2 CAMERON COUHTT PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published E\«»ry Thursday* TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. I J rr year AM 11 |>ui«l in ailvance l uO ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements ure published ut the rate of r.ne dollar per square for one insertion unit llfty runs per square for eaeli subsequent insertion- Rates by the year, or for six or three months, ure low anil untforui. and will be furnished on application. Leifal and Ottleial Advertisint: per square, three times or less, <2: each subsequent inser tion 1.0 cents per square. I,ooal notices lit cents per line for one inser m rtion 5 cents per line lor eaeh subsequent consecutive insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line simple announcements of births mar riages and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, live lines or less, tii per Near: over live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising No local inserted for less than 75 cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The .lob department of the PKESS is complete and affords facilities for doing the best class of work. PAHUt l I.Alt ATTENTION PAID TO I.AV PHIN t IN<;. No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. The 'Tusineus Engineer. Not long ago the magazine called System spoke of the- "business engi teer." That is, it implied that, the wan who is to conduct a business re quire.- a technical training and stands j cm as high an intellectual plane as tha , man who constructs a bridge. By a curious anil most significant co- j incidence the University of Brussels at | just about the same time announced j that it would bestow the title of "busi ness engineer" upon the graduates of its newly established department of commercial studies. Meanwhile com mercial education, which is as techni cal as engineering education, lias raised iis head almost simultaneously in the three great commercial countries of the world. In Germany there are three new "commercial universities." one at Frankfort, one at JxMpsie. and one at Cologne, while a fourth is about to open at IJerlin. In England the uni versities of London and Manchester have added commercial courses to their curricula and the University of Bir mingham. at the suggestion of Joseph Chamberlain, has erected a "faculty of commerce." In the United States commercial high schols are numerous and departments of commerce have been introduced into many colleges and universities, notably those of Dart mouth. Michigan, Chicago and Wiscon sin. Under such circumstances is there not something to be said for the suggestion made by Prof. Waxweiler, e! the University of Brussels, that as the nineteenth century made manufac turing processes scientific so the twen tieth lentury will do commercial pro cesses the same service? It is Prof. Waxweiler's conviction that during the i twentieth century the process of dis tributing manufactured good through the markets of the world will become so complicated a profession, demanding so intimate an acquaintance with la bor and time-saving devices, with methods of transportation, and with the habits and customs of the people in various countries, that in the first place rigid preliminary training will be required, and that in the second place the business man will he set off in a professional, technical class by himself, just as much as the civil en gineer. the architect, the chemist, or the physician. Crowding and Crime. The Brooklyn Eagle thinks it ought to be worth the while of our sociologists to investigate the effect of tenement life on the psychology of city populations. "We have had the results in vital and sani tary statistics, in prison reports, in educational pamphlets, and all that, but it is evident thai the pressure of dense populations, the ceaseless al I night glare, the racket of streets, the poor food, the want of play room, the lack of even min utes (,!' solitude and self-communion, by the year together, are producing an evil effect on the young. How else are we to construe those attacks on people who go about the town, minding their own business, or who attempt to walk or row or ride in city limits? We can regart; them only as a form of social insanity. This phenomenon is not pecullarto New York. Melbourne, even, as its "iarrig-. am", a turbulent and dangerous element, and London has recently been confront ed with its horde of "hooligans," who smash windows, destroy park shrubbery, frighten women, assault old men and children and take life in a manner quite dissonant from :t!l that we have been led to respect of English courage and io\e tf a lair tight. The Absent Chaperon. Chaperons have no serious part to Jilay in an American engagement, says the London relegraph. The chaperon has never been taken seriously by Americans, it is Li only a few of the great eastern cities that the idea ob tains at all, and then only among a very limited class. Published col umns on etiquette advise the chaperon t.n every occasion, but In reality s!i> is as much a matter of tradition in most American communities as the obedient child or the stern father. Like them, she is known in the novel and drama only. When she does hold a place in the community it is as the friend of both wooed and wooer, and the official smoother of differences. THE CONSISTENT DEMOCRATIC PAP^Y. c ■ vlr • ygSpk CHANGES PARTISAN FAITH. Chicago Chronicle, Prominent Demo cratic Organ, Will Hereafter Ad vocate Republicanism. The Chicago Chronicle, since its ■ founding a democratic newspaper, con- : tinually friendly to sound money, an- j nounces in its issue of July 12 that here- i I alter it. will advocate the principles and j candidates ot the republican party. The j editorial in which it makes this declara- | tion follows: TIIK riIROXICBE RKPCBDICAN. W ben 1,000 men, representing the i!cmn crats of the I'nited States, most of th'-m chosen with much difficulty as represents- t tives of what Is called conservative democ racy. permit a mere demagogue to bull*; j them into wrongdoing it must be that t! J • demagogue in greater than the party. Two-thirds of the delegates to the na- i tionii 1 democratic convention voted tor ' Judge Barker on the first ballot—the man whom .Mr Bryan had traduced for three months, the man whose friends Mr. Bryan j had vilified, the man who Mr. Bryan had said should not be nominal' land could not be elected. When a cowardly committee representing these delegates brought in a platform which was silent on the money question not a volte was raised in expostulation or pro test While hundreds were ready to shout for Barker, not one appeared in defense of elementary i> mocracy. Mr Bryan n.>i only gracious y permits the t.'emocraMe party to name a candidate whom he lias done his best to defeat in advance, hut he places him on a platform with a hole In it big enough to drop the t ntire party through. It is had enough to have Mr Bryan dom : inating radical democratic conventions, i When Mr Bryan is able to silence a "con servative" democratic convention the sit uation becomes Intolerable A mixture of William J. Bryanism and David B. Hiliism j is insupportable. The Chronicle Is not In sympathy with Mr. Bryan's ideas. For • ight years it has i refused to believe that Mr. Bryan's Ideas j were acceptable to the real democrats of t» e country. The result at St. Bonis tip- | pears to end the discussion. He and Hill : are in control. He and Hill have named the ; ticket iind made the platform. A timid eastern democrat, who fondly imagined that he could be nominated as : an unknown, has been placed on the ticket | with an octogenarian free siSverlte from j West Virginia and supplied with a plat- j form which amounts to an indorsement l of the platforms of Chicago and Kansas ! • 'it? The populistic west and the reaction-.! ary south are again in alliance, with a r.ew" leader, it is true, bu: with no change in ! principle and purpose. The ticket hears the stamp of populism. There is not a plank in i the p.atform which was not modified by populism. The democratic party is attached to Bry- j anistn. it is subservient to Bryan, it has 1 been persuaded against its natural inclina- j tions to nominate an unknown candidate, | whom Bryan has antagonized, but it has permitted Bryan to do the rest. The dem- j erratic party is Bryan, and there is no I reason to suppose that its triumph under j the leadership of a man who voted twice j for Bryan and fro< silver, and boasted of it, I would be anything else than a triumph for I Bryan. Disagreeing fundamentally with this leader and his party in most things, and agreeing with the republican party in the | essentials of its creed, the Chronicle to-day I ; takes leave of the democratic party and } | allies itself with the republicans, j As ut present constituted and led, the j | democratic party is a menace to the j eace, ] the prosperity and the integrity of,the ! I'nited States and Its people. It has dis carded democratic princip.es and taken up j with the radicalism of populists and social j lsts and the obstructionism and the tow ' ardice ol' wreckers anJ demagogues. No I good can come out of it. With a blank for a ' candidate and a blank for a platform, it i will become more and more it contemptible ' instrumentality for the exploitation of j William J. Bryan and the school of ilema | gonuts following in his train. ! The Chronicle believes that the repub , lican party, while not free of fault by any means, offers the American people at this time the only prospect of efficient, intelli gent and honest government that is anj where to be seen, and. so believing, it will do what it can to advance 'ts principles me lo strengthen its candidates. c ; "Tho campaign itself will not injure business at all. Whatever injury there is will lie due solely to tJie superstition of business men that presidential cam paigns and poor trade necessarily go to- j get her. —Chicago Record-Herald. tU"One swallow does not make a sum- j mer. neither does it cut much figure in 1 a national campaign, even though it be a presidential candidate.—Pueblo Chief tain. s The declaration against trusts in the democratic platform will hardiy surprise their promoters. The business is one which dees not depend on com plimentary notices. —Cleveland Leader. 1 IT?" Bryan was in the army and would ; have helped storm a hill if it had come J within his line of duiy. His direct cour age in dealing with political sneaks and shufflers has betn proved.—St. Ljuis Globe-De'viocrat. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY. JULY 28, 1904. THE FUELIC IS SATISFIED. Whatever the Roosevelt Administra tion Has Undertaken It Has Carried Through. The spec h of John Sharp Williams, i temporary chairman of the democratic national convention at St. Louis, indi cates that the time is at band when the \ administration at. Washington is to be J "arraigned," "indicted" and "viewed j l with alarm" because of its most note- j j worthy acts in the last four years. What are those acts? asks the Chicago j | Inter Ocean. The administration interfered in the hard cop' strike. At the time the peo i pie of Chicago Xew York and ahundred i | other i ities were 011 the verge of mob I j law. Vet no sooner did President | Roosevelt interfere than there was tranquillity throughout the nation. The administration got there, and the i results were what the people wanted. The administration proceeded against J i the Northern Securities company. It j ; established beyond doubt or question 1 | the fact that in this country no indi- ! J vicinal, no corporation is above the law. | | Again the administration got there. I ! and the result was what the people J wanted'. Tli ■ administration grappled with tl:o ! problem of half a century on the isth i mus (.! Panama. Despite tempestuous j | assaults from the democrats and anti- | imp'.rialiMs. it overcame a!I difficulties | and solved the problem. To-day there , is nothing more in doubt on the isth- J mus. The administration got there. : and the result is what the American . people have wanted for 50 years. The administration set. out, in the | face of hot opposition, to pacify the | Philippines. To-day there is peace in j the islands. Again the administration I got there, and the result is what the ! people have wanted. The administration went ou f toshow | that every American citizen, every j where, is to have the protection of the | flag. It. determined to rescue lon Per ! dicaris. an American citizen, from the ~ brigands of Morocco. Perdicari.y is j lree. and there is peae-e r.nd respect for the American citizen in Morocco. The I administration got there, and the re j suit is what American citizens wanted. Carping as to ways and means is all that is left, in tiiese cases to the oppo j nents of the administration. The re sults speak for themselves. The people I will speak for them. too. Declaration of Nullification. The South Carolina democratic state convention deserves credit at least for | being outspoken on the race question. One of its planks, after declaring will- I ingness to make generous provision for I the education of colored children and j expressing sympathy with the negroes' ; efforts to acquire property, enjoy lib j erty and elevate their race, neverthe | less says it is "indispensable to the | permanency of peace in the state and essential to the welfare of otir poo- J p'.e, white and colored alike, that in j matters political the will of the white j people shall be supreme, and we avow ! our purpose to maintain white stiprem i aey." That is, no matter what the | constitution and laws of the United j States say, the colored citizen shall j not exercise the suffrage to which those | provisions entitle him. South Carolina has previously shown a disposition tc nullify federal authority, but it is not lon record that she succeeded.—Troy j ( N. Yj Times. tr? Bourke Cockran's comment on the democratic platform: '.'They have strangled the party to save the organiza tion," is epigrammatic, and might we] j serve for the epitaph which will be need i e»! later on.—X. V. Tribune. U What is a dor r-nail. my son? Why | it is a thing that is quite as dead, not tc say damned, a- is the average, demo cratic issue.—Judge. z Vice Presidential Candidate Davis, of West Virginia, was born November 16, 1823. If elected he will be inangurat i ed in his eighty-third year. Mr. Davit is a democratic free silver populist, but lon account of his great age it would be : interesting to know whom Judge Parker ; has in mind for secretary of state in the event <»? his election. Here is where David R Hill might stand pretty close to the presidential succession.—Chicagt Chronicle. HE WAS WILLING TO PAY. But Was a Xittle Too Foremost in Ordering the Help Around. A lively looking porter stood on the roar of ;i car in the Pennsylvania depot. A JH.-t-y and choleric-looking old man clambered up tiie steps. He stopped on the platform, puffed a moment, relates the ('leveland Plain Dealer, and then turned to the young man in uniform aud *uid: "Peter!" "Yes, sir!" "1 am going to St. Louis. I want to he well taken eaie ol and can pay for it. JJo jiiu understand'.'" "Ye.-, sir; I hope—" "Never mind what you hope. You listen to whut I say. Keep the train boys away from me. Dust me on whenever I want you to. (live me an extra blanket, and if any fellow has the berth above me, slide him over into another one . 1 want you to —" "Hut, say. boss, 1 —" "Don't talk too much, young man. Here's two dollars. Now I want to get the good of it. Not a word, sir." The train was starting. The porter swung off to the platform. "All right, boss," he shouted. "I'm pow erful sorry you wouldn't let me talk, but 1 ain't going out on that train." Wrong House. An attendant at -Mount Vernon not long rince found a lady weeping mo.-t bittcly and audibly with her hanrikere'i ief at her eyes, lie stepped up to her and -aid: "Are you in any trouble, madam?" "No. sir." she sobbed. "I saw you weeping." I "Ah!" said -lie. "how can one help wcep ; ing at the grave of the Father of ll.s Coun i try ?" "Oh! Indeed, madam." said he. "that's it ! The t< mb i« over yonder. This is the ; ice house."- Indianapolis Journal. Of Wide Interest. Breed, \Yi-., July IS-- special—Ch.is. Y. | Peterson, Justice of the Peace for Oconto j I C 0., has delivered a judgment that is ot ill- j terest to the w hols United States. Put I I briefly, that Judgment t-, "Dodd's Kidney I ; Pills are the best Kidney medicine on the ; market to-day." And -Mr. Peterson gives his reason for ; | this judgment. He says: "Last winter I j j an aching pain in my back which j troubled me very much. In tiie morning i I 1 could hardly straighten my back. I did I not know what it was but an advertisement I led me to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. After I taking one box I can only say tliry have done i more for me than expected as 1 feel as well | now as ever I did before." Pain in the hack i< one of the first svmp j Joins of Kidney ilisease. If not cured by j Dodd's Kidney Pills it may develop into Uright's Diabetes. Rheumatism or ; Mirne of the other deadly forms of Kidney j Disease. Signs of the Times. "Now is the time to lay in your coal!" is j the peculiar way a ijiri in the window of a ) Brooklyn store reads. I.e«« mnbiguousis the | placard ot a tailor on the same block, who has a genius for advertising. It says: "Pants, 50 cents a leg: if von buy two | leg-, the seat thrown in." —N. Y. Times. • | Don't Get Footsore! Get Foot-Ease. ; A wonderful powder that cures tired, hot, j aching feet and makes now or tight shoes | easy. Ask to-day for Allen's Foot-Ease. Accept no substitute. Trial package I'REE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Appropriate. "Why. that coat doesn't tit a bit." said | Edgar's -i-tcr; "it's all waves up and down your back." "Titat i- what 1 told the tailor, but heeaid i | you had to expect that because it was a • surge suit!"— Ktra\ Storie-. Fits stopped free ami permanently cured. I Xo fits after first day's use of Dr. Kline's I Great Nerve Restorer. Free $2 trial bottle & j I treatise. Dr. Kiine, 'J3I Arch st., l'liila., Pa. i Mrs. Malaprop, Jr., declares that noth- j J lng affects her composition so much as j ! this craze for automof)il:ly. She declares ' that she fairly hates the sight ol a chat- I ierer. Indianapolis News. I am sure I'i.-oV Cure for Consumption caved rf.y life three years ago. Mr.-. Thos | Robbing Norwich. N. Y Feb. 17,1900. Love your neighbor, but don't tear ; down the fence. Chicago Journal. THE MARKETS. New York, July 22, 1901. Flour —Steady but inactive. Wheat —No. 2 red $ 1.07. Corn —No. 2 yellow 50y^c. Oats —Natural white 47 , / &@r»lc. Hay—Quiet. Beeves —Steers $4.00©5.85. Veals 1 | $4.00@7.00. Sheep—Best wethers $2.5tM7 -1.25, : lambs s4.Uo@(i.&ij. Hogs—Yorkers $5.90@G.00. Cleveland. July 23. —Flour —Minue- | sota patent s.fio. Wheat —No. 2 rod $1.05. Corn —No. 2 yellow soc. Oats —No. 11 white 4He. Hutter —Uest creamery lS'io. Cheese—York state 9c. Eggs-—Strictly fresh 20c. Potatoes —Best grades Me. Hay—Choice timothy $13.00. Cattle —Best steers ijfl.OS, choice calves $C.25(5,0.50. Sheep—Choice wethers $3.75@>4.00, lambs $5.00®5.25. Hogs—Yorkers $5.45. Toledo, July 23. Wheat —July sl.Ol. Corn —Cash 52'£c. Oats —Cash 42c. Cloverseed —Cash $0.30. East Buffalo, July 23.—Cattle— i Prime steers $G.25f/ 0.50. Best veals $0.50® 7.00. Sheep—Best wethers $4.254.75, spring lambs $0.25® 0.50. Hogs—Best Yorkers $5.70, pigs so. 1 5. Pittsburg, July 23. —Cattle —Choice j steers $G.00®0.25, good $5.30@5.00. Sheep—Prime wethers $4.C0@4.70, lambs $3.50(fiC.00. For Infants and Children ' r s Signalu yHp jJdT Thirty Years LjJ/UtM* The Kind You Have Always Bought I TKt 6MTMn COMPMIV, *1 MUMIAY • !*««▼, NIW VOBA ©IT». THE WEAK SPOT. A weak, aching back tells of sick kidneys. It aciies 'jppHßk when you work. It '\AEgf aches when you try ffiSgL to rest. It throbs changeable 112. tof' weather. Urinary troublesadd toyour misery. No rest, ir no comfort, until ' the kidneys are lift well. Cure them i'h with Doan's Kidney W piiis - Mrs. W. M. Dausch fl\l UN er, of 25 Water St., I Bradford, Pa.,says: ] "I had an almost continuous pain in the small of the back. My ankles, feet, hands and almost my whole body were bloated. 1 was languid and the kidney secretions were profuse. Physicians told me I bad diabetes in its worst form, and I feared 1 would never re cover. Doan's Kidney Pills cured me in 1800, and I have been wj-11 ever since." A FREE TRIAL of this preat kidney medicine which cured Mrs. Dauscher will be mailed toany partof the United States. Address Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Sold by all dealers, price 50 cents per box. It Cures Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Croup, Influ enza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in tirst stages, atul a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect after taking tha first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Largs bottles '4i centa and 50 cents. FREE to WOMEN A Large Trial Box and book of in structions absolutely Free and Post paid, enough to prove the value of Paxtine T oile t An t ise ptic § Paxtine Is in powder form to dissolve lit voter non-poisonous and tar superior to Hqu id antiseptics containing alcohol which irritates Inflamed surfaces, and have no cleansing prop erties. The contents ol every box makes more Antiseptic Solu jfocs further—has more uses In the family and does more good than any antiseptic preparation The formula of a noted Boston physician, and used with great success as a Vaginal Wash, forLeucorrhoea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane, j Inloealtreatmentof female ills Paxtine is invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we j challenge the world to produce its equal for ; thoroughness. Itisarcvclationincleansing I and healing power; it kills all germs which j cause inflammation and discharges. I All leadingdruggists keep Paxtiiio; price, Eoe. a box i if yours does not, send to usforlt. Don't j tal.o a substitute— there is nothing like Paxtine. Write for the Free 15ox of Paxtine to-day. R. PAXTON CO., 4 Pope Eldg., Boston. Mass. DOMINION EXHIBITION JULY 26 to AUGUST 6 WINNIPEG, MANITOBA THE BEST EXPOSITION OF AGRI CULTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL RESOURCES OF CANADA EVER MADE. j An aggregation of attractions never before presented at an exhibition of this kind. Ample Accommodation for visitors. Low Railroad Rates from all United States points. Particulars given by CANADIAN GOVERNMENT AGENTS cr NEAREST TICKET AGENT. LIVE STOCK AND I MISCELLANEOUS ! Electrotypes i BMnriMiTi I IN GREAT VARIETY FOR SALE AT THE LOWEST PRICES B\' I A. N. KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO. 71 Ontario Street, Cleveland. S SCHMELZ i CO.'Sf xi I Sluice Pipe. S J) A [L 1 II fl | j] IMPROVE YOUR ROADS with jjj a STEEL and WOQD SLUICING |0 xi Ln ll The Steel pipe * 8 made of cold rolled, fp J] heavy sheet steel, n vited so at to leave it fL "J smooth inside. pipe is covered with ui J| a preparation that makes it rust proof, m u The wood pipe is made of staves matched LTj J1 and grouved, bound with heavy iron fll U hands, treated chemically against runt LT J| and coated with a preparation that will (1? u stand climate and will practically ex- IT) /] elude moisture. The entire length is of rt \1 even diameter. Obstructions will not IS] Jl lodge in it. Manufactured in all sizes up fll TJ to SIXTY INCHBS. In J1 Write lor catalogue and prices, or a f'J 11 postal card will bring to you a represen- LQ J1 tative with Mimplesof our goods. Hi "U in What are Sluice Pipes Used For ? jji They are used on roads and highways [}• Ji to convey water under the road bed irom streams and ditches to keep the roafl bed j"j dry and prevent washouts in heavy rains j^j :jj and showers. (i r? Schmelz & Co., j| Coudersport. Pa. h \sra SES2SHSH-©> 3 cr =SHSHSESSH , L Anyone fending a sketch and description ma? qolcitljr ascertain our opinion free whether an i InT«Mit.lon Is probably patentable. C'ommuiilen t tons at rietl?confidential. HANDBOOK on I'ateuta I sent, frofv Oldest agency fur securing patents. Patents taken through Munu fc Co. receive wperiai notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms, f.i a year; four months, sl. Bold by all newsdealers. MUMN & 0Q a 361 Broadway, New York - Branch Otlloo. 626 IT St., Washington, D. C. / We prniiiptly (ihittin I;. H. anJ in:, / i / Scud model, sketch or photo of inventicrj for < r free report on patentability. For free hook, 112 j | Patents und |j fllaflam Deans I fc3s A safe, certain relief for Suppressed K H Menstruation. Never known to full, i'ufc! i §3 Sure! Speedy! Satisfaction Guaranteed B Hor money Refunded. Sent prepaid for B gj 81.00 per box. Will Nend them on 1 rlt l, to B C 3 be paid for when relieved. Samples tree. B p| UWITtD MIDICALCO., BOX 7«. UWC»»T:» P. B Sold lu Emporium by L. iTaggart ant R. C. Dodson. Easy and Quick! Soap=Making with BANNER LYE To make the very best soap, simply dissolve a can of Banner lye in cold water, melt 5 'j lbs. of grease, pour the Lye water in the grease. Stir and put aside to set. i Full Directions on Every Package Banner l.ye is pulverized. The can may be opened and closed at will, per mitting the use of a small quantity at a time. It is just the article needed irv every household. It will clean paint, floors, marble and tile work, soften water, disinfect sinks, closets and waste pipes. •Write for booklet "Uses of Banner Lye '' —free. The Peon Chemical Works. I'hiladtlphfe wrAapgyqtf >mu -m ] «Y T ny* A eure guaranteed if you u«o E PILES Supposltoryi ■ * i K Tbotnpaon, flupt. R ■ (Iradod S'hooia, Btltaavllle, N. writes " 1 ami mr K B the? do ail you claim for them. ' I>r. S. M. Devor*, H « fsctlnu." L>r. H. I».' MitQIII, Ciarkabirg. Troo . writ«-a g 3| *qual jours." Paici, 60 i inn. Free. Bold R. So d in* Kmporiuu by 1 fT*g£»rt aai A. <# OMUI.IL EVERY WOMAW Sometimes needs a reliabl# S monthly regulating mediciutv. ' i DR. PEAL'S I PENNYROYAL PILLS, Are prompt, eafo and certain in result. The genu ine (Dr. I'eal's) never disappoint. 81.00 pel' bojv Sold by R. C. Dodson, druggist CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL FILLS , dfik , Hjkto. Alwavs rt'liablf. I'riißpist Tor C'HiniIMKK'K in K4'(l nnd 4«ol«l metal lit! hoxos, scul**