/., who won distinction in the late revolution; Manuel Kanguilly, Jose Lanuza and Jose 11. Villalon, a civil engineer who served on the staff of Maceo. Villalon is the secretary of the commission. It is the purpose of the commission to discuss with the officials of the ad ministration all questions relating to the future of the island and its peo ple. One of the principal questions will be that relating to the disposi tion of the Cuban army. In an inter view (iareia said it would be a hard ship for the Cuban army to disband at this time without receiving pay for its services in the field. When the revolution began the Cubans left their homes to fight f<y the freedom of the island. Through the assistance of the United States the yoke of Spain has been thrown off forever and the sol diers are now anxious to return to peaceful pursuits. In a majority of cases, however, their homes have been destroyed and their land laid waste. They hope some method may be pro vided whereby they may be given sufficient means to gain a new start in life. Garcia expresses the hope of obtaining, through the assistance of this country, a sufficient amount part ly to reimburse the Cubans for their services in the field. This sum may be advanced on the security of the Cuban revenues or obtained in any other way that might be satisfactory to this country. Garcia says the Cuban government stands pledged to pay its soldiers and will in good faith live up to any agreement that may be made for the adjustment of the temporary difficul ty. Concerning the proposition which lias been made to annex the island to the I'nited States, (iareia said: "I do not think that is a question which can be discussed or settled at present, because the congress of the I'nited States has declared that the people of Cuba ought to be free and independ ent. I have such faith in the honor of the I'nited States that 1 am satis fied that declaratirfn of congress will be carried out. Other things are mat ters of time and detail." PENSION MONEY. lnmaten ol the Soldier*' Home Ht ICrle Claim that It Ik llein-; '■' alien from Tlkiii. Philadelphia, Dee. I.—State Senatoi Perry A. Gibson, of the Erie county district, yesterday met Gov. Hastings at the Stratford hotel in this city a tit] laid before him a petition which the senator had received from inmates ol the soldiers' and sailors' home at Erie. Pa. The petition prayed the senatoi to take steps to recover for thera money which they had received from the national government and which they allege has been illegally taker from them by the trustees of the in stitution at Erie. Tly. petition if signed by 100 inmates of the home. The method of taking this money from the old soldiers, the petition alleges, is a rule adopted by the trus tees of the institution which compels Ilii' inmates to turn over to the home all pension money received in excess of $4 per month, on penalty of dis charge. The petitioners say they are In formed that this money is placed in fhe hands of Louis Wagner, of Phila delphia, treasurer of the board ol trustees of the lion#, and that it is used in extending relief to dependent relatives of pensioners in the home. The petitioners say they have no de pendent relatives and that the money is taken without any apparent design o.f using it for any purpose, either foi the benefit of the home, relatives, or inmates themselves. A REINFORCEMENT. Lortl Stratlieona Join* the Kankn o the Anglo-American CommUnlon or*. Washington, Dec. 1. —Lord Stratli eona, Canadian commissioner to Don don, arrived here last night to join the ranks of the Anglo-Americans in session here. As commissioner to Lon don, Lord Strathcpna is in a position to reflect the views of both the Eng lish and Canadian authorities. "I am here while the present com mission meets," lie said, "as I was when the last commission met in Washington 28 years ago to settle the Alabama claims, and all other con troversies growing out of the civil wat. That commission brought about splendid results in removing every possibility of trouble between the two governments, and with the warm feel ing now existing between the Eng lish speaking people on both sides of the water 1 am most hopeful that the present commission will remove the last vestige of contention between the United States, England and Canada." The commission held a joint session yesterday,resulting iji much progress. The desire to conclude work and frame the final treaty is shown by a proposition presented for nisht. ses sions. This was vetoed, as night work would not at present materially expe dite matters. Vnilleteil for Conspiracy. Columbia, S. Dec. I.—-In the dis trict court yesterday the grand jury returned true bills ncainst nine well known citizens of McCormick, S. C.. upon the charge of conspiracy, the offense being the driving away from that town at the time of the recent Phoenix trouble of J. W. Tolbert. the Mislmnd and assistant of the postmis tress. There are several ocunts in ■ach indictment. Warrants have been ; ssued and Marshal Clayton dispatch »d to McCormick for the defendants. It is proposed to have the trial at the present term of court here. HAS LOST ALL. Spain Yields to the ArT'Orioanß* Every Demand The Victor* Will I»uy *20,000,000 and UcniMir tlie Owner* ol the IMilll|>- plne IhliintlN It I* I'o«*lbl<J that the Treaty May be Signed Thla Week. Paris, Xov. 29.—Spain has accepted the United States' offer of $20,000,000 and at a joint session of the peace commissions on Monday consented without condition to relinquish Cuba and to cede Porto Rico, Guam and the Philippine islands. The document presenting this accept ance contained only 300 words. It opened with a reference to the final terms of the United States and said the Spanish commissioners, after hav ing taken cognizance of the terms pro posed by the Americans, replied that their government had tried to give as equitable an answer as possible, but they were not prepared to commit their government to the acceptance of the principles embodied in the American argument. Spain rejects these princi ples, the note continues, "as she has always rejected them." Basing her at titude upon the justice of her cause, the note then says that she still ad heres to these principles "which she had heretofore invariably formulated." However, the note adds, in her de sire for peace she has gone so far as to propose certain compromises which the Americans have always rejected. She has also attempted, it is further asserted, to have submitted to arbitra tion some of the material particulars upon which the two governments dif fered. These proposals for arbitration, it is added, the Americans had reject ed. These allegations in Spain's reply, as to attempted arbitration, refer to her proposal to arbitrate the construc tion of the third article of the protocol and also to submit the Spanish colonial debt of Cuba and the Philippines to arbitration. The last proposition was made in a written communication. Since its presentation, and in return for such arbitration, Spain offered to cede the territory in dispute. The Americans refused both propositions for arbitration. Spain's reply yester day in substance continued by declar ing that the United States has offered, as a kind of compensation to Spain, something very inadequate to the sac rifices the latter country makes. Spain has, however, exhausted all the resources of diplomacy in an at tempt to justify her attitude. Seeing that an acceptance of the proposal made to Spain is a necessary condition to a continuance of negotiations, and seeing that the resources of Spain are not such as to enable her to re-enter upon war, she is prepared in her de sire to avoid bloodshed and from con siderations of humanity and patriot ism to submit to the conditions of the conquering' nation, however harsh they may be. She is, therefore, ready to accept the proposals of the Ameri can commission as presented at the last sitting. The reading and translation of the document occupied less than five min utes. At the conclusion of the trans lation the commissioners empowered Senor Ojeda, secretary of the Spanish commission, and Secretary Moore, of the American commission, to draw up articles which are to embody the re linquishment of Cuba by Spain and the cession of I'orto liico and the Philip pines. Paris, Dec. I.—The joint peace com mission devoted two hours and a half yesterday to drafting the three lirst articles of the peace treaty protocol, dealing with tlie cession of Cuba, I'orto Itieo and the Philippines, upon which the commissioners agreed in principle. A general discussion on the other articles followed, but no decision was reached and the joint commission adjourned until to-day. There were 13 articles laid before the two commissions, covering the fol lowing subjects: I—The relinquishment of sovereign ty over and claim of title to Cuba. 2—The cession of I'orto Itieo and other Spanish possessions in the West Indies, together with Guam in the Ladrones. 3—The cession of the Philippines. 4 -The terms of the evacuation of the Philippines. s—The5 —The pledge of the United States to preserve order in the Philippines pending the ratification of the treaty. 6 —The mutual release of military prisoners. 7—The cession by Spain of the isl and of Kusae, or Strong island, in the Carolines. B—The mutual relinquishment of indemnity claims. 9 —Tin- religious freedom of the Carolines, assuring the rights of American missionaries there. 10—Cable landing rights at points within the Spanish jurisdiction. 11—The release by Spain of politi cal prisoners for offenses in Cuba and the Philippines. 12—The pledge of the United States to inaugurate in the Philippines an "open door" policy and to guarantee the same to Spain for at least 12 yea rs. 13—A revival of the treaties broken by the war. Daily sessions will be held hereaf ter, and it is now believed that the work may be possibly concluded this week, although so early a termination is not probable. Ho)- Gave Them u Hot Reception. Macon, (la.. Nov. 29. —A special from Butler, (ia., tells of the killing near there on Sunday night of a member of a the fatal wounding of another and the serious wounding of a third. R. I. Cooper, Wesley Wainwriglit and John I'. Jones were the posse. They went to a negro's house with a war rant. The negro's 14-year-old son said his father was not at home. When the officers attempted to enter the house to see for themselves, the boy fired on them. Wainwriglit fell dead. Cooper will probably die and Jones is badly injured. The boy was arrested »ud taken to jail. Catarrh Cured Blood Purified by Hood's Sarsapa rllla and Health is Cood. "I was a sufferer from catarrh. One of my neighbors advised me to take Hood's Sarsaparilla and I did so, A few bottles purified my blood and cured me. 1 have remained In Rood health ever since." JAB T. ADKIXS, Athensville, Illinois. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. |l ; six for $5. Hood's Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents. llroDiria rrrioolQed. "Did I understand you to say that dress you admired so much to-day was a dream?" .nquired Mr. Smokehart. "Yes," answered his wife hopefully. "Well," he proceeded very kindly, "you keep your mind on it when you are to sleep to night and inaybe you will dream one of your own."—Washington Star. Tu California. Attention is called to the excellent serv ice of the North-Western Line to Califor nia and the favorable rates which have been made for single and round-trip tick ets for this season's travel. West accom modations in lirst-class or tourist sleeping cars, which run through every day in the year. Personally-conducted tourist car parties every week to California and Oregon. Choice of a large number of different routes without extra charge. Particulars cheerfully given appli cation to agents Chicago & North-Western K'y, or connecting lines. A Sweet Memory. She—l shall never, never cease to enjoy the memories of my college days. He —What incident connected with them is brightest in your memory? She —Let me see —oh, yes! those elegant ice cream sodas we used to get down at the village apothecary's!—Roxbury Gazette. I.anc'ii 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 SO' l . An Authority. Willie—Mamma, what does making a bad break mean? "You'd better ask your father, Willie." — Indianapolis Journal. To Care a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Rromo Quinine Tablets.. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. Indolence often assumes the mask of pa tience and gathers in her rewards.—Chicago Daily News. Check Colds and Bronchitis with ITale's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. Very few people appreciate the im portance of doing a thing right in the first place.—Atchison Globe. HI SBCKI iMWeiig !Many persons have their good day and their bad day. Others are about half sick all the time. They have headache, backache, and are restless and nervous. Food does not taste good, and the digestion is poor; the skin is dry and sallow and disfigured with pimples or eruptions; sleep brings no rest and work Is a burden. What is the cause of all this? Impure blood. And the remedy? It clears out the channels through which poisons are carried from the body. When all impurities are removed from -TSTj the blood nature takes right hold Egg** and completes the cure. VW If there is constipation, take Va Ayer's Pills. They awaken the Ea drowsy action of the liver; they Eg cure biliousness. |? Write to our Doctor* n Wo have the exclusive senrlceo of £| tome of the most eminent physicians in 19 the United States. Write freely all the K3 particulars in your cage. You will re- KjL coive a prompt reply, Without cost. EXA Address. DR. J. C. AY Eli. Ml Lowell, Mass. tfvjj jfT Whiskers Dyed A Natural Black by g Buckingham's Dye. Price 50 cents of all druggists or K. P. Hall A Co., Nashua. N H. Allen's Ulcerlne Halve is the only sure cure in the world for Chroale I'lce re. Rone Ulcere, Merof tilntie Ulcer*, Varlceie Ulcers, White Mwelllni, Fever Son*», and all Old fiorre. It never fails Draws out all poison. Saves expense and luffer'.ng. Cures permanent Best sal ve for Bolle, Curbtiuclee, Pile*, Salt Uhotira, Iliirne, i'nU and all Fre»ta Wound*. By mail, small.33e; large. l»c. Book free .1. P. Al.l.K\ MHUdXB DO,| It, Paul, Minn. Mold by Drusglete. A Christmas EVERYBODYI I)o you wont to em u something for Christina*! We ean put you in tin ■ way <»r making *l4, without In* terff ring with r- gular occupation Kvevi children can pern between school hours Something entirely new and original N" canvassing. and no rap'tal re jirired A *;t outtlt will t»** sent on receipt of 2-<-ent •tamp. Pobtoflice box 2407, NKW YORK, N. Y. Top Snap ni H& FISH TACKLE ffV, an "P! IIBXrVY SrORTs.MEJCM bUPIMJM lVoiiblc 9BH ■'! (a Era C,I,:Al * ERlh4n Bl>K * HraE truth sQ.9ofl TSg HI BPOWELUICLEMENTCO. Uadtr J i.%« INNATL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers