2 mm COOKTY PRESS. li. H. MULLIN, Eu.tsr. PubUsiitHt I'.wvy Tiisirsdsij . | \KRMS OF SUBSCRI I'TION. P r J«r « <* 1! paid !•> advance 1 "0 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of j enc tlfl ur pi r .quarr forum: insertion and tlf'y i t.-tax i er • q i in- 112 ,r bscmunn Insertio i Rates rv ij■ • war. or to s.iut tii.-eo moitns . are low uniform, a '1 will be furnished on j «p; licai.on. I.ck 1 a..d Official Advertising per square, , ttnee times or less, eacb subsequent inner- , to i .0 i ems per nuar- Local notices I i cents per Una for one Insor- ; ienlon: r> cents p.-r line for each subsequent con ecutive insertion. oiiltuai-v n< ties ' ver five lines 10 rents jet lliit. s; 1 ii'inonn' ri.iPnts ol births, n.ar riai:e>- ud deaths w. ibe inser.i'il free. Hi iness cir.lt five li es or less. 55 per year. t>' i : live liu; a, at the regular rates of advei t j : n/. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per !► sue. JOB PRINTING. I he .fob department of the I'ukss incomplete and . ?. id. facilities for dointf the best class of * ill. I'Att'l K'-ri.AH ATTKNUON PAID TO LAW PIUNTING. No pap i- will bo discontinued until arrear |>j. s arc paid, except the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out o{ the county must be paiO t r in advance. CURRENT TOPICS. The average depth of the ocean la about two miles. Cne-thiifl of the college graduates j now are women. The latest move is the shipment of California oranges to Japan. A parasite, the natural enemy of the 1 mosquito, has been discovered. The total income of all American farmers last year wa • about ' 000,000. The hottest day in l'aris this year i tha temperature rose to 83.6 deg. in the shade. The first English hymn hook used in ! public worship was by Isaac Watts, about 1715. The importations of pig tin last year were 68,000,000 pounds, against 7,000,- j 000 in 1800. There are 800 Chinese students in , the colleges of Japan and 500 more j are to be sent. At the burial of a South London ! man six dogs, draped in black, fol lowed the cortege. The income tax returns show that i citizens of Great Britain have invested I abroad $5,630,540,500. The Kongo state sells abroad annu- j ally over $13,000,000 worth and buys ! less than $8,000,000 worth. The medical schools of Nashville. \ Tenn., graduate more doctors than those of Berlin, Germany. A London paper given away the ee- j cret that Irish women's native shawls are wholly made in Scotland. Some Chicago burglars used an acid i in order to take only real silver from | a house they had broken into. Juvenile crime in France has do- j creased by 30 per cent, among boys | and 12 per cent, among girls since ! 1881. More than one-fourth of the inhabi- j tants of Newfoundland are engaged in j catching and curing fish for a liveli- | hood. Two German Alpinists, climbing j near Innsbruck, have died suddenly, | owing to the exertion affecting weak hearts. A drop of blood whic'.i might hang ! from the point of a needle contains about 1,000,000 red flattened cor- , puscles. State lotteries in Holland are to be ; gradually diminished during toe next 18 years, when they will be abolished entirely. Not more than 3,500 persons in Par- j is have a capiial as much as $300,000, and nearly one third of those are for eigners. Scotland not only leads in pure bred cattle, but by daily quotations on the London mavket leads on prime beef likewise. All foreigners not authorized to re side in Spain are to be expelled under a new government order with regard to anarchists. The secretary of the treasury te reived a few days ago in an envelope, postmarked Boston, a conscience con tribution of SSOO. It requires the labor of about 10,- 000,000 men and women for nine months of the year to harvest all the crops of the world. On the body of a Russian who shot himself at 1 orient. Brittany, was found a letter saying that he was a convict escaped from Siberia. At the University of TJpsala, Swe den, an exhibition of English school books and English teaching methods will be opened shortly. Maude Brown, 18 years old. of Washington, Ind., is the only female mailcarrier in the United States. She does not wear a uniform. According to the exports it takes ten pounds of milk to make a pound of cheese and 23 pounds of milk to make a pound of butter. Two Italian government officials have been arrested at. Moona, on A us trian territory, in the act of making sketches of the fortifications. 'r-€r to the Massachusetts bu .viatistics there are 3,459 law > in that state. 5,407 physicians and surgeons and 0.737 clergymen. The navy which gives England the j supremacy of the seas costs $155,000.- j 000 a year, or a little more than the : United States pays in pensions. hi 1870 the German people barely exceeded 40.000.000-, in 1885 thry had risen to nearly 47,000,000. and In 1900 I the census return gave 56.345,014. The growth of the nails is more , rapid in children than in adults, and slowest in (he aged. It goes on more i rapidly in summer than in winter. j The postmaster general of England • has declined a proposal to establish j a penny postage system between i Great Britain and the United States. i "LET "ER STRIKE!" TOM JOHNSON, WITH his i.k.iitmm; l«OI» I I*. LOOKS la.KICI'II.I.V AT I'HKMUK NTIAI. I<I(a IIT\I \G. —Philadelphia North America. BRYAN AND CLARKE. A fontbillation That Han All the Knr- Murks of Trust Promoter*' Prosperity. In hi:! loni; apology for casting li s powerful inthi'n" 1 in favor of the elec tion of John 11. Clarke, the gold dem ocrat who has been nominated for | United States senator from Ohio, Mr. Bryan still adheres to forms of ex pression which do not become a gen tleman who is popularly believed to j be the richest man in Nebraska. "I am satisfied," he says, "that Mr. Clarke's sympathies are with the peo ! pie in their tight against organized wealth." Again he declares: "His i sympathies are with the masses." Once again he asserts: "He is not the representative of plutocracy: his : sympathies are right, and I shall trust : him. I believe his sympathies will ! lead him to our side when he thor oughly understands ilie (money) ques tion." The gentleman whose sympathies | Mr. Bryan thus depends upon to lead him into hostility to organized wealth, ' and who is unequivocally vouched for i as not a representative of plutocracy, | says the Chicago Chronicle (dem.).is j corporation lawyer of ability and good , character, who in 1808 denounced the i Bryan platform as meaning "the | breaking of all honest ties between i man and man." In the course of the ; same speech Mr. Clarke addressed i himself to the organization of capital | with which Mr. Bryan has been rea j sonably familiar for many years, as | follows: "I believe in smashing j trusts, but I believe this year we ' ought all to vote to smash the most gigantic and the most impudently in famous trust —the silver trust." This particular trust, or organiza tion of capital, started out in the early 'Bo's to double the value of its J product—silver bullion —by convinc | ing the people that it was their duty to coin about 50 cents' worth of it into a dollar free of cost, and wlth ! out limit. Mr. Bryan came to its ' rescue early in the 'oo's, a poor young i man, with a surprising gift of ora tory. For ten years he has devoted ! himself to this proposition, with the result that he has been nominated twice for the presidency, and has passed from poverty to affluence. Classifying the gentleman from Ne braska as he deserves to be classified, it will be found that few of the trust promoters of the last decade have fared better than he. Many of them have nothing. Some of them are very rich. A good many of them are struggling desperately to keep what i they have. If Mr. Bryan could acquire great wealth by the mere advocacy of he big bonanza enterprise to transmute, say, $35,000,000 worth of American silver bullion annually into $70,000,- 000 of legal tender money, what would not his fortune have been if he and his associates had succeeded? In view of Mr. Clarke's attitude on this question, which has undergone no change whatever, why should the plutocrat from Nebraska assume that his "sympathies" are all right, and that eventually they will land him in the ranks of the silver trust promo ters, whose principles "break all the honest ties between man and man?" If sympathy were ever to control in the case of Mr. Clarke, it would have ! asserted itself in 1806, when a young lawyer, without reputation, without money and without practice was by an amazing piece of good fortune pitch forked into the leadership of a great party, and when most people believed | him to be honest. Now that he has grown rich and famous, now that very few people believe him to be disinter ested. is a hard-headed brother pluto crat and a corporation lawyer, at that, likely to waste much sympathy upon him and his very lucrative "cause?" if Although the Ohio democratic plat form indorsed the Kansas City platform, and Mr. Bryan was invited to make some addresses during the campaign, John A. Clarke, the party candidate for senator, leads off in the campaign by openly re pudiating free silver. He said he bad no apologies to make for having opposed j free silver in the past, as he is opposed to it yet. Mr. Clarke voted against Mr. Bryan at both presidential elections, and I is of the same opinion still. This makes ! an interesting situation for Mr. Bryan i when he begins his series of speeches | which he has promised to make. —Pitts- I burg Chronicle-Telegraph CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER i, 1903. 1 HANNA WILL BE ATTACKED. Promise of ii f.lvcl.v Cumpxilit" When tli«- Ohio .Senator (o Work. It io announced ihat the democrat!? i in the coming campaign in Ohio will attack Mr. Manna's record in the sen ate, and Mr. Clarke, the indorsed can didate of Tom L. Johnson, is expected to lead in the assault; in fact, Mr. Clarke has announced that he will be aggressive in that respect, says the Cleveland Leader. Of course this indicates that there will be a lively campaign. If there is anything which Senator Hanna likes it lis a fight. Some of his friends say that i he would rather fight than do anything else. At least nobody has ever known him to show the white feather, when It came to an emergency requiring a dis play of personal courage. He does not | even favor compromises with his ene mies; he much prefers a battle to a fin ish. Senator Hanna is somewhat indis posed at present, but his condition is improving, and it is likely that he will jbe ready to begin the fight when the i enemy lines up for battle. Of course the senator will have to ; refer to his record. He has made a career as a senator that is unieiue, in i some respects, in American statesman i ship. Usually it takes a senator a long time to become influential among his I colleagues, but before Mr. Hanna had | been in the senate a year his fellow members were ready to listen to his ad : vice, and keen observers of affairs in Washington have conceded to him ele ments of leadership which few men I possess. Nobody disputes the fact that |it was his masterly presentation of facts and figures which influenced the I senate to decide in favor of the Panama route for the isthmian canal, and that incident led to his being credited with 1 great power as a member of the senate. Of course Mr. Hanna can defend his ; record in his own way and he will do it. He may be compelled to plead guilty to | not being a demagogue, and to standing i for what he believes to he right, re guardless of consequences. His enemies as well as his friends will admit that j this is one of the prominent traits of his | character, and it Is possible that his record has been Influenced in some re spects by the display of this trait, ; which is uncommon among men in pub lic life. At any rate the campaign | promise to he interesting. PRESS COMMENTS. HTThe Ohio democrats may not carry j the state, but with the assistance of Mr. i Uryan they will treat the population to j some fine speech making.—Washington | Star. elf this combination of William Jen | nings Bryan and the megaphone-tele ! phone system is going to be perfected i till it takes in the whole country we 1 might as well give up right away.—Chi | cago Record-Herald. I3"Tom 1,. Johnson is reaping the re ward of his political duplicity. The lat- S est development Is a revolt of Bryan men and a demand that Johnson's candidate : for United States senator be removed from the ticket.—lndianapolis Journal. | CTSenator Tillman is quoted as say- I ing that he has had enough of the lecture business. Can it be that the inconsider i ate corporations have refused to reissue | the railroad passes, express franks and \ "all that kind of stuff." the loss of which on his latest lecture tour doubtless re j duced somewhat the profits thereof? — Providence Journal. J a "The chief democratic manager in Cincinnati says Tom Johnson will be | beaten in that city by 40.000. Another j prominent Ohio democrat declares that | Johnson is trying to betray the party | into communism. Judging from Ohio | conditions, the democrats next year will I display the greatest energy in toitia ! hawking each other.—St. Louis Globe- Democrat. 17' It is thought that John It. McLean's I silence in the Ohio campaign will be far more effective in rolling up repub i lican majorities than William J. Bryan's I speeches.—Phladelphia Press, j £7President Roosevelt's rule not to I accept personal gifts of intrinsic value, [ excepting where states or entire com | munities combine, is a sound one, and | he does well in returning all such gifts. 1 Presents made through him to the na ; lion are proper, hut the people have for | innately provided for their president so that he does not need and should not 1 accept costly persoual presents.—Phila delphia Press. NOT A FIUUIIEHEAIi King 1 Edward VIL Acts as ;i Cabinet Builder. lie Wall Is One Ilia! Will Command tlie t'oitlidciiec of III", Peopln— Klnu Ik Determined that the Army Scandals Shall \ot be Hcpetaied. London, Sept. 24.—The political crisis has taken on a phase which lends to the present situation an his torical and constitutional importance of aimost unprecedented interest. The k'ng has interfered, not un constitutionally or beyond the-powers vested in the crown, but in the exer cise of li s prerogatives to an extent never dreamed of in the Victorian era Premier lhilfour's continued pres ence at LSalmoral has given rise to much surmise and comment, but the Associated Press is able lo state de finitely that it is due to Ihc king's determination not to assent to tlie formation of a new cabinet until thoroughly satisfied that its person nel is such, as to ensure the efficient carrying on of the affairs of the em pire pending the resumption of par liament. For years previous, cabinets were formed or ministerial vacancies tilled with the mere formal presentation to ihc sovereign of ihe name of the new ministers. King Edward has done t-way with this tradition. To such an extent is King Edward holding his powii of veto in reserve that now he is almost regarded by the inner circles as more the cabinet maker than Mr. Balfour himself. Though, with las usual tact, tin- king has refrained from expressing any political views or infringing the in itiative belonging to the ministers, this has not prevented him from ex pressing his genuine desire, amount ing almost to a command, that steps be taken lo remedy the scandals in the army administration revealed by the report of the South African war commission, and insisting that the new cabinet shall be one adapted to deal with that question. After the long conversations be has liail during the last few days at Hal moral with Lord Lansdowne, Mr. Broderick, Lord Eslier, who was president of the South African war commission. Lieut. (Jen. Kelly-Kenny and other military authorities, the king is said to have expressed the opinion that Lord Lansdowne's rec ord as war secretary was due more to the badness of the system then in vogue than to any defect in Lord Lansdowne's own judgment. King Edward has not shared the keen pub lic indignat ion against Lord Lans downe aroused by the report of the South \friean war commission, and he is understood to have consented to his lordship continuing as foreign minister. This decision has not prevented his majesty from telling the ministers that he wanted something done to improve the military muddle and that he hoped some man would be appointed who, with the commission's report as a basis, would be capable of changing the system which render ed inefficiency unavoidable. The question of having some gen eral. notably Lord Kitchener, as head of the war office has been discussed at ISnlinoral between the king and the ministers, but the consensus of opinion was that such an appoint ment be interpreted as a modified form of military dictatorship which the public would never sanction. Parks Wins, Kansas City, Sept. 24. After being in session behind closed doors since early in the morning, the convention of the International \ssoeiafioii of llridgc and Structural Iron Workers last, night voted in favor of seating Sain Parks and the other delegates from local union No. 2, of New York. There were but three votes against Parks and his friends. The result was a decided victory for Parks, as it re instates liini and local No. 2, of New York, of which he is the business agent and directly repudiates the ac tion of President liuchanan in sus pending it. Regan an Inquiry. New York. Sept. 24. —The commis sion appointed by President Roose velt to investigate charges against the administration at the Hllis Island immigration bureau commenced its work yesterday. The commission spent the day on the island. The New York detention room was exam ined, the "excluded" room was visit ed, and particular attention was paid to the registration of immigrants, where the questions and answers were listened to. Nominated Loiv lor II ay or. New York, Sept. 24.—The republican and Citizens' union city organizations met last night, the former at the Grand Central Palace and the latter at Cooper I'nion and nominated to head the city ticket the candidates decided on at the conference of the anti-Tammany forces. Scl li Low for mayor, Edward M. (Iron! for comp troller and Charles v. Fumes for president of the board of aldermen. Itcatli of iCx-Senaior Harwell, Chicago, Sept. 24. — Ex-l'nited States Senator Charles 11. Farwell died at his home in Forest yes terday, after several months' illness. Mr. Farwell has been a prominent figure in politics since 1>44 when he came to Chicago from Ogle county, Illinois. ISairdN Sensational Story. Indianola, la., Sept. 24.—A sensa tion developed yesterday at the trial of ex-Deputy I'nited States Marshal AV. A. Richards, who is accused of the robbery of Mr. and Mrs. F. Sullivan at Hamilton on New Year's eve, for complicity in which Frank I laird is now serving a 17-year sentence. Two thousand dollars was secured. 1 laird, who was brought from the peniten tiary, testified that Richards planned the robbery in the presence of wit nesses. summoned him by telegraph on the day of the robbery, and as sisted him and Charles Redrup, a cook, to commit the robbery. MILITARY CLOTHING DEAL Col. IC. iC. Stilton, In a Court, I'li'ad* S.Hilly ii> «'barsn ol < uey lo He! ratid the Sin e ami I» lined s2,(l(lUi Lansing, Midi., Sept. 21. Col. Eli li. Sutton, former regent of tin- sfai' university anil prominent in Michi gan r<-11 111>1 i<-;i 11 |)olitics during (iov. Pingree's administration, who re turned from Mexico to plead guilty ito the charge of conspiracy to de- I fraud the state by means of the no i torious military clothing deal, arrived ! iiere Wednesday from Sodus, N. Y., | accompanied by Prof. IC. Curtis, of i that place, who was prepared to meet j any financial requirements imposed 1 by the court. Sutton's case is one of the strang est in the history of Michigan legal i practice. He was once acquitted of I the charge of complicity in the con spiracy. after a sensational trial. Later, when (Jen. White made a com plete confession of the manner in which the frauds were perpetrated, Sutton was indicted for perjury and 1 fled to Mexico. Sutton's return was the icsult of an arrangement to nolle piosse the perjury charge against him, let him plead guilty to the charge of con- I spiracy of which he was once aequit i ted and, in return, it is stated, turn j state's evidence in cases to be brought against the a I lege d jury bribers. Inasmuch as a circuit jury once acquitted Sutton of a charge of conspiracy to defraud, it was neeesj sary to commence a new case against him 011 the same charge. A new com plaint was made and he was arraigned before Police Judge Hoe in the fore noon, waived examination <yid went j at, once to the circuit court, where he pleaded guilty. In reply to questions propounded by Circuit Judge Wiest, Sulton said he would waive his rights under the .jury's verdict of not guilty. When he was asked if that verdict was ob tained through fraud, the prisoner hesitated and then said that, the question was too general. He finally said that there was fraud in the case and that it might have influenced the verdict. After spending the afternoon closeted \\ith Judge Wiest, Sin lon came into court just, before (i o'clock to receive his sentence. Judge Wiest gave him a severe scoring and then imposed a fine of $2,000, which Sut ton paid. Its understood that Sutton during the time he was closeted with Judge Wiest. Prosecutor McArtlnir also be ing present, related everything with in his knowledge in regard to the al leged attempts at jury bribing in this county at the time of his first trial. His statements were taken down by a court stenographer and were sworn to. Sutton's fine of $2,000 is the amount paid by the other i-ien implicated in the military supplies deal. When Sutlon left the city last night he de clared that he was now free to come and go as he pleased, indicating that he is assured that he will not be prosecuted on the charge of perjury. ALL RECORDS ECLIPSED. I'rliiee Alert liop« a Uilc In 1:57 oil the Umpire City Track. New York. Sept. 24.—Prince Alert, the pacing hero of a hundred races and the champion of a score of half milte tracks, went against the world's pacing record of 1:59 held by Dau Patch and beat it most decisively at the Empire City track yesterday. It was the first day of (lie autumn meeting of the Empire City Trotti ig club and.in addition to a strong curd of four races. Prince Alert was hi led for what looked like the impossible feat of beating the record. Put Prince Alert had recently won the half-mile track championship in 2:0.'}%, which had been won only tlu> week before by Dan Patch in 2:0-1, and good judges were sanguine. The weather and track were per fect and the wind, which was high early in the day, kindly subsided so that all the conditions were favor able. Mart Demarest, the trainer and driver of Prince Alert, on account of overweight decided to get John Curry to drive and Demarest drove the thoroughbred speedmaker in front with the wind shield sulky. At the third time the starter gave the word and. pacing like a perfect piece of machinery, Prince Alert shot away to the quarter pole in :2!)'/.; as he got into the back stretch he increased bis speed and was at the half in :."s. I'lien the crowd realized that they were witnessing the fastest mile of the century and cheers and shouts of "Come on" came from grand stand and lawn. Without a break or a tremor he flashed by the three-quarter pole in l:2(j'/4, and with out any urging came on with a most superb burst of speed, crossing the wire in 1:57. In the regular program Dark Secret was the favorite in the 2:20 trot, and won easily in straight heats. Thai great speedway favorite. Swift, won the 2:<is trot and reduced his record to 2:07. In the 2:08 pace Cubanola was the choice, but was distanced in the first heat, Nonamie winning the two heats Itolibei-M Hot No Ilooty. St. Joseph, Mo., Sept. 24. —The offi cials of tlie Iturlington Railway Co in St. Joseph announce that a si«»t alile reward will be offered by the company for the arrest and convic tion xjf the four masked men who held up the Portland express north of St. Joseph Tuesday night. The railroad and express officials si ill insist that the robbers got no booty. < Foiln<! llciml In a AVa;;on Holme* Red I tank, X. J., Sept. 24. Robert Allen, jr., a prominent lawyer, died j here yesterday. There is some ln.vs- j tery about the cause of his death. I Mr. Allen who was about 70 years of | age, was found dead in a wagon • house in the rear of his residence, with a bullet wound in his head and a revolver by his side. All the cir cumstances point to suicide. It is ru mored that business Troubles were the cause of his taking his life. Mr. Allen was formerly prosecutor of Monmouth county mid had also served as member of the assembly. AMERICA LEADS Si EEL TRADE L:iit Year's <»n;p ii tiracbrd . to" Hiiop ■IKIIIS Amount «! I .j,()OII,<)(IU 'b «uu 'B'iie \* OI*I<I'N Itrcurdi The stale, department at Washing ton lias received from coii.sulai sources in Germany some notabl* comments on the development of tht world's steel industry. 01' nil coun tries producing 1 steel in l'jf)-, the United States led with an output oi 15,000,000 tons. Of one of the reports tlx* department says: "These figures grow in importance when it is remembered that tlie world's production in ls<J4 was onlj 12,831,000 tons, (lerman.v's produc tion in 1002 was 7,780.000 tons, one half that of the United States, while England's was only 5,000,000 tons, or one-third of the production of Hie tinted States. The world's total steel out put for 1902 was estimated at 35,- oon.'ion lons. This would indicate t growth of 70 per cent, in 22 years, oi an increase from a little more than 4,000,000 tons in lsso to :i5.000,000 tons in I!i!i2. The great increase it» due to the introduction of improved processes, notably the flame furnace. Pennsylvania leads nil parts of the world in the use of this furnace, and is followed by Illinois, New Knglnnd and Ohio. "The steel produced by the Ucsse mer process during 1 the last 15 years was used mostly for rails. In En gland more than half of the steel pro duced by the Bessemer process went into rails. in Germany and the- I nited States the proportion is not. so large. While the United States pro duced 9.1106,471 tons of steel ingots in 1902, il turned out only 2,870,293 tons of steel rails, or about HO per cent, of the steel ingot production. In Ger many the an omit of Bessemer steel put into rails is proportionately smaller." Her Dpifree of Conrnue. Amie had heen suffering from tooth.iche for several days. At last she consented to<ro with her pa pa to tliedentist. When she was starting, her inammu .-aid: "Xow, deare-t, be a brave little girl. Show fortitude, and. mamma will be proud of yon." Indue time Amie returned. "And did. you show fortitude?" mamma iixiuireu. .Amie he.-itated. "It hurted awful, mammaj 1 gue-- (reflectively) I showed about twenty tude."—Kansas City Journal. Plenty of Them. Biiggs—(Jilder has taken me out ir. lids automobile -juito frequently of late. Griggs—Well, 1 suppose he wants to have you ,-liare his pleasures. "You mean his troubles."—Detroit Free Press. TRIED EY TIME. Eugene E. Lario, of 751 Twentieth Avenue, ticket seller in the Union Sta tion, Denver, Col., says: "You are at liberty to repeat what I first stated through our Denver pa- yMßjjfo. pers about Doan's Kidney l'ills in the summer of 1899, for I have had no reason in the interim to change my opinion of the HaSae?. remedy. I said when first JUng interviewed that if I had a friend and acquaintance Im£| suffering from backache jjgls or kidney trouble I would KB unhesitatingly advise BBS them to take Doan's Kid- _ ney Pills. 1 was subject to severe attacks of backache, al ways* aggravated if I sat long at a desk. It struck me that if Doan's Kidney Pills performed half what they promised they might at least help. This induced me to try the remedy. It absolutely stopped the backache. 1 have never had a pain or twinge since." A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Mr. Lario will, be mailed to any part of the United States on application. Address Foster- Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale* by all druggists, price 50 cents per box. Cenuine Cartels Little Liver Pills. (tfust Bear Signature of See FaoS'mile Wrapper Below. Very omaU and as coqr to talte es sugar. lf*AtnT«V>l FOR HEADACHE. I/Am tittf FOR DIZZINESS. BHiTTLE for BILIOUSNESS 83a WC D FOR TORPID LIVER. HPiI L? FOR CONSTIPATION. M est FOR SALLOW SKIN. Wm IFOR THECOMPLEXIQH B . OKIStJKVJB MUtTHAVI _ U Ctfits I Purely Veffetail _CURE SICK HEADACHE, TOW Wibb ri«S> V> T A f'SH BBKs> / \ WATERPROOF / \ ©!UP CkSTHIW* I 6TLRYWH6R6. Y '■ The best irvctaiak skilled workmen and s!Aty-3ev«n>cari eAperirry;e hovenvxfe p TOWER'S .Slickers, Coats and Hats I famous the world over They are rnade in black or yellow for all kinds of wet work. TAWE9S and every Carment bear in j the SIGN OP ivsu ,JJ JhE p |3( _, , s guaranteed to cut sat ABOVE isfoction.AH reliable dealers sell therrv indTBLM AJ. TOWER CO.BOSTOH.MAJS..U.SJL ALL OIHIUJ TOWIK CAKAMANCO.LirJUd.TOeOHTO. CAM.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers