2 • CAMERON CODNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. per year (2 00 If pud In advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES: Advert! sements are published at the rate of one dollar per square for one insertion and fifty sent* per square for each subsequent insertion. Rates by ihe year, or for six or three months, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished oil application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or lets, *2: each subsequent inser tion 60 cents per square. Local notices 10 cents per line for one Inser •ertlon: 5 cents per line for each subsequent consecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over fire lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be Inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. 15 per year; over tlve lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local Inserted for lest than 75 cents per Usue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRBSK IS complete •nd affords facilities for doing the best class of work. PABTIC'LLAK ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW PRINTING. No paper will bo discontinued until arrrar- Kes are paid, except at the option of the pub her. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. Missing llie desk and pile of books upon which he is wont to lean an Elbow while speaking. Lord Salisbury once, at a meeting in his own home, walked into the angle of a high fold ing fire-screen, and finished eloquent ly a speech he had begun haltingly. The tiniest village in the world is on Long Island. Far out where the sand- tipped end of the island reaches into the sound is this smallest hamlet. Fire Place is its name. Its popula tion, according to the last census, is 10. Every man in the village holds an office. There are two dwellings. II is. perhaps rather a curious tiling that though the king l of England is such an excellent judge of horse flesh, it is years since he has driven him self. Neither he nor the duke of Corn wall has ever shown any leaning to ward this pursuit, and it is not likely that the king will be seen driving his own equipage about London. On the other hand, the queen is very fond of her ponies in the ountry and all her daughters drive. The preliminary report of the cen sus of Ireland, according to the Lon don Mail, confirms the position that Ihe depopulation of the island con tainues with little abatement. Since 1841, when the population was 8,196,- 5!i7, the population has fallen off 3,- 740,051. Of this total there was 1,622,- ■il'J lost before 1S."»1 in the great fam ine. Since then the loss has been more regular, and in Ihe last ten years it amounts to 248,204. The most costly state funeral which has ever taken place was. perhaps, that of Alexander the (ireat. A round million was spent in laying Alexander to his rest. The body was placed in H coffin of gold, filled with costly aro matics, and a diadem was placed on the head. The funeral ear was em bellished with ornaments of pure gold and its weight was so great that it *ook eighty-four mules more than a year to convey it from Babylon to Syria. When the King of England goes 1-traveling he does not jump an ordi nary train and take any vacant se.it he can find. insftv:d of thai he lias his own business oar which has ihe ?iglit of way over almost any railroad n Europe. This car which is just be ng finished, h is - ee I under spasmod ic construction for over two ;>.irs. It is said to run vi-ry smoothly, arid, is soon as Ihe necessary trial trips lave been held, it will be turned o\er to His Majesty. Itoman, Sig. Marino Torlonia, re cently made a bet with his friend. Sig-. sihestrelli. that with his automobile he could beat the railway train in running from Home to Civita Vecchi:i t , % distance of 42 miles. Kig. Silvestrelli took the train on whose prowess he counted, although it does not appear that the engineer was induced to put nn any extra steam, and Sig. Torlonia started with his automobile. The lat ter won in what seems to have been almost a neek-and-neck finish. According to the Japan Times a new island has ben discovered in the Sea of Japan. From a statement ap pearing in the Nichi Xichi it appears that the island is situated at a point between ri-long-do island, off Korea, and the Oki archipelago, off the coasts of the San-in-do, the distance from either side being thirty mill"-.. No maps ever published contain any reference to the island, which is re ported to lie about two miles in lengllt and about the same in breadth. Private railway cars have always been associated in the popular mind with great wen lUi. but a plan has been developed which makes it possi ble for even a vaudeville actor or business man in ordinary circum stances who wishes to enjoy the lux ury of travel to own a private ear built according to his own specifica tions. A ear-refitting 1 company in New York city buys old •'ullmati conch es, tears the inside furnishings out, and refits them according to the wish es of its customers. In the corridors at Windsor stands a little ebony pedestal, and on it a splendid casket of seventeenth cen tury Italian work, with sides of en graved rock crystal. Within this gor geous setting lies wide ope it, oil a sat in cushion, a little well-worn book. It is General (iordoh's Bible, and is open at the gospel according to St. John. Below, a little plate bears an inscription recording the fact that the ISible was presented toiler Ma jesty by the sister of General Gor don after his death, CAUSE TO BE PROUD. Triumph of Policies Juatilira llii* PerlliiitTbat I're vuilH in tin 1 Party. Very few people in ibis city, or, in deed, in the country, if called upon at the present time to note the impor tant events of the past year, would recall the National Liberty congress held in this city in August, 1900, as a matter of any consequence. It is more probable that many intelligent men would find it necessary to stim ulate their memories with some close thinking to recall the faintest recol lection of such an event. Viewed from to-day and the results, that incongruous assemblage called liberty congress appears one of the most ridiculous events of the cam paign—the platform partly occupied by a limited number of respectables making speeches to two or three hun dred of Mayor Taggart's henchmen, few of whom could comprehend the utterances of the speakers. The sol emn farce ended in an earnest appeal, adopted by local democratic hench men, to rise above party and save the land and the islands of the sea from imperialism and McKinleyism. In view of the result, how absurd that liberty congress now appears. Even the excellent gentlemen who partici pated in it and hailed Aguinaldo as the George Washington of the Phil ippines, would be obliged to the writ ers of history if they should pass over the liberty congress as an incon sequential affair. Their demand, like Mr. Bryan's, was that the president offer the Filipinos in arms independ ence on the same terms that it was promised by congress to Cuba. The republicans took the ground that the insurgents must .recognize the au thority of the United States and that local self-government should be ex tended to the Filipinos as soon as they showed a fitness for it. By a plurality of 871,513 the voters of the United States accepted the plan of the president in preference to that of Mr. Bryan. And now under the republican policy civilization is spreading in the Philippines and hun dreds of school teachers have gone to the islands to carry on the work begun by the army and the Taft com mission. Again, five years ago this month, men by the hundreds were going about the country shrieking 10 to 1. By thousands they labeled themselves with the inscription 10 to 1. On the street corners lliey threatened the safety of men who were, so impolitic as to dissent from the unlimited coin age of silver at. the ratio of 10 to 1. Processions carried banners and transparencies marked 10 to 1. The test of democracy was noisy procla mation of 10 to 1. Four years ago Mr. Taggart was suspected of disbe lief in the party shibboleth, and to placate that element was compelled to issue a letter declaring? his undy ing devotion to 10 to 1. The repub licans, because of a courageous ma jority. declared for the gold stand ird. The fight was a fight to the death, but the good sense of the ma jority prevailed and the silver heresy was rejected. In Indiana there are not a hundred intelligent men in their right mind who would wear a 10 to 1 badge. There is not a democratic orator in Indiana who has a reputa tion for ordinary intelligence who would not like to revise his wild ex pressions of devotion to 10 to 1. Attention is called to these recent political events to remind a great, number of people that in every great crisis in the nation's affairs the re publican party has fought on the right side and saved the people from disaster and the government from ruin. It seems necessary to do this because so many people forget, from time to time, and assail the party in seasons of security which have come, like the present prosperity, by the triumph of republican policies. It is the one party which can point with pride to its past.—lndianapolis Jour nal. Wniit None of Ilrynn. A few days ago a member of the Virginia constitutional convention in troduced a resolution reading: "Whereas, it is reported that Hon. William Jennings Bryan will shortly visit Virginia, the president of the convention do invite Mr. Bryan to at tend and address the convention at such time as he may designate." The convention refused to consider the resolution. The members, with the exception of about IS, are democrats, but the majority of them evidently are not enthusiastic over Mr. liryan. Had the convention met at any time between the summer of 1890 and the fall of 1900 it is more than likely that Mr. Bryan would have been invited to address it, had he been in the state, although the Virginia demo crats never took so kindly to him as the democrats of some oilier states. Mr. liryan has had his day. Perhaps he is philosophical enough to accept the situation uncomplainingly. Chi cago Tribune. Proa|ircta of Porto Rico. Porto Pico's treatment by the United States will make American sway in the Philippines popular, and will strengthen the annexation senti ment in Cuba. Within three or four years, it is safe to predict, Porto Kico will be given the full territorial sta tus. The island has already consid erable home rule, but it will have more when it. enters the list of ter ritories. As a territory it will have made a big advance toward state hood. The American people feel well toward the Porto liicans. Tho islanders are showing an apprecia tion of the good treatment given them by the Cnited States, and. are thus putting themselves in tne way of further favors. Porto Kico has a bright future. —St. Louis Globe-Demo crat. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1901. A BUGABOO EXPLODED. The Party of the Contented la (iron, Intc Not wl t liMtn nd I kiK f'iltorti of the 1)1 M4-o nt en ted, In his Phi Beta Kappa address al Harvard recently Mr. Wayne Mac- Veagh gave us in substantially its original form the prophecy of Aris totle, now over 2,000 years old, as to the danger to a republic which lurks in a death grapple between the haves and the have nots. Mr. MacVeagh did not trace it farther back than Macau lay, and he set Webster's version above Macaulay's as coining nearer to his own ideas, citing it as follows: "The freest government would not be long acceptable If the tendency of the laws was to ereate a rapid accumulation of property in few hands, and to render the great mass of the population dependent and penniless. ... In the nature of things, those who have not property ar.d see their neighbors possess mueh more than they think them to need cannot be favorable to laws made for the protection of property. When this class becomes numerous it grows clamorous. It looks upon property as its prey and plunder, and is naturally ready at all times for violence and revolution." That differs only in phraseology from Macaulay's famous passage which he closed with ihe portentous sentence: "As for America, we appeal to the twentieth century.". Well, the twentieth century is here, and the an swer is squarely against Macaulay; yet, curiously enough, Mi, MacVeagh does not seem to realize tt ! s. He put into his address on"The Value of Ideals in American Politics" the same prophetic passage on this point that has appeared in every similar address for nearly or quite a hundred years. "Things are going on smoothly enough now, but beware of what may happen when times are less prosper ous!" This is the invariable basis for making it. When that point in the ad dress is reached Macaulay and Web ster are certain to reappear with their echo of Aristotle, and we are sure to get a modern application of it from the orator. Mr. MacVeagh gave it to us as follows: "Now, it is at least quite possible that In the not-distant future Amerlean polities may transform Mr. Webster's warning into history, for our electorate is already beginning to he divided, and must, in obedi ence to the law of social evolution, con tinue more and more to be divided, by that sharp cleavage which separates those who are contented with their lot from those who are discontented with their lot. Under whatever disguises, called by whatever r.ames. Inheriting or seizing whatever partisan organizations, the alignment of the two great political divisions of Amer ican voters, who will sooner or later strug gle against each other for the possession of the government, will inevitably be upon the basis I have named. The party of the contented will be ranged under one banner, and the party of the discontented will be ranged under the other, and that alignment will steadily develop Increasing sharpness of division until the party of the discon tented, being the majority, has obtained the control of the government, to which, under our system, they are entitled, and then they will be sure to remodel the pn s ent system for the distribution of wealth, unless we have previously done so. upon basts wis'-r ar.d more equitable than those now existing." Well, have we not just emerged tri umphantly from two "alignments," two "divisions of the electorate" of precisely that character? Bryan's candidacy of the "discontented" was the product of the hard times between ISO.'! and 1895. Those times produced exactly the conditions tliat Macaulay based his prediction upon, and they came on the very threshold of the cen tury to which lie had appealed for his answer. Neitlie Aristotle, nor Macaulay, nor Webster, nor Mac- Veagh could conceive of a more dan gerous candidate or leader for the dis contented than Bryan was. We had the "sharp cleavage which separates those who are contented with their lot from those who arc discontented with their lot," and what was there suit when the count was made? Why. that the contented outnumbered the discontented. This was the result in 1806, and it was also the result at the second cleavage in 1000. Does Mr. MacVeagh think that there would be any different result in 1004 if a third cleavage were to be made then?—N. Y. Commercial Advertiser. To >1 r. Mclv liiley'n Credit. The refusal of President McKinlev to remove Pension Commissioner Evans, despite the tremendous pres sure brought to bear against the com missioner by the shyster pension at torneys—not the reputable men en gaged in that business—is one of the most creditable acts of the adminis tration. A great deal of money has been spent by the attorneys in work ing up opposition, and they have even gone so far as to declare that the na tional committee promised to have Evans removed, but that proves to be. like so many of their rejected claims, a "fake." The soldiers never had a better friend in the pension office than is Commissioner Evans, himself a sol dier, and all stories about his being in the slightest degree inimical to the true interests of the veterans are bosh. Commissioner Evans has proved the right man in the right place, de spite what certain "professional sol diers" may say to the contrary.—Phil adelphia I'ress. Cln view of the statement of Chair man Jones, of the democratic national committee, that Bryan will not he renominated by his own party in 1004, and that his pet issues of free coinage and "imperialism" will be laid on the shelf, it would not be surprising to see the Nebraskan at the head of a party of "reformers" three years hence. If the democratic party is re organized. as has been suggested by Mr. Cleveland and other former lead ers in the east, Mr. Bryan may be glad to affiliate himself with this new movement. —Cleveland Leader. It-- i he few people who now recall "Coin" Harvey are informed that he has become a resident of Benton coun ty, Ark. He is not realizing from the copyright on his books. It was differ ent five or six years ago.—lndianap olis Journal. AN AWFUL WRECK. ▲ Lake Shore Limited Runs Into a Freight Train. The Rnzlneer and Itlall Clerk IVtri Killed, Mild Several Oilier I'or ko kim Injured, Two I'er laapn Katutly Ter rible Scene. Nottingham, 0., July 10. —The Southwestern limited one of the fast est, trains on the Lake Shore <fe Michi gan Southern road, crashed into several freight cars while it was mov ing' at the rate of 55 or CO miles an hour, and was precipitated into a gully, about 100 feet below early Tuesday morning-. Miraculously, only two persons were killed, although seven others were seriously injured, one or two perhaps fatally. The limited, or "the Cannon Ball," as it is called, eastbound, left Cleve land shortly after 2 o'clock, and had just past l)iile street, one of the main thoroughfares of the village, •when a freight train—the Southwest ern fast freight—passing- in the op posite direction on the other track, 'broke in the middle, it is supposed. The freight was running at the rate of 15 miles an hour, anil consisted of 50 cars. When it parted the rear section jumped the track and bound ed at an angle right in front oi the fast-runn'ing limited with its precious load of humanity. The passenger engine in an instant was derailed and was shot down the steep embank ment, carrying with it the coal tend er, mail, baggage and buffet cars. One of the sleepers left the track, but became detached and remained on the roadbed. in the rear section of -the freight train were 13 cars, and these were telescoped and thrown to either side, and rolled down into the ravine, turning over and over as they went. The killed: Frank L. Anderson, of Buffalo, engineer of passenger train. 0. G. McCullen, of Cincinnati, mail clerk. The injured: William J. Elliott, of Buffalo, fireman, fatally injured; Charles W. Gano, of Cleveland, extra conductor on freight, seriously in jured; A. Hertz, of Cleveland, conduc tor on freight, seriously injured, but will recover; Andrew limine! and Harry Malt by, of Buffalo, badly in jured; W. M. Baker, of Columbus, mail clerk, badly bruised; E. F. Love less, of Cincinnati, mail clerk, slight ly bruised. None of the occupants of the pas senger coaches were injured, al though eaeh was badly shaken up and very much terrified. Then it was that pandemonium reigned. Women shrieked, children cried and men ran hit'her and thither yelling at the top of their voices. All thought that they were going to certain death. The sudden lurch following the col lision had awakened all the passen gers. Those aboard the train came from «11 sections of the country, al though not a few took the train at Cleveland, and many were en routa from the far west to the Pan-Amer ican exposition at. Buffalo. Thirteen freight cars were almost reduced to kindling wood, and their contents, including several ear load.l of fish, were scattered everywhere. The baggage car was almost de molished, its roof being the only part remaining intact. Most of the bag gage was recovered, although not a little was lost. The mail in pouches was not mutilated, but that part of it which the clerks had been distrib uting was strewn broadcast, (ieorge W. Pepper, superintendent of the mail service, and a postal clerk, ar rived shortly after and supervised the collection and disposal of the mails. The crash made a loud report, and awakened the eiti/ens of Nottingham, who lent all possible aid to the in jured. Drs. I. A. Tripp and W. O. .Tenks, of the village, dressed the wounds of the injured and sent them to the Cleveland General hospital in ambu lances. Pierre Lurillard [Me*. New York, July 8. —Pierre Lorillard died at 2:10 o'clock yesterday after noon. The death of Mr. Lorillard took place at the Fifth Avenue hotel, where he was taken from the Deutschland when that steamer ar rived from Europe July 4. The mem bers of the family present at the bedside when the end came were Mr. Lorillard's daughters, Mrs. T. Suffern Tailor and Mrs. Win. Kent and their husbands and Pierre Lorillard, jr., and wife and also Pierre Lorillard 111. Crop* Ilrjlnjt I'p. Topeka, Kan., July 10. —The hot weather in Kansas continues with no immediate prospect of relief. Corn is fast shriveling up, the oats crop is worse than a failure and hay is scarcer than for years. In western Kansas the conditions are better than in the eastern part, this being direct ly opposite to the usual state of af fairs. So.ne of the central Kansas farmers are shipping their stock to western Kansas so as to take ad vantage of the superior hay crop. A Ileiiinrlialtlc Font. Victoria, B. C., July 10.—Oflicers and crew of the Norwegian tramp steamer Guernsey have performed a most remarkable, feat of marine en gineering. Losing their propeller and shaft in mid-ocean, 'they shifted the cargo until the stern of the boat was tilted high in the air and then putin a new propeller andjsha-.,. Charged Willi Stealing:. Kansas City, Mo., July 10.—Alfred Thomas damage, 2!) years old, for mely a sergeant in the British army, stationed at Hamilton, Scotland, is under arrest here charged with steal ing SSOO from the crown. Gamage, who had ween known here as Sidney Thomas ,of Hamilton, Lenarkshire, Scotland, was arrested at the instance of Frank Stanley Young, British vice consul at Kansas City, to whom he had voluntarily surrendered and con fessed. Gamage said he had been disappointed in love, took the money and deserted in 1900. A Med leal Teatlmonlal, Firs: We fed our baby on modified cow's milk the first six months, but the milkman did not underst-md how to modify his cows properly, and in consequence the child lost flesh till he weighed but one pound. I now procured some of your celebrated Infant's Food. This the baby managed to trade off to the dog for some dog biscuit, which he ate, and is now well and hearty. The dog died, hut dogs arc cheap. We are grateful to you, indeed. You may use my name if you like, John Jones.— Detroit Journal. Too SugKmlive, ."You look discouraged," remarked the visitor. "And I feel it!" sighed the manager of the great Pacific Slope Prune company. "After all the time and money 1 have expended proving to the public that the prune is no longer a fake, that miserable old editor has to step in and wreck my assertions." "I hope he didn't run j our ad. in the hu morous column?" "Worse than that! ne ran it under the boardi/ig house notices." —Chicago Daily News. A Mutter of Expense. "Doctor, what is the matter with me?" "You need about three months' rest from business—that is all." "Three months' rest? That will eost me $5,000. The other doctor said I needed an operation for appendicitis. That would cost only sloo_. I think I'll let him operate." —Chicago Tribune. Raiting; tllni. Hodriek—lt seems incredible tint the wise Hostonian should have been du'.-ed by the grafter's game of three shells and a pea. Van Albert—lt. is easily explained. The pea was discarded and a bean substituted.— Chicago Daily News. LaunilerinK Thin Drrors, _ To launder the exquisite creations of mus lins and lace in which this season abounds has become quite a problem, yet the most delicate materials will not be injured if washed with Ivory Soap and then dried in the shade. But little starch need be used. Ei.iza B. Pahkeii. It is better togo to bed hungry some times than to get up every morning hope lessly involved in debt.—Christian Intel ligencer. Too Suggestive. . "You look discouraged," remarked the visitor. ''And I feel it!" sighed the manager of the great Pacific Slope Prune company. "After ill the time and money I have expended proving to the public that the prune is no longer a fake, that miserable old editor has to step in and wreck my assertions." "1 hope lie didn't run your ad. in the hu morous column?" "Worse than that! Tie ran it under the boarding house notices."—Chicago Daily News. A Medical Testimonial. Sirs: We fed our baby on modified cow's milk the first six months, but the milkman did not understand how to modify his cows properly, and in consequence the child lost flesh till he "weighed but one pound. I now procured some of your celebrated Infant s Food. This the baby managed to trade off to the dog for some dog biscuit, which he ate. and is now well and hearty. The dog died, but dogs are cheap. We are grateful to you, indeed. You may use ray name if you like, John Jones.— Detroit Journal. InHiiltinpc. Dashleigh—That was an insulting thing Miss Swab a»ked me at the reception last night. Fres'nleigh—What was it? "Wanted to know if I was a college grad uate; the idea!"— Ohio State Journal. I'lennurcH of Amateur Gnrdentiifc. "William, 1 wish you would go and weed out trie flower bed. William went out and inspected it. Then lie returned.. "It would be a simpler job, Marie," he raid, "to tlower out the weed bed."—Chi t-ago Tribune. A Doubtful Compliment. Miss Mudd —Mr. Fi-eshleigh paid me a very pretty compliment about my hair. Miss Wi.-e—indeed! es; he asked uie if it was mine." —Ohio State Journal. "MY HEAD WILL BURST!" " This head will be the death of me and I don't care how soon. I don't want to try to drag- through life with pain like this." Are you going' to give up now? Are you tired out with the effort to bear that awful pain ? Are you despondent because your suffering makes you haggard and thin? Are lines coming AP'-V*. into your face? Is your beauty going from you? Think for one moment of the great multitude of \ \ women, suffering in just this way, who have been \ \ l" 3fP |S V_\ cured by Dr. Greene's Ncrvura blood and nerve \ V V p? ■ / remedy. There is absolute certainty of help in this / grand medicine. Here is an instance. / Miss Agnes Graham, 403 W. 28th St., New " For years I endured the greatest agony with pick headaches. X ' v Myhend would throb so that every step I took wan positive tor- Ms? turn. When I went home, after work, I felt as though I never could cot there. It seemed to me that every stop must lie my last, \ and when I tried togo up stairs my head ached so bad 1 thought I "Nothing I took helped me. The headaches returned all tlio time, and I despaired of ever getting over them. My back ached, too, ami often 1 felt so tired and weak it seemed as though I could not goto work. I was badly run down, and in a very nervous " But I am thankful to say that these terrible headaches havo left me, now that 1 have taken l)r. Greene's Nervura blood and teSsalS't*~ L4wl liorve remedy. I c innot say too much for this great medicine and ®sßj™b' JST] what it has done for mo. I began to feel its good effects after tho wigu first dose. I felt brighter r.nd more cheerful in every way. Jfts xy/fin "After tlio first bottle, my nervousness was gone, and I had iwM/I but one attack of headache since taking Ncrvura. I havo now flHtaia.'ljW taken four battles and have had no return of tho trouble. For /ESSJHBV- I women suffering from woman's greatest enemy, headache, I can- /j&nH/py not recommend this wonderful medicine too highly." Headache powders have lost their effect- 7si iveness with you, haven't they ? You are letting yourself be driven to narcotic drugs. { You are letting your headaches wreck your life. Your doctor fails to help, and your * .1 r.st one bottle of Dr. Greene's blood and nerve remedy will do you so much good that you won't feel like the same woman. Try it and see. If you have complications, get l)r. Greene's free advice by call or letter. His address is 35 W. 14th Street, New York City. Doctor* Mlalikrn. It Is seldom that a number of doctors' agreo in a wrong diagnosis, but they evi-< d<!ntl.v did in one ease as instanced in th« : fuliowinir letter, from Anson, Baker & Co in New York City: " Your Lotion has cured, an acquaintance of E< zemaon both legs and feet, after having been pronounced incurable by physicians in and out of Hospitals.''' Palmer's Lotion has effected many cures* that physicians could not and it is the one' remedy that should be kept in every home. If your druersrist hasn't it send to Solon Palmer, 374 Pearl St., N. Y., for samples of. Palmer's Lotion and Lotion Soap. A Doalitful Compliment. Miss Mudd—Mr. Freshleigh paid me iV very pretty compliment about my hair. Miss Wise—lndeed! "V es; he asked me if it was mine."—Ohio- State Journal. Do Your Feet Ache and Hum? Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes Feel Easy, Cures Corns, Itching. Swollen, Hot, Callous, Smarting, Sore and Sweating Feet. All Druggists and Shoe Stores sell it, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad dress, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, X. Y, Ilnrdnlilpn of City Life, "Pa, what's a metropolis?" "A metropolis, Jimmy, is a place in whicti it costs you about 25 cents street car fare to get out where you can pick clover."— Chicago Record-Herald. Beat for (be llowell. No matter what ails you. headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. Cascarets help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10- cents to start getting your health back.. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C.. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. PJ on mi re* of Amntenr Gardening. "William, I wish you would go and weed, out the flower bed. Will iam went out and inspected it. Then he returned. "It would be a simpler job. Marie," htr said, "to flower out the weed bed."—Chi cago Tribune. Ilroncliitfa Can De fnfed With Hoxsie's Croup Cure, speedily. 50 eta.. ln>nltla(. Pashloigh—That was an insulting thing Miss Swab asked me at the reception last night. Freshleigh—What was it? "Wanted to know if I was a college grad uate; the idea!"'—Ohio State Journal. I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consump* tion has an equal for coughs and colds.— John F. Boyer, Trinity springs, Ind., Feb.. 15, I'JOQ. Hi* View of It. Mc.Tigger—l thought your wife was eco nomical. Thingumbob—Such ignorancs! My dear man, no woman is ever economical. She is either extravagant or stingy.—Philadel phia Press. Old Soldiers ! Now Is your opportunity! The right to enter 2.000.000 acres of choice lands in Oklahoma is to be deter mined by a government drawing- Ex-Union soldier* may register and file by agent. Send and 1 will prepare your papers aind register your names. If claim Is secured, an additional fee equal to & per cent, of the value of the claim w,%l be charged for selecting tiie land and tiling the Declaratory, ltefer to any banker or public official In Oklahoma.. Address T. MOKOAK, Perry. «. T. fECOWOMY CREAM SEPARATOR Pays for itself in a few days. Separates in 40 minutes automatically and gets a I the. cream. Only costs a trifle and lasts forever. AOE\T» \| A XTED- Uig pav— every farmer buys. Where we have no agent we will send a Sepa rator at agents* prices, to introduce it. Write for catalogue, prices, etc.. to ECONOMY SUPPLY CO., 554 Main St., Kansas City,MO Pil PA AMAKESIS&£& m lief and POsrnvK- M 33 I, V <UKKS MLEJi. $3 W tgi iwa For free samplea^dreM fi ••AXAKKSISi." Trib une building. Mew Yorfc. EDUCATIONAL. I IMA COLLIGE. Eight Departments Fine loca tion and building. faculty. Expenses low. Catalogs frpe. lie*. C arl Aflrrmmr. I'h. P.. Pern-. IIM i.Ohio.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers