2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per year *2 If paid lu advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements ore published at the rate ol •ne dollar per square for one insertion and fifty cents per square for each subsequent insertion. Rates by the year, or for six or three months, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less, S'J: each aubsequent inser tion 10 cents per square. Local notices ID cents per line for one lnser ■ertion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent eon-ecutivc insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. iO cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riatres and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. »5 per year: over tive lines, at the regular rates of adver tiaing. No local Inserted for less than 75 cents pet Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pbkss is complete •nd affords facilities for doing the best class of worU. Paiiticulab attention paidto Law Pkintino. No paper will be discontinued until arrear age* are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. . Papers sent out of the county must be paid for In advance. "No, you don't see my children loafing around the streets at night," said the janitor of Street Tomer •* a city apartinent- Urailiintra. , ~ . house,according to a writer for the Youth's Companion. "It costs me something to keep them away from the gangs, but it's worth the money. They're all respectable people here on the street, you know, and some pretty well to do. Doesn't seem to be any need of their boys going wrong, does there? Well, the trouble started with letting the boys run wild in the evenings. The janitor of this next house didn't attend to his business. The boys learned he wasn't around at night, so they used to take their boxing-gloves into his basement and light the gas and have great times—regular prize-fights. Now, that was only a boy's caper, and needn't have led to any serious harm, if the young fellows had been taken hold of right then and there, and handled right. When the police man found 'em and drove 'em, pos sibly one or two of the boys did get a-wlialing; but they went right back to their hang-out at the corner, and kept on scheming how. to have fun. Come warm weather, vacation time, and the leader took a notion to jump on a train one day and have a ride, lie got out in the country and begged his living for a day or two. and then he hopped on another train and came back. He had a regular picnic, he thought. All the other boys were wild to try it. Well, one of 'em did. He. got thrown off the first time, so he had to do it all over again. The second time he got under the wheels, and that was the end of him. Mind you, all these fellows had been picking tip lots of accom plishments while they hung around the corner. In the course of a year they knew how to smoke, they were good, hard swearers, and could lie pretty well, and because they could do mischief all around the neighbor hood and dodge the policeman, they thought they were about as smart as the next one. It happened one day that the leader of the gang was suffering for cigarettes, so, what does he do but steal a pair of trousers and pawn 'em. He stole from the wrong man, as it turned out, and his folks couldn't settle the case. The officers on this beat pave the boy a bad name —and there's no denying he was the worst of the bunch—and the judge sent him to jail for 30 days. Well, there you have the year's record of six sons of decent people. One of them killed while trying to play 'hobo,' one graduated to jail, four of 'em "on the ragged edge of worthlessness, and all of 'em under 17 years old. I bought my boys gymnasium tickets last winter," the janitor added. "They're playing baseball now, and in the fall they'll join a football team, if I have to start one myself. They've got to have company, and they need some way to work off their animal spirits, and I calculate decent company and decent sports in decent places are the cheapest kind." An Interesting Illustration of (lie ex pansion of the field of American finan cial investment is afforded by Ihe re port-of a large life insura lice coinpnnj that itsiissetf include securities of the government.- of the Argentine Repub lic. Austria, lirtt/il, (treat Itiiiain. ltul garia, France, llutigary, Switzerland, I'm- - in, Queensland, Itu -in, S« rvia. South \iistralia, Swe'len, Spain, Mex ico and Wurttemberg. In ii reci ut ihi 11 -t fur uggest lup the be-t way to make $5 grow . i lit- pr'i/.e was ii M:i 1 1 ed |ol Ilia u Mlldiiiii i ill that the amount he invr-ted in rgg* for hatch ing. He cited, among other things, the c,. •Eof a bov who i \chui gi a peti ny for an egg, ul "' (few, sticcc aively, into a hen, six chickens, a pig, a calf uud a pun J, with bridle and sad tile. I.iilighter i-. one of nature's b«»| iiiftlifiitt uud beut pllli und bitter* •ml of sight. I .aught cr brushes down the eiiiiwi b - front the ceil tig of lhe brum, du»l up and >w p> mil old rtisiyr whims uml it.inky notions and gloomy foreboding , ami adorns i lie • tin in Iters of thought with th* Iwauflful pictures of hope. THE PRESIDENT'S SUCCESS. .Satisfactory Iti-nnlts of Ills KfTttrla to Secure' Legislation on Trusts. When President Roosevelt began his speeches on "Trusts" last summer fill felt a grave risk had been courageously assumed. The- feeling was equally shared by those who opposed and by those who supported his course, by those who approved and those who dis approved the regulation of trusts by federal legislation. If much were accomplished great business interests might be injured. If nothing' were done the prestige and position of the president, his adminis tration and the republican party might be imperiled, says the Philadelphia PresSs Six months have passed. A measure regulating trusts is now certain to pass congress. It will be conservative. If will not disturb business. Solvent and well-managed enterprises it will not affect. Others need small considera tion. It is accepted, however, unwill ingly, ns necessary and inevitable by the ablest and most powerful capital ists in charge of these great corpora tions. It is drawn by the congressmen who have beien most conspicuous in de manding the regulation of trusts. A contest which might, it once seemed probable, either inflict injury on busi ness if a law were passed and if none were enacted might arouse public opinion to demand extreme measures, has,been brought to a healthy compro mise. Publicity will be secured, but with out vexatious interference with busi ness secrets. The long litigat ion under the Sherman anti-trust act will be brought to an early decision. Railroad rebates, on which trusts have thrived, will be made more difficult by making it as dangerous to accept a rebate as to grant, one. Secret contracts as to price will be regulated. This legislation, which promises to pass wit hout serious opposition, brings these great corporations under the purview of the law. It begins the diffi cult fask of government supervision in a new field. What President Roose velt demanded last, summer is begun, and begrin with a measure which | changes all the outlook for trusts, i Their freedom from all regulation ! ends. Their reports will be public, j Their special railroad favors will be J curtailed. Competition will have the support of law against secret discrim ination. | It is a great victory of a newtnation al policy, boldly launched, wisely urged and brought to a conclusion which satisfies the country as the first step in a difficult problem, without dis turbing business, endangering credit or alarming capital. QUEER STATE OF THINGS. DemocrntN Votlnjc AjinHiist n Sliver Currency for tli-e Phil ippines. The republican leaders in the house were probably astonished at their complete defeat in the matter of the Philippine currency bill. Twenty eight republicans bolted and joined ' the democrats in adopting the substi- I tute offered by the democratic minor ■ ity of the committee on insular af fairs. The situation is not without comical features when we consider , that the republican measure provided for a silver legal tender currency maintained at a ratio of 16 to % with gold, while the democratic substitute was the American gold standard pure | and simple. Surely times have changed since the age of William ,T. 1 Bryan, says the San Francisco Chron ; icle. This currency bill should never have been made a party measure, for the J silver issue is as dead as Pharaoh's : mummy and there is really a good deal | to be said from an economic stand | point on both sides of the Philippine money question. It became political for the reason that those favoring the ' extension of the United States coinage laws to the Philippines do so mainly rk an incident of their contention that all general laws of the United States should be spredily extended to the islands, with the object, as soon as may lw, of completely incorporating j the islands within the limits of our body politic. A uniform currency is one of the important agencies of pro moting trade, and the legend of"the United States of North America"on I the cum nt coin is an agency in de veloping patriotism in our people. It was tin se considerations, rather than economic views, which prompted ~S 1 republicans, under the lead of some • who have nlway- favored free trade with the Philippine*, to join thedem- I ocrats in voting for a measure be lli \i d to tend in that din ction. What will hnp|ien to the bill in the senate is an altogether different question. It j is ess# ii tin I that some currency bill be. passed, but it may lie safely predict ed that the house bill will hate a hot time in the other wing of the capltol, COMMENT ANI) OPINION. t 'lt must In highly rwlmrni* ng to any sort of an idea w lit ii it is ii ath lo reiili/i that Me. Itryun' Coinuioiier has ti im 11 \ caught up with it. Wash ington Post. C * I lie tariff work of the democrats from 'til to 'ii'i aggravated to a tie flant -late panic condition which wise and practical legislation would hate alleviated, if not have removed, 1 - Mlmny Journal. trft does not ap|H fir that the tak ling otr of th< tint % on coal has either lowered thi iir ■ or dulbtl tlo ed, . of the famine in the eastern 111'. v It has. howt ver, sllei ci tl thi fft t trade ••lawtoirr. To him it i* enough that 1 there I* n» ilmy. After (hat achieve me a t |iriet ikmml Hi tie account ln- I tfianapolu 'noma I CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1903 DEMOCRATIC PLANS. Mil}' Take Ip the Cause of "Tine Op* pressed ( oiimmiuit*' anil Atluek II IKb I'riees. "There arc indications," said Secre tary Shaw before a New York repub lican club a few days ago, "that un other campnign is to be waged against high prices." High prices are, indeed, the chief argument for revising the tariff, lr its destitution of issues the deuio eratic party is likely again to take up the cause of"the oppressed consum er," ignoring, as it always does, that lower prices mean lower wages and lower profits and that as producers all consumers are bound to lose more by tariff tinkering than they would gain, as they <1 id in 1893, says the Chicago Inter Ocean. This is not. to say, of course, that particular schedules should not be changed when concrete advantages may be gained. Secretary Shaw, in the same speech, gave a very clear and accurate test by which to determine when tariff schedules should be re vised. "Our unprecedented prosperity," he said, "does not imply that the tariff schedules are perfect, or should never be revised. It- does imply, however, that they should not be revised simply because they are imperfect. Some in dustry ought to show an actual hard ship before present conditions are dis turbed." Perception of that fact, and the fail ure of any important industry to show that hardship, was r-ne of the reasons that led the American people in the last election to reject the democratic clamor for tariff revision and to stand fast for letting the tariff alone at present. The other reason was-that the Amer ican people are endowed with common sense and believe thoroughly in doing one thing at a time. Tlie thing they wanted done first was the curbing of the trusts. They agreed with the president that this was the first task and that incidental defects in the tariff should be let alone until that task was accomplished. And for that policy they voted. Indications multiply that thedemoc- racy, deprived of the trust issue by republican legislation, will make the next campaign upon tariff revision. No one, of course, presumes to say that conditions might not be improved by revision. On the other hand, as Secretary Shaw significantly said, "no one dare insure against their being made worse." I ntil the democratic party dares so insure it is not likely to be trusted to revise the tariff. And the republican party will not touch the tariff until the trust question is settled, and tlu-n will change schedules only as some in dustry shall show actual hardship in them. SOMETHING TO REMEMBER. \n IntereMlnK Fnet Almnt tlip llonw Mnrliet for Free Truderw to ('oiiN^)ler. Alluding to the fears expressed by some of the Chicago packers that the new German tariff may play havoc with their export trade. The Boston Herald remarks that "they will find tio difficulty in disposing in the Amer ican market! of all t,he food stuffs that, they have been sending to Germany if they will lower their prices the mer est trifle." And Ihe Herald adds: "The American market is the one which the packers have to depend fin for their profits, and the more they cultivate it the better it will be for them." The admission that the American market is the one 011 which the American producer must rely for profit, coming from a free trade news paper like the Herald, is noteworthy and significant, says the Troy Times. That is the protection argument in a nutshell. The true protectionist knows and has always affirmed that prosperity for home industry depends on the home market. That does not prevent or discourage proper effort to extend our trade to other countries. Hut sales abroad always have and un questionably always will be but a fractional part of those made at home. The bulk of what we grow and manu facture is used at home. The surplus I goes abroad. It Is well to have as | large a surplus as possible and to sell I all we can tn foreign lands, e*p< clallv ! when such sales are testimonials to j the superior < xcellence and cheapness of the American product. Hut that ! does not change the fundamental truth that the American market is the irnatist and lust for American goods. ! It is highly Interesting 10 have free j trade recognition of that fact put on record. \ 1111 - l-T \ |iiiiiKloiiUt« Kuril Im. The protests of the anti-c\panslon ts are ilail.v '.'rowing wcakiT. Su<-!i in array of facts going to show In ne- I •t« which this country will derive! 'rum the retention of the Philippines 1* the nnti-rxpnnsloiil»t-< meet dailv 1 noiifh tu discourage the mo'-t ar 'i HI ad\neatc of retreat. The lati>t bomb that ha- been thrown Into the | intl-exp.'ii - iil-ls' camp i the report '»> the chief of the bureau of forestry. ! who ha reltiriod from the Philip- | • tine*, that half the total urea of the | Uln lids . heavily timl»ied and that | not much more than Hvi* per <■■ nt. is in j •he hainls of private owners. In Ills i •pM 1 I • n "1 In fofMtS an al most entire! \ hard wood, eKtremrU rich In while mahouan.v. satin w...wl I'KMUiiod I* l 11 1 IMIII V " Till. 11l w - wllll nruiml'iy make .Wuiunldo's frit tub | w s|. Imf i« 11 true spirlied j will 1. Julec 1 feat u territory >0 rich li unri.'tvlo|wd |Hir >-|l)|lilie« for eonmrr I eittl aMI trude 1 \|»an Im. has COHO> mi ! d.r the »ii»ulmand p»,,gr..slw in flu* net of tin t'nied Tiei Tiiui 1 ITALIAN THIEVES. Tlicy De fraud Life Insurance Companies. One of tin' fianu ConfcKwcN and Telia How Tiles' Nude Sums of Muiiey Out of a System of Fraud that Kx Idled lor lO Years. New York. Feb. 12.—An exposure of the methods qf the conspirators in the recently discovered Italian life in surance frauds was made yesterday by the confession of one of the men concerned. It appears that the frauds have been in operation for ten years, during which time the insurance companies have been defrauded of hundreds of thousands of dollars. In one instance a company paid out $20,- 000 on one fraudulent risk. The head of the conspiracy, Mr. Krotel says, was Bartolomeo Cirino, who was re cently arrested and released under SO,OOO bail. The usual plan of operations was to make an application for insurance in the. name of some person in a practically dying condition, a healthy substitute being presented for med ical examination. In cases where the original "risk" lingered too long to satisfy the conspirators, a substi tute body was used on which to col lect. the amount of the policy. These bodies are said to have been furnished by Joseph Tripan, an Italian under taker. who is now awaiting trial in ; the Tombs. In some instances false : death certificates were presented, j said to have been signed by Cirino, ! or by two Italian doctors who are now under heavy bail. So well organized was the scheme that there was a regularly appointed board of directors that used to meet every week to discuss the payments of premiums falling due, and pass upon the matter of the substitution | nf /bogus bodies in the case of "risks'* { that did not die until the payment of premiums became too heavy. A MINE DISASTER. Two .Hen Killed Narrow» ICncupc of Ten O lln*rn Irani a Similar l'aii-. | Diiluth, Minn., Feb. 12.—Two lives j were lost and ten men had narrow escapes as a result rsf a Are in Xo. 3 shaft at the Spruce mine, owned by the I'nited States Steel Corporation, at Kveleth, Minn., yesterday, j The fire was caused by the explo sion of a lantern which was left near the edge of the shaft on the second level, 150 feet below the surface, j Ninety feet deeper In the mine !2 men ! were at work in a drift which was being put through from Xo. to Xo. 1 shaft. There was no escape for them except by way of Xo. 3. in which the fire was raging. There was no ventilation for them and they were in total darkness, the lights from their candles being of little avail. They groped to the point where the drift joined the Xo. 1 shaft. When they could no longer see ! fire above they began climbing the ladder. Ten of the men reached the second level. Two, O'Brien and Matthews, were overcome when about 40 feet from the point of safety and fell back to their death. The firemen fought the fire by carrying their hose down the Xo. 1 shaft and through to the point where the blaze originated. Quick work in extinguishing the fire saved the lives of at least ten men. ARSENAL ABLAZE. A Storehouse at Hock I«taiid lltiriih, 4'anolnsc a Loan of 8 1,500,000. Rock Island, 111., Feb. 12.—"Shop A." the principal issue storehouse at the itock Island arsenal, was de stroyed by fire last night, with its contents. The latter included cav alry and infantry equipments of every description, and 1,000,000 rounds of Krag-Jorgensen smokeless ammu nition. The contents were worth $1,500,000. The building was a mas sive structure, three stories high, erected 20 years ago at a cost of $400,000. The flames in the great government institution endangered property worth many times the amount lost. The fire was under control by 1 o'clock this morning, at which hour Maj. Blunt, the commandant, made the estimate of the loss given before. The Hock Island arsenal is the larg est in the I'nited States. ST. LOUIS GETS THEM. Olympic t.aUKo Will l»e a I'eiiture ol tin* \% orld'M I'ulr. St. Louis, Feb. 12. "Everything.! settled. You have Olympic games. Is the wording of a cablegram re ceived frtwu Michel La (irave, world's fair commissioner at Paris, France, i by the Louisiana Purchase exposition officials. The meaning of the cablegram i* that the Olympic game*, which were originally intended to be held in Chi. cago In 1004, will be held in St. I.<>uif ilurhig tin" world's fair, the interna tional committee having so decided. Through the aid nf \. ii! . though dependent upon the ul I iinate deeiiion of the internallorta' committee in the Olympic game , tf which the whole question was final ly referred. Trrrllh lt|»l»»|iin In u 'line. \\ . Ui- cirri*. IN , IV i. 12. \ -.er- j !"u - cNpl i >ll occurred Wednesday .it ||a It ••■•!!i• -ry. n|MM\,!.-.| b) li.e l.e !|| •li i(ul WilllMkaifl ' o.il (',, , a | I'lvutoMlll. four mile* from thi» eitv I" ■ H bur,l |nj f\\ .of ! belli .•finitely \ linked llimf i.f 1t... , lamlM-V-, whlell evpl..ded"wh' ■ lr- 112 y ir.l I.V ' . I i 11...1 Ih« Runnelt vein. I iin »er. Here litirlyt • i a d l i ,e iqldi eul lovHt fri'iu their hlii"** THE PROFESSOR'S DISCOVERY. All Hi* I/mrnlng Went for .VuiiKht \\ lien l.lii* NuppoMed Antlijue, Una Itpcncd. It took the professor a lifetime to master the intricacies of tlie old Egyptian hiero glyphics. One day he discovered a roll of papyrus, containing in one place mysterious marks too faint to be deciphered, says the New York .Sun. It took the professor a week to find out that the papyrus was in a double layer with the mysterious marks in between. It took the professor another week to separate the layers of the papyrus without tearing it. It took the professor practically no time at all to read the writing, which ran as follows: "My name is Blanche Terwilliger. 1 work in Mctiuire's factory of antiquities at Osh kosli, Mich. I am a brunette, 18 years old, and generally considered handsome. I could make a trusting wife to the right man and write this note in the hope that it will fall into the hands of such a man and so lead to further correspondence." It took the professor two hours to yield the objurgations which he felt the situa tion demanded. Did the professor marry the girl? Thunder, no! The professor was already married. The idea! An Important Discovery. Granton, Okla., Feb. 9th. —After ten years E. H. (jiosney of Granton has at last found a cure for Kidney Trouble. Mr. Gosney suffered very severely with Kidney Com plaint and some ten years ago made up his mind to find a euro if one was to be had. He has tried and tried and experimented ■with every kidney medicine he could hear of. Although he was always disappointed he kept on trying till at last hisperseverence •was rewarded and he found a complete cure. He is a well man to-day and explains it as follows: "Everything failed to cure me and I was growing worse and worse till I tried a new remedy called Dodd's Kidney Pills and I had not taken many of them before 1 knew that 1 had at last found the right thing. I am entirely cured and I cannot say too much for Dodd's Kidney Pills." Accuracy.—Husband—"Didn't I tell you that was a secret, and you were not to tell it to anyone?" Wife —"You told me it was a secret, but you did not say I was not to tell it to anyone."—N. Y. Weekly. The Nickel I'late Road. The care and attention to all the patrons of this road make it the iavorite with the inexperienced as well as those accustomed to travel. Every feature necessary to the comfort and convenience of passengers, espe cially ladies traveling alone or accompanied by children, is provided. Colored porters uniformed are in attendance to serve the wants of all and to see that the cars are clean and kept so. Pullman sleepers with choice dining ear service. American Club Plan or a la Carte, at moderate cost. With no excess fare charged on any train it will be to your interest to have your ticket read by way of the Nickel Plate. Fear is nursed in the lap of imagination. —United Presbyterian. Three trains a day Chicago to Califor nia, Oregon and Washington. Chicago, Union Pacific & North-Western Line. Xo man was ever discontented with the world if he did his duty in it. —Southey. Three solid through trains daily Chicago to California. Chicago, Union Pacific ic North-'Western Line. It costs more to support one vice than tea virtues. —Chicago Daily News. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infalli ble medicine for coughs and colds. —N. W. Samuel. Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17,1900. Selfishness is the seed of sorrow.—Four- Track News. Force never fusses.—Ram's Horn. Honied words and sweetness of character are not always found together.—United Presbyterian. Many a man who forged his way to the front landed in the penitentiary.—Chicago Daily News. ''Has he great poetical imagination?" "I should say so; he imagines he's a poet!"— Baltimore Herald. Men living within themselves haven't much to boas* of in the way of earthly habitations. —Chicago Daily News. Time flies, but not anv faster than for merly; which is somewhat remarkable in this go-ahead age.-—Brooklyn Life. She (musingly)—" How can Chinamen bear to eat rats?" He (absently)—"lt helps fill the Chinks."—Harvard Lampoon. First Lady Passenger (on elevated) — "That is the first gentleman I've ween in some time." Second Lady Passenger— "What did he do?" First Lady Passenger —"Offered me his strap."—Town Topics. "Robbers at your office, eh? Did they find the combination for tne safe?" "Ap parently. We can't find the safe. The combination must have been a steel drill and unlimited dynamite.'*—Philadelphia Press. Uncle Reuben says: I'm realizin' dat I hasn't created no pertickler conimoshun in dis world, but as an offset 1 am consolin' myseld wid de reflection dat de world has bin none de worse for my livin' in it. If I haven't helped, 1 haven't hurt.- Detroit Free Press. Mrs. (Jrwn —"They tell me your husband has b*it4 u lt . w«irn • ill n»u*. •>( lh»* tn H\ |«'*| i j.tl u it. Mull , lirnp* I•i: i« | 112% fif— h nutki^i H N V 2%"' ti»«l «*f» t irlrli.nl M. 4. Mtiil't «Jmi »• i ule H t i ni«*t i•< >-am km % t f,*r o I 'III. i| Ni t'l 1% 4l» III' Ths K. C. fi. Almanac for lf»03. The Kansas City Southern Railway's Almanac lor 1863 is now ready for distribu tion. Farmers, stock-rait-eis, fruit-grow* ers, truck-gardeners, manufacturers, mer chants and ottiers seeking a new tield of action or a new home at the very lowest prices, can obtain reliable information con cerning southwestern Missouri, the Cher okee and Choctaw Nations in the Indian Territory, western Arkansas, eastern Texas, northwestern Louisiana and the Coast coun try, and of the business opportunities of fered therein. Write for a copy of the K. C. S Almanac and address, S. G. War ner, G. P. A., K. C. S. Kailway, Kansas City, Mo. Wan Deluded. Mr*. Muggins—How long had you known your husband before you married him? Mrs. JSuggins—l didn't know him at all. 1 only thought I did. —Philadelphia .Rec ord. California—Low llnte*. Beginning February 15th, the M., K. t», ana is J*r«jr>ai»«d for use as eaaily tea. Itiacallod "Laur'ii TVa" or LANE'S FAMILY MEDICINE All drupgiata or by mail 2ft eta. and 50 eta. Buy it to day. Family Mfdicine uiovcm the howrlH each flay. In order to he healthy thiaii Übcciihary. Addreaa, Box 295, Lo Roy, N. Y. [ MONEY I Buy your goods at I Wholesale I'rices. Our 1,000-pace catalocue will be sent fl upon receipt of 15 cents. This amount fU does not even pay the postage, but It Is sufficient to show us that you are acting I In «oo(l faith. Better send for it now. I Your neighbors trade with us —why not I you also ? 9 2 CHICAGO a The house that tells the truth. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of Sm Pac-Slmll* Wrappsr Below. T«rj nun nl u eof Mtaksnnfu nko-rtDQ™ ""DACHf. UAm trio rii dizziness. Kittle re* biliousness. HIV F R FOR L,VER -13 p| II g CONSTIPATION. i a w FOR SAUOIV SKIN. ! %ISgfcM | rot TWECMPLEXICfI tiiZm I Wttreir CURE SICK HEADACHE.