2 CAMERON COUNTY FKaSS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per year *2 00 U paid iu advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of one dollar per square for one insertion and ttfiy eeuts per square for each subsequent insertion Rates tiy the year, or for si* or three months, are low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less,«!!: each subsequent Inser tion HI ceuts per square. Local notices lo cents per line for one inser ■ertion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent consecutive insertion. obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less, Ift per year; ever nve lines, at the regular rates of adver tising No local inserted for less than 73 cents per Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pwtss is complete •nd affords facilities for doing the best class of work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAIOTO LAW PRINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the option of the pub fisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. CURRENT TOPICS. Adelina I'atti has celebrated her E6th birthday. Lord Roberts is a possible purchaser of Mine. Haiti's castle. Cireat Britain lias no distinctive and exclusive throne. One person iu every thirty-nine in England and Wales is a pauper. At present each 1.100,000 tons of coal raised costs one human life. A fire lias been raging In a rich Pennsylvania coal field for 42 years. Lions and «tigers are too weak in lung power to run more than half a mile. Senor Sagasta beads the new Span ish cabinet. Gen. Wcyler is minister of war. The Hindu chronology extends to 0174 I>. ('.; Habylon, 6758 B. China, 0157 H. C. Professional cyclists made over SIOO,OOO iu prize money during the past year. In Prussia alone, in the ten years ending 1896. 407 school children ccni mitted suicide. Our Indian population is not skilful in any line of mit tut fact ure save their own crude industries. After having been threatened many years, the fortifications ol' Paris arc at last to be destroyed. l'hc fastest-flowing river in the world is the Sutlej. iu India. Its de scent is 12,000 feet in 180 miles. At Schoenbrunn, the Austrian em peror's palace, is the finest collection of orchids in the world, numbering 18,000 plants. A fiber company is preparing to manufacture gun stocks of tiber. with a view to lightening the weight of the present rifle. An Ohio clerygy man has adopted display newspaper advertising as a means of increasing the size of his congregation. ('apt. Alfred Dreyfus has written a book entitled "Five Years of My Life,*' dealing with his imprisonment on Dexii's Island. <ieri. MaeArthur has issued a state ment to the Filipinos, offering to sur render one prisoner for every gun given up by the rebels. The working force of the govern ment departments in Washington number 1(1,410, drawing salaries to the amount of $16,628,505.72 per annum. The censorship is a very real thing in China. There any one who writes an objectionable book is punished with 100 blows of the heavy bamboo and banished for life. Bombay is an immense city, with land and sea shipping equal to the best. It has large commerce and trade and manufacturing interests. Its buildings are said to be finest in i ndia. The death rate of the world is 07 and the birth rate 70 a minute, and this seemingly light percentage of gain is sufficient to give a net in crease in population each year of 1,- 200,000. In the years 1898 and 1899 Germany held second place in shipbuilding, but, for various reasons, the shipbuilding in 1000 has received such an impetus in the United States that it has placed Germany third. The distinction among animals of requiring least sleep belongs to the elephant. Iu spite of its capacity for hard work, the elephant seldom, if ever, sleeps more than four, or occa sionally five, hours. The inks of ancient days were much like black paint, and, on ac count of the large quantity of gum employed in their composition, the letters stood up in relief on the parch ments iis though embossed. Smoking a pipe of medium size, says a statistician, a man blows out of his mouth every time he fills the bowi 7(10 smoke clouds. If he smokes four times a day for twenty years he blows 20,110,00 smoke clouds. The common potato, when decom posing, gives light enough to read by -a light so vivid that once a cellar at Strasburg was thought to be on lire when shining with the phosphor escence of decomposing potatoes. The memorial of Queen Victoria, which has been approved by King Ed ward, is - to be a monument, the most prominent feature of which will be a statue of the queen, to be erected near Westminster Abbey or Rucking ham palace. The ten largest German cities art to-day: Berlin. 1,884,345 inhabitants; Hamburg, 701,000; Munich, 500,000; Leipsic, 455,120; Breslau, 422,415: Dresden, 395.349; Cologne, .'170,685; Frankfort, 287,813; Nuremberg, 260,- 743; Hanover. 234,986. M'KINLEY THE MAN. A CI I*7loo n( flu* Ipuard Carter of Itic >ntlon'« ItmiXM'tcd < hU-f e. Just ton years ago William McKinley was retiring' from congress. a defi ated candidate for reelection, after an al most unbroken service of 14 years. Ile had gone down under tlie democratic avalanche of November, JbfO. His op ponents attributed his deirut o the tariff bill bearing his name, then but recently enacted into law. friends attributed it to a democvafC gerry imtnder. which had placed hint At a dis advantage «u his district. Hut. for one cause or the other, he was returning to private life, and the boldest of thr enemies of protection ventured the pre diction that he would find it difficult to regain a place as leader. Thos« gen tlemen spoke without prescience. Hardly had Mr. McKinley peached home when a movement took form to make him his party's candidate that year for governor of Ohio. The repub licans responded readily to the sugges tion, he was nominated with ease and he had a plurality at the polls over James E. Campbell of over 20.000, It was an extraordinary victory, coming so soon after the repudiation .of the Mc- Kinley tariff bill at the congressional elections of the year before. He was re nominated and reelected governor in 1893, and this time received the un precedented plurality of 80,Cfl0-odd. votes. The campaign had been fought on both sides with extraordinary vigor because of the recognized fact that the result would probably have an impor tant bearing on the presidential nom inations of 1896. If Mr. McKinley should win. his chances for the repub lican nomination would be greatly ad vanced. while if Mr. Seal, t he democrat ic candidate, should win. a new leader in that party would have to be reck oned with. Mr. MeKinley's record-breaking race had the effect desired and expected b\ his followers. It made him irresistible at the next republican national conven tion.and he won the nomination for president over as strong a. man as Thomas? B. Heed with ease. The ean \;is< that followed, in which lie was pitted against a whirlwind campaigner of many attractive personal qualities, and who played upon the emotions of the people at a time of much want and distress, stamped Mr. McKinley as a leader of great sagacity and reserve power. He brought forward the policy of protection again and opposed it to free silver, and again Mr. Bryan went to the wall. His renomination and re election a.s president have logically fol lowed. and he is beginning his second term in the white house with the en thusiastic plaudits of his' friends and the heartiest personal good will of even his opponents. Mr. McKinley is 57 years of age. His health is excellent. His capacity for work is great. His knowledge of men «i.nd affairs is very wide. He enjoys the confidence of the people. As white a light beats upon him as upon any throne, and it discloses nothing to his disadvantage. He is so much respected and so well beloved, indeed, that all men, regardless of party, cordially and sincerely respond to the toast of Long live William McKinley!—Washington Stsir. LIBERATOR M'KINLEY. Million* of o|i|ires.seil Ileved of rlie (iallint; Yoke of Spain. The war with Spain, which Presi dent McKinley did everything in his power to prevent, gave him tlic great opportunity of his life, and one that he l>est improved. In it he lifted his administration to the plane of those of Washington and Lincoln, and linked his name with theirs for our time, if not for all time, as the lib erator of millions from the yoke of Spain. The country wanted war, but was not prepared for it; the presi dent did not want it, but was pre pared for it when it came. Through out the war he was not only the ac tual commander in chief, but the di rector of our diplomacy. The story of the United States in the summer of 1898 is as dramatic and as bril liant and as glorious as any that his tory tells. Spain was expelled from her last strongholds in the West In dies and in the East Indies, and shut up in the home peninsula; the is lands she had misgoverned came un der the flag of freedom; the United States, as the champion of the mil lions whom Spain had oppressed, came out of her isolation, and re ceived recognition from all of the nations. President McKinley could cay better than any man:"This was my work," while, with characteristic modesty, thought fulness and gener osity, he was praising and thanking other men, all of whom did not de serve to be so praised and thanked. The suddenness and completeness of our achievement dazzled the imagina tion and won the admiration of the world. Its consequences made us an active instead of a passive world pow er. and gave lis new duties and re sponsibilities, which we regret, but could not honorably avoid. —Henry 11. F. MacFarland, in Atlantic. ItyThe report of the joint commis sion to survey the boundary line be tween the United States and British America, although not final, practi cally sustains the claims of this gov ernment, the former getting nine ter.ths and the latter one-tenth of the disputed territory. Thus dies an other assortment of falsehoods to the effect that the administration would surrender to Great Britain.— Indianapolis Journal. P'Mr, Bryan has become quite cheerful since he learned that a resi dent of Canton, 0., died recently of starvation. Detroit Free Press (Dein J. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1901. INDEPENDENCE OF CUBA. Itnllomil ii nd ( <ii«» me ■■ 11 II lile (nurse tif President McKinley in Treu liiK n lib tlie I sin ti il. The anti-administration journals tell us that our government is intent upon "robbing" the Cubans of their inde pendence and making of the island o' Cuba an Ami rican colony and so re pudiating the solemn pledge* of con gress in 18(18. The answer of th«> presi dent to these outrageous charges, which Invp not the slighesi foundation in fact, \vat> the attachment of his sig nature to the army appropriation bill, which embodies the provisions tend ing the relations of the United States with Cuba and the Philippines. The president has thus emphasized the position of this government and na tion on this important subject, 'l'lie position is in the highest sense com mendable, rational, conciliatory and calculated to bestow upon Cuba the strongest reality of independence and local autonomy and to insure the reign of law and order, peace and justice on the island and insure it against a lapse into the chaotic condition of Ilayti. Having freed the island from Spain, our government has. in every step it has taken, given the Cubans to understand that it purposes to be guardian of the island and to establish the stable gov ernment required by the treaty of Paris. It declared, in the call for the Cuban constitutional convention, that the constitution framed by the conven tion must lie submitted to the United States congress for approval. There was not a delegate in the convention who did not perfectly understand that the work of the convention would be subject to such supervision. Even men like Cisneros understood this :ini! made no objection when the convention met. They a.ll knew that they were expected to define the relations of the island to the I'nited States. Intelligent Cubans saw that as the United States holds the sovereignty of Cuba as trustee, the trusteeship cannot be turned over to any persons or government who does not have the right and ability to act in the place of the United States. If the constitution were eminently accept able, the Cuban government elected 9ft days after its promulga 'ion would have to be installed under tl-e protection of our troops and the I'nited States would have to see that the elections were properly he'd and the machinery of the insular government putin operation successfully. The Cub?,Tl constitution itself devotes several sections to the subject of the transfer of government, plainly conceding that the elections must be held in accordance with t he or, ders of the I'nited States issued .Inly 25, 1900. Obviously, the trusteeship of the I'nited States over the island dees not end until a. stable government shvWl have been established there, and the United States has properly and law ful ly insisted that the Cubans shall give certain guaranties protective of the in terests of both parties, and either to be made a part of the organic law or to be embodied in a permanent treaty between the United States and Cuba. It is a. small thing for the United States to require American supervision of Cuba's treaty-making and debt-making power. The United States reghteously demands that the last, state of Cuba shall not be worse than the former state under Spain. It is the truest statesmanship to insist t'aat Cuba shall not fall into the hand*revolutionary juntas which will pro** destructive of the real welfare of the Cubans and make it the desolate- ttnlking ground for a series- of dictators. Fortunately, the administration of President McKinley is e-rcal to the duty •and responsibility of dealing with tint Cuban matter, which will be settled in a. statesmanlike way. conducive to the highest interests of Cuba and the I'nit ed States.—Minneapolis Journal. POLITICAL DRIFT. have been presidents who apparently held congress in light es teem. President McKinley has had a long and honorable ffireer in con gress, he knows the proper functions of that body and recognizes its prop er authority, and he has no intention of encroaching on its rights or ig noring its responsibilities. That is one reason why the president and congress get along so well together. —Troy Times. E?'The president has spoken lumi nously and convincingly concerning Cuba. The policy enunciated by con gress w ill have few opponents among men who read the president's re marks on this most important ques tion. He says"the declaration of (he purposes of this government in the resolution of April 20, H9B, must be made good." The only way to mawe it good is to iollow the line of policy indicated by congress .laid approved by the president.—Chicago Tribune. mTol. Bryan can't pet anything straight. In naming his paper lie has to juggle with a definition. He quotes Webster's dictionary as defining a "commoner" as "one of the common people." lie conveniently leaves out Webster's addition and qualification, "one having no rank of nobility." In the United States the word has no relevancy. The colonel might just as well call his weekly emanation The Serf, The Slave, or The Peasant, as The Commoner. The. title is ab surd. —X. V. Sun. (CTh&t tariff war against the United States does not seem to pre vent other countries from buying what they want of us. Our exports continue to increase, and some of our specialities are rapidly growing in foreign favor. The city of Berne, Switzerland, has just placed a large order for American electric cars With our bridges in the Soudan, out electric ears in all progressive cities of the old world and our machinery everywhere, the tariff does not ap pear to be much of « Chinese wall. —Troy Times. A STATESMAN DIES. Ex-Prssident Harrison Joins tho SiPnt Majority. IIIk Liul Hour* Were Spent 111 a Stupor and It Ii Said lliat During De lirious .Moments lie Spoke ol tlie Siifl'erliii;* unit W roiigii of I lie lliirrn. Indianapolis, March 14.—Gen. Ilen jamin Harrison died at 4:45 o'clock Wednesday afternoon without re gaining consciousness. His death was quiet and painless, there being a gradual sinking until the end came, which was marked by a single gasp for breath as life departed from the body of the statesman. The general's condition was so bad in the morning that the attending physicians understood that the end could not be far off. anil all bulletins sent out from the sick room were to this effect, so that the family and friends were prepared when the final blow came. The gradual fail ing of the remarkable strength shown by the patient became more noticeable in the afternoon and a few moments before the end there was an apparent breakdown on the part of the sufferer, as he surren dered to the disease against which he had been battling for so many hours. The change was noticed by the physicians and the relatives and friends, who had retired from tlie sick room to the library below, were summoned and reached the bedside of the general before he passed away. KX-I'RESIDENT HARRISON'. None of Gen. Harrison's children were present at his death. Neither Col. Russell Harrison nor Mrs. McKee had reached the city., although both were hurrying to the bedside of their dying parent as fast as steam could carry them. Elizabeth, Gen. Harrison's little daughter, had been taken from the sick room before the end came. One of the most pathetic incidents of the whole illness of the general occurred Tuesday before he became unconscious. The general's little daughter, Elizabeth, was brought into the sfi-k room for a few mo ments and offered him a small apple pie which she had made. Gen. Har rison smiled his recognition of the child and her gift, but the effort to speak was too much and he could do nothing more to express his appreci ation. Yesterday all efforts to arouse the slowly dying man to consciousness failed, and be died without a word of recognition to any of those who surrounded his bedside. The funeral of ex-President Harri son will take place next Sunday af ternoon at 2 o'clock. The services will be hi Id in the First Presbyterian church, of which Gen. Harrison was a member for nearly 50 years. The body of Gen. Harrison will lie instate in the rotunda of the Capi tol all day Saturday. From one who was present at the death bed it is learned that the alle gations of cruelty and injustice dealt out by England to the Boers in their struggle for liberty had been a sub ject for thought in the mind of Gen. Harrison. To liis friends he had often spoken of the pity and shame that the brave farmers of South Afri ca should be robbed of their coun try, of all they nave in the world and forced to submit to terrible miseries. Gen. Harrison would have liked nothing better than to have come out strongly and say what he thought of England's cruelty; it was in his mind constantly, but he believed that an ex-president should observe the same properties of speech which are ob served by a president of the United States. He was at all times careful to say nothing that could be twisted into a seeming disregard for the hon or of the high position he once held. During the last hours he spoke of the Boers and their struggles. His voice was low and his thoughts dis connected. but those lying over him could catch words of praise for tlie Boer republic. Benjamin Harrison was born at North Bend, ()., August 20, 1833. He was the son of .lohn Scott Harrison and the grandson of William Henry Harrison, tlie ninth president of the United States. Benjamin Harrison, his great grandfather, was one of the signers of the Declaration of Inde pendence. Washington, March 14.—President McKinley will attend tin- funeral of Gen. Harrison. He will leave here probably to-night, although the exact time of departure has not been de termined definitely, accompanied by Mrs. McKinley and Secretary Cortel you. The party will stop at- Canton for a day or wore and Mrs. McKin ley will remaiti there while the presi dent and Mr. Cortelyou proceed to Indianapolis. lliseeS Will. Pittsburg. March 14.—The will of the late Slat- Senator Magei does not indicate the value of the estate, but close frittids estimate it at be tween $4,500,100 and $5,000,000, the bulk of whi<h will ultimately reach the fund for the establishment of a hospital witch Mr. Magee directs shall be ere«ted in memory of his mother. All'of his brothers and his sister are remembered. Several friends and all of his servants are eared for. aid his wife is given the income of his residuary estate. At her death tie entire estate will re vert to the lospital. A Fill XL'ELY G IFT. Mr. Carnegie Establishes a Pen sion Fund for His Employes. Nreurlllm Worth 81,000,0(10 Are I»o --naled lif I lie Steel Klna lor Hie I'ur poaie of Aiding 'l«'ii ICm *'< l l>j the < Co.—Ulvc* u Mil lion to Tlirvit I<lbrarlcf. Pittsburg, March 14. —Two commu nications from Andrew Carnegie, which were made public last night tell of the steel king's retirement from active business life and of his donation of $4,000,000 for the endow ment of a fund for superannuated and disabled employes of the Carne gie Co. This benefaction is by far the largest of the many created by Mr. Carnegie, and is probably with out a counterpart anywhere in the world. This fund will in nowise in terfere with the continuance of the savings fund established by the com pany 15 years ago for the benefit of its employes. In the latter fund ilea "ly $2,000,000 of the employes* sav ing:. are on deposit, upon which the company by contract pays 6 per cent, and loans money to the workmen to build their own homes. The letters follow. "New York, March 14. —To the pood people of Pittsburg: An op portunity to retire from business came to me unsought, which I con sidered it my duty to accept. My resolve was made in youth to retire before old aire. From what I have seen around me I cannot doubt the wisdom of this course, although the change is great and seldom brings the happiness expected. But this is because so many, having abundance to retire upon, have so little to re tire to. I have always felt that old age should be spent not. as the Scotch say, in 'making miekle mair,' but in making good use of what has been acquired, and I hope my friends of I'ittsburg will approve of my ac tion in retiring while still in full health and vigor, and 1 can reason ably expect many years for useful ness in fields which have other lhan personal aims. "The pain of change and separation from business associations and em ployes is keen; associates who are at. once the best of friends; employes who are not only the best of work men, but the most self-respecting body of men which the world has to show. Of 1 his 1 am well assured and very proud. "Hut the separation even from a business point of view is not abso lute. since my capital remains in Pittsburg as before, and indeed I am now interested in more mills there than ever, and depend upon Pittsburg tor my revenue. I shall have more time now to devote to the Institute an I to the Technical school, which arc in the higher donKiin of Pitts burg's life and these I have long seen to be my chief work." LETTER XO. 2. "New York, March 12.—T0 the President and Managers of the Car negie Co.: Mr. Franks, my cashier, will hand over to you upon your ac ceptance of the trust $.1,000,000 of the Carnegie Co. bonds in trust for the following purposes: "The income of $1,000,000 to be spent in maintaining the libraries built by me in I'raddock, Homestead and Duquesne. I have been giving (lie interest on $250,000 to each of these libraries hitherto and this will give a revenue of $50,000 hereafter for the three. Braddock library is doing a great deal oT work for the neighborhood and requires more than Homestead. Homestead, on the other hand, will probably require more for a time than Duquesne, but I leave it to you to distribute the funds from time to time according to the work done or needed. Du quesne's portion can be held until the library is opened, and then ap plied to meet extras in cost, if any. "The income of the other $4,000,000 is to be applied: "First To provide for employes of the Carnegie Co. in all its works, mines, railways, shops, etc., injured in its service, and for those depen dent upon such employes as are killed. "Second—To provide small pen sions to such employes as, after long and creditable service, through ex ceptional circumstances need such help in their old age and who make a good use of it. Should these uses not require all of the revenue and a surplus of $200,000 be left after ten years' operation, then for all over this, workmen in the mills other than the Carnegie Co. in Allegheny county shall becomf eligible for participa tion in the fund, the mills nearest the works of the Carnegie Co. being first embraced. "This fund is not intended to be used as a substitute for what the coir 'any has been in the habit of do ing in such cases—far from it. It is intended togo still further and give to the injured or their families, or to employes wlu> are needy in old age, through no fault of their own, some provision against want as long as needed, or until young children can become self-supporting. "I make this first use of surplus wealth upon retiring from business as an acknowledgement of the deep debt which I owe to the workmen who have contributed so greatly to* my success. I hope the cordial rela tions which exist between employers and employed throughout all the Car negie Co. works may never be dis turbed." Tlie Alabama l» O. K. Montgomery, Ala., March 14. —Hear Admiral Evans, Commodore Uoelker and Naval Constructor Capps, who went to Pensacola for final inspection of the battleship Alabama, passed through Montgomery last night on their return to Washington. Tues day morning the Alabama went t.;> sea for a final trial trip. Two rounds were fired from the batteries to test the mounts and the entire battery was fired to test the mounts and fastenings. The vessel was run two hours at full speed with natural draft and the indicators showed a draft and made 15.2 knots an hour. f>ne Way of Nettling for Supper. Three commercial travelers meet ing at a hotel one winter evening had a hearty f-ipper together. Supper over, the three found some difficulty in allot ing their respective shares in the bill; but one of them at length cut short the dispute by proposing" that whoever had the "oldest name" among- them should go frei\ the ex penses being - halved by the <jther two. This amendment being- promptly accepted, Xo. 1 produced a card in scribed "Richard Eve," which Xo. 3 trumped with "Adam Hrown." Then Xo. 3, a portly veteran with humor ous gray eyes, laid down his card with the quiet confidence of a great general making a decisive movement, and remarked, with a chuckle: "I don't much think you'll beat this *un, gents." And he was right, for the name was "Mr. ]{. Ginning."—Tit-Bits. Train* Delayed b\- Thlwtle*. Trainmen in some parts of South Dakota have a new difficulty to sur mount in the shape of vast masses of Russian thistles, which collect in drifts on the tracks. The weeds are blown into cuts, where they become interwoven so closely that sometimes trains are delayed for hours. The locomotives might push their way through but for the fact that the rails become slippery through the crushing of the oily fibre and seeds, the wheels refusing to revolve even after a liberal application of sand.- Chicago Chronicle. A Careleaa Woman. Wife Henry, can't you let me have some money to-day? Husband—What did you do with that dollar I let you have last week? Wife (good naturedly)—Well, I had to have a new bonnet and a lieaxVr wrap, and Willie and Kate needed new shoes, and John had to have a new suit, and Frank a new hat, and Caroline needed a new gown and Mary a pfti-r of gloves and David an overcoat and and and, really, Henry, I don't remember what I did with the change. Detroit Free Press. Her View. Mr. Solidrocks—lt's a heavy defal cation and, perhaps, I'd better keep it quiet. Mrs. Solidrocks—Oh. no! Let the: world know how easily you can af ford it.—l'uck. ANGIBNTS HAD SENSE. " Dated Beginning of Year from Opening of Spring When All Things in Nature Start Afresh, Some Other Things In Which the Ancients Have Given Us Points. The ancients began their year with the advent of spring. How much more appropriate thus to begin the Xew Year with the new life of na ture in the awakening spring. At this season all processes throughout the natural world start afresh. The ancients also showed their sagacityand appreciation of the great changesandactiveprocessesof spring time, by realizing that this is also the time for renewed life and energy iu the human system. They well knew that the blood should be cleansed from impurities and the nerves re-in vigorated at this season. Hence the establishment of the custom of tak ing a good spring medicine. This most sensible and healthy custom is followed by almost every body at the present day, few people of intelligence venturing togo through this trying time of change from winter to summer without tak ing a spring medicine. The unanimity on this subject is a settled fact; the only question hereto- MB. STOOO^O^ fore has been in regard to what is tho best thing to take. The people have now become unanimous in their de cision that asa springtonicandrestor ative.Dr. Greene's Xervura blood an.l nerve remedy is pre-eminently t he best. Year afteryearDr. Greene'sXervura blood and nerve remedy has proved itself the surest, most positive and reliable remedy. Made from pure vegetable medicines, it invariably cleanses, purifies and enriches the blood, making the blood rich and red. and at the same time, by its invigor ating effects, giving strength, power, vitality and energy to the nerves. In fact, I)r. Greene's Xervura blood and nerve remedy has proved itself the most perfect of medicines and just what everybody needs for a spring remedy. Try it this spring. Mr. Stoughton L. Farnhain of Man chester, X. IT., says: "Some time ago I was troubled with lassitude and a feeling of fa tigue. I did not have the ambition to do anything that demanded un usual physical exert ion. "I was recommended by a friend to try Dr. Greene's Xervura blood and nerve remedy. 1 took two or three bottles and am prepared to say that it did me good. 1 can recommend it as a tonic, as 1 know it helped me. Remember Dr. Greene's Xervura blood and nerve remedy is recom mended by physicians, in fact, it is a physician's prescription, the discov ery of the well-known specialist in nervous and chronic diseases, Dr. Greene, of 35 W. 14th St.. Xew York City, who can be consulted free ol charge, personally or by letter.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers