2 MMM COUNT'/ PRESS. H, H. MULLIN, Ed-tor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per year (2 00 If paid tu advance 1 >»U ADVERTISING RATES: Advert'sements are published at the rate ot one dul ar per square forone insertion and tlfly cents i er square tor each subsequent insertion Rates by I he year, or for si* or three months, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished on itpi licat.oti. Legal anC Official Advertising per square, three times or less. each subsequent ins<sr tio i • 0 cents per square. •Local notices In cents per line for one tnser seriion: S cents per line for each subsequent con -ecutive insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, live lin»>s or less, 55 per year; over live lints, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PttEss is complete affords facilities for doing the best class of w. rk. Paktici'ljAii attkniion paidto Law PKINTI.NG. No paper will bo discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the crtlon of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for iu advance. Four hundred and ten thousand im migrants landed on the shores of the United States last year, says a statisti cal authority. Many of them were Christians, many others were not. The majority even of those who were had no copy of the Bible, in the hands of each, as lie set foot upon the soil of his new home, the New York Bible society placed a copy of the Scriptures. Twenty-one different languages were represented, the largest number be ing in German, the next largest in Swedish. The immigrant problem is always a difficult one. No one has wholly solved it or found a safeguard for all its dangers; but the Bible so ciety is doing its part. It is a great thing to get a man who does not know the Bible to read it, and no small thing to show him at the very doorway the xock on which we desire our national life to be built. Commissioner General I'owderly, of the immigration bureau, reports that the total number of steerage passen gers who arrived in the United States during the year was 487,918, an in crease of nearly 40,000 over the [ire ceding year. The ratio of increase of Italian immigrants was three times that of immigrants from the rest of Europe. Considerably more than one fourth of the whole number of ar rivals were from Italy, Sicily and Sar dinia, and nearly another fourth from Austria-Hungary. Of the immigrants over the age of 14, 117,587, or nearly one-third, were unable to read or write. In addition to steerage immi grants, there were 74,950 aliens who came in the cabin. A Springfield, Mass.. bridal couple who planned to outwit their torment ors recently were victims of their own cleverness. They went to the railroad station by separate routes, and it was also in their plan to get into separate cars. The bridegroom comfortably located in the smoker, and the bride sought an inconspicuous seat in a pas senger coach. The bride, however, in her flurry got the wrong train, and, unaware of her mistake, went onto Pittsfield, while the groom went unsus pectingly north and arrived at North ampton. Two hundred years ago, January, 1902, Bienville, under the direction of Iberville, founded Fort Louis, that be ing the origin of the French colony of Louisiana and of its capital, Mo bile. The citizens of that Alabama city will therefore celebrate its bicen tennial on January 11 and 12. On the second day Twenty-seven Mile lilutT will be visited, and a memorial stone will be erected there to mark the site of Fort St. Louis. Ihe women oft hicago arc both cour ageous and resourceful. One of them a few days ago severely clubbed a "masher" who insulted her, then knocked off his hat and retained it for a souvenir. A row of hats dangling from the Chicago woman's waist here after may be considered as equaling the Indian's string of scalps. May thi ir tribe increase. fortune is said to knock at a man's door but once iu a lifetime, and it is pitiful when that knock comes just too late. Alexander Carl Derois, re ports the lowa State Register, sent to the insane ward of Dunning hospital after a life of hardship and privation that unbalanced his mind, is heir to $300,000 in gold. The South Carolina legislature looked with disfavor upon a proposi tion to compel street car lines to pro vide vestibules on their cars for the protection of the motormen, it hein«- asserted that the vestibules are liable to be the cause of accidents when the glass becomes frosted or bespattered with rain. Sir Henry Irving at 03 says:"i am rot old. In Kngland we count a man young until 70." Sir Henry's words, •says the Chicago Record-Herald, will (no doubt make ihe boys who are hover ing around 50 f1 quite chipper again. A woman cashier lias defaulted. Th's should end all controversy, says the Chicago Record-Herald, over the question whether woman can really Ull man's place or not. PLANS OF THE DEMOCRATS. Brynn'tt \imv I'lntform Seonm In lie in Favor ytmotiK <1 Certain Following. There is democratic authority for the statement that Mr. liryan lias n«t •urrendered the leadership of his par ty. Those in the confidence of Mr. Bryan claim that the populistic wing of the democratic party will put him forward as a candidate for governor of Nebraska, in the belief that if he is nominated and elected he can be nominated for the presidency in 1001, eavs the Chicago Inter Ocean. This statement is coolly or contemp tuously received by democratic news papers in Chicago and throughout the east. They concede that Nebraska hav ing given a republican majority in 1000, when Mr. Bryan was exerting all his influence, and having given an in creased majority last November, after Mr. Bryan had dictated the platform on which the state democracy went to the people, the state must hereafter be counted as certainly republican. They argue also that, even if Mr. liry an should become a candidate for gov ernor and should be elected, the fact could have no influence in the demo cratic national convention of 1004. This is not the view taken by the western or populistic-democraticnews papers. They favor Mr. Bryan's plan of campaign, which involves a special effort to secure the control of congress in the elections of 1902. This would in dicate that Mr. Bryan, who first sug gested the plan in his Commoner, con templates a three-corned presidential fight in 1004. and believes that the peo ple will fail to elect a president, and that the election will goto the house. Therefore the anxiety as to the elec tions of 1002. But Mr. Bryan's platform of inde pendence for the Philippines and tariff for revenue only, in place of our pres ent protective tariff, and a revision of our financial or money system, does rot meet with favor among the Illi nois or Ohio or New York democrats, and certainly the eastern wing of the party is striving not only against Bry an mm but against Mr. Bryan himself. Mr. Bryan pretends to believe that there are thousands of r< publicans who would flock to his standard in 1002 and that by their aid the populists or the populistic democrats would have enough members of the Fifty-eighth congress to hold the balance of power and become an important factor in the election of a president by congress in 1004. If there is no election of president by the people, congress will select a presi dent, each state in the house of repre sentatives having one vote, the com plexion of that vote being determined by the majority of the delegation from that state. In the Fifty-sixth congress the democrats and free silverites had majorities in 20 states, including New York, and the republicans in 25. In the Fifty-seventh congress the republicans have majorities in 26 states and the democrats, populists and sil verites in IK states. Illinois is repre sented by 11 republicans and 11 dem ocrats. The democrats and populists are evidently planning to unite in the congressional elections of 1002 and elect a majority of the delegations from Illinois fin which they will ha v<» to gain only one member), Maryland, Netv Jersey. Xew York. West Virginia, Wyoming, Indiana and Kansas. If they secure control of congress the popu listic wing, if defeated in the conven tion of 1004. can with safety intrigue to throw the election of president to the house. Dilliiitp on the Tnriff. It is a fact of some moment that the democratic party is no more unit ed to-dav on the tariff question than it was in 1894. On this subject demo cratic opinion ranges all the way from the most rabid free trade to high protection. Being out of power and not being required to frame and pass a tariff bill, the party is able to present something liße a solid front. But if the tables were turned, the old factional fight would 'break out again. Protection is more strongly intrenched in the confidence of the country to-day than at any previous time. No legislation has ever been more grandly vindicated by results than the Dingley tariff. When tin free trade organs are all joining with the republican papers in portraying the magnificence of our prosperity, they are paying a tribute to protec tion. The fact that some of our in dustries have outgrown Hie need of protection and are abusing it i". a good reason for revising some of the schedules- for the abolition of some and for the lowering of ot hers—but that outgrowing is a fulfillment of the hopes of and the friends of protection are bound to put an end to such abuses.- —Washington Star. t-TTheodore Roosevelt's protection ism is as sound as William McKinley's, Nelson Dingley's or Henry Clay's. In his own words, "the first requisite to our prosperity is the continuity and stability of our present tariff sys tem as a national policy." .Reciproc ity's only allowable function is as "the handmaid of protection." This lays the ghost of free trade within tl'ie party which Messrs. Babcock, Kas son et at. had been assiduously sum moning up.—N. Y. Press. house rules, concerning which so many democrats arc making themselves unhappy, are practically the same which were in force during the two congresses of ISOI and 1893, When t lie house was democratic. They are, however, of republican origin. Indianapolis Journal. K7Thn democratic newspapers have already arranged that there shall lie a row between President Roosevelt and the republican congress. Of course they are prompted by a ma licious desire that such a thing shall happen - -Cleveland Leader. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1901. MANIFESTO OF MR. BRYAN. I'oluta on Whieh Ihe I.ate Democrat!* I.en del' In Without Support of Any Kind. William Jennings Bryan has con ferred a favor upon his fellow coun trymen. in the democratic party and out of it. He has given out a manifesto which is in substance the platform on which he will seek the next presi dential nomination at the hands of the national democracy, says the Chi cago Chronicle (dem.). Mr. Bryan says that imperialism and the independence of the Philippines are still burning politienl questions and that it is only by pushing them to the front that the democrats can hope for success in 1902. By inference, therefore, Mr. Bryan has recovered partially or permanent ly from his unsound money delusion. The currency of the country is ap parently to remain unthrcatened by Mr. Bryan during the next presiden tial canvass. For this promised relief from an expected recurrence of finan cial lunacy on Mr. Bryan's part the entire country ought to be thankful. Elimination of the unsound money issue from national politics will leave intelligent men of all parties free to discuss in tranquillity and reason the real national issues before the Ameri can people. Mr. Bryan will not find any consid erable number of his fellow citizens ready to agree to his proposal that the American fiag be unconditionally withdrawn from the Philippine is lands. He says"the war is unneces sary because the people of those is lands are ready to lay down their arms whenever their independence is promised them." Mr. Bryan has no better means of knowing this than any other American citizen. Americans must differ over the. equity or necessity of the continued presence of our arms on Philippine territory after the surrender at Ma nila. But humane Americans cannot now abandon the Philippine people who prefer our constitution to anar chy or invasion and conquest by a Eu ropean power. Mr. Bryan says that the people of the Philippines "cannot lie citizens without endangering our civilization. They cannot lie subjects without im periling our form of government." The literary habit of mind has never been characteristic of practical statesmanship. Mr. Bryan's instruc tive inclination to prettiness of ex pression is a fundamental weakness in his adaptability to politics. As a matter of fact there is no rea son why the people of the Philippine islands should not become in time American citizens. We have madeciti zens out of red aborigines and out of descendantsof African tribesmen. The ruling mass of the Philippine people are of far more assimilable stock. They are moral, peaceful, industrious, ac customed to obey and to command. They have responded readily to our overtures of friendship when accom panied with convincing proofs of a sincere purpose to establish among them firm, free, honest and just repub lican government. The work, it is true, is only begun. To desert it now would lie cowardice. The ultimate solution of the politi cal status of the Philippines cannot be predicted now. But this can be as serted now—that the flag of the United States must remain in the Phil ippines for the protection of the peo ple from anarchy or invasion and that the constitution and lawsof the United States must, be put into operation in the islands as rapidly as possible. Mr. Bryan will find that no consid erable proportion of the national dem ocratic party will support him or any other presidential candidate on a plat form proposing desertion of the peo ple of the Philippine islands to an archy, dictatorship or invasion for con quest or reconquest. CURRENT COMMENT. IC'So long as the American people do their own work they may expect a fair degree of prosperity.—lndianap olis Journal. will settle the Philip pines tariff promptly, sensibly and equitably to all concerned.—St. Louis G lobe-Dv m oera t. tc?" Democratic newspapers are evincing more knowledge of the po litical intentions of republican lead ers than the leaders themselves pos sess.—Cincinnati Commercial Trib une. C7"Mexico is having trouble with her silver standard. Mexico, the Philippines and Mr. Bryan are about the only localities in the world that are now troubled. —Indianapolis News (Ind.) IC"Bryan has once more taken the center of the stage to remark that the democratic party will not recede from the Kansas City platform. The "colonel" always was a great comedi an.—lowa State Register. friends have changed the constitution of the democratic club in New York so as to permit the boss to remain in control. When everything else fails, a democrat can always win by changing the consti tution.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. With till his pitiful display of tawdry, shallow, meretricious, calam ity-howling and calamity provoking "oratory" and "eloquence," liryan may have had his uses. Let tin be thankful, accordingly, for him, and especially for his exit. —Portland Ore goniau. iCWithin the past year the amount of money in circulation in the Unit ed States lias increased by about $92,- 000,000. The per capita circulation is now $28.78, which is nearly three times as much as it was in 1879. No wonder the nation's pulse beats Btrohg.—Albany Journal. / SASKATCHEWAN, WESTERN CANADA, IS CALLED THE "GARDEN OF EDEN," By a Former Itpildrnt of Ilerd City, Michigan. In a letter to the Reed City, Mich igan, Clarion, Mr. James C. Arm strong, of Meltford, Saskatchewan, lays, writing on 27th May, 1901: "This is a fine country for a poor man, as he can go out on the hay slews and cut all the hay he needs. He turns his cattle on the prai rie, and when he is not using his horses, he turns them out also. There is such an abundance of food, they never wander away. "A lady, who has lived here eight years, told me that this was the original 'Garden of Eden.' I certain ly would believe it, if we could only find the apple trees. But as it is, i we have many varieties of fruit — strawberries, cranberries, saskatoons, huckleberries, red and black cur rants, dewberries, plums, red and black cherries, and red raspberries. All of these fruits grow wild. Then the flowers that dot the prairies, making them look like a real garden. We have eaten of the wild red cur rants, and they are equal if not su perior to those grown in Michigan. We have sweet corn 7% inches high. As the western farmers are all done seeding, branding cattle and sheep shearing are now progressing. Wool is only five cents a pound, and many ranchers have on hand last year's clip. I inclose you a potato blossom, slice of new potato, which measured 6y 2 inches when cut. This is no fairy tale, if we are so much farther than Reed City. It is all facts. Come up and see. This has been truly called the 'Garden of the West.' With fruits and flowers, lakes and streams, fish and fowl, beautiful riv ers, tracts of timber and mountains, what more does a man want?" Information concerning Western Canada will be cheerfully given by communicating with the agent of the Government of Canada, whose adver tisement appeari elscv?here. SALVADOR'S PROSPERITY. Tbe Country !• Enjoying a Period of I'n ex ain pled Peiace and Plenty. The little republic of Salvador is the smallest country in America and one of the most densely peopled parts of it. If our country had as many inhabitants to the square mile as are living in Salvador we would have a population of about 350,000,- 000. Perhaps that day is coming, but not yet awhile, says the New York Sun. Our latest consular reports from Salvador says -that the country is en joying a period of profound peace. This is good news, for Salvador has had its share of revolutions, to say nothing of quarrels with its neigh bors that at times have seriously in terfered with its prosperity. The government is supposed to be based upon the consent of the governed, but sometimes it is merely a military regime with a little diversion in the form of insurrections. The reports say that the coffee crop will be unusually large this year. This, of course, means pros perity, because coffee forms three fifths of the exports, little Salvador selling more coffee tl*an any other state excepting Guatemala. The crop will be gathered next month. The crop of indigo is also unusu ally large. Indigo is one of the two products that distinguish Salvador from the other, countries of Central America, for practically all the crop is gathered in that republic. The other commodity which Salvador mo nopolizes is balsam of Peru, so called because the Spaniards used to carry It to Callao, Peru, for shipment to Spain. It grows on the coastal plain of Salvador and is valued in medicine. Salvador has no foreign debt and its financial condition is very satis factory. Like our own country Sal vador exports a great deal more than it imports. Its prosperity is of par ticular interest to us because the re public has larger trade relations with this country than any other nation except England. The reason why Salvador is so densely populated is that it fronts wholly on the Pacific ocean and prac tically all of it is adapted for settle ment. It is one of the peculiarities of the Central American republics that nearly all of their population is gathered on the Pacific slope. The northwest trade winds bring a tre mendous rain-fall to the Atlantic slope covering most of it with dense tropical forests which are not fitting homes for white men because they are so unhealthful. Civilization, therefore, has centered -on the Pa cific slope for the most part, the rain fall there being moderate and the cli mate and soil adapted to the raising of stock and the cultivation of many crops; Mills nearly all of Salvador is adapted for development. Never Loved III* Work. A visitor to a farm was especially struck by the great ruggedness and strength of one of the stalwart harvest hands, and said to the farmer: "That fellow ought to be chuck full of work." "He is," replied the farmer, "or he Oirght to be, because I hain't never been able to g-ct none out of him." This man never fell in love with his work, and hence was regarded as a g-ood-for-nothing by his employer.— Success. Flnttrry. Miss Bragg—l met that wealthy Mr.Wej tron at the Cadleys' last night. Miss Nagg Did you, indeed? "Ye.i. lie sat, next to me at dinner, and was i leased to remark upon ray liirtilike ap petite." "All! Well, he's a good judge. He owns nti ostrich farm, you know."— Philadelphia Press. ■Waiters' Arithmetic. i4 W a iter, 1 find I have just enough money to pay for the dinner, but I have nothing in the way of a tip for yourself." "Let me edd up the bill again, air."—■ lioonshina HP Kecfled the Hnfh. A certain congressman has instructed h : s butler to say to all undesirable callers that he is in the bath and Cannot be seen. One day lately a constituent with a griev ance to exploit called every day at the house, but no matter at what hour he presented himself he was invariably in formed that the honorable M. C. was bathing. His last visit he timed late in the afternoon, but was again chagrined to learn that Mr. X was in the bath. Whereupon the disappointed constituent wrote upon his card: "You may succeed, if you persevere, in getting your l>ody clean one of these days; out if you should spend the rest of your life in a bathtub it would not purify your conscience or your political record."—N. Y. Tribune. CUIIED BY ST. JACOBS OIL.. Unable to Stand For Months ilrcouia of Sprainetl Auklen. (From the Cardiff Times.) Among the thousands of voluntary en dorsements of the great value of St. Ja cobs Oil lor sprains, stiffness, and soreness, is that of Mrs. G. Thomas, 4 Alexandra ltoad, Gelli, Ysbrod, near Pontypridd, (South Wales, who says:— "It in with great pleasure that I add my, willing testimony to the invaluable excel lence of your celebrated St. Jacobs Oil, as experienced in my own case. 1 sprained both my ankles in walking down some steps *o severely that 1 was unable to stand lor several months. The pain 1 suffered was most severe, and nothing that I used hefped me until I applied St. Jacobs Oil, wnen they immediately became better daily, and in a short time 1 was able togo about, and soon after 1 was quite cured. 1 am now detenuined to advise all persons suffering from pains to use this wonderful remedy, which did so much for me." Mrs. Thomas does not enlighten us as to what treatment she pursued during the months she was unable to stand, and dur ing which time she was suffering so much, but we venture to suggest that had she called in any well known medical man he would have at once have prescribed St. Ja cobs Oil, for it has conquered pain upwards of fifty years, and doctors know there is nothing so good. The proprietors of St. Jacobs Oil have been awarded twelve gold medals by different international exhibi tions as the premium pain-killing remedy of the world. The committees who made the •wards were in each instance composed largely of the most eminent medical men obtainable. Mrs. Thomas evidently did not know the high opinion in which St. Ja cobs Oil is held by almost every progressive medical man. I r Hope. Teas—l heard him ray he felt rather en couraged because you left the gas turned low in the parlor when he called. Jess—How foolish of him! One needs a dark room to develop a negative.—Albany Journal. They say loafing is hard work. Still, we'd like to try it. —Atchison Globe. It is said that people "run"in debt; but they crawl out. —Atchison Globe. It Is the chief fault of women to be care less of a love they possess.—Judge. ' Speaking of bargains, good resolutions will soon be marked down.' —Chicago Daily News. Some men cannot hold a job because they always want a better one. —Washington (la.) Democrat. If you tell your troubles too much, after a while folks will not believe you.—Washing ton (la.) Democrat. At 30 a man is anxious for fame; at 50 he is willing to accept money as a substitute. —Chicago Daily News. lie —"Is she good-looking?" She—"No; but she will be when her father dies. She's an heiress." —I»ndon Tit-Hits. A good way to meet an argument when you are cornered is to tell the other fellow that he doesn't know any better. —Wash- ington (la.) Democrat. "You young scoundrel," said the father, seizing his disobedient son by the hair; "I'll show you how to treat your mother." And he gave him several bangs on the ears, and then shook liim until his hair began to fall out. —London Tit-Hits. Gotham—"A man should never smoke when out with a lady in an automobile." Church —"Why not? ' "Just think how it would sound when they were getting out for him to ask her if he could help her to a light."—Yonkers Statesman. >nmhiK the Ilnliy. Mot'her-in-Law (who helps)— How would Cleopatra sound? Father —Cleopatra is a pretty name; but you must remember we are selecting a name for my first child, not a uarlor car. —Judge. I How Truly the Great RgHp Jem. I Fame of Lydia E. Pink if I ham's Vegetable Com- I pound Justifies Her Orig- I inal Signature. Lydia PSnkhssn's VegetzbEe Compound. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ova rian troubles, Inflammation and Falling and Displacement of the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to tho Change of I^ife. It has cured more cases of Backache and Leucorrhcea than any other remedy tho world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such, cases. It dissolves and expels tumors from the Uterus in an .early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. Irregular, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation, Weakness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Head ache, General Debility quickly yields to it. Womb troubles, causing pain, weight, and backache, instantly re lieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the laws that govern the female system, and is as harmless as water. It quickly removes that Bearing-down Feeling, extreme lassi tude, "don't care" and "want-to-be-left-alone" feeling, excitability, irritability,nervousness, Dizziness, Faintness, melancholy or the " blues," and backache. These arc sure indications of Female Weakness, or some derangement of the Uterus, which this medicine always cures. Kidney Complaints and Backache of cither sex the Vegetable Compound always cures. No other female medicine In the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles. Those women who refuse to accept anything else are re warded a hundred thousand times, for they get wLat they want —a vure. Sold by Druggists everywhere. Refuse all substitutes. War Wa«tp o" norm. Rougl.Jy speaking 1 , a corps require*, to be remounted every foirr months, but one cavalry regiment records the staggering figure of 3,000 animals in a little over a year. It was the gen eral opinion of experts that the mem bers of the Household cavalry proved themselves the best "caretakers," and despite their heavy weights got ns much work out of their jwount® as any cavalry in the field. There was even one instance of a troop horse weathering the whole cam paign and returning lit and well to ceremonial duties in London.—Lon don Telegraph. A Good Tackle. "Did I make a good tackle?" asked th® football player, looking from his cot in th® hospital. "Yes," replied the nurse, "you bit off on® ear and two lingers and broke three legs." "Thank heavens!" murmured the football player, lapsing again into unconsciousness. —Ohio State Journal. Persons contemplating a journey East or. West should be careful that the rates paid for their transportation do not exceed toot® charged by the Nickel Plate Road. This company always offers lowest rates* and the service is efficient. Careful at tention is given to the wants of all first and second class passengers by uniformed' colored attendants. The dining car service of the Nickel Plate Road is above criticism and enables the traveler to obtain meals at from thirty-five (35) cents to SI.OO but no higher. The Pullman service is the usual high grade standard. Semi-weekly transconti nental tourist cars ply between Atlantic and Pacific Coasts. Confer with nearest agent of the Nickel Plate Road. And They .Marveled. "And what are you making?" we askei of the Intelligent Artisan, as we admired the play of his brawny muscles. "Makin' cowcatchers for milk trains," h® replied, without looking up from his work. Whereat we passed on, marveling greatly at the intricacies of modern science.—Balti more American. LarKCHt In tlie World. Walter Baker & Co., Limited, Dorchester, Mass., are the largest manufacturers of cocoa and chocolate in the world. They received a gold medal from the Paris exposition of last year. This year they have received three gold medals from the Pan-American exposition at Buffalo. Their goods are the standard for purity and excellence. Ju»t About Right. "What is a promoter, Jim?" "Well, a promoter is one of those fellow® that can sell you a colander for a wasti basin."—Boston Commercial Bulletin. Be«t for the IloweU. No matter what ails you, headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. Casearets help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy, natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Casearets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. "A woman," said Mr. Plattitood, "can't k#pp a secret." "Huh!" said little Johnny. "My teacher kep' me workin' an hour on a «uni when she might have told me the an iwer any time."—London Tit-Bits. The IlandanmeHt Calendar of the season (in ten colors) six beautiful heads (on six sheets, 10x12 inches), repro ductions of paintings by Moran, issued bj( General Passenger Department, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, will be sent on receipt of twenty-five cents. Address F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chi« cago. Children are becoming better, and par ents are becoming more sensible.—Atchison Cilobe. To Cnre a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AH druggistsrefundmoney if it fails to cure.2sc. The man who think : himself bright is not inclined to keep it dark. —Philadelphia Rec ord. Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of the throat and lungs.—Wm. O. Kndsley, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. A miser is known by the money he keeps. —Chicago Daily News. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are the brightest, fastest and easiest to use. In driving storms the clouds hold th® rains.—Philadelphia Record.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers