4 Sunder® i) GouqlJ j^pess KSTABI.ISHBD BY C. B.GOULD. HENRY H. MULLIN, Editor and Manager. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY TERM S OF SU BSCRIPTION: Per year $2 bO If paid is advance $1 50 ADVERTISING RATES. Adverti ementsare published at the rate of one dollar persquareforoneinsertion and fiftycents per square for each subsequent insertion. Rates by the year or for six or three months are ow find uniform, and will be furnished on appli cation. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less, $2 00; each subsequent insertionSO cents per square. Local notfeesten cents per line for onei nsertion, Ave cents perlineforeaclisubsequcntconsecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over live lines, ten cents per ine. SinipleannouncementsofbirthE,marriage;- and deaths will bcinserted free. Business Cards, live lines or less $5. Of per year over live lines, at the regular rates of advertising No local inserted for less than 75 cis.per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRESS is complete, and affords facilities for doing the best class of work. I'ARTICUI.AR ATTENTION PAID TO I.aw Printing. No paper willbe discontinued until arrearages are paid, except at the option of the publisher. Papers sent out ofthe county miißt be paid for in advance. i'i-No advertisements will be accepted atles - than the price for fifteen words. * «Sr Religious notices free. WASHINGTON LETTER^ {From our Regular Correspondent.) Washington, May nth.. 1902. Editor I'ress: The long period of waiting in the Senate is approaching an end and the strain, under which Republican senators and the correspondents of the Republican press have labored, is to be remitted. The orders of Senator Lodge, in his capacity of manager 011 the floor of the Senate of the Philippine Civil bill, have been "hold your lire until you see the whites of their eyes," but the whites of a good many Democratic eye-balls are now in view and the first skirmish of the Republican forces was made on Friday by Sen ator Pritcliard, of North Carolina. Behind the smoke of Senator Pritchard's skirmish line Mr. Lodge has been getting his big guns into line and to-day at two o'clock they will go into action with telling ef fect. The Senator from Massa chusetts has prepared his speech very carefully and it is calculated to play havoc in the Democratic ranks. Mr. Lodge will admit the cruelties which have been practiced in the Philippines by American soldiers but he will point out that they till occurred from one-and-a half to two years ago. Then iie will cite the .atrocities practiced on American soldiers by the Filipinos, outrages and barbarities which, to use the Senator's own words, "would make a marble saint thirst for vengenee." Space will nor per mit an enumeration ofthe frightful atrocities which have been perpe trated on the American boys and which have made their comrades, crazed with the sight of their brothers' suffering, overstep, in a very few instances, the bonds of civilized warfare. I have seen the Senator's speech and when the American people have read it their horror at the pictures which have been drawn for their imagination by Democratic partisans will be turned to pity, and to gratification that the American forces have shown themselves so tolerant, so merciful and so well-disciplined in the face of such frightful provoca tion. What the Democrats have been exultingly contemplating as magnificent material for the cam paign will be shorn of its oratorical flowers and made to stand out as partisan vilification of American soldiers, under the furious batteries of the junior Senator from Massa chusetts. The testimony of Messrs. Have meyer and Donner, respectively president and treasurer of the Sugar Trust, before the Committee 011 Relations with Cuba, have failed to discover the sensational facts which have been so confidently counted 011 by the opponents of Cuban reciprocity. The statements of both of these gentlemen, made under oath, have revealed the fact that the Trust has 110 holdii igs of Cuban sugar and that reciprocity will operate to the disadvantage ratber than to the advantage of the trust. Further delay will obviously operate to the advantage of the trust, but Cuban reciprocity, ac cording to their statements, will not. Mr. Mott, purchaser of raw sugar for tlie Company, cited with effect the results of admitting free Porto Rican sugar as ample evi deuce of the benefit to the planters ] of a reduction of the tariff. The refusal of the Attorney General to meet in conference the representatives of the beef trust is in entire accordance with the views of the President and with the action j already taken by the Department of Justice. Mr. Knox has begun this suit in the belief that the men who compose the trust have violat ed the law and have conspired to raise the price of a commodity which is important to every con sumer. There is nothing about which he wishes to confer, lie has brought suit in the courts and the results will stand on the facts there demonstrated. It is not the posi tion of the government to compro mise with law breakers and it now remains to the courts to determine if the Attorney General is correct in his assumption that the law has been violated. Having demon strated the correctness of his posi tion Mr. Knox will leave it to the courts to enforce the law and tlx the penalty. Spring Ailment. There is an aclnng and tired feelinjz; the liver, bowels and kidneys become sluggidi and inactive, the diji'stinn im paired. with little or no appetitt. no ambi tion (or anything, and a feeling that the whole body and mind needs toning up. The trouble is, that during winter, there lias been an accumulation of waste matter in the system. Ilerbinc will remove it, secure to the secretions a right exit, and by its tonic effect, fully restore the wasted tissues and give strength in place of weak ness. 50c at L. Taggart's. The wise man flatters the fool, but the tool flatters himself. Foley's Iloney and Tar is peculiarly adapted lor astlnua. bronchitis and hoarse ness. L. Taggart. Labor i:- the girdle of manliuess. A Lesson in Hoalth. Healthy kidneys tiller the impurities from the blood, and unless they do this good health is impossible. Foley's Kidnev : Cure makes sound kidneys and will posi tively cure all forms of kidney and bladder disease. It strengthens the whole system. L. Taggart. Money is like muck, not good unless it spread. Dangerous il' Neglected. Burns, cuts and other wounds often ' fail to heal properly if neglected and be- j come troubli omc sores. D Witt's Witch Hazel Salve prevents such consequences. Kven where delay has aggravated the 1 injury De Witt's Witch iia/.el Salvo < 1- fects a cure. "I had a running sore on my leg thirty years," r,. 11. llartly, j Yankeetown, hid. ' After using many remedies, I tried DcWitt's Wit<-ii llazvl, , a few boxes In iled the sore." Cures all skin diseases. Piles yield to it at on re. j He ware of counterfeits. It. ('. Doclsou. : \ irtue is like precious odors, mo t 1 fragrant when they are incensed or , crushed. You never heard of any one ' Foley's Honey and Tar and not being ; satisfied. L. Taggart. I see that time divided is never long, j and that regularity abridges all things. Will Cure Consumption. A. A. Herren, Finch, Ark., writes, Foley's Honey and Tar is the best pre paration for coughs, colds and lung trouble. I know that it has cured con sumption in the first stages." L. Taggart. Love labor; for if thou dost not want j it for food, thou mayest for physic. A Spring Tonic. Everybody needs a tonic in the spring, at this time the system craves a tonic, it is housecleaning time for your body. Liehty's Celery Nerve Compound will tone up your nerves, blood, kidneys and liver and till you with health and energy. Sold by L. Taggart. LOWEK RATE EXCURSION TO CALIFORNIA. During the coming summer frequent ! opportunities will bo offeree! by the I Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway j to visit California at the lowest round ! trip rates ever offered, with choice of | routes from Chicago via Kansas City, j Omaha or St. Paul, or going and re turning via different routes. Electric lighted trains. Route of the Pioneer Limited. Famous Train of the world. Write for full information to F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chicago. 9-3t. SPECIAL EXCURSIONS. Via Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul] Railway to Pacific Coast points, fori which tickets will bo sold from Chicago j April 20th to 27th, May 27th to June I Bth, good sixty days. To Colorado and j Utah points tickets will be on salo dur- j ing June, July, Au: usfc and September ' good to return until October 31, 1902. \ I tomeseekere oxourpion tickets are sold 1 on the first and third Tuesdays of each ! month to points West and Northwest of Chicago, good twenty-one days. For j particulars call on or uudress John R. i Pott, District Passenger Agent, Room I J). Park Building, Pitli--' :rg, PH. 0-3 I CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1902. Doti't Start Wrong. Don't start the summer with a linger ing cough or cold. We all know what a "summer cold" is. It's the hardest kind to cure. Often it "hangs on" through the entire season. Take it iu hand right now. A tew doses of One Minute Cough (lure will set you right. Sure cure for coughs, colds, croup, grip, bronchitis, all throat and lung troubles. Absolutely safe. Acts at once. Children like it. "One Minute Cough Cure is the best cough cough medicine 1 ever used," says J. 11. Bowles, Groveton, N. 11. "I never found anything else that acted so safety and quickly." R. C. Dodson. Manners are the final and perfect ! flower ol noble character. Traveling Is Dangerous. Constant motion jars the kidneys which j are kept iu place in the body by delicate attachments. This is the reason that | travelers, trainmen, street car men, tcam , stera and all who drive very much suffer j from kidney disease in some form. Foley's Kidney Cure strengthens the kidneys t and cures all forms ol kidney and blad ; der disease. <«eo. 11. Hausen, locomotive engineer, Lima, 0., writes, "Constant vibration ol the engine causen me a deal of trouble with my kidneys, and I got no relief until I used Foley's Kidney Cure." L. Taggart. If a man lias the right stuff in hint it's ! bound to coma out. That what makes | some men's noses so red. The Spring Fever [s a malady which no one can escape iat this season of the year. The vitality is usually overtaked during the winter j months, and spring finds the system all run down. The blood is thinned and im pure. The kidneys and liver are inactive —resulting in a loss of energy and appe tite, and a derangement of the nerves. Lichty's Celery Nerve Compound will purify your blood, tone up your nerves, and leave you feeling fresh and energetic. | Sold I)}' L. Taggart. Take wine from good soil, and a daughter from a good mother. Wants Others to Know. "1 have used DeWitt's Little Risers tor constipation and torpid liver and they are all right. lam glad to indorse them for I think when we find a good thing I we ought to let others know it," writes | Alfred Heinze, Quiney, 111. They never | gripe or distress. Sure, safe pills. It. C. [ Dodson. To give and lo lose is nothiug; hut to ! lose and to give still is the part of a great J mind. Holds un a Congressman. At the end of the campaign," writes ; Champ Clark, Missouria's brilliant eon- I grcssman, "from overwork, nervous tension, loss of sleep and constant speak - : ing I had about utterly collapsed. ft seetneu that all the organs in my body I were out of order, but throe bottles of Klectric Hitters made me all right. It's the best all-around medicine ever sold over a druggist's counter." Over worked, 1 run-down men and weak, sickly women gain splendid health and vitality from Klcctric Hitters. Try them. Only 50c. < i uarrantecd by L Taggart. All colors will agree in the dark. Cures When Doctors Fail. Mrs. (Jrauk Chiasson, Patterson, La., writes .June Bth, 1901: "I had malaria fever in very bad form, was under treat ment by doctors, but as soon as I stopped taking their medicine the fever would return. 1 used a sample bottle of Her bine, found it helped me. Then bought two bottles, which completely cured me. I feel grateful to you for furnishing such a splendid medicine, and can honestly recommend it to those suffering from malaria, as it will surely cure them." Ilerbine, 50c bottle at L. Taggaits. Corseience is the voice of the soul; the passions are the voice of the body. For Female Complaints And diseases arising from an impure state ol the blood Lichty's Celery Nerve Compound is an invaluable specific. Sold by L. Taggart. Less judgment than wit, is more sail than ballast. When you get a headache Don't waste a minute but goto your druggist and get a box of Krause's Headache Capsules. They will prevent pain, even though your skull were crack ed. They are. harmless, too. ltead the guarantee. Price 2oe. Sold by L. Taggart. To live in hearts we leave behind is not to die. A Revelation. If you will make inquiry it will be a revelation to you how many succumb to kidney or bladder troubles in one form or another. If the patient is not beyond medical aid, Foley's Kidney Cure will cure. It never disappoints. L Taggart. The man who can take an umbrella to church and leave it in the vestibule has true christian faith. Foley's Iloney and Tar contains no opiates and can safely bo given to children. Ij. Taggart. What is Foley's Kidney Cure. Answer: Tt is made from a p:escription of a loading Chicago physic'an, and ine of the most eminent in the country. The ingredients are the pure.-! that money can j buy. and arc scientilically combined to ; get ill ir utmost value. L, Taggart. 1 ' j MONTEREY CALIFORNIA. Continued from First page. fines, augmented in no small degree by ' repeated "raids" on gambling places | throughout the town, the entire outfit, ' including"jack potf'and all its contents fining its way into this fund, until ! money enough to build the capitol was ' secured by Mr. Colton, and the gamb- i lers still played their game. Monterey's Sub-Marine Gardens, a j new industry for at least one enterpris I ing individual in Monterey has sprung up within the past year. It sprang ! from the bottom of the sea, and is [ plied with the aid of "El Buso"— the glass-bottomed boat. These Sab-Marine j i gardens and menageries are so old as j "old ocean" itself, but have only j recently been brought to the notice of the public, and in their antiquity con- j i sists their marvelous beauty. The Mon -1 terey gardens have not been advertised | ] as have those of Santa Catalina Inlands, j | lying about 30 miles off San Pedro j Ilarbor, where the glass bottomed boats through which can bo viewed ■ the wonderful animal and vegetable life that inhabits the bottom of the sea have been in use for some time, and thousands of "tourists" have absolutely j courted sea-sickness, and many actually | took the dread malady home to their > | "bosoms," all for a peep at the gardens j | of the sea whose counterpart is found j nowhere on land. The master of "El ' Buso" tells his enthusiastic passengers, ' that there are by actual count 173 1 species of sea mosses, kelps, weeds ' vegetables, etc , with coral reefs re- 1 spkndant with color, all of which are j inhabited by 150 species of fish in this i bay. These coral reefs with their vari- ' colored mosses, barnacles and shell growth, the result in tint and outline of the action of the sea through the ages i since creation, assisted by the crystaliz ing influences of the waters of old ocean, j present a picture of rare and marvelous ; I beauty, one that the most extravagant I | imagination cannot conceive, one that I the most talented pen cannot describe, j j and the most artistic brush cannot dei : PJCt. These, interspersed with the multi- ! tude of shell fish, of hue so dainty and delicate, and shape so unique and j pictusesque, the houses of the inhabi- j tants of the bottom of the sea consti tute the architecture of this city of the depths. Fishes without houses to dwell in are here seen basking in the beauties j of these tropic.il sea gardens, these j aquarimus of the deep. The skeletons ! of whales, the wrecks of centuries, lie ■ scattered in the depths. The Octopus \ is by 110 means a stranger in these waters, and can be seen clinging to the | bottom or to the sides of rocks with his j score or more of arms or legs, waiting j motionless for the opportunity to em- J brace in his strong far-reaching ten- ; lacles, some defenceless creature upon j which to make his morning meal. Every rock in these placid depth, is radiant in colors so harmoniously ! blended, and so graceful in for.m that' it would put to blush the efforts of artist and sculptor to reproduce it with \ brush and chisel. The principal vegetable raised here j without cultivation is the cucumber 1 that attains a giant size, the chief fruit j is the sea olive that grows in abundance i on tall graceful trees or stems standing i upright or in a graceful drooping po3i tion, some of them reaching a height of 30 or 40 feet, and the plant or tall king dom is mainly represented by the graceful Cypress, that is equally, or even more attractive on the bottom of the sea, than is its sister growth on land. The crowning glory however, of this fairy-like, yet extremely realistic panorama, remains for the immense and luxuriant floral bouque, so deft and symmetrical in arrangement and yet so mammoth in its proportions, it seems the work of a giant hand. I wish only to say in conclusion, let 110 visitor to the Pacific Coast, from the East, return without seeing the Sub- Marine gardens of "Monterey." J. S. DOUGLASS. Monterey, April 10th, 1902. THIN PEOPLE. We Advocate Vinol As a Means To Regain Normal Weight. A declinfl weight generally foretells a serious illness. Take otir advice and keep an eye on! your weight. If you find it is falling off, j take our advice again and take VINOL. | The reason wo recommend VINOL is j that we know what it contains. We have ! investigated its merits. We thoroughly | endorse this great tonic rebuilder. j So sure are we of the satisfaction it j will give that we unhesitatingly offer to j refund the cost of VINOL to anyone j who is not satisfied with the results ob tained by its use. Please read the letter that wo print ' herewith, that bears on the subject and which we know will interest you. It ! comes from Mrs. W. 15. (Jenner of Lake- | wood, New York. "My normal woiglit Is 175 lbs. When i I began taking VINOL I weighed not ' over 100 lbs. Everyone thought I was 1 going to die with consumption. As a I last resort 1 decided to try VINOL and, I to the astonishment of all, I began at i once to get better. I have taken in all not over two bottles as yet, but have gained in flesh over twenty x>ounds and I moro than that in strength." Please call on us and let us tell you more about what VINOL will do. 3!d Reliable Drag Story. [ STERLING RUN, PA. 1 j We bave returned from the city, I and as usual we bought too many I goods. The goods are on our shelves I lor your inspection and we invite the 5 public to come and inspect them and I get prices. We will sell these nice I up-to-date goods forthe next THIRTY B DAYS at a very small margin to rc- 9 duce our stock. NOW IS THE TIME I FOR GOOD BARGAINS. We sell BRUSSELS CARPET from 1 sample, we measure your room, cut 18 carpet to fit and sew it if you wish, g I We carry INGRAIN carpets and S FLOOR MATTING in Stock. Our £ prices on matting are lfic, 2'> c, 25c, 28c, (fj and .'SO cents per yard. We are agents for DEMOREST SEWING MACHINES, | DEERING HARVESTER.COMPANY, I AMERICAN AGRICULTURAL CHEMICAL FERTILIZER CO. J. K. SMITH, ® Hterliiijt Run, S*a. ■ illMHII■! IllllHiyiMli IWIIMIIiIWIIIiIIIII' nil if | js Famous at home for Generations past; £4 Famous now all over uj Sj the World. Li BS 's i M For sale by M WM. McGEE. j* j Kodol Dyspepsia Sure Digests what yo« «jat. OF}. CALDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSlife i CURES CONfiTiRATIOtY.N V Mpn'ci -mvi I IdtilD UlIIl l Is dfhibs | II have just received a most handsome line of the IpS latest styles in Men's Waists raid now an advance crop of these swell waists are ready for your harvesting. H The waists have been chosen with an eye to patterns and iff quality. They are nude up i ••'v:i ias shirts can be. You couldn't ge;. a better ii von were to pay I twice as much for it. We w> \ i I b_* Ito convince M you of the truthfulness of our assertions. The People's Popular Clothier. Adam, Meldrum & Anderson Co. ; :506 to 108 Main St.—American Block, iltfH'FAriO.N. V. SILKS A FORTUNATE purchase lias enabled us to present a magnificent array of the newest Spring and Summer Silks at prices that are tempting FOULA RI>S Beautiful Foulards in silk and satin, from the best looms in the world, in all the fashionable de signs and colorings. Made to re tail at sr.oo, and worth it. Marked Special at, OS'c There are silks and silks, buta black silk today must wear. Buy , the staples. The world's Best. "SSonaacii" 1 ' French Make. "Regatta'' American Make They come in Taffeta, Peau de- Sorie, Satin Duchesse,Grosgrain, Louisina, Brocade and Fancy I weaves. COLOREO SiLKS in all the popular weaves and colors. Taffeta Silks >.ck 50c to $1.50 Brides' Ureases in Moire Antique, Argentine Bro ; cades Crepe de Chine, Dames Richc and Panna Arniure. Novelties in Marl; and White Silks ami Evening Silks UMM, AADEHSOi\ CO., 490-108 Main Street, Th e Americar Block. BUFFALO, N. Y i