2 CAMEROiI COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. r'er year 18 W 112 paid In advance 1 -0 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements arc published at thp rate of one dollar per square for one insertion and llfty cents per square for each subsequent insertion. Rates by the year, or for six or three months, are low and uniform, ami will be furnished on application. Legal ami Official Advertising per square, three times or less, S8: each subsequent inser tion 10 cents per square. Local notices lu cents per line for one inser •ertion; 5 cents per line for each subsequent consecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents rer line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages anil deaths will be inserted free. Business cards five lit.es or less <f> per year: over live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 75 cents pe« issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PKESS Is complete and affords facilities for doing the best class of WRK PAKIII I I.AU ATTE.VI ION PAID TO I.A\* PRINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear rgt's are paid, except at the option of the pub isher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. An advertising ngent. for nn up state dry goods house told tlie fol There Are Trick* writer for the New In All Trades. \ i n , r i i ork lost, of now he got rid of u dozen ladies' coats that were two seasons old: "During the early winter a year ago our firm purchased a lot of jackets in New York of a new cut that prom ised' to be popular. They had no particular name, and we simply ad vertised them with the rest of our coats and jackets as the latest style and cheap at .fls. The coats, a dozen in number, hung on the models in our cloak department nil winter, and no one paid any attention to them. It was impossible for the saleswomen to get any one interested enough in them to even try one on, and as spring opened, the manager came to me and told me to advertise them at ten dollars, and see if we could not sell at least one or two. 1 ad vertised them at ten dollars, and put large placards on them, noting the reduction. Still the coats remained on the models, and in a week 1 re duced them to eight dollars. This met with no better success tlian"fhe previous reduction, and J reduced them to five dollars. When this small price failed to bring a pur chaser, the manager became disgust ed, and laid the coats away until fall. They were then advertised at ten dollars, with the intention of selling them at any price to get rid of them. They hung in the cloak room until the middle of winter, and the firm was about giving up hope of ever selling the coats, when It occurred to me that what they needed was a name. 1 thought that 'Trilby' would do, and advertised them the following morning as 'the new "Trilby" coat. The latest thing out. All the rage in fashionable New York sets. A big bargain at slß.' I had not the slightest idea that they would sell at this price, and made it high so as to reduce and make the cut look large. That name caught, however, and inside of a week we had sold all the coats, the firm mak ing a larger profit than they had even desired." The father of the young lady most concerned has just preferred charges Iton.anee "tfninst an officer of the United anil lieu sun. States army for having broken an engagement of marriage. It is probable that he acted in ignorance of the precedent set by the war department in a re cent similar instance, when it was ruled that no action could be taken unless "unbecoming conduct" was al leged. The instinctive feeling will be, of course, that the girl was shab bily treated; but is the instinct a just one? Or, as the New York "World asks, is it, like so many so cial beliefs, a mere survival of times when conditions were different? Suppose that it young man who has become engaged finds that he no longer loves the woman lie hits won. Is it fair to her to permit her togo to the altar with him believing tnat his affection has not altered? Has he a right to risk her future happi ness by imposing upon her a loveless marriage? The romance-writers have but one answer to such a ques tion. The man must act a lie and goto the altar like a hero unless extricated by happy accident. But is that solution fair to the woman in the case? Js it one that a truly self-respecting woman would accept? In the office of a large corporation in New York the following bit of philosophy is displayed conspicuous ly in hold black lettering: "No tal ent, no self-denial, no brains, no character is required to set up in the grumbling business, but those who are moved by a genuine desire to do good ha\e little time for murmuring or complaint." At Dayton, <)., the engineer of the city hall raided the rodents in the base ment of ihe building and captuurcd a sufficient number to make the total 1,800. He will soon reach the 2,000 mark. This is believed to be the best municipal rat record of the world. UNCLE SAM'S POLICY. President Roosevelt Points to New Position Assumed. Praises Civil mill Military OfficinlN null S|»enkM for Prosperity ill I nsu In r PUSH unions—\\ un derfill Aeli ievelllelit». While visiting Hartford, Conn., Fri day, August 2~, President Hoosevelt spoke in the evening at the Coliseum to an assemblage of 5,000 people, taking as his principal subject the attitude of the administration to wards the new insular possessions and Cuba. The president was re ceived with much enthusiasm and his address was warmly applauded. In substance he said: "The events of the last few years have forced the American republic to take n larger position in the world than ever be fore, and therefore more than ev. r In foro to concern herself with questions of policy which affect her Interests beyond her own borders. An a people we now have duties and opportunities in the tropic seas and lards south of us as w« II as in those of the farthest east. Ann much di per.d« upon the way In which we mo t these dottles, the way In which we take advantage of these opportunities. "From the days of Monroe, Clay nnd the younger Adams, we as a people have always looked with Interest upon the West Indies and the Isthmus connecting the two Americas, feeling that anything happening in those regions must be of concern to our welfare. There is now ampler reason than ever before for this feeling. The outcome of the Spanish war put us in possession of Porto Rico and brought us into peculiarly close touch with Cuba, while th«* successful negotiation of the Hay-Pauncefoto treaty at last eleai <1 the way for the construction of the isthmian canal. Por to Rico, it is a pleasure to say. may now serve as an example of the best methods of administering our insural possessions. Conditions in Porto Itieo. "So excellent have been the effects of otir administration and legislation con cerning this island that their very excel lence has resulted in their being almost forgotten by those at home. There is hardly a ripple of failure on the stream of our success and so. as is apt to be our way, we do not think of It at all. Yet it is well worth while to think of it, and It is pleasant to learn by an experi ence which teaches us what to follow instead of what to avoid. First and foremost in Porto Rico, we have con sistently striven to get the very best men to administer the affairs of the Island. It Is desirable throughout our public service to secure a high standard of efficiency and integrity. But after all, here at home we always have in our own hands the remedy for any fail ure to provide such qualities. In a far off island things are different. There wrongdoing is more easy, and those who suffer from It arc more helplpess; while there is less efficient cheek in the way of that public opinion to which public men are sensitive. In consequence, the administration of those islands Is, be yond all other kinds of administration in our country, the one in which the high est standard must be demanded. In making appointments to the insular serv ice, it is necessary to disregard any question of mere party expediency, and to look at the matter solely from the standpoint of the honor of our own nation ar.di of the welfare of the island itself. This has been the standpoint adhered to in selecting the men who represent our government in I'orto Rico—governor, treasurer, attorney general, judges, su perintendent of education—every one. In consequence, all Americans should feel a real pride in the way in which their compatriots who are responsible lor the government of the Island have administered it. Moreover, in shaping the government of the island we have acted with good sense .as well as with good faith. We have not been fright ened or mislead into giving the people of the island a form of government un suitable to them; and while providing that they should govern themselves so far as possible, we have not hesitated in their own interest to keep the power of shaping their destiny. The Cuban Problem, "In Cuba the problem was larger, more complicated and more difficult. Here, again, we kept our promise absolutely. After having delivered the island from its oppressors, we refused to turn it loose offhand with the certainty that it would sink into chaos and savagery. For ovvr three years we administered it on a plar.e higher than it hati ever reached during the four centuries since the Spaniards lirst landed upon Its shore. We brought moral and physical cleanliness into the govern ment. We stamped out yellow fevt-r—in itself an Inestimable service both to the Cuban people anu to the people of our owr. southern states. We established a school system. We made life ar.d property secure, so that industry could again begin to thrive. Then, when we had laid deep and broad the foundations- upon which civil liberty and national independence must rest, we turned the island over to the hands of those whom the people had chos< n as the founders of the new republic. It is a r> public with which our own great republic must ever be closely kr.it by the tii s- of common interests andi common aspira tions. Must Have Krciiirneity. "Cuba must always be peculiarly re lated! to us In international politics. She must in International .iffairs be to a degree a part of our political system. In riturn, she must have peculiar relations with us economically. Sin must be, In a sense, pat t of our economic system. We expect h< r to accept a political attitude toward us which we think wisest both for her and us In return, we must be prepared to put her In an economic position as regards our tariff system which will give her some nu asure of the prosperity which we enjoy. We cai t'lt. in my judgment, avoid i ikli g this attitude if w< ar. to persevere in the course which we have outlined fur our selves as a nation during the past four yisirs; and, therefore, I believe lhat it is only a matter of time—and, I trust, only a tnatti ruf a very short time— bt fore we en ter into reciprocal trade relations with Cuba. The Istliuiinii Cniinl. "The isthmian canal represents what is probably to be the greatest engineer ing feat—the greatest feat of the kind— ot tiie twentieth century. Itefore we start upon the construction of the canal certain questions of detail and of our re lations with the people owning the soil have to be settled. When this has been done, the first question will come upon choosing the commission which Is to su pervise the building of the canal. Here, again, we have to ileal with an enter prise so vast and so far reaching in its efi'i'ds that but one thought is permis sible—how to get the very best men in tlx' nation, the men of the highest en gineering and business and administra tive skill, who will consent to under take the work. If possible. I should like to see these men represent different sec tions and different polici al parlies. I'.ut these questions are secondary. The pri mary aim must be to get men who. though able to contiol much greater salaries than the nation is able to pay. nevertheless possess till' patriotism and the healthy ambition which will make them willing t < put their talents at the government's service. The Philippines. "So much for what has been done In CAMERON COUNTY PRHTSS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1902. tho oee'-dent. In (he orient the labor was more difficult. "ft Is rare. Indeed, that a great work, a work supremely worth doing, can ha done save at the cost not only of labor and toil, but of much puzv.lins worry during the time of the performance. Normally, the nation that achieves greatness, like the individual who achieves greatness, can do so only at the cost of anxiety and bewilderment and heart wearing effort. Timid people, peo ple scant of faith and hope, and good people who are not accustomed to the roughness of the life of effort are al most sure to be disheartened and dis mayed by the work and the worry, and overmuch cast down by the .shortcom ings, actual or seeming, which in real life always accompany the first stages even of what eventually turn out to bo the most brilliant victories. "All this is true of what has happened during the last four years in the Phil ippine islands. The Spanish war itself was an easy task, but it left us certain other tasks which were much more dif lieult. One of these tasks was that of dealing with the Philippines. The easy tiling to do—the thing which appealed not only to lazy and selfish men but to very many good men whose thought did not drive them down to the root of things—was to leave the islands. Had we done this, a period of wild chaos would have supervened and then some stronger power would have stepped in and seized the Islands and have taken up the task which we in such a case would have flinched from performing. A less easy but infinite ly more absurd course, would have been to leave the islands ourselves and at the same time to assert that we would not permit any one else to interfere with them. This particular course would have combined all the possible disadvantages of every other course which was advocated. it would have placed us in a humiliating position, because when the actual test came it would have been quite out of the. question for us, after somu striking deed of savagery had occurred in the islands to stand by and prevent the re entry of civilization into them; while the mere fact of our having threatened thus to guarantee the local tyrants and wrongdoers against outside interferences by ourselves or others, would have put a premium upon every species of tyranny and anarchy within the islands. Ylie Course Adopted. "Finally, there was the course which we adopted—not an easy course, or.e fraught with danger and difficulty, as is generally the cast in this world when some great feat is to be accomplished as an in cident to workli.g out r.ational destiny. We made up our minds to stay in the is lands—to put down violence—to establish peace ar.u order—and then to Introduce a just and wise civil rule, accompanied by a measure of self-government which should increase as rapidly as the islanders showed themselves- lit for it. Well, it was certainly a formidable task; but think of the marvelously successful way in which it has been accomplished. "The first and vitally Important feat was the establishment of the supremacy of the American flag, and this- had to he done by tiie effort of those gallant fellow-Amer icans of ours to whom so great a debt Is due—the officers and enlisted men of the United States army, regulars and volun teers alike. In a succession of campaigns, carried on in unknown tropic jungles against an elusive ar.d treacherous foe vastly outnumbering them, under the most adverse conditions of climate, weather and country, our troops completely broke the power of the insurgents, smashed' their armies and harried the broken robberbands into submission. In its latter stages, the war against our rule sank into mere brig andage; and what our troops had. to do was to hunt down the parties of ladrones. It was not a task which it was humanely possible to accomplish In a month or a year, but month by month, year by year, with unwearied and patient resolution, our army In the Philippines did the task which it found ready to hand until the last vestige of organized Insurrection was stamped out. "I do not refer to the Moros, with whom we have exerclsi c the utmost forbearance, but Who may force us to chastise them if they* persist In attacking otir troops. Among the Filipinos proper, however, peace has come. Doubtless here ar.d there sporadic outbreaks of brigandage will oc cur from time to time, but organized war fare against the American flag has ceased and there is no reason to apprehend its re currence. Our army in the islands have been reduced until it is not a fourth of what It was at th.. time when the outbreak wag at its height. Civil It ii lc Established. "St< p by step ns the army conquered, the rule of the military was supplanted by the rule of the civil authorities—the soldier was succeeded' by the civilian magistrate. Theutmost care has been ex< rcised In choos ing the best type of Americans for the high civil positions, ar.d the actual work of ad ministration has been done so far as pos sible by native Filipino officials serving ut dor these Americans. The success of the effort has been wonderful. Amnesty Ileclareil. "It was, of course. Inevitable that there should be occasional failures; but it is astonishing how few these have been. Here and there the civil govern ment which had been established in a given district had to be temporarily withdrawn because of some outbreaks; but at last, on the July 4th that has just passed—on the one hundred and twenty sixth anniversary of our independence it was possible at the same time to de clare amnesty throughout the islands and definitely to establish civil rule ovi r all of them excepting the country of the Mohammedan -Vloros, where the condi tions were wholly different. Kach in habitant of the I'hlllppines is now guar anteed his civil and religious rights, his rights to life, personal liberty and the pursuit of happiness, subject only to not infringing on the rights of others. It is worth noting that already the Philip pine people have received a greater share of self-government, that they havo more to say as to how they shall be gov erned. than Is the case with any people in the orient which is under Kuropeau rule. Ili'lp.s Our Own People. "Nor should it be forgotten that, while we have thus acted in the inti rest of tho islanders themselves, we have also helped our own people. Our interests are as great in the Pacific as in the At lantic. The welfare of California, Ore gon and Washington is as vital to the nation as the welfare of New Kngland, New York and the south Atlantic states. The awakening of the orient means very much to all the nations of Christendom, commercially no less than politically; and it would be shortsighted statesman ship on our part to refuse to take the necessary steps for securing a proper share to our people of this commercial future. The possession of the Philip pines has helped us. as the securing of the open door in China has helped us. Already the government has taken the necessary steps to provld- far the lay ing of a Pacific cable; under conditions which safeguard absolutely the interests of the American public. Our commerce with the east Is gowlng rapidly. Events have abundantly justified, alike from tu moral and material standpoint, all that we have done in the far east as a - Je i to our war with Spain." Ilreatfl of SuM(>ieion. Wencrlj My wife is one of the most alVeclionate women 1 ever saw. Singleton— Indeed! "Yes, No matter at what hour of the day or niglit I happen to come home she always meets me at the door with a kiss." "Hull! That's not affection. It'ssitß pieion."—Chicago Daily Sews. Between Two Classes of GOY ei'iiment Employes. AS TO POLITICAL ACTION. Those Not in Classified Service Have Most Privilege. Mil. FOULKE EXPLAINS LAW Tl»e President of the Civil Service Commission A«l<lre«»e* a Letter to OfllceiiolderM and Tells I'lie-ni .limt How Far Tlicy Can t.o. Washington, Vug. ,'io. —Acting Presi dent Foulke, of thi* civil service com mission, Juts addressed a communica tion to all tin* executive departments in regard to the part officeholders may take in politics. \ttention is called to; 111 order issued by Presi dent Cleveland. .Inly It, ls'JS, contain ing - the following: "Tho influence of federal office holders should not ho felt in tho manipulation of political primary meetings and nominating conven tions. The use b,\ these officials of their positions to compass their se lection as delegates tei political con ventions is indecent and unfair, and proper regard for the proprieties and requirements of official place will also prevent their assuming the ac tive conduct of political campaigns." The communication states thnt this order has never been repealed, hut has been declared by President Koosedent Roosevelt to be sfill in force. In construing it, however, there is a distinction, Mr. Foulke says, to bo made between offleers and employes who are in the classified service and those who are not. The letter states that those who are out side the classified service are chosen largely with reference to political consideration and as a rule are and expect to be changed with a change of parties, but in the classified serv ice the choice is made without re gard to political consideration and tenure of office is unaffected by the change of part ies. In consideration of this, flu* com munication says, the man in tho classified service, while retaining his right to vote as he pleases and to express privately his opinion on ail political subjects, should not take an active part in political management or in political campaigns, for the same reason that a judge or an army officer is debarred from taking such a part. In regard to those who are not in It.he classified service, the communica tion say« the limitations are not so strict, hut oven in this case office holders must not use their offices to control political movements, or eo eree the political actions of em ployes. They must not neglect their public duties and must not cause pub lic scandal by their activities. .Murdered by a tluli. Monroe, Mich., Aug. 30.—Walter Lcmerand, lately from Toledo, came home yesterday, and found a man. a Frenchman, in the house with his wife. A quarrel ensued and a run ning fight followed. An officer at tempted to arrest the* Frenchman when hi- ran down Third street, a, crowd pursuing. The cry "assaulter" was raised and the mob began to shoot. The unknown ran into a corn field, where ho was surrounded and shot dead, a bullet penetrating his heart. Mrs. Lenientnd told tho sheriff that, tho dead man is .loscph I.abargo, :il!> Cherry street, Toledo. She says that she and La barge had planned ua elopement. All Iteaily lor the War (faille. Newport. ]{. L. August .'ill.—The day before the battle finds the army of defense in the several ports along the shore between New Bedford and the east, entrance of Long Island sound practically in readiness to re pel the attack of the hostile fleet un der command of Admiral lligginson. The only thing that remains is tho additional armament on both sides, the Massachusetts heavy artillery for the shore and the Massachusetts, Connecticut and New York naval mi litia for the fleet. These organisa tions will arrive to-day. A Buttle In Venezuela. Willemstad. Curacoa, Aug. .'!().—Ad vices of an oflicial nature which have reached here from Caracas, Vene zuela, are to the effect that a severe fight occurred Thursday between government forces and the advance guard of the revolutionary army un der (ion. Matos. The revolutionists made an attempt to occupy tin* town of Taguay, but after a fight of five hours they abandoned the field to the government, forces. Two hundred revolutionists were ki'.lfel or wound ed. Could'* Rapid Tourney. Chicago, Aug. 30.—George Gould with a party traveled over the Wa bash yesterday from Detroit in a spe cial train and broke the record for the:.' 7" miles. The "7:i miles were made in four hours, 5."> minutes, ~'o:;i/ H miles of these in Is.'! minutes, the miles from Detroit to Mont pelier in so minutes. A t ongremiiiinii Dlch. Washington, Aug. 30.—IJepr?senta tive Reese ('. De Graffenried. of Tex as, died of apoplexy at the Kigga house ill this city last night, lie had been suffering with a bilious at tack. During a severe vomiting spell u blood vessel burst in his brain and death ensued instantly. A Drop that was Fatal. St. Paul, Minn., Aug. 30. Mrs. [{. Marsh, of Holland. Yt., was killed j'riday by falling from a second-story .vimiow of the Kendall hotel. She .\as 7_' years olel and had been ill fe-r lomc weeks. FORTS MUST BE READY. Const DefrnKPH to lie I'lacfd In a Po ■Kioii fur ■■uiucdlnto .•cllun In I use or Daneer. Another stop toward putting coast defenses in an efficient condition will be taken in a few days. Gen. VV. E. Randolph, chief of artillery of the army, who was president of tho board which recently attempted to examine the gun carriages at coast forts, has made a recommendation which he believes will have practical results, lie has suggested that an order he issued from the war depart ment to the effect that all command ers at forts he required to keep the gun mechanism in good order and to have the officers and men constantly in training. To do this lie has urged that ho he allowed to designate the periods of target practice with great guns at various forts. He proposes that not more than one day's notice will he given when such target practice will commence. Gen. Kandolph says that this will serve to keep the forts in an ellicient condition. l'ost com manders will not care to run the risk of being caught with their guns out of order and their men out of train ing. lie believes that 24 hours' no tice is suflicient if post commanders do their duty. Under the prospects of being called upon on such short notice to do im portant work, which will demon strate the efficiency of a post fort, the commanding officers will be com pelled to maintain a state of readi ness. If such a system prevailed, Gen. Randolph has pointed out to the departmental authorities that it would not be possible for a board of inspectors to visit a coast fort and •find the mechanism displaced, and, as was the ease at one post, some of the tools necessary in the operation of the guns lost beyond recovery short of many hours' search. This evidence of carelessness has been impressed upon the official ob servers recently, and they are deter mined that some energetic measures shall bo introduced so as to keep the coast fortifications iu a state of effi ciency. They insist that tho guns should bo ready on the shortest no tice or the function of the coast furt will be lacking. KILLS HAY FEVER. Physician* Claim lliat Heavy Itnlnfall flee reuse* I'revulencii of (lie IM»« ease* Unless a sudden drought descends on this region there will be no hegira of hay fever sufferers from Illinois this summer. The continued wet weather, which has been an annoy ance to many people, will turn out a benefactor to hosts of others, ac cording to the opinion of physicians, who predict that the heavy rains will act as an effectual preventive of the annual hay fever attacks, says the Galesburg (III.) Evening Mail. This condition of affairs will have its effect on hotel keepers at the northern lake resorts. Every Au gust thousands of unfortunate vic tims of hay fever seek relief in the woods, where they can find company for their misery, and escape the com incuts oii thf.*? personal appearance which heartless immunes take every opportunity to make. Several hun dreds of the victims who throng the small lake and beach resorts of up per Michigan each year go from Chi cago. Most of the others make the journey northward by way of Chi cago, and the steamship companies reap a rich harvest all during Au gust from the increased amount of travel, for many of the best, places of refuge are inaccessible save by boats. Heavy beating rainstorms drive the pollen into the ground where it is held by the moist earth. The few eases which will develop this year un der present conditions will be con fined to those caused by other agen cies than flower pollen. Local nasal deformities and asthmatic tendencies will bring on the dread affliction to many people but tho majority of the annual victims are destined to escape unless it stops raining. Antitoxin Cure* Lix'lijaiv. Physicians connected with Harlem hospital New York, have announced the recovery from lockjaw and dis charge from that institution of Jo- j seph, a son of "Silent Mike" Tiernan, i who was for many years a member , of the New York baseball team. On | the Fourth of July he shot himself j in the hand with a blank cartridge. He was taken to the hospital. Lock- ■ jaw was developed, and it was docid- j ed to inject antitoxin into the spinal cord, and not. into the brain, as in previous eases. The injections were made between the first ami second lumbar vertebrae. On the fifteenth day the jaw relaxed. A Question lor Women's Clubs, "The young woman," says the nar rative of a local tragedy, "threw her arms into the air and fell. The street twas crowded with shoppers, who fled in all directions." Just why shoppers, mostly women, should run in terror from another woman in dis tress and leave a man to aid mr fivst. exclaims the Chicago Inter Ocean, is a question which it would sceui some of the women's clubs might profitably discuss. Well Rallied. A Kansas man has named his baby daughter E I'luribns t'num. lie isn't as crazy, however, as might at first he supposed, says the Chicago ]{ec ord-llerald. She is his eleventh and the other ten are living. What Otrnejile Call* Work. Carnegie has been tolling people over in London flint it is hard work to give money away, says the Chicago Reeord-llerald. Still, we could men tion several professions that are harder. TO MOTHERS Mrs. J. If. Masking, of Chicago, II!., President Chicago Arcade Club, Addresses Comforting "Words to Women Regarding Childbirth. " Deai: Mrs. Pinkham : —Mothers neoil not dread childhearing after they know the value of Lydia E. Pink liam's Vegetable Compound. AY hilc I love«l cliildren 1 dreaded the ordeal, for it left me weak and sick MHS.'j.' 11. IIASKINS. for months after, and at the time I I thought death was a welcome relief; I but before my last child was born a J pood neighbor advised LiydiaE.Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, and I used that, together with your Pills i and Sanative Wash for four inontha j before the child's birth; —it brought me wonderful relief. I hardly had an ! ache or pain, and when the child waa | ten days old ' left my bed strong in j health. Evr>ry spring andfall I nowtake abottlerif Lydia I'LPinkliaia's Veg etable Compound and find it keeps ! me in continual excellent health." | Mits. J. 11. llaskins, 31*48 Indiana Ave., Chicago, 111.— 55000 forfeit if above testimo ! nial is not genuine. Care and careful counsel is what the expectant ami would-be ' mother needs, ami this counsel | she can secure without cost by writing to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of | , Am Fac-Slmllc Wrappar Below. V«Sry an nil tai tut ea try irAEnrtfcl" 8 HEAOACHE ibAnI trio FOR OIZZIMESS. Kittle rori biuousress. l/rp FOR TORPID LIVER. PILLS fOR eOMSTIP&nOR. i FOR SALLOW SKIN. MBal Iroa tmecomplexioh p , I t>EKU?oa MUCT HAV vomatjwc. 23 cs«tx I Sorely 111 B^WL' CURE SICK HEADACHE. KEEP YOUB SADDLE, DRY! * //y»y/- THE ORIGINAL ~ i iP©mmel / */[f //)r// /£ \S ftl-ACK OPYtLIOtV /• PROTECTS BOTH ! AMD SADDLE Ou ... .•Ut(rf wME ?£t V IN TMC HARDEST STORM ooKro** CATALOGUES PREB I SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AN£HAT&' A J.TOWER CO., BOSTON.MASS. 39' a l&k. $J a,( '' s bargain Book ffi W ar( * s °" P rices - by 1 9 holosallng goods to all. E I ifcf 119 111 save you many dollars. | j It contains oror 1,001) pnecs quottnuwhola. I (J W ln nrifpa on 70.00U different nrtioles-JV.OOO 9 J illustrations aro used to help you under- 0 i Btand what the goods look likr. Send 15 H ■ ccntajor catnlotfuo and lenrn how to make » I four dollars do tho work of Ave. Bj CHICAGO 1 The house that tells the truth. jfj 1 p|Aiyr?SEI»TIC^P I p/^rn^ (electbS^pes] 112 In (Treat variety for paio n,t the lowest prices by I | A. V Kellogg .Newspaper Co., 71 (InUrlo HI., <ht,-laud. | niJitiiVit w r r»Tf "~i n • a AvWiauiiait A. N. i:.—c 1932 E" ICS ET 1 E? MOTHERS of sutTrriMK babies. S" &fc to Henry < lllnir. WVi. i\ b m " Mil HI . Philadelphia, for u TVeth liik Necklucc. Money refunded If uvt batibla®- torj. F\fty cents mail, pi*pa*iL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers