The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, September 21, 1905, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMsBURG, PA.
COL. BRYAN'S JAPANESE PbPIL.
CHESS IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS:
Ill
$22,(m.ojO Alr.-aJy Tak.-n
From .Mount Acran.
NO SI.V.ILAR FORMATION
A Msuntvn in Oueens'anJ Cempe?d
Enti-e'y of Oo'd Cre. Sod ly a
Poor Herder for $5 an A:re.
Fortune M.cle Ey It for Subse
quent Owners.
V Ixmdon ntwi paprr announced the
;, r Jay tliat tho u.ual monthly i v
t'Js 'if tll'.i'.'i had rx-cn paid on
si.ck of t'.ie Mour.t Mining Com
Thus far th lucky s-harchold-In
H.Ik company have received
.'r.; than I22.000.'.J in dividend).
The richest k11 dejosits were
louad at the top of t! mountain, and
until the top had bo-i quarried away
the dividends amounted to more than
000. 0O0 a month. The sensational
returns ceated several years ago, and
since then the company hag been pay
ing regularly $145,000 a month, and
seems llkWy to continue to do ko for
many years, for the entire mountain,
as far as can be a.ren allied, consist i
of gold bearing ore of ua.f.jrm rich
ness. Mount Mor-rin in the southeastern
part of Qu ei. -land. A'i:-'rl;a. is i rob
ably the rnot marvellous gold mine
ever opened. There Is pathetic as
well as ron. antic Interest in its his
tory. Years aeo the mountain was owicd
by a poor harder named Gordon, who
el:ed out a ircciriotii existence by
keej.in? a f.-w score of cattle. Me
had fenced in the mountain and a
strip of the plain around it. etablishd
his resilience there and fulfilled ail
the conditions necessary to make l!.e
property his homestead.
Ti e f-w i eople who came to his
little cottage wondered that he had
chosen fo uninviting a spot, for the
pasteuring was poor and little of the
soil was adapted to cultivation. He
said, however, that he had plenty of
water, and that consideration had In
duced him to settle there.
One day two brothers named Mor
gan came to Gordon's cottape at night
fall and sought his hospitality. It
was the custom in the bush country
to make all travellers as comfortable
as possible, and Gordon welcomed
the strangers and set out his best
store for their entertainment.
They were experienced prospectors
and were looking for rroid indications.
As they were chiefly Interested In
'ning. Gordon told them about his
:"intaln. He said that he hail ob
rved curious green and blue j-talni
! over it, and he would not be but
i :ed if it contained copper.
He excited the curiosity of the Mor
ln brothers, who next morning exam
ined the mountain. A shower fluring
the night had wetted the rocks, and
one of the brothers observed indica
tions of (.'old that fairly startled him.
They said nothing, but pocketed a
few specimens of the rock aid went
on their way. Tli"y had cli 'cover
ed the richest known spot on the
globe.
A few weeks Inter the Morgan broth
ers again appeared find offered to buy
the land from Gordon at $." an acre.
He thought it was a good offer pnd
decided to sell. At that time the Mor
gans had no idea of the enormous
value of the mountain, though they
were confident that It would pay
handsomely to work It.
Gordon drove his cattle away to an
other freehold, and a few years ego
It was reported that he had died in
poverty. He lived long enough to
know the value of the prize that had
slipped through his handi.
A battery was needed to treat the
rock, but the Morgans did not have
money enough to buy the necessary
plant They therefore offered a half
Interest In the property to a resident
of Rockhampton for $10,000, the
money to be Invested In machinery.
He said It was too great a risk for
one man to take, but he found three
ether men to go In with him, each
Investing $2,500. There were thus
lx men in the enterprise, the Morgan
brothers owning half of the property.
Five yean later each of the six men
was a millionaire. The stock Is now
more widely distributed, though it is
In comparatively few hp.nd.s. The
mine has made a fortune for every
one concerned In it.
It was found that the methods nec
essary for mining and reducing the
ore were unique, as no similar forma
tion or quality of ore had been discov
ered elsewhere. Original methods
were therefore devl.'Pd for working
the mine.
At tho foot of the mountain there
Is now a thriving town, and the whole
district has been transformed by the
great expenditures of the company.
The place where poor Gordon's cattle
found scanty subsistence is row
marked by the luxurious homes of a
few very rich men and the cottages
of an army of workmen usually Tim
bering 1,200.
Geologist i believe that they have
discovered how this mountain of gold
ore came to be formed. They say
that the occurrence of the gold Is due
to a former thermal spring that
brought up the precious metal with
other mineral substances, chiefly s'lica
and Iron, In solution and precipitated
them at the surface.
In this way the wonderful mountain
was built up and the whole of It Is a
solid mass of gold bearing ore.
poet says: "Her face was past
ing fair, but sorrow came and left its
traces there." Where sorrow left the
rdat of the harness the deponent say-
not.
Yamashita Ysschlro Going Home to
Eecome the Gryan of Japan.
Yama-l.l'a Yasf h.ro. the young Jap
an' e who has bei n studying the sci
ence of government under the curie
bi-.'d ttlt-latre of William J. Rryan
ard the StVe T'n!v..r.;ty, will ,-hortlr
tl.er. after return to Japan, wh're he
will enter politics.
He Is ibnyint fared and rather
sVri'Kr. and l.e mrprised Col. Rryan
six years ago by descending upon him
oti" afternoon while he was enjoying
the restful shade of his iorch and
announcing that he had come to make
his home with the Nebraskan to learn
the art of becoming a state man ar.u a
leader of the people. Mr. Uryan de
murred, at f.r.-t gently, but later
strenuously; but nothing he could say
or do coul l shake the firm determina
tion of the young Japanese.
Mr. Uryan told him that he should
find some place to work and In this
way obtain the means with which to
go through school. Yamashlta replied
that that was Just what he wanted to
do, and as he had the right of choice
he had fixed upon Col. liryan's hou-,e
as his home during the time he was
getting his education.
The patient, gentle courtesy of the
Japanese wou'd be satisfied with no
unfavorable answer, anfi .Mr. afuj ;,jrSi
Rryan capitulated gracefully. The
young man said that he had read
much of what Mr. Uryan had said and
wrlt'en, and these words had inspired
him to educate himself and bee ime
the Rryan of Japan.
The e were not the exact words of
Yamah!ta. but that wan what he
meant, and as ho could learn to be
the Rryan of Japan only by fitting at
the fe t of the original he was no
lonuvr resisted. His gentle manners
Foon made him a household favorite.
He was at home in any department
rf the domestic work and he faithfully,
performed every task that was re
quired of him.
Ije.-pi.c his rather poor equipment
for entrance into the university, he
qualified within two years and has
diligently applied himself to the
course of study he marked out, which
embraced political economy, sociology,
ethics and American history. Col.
Rryan has interested himself very
much in the young man, and guided
him In his selection of studies and
reading.
All the time Yamashita has made
his home with the Rryans and has
made himself a general favorite In the
university and the city. To a reporter
he said:
"My course of study has boon
shaped with the Intention of fitting ,
me for a career In poll.les In my na
tive land. There are jreat opporlunl- ,
tlrs there for young men, and many
of us have been favored with the op
portunity to Imbibe the best there Is
of American Ideal.? and institutions. j
"We feel very grateful to you peo- :
pie for the chances we have had, and
Bhall try to repay you by trying to
ma!;e our own country more than ever
deserving of the title of the America
of the Orient. Japan Is on the wave
of a gre:t intellectual uplift and Is
destined to take a more prominent
position In world affairs hereafter.
A knowledge of American politics and
of political economy will fit our young
men for the great opportunities that
will arise.
"I shall devote my life, regardless ,
of material Interests, to assisting man-
kind and helping to make their condi
tion better. I am not versatile enough
to do all things, and I hope I am not
so unwise as to think myself capable
to do many things, but I expect to
meet with success In politics in my i
native land.
"To me that appeals as a great field
of usefulness. It may be as broad as
a nation Is great or as wide as the
world's brotherhood. 1
'the real basis of universal politics
Is to know man. I have been much
Interested in mathematics, literature
and philosophy, but Immeasurably
more In finding out In what way I
could beter the condition of my fellow
men."
Quail Abundant In Oklahoma,
With favorable weather conditions
during the nesting season next spring j
there should be more quail In Okla-
hoina In the fall than at any time I
since the country was opened. The j
game law enacted by the last leglsla- j
turo was so prohibitive that during '
the past open season for quail, which 1
clo.;ed February 1st, the killing of j
birds was reduced to a minimum. Not
only was It again t the law for any '
person to ship quail to points outside
of Oklahoma, but an Oklahoma sports- '
man could not ship quail on common
carriers from one point to another In i
Oklahoma. Railroad and express com
panies dared not accept prohibitive
game for shipment. Tho Oklohoman
who ate quail this year either killed j
tnem himself or caused some person
to violate the law In buying them.
The game law has been strictly en
forced this season, and many heavy
fines, sometimes as high as $300, were
Imposed upon violators. There has
been an abundance of quail, and In
several western counties, especially
Day, prairie chickens were plentiful.
Kansas City Journal.
You Needn't Take a Cussing In
Kansas.
Squire Smith of Harrison township,
In Ktowa County, has handed down
some new law. A man was brought
before him the other day charged with
assault. The defendant admitted the
crime, but said that he was Justified
in coalmining it because the com
plaining witness had called him a lot
of rile names. The squire discharged
the prisoner, snylng that a man who
would cuss another deserved to be
licked. Kansas City Journal,
II
War Grows AWe Expensive
But Fewer Are Slaughtered
HAS BECOA.E A SCIENCE
Battle of Waterloo Was One of the
Bloodiest Contests of the Century
One English King Prevented
from Waging War Because He
Was Over $2,000,000 In Debt.
It costs far more to kill a man In
modern than it did In ancient warfare.
According to the best authorities of
Kussia and Japan, the conflict recently
ended involved a total cost of $1,500,
0O0.0UO. Of this the Russians suffered
a loss approximately $l,0w.0o0.0"0 and
the Japanese $5'.'0,uu0.000. The Russia
casualties amounted to 400,000 and the
Japanese to 200,000 men, says the New
York Tribune.
It may be estimated, therefore, that
every man woo fell on either side In the
recent struggle for supremacy in the
far east represented an expenditure of
12, Sw. It cost $1,220 to vanquish out
Russian, and Russia had to spend $5,
000 to overwhelm one Japanese.
Although more money Is spent today
in war than In olden times, yet fewer
are killed. The great guns of modern
Invention, costing thousands of dollars
to construct and hundic-ds of dollars to
fire, and the battleships, representing
expenditures of from $3,000,u0'j to $3,
OOo.ooo each, are less destructive to hu
man life than the spears and arrows of
the ancients. At the same time that
men have devised more powerful en
gines of warfare, they Lave gone still
fuither in inventing more nearly in
vulnerable methods of dij.'i .nse.
Some of the great Lattlts and wars
of the last century xcemed bloodier
than they actually were in comparison.
The battle of Waterloo was one of the
bloodiest of the contests of the century.
Of those who fo'jglit under WeMngt'-f
and Napoleon in this battle. 33.8 pet
cent gave up taeir lives or were wound
ed. The battle of Ltlpslc ranked next,
with 20 per cent of casualties. On tho
field of Gettysburg the percentage waJ
20. C. Judging, by percentages, the bat
tle of Moukden in the recent war was
bloodier than any of these. Its per
centage of casualties wa.s 30.3. Taklnf)
some of the rectal wars as a whole, tho
percentages have been: American civil
war, 6.4; Franco-I'rusiian war, 10.7;
Rotr war, 19.
A comparison of the cost of providing
a gun and firing It, as it has grown
within the lxst century, gives a good
Impression as to the ir.i rease In tho
cost of warfare. It Is said that In tho
time of the war. fur the overthrow of
Napoleon bonapart, when solid shot
were used, a l;2-r"und br.ll cost only
five shillings, or $1.23. At the time oi
the Crimean war, in the OO's, these had
been replaced by 22-pound shells. Tho
Fhells cost, ready filled for firing, $5.
The charge of powder and wadding cost
$3 more. A rS-pound shell, powder,
etc., cost $9.5'V The cannons weighed
from three to five tons, and cost from
$;J2") to $473 each. A 12-inch gun, an
Inches, larger than the gie?.t howitzers
used by the Japanese at 1'ort Arthur,
costs the I'nlteri States government
$11,000. It weighs from 34 to CO tons,
and each time it Is fired tho treasury
is mub ted of $110, or the cost of a can
r.on less than 30 years ago.
That war relatively cost less In the
middle ages than today is indicated by
the fact that one English king was pre
vented from going to war because he
was a debtor for $2,30u,000 and could
borrow no more.
Two or three centuries ago it was
discovered that money for warfare
could be secured more easily and in
larger quantities by bonding the nation
for It and taxing the people to pay the
Interest. Wars began to cost more. In
less than 300 years, Great Britain has
spent on warfare $ij,7ba,000,000. Tho
revolution of 1CS8 cost $135,000,000; the
War of the Spanish Succession, $220,
0"0,000; the Spanish war, $325,000,000;
the Seven Years' War, $335,000,000; the
American War of Revolution, $725,000,
OuO; the war of the French revolution,
$2, "10,000,00; the war against Napoleon,
$2,ri30,ooo.00j. The I$oer war cost Great
brltaln in cash more than $800,000,000.
It Is estimated that the wars of the
nineteenth century cost the world $17,
!22.0l.,,'OO. The debts of the chief nations of the
earth aggregate more than $34,000,000,
000. It is believed that three-fourths
of this sum wa.s swallowed up In war
fare and preparations for it. Nearly all
the sum icpnscntcd by the debts of
Great brltaln, France and Germany
was spent for warfare. These countries
are spending annually In Interest on
their debts nearly $290,000,000.
The Hotel on Wheels.
Old sleeping cars and parlors cars
bring good money In rental before they
are sent to the Junk shop. They are
chiefly wanted by showmen and travel
ing photographers, who run all over the
country with them during the summer.
You find them sidetracked at all the
small towns. Some are used by medi
cine men and agents of all kinds, who
travel in large groups. Scores of these
cars are in the hands of strolling enter
tainers who don't want to remain idle
between seasons.
The rental of these movable hotels
has developed Into a recognized Indus
try. A bond is required for the return
of the car to the point where it was
hired. From ten to twenty persons can
live comfortably on an ordinary show
Clay modelling in schools Is con
demned by doctors as being worse than
slates for transmitting infectious dis
eases. Tea grows wild In many parts of
81am. . .
Woman Champion Explains Its Effi
ciency. Fads and frills In the school cuurse
are outdone! Miss Rosa bradfoid Jtf
1. rson, the latest adoi a'.e of an a ldl
t cn to the curriculum, would have
t.eiy child taught to play chess as part
il the education given it by the state.
but Miss Jeff ci son is no faddist. The
fc'j.-p 1 she j teaches Is oue Impressed
l jcars of practice and result, lor she
ii herstlf a "cbe&s cliiid." and It Is
I rum the height of her position as the
champion woman chess player of the
world that she is urging upon educa
tors a list of reasons why chess should
Le an essential of a practical public
school training.
All my family were chess players,
lad I suppose a bent in that direction
came to me naturally. When I was six
I already understood the game, and by
the time I was eight I had defeated
uome of the leading experts of Missis
sippi. "Except for the first few moves. I rely
on no set method. Everyth.ng depends
on my antagonist. 1 here Is r.o such
thing as chance in chess. It is all a
matter of calculation. It is to the mind
what physical culture Is to the body,
what manual training Is to the hands.
It is a splendid mathematical disci
pline. It develops a reasoning mind. It
Inculcates accuracy, and sharpens ob
servation to a point that makes it pho
tographic. Memory becomes a series
if pictures. The Germans are Introduc
ing It Into their schools. Why should
not we do likewise?
"My knowledge of chess has made
everything easier for me. It helped me
In music to understand the principles
cf harmony. It is a help In arithmetic.
It Is a help In spelling. Just consider
the intricacies of chess," continued the
enthusiast. "The first move on either
side can be made In twenty different
ways, and the possible combinations
after that are practically beyond com
putation. Success depends not upon
luck, but upon brain. The attack, the
defense and the capture are made be
fore the eye of the enemy." New York
World.
Strange Foods.
A Chinaman conducts In New York
what Is probably the queerest shop In
the world. The sign on the door says:
"Strange Foods Exotics."
And here are sold eatables from all
parts of the world.
Chow-chow is one of the dealers'
commodities. This Is not the chow
chow that everybody eats, a cheap
pickle; it is the real Chinese chow
chow, a compound of bruised vegeta
bles, very odd and bitter In tasie, and
very costly $1.50 a pint.
Ant-cakes are small biscuit of a gray
ish color that cost $2.3o apiece. They
are made of the dried and compressed
bodies of African white ant.s. Men who
live a while in Africa grow fond of ant
cakes, a; they who live a while in Ja
pan grow fond of Japanese raw fish.
The dealer sells, he says, about a hun
dred of these cakes every month.
Edible snails he sells in great quan
ties to French families. Filled with
the green butter that gives them succu
lence escaigot butter they cost ten
cents apiece.
The man sells betel nut, which In tho
cast is chewed like tobacco. A box of
ground betel weighing a half iound
, costs a dollar. Half a teaspoonful of
I the powdered nut is wrapped In a leaf
and chewed with a pinch of lime.
Though it darkens the enamel, it la said
to preserve the teeth.
Genuine Russian caviar is one of the
dealer's most costly commodities. A
I tablespoonful of It costs $2. Twice as
much ordinary caviar can be bought
elsewhere for a quarter, but those who
have once tasted the real thing never
again return to the substitute stur
geon roe; for Russian caviar Is as dif
ferent from sturgeon roe as liver Is
from crow.
j Teaches History with Dolls.
A novel idea has been realized in
Paris by M. Leo Claretle, who, besides
j being an eminent educationist, Is an
1 ardent advocate of rendering education
I attractive. His system of the history
' of France in dressed dolls Is to be
1 placed on public exhibition, as an ob
j ject lesson in its capabilities. Even the
I prehistoric periods, whose life can only
be known on the testimony of the
rocks, are represented.
Within the pale of history every age
is represented by Its leading figures, as
Gaul, pre-Roman, Roman and Frank-
ish. Then come the Crusades, the Eng
1 lish wars, the middle ages, the early
: modern period, and so on to the third
republic.
Hay and Lincoln.
As with Lincoln, so with Hay, the
rough edges of untoward events and
Impertinent individualists were made
smooth by a sense of humor and a par
rying and ameliorating wit. The gifts
were different but analogous. Like
wise, while It may be said that Nlcolay
bad something of Lincoln's gravity of
mind and expllcitness of statement,
Hay had something of Lincoln's senti
ment, brevity, balance of Btyle and im
aginative grasp, while both shared the
mighty President's love of country and
devotion to its service. Century Maga
zine.
There are neither distilleries, brew
eries nor saloons In Persia, and the only
beverage of an intoxicating sort Is a
wine which, to the stranger, tastes too
much like medicine to be indulged In
In quantity.
An English judge recently altered a
sentence from eighteen months of hard
labor to five years' penal servitude be
cause the prisoner threw a bottle at
him.
There Is a village In Wales whioa
bears the name of Nowhere,
j0liUEIi9i 'i for Infants and Children.
CASTOR
3
AYr ectable PrepaMlionforAs-
;imil,itin(5 ilicFoodandRcula-
ling the Stomachs andDowels of
rromolcs Dicslion.Cbrcrrur
ness and Rest-Contains neitlur
Oinum.Morphiiie nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
lmrium Smi"
JUtnmxt -
Aperfecl Remedy forConslipa
fion.Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions Jevcrish
ncss and Loss OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW YORK,
GRANGE NEWS.
Cy J, T. Ailman. Press Correspondent ar.tf
Secretary Penn'a Slate Grange.
Ti:e last session oflheXatiou.il
Orange was held on the Pacific
Coast in far off Oregon. The com
ing; session will be held on the
Atlanf'c coast in Atlantic City, X.
J. The Grange is truly a national
organization.
Other interests and other classes
recognize it as such and the farmer
who believes in organization and
who is moved by a desire to help
hiins.lf and his class cannot afford
to stay outsiJe of the gates.
qvf.stions.
The political boss is powerless
without money and it is possible to
get money on y from those who
have it. Hence the real Lctor in
manipulating politics is the special
interest that has something to gain
by influencing legislation. The
boss is only the agent of these spec ial
interests. So long as these in
terests exist so long will he have a
field in which to operate. Many
then are ready to say we will have
hnn with us always for in these
days of steam and electricity many
brarches of business can be rim
only on a large scale. It is true that
this is an age of large things with
the promise ot Mid larger ones in
the future. We are face to face
with the question whether it will
be best for the body politic that
these interests shall continue to be
private interests or whether they
shall be operated by all of the peo
ple for all of the people. The prin
ciple objection to running public
utilities by the public is the strength
of the political pull it would give to
the unscrupulous politician. Those
who argue thus forget that the ele
ment of power in the hands of the
politician is money and that the
money comes from the corpora
tions. Thus the real political boss
is the head of a great corporation.
For instance, is not the president of
a railroad, as railroads are now run,
a far more potent factor politically
than the same man would be if he
weie a government employee, espec
ially if he were elected instead of
being appointed to his position ?
Big questions confront the people
of this age and they must be de
cided by the common people. They
require careful thought and much
discussion. The organized farmers
are talking them over in the grange.
It is to be feared that the un
organized farmers think of them
little if at all.
DESPOILING NATURE'S GIFTS.
A German whose education had
been thorough and whose observa
tion had been extensive, in con
trasting Germany with the United
States admitted that the location,
area, and resiurces of Germany
bear no comparison with those of
America, but Germany, he said,
husbands and improves her re
sources while Ainer ca destroys
hers. That there is much truth in
this charge was deeply impressed
on the writer during a recent ride
on the Philadelnhia & l.'.ri- roil.
i road. After leaving Lock Haven
I EXACT COPY Of WRAPPER. U
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
TMl OCimuK OMMMT. M 0
the road rnrs among the mountains
for a hundred miles nr more Only
a generation ao these mountains
were covered with magnificent for
ests of valuable timber. Xow
scarcely a tree is seen that is fit to
cut for a saw log. The German for
ests have furnished fuel and lum
ber for a thousand years and are
now as valuable as ever.
On emert ing from the mountains
the oil fields are entered. Here the
same evidence of destruction is ap
parent. The thoughtful observer
"an not help asking whose hand
planted the forest and placed the
oil in the heart of the earth and for
.vhose benefit was it done. If it
vas done by the Author of Xature
lor the benefit cf humanity, then
why were a lumber king and an oil
magnate allowed to reap the har
dest, and why are private interests
fill allowed to devour the things
that God has, made ? It is a hope
ful sign that these questions are re
ceiving consideration by many who
until recently gave them but little
thought.
OKC.AXIZKI) KAKMKRS.
Pennsylvania has nearly 300,000
farms. Of course there are 300.000
farmers and uearly every fatmer is
a voter. Xor is this all On many
farms there are two a::d sometimes
three or more voters. A conserva
tive estimate gives the agricultural
class at least 500,000 votes in the
State. This represents a pjwer
possessed by no other class a
power which, if united and direct
ed aright could not be successfully
resisted. And j et for want of union
we take what others give us and
bear what they place upon us
The tax collectcy has again post
ed up his notices and again we will
call upon him and pay four times
as much tax as our neighbor who
has the same amount of money in
vested in some other fcrtn of pro
perty. We, however, deserve no
sympathy. Rather should we as a
class hang our heads in shame for
thus suffering wrong when we have
the power to secure the right. The
time is coming when we will assert
ourselves. The organized farmers
lave in the past won substantial
victories through the grange aud
.hey will win even greater in the
future. All that is nov needed is
numbers. The Grange is fully
equipped to do the work. The un
organized farmers have no influence
svhere law makers meet.
The mother who would he horrified at the
thought of letting her daughter wander
away to a strange country without guide or
counsel, yet permits her to enter that un
known land of womanhood Withuut counsel
or caution. Then, in utter ignorance, the
maiden must meet physical problems whnte
solution will affect her whole future hie. Dr.
Tierce's Kavonte Prescription has Ixeu well
named a "God-send to women." It corrects
irregularties and imparts such vigorous vita
lity to the delicate womanly organs, ns fit
thrm fcr their impuiunt functions. Many a
nervou. hysterical, peevish girl ha been
changed to a happy joung woman after the
use of Favorite I'recrii.iion ' ha esiab
lished the sound health of ihe uicans icu
hany feminine.
Every woman should own a copy of the
I'eopVs Common Sense Medicil Adviser,
scut free on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to
pay expense of mailing only. The same
look of 1008 pages in substantial cloth for
31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. ; fierce.
Uuffalo, N. V.
AW
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