2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per year 12 00 If paid in advance 1 *>o ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate o\ ene dollar per square for one insertion and lift j •cuts per square fur each subsequent insertion Rates by the year, or for six or three months are low and uniform, and will be furnished on applicat.on. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less, 42; each subsequent tnser* tk>M i>o tents per -quart*. Local notices In cents per line for one lnser aerilon; f> cents per line lor each subsequent oon-ecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over five lines 10 cents pel line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. *5 per year; over live lines, at the regular rates of adver ts ng. No local inserted for less than 75 cents p ft Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pkkss Is complete anrt affords facilities for doing the best class of Stork. PAKIK ( UK ATTENTION PAID TO I. AW PKINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear* agi-s are paid, except at tho cation of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. CURRENT TOPICS. There are 5,416 parts in a modern lIK'C miotive. Wade Hamilton at one time owned 4,01K1 slaves. The ivory market shows signs of a steady decrease. A lew days ago Michael Davitt cele brated his 56th birthday. Total population of Greenland at the cud of 1901 was 11,127 persons. Clinton (Mass.) master builders have granted an eight-hour day. Capt. Fritz Honig, the noted German I writer on miltary affairs, is dead. The Bog of Allen, the biggest in Ireland, is, in places, 17 feet deep. The amount of French capital in- i ■vested in China exceeds $100,000,000. j A Philadelphia female book-keeper j lias confessed to embezzling $15,000. j Methuen's defeat, it is reckoned, j means about $10,000,000 loss to Eng- j land. In Welsh ping-pong is know as ping pongyddiaeth and the devotees as ping-pongwr. Plans are being prepared for a tem porary executive building to be erected I en the White House grounds. In order that a rainbow may be pro duced, the sun must not be more than 42 degress above the horizon. No known land animal has naturally poisonous fiesh. There are, however, several fish whose flesh is deadly. The total fruit and vegetable .pack i In California in 1901 was 3,753.130 j cases, against 3,756,602 cases in 1900. j The German Shakspeare society ha-s 1 elected Dr. White, tlie American am- j bassador at Berlin, an honorary mem- j ber. The corn crop of Austria in 1901 has | been officially estimated as equiva lent to 17,535,500 bushels of 56 pounds j each. An injury to the tongue is repair-nl j by nature with more rapidity than is ! the case with any other part of the | system. Champagne was invented about 240 years ago by a monk named Perignon, | at the Abbey of St. Peter, Hautvilliers, j in France. Indiana labor unions have begun ari agitation against the chain-making j work done in the State Reformatory at Jeffersonville. A Connecticut schoolmaster thrash ed forty-nine scholars in one day, and ! the Nutmeg state papers are bragging that he broke the record. Hats have been pestering the Mt. ' Kosciusko observatory, in the Aus- \ trian Alps, 7,328 feet above sea level, j The officials are killing hundreds of them every month. I)r Leyds is organizing a demonstra- j tion for coronation day. The Conti nental and American pro-Boers are to show tlK'ir feelings by displaying Boer ; fags and sending telegrams to Mr. J Misuser. The Canadian government lias ap propriated slo,ooo° to '* M Ud a barbed wire ff.'pee along the boundary be-1 tween Montana and the Dominion, ex- j tending from St. Mary's Lake to th«? I Sweet Grass hills. Horses, mules and donkeys go load-! Ed to market in Turkey, but the road j Is strewn with grain leaking from the | o'd sacks, anil thousands of iurKeys,' * which may be bought at 1 cents apiece, ( feed on tlie dropping grain. It is estimated that there are fewer ! than 10,000 wild elephants left in all the countries on the globe, and that five of these will be killed off where one is born. It is a oniy n ' few >ears when the last 'one must, go. Mrs. U. S, Grae* bas shown ! the designs Submitted for the German j jnemorial six ofl w hich are to be ¥c- i iGCf'u, and she was so W'll p-lefr'ifed ; ""with them that she expressed the wish that they could all be preserved in marble. In order to illustrate the growth of the shoemaking industry the I.ynn (Mass.) Historical society is fitting up a shoemaker's shop that will be an exact reproduction of the kind known to the oldest inhabitants in thei younger days. Mrs. Elizabeth R. Horton, of Salem, Mass., owner of the famous Interna tional Doll Collection, which has earned nearly $25,000 for charity, ha just received, from the epieen of Ho mania, a doll with which tho quee once played. The vice president of the Boston and Albany railroad, who has been ex perimenting with a view to securing a smokeless locomotive engine, says that the experiments have been sue cessful and every engine on his road .wlli be fitted with the device. TRUSTS AND REPUBLICANS. Tilr Only I'nrly That linn tlio Ci>«r -IIKr ii ■■ il lloiiruli to l.«*K Imlii Ie AKaliut Tt until. One of President Roosevelt's expres sions about the trusts in his Charleston speech seems to have given some .satis faction to many democrats. The presi dent said "the nation should exercise overcombinatlons,cautiously but iirin ly, the power of supervision and regu lation." Representative Richardson, the democracy's titular leader in his branch of congress, says "that's good democratic doctrine, and if the presi dent wishes any assistance in the line he suggests he can count on every member of the democratic party >p congress." McClellan, Patterson and other democrats in congress say the same thing, states the tit. Louis (iiobe- Demoerat. This democratic hypocrisy in regard to the trusts can be easily exposed. The first square and honest expression by either of the two great parties against the trusts was made by the republican party in the convention which nominated Harrison the first I time, that of ISSB. The democrats in that year made a shuffling and dishon est deliverance on the trust question, which not one out of ten of the mem bers of the convention understood, and which not one out of a hundred oft lie members of their party in the country at large ever thought of in that COll vass or ever cared for. The republic ans in that convention proclaimed: "We declare our opposition to all com binations of capital, organized in trusts fir otherwise, to control arbi trarily the condition of trade among our citizens, and we recommend to congress and our state legislatures, in their respective jurisdictions, such leg j islation as will prevent the execution j of all schemes to oppress the people by undue charges on their supplies or I by unjust rates for the transportation j of their products to market." I That is what the republican party said in 18SS. the first year of a national j canvass after the trust idea came up | through the organization of the sugar J combine. The republicans, with char acteristic promptness and courage, carried out their promise by putting their platform declaration into the Sherman anti-trust law of 1890. passed by a congress republican in both j branches, and signed by Gen. Harri son. That act has done good service, and it is expected to do more work of the same kind. I'ndcr the direct ion of the president and the attorney general the act of 1800 is to be invoked against the merger of the northern railroads. If the law proves to be inadequate to meet the present necdes the republic ans will amend it in the right direc ! tion or pass a new act which will cover j the sit nation. The democrats, despite | tlie prating of Richardson and hiscon i geners, have neither the brains nor I the honesty to pass an anti-trust law | that will hurt the combines. All the work that they have attempted in this | direction in the states under their con | trol has either become a dead letter or j has been set aside by the courts, as in j the case of Texas the other day. The | only party which has the courage, the ; honesty and the sense to do any legis j latinij against the trusts which is ef -1 fective is the republican party. The ! whole country, democrats as well as re ' publicans, knows this. DONE FOR THE CUBANS. Tin- Immense Outlay of Moiu-y nml l.nlior in tlie Work of lie* cmiftt rui-t lou. In 1«54 it was proposed at tlieOstend ! conference that the United Stages paj Spain $120,000,000 for Cuba. Forty | four years later we entered upon a I war to free Cuba which cost us S4OO,- j 000,000. We compelled Spain to relin- j | quish the sovereignty of the island, j We took possession of forts, harbors* j and all public property. We sent the ! [ Spanish soldicis home at our own ex- j pense. We pnid the Cuban troops out j of our own treasury, says the Chicago | j Inter Ocean. We rebuilt and extended railroads, j ! constructed hundreds of miles of wag- i j on roads, brought order out of revolu- | j tionary chaos, reorganized the gov- j | eminent, protected the Cubans in all ! : their rights, maintained an army ii> j I Cuba to preserve peace, and expended j 1 some millions of dollars in buildingup j j wbf't Spaniards and Cubans had de- j stroyed. . After all this expenditure of money, | ■ after three and » '»'!«\,. ;irs of recon- I s,tr'.iction work, the I'nited States, on | May 20, is to turn the island over, with j out money and without price, to the i Cubans, themselves for local self-gov ! ernment. No other nation ever did so much, t spent so much, for a st niggling, aspir ing people, but if Cuba, under the pro tection of the United States, go for : Ward with her people attached to free I institutions and with her trade fos- I tered by beneficent laws, then the money will have been well used. CURRENT COMMENT. trr.Tames K. .Tonen can now follow , j the illustrious example of Morton ami Rryan, and take to ■editing. The week ly field is not yet crowded. Mobile Register. Nebraska democrats Who claim to know say that. William Jennings Rryan will be the fusion candidate for 1 governor in that state next fall. You can't lost. William J. lndianapolis Journal. ICBecause Mr. Jones is likely to lose the United States senatorsliip, is that any reason why he should be driven out of the democratic party? Mr. Ilry -1 an lost the presidency twice, yet lie is still a member in good standing. 1 dictating candidates, and interfering seven in local affairs. It looks as though Tirol her Jones was not being I treated in tire fairest manner.—Albany Journal. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY i, 1902. BETTER PAY FOR WORKERS. One of the Appreciable llPKult* of tlie W orkiitK-Oat of Itcpuli llean I'ollcle*. Without any great and sensational struggles between employers and workingmen a very large number of wage earners have had their pay in creased this year, and 1902 is still young. The gains for labor have been in many trades and in widely separated parts of the country. As a rule they have been obtained without strikes, threats or trouble of any kind. Many employers have taken such action un solicited. In all, hundreds of thousands of fam ilies will have better means of living comfortably and laying by provision for old age. They will be freer and happier, in nearly every case. It is the rare exception to the .-ule when wage earners or those dependent on them are injured by prosperity awl ] better pay. says the Cleveland Leader. The effect upon the industries and business of the country is also an im portant fact to be noted. When wages | go up the consumption of all sorts of useful and desirable merchandise in creases. There is no other stimulant for trade which is so certain and so powerful. It is needless to argue the point that the rich use far greater quantities of the products of labor and capital than the' poor and the middle classes are able to buy. One wealthy family dis poses of more work turned into cloth, food, furniture, paintings, books, houses and other things which nearly everyone desires than the consumption of a hundred very poor households rep resents. This is not true in regard to the weight or bulk of the food, of course, but it is, to some degree, in the human labor represented by the things eaten. Tn other particulars, as in clothing and jewelry, the difference may be as one to a thousand. Hence it follows that whenever any thing happens which makes a large number of persons a little better able to buy and use what they want there is immediately a marked increase in the demand for the products of Indus- 1 try. through the entire range of busi ness. In comparison with the stimu lating power of higher wages in the I'nited States all the growth of oui i foreign trade is a slight matter. . That is why the most selfish Amerl- I ! cans, even if far from any direct con- \ j nection with the-artisans and laborers i J of the great industrial centers, may i well rejoice in the largeadditions made | t his spring to the mult it tide of Ameri j can workingmen whose pay is better j now than it ever was before. FILIPINO LIES. 1 Sample* of Storlri t ireulatcd \ molly liiNuricontN to llriHK About Further 11 o«l ili I i en. I A recent copy of the Manila Ameri can, received at the war department, j contains a letter in regard to the ef- ! | forts of the insurgent leaders in Tia- ! , tangas province to deceive the igno rant natives and bring about further hostilities, says a Washington report. ; Ratangas province is one of those not j i yet pacified, and was recently brought i into prominence by a report called for | by the senate on the conditions tl.cre. ! The correspondent of flic Amer. an in Patangas says that an insurrceto commandante has issued a proclaina- | tjon saying that the I'nited States i.as in the midst of a bloody civil war, that 1 a great battle had been fought at ( lii cago in which 1,600 regular soliders were killed; that an army of anti-iin- ( j pcrialists was besieging Washing! ■ n j and that Roosevelt would be deposed i • and "Dr. l'ryan'' proclaimed president. ; Tn a circular letter issued by an | other officer, it was declared that the ; junta at Hong-Kong had received a j cablegram from Merlin saying that the ! i emppror of Germany was about tocpn- | fer upon Cien. Malear a grand decora- I tion. and that in consideration of a I j relinquishment by the insurgent gov- I j eminent of all claims to the Caroline ; islands, which formerly belonged to | the Philippines, Germany would sup- I ply the insurgentswith 4,800 new rifles ; ' and 1,(100,000 Mauser cartridges. The same officer charges that in J Iloilo the "Americans! established a j public hospital and then compelled I | all the very sick people to be taken i there for treatment. It was noticed j that some of these sick people died | : very soon. Tbat t hey might ijof he , bothered with cases the American doc- j tors, administered much poison. In this easy way the Americans meant to I kill off all tlicir enemies; consequent ly all who were true to the insurgent cause should under no circumstances be taken to an American hospital." 'The same officer declared that add!- ' tional chaplains had been sent to I Philippines, the reason being i, lla j «« n j_ I though the I'nited State' was consid- I ercd a Protestant D r ,(j o n, so many Americans were s- f . n j j,, ], o j| from the Philippines th'at all Christendom was scandalized !in ,i the pope of Rome eowiWaiKied the president to send more chajil'ains to these islands." The paper adds that these are only ' samples of many such lies circulated for the purpose of making trouble among the natives. lETTIic president lias made an excel lent selection for commissioner of pensions in Eugene I*. Ware, of Tope ■ ka, Kan. Mr. Ware is a veteran of the civil war. an able lawyer and a man of liip-h character. His acceptance of the place would insure its faithful and intelligent administration. In some respeets there is no more difficult po sition connected with any department in Washington, but those acquainted with Mr. Ware's abilities and record believe him to be rnrely well qualified to assume the arduous duties for which President Roosevelt, on the strength of personal knowledge, has chosen him. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat. DUN & CO.'S WEEKLY REPORT. All lliirl iicm* In (>uuit"Truunpinn'lnu Interest* .Maintain h (.rral llrcoril. New York, April 26.—'It. (i. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Ketail distribution of merchandise has maintained a pood average, losses at some points being offset by gains elsewhere. Manufacturing plants are well employed, except where wage disputes interrupt. Cof fee and silver touched low prices, but the average of commodities advanced. Transporting interests maintain their wonderful record, railway earnings thus far reported for April exceeding last year's by 5.2 per cent., and those of 1900 by 15.S per cent. Most, large consumers of pig iron have provided for their needs well up to the end of the year, and conse quently there is little change tore ! port in the situation, except as to I small orders that appear from time to time. Quotations received by j cable indicate that pressure in the ! I'nited States has produced a decided j advance abroad, and imports, after {laying duty and freight, are ex | tremely expensive. .Movement of pur- Itially manufactured and finished | steel products continues on a large j scale. Increased output and quicker ! deliveries of coke facilitate work at i iron furnaces and reduce the price, | while the lower list for anthracite i coal has stimulated orders. Lumber ! and building materials are having the usual spring activity. (Manufacturers of cotton goods are still behind with deliveries, and active machinery is assured for some time to come. Labor disputes have been temporarily • .adjusted, making the output very heavy as compared with j recent weeks when the strikes were causing interruptions. Jobbers have | received requests for more prompt de | livery, retail trade having expanded j with the warmer weather. Indepen dent woolen mills are working night and day. Wool moves slowly, and iu some in stances prices are shaded, but as a rule holders insist on fall figures. Footwear shops at the east have few ! new orders. The prospects for a full yield of wheat are less bright than they were a week ago. Lack of moisture has checked growth in the southwest, and snow has retarded farm work in some spring wheat states, but it is prob able that there is the customary ex | nggeration of damage reports for | speculative purposes. Meats were | well sustained. Cotton rose to the top point of the season on light receipts and reports of reduced acreage. Failures for the week numbered 212 in the I'nited States, against 215 last year, and 18 in Canada against 25 a year ago. VIGOROUS FIGHT. It ni'.l Itc Aifiilimt the Ameri can Leaeno by tlie National. New York, April 26. —The National league executive committee complet |ed its first regular session at the , Fifth Avenue hotel last night. The members decline to make public their i plans for conducting the fight against the American league; but that a defi nite plan of action has been adopted I and that it will be thoroughly carried out. the committee left no room to doubt. "There is no use denying that we i went over the matter from every possible point of view," said James \. Hart, of Chicago, last night, "but to make public what the outcome has been, would be furnishing our ene | mies with our ammunition." Mr. Hart admitted, however, that the Na tional league would follow up the vic tory gained in the Pennsylvania su preme court in the Lajoie ease. .lull n T. I'rush was seen after the i meeting and asked what plan had been mapped out for lighting the American league. Hie said: "A plan has been figured out. but just what it is I cannot say at this time. It would I injure our interests greatly to make : anything public just now. We pro i pose to make a vigorous tight, and no I one need be surprised to see many of the old league [layers back in ] their old clubs before many days have . passed," 18tlNMlnil Liilioi' Trouble*. St. Petersburg, April 2(5.- pliable information received here from Mos j cow shows that the labor movement j there has assumed most dangerous forms. There have been many factory I fires in Moscow and in the southern i provinces, supposedly of incendiary I origin, and factories have been pla i carded with boxer-like posters, call ! ing on the workmen to rise up against the "foreign devils," as the fort"- rt i managers and foremen are These posters further rt<vl<tro tha i "cold steel and lo„ r , e;i(1 nre Hon H (.'ortuite. London, \prii of,.—The examination in bur iU .,|ptey of the Marquis of i ensberry, which was concluded ' i' riday, showed that he rail through | personal property to the value of j .£ 2(><>,ooo, and the Glen Stuart estate of 500 acres. When he succeeded to [ the 'Marquisate, in ISiOO. he had an ticipated his interest in the estate to the extent of £106,235. The marquis lost between £OO,OO and t 100,1)00 in speculation on the stock exchange. Aaphyxlatetl. New York, April 26. — Frank Miller, George Moore and Frank Halster were found dead from gas asphyxia tion in a room in Peterson's hotel, at Coney Island, Friday. The case was evidently one of accident. A ItlNiiNtrouN Fire. Findlay, <)., April 26.- Custar, an oil town of 500 inhabitants. 20 miles north of here, was totally destroyed by Ire last night, the origin of which cannot be learned, owing to the fact that telephone and tele graph wires are burned and all com munication with the town is shut off. A high wind was blowing, which pre vented any possible chance of sav ing the town. Aid was sent from sur rounding towns, but to no avail. The loss, which will exceed $60,000, in cludes nine stores and scores of dwellings. RAIDED SILK MILLS Alob Violence Resorted to by Paterson, N. J., Strikers. Compelled a Complete Su«peii*ton of Ilint)nek»--:tliiiiy I'ersoiiH Injured --Clashed With Officer* of tlie Laiv—Several Shot* Were Exchanged. (Paterson, N. J., April 24. —Striking dye helpers yesterday stormed the establishments that were still run ning and by force compelled a com plete suspension of business in their trade. They engaged in a series of running tights with the police and plant managers and in one of the severest clashes exchanged a volley of pistol shots with them. The radi cals among the strikers were in com mand and hostilities ceased only when they tired of fighting. Many persons on either side were severely injured during the rioting, one dan gerously so. The conservative element among the strikers had in the meantime disavowed the violence of their fel lows and urged a return to peaceful means to gain the end that was sought. A written demand upon the employers for increased pay was formulated and committees opened negotiations for its consideration. Large numbers of strikers were in a sullen spirit and it was predicted last night that any attempt on the part of the employers to resume business without dealing with them would be desperately resisted. When the strikers completed their campaign against the plants in opera tion tin- number of men out was found to be nearly 4,000. The disorder began early in the day and was exciting. A meeting of strikers was held at 8 o'clock at liueger's Riverside hall and 2,000 men gathered at the place. The hall would not accommodate them all and the proceedings were slow because of the many nationalities represent ed. To simply matters it was final ly decided to have the men of each shop on strike appoint a committee of five to represent them. The meet ing was orderly and declared for peace and the men were urged to keep away from the shops. While the meeting was in progress hundreds of strikers stood outside the hall angrily discussing their grievances. 'Hie radicals urged a raid upon the works still in operation and when their suggestion was approved rushed for the plant of Johnson, Cow din & Co. The men at work were called out and the strikers moved onto the establishment of James Simpson A- Co. That firm, fearing trouble, dismissed the men and closed its doors. Robert Caere's works were visited next and after that the Bamford mill, where the first seri ous disorders occurred, was surround ed. Windows were smashed, chemi cals spilled and considerable damage done. The men at work in the plant left their places. While one mob was closing the Hamford mill, another was surging into the plant of the American Silk Dyeing and Finishing Co. Armed with dye sticks and stones, they charged through the plant, driving the men from their places. George Arnold, one of the members of the firm, was dropped insensible with a blow on the bead from a dyestiek. Almost simultaneously an attack was begun on the works of Emit (leering Co., in the fight for possession of it, shooting occurred. Two policemen were guarding the place. Some one in the crowd discharged a revolver and the police quickly r •turned the lire. Half a dozen shots were iired and one striker, who escaped un identified. was shot in the leg.' The inob stone the two policemen and, when one of the latter arrsted one of the leaders, closed iu around him. The oHicers sw ing their clubs and beat their way out of the crowd. The strikers met at Riverside again at -1 o'clock in the afternoon to re ceive the reports of the several shop committees. Nearly every one of the latter reported that their particular shop would agree to the wage eon cession demanded if all the other shops would. The conservative lead ers strongly advised the strikers to avoid and disavowed the at tacks made oil tile mil's during the morning'. Try!iiis C ombine Yarn .lain*. Charlotte. X. C., April 24.—Owners of yarn mills from li-ilf a '!" zen representing ViParly a million Spindles, met here yesterday to con sider ti proposition looking to a com bination of CO per cent, or more of the southern yarn mills in a company capitalized at'soo,ooo,ooo. A largo pro portion of the spinners seem to be iu favor of the merger. It is argued that because of the advancing price nf cotton and sharp competition there is a gloomy future for yarn manu facturing. Two hundred mill men at tended the meeting. Wiped Out by Fire. Oil City, Pa.. April 24.—Thirty-five places of business and 50 dwellings were destroyed by fire at Maricnville yesterday. There was a high wind and no adequate tire protection. The fire started in the dwelling house of Mrs. AL J. Smith, who was smoking meat. The 1!., IS. & K. railroad station and telephone exchange were among the buildings destroyed. The loss is esti mated at $200,000, with about one-half that amount in insurance. Death of an Aetre»*. New York, April 24. —Rose Osborn, an actress, died here yesterday. She became insane during illness of - tritis and while being removed to an asylum intule a desperate attempt to commit suicide by jumping into East river from a ferry steamer. She was rescued, but died yesterday. ISaiilt 4'lo*c<f« Algonae, Mich, April 24.—The bank belonging to the Algonae Ranking Co. was closed yesterday. J. W. McKen zie and I*. J. Kean were the principal stockholders, the former being man ager. CONDEMNED IN MISSOURI AND CONFISCATED Itf NEW YORK. Judge~Clarke of St. Louis has con victed and lined heavily a number of grocers for selling baking powder® containing alum. The week before the Health Depart--' ment of New York seized a quantity! of stuff being sold for baking powder which they found was tnade from alum mixed with ground rock, and dumped it into the river. The Health Authorities are thus tak» ing effective means to prevent the in troduction into our markets of in jurious substitutes in place of whole some baking powders. As alum costs only two cents a pound, there is a great temptation for those manufacturers who make sub stitutes and imitation goods to use it. i Alum baking powders can be detected. J by the health authorities by chemical | analysis, but the ordinary housekeep | er, whose assistance in protecting the health of the people is important, can not make a chemical examination. She may easily know the alum powders, however, from the fact that they are sold at from ten to twenty cents for a pound can, or that some prize—like a spoon, or glass, or piece of crockery, or wooden ware—is given with the powder as an inducement. As the people continue to realizeth© importance of this subject and con- I sumers insist on having baking powder of established name and character, i and as the health authorities continue j their vigorous crusades, the alum | danger will, it is hoped, finally be j driven from our homes. To Hake Study of Cancer. The official heads of the medical profession of (ireat Britain are deter j mined to unite for a systematic in : vestigation into the causes, the pre vention and the treatment of cancer, according to the London correspond ent of the .New York Herald. The king has given countenance to the movement, and it is likely interesting developments will follow shortly. The councils of the Royal College of Surgeons and the Royal College of Physicians have adopted a joint reso lution empowering delegates to draw up a detailed scheme of work. Sir William Church, Sir William -Jiroad bent and others equally well known are on the committee. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills, Must Bear Signature of See Fac-Slmile Wrapper Below. Very small and as easy to talte as «D£uz. PADTK"KJC HEADACHE, I/Am Lft&> for dizziness. for biliousness. h iv na FOR TORPID LIVER ' if Piil S FOR CONSTIPATION. H m FOR SALLOW SKIN. ,ggSgS3l I FOR THE COMPLEXION . OBSnKII MutrmvisyJMATu.i, t6 Cuito I Pnrelr fc ■" CURE SICK HEADACHE. Good enough for anybody! Havana Filler J of same value as tags from 'STAR: 'HORSE SHOE: I "SPEARHEAD. STANDARD NAVY? I 'OLD PEACH & HONEY" and J. T. " Tobacco.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers