A CURL FOR DEBILITY Or. Williams' Pink Pills A Rellabls Remedy for tho Weak, Ailing and Bloodless. ■When tho body is M-eak nrnl the blood thin it is sometimes difficult to iiud the cause unless a wasting illness has pre ceded, or tho sufferer happens to be a girl on tho verge of womanhood. Ohscnre influences, something nn healthful in one's surroundings or work, may lead to ft 6low impoverishment of the blood and an eufeeblemeut of the whole body. When a serious stage has been reached there seems to bo uothiug that will account for it. Mr. C. E. Legg, of Tipton, W. Ya., lias found a successful method of treat ing weakness aud bloodlessness. He says: " I used Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for weakness caused by a lingering malarial fever that began in the spring of 1896. The worst effects of this were indiges tion and a bad state of my blood. I was anaemic, as the doctors say. People generally would say that I didn't have blood enough, or that I didn't have tho right kind of blood ; mine was too thin. My kidneys and liver were out of order. I was badly annoyed by sour risings from my stomach. There was a good deal of pain, too, in my back and umler my right shoulder blade." " How long did these troubles last? " " For over two years. For four mouths of that time I was under the care of a physician, but his medicine did me no good. Meanwhile I learned of the cures that had been wrought by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." "You owe your cure to these pills ?" " I certainly do, and I also know that they are helping others to whom I have recommended them. They have real merit and I know of uothiug that would take their place." For further information and valuable booklet address the Dr. Williams Medi cine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. PERSONAL PARTICULARS. Ralph D. Blumenflekl, editor of tha London Express, is an American, having been born in Milwaukee. He learned bis profession in Chicago and New York. Gov. Guild of Massachusetts has ap pointed Miss Marie Rose Collins, a daughter of Former Mayor Collins, of Boston, as state prison commissioner. Ehe has given the subject of prison work much attention. Ex-President Cleveland has sold his farm lying a short distance outside of Princeton. He bought the farm soon after going there to live, and intended to make it an industrial farm for poor boys, but the project proved a failure. Mrs. Cynthia M. Paden, of Monte tuma, la., was recently the only suc cessful woman candidate in a class of 85 examined by the state commission of pharmacy. Mrs. Paden is a mother with three little children and her work has uot interfered with her household duties. Gen. Henry E. Tremain, the newly elected president of the Republican club of New York city, has a splendid war record. He enlisted as a volunteer and rose to be a brevet brigadier general in 18G5. He was one of the founders of the Grand Army of the Republic in New York state and always has been active in politics. ~ Patrick J. MeHugh, of Holly Springs, Miss., in a way is twice an American citizen. He came to this country over 20 years ago and was naturalized in 1888. Not long ago a building in'which he had come papers was burned, his naturaliza tion papers going with the rest. Patrick at once made application for a new set and now is able again to give documen tary evidence of his American citizen ship. Candy and Water. As candy eaters and water drinkers, Americans rank first. "COFFEE JAGS." The Doctor Named Them Correctly. Some one said "Coffee never hurts anyone." Inquire of your friends and note their experiences. A Phila. woman says: "During the last 2 or 3 years I be came subject to what the doctor tailed 'coffee jags' and felt like I have heard men say they feel who have drank too much rum. It nauseated me, and I felt as though there was nothing but coffee flowing through my veins. "Coffee agreed well enough for a time, but for a number of years I known that it was doing m« great harm, but, like the rum toper, I thought I could not get along with out it. It made me nervous, disor dered my digestion, destroyed my sleep and brought on frequent and very distressing headaches. "When I got what the doctor called a 'coffee jag' on, I would give up drinking it for a few days till my stomach regained a little strength, but I was always fretful and worried and nervous till I was able to resume th« use of the drug. "About a year ago I was persuaded to try Postum, but as I got it in res taurants it was nothing but a sloppy mess sometimes cold, and always weak, and of course I didn't like it. Finally I prepared some myself, al home, following the directions care fully, and founu it delicious. I per severed In its use, quitting the old coffee entirely, and feeling better and better each day, till I found at last, to my great joy, that my ailments had all disappeared and my longing foi coffee had come to an end. "I have heretofore suffered Intense ly from utter exhaustion, besides the other ailments and troubles, but t If summer, using Postum, I have fell fine" Name given by Postum Co. Ilnttle Creek, Mlrh. There's a reason. It'Ktaurant rooks rarely prepare Postuin < off,.n properly. They do no' let it boil long tuou fth. A SURPRISE. 1 Anthracite Miners Spring One on Operators. WILL ARBITRATE. •Miners Offer to Submit All Ques tions in Dispute to the Decision of a Conciliation Board. New York. —Having failed to | come to an agreement among them ; selves, the hard coal miners of Penn | sylvania, through their representa tives, on Thursday proposed to the op I erators that all matters in dispute be j referred to a board of arbitration for | settlement, the tribunal to be compos- I ed of the board of conciliation which | was created by the award of the an j thracite strike commission in 1903 j with Judge George Gray, of Delaware, !or any person he may appoint, as chairman and umpire. If the oper ators acoept the proposition and a | convention of mine workers approves ! the plan, the ICO,OOP men now idle in | the anthracite field will return to I work at once. While it had been reported for sev | eral days that the miners might ask that the differences be arbitrated, the proposition made to the mine owners came to them as a great surprise, as | they did not believe the union leaders | were ready to leave the controversy I to a third party at this time. That the operators will accept the miners' proposal as submitted is not j generally believed; in fact, it is inti j mated they may flatly refuse the of fer, on the ground that existing condi | tions are the result of arbitration. The employers have decided to consider the miners' latest move and promise |to give President Mitchell and his men an answer on Monday, when an other meeting of the two sub-com mittees will be held in this city. The proposition was read to the op erators by Mr. Mitchell and along with it he submitted the original demands of the miners, the reply of the operators in which they proposed that the strike commission award be renewed and continued for three years, and the letter of Gov. Penny packer, who urged that both parties make reasonable efforts to come to an agreement. The operators at their meeting de- ! cided that before they would frame a reply to the miners they would first . consult all interests, in order to get the sentiment of the heads of all the i i coal carrying roads as well as that of ; the independent operators. The anthracite board of conciliation consists of six members—three repre i senting the operators and three the ' miners. It was stated at the miners' head quarters that if the operators agree : to arbitrate, a call will be sent out at j once for a convention of miners at which instructions would be adopted, : if they ratify tho arbitration plan, for ! the idle miners to return to work im- ; mediately. Pittsburg, April C.—Reports from j various sections of the soft coal re- ! j gions show that conditions in those | fields are improving. There was j more coal mined in that territory j j Thursday than on any day since the strike was inaugurated. The produc- j tion of coal, however, is not as large as was expected. Patrick Dolan, ex-president of the j Pittsburg district of the Miners' j | union, and Uriah Bellingham, ex-vice j I president of the same district, have 1 been expelled from the organization j j for voting against instructions. SUICIDED IN A MOTEL. A Philadelphia Woman Kills Herself In the Palmer House at Chicago. Chicago, 111.—Mrs. Edith Coo- ! per, whose address is given as 2330 j Germantown avenue, Philadelphia, committed suicide Thursday in tho Palmer house by shooting herself through the head. She went to the Palmer house early in the day with a man about Go years of age, who regis- 1 tered as Emo Bardeleben, of New i York. The woman registered as Mrs. ' Bardeleben. They were assigned to , a room and Bardeleben left the hotel. He returned three hours later and found the room locked. The door was forced open. The woman was dead on the floor with a revolver on the ; carpet beside her. Bardeleben at once declared that j the woman was not his wife and for | some time refused to give her name. | He finally told the police that she was | Mrs. Edith Cooper, of Providence, R. | 1., and that her husband, from whom I she had separated, was an electrical 1 I engineer. Later Bardeleben told the ' I police that Mrs. Cooper's home was in ] Philadelphia. Congress. Washington.—The houee on the sth ■ considered the postofflce approprla , tion bill. Mr. Stone, of Missouri, made I ' a speech in the senate on th< railroad i rati' bill. Fifty-five Peoole Killed in a Hote'. Nagoid, Germany Fifty-two per sons were killed and 100 dan j gerously injured Thursday by the col- I lapse of the Slag hole). The building had not iieey fully completed aud the catastrophe is attributed to the non observance of proper precautions. Dowie Is Deprived of $53,000. Chicago, 111. The appelate court In a decision Thursday deprived Dowitt of oon which had been left to itl iii by Frederick Mutton, u New JSealender. The heirs of Sutton ferouglU suit to have the will set aside. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 19C6. Btnp JcaslevlVlU* monaster bells, rin£ mntilp, Jl peaceful halo bring. . y- y 7H Bn *h* nrnfr njooOs ttftth iramc, n lret "(he bltxebird OZtilp irill, A j&n# the robin ttfifh hts silver notes, I&ieuiifh the thrush at umi y V- y^ s io' > rsv) Rirrqr&aster fcelu, ring rntotitor LS Jl deleome to the flowers. 3-J rH <£hat peep their heaOs so shplp ti - ft p? (T all forth the *leepiiM petak, . W (t X Bn 300 here ttmters *nows hatfe lain. <K > l_f\ "Rirng faster hell*, ring cheerikr, /L, ronie ronie agam. <£ ell fhzrf the earth \% born anen* faflefc xtfith hope and dieer; <p hat Ifaitb bid? at) Ihe n>orl& time up. her *ono of Uictorn. 112 . j Ring Ji arter hell t , from tar dntt near . y out extutinoly. —J iftlalie I Caster JMielttcs Pretty Thintfs, Easily Made, That Will Interest the Little Folk* little Americans like Easter lIL for the novelties the season brings them. The stores are filled with them, and many others are ; made by the ingenious boys and girls i themselves. Here are a few that may be made at home with nothing more expensive than the always abundant ! egg. One that is sure to please is a tor pedo boat that floats. It is made by blowing out the contents of the egg t by making a pinhole at each end, and then blowing steadily at one end. Make a hole in the middle of the side of an egg and pour in melted sealing wax and lead. Paint a row j of portholes around the egg and glue on a bow and a stern cut from a cigar I j bos or a shingle. The smokestack is made of black cardboard, and the rail ing of wooden toothpicks glued in a | circle of cardboard which slips over the smokestack and is kept in place ' with a touch of glue. The American I flag flies from a toothpick. If a needle is put into the bow the boat can be j drawn through the water by a mag | net.. A more peaceable toy is the duck. | Weight the shell and paint it to repre j sent a duck. Cut head and tail of ! pasteboard, and after gluing firmly to I the shell paint in colors. For the little girls' dollhouse an j eggshell cradle can be made. If the j maker is skillful it can be cut in one j i l piece from the egg. Pasteboard rock ers are glued on and the cradle can be fitted with tiny mattress, pillow i and spread, A penny doll, dad in its , nighty, should repose beneath the cov ers. When Easter Comes. "The festival of Easter is to be eele- j 1 brated on the Sunday following the Hist full moon after th>' beginning of | spring." Therefore, If the moon becomes full upon the day on which spring be gins, the Sunday after the next full uioon Is, of course, indicated by the I directions of the council as Easter day. And If the uioon becomes full on a Sunday, the next Sunday, »im- U*i l>, must be day. ( Caster Customs of ittanp Eantjs Quaint Practices Found Wherever the Day Is Observed ytJjjANY quaint and curious cus | Ijirf toms are in vogue at the Eas j ter season in many lands. Many oi these customs date back to | centuries ago, and the legends of their j origination are almost obscured in an- I tiquity. Such, for example, is the practice of "lifting" from which our present nursery game of "making a chair" by two children clasping hands ; for a third to sit upon was derived. This was an old Easter custom in which two persons lifted a third three times. If anyone refused to be lifted, he or she must pay a slight forfeit, forfeits being applied to buy refreshments after the village games. A kindred custom was that which prevailed in the Yorkshire villages, of taking the buckles from each other's shoes and demanding a forfeit for their return, the earnings being applied to the same end as those obtained in the lifting. In Hungary, when Easter Sunday comes everything is gladness. Wreaths of green leaves are hung in the windows, and the young girls of the towns and villages, all dressed In white, walk in a procession to the church, carrying branches of the bud- j ; ding spring leaves. It is a very pretty sight. After the young girls the older people walk in procession. The cler- ; gy, in their robes, and acolytes, car- ! rying a large gilded cross, walk at the head of the procession to the J church. There the people lay offerings | of money at the feet of the holy image. 1 Easter Monday Is the favorite wed- ! J ding day among the Hungarians, as j it is thought that marriages made on j that day are sure to be fortunate, so J j the priests are kept very busy. ! The custom called "watering" on Easter Monday is extremely odd, and j people who have traveled and studied j much say that it is not to be found I in any other country save Hungary. iae men take water in bottles and j pitchers and throw it over the girls j they meet in the street, whom they ! know, or call at their houses and throw it on the person who opens the door, if it is a woman. The funny j part is that the more drenched the vic tims are the better they like it, as they think it brings them good fortune for the year. Everybody used to do this, but now the fashionable young men take spraying bottles of perfume. On Tuesday the young women retaliate, and the men often find themselves J drenched, most unexpectedly, from a ; window or door or as they pass a J drinking place in the street. | Instilled by nursery lore and very ! | ancient is the belief of German chil- | i <lren that on Easter eve a snow-white J j hare visits every household where the ; the little folks have been "good, obe dient, truthful and kind to each oth er" since the previous Easter. Timid 'after the nature of its kind, it waits until everybody is asleep and then ' soft-footed it brings and secretes in ! odd out-of-the-way places any nutn | ber of lovely, wonderful colored eggs that the children may find and enjoy j on Easter morning. Many familiar pictures of scenes in the Tyrol are the representation of the Easter custom. The men go about In their picturesque costumes, their broad brimmed hats trimmed with fresh flowers, and sing the Easter hymns to the accompaniment of their guitars. ! The people come out to the doors of their houses and Join In the choruses, I and treat the singers with hospitality, glvlug them eggs and wine. All day they continue their ceremony, end when the night <nines on children accompany thuu, bearing lights 1 torches. In ancient days it was a praetics among the preachers to Introduce facetious stories Into their ► •rinorm ou Raster, to set the example of the ills p< r lu>; of the gloom of the Leuteo season BEST AXLE GREASE EVER MADE Something new and far better than the poods put out by the old monopolies. Use independent gooda and ask your dealer for Sun Light Axle Grease. If he does not handle it, write us. MONARCH MFG. CO.. Toledo, O. MAKE EVERY DAY COUNTj£rr COUNT j£rr /' ' ,? , no, matter how ftHl JNtSr / b ¥» the weather You cannot mv uW*Y7\ afford to be ®. j k}'i V -without a TOWER'S Pi M 'H? WATERPROOF \r h a oiled suit M/ (f - Q vOR SLICKER I 1 /I When you buy Is' Ml look for the / l . 1\ 510N OF THE FISH * v y i<ss»«i 4" » J *»««« eo eoifDN u » • BROWN Send for Booklet givincfuil description. BROWN MANUFACTURING CO. Zanesville, Ohio. A Positive /gTnT^v CURE FOR fffJAMB AU*\ CATARRH M'MWw Ely's Cr&am Balm 112 yW[ is quickly absorbed. ""I Gives Relief at Once. M It cleanses, soothes, heals and protects the disoused membrane. It cures Catarrh and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly. Restores tho Senses of Taste and .Smell. Full size 50 cts. at Druggists or by mail; Trial size 10 cts. by mail. Ely .Brothers, 56 Warren Street. New York. SOUTHERN FARM LANDS where diversified crops, grasses, grains, fruits and vegetables grow, there are tine oppor tunities for stockmen and dairymen, may be had tn Southern Railway Territory at very low prices and on easy terms. A little investment will go a long ways. The finest climate. No Irrigation needed. Publications and informa tion sent. !tl. \. RICIIAKDH, Land and Industrial Agent, WASHINGTON, D- C. WHOOPING COUGH IM'XIf AM'H SPECIFIC! Shorten* and Lightens the Disease. Warranted to < ure. INed In the Cleveland Orphan A.»yliitit«. Kndort-ed by Physicians. Sold by drutririKtii or mailed. soz- bottle r>Oc., 12 oz. liOttleVl. Lickes Drug Co., Mfrs., CLEVELAND, O. A.N. K.-C , 2120 Oldiraobile Standard Runabout Price $650.00 OLDSMOBILE •> The Oldsmobile Standard Runabout ( Model B), is made in both curved I dash and straight dash piano box body. 7h. p., single water cooled cylinder. ( It has been improved during many years until now we do not know what to do [ to make it better. Kepairs for entire season will be less than 15.00. Just the | car for country roads. Our nearest agent will demonstrate it without cc* t to you. l'rice, s(j-,0.00, including lamps, horn and tools. Four Cylinder Touring Car (Model S). 36-28 h. p. Trier, ♦<230.00. Double Action (Two Cycle), Oldsmobile (Model L). 20-24 b. j.., F detachable rear seat, l'rice, St2<o.oo. I AUTO-SHOP CO. (*. M. OWEN), OLDS MOTOR WORKS, CIIVIItNO, OHIO. I*NSIM«. MICH. INFORMATION COUPON Kiuiil? ■ rut! ma infuiuutioii if(4iJiiif Mulltl ..... I mi mini itj N«oi« , T-i,,,,,,,,,,, , I Cl»» Suu W. L. DOUGLAS •354 *3= SHOES S& W. L. Douglas 94.00 Cllt Edge Line 111 j jtAprrAC *2.300.00 c mmmrntm tin nnn REWARD to anyone who can VI UjUUU disprove this statement, til could take you Into ray three large factories ■t Brockton, Man., and (now you the Inflntto care with which every pair of ihoea la made, you would realize why W. L. Douglui $3.80 abac* Coat more to make, why they hold their iliam, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe. W.L. Doug/am Strong Maria She mm for Man, 92.80, 02.00. Boym' School « Di-mmaShoem. 92.80, 92,91.78,51J50 CAUTION .—lnsist upon Laving W.L.Doujj ia shoes. Take no substitute. None genuipm Without his name and price stamped on bottom. fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear bra99ti Write for Illustrated Catalog. W. Le DOUGLAS, Brockton, lln—■ One of our clients, ~df prominent, successful Clevjp' land Manufacturing- Com pany, is about to increase their capital and will $50,000 treasury stock. We have arranged to handle issue for them, and will sell it in lots to suit. This is a stock of unque?** tioned merit, sterling value, earns large dividends and is desirable from every stand point. It will stand the closest scrutiny and full portunity for investigation will be given. The Company manufac tures a staple product, well and favorably known throughout the country. Its equipment is superb and they are leaders in their line. We shall be pleased to confer with you through your local attorney, or you may visit us personally. BURROWS & MASON, Attorneys, 413 Schofield Building, Cleveland, Ohio. CALIFORNIA! via UNION PACIFIC | EVERY DAY to April 7, 1906. ]• Colonist rates to all principal I points in that state from 1 Chicago $33.00 SHORT ROUTE FAST TIME SMOOTH ROADBED Tourist Sleeping Cars a Specialty Inquire of W. NEIMYER, G. A., 120 JACKSON BOULEVARD, CHICAGO, ILL. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers