2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor Published Every Thursday. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. P<t yenr ** ?! If paid in advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are publlshod at tho rate ol #ne d"l ur per square for one insertion ami llft> cents per square for each subsequent Insertion K:ites by tin- year, or for .si* or throe month#, are low ami uniform, ami will bo furnished QM »pi Ileal.on. I.rtril ami Official Advertising per square Uire>' times or less.each subsequent insei tio i . (i i cuts per square. Local notices lu cents per Une for one inser ter ton: 5 cents per line for each subsequent ec.r ecutivo Insertion. <ibituary notices over fire lines. 10 cents por Ur, ' simple announcements of births, mai • rirnies and deaths will be inserted free. Business cur ls, five lines or less, <5 per year, ever tlve lines, at the regular rates of adver tia! ur* No local inserted for less than 75 cents pei Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PiiEssiscomplete Hid iff r.t- facilities for dointf the best class of Wurk. PAICI ICULAII ATTKN l ION r AID TO LAW Phinti.v, No paoer will b? discontinued until arrear rges are paid, except at the option of the pub« sher. Papers (-cut out ot the county must be paid lor in advatce. The Effect of Caste. "The mixture of the social classes In education," says Henry M. Whitney in the current issue of the Arena, "has been one of the greatest safeguards of the quality of culture, helping to keep it pure, practical, helpful and unsel fish. "No reflective observer," con tinues Mr. Whitney, "can fail to see that one of the greatest hardeners and then corrupters of the human heart Is the spirit of caste. A culture that is founded upon caste, that strives to protect or brild up coite, is absolutely suro to do mischief—in a positive or a negative way. On the other hand, tho more frequently and intimately aud helpful the representatives ol' different social classes can meet and learn to respect each other —in the schoolroom, or on the athletic field, or anywhere ■else—the purer, other things being equal, will be the life and the culture of all, and the more will those who have had greater privileges think it a matter of course that they must help in any good work that is doing. They realize better that the world is not wholly of them nor for them. "In America to-day there are two linos in which a healthful mingling of classes may especially be found. Ono, as we have already suggested, is the educational system. In the older days the 'select school' was the place for the child, if the family purse could afford it. But * * * our public schools are, especially in the more democratic parts of the country, used and enjoyed by all classes, and hence have been made good enough for the rich while not beyond the reach of the poor. "Then, the friendships of school days are carried through life, crossing all artificial lines. * * * Our collegesand universities are substantially demo cratic; men are still valued there for tlieir worth, the door of opportunity is still open to the deserving, however born; and the future is still so hope ful that President Harper, in one of his very last utterances, ventured to declare even that 'the university is the phophetic interpreter of democracy.' So long and so far as this continues true, our culture will be safe from de cay." Pig Iron Statistics. According to preliminary statistics which have jus-t been issued by the bureau of cens;is at Washington the production of pig iron in the United States in the calendar year 1901 amounted to 16,203,025 gross tons, val ued at $228,911,11 C,, against 14,447, 791 tons, valued at $206,512,755, in the census year ended May 31, 1900. The Wage earners employed in 1904 num bered 35,077, who received $18,934,513 in wages, against 39,241 in 1900 wha received $18,484,400 in wages. The consumption of iron ore in 1904 amounted to 30,033,8G2 tons, valued at $100,945,369, as compared with 25,- 366,894 tons in 1900, valued at $05,- 902,922. Of the iron ore consumed in 1904 29,203,994 tons were domestic, valued at $96,206,246, and 829,918 tons were foreign, valued at $4,729,123, while in 1900 the domestic iron ore consumed amounted to 24,612,511 tons, valued at $61,795,473, and the foreign ore to 754,383 tons, valued at $4,107,- 4.49. The daily capacity of the com pleted furnaces in 1904 was 77,970 tons, as compared with 54,425 tons iu 1900. As ascertained by the American Iron and Steel association the produc tion of pig iron in the United States in 1904 was 16,497,033 gross tons. A Chicago school of domestic sci ence has recently turned out a group 1 of sweet girl graduates whose diplo- ■ mas certify that they ine able to keep | a house on ten dollars a week. While j this movement may not settle the j household problem, remarks the Min neapolis Journal, it is gratifying that It is being considered and that ther.e j are young women who are making the j effort to restore the art of housekeep- j ing in this country. Ten dollars a | week may not be the right figure but it seems a safe starting point. Nc man who cannot earn ten dollars c week has much of a license to mar ry. And the mt.n who can earn that amount is entitled to know in ad vance that if he does marry he is not being run up against a S2O wife. BRYAN AND TARIFF FAVORS THE TKUST ISSUE IN THE 1008 CAMPAIGN. Regards Silver Question as "a Dead Horse"—Thiiip* Tariff Reduc tion Bettor Thnn Recipro* city as a Policy. According to the Sun's Berlin ca blegram of June 16. William Jen nings Bryan was interviewed regard ing the political situation in the United States: "Mr. Bryan expressed the opinion that the next election in the United States would turn on the question of the trusts. The silver issue, he said, was a 'dead horse.' "Being asked about the prospect of the passage of reciprocity treaties, Mr. Bryan said that he was in favor of a general reduction of duties, in which case reciprocal treaties with foreign countries would be super fluous." The silver issue being a "dead horse," it follows of necessity that the campaign of 1908 must be fought out on the tariff question. It will be the fight of 1890 over again, except ing the elimination of free silver as a side issue. The tariff was the main issue in 189 C. In 1908 it will be the only issue. Standing alone the trust issue will be of no utility to the Dem ocratic party, for the only anti-trust laws now on the federal statute books are the product of Republican legisla tion. Coupled with the tariff tho trust issue can be utilized again as it v/ns iu 1900 and 1904, and doubt less will bo. Handled in this \vay, it may prove useful in winning votes for Bryan from those who feel the need of some pretext for a downward revision of the tariff. We can imag ine Gov. Cummins supporting Mr. Bryan on the ground that "the tariff is the mother of trusts," along with the assured prospect of increased foreign competition as the result of Democratic tariff revision. It would be a little harder strain on Gov. Guild, but he, too, might be won over by the promise of free trade in raw materials. In the event that the Re publican party should adhere to its record of guaranteeing equal protec tion to the producers and the users of raw materials, the temptation to "go Democratic" might prove too strong for Mr. Guild to resist. It will be noticed that Mr. Bryan Indulges in no ecstatic delusions re garding the beauties of the recipro ; city system of tariff revision down ward. That scheme does not appeal to him. His intelligence revolts at it. Presumably, also, his sense of fair play rejects it as an outrageous | discrimination between industries equally entitled to the benefits of protection, or, as he would put it, equally able to get along without any protection. He is right in thinking that there is a better and a decenter way to insure what Gov. Cummins calls "potential competition." He would not revise protection out of the tariff in spots and chunks; he would eliminate it altogether and place all industries on a level foot ing of no protection. So, as we are told in the Berlin in terview of June 11, he is "in favor of a general reduction of duties, in | which case reciprocal treaties with foreign countries would be superflu | ous." Most assuredly they would. I With the tariff reduced to suit Mr. i Bryan's ideas foreign producers could , get into the American market with out paying anything for the privilege. They could keep their own tariff in tact. Moreover, our tariff having been swept away, we couldn't reduce it if we wanted to. We should be exactly in the present position of Great BritaTn, a convenient dump ing ground of all creation. Mr. Bryan's preference for tariff : reduction and his reprobation of reci j procity dickers as "superfluous," will, of course, suit his party, and it may, as we have said, appeal strongly to tariff revisionists like Cummins ana Guild, but it is going to be bad for the American Reciprocal Tariff league. How can the enterprising organization keep on raisi%'{ money 1 with which to exploit its scheme of foreign trade advantages when the ground shall have been dug from un der its feet by an all-round tariff abolition that leaves no basis for special dickers? Flour is no more in dispensable to the baker's dough than protection duties are to the dough of the Reciprocal Tariff league. But Mr. Bryan's reappearance upon the scene as the accepted candidate ! of his party presents a pleasing phase in the political situation and outlook. It serves to clear things up arid straighten things out. It will j bring the armies squarely face to face \ upon a single issue: Protection or free trade. It will put courage into the party of free trade and back bone into the party of protection. Both parties need bracing up. Eggs and Pence. To have things cheaper is the eco nomical ideal of free traders and tar iff reformers. They do have things cheaper when they have their way with the tariff. This result is reached by a lessening of demand without a corresponding curtailment of the sup ply. Poorly-paid people are poor buy ers. When eggs were selling at tuppence a dozen in the Scotch High lands, Dr. Johnson observed that the trouble w»s not too many eggs, but too few pence. It is better to have eggs selling at five times tuppgnee and also have pence enough to buy and pay for them. That is what pro tection aims at and accomplishes. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1906 FAULTS OF THE PRESIDENT Veteran Republican Editor Points Out Many Blots on the Political Record Theodore Roosevelt. The Evening Star, of Washington, 1). C., edited by the venerable Crosby S. Noyes, has for nearly half a cen tury been the leading Republican •newspaper south of Philadelphia; aud its editor has been on terms of in timate friendship with every Repub lican president since Lincoln's time. He knows better, perhaps, than any other living man, the opinions preva lent in the highest circles of official society in Washington. His editorial utterances are therefore of the first importance. In the Star of June 25 Mr. Noyes in his leading editorial, speaking of Roosevelt, says:"He does not hesitate to exe|t all his strenuous energies in the execution of anything he has willed, when he ia wholly in the wrong. His oldest, best and most sincere friends have noted with dismay Ills rapidly growing dis position to exercise autocratic power on all occasions*, big or little, right or wrong." By close observation Mr. Noyes has discovered that Mr. Roosevelt has less respect for decent people than for many questionable characters, and cites the Barnes appointment in sup port of this contention. Barn<« had become odious to the people of Wash ington by reason of his brutal treat ment of Mrs. Minor Morris; and the Star says, in "contemptuous defiance* of outraged public opinion he (Roose velt) appointed the person directly responsible for the brutal outrage to one of the best paying offices in his gift." j The Star also charges that, a dis graceful compact was made between ; Hie president and Penrose, the suc j cessor of Matt Quay as boss of the 1 Pennsylvania Republican machine, by ! 'he terms of which Roosevelt is to ' help Penrose and Durham to reestab lish their sway in that state, in re j turn for the aid rendered by Penrose in securing the confirmation of Barnes as postmaster at Washington. These attacks upon President Roose | velt by the leading Republican organ at the national capital are unpreoe ! dented. The Star would make good | reading in Pennsylvania, lowa and ■ Ohio this year. Nobody can charge it j with being a Bryan organ or a yel ; low journal. It is after the straight est order of its sect a Pharisee. AT EXPENSE OF FARMERS. Removal of Duty on Hides Would Aid the Manufacturer, But Not the Agriculturist. One of the assaults upon the Repub lican tariff law which restored pros ; perity to this country has been led by those who want free hides for the benefit of the manufacturers. Strange as it may seem there is an element in lowa, great agricultural state that she is, that has joined in this de mand, notwithstanding the fact that hides are the farmer's product and one of the comparatively few things upon which he gets the direct benefit of protection. The plea has been that the tariff made hides so high that it was a hardship on the manufac turer and that the latter would take it out of the consumer. Frank W. Mahin, an lowa man who is consul at Nottingham, England, says that English shoe manufacturers have raised their prices because they have been compelled to pay ah advance of 40 or 50 per cent, on leather the past year. It is hardly necessary to say that Mr. Mahin is telling the truth, as he is a reputable and reliable man, and besides misrepresentation in a matter of this kind would cost him his position. Neither is it necessary to call attention to the fact that there is no such thing as a duty on hides in England. The situation in Eng lad, taken in connection with the fact that in this country the advance in the price of hides is far greater than the tariff duty, seems to show that the increase is worldwide and is caused by the fact that the supply was not equal to the demand. The remedy which the manufacturers proposed to apply would be at the expense of the farmers. —Creston (la.) Advertiser. Democratic Measure Defeated. Even that high Republican authori ty, the New York Tribune, is troubled over the failure of congress to pass the Tillman bill prohibiting corpora tions from contributing money in con nection with elections. While Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Cannon could have pushed this bill through the house in less than an hour, they refused to do so. The Tribune warned these gentle men against resisting the passage of the bill, but in vain. On June 27 it said: "This is a reform which pub lic opinion demands, and there is no good reason why it should not have its first trial In the approaching con gressional campaign. Delay in legis lating against corrupt practices will j only suggest evasion, and such a charge will prove embarrassing to meet in the present temper of the voters." Let it not be forgotten that the measure failed because it was ob structed by President Roosevelt and Speaker Canrton. And when the president goes out on his poaching tours at the expense of Democrats a« well as Republicans, ask him why he stifled the corrupt bill; why he keeps Cortelyou Hi his cabinet.; why he doesn't apologize to Juitge Par ker for the falsehood he told about Parker in 190 i; and why he doesn't make Cortelyou and Bliss pay back to the policy holders of the life in surance companies the money filched from them in the la t campaign. Ted dy is a fine preacher; but "words are good when bncked up by deeds, and only so." THE COURTS Should Not Aliow Tech nical Appeals in CRIMINAL CASES. While the Number of Murderers is In creasing Procedure Against Them is Becoming a Farce. Ithaca, N. Y. —Andrew D. WlTite i ex-presdent of Cornell university |in an address before the Cor | nell summer school Friday night, de ! cla.ed the time has come when techni cal appeals in criminal cases shoulc | no longer be allowed by the courts j Referring to the situation in Nev j York City and speaking of Distric Attorney Jerome, Dr. White said: "On him more than any other mat j thinking people throughout the stat< ! and nation are pinning their hopes that sundry cases of high crime nov attracting notice may not become s lasting disgrace to the New Yorl | courts and American justice. "While the number of murderers is I rapidly increasing, procedure agains | them is becoming more and more in j effective, and, in the light of sundry ; recent cases in New York and else where, is seen to be a farce. "One of the worst results of t.lies< cases is the growing opinion amonj the people t large that nuiii witt money can FO delay justice by ever; sort of chicanery that there is virtua immunity from punishment from tin highest crimes. I favor preventing appeals based on mere technical mat j ters and upon errors of trial judges ii trifling, matters of procedure and th< like which have really nothing to d< with the question of guilt or inuo cence." TRADE REVIEW. R. G. Dun & Co. Report Conditions o Business as Exceptionally Good. New York.—R. G. Dun & Co.'i • weekly review of trade says: Exceptionally encouraging reports for this time of the year are receivec regarding Cratfe, industry and trans portation. The best news of the pas | week comes from agricultural sec j tions, where progress is fully main j tained, harvesting of winter whea l promising a larger yield than expect ed, and of good quality, while con and oats exceed anticipations, anc hay alone of the leading crops threat ; ens to be short. As results on th< i farms become assured there is i growth of confidence that brings ou' large orders for fall and winter de j livery of all. staples. More textile mills have voluntarily advanced wages 5 per cent., to tak< effect after this month, and the onlj important labor trouble that threat j ens is a local building complicatior that will be averted if conservative j counsel prevails. Official returns show that foreigr commerce in the fiscal year ending June 30, 190G, far eclipse all records i both as to exports and imports. Restoration of foundry pig to $1 i \ is probaly (he best development ol the week in the iron and steel indus try. Failures this week numbered 192 ir the United States, against 193 last | year, and 22 in Canada, compared with 23 a year ago. SIGNED TREATY. Peace Hss Been Concluded Betweer Central American Belligerants. Washington, D. C. —The state de partment Friday night was advised ol the signing of the treaty of peace by the representatives of the belligerent republics aboard the Marblehead. A cablegram was received from Mr Merry, the American minister to Sal vador, Cosla Rica and Nicaragua, an nouncing that a treaty of peace had been signed on board the American warship. In his message Mr. Merry referred to a joint message sent by himsell and Mr. Combs, the American minis ter to Guatemala and Honduras, which message had not reached the state department Friday night. This message, it is believed, gives details as to the conclusions reached and is awaited anxiously by the officials here. Fell Down Elevator Shaft. Pittsburg, Fa. —Ella Farmarie, 18 years' old, employed in the dress making department of the dry goods establishment of McCreerv & Co., of this city, was instantly killed Friday by falling down the elevaur shaft from the tenth floor of the building. Miss Farmerie walked to the door of the elevator which had been left open. The car was on the lowest floor and in some manner which has not been explained the young woman stepped into the shaft landing on the roof of the cage. Kicked Into River and Drowned. Chicago, 111. —Albert Wegel was beaten into insensibility by Adolph Adams Friday and then kicked into the river during a quarrel. Before help could reach him he drowned. Adams was arrested after ha had made a hard fight against three po licemen. Will Buy Railroads. Tokio, Japan.—The Japanese gov ernment has decided to purchase six railways by December ], paying for them $125,000,000 In 5 per cent, bonds, redeemable in five years. PANIC AMONG PEOPLE. Excursion Boats Collide in New York Harbor—l,soo Lives in Peril, but There Were No Fatalities. New York.—Two crowded excur sion steamers were in collision Thursday night in New York harbor off Staten Island, imperilling the live® ot 1,500 persons, but neither in th« crash itself nor in the wild panio which followed was anyone seriously injured. The vessels were the Per seus, bound for Coney Island with 500 passengers on board, and the Thomas Patten, from Long Beach to New York, carrying 1,000 passengers. The shrill whistles of the colliding steam ers soon brought assistance from boats in the bay and the frightened passengers were transferred as quick j ly as possible and brought to this city. I The Perseus and the Patten interlock | ed and neither sank. | The lower harbor was covered with a dense fog at the time of the collision I and the two vessels were running at reduced speed. When directly off St. George, S. 1., the Patten crashed with terrific force j into the port side of the Perseus, | smashing the paddle wheel and box ! and tearing away much of the joiner | work. The Patten's bow and upper | foredecks were badly damaged. The ; Impact was so great that the vessels ; remained fast together. No effort was ; made by the Patten to break away, however, for it was felt that safety from sinking lay in vessels remaining interlocked. When the Patten loomed suddenly | out of the fog bank and it was seen ! that a collision was unavoidable, the passengers on the two vessels became I frantic with fear. Just before the ' wash one man on the Perseua jumped overboard. Ho wan quickly rescued, A hasty examination indicated that 1 neither boat was in immediate danger of going down and the excursionists were assured of this fact. Meantime the whistles were calling assistance, and while the passengers were rush ! ing about the decks seeking relatives and friends, the excursion boat Com ; modore and a Staten Island municipal | ferry boat ranged alongside. The , transfer of passengers was quickly made and ull were brought to the city. During the panic many women fainted and some were bruised, but not seriously. DAMAGE IS SLIGHT. Reports Regarding Earthquake in New Mexico Greatly Exaggerated. Santa Fe, N. M. —Mayor Bursum, of Socorro, Thursday issued the follow ing signed statement: "The reports regarding the earth quake at Socorro have been exagger ated, the damage to date being limited to the falling and toppling over of loose chimneys and shaking of some of the walls of buildings not of a sub stantial character. "The actual damage all round is very slight, although there is some j uneasiness on account of the fre- j quency of the shocks which are, how- j ever, becoming lighter each time, in-! dicating that the disturbance is sub-1 siding. Since Wednesday there have j been four slight shocks which were barely perceptible and would have passed unnoticed at other times. Peo ple who have left Socorro on account of the earthquake have done so princi pally on account of their children or female relatives. There has been no cloudburst or flood, as reported in dis patches, and not the slightest injury to any person." Mayor Bursom also denied reports that the Santa Fe railroad tracks are blockaded by falling boulders. All trains through Socorro arrived on time Thursday. MINE EXPLOSION. Causes Death of Five Miners and In jured Two Others so Badly They Will Die. Bluefleld, W. Va.—As a result of an Explosion in the Dixon mine at Hughey, in the east end of the Tug river field, Thursday night, Wallace Mitchell and four miners, Ernest Jones, Palmer Harris, Robert Harris and John CJilmore are dead and Bill Crouse and Langdon Whiteside will die from burns and shacks. The men were going on duty for the night and had started down the shaft in a bucket. They had gone about half way down when the explosion oc curred, blowing the first five men named out of the bucket and down to the bottom of the shaft, where -they where later picked up Their bodies were crushed almost to a pulp. The explosion was caused by the men hav ing a gasoline light in the bucket while descending, the light igniting an accumulation of gas. Eight-Hour Law to be Enforced. Washington, D. C.—Action of the greatest, importance to labor circles is contemplated in a direction given by the president to officers in charge of public works, at the instance of Secre tary Tftft." This is to employ the government's own officers to detect and punish violations of the law of 1892 providing that except in case of an emergency work upon government buildings, ships and other properties shall be limited to eight hours each day for each workman. Shows an Increase. Washington, D. C. —According to a statement issued by the geological survey Thursday the value of the products of clay in the United States in 1905 was $119,(597,188, as against an output valued at $131,023,248 in 1904. Of the total value in 1905, $121,778,294 was for brick and tile and $27,918,894 for pottery. Jockeys Injured. Buffalo, N. Y. Five jockeys were injured at the Fort Erie race track Thursday by their horses going down in a bunch. UTTERLY WORN OUT. Vitality Sapped by Years of Sufferingf with Kidney Trouble. Capt. J. W. Hogun, former postmas -1 ter of Indianoia, now living at Austin,, Texas, writes: "I was afflicted for am years with pains i across the loin* jvzk aßt^ i MR and shoulders. I ' -fiiffmS had headache also l JMAyEafr,' 1 and neuralgia. 112 "• J&Hj£s from pain, was of *" little use to me ' • ' for years. The constant flow or urine Ijept my system depleted, causing nervous chills and night sweats. After trying seven dif ferent climates and using all kinds of medicines, I had the good fortune to hear of Doan's Kidney Pills. This remedy has cured me. lam as well to day as I was twenty years ago, and my eyesight is perfect." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box„ Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR. The thing that makes a pretty hat- Is the face under it. People may love their children for their faults, but mighty few others. Singing in a choir is the very best way not to make friends of the rest: of it. Hardly anybody would like to get. the cussing a millionaire has without his money. There is hardly anything that makes a woman madder than to have her: photograph look like Iler. Tho meanest man la tfca cue wh® woj't kiss a doJl for a child whta she thinks it has been hurt. When you see a man lo'kLig prettj*' cheerful in town it's a sign his fam ily is away for the summer. A very useful thing about an ama teur garden is it's such a nice place; for the dog to bury his bones. Girls don't get much fun out of go ing in swimming unless there is some man around to show them how. Even if a baby understands the lan guage the women talk to it he'd be ashamed to admit it by answering. A man can make a good deal of: money in stocks by being careful not to have anything to do with them. When a man lets a collar butttoc* fall and brags that it didn't roll un der the bureau it's a sign he is a per jurer. One of the meanest things a man can do when his wife has a point in an argument that can't be beaten is.- to agree with her. —N. Y. Press. BADGER PHILOSOPHY. A man can't be ifnusually polite without being looked upon with sus picion. When the real nature of a man's: business is in doubt it is often hinted that he is a gambler. A woman is never satisfied with her self until she has outdone her neigh bor in somo respect. It's hard to understand why actors with such fabulous salaries always stop at such modest'hotels. Lots of people think they have been, cheated unless they get more than their money's worth. —Milwaukee Sentinel. Another Australian Experiment. Suitable farming land is provided by the Australian government for groups of men and their families that will ul timately form village settlements, but they are not to be cooperative—each-. ' settler will stand or fall on his own merits. Government overseers will guide and instruct the settlers for two years, and the house erected for his, use can be used as a public hall or school. Plain rations, implements, a.-, small stock of cows, poultry, etc.; roofing material, water tanks, etc., will' be supplied for the first year. This will be charged as a loan and must be-, eventually refundPd to the state. OUTDOOR LIFE Will Not Offset the 111 Effects of Coffee* When One Cannot Digest It. farmer says: "It was not from liquor or tobacco that for ten years or more I suffered from dyspepsia and stomach trouble, they were caused by the use of coffee until I got so bad I had to give up> coffee entirely and almost give up eat ing. There were times when I could eat only boiled milk and bread and when I went to the field to work I had to take some bread and butter along to give me strength. "I doctored with doctors and took, almost everything I could get for my stomach in the way of medicine, but if I got any better it only lasted a lit tl£ while until I was almost a walking: skeleton. day I read an ad for and told my wife I would try it ( and as to the following facts I will make, affidavit before any iudge: "I quit coffee entirely and used; Postum in its place. I have regained my health entirely and can oat any thing that is cooked to eat. I have; increased in weight until now I weigh more than I ever did; I have not taken any medicine for my stomach since I began using Postum. Why, I; believe Postum will almost digest an iron wejlge. "My fasiily wauld stick to coffee at first, but they saw ,tb« effects it had on me, and when t'hey wer« feeling bad they bogan to use Powtum, one at a time, nntil now we all use Postnm." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Hon days' trial of Poetnjr hi plaee of coffee proves the truth, an easy end pleasant way. "There's a rtKiaon." " Look In pkgs. for a copy <>f the fa mous lfYtto book, "The Road to Well-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers