2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLtN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TKIiMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per f»r »« J® If paid In advance ' ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published al the rate of ene dollar per square for one insertion and llfiy cent* 1 er square for each subsequent insertion. Rates by the year, or for six or three months, are low aiiil uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or lets. each subsequent msCr tioi .'0 i ents per square. Local notices 10 cents per line for one inser ■ertion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent consecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line. Siniple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be Inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. <5 per year: over live lines, al the regular rales of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 75 cents pet Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRESS is complete and affords facilities for doing the best class of W. rk PAHTU I'LAB ATTENTION I'AIUTO I.AW PRINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear f ges are paid, except at the option of the pub isher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. CURRENT TOPICS. The Inventor of the calliope is dead. J. I ierpont Morgan says poker IB n wicked game. Less than half the people struck by lightning are killed. The son of Count BonJ De Caste 1- lane has been named Jay. The record aur ra borealis lasted for a week in August, 1859. Annie Laurie was arraigned in a Buffalo court for drunkenness. .Mr. Edison has turned his attrition to aerila navigation in earnest. It cost over $35,000 to police the British house of parliament last year. John Jolly is tin name of a farmer living in Happy Hollow, near Plcas anton, Mo. A portrait ol' Rear Admiral Clark, of Oregon fame, is to be placed in the capitol of Vermont. Atlanta, Ga., is talking of erecting an auditorium and music hall that will seat 10.000 persons. England is going to coin 2 pound pieces in gold. They will be about i!io fcize of our $lO coins. Kegensburg, Germany, is to enjoy the novelty of a convention of *„ r uiia.r players in September. The Chinese regard as sacreo i?aper that is either printed or written upon in their own language. Farmers are offering high wages in lowa. At Fertile one man is paying $47.50, and $45 is freely offered. Great Britain and Japan have en tered into an agreement whereby they mutually guarantee Korea's independ ence. Lord Acton, who died recently In 7,otifinn. had the finest private library i;\ England, consisting of over (!0,000 volumes. A new theater is to be built in Paris for the purpose of teaching French actors the proper stage use of Engfish. A gentleman named Styles is in jail at Port Gibson, .Miss., for having seven Styles of wives at ono and at the tame time. Soldiers from the North and East who fought in the war against Spain have filed thousands of applications for pensions. Coal miners in Holland are better paid and work shorter hours than men employed in any similar industry in that country . The biggest petition ever presented .to the English Parliament was tlie Chartists' petition in ls4B. Jt bore £,706,000 signatures. Or. 11. H. Furness, the Sliakesperean scholar, possesses a pair of buff gaunt lets, embroidered in gold, once worn by William Shakespeare. The king of Spain and Presid -iit l.oubet are to meet at Toulouse in the near future to review the Sixteenth and Seventeenth army corps. Attorney-General Knox and Senator Spooner will goto Paris in a short time togo thoroughly Into the matter of title in the Panama canal. Itev. I Jr. Theodore E. Cuyler, of Brooklyn, has just completed the man uscript of Ills volume to lie entitled "Recollections 112 a Long Life." Mrs. Ida Btlmar Camp, of Cairo, Mi h., ha. the largest private c'olle.-- tion of em ti in this country. She lias been aide to produee many new varie ties. Johurin Gottfrp"! Galle. who, on Sep tember -It, is pi. discovered the plan t NeptUlie, i till living and recently celebrated his uiiietp th birthday in I 'otsdaiu. The Nile mud, whi li fenders ICpypt a habitable country, if said to lu ar a striking resemblance to that which, etery oa-on, is brought JuMi by iuu Mi Miuri. Senator lloar has for many years lived in Washington boarding housi and hot* Is. but has now purchased .t < i.intui tu lili though mod- I. use an.l will li\ e in it. Charle j T< mi) mi, a grand-1 n •)( t'. • late poet laureate, won distinction a - t'aiuliridgit university tin Mar. Ilu father was the late I,ion I Tennyson, third Mill ol the poet, Thotua* Garland, of N< w York, is the mil«< HUlvivor of th"< slilewheel steamship Ai ti vs>i 'i «. ni duv.n with &!■» persons in I -..4, off ( ap. Itui i ||i. i M sh years old. The steamship intercuts In Montreal will make a vlic'iou* protest against Ihe sul.Mll/ing of the Canadian P«i ciiic railway 11 run a pa.' iisci and fr«lglit line across the Atlantic. # Gamble e lit tii«. yellow sap of a 'r< >• who li Krovts In Hiam. and raw sienna la the natural eaitli from Hleniia. when burnt It becomes burnt ab'itna Tuikey re<| is luadu li m the Indian madder plant TRADE FROM EXPANSION. Incrrnseil lm|iiirli null Eiparta Tliroiitflk AcfiulNtllon uf Nor Territory. From figures just published bj r the bureau of statistics of the United States treasury department it ap peurs that trade between tlie United States and its newly-acquired posses sions has had growth that is fairly phenomenal, says the Albany Jour nal. In 1807, the year before that in which the Philippines passed into the possession of the United States, our exports to the archipelago amounted to only $94,597. In lsii!), our total exports to the Philippines were val ued at $404,195; in 1900, at $2,640,449; in 1901, at $4,027.0i54, and when the figures for the fiscal year 1902 are made up, it will be shown that fully f0.000.0U0 worth of American prod ucts were sent to the Philippine arch ipelago. To Porto Rico this country in 1897 sent SL9sS,BSB worth of articles, in the fiscal year 1901 the exports to that island from the United States aggregated $9,051,000, and a conserva tive estimate for the fiscal year just closed is that tlie total value of our exports to Porto Rico will lie shown to lie well above $10,000,000. To Hawaii, which in IV.iT received American products worth $1,090,075, American exporters are now sending about $20,000,000 worth of goods an nually. Within the same five years, imports from the three insular possessions have likewise increased greatly, but not by such percentage as the ex- THE GREAT DEMOCRATIC ANIMAL RACE FOR THE PRESIDENT IAL NOMINATION IN 1904. ports to Ihem. However, the differ ence in percentage <• I' increase is due mainly to tin- fact that our imports were far larger than the exports, at the beginning of the period. In ]s'.i7 we received $4,353,740 worth of goo<ls from the Philippines, $2,1 SI/KM worth from l'orto ltieo, and $13,087,709 worth from Hawaii, imports for the fiscal yenr just ended amounted, in round numbers, to $7,000,000 from the Philippines, $20,000,000 from Hawaii, and $7,000,000 from Porto ltieo. To sum up, in IHO7 the United States sent to the islands which have since become its possions, products aggregating $0,773,560, and imported I'mm them goods whose aggregate value was $20,252,503. In the fiscal year 3002, we sent to those islands $35,000,000 worth of goods and took from them $40,000,000 worth. While imports increased about 100 per cent, exports increased more than 400 per cent. And our trade with the Phil ippines may be said to have .just be gun to develop. In a few years, when under orderly and wise government directed by the government of the I'nitcd States the Filipinos will have become more active and enter prising, and consequently more pros perous. the $5,000,000 worth of ex ports of the fiscal year 1002 will look as small in comparison with the tig tires then on the records, as the pal try $04,0t»0 recorded for 1-07 looks now in comparison with present lig ures. 16 TO i IN TKXAS. It)'III IK'l'll I > iii 'I lint Slate lime llail All the I'ri-i- Sllii'f Tlicy W ii ii I. The Texas democratic convention of 1- "> in «ir-fil the t Mcngo platform in c \ e r\ part ieuhtr. and cupc ciall v com mended and approved the declaration "for the free and unlimited coinage of g' Id and ilvir at the ratio of ]tl to one, with full legal tender qualities h ml without- it fin nee to the action of other go\i inuicnt " Then, II» if thin wile not emphatic enough, re in 111. the Chicago I{i curd-11 c raid, the following u.i millet!: "We ei dure that the pri <fiit war rvitctiieiil cannot and sluill it• • t ob leiire the tro i ev qiic»th n. upon which the light In 1000 will he chii tlx made Hint that the Intere t now hi ii tnki n in the ' 000.IK opi ■ pie if ( illni .uid Pit. I: I. li u-1 | |I . ■ ct fi • 111 t l,e villi I eii*' - t i.f Ihe 7°. • " 1 ifi n r I.Wli people." The lis. i>m<H'intlc eomenth ii paw* a pi rfiineti.rv iiiili rienii'iil tolhe Kan- iih i ii\ pint form but »aiil in th ing »pi el flea IIJ ftlii.lit tin i|Mt*#tioi) Upon which the tii'hl |n I<MMI Hill In hate 111 en ehieltv lliaei I'.thUtllU ll.l* 'l'evan t iii ih i titk, Hlii their breth ren of ti«iir|flu, Illinois and I milium, tune hud •■iioii((h • 112 •pllvi p. mid flout ||l i i lit.l ' 11 ' e M 11 he (Hi repetition • 112 the KitN>a* I il.v rule hi. ii. , in ihe brtt nitii iiitl (ititio on*wt (lUtluiui. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1902. BRYAN'S NEW PARTY. Silver Men Meet In New York mill ci«lc to Ahfimloii the Money it noNtlon, Alarmjed and aaigered by the grow ing power of Urover Cleveland, David 1!. Mill and other gold democrats over the democratic organizations in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Mas sachusetts and other easterii states, \V. J. Bryan's friends are going' to drop silver, declare the money ques tion is settled and found a new party out of the patches of several old. or ganizations, says a New York report. Announcement to this effect was made by former Senator R. F. I'ettigrew, of South Dakota, after a long conference at Manhattan Beach, in which F. K. Dubois, United States senator from Idaho; Prof. Garret Droppers, of North Dakota; George 1. Shiblc'y, of Washington, 1). C'., and other western democrats took part. lirvan's recent letter to the Tilden club denouncing Cleveland was the first blast of the bugle. During his forthcoming tour of the eastern states he will continue his attacks at every opportunity and endeavor to hold as many of the state organiza tions as possible. I'ettigrew, Dubois nnd Shibley are the advance heralds of the new move ment. Their meeting to-day was said to lie mainly for the purpose of pro viding some literature which is to be scattered along I!rynil's path. After the meeting Mr. I'ettigrew said: "The silver question is dead. What we demanded in 1892 and 1596 was more money. We claimed that better times would result from an increase in the quantity <>f the circulating me | diuip. Alaska and South Africa poured | 1 their great stores of gold into our | I treasuries, and the result was what i .j we predicted. I'rices rose and times : grew better. There is no scarcity of money now, as there was ten years ), ago. and that issue is eliminated from 1 politics. One of the greatest of ques- j s tions i> whether the people shall own v the railroads or the railroads own the 1 people. 1 try an has risen vastly in the ; 1 estimation of the people of the west j c since he scored Cleveland." I . OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. I <i C-"The nomination of a Bryan £ ticket in .New York as one of the mi- j ' nority parties marks unotber stage in the elimination. —Pittsburgh Dis- i patch. | " H-* 1 There is undoubtedly a great ;j. deal of democratic harmony iu the j, j country, but ii is somewhat obscured g by the flying bricks.—Detroit Free S Press (Dem.). r t--' David Dennett Hill is now mak- I ing up by energetic activity the time ' he lost in lsUli, when, to use fiis own j 1 words, he was "still a democrat—very ij' still."—lndianapolis Journal. jj Si id. Jlryan prefers Tom Johnson r to John li. McLean, probably for the reason that Johnson is known to be ' willing tn risk something on an un certaint^. rit. Louis tilobe-Demo crat. C According to the new apportion- 112 uiei:t the democrats must gain at '' lea-l -10 seats in the house of rtjpre s>.!iitulives in order to secure a bare ' control of the next congress. Where ! are they going to get them? Kvcn , the must optimistic men in the party j will tiuil ilillicnlty in uuswering tliu:. | ipiesiliui. Troy Times. y t the democruts have about con- il eluded l<> rcgild the octopus, to put v a dab of red paint on its ni>i»e, and to K walk it up und down the country in 1 order to a ccr ain whether it is u» iiiucb of a terror as it used to be. If I it is till li it will become tie chief , support iii the democratie luiupaign \ 112 ol i ' it. ( levehiud Leader. t ""i:>'iueiuber Isui. The I ers were then iu full control, ami i they led he parly tu o\erw hi lining >' defeat." I Inn is true, bin Mr. Ilr win i 1 li** 11 ed to make the deep sea whieh j tui r«helmed the party I>\ voting f ( >r ' I lie \V iDon tiormun tarilV bill. The ' " denim • aey tool, tu silver Ixciitlse a tariff lor revenue only meant ilefeut ladi'ii apolis Journal. | C Ihe Vmerieuii people nie wi.l. I he...l a e lit i.. -ev el I bMHIMI In* t'lt' foil i lit* r hi w M itliou: fi hi* df t «>« r 1I e\ are with him be<ati«e he lor | oii i« of a.ll i, i iim , MM I nil "iiul honor. lln v un Inking 1 oil- t11• *ll 'III ol 10l Oil . I |l|l»| ' •!i■ i. It ,i aili'l.i te Im euun' of w lot | lliiiiilot'c Kooctl'lt |in beell, wliMt | lie |>. und w hut they Itt on he will l«*. V n<l i.o * tinkering lilt Mien" of "u lit Id t "111 I " II " CUM niter till) kiIUU I llvll. II go lUU'I IKtuU, CROP REPORT. Droulli l'rcviilln In Sump Mnlc«,While Oilier District* Siill'r lleeauao of Heavy Kuliin. Washington, July .'so.—The weather bureau's weekly summary of crop conditions is as follows: Drouth of considerable severity generally prevails from Virginia and the Caroliuas westward over Ken tucky, Tennessee and the northern portion of the central and east gulf states, in Kansas and southeastern Missouri and the southern portions of Illinois and Indiana, while heavy uiml damaging rains have continued in Texas, portions of Missouri valley and lower lake region. Uains are gen erally badly needed in the central southern Kocky mountain districts. The temperature conditions have been highly favorable, except in New Kngland, New York and Texas, where it has been too cool, and in Califor nia, where excessive heat has caused Kune deciduous fruit to ripen faster than it could be handled. The corn crop has experienced an other week of exceptionally favor able conditions over much the greater part of the principal corn urea, the least favorable reports be ing received from southeastern .Mis tiouri and southern Illinois, where the crop is being injured by drouth. A fine yield is promised in Kansas, Nebraska, Indiana and over much the greater part of Missouri, Illinois and Ohio. In lowa, where the crop has suffered much in previous weeks from heavy rains and lack of culti vation. corn is improving and in the early fields is earing heavily. In the middle Atlantic states and to the southward of the Ohio river corn has suffered much from drouth iu sec tions, especially the early planted. Showers have prevented the com pletion of winter wheat harvest in the lake region. New Knglaud, and the northern portion of the middle Atlantic states, where damage to wheat in shock is quite extensively reported; elsewhere harvesting is completed, except on the Pacific coast, where it is progressing rapidly in Oregon and has begun in Washing ton. Late spring wheat needs rain in portions of South Dakota and rust is appearing in North Dakota, but on the whole its condition is very prom ising. The crop is ripening rapidly in the northern portion and harvest ing has begun in the southern por tion of the spring wheat region, lu portions of southeastern Minnesota fields are too wet for the binders. Oat harvesting is progressing un der diflieulties in the upper Missis sippi valley and lake region, where the crop is badly lodged and fields iu some sections are too wet for reap ers. Notwithstanding these adverse conditions the general outlook for a large yield is favorable, especially in the Missouri and upper Ohio valleys and the northern portion of the mid dle Atlantic states. The northern portions of the east ern and central districts of the cot ton belt continue to suffer from drouth, the effects of which are be ginning to be more seriously felt, es pecially on uplands. Outside the drouth area in the districts named the crop is making very favorable progress, the plant being heavily fruited. General :vnd heavy rains in Texas were very beneficial in western counties, but they were not needed elsewhere in that state. These rains have caused very rapid growth and the plant is heavily fruited, but con siderable damage by boll weevil, boll worm and shedding are reported. Hot and dry weather now is needed in Texas to permit, cultivation and cheek ravages by insects. Tobacco is suffering from drouth in Tennessee, Virginia and portions of Kentucky and Maryland. In the Other tobacco states the reports are generally promising. Dry weather iu the Carolinas has been very favorable for curing. As a rule the general outlook for apples continues unpromising, al though in some sections a good crop is promised. The most favorable re ports are received from New l"n --gland, eastern and northern New York, Michigan and portions of Illi nois. Kansas and Oklahoma. The bulk of the good hay crop has been secured in the states of the cen tral valleys. In the lake region and northern portion of the middle At lantic states having continues, but lias been considerably delayed by rains and much has been damaged. A POWERFUL EXPLOSIVE. II < an Si'int » Shell Through 1 1-Inch Armor I'lulc. New York, July .'i 1. — V new time fuse, for use mi minor pi -reiiig shells loaded with a recently discovered secret explosive of great power, has been invented by the war departmeut ordnance experts, and will revolu tionize foreign warship building. Tests of the explosive and fuso have been made, and long as tiic I'uited State gov eminent holds the ferret, foreign Imt t lesliip - eit her lllllst tioiHile their steel walls or be as wooden frigates against the new de al r-iv er. Gen. Crozier. chief ordi i;ice of 'leer, is quoted as having said that a test «,f I lie new explosive hits been conducted with eminent miccc-s at tli Sandv llook pi"\iii! r ground, that t'ie ihell rirrltd Its contents thmttifh the thii kc t and that the fuse livid long enough to have ■ \phidc<| in the Interior of a -hip of h .ir. The |f I elite I p'liel rill 101 l secured w Ilillt of a shell tired from a tMiirli guu. It po reed 11-lneh Krtipp nriimr be fore detonation. The hcavic i shield i now in use js only r; inches thick. %■» 4ii ii 111 it h> flfftMl Mi-:. , : | ; masked men entereif the railroad kiu ton at I lit I ill ii. about hi in 11* north, on the Pert* Mill'i|ilelle railroad, hit;* Moiilhi > night and u--atiltcd uiul bound \ilflit llpci itor Mel my utid Du.\ llpcialor MrrWlehl Until men woe til' - 1 knocked now ii with piece 4 of r 1 rpi Mi rryHclit i .. badly Ik JII MM I (hut Ii 1 - r*MMNV) II i ! < > 11111 fll j , ! After the 1. null the ma !■ d no 11 rft miiiugN 1 • ' < ik Ma i bond* and lllierat* hit companion ' Section lite a were Untitle. 11.d Ii4««tl t'ie i 1■ y -11111 the wo'nl PEACE NOW REIGNS. Troops Encamped on a Hill Overlooking Shenandoah. During the It lot, Which Cmmr-d ih« Solillcr* to Kn Sent Hero, (•'our J"<> 1 icemen and Twenty JtllncrM Were Shot, Sonic I'ulully. Shenandoah, I'a., July 31. —A reign of terror, compared with which the scenes enacted during the riots of 1900 seem insignificant, holds Shenan doah in its grasp. Last evening Cen tre street, one of the principal streets of the town, was in the hands of a mob. The trouble started about 0 o'clock when Deputy Sheriff Thomas IJeddall attempted to escort two non-union workers through the strikers' line of pickets. The workmen were dressed in their street clothes, but one of them carried a bundle under his arm and this aroused the suspicion of the | strikers. The bundle was torn from j him and wiien it was found to contain a blouse and overalls the man was taken from the deputy and beat al most to death. In the meantime IJeddall opened fire on the mob which had gathered by this time, and emptied his revol ver. Two shots took effect, one man being shot in the leg and the otner In the foot. The deputy and the other strike breaker were now compelled to fly for their lives and took refuge in the Philadelphia & Heading de pot. The depot was soon surround ! cd by an angry mob of 5,000, which was becoming more threatening every moment. Joseph lieddall, a hardware merchant and brother of the deputy sheriff, was seen making his way through the crowd in an ef fort to reach his brother, and the j mob, divining that he was carrying ! ammunition to those inside the de ! pot, seized him and beat him with I clubs and billies into insensibility. Shortly after this the entire bor ough police force arrived on the scene and escorted the deputy sheriff and his man to an engine which had been backed into the depot for that purpose. When the mob realized that their prey was about to escape they ! surrounded the engine and the en gineer was afraid to move. In a few moments however, the police fired a volley, dispersing the crowd for a brief period, and the engineer got away with his men. Stones were now thrown thick and fast about the heads of the police, whereupon Chief John Fry gave the order to fire. At the first volley the mob fell back and several fell. It is estimated that upwards of IXOO shots were tired and the won der is that more fatalities did not re sult. More than 20 strikers, all of whom were foreigners, were shot, and at least two of them will die. Many of the merchants and politicians refused to sign the call for troops, fearing that the miners will boycott them after the trouble is over. The doctors of the town dressed the wounds of near 40 strikers. Four out of six policemen were shot, one fatally. Ilarrisburg, l'a., July 31.—The Eighth and Twelfth regiments and governor's troop have been ordered to Shenandoah. Shenandoah. Pa., Aug. I.—Twelve hundred state troops are encamped 011 a hill overlooking Shenandoah. Down in the town where strikers and policemen fought a bloody battle Wednesday all is quiet and the indica tions are that so long as the militia remains the peace of the community, will not again be broken. The riot, which caused the soldiers to be sent here, came like a flash and was over almost as quickly as it had started and since then there has not been a single case of violence reported. The thousands of idle men and boys in t!il- vicinity who had been gathering in large numbers and marching from place to place, did not repeat their demonstrations yesterday and the au thorities consequently had little or iioi hitig to do. The mine workers are greatly In censed over the calling out of the ' troops. They assert that this action was entirely unwarranted and is an unjustifiable expense on the state. The strikers, through their officials, | are making an effort to have the sold iers withdrawn. The lirst step in this direction was taken when the follow- | ing telegram was sent from here to ; Gov. Stones "We the officials of the Miners' union, believe that the request made to you to send troops here was based upon exaggerations, and we respect fully request you to send a personal repp dilative into this town to in vestigate the conditions. We believe von will liud that the presence of the troops in this place is unnecessary.'' The miners" advisory board of thi vicinity, which includes the officers of the several local unions in this region, held a meeting yestcnlav at which plans were devised to prevent any breaks in the ranks of the strikers. One of the things decided upon was to hold frequent meetings of strik ers and have them addressed by the | varioii- di-trlct leaders. I'here was.l large inas meeting of foreigner held re iu the afternoon. Half a ilovteu speeches were made. General indig nation was expressed by all of the apeiikers again*! the bringing of troop, to Shenandoah. .In •-pit Itcddall died last night, lie me a brother of Deputy sheriff sheriff of the county. I l.rnilr « rotting I'HIHIIII. riu:fhaliiton, V \ , .lllly ' The hai i milfoil which Hll Conveying the 11i IHI baseball team In Suburban park ycHcrdit.t wim struck at the Itroad ► I reel cro Jug in |,i stcr»hlre bv trie train No. ' and the driver instantly killed and six others Injured, one *erf. The 111 w of Ihe truck Hi'«t of thi* •tutlou Is shut off In thi 1 i«tlon and a high bluff and the occupants the waif on claim thai th cuglueer of Ihe train failed blow his whl* It. or III!' the bell ll in el.time it bv 11 ■ en;" r that Ihe train »;u run Mint; 7u inlh » an hour. PRESCRIBED FOR HER. Denparatv Cnar Thnt Taird the l)oo« ton'n l'atifnre to lh« lllliott. When Dr. Itlank, of Fourteenth street, who i*n t the mo*t patient c.i men at any tea .-on of the year, goes away for a vacation nothing infuriate* him so much as tlie sight of an invalid, says the Washington Pout. A month ago he went to Atlantic City for a few days' rest, and he had no sooner settled himself for a brief time of being an ordi nary mortal than a chronic patient of his appeared on his horizon. He endured her complaints all one day in silence, but the next morning she accosted him while lie was smoking his cigar on tlie veranda after breakfast. J will say in her defense that she i.-n't married, and she hasn't a father, so she didn t know what she was doing wiieu she broke in on a man's smoke. ' "h, doctor," said she, "I do wish you'd tell me what to do. I just can't sleep at all. \\ hy. last night I didn't once close my eyes." J he doctor glared at her. I didn t close an eye," sKe went on."I do wish you'd tell me what to do." The doctor glared again. "(iood Lord, madam," he thundered, "try closing your eyes. How on earth do you ex pect to sleep if you don't?" Knight* l'j Iliia* liieimial Meeting. I'or this gathering in >San Francisco in August next excursion tickets will be sold via the Chicago, Milwaukee & .St. Paul Jly. from Chicago to San Francisco or Los An geles for *.jii for the round trip with*final return limit September 30. 'J lie "Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul" rail way is the Short Line between Chicago and Omaha. Two through trains daily m each direction with the best Sleeping Var and Dining Car Service, and all regular travelers know and appreciate the merits of the Chicago, Milwuakee & St. Paul llail way's Short Line between the East and the Wert. 'lime tables, maps ami information fur nished on application to )•'. _\. Miller, Cen tral Passenger Agent, Chicago. \ ou may think you are a good man, but the point is to get others to think so.— Atchison Globe. It Cure* While You Wnllc. Allen's Foot-Kase is a certain cure for hot, sweating, caHwus, and swollen, aching feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don't ac cept any substitute. Trial package FHEE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Hoy, N. Y. There is nothing more imprudent than ex cessive prudence.—Col ton. To Cure n Cold In One Ony Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. He ignorance thy choice where knowledge leads to woe.—Beattie. I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consump tion has an equal for coughs and colds.— John F. Hover, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 10, I'JOO. \\ atch the schemer; he is a dangeroun j man.—Atchison Globe. WHERE DOCTORS FAIL To Cure Woman's Ills, Lydia E. Fiukham's Vegetable Cora- Siouikl Succeeds. 31is. Pauline iudsou Writes: "Dear Mns. Pinkiiam: —Soon after ! my marriage two years ago I found 1 myself ia constant pain. The doctor ! said my womb was turned, and this | caused the pain with considerable in -11 animation, lie prescribed for me foe MRB. PATTLIXE JUDSON, Secretary of Schermcrhorn Golf Club, Brooklyn, Now York, four months, when my husband became impatient because I grew worse instead of better, and in speaking to the drug gist he advised him to get l.vtlia J?. I*in k hitiii's Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash, llovv 1 wish I had taken that at first; it would have saved me weeks of suffering. It took three long months to restore me, but it is a happy relief, and we are both most grateful to you. Your Compound has brought joy to our home and health to me."— .Si ism. Pauijne JI'DSOJT, 47 lloyt Street, lirooklyn, N. Y. SSOOO forfeit If above testimonial Is not genuine. It would seem by (lais stafe rient thai women won I<l savo time and much sickness if they would g<>t Lydia I'. Pinkliam'a Vegetable Compound at once, and also write to Mrs. I'iiikhant lit Lynn, lUuss., for special atl» Vieto It is free and always helps* mjPTUREI I »•>«■ n &■' | ■ tIASTIt T«USSK;> J0 |. ». . a.,il . I rmss*x i ■■ ■ft JK\ JVard'i Bl j Bargain Rook I wit' AM oft high prleav by B Wt' JE holetallny ijoods to oil. oi Wm V 111 ;at« you many dollar*. I I r; :: ..f . ' « 1 « > fc-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers