THH COLUMBIAN, BLOOMS BURO. P mmm AS HI GIL Chicago Negress For Many Years Concealed Her Secret. MOTHER TELLS STORY Why Lillian Beatrice Watklns Coin l.iitted Suicide Back of tlu V.irVn Story Is a Tragic Narrative of Race C nCirt Which Brought Aching liearts to a .Score. Chicago, III. Lillian Beatrice Wat. l.ins, a beautiful negress, who for years passed herself i.fT as a white girl, killed herself v'..on her cup of bitterness became full to overflowing, A man had fallen In love with her, and passionately loving him In ro turn, she confessed her secret to him. He gave her $15,000, married anoth er girl and a month later blew out his brains in Washington Park. Tho girl In planning of nor own death adopted his method, even to sending a bullet crashing into her right tem ple. Back of the girl's death Is a tragic story of a conflict of race which brought aching hearts to a score of persons. As the young girl lay In a north side undertaking room a De gress bent and withered, leaned over the bo'ly and wept. She w..s the phi's mother, who In order to allow her only daughter to associate with white folks, had given her up and passed her daily on tho street without a sign cf recognition. And yet the golden haired octoroon loved her 1'ark sklnnel mother, and on secret visits to her l.omo lavished affection upon her. Thomas F. Kennedy, the motive for whose suicide In Washington Park on January last had been a mys tery until now, was the man who fell In love with the ill-fRted girl. She returned his jove and told her moth er that they were engaged and that she intended to keep her race a se cret, but Bhe worried so over possible discovery that one night she sobbed out the truth. Kennedy left her and a month afterward married Gwendo lyn Reese. Four weeks after his marriage Kennedy was found dead in Washington Park, only a few blocks from his home where he had furnish ed elegant apartments for his bride. lillian Watklns the last year had n living at the home of Samuel Phlnney, No. 376 Dearborn ave. sad Mrs. Phlnney never suspect- '.i.3t the girl was a negress. Miss . itklns was employed as a steno . ipher In the First Trust and Sav ..:gs Bank, and all of ber fellow workers thought she was a Causcas lan. On one or two occasions friends had remarked that she had rather a dark skin, and .Miss Watklns always turned the subject by remarking carelessly that she had Hindu bloofl, as her grandfather was a Hindu. She studied at the University ol Chicago. At one time she lived at the Virginia Hotel and for a few months was a guest at the Warnet Hotel, Thirty-third street and Cot tage Grove avenue. Mrs. Ida Watklns, the girl's moth er, lives at 8571 Forest avenue. With tears streaming down her face she told the story of her daughter's struggle to obtain recognition as a white. . : "My child's misfortune was that she was born with a white skin and golden hair. Oh, how proud I was of my little baby when she lay at my breast and I saw her delicate skin and golden tresses. I little thought of the shame and misery it would cause her later In life. Her fathet was a whlte-sklnned mulatto and Lil lian was even whiter than he. "Until my little girl was sixteen "years old she always passed as a col ored girl. Then a schoolmate put it into her head that she could pass as a white girl, and she came home and told me that, while she still loved Die, she wanted to be known as a White girl and asked me not to rec onlze her as my daughter. I thought my heart would break and we both cried for hours, but finally I saw that Lllllan'B happiness depended on the sacrifice and I made it. "Then Lillian became converted to the Catholic religion and entered a convent in Buffalo, N. Y. She wanted to take the veil but became 111 and confessed to the priest that she was a negress. I was living in Hamilton, Ohio, at that time, and Lillian came home. A few months afterward she came to Chicago and then sent for me. She explained gently that she was known as a white girl and would have to visit me secretly. She gave me $50 a month for my expenses and came to see mo three times a month. When we passed on the street we did not rec ognize each other. "Then came my daughter's great unhappiness. She passionately loved Thomas Kennedy and she told me that he loved her. She told him her secret and they parted. He married in a few weeks and a month after ward shot himself. He gave Lillian $15,000. She has left me all of this money In her will, and in her will wrote that I was her nearest and dearest relative. Bo you see she did love me although my skin Is black." Miss Watklns shot herself in ber rawm at the Phlnney home. She evi- tsaUy had deliberated a long time iu aommltted suteM. TAO WITH A FLOATING MlXfc A Norwegian Vessel's Dire Peril In a Typhoon. Capt. Lars Anderson of the Nor wegian tramp steamer Eklund put Into the port of Chefoo on the north China coast a while ago, with a tale about how his ship had played tag with a floating mine and a typhoon out of the arm of the Llaotung penin sula. The experience of the Norwegian captain was novel only because it combined the typhoon and the float ng mine. Other ships in the China fcta up between Shantung and Ko rea have struck tho deadly engines so vn by the Russians and Japanese alike during the war. Although the wa i;as been over some years, float ing mines are still bobbing up in the paths of'shlps. According to Capt. Anderson tho Ekl 'nd was'out of Chlnnampo, Ko rea, bound for Taku, when about 2 o'cloc.t on the first afternoon, the lookout on the bridge sighted the floating mine off to the starboard about half a mile ahead. The glass had been falling rapidly all after noon and Capt. Anderson knew that a typhoon was coming up out of the southeast. The roaring column of wind struck the Kklund within ten minutes after the mine had been sighted. For the next three hours Capt. Anderson and his crew of twenty-six were cost ing dice with t'.eath every minute. If the typhoon didn't sink them they were certain that the mine would, only one death would be quicker than the other. It was Inky black all about and the rain fell In torrents. Capt. An dersen and two sailors lashed them selves to the rigging way up near the nose of the boat to keep an eye rpen for the mine. The rest of tho crew simply went below and, and waited to hear the crack of doom. Tin captain tied himself to the stanchions of the bridge where his hands could reach the engine room signals. He could not ' hear the voices of the lookouts at rthe bow, for the wind blew their w'ords out to sea, but he could plainly distin guish the two figures between the whips of spray and the murk of the clouds. Before the storm had been on for an hour Capt. Anderson saw both lookouts at the bow turn in their place and frantically signal, hold ing up their hands and pushing them away from them with the violence of desperation. Anderson prompt ly pulled the signal for reversed en gines and although the boat was only going at half speed it slack ened so suddenly that it began to lose bead. Tho bow slewed, and then a great comber rose up alongside and crinkled high over the starboard rail. The captain cast one hasty glance at the wave and tried to right his bow so as to meet It. He wasn't quick enough, the wave came and with it the mine.' " "There the thing sat on the top of the wave," said Captain Anderson in detailing the adventure afterward. "It looked like a hedgehog all curl ed up and asleep, with the glass prickles sticking out in all directions. To break one of those tubes of glass would be set oft enough gun cotton to blow the ship to slivers. "I saw the wave curl with the mine right at the ".rest, then it broke and came down over the starboard rail. About forty tons of water more or less, hit the bow and shoved our nose under water until the water camr uj to the bridge. "I thought we were never going to come up. And, sir, that mine went right over the boat on the top of the wave, passing so near the bridge that I could have reached out and touched it. It slewed off over the port rail and disappeared behind the ship." That was all the captain of the Eklund saw of the floating mine. When the typhoon passed he found the two lookouts still lashed to their posts dead. Otherwise the ship and the crew were unhurt. Man is tho Superlative. We speak of good men and bad, of great men and small, but man, real man, Is the superlative, and whenever you come across the real thing you will find a man after your own heart, generous, unselfish diligent in good works. Tho really good man has no time in which to be bad, and being interest ed 1l good works, he does not feel In cline, to waste his time and talent doing that which is not worth while. Mn have gained the center of the stage and posed in the limelight for a brief period who were not good through and through, but not for long. There are prominent men, promi nent 11 finance and trade, who are not very good through and through. Some of these continue to splutter and tare for a good while, but ttte world Is not shocked If they suddenly ly disappear, nor are they greatly missed when gone. It is the man of sterling worth who is missed, and is sincerely mourned. Seek therefore, to meet and know men of sterling worth. College to Breed Dogs. A farm at .Stamford, Conn., has been acquired by the Columbia Uni versity and will be utilised is connec tion wltS the work of the department of soology. The Idea of the farm la to provide for the faculty of soology 'ulta blepllace for U breeding- of di pigeons, guinea, pigs, mica, etc ESCAPED CONVICT DEPUTY SHERIFF. Model Citizen for Eleven Yen Identity Disclosed by Former Fellow Prisoner. Williams, Art. "No necessity for that," Raid Frank Sherlock, as H. H. Woods, a ranger, covered him with a revolver and declared him under ar rest. Sherlock had been reeognlv.el r.s Charles Illy, a convict who ro'.o away from the New Mexico peni tentiary on the warden's horse elev en years ago. Kver since his rsrppe the fugitive has lived an exemplary life. For eight years he served as a deputy Rherlff of Mojave County, nnd in that time hnd run down ninny desperate criminals. He was held In the high est esteem by his fellow townsmen, and the revelation thnt he wns an escaped convict inme ns a shock to the entire community. Recently Sherlock became a suc cessful contractor nnd secured con tracts at Nelson, ' rlz. A workman In tattered clothes anproaclie 1 hi in later and appealed to him for work. ! A moment later the stranger extend ed his hand nnd said: "Why, hello, how are you?" The supposed strang er was a fellow torn let who hnd served In the penitentiary when Sherlock nllas BIy. meile bin cKcnpe. Sherlocu gave him a Job but dis charged hfm later. This Incensed the cx-conviet and ho betraynu Sherlock. The next day Captain Christian, of the New Mexi co penitentiary arrived and started tor Sante Fe with Sherlock, where he has two years, to serve on a four year sentence for horso stealing. He cause of his exemplary life the rltl ens of his home town will make an effort to secure his pardon. DKXTISTKY FOP. l)()f; 4. Cost of Filling and Scraping a Ca nine's Teeth. London, England. --An observing reporter of a local dally on overhear ing two ladies discuss the relative merits of their pet dogs' teeth at the Peking Palace Dog Show, started up on a tour of investigation among fashionable West End dentists and made the important discovery that several well known dental surgeons made a large income by attending to tho teeth of. their cllent's'pet dogs. Said one: "I frequently attend to the teeth of pet dogs belonging to my clients, and that practice is common iu our profession. Scraping dog's teeth is a simple enough and almost painful operation. I have on several occa sions cleaned a dog's hollow tooth and HI led it. Only once have I tak en a wax Impression and supplied false teeth, and the dog soon got rid or them. The instruments are the same that, we use for human beings. "Show dogs are brought to me for their teeth to be scraped or stopped, as a decayed tooth means loss of points In competition. My scale of prices is: Scraping a set and clean ing, 1, Is.; refilling and cleaning one tooth, 5s.; making a bicuspid or Incisor, 17s. Cd.; making a canine and grinder, 1, Is. I have never supplied a full set of teeth for a dog, and could only give a fancy estimate, but the work could not be done prop erly under 25 guineas." PLANTING EYELASHES. Hair of One's Head Is Threaded Along Edge of Eyelid. Paris, France. "Planting eye lashes" is the latest torture which women endure for beauty's sake. The operation which is "very delicate and painful," Is this described in the Paris Health Journal: A long hair Is Blngled out of the patient's head. A needle is thread ed with It and forced in and out of the skin along the edge of the eyelid, forming a series of loops. These loops are then cut at the extrcmetles and the rows of lashes thus obtain ed are curiea upward wttn curlers When the operation is finished trfW patient has to spend twelve hours with an oiled bandage over the eyes. The process for the manufacture of eyebrows is similar. 400 KEPT FROM SUICIDE. Persuaded to Live by Kulvutlon Army Officers. Chicago, 111. Five of the Salvation Army officers, among them Brig. Alexander McMillan, the founder and head of the famous "Anti-Suicide bureau," has left Chicago to take command in various parts of the United States. Within a year or more, since the Anti-Suicide Bureau was started ex actly 400 men and women have ap plied for advice at the headquarters. According to the army officials a large proportion of these would have taken their lives if the bureau had not Intervened. nalloon Parties for London. Lnodon, England. The "balloon party" Is said to have arrived, and, Indeed, there are hostesses who boast the possession, of a tame balloon for the entertainment of their guests. Helium Really Liquefied. London, England. Prof, , Ohnes hits telegraphed to prof. Dewar con firming the statement that he has succeeded In liquefying helium. iHANIAC KILLS TWO; LIGHTS GREAT POSSE. Lend a Desperate Running Fight Out of Federal Asylum In Wash ingtonTwo Slain. Waslngton, Sept. 24. Andrew Llghtfoot, a demented mulatto "trusty" of St. Elizabeth's Federal Asylum for the insane, suddenly be came violent on the grounds of tho institution. With a crowbar he slew Patrick Maloncy, the keeper of the grounds; then killed Millie Fol 1 1 is . another Inmate, and shattered the arm of Elizabeth Robertson, aa Insane woman, who sour.ht to Inter cept him. Later, In a ruiinln;? bat tie, he dashed for the swamps or the outskirts of the Capital City, whore he fought .-. great posse of pursuers with sticks and stones, until he was shot twice and brought to earth. Llghtfoot, so nearly white that l.e scarcely could be rilHtlngulshnd from a Caucasian, had been confined In St. Elizabeth's for eight years. II'? was a soldier in the Philippines, nnd with several other troopers he was brought back rrom the Far Eaut to bo confined In the Government asy lum. Apparently the man had been im proving for several years, lie seem ed so rational Ciat Dr. Fitch of t!ie asylum, patrolled him to "trusty" work,, and, under Maloney's super vision, he was detailed to rake the lawns and keep an eye on the oilur patients In the men's ward during their recreation hours. Llghtfoot was watching a score or more of male Infants in front of the men's pavilion. Maloncy by his Bide, had been prying up a stone with a crowbar. Suddenly, with a yell, the mulatto grabbed the implement from the keeper's hands and, before Maloney could swerve away, had brought It crashing down upon his skull. Ma loney went down In a heap, dead In stantly. As his first victim fell,' the maniac began yelling wildly. Brandishing the crow-bar above his hoad hi? swung It furiously In circles and started on a dash toward the bound ary of the grounds. Millie Follln, a white inmate, wis in his pathway, and as he came rush ing upon her, he brought the Iron weapon down upon her head, shat tering the woman's skull and kill ing her Instantly. Then the maniac ran for the river at the foot of tho lawn and for the tree-grown, swamp beyond. Elizabeth Robertson, another woman patient, more than seventy years of age, was returning from the river side when Llghtfoot saw her. He ran from his course, raised tho crow-bar and struck at her head. She fell to one side and the crow bar, missing her head, struck the arm she had flung up to ward her self agalnBt the blow. Her arm bones were shattered. DROUGHT IS BROKEN. Heavy Rain Set In In Central West In Time to Save Fall Pastures. Chicago, Sept. 24. The drought of three months' duration through out the Central West was broken by a heavy rain which began falling at noon and continued all afternoon and evening. Corn is made and well cured in most i.eld8, but the rain will be of great value to fall pastures. Ship's Gun Bursts; 13 Dead. Toulon, France, Sept. 24. During gunnery drill one of the big turret guns on the French armored cruiser La Touche Trevllle exploded with terrific violence, completely wreck ing the after turret and killing out right the entire gun crew of thir teen. A number of others were se riously Injured. BASE BALL. NATIONAL LKAGUE. W. L. P.C'.I W. L. ,.7 73 ..48 91 .17 93 New York S7 SO ( hirao 90 M Mltaburc "3 M Phtlaclalphia.74 63 .65.'iOlnclnntl.... .J9 Bostnn.. .M0 Brooklyn .... M0 St. Lnuti .47S .4'! m: .3116 AMKUIOAN l.KAUUE. W. L. r.c W. L. .87 Ti .& Tl VJ 7 l'.rt. .Hj .174 .4.17 sin CluTflanrt K CO ..vn oiton Philadelphia I'uroit 79 60 ,'i6 hicaro ho (1 ..Mi Washington Si. Loula .77 62 ibtl .Saw lorlt. At J NEW YORK MARKETS. Wholesale Price of Farm Products Quoted for the Week. WHEAT No. 2. Red, $1.05 $1.06. No. 1, Northern Dulutn, $L07H. CORN No. 2, 89 89. OATS Mixed, white, 65 61c. BUI TER Western firsts, 21422 V. State Dairy, 21 21. CHEESE State full cream, 12yf 13. MILK Per quart, 3c. EGGS State and nearby fancy, HI 3 2c; do., good to choce, 24 28c; western firsts 23 24c. SHEEP Per 100 lbs., $2.60 $4.00. BEEVES City Dressed, 7 10 Vs. CALES City Dressed,) g 13 Y4c. HOQ3 Lives Per 100 lbs., $6.25 $7.40. HAY Prime per 100 IbB., 80c. STRAW Long Rye, per 100 lbs., 80 0c. LIVE POULTRY Spring Chickens per lb., 14c; 'turkeys per lb., x'i Tic; Ducks per lb., 10llo.j Fowls per lb., 10 14 c. JRESSEU POULTRY Turkeys per 'lb., 16 25c; Fowls per lb., 10 14c; '. Chickens. Phil., per lb.. 1822 VEGETABLES Potatoes, Jersey, per sack, 12,00 (tf 62.15. ONIONS eUow, ir basket, 60 76. c i,-,. r.i.tiiirra fry 1 1 (ni f n) 0 Moll ii n ii k ii iiii im i ii - h mi Afcjclable Preparation for As similating utcFoodandRcf? ula ling ihc Stomachs and Dowels of Promotes Digcstion.Chc?rfur nessaixtnest.Containa neilher OpitinvMorphiiic nor Mineral KOTTiAllCOTIC. Hyr arou.nrSiMvnmaaR JLx SmitM Aperfrcl Remedy forConslipa Tion, Sour Slonuvch, Diarrhoea orms .Convulsions .Fevcnsh nrss nm! Loss OF SLEEP. FacSimilo Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. Jury List fur Stjpto.nbar Court (IRANI) JURY Rriurcreek Clmi lcH MiiNtellei. Rerwick ('lmrh'K HiuiliT Locust Jaciih Fink, fsugarloaf T. A. Ruckle. Mlooinsburg A. V. Kresaler. Berwick Claude Kurt.. Catawissa Jeremiah Yeager. Beaver Jacob Baker. Jr. Blonmsliiirg Calvin Olrtoii. Ornni7tvill W. Knnria Cleveland W. M Cleaver. isugarioar-J. Ii. Hutliir. RlfMiniHhnrir .l)nriii.l Tlnnim Greenwood Jonas Ager. latawlssa J. L. Walter. Centralia John Leant. Conyngham V. H. Honabach'. Franklin Samuel Raup. CatawisHtt Henry Hhane. Bloomsburg Henry Knorr. Coiiyngliam H. D .Kostenbauder. Jacksou Kdward Bones. Conyngham Oeo. W. Weller, Mt. Pleasant John H. Thomas. TRAVERSE JURORS-First Week. Berwick -George H. Catterall. CatawiHsa William G. Yetter. West Berwick R. M. Smith. BIooiiiHbiirg... William Coflmau. Centre Daniel Mordan. Bloomsburg Rev. J. R. Murphy. Briarcretk J. K. Adams. Bloomsburg Charles I). Brobst. Mt. Pleasant-G. M. Ikeler. Orangeville Carl Fleckenstine. Berwick C. J. Courtrlsrht. Benton Townshlp-T. K. Kdward. Centralia -Robert Welsh. Itoaiingcreek Alfred Hoagland. Madlson-D. N. Williams. Pine Twp Thomas Y. Stackhouse. Mifflin Joseph Cleaver. Pine Isaac Trivelplcce. Couynirham Jacob Rentier. ' West Berwick G. G. Chritmian. Seott-K. A. Hrown.. Bloomsburg L. D. Cane. Orange Township William. C. White. Samuel Y. Keller. Main Benjamin Krelsher Berwick McClellun Cope, Rob. Reedy, West Berwick Horace Yeager. Catawissa Edward Brosious, Frauklin Clark Yost. Bloom bnrg John Scott. Hemlock George Irvln. Locust Benjamin Waters. Catawissa-John Overdorf. Hemlock K1 ward W. Ivy. Beaver A. F. Rupert. Cony iighnin Lewis Kustenbauder. Catawlssa Charles P. Pfuhler. Bloomsburg C. B. Gun ton. Conyngham Isaac Beaver. Berw ick Hurl Davis. Berwick E. C. Morehead. Brim creek Samuel M. Petty. Centralia-W. W. Hetlner. Catawissa George II, Sharpless. Main-F. P. Gruvcr. Berwick Harry East. Berwick H. R. Oliver. Bloomsburg Moses Tressler. Berwick Theodore F. Berger. Fishingcreek Robert E Whitenlght. Centralia Patrick Currau. Bloomsburg H. B. Sharpless. West Berwick W. A. Linden. Conynghani-Dunlel E. Fctterman. Berwick-John E. Traugh. . Centre-C. E. Drum. West Berwick-William Fairchilds. Mlfflin-H. W. Houck. Benton Borough Job 11 S. Baker. SECOND WEEK. Conyngham-John Kertln. Centralia John White. Berwick Eugene Doty. Mt. Pleasatit George L. Johnson. Berwick-R. W, Hoyt. Scott Ellis RIngrose. Hemlock Edward Sterner. Mifflin Edward Green. Jackson Deaner Davis. Bloomsburg Charles M. Hess. Uoariugcreek Alvln Rhoads. Berwick Francis W. Roup. Bloomsburg A. J. George. Locust John Hughes. Berwick Percy Curran. Greenwood J. H. Johnson. Beiiton Township Wesley Roberta. Berwick J. B. Evans. Berwick Walter Suit. Catawissa Borough John Fox Berwick M. O Hetler. Berwick Rev. J. K. Adams. I Centralia Martin Barrett. aF m JUfl For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years VMS OtWTMMI aeMMNV. NCW MM CfTV. Pine-Jacob Webb. Madison J. E. Cotnor. Centnilia J nines Murphy. Sugnrlivaf-Alt'red Hess. Locust Adiim Rarlg. Sllgarloaf- ). F.Cole. Bloomsburg--R. 14. Hartman. Catawissa Thomas E. Harder, Cleveland- Charles Kline. Catawissa Borough E. B. Gule. Centre J. II. Hughes. Berwick--William Harry. Catawissa Township Oicar Lcighow. A I'll -nit Rose Lush. W. it. Wilson, the president of the Huntingdon Borough Council. an oddity at his htu3 on Mlllilri street In the form of a perfectly white rose blooming on a rose bur.h which has borne only red roses and on whicii ail the other tlowers now blooming are red. The rose is a c'.lnihln; rambler, and about eight teet troni the ground up the stde of the hnuo the otic per fectly white ro ;e haB ,",rown, standing out prominently among the r'd ones urroundlirtj it. Philadelphia Rec ord. A Stone Iu Which SO People Live. During the course of the centuries the enormous stone known ns Yenno lofTs Rock has been so tunnelled that It resembles a gigantic rabbit warren. In its Interior, says a Rus sian paper, live live far.itlle3,. num bering no fewer than 30 people. The F10114 Is in the Caucasus, within half a mile of the Qeorglun military road. ' The .flip's Increase. As a result of Its war with Rus Hla the area of Japan's territory was raised from 183,000 square miles to 2S3.000 square miles, and her popu lation Increased by 10.000.000. Americans ura known as a dyspeptic people. The extent of this disease may be inferred from the multitude of so called "medicines" oilered as a reme dy. They are often in tablet form and have no value except as palliatives of the immediate effects of dyspepsia. The man who used them may feel better but is surely getting worse. They do not touch the real cause of the disease. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Is a medicine specially prepared to cure di.jeuses of the stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition. It is not made to tlve temporary relief but to effect permanent cure. In ninety-eight cases out of every hundred It cures perfectly and permanently. Write to Dr. Pierce. Buffalo, N. Y., for free booklet giving all the ingredi ents contained in his medicines, which have been so widely used for the past forty years, and the'oplnion of eminent medical authorities indorsing these In gredients. In Dr. i ierce'sGoUleii Med ical Discovery pure triple-refined gly cerine Is used Instead of alcohol to ex tract the medicinal' virtues from the roots and preserve the same unimpair ed in any climate It has cost Dr. Pierce til.OOl) to 'give away in the lust year the copies of his People's Common Sense Medical Ad viser, which have bem applied for. This book of 1008 pages is sent free on receipt of 21 one-cent stumps to pay ex jiense of mafling only. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. The man who knows most about geology is seldom the one who accumu lates the rocks. Only a little cold in the head mav ho Hi I. .,!,. ... .l.ut InufM . ...v .'v . nit 1 1 if w, ni, r 'j case of Nasal Catarrh. Drive out the invader with Ely's Cream Balm appli ed straight to the inflamed stuffed up alr-passges. 'Price SOu. T; vou prefer to use an atomizer, ask for Liquid Cream Balm. It has all the good qual ities of the solid form of this remedy nd will rid you of catarrh or hay fe ver. No cocalue to breed a dreadful habit. No mercury to dry out the se cretion. Prloe 75o. with spraying tube. All druggists, or mailed by Ely Bros., 66 Warren Street, New York. AW
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers