2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TKRMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. r'er yeir H Of) 112 paid in advance i 4 0 ADVERTISING RATES: AdTert semenUi are published at the rate o! •ne d >1 ar per square for one insertion ami fifty cents per square for each subscquentlnsertioa Hates toy ihe year, or for si* or three months. •re low and uniform, and will toe furnished on Implication. Lee:il and Official Advertising- per square, j three times or less, t": each subsequent inser tion ; n cents per square. Local notices It) cents pel line for on? tnser- i «eriion: f> cents per line for each subsequent •ull.ecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per j line. Simple announcements of births, uiar ringe* and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. »f> per year; o\T ftve lines, at the regular rales of adver- ] iising. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Puss* Is complete ai d affords facilities for doing the best class of Work. Pakticulak AT'iorriuH paidto I,aw Pkintikg. No paper will be discontinued until arrear tgi s arc paid, except at the option of the pub »her. Papers sent out of the county must be p»'.A lor in advance H 11 =3 G.*»e the Cfurt Notice. In a rural justice court (he defend ant in a case was sentenced to serve 80 days in jail. Ho had known the ! judg:- from boyhood, and addressed liini as follows: "Bill, old boy. you're a gwine to send ine ter jail, air you?" "That's what," replied the judge. ! "Have you gut anything to say ag'in ! it?" "Only this here. Bill: God help you when 1 git out .'"—Atlanta Constitu tion. To Banish Sea-Sickness. Bright red spectacles, accompanied by internal doses of calomel, form a ■ new German specific against sea-sick- j ness. It is deducted from Epstein's j investigations on the influence of color j on the blood vessels in the brain, j Sea sickness is due to lack of blood in the brain, while red sends blood to the brain with a rush. By looking at one point for some time through the red glasses the patient is rapidly cured. Cargo of Cheese. A record consignment of cheese was recently dispatched from Liverpool to j London. It consisted of 5,000 cheeses, J weighing 200 tons, and was consigned to one person, a London merchant, i The whole of the cheese was Cana dian. Its value was about £9.000. Some 32 railway trucks were requirej for the carriage of the cheese. Room for Good Men. The president of Columbia univer- | sity asserts that the day of the self- j made man is over. The self-made ! man is one who has common sense, [ energy, pluck and determination. Is j there any good reason for supposing I that these qualities will not be pos- j sessed by men of the future?— Kansas City Journal. Divorce in England. The number of petitions filed for dis- ; solution of marriages in England and j Wales in 1902 was 1,050. against 900 in 1901. The annual average number ol petitions filed in five years (1898-1902) ' was 853. The number of petitions filed in 1902 by husbands was 6u9; by wives i 441; total. 1,050. Complimentary. Fond young mother (with her first ' born) —Now, which of us do you thinli : he is like? Friend (judicially)— Well, of course intelligence has not really dawned ic his countenance yet, but he's wonder- j fully like both of you.—Punch. Short Temperance Lecture. It is reported that a Japanese jiu jitsu expert is in jail with delirium tremens in New York. Old J. Barley- j <orn can put the kibosh on any old | physical culture expert we have yet seen if only given a little time. —Au j gust a Herald. The General's Error. Kuropatkin's opinion of the Japa ; appears to be altered. It wasn't so very many moons ago, when he and some brother ofiieers were visiting i Tokio. that, he said: "Some day we'll j have to conquer these monkeys." Good Legislation. The Nevada legislature has just ad- ! journed with a remarkable record. It | repealed every restrictive gambling and j liquor law on the books. The only re- j Btriction of the kind it retained was the one on prize fighting. Burn 'Em. Mark Twan does not like to write letters, and this proves that he is a very wise old owl. Letters produce more trouble than any other invention in the world. —Memphis Commercial Appeal. Three C's for Chauffeurs. After all, the mosL effective regula tion of the use and speed of automo biles is courtesy caution and common sense on the pan of the operator at the lever. —Hartford Times. In the Bible Class. "Johnny." said the Sunday school teacher, "what is a centurion?" "He's a feller what rides a hundred miles on a bil.e." promptly answered the boy.—N. Y. Times. Euster Bonnets. Speaking of the activity of diplo ma' what is the matter with :he various schen< ; under way to procure new Easter bonnets?- —Pittsburg Ga jtcite. NEW PANACEA BY BRYAN. Recommended by Him p.s the Great Remedy for the People's Political Ills. Not many years ago William J. Bry an was going up and down in the land assuring the people that the one thing wanting to make them prosperous and happy was the free and unlimited coin age of silver, for account of depositors ot that inetal at the mints, at the rate of It; j ounces to one ounce of gold. He was telling the people in rear-end I platform speeches as he rushed from place to place, says the Chicago Chron- , ! icle, that the alleged "demonetization of j ' silver —"the crime of '73" —was the cause of hard times, lack of employment j | and all other economic woes, and that j i the "remonetization of silver" would i I lift their burdens and fill the land with \ | all the good things of life. Four years later he was not so insist ent upon immediate free coinage with- ; out waiting for the concurrent action or ' consent of any other nation, lmperial i ism had come to be the paramount is- j sue, the imminent danger, the frightful | monster threatening the liberties of the | people and the life of the republic. He j declared that we must throttle imperial ism and be sure of our freedom before we could stop to talk about the sort oi i money we should have. Aften another interval of four years ' ; he perceived that the country had sur- j ; vived imperialism, and the formal es I ! tablishment of the gold standard and ; had become wonderfully prosperous de | spite these dreadful happenings. In fact, it had become too prosperous, in so much that enormous corporations had been formed by the union of smaller ones and capitalized at from twice to j four times the value of the properties j combined, and that these were a source of unhappiness and would soon make us j j unspeakably wretched. Especially j i were great railroad combinations a j source of impending tyranny and im- j I poyerishment. Therefore he changed his prescription for the salvation of the country to government ownership ol railroads. At first it was state owner ship, but later he modified that and made I it state ownership of roads for traffic j ! not crossing state lines—instate traf 1 ' fie— and national ownership of roads for • interstate traffic. Now, after an interval of less than j four months, he is out with a new pre- \ scription. Finding himself badly i tangled in his mixed state and national ownership, he seeks escape under cover | | of a loud outcry for the direct election j , of United States senators by the people ! This he now declares to be the great I source of relief from most of the burdens | under which the country is laboring. Ol one thing he feels sure—that "when the I United States senate is elected by the I direct vote of the people the trusts will be done away with." Probably Mr. Bryan will think it safe to stick to this new political panacea for more than four months. It is noi new with him except as a panacea. It j has been agitated more or less for years, and, since it has called out no pop- j j ular opposition to speak of, it is a tol j erably safe thing to offer it as a cure-all ! when there is nothing else in sight thai looks as though it might be popular. Perhaps the senate would be better if | senators were elected directly by pop ular vote, and perhaps it would not. Of one thing we may be sure, it would not be much more responsive to the ' popular clamor which passes for public l opinion. Its conservatism and com parative indifference to clamor are due j much more to the fact that the term of a senator is three times as long as that of a representative than to the fact that he is elected by the legislature and not by direct popular vote. It would still be comparatively slow and conservative , If elected by the latter mode, both be- ! ' cause of the length of the term and be- i j cause the senate is a smaller body than i the house and can be in fact a delibera tive body and still reach decisions in most cases within a reasonable time. CURRENT PRESS COMMENT. Cls Mr. Bryan trying to bring on a | breaeh-of-promise suit against the dem ; erratic reorganizes with the hope of ! j profiting by the separation?—N. Y. World (Ind., Dem.). of Mr. Bryan's favorite lectures is on"The Value of an Ideal." It is no I j wonder Mr. Bryan values ideals. Sever al times in his career he has been up against the real —Chicago Tribune. Parker be lieves that his re cent participation in national politics ; bars him from accepting a nomination I | tor the bench in New York. The judge j | seems to take his part in the late un- j pleasantness more seriously than the rest of the country did.—Washington I Post. it-The Boston Advertiser says: "H ! the duty is taken from raw hides it wi!j i be because the tariff makers are satis lied that the present law does not pro- I tect, but really hurts American indus- I tries." If the producers of American ; hides are iieard on the subject there will be some difficulty about tariff revisers satisfying themselves that no one win i be injuriously affected by the removal ' of the duty from th.> products of this particular American industry.—San Francisco Chronicle. fMr. Bryan has started out to get ' a fresh cinch on public attention with a ! new lecture entiled "Back to the Peo pie." Perhaps what he really means is ! "How the People Went Back on Parker.' —Troy Times. referring to the Missouri sena torial deadlock, an eastern republican paper says: "These clashes, precipi tated for the most part by personal re venge and personal ambition, betray a fatal narrowness of vision and lack oi public spirit." It is a pity a few bolters can bring reproaches like that on a j faithful party.—St. Louis Globe-Demt) i crat j CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1905. HEAD OF THE COMMITTEE.' Light on the Recent Selection Chair- ' man New for National Position. Probably a great deal more impor tance is attached to the new selection for acting chairman of the republican national committee than it deserves. Chairman Cortelyou has named Harry S. New. of Indiana, for acting chairman. Mr. New has been more or less prom inent in the politics of the Hoosier state for a score of years. He has | been the state's representative on the j national committee since 1900. He | was made a member of the executive I section of the committee in 1900 by | Chairman Hanna, which was some- j J thing of a distinction for a new member j | of the national organization. It has been imagined, says the St. j Louis Globe-Democrat, that Chairman j Cortelyou's selection of liis acting suc cessor would reveal the adininistra- I tion's preference for the presidential candidacy of 1908. As a consequence : the choice was awaited with much in terest by the country. Now that it has j come, it is hard to see that it has much j significance. It has been said that Vice ; President Fairbanks, thinking there i was a possibility of the choice of New worked against the selection. New i and Fairbanks are not harmonious. It is said that New is against the idea of I the Fairbanks candidacy for 1908, and ■ | that he wants Beveridge or somebody : else to get it. Put this will not have the slightest 1 influence on the chances of any of the aspirants. It is not the business of the j head of the national committee to ; work for or against any particular per sonage except as he does so as a url ■ vate person. He has no right to use ! the influence of his office for or against anybody in the national convention. The chairman of the committee is to work for republican success, no matter who is the party stardard bearer. The chances are that the chairman, whether he be Mr. New or somebody else —for the New selection is but temporary, and is to last only until the committee I makes a choice of chairman —will i recognize the proprieties sufficiently to j i keep his hands off the matter of the j 1 nomination. There must be a free field ! : for all the aspirants. The man who ! secures the favfir of the majority of ; | the republican voters is the man who | will be chosen to lead the party in | 1908. NEW SENATOR OF MISSOURI An Omen of Fourth Victory for Re publicans and the Roosevel tian Policy. The outcome of the long struggle over 1 the Missouri senatorship is so wholly ! • satisfactory from every point of view i j that republicans—"Roosevelt republi- j cans"—everywhere will gladly forget the disgraceful scenes of selfishness and bargaining among other candidates which preceded it —and which threat ened a national disappointment—as they congratulate one another, the win ner, and the state he is to represent. Maj. William Warner is a typical old line Lincoln republican, says the St. ! I'aul Pioneer-Press. Wisconsin-born, ! he won his military title by four years' ; service in the war for the union in the j Thirty-third and Forty-fourth Wiscon- j sin regiments. Since the war he has j been one of the most active among the men who have led the political thought of Kansas City and represented the best aspirations of Missouri republicanism. He has served as city attorney, circuit attorney, and United States district at torney; as mayor and as a member of i congress for two terms. In 1892, as the ! republican candidate for governor, he made a canvass which attracted nation al attention and which put the democ racy on its mettle to defeat him. in every position he has won honor; from each he has retired poor. Corporations and combines have never been able to I "use" him. President Roosevelt will find in him a staunch supporter; which would not have been the case, in railroad or anti-trust legislation, had either Nie dringhaus or Kerens been elected. Maj. Warner's election will unify the republican party in Missouri and bring to naught the democratic hopes based on the acrimonious contest just ended. It will help cure the recalcitrant atti tude of the senate toward the sentiment j which swept Theodore Roosevelt into j the presidency last November by such an unprecedented majority. It is an omen of further victory for the Koose veltian policy. Argument for the Tariff. The contention of the tariff revisers ' that the present schedules oppress the commercial development of the country is not borne out by statistics. 111 189U, when the present tariff was adopted, i our exports of domestic manufactures amounted to ♦177.800.909. Since then they have increased year by year until in 1903 they reached in value the amount of $421,453,915. The report for the calendar year of 1904 has recently been compiled and it appears that the ! amount increased to $502,764,729. Such a showing makes a cogent argument in favor of the let-well-enough-alone pol icy.—Pittsburg Gazette. Warm Slippers. Tommie —You say mamma suffera with cold feet, pop? Pop—Yes, my boy. "Well, why doesn't she wear her slippers more?" "Why, they're not warm, Tommie!" ] "Well, every time I've felt 'em they've been pretty warm, pop!"— ( Yonkers Statesman. He Poth Protest Too Much. Hicks —What makes you think that , he isn't a genMeman? Wicks —He keeps forever insisting 1 i that he is.—Philadelphia STANDARD DEFENDED Lawyer Dodd, Chief Attorney for the Oil Trust, Issues a Statement. RAILROADS, CAS AND COPPER Mr. Dodd Denies that the Standard Owns Any Railroad Stock, or that John D. Rockefeller Was an Organizer of the Gas and Copper Combines. New York, April 7.— S. C. T. Dodd, ■ | chief solicitor of the Standard Oil Co., 1 gave out a statement yesterday with | reference to the recent discussion as to the acceptance of a gift of SIOO,OOO j offered by John D. Rockefeller for ] missionary work. Mr. Dodd declares j that the statement that. Mr. Rockefel- j ler made his money dishonestly, "is ; I false, is vile and, being made by min | isters in the pretended interest of ' morality, is doubly vile." Mr. Dodd then says that the Stand \ j aril Oil Co. does not own a share of s i stock of any railroad company, does 1 not control any railroad company, and | | that since the enactment of the inter I state commerce law, has not received lower rates than other shippers by re j bates, arrangements, devices or plans I |of any character. The testimony of j j Howard Page, freight agent of the j ; Standard Oil Co., before the industrial commission is quoted in this connec-- j tion. With reference to gas and cop- j per companies, Mr. Dodd says: "No doubt many have been preju- i diced against Mr. Rockefeller by j sensational writers, whose articles ac- j companied by portraits and caricatures 1 are intended to create the impression ; that Mr. Rockefeller was principal in j the affairs relating to the organization of the gas and copper companies, al- j though no fact showing such connec j tion is stated. The Standard Oil Co. j has already denied that it had any connection or interest directly or in directly in the organization of these corporations, and on the best author ity the same denial is now made for John D. Rockefeller." Bloodhounds Failed to Furnish Clue. San Francisco, April 7. —Blood- j hounds were put to work yesterday by detectives here in an effort to gain a j clue to the slayers of a young man whose dismembered body was found in Vallejo street late Wednesday night. The hounds took up the trail at the bloodstained spot on the side walk where the remains were deposit ed by an unknown man. The | bloodhounds ended their run at 1 a house on Mason street, on the steps of which were several drops of blood. ! In the place, however, nothing incrimi nating was found. A Record of Railroad Accidents. Washington, April 7.—-A report of ! the railroad accidents in the United j States during October, November and : December, 1904, has been compiled by ! the inter-state commerce commission. It shows that, in that quarter, 53 pas- : sengers and 189 employes were killed, I and 1,430 passengers and 1,868 em- ! ployes injured; a total of 242 persons ! killed and 3.298 injured in train acci- j dents. Other accidents to passengers 1 and employes, not the result of col- 1 lisions or derailments, bring the total : number of casualties up to 14,978 — 951 killed and 14,027 injured. Three Men Shot in an Election Riot. Huntington, W. Va., April 7.—After I an election conflict in which three j men were shot, several were beaten j by policemen and deputy sheriffs and | numerous county and city officers were arrested and cast in jail, John W. Ensign, democrat, was yesterday elected mayor of Huntington, having a plurality of 48 votes. The democrats elected four councilmen, which with two holdovers and the mayor, gives them control of city affairs. Repub lican candidates were elected for all other offices. Everything Is Harmonious. New York, April 7. —Out of the 50 members of the board of directors of the Equitable Life Assurance Society, j f:S assembled in the company's board room yesterday and after an hour and j 30 minutes of discussion, in the course of which it is understood the whole { Equitable controversy was gone over, announcement was made that those ! present unanimously had decided to adopt the two years' mutualization j plan announced several days ago. A Collision on the B. & O. Wheeling, W. Va., April 7.—Last j night at Bethesda, 0.. west of Wheel ing, an east bound passenger train and a westbound freight on the Baltimore I & Ohio railroad collided because of the failure of the freight train crew to give the passenger train a clear track. Both locomotives are badly wrecked. One man was killed and two injured. The Advance of the Japs. London, April- 7.—The correspon dent at St. Petersburg of the Times telegraphs: "The latest official infor mation leads to the belief that the Japanese are advancing in crescent formation, Oku on the left, Nodzu 011 tin; center and Kuroki and Kawamura on the right." A Bulge in Steel Trust Stock. New York. April 7.—A new high record for United States Steel pre ferred was reached on the stock ex change Thursday when that stock sold for a time at 102%, a half a point higher than ever before. It closed at 102. Sales of 171,000 shares were re corded yesterday. A Teamster in Hard Luck. Indianapolis, April 7. —Pickpockets yesterday secured 51.555 from Daniel Weaver, a teamster, who had drawn the sum from a bank to pay for a home. The sum represents the sav- j ings of a lifetime. ' j THE SHADOWOFTERRORISM ' It Hangs Over Russia Like a Black Cloud—A General Uprising Is Expected Soon. St. Petersburg April 6.—The pros pects of a general upheaval of the city and country with the advent of spring increase daily. Evidence ac cumulates that the radical forces are | acting in unison and awaiting a signal 1 which it is general!? believed will be i given shortly after t'he Russian Easter. | The Terrorists are showing great ac tivity and reports from all over the j country prove that the workmen, who ; in many cases have been formulating I petty demands which are no sooner ; granted than they are succeeded by others, are acting under instructions j from the revolutionary leaders, who I are only biding their time. The em ployers say that it is impossible to | continue their businesses and some of them have shut down. The people are | plainly becoming panicky and the au thorities cannot conceal their alarm. Warsaw, April o.—ln anticipation jof the funeral of a girl who died of i wounds received in the fighting in Dzika street on Sunday, the workmen of all the factories in the northern j part of the city left their work yester ! day afternoon and crowded Elekoralna and Leszno streets. The police, fear } ing a hostile demonstration, forbade | the funeral and summoned Cossacks, I who, using their knouts and swords freely, succeeded in dispersing the j gathering. The police and military made a fur j ther house to house visitation in the suburb of Wela Tuesday night, where they arrested 14 persons and discov | ered great quantities of revolutionary i proclamations. Harbin, April 0. —Complete returns | received at headquarters give the to tal Russian losses in killed, wounded ! and prisoners at the battle of Mukden |as 107,000. The wounded are being j taken away from here over the Siberi ! an railroad as rapidly as possible in I order to free the hospitals prepara | tory to a renewal of fighting. A THEFT OF VALUABLE RUGS A Turk Claims that $250,000 Worth of Goods Which He Brought to New York Disappeared. New York, April 0. —Charged with the larceny of two Oriental rugs, valued respectively at SIO,OOO and j SB,OOO, Frederick Coinp, of Rutherford, N. J., formerly bookkeeper for the firm of Sajun & Telehram, which went , into bankruptcy on Saturday, was ar i rested Wednesday and held in $5,000 bail. The arrest was made at the instance of Hadji Hassanof, a dealer who said that he brought $250,000 worth of rugs to this country and placed them in storage with Sajun & Telehram j some months ago, since which time he \ had been unable to get any track of j the goods until yesterday, when he ; j found these rugs in a broker's office, j where, he said, they had been placed jon exhibition by Copip. He also said he had been unable 'to find any mem- I her of the firm since the bankruptcy : proceedings were instituted. A Tragedy in a Park. Philadelphia, April G. —Mrs. Urania j Cundy, aged 23 years, of Patchogue, i Long Island, died here Wednesday ; from a bullet wound in the head. The ; occurred in Fairmount park ! and her husband, Percy Cundy, is un der arrest. At first the man said that his wife shot herself, while admitting that he had purchased the revolver in tending to kill both himself and his wife. Later he told the police that while he and his wife were seated in the park he placed the revolver at his wife's temple and, as he hesitated, Mrs. Cundy, he says, grasped the weapon and discharged it. Stands for the Open Door. Washington, April G.—Germany yes terday clearly outlined to the United States her Moroccan policy. Acting under instructions from Berlin, Von Speck Sternburg, the German ambas sador, called at the war department and left with Secretary Taft a memo randum to this effect: Germany stands for the open door in Morocco as in the far east and for the preservation of the status quo, and for the safeguard- | ing of the commercial and trade inter ests not only of Germany, but of all j trading nations of the world. Was a Veteran of Two Wars. Norfolk, Va., April 6. —Daniel j Knowles, aged 75 years, one of the few survivors of those who fought on the Confederate ram Merrimac in the fight with the Monitor in Hampton Roads during the civil war, is dead. He was a veteran of two wars, having served in the United States navy dur ing the Mexican war. On the Merri mac during the Hampton Roads fight he was a gun captain and commanded the big Dahlgren gun crew during the two days' fight. The Mountains Trembled. Calcutta, April G. —Reports from many towns show widespread damage and many fatalities from the earth quake Tuesday. Personal stories from Mussoore state that the reverberation which preceded the shock never will he forgotten by those who heard it. The mountains heaved and swayed a full minute and then three severe shocks, each lasting a few seconds, were felt in quick succession. Be tween G o'clock in the morning and midnight there were 12 shocks. A Disastrous Drouth in Spain. Madrid, April G. —Owing to an ex treme drouth all field work in Anda lusia has been suspended for a consid erable time and crops are threatened with total destruction. The cost of necessaries of life has risen to exorbi tant figures. The municipal authori ties have done their utmost to allevi ate the distress. Three Deaths in Fire. Ditndas, Ont., April G. —Fire in the residence of Godfrey Walker early yesterday resulted in the death of Mr. Walker and his two daughters, Annie and Jennie. 1 I Who is I Your Clothier? If it's It. SEGER & CO,. I you are getting the right j kind of merchandise. There ! ia no small or grand decep- J ! • tion practiced in their store, j Sustained success demon- g etrates that there is B "growth in truth"in the B retailing of NEW AND UP-TO-DATE CLOTHING AT POPULAR PRICES. R. SEGER & CO. | I G00(1 I |Cedar j ! Shingles j jjj == _ i WILL KEEP OUT THE ft jjj RAIN. WE HAVE THEM ft J] IN ALL GRADES. j}j Hi ft ■u In ]j lr S In 8 | IC. B. HOWARD & CO. Jj nJ SaSHSBSBSasaSHSHSfHSaS^ jSCHIVIELZ CO.'Sg i Sluice Pipe. I 3 ============== fr 3 c! jj IMPROVE YOUR ROADS with ft 3i STEEL and WOOD SLUICING jC u If] "0 The Steel pipe roads of cold rolled, [r 1] heavy sheet steel, n vited so at to leave it fli *J smooth inside. pipe is covered with in J1 a preparation that makes it rust proof. [L 1J The wood pipe is made of staves matched IT. Jl and grouved, bound with heavy iron [L U bands, treated chemically against rust IT: J1 and coated with a preparation that will FL u stand climate and will practically ex- ul J) elude moisture. The entire length is of fL 1J even diameter. Obstructions will not IT J] lodge in it. Manufactured in all sues up fli IJ to SIXTY INCHES. IT J1 Write for catalogue and prices, or a [L U postal card will bring to you a represen- LP JJ tative with samples of our goods. |li J] What are Sluice Pipes Uaed For ? JJ. r| They are used on roads and highways [J: jj to convey water under the road bed fVom jjj i] streams and ditches to keep the road bed [{j jj dry and prevent washouts in heavy rams y and showers. |j^ jj Schmelz & Co., jjj' jj Coudersport, P». ft •SH SHSaSHSH-O cr =HHSHSaSSHr' We promptly obtain I'. H. Ud l'uri-iifn T 5 Send model, sketch or pl.oto of invention for 112 < frcereport on patentability. For free hook, 112 | madam Dean's I I A safe, certain relief for Suppressed R I Menstruation. Never known to full. **afe! Rj V Sure! Speedy! Satisfaction Guaranteed |fi lor money Refunded. Sent prepaid for |3 I 81.00 per box. Will send them on trlsvl, to EJ |be paid for when relieved. Samples tree. I I UNiTIO MEDICAL CO., Box T4, LANCASTER e* H Sold in Emporium by L. iTaggart ant R. O Dodson. EVERY WOMAN Sometimes a reliah'.n monthly regulating medicine. a#l i DR. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL piLLS, Are prompt, safe and certain In result. The genu, toe (Dr. real's) naver disappoint. 81.00 per Uuv bold by K. 0. Dodson, druggist
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers