Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, March 31, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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    SSOO Reward
TV* abort Raward will W paid 9m to*
JWrmatioß th«» will lead to the imri ml
•onrietion of the party or parties «W
eo*d iroa tod alaba oa the trmek «/ tka
iporium k Rioh Valley K. R., MM
tke eut lio« of Fraaklia Hoa«l«jr's tkna
•B the eYeniaft of NOT 2 lit, 1891.
HUIT Auc.ro,
»8-tf.
FINE LIQUOR SIORE
—n*—
EMPORIUM, PA.
TITS undersigned baa opened ftrvt
elaee Liquor atora, and Invitee tfci
trade of Hotels, Rcatanranta,
We shall carry none bat the beat !■»
loan and Imported
WHISKIES,
BRANDIES.
GINS AND
WINES,
BOTTLED ALE, CHAMPAQUE, Etft
Cliolee Ua* <d
Bottled Goods.
reddttloa toB7 !»»*• mtn**mmlmmm
•oaataatty ia Mock a ftul lla* of
CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
am led mwi BDHaad Boo— la aaaae
OaLL JJO> BKB Ma
A. A. MCDONALD,
PBOPBIXTOB. BKTOBItJM, VA.
|F. X. BLUMLE,2
y IMFOBICU, PA. M
Bottlaa ml mm* Scalar la A
& BEER, g
& WINES, ¥
& WHISKIES, ft
M Aad Liquors of All Kinds. < B
Q Tbe best ofgooda always Jl
w carried In steak and everjr- J B
TT thing warranted as represent- J
ST Especial Attentlea Paid tm ■
M nail Ordsra. < A
W EMPORIUM, PA. jjjj
i—
/ 60 TO i
jj. A- flinsler'U
J Bread Street, Eaiperlaa, Pa.,
J Where pea eaa get anything yea weal la V
\ the llae at J
S Groceries, )
i Provisions, 7
y FLOUR, SALT HEATS,
( SMOKED HEATS, \
J CANNES G0&58, ETC., J
I fmt, Ccfm, Frelts, CMfwUaierj, y
S Tok«c<« uU dfin. C
\ Ooedi Bellpered Free any /
/ Place la rem. S
C CILL ill SR IE in MT ftICILN
C Uift P. * I. lEMT I
Bottling Works,
JOHN McDONALD, Proprietor.
*tar P. a a. Deyot, Kaaporluaa, Pa.
BotUar and Shlppae a#
Rochester
Lager Beer,
IDT Hi IBS «V ETPOKT.
ne Manufacturer of SeA
Orlaka and Duln ia Ckakx
Wlaes aad Pore I.iqaora.
We keep noae bnt the very beat
Beer and are prepared to fill Orders ea
short notice. Private families served
daily IT desired.
John Mcdonald.
I'Qrraata, and Trado-Mnto obtained and all hM
• lent bu*iacu conducted for Modchati PtCfe. I
OUR Orrtcc IS OPTOBIT* U. 8. PATENT OrftOBI
< and we can secure patent ia ic*a time than liwMj
\ \ Bead modal, drawmj or photo., with
? tlcn. We ad viae, if patentable or not, free of a
J char**. Our fee not due till natent le secured. 2
S A PAMPHLET, 44 How to Obtain Patents," with#
#eost o! aame in the U. 8. aaC iattig a countrieaS
J sent tree. Address, ]
C.A.SNOW&CO.
CHICAGO
te NEW YORfC Onicaa «
A. N. KELLC6B HEWSP#»EB Cflb
WITH WATER AND WINE.]
Two Battleships aro Launchod and
Christened.
Tin* Kearaarge it ml Kentucky Take to the
Urlny Dlnupiit Like a I'atr of liigun
tl<* I>tH'kt l>C(l<Tlpt!oii of h Nota
hie Kvent in Naval Anual*.
Newport News, Va.. March 25.—The
tirst great battleship ever launched
from a private yard in the south, kissed
the waves in the .lames river Thurs
day morning at the immense plant of
the Newport News Shipbuilding and
Drydock Co., and a little more t: an an
hour later a second ship, the exact
counterpart of the first one except in
name, followed. They were christened
respectively the Kearsarge and the
Keutut
V
' *■ % t
ry 112 1 >
CHRISTINE BRADLEY.
"The ship of the nation" was
launched tirst and long before the hour
announced for the ceremony fully ls,-
000 people were around the powerful
steel hull of No. is. as the Kearsarge
was known in the shipyard.
.lust before the preliminary prepara
tions were finished the christening
party arrived and was conducted to
the decorated stage at the bow of the
Kearsarge. The party was composed
of C. 1!. Orcutt, president of the New
port News Shipbuilding Co.; Mrs. Her
bert sponsor for the Kear
sarge. and her maid of honor; Miss
Christine Bradley, sponsor for the
Kentucky, and her maids of honor;
Miss Anna Webb, of I'aducah. Ky.;
Mrs. William <). liradley. Gov. Tyler,
of Virginia, and staff, and a number of
state officials of Kentucky; Lieut. Com
mander Herbert Winslow, I'. S. N.,
the only surviving son of the captain
who commanded the famous old Kear
sarge in her fight with the Alabama;
THE KENTUCKY—THE KEAHSAKOE IS AN EXACT COUNTERPART.
members of the house and senate com
mittees on naval affairs and other dis
tinguished visitors from Washington.
All preparations being arranged, a
saw severed the pieces that held the
Kearsarge in place and the splendid
hull started on her journey to the
water. As it started Mrs. Winslow
broke a bottle of champagne over its
bow and exclaimed: "I christen thee
Kearsarge."
The christening party then pro
ceeded to the bow of the Kentucky,
which vessel was launched at 11:35 a.
m. This ceremony was an exact coun
terpart of the former, except that when
the critical moment arrived Miss Chris
tine Hradley broke a bottle of water
from the spring on the old Lincoln
farm, and said: "I christen thee Ken
tucky." Then as the vessel started
down the ways several bottles of old
liourbon whisky were hurled against
her sides by Kentuckians who were
opposed to the water christening.
These ships, with a displacement of 11.525
tons, draw only 28 feet 8 inches of water, less
than the armored cruisers New York and
Brooklyn, which would not combined l.c equal
in combat to one of these battiesiiips. Light
draft on heavy displacement is only one of the
many valuable qualities of these battleships
Save the Indiana class, they carry the heaviest
batteries in accord with modern naval practice,
and with primary batteries fully equal to that
class they mount secondary suns in such fash
ion as to make the combination almost un
equaled in naval architecture. The biff rifles,
four in number, are mounted in two turrets.
The armor is of liarveyized nickel steel.
The Kearsarge und the Ken ucky at e :tfis feet
in length. 72 feet 5 inches team and 23 feet 0
inches draft. Tncy carry normally 410 tons of
coal but may take aboard 1,210 tons, and ill
officers, sailors and marines are required to
navigate each of them.
The Keport Is at the Capital.
Washington, .March "J5.- —Lieut. Com
mander Marix and his naval com
panions bearing the report of the
Maine court of inquiry reached Wash
ington at 11:35 last night. The crowd
was so dense sit the depot that the
party left the train outside the shed
and took carriages for the Kbbitt
house, where the oflicers spent the
night. They were met at the station
by an official of the navy department
who informed them that the secretary
of the navy would not receive the re
port last night. The report of the
court of inquiry will be read at to-day's
cabinet meeting.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1898.
A PATRIOTIC ORATION.
inenstor Thunton Pcorea the Money Chso^"
rre—The» Voice of tlie Stork Cismbler the
Only One Rained Agalnxt Intervention.
Washington, March 25. —A dramatic
scene was presented in the senate
Thursday during the delivery by Mr.
Thurston, of Nebraska, of a speech on
the Cuban situation. Not since the in
auguration of President McKinley hare
so many people been on the senate side
of the Capitol. Mr. Thurston's tirst sen
tence, in which he said he spoke by
command of silent lips —a delicate ref
erence to the loss of his wife on his
trip to Cuba —commanded instant at
tention. A hush fell over the great
audience which hung with almost
breathless attention upon every word.
As he ncared the end of the speech
he was almost overcome by emotion,
but rallied and closed in a manner that
thrilled his auditors. Staid senators
turned away and wept and in the gal
leries tears welled to hundreds of eyes.
Mr Thurston said that ho had *rone to Cuba
believing that the condition of affairs on the
island hud been greatly exaggerated and that
h<* had directed his efforts in the tirst instance
to the exp sure of the supposed exaggerations.
He had concluded, however, that any over
statement of tlie horrors of the situation was
impossible. Ho was prepared not only to
adopt every word of the statement of Senator
l'roctor. but he was even convinced that he bad
understated the facts.
Mr Thurston quoted the Cuban plank of the
republican national convention of 1K96 to show
that this nation "should use its influence and
good offices to restore peace and give inde
pendence to ihe island." Then he eulogized
President McKinley s course during the past
year, but said that it was now too late to rec
ognize either the belligt rency or the independ
ence of Cuba. He said he was opposed to an
nexation Toward the close he said:
Against the intervention of the United States
in this holy cause there is but one voice of dis
sent; that voice is the voice of the money
changers. They foar wap. Not because of any
Christian or ennobling sentiment against war
and in favor of peace, but because they fear
that a declaration of war, or the intervention
which might result in war, would have a de
pressing ♦•tTeet upon the stock market. Ido
not read my duty from the ticker; Ido not ac
c *pt my lessons in patriotism from Wall
street. I deprecate war
War wf'th Spain would increase the business
of every American railroad; it would increase
the output of every American factory: it would
stimulate every branch of domestic commerce;
, it would greatly increase the demand for Amer
ican labor. But in the meantime the specter of
war would stride through the stock exchanges,
and many of the gamblers around tbe board
would find their ill-gotten gains passing to the
other side of the table,
i Let them go: what one man loses at the
gambling table his fellow gamblers win. Let
I them take their chances as they can. Their
i weal or woe is of but little importance to the
people of the United States. Let the men
whose loyalty is to the dollar stand aside while
the men whose loyalty is to the tiag come to
the front
There are some who insist that the republic
an party will not act. for they say it sold out to
the capitalists and the money changers at the
last national election. It is not so. God for
bid. The 7,000.01)0 free men who voted for the
republican party and for William McKinley
did not mortgage the honor of this nation for a
campaign fui d and if the time ever comes
when the republican party hesitates in its
course of duty because of any undue anxiety
for the welfare of the accumulated wealth of
the nation, then let the republican party be
swept from the face of the earth and be suc
j ceedcd by some other party, by whatever name
| it may be called, which will represent the pa
| triotism, the honesty and loyalty that the re
j publican party exhibited under Abraham Lin
coln in 1861.
In the cable that moored me to life and hope
| the strongest strands are broken. 1 have but
: little left to offer at the altar of freedom's sac
| rilic, but all 1 have 1 am glad to give. lam
I ready to serve my country as best I can in the
j senate or in the Held. My dearest hope, my
most earnest prayer to God is this, that when
! death comes to end all. I may meet it calmly
j and fearlessly as did my beloved, in the cause
| of humanity, under the American flag.
J As Mr. Thurston sank into his seat
j and buried his face in his hands the gal
[ leries were swept by a tumult of ap
: plause.
r'ive I.ivfH I.ost In the Flood.
Zanesvillc, 0., Marelv 25. —Fifteen
j hundred families are homeless, five
lives have been lost and nearly $1,000,-
! 000 worth of property has been de
j stroyed by the flood. Mrs. James Rrcn
j nan and child and John Leach were
drowned by the overturning of skift's;
! Mrs. Nancy Church was drowned in her
home and Tim Jones fell from a bridge;
ahel was drowned. Two thousand dol
lars was raised last night for sufferers.
Caused SHUO.OOO l.oss.
Indianapolis, March 25. Railroad
men estimate that the loss to the In
dian:! polis lines because of the recent
I storm will not be less than 8800,000.
Trains arc now running regularly.
Siajsbee Ordered Home.
Washington, March ~'t. —Orders were
issued yesterday detaching 1 apt. Sio-s
--bee and other ollicers from the battle
ship Maine at Havana and ordering
them to proceed home and await or
ders. Commander Wainwright. who
is in special charge of the wrecking
operations, will remain at Havana un
til they are concluded.
Is Out of Politics.
Atlanta, (ia.. March U.">.- Hon. Thomas
E. Watson, who was nominated for
governor by the populists, is out in an
open letter declining' the honor. He
announces that lid is out 01' politics tor
goo .
SPAIN'S HOSTILE MOVE.
Her Torpodo Flcr t Sails for Porto
Rico.
Admiral Klcarii I* Ki'!l<'vi k <i from Active
Duty it,it! Cupt. SanipMon 1m to l>e (lltrn
Comur.ilid of th« Sqtmilron in
Fli riil* Water*— A Kor.'r:nt
of rri'Hiil.'iil MeKiuley'4
Cuban I'olicy.
Washington, March —Thursday
was marked by unexampled activity in
nil otMcial quarters. Adviees came
that the Spaninh torpedo flotilla had
sailed from the Canaries for l'orto Rico
and from this moment energetic war
like measures followed in quick suc
cession. The movement of this fleet
has been watched with tlie keenest in
terest. as it was felt to involve serious
possibilities which might compel our
government to protest against the
movement as of a hostile character.
The fact was made known to the pres
ident and a conference was held be
tween him and Secretary Long and
Assistant Secretary Roosevelt. The
president was advised that naval strat
egists regarded it as essential that this
torpedo ileet should not be allowed to
reach western waters. What conclu
sion was reached is not known.
C'Al'T. WII.LIAM T. SAMPSON'.
Later in the day the Spanish minis
ter, Senor Bernabe, called at the state
department and spent some time with
Mr. Day. It was inferred that the ap
proach of the Spanish flotilla was one
of the subjects referred to. Whether,
however, there was any suggestion
aggainst the move was not disclosed
by either Mr. Day or the Spanish min
ister. Following the flotilla announce
ment important news followed rapidly.
The first was this announcement by-
Secretary Long, indicating the placing
of our squadron and fleet on a war
footing:
"Admiral Sicard has been granted
leave on account of his health, (.'apt.
Sampson has been made commander of
the fleet at Key West. Capt. Evans
has been ordered to take command of
the battleship lowa. The orders to the
squadron in Hampton Roads have not
yet been issued."
It soon became known that Commo
dore W. S. Schley was slated to c om
mand the flying squadron now assem
bling at Hampton Roads. This an
nouncement wasof unusual importance.
Admiral Sicard has been in command
of the fleet at Key West throughout
the critical period of the Maine dis
aster. Capt. Sampson has been in
command of the lowa, but recently has
been conspicuous as president of the
Maine court of inquiry. Capt. Kvans
is,better known as "Fighting Rob."
At the close of the day came the an
nouncement that the navy depaitment
had purchased eight steam yachts and
four steam tugs, presumably at New
York, for use in the auxiliary naval
fleet. The boats are about 401) tons
each and would be suitable as torpedo
boats. The yachts purchased are
among the fleetest along the Atlantic
coast.
The president said to several visitors
yesterday that he would do everything
consistent with the honor of the coun
try to avert war and he still believed
war could be averted. The president
acknowledged that he believes the re
port of the board of inquiry will find
that the Maine was blown up from the
outside.
liis programme has been definitely
decided. It is his purpose to treat the
blowing up of the Maine as an inci
dent. The report of the board will be
sent to congress on Monday with a
brief message relating the events lead
ing up to that point and informing
congress that the facts contained in
the report have been cabled to Madrid
to be laid before the Spanish govern
ment by Minister Woodford. No de
mand will be made upon Spain, but
the laying of the facts before the
Spanish government will be equivalent
to calling upon Spain for an explana
tion and such action as she .'nay deem
proper.
It is the purpose of the house leaders
to refer the report and message to the
committee on foreign affairs without
debate and to this purpose it is be
lieved the democrats of the house have
acquiesced, reserving the; right to de
mand action if a report from the com
mittee is too long delayed. Much will
then depend upon Spain's response, but
there are those close to the president
who believe that from the time the re
port is sent to congress it will dropout
as a factor in the situation.
The second part of the president's
programme reaches the main question
and involves intervention on human
itarian grounds within a week or ten
days after the report of the board goes
to congress. It will be intervention to
relieve the starvation in Cuba and upon
Spain's acquiescence in or objection to
this act will liepend peace or war.
I.c-ft « 10,000,000 to tier Heirs.
New Haven. Conn.. March 25.—Mr?,
.lane Winchester, widow of the found
er of the Winchester Repeating Arms
Co., died at her home here Thursday
She was ill years of age. She was the
richest woman in Connecticut, it' not
in New England. Her fortune is esti
mated at $40,000,000.
Strikers Threw Ip the Sponge.
Urunswick, Me., March The
Cabot cotton mills, which have been
idle since .January JO on account of a
strike of the employes against a 10 per
cent, reduction in wages, have started
up. The operatives gave up the strike.
A SUBMARINE MINE
Maine Court of Inquiry
Says It Caused the
Explosion.
The Spanish Naval Commission,
on tin 1 Other Hand, Announces
that tin 1 Disaster Was of
Internal Origin.
I'renldent Mi-Klnley and lli* Ad-.ine
.Spend an Kv« a ntful I>ay and Orders
are Given to JitMloubl** the
l'ruparatioim for a Con*
Ittst with Spain.
Washington, March ;j<i.—The Mains
court of inquiry has reported that thj
loss of tin- battleship was due to au
outside explosion. The state depart
ment, by direction of the president,
has cabled l'nite'l States Minister
Woodford at Madrid to notify the
Spanish government of this conclusion.
The president and his cabinet advisers
held two sessions Friday, at which the
report was considered in detail. Mem
bers of the cabinet stated after the
meeting that the discussion was of
"•rave character and that never since
the wrecking of the Maine has the sit
uation seemed so critical.
The Spanish government has cabled
>ftieially to Washington that the Span
ish naval commission holds the disaster
to the Maine to be of internal origin.
The government of Spain, it can be
stated positively, is not disposed to
turn back the torpedo fl >tilla now pro
ceeding from the Canaries.
The foregoing gives the record of
me of the most eventful clays the na
tional capital has seen since the close
of the civil war.
The findings of the court. briefly
stated, are that the loss of the Maine
ivas due to an explosion from the out
side, the court being unable to fix the
responsibility for the explosion. The
jourt does not express an opinion as to
the character of the explosive, but the
testimony goes to show that it was a
powerful submarine mine, the exact
character of which is not determined
by the testimony, though the belief
was expressed that it was a floating
submarine mine. There were two ex
plosions. the court finds', the first was
from the outside, and that set oft' one
of the smaller magazines.
It was this result, expressed in detail
anil with the precision of a court deep
ly conscious of its responsibility, to
gether with the evidence on which it
was based, that occupied the attention
of the cabinet throughout its sessions.
There was no change in the plan of
making the report public and trans
mitting it to congress early next week,
rccompanied by a brief message from
the president.
While interest was thus centered at
the White House, the navy and war
departments were hurrying forward
their work of preparation. The ad
vance of the Spanish torpedo flotilla
continued to receive the closest atten
tion of naval otlieiuls, and while so
far as could be ascertained no definite
line of action was determined upon,
the need of intercepting this fleet was
urged by the highest naval authorities.
Hardly less suggestive than the ap
proach of the torpedo flotilla was the
information received by the military
authorities that the Spanish govern
ment had hurried to completion exten
sive fortifications on the island of
Porto Rico. The exact character of
these new defenses has been made
known here and they are being given
weight with the military authorities
as showing the disposition of Spain.
Madrid, March "JO. —The report of the
Spanish board of inquiry into the loss
of the battleship Maine says emphat
ically that the explosion was of in
ternal origin. The report says it is
••scientifically and practically demon
strated that the explosion was inter
nal."
Key West, March '.ld. —The bulletin
that the court of inquiry had found
that the Maine was blown up by a sub
marine mine created intense excite
ment here. It was read by eager
crowds, which included Admiral Si
card, elderly captains and younq
cadets. Most of the naval officers at
Key West have held to the opinion,
shared by all the officers of the Maine,
that the warship was blown up by ex
ternal means. All were glad to know
that the Maine's fate was not due to
the negligence of her own officers.
The most significant development
that followed the announcement of the
court's report—a development known
to but few—was the sudden sailing of
the lighthouse tender Mangrove for
Havana. The Mangrove was lying
quietly at the dock, loading buoys,
when orders came about 5 p. m.for her
to proceed with all haste to Havana
and take on board all the American
officials in that city with the exception
of Consul General Lee.
The attention of Admiral Sicard was
drawn to the fact that Spain had offi
cially denied that Havana harbor was
mined. He replied: "If Havana har
bor was mine I should certainly have
mined it. The water there is especial
ly suitable to such a method of de
fense. 1 should not believe a state
ment that Havana harbor was not
mined."
I'liminutcK t lm from I'olitics.
New Orleans, March 20. —The Louisi
ana constitutional convention yester
day adopted a suffrage plan. The con
vention is almost solidly democratic
and the avowed purpose was to elim
inate the negro from Louisiana politics.
The measure adopted provides for edu
cational and property qualifications
and a poll tax is presumed to answer
the purpose effectively. At the same
time it was desired to let in as many
white people as possible, and this is
accomplished by exempting naturalized
voters, as well as those who wera
voters in 1807, with their sons.
COL. HAMILTON,
Of Colombo*, Ohio, L'aea I'e-ro-n» !•
Ilia Family—'The Colonel'! Wit*
Reatored to Health bjr Ur. Hirt*
nan's Famoua Remfdy lurtatarrk,
Columbua, 0., May 18, 1807.
"Besides having the merits of Pe-ru-na
so fuliy demonstrated in my family, I have
i number of friends who have taken
it for catarrh and stomach trouble and all
unite in praising it. As a remedy for ca
tarrh I can fully recommend it."
Colonel Hamilton's residence is located
it 300 West First Avenue. Columbus, Ohio.
A HOUSEHOLD REMEDY.
That Pe-ru-na has become a household
remedy in this elegant home is well at
tested bv a letter from Mrs. Hamilton, which
says: ''l can bear testimony as to the mer
its of your remedy Pe-ru-na. I have been
taking the same for some time, and am en
joying better health now than I have foe
some years. I attribute the change to Pe-ru
na, and recommend Pe-ru-na to every wom
an, believing it to be especially beneficial to
them."
Address The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufactur
ing Company, of Columbus, Ohio, for a free
copy of "The National Witness. '
Nntnrnl History.
Teacher—What can you tell me about thm
rabbit ?
Pupil—lts left hind-foot is lucky.—Puck.
THE COLUMBIA CHAINLESS.
Let the sportsman boast of his hammerlesa
gun.
The fisherman praise his multiplex reel.
The rifleman proudly show trophies won,
I sing to the praise of the Chainless wheel.
There is only one with Its bevel gear,
Fine as a watch its bearings roll.
Its name is COLUMBIA, pride of the year.
Perfection attained, it haa reached the goal'.
The sprocket was good 'till the Chalnles®
came,
With its peerless action and wonderful
stride.
And wheelmen who try it give up the game.
And vow they have Just begun to ride.
No slack to gather, no chain to clean.
No oil to soil as you take your flight;
The gear is protected on Pope's machine.
And -svery bearing is "water tight."
Then hail to the model of ninety-eight.
With the stamp of perfection affix the seal.
The bevel gear has settled the fate
Of the sprocket. Hurrah for the Chainlesa
■whbel.
H. W. D. L.
A HI it I net lon.
Stranger (to Highlander in full uniform)
Sandy, are you cold with the kilt?
Sandy—Na, nion, but I'm nigh kilt wi'
the cauld.—Detroit Free Press.
STATE or OHIO, CITT O? TOLEDO, I .
LUCAS COUNTY. { "
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the
senior partner of the firm of F.J. Cheney
& Co., doing business in the city of Toledo,
County anil State aforesaid, and that saia
(irm will pay the sum of One Hundred Dol
lars for each and every case of catarrh that
cannot be cured by the use of Hall's ('atarrh
Cure. FRANK J. CIIENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this Gth dav of December, A. D.
lSSfi. A. W. GLEASON.
[Seal] Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur
faces of the svstem. Send for testimonials,
fi ee. F. .1. CH ENEY &. CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Oft Proved.
Money has wings, as is frequently shown
by fliers in the stock market. —Philadelphia
1 imes.
Shake Into Your Shoo
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet,
tt cures painful, swollen, nervous, smarting
eet and instantly takes the sting out ol
orns .uid bunions. It's the greatest comfort
liscovery of the age. Allen's Foot-Ease makej
tight or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain
•ure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, ach
i'ig feet. Try it to-day. At all druggists and
shoe stores, 25 cents. Trial package FREE.
Vddress Allen S Olm»ted. Le Roy, N. Y.
A woman's idea of the best plastering it
the kind you can drive a nail into any
where.—Washinston Democrat.
Oil, Wliat S|ilfiidiil Coffee.
Mr. Goodman, Williams Co., 111., writes:
"From one package Salzer's (Jernjan Coffee
Herry costing 15c I grew 800 lbs. of better
coffee tliau I can buy in stores at 30 cents a
lb."
A package of this and big seed catalogue
is sent you by John A. Salzer Seed Co., La
Crosse. Wis., upon receipt of 15 cents stamps
uu'l this notice. Send for same to-day. kl
The best man is he who tries to perfect
himself; and the happiest man is he who
feels that he is perfecting himself. —Socrates.
Cnniclilne Leada to Consumption.
Kemp's Balsam will stop the Cough at
once. Co to your druggist to-day and get a
■■ample bottle free. Large bottles 25 and 50
cents. Go at once : delays are dangerous.
How to dissolve bones—feed the children
on corn meal, fat meat, pie and cake. —Rural
New Yorker.
Lane'a Family .Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to be
healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on
the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache.
Price 25 and 50c.
Sacque religious—the young woman who
uses the church to advertise her new clothes.
—Rural New Yorker.
To Cure n Cold In One Day
Take Laxative Hromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it fails tocure. 25c.
To-morrow will be like to-day. Life
wastes itself whilst we are preparing to live.
—Emerson.
Surely. Often after 10. 15, 20 years' suf
fering, St. Jacobs Oil cures rheumatism.
The most ludicrous being in the world is
he who tries to be unhappy and can't.—De
troit Free Press.
Humped and bent. Lame back did it.
Straight and sound. St. Jacobs Oil did it.
I can recommend Piso's Cure for Con
sumption to sufferers from Asthma.—E. D.
Townsend, Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4, '94.
We can't see the benefit in learning to
v»ork puzzles.—Washington Democrat.
?!ii g lg" A WKKK iiiil expenses tor honest,active man
or woman, as special representative in thele
wli" vicinity. Responsible House; experience un
necessary. KKKI.KR & KlKKl'ATßlCS, Philadelphia, Pa.
ft* RSSPISrB TU MO as,PILES audita
M rA SV Safe ifa forms of Mutlirniinl browthi
■ ■ ■" ■ *J « ■ a cured at home without the use oC
liook I roe. Ur. M. W It U N CO., CaiUavllle 4 UI
3