2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. f'fT Tsar JJ 0(1 112 fiid in advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate ol •ne dol:ar per square forone iusertlou ami Oft j cents per square for each subsequent insertion Rates by the year, or for six or three month*, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square three times or less. *2: each subsequent insei ti«a fO cents per square. Local notices lu cents pel line for ona tnser •ertion; 6 cents per line lor each subsequent insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcement* of births, mar- Ttnces and deaths will be Inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. «5 per year; ever live lines, at th# regular rates of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per Issue- JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pnttss Is complete *nd affords facilities for doing th« best class of worll PAIt'IICIILAR ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW PRINTING. No paper will bo discontinued until arrear tges are paid, except at the option of the pub • sher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. Tiie word "tip" originated in the old English coffee houses. At the door nt these coffee houses was a box made usually of brass, with a lock and key. It had engraved upon it the letters "T. I p." (observed the stops between thelletters"To) —"To Insure Promptness.' Customers, as they passed out dropped a coin in for the waiter. Hence the word "tip." Chicago bears the eminent distinc tion of being the greatest focal point for railroads in the world. There are 24 trunk-lines, besides numerous small roads, centering there, witn a total mileage of 120,000, or 59 per cent, of the railroad mileage of the United Slates. Nineteen hundred trains ar rive and depart every day from the dif ferent stations. Austria has succeeded in raising tho wind by enforcing cleanliness upon its people. Under a penalty of SSO Aus tria demands that every householder *hall have his chimney swept by the government sweep at least once a month for fear of age. She found the measure most lucrative, as she charged a tax of 4" cents for every chimney cleansed. Numerous as are the members of Ihe Smith family, they do not occupy as prominent a place in European di rectories as they do in those of Eng land or at home, though they take up much room in the Berlin directory, five thousand Schmidts being regis tered. They have to give room, how ever, to the Schultzes and Mullers. In Brussels the Jansen family is the most numerously represented, while the greater space in the Paris directory is given over to the Martinets. A reward of $25 cash is being paid by the New York State Cancer labora tory for small animals —mice, rats, guinea pigs or rabbits —with cancers. These animals are required for experi mental purposes, and any specimen proved to have a case of cancer will call for the amount specified. A cir cular to this effect has been issued by the cancer laboratory of the empire state, and distributed among the prom inent dealers in this sort of stock throughout the country. As a conse quence all sorts of diseased animals have been sent to the institution. The largest diamond ever found was recently unearthed in the Premier mine, in the Transvaal. South Africa. It was discovered by Fred Wells, su perintendent of the mine. He saw it glistening in the wall of the excava tion and dug it out with a pocket knife. The stone weighs 3,024% carats (about Ipounds); its general di mensions are 4x2' ,xl l - inches, and it forms a good-sized handful for the average man. It is the purest cf all the big diamonds in existence, "water white" and having no defects. Its commercial value is variously tsi! mated at from $5,000,000 tip. An idea] scheme to protect his check from forgery is one peculiar to A. M Griffon, a Plainfield, N. J., merchant. Every check that Mr. Griffen writes he signs in the usual business way, hut, in addition, he moistens his riglr thumb with red ink and presses it down upon the figures in the corner of the check. This covers the figures ■with a light coating of ink, which leaves the imprint of the lines of the thumb clearly outlined, and no figures can be raised without the fact being apparent. No two thumbs in the world ■will leave the same imprint. "The native Africans are among the most, interesting people in the world," sayß Mr. George \V. Ellis, United States charge d'affaires at Monravia, Liberia, in a recent report, "and the varied and natural wealth of their country is unsurpassed. The indica tions are that, they will for some time yei almost wholly possess West Africa. They thrive along the west coast, in millions. Though armed like war riors. they are lovers of peace; they have Iheir peculiar civilization, and th'y :ue rich in wives, buUocks and slaves, captured in intertribal wars." Just now there is :i cra/.e togo to the Amazon river to make quick for tunes. Young men with from? 250 to sl,ono capital are on the way there to mine coal, cut hard woods, raise cat 11c antl grow rubber. The Amazon country has b<en cracked up to be an Eldorado. Ii is in rea'ity an ignis fatuus. Avoid it an you would a plague, says a writer who lias bee'i Ihi're. North Americans know abso lutely nothing about the mightiest of rivers and the territory it drains —or nor s not drain. Graves of young an I fcu.iliing while men urn very numerous. MAYOR WEAVER DECLARES WAR Philadelphia's Mayor Throws Down the Gauntlet to City's Re publican Leaders. A GREAT POLITICAL FIGHT BEGINS Director of Public Works and of Pub lic Safety Are Dismissed from Office by the Mayor—An In cident in the Gas Lease Battle. Philadelphia, May 24.—1n his effort to defeat the consummation of the plan to lease the city gas works to the United Gas Improvement Co. for 75 years for $25,000,000, Mayor Weaver yesterday dismissed from office the two principal members of his cabinet and thereby delivered a staggering blow to the dominant political organi zation of this city, which has caused probably the greatest sensation in the | history of Philadelphia municipal af fairs. While the citizens were expect ing some sort of a move on (he part of the mayor, they were not prepared for the immediate removal from office of I »avi«l J. Smyth, director of the de partment of public safety, and Peter E. Costello, director of the department of public works. After iho removals had been an nouncrd the mayor made public the names of the men he had selected for the places. They are Col. Sheldon Potter to fill the office of director of public safety and Lincoln Acker to be j director of the department of public works. The mayor has announced that he is | in the fight to the bitter end, which | means that a great political battle is I now on and will be carried to Ihe polls next November. In his fiuht against | the gas lease and the republican or j gani/ation the mayor has called in as j counsel Elihu Root, of New York, and i ex-Judge .lames Gay Gordon, of this I city. Judge Gordon is a democrat. Philadelphia, May 25. —The gas j lease fight was carried into the courts \ Wednesday and in consequence the j two directors appointed by Mayor ; Weaver Tuesday evening are out of | office and the directors who were dis- I missed have a.uain taken up the duties , cf their positions. The first move of the day was the | appearance before Judge Ralston in | common pleas court of attorneys for ! Peter E. Costello and David J. Smyth, i the dismissed directors, who applied for a preliminary injunction against | the mayor and Lincoln Acker and | Sheldon Potter, their successors in of | flee, restraining Messrs. Acker aand I Potter from assuming the duties of | their respective offices and restraining | ihe mayor and all other city employes | from aiding them in carrying out such j intentions. Judge Ralston granted a temporary restraining order and fixed next Monday as the time for the de fendants to show cause why the in- I junction should not be made perma nent. Philadelphia, May 2C.—The bitter ' feeling that has been engendered by ! the gas lease fight was intensified j Thursday when Mayor Weaver prac tically ejected from tin offices of the ' departments of public safety and pub ; lie works his two former directors ; and again installed the men appointed by him on Tuesday night. The action ! of the mayor was the most sensational I move that he has yet made. The news created considerable ex | citement in the city hail and on the j political "Rialto" and nearly all that were interested assembled in the vi cinity of the mayor's office to learn of the next move. This came quickly, but from an unexpected quarter —the state supreme court. While the mayor was ordering his old directors out of their office, his attorneys appeared in the supreme court and obtained a special supersedas suspending the i temporary injunction granted to the | old directors by the county court. A TRUST COMPANY FAILS. Receivers are Appointed for an Insti tution in New York City. New York May 21. —The Merchants' Trust Co., of this city, was closed Tuesday by order of tile state superin tendent of banks because it had made loans amounting to about $1,250,000 upon which it had not been able to realize a sufficient sum to pay deposit ors and save the canital of the com pany from impairment. Upon the ap plication of the state attorney general, Douglas Robinson, a brother-in-law of President Roosevelt, was appointed one of the receivers of the company. The company's loans which had no ready market value were about $850,- 000 on securities of the Hudson Valley Railway Co., of Glens Falls, N. Y., which is a consolidation of trolley lines in the vicinity of Albany, Troy, Saratoga and Lake George, and nearly $400,000 to the Rutland. Vt., Street Railway Co. and the Chittenden De velopment Co.. of Rutland. The trust company owes depositors about $2,200,000 and, according to the state bank examiner, has available assets other than in the Hudson Rail way Co. and the Rutland companies of nearly $1,300,000. A New Canal Project. Pittsburg, May 24. —The long talked of Ohio river and Lake Erie ship canal is to become a reality at last through private capital. The undertaking is to be put through by Pittsburg capitalists who have formal a company with a capital of $2,025,000, which will be in creased to $30,000,000. Nominated Gomez for President. Havana, May 21. —The national lib eral convention yesterday nominated Jose Miguel Gome/, governor of Santa Clara province, for president and Sen ator Alfredo Zayas for vice president. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE I, 1905. JEWS RIOT IN WARSAW. Eight People Killed and 100 Wounded During Conflicts Between Hebrews. Warsaw, May 2C. —The Jewish dis turbances continued all day yesterday and were still in progress late last night. Eight persons have already heen killed and 100 wounded, 19 seri tusly. The damage to property lias heen considerable. There has been no pillaging, but the destruction of the furniture in various houses has been absolute. The mob armed with axes smashed the doors and windows and brought i he furniture out on the streets, where they broke it into small pieces. The owners of the furniture in attempting to defend their belongings were at tacked, beaten and even killed. Knives and revolvers were used freely and many persons were terribly injured. The authorities took no steps to prevent the riots until late last night, when the Cossacks fired on the crowds j at two points, wounding four people. The character of the disturbances is j unprecedented. The whole affair is a j conflict between the respctable Jewish | socialist classes and the disreputable Jewish element. There are conflicting stories as to the origin of the trouble. One report is to the effect that the respectable Jews, tired of hearing the members of their race called keepers of disorderly houses, thieves and usurers, resolved, as the police were receiving bribes for protecting disreputable houses and persons, to take the matter into their own hands. Another report has it that j Jewish roughs were levying blackmail upon shopkeepers, thus enraging the socialists In any case the socialists seemingly determined on a crusade against the undesirable persons of their own race, with the result that crowds of men and boys are sys tematically ruining the disreputable houses. Extraordinary scenes were wit nessed late last night when the crowds visited the better section of the city ;ind demolished apartments filled with costly effects. Wardrobes, pianos and mirrors were thrown out of windows. The mob in the streets left open spaces for the falling articles and then completed the work of destruction. In one place a fiuantity of valuable jew elry was taken out and smashed with stones. FAILED FOR $1,700,000. A Firm of Boston Bankers Files a Pe tition in Bankruptcy. Boston, May 2G.—Seventy-one banks and trust companies, most of them in Massachusetts, but several located in other parts of the country, are among the creditors of the banking firm of Burnett Cummings & Co., of 4:? Milk street, this city, which yesterday filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the United States district court with liabilities placed at $1,714,308. The assets are stated to be uncertain. Tin creditors have been given to under- ' .stand that they will not exceed S2OO.- j 000 if indeed, they prove to be of any ■ value whatsoever. The bankruptcy i petition is the heaviest ever filed in ! this district Attorney J. T. Auerbach, counsel for j the bankrupt firm, said that the cause ! ' of the failure was the building and 1 j financing of the Concord & Boston ; | Street Railway Co., the Middleboro, | Warham & Buzzard's Bay Street Hail- i | way Co., the Lowell & Boston Street j | Railway Co and the Bristol County | | Railway Co Tin se roads were in thinly settled districts and were un- ! I able to make suitable connections i with roads running to Boston. The | ! four companies were placed in j hands of receivers and their notes be- | I came valueless. Lawyer Auerbach stated also that i the break of the Hampden Trust Co., I of Springfield, and of the Taunton , Safe Deposit and Trust Co., of Taun ton, both of which, unknown to the j firm, were in serious financial straits j and which were placed in the hands ' of receivers, hastened the firm's finati eial embarrassment. The refusal of ! the extension of credit by banks then j made a continuance in business impos- ' sible. The secured creditors number ST J and the unsecured 81. There are ■ Massachusetts savings banks in the ] list of creditors and 13 Massachusetts j national banks. It is understood that j the securities given the banks for j their loans were bonds of the Massa chusetts Securities Co., which in turn were secured by notes of the bankrupt ; electric railways. The largest unse j cured claim is that of the Worcester ! Five Cents Savings bank for SBO,OOO. i Capt. Worth Is Convicted. Elyria, 0., May 20. —The jury before : whom was tried the Worth "bucket "hop" case, after being in deliberation I but ten minutes, returned a verdict ! of guilty Thursday afternoon. The i jury took but four ballots. When the verdict was known, Attorney Gilmour, aho represented Capt. Worth, made n motion for a new trial and said he would test the validity of the law in the United States supreme court be fore he was finished. The next trial will be that of King, A Very Fatal Collision. Augusta, Ga., May 20. —Two men were killed one fatally injured, two probably fatally and three slightly in jured in a colisiou last night between a trolley car and a car on the All - Aiken railway in a woods some miles from Augusta. Cashier Shot Himself; P Suspends. Stockton. Cal., Ms;.' ionsequent upon the fact that C& • Kahn. ol' the Oakdale bank, shot aiself Wed nesday, the directors o the institu tion, of which Thomas B. Horsey is president, have suspended business Indefinitely. The state bank commis i sioners have been sent fotr. The con j r'it ion of the cashier is precarious. A Jurist Dies. Hollidaysburg, l'a., May 20.—Hon. I John Dean, a justice of the supreme j court of Pennsylvania, died at, his I home here last evening. I WILL FIGHT TO A FINISH All Efforts to Settle the Teamsters' Strike in Chicago Result in Failure. LUMBER YARDS ARE TIED UP Strike in the Lumber District Spreads Rapidly—Union Leaders Are Held for Contempt of Court by Judge Kohlsaat, of the Federal Court. Chicago. May 21. —All prospects of j peace in the teamsters' strike have j disappeared and it will be open war | from this time on. The last conference j looking toward a peaceable adjust ment was held last night between j James B. Barry, business agent for the j Express Drivers' union, and the local managers of the seven express com- I panies. The "conversation was brief j and pointed. Business Agent Barry j opened the negotiations by saying. "Our position is this. I want all j the men reinstated except those who j have been guilty of violence. I can i not do anything different. That is | what the local union wants and that is | vhat the local officers have told me to • demand. That is all I can do. The men told me they all want togo back in a body or they won't go hack at all. i That is the position of the union and | the union officials." The reply of the representatives of ! the express companies was: i "Our opposition to the reinstatement I of the men will be the same four years ; from now as it is to-day. We will not take them back under any circum stances." Chicago, May 25. —Final rejection of union teamsters' demands, especially | those of the express drivers, was of | ficially announced Wednesday by the employers, thus annulling any present | settlement of the strike. The employ - j its demand unconditional surrender. ' The employers sent their goods all ! ever the city under police protection j without encountering violence. The strike in the lumber yards ! ;pread with great rapidity and nearly j "II lumber business is at a standstill, j A number of planing mills and sash and door factories were compelled to ( shorten operations and by Friday will j be compelled to close entirely if the Mtpply of lumber is not largely in f reased. Chicago, May 20. —Cornelius P. Shea, president of the International Teamsters' union, was upheld yester day by Judge Kohlsaat, of the federal court, in his refusal to answer ques ions before Master in Chancery Sher man, which might intend to incriml- I nate him. Shea is now under indict | ment in the criminal court and Judge | Kohlsaat declared that answers to | some of the questions put to him | might prejudice the hearing of his 1 case. In he same decision which ex cused Shea, the court ruled that Bcr ! Hard Mulligan, president of the Ex , press Drivers' union, and John Dono | hue, a member of the same union, had | refused to answer questions which i could not in any way connect them i with any criminal proceedings and ! they were, therefore, in contempt of | court. He sentenced both men to jail, I but allowed them to remain in nominal custody in the hands of United States I Marshal Ames for five days, in order i that their attorneys may perfect a re- I view on habeas corpus proceedings \ before another federal judge. The strike did not spread to any ! .;reat extent yesterday and there was l 'ittle disorder. A number of lumber | firms made a few deliveries. For the I first time since the commencemnt of | the strike a large number of coal .vagons handled by colored teamsters passed through the down town streets wit lit out police protection. None of | them were molested. A $300,000 FIRE LOSS- Crossed Wires Caused a Disastrous Blaze at Wilkesbarre, Pa. Wilkesbarre, Pa., May 22. —One of i the most disastrous fires that has oc curred in this city in some years I'tarted at an early hour Sunday. | The loss entailed will reach SIIOO,OOO. The fire originated in the millinery ! department on the second floor of the ! isaac Long dry goods house in the j Welles building on the west side of ! the public square, one of the handsom- I est and costliest structures in this city. When first discovered the flames j were controlled by the firemen in less ■ than an hour. A second fire broke out | in the basement of the building. A careful investigation was made by electricians, who declare the tire was first caused by the crossing of two electric wires, the water used to quench the first llames following some of the wires into the basement of the building, where a short circuit was formed, causing a flash from a large dynamo which started the second fire. Man and Wife Drowned. Benton Harbor, Mich., May 25. George Young and wife, of New Buf falo. lad., were reported missing Tues day night and their bodies have been recovered from Galien river. They had been fishing in a small boat. Two Men Burned to Death. Attain, Pa.. May 22.—An exploding lamp set fire to the Palace hotel Sat urday and two men. Michael Kemner and Dr. Benjamin, were burned to death. Several other inmates were scorched, but escaped by jumping from windows. Judge Tourgee Dies. Bordeaux, May 22.—Judge Albion W. T'jurgee, of Mayville, N. Y., Amer ican consul here, died Sunday of acute uraemia which resulted from an old wound Judge Tourgee was taken seriously ill some months ago. Just What She Would Do. She—What would you do, George, if you were left a widower? lie—Oh, I suppose pretty much the ! same as you would do if you were left a i widow. "Oh, you wretch! And you always t.-.M me you could never love anybody else."— Pick Me Up. _ One Good Way. "And ho Jimpson read his poem to you yesterday! Bow did you endure it?" "I jiint fixed my t'ass eye on liiin, and went to sleep with the other."—Chicago Journal. Some men upend so much time in get ting ready to die that they make a dismal failure of life The Commoner. Back at Work Again. Buffalo, N. Y.. May 22nd.— (Special)— Crippled by Kidney Disease till he could i not stand on his feet for the hours re- j quired at his trade, I<\ 11. McLean, 90 ' Fast Ferry St.. tins city, had to quit j work entirely. Now lie's back at work I again and he does ngt hesitate to give the credit to Dodd's Kidney Pills. "Yes," Mr. McLean savs, "1 was too bad, I had to quit. I could not stand on | my feet for the necessary hours, it waa I Kidney Disease 1 had, and a friend ad- j vised me to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. 1 • did <io and after using six boxes am com- j pletely cured and am working as steadily j as before- I was sick. I recommend Dodd's j Piils to anyone afflicted with Kidney j trouble." There is no form of Kidney Disease ! Dodd's Kidney Pills will not cure. They j always cure Bright's Disease, the most ' advanced and deadly btage of Kidney j Disease. A self-made man sometimes works thp short-change racket on himself.—Chicago Ne .vs. The Coming Country. The opportunity for the man of little means is probably better to-day in tho prairie states of the Southwest than ever i tiefore in the history of the nation. The chance of pre-empting claims or of tak- ; ing up lands under government laws is gone and will not return again. It is a : different kind of opening which lies before j the settler and its promise is of exceed ing brightness. Its best opportunity is : shown in the great Southwest where tho ! transformation is going on and where the \ conditions of soil and climate are in har* . mony uitli the warm skies and temperate winds. To the man who is not satisfied | with his- condition, the Southwest has an ' inviting future. Along the lines of the Missouri, Kansas i & Texas Railway there are vast areas of un- j improved lands awaiting willing hands to ; make them yield the bountiful crops of ■ which the land is capable. There is a need ! of stores, factories and new business of; every description. It is the finest kind of an opportunity in the finest section of the United States. The Southwest is un excelled for the variety and fertility of its soils—for its climate. Its people are : progressive and up-to-date, its religious and 1 educational facilities are as good as can J be found elsewhere. ,i Tho M.. K. A T. R y has no lands for ' sale, but is interested in building up this productive country. It is believed that the Southwest has brighter prospects and; offers better opportunities than any other section. Seeing is believing. For that rea son the Southwest courts investigation of the conditions as they exist. Anyone de sirous of learning more of the Southwest will do well to address George Morton, Generd Passenger and Ticket Agent, Mis souri. Kansas and Texas R'y, Box 911, St. Louis, Mo. The modern siren :s the lady on the dol lar. X. O. Picayune. j j CASTORIfI J For Infants and Children. Kind You Have f5. i Always Bought AvtgetablePreparcitionForAs- # **_ | similntinglhcFoodandßegula- ill M I tticStoiiiaihs and Dowels tT tfears the ——— % Signature //[tr Promotes Digeslion.Cheerlul- $ ./ S tr ness and Rest.Contains neither o /jf Ff h |p Opium.Morpliine nor Mineral. :l| 01 £J |\ *\ ?/ JS'OT NAM C OTIC . i| U Y Jiw'pe ofOMfi/SiMUELPirCIOR J| . \ ihmpfcui •Seed" » ft \gf H Mx.Sennrt * j \ l(erh*tu Sells- I fe §&Jk 5 j, still re Srrc! t ijjjj ' 1°; Ji' 'Ci.rc&ia A- ■ ftxte. * I 'Sjl |\ 6/5 ffS/ttt Sc*ef - | .'ijjjj \ 1 JL# B (k&t Su *& J i w * ■ lUHterywrn Flavor. / H Bjj A perfect Remedy for Conslipa jjjtl j \j U S* ; Hon,SourStoaiach,Diarrhoea $6 8 IjL/ Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- a M 112 „„ „,, ness and Loss OF SLEEP. | \_f I 0 T 01/1' FacSunilc Signature of I Bars THC OFNTfIUR COMPANY. HEW YORK CITY. I^BL VS. Drugs k 4 fi'j People Are finding 3 jfc)?*s* g roc efy tsU fr That Proper Food V ; t Sf- SL, rrr n err™ -b6 \|. is Better Than - IGG-0-SllC° 185 j&f Medicine. <(£■* ' Quinty, II!. jiv Mp A distinguished physician In a recent lecture before a class la an East- 1»B Bf em Medical College said: "it is my sealed conviction that ninety per B# ifil V 01 all human ailments arise primarily from the stomach. Proper WH Hit out would nearly put the physician out of business." F7Y» H J' you desire a clear head and a strong body, the moral is plain that you //£# iS§\ m " st e;tt only the most nutritious and healthful foods. /;Jrg I@\ A '' physicians and food experts agree that fialted wheat properly rn.inn- l/Ss factured Is on ideal food. EGC-O-SEE is the purest, daintiest and the Jg Ml mLV\ most wholesome of all naked wheat foods It is the whole grain B/l\ lvHi\ of the best wliito wheat thoroughly steam cooked and then B// I \\WA . crisped a delicious brown and properly flavored. There is W/ / J health, appetizing enjoyment and economy in every pactage. //■7 J !&? *C f><^aaOo^AA ! sa ' 9od especially adapted £t /iSr OSV\Q " >-' et, rc) people living in tho vVv. pniallortowns andcountrydistrictp.hecause ot the abundance of rich cream at hun<!. Nearly Everybody Eats It How. ' INTERESTING LETTER WRITTEN BYANOTABLEWOMAN — Mrs Sarah Kellog? of Denver, Color Bearer of the Woman's Relief Corps, Bends Thank 8 to Mrs. Pinkham. j The following was troubled with it I great mental depression- I was unable to at/ i tend to my house work,and life became a bur ; den to me. I was confined for days to my t>ed, | lost my appetite, my courage and all liope. j " I could not boar to think of an operation, I find in my distress I tried every remedy which I I thought would be of any use to me, and J reading of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's | Vegetable Compound to sick women decided j to give it a trial. X felt so discouraged that I | liad little hope of recovery, and when 1 began ; to feel better, after the second week, thought j ic only meant temporary relief: but to my j great surprise I found that I kept gaining, I while the tumor lessened in size " The Compound continued to build up my j general health and the tumor seemed to be i absorbed, until, in seven months, the tumur j was entirely gone and 1 a well woman. 1 a>n j so thankful for my recovery that I ask you ! to publish my letter in newspapers, so other j women may know of the wonderful curative j powers of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable | Compound." When women are troubled with irreg j tilar or painful menstruation, weakness, j leucorrhoea, displacement or ulceration i of the womb, that bearing-down feel* j ing, inflammation of the ovaries, back ! ache, flatulence, general debility, indi- I gestion and nervous prostration, they | should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound at once removes such trouble. No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and unquali -1 fled endorsement. No other medicine : has such a record of cures of female . troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine: Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, • Mass. Health is too valuable to risk in ex i periments with unknown and untried ' medicines or methods of treatment. .; Remember that itis Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound that is curing women, and don't allow any druggist to sell you anything else in its place, eTra iij When you are bilious B ! rnd have headache, back | ache and bad taste in the ! mouth, 6end to your drug- S3 B gist for the best cure for biliousness—Celery King, Kwß|v%- the tonic-laxative. It only B B w B costs 25 cents to get welL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers