2 CAMERON COUNTY PRffi H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. for year 12 00 If paid In advance 1 M ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate ol •ne doliar per square for one Insertion and fifty •euts per square for each subsequent insertion Rates by the year, or for si* or three month*, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. 12: each subsequent inser tion to cents per square. Local notices 10 cents per line for one lnser sertion: 6 cents per line for each subsequent consecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over fire llnei. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less <5 per year; ever live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRESS Is complete srd affords facilities for doing the best class of WORK PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAIUTO LAW PRINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear uek are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. A most curious case, showing how the separate systems of the govern . . uient may take on Victim of Judl eonf using s h a p e, «-ial Krror. Las j (ls1 t .,„ ne to light in Indiana. A man who has for 19 years been confined in jail, at Ihe expense of the nation, has, during all these years, been in receipt, or intend ed receipt, of ;t considerable sum of money from this same nation. It is because the man fought in the great civil war that the complication was made possible, explains the New York Herald. At least, his services in bat tle were responsible, in part, for the situation. It once occurred to the man that after having fought the good fight for freedom and unification, it might be the graceful thing for the country to recognize his worth by a money con sideration, so he putin an application for a pension. It was allowed, and the man's name was written on the book of fame, after which he was entitled to dollars. Shortly following this period, another man passed onto the great beyond, under circumstances which the coroner's jury considered called for the trying of somebody on a capital punishment charge. It so hap pened that the pensioner was the per son fixed upon as Ihe active agent as sisting in the earthly exit of the de ceased. Although the pensioner stout ly maintained his innocence, the proof was so strong as to lead the jury to a verdict of guilty, and the committing judge to a sentence of life imprison ment. This was in the year ISSO, and for 19 years the pensioner worked out his destiny behind the bars. At the conclusion of this time, the man who had committed the murder took to his last bed, and it occurred to him ?o make a confession. So the pensioner is free now. But he still has troubles. There are some thousands of dollars in pension money which the wardens have failed to turn over to him, and he is obliged to sue for their recovery. Besides, there are the wasted .19 years, because of the implicit judicial faith in the infallibility of circumstantial evidence. There is little doubt that farm la bo( offers a surer subsistence than the average labor of the cities. But it holds out no such dazzling prizes, and what is probably the most powerful reason, very truly observes the Pitts burgh Dispatch, it offers no such in ducements to the gregarious instincts of humanity. To the average young men the lights of city streets, the so ciety, even of the street corners, the occasional chance of a theater per formance are better than the loneliness of a secluded farm. On no other the ory can the desertion of the farms for the uncertainties of city life be ade quately explained. Once, say sa New York contemporary, when an enthusiastic young chairman at a large meeting in Harlem, was making an earnest and sincere, but very flattering speech in introducing the late Henry George, the latter, sud denly leaned forward and poked the chairman in the back with a walking stick he had found beside him. The chairman chopped off in the middle of a word, looked behind him, hail a whis pered conference with the philosopher, turned back to the audience and said, quietly: "Air. George don't want ine to get the rest of that off," which tickled the assemblage into spasms of laughter. A table, published in the annual re port of the department of agriculture, is enlighening as to the amount of money the people of the United States spent in purchasing favorite flowers at retail in 1899—roses, SO,OOO 000; ear nations, $4,000,000; violets, $750,000; chrysanthemums, $500,000; miscel laneous, including lilies, $1,250,000. These vast sums way into the pockets of nearly 100,000 producers and dealers. #■ "We were jollied last week," says the Goodland (Kan.) News, "because we said the climatic conditions were hanging in this country. IJo you re member how dry it was in 1894? Well, a man has been drowned in Beaver creek since then. Do you remember how the people received aid in ihe year 1894? Well, there is a man just now getting over a case of the gout here in Goodland. Isn't that something of a change?" THE PLOT IN MARYLAND. Olafranrlklailvik Illiterates a Scheme uf !>«• inoera t w to Iti'Kain I.OM( Ground. An increasing number of democrat ic conspiracies are on foot to carry elections by tampering with the bal lot. The new disfranchising law in Maryland was conceived and passed in the interest of the democratic par ty. When questioned concerning it Mr. Gorman enlarges on the subject of illiteracy, lie ignores entirely the real purpose of the law, which is to secure his own return to the United States senate. Mr. Gorman was re tired from the senate two years ago and is not enjoying his release from the official "courtesies" in the prac tical utilization of which he has had few equals. lie spent 14 years in the senate as one of its subordinate offi cials, beginning as a page. He was a member of the senate from Maryland for three full terms, ending March 3, 1899. Mr. Gorman's senatorial experi ence covers :t!2 years, and it is admitted that no man living is more deeply versed in the usages and peculiarities of lhat body, lie is particularly keen in handling' whatever personal suscep tibilities can be found in a coordin ate branch of the government consist ing of 90 men. The country has run along and pros pered without Mr. Gorman in the sen ate. Gorman i•> not necessary to the senate, but he feels that the senate is necessary to Gorman. So he has pro cured the passage in Maryland of a law disfranchising illiterate voters, the most of whom are colored men and republicans. If the case had been otherwise Mr. Gorman, of course, would have left the question of ifliter acv severely alone. It is estimated that Maryland has 25,000 black illiter ates, nearly all republicans, and 18.000 white illiterates, two-thirds of whom are democrats. These figures give a net republican loss of 19,000 votes. Mr. Gorman and his friends believe that this reduction in the republican vote will insure the election of a democratic legislature next November and restore him to the legislative body with which he is. in a certain sense, so profoundly familiar. Wheth er Mr. Gorman can devise some elec toral bypath, some ancestral condi tion by which the 18.000 white illit erates may be spared, is a point as yet unsettled. In the year 1895 a perfectly fair elec tion law was passed in Maryland. Tt was drawn up by the Reform League, an organization of able and patriotic citizens belonging to different parties. A republican legislature and a repub lican governor made it a statute. Since it went into force five general elec tions have occurred in Maryland, of which four were won by the republic ans. All were absolutely fair. Last year MeKinley carried the state for the second time and all six of the re publican candidates for congress were elected. The republican plural ity on president was 14,000. Mr. Gor man's disfranchising act, if all goes on as he anticipates, gives his party a margin of 5.000 votes. While the cal culation is close, Mr. Gorman is con fident that he now holds the winning cards. His eloquence on the subject of illiteracy is merely incidental. He has embarked in the growing business of making the ballot secondary 1o the exigencies of the democratic party and its individualities of the Gorman stamp. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. DEMANDS OF CUBA. Infliirnrm nt Work Wliicli Will Op erate Auiilnxt the Ural Inter of Ilie Country. The Cuban constitutional conven tion's refusal to adopt the pro gramme of Ihe Piatt amendment makes no change in the situation, for the reason that the other party to that situation is not the American president, with whom the Cuban or ganization is dealing now directly, but the American congress. The Piatt amendment is a rule by which the. administration is bound, and be fore it can take a step in another direction than the one therein pre scribed congress must be heard from. The action of the Cuban conven tion indicates influences at work within it which must be deplored, as made up of other elements than un alloyed interest in the good of Cuba and friendliness to this republic. We firmly believe that the motives at work were distinctly different, and we must accordingly hope that time will replace them with others more conducive to the advantage of the two countries. If Cuba is dominated by a spirit which refuses to accede to the most reasonable requests of the nation through whose military power and sacrifices she was delivered from a humiliating and exhausting tyranny of centuries' standing, what is this country to do? Such a spirit denotes more hostil ity than friendliness. For that very reason we are constrained to believe that it does not denote Cuba truly, but that it is an error which subse quent reflection will rectify, at a not distant day.—N. Y. Sun. tCEastern democrats who are anx ious to get rid of Bryan, but who did not have the courage to say so last year, find much encouragement in the results of the elections in Chicago and St. Louis. In the former city Altgeld was badly beaten, but that was not necessarily a defeat for Bry an. In St. Lotus Bryan's man was only third in the race, but there the grossest fraud was practiced, so that the result counts for nothing as an indication of the sentiment of the voters. The democratic party has not yet rid itself of its "old iiiau of the tea." —Troy Times. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1901. DEMOLISHES A FALSEHOOD. Sympathetic KrlendM of Aidiinnldo l.eft on Their Favorite Tlu-nie. The anti-administration people, in cluding by that term the so-called anti-imperialists and the democratic party as organized under Bryan on a so-called anti-imperialist platform, have, ever since they gave their sympa thies and allegiaiftje to the enemies of the L'nited States in the Philippines, stuck with almost heroic tenacity to the falsehood that the United States forced the conflict on the "innocent" Filipino in February, 189fl, in order to get votes in the senate for the ratifica tion of the treaty of Paris. It is interesting to note that, in ad dition to all the strong evidence to the contrary furnished by the United States authorities, which has been ig nored and brushed aside by the Amer ican sympathizers with Aguinaldo, the Philippine Information society of Boston, which with undisguised sym pathy with the Filipino insurgents, has been publishing tracts for some time purporting to give the exact truth about all the occurrences in the Philippines since Aguinaldo came upon the scene, has in the tract num ber seven assembled all the evidence, documentary and otherwise, bearing upon the identity of the aggressor and announces this conclusion: "The editors would say that, after care ful study of all the accessible evidence, they find that, according: to the most au thoritative statements, the outbreak oc curred as the result of a trespass by four armed Filipinos on territory admitted by the Filipino in command to be within the jurisdiction of the T'nlted States. The ac tion of the Flllgino trespassers seems to have been an Instance of bad discipline In the insurgent army. Certainly It was not ordered on that date by the insurgent lead ers. although the indications are that the leaders had planned to attack In a few days. The claim that our forces Instigat ed the attack for the purpose of securing the votes necessary to ratify the treaty is absolutely unsupported by any evidence which has come to the attention of the editors." This admission makes a very large and ragged hole in the offensive works of our American Tagalog sym pathizers. They have stuck to the lie that our government was the ag gressor on the night of February 4, 1899, at Manila and have rung the changes on it in the face of official federal reports. They have charged President McKinley with personally ordering an attack on the "innocent" Aguinaldo and his forces, when the evidence, "most authoritave," as the Philippine Information society says, reveals the Filipinos as the deliber ate aggressors; that a rising of the natives against the Americans in Manila had been planned and that Aguinaldo had advised his personal friends in Manila to leave the city for safety; that Aguinaldo about No vember 1. 1898, had not made up his mind to advocate a republic or an American protectorate, but was in clined to the latter; that no promises were made by the United States to Aguinaldo to set him up as a ruler in the Philippines. The faric of falsehood constructed by Aguinaldo's sympathetic friends in this country has long been demol ished, but it is interesting to note the disintegration of the remains of the Philippine Information society, which can hardly be charged with being a supporter of the administra tion. The American sympathizers with Aguinalo have accepted the half breed's words and fabrications in preference to the official reports of our government. They have backed an adventurer who has, for two years past, waged i a war against the United States which has cost the lives of 3,000 of our soldiers und a vast amount of money. They have made a hero out of a pitiless tyrant and supported his "cause" based upon fraud and false hood, —Minneapolis Journal. POLITICAL DRIFT. rrPossibly Aguinaldo feels that if he is careful with the diction of his manifesto he may be able to appease his Boston friends.—Boston Globe. E5"Mr. Bryan states a plain fact when he says that he still stands whera he stood in 1896 and 1900. The people left him standing there.—Al bany Journal. recent municipal elections have enabled Mr. Bryan to add sev ! eral choice specimens of sore spots I to his interesting collection.—Detroit Free I'ress (Dem.). C?" The Colorado woman now under arrest for willfully voting in the wrong precinct is said to be the first woman in the country ever legally charged with election fraud. She is I a democrat, which explains all.—ln- I dianapolis Journal. ICT"The democratic party may make j temporary gains in the north, but no j party can succeed which depends ! upon force, fraud a.id disfranchise ment to carry elections, as that party has done in many of the southern states. —Cleveland Leader. IE?" People who are complaining about Gen. Funston's method, be cause it was not specified in tactics, and was irregular, should remember that he was dealing with an enemy | who was so irregular himself that there was no other way to get at I him. When you go gunning for rab | bits you do not adopt the methods needed in hunting elephants.—Brook lyn Eagle (ind.). fact that a commission of representatives of Cuba are to call ; on the president to learn the exact ! situation as it presents itself in this country is fortunate. They will dis ! cover while in this country that fhe terms which were set forth in the 1 'lall resolutions were the best that would be likely to be offered to them. It is safe to predict that these will jbe accepted ultimately.—St. Louis I Globe-Democrat. A BIG LABOR IM Unionists Propose to Form One Very Soon. NATION A L CONVENTION. Will be Culled to Meet in Pitts burg Early in May. A PROTECTIVE MEASURE. lifader* of Organized l.alxir Believe lliHt Midi u .Movement ■« Net-canary 111 View of ilie Strength of (lie < a|>- Itallata* < olllblllen. Pittsburg. April "7. —The Dispatch says: At a meeting in this city on May 5, a movement will be started for the organization of the Central Labor Council of the United States, which is aimed to be an amalgama tion of all labor organizations of the country, with central headquarters, the object being to secure co-opera tion among all branches of labor, and aimed to operate especially against the great trusts. The project had its conception yesterday in a room on Smithfield street, the district headquarters of the Knights of Labor. A half dozen labor leaders, including several na tional officers, were in the party that issued the call and last night Presi dent Shaffer, of the Amalgamated As sociation of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, gave the idea bis approval. Among those in attendance yester day were: President L. U. Thomas, of the Pattern Makers' League of .North America; President John Kuntzler, of the American Flint (llass Workers' union; William Ben nett, secretary of the Pattern Mak ers; J, W. l'ryle, national secretary if the Structural Iron Workers' union; W. A. Shaw, business agent of the International Association of Ma chinists, and John Fernau, district master workman Knights of Labor. The plan was talked over in a gen eral way, and at the meeting on May 5 a national convention will be called, to which the heads of all the great organizations.including the American Federation of Labor, will be invited. The scheme, as explained by Messrs. Thomas and l'ryle last night, would assume actual co-operation between all branches of labor in any labor dispute. The country would be di vided into districts, each to have its own district council. President Shaffer, of the Amalga mated association, said: "I believe in the principle. It is the natural outcome of the big combinations of the present day. I have advocated it for some time and have already incorporated the idea in my annual report to the next convention of the Amalgamated association. It is labor's only recourse, in the light of the present industrial situation. The time will come when the union work er will refuse to make iron with non union coal, and when the miner will refuse to dig fuel for non-union mills." _ The (lliio Ceaaea te Kive. Cincinnati, April 27.—The Ohio riv er has been stationary here and for some distance below Cincinnati since 9 o'clock Friday morning, when the limit of 59.05 feet was reached. Those dependent on the prediction of the limit not exceeding 5s feet, have suf fered since the stage became almost ten feet above the danger line. Fa vorable weather is reported through out the Ohio valley and'relief is confi dently expected soon. The condi tions on both sides of the river here are quite serious. Agreed lo Continue the Scale. New York, April 27.—An agreement between the employing typefounders and the Typefounders' union, which represent the manufacturers and the workmen respectively in that line throughout the country was reached Friday whereby the arrangement of uniform wages and hours which has been in effect for the past year will remain practically unchanged for two years. Under this agreement the employes will work nine hours a day at wages running from $lB to $25 a week. A Kleli (.old Strike. Taeoma. Wash., April 27. — Passen gers just in from Dawson tell of a rich second bed rock on the famous Eldorado creek of the Klondike. In the gravel now being hoisted, it is said not a bucket of dirt comes to the surface in which nuggets cannot be seen running from a quarter of an ounce to tin ounce. Pans tanen from the new pay streak have yield ed as high as SSO in many instances, and on one day two men took out dirt that contained $5,000. Ilooaler (>irl to Weil Marconi. New York, April 27. — Miss Jose phine Ilolman, of Indianapolis, a daughter of the late Justice Ilolman, of the Indiana supreme court, and a cousin of the late Congressman Ilol man. of Indiana, said last night that the report that she was engaged to Marconi, the inventor of wireless telegraphy, was true. Signor Mar coni is now on his way to ICurope and the marriage will be in the autumn. Boxer* on tlie Warpath. London, April 27.—The Ileuter Tel egram Co. has received the following from I'ekin, dated yesterday: "A band of Boxers estimated at 1,000 is operating south of I'ao Ting Fu. It has raided three villages within a week and threatens to massacre the Christians in that vicinity, u»any of whom have fled to I'ao Ting Fu for refuge. In the Man-Cheng district, northeast of I'ao Ting Ku. another strong band is committing depreda tions and lias announced its intention to attack thecity of Man-Chcng,where there is a post of 20 German sol diers." IDEAS OF HUMOR CHANGE. Comicalities Ilrllabud a (>rnr ration Ago Are Mow Begarded a* Very Stupid. There appears to have been a vast ! change in the pictorial work of the humorous periodicals in the Inst few years, so much so, in fact, that the | humorous ideal seems to have been ! shifted. A few years ago the illustra- j tions in a certain of these pa- j pers were almost invariably of some | artistic merit in a serious though often unmeaning way; now they are, : for the most part, grotesque and | broadly comic. Before the "joke" was I to be found in the text beneath the j picture. Mow it is in the picture itself j and often the text is dispensed with i altogether. Most of the humorous j papers still retain one or two artists whose work is of the finer order, as j a connecting link between the old ■ manner and the new and in order j thalt he may furnish a slight coun- j terpoise to the comic preponder- ; ance. But the man whose wares are ! most readily accepted and which command the highest figure is the \ caricaturist or the "original," who luis discovered some distorted point of view of things. Their pictures amuse in themselves and the text, if text there be, is a factitious aid, says the New York I'ost. A New York artist who used to command a comfortable living by drawing for the humorous papers comments rather ruefully on this change in style, "llave you ob served," lie said, "that the 'he and she' picture has gone the way of all flesh? There is no market for it now. T used to support myself do ing 'lie and she' pictures and nothing else. They would take as many of them as I cared to draw. All that i had to do was to put a man and a woman on a bench or a sofa or stroll ing down a shady lane, or sitting on the seashore, and their funny men did the rest. I would not know what joke was going with the picture un til 1 saw it in the paper. The jokes were always "He'—then his remark, and 'She' —and her reply. That is the way this type of picture got its name. "Finally, however, the editors of these papers drew the artistic reins tighter. They said that there tvas nothing in the expressions of the 'he' and 'she' to indicate that they were saying the lines the funny man had given them. Sometimes, you see, I would have a man leaning carelessly over the back of a rustic seat smil ing down at a girl, while, according to the lines, she was giving him the 'mitten.' The members of the 'he and she' school were gradually crowded out by the 'comics' and if they could not adapt themselves to the new style had to seek other fields. Of course I do not mean to say there are no more 'he and she' pictures in the comic papers. They will appear, but y r ou will observe that they are not only very well done from a-n artistic point of view, but that the action in them squares with the sense of the lines beneath. ".What, is the reason for this change in the humorous Reapers?" echoed the artist to a question. "Well, it would be hard to say. It is more than a fashion, I think. Call it rather an evolution. One reason, I believe, is the great improvement in the last few years of the illustrations in the serious monthlies and week lies. The public sees so much excel lent pictorial work in these nowa days that it would be surfeited if it found this work in the comic papers itoo. They turn to them for the •funny' pictures." A Ten of Sanity. T A gentleman was once being taken over an idiot asylum. He asked an attendant how they knew when an idiot was considered to be sufficiently restored to sanity to be discharged. "Oh," said the attendant, "it is eas ily managed. We take them into a yard where there .are several troughs. "We turn on the taps and then give the idiots buckets to bail out the water and empty the troughs. Many of them keep bailing away while the taps keeps running', but them that isn't idiots stops the tap."—Tit-Bits. Hla Volcelrim Orlef. Til!ets—Tyrder looked very sad when he heard that telephoning across the ocean is possible. Crustham —I suppose he did, poor fellow. It will be an unhappy day for him when he cannot get beyond the reach of hig wife's voice.—Harper's Bazar. "Then what is your reason for marrying her?" "1 have no reason. I'm in love." — Philadelphia Times. The happiest life is that which constantly exercises and educates what is best in us. — Hamerton. The man who is never idle has no time to be mean. —Chicago Daily News. Try tirnln-O! Try Grnln-O! Ask your grocer to-day to show you a pack age of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most deli cate stomach receives it without distress. J the price of coffee. 15c. and 25cts. per package. Sold by all grocers. "Dew all the good yew kin, but don't neglect yewr dewty ter dew it."—ls. Y. Herald. FRAGRANT £O7QPONT a perfect liquid dentifrice for the Teeth and Mouth New She SOZOOONT LIQUID, 25c - SO7ODONTTOOTH PONDER, 25c V%" Urge LIQUID and POWDER, 75c Em *0 At all Stores, or by Mail for the price. HALL & RUCKEL, New York. Eiwy and Delicious Denaerta. Burn ham's Hasty Jeliycon makes delicious desserts. You have nothing to do but dis solve it in hot water and set it away to cool; it makes a delicious transparent and delight ful jelly dessert. Flavors: orange, lemon, •trawberry, raspberry, peach, wild cherry ind unfavored "cajfsfoot" for making wine and coffee jellips. Get a. package to day at your grocer's. ' • * • • : Sudden and Severe : • • m attacks of • • I Neuralgia I : comet ° 112 • - ma °y of u% • but however J • w ' " bad tlle cas e • • k V/ • I iM st. I : /A\ VP Jacobs • : flj|K Oil : • \Jft [NT • • lWn penetrates • • W/i I promptly • • \\ H I and deeply, o fil ®I jt soothes and • • / \\\\ ' 'fl strengthens J ? I A \>,„/'\ the nerves • J and brings • • a sure cure. J • • • • It Cures Coughs Colds, Croup, Sore Throat. Influ enza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect after taking tba first dose. Bold by dealers everywhere. Prioe, 25 and 60 cents per bottle. Ilou Mraigtit 1M a < biiiHinaul A Chinaman is universally consid ered to be a liar. And so he is. But after a few years of initiation I have never found much difficulty in ex tracting- the truth from any China man, be he milkman or mandarin. Not only so. 1 have always felt great' confidence in tlie truthfulness of my own servants, though they often.! popped out sundry lies. We have our own lies —divorce court lies, club lies,, society lies, husband and wife lies,, and so on. The distinction is that, we lie with a different motive. * * A Chinaman is thought to be a thief., * * * I always kept the safe lock<ed,i possessed no jewelry I had not always on, and I never locked up anything but money and important papers; particularly, 1 never locked up wine and cigars. During the whole course of my life in China (with one notable exception, when a thief at an inn walked off with me and my bed in my sleep, deposited me in a handy spot and extracted a valuable fur coat from underneath me) 112 was never robbed of anything.—"China, Her History." Yon Con Got Allen'i Foot'Eane FRICIC, Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted, Leroy, N. V..for a KRKM sample of Allen's Foot- Rase, a powder to shake into your shoes. It cures chilblains, sweating, damp, swollen, aching feet. It makes New or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Corns and bun ions. All druggists and shoe stores sell it. 25c. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Fac-Simlle Wrapper Below. Tvr uull nd na easy to take as ragas. !AAQ-RRN , Q| FOR HEADACHE. CAKI tKO FOR DIZZINESS, I RBITTLE FOR BILIOUSNESS. liivro FOR TORPID LIVER. § MIL? FOR CONSTIPATION. MJ®' FOR SALLOW SKIN. JMMML IFOR THE COMPLEXION I . CKIWKWI mBOHjiP"""'. «cSrt, I l»urely | CURE SICK HEADACHE. SEAFARING MEN / KNOW THE VALUE OF 1 1! i OILED CLOTHING \' A / lit ,T W|LL 4 ') RO\ KE EP YOU DRY n r\\ IN THE /' \ I\l rv WETTEST WEATHER ■ V/// JVLOOK FOR ABOVE TPADE MARK ' ON SALE EVERYWHERE: CATALOGUES FREE SHOWING FULL CfNE. OFGARHENTS AND HATS. A.J TOWER CO.. BO3TQN.MASS. „ , m ■ H ■ ■ nn TICII Van Bnren'f Rbetf I ■ I I ItIM I lOm malic C'oili pound is EJ IL. ■ ■ the only positive cure. I'aMi'i- Rn ■ I I perieuce speaks for itself Depot ILU b. Caiiluruiu Ave., Cbicugflb
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers