Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, January 18, 1900, 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 CODNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Per year 12 (>0
If paid in advance l ;>0
ADVERTISING RATES.
Advertisements are published at the rate of
one dollar per square for one insertion and fif t y
cents per square for each subsequent insertion.
Hates by the year, or for si* or three months,
•re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legal and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less, *2; each subsequent inser
tion 50 cents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for one inser
nrrtion, 5 cents per line for each subsequent
uonsecutive Insertion.
Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, mar
riages and deaths will be inserted free
Business cards, five lines or less. 15 per year;
over tlve lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local inserted for less than 75 cents per
issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PKESS is complete
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO LAW
PRINTING.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
tor in advance.
Waste in lornflelriH.
The editor of Wallace's Farmer com
putes that lowa loses $8,000,000 a year
in ungatliered cornstalks. In making
this estimate he puts the value of the
cornstalks at the low rate of one dollar
an acre. On the same basis of valua
tion how much do Minnesota and the
Dakotas lose? W ; ould not the sum at
least reach the million mark? Such loss
is appalling. In the corn belt it reaches
a prodigious sum. It must be stopped.
No nation, how«?Ver prosperous, can af
ford to waste the gifts of a kind Provi
dence. The man who only cuts half
his hay would soon be dealt with by
the authorities. But where is the dif
ference in such a course and in leaving
cornstalks ungathered ? The excuse
made for not cutting cornstalks is the
scarcity and dearness of labor. The
remedy is not an impossible one. Grow
less corn anil turn up some other kind
of food that can be harvested at some
other season. The ability to grow so
much corn is fraught with promise to
the live stock interests of the country.
It means that two or three limes as
much live stock will some day be grown
as we have at. the present time.
Mrs. J. C. Croly, who has just rounded
her 70 years, is the Mteral embodiment
of the woman's movement, being not
only the progenitor of woman's club
dom, but the pioneer press woman of
the country, says the New York
World. Few of her contemporaries
know that her pen name, "Jennie
June," is one of the sweetest reminis
cences of her childhood. When she was
only 32 a gentleman who had beep vis
iting her family wrote to a friend: "She
is the Juneist little girl I ever knew!"
In after years when she made her first
adventure into print and sought for a
signature she remembered the quaint
fancy and promptly became "Jennie
June."
Augustus Rice, of Cleveland, aged 35
years, of stalwart form, a sailor, and
steeple climber, while en route from
Green Bay, Wis., to Baltimore to board
ship, was run over by a train at Sand
patch and his foot crushed. Bice is
tattooed from head to foot. On the leg,
just above the crushed foot, is a beau
tiful tattoo representing the stars and
stripes, lie begged the doctors piteous
ly not to mutilate the stars and stripes,
saying: "Please save the old flag, I love
it," just as he was overcome by the
unaesthetic. The doctors were able to
make amputation just below the em
blem, and when Rice recovered con
sciousness he shouted with joy to know
that tlie flag was saved.
Oklahoma enjoys the unique distinc
tion of being the only state or territory
east of the Rocky mountains which
produced more wheat in 1899 than in
1898. The government statistician at
Washington gives Oklahoma credit for
1,218,000 acres in winter wheat and a
crop of 10,202,000 bushels. Only 12 of
the 40 states of the union raised more
wheat than Oklahoma did this year.
The prominent grain states which
produces less than Oklahoma are Mis
souri, Illinois, «lichigan, Kentucky,
Tennessee, Maryland and Texas.
During a recent holiday in New York
the price of American Beauty roses
went up to the usual figure of S3O a
dozen and remained there. Pinks sold
in some places for four dollars a dozen.
But it was the azaleas that brought tho
highest price. A basket of them was
made up by a certain florist for a mil
lionaire. The millionaire was a regular
customer, but his basket cost $175.
"The women of Wichita," remarks
the Kansas City Journal, "have been
canvassing the town for subscriptions
in aid of the poor. They tackled L. It.
Delaney, of the Santa Fe, in a cigar
store. He had just one nickel in his
pocket. He took this out, walked over
to the slot machine and dropped it in
Out rolled five dollars in nickels, which
Delaney piled into the apron of one of
the women."
There are some men, says the Wash
ington Post, who feel that the highest
round of greatness has not been
achieved until they have been tucked
away in a public office with a colored
gentleman stationed at the door to
keep out the fellows who whooped it
up for them.
AS DEMOCRATS SEE IT.
Independence for Filipino* llcium
ucndcd by llrynnlte Rcpre—
■rnlalirri.
The democrats in congress have not
been able to agree on a Philippine pol
icy as yet-. A few days ago Representa
tive Williams, of Mississippi, offered a
series of resolutions which, it is under
stood, express the views of Mr. Bryan.
Those resolutions propose that the
United States shall recognize the right
of the Filipinos to national independ
ence, and shall withdraw its land and
sea forces upon "the inauguration of a
constitutional government or govern
ments by the people of the islands or
any of them." Were the American
forces to stop fighting. Aguinaldo
would set up in a day what, he and
Representative Williams would call a
"constitutional government," because
there would be a written constitution
which would be so much waste paper.
Then it would be the duty of the l"nited
States to move cut. But under the res
olutions it would have to protect for
ten years the "constitutional govern
ment or governments" against the ag
gressions of foreign powers.
Senator Bacon, of Oeorgia, has of
fered resolutions regarding the Philip
pines which, though they differ from
those of Representative Williams, are,
it is understood, favored by many dem
ocrats. These Bacon resolutions de
clare that it is not the purpose of the
United Slates to maintain permanent
dominion over the Philippines, but that
it contemplates the establishment of
au independent government there ul
timately, and that when a stable gov
ernment shall-have been established un-
PROUD OF IT.
tier American supervision, "competent
and worthy in the judgment- of the
United States to exercise the powers of
an independent government and pre
serve peace and maintain order within
its jurisdiction," then national inde
pendence shall be given the Filipinos.
The difference between these two
sets of resolutions is considerable. One
set contemplates the abandonment of
the islands by the L'nited States when
ever the Filipinos set up what they will
call a constitutional government, but
which will be a choice mixture of an
archism and despotism, cemented to
gether with blood. The other set pro
poses that the islands shall not be
given up until American authority has
been fully established and the Filipinos
have proved to the satisfaction of the
United States that they are competent
to govern themselves. They are not
now. Humanly speaking, they never
will be. They do not belong in the
category of self-governing races. The
adoption of a constitution will not put
them there.
What is to be gained, then, by prom
ising the Filipinos national independ
ence when they are fit for it, when it
is plain that they never will be fit for
it, at least not until generations have
come and gone? The only effect of
such a promise, impossible of fulfill
ment, will be to encourage malcontent
Filipinos like Aguinaldo to keep on
insisting that they arc (it for independ
ence and shooting at American sol
diers to prove it. All these democratic
rsolutions—none of \\ liich will be adopt
ed—will contemplate recognizing on
possible or impossible conditions, the
national independence of lh<- Filipinos,
serve only to confirm Aguinaldo in the
belief lliat he has friends in this coun
try, and thus encourage him to keep
on resisting the lawful authorities in
Luzon. —Chicago Tribune.
(CTThe Mobile Register (dem.) says
that "not many months ago the dis
play of a Bryan picture to an assem
bly in a Mobile theater would sure
ly a storm of applause, but that
time is no more." The other night,
when Mr. Bryan's picture was thrown
upon the screen, some applause fol
lowed, with a few shouts in the upper
part of the house. Directly after a
MeKinley picture was shown, and it
was greeted with applause equal to
that given to Bryan. some saying it
was twice as loud as that given to Mr.
Bryan. "The difference in quantity
is of no eonsequeuce," says the Reg
ister; "the startling fact being that
i Mobile assembly applauded MeKin
'e\ it all."—lndianapolis Journal.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, iooo
A PARTY OF JOB LOTS
Tl»«* Ileniorrnoy nt Present la a
queer Mixture of I'olllleitl
Odd* mill Knds.
Recently a member of the house in
debate referred to Mr. Cleveland as the
greatest democrat since Jackson, and
the report says the remark caused de
risive laughter on the democratic side.
The incident serves to show thetorn-up
condition of the party. Cleveland is
the only man the democrats have re
elected since Jackson's day. He re
ceived the nomination three times. He
is the only democrat who has.reached
the presidency since 1850. His second
term expired less than three years ago,
and yet his name excites nothing but
sarcastic merriment among the demo
crats in congress. The point seems to
be a confession that the one demo
cratic president in half a century was
one too many. His own party, after re
peatedly bestowing upon him their
highest honors through a long term'
of years, have nothing left, for him but
a mocking laugh. If they are right now
they were wrong in 18S4, 1888 and 1892,
and are simply acknowledging an un
limited capacity for making mistakes.
No doubt Air. Cleveland has some
friends and admirers left in democratic
cirrtt s. but they can have little in com
mon with the element now running the
organization. The party is split up in
so many ways that it is next to impossi
ble 1o describe them all. There are
gold democrats, silver democrats,
greenback democrats, expansion demo
cats, anti-expansion democrats and oth
er subdivisions too numerous to men
tion. Only about 30 democrats could be
mustered to support the pretensions of
Roberts, of Utah, though their new
leader in the house tried to point the
way. it is true that Roberts lias a par
ticularly bail case, and it was therefore
a democratic blunder to attempt, to
stand by him at all. As the session runs
on the public will be interested to see if
the democrats can agree 011 anything.
Their readiness to be mirthful over
their past record is not calculated to in
spire confidence in their present or fu
ture. — St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
DRIFT OF OPINION.
Es* After a republican congress
passes the gold standard bill the talk
of free coinage will be shadow without
substance—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
K?" 1 lon. John P. Altgeld says gold
is of no earthly use to anybody. If
lion. John P. Altgeld. ever runs for
office again this may cost him the en
tire dental vote. —Chicago Tribune.
Every democratic leader sees the
folly of going before the country
again on the silver issue, but he
doesn't see any other issue that olTi-is
better inducements. Kansas City
Journal.
t?S!imp people do not know an an
swer when they meet one. llryan still
insists that there is a money "ques
tion." With him it is probably "How
much can 1 touch the committee for?"
—Topelta Capital.
ICTIf anyone expected that Mr.
llryan would favor the currency bill
after he emerged from the Texan
wilds,he is doomed to disappointment.
Still, why should anyone expect Wil
liam J. to favor a sound currency
measure? lie is not built that way.
—Cincirnati Commercial Tribune.
IFA Minnesota paper says the coun
ty banks are filled with farmers' de
posits. Good crops and good polities
are a strong team for prosperity on
the farms, and many people have dis
covered since J896 that the right
stamp of politics is indispensable to
round out other blessings.—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
hawton's last message to
his fellow-countrymen on the war in
the Philippines should be taken to
heart by all, but it is especially appli
cable to the anti-imperialists. Just as
Admiral Dewey was misquoted by the
I lost on enthusiasts, so Gen. Law-ton's
view as to the campaign in Luzon
were grotesquely misrepresented. In
his letter to ex-Minister I'arrett airl
read at a banquet in New York, he
asks the imperialists "honestly to as
certain the truth."' Philadelphia
Press.
MR. GAGE EXPLAINS.
Tlie Secretary Tells Wby Cmtunit R«>
eel pin Were lle|>o»llid in Nutlonal
■ln ■■ k».
Washington, Jan. 11.—Secretary
Gage yesterday sent to congress his
replies to the resolutions recently in
troduced in the senate by Mr. Allen,
of Nebraska, and in 'the house by Mr.
Sulzer, of New York. In his reply the
secretary says:
"First—That the reason for utiliz
ing national banks as depositories for
public moneys, as authorized by law,
will en the receipts of the treasury
were exceeding it-s expenditures has
been to avoid the disturbance to busi
ness which the withdrawal of large
sums of money from active circula
tion must inevitably cause.
"Second —The reason for directing
the internal revenue receipts into de
jiository banks at this time is that
the revenues are now largely exceed
ing disbursements from month to
month, and seem likely to do so for
an indefinite time. This condition
would be a menace to the business
world if assurance were not given that
this surplus would 1»' diverted from
the treasury vaults to public deposi
tories.
"Third—The reason for directing
n.ll of the internal revenue receipts to
one depository was that it is more
convenient to first collect the receipts
of numcTors offices info one place and
make the <:esired distrlfou. .on from it,
than to give new instructions daily to
11 3 collect irs.
"Fourth - The reason f<ir selecting
the National City bank as such dis
tributing agent was that at the time
the order was issued it was one of
but two banks which had offered
ttonds sufficient to cover the amount
of the daily deposit. Its bond deposit
was $4,000,000 and that of tin Hano
ver national bank $1,910,500. The Na
tional City bank was therefore t.he one
chosen.
"Fifth —The custom house property
was sold to the National City bank as
the highest bidder on July 3, 1899.
llnder the terms of the sale it had the
option of paying in cash all of the
purchase money at any time, or any
part it might elect above $750,000,
which sum it was absolutely oblige.l
to pay. It eercised this option by
choosing to pay $3,215,000, leaving
$50,000 yet due. No dcei. will lie exe
cuted until full payment has been
made.
"The payment, received was turned
into the treasury by deposit in the
National City Isuik. it having been the
established custom of treasury offi
cials, supported by decisions of the
supreme court, to consider moneys on
deposit in designated depositories as
moneys in the treasury.
"Finally, under my administration
of the treasury department no dis
crimination in favor of one bank
against mother has been made."
SALISBURY YIELDS.
Knslund'n Premier Order* Hie He
leafce of American Flour Seized I>}
ICimlifcli Wa r«lil|>».
liondon. Jan. 11.—The American
flour seized till* Delagoa Kay lias been
released. I'tilled States Ambassador
Choate had an interview with the
Marquis of Salisbury yesterday after
noon and received a verbal reply to
the representations of the Washing
ton giverninent. 'The British note on
this subject was sent later to the Uni
ted States embassy. The gist of it
was cabled to Washington. In brief
food stuffs are not considered contra
band of war unless intended for the
enemy.
The foreign office only arrived at 8
decision yesterday and it was not un
til after Mr. Choate's interview with
the Marquis of Salisbury that a note
embodying the provisions was drawn
up. Several of the government's ad
visers wanted to make a regulation
regarding canned goods, but. this was
decided to be impracticable. The de
cision to make flour and grain in
•transit to the enemy contraband is
evidently hedged in by many difficul
ties of execution, but the foreign of
fice believes that investigation will
generally determine whether the grain
is really meant for consumption af
Lorenzo Marquez or in Transvaal.
Mr. Choate cabled Lord Salisbury's
note to the state department at Wash
ington and Mr. Hay is expected to re
ply accepting the terms. The latter
step was not. taken by Mr. Choate, as
he had first to receive authority from
the state department to do so.
ROCKEFELLER'S ANSWER.
Standard <lll tlagnalr Keplie* to elocu
tion* Put to lllm by the Industrial
Commission.
Washington, Jan. ll.—The indus
trial com mission has received from
John I). Rockefeller, president of the
Standard Oil Co.. replies to questions
sent him by the commission. The
company received rebates from rail
roads prior to 1 hSO, but received no
special advantages for which it. did
not give full compensation. No pro
fits ramr from such rebates, as what
ever advantage was received in this
way was deducted from the price of
oil. The company never received any
income from any railroad for oil ship
ped over its line. The enterprise had
been successful because of the cheap
ness of its commodity.
Combinations, he says, are absolute
ly necessary in order to carry on a
large business. He recommends fed
eral legislation under which corpora
tions may lie created and regulated,
and if that is not possible to have uni
form state legislation encouraging
combinations and permitting state
supervision which will not hamper,
but sufneit nt to prevent frauds.
Hod Hill Tlcn to Strike.
Anderson, Ind., Jan. 11.—It is an
nounced here that, in accordance with
the action of the state Kod Workers'
association, which on January 1 made
a. demand for an increase from 3 to 20
per cent, on t.he wage scale, a .strike
in ail the union rod mills of the conn
pry will probably begin Montlay.
It i- leased the Her/on.
Durban, Jan. 11.—The I»ritis<h au
thorities have released the German
steamer llerzog,w.iieli was seized Jan
uary 0. while her way to Lorenzo
Marquez.
SKIPPED TO THE HILLS.
Insurgent* lletreat, no I'mial, Bflorf
the Advance of \\ lihikmi aii<L Haun'
Troop* -Oilier Philippine New*.
.Manila, .lan. 11.— Reponts from the
movements of tlie American cdiii
manders south of Manila, show that
(iens. Hates and Wheaton are at Perez
l>as Marinas and (ien.'Schwan at Ki
lang. all awaiting the arrival of pro
vision wagons. ReconnaisLsances have
shown that. 2,000 armed insurgents
have ret.ired to the mountains from
the district l>et\veen Indang and Maig,
and tihat others have retreated along
the coast from Novaleta toward Ha
tangas.
Tuesday night Nolan's squadron of
the Eleventh cavalry drove a body of
insurgents from .Maig. One American
was killed and two were wounded.
Thirteen tlead Filipinos were found.
The movement largely resembles
Gen. Sehwan's experience in the sr.me
country, except that the towns are
now being garrisoned and that the in
surgents refuse to fight, retreating
soutihward and dividing into small
bands, with the apparent intention of
reassembling later. The plan of
catching a large number between two
brigades has failed. About 100 insur
gents have been killed, but compara
tively few arms thave been taken.
The region is full of arnigos, who
doubtless have been bearing arms
wliicth they have hidden. The women
and children remain in their homes
and the insurgents, as they fall back,
release all prisoners they have cap
tured.
It is asserted on high authority that
Archbishop Nozaleda contends in his
interviews with Monsignor Chapelle,
the papal delegate, on l>ehnlf of the
Roman church and the brotherhoods
that the titles to all property held by
the church and the brotherhoods in
the Philippines should be recognized;
that the Roman catechism should be
taught in the primary schools; that
tihe existing religious orders should
continue to administer the parishes;
that other parishes should be estab
lished under the same control and
that the parochial control of ceme
teries should continue.
In addition. Archbishop Nozaleda
advises the continuation of the
church's control of pawnshops and
certain designated hospitals and
schools, together with the establish
ment of a special form of parochial
administration exaevted by the actual
conditions in the Philippines. Final
ly, he makes a plea for the continua
tion of the present missionary work
of tlx- church.
The inhabitants of the islands of
Leyte ami Samar are suffering from
lack of food, resulting from the long
blockade. the arbitrary confiscation of
property and the levying of tribute by
the so-called government of the Fili
pinos. The governors of both islands
are Tagalos, who are appointed by
Aguinaldo. and they hold the terri
tories completely in their power, ad
ministering local affairs according to
their own whims and accountable to
no O'lie.
The rebel forces, on the other hand,
have never lacked food or money. The
inhabitants, driven to desperation by
the necessity of having to pay four
times the normal price for food stuffs,
organized against insurgent depreda
tions. but. having no arms, they were
unable to resist their oppressors.
MURDER AND LOVE.
They are Strangely Tllxi-d Ip In the
Liven ol I'lve tlUMiuriaiik.
Mountain Grove, Mo., Jan. 11.—The
facts in the suicide of Joseph L.
Moore, a man of 70, who shot his wife
of 'S-i at their home at Astoria and then
killed himself, have just become
known. Mrs. Moore, as a girl, was en-
ito .lames Winningham, tihe son
of a once wealthy farmer. When the
elder Winningham lost his property,
the girl's father forced her to give up
young Winningham and marry Robert
Ford. Last year Ford died.
When Mrs. Ford refused to marry
the aged Joseph Moore, he secured
Winningham's promise to aid him in
his suit, in consideration of three
months' pension—$72. Winningham
was successful and Mrs. Ford consent
ed to the marriage last year. The
father of Mrs. Moore objected to the
gossip, about his daughter and Win
ningham. and in a quarrel killed the
elder Winningham and dangerously
wounded the son. Mrs. Moore nursed
the wounded man and when he recov
ered he was a frequem caller at her
home. Her aged husband became jeal
ous and committed suicide after shoot
ing his wife. She is still alive and may
recover.
A RAILWAY MYSTERY.
A New I.tut Kullt from N0%% here to No
u liere by I nkniitlli I'arlic*.
Lewiston, Idaho, Jan. 11.—The Pa
cific & Idaho Northern railway, now
being built from Weisier. in the south
ern part of the state, north to Seven
Devils, is the most mysterious piece
of railroad building in the country.
It begins nowhere and ends nowhere,
yet over 100 miles of the finest road
bed have been built ami cash is paid
for everything and only the best ma
terial is purchased. No one knows who
is furnishing the cash or why the n»ad
is being built. Tt is believed, how
ever, to be the Vanderbilt connecting
link between the east find west.
The Oregon Railway and Navigation
Co. is to build 77 miles from liiparia
to Lewi.-'ton and eventually this piece
of rotid will connect the Oregon rail
way and Navigation Co. with the Ore
gon Short Line. This will make it
possible to start a car at New York
City 'and pull it to Portland. Ore., on
tracks owned by the Vanderbilts.
A i udge AOMiMkllluted,
Florence. Ala.. Jan. 11.—Judge W.
P. McClure, of the probate court of
Lauderdale county, was assassinated
Til- - !ay night. Wednesti iy morning
his Ixwiy was found in the street, the
rain beating upon the upturned face.
He had been rich lied with buckshot.
Illoodhoumls have been put on the
traciv of the murderer.
Allen'* IViimloii Kill.
Washington, .lan. 11.—Senator Al
len has introduced a bill granting a
pension of $lO a month to every sol
dier and sailor who served in the civil
war for three months or more.
TWO MEAN TOWNS
Itorles Told bjr Traveling .Men About
a Couple of Decidedly I'oor
risrei to Live In.
They were talking about bad towns.
"The meanest place I ever was in," said
ihe man who travels for a Chicago house, "is
lown in Massachusetts, bay, do you know
what happened while I was stopping thero
snce? A man had fallen through a hole in
;he sidewalk and sustained injuries that re
uilted in the loss of his right arm. He sued
ihe city for damages, and the case was tried
oefore a jury, which, the papers said, was
:orriposed of representative citizens. Well,
what do you suppose they did to him?
Brought in a verdict in favor of the city,
holding that inasmuch as he was left-handed
us injury didn't amount to anything."
"Yes," the cigar man said, "that's a pretty
mean town, I admit, but I know of a worse
ine. This place is in Pennsylvania. An ac
juaintance of mine down there was injured
some tunc- ago in pretty much the same way
the man you mentioned got hurt. He fell on
i bad sidewalk and lost one oi a» <egs. He
sued the city, and didn't get anything. I
aever heard just why, but probably because
:he jurors didn't believe he needed more than
one leg in his business, seeing that he was
l barber and couldn't hone a razor or shave
i man with his foot anyway. Hut wait, I'
laven't come to the point at which the real
meanness developed. Heing a poor man, he
couldn't afford to buy a cork leg, so he had
to get along with a wooden peg, and one day
while he was crossing the principal street
this peg in some way got wedged between a
touple of paving stones right in the middle of
the street car track. It took them nearly an
hour to get him loose, and what do you sup
pose happened then? Blamed if they didn't
jo and fine him ten dollars and costs for
jbstructing traffic!"— Chicago Times-Herald.
lion- Woman Wn« Mnde.
A small boy in the Mission Sunday school
of Bishop Fallows' church propounded aa
entirely new theory of creation last Sunday.
"Who made man?" asked the teacher, be
ginning, as in the good old days when ortho
doxy used catechisms.
"(Sod," was the prompt replj\
"And how did he make him?"
"Out of dust, ma'am; nothing but dust.**
"And who made woman?"
"God made her, too, ma'am."
"How?"
The small boy hesitated, and then replied
cheerfully: 'He caused a deep sleep to fall
upon man and then took out his backbone
and mads the ■woman."—Chicago Inter
Ocean.
Lane's Family Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to
be healthy thie :c mcessarv. Acts gently on
the liver and kidneys. Cure# Mick head
ache. Price 25 and 50c.
Approximated.
First Wife —Have you any idea what your
husband's income is?
Second Wife —Oh, most anywhere between
two and three o'clock in the morning.—Bos
;on Courier.
ConirblnK Leads to Consumption.
Kemp's Balsam will stop the Cough at
once. Goto your druggist to-day and get a
sample bottle free. Large bottles 25 and 50
cents. Go at once; delays are dangerous.
The so-called modest violet commands &
higher price, in proportion to its size, than
any other flower at a greenhouse.—Atch
ison Globe.
The Qneen & Crencent
Only 24 hours to New Orleans. The Queen
& Crescent is the shortest line South.
The veracity of figures often depends upon
the honesty of the statistician.—Chicago
Daily News.
i "An Empty Sack '•
[ Cannot Stand Upriqht."\
i : |
i &{either can poor. <weak, thin Mood i
I nourish and sustain the physical system. I
c For strength of ner<ves and muscles g
| there must be pure, rich, vigorous blood. ;
■ Hood's Sarsaparilla is established as the I
I standard preparation for the blood by |
| its many remarkable cures.
(( T Re vers lb It
fjQ. LINENE-
Collars & Cuffs
J Stylish, convenient,
economical; made of
*• fine cloth, and finished
\ *** Uie StarC * l
/ ® re
/ VxT \ JT \ J fever.
I \ 4 - #ible
I L give double
* service.
Mo Lmundpy Work.
When soiled discard. Ten collars or live
pairs of cuffs, 25c. By mail , 30c. Send 6c.
in stamps for sample collar or pair of cuffs.
Name size and style.
It Cure* Cold*, Coughs, Sore Throat, Croup, Influ
enza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma.
A certain cure for Consumption in first stages,
and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at cr.ce.
You will see the excellent effect after taking the
first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Price,
26 and 6C rents per bottle.
/DEBUII'SN
Cures all Throat and Lung Affections.
COUGH SYRUP
Get the genuine. Refuse substitutes.
Vis sure/
Dr. Uu/rs Pills cure Dyspepsia. Trial , 20 for 5c
CI In time. Sold by druggist*. |i*f
B||Bfegal^lsigJaiaggI ig ?gTn^|i