2 CAMERON COUNT'/ PRESS. H, H. MULLIN, Editot. Published Every Thursday. TKRMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, fer year •*> If paiel la advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES: Ad verlsements are published lit the rate eit ene d'd.ar HIT square forono insertion and lif'.j ecnts er "puirc for ivu'U subsequent mvrho i Rales i• v , tie year, or for six o. tbreu numtliH arc low a I an.form, and will be furnished on apt lical on. l.et-'ai a:a". Official Advertising per square, three times or lets, 8: each subsequent ins«,r. tio i O i ls per -qnar Local notices In cents per Kne for one inser seriinn: ft cents per line lor each subsequent cem ecutive Insertion. obituary notice's over five lines. 10 cents i er line. S-; i pie n'lnoune'euients of liirtlis. inur Holiness cards, five iii "s or less. Spr year; ever live lines, at the regular rates or udver tis ny. No local Inserted for less than 7.) cents pe.- tssye. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Phkss is complete «i;Tt .(I I'd facilities for eleilni; the be >t class of *■ rk. I'Mt i te.:i i.AH at i ENI lejN PAlbTo LAW Fkintisi;. No paper will l>- discontinued until arrear - are paid, except at the i-l'tlon of the; puti -1.-her. * , 1";, pers sent out of the county must be pa.d fur in iidvai ce. Tt is frequently stated that no olel men are wanted nowadays. There . . are hundreds who Ik I here mi \ye say they have been l.inilt 112 , , * . , shoveu aside make room for younger men. Ct seems, however, observes the New York World, that despite his (ill years, Lyman .1. Gage, who lias just retired from the treasury department, litis liael four good jobs eiffered him, with salaries attached ranging from 000 to $.">0,000. I'sclcss olel men are not wanted these days. Useful old men are. Mr. Gage litis made a life 1 - long specialty of banking. Hanking lias changed greatly since he first went into the business, but he has kept abreast of the changes. In f:ie-t, in some instances, it was he who made the changes. Mr. Gage is only one instance. Tlie're are hundreds of other men past the threescore mark filling positions of highest im portance and filling them well. Channel y Depew, John Wanamaker, John I). Rockefeller, Andrew Car negie. George F. Hoar, Hiram Maxim, iii.-ho|i Peitter and Levi I*. Morton tire all past 00- some of them past 70— and yet they tire among the most use fill and active men in the country. How old a man is depends largely on himself. If an olel man is not want ed in a position he has occupied for years it is not because of his years or his gray hairs. It is because be lias 1 ost interest and ambition, be cause he has made no effort to keep up to the times, because he lias grown careless or litis sacrificed his health to indulgence or ignorance. I'seful men are always in demand, no matter when they were born. The title of a popular song and the geniality of a judge in Chicago were ...... . . instrumental the "Ki«« and Slake other day in set -1p" iii Court. ... , . , tnng the marital difficulties of an aged couple. The scene was as amusingas it was unusual. The principles in the ease were Har taloini j Toinklewiez, 7~ years old. and his wife, OT years old. He had filed a hill asking divorce on the ground of desertion, and she had entered a cross bill asking for divorce and alimony. "You dein't want a divorce," said Judge Tut hi!!, who was hearing the case; "you had better kiss and make up.'' "Perhaps you arc right, judge," s'aid the.it tie old man as he arose and cere nionii it sly offered his arm to assist his wife from the stand, saying, "My dear, allow me." Then he kissed the littie o!d woman and the pair left the court room Moth had bee'ii earefully dre sst d anel punet iiiousU polite in their treat ment of one another, creating a diver sion in the usual divorce routine. The differences were said to be of a finan cial character, the man claiming his v\i fe was ixt ravagnnt. 1 he driver of the coal wagon came into the business ofliee with icicles hanging to his whiskers and eve brows, and, when the bookkeeper signed his slip anil handed it back to him with the remark that it was rather a colli day, the man who has to fp.ee the storms and till kiiuls of weather to earn a scant living, rc- I'lied: "Yes; but what do you know about it?" When the' coal man had gone out, the! bookkeeper did senile strong thinking, and decided that he ought to be very thankful for his lot in this world. "The features of the human face'," said Mark Twain the- other day, 'Van readily lie compelled into a kaleido scope of contortions, running the gamut from the expression of in te'.nse delight tej the expression of e'x crueiating agony. You will never wholly realize this, however, until you have the opportunity of watch ing a humorist in the throes of turn ing out a 'side-splitter.'" How we woulel like to see Mark at work! Henry Thomas I'uckle's thoughts and conversation were always on a high level. Once lie remarked: "Men and women range themselves into three classes, or orders, of intelli gence", you can tell the lowest class by their habit of always talkftig •about persons; the next by the fact that their habit is always to converse about things; the highest by their preference for the discussion of ideas," ANTI- IMPERIALISTS UNWISE. | General Lnnion'a I.oltrf mill lit Atvflll (HiurKC AnniiiMl Allier icun Malcontent*. T'.ie recently renewed attempt of certain anti-imperialists to revive elis cussion over tli<> Philippine question lia> drawn out some effective replies. And perhaps the most effective is the publication of the letter by the late I (it>n. Lawton condemning - the Ameri can sympathizers with tlx* Filipino insurgents. The letter is given in the Louisville Evening Post, to which it was furnished by Gen. Lawton's widow. It will be recalled that the letter was written from the Philip pines, where be was actively engaged in suppressing the insurrection," by the general only a short time before lie was killed in battle, lie declared tliat if the antiimperialists would honestly ascertain the truth on the ground they "would be convinced of the error of their exaggerated state j nients and conclusions, and of the [ cruel and unfortunate effect of their i publications here." The general add j ed that if he were shot in the Philip pines he would feel that the blow came from his own side, because, as he said, "I know from my own obser vations, confirmed by the stories of captured Filipino prisoners, that 'lie , continuance of the fighting' is chiefly J due to reports that are sent out from America and circulated among' those j ignorant natives by the leaders, who know better." Commenting on the appearance of that historic letter at this time, the St. Louis Globe-Democrat says: "Those are the words nf a man who knew the situation in the Philippines as will as any oth< r pt rson in the T'nlted States serv ice, anil better than it cnule] be known by thi little juntas of flag-furli rs in Boston, Chicago ar.d the other centers of 'antf impcrlalism.' Tie knew the Filipino as a civilian and as a soldier. In Manila and its environs, as well as out In the jungles and mountains of Luzon, Gen. Lawion had mi t the natives of the Islands, and he was fully conversant with the thinss that made thi 111 rebel against American author ity and which made them keep up the re bellion after possible hope was ended of success from llßhtinK. The K' neral, as well as every other American ir. the is land-. soldli rand civilian, was w< 11 aware that It was the slanders and the promises of the little band of 'anti-Imperialists' in the I'nited States which precipitated the insurrection in the first place, ar.d which rer.ewid It several times after serious re sistance to the Aim rieans had been tim porarily erushtd. Moreover, all this was plain from the beginning; to a large major ity of tin Americans at home. "(Jen. Lawton's letter,-now known to everyone in the t'nitid States to have hi > n g( nuine as it was quoted a year and more ago, is ,i crushing condemnation of the cor poral's guard of implacabli s wh<> ml £ p resi-nted the motives of their own govi rn mi r.t and incited the ignorant Filipinos to r 1 • against Its authority. The blood of every Ami rie soldier who has been killi d In tli Philippines. frn» 'itn. I.awton down to the privates in the ranks, is upon the hands of this coterie of mischief makers. The ignorant holomen in the swamps ar.d the hills of Luzon and other centers of disturbance were"led to believe that they had powerful allies In William J. Bryan and his party, assisted by a cabal of re publican malcontents. More Interest was felt ir the jungle s of Luzon in Bryan'B can vass that, was entertained in the Vnlted Statis. The wishes for his victory were more fervent there than they were here. Bryan's election would have been hailed | with more delight among the land ar.d wat< r plrati s of Luzon. Samarand the rest of the' seats e>f disturbance in the Philip pines than it would have aroused even among Croker's janizaries. This letter of Gen. Lawton ought to have been givi n to the piiblie- earlier, but it Is well to have It even at this late day as a refutation and rebuke for the little gang of vlllflers who have raised up enemies to American sway In tlie Philippines and who have indiri ctly sacrifice d the lives of hundreds of Ameri can soldiers." 'I his is pretty strong language, says the Troy Timeh. Vet it would be difficult te> successfully challenge truth. The American people have passed upon the Philippines ques tion and all the "imperialistic" non i sense in connection with it. The elec tion of 1000 recorded their emphatic, overwhelming 1 verdict. P.ut there is an element which is apparently de j termined to resurrect Ihe issue l , if possible. It is composed principally of supporters of Mr. Bryan in the last campaign, jvliei do not seem to be satisfied with the crushing rebuke they received at that time. They are very unwise and tire inivting their own undoing. The letter of Gen. j Lawton and the corroborative evi j dence e>f anti-imperialistic aid and | comfort to the enemy that can easilv j be furnished will be sufficient to j arouse loyal and patriotic Americans | to a higher pitch of indignation than they have previously attained. P.et ; ter let "imperialism" alone. t POLICIES OF M'KINLEY. Ttie ProdlilPromhe to Continue Them I iiliriilteii llna lleen Faithfully Kept. 'I he* olel policies lire iieit changed, nl j though tbey art; likely to be modified | as they might have been bad Mr. Mc j Kinley lived, says Henry Loomis Nel seni, in Atlantic. Time as well as man changes pedie'ics. New questions pre sent themselves alsoj and the mind of I the- new president litis necessarily a j different point, eif view tinel a per spective tiiat differs from that of his predecessor. It is ne>t only the eom binations of wealth known as trusts which present themselves in larger proportions to the mind of the one tlifur they eliel to that of tlie' other, but the subjects of forestry and game pres ervation. of irrigation, of practical army ami navy reforms, appeal more strongly to Mr. Roosevelt than they eliel to Mr. McKinley. The general poli cy of the one. however, if it differs in the relative proportions of its details, is subst nntially thnt of the either. What we know is that the promise to maintain the general policy of the dead president has been kept, anel is likely to l>e> kept, by his living sui'- cessur. and that the material welfare e>f the' country is as safely and wisely guarded as it, would have been if the awful tragedy at JJuffalo had neit been enacted. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1902 THREE MONTHS OF ROOSEVELT Something; tor the frltlm of lb« I'rcNitlciit In the Scliley Afluir tu Hcflect Over. There are two sides 1o most con troversies that come before the American people. That there are two sides to the controversy between the president on one hand and the friends of Gen. Miles and Hear Admiral Schley on the other is shown in "Three Months of President Roose velt," in the Atlantic Monthly for February. In this article, says the Chicago In ter Ocean, Henry Loomis Nelson cites the rebuke administered to (ion. Miles as an illustration of the president's attitude toward the army and navy, of the strength of his determination to compel discipline, and of his fear lessness in the discharge of his duty. Here is Mr. Nelson's statement of the case: "Ttv» disastrous controversy ! n the- navy touching Admiral Schley had been aggra vated by (allure on tlie part of lh> i xfi'U tive to suppress it by quick and decisive action. It bad lived mainly because the right thing had not been done at the right time. If the Judgment that wa* rendered by the court of inquiry had been rendered by the executive as soon as the partisan and sectional campaign in Schl< y's behalf had broki n out, the claims finally made fur him could not have lived a moment in the face of the ridicule with which they would have been greeted. "Hut the scandalous talk went on. * * * The events of the campaign faded out of the public memory; the real commander in chief, suffering from the* Injustice of the country to himself and his loyal cap tains, was forgotten, or, if remiinberid, was made the victim of the coarsest in sults that ingratitude would invent; the whole naval service was In a state of in tense exasperation, to the detriment of its discipline and to the threatened injury of the country. Finally, the admiral of the navy, who had done so much and received so much, threw oil upon the flames by (ly ing in the face of all the facts; by»denying the decision of the court, by doing his best to take from Admiral Sampson the honors that were his, after denying him the right to be heard In his own defense. "At such a moment, when the navy was almost in a state of insubordination against the admiral who had been so un just and so ungrateful, when passion was at its hottest, <!en. Miles, forgetting his duty of subordination, careless of the obli gation that rested upon him to set an ex ample of discipline, indifferent to tint wel fare of the two services, and to the neces sity of preserving active good will between I ihi m, joined in the controversy." Here is criticism for Admiral Dewey, for I veil r Admiral Schley and for lien. Miles. The unpleasantness of the statement is not all in its language, but in the suspicion that will be liar [ bored by 1 he friends of all the gentle men named that it is true. The president and the secretary of war have been criticised for the sever ity of their rebuke to Gen. Miles. The critics forget the serious character of : the provoeot ion and the tactics of (ien. Miles, which forced the president to | disregard even his own personal feel- J ing and do his duty. Mr. Nelson considers Secretary j Long's Indorsement of the decision of the court of inquiry as severe a re | buke to Admiral Dewey as Secretary Root's let ter to (Jen. Miles, and in t his ' censure he insists the president had I no thought but to do justice and to : teach a lesson of discipline to the lieti | tenant general of the army, at the ! same time putting an end to a disrupt ing controversy in the navy, and he : adds: I"In doing this he invited a storm of critl ] clsm, faced an angry mob in and out of I congress, but taught a needed lesson to the | two services, and, incidentally, to the I heroes who abuse their popularity to the j injury e>f the government whose welfare j they are bound to put above their own am- I bitlons." Here is another unpalatable state- I ment. Hut who will say there is not an element of truth in it? It raises a , question whether there is not to be a j read ion in public sent intent on eontro | versies of the present, as there was in , llie case of tile controversies of 1802 j and 18G!', in which ambitious men j sought to involve Gens. Grant and I Sherman to their disadvantage. There was then great bitterness I against these two officers. Hut in the ! end the people took up the cause of I the man who said nothing, who bore I in patience unjust criticism and who lived to speak generously of all the men who had striven to destroy his reputation. DRIFT OF OPINION. C?Somc of the mugwump newspa pers arc delighted, for they say that the democratic party at times posi tively shows signs of having human intelligence.—Cleveland Leader. ICCleveland has just referred to the l'ryan episodes of tSOfi and 1000 as "afflictive visitations." Cleveland would not have to jump very far to land in the republican camp.—lowa State Register. f"When I refuse to vote to pro tect the life of an American soldier I hope I may be paralyzed." So said Representative Cummins (dein.), of New York, and voted with the repub licans. The other democrats had no such regard for the life of an Ameri can soldier.—lndianapolis Journal. CThc democrats in congress, have once more tried to get together and decide upon what the party stands for, and once more they have failed. In view of the great number of con -1 ventions that will be held this year j the prospect for democratic union is i not inspiring. Meanwhile the party j as a party stands committed to I'.rv anism arfd the doctrines that have j twice brought it to disaster.—Troy | Times. U '"The democrats in various parts I of the country, taking their cue from the party leaders in congress, will | make the Schley controversy a p () - ' litical issue. At Wißiuuisport. Pa., for I instance, the democrats have declared | that no candidate for school .lireefor will receive support at the polls un | less he is willing to pledge himself to favor the adoption of a history which gives Schley credit for winning the bat lie of Santiago.—Cleveland Leader THE AMERICAN CORONATION. jjjj THE Til IST CIIOWXS OLD KIM* COAL. CAR SHOPS ABLAZE. ICeM'k Imluikl Kill I roil (I 4 e>. Lime* 000 at Morton, Kuli.- Two .Men lire Killed. Horton, Kan., Feb. 8. —Fire in the big e'tir works of the Rock Island rail road Friday afternoon caused the death of two persons and the de struction of $-.10,000 worth of prop erty. The dead: I*. 11. McKeon, president of the boarel of education. \Y. 11. Davis, the oldest employe of the car works. Tlii' fire broke out at t o'clock, in the' hair sorting room of the cabinet department, and spreael so rapidly that the employes on the second floor anil in Superintendent Studer s ofliee barely escaped with their lives, ninny of the employes being slightly injured. The walls of the car shops fell 20 minutes after the fire was ilis coveTCd. The loss on the building is $50,000, machinery SIOO,OOO, material SIOO,OOO. The engine house was (le st reived, but the new $75,000 boiler plant was saved. Fire is still raging in the lumber yard, which contains 5,000,000 feet of lumber. The buildings, machinery and material saved are valued at $2,000,000. •The company will rebuild Ihe car shops tit once. McKeon lost bis life in trying to save Davis. It was thought that all of the 300 employes had got out of the' burning building safely, when the absence of Davis, a prominent member of the working' force, was noticed. McKeon. a spectator, against the advice of liis friends, made an effort to rescue the workman. McKeon ran into the burn ing building, but in a few moments returned without Davis. McKeon *s heroic effort e'ost him his life, as be i.led from the effects of inhaling smoke. Davis anel McKeon were prominent in Morton. Will Make a Flying Trip. Washington, Feb. B. i'he illness of Theodore Roosevelt, jr., litis change-el l c plans of the president for his trip to Charleston to visit the exposition ; 'le're-. The trip may have to be abati (, mod altogether, but the- present purpose is to make a flying visit to Ije* exposition anel to return after the most important, functions in which it has been arranged the presi dential party should participate. X<> ladies will accompany the presielen tial party. The president, will not start until Tuesday. He- will go di rect to Charleston, will take part in the exercises of Wedneselny, and will then return to Washington. Agreed on One- Article. Philadelphia, Feb. B.—The commit tee on cree'd revision of the Presby terian church, which is now sitting in this city, devoted both sessions Fri day to the consideration of a brief statement of doctrine devoid of tech nicalities, for popular use. Earnest discussion was bail over the points that should be included in the state ment. At the conclusion of tlje af ternoon session a member of the eoni mitt.ee said: "The committee ha., adopted one article which relates to revelation." I'rine'i' Killeel in u lliicl, London. Feb. 8. —It is reported here from Paris that Prince Galat/.in was recently Wounded in a pistol duel with his brother-in-law, Count TschernadofT, at Htisle. Tue Cologne correspondent of the Daily Mail re ports that the body of Prince Galat zin has passed through Cologne* on the way to St. Petersburg. The* cor respondent says that, this is the first intimation that the prince had been killed. _ Oppose* tin' I'n iIII HcitlcrN. tUerlin, Feb. B.—Emperor William has interveneel to stem the spreael of the faith healing cult in Germany. His majesty has had long corifer e-ne'i's with the chiefs of police, for the purpose of devising measures to counteract, the campaign here of the Christian Scientists, who have fol lowers in the higher circles of I'erlin society. InvllatioiiM Sent te> I, 100. New York, Feb. B.—Plans for the linuer in honor of Prince Henry, to lie tenelered flic American press by Ihe* New York Staats Ze'itung, Febru irv :.'ii. are nearing completion. More than 1.400 invitations have been sent to representatives of daily papers throughout the country. A Bank Cashier Halted in About $150,000. WAS A CLEVER PENMAN. Sold Bogus Notes and Mortgages to l'nwary Investors. HE FOUND MANY VICTIMS. ■Mil \<>l < online III* Operations to the Lot-11l 11.V In W 111 I'll III)' (tank nil* Situated, l>iil f.ot Lurat' Sums Iroui People in Another State. , David City, Xeb., Feb. 8. —Forged paper sold by the defunct Platte Yal ley bank, of Bellwood, lias already reached an aggregate of $150,000 and it, may largely exceed this. Custo mers of Cashier Amos (iould from l.a Porte and Michigan City, Intl.. are here and claim that in every instance the notes and mortgages held by them are forgeries. Heal estate mort gages have been forged, including the certificate of filing and record ing. giving book and page, while this week several chattel mortgages have been received hy banks and attorneys here for collection that are also forgeries. (iould, it is charged, kept a private lionk where had had a record of all forged notes, the amount of each and the date of maturing and when one of those notes matured, he would re place it with another forged note and pay the holder the interest. (iould, it is alleged, claims that if it had not been for the blowing up of the bank safe a short time ago, in which his private book was de stroyed. he would not have been de tected and he still would hi' running the bank. The cashier and his broth er are still in jail. The day of their arraignment has not been set. Somebody Tapped tlie Wire*. Cincinnati, Feb. S.—When the Cov ington and Newport pool rooms were hit Thursday evening for $20,000, there weiv many surmises as to how it was done, but it is now claimed that tin- wires were tapped at some point north of Dayton, ().. as other pool rooms were hit south of here and none north of Dayton. Most of the money was secured by visitors from Dayton and it was won on Lady Kent in the last race at New Orleans. The pool room men claim that their report was delayed 15 minutes, whereby each of the four rooms were hit for more than $4,000 on that race. The telegraph company and the pool room men have instituted an investi gation which, they say, will result in sensational developments. Hxpenslve Colonies. Berlin, Feb. B.—l lerr Hichfer, the radical leader in the Reichstag, analyzing the m«st recent govern ment report concerning the colonies, finds that there are only 3,702 Ger mans in all the colonics, including of ficials, oflicers, missionaries, women and children. He proves from the budget of is<)2 that every German colonist costs the empire fi.ooo marks a year. While the total colonial trade has increased during the last five years from 11,000,000 marks to 25,000,000 marks, the colonial ap propriations during the same length of time have increased from slightly more than seven millions to nineteen million marks. Collided at » Junction. N'iles, Mich.. Feb. B.—At Granger, Ind., nine miles southeast of here, passenger trains No. it, on the Grand Trunk, and .No, 25, on the l.ig Four, collided at the junction of the roads Friday afternoon. The Pig Four en gine struck the side of the Grand Trunk engine, hurling it over against the station house, which was demol ished. Conductor Wells, of Benton Harbor, on the li>g Four train, sus tained serious injury. Two hundred passengers were shocked and both engines were badly damaged. Con fusion of signals was the cause of the collision. MISS BONNIE GFLANG A Chicago Society Lady, in a Letter to Mrs. rinkliam says: " DEATI MRS. PINK IT AM :—Of all the grateful daughters to whom you have given health and life, none are mora glad than I. "My home and my life was happy MISS BONXIE DKI.ANO. until illness came upon me three years a<fo. I first noticed it by being irreg ular and having very painful and scanty menstruation; gradually my general health failed : I could not en joy my meals ; I became languid and. 1 nervous, with griping pains frequently in the groins. " I advised with our family phys ician who prescribed without any im provement. One day he said.—'Try Lydia Pinkham's Remedies.' I did, thank (iod ; the next month 1 was better, and it gradually built me up until in four months I was cured. This is nearly a j r ear ago and 1 liav£ not had a pain or aelie since."— ISOXNIE DELANO, 3248 Indiana Ave., Chicago, 111.— $5 000 forfeit if above testimonial is not genuine. Trustworthy proof is abundant that Jjydia 13. l'inkliam's Vegetable Compound saves thousands of young women from dangers resulting from organic irregularity, suppression or retention of the menses, ovarian or Womb troubles. Refuse substitutes llou It Leaked Ont. Towne—Yes, their marriafe was a secret, mid it never would have been discovered but for one tiling. Hrown — What was that? "They couldn't keep the divorce proceed ings from becoming public." — Philadelphia Press. Grand Trunk Spuce at Sportsmen'* Show, The Grand Trunk .Railway Company lias completed arrangements for an extensive exhibition in connection with the second annual Sportsmen's Siow to be held in Chi cago from February 3 until February The Show is being held in the Coliseum, a large building admirably suited for the pur pose. The exposition will probably be the finest tiiat has ever taken plaee iu America, excelling even that held iu Philadelphia dur ing last December. The Grand Trunk ex hibit will include the collection of large photographs of scenes throughout the sum mer resort districts situated on its line, including the Jluskoka Lakes, Lake of Hays, Magnetawan Kiver, 30.000 Islands of the Georgian Hay, Kawartua Lakes, and Lakes Siuacoe and Couchiching, as well as views on the Portland division, combining land and water scapes, scenes in the White Moun tains, and surf bathing scenes taken on the Maine sea coast. The space to be occupied by the Grand Trunk will be about 4.000 SQUARE feet, and will be one of the most attractive and most interesting exhibits at the show. The Grand Trunk has expended thousands of dollars in bringing before the people of the United States and foreign countries the beauties of the Canadian districts. In the districts em braced iu what is known as "the Highlands of Ontario," nearly 30,000 tourists were car ried during the summer months, the ma jority of whom were from the I'nited States. These districts have become so popular that each year finds the hotel accommodation in creasing and modern and up-to-date struc tures are being erected to accommodate the ever increasing travel that is being brought Into Canada. Tlic Modern I'liiy. "Your friend, the theatrical manager, has gone abroad, I believe." "Yes, lie's oft -couring the continent for new attractions." "Ah! and the American public will get the off scourings, as usual."— Philadelphia Press. Some people can't even manage to go up like a rocket. — Puck. «£* «£» «£» *s» «$» 4sM£» «$» % T\ \ * * 112 troJtahlA * I | l | DON'T I I "GRIN AND BEAR IT" | * IF YOU HAVE * t Rheumatism, 112 Gout, Sciatica, or % | Neuralgia, Bronchitis, * % USE * I St. Jacobs Oil I 112 The result will be immediate relief from pain. It acts like marie; it penetrates V quickly and removespie cause of pain; it *;* | CONQUERS PAIN : v Sold everywhere, 25 cts. and 50 cts. isHs» •$» «$» »J» »$» «J# 4* <s» »*♦♦*« ♦s* *l* H6T wmm nffi? TUG MAKER* Of" mm I?*®^ yy Gp| HP OfLES) CLOTHING HAVE THE SAME-POINT* OFEWELkE*"" ' e&4PEiI COHPIE*'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers