THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG. PA. CONDENSED DISPATCHES. Wotahlr EipiiIi of lh Wrrk Ilrlrflr anil Tprarlr Told. The French chiiinbi'r rejected n mo tion to fix a minimum wngo for miner. M. C. I). Itonlen ngniu Increased tlm w&jres of IiIh cotton operatives at Full Wrer, Mas. Mayor Harrison of Chicago suagest d a law forbidding private wlnerooins tt city saloons. Miss Enstwlck of riilladelphln plond d guilty In London of forging a ra 11 ad cert I Urn to. The Northern raclflp rnllrond took rat at Pnhith. Mluu., a $'.'0,()tO,(Mio tire nsurauce policy covering Its whole ysteui. Tnrailar, Opt. 22. Marquis l(o culled on the president ind Secretary ll:iy. The liuke of 'i'eck was rolilxd of vatch nnil money on the Ophlr. Bubonic placate Is reported to lip rav aging Km-hati nnd vicinity, China. The I'eiins.vlviinla supreme court de ified that the Philadelphia "ripper" aw Is unconstitutional. Henry M. l'cdlcy of New York city, v Tale freshman, was arrested on the barge of causing the death of Edward lonigan, a follow student. Oct. 21. Rear Admiral Tram-Is M. IUincedled X his homo In Hartford, Conn. The steamship Silierla, 18,11(10 tons, tras launched at Newport News, Va. Hull ('nine has consented to become i candidate for the Manx parliament. It Is estimated that the Florida range crop will amount to l.oUO.OdO i axes. At Niagara Fulls, N. Y., the Interna ionul theater was badly damaged by ire; loss, !fl.",(HMi. The Republicans of Ohio have funn ily opened their state campaign at n reat demonstration In Delaware. A destructive lire swept Sydney, C. causing heavy property damage nd rendering ninny people homeless. Five firemen were Injured and !fl. 00,0i0 worth of property destroyed in u Are on West Fourteenth street, Chl ago. The captain nnd ten sailors of a 'rench fishing vessel from Newfound ind were drowned in the wreck of heir vessel off the coast of Flnistcre, 'Tance. Saturday, Oct. 10. Former Governor John S. Fillsbury Jed at Minneapolis. Congressman Hull, who is ill at iJes Xolnes, In., is reported better. The Puke ami Duchess of Cornwall ave left St. John, N. 15., for Halifax. The National bank of Uoyertown, 'a., was closed on account of cash r's defalcation. Gold and silver bars have been wnsh d out of nn old wreck on the Island f Grand Cayman, near Jamaica. General James A. Walker, ex-con-ressinan from the Ninth Virginia dis .1et, is roported critically ill ut his ome In Wythevllle. The new battleship Uetvlznn, built i Philadelphia for Russia,' averaged i.8 knots for twelve hours, breaking l le battleship record. . l'rlililj, Oct. IK. Naples was otllclally declared free oni plague. Earl Russell was released from Jail ( i Loudon, having served his sentence ye bigamy. A large gold shipment and 300 pnsseu jra from Cape Nome, Alaska, reached uget sound. An anarchist editor was sent to prls .. In Berlin for approving McKinley's ..raassinatiou. , Tliumda-, Oct. 17. Empress Augusta Victoria is still con- aed to her sickroom. Secretary Hay has resumed his du- ; e at the state department. The battleship Indiana started from ew York for the West Indies. Congressmen who have been visiting ie Philippines sailed for home. King Edward was assailed by rltu Istic organs for attending a rresbyte an church at Craithle. Kingston, N. Y., celebrated the one mdred and twenty-fourth anniversa- of its burning by the British. Clinton, a mining town located on the ortheru I'aciflc sixteen miles east of 4ssoula, Mon was wiped out by Are. Molini'in Out of Slim SIhk, NEW YORK, Oct. 18. Rowland R. :llneux Is back in the Tombs. He ached New York over the New York :ntral and Hudson River railroad at e Grand Central station nt 4:f7 clock last evening, entered a carriage id wns driven to the prison. He was .coin pan led by his father, his conn U George Gordon Rattle, and Iietec-ve- Sergeant McNaught. Molineux as shaved and dressed In u prison ade suit before the hour for his de irture. He then stepped on the scaleH, id It was found that he had lost Just ie pound since ho had been in the Draarucd to Ileal li ly a Colt. PLATTSRURU. N. Y., Oct. 2l.-John uhcy, a lad adopted from the Catho v protectory In New York city by .men Touhey, a farmer living near re, was killed in an odd manner. He as sent to a field to bring In a colt, tstead of leading it by the halter he d the rope arouud his own body, he colt ran away, dragging the boy .er a field and n stone wall. Being Issed by the family, search was made id the lad's crushed body found still ed to the colt. Electric Power Without Wlreat. LONDON, Oct. - Experiments ere mndu nt the residence of the ln ntors, Messrs. Armstrong nnd Orllng, . Buckinghamshire, of a new system . ; wireless telegraphy nad telephony, dng earth currents Instead of nlr cur nts, a's In the Marconi system. Opur lions, were successfully conducted hver a distance of 000 yurds. THE PUBLIC REVOLT The Issues of the Campaign At Clearly Stated By the Fusion CandU data for 8tate Treasurer. In his letter of acceptance of the Union party nomination for state treas urer, Hon. E. A. Coray writes to the chairman of the notification committee, m follows: "Replying to your letter notifying me of my selection by the recent conven tion of the I'nlon party as Its candidate for state treasurer, I desire to say the nomination Is accepted and the high honor conferred fully appreciated. "It was natural to expect that revolt would follow the unspeakable acts of the late legislature. It Is the revolt of patriotic citizens jealous of the honor of the commonwealth. It is the revolt of long-suffering taxpayers, goaded to desperation by their plunderers. It Is revolt against the mnchine that writes reform In Its platform, proclaims it from the stump and then repudiates It in every political act. It Is revolt against the further exercise of power of attorney for a great political party by men who are without pride in Its traditions or loyalty to its principles and who constantly humiliate It by their practices. It is revolt against conspiracies to loot the assets of the commonwealth, from the coin of the treasury to tho coal in the bowels of the earth. It Is a revolt against legis lation to pinch the capitalist and rob the laborer of the fruits of his toll. It la revolt against the purchase and sale of legislation. It Is a revolt against politics on the bench. "The mnchine fears this revolt. It strives to befog the issues. "Yellow." It cries at tho faithful press that turns light upon its blackness. "Anarchy," shout the promoters of stuffed ballot boxes and treasury looters at those who strive to curb their lawlessness. Still the revolt spreads. Thousands of reputable citizens, aforetime sturdy sticklers for party regularity, are Join ing the forces of good government ' not that they love party regularity less, but decency, the honor of the state, and their own Interests as taxpayers more. The revolt is born of the hope of better government In Pennsylvania. It Is rooted in righteousness. It must win. "Regarding the office of state treas urer, I would suggest that It should cease to be regarded as a "plum tree." It should cease to be a receptacle for padded pay rolls, or bonds of Indem nity. It should not honor vouchers for contingent expenses, unless specifi cally itemized. It should pay no offl cers except those elected or appointed In pursuance of law. It should not withhold payment of appropriations for public schools or charitable Insti tutions in the interest of favorite banks. Its transactions, Its assets and Its accounts should be so open that any citizen of the commonwealth, desiring to do so, may be able to make himself familiar with them. "In brief, In connection with the state treasury and Its management there should be the strictest compli ance with the requirements of the law and the constitution no secrets, no mysteries, no bonuses or "rake-offs;" no funds for speculators; no fear of attack; no occasion for seeking refuge behind statutes of limitation, or flee ing from the Jurisdiction of the state. And If elected state treasurer I pledge myself to conduct the office In har mony with the above suggestions." AN HONORABLE JUDICIAL CAREER Judge Yerkes' Eighteen Years' Service On the Bench A Model Jurist. Hon. Harman Yerkes was born In Bucks county, In 1843. In early life he became a school teacher and later studied law, under the late Judge Ross, being admitted to the bar in 1865. He at once entered upon a suc cessful practice at Doylestown and was elected Judge of the county court, In 1S83, and has served continuously since, being now near the close of his second term. Before going upon the bench, he took a very active part In local, state and national politics, serving In Democratic conventions. In 1868 he was elected dliitrlct attorney, and in 1S73 was chosen state senator, being re-elected In 1876. His legisla tive career was conspicuous for abil ity and zeal In the performance of bis duty. As a Jurist, Judge Yerkes has displayed superior ability, winning the highest opinions from all classes of the people. He has been a terror to evildoers and has held the scales of Justice evenly between litigants. Near the close of hi first term all the members of the bar, Irrespective of party, addressed to him a letter urg ing that he be a candidate for ro election. Unanimously nominated again by the Democrats, he was in dorsed by the Republican convention and re-elected. In 1895 he was one of the nominees for the superior court. In social life Judge Yerkes Is a con spicuous figure at his home, in Doyles town. In 1S60 he was married to a daughter of Monroe Buckman. He is a member of tho vestry of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, and rector's war den. He Is a member of the Society of Sons of the Revolution and of the Historical Societies of Pennsylvania and Bucks County and is a past mas ter of the Doylestown Lodge of Ma sons. For a long time In advance of the last Democratic utate convention, by which Judge Yerkes was unanimously nominated to succeed Justice William P. Potter, on the supreme bench, be was unaueBtionablv tho rhnim of v. ! ery element of his party for that ex alted office. The placing of his name , on the Democratic state ticket, with such enthusiastic unanimity, and the . adoption of a platform aiming at the complete fusion which has been of j fected, was hailed by tho Independent I voters of the iltate as the forerunner of victory. By Independent Republi cans, as well as by Democrats, Judge Yerkes Is regarded as the strongest man who could have been selected to , head the fight of the people to j strengthen and dignify the highest tribunal of the commonwealth. A MOST FAITHFUL PUBLIC SERVANT How the Reform Candidate for State Treasurer Has Fought For the People at Harrlsburg. Ellsha A. Corny, Jr., Is a native of Bradford county, Pa., 43 years of ago. He has resided In Luzerne county, at West Plttston, for many years past. After an academic education, ho learned tho printer's trade and be came a reporter on tho Plttston Even ing Gnzotte, which he served accepta bly for six years. Taking an active intorest In politics, he became a mem ber of the Republican county commit tee, and was also chairman of the legislative district committee. In 1888 Mr. Coray was elected to the legisla ture and re elected In 1890. Through out both terms he was an intelligent and faithful legislator, exerting his Influence upon every occasion In favor of honest and desirable legislation and against everything of a dishonest character, no matter from what source It came. After five years of retirement from public life, during which time he established himself In the real estate business, Mr. Coray was returned to the legislature, and at once took a leading position In the house. In the senatorial contest of 1897 he opposed the candidacy of Mr. Penrose. During the session Mr. Coray consistently and earnestly de fended the public treasury against all kinds of selfish schemes and unjust bills. He was a thorn In the side of the machine members whenever at tempts were made to secure illegal ex tra pay, through Incidentals, special expenses, etc. He continually called attention to the pledges of the Re publican state platforms with regard to reform Dills and endeavored to se cure a more efficient ballot law. Mr. Coray was re-elected to the house. In 1898. and again in 1900. He opposed Mr. Quay's re-election to the senate, and during the last session was par ticularly vigilant and active In pro tecting tho public Interests In every possible way. All the iniquitous measures that came before the house he vigorously opposed. Upon many occasions he called attention to the falsification of the vote, and several times was threatened with personal violence for the stand he took in thus exposing machine trickery. It would require much space to record In detail Mr. Coray's work during the five terms that he has faithfully served the peo ple at Harrlsburg. No man In the state has been more courageous in the dotense of the honor of the common wealth, and what he has done makes his nomination as a candidate for state treasurer the legitimate culmi nation of an honorable and useful pub lic career. A comparison of the votes of Coray and Harris, the Quay candidate for state treasurer, on lead ing measures, clearly shows who has the largest claim upon public confi dence and support. The following statement speaks for itself: Coray Harris Voted. Voted. PlttshurR Rlppor Nay Tea Philadelphia, Hipper Nay Yea Philadelphia Fifth Court Nay Yea Street railway franchise KrnbR Nay Tea Stelnnmn canal grab.... Nay Tea Krle lund (Trail Nuy Tea I4.OoO.Ood Cupttol bill Nay Yea Increasing clerk hire al lowance RnpremeCnurt Judge, $1,UU0 to 12,500 euch Nay Yea Garner bill for mine In spectors Yea Dodged Requiring operators to pay mlnera by ton, in tend of by cur Yea Dodged Giving mlnen u check Welshman at each col liery Yea Dodged Requiring roul to be weighed to compute mlniMH' pny bofore be ing ncreened .Yea Dodged Ferrebee bill taxing) company Hturt-i out of existence Yea Dodged Coopur Libol bill um-iml-mvnt to prevent mux tllng the press Yea Nay Coruy amendment to General Appropriation bill to lnuurt) public schools Immediate puy- ment of Kl.ooo.OOO Gov ernor Stone had vetoed Yea Dodged Bills creating nendlenH courts In Northumber land and Montgomery counties Nay Yea Coray bill to revoke atate warrants for land under streams. nnd thus block the $50,0u0. cool grab Yea Nay The (iuffey-Ikeler Bal lot Iteform bill Yea Nay Thero seems to be no limit to the audacity of the Quay machine. Its disregard for tho honor of the state exceeds anything ever before wit nessed. The whole state govern ment has been put to work In a fran tic effort to prevent Its own condem nation at the polls. Oovernor Stone bas no sense of self-respect or official propriety; otherwise, be would not be going about making stump speeches that are In themselves extremely dis creditable. The executive well knows that the odious record of the past three years cannot bo successfully de fended; hence his feeble attempts to mislead the public, to excite the pre judices of the Ignorant, and to arouse partisan feelings. But tho people surely have intelligence enough to see through all this and to understand what It meant. The Quay ring would be frlghtenea Into spasms if they should wako up the morning after the election and find that the brave Coray had been commissioned to take charge of the stato treasury, to open the books and turn on the light. Let no rotor be deceived. There Is ao pam Issue at stake. It Is simply a blttli for honest administration oCtae pub lic finances and the maintenance of purity on the bench. Let every pa triot help to bring out a big vol for Yerkes and Coray. It Is understood that the managers of the Republican stat campaign have given Instructions to their fol lowers In every county to look sharply after the vote at the coming election. The machine never makes muoh noise When a state treasurer la to h 1rt. ; ed, but it makes sure that Its hire j lings are at work, all along the line. ' It takes no risks, and It is not taking any at this time. This faot should be sufficient notice to the people of the Importance of the Impending eon test. Quay's battle for re-election was the hardest fight of his life and cost him and his friends a barrel of money, But he would spend as much more, If needed, to hold on to the public ehest, for the special usee of his corrupt machine. There should be a great non-partisan vote this time to turn the rascals out Ilirlli-mnrks which mark and mar the out side of the I'oily nrc n pricf to every mother whose children may hear tliem. Hut for ev ery child who bears n birth-mark on the skin there aic many who b:ar an indelible birth-mark on the mind. Nervous mothers ! have nervous children nnd mnny a man mul ! woman owes nn irrital lc and despondent tcmptramci.t to those days of dread when the mother waited the hour of her maternity. The use of Dr. Pierce's Kavoiite l'icciii tion strengthens the mother for her trial. Willi strength comes a buoyancy of spirits nnd quietness of mind, which is one of the hnpj iest gifis a mother can bestow on her offspring, tev niving vigor and elasticity to the delicate womanly organs "Favorite Pre scription" practically does oway with the pain of maternity and makes the baby's ad- ent ns natural nnd as simple as the bios, soniinjj of a flower There is no opium, cocaine or other narcotic contained in "F.i voiiie" Prescription." One way of giving the professional bog gar n ihnnce to rise in the world is to yie him a ood I. lowing up. Oni: Short Pukf Ci.kaks tiik IIkad. Does your head ache ? Have you pnins over your eyes? Is the breath offensive ? These are certain symptoms of catarrh. Dr. Ag new's Catarrhal Powder will cure most stub born cases in a marvellously short time. If jou'ychad catarrh a week it's a sure cure. If it's of fifty years' standing it's just as cf fectve. 50 cents. Sold by C. A. Kleim. 2g Docs laughing cause dimples, or do dim ples cause laughing f Ten cents will buy trial size of Ely's Cream It.llm pnnmth In iniuinrA ,,,. ).. it is the greatest of remedies for nasal ca . u .1 1 , .... i.wiii or com in me neao. run size 50c All druggists. We mail it. Ely Uros., 56 Warren street, New York. 153 Second Street, Albany, N. Y. Messrs. Klv Urns f cnfTer..l nr..tt with catarrh nnd tried rlin:..rn mArl:. without effect. After using one bottle of your cream Halm 1 louml roller and I can not praise too hichlv Sllrll a renie.lu Sep. 27, 1SS9 .MlSS C'OltA Wll.LARt). Marrying a blockh.-ad doesn't make a wooden wedding. Like Tearing the Heart Strings. "It is not within the conception of man to measure my great sufferings from heart dis ease, l-'or years I endured almost constant cutting nnd tearing pains about my heart, and many a time would have welcomed death. Ur. Agnew's Cure for the Heart has worked a veritable miracle." Thos. Ilicks, Perth, Ont. Sold by C. A. Kleim. 30 In China liquids are sold by weieht and grain by measure. FoSSII. TILLS. The demand is nronf of their worth. Dr. Agnew's Liver Fills are beating out many fossil formulas at a quar ter a box. They're better medicine, easier doses, nnd 10 cents a vial. A thousand ail ments may arise from a disordered liver. Keep the liver right and you 11 not have sick headache, biliousness, nausea, constipation and sallow skin. 100 pills in 25c. size. Sold by C A. Kleim. 31 Every woman who marries feels that to a certain degree she is a reformer. A Home in the South. Escape ithe rigors of another Northern Win'.er anrl enjoy the delights of the South land. Nowhere can be found a more delightful climate than in our own Southland. Its winters are mild and balmy and In the most cases summer does not bring with it such extremes of heat as are to be found else where. In fact, the South is a land where extremes of climate are avoided, and conse quently, is a healthful nnd altogether desir able location. The tide of emigration has turned South ward, for it is not alone in climatic advan tages that this favored land excels, but i s resources, the fertility of its soil and its min eial wealih and abundant water power com mend it to the thoughtful consideration of any one who seeks a home where Northern thrift and enterprise may carve out success. The Seaboard Air Line Railway, in order to stimulate investigation and to assist in opening up the fine territory traversed by its lines, announces that it will sell to prospect ors and settlers, tickets one way or round trip, at greatly tedueed rutes, information as 10 which may be obtained of any pgent or representative of the Company. J. C. IIorton, Eastern Pass. Agent, 1183 Broadway, New York City. W. II. Doll, Gen'l Agt. Pass. Dept., 1434 New York Ave., Wash., D. C". C. L. LoNGsnoKP, N. E. Pass. Agt., 306 Washington St , Boston, Mass, II. K. Duval, Tussenger Agent, Continental Trust lildg., Kalto., MJ. U. E. L. Bunch, Clen'l Pass. Agt.. Portsmouth, Ya. The favorite flower of the fortune hunter is maiigold. Brazil grows about half the coffee crop of the world. CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. Ths Kind You Hava Always Bought Signature of Cfi m nrc n Vnif. A thnurnnd times I prntaed him when He waen't near To hrar, Rut nn one hurried then To tell him of the things I nld. One day I dropped behind his back, A slighting word 'Ta heard And ere that day had passed, nlnck! He knew, and. passing, turned his head, Chicago Record-Herald. I'OIST OP VIKW, Mrs, Wcdcrly (looking nt lint) Oh, wlin t n (Iciir lit t lo hut I Wcdcrly (looking nt the price tag) Well, 1 should Rny it is. Chicngx Daily News. One l'nllnfT tlir other. The heir who's left a fortune fat, It may be safely stated, Oirows dlssoluto because of that, Hut noon the fortune tit for tat Is also dissipated. 1'hlladelphla l'ress. A Perfect Hoy. "I never henrd of but one perfect hoy," km id Johnnie, pensively, ns ho isat in the corner doing penance, "And who was that?" asked mam ma. "Pnpn when he wns little," wa the answer. And silence reigned for the space of five minutes. Cincin nati Kiuiuirer. OASTOniA. Bean the Ita Kind You Havfl Always Bought DR. T. C. HARTER, Pres. BLOOMSBURG. PA. rmin rn 1 1, .1 j 1 I iA I 1 1 I UUlli 1 Kl I VI I Incorporated Under the Laws of South Dakota, June 15, 1901. Capital Stools- $1,000,000. Divided into 2co,ooo Shares of Par Value of $5.00 Each. FULL PAID AND NON-ASSESSABLE We call special attention to the fact that one share of this Company whose entire Canital Stock consists of Otllv rcm nrm slinrc rf tho nnr value of Five Dollars each, secures an interest in its property equal to 5 shares in a Company of One Million Shares of the par value of only One Dollar each, as is the case with nearly all Mining Companies offer ing shares at a price seemingly lower than the present price of the shares of this Company, but in reality much higher. IL?xopert3r of Company. This is very extensive, consisting of four mining properties, each over one mile in length, on a great copper vein over 100 feet in width, pronounced by Copper experts as among the widest and richest copper veins known, lacking only the necessary development to place 6ame in the front rank of the greatest dividend and copper producing properties,' It is on the same gieat Copper Mineral Belt upon which are located the world's pres ent greatest copper mines, each paying mnny millions of dollars annually in dividends nndl developed to the depth of from 1000 lo 2000 feet, thus fully estabbshinR the fact that ine veins are not alone inexhaustible, but widen nnd become even more profitable with depth. The great vein on this property is of such unusual width and f o proline in copper ore from surface thnt only moderate developments are needed to bet-in the production of ore on a scale to insure large dividends on the sham of this Company. The Company is sinking a shaft now nearly loo leet in depth on the vein of one of its four propeities, the "Pay Koll." This shaft is entirely in ore, which, by tests, gave values nt the surface of from 3 to 4 per cent, copper; at the depth of fifty feet tests gave values of from 8 to 10 per cent, copper; at the depth of seventy feet tests gave values of from 12 to 14 per cent in copper, while selected samples show values as high as 12 per cent, copper and nearly $15 in gold and silver per ton. The value of the gold per ton will enable the Company to produce copper nt very low cost. As showing that this great vein is nol nlone of unusual width, but also of rare rich ness in ore as compared with some of the richest copper mines, we refer to tlie great "An aconda Mine," paying over s.oo,ooo annually in dividends from ore avenging less thaa five per cent in copper; or to the "Uoston and Montana" paying over 6,000, coo annual If from ore averaging less than six per cent, in copper; or to ihe "Great Verde," paying neaily $5,000,000 annually in dividends from ore averaging less than six per cent, in cop To give an approximate idea of the amount of ore nnd its value, that can be opened by a moderate development in only n small part of such a vein, the following estimates nr given : Estimating pay ore vein at only 25 feel in width, rlepth of shnpft, 500 feet, length ol levels, 500 feet, would open up 6,250,000 cubic leet of ore, or over Five Hundred Thous and Tons. t Estimating the net Profits at Twenty Dollars per Ion, would give total net profits ot Ton Million Dollars, or Ten Times the Amount ol ihe Par Value of the entire Capital Stocfc of the Company, and sufficient to insure dividends to amount of Ten Dollars for each shar of the stock. As the length of the vein on this one property, the "Pay Roll," is over nne quarter mile in length, and the depto to which s; mc can be worked many thousands of feet, it will be seen that as a copper investment the shares of this Company offer an unusual op portunity. ' The property of the Company is situated in Rio Arriba County, in the northern part of New Mexico (only 40 miles from the southern boundary line of Colorado), convenient tj Railroad Station and in a section heavily timbered and one of the healthiest in the United btntes. The Company has no debts or mortgages. Its property is free anl clear sud its management is under able mining experience. One-quarter of the entire CapUal Stock of the Company being 50,000 Shares of the par value of f 250,000 has been placed in the Treasury of this Company as a working cau ital, of which a limited amount is ottered for sale at $1,0 Q Until October 1st, when the price will be ad vanced to $1.50 per share. As there are only 200,000 shares in this Company it will require net earnings of only $200,000 to pay dividends at rate of $1.00 yearly upon each share. This will require only a moderate development. 1 hose wishing to purchase shares can make remittance, by check or otherwise, to The Keystone Copper Mining Co., Harter Building, 208 Main St., BLOOMSBURG, PEN'A There' Srv tb no ref,ec,,on m dal,,ty no ,,iEht 80 iffYj charming as the p ll I I ' mellow glow that H M CORDOVA I law PimJIam PffPrf,1 in man? cc)or Unit rouiidtiir" In dining room, (truwlnff room, w jirinoniE wim Bar i-ii rnuii nr anil, aula try wnere. Mids lf STANDARD OIL CO, frflT HUMPHREYS' VETERINARY SPECIFICS A. A, (FEVEHS, Cnnimtlnn. Inflamm. ciinmltloiia, Lnn Krtrr, Milk Frvrr. II. II. M'H l.amrnrai), Injuria, ruBMilUirinunll.nl. ;V; F !,K thiioat,iuIii.v. Epixootir. niHw I Oi.li'iiipi r, W ORMS, llol.. Grub.." ' E. K. M'OI OHS ToM.. Innitrnzii, Inflame cukkk j LiiniK, 1'leiiru.Pm-iiiimiiln. F. V. M'OI.M'. H. llynchr, Wlnd-Illown. cvrksI Diarrhea, Ii.,-iiiitv. ii.il. Prevent. MIM All IMAGE. Jck'iL J KIIIXEV A II I, A DDE It DIHOIIDEI1H. I. I. fKI DIKE NEM, Manse, Eruption. cciiks) I Irem, (iren.e, l an y. .1. K . j II It '0l)l l'IO, Nmrln font. i-uitK. S InUtweNilmi. fcimnach Maimer.. flOo. each i Slnhle Cnso. Ten Spoelrtes, Honk, o., ft. v 1,1 iihi .is ,,r mil ,rri.iu ml ri'ri'iiii or ,rif Rl... New S'nrk. n u ill ri',, n aii.Ht'iiitt 1(1., Kir. llll; urn A JnliH VRTKHINAIir tlASTAI. SKT KHMfc NERVOUS DEBILITY, ! VITAL YVEAKXrsS nnd Prostration from Over work or other causes. Humphrey' Homeopnthlo Specific ! No. ES, In use ovor40 years, tho only successful rcmody. $1 per rial, or .pedal p.ckag with powder,for SI 8oM hr Dmirrl.t., or wnl l'i.t't.ld cm r.relnl of trlc. Ill irUHMg' HUD. CO., to, WUIIu a Jofca SU., Iwtat 1 ( .. !! r;,t -n..-,. tW Ulf. i '. i ii lii-". .ii ir n.'.1!. ' V r. . . t' tk. "(V r!'. to H !-. r-j 1' 1 it,"'- V.''; ' i''--" 'e ii" cut w 1 Colo.-, t.. ' r-ll. ;Cu.J f- l" "" w ' - J...- ; J 1 "'-'S, ' '." '' ; l A. N. YOST, Treas. LL00MS3URG, PA. i MM V I 14 1 1 -' fit MINING CO.,