2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per year fl 00 If paid in advance 1 ->0 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of one doliar per square for one insertion and ttfiy rents )ier square for each subsequent insertion Kates by the year, or for six or three months, are low anil uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or luss, each subsequent inser tio i 0 cents per square. Local notices It) cents per line for one inser scrtioti: ft cents per line for each subsequent con-eeutive Insertion. Obituary notices over Ave lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar rint'es and deaths will lie Inserted fr» e. Business cards, five lines or less. per year; over tivo lines, at the regular rates of adver tising No local Inserted for less than 7o cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job departnfent of the PK ESS is complete and afford-- facilities for doing the best class of work. PAKTICVLAR ATTEN'IRON CALD'I'U LAW PRINTING. No paper will bo discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. , CURRENT TOPICS. Orent Britain brews $345,000.000 worth of beer a year. I h" world's product of silk is 38,- 525,823 pounds annually. Kiddville, Right Angle and Log Lick are Kentucky post offives. The engines of a first-class British man-of-war cost about £ 175,000. -Nineteen hundred sflould really be 3001. Christ was born 1,904 years ago. Five pounds of oats give a horse as much nourishment as ten pounds of hay. The world's coffee crop is 800,000 tons. America drinks one-third of this. Comic opera is over a hundred years old. The tragic, in a way, has always existed. For twenty years Mrs. Jane West over was the town barber of Marl borough, Ct. There are about 30,000,000 acres of unoccupied public lands yet re maining in Montana. In 1801, 1,570,000 newspapers were Issued monthly. This has grown to over 41,000,000 a day. The apartments of deceased kings of Italy are left absolutely -untouch ed for two generations. The United States government spends more than $10,000,000 a year in maintaining the Indiana. Ireland sends annually 44.000 tons of eggs—some 640.000,000 in round numbers—to Ungland alone. Everything that has value in En gland is insured against loss. Even race meetings are insured. Two Sedgwick county (Kan.) farm ers will buy it pair of elephants, to be used on their wheat fields. The first lueifer match was sold in !IS2'.), but striking matches were made in Nuremburg as long ago as 1477. Twenty-five thousand tons of locust beans are grown a year in Cyprus, most of which goto Scotland to make •whisky. Thirty years ago there were only about twenty-five explosive com pounds known. Now there are more than 1,100. President Diaz, of Mexico, is said ♦ o be about to apply for a leave of absence in order to spend the spring in Europe. Four night watchmen of the Gil christ glassworks, at Elmer, N. J., have recently seen ghosts and have quit their positions. Free electricity travels at the same rate as light—lßo,ooo miles a second. Through wire electricity moves at only 10,000 miles a second. Ch.'i rles Quincy Ilillebrand, the new congressman from the Sixth Ohio district, was once a professional base bail player, and a good one. Ohio's cities and towns gained 436,- 021 in population during the last ten years, or 792 more than the increase in the rest of the entire state. Gov. Gregory, of Rhode Island, is one of the prime movers in a plan to have erected in Providence a statue of Gen. Nathaniel Green. Fifteen hundred millions of acres of Australia are yet undisposed of, and there are in the United Stated 800,000,000 acres of unsettled lands. Lady Curzon is encouraging her husband, the viceroy of India, in the steps he lias taken for the preser vation of India's ancient monuments. The new forts of Dover, England, are to have six nine-inch wire-wound guns, having an effective range of eleven miles. They are nearly forty feet long. The rivers of the Emerald Isle have generally a dark color, owing to the fuel that most of them at some point in Iheir course flow through peat marshes or beds, which impart a dark hue to the water. Swiss steamboat companies, to a\oid disputes as to the age of chil dren, have established measurement rules. Children under 3 feet in in length ride free, children under 4 feet 4 inches and dogs pay half fare. lie v. Father M. C. O'Brien, the new ly appointed Kornan Catholic bishop of Maine is widely known in edu cational circles as an authority upon the various dialects of the American Indian, of whom he has made a life long study. Miss Laura I). Gill, A. 8., of North ampton, Mass., who will be remem bered as one of the first volunteer nurses in the Spanish-American war, and who was in charge of the first Led Cross auxiliary detachment, has been elected dean of Barnard college. ITS SHORT MEMORY. The Ilemoornoy Kernel* All About lis l-'iK'ht on the Anll-llclluiu Cuban Question. EX-GOY. Stone's recent remarks on the desirability of the annexation of Cuba leads the St. Paul Pioneer Press to say that if Cuba sets up for itself un der a republican administration "the democracy will point to the fact as the result of republican blundering, wholly regardless of the fact that democratic opposition prevented any intervention in behalf of the Cubans until repub lican leaders had yielded a reluctant consent to the famous 'self-denying pledge' of our pronouncement against Spain, which bars lis from annexing the island." The Pioneer Press predicts that the democratic party will raise a clamor that Cuba vv;is lost through republican weakness and mis management, and the history of that party warrants the opinion. Sen ator Hoar has declared, upon his own knowledge of the circumstances, that Bryan's trip to Washington when the Spanish treaty nc-ared a vote was to urge senators with whom he had the moral influence to support the treaty in the belief that it would be disastrous and so improve the prospects of the op position. With its proverbially short memory the democratic party has ceased tocon sider the fight it made, just before the declaration of war with Spain, to recog nize Cuba as an existing republic. The report of the senate committee on for eign relations, on April 13, 1898. signed by, fiio republicans and one democrat, did not go far enough to suit democrat it- ideas, so there was aminority report, signed by three democrats and one re publican. recognizing the republic of Cuba as the true and lawful govern ment of the island. The resolutions as finually passed by congress stopped short of the immediate recognition.of a Cuban republic demanded by the democrats, but it was the prolonged and heated contest on that point that resulted in ihe insertion of the "self denying pledge" by the conference committee. If the democrats had had their way the United States would have gone into the war with a declaration that Cuba was already a republic and a sovereignty; and the mind can scarcely conceive all t lie coniplicat ions tow liich that wild absurdity would have led. — St. Louis Globe-Democrat. RECORD OF PROTECTION. A Principle of Government Tlint lins Worked Out Its Own Sal vation. Xo other principle of government lias worked out its own salvation to an equal degree with protection, which is now accepted as a settled policy except by the few who are so ignorant as to believe that an unfavorable balance of trade makes no difference with the general prosperity of the people of the country having an unfavorable bal ance. The American people enjoyed an unexcelled degreeof prosperity dur ing the year .1900, and the linal official reports will show that the balance of tra-de in favor of the United States was larger than ever before. The report for the port of New York was made by Dun's Review of recent date. That re port states that the aggregate value of the exports from that port during 19C0 was $577,166,081, while the imports ag gregated but $531,938,107, which makes the balance of trade in favor of the port of New York during the year $45,228.- 874, or nearly $1,000,000 per week. The advantage of that large favorable bal ance of trade to the increased general prosperity of last year is sufficiently shown by the trade balance at that port for each of the past eight years: T893 $158,341,779 1597 $61,610,833 IS! >4 80,549.530 IX9S 53,978.215 ]S!i5 166,739,980 ls9:l 51,?45,396 1596 56,150,208 1900 45.228.574 Dun's Iteview called attention to the fact that the significance of tliecom parison of 1900 with the other years named is increased by the further fact that "only 4€.4 per cent, of the total ex ports of the country pass out through the port of New York, while 04.7 per cent, of the total imports enter here." An examination of the foregoing com parison should be interesting to every person who desires the continued gen era.l prosperity of all the people who are willing to work their hands and their brains, yet it is true that visionary the orists will assert that the balance of trade does not affect the conditions of the people, notwithstanding every man who can read knows that when he pays out- more money than he receives the balance is oil the wrong side of his cash book, and he is operating under condi tions which lead to bankruptcy and poverty."—lowa. State Register. tCIt is about time for Col. Bryan to begin to view with alarm the renewed activity of Grover Cleveland. When Mr. Cleveland gets one of his misgiv ing paroxysms it means something, and he may yet receive his fourth nomina tion for president before Col. Bryan gets his third.--Philadelphia Press. lET"A speaker on the present condition of the democratic party says a cat and dog may repose peacefully on a rug. "but tie them together, and see if they would not fight." The tying operation will be t tied laier on.—i>t. Louis Globe- Democrat. (ETThe revenues of the Philippines the past year were $19,000,000. With peace the .amount would be much larger, but $19,000,000 under the reign of peace would support a good govern ment in the islands and leave-a surplus sufficient to refund to the United States a part of thee cpendit tire forthe war.— Indianapolis Journal. GTThe flilibusterers in the senate are becoming alarmed at their own success in deferring the consideration of im portant measures—some of which they desire the passage of themselves, ship ping bill or no shipping bill. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1901. SOUTHERN CONDITIONS. SeriotiN Politic!!l Problem Tlmt Con* IronlJi the People In Tliut Section. Among the subjects which have agi tated congress at the present session and which have not yet been disposed of is that of representation in t lie house from those states in the south which recently have passed constitutional amendments restricting suffrage. These amendments have not been gen eral in their application, but have been so drawn as to disfranchise ihe black, while permitting- the white man with no more education, to cast his bal lot. This system of discrimination it is customary tocondemn. At first sight and without going deeply into the question one is inclined to believe that great injustice is being done upon the theory that no restrictions should be placed upon the, right of franchise which do not apply to all of the voting age. Hist conditions in the south are such that many conservative citizens have advocated the adoption of the amendments. A serious problem has been confronting the white people of the south for a number of years, and it is of such a nature that it should at tract the attention of the thinking citizen everywhere. The whites of the south are entitled to the sympathy of their brethren of the. north in their attempt to solve it. It may be that the disfranchisement of the unintelligent and uneducated black is not the true solution, lint there are many who believe that it comes nearer to it than any which has yet been suggested. The problem in the south i~ one of race, not of politics. The average white man in that section of the country is not so much for the democratic party a-s he is against negro domination, and what it is to be controlled by the negro in the south can hardly be ap preciated in the north, where the black man has intelligence and education and frequently refinement. It is true that for the disfranchisement the democrat ic party in the south is directly re sponsible, because its managers hoped to gain partisan advantage thereby. They knew t hat the whites had always voted the democratic ticket, and be lieved they would always continue tc do so. They thought that with the vote of the black eliminated they would receive what would be equivalent to a perpetual lease of power. I!ut it was only the political managers who took this partisan view of the situation. The action of the legislatures, had the indorsement of thousands of voters not actively identified with politics because they believed they saw in it relief from the conditions which prevail and which those in the north, who have not studied the question can hardly ap preciate. Their view of the matter is entitled to consideration in weighing this subject. They indorse the move ment because they believe a vital prin cipal in government is at stake.and be cause they believe that in domination by the element which has been disfran chised would mean to them the loss of business and much less personal com fort, and that it would have an unpleas ant effect upon tlieir home life. While, perhaps, the experiment is of too recent birth to predict the bearing it will have upon the future in the po litical history of the south, it is by no means certain, that it will not have an effect directly contrary to that which its originators had planned. Those men who supported the disfranchising amendments because of their honest fear of negro domination, have allied themselves with the democratic party because only in that alliance could they see an assurance that the white vote would predominate. With that fear eliminated they are apt to look at oth er questions. They will consider the great national principles which divide the two great political parties, and the business man and the laboring man of the south., like their brethren in the north, will discover that their inter ests lie in supporting those theories of government advocated, advanced and practiced by the republican party. It would seem as if there were food for reflection in this thought. It is not impossible that the action which the democratic legislatures of the south have taken in the hope to strengthen thi ir own grip upon tlieVe states may result ultimately in the disintegration of the so-ca.lled democratic solid south. —Albany Journal. E7William Jennings Bryan's newspa per. The Commoner, w ill, it is said, ac cept no advertisements of articles man ufactured by trusts. This policy, if rigidly carried out, will exclude from Mr. Hryan's weekly a large amount of democratic advertising matter which it might have just as well as not. It will be felt as a particularly harsh busi ness rule by the large element of his party that looks for the latest adver tisements concerning the products of Kentucky and Peoria. —Chicago Inter Ocean. wi'l be quite interesting to note the disposition of the press of the coun try toward congress, if it actually "jams through" a $00,000,000 river and harbor improvement bill during the re maining six weeks of the session, while refusing to give sufficient consideration to the shipping bill, involving but 39.(100,000, after having the latter meas ure before it for over two years. IClf the river and harbor improve ment bill, carrying appropriations of $00,000,000, can "be jammed through" the senate inside of six weeks, is it such a dreadful thing to "jam through'* congress the shipping bill, which has been before that branoh of the govern ment. for two full years, having twice been favorably reported to each branch of congress by committers having it in charge? it 'Mr. Bryan's paper will not print all the particulars of the downfall of the republic until more of them ai* at hand.—Chicago Record. ANTI-SALOON WAR. Women of Kansas Continue Their Attacks. Four "Joint**' »l Anthony »re Wreck ed by Imitator* ol.tlr*. Nation anil Scared Saloonlwtn In Other I'artM of the Ntute Shut C|) Shop. Topcka, Kan, Jan. 29.—Mrs. Carrie Nation yesterday invaded the office of Gov. Stanley in the Capitol build ing and for an hour arraigned the chief executive of the state for. his failure to close the saloons of Kan sas. Then she visited the offices of Attorney General Goddard, County Attorney Nichols aud Sheriff Porter and demanded of each that they close the saloons. When Mrs. Nation entered Gov. Stanley's office by turns she admin istered to Stanley a tongue-lashing for his failure to uphold the laws against liquor selling, or begged him for aid to carry on her crusade. She put her questions with fierceness and answered them herself without giv ing the governor time to utter a com plete sentence in his own defense. "You can close every joint in Kan sas if you will," she said with force. "You ean do it if you want to, but you won't. You are a lawbreaker yourself if you don't. You are not only a lawbreaker, but a perjurer." Finally Gov. Stanley said: "You get the county prosecuting attorneys to put the joint keepers in jail and I will use my power as governor to keep them in. I will see that they are not pardoned out." This promise instantly trans formed Mrs. Nation. She beamed with joy, and thanking the governor, started for the office of Attorney General Goddard, who referred her to the county attorney. To County Attorney Nichols she re peated her demands, and said she wished to swear out a warrant for the saloonkeepers who had attacked her Saturday night with a broom stick. Then she headed for the of fice of Sheriff Cook. The sheriff boiled over with an;yer under her searching attack. He broke away and, rushing towards a newspa per man in the crowd who had point ed to him, seized the offender's col lar and made a motion to strike him. Others interfered, and, Sheriff Cook returning to Mrs. Nation's side, asked her to his private, otlice to continue the argument alone. The chief of police was picked out for the next on slaught, but his office was. found locked and Mrs. Nation harangued a crowd near the city hall. Boston, .lan. 31. —Mrs. Mary Green, who seems to be familiar with the methods of Mrs. Carrie Nation, of Kiwisas, wrecked a Cambridge street bar room Tuesday evening and yes terday was sentenced to serve a term at Deer island. Mrs. Green not only laid the bartender low with a plate, but also shattered several plate glass windows and drove the patrons of the establihment into the cellar. "I'm Carrie Nation," she said, "and I'll leave no rum shftp in the town when I g'ot through." Mrs. Green's imitation of the noted Kansas reformer was terminated by a policeman and .ludge Wentworth sentenced her to the house of correc tion. Anthony, Kan.. Jan. 31. —Mrs. Car rie Nation was outdone here Wednes day when a band of W. C. T. U. wo men. headed by Mrs. Sheriff, of Dan ville, completely wrecked the fixtures in four "joints," smashing plate glass windows and mirrors right and left and turning gallons of liquor into the gutters. The women, who were of the best families in Anthony, were accompanied by their husbands and sons or brothers, who assured pro tection. The band will, it is said, start out to-day on a tour of destruc tion through Harper county, which is prolific in saloons. Mrs. Sheriff, who led the raid, is under bond to appear at Danville in April to answer a charge of saloon wrecking placed against her six weeks ago. Mrs. Sheriff came to Anthony on Tuesday ami worked all night procuring hatchets and other implements of de struction. No arrests were made, but the mayor swore in extra police and the crusaders were placed under strict surveillance. He also preserved the names of the women engaged in the work. As a sequel to the raid a number of young men and two or three small boys became reeling drunk. Two of the boys were locked up in the city jail. During the ex citement they had followed the cru saders into the saloon and secured a quantity' of whisky, wine and beer. Wichita, Kan., Jan. 31. —Wholesale liquor dealers here received tele phone messages from Harper last night stating that there was not an open saloon in town at sunset. Harp er is half way between Anthony and Danville and it is said that the local W. C. T. U. leaders were strangely active there yesterday. Messages have also been received here that three saloons at Attica have closed. Coffeyville, Kan., Jan. 31.—Every "joint" in Montgomery county is closed as a result of the action of County Attorney Dana, who served notice on the keepers that they would not be permitted to run longer. Topeka. Kan.. Jan. 31.—Mrs. Carrie Nation yesterday organized a band of 4(> women to follow her leadership and assist in wiping out "joints." ITliKNoiirlnnN Win. Washington, Jan. 29.—The United States supreme court yesterday ren dered an opinion in the case of the Chicago drainage canal, overruling the demurrers filed in the case by the state of Illinois and the Chicago drainage canal district board. The proceeding was brought by the state of Missouri against the state of Illi nois and the drainage board, the end sought being to prevent the use of the canal because of its supposed pollution of the drainage water of St. Louis. The effect of the decision sustains the contention of Missouri. CAUGHT BYJHE GRIP. Released by Pe-ru-na—Congressman Howard's Recovery—Congressman Geo. H. White's Case. La Grippe is epidemic catarrh. —It spares no class or nationality. The cultured and the ignorant, the aristocrat and the pau per. The masses and the classes are alike subject to la grippe. None are exempt—all are liable. Have you the grip? Or, rather, has'the grip got you? Grin is well named. The original French term, la grippe, has been shortened by the busy American to lead "grip." Without intending to do so a new word has been coined that exactly describes the case. As if some hideous giant with awful Grip had clutched us in its fatal clasp. Men, women, children, whole towns and cities are caught in the baneful grip of a terrible monster. Pe-ru-na for Grip. Mrs. Dr. C. D. Powell, President of Ep worth League, also President of Loyal Tem perance Legion, writes from Chehalis, Wash.: "I have used several remedies' in cases of severe colds and la grippe, but none I con sider of more value than Peruna." —Mrs. Dr. C. D. Powell. The Peruna Medicine Co.. Columbus. of La Grippe. Miss Emma Jouris, President Golden Rod Sewing Circle, writes from 40 Burling street, Chicago, 111., as follows: "This spring I suffered severely from the after-effects of la grippe. As the doctors did not help me I bought a bottle of Peruna."— Miss Emma Jouris. CoiiKi'eHMiiiau Hownrrf's Letter. Fort Payne, Ala. The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, i Ohio: Gentlemen—" I have taken Peruna now for two weeksand find I am very much relieved. I feel that my cure will be permanent. I have also taken it for la grippe and I take pleasure in recommending Peruna as an excellent remedy to all fellow sufferers."— M. W. Howard, Memberof Congress. La Grippe Lenve.n the SyiMtem 111 a Deplorable Condition. D. L. Wallace, a charter member of the International Barbers' Union, writes from 15 Western Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn.: Dr. Bull's Cough ]W| Cures a Cough or Cold at once. bus j£w Conquers Croup, Whooping-Cough, fcSl w » lllj " Hoarseness, Bronchitis, Grippe and ™ Consumption. Mothers praise it. Doctors prescribe it. Quick, sure results. Get only Dr. Bull's 1 Price, 25 cents. Ur. Bull's Pills cure Constipation. Fifty pills, lOcts. Trial box, 5 cts. In 3 or 4Years an Independence Is Assured If you take up your homes ■alKMBSrv P n Western Canada. the ij|\fl Iland ol plenty. Illus <tw i I ifl J.l J who have become wealthy \ro W A of delegates, etc.. ana full ™ >Hf>iW Information as to reduced dAK&sxjl railway rates can bo had L ~—application to the Superintendent of Immigration Department of Interior. Ottawa. Canada, or address the Under signed. who will mail you atlases, pamphlets, etc., free of cost. F. PKDLEY. Supt. <>t Immigration, Ottawa. Canadii; or to M. \. McINNES. No. 2 Morrill Blk.. Detroit. Mich.; K.T. lloi.mls, RoouiG, Big Four lildg.. Indianapolis. Ind. For full explanation of the most ATTRACTIVE and PROFIT ABLE PROPOSITION ever offered to AGENTS. Address P. O. Box 1501. New York City, N. Y. Itn M WIIVA without foe un -0 A H &MTG >•''*'* surc. snfiiU Btfr KM B IT" IV H Scml description; 1 ft I kll I %# FHKG opinion. ■ MII.O It. STEVENS & CO., Ksrali. ltslH. Dlv. 3. HI" MtbStruet. WASHINGTON, I>. O. Br&ncli offices: Chicago, Cleveland anil Detroit. CURES WHtH*! ALL ELSE FAILS. eT {fc-J Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use jp® |>l in time. Sold by drupgints. Mr# "Following a severe attack of la grippe I seemed to be affected badly all over. "One of my customers who was greatly helped by Peruna advised me to try it, and I procured a bottle the same day. Now my head is clear, my nerves are steady, I enjoy food, and rest well. Peruna has- been worth a dollar a dose to me."—L. I). Wallace. Grip Cause* Denlneu, Mrs. M. A. Sharick, chaplain G. A. R. Woman's Relief Corps, writes from Fre mont, Wash.: "When la grippe was the prevailing illness in this Western country I was laid up the ■whole winter, I partially lost my hearing, and had a very bad case of catarrh of the head and throat. "I read of Peruna, tried it and had my hearing restored and catarrh cured. I can not speak too well of Peruna." —Mrs. M. A. Sharick. La Grippe Cared in Itn Flr»t Stnsre. Lieutenant Clarice Hunt, of the Salt Lake City Barracks of the Salvation Army, write® from Ogden, Utah: "Two months ago I was suffering with so severe cold that I could hardly speak. "Our captain advised me to try Peruna, and procured a bottle for me, and truly it worked wonders. Within two weeks I waa entirely well."—Clarice Hunt. ConKrMsnmn White's Letter. Tarboro, N. C. Gentlemen—•' lam more than satis fied with Peruna and find it to be an excellent remedy for the grip and ca tarrh. I have used it in my family and they all join me in recommending it as an excellent remedy." Geo. H. White, Member of Congress. Remnlneil la Feeble Health After Cured of La Grippe. Mrs. T. W. Collins, Treasurer Indepen dent Order of Good Temfilars, of Everett, Wash., writes: "After having a severe attack of la grippe I continued in a feeble condition even after the doctor called me cured. My blood seemed poisoned. Peruna cured me." —Mia. T. W. Collins. Address The Peruna Medicine Co., of Columbus, 0., for a free book on catarrh. l(sg 150 KINDS ~ For 16 Cents \M Laat year wentarted oat for *2(lo,ooonew I custom ere. We received 270,000. We I I now have on our books I,llo,ooonamea. m I C J« Wo v# h morf in l#ol, making mi ;| £ ■ 1,500,0u0 full, nence this unprecedented I PA., LM\, Nfl offer for 16 centH postpaid of ! 1/ M ' V2O kind* of rurent IIINCIOUM radlihci, I. "■*#. J| 12 muifiiltlccnt curliest nulouo, a 16sort# fflorloua toiuntocn, I I A ■25 pcerlrM lettuce varieties. I A W 12 aplendld boot aorta, I V ■ <i ] 1 12» ir«» ] r «r* b. uut It'u 1 flowcr»efd/« I W M captivate rour hearts, together wiih our great ■ ■[ ■lllustrated Plant and 3eed Catalog. telling all U ■H ■about Million Dollar Grass, Peaoat, Teoslnte. ! ■ ■ Bmmus. Speltr. Onioc Seed at 60c.. etc . all I ■ for 16 centa stamps and thla notice. Catalog positively worth SIOO to auj I Jinn I \\\\vl planter of garden and firm seeds. i Ltd I I I ) / ))) JOHNA.salzerseedco. m\)JM la Crosse, W,a. I,nl>or Saving; Dessert. Dissolve in hot water contents of a pack* ! age of Burnham's Hasty Jellyeon, set away in a cool place until wanted and you will have the most brilliant, pleasing jelly. The flavors are: lemon, orange, strawberry, rasp berry, wild cherry and peach, or if a delicious wine or coffee jelly is desired, get ''calfsfoot" Jellyeon. Your grocer sells it. | A. N. K.-C 1880 DYRIB MATISM H^SSR, KRPII the only positive cure. Pustex i filflLU
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers