Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, May 11, 1899, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
112 ar year I* o»
If tilt ID Sdvance I M
ADVERTISING RATES
A4*ertlsements are published at the rate o]
tse foliar per square for one insertion and fifty
ssatn par square for each subsequent insertion
Rates by the year, or for six vr three months
are low and uniform, and will be furnished on
saplu-at on.
Legal and Official Advertising per square
Rrse times or loss. *2. saco subsequent, inter
in :o cents per square.
Local notices lu coins per line for one inscr
iption: 5 cents per line for each subsequent
lensecutlve insertion.
Obituary notices over fire lines. 10 cents par
Hne Simple announcements of births, mar
riages and deaths will be Inserted free.
Business cards, five lir.es or less, »5 per year
fver live lines, at tha regular rates of adver
tising
No local Inserted tor less than 75 cents per
issue
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the Pitsss Is complete
%ff -rds facilities for doing th#» best class o:
jrork PAKTICULAH ATTENTION PA ID TO LAW
PRINTING.
No paper will be discontinued n lll arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must be pah'
lor in advance
Municipal woman suffrage is a con
dition and not a theory at ISeattie, Kan.
At the recent election the town elected
i mayoress, five alderwomen and a
jlerkess.
You best a man when he gets the
worst of it. You worst him wl en you
get the best of him. That is to say, "to
best" and"to worst" mean exactly the
same thing.
A pauper woman in I'aris has been
convicted of having had her child bap
tized 14 times as a Catholic and 12 times
as a Protestant for the purpose of se
curing five francs and a dress each time.
Congressman Joe Sibley, of Pennsyl
vania, has furnished a startling prece
dent for other congressmen by giving
his entire salary for the term, amount
ing to SIO,OOO, to public hospitals and
other charities in his district.
In recent experiments with the Mar
coni system of wireless telegraphy it
has been demonstrated that the wave
currents can be reproduced with ac
curacy and clearness in spite of strong
winds or other atmospheric disturb
ances.
Admiral Dewey's favorite watch is
made of steel from the sunken battle
ship Maine. Capt. Sigsbee, who com
manded the ill-fated war vessel at the
time she was blown up, carries a similar
timepiece. Both were made by a pa
triotic downeast Yankee.
The late John Walter, of the London
Times, made a peculiar will. He left
as a legacy to one of liis daughters, one
of the advertising columns in that pa
per. The column is the best in the pa
per for advertising, it commands a very
high price, and slie is enjoying a steady
income of $l5O a day therefrom.
In the last 50 years the total number
of public officials in France lias in
creased from IsS,OOO t0416,000,and their
salaries have grown from $49,000,000 to
$121,000,000. In the same period the
population has increased only ten per
cent. Either France did not have
enough government half a century ago,
or else it has too much now.
Relic hunters are carrying away
piecemeal in their pockets the house in
Montpelier, Yt., in which Dewey was
born. The number of relics immedi
ately pertaining to the hero of Manila
are few in number. Those for which
lie is responsible are numerous, but
they are not available as mementoes,
as they are tit the bottom of Manila bay.
And now there is a revolt in Arabia
caused by the fleecing of pilgrims by
the Turkish authorities, and it is re
ported by cable that the chiefs of the
Mohammedan church at Mecca may
throw off the yoke of the sultan for
ever,andgive their undivided allegiance
to the grand cherif, who is England's
friend. This promises to be a turbulent
year in Europe.
The annual report of the inspector
general of the army shows that 29 reg
ular college students and 59 alumni
were commissioned in the regular army
and 157 students and 290 alumni in the
volunteer army, a total of 541 officers,
or enough for about 12 regiments. Fur
ther, !,'i*4 students and former students
Joined the army as noncommissioned of
ficers or privates.
A French centenarian lias just com
mitted suicide because he was afraid
that he would live forever. It is not
necessary to inquire whether this aged
person was in the full possession of his
faculties. Evidently he had lived so
long 1 as to lose the power to reason eor-
W.'Ctly, or he would have appreciated the
truth of Mark Twain's remark that only
French duelists are immortal.
That hay fever is a mystery is very
evident. An editor in Ohio says it is
caused by kissing grass widows. A
Missouri editor says it is caused by a
grass widow kissing a fellow by moon
light. An lowa editor says it is caused
by the fellow kissing the girl while he
is feeding hay to the cow, and a Kansas
exchange is of the opinion that it's
caused by missing the girl and kissing
the cow. A poetical editor says that it
is caused by kissing in the heydey of
youth.
The farm on which Abraham Lincoln
was born near Ilodgensville, Ky., litis
been sold to David (irear, and will be
converted into a park. The farm should
be preserved as a park for many rea
son's, one of which is that it is the only
thing related to the place of the great
American's birth that has not been
carted around for exhibition. The cabin
Lincoln was born in, the old oaken
bucket that hung in the well, and every
fence rail that was on the place when
Lincoln died disappeared lonsratro.
I AM A DEMOCRAT.
I am a democrat.
H'W strong the words strike on the ear
E>i»pellln;r every doubt and fear,
Defending as a giant's arm
The body politic from harm;
Extending from the Kreat and small,
t'ntil it takes in each and all
And fills them with the sacred fire-
Whin echo rises to Inquire,
Ten-dollar or one-dollar?
I am n. democrat.
Frum north to south, from east to went.
The noblest patriots and the best
Fy those plain words are tilled anew
NVith fresher purpose to be true:
Arc made to grasp and wltld
The word of mouth, the facile pen;
To lead, encourage and inspire—
When echo riaes to inquire.
Ten-dollar or one-dollar?
I am a democrat.
Could grander words exist than they?
Could Jefferson in his great day
Have made a nobler speech? Could he
Have told in such char brevity
The wondrous story of a soul
True to the democratic poll.
As th«se words show each one to be
In his concrete democracy?
How nobly do the words ins; ire—
When echo rises to inquire,
Ten-dollar or one-dollar?
—W. J. Hampton, in Judge.
UPHOLD GOLD STANDARD.
Fa •!« AVhioli Give tlic I,ie to the A»-
■ertiotiH at the Ctieup Money
Colonel.
Mr. Bryan, whose knowledge of cur
rency matters is in inverse ratio to the
quantity of his talk, about tliem, said
iu Now York that "the republican party
has been burying the gold question."
As usual, Mr. Bryan was mistaken.
The republican party has been burying
several other things, including Bryan
ite assertions that high-priced wheat
and silver were incontrovertible terms,
and that republican success in ls'Jti
meant continued', commercial and in
dustrial distress. Mr. Bryan never did
shine as a prophet.
The gold question has never been
buried, for the reason that the people of
the country took the republican party
at its word when it, promised to make
and keep the currency of the United
states "as pood as gold." That is what
the republicans have done and are do
ing. A paper dollar with the gold to
back it is valued so highly that the peo
ple prefer the paper and leave the gold
in the treasury and bank vaults. "The
endless chain" has gone into innocuous
desuetude.
That is simply the efTect of putting in
a republican administration at Wash
ington.and of the popular confidence
that it would uphold a sound money
standard and guard the financial honor
of the nation. It could do no more be
cause Bryan's free silver friends in the
senate blocked the way. It is going to
be different at the next session of con
gress, and already the steps to accom
plish something definite in the shape of
currency legislation have been taken.
The republican members of the house
of representatives in the Fifty-fifth con
gress, just before final adjournment
last month, appointed a committee on
jnonetary legislation. That committee
is carefully constituted. Gen. David B.
Henderson, of lowa, is chairman, and
the other members of the committee
ure as follows: John Dalzell, Pennsyl
vania; Sereno E. Payne, New York;
Jesse Overstreet, Indiana; William
Loveriug. Masaehusetts; C harles Cur
tis, Kansas; Page Morris, Minnesota;
Eugene 1". Loud, California; 11. B. Haw
ley, Texas; J. W. Babcoek, Wisconsin,
and W. S. Kerr, Ohio.
These gentlemen fairly represent
sound money sentiment; they are
typical republicans, and almost with
out exception are noted for ability and
skill during long public service in hand
ling important questions. They met
at Atlantic City, .V. J., where the pre
liminary work in the way of prepar
ing a currency bill was done. Xo hasty
action is likely to be taken, for the
fubject with which they have to
deal demands care find deliberation.
But that they will devise a measure
which in its essential features will com
mand the approval of those who favor
honest money and legislation that will
assure the permanent stability and in
tegrity of our country is hardly to be
doubted. This gathering, so closely
following the adjournment of a con
gress in which all attempts at monetary
reform were abortive owing to silver
antagonism, is the best and most sig
nificant reply to Mr. Bryan's taunt.—
Troy Times.
Democrats IJesertlnsr l!r>nn„
Oh, no. There is no hostility to demo
crats who wish to return, "providing
they admit that- the party now has a
national platform which is satisfac
tory," but the trouble is that the num
ber of democrats who are willing to re
turn on that understanding seems to be
growing smaller instead of larger. '1 he
colonel lost New York by nearly 270,-
000, and if he expects iiis principles to
triumph, these votes must cerhunly be
made good somewhere. That they are
not being made good in the west is in
dicated by Ilie drift of political senti
ment in that section. The men who
eitlu r voted for MeKinley outright or
who helped to defeat Bryan by voting
for Palmer and Buckner, do not feel as
though they are called upon to perforin
works meet for repentance. And it is
nol probable that they will change their
minds between now and the next presi
dential election. Brooklyn E'gle.
(Detn.)
CT'There are many democrats who
are very much disturbed because Col.
Bryan is devoting so much of his
speeches to denouncing the occupation
of Manila by American troops. "It was
sixteen to one which fooled u* in IS9G,
and now Bryan is going about the
country attempting to commit the
party to active hostility to the occupa
tion of the Philippines, a course which
will alienate thousands of patriotic
democrats." Such was the remark of a
well-known democrat in this city.
There are a great many others who
were the first to declare for what is
called the pol'cy of expansion. —lndian
apolis Journal.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MaY n, 1899.
THE DEMOCRACY.
A FrniiU Confession of It* Forlorn
ami llclpleßN Condition by n
I'nrty I'npcr.
Lot. us face the facts, let us no longer
deceive ourselves. The democratic
party to-day is without character and
standing' in the nation. It has lost the
confidence, if not tlw respect of th*
great body of intelligent, thoughtful
men of this country. What docs the
party stand for? What are its princi
ples? What man is there in this party
to-day who can stand up with any sort
of confidence and declare them? l*>es
democracy stand for imperialism or ex
pansion? Bryan answers one way and
Jones the other. Does it stand for free
silver or the single gold standard?
l'.ryan and J. lies answer one way;
Croker and a distinguished member of
the democratic committee an
swer another. Does the party stand for
tariff reform or protection? Nobody
knows, for the Chicago platform de
clared that that question was retired
until the money question should have
been settled.
Where are the party leaders? Wheje
are the great men of thejiast who could
upon any occasion, at any time of the
day or night, if called upon, stand tip
and with accuracy and confidence pro
claim democratic doctrines? There are
110 leaders, there is no man or set of men
who are recognized to-day as the
mouthpieces of the party. There was a
so-called leader of the minority forces
in the house of representatives. lie
raised a constitutional question and
called upon the democrats in the house
to stand by him in the positioh that he
assumed, but when the test came more
than 40 members of his party >oted
against him, and he then and thel'e re
signed.
Alas for the party of Thomas Jeffer
son! Surely it has fallen upon evil
times. It is paying the penalty of the
folly of IS9G. Every prediction that we
made when it then went astray has been
fulfilled, or is about to be fulfilled. It
must reorganize upon a true democratic
platform or goto pieces. Gentlemen
may mock at this, as they mocked at it
in IS9G, but it is the truth. Those who
then forsook the old ship must come
back to the little band (if democrats
who remained and kept the eolors fly
ing, or be wrecked.—llichmond (Va.)
Times (Dem.).
M'KINLEY IS WINNING.
The President'* Hold on the People
Co 111 pared" to That of
I.i 11 coin.
The growth of William McKinley in
the respect and good graces of his fel
low-citizens is not confined to his own
party, but extends to all classes, re
gardless of partisanship. In proof of
which see the following estimate of him
from the democratic Brooklyn Eagle:
"In 1596 the question was 'McKinley
or Uryan?' Most Americans, we are
sure, are glad it was McKinley. He had
the experience in congress and the ex
perience in politics wdiich enabled him
to obtain necessary legislation iti a
great emergency. He had the knowl
edge of a man which ennbied him to
put at every point of peril or of emer
gency agents who were equal to what
was required of them. He has had the
conciliatory, yet firm, the quiet, yet. in
sistent, temper, which has enabled him
to have his way at the Inst, by permit
ting all others to have their say sit first.
He has wisely used, on well-cliosen oc
casions, a rare capacity for luminous
public statement and for moral appeal
to the people who have made up their
minds in his favor against all criticism
and casuistry and aspersion. He has
maintained the organization of his
party intact; he has greatly extended
the civil service rules and he has estab
lished for himself a hold on the homes
and hearts of plain Americans that
cannot be mistaken, and that can well
nigh be compared to the hold which
Lincoln himself had under circum
stances analogous to those in which
Mr. McKinley has been placed."
By the way. catch a republican paper
comparing McKinley to Lincoln and,
oh. what a howl would go up from cer
tain quarters—quarters too miracu
lously constituted and partisan-minded
ever •* •< expand and broaden into fair
r.esr,, no matter how much light may b;
poured out upon them.—Oswego Times,
POLITICAL DRIFT.
IT3"The democratic party is threat
ened with the most serious danger of
disruption ic i'.« history—Kansas City
Independent.
(CT'When Thomas Jefferson annexed
Louisiana the consent of the governed
was not thought of by him —lndian
apolis Journal.
ITTIowa out of debt and a surplus
in sight, eh? And now the democratic
calamity press may soon be growling
about the great surplus.—lowa State
Register.
ID"'A man cannot be a political big
amist." declared Mr. Bryan in one of
bis oratorical flights. Yet Mr. Bryan
managed to wed himself to three dif
ferent nominations in 1896. —Washing-
ton Post.
C-T'lf, as is reported. Col. Bryan
dropped the silver question at Milwau
kee, lie picked it up again before he
reached New York. The colonel with
out sixteen to one would be like a baby
without a rattle. —Omaha Bee.
j3r"What has happened tomake.more
soldiers necessary?" asks Mr. Bryan,
and he proceeds to answer: "Nothing
but a republican administration." He
has forgotten the democratic cavort
iiigs in congress to hasten the war with
.Spain. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
free and unlimited coinage of
silver at a ratio of sixteen to one, urged
as a cure-all at a time of popular dis
tress. reached its highest point when
Bryan was named for the presidency.
L'rged anew, the disasters of '9B are like
ly to be intensified in 1900. —Chit-age
Chronicle (Dem.).
IN STROf G TERMS.
Coniliiil of Volunteer Arm) Mnr^Foni
I* « riticlKcd bj One ol Surgcuu t.eu.
era! Sternberg'* t »fci»<niiO>.
Washington, May 4. The session of
'lie Association of American Physicians
held here Wednesday was marked by
nn important paper on typhoid fever
iu the vol nn tor cam]is bj Dr. V. C.
Vaughn, one of the board of surgeons
appointed by Surgeon General Stern
berg last summer to look into this
matter when tlhe epidemic of typhoid
was prevalent in the various camps. The
boa id made a thorough study of the
subject and its report has been looked
forward to as an authoritative work.
The report is not yet completed, but
Dr. Vaughn's paper was in the nature
of an advance statement, with the >.aiic
t;on of Gen. Sternberg, who was pres
ent at the meeting.
I>r. Vaughn's paper was a severe ar
raignment of the volunteer surgeons
and incidentally of the officers who
were res|«onsible for tlhe policing of the
great camps at Jacksonville, Cliicka
mauga, Camp Alger and Montauk
I'oint. The board visited all these
points and found that not only was
there a great deal more typhoid than
was at first supposed, but that the sur
geons. mostly of the volunteer class,
were, from ignorance or other motives,
treating and reporting typhoid under
the names of "persistent malaria." "in
digestion." "gastric fever" and "typho
malaria." lilood examination of many
of the "malaria" patients failed to show
The presence of the malaria bacillus,
but there was every indication of well
mnrked typhoid. These patients were
being treated with quinine and natural
ly either died or had to be sent to city
hospitals, where their disease was prop
erly diagnosed.
The board made an extra careful ex
amination of the water supply of the
various camps and found that the prev
alence of typhoid could not be laid to
impure water in any large degree. The
explanation. Dr. Vaughn said, was in
the disgustingly filthy condition of the
camps, where the excreta of typhoid
patients was strewn broadcast, with
no apparent effort either to sterilize if
or collect it so as to prevent its spread
ing contagion to the remainder of the
camp.
Gen. Sternberg referred to the ap
pointment of volunteer medical army
officers of the governors of states, the
former thereby becoming responsible
for the health of our camps. The re
sult had been unsatisfactory. It seemed
to liim 10 be inconsistent that we
| should set ourselves tip to show the
Spaniards how .to eradicate yellow fever
from their cities while, our camps are
infected seriously with typhokt. He
declared that any ad\orse conditions
which prevailed at Montauk should not
be held against the regular army medi
cal officers, few of whom were t here.
Dr. George Dock, of the university of
Michigan, spoke of his investigations at
the Sternberg general hospital. The
misunderstanding regarding the symp
toms of typhoid and the over-estima
tion of the effects of quinine form,
Dr. Mock declared, the striking faults
of the volunteer medical service. Most
of the volunteer medical officers went
to camp with the expectation of fight
ing no end of malaria. In o e regi
ment each man was provided with 200
grains of quinine and a three-ounce
bottle of paregoric. The great bulk of
supposed malarial cases were not mar
larial infections a.t till, but many of the
doctors, regardless of this, dosed their
patients with !J0 to -10 grains of quinine
< ach day.
CHICAGO'S SWEAT SHOPS.
Tlieir ICvll* are Painted ill Ditrlt Col- ,
or* by a I'ornier Factory Inspector. |
Washington. May 4.—The industrial
commission resumed its public hearings
yesterday. One witness was Florence
Kelly, for four years chief factory in
spector of Illinois. Her statement
dealt particularly with sweat shops in
Chicago. She painted the picture in
dark colors. Of the 200.000 factory
workers in Illinois she said 150,000 were
;in Cook county. Practically all the
ready-made clothing and much of the
so-called merchant 'tailor work of the
city was sweat shop work.
The conditions .surrounding the
workers were unsanitary and harmful
in a marked degree. Child labor was
used in direct defiance of the 14-year
age limit in force in the ataite. She
said the employers had no difficulty in
evading this law and securing age
certificates for the children. Many of
these little ones, she declared, worked
for tilie first year for nothing, with the
promise of a dollar a week at the end
of that time and ultimately perhaps $3
or $4 per week, when they had reached
the top of the ladder in their line. She
strongly advocated the passage of a law
similar in its general provisions to th
Sulzcr act now in force in New York.
Killed 120 ol the IC»cort.
Cairo. Egypt, May 4.—lbrahim Ali,
whom Lord Kitchener sent upon a
mission to Ibrahim's uncle, the sultan
of Barfour, has returned to Cairo. Ibra
him Ali found upon reaching Darfo.tr
that his uncle had been dethroned by
Ali Dinar. The latter, on the appear
ance of Ibrahim Ali, turned out with
his troops and routed the escort of
Gen. Kitchener's envoy, numbering 150,
of whom 120 wire killed.
Sickle* 1m Reappointed.
Washington, May 4. Stanton Sickles,
rf New York, has been appointed sec
retary of the I'nited States legation at
Madrid. Mr. Sickles is a son of Daniel
Sickles, formerly minister to Spain,
ind held the same positon to which he
is now appointed when Mr. Woodford
was minister there.
Will ArrcM Imported Laborer*.
Little ltock. Ark.. May 4. Gov. Jones
has been informed of a movement to
bring 1 into the coal mining distriot an
firmed body of men to take the places
of the strikers. He instructed the state
authorities to summon every man in
Sebastian county, if necessary, to en
force the injunction of Judge liowe
prohibiting the importation of laborers.
Ml such armed men are to be met at
•he state line and placed under arrest,
as arc also those who supply the arms.
Mine operators will also be arrested
when they attempt to bring in armed
i abort i-s
■■■■wnnranMnßMaMiKaaMaHHßßKflßMß
' fiftieth
-£|l«g§ \to cure and
m@®r\to help. No
wonder it has fifty happy years back of it.
Get a bottle today of
Safsaparilla
[which made Sampirilla famous]
{ "WELL DONE OUTLIVES DEATH."
{ YOUR WIEP/SORY WILL SHINE
I IF YOU USE 1
I
ALABASTINE IS the original '
and only durable wall coating,
entirely different from a'.l kal- j
somlnes. Heady for use In |
white or twelve beautiful tints
by adding cold water.
LADIES naturally prefer ALA
BASTINE for walls and ceil
ings, because It is pure, clean,
durable. Put up in dry pow
dered form, in five-pound pack
ages, with full directions.
ALL kalsornlnes are cheap, tem
porary preparations made from
whiting, chalks, clays, etc.,
and stuck on walls with de
caying animal glue. AI.ABAS
TINK is not a kalsomlne.
BEWARE) of the dealer who
says he can Bell you the "same
thing" as ALABASTINE or
"something just as good." Ha
Is either not posted or la try
ing to deceive you.
ANT> IN OFFERING something
he has bought ehean and tries
to sell on ALABASTINES de
mands, he nmy not realize the
damage you will suffer by a
kalsomlne on your walls.
SENSIBLE dealers will not buy
a lawsuit. Dealers risk one by
selling and consumers by using
Infringement. Alabastlne Co.
own right to make wall coat
ing to mix with cold water.
THE INTERIOR walls of
every schoolhouse should be
coated only with pure, durable
ALA CASTINE. It safeguards
Health. Hundreds of tons aro
used annually for this work.
IN BITTING ALABASTINE, sea
that packages Rre properly la
beled. Beware of large four-
Itoutid package light kalso
mlne, offered to customers us
a Uve-pouud package.
NUISANCE of wall paper 1s ob
viated bv ALABASTINE. It
can be used on plastered wa'.ls,
wood ceilings, brick or can
vas. A child can brush It on.
It does n<>t rub or scale off.
ESTABLISHED in favor. Shun
ajl Imitations. Ask paint dealer
or druggist for tint card. Write
for "Alabastlne Era," free, to
ALABASTINE CO., Grand
Rapids, Michigan.
1000s of UNSOSCITED TESTIMONIALS SAY.
Permanently cures all Itching. Rurning. Scalpy,
Scalp and Skin Diseases, such as Salt lUienin. Kc
reina. Scald If cad. Chilblain*. Piles, Hums. Haby
Humors. Dandruff. Itching Sitalit. Fnllim; Hair
(thickening ami making It Soft. Silky, and Luxuri
ant). All Face Eruptions (producing a Soft, Clear.
Heautiful Skin and Complexion). It contains no
Lead. Sulphur. Cantharidcs or anything injurious.
An «»asy, great seller Lady canrassers make
to a dav. Druggists or mail fiOc. Capillaris
Manufacturing Co.'. N Y Address T. IIS S.I.
M \ NHI in.u, AFT., ifnioCf nr. J.
CURES WHtHt All ELSE MiiS. TjflH
fe* Boat Cough Syrup. Taates Good. Use Pf|
te in tirno. Sold by dnifglsta.
|| eEBI2H2I2iaaEIS2toI
Excursions B§|||!
California®™'
111
Every week an organized
party leaves from Chicago via
Denver and Salt Lake, in
charge of a special conductor.
Pullman Tourist cars are used.
They lack only the expensive
finish of Palace cars, while the
cost per berth is about one
third. Similar parties leave
each week from St Louis also.
For particulars address T. A.
GRADY, Excursion Manager,
211 Clark Street, Chicago.
HOOK
f* n ttie Great Grain and
BffflanfYßlJjru Grazing Helts of West
rJr\ ft P em Canada and lnfor
i I /r matlon as to how to
I fc I rji secure them can be had
Kij; on application to Su-
I[ ml fiperintenclent of Immi'
I w gratlon, Otta\ta,_Cuna'
I INNKS. No. 1 Merrill Block, Detroit, Mich.
' ————————— ——«
READERS OF THIS PAPER
DESIRING TO BUY ANYTHING
ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS •
SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING
WHAT THEY ASK FOR, REFUSING t
ALL SUBSTITUTES OR IMITATIONS. ►
A Natural Black is Produced by
Buckingham's Dye^U™.
(0 cti. of druggists or R ? M«ll & Co..Nashua,N.H.
You will never know what
GOOD INK
is unless you use Carter's. It costs
no more than poor ink.
Funny booklet" How to Make Ink Pictures" free.
CARTER'S INK CO., Boston, Mas*.
A. N. K.-C 173H
tVHE\ WKITINO TO ADVERTISES!
Blense state that yon WW U« Ad>trU>»
sent ta tut- pn^n