NOTE.— The following article has been widely published a.ml is one of the most remarkable illustrations of the value of careful marshalling and analy sis of facts in presenting a. subject to the public. LEVELERS The Mission of Whiskey, Tobacco nnil Coffee. The Creator made all things, we be lieve. If so. He must Lave made these. We know wliat He made food and water for, and air t.nd sunshine, but why Whiskey, Tobacco and Coffee? They are here sure enoug> and each performing Its work. There must be some great plan behind it all; the thoughtful man seeks to un derstand something of that plan and thereby to judge these articles for their true worth. IA-.I us not say "had" or "good" with out taking testimony. There are, times an(4 conditions when It certainly seems to the casual observer that these stimulant narcotics are rea! blessings. Right there is the ambush that con ceals a "killing" enemy. One can slip into the habit of either whiskey, tobacco or coffee easy enough, but to "untangle" is often a fearful struggle. It seems plain that there are circum stances when the narcotic effect of these poisons is for the moment beneficial, but the fearful argument against them is that seldom ever does one find a steady user 01 either whiskey, coffee or tobacco free from disease of some kind. Certainly powerful elements in their effect on the human race. It is a matter of daily history testified to by literally millions of people that Whiskey. Tobacco and Coffee are smil ing, promising, beguiling friends on the start, but always false as hell itself in the end. Once they get firm hold enough to show their strength, they insist, upon governing and drive the victim steadily towards ill health in some form; if per mitted to continue to rule, they will not let up until physical and mental ruin sets in. A man under that spell (and "under the spell" is correct) of any one of these drugs frequently assures himself and his friends: "Why. I can leave off any time I want to. I did quit for a week just to show I could." It is a sure mark of the slave when one gets to that stage. He wiggled through a week fighting every day to break the spell, was finally whipped and began his slavery all over Kcain. The slave (Coffee slave as well as To baceo and Whiskey) daily reviews his condition, sees perfectly plain the steady encroachments of disease, how ihe nerves get weaker day by day and de mand the drug that seems to smile and offer relief for a few minutes and then leave the diseased condition plainer to view than ever and growing worse. Many times the Coffee slave realizes that he is between two fires. He feels bad Jf he leaves off and a little worse if he drinks and allows the effect tr> wear off. Ho it. goes on from day today. Kvery night the struggling victim promises himself that he will break the habit and next day when he feels a little bad (as he is quite sure to) breaks, not the habit, but his own resolution. It is nearly al ways a tough fight, with disaster ahead * ||r '' if the habit wins. Tbere have been hundreds of thou sands of people driven to their graves through disease brought. 011 by coffee drinking alone, ami it is quite certain that more human misery is caused by toffee and tobacco than by whiskey, for the two first are more widely used, anu more hidden and insidious in the effect on nerves, heart and other vital organs, «nd are thus unsuspected until much of tiie dangerous work is done. Now, Reader, what is your opinion as to the real use the Creator has for these things? Take a look at the question Irom this point of view. There is a law of Nature and of Na ture's God that things slowly evolve from lower planes to higher, a sturdy, steady and dignified advance toward more perfect tilings in both the Phys ical and Spiritual world. The ponderous tread of evolutionary development is fixed by the Infinite and will not be quickened out of natural law by any of man's methods. Therefore we see many illustrations showing how nature checks too rapid ad vance. Illinois raises phenomenal crops •if corn for two or three years, if she continued to do so every year her farm ers would advance in wealth far beyond those ot other sections or countries. So Nature interposes a liar every three or four years and brings 011 a "bad year." Here we see the leveling influence at work. A man is prosperous in his business for a number of years and grows rich. Then Nature sets the "leveling influ ence" at work on him. Some of his in vestments lose, he becomes luxurious and lazy. Perhaps it is whiskey, to bacco, coffee, women, gambling, or some other form. The intent and purpose is to level him. Keep him from evolving too far ahead of the masses. A nation becomes prosperous and Kreat like ancient Rome, if no leveling influence set in she would dominate the world perhaps for all time, nut Dame Nature sets her army of "levelers" at work. Luxury, over-eating and drink ing, licentiousness, waste and extrav agance, indulgences of all kinds, then comes the wreck. Sore. Sure. Sure. The law of the unit is the law of the mass. Man goes through the same proc ess. Weakness (in childhood), grad ual growth of strength, energy, thrift, probity, prosperity, wealth, comfort, i*ase, relaxation, self-indulgence, lux ury, idleness, waste, debauchery, dis ease, and the wreck follows. The "lev elers" are in the bushes along the path way of every successful man and woman mid they bag the majority. Only now and then can a mart\gtand out against these "levelers" andXheld fcis fortune, fame and health to thelipd- So the Creator has use for Whiskey, Tobacco and Coffee to level down the successful ones and those who show signs of being successful, and keep them back in the race, so that the great "Held" (the masses) may not be left too far be hind. And yet we must admit that same all wise Creator has placed it in the power of man to stand upright, clothed in the armor of a clean cut steady mind and say unto himself, "I decline to ex change my birthright for a mess of potage." "1 will not deaden my senses, weaken my grip 011 affairs and keep myself cheap, common and behind in fortune ami fame by drugging with whiskey, tobacco or coffee, life i c . too short. It is hard enough to win the good things, without any sort of handicap, so a man is certainly a 'fool trailer' when he trades strength, health, money, and the good things that come with power, for the half-asleep condition of the 'drug ger' with the certainty of sickness aud disease ahead." It is a matter each Individual must de cide for himself. He can be a leader and semi-god if he will, or h-" «"an go along through life a drugged clown, a cheap "hewer of wood or carrier of water." Certain it is that while the Great Father of us all does not seem to "mind" if some of his children are foolish and stupid, he seems to select others (per haps those he intends for some special work) and allows them to be threshed and castigated most fearfully by these "levelers." If a man tries flirting with these lev elers awhile, and gets a few slaps as a hint, he had better take the hint or a good solid blow will follow. When a man tries to live upright, clean, thrifty, sober, and undrugged, manifesting as near as he knows what the Creator intends he should, happi ness, health and peace seem to come to him. Does it pay? This article was written to set people thinking, to rouse the "God within" for every highly organized man and woman has times when they feel a some thing calling from within for them to press to the front and "be about the Father's business," don't mistake it; the spark of the Infinite is there and it pays in every way. health, happiness, peace, ar.d even worldly prosperity, to break off the habits and strip clean for the work cut out for us. It has been the business of the writer to provide a practical and easy way for people to break away from the coffee habit and be assured of a return to health and all of the good things that brings, provided the abuse has not gone too far, and even then the cases where the body has been rebuilt 011 a basis .>£ strength and health run into the thou sands. j It is an easy and comfortable step to I stop coffee instantly by having wcll j made Pus turn Food Coffee served rich j and hot with good cream, for the color j and flavor is there, but none of the caf feine or other nerve-destroying elements of ordinary coffee. On the contrary the most powerful rebuilding elements furnished by Na ture are in Postum and they quickly set about repairing the damage. Seldom is it more than 2 days after the change is made before the old stomach or bowel troubles or complaints of kidneys, heart, head or nerves show unmistakable evi dence of getting better and ten days time changes things wonderfully. Literally millions of brain-working Americans today use Postum, having found the value and common sense in the change. C. W. POST. TALKS WITHOUT TONGUE. Bobbed of Organ by Surgical Opera tion, New Jersey Man Articulates Better Than Before. Tongucless, yet able to talk better ] than when in possession of His organ I of speech—that is the remarkable con ; dition of William Bunting, a wealthy bachelor of ISimer, N. J.. who received treatment recently in Philadelphia. Mr. Hunting came 10 the Hahnemann hospital to have his throat treated for | what he believed to be inflammation, ! caused by a severe cold. Upon investi j gation the doctors found the disease to Lie much more serious than the patient had suspected, and that in order to save his life his tongue must be re moved. It was swollen to twice its normal si/.e, so that Mr. Bunting was unable to articulate plainly. After the operation the first words the patient spoke, "Is it all over?" were the plainest, he bad spoken since his trouble began, several years ago. Those in attendance were able to un derstand everything lie said. Wrong Department. A prominent physician (ells this story at the expense of the modern craze for specialization in the medical profession. A poor woman went to a dispensary lo ask for aid for her little son, who had had one of his fingers smashed. At the first room where she applied she was told by a curt attend ant that the boy could not be treated there. "Wrong place," he explained, "this is the eye and ear department." "Vcre is der thumb and finger de partment?" inquired the woman, sim ply.—Tit-Bits. Where the Sin Lay. A rather plain lady asked the opin ion of her minister: "Is it a sin to feel .1 trifle of vanity when 1 am called handsome by a gen -1 leman?" "Not a sin for you. my child, but a terrible responsibility hangs upon the gentleman."— Tit-Bits. Not Too Fast. Mrs. Weeds—l suppose the law in this state gives the widow her third. ■lawyer—Oh! yes; but you've got to get rid of your tecond first— Chicago Journal. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1904. TERRIFIC EXPLOSION IN A MINE " TERCIO, COL., THE SCENE OF THE DISASTER. Exact Number of Men Killed Is Not Known, but It Is Believed that at Least 30 and Maybe 60 Lives Were LosL Trinidad, Col., Oct. 2i l. —From "0 to 1 60 men lost their lives in a terrific ex plision which occurred at mine No. 3 ! of the Rocky Mountain Fuel Co. at | Tercio, 10 miles west of Trinidad, 1 Friday afternoon. The exact number of dead may never be known, as the ! mine is burning and in all likelihood i the bodies will be consumed. A large ! number of mine officials left here as : soon as word of the accident was re ceived Company doctors were pick ed up all along the line, as well as all other available physicians. F. J. Fore man. a government stock inspector, was at Tercio when the explosion oc curred. He returned here last night and gave the following account of the affair: "I was standing not more than 300 j yards from the mouth of the tunnel I when the explosion occurred. The 1 explosion was preceded by a low I rumbling sound, resembling an earth ; quake, which made the earth tremble and startled the whole camp. "1 looked toward the mine and out | of the mouth of the tunnel and two air shafts came a great volume of smoke and dust, which continued for nearly ! a minute. Out of the two air shafts, each of which are seven feet in diame ter, timbers fully three feet in diame ! ter were shot into the air and broken it.to splinters. Rocks were thrown over the camp for a distance of a quarter of a mile. In fact, it rained rocks, broken timbers and all kinds of debris for fully a minute and many people were injured by being struck | with these missiles. "The explosion, which resembled a volcanic eruption, caused the wildest excitement. Men, women and chil ; dreu rushed to the mouth of the tun : nel, and women whose husbands were !in the mine had to be brought away by miners to prevent their being killed by the fumes coming from the 1 mouth of the tunnel." The mine in which the explosion | occurred employed SO men and it is believed that at least. 00 were in the mine at the time. News of the explo sion brought assistance from the ad jacent camps and last night hundreds of men were trying to enter the mine. Deadly fumes overcame the rescuers frequently, but their places immedi ately were taken by others ready to risk their lives. It was not thought possible that any one in the mine could escape death, j Nearly all the miners employed are Slavs. The mine was opened only a year ago and extended 2,000 feet into the bill. The explosion is supposed to have been caused by dust. Hut one body has been recovered, that of T. Duran. a driver who was just entering the tunnel when the explosion oc curred. He was torn and bruised al most beyond recognition. All the mines within a radius of 20 miles have been shut down and the miners are on the way to assist in the rescue of the bodies. DUN'S REVIEW OF TRADE. Manufacturing Plants are Making Steady Gains, Particularly in the Leading Industries. New York, Oct. 29. R. O. Dun's Weekly Review of Trade says: Mild weather early in the week checked the distribution of seasonable goods, but had a permanent value in facilitating the harvesting of cotton and late grain. Subsequently the I i temperature fell, restoring retail 1 trade in wearing apparel, fuel and similar products to greater activity than was experienced a year ago. ! Building operations are active, strengthening the markets for lumber and materials. Manufacturing plants are making steady gains, particularly in the lead- j ing industries, and it is significant that reluctance to do business has shifted from the buyers to sellers, eliminating largely the concessions in prices that prevented stability. Labor is unusually well employed, judging iby the official compilation of the | unions. Railway freight blockades , cause some complaint, which is re markable in view of the restricted grain movement, and earnings in the three weeks of October were 9.2 pei cent, larger than in 1903. ; In the iron and steel industry new cars and ships are requiring very large tonnage of plates, and praetic- j ally every department except stee! rails has aroused from the dull con dition so long prevalent. Improve ment is emphasized by the large or. j ders for pig Iron. Failures this week numbered 233 in the United States, against 253 last j year, and 2S in Canada, compared < with 15 a year ago. Almshouse Is a Fire Trap. New York, Oct. 29.—The Kingi ; county grand jury yesterday con : demned Raymond street jail and the Kings county almshouse in its pre ! sentment to Judge Aspinall, of the | : county court in Brooklyn. The alms- j | house, In which are 1,200 old men and i women, was declared to be a fire trap. ; The jail was described as a dungeon. | Mother and Son Asphyxiated. Pittsburg, Oct. 29. —What was first , j thought to be a double suicide of j mother and son is novr believed to ! ! have been the result of asphyxiation- j When Anthony Dix returned home i ! from his work yesterday he found the ! , bodies of his wife and son in the son's 1 room which adjoins the kitchen. The j j kitchen stove was throwing out foul | tins and it is believed the mother ! when she found herself becoming uf fected by the fumes went to the boy's i room to arouse him, but succumbed to i the poisoned air before either could | escape. Business Announcement. j Among the oddities in the »moke room of ' I Clyde Fitch's country house at North Cos- I | cob there is * notice of the dissolution of I * partnership between two colored barbers. The notice, three feet square, is written in I red ink on yellow paper. It occupies a cor-I ) ner between two crossed canoe paddles, and it reads: "de Dissolution of co-parsnips heretofo ; 1 resisting Betwix Mc and mo/.e Jones in de j barber profession «n heretofo disolvcd. j pussons Who O must pay to de subscriber, j J)cm what de firm Os must call on Jones, j as de firm is insolved."—N. Y. Sun. Why He Studies Lftw. Wall Street—So your son is studying l»w. Do you expect that he will slick to it r i Speculator Oh, no: I just want him to know enough about it so that he will be able to evade it successfully.—Detroit Free j l'ress. Six Doctors Failed. | South Uend, Ind., Oct. 24 (Special).— I After suffering from Kidney Disease for three years; ufter taking treatment from ! six different doctors without getting re- J lief, Air. J. O. Laudeman, of this place, j found not only relief but a speedy and ! complete cure in Dodd's Kidney Fills. Speaking of his cure, Mr. I.audeman says: "Yes, I suffered from Kidney Trouble ! for three years arul tried six doctors to no 1 good. Then 1 took just two boxes of Dodd's I Kidney Fills and they not only cured my kidneys, but gave me better health in gen eral. Of course 1 recommended Dodd's Kidney Fills to others and I known number now who are using them with good results." Mr. I.audeman a ease is not an excep tion. Thousands give similar experiences. For there never yet was a ease of Kidney Trouble from Backache to Fright's Disease that Dodd's Kidney Fills could not cure. They are the only remedy that ever cured Fright's Disease. "Some of your opponents, Colonel, are accusing you of putting money into politics," said the plain citizen. "Well, some of the others have been accusing me of taking money out of it," replied the colonel, "so things are about even up."—Philadelphia Press. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of •s a cough cure. —J. W. O'Brien", Third Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. l>, liiOO. The Chiropodists' society, of Chicago, has been incorporated. Hooray for tho corn crop!— Chicago Journal. A fdl growi: elephant can carry ihrri ton* •ii its back. Being eloquently silent is a gilt bejond the reach of art.—Bovee. He m;ikes little out of life who i.» always on the make.—Chicago Tribune. A slender income is said to be an excellent remedy for obesity.—Chicago Daily News. Life isn't a dream to the man with the silver dollars in iiis pocket it's a jingling reality!— Atlanta Constitution. Boiled microbes may not be any rtior® palatable than raw ones, but they are not naif si> dangerous to the average human be ing.—Chicago t ,'hronicle. At the entrance of a little provincial restaurant on wiiieh the sun pours down, there has been this sign all summer: "On hot days the veranda i- inside."- Le Kigaro. Face patches are coming into style again. Tiiis is mighty good news at a time when almost any of us are liable t" get into a political discussion.— Indianapolis News. "I'm «o glad t <• boys of your company gave you that handsome revolver," said the militia's captain's wife. "Wo need nave no fear now of tii.- burglars infesting this neigh* borhood." "That's what,!" replied the gal lant captain. "I've got it locked up in the office safo where they can't get at it."— Philadelphia Fublie Ledger. The Chauffeur's Idea. "What," asked the license board of the chauffeur, "is a pedestrian?" "1 have never see one altogezzer. mon sieur," said the chauffeur, "but /c pieces, zey look like he was someziisg ali\t licit.re we hit him."—-St. Paul lllobe. Confirming' an Old Theory. "A lot o" people was killed n New ork from drinkin' wood alcohol," -aid Bronco Bob, who gets the only paper that comes to Crimson tluleh. "Well," answered Three-Finger Sam, "it's terrible to think of what weak stomachs us Americans have.l guess those seientilic sharps are right when they -ay He are getting to be .t nation oi dyspeptics."— Washington Star. —mm fplSfjH® |The Kind You Have Always Bough! similalingUieFoodandßcgula- r JI / ; ting the Stomachs and Bowels of || INGOTS til 6 / PromolcsDigisnonJChcorr.il- I ness and Rest. Con tains neither II c ff If. §p Opium, Morphine nor >lineraL : m 01 iffy /\ \j NOT M / 1\ /a»vr ofOUAr.WL 'EL PnVJWi ffl . fV JlfkrlU Snllt J -'jß jtfl 1 jitUAc Sfrtl t 1 •JE JK lSpy! & I n VWrW - > fg f\ i ft 1 1 111 Jit 1 i»Wji I \ VIA I II 11 \J 1 |/fl .112 Hop Apetferl Remedy for Conslipfl- 'I; I li fV UOu lion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea HI Ikj Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- ;|2 I j g I" f| ness and Loss OF SLEEP, il j* Q|* |I UOT Tac Simile Stgnnlure of mi-rniH : Jinil BrS EXACT copy OF WRAPPER. MEXICAN Mustang Liniment beala Old Sore* quickly. iss tells how any young woman may be per manently cured of monthly pains by taking Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. " You NO WOMEN: I had frequent headaches of a sfjvero nature, dark spots oelore my eyes, and at my menstrual periods 1 suffered untold agony. A member of the advised mo to tiy Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, but I only scorned good advice and felt that my case was hopeless, but she kept at mo until I bought a bottle and started taking it. I soon had the best reason in the world to change my opinion of tho medicine, as each day my health improved, and finally I was entirely without pain at my menstruation periods. lam most grateful' ]SKTTIK BLACKMORE, 23 Central Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Painful Periods are quickly and permanently overcome by L,ydia E. Plnkliam> Vegetable Compound. Tho above lett<*r is only one of hundreds of thousands which prove this statement to be a fact. Menstruation is a severe strain on a woman's vitality, if it is painful something is wrong. Don't take narcotics to deaden the pain, but remove the cause perhaps it is caused by irregularity or womb displace ments or tho development of a tumor. Whatever it la, Lyuia IS. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is guaranteed to cure it. Ii there is anvthinnr about your case about which you would like special advice, write freely to Mrs. Pinkham. She will treat your letter us strictly confidential. She can surely help you, for no person in America can speak from a wider experience in treating female ills. She has helped hundreds of thousands of women back to health. Her address is Lynn. Mass., and her advice is free. You are very foolish if you do not accept her kind invitation. Details of Another Case. "PEAII MKS. PINKHAM : lgnorance find carelessness is the cause of most of the suffer ings of women. I believe that if we properly %HP' understood the laws of health •we would all be ipif —j&KMj well, but if the sick women only knew the truth about Lydia I'. Pinkliarn's Vegetable Compound, they would be saved much suffer fe A jj ing and would soon be cured. ] i yffi | Hffli ~ //I culty which had troubled me for years, and for which I had spent hundreds tify. ily life_ forces were being sapi>ed, "Lydia E. Pink lium's Vegetable » Compound cured me completely, and I am now enjoying the best of health, and am most grateful, and only too pleased to endorse such a great remedy."—Miss JENNIE 1- EDWARDS, 004 11 St., N. W., Washiugton, D. C. Mrs. Pinkham, whose address is Lynn, Mass., will answer cheer fully and without cost all letter* addressed to her by sick women. MEXICAN Mustang Liniment cares SprHinii uuil Struins. r i i »m Big Four Route St. Louis •♦The Way of the Worid" to the World's Fair For information as to rates, hotels and boarding houses, address nearest Big Four Agent, or WARREN J. LYNCH, tl. P. and T. Agent, Cincinnati, O. MEXICO IS TEMPTING Id the two continents of America there la do uu>re chuiiinnu and delitfltUul oounliy for a vacation i rip than Old Mexico. A i every turn aome novel s übi or found claims tl»e traveler's atiautlon. everything Ib new and different. From St. LouNtoMexico(Jliy, tlie M.K.AT. H v operatesu Pullman(deeper running throitv.ii wii hmit change. Tbla sleeper leave* tit. .Loihh at B:3* p. m. every da* on the "Katy Klyor." nafea are low now. Write for partlcnlarn and copy of booklet, "Blahta and Hceneß Id Old S Mexico," to "KATY" ST. LOUIS. MO. nil IP*AANAKESISSIS? ™ Ul fj I ji.r n nr free nuninlu ailUrens m fl B|3lW "ANAHIOiIK." ITIl!- Doe tiuililnuh New Yurfc. A.N. K.-C 2045 BS 'n time. Sold b» .iriiKKlnM. 7