Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, February 08, 1900, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON CODNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
y«ar 00
112 paid in advance 1
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rate of
one dollar per square for one insertion and fifty
cents per square for each subsequent insertion.
Rates by the year, or for six or three months,
»re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legal and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less, 12; each subsequent lnser-
V'on 50 cents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for one inser
•frtion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent
oonsecutive 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, *5 per year;
over live 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 PRKSS is complete
•nd affords facilities for doing the best class of
work. PAKTICUI.AH ATTENTION PAIIJTO LAW
PRINTING.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
r,ges are paid, except at the option of the pub-
Isher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
for in advance.
The people of the United States
yielded half protestingly to the deci
sion of the board on geographic
which prescribed "Puerto IJico" as the
spelling of the name of that island,
although they had become accustomed
to spelling it "Porto Bico." They will,
however, refuse to accept the decision
of the board that "Ilabana" shall be
the spelling of the name of Cuba's
chief city. The proposed spelling is
illogical and un-American. After "Ha
vana" has been the American spelling
for centuries, after this spelling has
weathered the storms of peace and
war and become imbedded in the
hearts of the countrymen, no board of
ten men, even though they have geo
logical, geodetia, lighthouse, hydro
graphic and postal training, will prove
powerful enough to change the spell
ing.
A Lewiston (Me.) girl, who has never
tasted the weed and who dislikes the
smell of a much-smoked pipe, has one
of the most remarkable collections of
tobacco pipes in the state. She began
to collect them when she was a little
girl, and has kept up the fad, till now
she has a wonderful variety of them.
And what is more she has sent them
around the world for great men to
smoke. She has one that was smoked
by Bismarck, one by the prince of
Wales, and her pipes, which are all
new when she buys them, have been
smoked by many great men in Amer
ica. When her girl friends gather at
her house she brings out her pipes to
display and will not show them to
strangers. She fears notoriety, but real
ly her collection is remarkable.
It is estimated that more than 4,50 C
miles of new railroad were built in lie
United States last year. This is nearly
50 per cent, more than the new con
struction of 1898, and is more than twice
the average of the four precedingyears.
lowa took the lead in railroad building
last year, with 553 miles; Minnesota
came next, with 374 miles; then Arkan
sas, California and Michigan, in the or
der named. These five states include
one-third of the total new mileage of
the year; but there were only live of the
50 states and territories, including the
District of Columbia, in which there
was not some new construction.
In common with Massachusetts and
some other states, Illinois has a law
forbidding the use of the American flag
for advertising purposes. ThJfc <aw the
supreme court of Illirfois has pro
nounced unconstitutional, as an unrea
sonable interference; with personal lib
erty, and one not warranted by the po
lice power of the state. As to the senti
ment involved, the court holds tl'ifl a
dignified and proper treatment oi the
flag must be left to be enforced by pub
lic opinion. But the enactment of such
law's as that of Illinois suggests that
public opinion had not been sufficient
to that end.
The earl of Tankerville, who recent
ly died at the age of 90 years, was the
oldest English peer. His successor
married an American girl. Aliss Van
inarter, of Tacoma. lie is an eveugelist,
and goes about the country on preach
ing tours, singing Sankey hymns to his
own accompaniment on the harmonium.
He owns the Chillingham herd of wild,
white cattle, described in "Verdant
Green."
The American boy is certainly a
Btrange youngster. One hundred of
them chose up sides in Chicago last Sat
urday as "Spaniards" and "Americans,"
and then they had a light. "licks,
•tones and air guns were used and two
of the boys were severely injured,
though the comforting news is that
they will live. It was all done "just for
the fun of it."
The "lyddite" shells, used by ihe Biit
'.sb in the defense of l.ad.ysmith, ara
shells charged with "lyddite," one -f the
new high explosives which add to the
terrors of modern war. l.yudite is a
picric acid compound of potassium and
ammonium, and is six or seven times
as powerful as gunpowder.
A Flint (Mich.) doctor has fallen heir
to a title and $5,000,000. It will prob
ably be useless to try to get him out on
a night call.
In Montana women who pay taxet
vote OD all questions submitted to tax
payers.
A NEW NOTE FROM BRYAN.
The NebruKkn I'opoplionp IN NOW
GIVIuk forth n Different
Sound.
Washington correspondents tell us
that democratic senators and represent
atives are totally at sea with regard
to the dominant issues of their party,
and they are impatiently awaiting - W.
J. Bryan's appearance at the capital.
Time was when these inlluential gentle
men rather resented the candidate's
advice and direction, and if they are
now eager for his counsel and guidance,
their perplexity must be sxtreme in
deed. When they had issues, or thought
they had them —which is the same
thing, according to so good an author
ity as old Shakespeare—they experi
enced no difficulty in determining
which of theni was preeminent and
overshadowing and which were second
ary. Now that they have a sickly and
wretched collection of "back num
bers" to choose from, they are anxious
for Bryan's support and leadership.
But the democratic politicians at
Washington will not have to remain in
suspense very long. The keynote—the
one hundredth, we believe —is to be
sounded to-night at the Jackson day
banquet of the Bryan league. The Ne
braska candidate will be the guest of
honor, and he is to have carte blanche,
oratorfcally speaking, lie will have
unlimited time and free choice as to sub
ject. As this is presidential year, ex
ceptional interest is taken in the ex
pected address.
Last year at the local Jackson ban
quet W. J. Bryan pushed the trust and
anti-imperialism issues to the fore
front. History tells us what their fate
has been. They have not remained in
LEFT BEHIND.
BRYAN—You know how I hate to leave you, my boy, but you are not invited
this trip. Wait until Igo west and you shall go along.
the conspicuous place assigned to
them by the Bryan fiat. They were
closely inspected and weighed and
found wanting. In plain and collo
quial English, they have petered out.
And what will the new keynote, or the
dominant chord, be? The loyal Bryan
ites will be sorely disappointed if their
leader shall fail to furnish sometMs#
novel, fresh, inspiriting. But "aiag
netic" and resourceful as William Jen
nings is, he is not a performer of po
litical miracles. What is the use of
crying for new issues where none can
be found? Issues, like poets, are born,
not made.
We understand the expectancy, hush
and avidity, but we fear disappoint
ment. Silver, imperialism, trusts,
where are these once much-heralded
issues? Tliare is the new financial bill,
but how can that be attacked without
regal vanizing free silver as an alterna
tive? And that even Bryan himself
must shrink from. What will the key
note be?— Chicago Post.
\<» IMP for Itryiin.
William J. Bryan will not get a
chance to talk free silver on the cam
pus of Brown university. When the
university debating union proposed a
few days ago to get him to address the
student body while visiting ProvidTiiee
the proposition met with favor among
collegians. When Dean Winslow Upton'
checked the scheme by refusing to give
permission for such a meeting and re
ferred the matter to the executive com
mittee of the corporation for final ac
tion the officers of the union began to
be afraid of the plan. When three days
had passed with no reply from the ex
ecutive powers of the university the
students who had been working for the
Bryan meeting found that they dared
not venture farther. Therefore tney
dropped the matter. Fear that Brown
would lose prospective financial sup
port if Bryan should be allowed to
speak under the sanction of the univer
sity authorities is the reason given why
the plan has fallen through. Enemies
of former President F. Benjamin An
drews asserted that money sufficient
to run the college comfortably did not
come because of his free silver views.—
Chicago Chronicle (Dem.).
democrats of the house were
as consistent in their vote on the cur
rency bill as they could be without
open confession of idiocy; but the
record is one of opposition merely be
cause the bill was a republican meas
ure.—JudP'a.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1900
IGNORES THE LESSON.
Ilrfont Si'ClN* to II LIVE Had NO
Disciplinary Effect I pon Wng-
Jn%v llryim.
William J. Bryan lately made at
Omaha, Neb., the speech which, it was
announced, opens the Bryan campaign
for another nomination for the presi
dency. Just as if he did not begin his
campaign for renomination as soon as
he was defeated in 1896. Since that, time
Bryan has done nothing but declaim
against the gold standard in speeches
paid for at gold standard rates, al
though this has compelled some inat
tention to his former practice as a
lawyer and newspaper reporter.
Mr. Bryan's latest salutatory reaAs
very much like a continuance of liis
campaign speeches of 1896. He still
sees nothing but ruin ahead of his
country because it prefers dollar dol
lars to 40-cent dollars. He has changed
his figure of speech. That is all. As Mr.
Bryan has a large stock of figures of
speech, it is not difficult for him to
make that change. Labor hanging to
"the cross of gold" at Chicago, and clip
ping off large sections of that, cross
for the weekly pay-envelope, has be
come at Omaha "a captive to Europe's
golden chariot," but is sfill on the trail
of gold, just as much as if he were a
lecturer or a book writer. From the
cross to the chariot is getting a little
nearer to earth, but Bryan has not
got rid of his wheels yet.
Bryan sprang into notoriety with
one song, and he cannot refrain from
singing it. This is unfortunate for his
prospects, for it recalls his predictions.
The election of McKinley was to mean
adversity; it has meant unexampled
prosperity. The farmer was to lose his
all; he has paid every mortgage. This
country was to become the slave of
London and Berlin, but both are mak
ing to us profound obeisance.
Bryan has learned nothing from de
feat. But he will find, as he sings his
old song over again, that what he has
mistaken for an encore was the ap
plause of the people for the next act.
The "boy orator" is overgrown as* a
boy, but is still undergrown as a states
man.—Troy Times.
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
calling for free wool Mr. Bry
an is casting sheep's eyes at the farm
er vote.—Baltimore American.
Bryan once got his fingers
jammed in the Gcsbel door, and ap
parently doesn't want to repeat the
«>:pericncu.—N. Y. Tribunte.
tCCoI. Bryan lias a sure thing on
publicity. He excites even mora won
der when he does not make speeches
than when he does. —Washington Star.
cySilver republicans show a disposi
tion to be republicans hereafter, with
out the prefix. The lesson of repub
lican success is national prosperity
and progress, — St. Louis Globe Demo
crat.
ICA series of banquets lias been ar
ranged for Mr. Bryan, and from this
time on his campaign for the presi
dency will be pushed. He will let
somebody else do the "chasing of the
almighty dollar."—Cleveland Leader.
tC-'Coin Harvey's new book makes
the principal discussion on "imperial
ism" the "terrible octopus," as well as
free silver, are in the background. It
seems hard to tind out just where de
mocracy is going to stand this year.—
lowa State Register.
ICCoI. llenry Watterson explains
the gloom of the democratic outlook
by remarking that "the country is in
a state of hopeless prosperity." Those
are the exact dimensions of the situa
tion. There isn't enough calamity in
stock to support a populist campaign
in a single township.—N. Y. Mail and
Express.
CTGrover Cleveland says:"lt seems
t«» me that the inconsistency of un
reasoning and false party leadership
is impressively exhibited when the
c laim is made that Jacksonian democ
racy sanctions the degradation of the
people's currency and a reckless disre
gard of the restraint of law and or
der." There, Col. Bryan, "put that
in your pipe and smoke it."—lowa
State Register.
SENATE IN A TURMOIL.
Dignity I* Forgotten by the LCKIKII
t»r» ami Fierce I»eiiini< -latloiiK are
Hurled at Mr. Peltlurew, of South
Dakota.
Washington, Feb. 1. —Debate in the
senate, ordinarily calm and dignified,
burst yesterday into passionate utter
ances and bitter recriminations. Sen
ators hurled denunciations one at an
other until the auditors quivered with
excitement.
The debate grew out of a phase of
the Philippine question and no scene
has been witnessed since the discus
sion of the war resolutions in the last
congress which, in sensational feat
ures, compared with that of Wednes
day.
Mr. I'ettigrew, who has precipitated
nearly all of the debate upon the
Philippine question during the pres
ent session, sought to have read a
resolution embodying a document
written by Emilio Aguinaldo upon the
Filipino insurrection and containing
his version of the alleged recognition
of the Filipino republic by Admiral
Dewey.
Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts,
protested against printing the docu
ment and read a letter from Admiral
Dewey in which that portion of
Aguinaldo's statement relating to the
admiral was denounced as "a tissue of
falsehoods."
Mr. Lodge said he preferred accept
ing Dewey's word to that of Aguina 1 -
do and was satisfied the American
people would also.
In a passionate reply Mr. Pettigrew
declared that Admiral Dewey had rec
ognized the Filipino republic and. al
though afforded an opportunity here
tofore to deny Aguinaldo's state
ments, had not done so.
In an instant half a dozen senators
were on their feet. Mr. Hawley, the
senator from Connecticut, denounced
Mr. I'ettigrew's action as treason.
Senator Pettigrew was made the
target of stinging arraignments by
Senators Spooner, lltiwley, Sewell and
(iallinger. That the feeling was at a
pitch seldom noted in the senate was
evidenced by the pale faces of the
men who spoke.
Mr. Jones (dein.. Ark.) and Mr. Tel
ler (Col.) endeavored to stem the tide
of protest and deep feeling by concil
iatory speeches.
At the conclusion of the scene the
financial bill was taken up and dis
cussed.
ALL ARE WILLING.
I'rcMldcnt lleKlnley"* Proposal for a
Can-American Congri'ss I* Approved
by Our Southern Neighbor*.
Washington. Feb. I.—Secretary Hay
has received assurances from all of
the South American countries which
have diplomatic representatives in
Washington of the favorable reception
bv them of President McKinley s sug
gestion that a congress of pan-Ameri
can nations be reconvened, this time
preferably at the City of Mexico, be
cause the first congress was held in
Washington. The next step toward
the execution of the project probably
will be the extension by Mexico of
invifations to the nations of North,
South and Central America to partici
pate in such a congress.
It is the president's expectation
that, aside from the great political ad
vantages that may be expected to fol
low a closer association of the nations
of the three Americas, important com
mercial and business opportunities
may be owned to the merchants of
the United States through the legis
lation of the conirress.
It is the intention of this govern
ment to earnestly forward the project
for the establishment of an interna
tional bank; to adopt, if possible,
measures to simplify the customs
practices of the various nations; to
secure the universal acceptance of the
system of commercial nomenclature
and perhaps to push the construction
of the inter-continental railway. There
are other vast projects, too, such as a
universal arbitration scheme and a
uniform set of extradition laws and
treaties which may be expected to
come before the congress.
TO MAKE NO MISTAKE.
Itepublleaii Presidential IClertor* Will
be rhoHrn by State Convention*.
Washington, Feb. ].—Secretary-
Dick. of tlie republican national com
mittee. is preparing to mail letters to
the chairmen of the sit ate committees,
informing them that it is deemed bet
ter that all the presidential electors
this year should be nominated by
state conventions. Hon. Joseph Man
ley called the attention of the com
mittee recently to a decision of the
Maine supreme court that, under the
provisions of the Australian ballot
law, the jurisdiction of a nominating
convention must be as wide as the
jurisdiction of the otlice represented
on the ticket.
In view of this it was decided that
no loopholes should be left to contest
the rights of the presidential electors
to cast their ballots. Conventions for
congressional districts will be allowed
to designa'e the 71re.sident.ial electors,
as usual, but state conventions of the
renublican party will be expected to
rait if v these nominationis, that there
may be 110 question as to their valid
ity. Heretofore state conventions
have generally nominated only two
presidential elector:-:.
An Anil-Foreign HaiilfeKto.
Berlin, Feb. 1. T»ae Loltal Anzeiger
reprints an alleged secret decree is
sued by the empress dowager of China
to the governors of the provinces, ex
horting them to strong measures
against foreigners and even to war.
The lamruage is very violent.
Decided Again*! the Chinese.
Fargo, N. D., Feb. 1. -Judge Ami
don made an important ruling in the
Chinese eases yesterday and incident
ally the prosecution scored first blood
in the tight to exclude the men alleg
ed to have violated the exclusion act.
!n the eases against Moy Hall and
Moy FOOll. Judge Amidon ordered th >
n'cn del irted. In his order the court
ruled that the alleged membership of
these men in the Tai-Wah Co.. of Chi
cago. was not tenable, as 7.'! members
w ere alleged on a stock oi" only SS,OOO.
On this hearing 90 per cent, of the d<
#«ndnnts cla'uu a right to admission
DULLER BEATEN.
English Commander Is Forced to
Retreat Across the Tugela.
Urn. Wnrrrn <a|>lure» an Importuul
PUKIIIUII troin lli<' 'l'ruiiMvualrrH,
but IN I'urifd to Aliamlou
■ t in u !'<■« Hour*.
London, Jan. 29.—(Jen. Buller in a
dispatch to the war oftiee states that
Spion Kop was abandoned on account
of lack of water, inability to bring- ar
tillery there and the heavy Boer fire.
Following is the text of (ien. Bul
ler's dispatch, dated Spearman's
Camp, .lan. 27, 6:10 p. in.:
"On Jamjar" 20 Warren drove back
the enemy and obtained possession of
the southern crest of the high table
land extending- from the line of Acton
Homes and Hongers i'oort t<> the west
ern Ladysmith hills. From then to
January 25 he remained in close con
tact with the enemy.
"The enemy held a strong position
on a range of small kopjes stretching
from northwest to southeast across
the plateau from Acton Homes,
through Spiou Kop, to the left bank
of the Tugela.
"The actual position held was per
fectly tenable, but did not lend itself
to an advance, as the southern slopes
were so steep that Warren could not
get an effective artillery position, anil
water supply was a difficulty.
"On January 21! 1 assented to his at
tacking Spion Kop, which was evi
dently the key of the position, but
was far more accessible from the
north than from the south.
"On the night of January 23 he at
tacked Spion Kop, but found it very
difficult to hold, as its perimeter was
too large and water, which he had
been led to believe existed, in this ex
traordinary dry season was found very
deficient.
"Gen. Wood gate, who was in com
mand at the summit, having been
wounded, the officer who succeeded
him decided on the night of January
24 to abandon the position, and did so
before dawn January 25.
"1 reached Warren's cam" on Janu
ary 25 and decided that a second at
tack upon Spion Kop was useless and
that the enemy's right was too strong
to allow me to force it.
"Accordingly I decided to withdraw
the force to the south of the Tugela.
At 0 a. in. we commenced withdrawing
the train, and by 8 a. m. January 27
Warren's force was concentrated south
of the Tugela, without the loss of i>,
man or a pound of stores."
Advices have been received from
Spearman's C amp that (ien. \Yoodgato
lias succumbed to the wounds he re
ached in the attack upon Spionkop.
Boer lleauquarters, I'pper Tugela,
Jan. 25. Some Vryhcid burghers from
the outposts on the highest hills of
the Spion Kop group rushed into the
laager saying that the kop was lost
and that the English had taken it.
Reinforcements were ordered up, but
nothing could be done for some time,
the hill being enveloped in thick mist.
Scaling the steep hill the lioers
found that the English had entrench
ed heavily. l'etwee>n the lines of
trenches was an o|>en veldt, which had
to be rushed under a heavy fire, not
only from rifles, but of lyddite and
shrapnel from field guns.
Three forces ascended the three
spurs co-ordinately, under cover of
fire from the Free State Krupps, a
Creusot and a big Maxim. The Eng
lish tried to rush the Boers with the
bayonet, but their infantry went down
before the Boer rifie lire as before a
scythe.
The Boer investing party advanced
step by step until 2 p. in., when a
white flag went up and one hundred
nnd fifty men in the front trenches
surrendered.
London. .Tan. 30. —History pauses
for a time in South Africa.
The admiralty has warned all half
pay naval officers to hold themselves
in readiness for service. This, with
the fact that able seamen not thor
oughly experienced have been with
drawn from the channel squadron, is
taken to indicate the early mobiliza
tion of the reserve fleet.
London, Feb. 2. —Mr. Wyndharn's re
markable declaration in the house of
commons yesterday that Great Brit
ain will have in a fortnight 180,000
regulars in South Africa, 7,000 Cana
dians and Australians and 2<i,000 South
African volunteers, is received with
wonderment. Of this total of 213,000
troops, with 452 guns, all are now
there with the exception of about 18.-
000 that are afloat. Beyond compari
son this is the largest force Great
Britain has ever put into the field. At
the end of the Crimean war she had
scraped togetlwr 80,000 men.
Mr. Wyndhani's speech was the
strongest defense tlje government has
yet (lut forward as to what has been
done and is being done. The genenl
tone of the morning papers is that
his figures will astonish the country.
Roughly speaking only 80,000 men are
at the front. Ten thousand others
have been lost and 10,000 are shut up
at Ladysmith.
Excluding these, there are 70,000
trooos who have not yet been in ac
tion. in addition to those at sea. Why
so many effectives have not yet been
engaged is explained by the lack of
land transportation and the organiza
tion of supplies, to which Lord Rob
erts is devoting his experience and
Lord Kitchener his genius for details.
A further list of casualties publish
ed by the war office brings the total
from the crossing of the Tugela to
the abandonemnt of Spion Kop to
1,985 officers and men.
Three Soldier* .TlurUereUa
Watertown, N. V., Jan. 30. —The
Standard prints a letter from its cor
respondent with the Twenty-sixth in
fantry, dated at lloilo, I'auay island,
December Hi, in which he states that
three men, William IJuggan, Dennis
Haves and Michael Tracy, who were
reported missing at Calano, when the
column under Gen. Hughes stopped at
the town, have been murdered. The
bodies wer found in a eocoanut grovi
near the town of Calano. Their rifles
and ammunition belts had been taken
from them, their throats cut from ear
to ear and the bodies mutilated.
" Take Time by j
The Forelock/ 'j
Don't ixiait until sickness overtakes I
. you. When that tired feeling, the first t
■ rheumatic pain, the first 'warnings off
| impure blood are manifest, take Hood's T
. i Sarsaparilla and you 'will rescue your 1
health and probably save a serious sick- 112
ness. 'Be sure to get Hood's, because T
I'll. I'ucitlc iinil Of i« 111111 Mull
Leaves Grand Central Station, New York,
by tlie New York Central, every night in
the year at 9:15, and the fourth nifilit there
after this mail is at San Francisco, ready
for delivery or transfer to the steamers for
Hawaii, Australia, Philippines, Japan and
China.
. See the new "Round the World" folder
just issued hy the New N ork Central Lines.
A copy will lie sent free, post paid, on re
ceipt of three cents in stamps, In George 11.
Daniels, General Passenger Agent, Grand
Central Station. New York.
Due to Anxiety.
Guest—Ouch! You've spilled some soup
down my neck.
Waiter—l's orful sorry, sah; hut you see,
sah, I's so in doubt if you is gwine to gub
me a tip ernot, it makes me nervous.—What
To Eat.
Lare'n Family Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to
be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on
the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head
ache. Price 25 and 50c.
The fellow whom you think wears his
hair too long is quite as sure you wear yours
too short.—Elliott's Magazine.
To Cnre a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative llromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it tails tocure. 25c.
Every man thinks that only those whom
he owes want to settle. —Washington (la.)
Democrat.
History has to repeat itself because peo
ple are so forgetful.—Chicago Daily News.
l'iso's Cure for Consumption is an A No.
1 Asthma medicine. —W. K. Williams, An
tioch, 111., April 11, 1894.
It Cures Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Croup, Influ
enza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma.
A certain cure for Consumption in first stages,
aid a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once.
You will Bee the excellent effect after taking the
first dese. Sold bv dealers everywhere. Price,
35 and SO cents per bottle.
CONSTIPATION
" 9 hare roiio 14 days at a time without a
movement o*' the bowels, not being able to
more them except by using hot water injections.
Chronic constipatiou for seven years placed me In
this terrible condition; during that time I did ev
erything I heard of but never found any relief; such
was my case until 1 began using CAtsCAKETB. 1
now have from one to three passuges a day.and if I
was rich 1 would give lIUU.OO for each movement; It
is such a relief.'' Avlmeic L.UL'NT,
10S9 Kus&ell St., Detroit, Mich.
CATHARTIC
*l|i nWfc TRAOf MARK P«CI»TfWfO
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Uripe. 10c, 30c, 50c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Hterllaf tUmoriy Company, Chicago, Sdßtrtal, New York. 322
A Chance to Please the Children.
Four Funny |A hi
story Books for 1" vis.
With its usual enterprise the
B. & O. S-W. R. R.
makes t.kis popular offer to its patrons:
FOUR COMPLETE BOOKS
EACH BOOK ILLUSTRATED
IN COLORS.
44 Uncle Eli's Monkey Stories."
" Uncle Eli's Elephant Stories."
" Uncle Eli's Tiger Stories."
••Uncle Eli's Bear Stories."
Sent to any address "Post Paid." on receipt ol
lO cents in silver or stamps.
Entirely New,
Up to Date, Unique,
Fascinating.
The B. & O. S-W. R. R. having: made special
arrangements with the publishers, are enabled
to make this remarkable otter to its patrons.
They are just the books for evervbody. Gotten
up to please old and young alike.
Address all orders to
o. p. MCCARTY,
General Passenger Agent B. & O. S-W. R. R.,
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Mark Envelope •• Uncle Ell's serles."
As this is an advertising test, please men
tion this paper.
l hl ' M rem W lor
L>OI Consumption. Cures
C */ Coughs,Colds,Grippe,
VVI Up Bronchitis, Hoarse
* ■ ness. Asthma, Whooping
cough, Croup. Small doses ; quick, sure results.
Dr.Bulii 1 "illscute Const iftation. Trial , 20 forjc.
TO INVESTORS!
LARGE or SmALL.
We have a form of investment that will net the
investor from 10 to IS per cent, on the amount in
vested and at the same time give him approved
real estate security for every dollar invested.
This form of investment approved by the liest
banks. Write for plan. The Surety Guarantee
& Trust Co., 134 Monroe Street, Chicago, 111.
DROPSY Z
eases, Nookof testimonials and H> duj«* treatwent
tree Dr. H. H UKKKN'S SONS, Box 1). Atlanta. Ga.
PATPNTQ A, *vlce to patentability and invrntor»' guida
In I Lll I 0 U. KVA£4, iOIOF, WMiuA«(wa, l> o.