2 CAMERON CODNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. f«R »<>T MO* Jf ptit in advance 1 *• ADVERTISING RATE!: Advertisements are published at the rata ol toe Collar per square for one Insertion and Oft J oeats per square for each subsequent Insertion Rates by the year, or for all *»r three monlhe. Ife low and uniform, and will be furnished on Implication. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. t£. each subsequent inser tion 10 cents per square. Local notloes tu centa per line for one lnser tertlon: 5 cents per line for each subsequent epsecutlve Insertion. Obituary notlcea over fire lines. 10 cents per Use. Simple announcements of births, mar riage* anil deaths will be Inserted free. Huhlnesn cards, five Unea or less. 15 per year, over five lines, at the regular rates of adver llginf No local Inserted for lese than 75 cents per tesue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRIM !a complete and affords facilities for dolntf the best class of fork PAHIIUULAII ATTENTION PAIDTO I,M POINTING. No paper will be discontinued nttl arrear ages are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. The normal human body has in it enough iron to make seven large nails Some people are so sharp that it is said the iron would make tacks instead of nails. Two grandsons of President Polk liave seats in the present congress. They are 11. K. Polk, of Danville. Ky., and his cousin, James K. Polk, of Ilidge "way, Pa. In one year the American copper Tuining shares have advanced in value from $100,000,000 to $205,000,000. The mineral wealth of the United Strtes loomed up remarkably in the year 1S• 8. The execution of Joseph Yaeher. the Trench "Jack the Kipper." by Mr. Deib- Jer. was the la»t act of that kind per formed by him. Dei bier has. held the. post of public executioner in F nance for US years, during which time he has>ex ecuted 53 people, and he now relin quishes the work to his son. A Siberian paper says that a syndi cate of French and Ilussian capitalists has been formed to start factories, open hotels and business houses, and build towns in Siberia along the route of the great trans-Siberian railroad. This rail road will be the longest and greatest in the world when fully completed. It was the late Senator Morrill who crew up the educational land grant bill passed in ISC>2 andisigned by President Lincoln. The total grant to all the states was 9.597.840 acres. New York's share was 1)89,920 acres, and it brought $001,473. Cornell university is. one of the numerous monuments of the law. The lack of timber supply for the •world is not likely to cause much un easiness for some years yet. It is stated that in the province of Archangle, lius uia, there are forests belonging to the government which cover 88.979.400 acres in which the ring cf the woods man's ax has as yet scarce ly been heard. The doorkeeper of a Boston theater, ■who died recently, held his place .!• vears. and in all that time 1 never wit nessed a play there or anywhere else. On only one occasion he asked for a holiday, and that was.to attend'a clam bake down the harbor, lie missed the boat, and was in his place at the theater door at the regular hour. An electrician in Lock port, X. who was shocked by a current of 900 volts says he felt no sensation whatever. He saw a blinding flash and was thrown vi olently to the floor. After staggering to his feet he fainted. lie says his brain seemed to be partially paralyzed, and everything around was dreamlike, but he felt no pain, though his hands and ankles were badly burned. Cordelia Yiau lias been sentenced at Montreal. Quebec, to be hanged on March 10 for the murder of her hus band. The defense was that hypnotism controlled the hand that committed the murder. The official hanging of a wom an on this side of the earth is very rare, though fjuitc a number are lynched. During the past year seven colored women have been lynched in the south. There were 00,073 deaths in Greater Xew York in 1898 —one death for every nine minutes in the year. So says a New York correspondent, and he added lhat 30.294 of the deaths were in ten ement houses, and that 25.325 of the whole number were of children under five years of age—more than half in ten ement houses and nearly half children tinder five years of age. The death rate was 19.21. on an estimated population of 2,948,830. ' The United States senate, which is sometimes called the millionaires' club, might with equal appropriateness be designated as an old gentleman's club, for there are a considerable number of members who are well on in years and there are no really young senators, with the exception of Senator Penrose, of Pennsylvania, who is but 38 years old. Most of the senators are on the shady side of 60 and a number of them are past 70 while the late Senator Morrill, of Vermont, was in his eighty-ninth year. Official figures by the director of the mint show that the gold product in the United States in 1898 amounted to $05,- 782.077. or more than $8,000,000 in ex cess of the total for 1897. Of this total Alaska furnished only a little over s2,'- OOfI.OOO, or less than the output in Col orado. California. South Dakota, Mon tana. Arizona. Nevada, Idaho or Utah. Further investigation may place Alaska high up in the list of gold-prod uci'*- .states and territories, but at preser t is of relatively small importance. .e Klondike region is on the Canadian,side «jf the border. NO CHANGE IN THE TARIFF. Aurrlran llimlnrna Men llave Aceept r>l us Final the Pro(rotlvf Principle. Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee Dingier is reported as hav ing said that the war re-venue law would not be changed this winter, for the re-ason that the government needs the revenue that is produced by it. Congressman Dingley might have add ed another reason had he not thought that the necessity of the government was of itself sufficient. He must know that in this city, and probably in every manufacturing community in the L'nited States, a protest that would be impressive would be raised were it un derstood that it was the intention of the ways and means committee to change in any material way the ex isting law, or at least that part of it which applies to the customs tariff. In fact, this feeling is so strong that a reported interview with Senator Hanna has occasioned some anxiety here, and it is a common remark that it is to be hoped that Senator Hanna was inaccurately reported. The opinions which are quoted as coming from him have been carefully read and asa result it is the impression here that the sen utor does not mean that the war rev enue measure or the tariff law must be changed in any important respect, but simply that some minor changes are rdvisable, and perhaps some additions either to the internal revenue list or to the tariff list which will bring us a larger income. Nevertheless, the anxiety which the reported remarks of Senator llanna have occasioned of itself shows how in tense is the desire that, for a time at least, business and commerce be per mitted to continue undisturbed by any tariff legislation, upon the path which 'he amazing figures furnished by the bureau of statistics shows to be one of unprecendented prosperity. It was noticed in the campaign which has just been ended in this state that in none of the resolutions, either of the state or of local conventions of the democratic party, was there any ref erence to the issue which Cleveland made preeminent in both of his admin istrations. Not a word was said about the tariff in resolution nor upon the stump. The question was not ignored as a matter of policy, but it was treated ns an issue that had been determined and that belongs now to history rather than to the present administration of the government. The only democrat in the campaign who did speak of the tariff question was Abram S. Hewitt, and he stated two or three times that as a question of policy or of expediency the view which he for many years took, and which was preeminently the view of Cleveland in his first administration respecting the tariff had been, in the light of new con ditions and of trade expension, ren dered obsolete. Hewitt is understood to be of the opinion that the American people have accepted as final the principle em bodied in the Dingley law, and will con sent to no modification of it until pos sibly after experience in the adminis tration of colonial governments it may be found expedient to modify it in -ome respects. Roswell I\ Flower is confirmed by re cent experience in the view which he took a year ago. flow-ever much the Chicago platform of the democratic party may have displeased him. he dis covered in it. or rather out of it. some thing which gave him the greater, gratification, and that was that forth' first time in many years the party had subordinated the tariff question. Flower is now of the opinion that any man who is in business or who depends upon the income or labor of others for his support, who would ad vocate any change in the tariff laws, should have a conservator appointed ever him as a person of unsound mind. lie thinks that business has now thoroughly adjusted itself to the rev enue legislation and defies anyone suc cessfully to refute that statement in view of our trade experiences, and espe cially our foreign commerce of the past year. In that view other democrats who were once conspicuous as ardent fol lowers in the footsteps of Cleveland, now agree, and it is even observed that at the Iteform club, whence a few years ago went forth in the form of millions of pamphlets the gospel of practical fiee trade, there is no longer any vi vacity or especial interest in public qiiestions. and the club has lapsed into the luxurious lethargy of a purely so cial organization.—N. V. Letter in Phil adelphia Press. CURRENT COMMENT. FTThe admirers of Col. Bryan should lose no time in presenting him with a range finder.—Milwaukee Sentinel. silver and socialism weight down democracy. They assure McKin ley's reelection. —Chicago Chronicle (Dem ). Bryan must have realized by this time the helplessness of getting his party together on a free coinage, anti trust or anti-expansion pla-tform.—Chi cago Titnes-Herald. officials estimate that there ire $910,000,000 of gold in this country at the present time. If "gold is a cow ard," as the silver boomers assert, it cer tainly isn't afraid of America. —-V Y. Mail and Express. t7A brass band at Carson. Nev,has secured a judgment for S4O against Sen ntor Stewart for playing for him during the recent campaign. In future he will no doubt prefer to toot his own political horn.— Denver Post. volume of business for the year just ended has been the greatest ever handled in this country. And yet a few demagogues are going about telling the people that we ought to have a change of government. — CleveJacd Leader. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1899. A YEAR OF PROGRESS. Contldrnee In the It •-pn 111 Iran Trade l'olloy Ilaa llrouiflil Urrnl I'ruapt-rlly. Part of the story of the wonderful commercial development of the United States during the past calendar year is told in the weekly trade review issued by Dun & Co. Most of the story is fa miliar to our readers. Not only have all previous records been eclipsed in the foreign trade of the country, but they have been broken by prodigious figures. During the past twelve months the value of the exports has exceded those of any previous 12 months by almost $300,000,000. a r _d the value of the exports and imports com bined is greater by about $100,000,000 than in the previous banner ytar of 1892. Furthermore, during the year just closed, the balance of trade in our favor reached the enormous total of $017,000,000, against $357,000,000 last year. In only two other years d:d the balance in our favor rise to $300,0* 0,000. Never before this year did the imports of gold exceed the exports by Srj.OOO,- 000. During the year just closed the ex cess of gold imports over the exports reached the enormous total of sl4."' 000,- 000. Not only have we paid big debts we owed abroad, but we are now lend ing so much money in Europe that the foreign bankers are looking to New York to fix the rate of exchange. Thus have we been released from the "domi nation of the European money kings," which has been the burden of populis tic comp'aint, and the United States can to-day be counted as an independ ent nation in a financial, as well as many other senses. The triumph in financial affairs, says the trade review, is largely due to in dustrial progress. For the first time in the history of the country, the ex ports of manufactured products have exceeded the imports of manufactures, that excess in iron and steel products alone amounting to about $74,0'0,000, and industrial activity is noticeable everywhere, mills and factories run ning now as they have.s-eldom been op erated before. When it is remembered that all this industrial and commercial progress has come during the year in which the United States has fought and won a foreign war, and on the heels of a long and disastrous panic, the people ought to be convinced that the result due in a great measure to the policies that have been inaugurated and maintained by the party that was entrusted with the control of the government by the voters at the election of 1890, and which will assume complete control cf all branches of the government when the next congress- begins business, one year hence. When the merchants and manu facturers of a country have confidence in the financial and industrial policy that is in force, and the farmers are getting a fair return for their toil, there is bound to be prosperity, and such prosperity should continue as long as the conditions remain favorable. — Cleveland Leader. RESUMPTION OF GOLD. I ttlinate Hmult* of the Bound Money Aet of the Ke|<ublican* In 1M75. From January 1, 1870, onward to this hour, every dollar of the country's eir eu I#medium —greenbacks, national lank totes, Bland dollars, Bland cer tificates and all other sorts of currency —has been worth everywhere in the United States 100 ceuts in gold. This was tihe immediate effect of the gold te smnption act. Now for some of the act's other consequences. The banks, the national treasury and the country at large have a far greater amount of gold now than ever before. The clear ances of the country's railroads, the output of the country's textile and metal manufactories and the sum total of the country's business interests and activities are greater than at. any time in the past. In the year just ended we have sold more goods abroad thonKng lard, thus taking tihe primacy in that particular heretofore held by that state. Xew York, in the past few months, has passed London in the extent of its im ports and exports and in the amount ef its business transactions, and the world's monetary center is shifting to tins side cf the Atlantic. The country's social and political prestige among the nations of the world was never so high in tihe past as it is now. The prosperity and general well-being of its people never before reached the high mark which it touches at this moment. The=<? art some of the ultimate effects of the act which the republican party placed upon the national statute book in 187.1 and which went into operation in 1873. Here are a few of the reasons why tihe law which began its work 20 years ago constitutes the greatest date mark in the financial and business history of the United States. —St. Louis Globe-Demo crat. ICT'That doughty warrior. Col. Bryan, is now opposing the increase of the army. One cause for his opposition is th-is: "The army is the impersonation of force. It does not deliberate, it acts; it does not deuide, 'lt executes; it does not reason, it shoots." ilow does Col. Bryan know all this? He did not act. He did not execute. He did not shoot. He only resigned. It might also be urged, though it is not specially to the poiut. that he does not deliberate, does not deoide. and does not reason. Col. Bryan only incessantly talks.—Chica go Tribune. t£3"With his resignation from the army and return to civil life, Pryan, •! he be wise, will take down his neglected Shakespeare and read that "in peace there's nothing so becomes u man as modest stillness and humility." There is little hope of Bryan's "stillness and humility." He will goon talking more copiously than ever, but ought to find the hole of a new political issut to bark into. —N. Y. Tribune. A TRIBUTE TO DEWEY. (irrniHii OlHcrr \Vli<» uua hi Manila. Kiili)tU«'» llic Anerli'mi Admiral'* Comlm-I. New York, Jan. 13.—Maj. Alphonse Yon Sonnenburg, the German military expert who was at Manila «1 the blockade by the United States navy after the battle of Cavitfc, and who is now in t.his city, speaking yesterday about Hear Admiral Dewey said: "There were never any honest diffi culties bet ween Dewey and the <ier niau admiral, Yon Diederieh; there was only a theoretical difference about the interpretation of one word in the expression 'droit de visile*—the right of search. That was the meaning •visite,' for the forms of search were different towards different "Kinds of vessels, to ward 8 merchantmen and ships of war. Hut after tlie friendli est exchange of letters by the two ad mirals an understanding was at once reached. To show you the spirit that was in it, I will tell you that the American squadron once received sup plies of frozen mutton, and your ad miral sent Admiral Von Diederieh a present of half a sheep. The other re turned the compliment by sending Dewey a living calf, procured some where in the islands. You see how stupid it is to think they wanted to begin shooting at each other. "The Knglish," Maj. Von Sonnen burg continued, "were at the bottom of this story of a misunderstanding. All that the Knglish in Manila could do to create suspicion and trouble be tween the two countries tliey did. They sent false stories to Ilong Kong, which from there were telegraphed over the whole world. "Here is another example of •Treat broiul-mindedness of Admiral Dewey. When the consuls of various neutral countries became frightened for fear Manila would he bombarded, the German eonsill went to Dewey at Cavite and asked if he had any objec tions to chartering Spanish steamers tTlen lying in the river I'asig. placing on board the neutral refugees and an choring those vessels in between the neutral warships. Dewey answered: 'Well, why not? I do not make war against women anrt children.' Kven the Spanish non-combatants were granted this privilege." WAS A YEAR OF DISASTER. Tlie I'aM I'i .Tlonllin Were I'raiiiihl Willi Itulll lo Wool Walllllailtircr*. Boston. .Tan. 12.—The annual meet ing of the National Wool Manufactur ers' association was held here Wednes day. Secretary North's report was an exhaustive review of the year. "With all classes of .mills." he said, "it nas been a year of small business, of much anxiety and often of hardship and em barrassment. The chief exceptions have been in mills where large orders for the army and navy have been ob tained, but the extraordinary demands of the government have failed to ex ert any such influence upon the mar ket as would ordinarily have followed them. The number of failures and assignments in the wool manufacture have been larger probably than in any previous year since the panic of IS". "These many disasters among wool en mills are not due merely to the bad business conditions of the current year. They are the culmination of a series of years of short business at less than living prices. In the year and a half since the m*w tariff became operative iyiports have been the samllest in quantity for sft years and not of a character to disturb the mar ket for staple goods. The year's ex perience has ao-ain sharply raised the question whether it is not possible by concerted action to enforce some rem edy for the vicious methods of busi ness which have crept into the trade.'" CHOATE IS THE MAN lit* I* Noiniiuilril lor Aniba**a<lor to l nil. Washington. Jan. 12.—-The nomina tion of Joseph Choate, of Xew York, to be ambassador to (ireat Britain to suc ceed Secretary Hay, was sent to the senate by the president yesterday. Joseph Hodges Choate was born in I.s:i2 in Massachusetts. He graduated in 1 554 from Harvard Law School and was admitted in lfi.Vi to the bar. lie formed a partnership with William 11. Barnes, but in ]SI9 became a mem ber of the firm of Evarts, South may d <?• Choate. For the last ten years Mr. Choate has been acknowledged to be the leader of the Tew York bar. Mr. Choate's political career prac tically began in ISMi, when lie took the stump for Fremont. Since then he has been known as an ardent re publican. though he has never held of fice. At times he has no', been in touch with the party organization. From IS7H to IsTT he was president of the Union League club, o* Xew York City. Brooke to Have a Cabinet. Havana, Jan. 13. —f!ov. fien. Brooke has been considering the formation of a cabinet of civil advisers and has de cided to have four secretaries- tbf first, of state and gov.-ru nent. the sec ond of finance, the third of justice and public instruction and the fourth of agriculture, industry, rommerce and public works. Only prominent resi dents of the island will be invited to join the cabinet. The governor gen eral has received acceptances frotr two. whose names are reserved until all four can be announced. One of the other two may lie a Spaniard, though it is probable that all four will he Cu bans. Substantial Now Yenr'x Clft. LaCrosse. Wis., Jail. 11. llctiry A. Salzer. manager of the John A. Salzer Seed C<i.. of this city, sent the Charles City (Iowa) college a New Year's gift of $3,000 in gold. Although a very busy man, Mr. S. devotes time and means tc the encouragement of educational and benevolent enterprises. Sold lo <'nriH'irlc. Bethlehem, 'Pa., .Tan. 12.—The plate mill of the Bethlehem Iron Co. has been sold to the Carnegie Co. and it will be removed to Homestead. The will has been idle for a year. A LEADER DIES. Congressman Dingley Yields to an Attack of Pneumonia. *<>r Two \l'erk« lie Hovered Hetweeil L.lle ami llratii ~lCepre*rntcd the Second Maine Hlfttrlet 111 < oiigrckk lor 17 Iran. Washington. Jan. 14. —Hon. Nelson Dingley, of Maine, leader of the re publican side on the floor of the house of representatives, died here last night at 10:30 o'clock of heart failure result ing from extreme weakness due to pneumonia. He was unconscious dur ing most of the day, and death came quietly without consciousness being regained. There were present at the time Mrs. Dingley, Miss Kdith Ding ley, Messrs. K. N. and A. H. Dingley, Rons of the deceased; James C. Hooe, an intimate friend of the family; Dr. Dcale, one of the physicians who has been attending him throughout his illness, and the two nurses. To within a few hours before his death the fam ily firmly believed, as it has through out his illness, that Mr. Dingley would recover. Mr. Dingley's illness dated back to December ~".i. when he complained that he was not well. The physician diag nosed his case as one of grip, and cau tioned the patient to keep to his room. The following Saturday pneumonia developed in the left 1 uncompli cated with great irregularity of the heart. The funeral will be conducted in the house of representatives on Monday next. At 4:20 in the afternoon the funeral part\ will leave for Lewiston, Me., arriving there Tuesday. Further services will beheld at the family res idence in Lewiston on Wednesday. The interment will be in that city. Nelson Dingley, jr., governor of Maine in 1574-7.">, and member of con gress from the Second congressional district of Maine since in Durham. Me., February 15, IS3?. the son of Nelson and Jane Lambert Ding ley. In 1554 his parents moved to Au burn. At 17 he taught a winter school in the town of <'hinn, 14 miles from home, and he continued to teach win ders while fitting for college. Kntering Waterville college (now Colby university) in ISSI, he remained there a year and a half and then he came a student at Dartmouth college, from which institution he was gradu ated in isr.s with high rank. After leaving college Mr. Dingley studied law in Auburn, and was admitted to the bar. Instead of entering upon the practice of law. h<- decided to become a journalist, and in 1556 he purchased the Lewiston Journal. In ISGI In- was elected representa tive from Auburn to the state legisla ture, in which body he at once took high rank, was re-eleeteil several times and was speaker of the house in In 1 sTr? Mr. Dingley was nominated as the republican candidate for gov ernor of Maine and was elected by about majority. In 1574 he was re-elected. He actively participated in the presi dential campaign of 1876 and in was nominated by the republicans of the Second congressional district to till the vacancy in congress caused bv the resignation of Hon. William I'. Frye. lie was elected 'by a majority of over 5.000. When he entered congress he was made a member of the committee on banking and currency, serving there eight years. At the beginning l of his congressional career the country was disturbed on the question of the ex tension of national bank charters. He immediately identified himself with a bill for the extension of the charters of the banks and in the face of much opposition helped fight the bill through. Hut it is difficult to name any im portant legislation in congress of the last 1.1 years with which he was not identified. Ilis first speech in congress was made April ISS2. on "protec tion to American shipping." While lit had been active in financial matters be was thoroughly informed on ship ping. having come from a state with large shipping interests. iMr. Dingley was not an orator. He lacked the physical presence, the de velopment of throat and chest and quality of voice which make, men ora tors. None the less all the members listened when he arose to speak. He had ft wonderfully lucid way of as serting facts, going at once to the heart of every contested point, lie also had a remarkable faculty of pre senting an argument. His mind was logical to the highest degree. Iti£ Cupper Combine Formed. Chicago. .Tan, 14. —The Keeord says: A gigantic combination in copper wa recently effected in New York am with the reputed hacking of the Stand ard Oil Co.. the American Copper ('< in its combination of six great plant expects to revolutionize the coppe mining industry of the world. 'I" Uoston &■ Montana and Unite <V- Hosjo mining companies, the Old Dominii Chopper Co.. of Arizona, and 'he Arc dian. Tamarack and Osceola mini: companies, of Michigan, are named • the component parts of the new orga* ization. Pains and Aches Of Rheumatism Make Countless Thousands Suffer. But this disease is cured by Hood's Sar »aparilla, which neutralizes the acid in the blood. If you have any symptoms of rheumatism take Hood's Sarsaparilla t* once and do not waste time and money on unknown preparations. The merit of Hood's Barsaparilla is unquestioned and its record of cures unequalled. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine for rheumatism. Hood's Pills cure all liver ills. 25 cents. A Dainty Gift. Dr. P. Harold Hayes, the well-known specialist in Asthma and Hay Fever, whose success in curing these diseases h;<s been so remarkable as to attract the attention of physicians all over the world, has issued it dainty Calendar lor IK»9 which he is send ing to his many patients. Any sufferer from either of these diseases can obtain a copy free by writing to Dr. Hayes for it, pro vided this paper is mentioned. Small Realization. "Of all my expectations in life," said the Bombir-visaged man,"l have realized only one; inc] that was the expectation that 1 should fail to realize the others."— N. Y. Sun. _ How'i This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured bv Jlall's Catarrh Cure. h\ J. Cheney & Co.. Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. \\ est & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, To ledo, O. Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price 75c. per bot tle. bold by all Druggists. Testimonial free. Hall's family Pills are the best. When True Love Quit*. If the engagement lasts long enough, the firl grows careless and makes her appear ance before her steady in her kitchen clothes, and with her hair uncombed. Then Love, in the man's heart, folds its tired hands on its breast and breathes its last.— Atchison Globe. ConKliine I.endn to Consnmptlon. Kemp's Balsam will stop the Cbugh at once. Goto your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Large bottles 25 and 50 cents. Go at once; delays are dangerous. New Form of an Old Question. —"So you wish to marry my daughter?" "Yes, sir." "Well, can you support her in that condition of idleness to which she has always been ac customed?"— Chicago Daily Record. Lane'* Family Medicine. Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head ache. Price 25 and 50c. The average man prides himself on the possessions his neighbor can't afford.— Washington (la.) Democrat. To Cnre a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25e. "I always want introductions to long haired-men." "Why?" "I like to discover what subjects they are foolish on."—Chi cago Daily R.vord. 4 Dropsy treated free by Ui H. 11. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga. The greatest dropsy specialists in the world. Kead their adver tisement in another column of this paper. Success consists in persuading others t<» take you at your own valuation.-—Town Topics. THEY WANT TO TELL Those Grateful Women Who Have Been Helped by Mrs. Pinkham. Women who have suffered severely »nd been relieved of their ills by Mrs. Pinkham's advice and medicine ara constantly urging' publication of their statements for the benefit of other wo men. Here are two such letters: Mrs. LIZZIE BEVERLY, 258 Merrimao St., Lowell, Mass., writes: " It affords me great pleasure to tell all suffering women of the bene fit I have received from taking Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Icanhard ly find words toexpress my gratitude for what she lias done for me. My trouble was ulceration of the womb. I was un der the doctor's care. Upon examina tion he found fifteen very large ulcers, but he failed to do me good. I took sev eral bottlesof Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound, also used the Sanative Wash, and am cured. Mrs. Pinkham's medicine saved my life, and I would recommend it to all suffering women." Mrs. AMOS TnoMBLK*.r, Ellenburgh Ctr., N. Y.. writes: "I took cold at the time my baby was born, causing me to have milk legs, and was sick in bed for eight weeks. Doctors did me no good. I surely thought I would die. I was al so troubled with falling of the womb. I could not eat, had faint spells as often as ten times a day. One day a lady came to see me and told me of the benefit she had derived from taking Lydia E. Pinkham's medicine, and ad vised me to try it. I did so, and had taken only half a bottle before I was able to sit in a chair. After taking three bottles I could do my own work. I am now in perfect health." PEACE i VERSUS I PAIN 1 We have peace, and those i |' who are sorely afflicted with < ( I NEURALGIA 1 will have peace from pain and a perfect cure by using I | ST. JACOBS OIL > A Natural Black is Produced by Buckingham's Dyevir.. ftO ct«. of druggist* or R.P.Htll It
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers