2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor Published livery Thursday t TERMS OF SEUSCRIPTION. f'cr vfti'- .... r? OS r paid in ai.vunoe 1 *»3 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of *n>- u -I■:<r per wjuaro forono Insertion ud tirt) cent* per -pian lor (Mii-n subsequent lnsertiou Kates by the year. or In:' si >. or iliree month*, it low ami uniform. a..U will be furnished *vi tip- llcation. 1 and Official Ai'.vcrtlKinp per sqiiaio three times or less, e:ich subsequent insei • tio i■» < ents per square. I.ocal iu'lU" IN cents per line for oneinsej. K r:i"ii: l> root* ptr line lor each subsequent eon-ecutive Insertion. obituary noli >s over five lines 10 cent* pot Una. Simple announcements of births, mat* mure* and deaths will i><- Inserted free. Hut'lMss cards. Ave lines or lesi, t6permi'< c hve lint s, at the regular rates of artvcr tis!ilH. N'.. loeal Inserted for less than ..> cents pet Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRBSS Is complete smi ni»' ril«f nullities fur doing the best olass of TT rU I'M 111 I I.AH AT IKN I ION PAID TQ 1-AW PKIN I I V. No p..,) r will ha discontinued until arrear rt •« nr. i aid, cxc« pt at the . piion of the pub sher. Papers •■cut out of the county must be paid lor iu advance. Kind of Men Needed. If one were togo to the president c? the United States and ask him to name the country's greatest need, he would reply in his quick, conclusive way: "Clean men." He knows, says the De lineator. Smart men there are by the thousands: rich men abound more than in any other age of the world; able men are found in every state and township, but even from a population of 50,000,000 the chief executive has difficulty in finding the man of excep tional character for a post which re quires a square and flawless morality. It is tp his credit that he mlsse? no op portunity to preach manhood. Hut neither presidents nor preachers nor teachers can do the work ot fathers except in their own families. We do not mean to underestimate the marvel ens influence of the mother. In most lands men who reach success give their mothers the credit . "All that I am I owe to my mother," said Lin coln. "It was you who taught me to write so. You really did, dear moth er," said the crabbed Carlyle. We get our moral qualities from our moth ers. our mental from our fathers, say the physiologists, and as we look back we find this maternal affection the loveliest thing on earth. Rut isn't there a conviction down deep in our souls that we should have done much better if our fathers had taken time and tioilble to share oud confidences in the jears that counted most? Some Dogs Ave Lucky. A big touring car rolled up to the entrance of a roadside "hotel" over in Jersey one day lately with two men en tlie front seat and two women and si beautiful cocker spaniel in the ton neau. One of the men ordered some drinks for the party, and as they sat refreshing themselves, relates the New York Press, the spaniel made it known that he also was thirsty. "He wants a drink," cooed one of the women. "Well, how about it?" remarked the man who was driving the machine to the German waiter. "Vait a minute," replied that functionary, and he dis appeared behind the swinging doors leading to the barroom. Presently he emerged carrying a tin drink shaker tilled with water. The cocker barked his appreciation and scrambled up on the seat nearest to the point where the waiter was holding the tin vessel. When the dog had finished chinking one of the "women opened her purse fnd handed the waiter a half dollar. He made more out of that order than hie; employer had for the othtr drinks. >ot so bad to be a waiter sometimes. 11 is the opinion of an eastern con temporary that every sign of the times indicates that the people of America t-re advancing to a higher etliical plane. Things that heretofoie have been tolerated are now condemned. The ancient excuse tha shave done it —that it is the %vay of the world—is less a:.<e it 'd. The big cor poration must show great -r rectitude oi' conduct I ban was displayed by in dividuals in ihe old days. Prom those to whom much power have been given correspondingly more is required. As wealth has increased a new burden is laid upon it. It must carry it or else fiiiller the consequences that inev itably follow failure to do that which fcociety demands. An Oklahoma historian raises the question whether men of the European race saw that country before John Smith Handed at Jamestown. Doubtless they did not, siii're De Soto did not go so far west and Coranado hardly *o far east. But the white man has t-eeu making up for lost time by get ling into ihe garden patch of America with both feet, and to the number of nearly 1,000,000 in the last id years. And he is there to increase and multi ply. Justice Gould, of Washington, in sentencing a man to be hanged, name 1 Tuesday, October 30, as ihe day of execution, "i see no reason," re marked his honor after court had ad journed, "why I riday should oe hang man s day exclusively. Friday I; as gCiC(\ a day as any other, and I do not wish lo put the slightest opprobrium rpon it." THZ Vi/ATCH INDUSTRY. Killed by Uvitir.li Free Xvnde and Pro muted by American Pro tection. Massachusetts is one oi the s' itra where watches are made in ias*fc« Quantities. Certain couyre ■ ai; m in Massachusetts have just, been tUio-.u hard by the other Republicans in ion truss because they made ail appeal l'or a chance to make a revision o. the protective tariif, to push ttiia country along tow; I'd trie trade. The pe p!e already know, says the Worcestti Te!i vraiu, which kind oi congressmen they are in favor of, but here i- one more point which sti< ks out to disturli the position of the Mas.-'achusetts t a gressmen. T. P. Hewitt, managing director oi' iHo Lancashire Wanii company, in England, has written au article fur the Magazine of Cosam -i e, in which he makes the claim, and Bltows the proof, that the watch ma! ing industry of the Unite.l Kite. t.-m, in which it formerly leu the world, is bting rapidly transferred to the I ail ed States. Trailsferrad is an ray word, but the Englishman should hive the advantage of all sm 11 eons'/:. in, because he feels badly enough boat losing the industry without havi::': Americans change the word u> one which would sound in ire lorceful. Hi; Mr. Hewitt writes it plain enoi.- h in these won':.: "Forty years ; > t ; best known devices hi the modern wall he:, \v re invented by Enaii.sa makers, and at that Lima only ' watches were marie annually in tie I nited Si ..lea and 164,(»' '0 in Great Britain. But the whole situation has been reversed, and while in Great Britain only 22(1,000 watches wire made in 1&I-2, ia the United >Sia<.-•• ;.e enormous numb'T of 2,750,0u0 were turned out. Ihe American wa., ii [~ rapidly superseding the Swiss us well as the Ein.lish watch." Mr. tlewit says the decay of the watch ma ~in.-. industry in England is caused l.y '1 e "obsolescent assay laws' and th : strict enforcement in Great Britain, and the "fetich of iree trade," w'aia has hindered parliament in its lation. The center of the watch mak ing trade in England is at Birming ham, and the critic of the system notes the tact that Joseph Chamier laln was returned to parliament from that city because r:»n on a protee tion platform. That one instance nlight be enough to reassure the cour gressnien of Massachusetts ii' '.hay could back into Hie Republican p rty before the time for reelection comes around. They did not succeed in kill ing the wutcli making trade of Massa chuPf'tls by free trade ;s it has been killed m England, and there is ;i p pect that they never will be able to do it. RIDICULOUS ON TH£ FACE To Ask Americans to Forsake a Policy That Has Shown Such Good Results. The growth of our foreign trad.' is marvelous. The tariff revi i<»ni?,ts have been sounding the note of alarm tiiat if the duties are not slashed we shall have a customs war with Ger many ai least and perhaps with sev eral other European powers. Their theory is shattered, says the Pittsburg Times, by the steady increase of ex ports, particularly of manufactures. If the foreign peoples could dispense wilh what they are buying from us or if our prices were exorbitant there would be no gain in shipments to re port. If it was not that they find the American goods and products indis pensable to them they would not lie so eager customers and they would not be buying more and more with each successive year. The German gov ••uncut has retreated from its programme of a tariff conflict with the United States for 1(1 months, and it is altogether probable that if we stand pat it wiil find excuse for de laying Hostilities at the c:;d of that time. There is no solid ground for mak ing coik' si ms to a.n •• nation th.r.t would injure our industrial activity and prosperity. Manufactures ami trade are swelling in amount under the Dingley tariff. It is manifestly ridiculous to ask Americans to for sake a policy and a system that are producing such magnificent results, to try experiments, th • outcome of which would b< doubtful. Dependent No Longer. A press dispatch from Essen. Ger man.'.', mentions the expected demand from San Francisco for strut■ rural steel, and adds: "The steel syndicate has just voted $1.25 increase in ;he price for haif-rclted and structural steel." Our foreign friends have done just this thing to us several times in the past. In ISBO tbey found us short oi steel rails, and held the price on us at $82.50 for two months, averag ing $H7.50 for the year. Then we were making less than 4,000,000 tons o:' pig iron per year. This year, thanks t • the Dingley law, we will probably make more than 25,000,000 tons, and t..e German steel syndicate can put their price where they please without hurt ing consumers i-i the United State.-. American Economist. The Joab of lowa. ii Gov. Cummins could succeed in getting free trade with Canada in nat ural products—the burden ot h;s in augural two years ago—and then in creased rates on farm products the eastern markets, then could it be aid of our g-eat a-.ricultural interests, ~s it was of A.nasi r. er ha ;e --ceived the ? word tnrust in the fifih rib: "And (t'j) struck him not ai::; and he died." .live us what Cuniuiins demand', and profitable farming is a thirg of t!io past in lowa. —Cedar Rap ids Republican. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1900 ; CONDITION CF TREASURY. i , Prosperity end Good Times Under the Operation cf a Protec tive Tariff. ! Cn April o). u year ago, we ha ! a : defuit of y.I .. ■ l.u.V. ou April iais year, we had ;i surplus o£ !f0,'J53,G71, a gain of i> u.o'i '1 ho surplus at t'.io !ea i of the ti .-5 ~i year will undoubto.ay ' ' je much raare ti. -a it. is now. Whi e j expenditure.* will be about the ;-tu 1 ibis year as last, says thi Ain.rieya }J; (iao;:ii ,•, the re*, mies have i.i --j crea;-ed over §•«• w.v •>, luah cast iu« receipt sand Internal revenue showi: i substantia! gains. This i-; ie to tl: ■ ! incr-aseci purch: :ia p war of the poo ' p!e because of hi»;'.e: - wages and iui! r empli yment. I Two men recently took «n evening far It.) a. Tney v.a ..> both i.ive < travelers. The question arose :.; to the 1 .1- ofct Mollis they had w I;r *!- Ti.ey !of the beau;lts . 1 nature, of gn at buildings, eti. Uic ; remaraea: "At:or ab, tho grandest sight, in a.y 0; r.ii. i, •; a f;n ,ory and its hi".! .''is :of lights at n!;.l<:. As we pass i'«.•<» : South Norwalk, Stamford, Bridegport, New Havea, Wulilnjrford, Marldeti, we : liiill sco hj :(ired:i of factories all lighted and hear the I,llm <>f v. a>• i ■ ■ the night shifts : re turning out w r ! for sale: and distribution i: 11 ovr ;• tll3 world. Nut only is ttyis true In Coa ne ticut and Massachusetts and Rh Inland, but all over tho c aunt ay. and th< ir earnings aro enormous." Such is prosperity and good tir??n. Times that we c:nr\v only und 1 . ' ic op 'ration of a protect I -/e tariP". N ' oaiy are we buying about all vmm prod ; e ourselves, but a billion of dol '••• V.'-iftll 1 , !:! :•! 'lamils;: '1;; • !!••*. to our in (vnal rovonuo for tho : :r --pose of meeting the expenses 0° the tad the least burden ome in. t'h xl* of laaati >ll i:i exit'teace, for ; itch of if is paid by foreigners to get their gooes into our market. And r.o the perfoet ness of the IJingley law is a » in every (' ail. A perfi*> tnc.u never known before .and which cot:ld nt at present be equaled through* any revl sion of our present most Ji'imir. !».o and meet s..ccps:sful tariff. GERMANY'S SACK DOWN. Knew Who tho Suifcrcr Would 2o in a Tariff War with Ara erica. As this jcr ■ r i.as frc; : :uly ■ ?•" ste-'I, the (k'-mans are so far Itaa; I looking for a tariff war with tl: • United Stales that tho vote in tho reiehutag to extend the existing! duties in favor of this country to June was ah; a.-t unanimous. An i ! it is to tlie credit of the members, ! says the New York Press, that they frankly admitted, in ca. ting their j votes, thai from inch a war the 111!' i fercr would bo not tar- United .. !■■■. i iiut CN'rinany. \\ 0 have so often shown why—ao proving why the Ger mans would do exactly what they i have done —that it is unnecessary to j go over the ground again further than to reiterate that nearly all the tilings which Germany buys from us sh« must have and can get nowhere else. It that nation should bar out our products, tho greatest industries which goto make up the growing for- 1 eign sab's of the German exporter of i manufactured articles, now invading i tho world, would close down, and bankruptcy and misery plague the ! empire. The steamship line s doing j their mormon: ly profitable busir.oas j with the I 'nit<. d States would go oa; | or baa-inass. That is why v.e always said there wc .li bo no tariff war waged aar.in. t us by G -rmaay; that is why the Reichstag confirms oar prediction '.vita, its ovarwh-' lining vote to let thing 3 itay as they are iar a year and a hr.li lon .-r; and th- y v.a'l do tho sa . e taint ov. r again foi the I same reason. OPIKIOaio cr EDITORS. C3"La rol'.fctt - 1» hailed for l!.o; as "the i.leai Democratic Moses." As Moses never re.ai. u .lie promised land, the title may l. ■ con3ld<3ro.l prophetic.—Chicaga i -.st. u-'The anti-impe:a:iist3 are at it again. At least the Salem (Mass.) Civic League demands that a large pic - tare of Th •)d >re itoorcve.lt be re lieved fria.ii a Ktori front because i; mars the beautv i.-; ;he town.—indian aa-olis News (lnd.i. It is i'or 1 lie farmers of lowa to say with which e; ase tiiey propose to tie identified—that represented by (lie Ca'hoan-Cleveland-Cammins school cf politKail theorists, or that of McKin icy, l>in?ley and Roosevelt.—Les Moines Capital. ca- it. will be an easy and a pleasant task far the Republican newspapers and the Republican slump orators in the congressional campaign of I jg 10 show that 111" Anarican people are vitally inteiested ia keeping tho Re publican party in control of the gov ernment. —el:. Louis Globe-Democrat. r .'Proto :irn, ad.la.sted to tho vary ing reaadreti. ats «.f the nations Mat aiihore tot! • ay.-"' 1 i. tui:>uestionubl.v i-i productive of good, an 1 the I'.act that it ii . a" a. ..ily practiced is ita vin.'ii' a.;< n.— Va y Ti:.:e;i. : -"The sal a 1 a aa 1 wages pall by the United States Sice! corporatioa in lit j «iarat ! tor.a • per era:, cf «the prr "err?d s'.O'-l. «".'s sa'. for a; the end of If al SIOO p«s share. Here . another ar- K'lment/aa : i-r- 'f-'-n! Datvi . with anv that .'.a:-' j rotp rlt Stutesuian. I BUYING PAINT. | Springtime—after the weather has ! become well settled—is painting time. There is no dust flying, no in sects are in the air at that time ready to commit suicide by suffocation in 1 the coat of fresh paint. The atmos pheric conditions are also favorable at that season for proper drying and increased life of the paint. It should be a habit with every property owner every spring to look over his buildings, etc., and see if they need repainting; not merely to see if they "will go another year," but whether the time has not come for putting in the proverbial "stitch in time" which shall eventually "save nine." For one coat of paint applied just a little before it is actually need ed will often save most of the paint on the building by -preventing it from letting go and causing endless trou ble and expense. Paint lets go because liu.-eed oil, which is the "cement" that holds all good paint together, gradually decays or oxidizes, just as iron exposed to air and dampness will slowly decay or oxidize. The water and oxygen in the air are the cause of the trouble in both cases, and the only reason, outside of -its beautifying effect, that we apply paint to wood or iron is be cause we want to keep water and air away from them. Live paint, that is paint in which the linseed oil is still oily, does this very effectual ly; but dead paint, that is paint in which the oil is no longer oily, is no more impervious to air and water than a single thickness of cheese cloth would be. If then we apply a fresh coat ot oily paint before the old paint is dead, the oil from the new coat will penetrate the old coat, and the whole coating will once more become alive; and this method of ren ovation may goon indefinitely. This explains why it is better econ omy to repaint a little before it he comes absolutely necessary than a little after. When the paint is once dead the fresh coat will pull the whole coating off. In the days when repainting meant a general turning of tnjngs upside down, a two-weeks' "cluttering up" of the place with kegs, cans and pails, a lot of inflammable and ill smelling materials standing around, etc., the dread of painting time was natural. So was the dread of soap making time, of shirt-making time, of candle-moulding time and the like. But we live in an age when soap comes from the store better and cheaper than we can make it, when j shirts are sold ready made for less than we can buy the materials, when we can burn coal oil or gas cheaper < than we can make tallow candles, and when all we have to do when we ; want to repaiut is to pick out our ; colors from the card at the store and pay the painter for putting on the paint. When it comes to pit-King out the i paint it is not necessary that ono j should be a paint chemist, any more ! than one should be an oil chemist when buying kerosene, or a depart- j ment store buyer when selecting | shirts, or a soap chemist when buy- ! ing soap. All that is necessary to j insure a fair show is some knowl edge of the character of our paint dealer and the reputation and stand ing of the maker of the paint offered. Nor must one expect to buy a pure linseed oil paint for the price of lin seed oil alone. It can be taken for ! granted when anyone offers to sell dollar bills at a discount, he is bait ing a hook for "suckers." So it can be taken for granted when anyone— whether mail order house, paint manufacturer or dealer—offers paint too cheap, he is bidding for the trade of "suckers," no matter what his promises. But paints sold in responsible stores under the brands of reputable manufacturers are all good products, differing from one another in the less important matter of the solid pig ments contained, but practically alike '"n having their liquid portions com posed essentially of pure linseed on. The competition of the better class of paints has driven inferior goods practically out oi the market, and no manufacturer cf standing now puts out a poor paint, under his own name at least. As to guarantees on paint, they cf.n be taken for what they are worth. Any reputable manufacturer will make grod any defect actually trace able to tne paint itself and not to im proper use or treatment of- it. The really important guarantee which the paint buyer should exact from his dealer is that the paint is made by a manufacturer that knows his busi ness and that the paint itstlf has a record. If he secures this guarantee he can afford to chance the rest of it —the paint will undoubtedly give good service if properly applied ac cording to directions. He Pitied Them. A little boy was on his first coun try excursion, relates the Brooklyn Citizen. Some birds were flying high overhead, and his hostess, a young woman, said: "Look tip. Tommy. See the pretty birds flying through the air." Tommy looked tip quickly, nirl tuen he said in a compassion rite tone: "Poor little fellers! They ain't, got no cages, have they?"— Detroit Free Press. Fret. Teas—lsn't that Chicago girl tall? She must be n aiiy six fret. Jess —Yes; and if she stood on tip toes she'd be seven feet —Philadelphia Press. "T Is a faux pes," remarks an nrbnr philosopher, "to ask a lady what a faux pas is who never heard of :i faux pas." A BIG STORM Swept Over Chatham and Hamilton, Ont. DID MUCH DAMAGE At Hamilton the SSorm Cached the Proportions of a Cyclone— No Lives Were Lost. Detroit, Mich. — Eastern Ontario 1 was swept by a terrific rain and wind 1 storm Friday afternoon and as a re sult'all wire communication between this city and Canadian points east of Chatham, about <;o miles from here, was cut off. Chatham suffered severe property loss from the storm, which unroofed houses, blew down trees, felled wires and filled the streets with debris, but no loss of life resulted and no one was seriously hurt. Con siderable property damage is reported from small towns and farms between here and Chatham. A torrential rain storm accom panied by a 40-mile wind storm swept Detrc it iusl before 0 o'clock last even ing. The rainfall in less than an hour measured 1.3G inches. Trees were felled ; II Aver the city, causing severe damage to wires. Hamilton, Ont. —A terrific wind and rain storm swept over On tario on Friday from one end of the southern peninsula to the other, de molishing buildings, uprooting trees ! and leaving the telegraph and tele phone lines in a tangled mass of wires. Linemen who were sent put immediately after the storm got as far as Dundas, five miles west s>f here. They report miles of poles down. The storm struck this city at 4:35 p. m.and for 20 minutes the wind tore through the streets at the rate of ■ 85 miles an hour. Immense oak and maple trees were out off at the base as though a saw had been used; buildings were demolished and elec trical wires of all kinds prostrated. The street car service was suspended for four hours. Forty buildings in course of construction and some that had been finished were blown down. ARt IN A HURRY TO CLEAN UP. The President Gives Out Another Re port Regarding Packing Houses ar.d Their Managers. 'Washington, D. C. —In response to a request from the house committee ; on agriculture, President Roosevelt j 011 Friday forwarded to Representa tive Wadsworth, chairman of that committee, the report made to him by .♦committee of the department of ag riculture regarding conditions in the Chicago meat packing houses. Ac companying the report was a letter from the president in which he points out that there no conflict in sub stance between the Neill-Reynolds-re port and that of the agricultural de partment experts. It is said in the latest report that the packing house proprietors are manifesting almost "a humorous haste to clean up, repave and even to plan j for future changes." New toilet rooms are being provided, with additional dressing rooms and clean towels. The report, says that "the haste towards reform would have been amusing if it were not so nearly tragic." The president says his investiga tions have not been completed, but that "enough has been developed iu ! my judgment to call for Immediate, ! thorough-going and radical eniarge- I ment of the powers of the government i in inspecting all meats which enter '■ into interstate and foreign com merce." REVIEW OE TRADE. Prices of Commodities are the High est in 20 Years. New York.—R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Current distribution of merchandise is largely dependent upon the weath er, which varies widely according to locality. On the whole the week's re sults were encouraging, and monthly reports for May show splendid gains over last year's figures. Prices of commodities rose to tile highest point in 20 years. In the Iron and steel industry (here is not only little idle machinery at the present time, but little prospect of any shutdown in the near future. Failures this week in the United States are 200. against 210 the corres ponding week last year. Failures in Canada number 18, against 20 last year. Congress. Washington.—On the Bth the house passed 1)57 private pension bills and devoted the rest of the day to the sun dry civil bill. In the senate Mr. Mor gan spoke in favor of an investigation of affairs on the Isle of Pines and Sen ator Hopkins spoke in opposition to the sea level Panama canal bill. Three People Burned to Death. Newton, N. J. Three persons were burned to death Friday in a fire near Walpack Center, N. ,1. They were Mrs. Samuel Garrison, 50 years old; .Mrs. Jacob Bmery, .So years old, and .Mrs. Garris< n's daughter, aged 12 years. Gorman's Successor Is Named. Raitimore, Md.—Gov. Edwin War field Friday announced he ap pointment by him of ex-Gov. William Pinkney Whyte, of this city, to suc ceed the late United States Senator Arthur P. Gorman. A CRITICAL PEBIQD INTELLIGENTWOMEN PREPARE Dangers and Pain of This Critical Period Avoided by the Use of Lydia E. Pink harn's Vegetable Compound. ivy. faan How many wo- P" - mon realize that ' the most critical period in a wo- man's existence •. rj tlie change of •V *«■ £ life, and that the anxiety felt by | time draws near MrfAEGHy/atxi '' s Dot without 1 reason ? _ If her system is in a deranged condi tion, or she is predisposed to apoplexy or congestion of any organ, it i.s at this time likely to become active and, with a host of nervous frritations, make life a burden. At this time, also, enneersand tumors are more liable to begin their destruc tive work. Such warning symptoms as a^ sense of suffocation, hot flashes, diz ziness, headache, dread of impending evil, sounds in the ears, timidity, pal pitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities,constipation, varia ble appetite, weakness and inquietude are promptly heeded by intelligent women who are approaching the period of life when woman's great change may be expected. \\ e believe Ijydia E. Pinkharn's Veg etable Compound is the world's great est remedy for women at this trying period. Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Com pound invigorates and strengthens the female organism, and builds up the weakened nervous system as no other medicine can. Mrs. A. E. O. IT viand, of Chester town, Md., in a letter to Mrs. Pink ham, says: Dear Mrs. Finkhant:— " I had be.>n suffering with a displacement for years and was passing through the change of life. I had a good deal of soreness, dizzy spells, headaches, and was very nervous. I wrote you for advice and commenced treat ment with Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable. Compound as you directed, and 1 am happy to say that all those distressing symptoms left me, and I have passed safely through the change of life a well woman." For special advice regarding this im portant period women are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass- She is daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising sick women free of charge. Her advice is free aud always helpful to ailing women. THOUGHTS FOE QUIET EOUK. Don't call the world dirty because you have forgotten to clean your glasses. If your religion is of the kind that can be easily hidden it can as easily be lost. The only reason some men won't gc to the church is because they are not invited into the pulpit. If you want to make a rich man understand you must touch his pocket book. The people who are too lazy to pre pare always have a lot to say about the way the prizes e~t distributed. Kicker by Habit. j "That man began to kick the minute i he entered the office," said the hotel clerk. "Yes," answered the proprietor. "Hfe behaves as If he had always been used to the worst of everything."—Wash- I Ington Star. Disappointed. "So Mrs. Nurich was hold up and robbed. How did she feel about it?" "Oh, she's fearfully mad. Only had five cents in her pocket book at the time, you know, and she's afraid peo ple will think she hasn't any money." —Detroit Free Press. Experience Makes Us Wise. Teacher—Can anyone tell me what a. palmist, is? "I know, teacaer. It's a woman who uses her hand instead of a slipper."— Judy. Prosperity has ruined many a man, but if a fellow is going to be ruined at all that is the pleasantest way. FAINTTNG SPELLS Cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, the Remedy Which Actually Makes New Blood. Anannia makes the patient short of breath so that there is often a sense of suffocation, sometimes there is a eougli and the sufferer -seems to bo going into consumption, at others there is a mur mur of the heart and heart disease is feared. In the following case severe fainting spells were an alarming symp tom resulting from " too little blood." Mrs. George Forrester, of 7 Curtis street, Watertown, N.Y., says: "Some time ago I took a heavy cold and it left mo in a very weak condition. I bc camo worse and worse until finally I had anannia. I lost flesh and appetite, had no color and subject to fainting spells. Sometimes they would attack me suddenly and I would fall to the floor with hardly any warning. " I had one of oar best physicians, but after ho had been attending me • about a mouth without any improve ment in my condition, I decided to see what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills would do. "Tiio pills were well known to me for, about two years before, members of my family had taken them with the best results. I soon found that the pills were just what I needed for I soon be gan to notice ati improvement. After I had taken them awhile longer I was en tirely cared, and wo all believe in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and recommend them highly." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actually make now blood. They do that one thing and they do it well. Impoverished blood is deficient iu red corpuscles. Dr. Williams' PinL. Pills increase the number of these red iorpuseles and in this way send health and strength to every ti~-ne. All druggists sell Dr. Williams' Pink Pill" or they will bo sent by mail, post paid, on receipt of price, 00 cents per box, six boxes for s2.fio, by tho Dr. il li«ms Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y,.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers