Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, January 25, 1900, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE GIRLS OF SAMOA.
The? Wear Kilt Skirt* mid \ri klnoci
vf Nhark'a Teeth nml Are
Horn Coquettes.
The girl of Samoa is a born coquette,
full of romance and natural grace. Her
usual costume is a necklace of shark's
teeth, some metal earrings anil a short
skirt. The number of shark's teeth in
her necklace is the measure of her popu
larity among her admirers. The more
teeth the greater the belle.
From the time she is ten years of age
she begins to make eyes from behind a
beautifully carved fan. As usual with
coquettes, she is fickle in the extreme,
as well as romantic. Her nature is as
fierce as. that of the warriors of her
country, and she is a thoroughly
trained athlete as well. She is skillful
in the use of arms and is cruel and re
lentless in war. She is equal in strength
to many of the Samoan warriors.
For dress occasions the older Samoan
girls wear the same costume as a man.
This is a kilt or piece of drapery wound
about the waist in a manner which
seems to a foreigner nothing short of
miraculous. This is called lava-lava, a
sort of mat material. A mere scrap of
it wound about the waist of a child is
considered dress sufficient. Ordinarily
the children wear no garments what
ever. The drapery is of the same gen
eral character as that worn by natives
of most of the South Sea islands and the
Indian archipelago,as well as the south
ern countries of Asia. It is called by
the Malays the sarong.
But the Samoan girl has been out in
the world more or less of late years.
The tourists froija other countries have
visited Samoa; so the natural beauty of
the native Samoan girl is being spoiled
by her great vanity. She not only
spends a great deal of time in beautify
ing herself, but she adopts such incon
gruous combinations as a fine mat lava
lava and a ball gown waist or velvet
basque cut V necked, her hair done up
empire style and wearing, to complete
Iter toilet, a string of ferns around her
waist and a necklace of the inevitable
112
I
' : T ,:fU
SEAL. AT AX A. A SAMOAN BELLE.
•bark's teeth about her bronze throat.
Her arms and limbs are bare. She has
eeen shoes, but she prefers to be com
fortable. She also refuses stockings,
contrary to the Samoan warrior, who, it
is told, iii*»c:hed with his comrades in
battle array wearing a pair of opera
length silk hose, the soles of which were
worn completely off. These had no
doubt been given to him by some Eu
ropean travelers.
Although the Samoan glTl does not
wear clothes, properly speaking, she is
taught while still very young to em
broider and sew.
The hairpins worn in her hair are
beautiful in their workmanship. They
are made out of the wood of a cocoanut
tree, and are carved with a dead cocoa
nut leaf. This is most delicate work.
The girls are taught to swim when
babies. They are graceful and readily
learn to dance. As a people the Samoans
are great dancers, and during their
holiday seasons they dance day and
night. They are also fond of music,
nnd have native instruments, which
they beat to strange rhythmic music,
not altogether beautiful, but har
monious.
The marriage of the Samoan girl is
arranged by her parents. The girl never
thinks of having any opinion of her own
on the subject, but accepts the parents'
decision as inevitable. This does not
prevent her from having any number
of admirers before or after marriage,
which seems to be another matter en
tirely. She is far more inleresting in
her native costumes, pursuing the cus
tomary life of her own people, than
when site tries to ape the foreigners
who \isit her beautiful tropical country
to admire her in all her native sim
plicity and beauty.—X. Y. Tribune.
To Preserve Old Letter*.
Here is a unique method of saving
old letters. A youthful bride has
been trying to bring herself to
burning up her love letters. They
had accumulated during the years
of her engagement to such an ex
tent that to save them all was
out of the question, and to burn them
was out of the question, too. Instead,
she has torn them, painstakingly, into
small bits and changed them into an
embroidered covered pillow. It's a
idea, and might be util
ized in preserving all sorts of old let
ters and manuscripts.
Shipping Trust In England.
The consul of the United States at
Birmingham reports as an unusual
event in Grfcat liritain the beginning of
an inquiry by the board of trade of
that eitv into the shipping trust, which
is sa-id to be injurious to British in
dustry.
IS A GOOD DRESSER.
Mrs. MeKlnley's (lonnii t<irThl»Wl»»
ter Are Said to He Ilvuutlful
nnd llt-eoniing.
Mrs. MeKinley, our president's wife-,
is, as everyone knows, a great invalid,
and her husband's devotion to her is a
beautiful example, which will go down
in history. She has excellent taste in
the choice of her gowns. She receives,
almost always, seated in a large arm
chair, so has her dresses made that the
front effect is always good, and her
trains are so arranged that there is not
too much fullness at the top of the
MRS. M'KINLEY.
(The President's Wife Receiving in Her
Silver Gray Peau de Soie.)
skirt and vet enough to hang in grace
ful folds about her.
Mrs. McKinley's gowns for this win
ter are in excellent taste. She has one
of silver-gray peau de soie, which is a
sort of heavy ribbed silk, with hardly
any luster. The skirt has a long train,
and all up the front and on both sides
are bands of beautiful steel embroidery,
with small silver spangles. The bodice
is embroidered in the same way and is
relieved at the throat by a collar and
jabot of real lace. It is made surplice,
with long, tight-fitting sleeves, which
fall well over the hands.—Demorest's
Family Magazine.
HOW TO CLEAN JEWELRY.
To Keep Diamonds S|inrkllnc and
Silver Trinkets Shining I" Not
<1 I> i Hi<• ci 11 Tank.
Diamonds may be cleaned by brush
ing them with a lather of soap and wa
ter, rubbing them aftarwards with eau
de cologne. If well shaken in a bag of
bran they acquire great brilliancy. Cut
stones should not be wiped after being
washed. Wash in a lather of white
soap, rinse nnd put on their faces in
sawdust until quite dry. Opals which
have become dim may be polished by
rubbing them well with oxide of lin or
with dump putty spread on chamois
leather; finish with damp powdered
chalk, also spread on leather. Then
wash the opals with a soft brush in wa
ter and then immersed in the follow
ing: Salt one pine, alum one pint, salt
jeter two pints, water four pints.
Le&re the silver in this for five minutes,
then rinse in cold water and polish with
a leather. They should Vie kept in sil
ver paper. Oxidized silver can Vie
cleaned in a quarter of a pint of sul
phuric acid, mijed with one quart
of water. Ordinary silver articles may
Vie kept bright by cleaning them with a
slice of lemon and afterward rinsing
in cold water. Then wash in a lather of
soap and rinse in hot water, dry with a
soft cloth and polish with a leather.
Nickel should be rubbed with a flannel
dipped in ammonia. Amber may be
rubbed with wet powdered chalk; then
with a little olive oil applied with a flan
nel. Ivory can be whitened with a
solution of peroxide of hydrogen, or
let the articles stand in spirits of wine
in the sunshine.—Cincinnati Commer
cial Tribune.
WASHING THE FACE.
Instead of I'sing Water After a Walk
Ladies Should llnthe nitli
Lult Virginal.
Many skins will not stand constant
washing, a practice which indeed
tends t<> coarsen the complexion. Thor
ough washing once a day is sufficient
for most women, and is far prefer
able to partial and careless ablutions
morning, noon and night. Instead of
cleansing the face in water when coin
ing in from a walk, or when one feels
that a wash would be refreshing, it
is a capital thing to bathe it with lait
virginal. It is an excellent purifier,
easily made and harmless. It is,
moreover, delightfully refreshing. I
give the recipe: Kose, orange flower,
or elder flower water, one pint; sim.
pie tincture of benzoin, two ounces;
tincture of myrrh, ten drops; gylcer
ine, ten drops. Place the rose wa
ter in a bowl, and while stirring it
with a glass or porcelain spoon, add
drop by drop the benzoin, then the
myrrh and glycerine.
Be sure you get the simple tincture
of benzoin, as the compound tincture
contains other ingredients quite un
suited to the purpose. Some skins will
not stand glycerine. If this is tha
case with yours, all that need be done
is to omit it from the emulsion. Never
use pure glycerine to the skin of the
face, as it tends to induce hairy
growth.
The lait virginal should be ap
plied with a soft rag, and one is often
surprised at the amount of dirt, un
suspected because undetected, which
is brought away.—Philadelphia Press,
The Queen's lee Chest.
The stores of ice at Windsor, Os
borne and Balmorai castles are very
large. At Windsor there is storage
room for about 500 tons. There the
supply is obtained from the lake be
neath the north terrace, from Frog
more and Virginia water. Ice is
not only lavishly used in the royal
kitchen, but also for reducing the
temperature of her majesty's apart
ments in hot weather. Then it is
packed in pretty wooden buckets and
stood in the fireplaces.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1900.
STRUGGLING YOUNG AUTHOR. >
No Big Demand for His Warn Bat Q*
la Providing Agalnat
a Hush.
"I have just finished," said the struggling
young cutnor, "another storage warehouse
for returned manuscripts, this being of the
same dimensions as the other, 20x00 and
four stories high, and, also like the other, ;
fireproof. I find it cheaper to build that
way and insure myself. It costs a little
more, of course, to make the structure fire- i
proof, but the interest on this additional
cost is less than the insurance would be, !
and the difference 1 have set aside as a
sinking fund from which to pay the taxes
and repairs. j
"You might infer from this that there I
has been as yet no widespread general de- |
mand for the productions of my pen; and, j
if you should, your inference would be quite ,
correct; indeed, such unanimity of senti
ment as appears seems to take the form
of rigidly observed neutrality, with the re
sult that my second warehouse has already
begun to fill rapidly.
"Hut I have still no fear of the outcome;
else, I should throw away these manuscripts j
Instead of storing them; but as it is I think
I am simply putting down a gold mine.
Then why doesn't somebody see at least
a color in these manuscripts now? Well,
I don't know; you can't always tell about
those things, but some day the gold is dis
covered; J've built both m.v warehouses on
corners; so that when that discovery is
made, and the publishers swarm around the
buildings asking for manuscripts, I can de
liver not only from doors but from windows,
too."
BAD MAN TO INTERRUPT.
He Demonstrated to a Certainty That
He Knew What He Ha« Talk-
Ins About.
"Wen MOSCP tell de sun to stan' still —"
began the old deacon.
"Dat warn't Moses," interrupted a broth
er in the amen corner, "dat wuz Joshua!'^
"Kz I said," continued the deacon, "w'en
Joshua tell de sun —"
"You didn't say dat at all!" said the
brother who had corrected him. "Hit wuz
me dat said it! Hit wuz me dat tuck you
up to it!"
The deacon's patience was exhausted. He
folded his brass-rimmed spectacles, laid
them carefully on the table before hwn,
walked over to the amen corner, took the
objecting brother by both arms from be
hind, and, witli the swish of a cyclone, swept
him forward toward the door, landing him
precipitately in outer darkness.
"Ez I wuz saying', fo' dis little incident
occurred," he continued, "w'en Moses tol*
Joshua ter tell de sun ter stan' still—"
Some of the older, learned brethren moved
uneasily in their seats. They looked like
they wanted to correct him, but they diid
not. They let it go at that! —Atlanta Con
stitution.
For the Holiday Trade.
"What!" she exclaimed, "you want $2.50
for this? Why, when 1 priced the same
thing here a month ago it was only $2.20."
"Very likely," replied the honest sales
man. "That was before we began our
marked-down sale for the holidays."—Chi
cago Post.
Wliul Saved Him.
Finnepan.-—lt's a wonder Clancy
don't {?•'' killed, the way he lets his
tongue run on.
.Nlpriarty.—He would, begorrah, only
the way he lets his legs run off.—
Judge
112 If jtra are in doubt about it, don't do It.
Daily News.
She —"Would you be willing to die for
me?" He —"Why, I'm dying for you now!"
—Brooklyn Life.
A man is seldom rich enough to afford lux
uries before his stomach gets too worn out
to digest them.—Atchison Globe.
A good many men boast of their method
ical habits who never have anything but
unpaid bills to file away.—Atchison Globe.
A North Atchison woman who is nearly
60 years old is so tender-hearted that she
cannot kill a fish. The other day she had a
fish to kilJ. and couldn't do it, so she sent
for a neighl>or, and the neighbor was tender
hearted, too, so a darky boy was called in
and received ten cents for the terrible job.—
Atchison Globe.
"Bridget," said the mistress to her sick
servant, "would you take a little medicine?"
"Faith, ma'am,' said she, "I'd take any
thing to make me well, aven. if 1 knew
'twould kill me."—Philadelphia Record.
Supply and Demand.—"She pays her but
ler so,ooo a year." "Yes; there are so few
butlers who are really competent and yet
look less important than her husband.
Detroit Journal.
"Was she a trained nurse?" "I guess she
must have been. She hadn't been in the
hospital a week before she was engaged to
the richest patient."—Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
Mr. Northside —"Who was that friend you
had with you this afternoon ?" Mr. Shady
side —"That wasn't a friend. That was my
father-in-law."—Pittsburgh Chronicle-Tele
graph.
Mrs. Fogg—"A gentleman called to see
you, David, this afternoon." Mr. Fogg—
'Did he have anything to say ?" Mrs. togg
—"Only that he would call again." Mr.
Fogg—"H'm—evidently a dun; but to give
warning of his second coming betrays inex
perience. Beckon there's no greet dange*
vom him."—Boston Transcr.pt.
It Curfs Oolda, Coughs, Sorp Throat, Croup, Influ
•nia, Whooping Cough, Bronrhitia and Aathma,
A certain cure for Consumption in first stages,
ar>d a sure relief in advanced atagea. Use at occe,
Yc" will see the excellent effect after taking the
first doae. Sold by dealera everywhere. Price,
1!S and 50 centa per bottle.
CARTERS INK
Just as cheap as poor ink.
VIRGINIA FARMS for SALE —Good land, good
n«4*hhbi»r.«, school* and churches Convenient. Mild
healthy climate, free from extremes of both heat and
cold. Low |»ricci and easy terms. Write for fice cata
logue. It. B. CHAKFIN & CO. tine.;, RICHMOND, Va.
M CURES WHERtALI ELSE FAILS. TO
■m Boat Coutfh oyrup. Taaton Good. Use PJI
Cri in time. Bold by drugginu. pf
Deafness Cannot Be Cared
by local applications, as they cannot reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There i»
only one way to cure deafness, and that is
by constitutional remedies. Deafness is
caused by an inflamed condition of the mu
cous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When
this tube inflamed you have a rumbling
sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is
entirely closed deafness is the result, and
unless the inflammation can be taken out
and this tube restored to its normal con
dition, hearing will be destroyed forever;
nine cases of of ten are caused by catarrh,
which is nothing but an inflamed conditio*
of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars f«r any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh that
cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Seilll for circulars, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Words and Their Effects.
"Do you believe in the influence of single
words on a person's character? Some poet
ical fellow has advanced the theory, you
know."
"Yes, T do. There's my wife, for in
stance. She rises in the morning pale and
listless. She picks up the morning paper.
Suddenly her eye brightens, her face
flushes, her whole appearance changes. A
single word has wrought the miracle."
"What's the word?"
"Bargains!"— Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Many People Cannot Drink
coffee at night. It spoils their sleep. Yon
can drink Grain-* > when you please and sleep
like a top. For Orain-O does not stimulate;
it nourishes, cheers and feeds. Yet it looks
and tastes like the best coffee. For nervous
persons, young people and children Grain-O
is the perfect drink. Made from pure grains.
Get a package from your grocer to-<lay. Try
it in place of coffee. 15 and 25c.
A Suspicious American Tourist.
The American tourist is so firmly con
vinced that lie is being cheated on all hands
during his European travels that he occa
sionally oversteps the bounds of prudence.
"What is the price of this pin? ' asked a
young man in a Paris shop, handling a small
silver brooch of exquisite workmanship.
"Twenty francs, monsieur," said the clerk.
"That's altogether too much," said the
young American. "It's for a present to my
sister. I'll give you five francs for it." "Zen
it would be I zat gave ze present to your sis
ter," said the Frenchman, with a depreca
tory shrug, "and 1 do not know ze young
mademoiselle."—Chicago Chronicle.
Energy a Factor.
All things come to him who waits, but
the fellow who hustles does not have to wait
so long.—St. Louis Star.
Lane's Family Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to
be healthy this ir, accessary. Acts gently on
the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head
ache. Price 20 and 50c.
The great virtue Is industry; all the other
virtues follow in its train. —Atchison Globe.
The Million Dollar Potato.
Most talked-of potato on earth; the next
is Sunlight; which is fit to eat in 35 days.
Send this notice and sc_to John A. Salzer
Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., for their great
catalog. [K]
Men who have committed no crimes some
times lie awake nights and can't sleep, but
the women don't believe it. Atchison
Globe.
Coughing 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.
A woman's way is to get the best of an
argument and then cry as though her heart
would break because she has done so. —
Philadelphia Times.
Children Shoul for Joy
When they take Hoxsie's Croup Cure for
Coughs, Colds and Croup. It is so nice and
cuius so quick. Does not nauseate. ">0 cents.
Clam chowder is often productive of the
deepest melancholy.—Chicago Daily News.
I can recommend Piso's Cure for Con
sumption to sufferers from Asthma. —E. D.
Townßend. Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4, '94.
We always criticise; others find fault.—
Philadelphia Times.
Millions of Women Soap
Exclusively for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp
of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening,
and healing red, rough, and sore hands, in the form of baths for annoying irritations,
inflammations, and chafings, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes,
for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic purposes which >eadily sug
gest themselves to women, and especially mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet,
bath, and nursery. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used it to
use any other, especially for preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair of infants
and children. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from Cun-
CURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cieansing ingredients and the most rcfresh
ing of flower odors. No other medicated or toilet soap ever compounded is to be compared
with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No
other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all
the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines in ONE SOAP at ONB
PRICE, viz., 1 WENTY-FIVE CENTS, the BEST skin and complexion soap, the BEST toilet
and BEST baby soap in the world.
All that lias been said of Cuticura Soap may be said with even greater emphasis of CUTICURA OINTMENT,
the most delicate and yet most elFective of emollients, and greatest of skin cures. Its use in connection with
Cuticura Soap (as per directions around each package), in the "ONE NIGHT CURE FOR SORE HANDS," in the
"INSTANT RELIEF TREATMENT FOR DISFIGURING ITCHINGS ANI> IRRITATIONS," aud in "A SHAMPOO KO*
FALLING HAIR, and ITCHING, SCALY SCALPS," and in many uses too numerous to mention, is sufficient to pror«
its superiority over all other preparations for the skin.
Complete External and Internal Treatment for Everv Humor.
VII I. 11l HI 1 C° nslsUn S CUTICURA SOAF (2flc.), to cleanse yie skin of crusts and scales ami eottrn thr thickened cuticle
V? lIWUI U COTICITRA Ointment fftOo.), to Instantly alliur itching, tnllammatlon. and irritation and sciothe and heal an^f
CUTICURA RESOLVENT (50C0, to cool and clFanse the blood, A SINGLE SET Is oftSn sufflcdent ITO cure then" > r
Tur prr fl> I 1 r hW l ' itching, and burning skin, scalp, and blood humors, with loss of hair, when all else falls"
THE SET, $1.25 * wwrld - iuirKß u * oo **-i««!£
Florida, West Indies and Central America. '
The facilities of the Louisville & Nash
ville Railroad for handling tourists and
travelers destined for all points in Florida,
Cuba, Porto Rico, Central America, or for
Nassau, are unsurpassed. Double daily I
lines of sleeping cars are run from Cincin- i
nati, Louisville, Chicago and St. Louil
through Jacksonville to interior Florida •
points, and to Miami, Tampa and
Orleans, the ports of embarkation for tho »
countries mentioned. For folders, etc., write
Jackson Smith, I). P. A., Cincinnati, O.
Abnormal.
Mammy—l wouldn't want no gal ob mine j
to marry dat Sam Johnson.
Dinah—Yo' wouldn't?
"No. Why, dat fellah am jes' as crazy j
'bout dress as a sensible niggah ud be 'bout s
watahmiliions!"—Puck.
Largest Seed Growers In the World.
The John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, I
Wis., recently shipped Twenty thousand
bushels of seed potatoes to Alabama, Flori
da, Texas and other southern points. This
firm is the largest grower of seed potatoes
as also farm seeds in the world.
"When a man's young he's anxious to show
his knowledge," said the Manayunk philos
opher; "and when he gets older he's just as
anxious to conceal his ignorance."—Phila
delphia Record.
The neen <V Crescent
Only through Pullman line to Florida.
The Queen & Crescent only through car
line to Asheville.
A man can't make his home brighter by
making light of his wife's trouble.—Chicago
Dispatch.
A
jm
Busy
Woman
Is Mrs. Pinkham. Her
great correspondence is
under her own super
vision.
Every woman on this
continent should under
stand that she can write
freely to Mrs. Pinkham
about her physical con
dition because Mrs. Pink
ham Is
A woma
and because Mrs. Pink
ham never violates con
fidence and because she
knows more about the ills
of women than any other
person in this country.
Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound has
cured a million sick wo
men. Every neighbor
hood, almost every
family, contains women
relieved of pain by this
great medicine.
Dr.BulTs
COUCH SYRUP
Cures Croup and Whooping-Cough
Unexcelled for Consumptives. Gives
quick, sure results. Kefuse substitutes.
Dr. BulPs /VUs cure Biliousness. Trials 20 for sc.
f/Cp!p'
Look at yourself! Is your face
covered with pimples? Your skin
rough and blotchy? It's your liver!
Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They
cure cunstipation, biliousness, and
dyspepsia. 25c. All druggists.
Want your moustache or beard .. beautiful
brown or rich black ? Then use
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers I
_ .no,, or asseta o "- 6 p a>a * co w " mu *' 112t H
S»l/i*r'« Rape Spelt*—
plTex Uich, -1; jjKTfJ W'hutl*ltl
Jriin CaUtot
SEEDS^.
®*lWi Hwds are Warranted to Prodoco.
ilablon Luther, E.Troy .Pa. th*
H 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR !0c- Cj
85 P k *" earlifit v«» ? ela
112 wu«>dy^ > tlo lntnlo»
•dr. nil ** one »
HEALTH AND
PLEASURE RESORTS
In Tennessee. North and South Carolina, Ceorgia.
. Florida. Cuba, Porto Rico and are Levi aal
' most easily reached via the
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry.,
Over which lino and its connection* thw
FAMOUS DIXIE FLYER,
with through 12 section Pullman Palace, Bullet Flaep*
ing Cars are run daily the year round, between St-
Louis and Jacksonville, Florida. Close ci.nimi-tion#
are made at Nashville from Chicago, Cincinnati and
Louisville, affording a delightful diiylit-'lt ride be
tween Nashville and Atlanta, passing through the
most Historical and pictureS'ju® section of tbo South,
via Lookout Mountain. Cheap Hoineseekers* round*
trip tickets are sulci on the Ist and 3rd Tuesday of each
month. For full information, maps, folders and all
matter pertaining to Tourist Hates to those resort®,
write to
U.C.GOWiRDI\\ W. P. A.,
11l Merchants Exchange building. St. Lou la.
I>. ,|. MI LLA.XKY, S. £. I* A.,
69 West 4th Street, < lnclnnatl, O.
VIKIAIIU F. IIII.L. S. P. A.,
328 Marquette Bldff., Chicago, 111., or
W. L. DAXI.EY, «. P. A T. A.,
Nashville, Tenn.
MILLIONS OF ACRES
I KB IffPt ,tfl of choice aurlruliural
land! now opened for
FWn. jN Kettlement In
hTgitestprice^lnti'e rnaiS
1M la kcts of the world. Thou*
112 112 sands of cattle arc fat-
W toned for market without
j ■ fed grain, aud with
out a day's shelter. Send for information and te
cure a free home In Western Canada. Write th#
Superlutendeut of linnngration, Ottawa, or addreM
the Undersigned. who will mall you atlases, pam
! phlets, etc., free of cost. F rKDLKY. Sunt, of Ita*
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READERS OF THIS PAPER
DESIRING TO BUY ANYTHING
ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS
SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING
WHAT THEY ASK FOR, REFUSING
ALL SUBSTITUTES OR IMITATIONS.
II
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*J l\ V 1 O I quick relief and euro worst
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n IT r 11 TO Advice ai to patentability and inventor*' g«t4«
1 I A I L n I O "«• B. U. K v A*i, l«lt r, VubluiUM, p.«
7