Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, August 23, 1900, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON CBDNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Trr year *2 no
11 paid in advance 1 M
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rale of
©ne dollar per square for one insertion and fifty
eents per square for each nubsequent insertion.
Rates by the year, or for six or throe months,
are low anil uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legal and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less. I-. each subsequent inser
tion 50 cents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for one irmt
pertion; 5 cents per line for each subsequent
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 lesv Ir> per year;
ever Ave lines, at the regular rates o! adver
tising. .
No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per
luue.
JOB PRINTING.
Th« Job department of the Press Is complete
and affords facilities for doing the best ( lass of
work. PAItTICULAH ATTENTION PAIDTO I.AW
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
(or in advance.
In these days when appendicitis 4a
bo common an ailment the doctors &re
put tins" forth every
It IN Time *
effort to arrive at
I iie> K new. aclearer tinder
standing of it. The time has long gone
by, says a writer in the Philadelphia
Saturday Evening l'ost. since the
grape seed and the toothbrush bristle
were held accountable, and we may
now eat our grapes and brush our
teeth quite without the menace of a
month in the hospital. Medical men
generally agree that appendicitis is
due to the presence of ft bacillus. One
of (he latest and most ingenious theo
ries to account for the malady is that
put forth by a medical man who be
lieves that it is caused by the habit
of sitting with the legs crossed. Nine
men out of ten —leaving tailors out of
the reckoning—spend many of their
sedentary hours with the right leg
crossed over the left. As tlie vermi
form appendix is on the right side it
requires no great stretch of the imag
ination to believe that such a posture
may cramp and constrict the little sac
to an extent sufficient to cause
trouble. Whether or not litis explana
tion be accept<<l there '-tin be no harm
in crossing one's itgs the other way
about.
There was a fire in an apartment
house in New York city not long ago,
w... ~, ~ an d th e flames
I*ot All Heroes
gained eonsidera-
Are Wliitr. i i , i , ..
ble headway before
they were discovered. There was it
groat scramble for safety, and many
narrow escapes were chronicled. On
the second floor was a man with six
children, tlie mother being absent at
the time. The flames were right be
hind them, and it was evident that the
man could devise no way to save them.
At this juncture a young colored man
named Anderson called on two inen to
follow him, and ran into the building
and up to the third floor. With his
two companions holding his legs, An
derson swung head downward, and in
this position managed to reach the
children as tiny were held up to him
by the father, and then pass them up
to the room above. All were taken
out safely in this manner, except the
father, who slid down a water spout.
After performing his feat, Anderson
■walked away, and so far as we have
heard, received no reward for his hero
ism. nor was any further attention
paid to him.
A man in Pratt, Kan., was convict
ed of selling liquor without a license
•and sentenced to jail. Sheriff Uib
ibens, however, permitted the prison
er to remain with his family most cf
,the time and did not lock him up as
he should have done. At the expira
tion of the prisoner's term the pris
oner's wife sued ihe sheriff for the
;priee of board and lodging for her
spouse, alleging that the sheriff was
drawing pay from the county for the
keep, whereas, in fact, lie
was living off her. She was awarded
judgment for $21.60. but the sheriff
has appealed to the district court.
The most picturesque fish story ol
ihe season comes from Kennebec
•county. Me., where it is related that
a lazy angler removed the young birds
from a nest and replaced them with
Tiollow tin dummies resembling birds
Then, the story goes onto say, the
■parent birds fill up the dummies with
•worms, which the lazy angler steals
and thus keeps himself supplied with
Imit at no expense of energy.
The 14-year-old daughter of John
W. Stewart, while at work in a field
near itrookston, Ir.d,, a few days agc
became delirious from heat just as a
storm was about to break. On be
ing called into the house, relates «
local exchange, she uttered a startled
cry and ran in the wrong direction
through field, cross roads and ditches
until she fell exhausted nearly nine
miles from home.
The gentle microbe has found s
champion in Dr. Charles K. Page, whe
defended it in the physicians' meeting
at. Washington recently. H< held thai
a healthy body generates its owi
germicides, and that the microbe ii
Kuch a body stands about as good t
chance of doing mischief "as a mouse
in a tight room surrounded by t
dozen hungry cats. '
A DOUBTFUL GROUP.
flow Slhlm Tli 111 WfPf I ni'frlnlo I*l
LKVti W ill tio in Ibf tnuliig
Election.
Fourteen million American electors
took putt in the presidential contest
four years ago, and in three of the
states of the country the plurality for
the winning ticket was less than 600
in South Dakota, 2hl in Ken
tucky. 553 in Wyoming. These three,
though the closest, were by no means
the only close states in the last pres
idential contest. California was car
ried for MeKinlev by 1.H22, and Ore
gon by 2,040, while Washington gave
12,000 for Uryan and Kansas Kt.ooo.
These seven states. South Dakota,
Kentucky, Wyoming, California, Ore
gon, Washington and Kansas, consti
tuted the "doubtful" group in the
ejection four years ago, and vigorous
effort was expended by both parties
in each of them to attain success in
them. These states have collectively
;t7 electoral votes, and the situation in
each, as developed since the last na
tional election, has taken a majority
of them out of the doubtful columu
this \ear.
South Dakota was carried by the
republicans by a majority of 0.000 in
the 1899 election. The state adminis
tration. except the governorship, is in
republican hands, and there was a re
publican majority in both brunches of
the last legislature.
Wyoming was carried by ihe repub
licans for governor by a plurality of
1.300 in 1898. The republican party
has control of the state administra
tion and an overwhelming majority of
the state legislature.
California was carried by the re
publicans by a majority of 19,000 on
the governorship two years ago, and
the republicans control the state ad
ministration. They have two senators
in congress, five of the six representa
tives, and an overwhelming majority
in the legislature.
Oregon was carried by the republic
ans at the recent June election by a
majority so large as to preclude the
notion that it would be considered
as in the doubtful column this year.
Washington was carried bv the re
publicans in the election of 1898 by
8.000 majority, and at the same time
two republican congressmen were
elected, and republican control of the
legislature at Olympia was secured.
Kansas gave in 1890 an unexpectedly
large plurality for Bryan and a con
siderable, though smaller, majority
for Leady, the populist candidate for
governor. In 1898 the republicans
carried the state for governor and
other offices by 15.000 majority, and
the industrial conditions of Kansas
since and now give little expectation
cf democratic success, though a vig
orous effort is to lie made to secure
through the nomination for governor
of John W. Breidenthal. of Topeka,
who w;is chairman of the populist
slate committee in Kansas during the
last presidential election ami one of
Ihe representatives of that state on
the populist national committee. Kan
sas is one of the few states in which
there are practically no gold demo
crats. In the election of four years
ago 40,000 voters in Kansas supported
the populist, and 186.000 voters the |
democratic, Bryan ticket, the names j
upon each of which were identical,
but were returned separately by the
election officers in the Sunflower state. !
The muddled condition of politics in J
Kentucky has not been clarified by
any development since Ihe national j
election of four years ago when the |
electoral vote of that state was di
vided, and in this particular Kentucky
is an exception among the group of
former "doubtful" states. Consequent
upon the exclusion of Taylor from of
fice. the assassination of Ooebel. and
the temporary occupancy of the gov
ernor's place in Frankfort by Beck
ham. a new election for governor will
be necessary this year, and ihe most
skillful and capable prognostieators
are making no prophecies as to how
it will turn out, and who will be.
turned out. Among the states put
in the doubtful column this year is
Colorado, which Bryan carried by
153,000.— N. Y. Sun.
PRESS OPINIONS.
E7 Every prediction of victory made
by a democratic leader is coupled with
a fervent appeal for party harmony.—
St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
O'ln 1897 the people of Nebraska
paid (IFF $19,000,000 of mortgages: in
1898, $49,000,000; in 1899. $78.000,0000 —
SI4G.(X)O,CO<j in three years.—lndianapo
lis Journal.
ICJ'Theeloquence of democratic spell
binders on the subject of "imperial
ism" is likely to be much marred by
coarse shouts of "How about North
Carolina?"- —Kansas City Journal.
IC?""l."emocrats," says the Memphis
Commercial-Appeal, "need not fear
that V'illiam J. Bryan will ever turn
his on the free coinage of silver."
No, i*3r the mints, either. —Chicago
Times-Herald.
ICRepublican prosperity is hard on
ihe farmer. In South Dakota difficulty
is being experienced securing hands
to harvest the small grain crop. Noth
ing of the kind occurred during the
late democratic administration. —Oma-
ha Bee.
Bryan talks imperialism for the
sound money east and sixteen to one
for the wild and woolly west. That is
the kind of free and unlimited coinage
of humbug and fraud in which the
popocratic party is now working over
times. —Troy Times.
CThe democratic vote ir. Wisconsin
for governor was 09,000 in 1896, and
two years later, under what have
sometimes been called "improved con
ditions for democratic harmony," the
vote of the democratic candidate for
governor was 135,000, or 30,0U0 less. —
N. Y. Sun.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1900.
SILVER WILL NOT DOWN.
Ilrynn Jin* Commltlrd Hlm«elf «nd
Ibe Demoeriioy find * annot
llncb Out.
The hope of the mugwump enemies
of President McKinley that .Mr. Bryan
would bt placed in a position where he
could force the silver issue into the
background and make his campaign on
the imperialism issue is not to be grat
ified. Silver is bound to be an impor
tant issue of the campaign, no matter
how the eastern leaders of the party
may try to ignore it, and no matter
what Bryan may do in the attempt to
push imperialism to the front after the
campaign has opened.
Bryan and his followers have gone
too far in committing the party to free
coinage at the ratio of 16 to 1 to lake
the back track now. Even if a specific
declaration foT silver had not been put
into the platlorm it would have been
impossible to evade the issue. Bryan's
open declaration of his purpose nut to
abandon the principle for which he
fought in 1896, and the avowal by his
followers of their belief in the virtue
of the issue of 16 to 1, prove that the
massies of the democracy throughout
the west and south are as fully com
mitted to that issue now as they were
in 1896.
Furthermore, Ihe discussion at the
meeting of Ihe committee on resolu
tions «it Kansas City sihows the senti
ment of the leaders of the party, he
silver men insisted that tliey had
fought for the principle of "bimetal-
TEE CART BEFORE THE MULE.
' ftttnned/ioAi}
lism" ir, 1896. and that they would not
abandon t.h; 1 principle. They f<-1 1 that
Bryan's candidacy throughout the
west and >outh would have been weak
ened by the refusal to put a specific 16
to 1 piank in the platform, and that
was why they insisted upon thot ac
tion. On the other hand, the leaders
in the eastern stales realized that sil
ver would fie a handicap in the coming
campaign. They frankly admitted that
free coinage had defeated the party
in 1896, and they saw no chance of w in
ning this year on that issue.
This seems to define the lines on
which the campaign will be fought. It
will be the same fight over again, and
the republicans will have the ad
vantage of being able to quote the
declarations of distinguished demo
crats to t.he effect that the financial
question has been disposed of and that
prosperity has returned to the country
in spite of the geld standard. That the
money issue is the only one that has
been given earnest consideration is
proved by tjie fact that no other ques
tion was seriously discussed by the
crowds at Kansas City. The dele
gates cared little for the issues of im
perialism. apparently, and while they
will follow the lead of Bryan in attacks
on the foreign policy or the administra
tion, it is plain that they will not re
gard that as the vital issue of the cam
paign.
It seem si to be clear that if the mug
wumps support Bryan this year they
will have to swallow the pernicious
financial doctrine which they abhorred
in 1890. and in opposition to wh'ich they
worked for the election of President
McKinley.—Cleveland Leader.
Too Much Work.
A stalwart republican, making pur
chases in an lip-town dry goods store,
happened to meet Mike, the porter,
and the political microbe in the air
tempted him to ask: "Mike, how do
you feel about the election?"
"Bryan, for shure," said Mike.
"But, Mike are you going to vote
for Bryan?"
"Shure I am, sor."
"Why are you going to vote for
Bryan, Mike?"
Mark the sage reply: "Oh. begorra,
I have had work for four years, an' I
want a rest." —N. Y. Press.
ICDemocratic stump speakers in
states like New York will have to
keep watch over their tongues. The
I ratio of sixteen to one win be a for
bidden subject. To denounce trusts
will be to tread on the toes of the
Tammany leaders, who own stock in
the ice trust. Denunciations of "im
perialism" and "militarism" will
awaken no enthusiasm. Cnstinted
general abuse of everything done by
the McKinley administration will have
to be the chief stock in trade of the
democratic stujv'vrs.—Chicago Trib
une.
DEFEAT OF BRYAN.
of John M. I'nlmer. r n Olfl
Democratic* \\ arliorat of
Illinois.
"Mr. Bryan is not an inspired man.
Nor has he prescient powers. Indi
vidually he is clean, and I credit him
with being honest in his opinions, but
at the same time i cannot indorse
ihein. Populism has grown wonder
fully strong and wonderfully danger
ous.
"You predict his defeat?"
"Assuredly. The cry of imperialism
will win him no votes to amount to
anything. It's a false alarm. This
country is not nor are Mr. McKinley
and his followers believers in imperial
ism. Cuba will be under self-govern
ment in a little while, and the Fili
pinos will be governed as best the ad
ministration can.
"Pray, what would Mr. Bryan have,
had this country do with the islands?
We got them, and we will hold them
as they stand until some better schema
presents itself for controlling theit<
1 think myself that the American gov
ernment would be better off without
theislands. but the administration has
met all the demands that have arisen
there manfully and honestly.
"Mr. McKinley has the confidence of
ihe business interests of the country.
He is not an unsafe leader. 1 differ
with him on many material questions
concerning the welfare of the whole
people, but as between him and Bryan
there is but one course.
"If Mr. Bryan were president and
controlled the legislative branches,
this country would be thrown ill a
panic which would require months to
check and years ro heal. False proph
ets and leaders sprit? g up and
live for a time, and they die. Mean
time the true principles of self-govern
ment live.
"My prediction is that after Mr.
Bryan has been defeated for the sec
ond time the people will renounce
him. No man and no set of principles
can live after having been twice de
feated at the polls. Perhaps it is well
that Mr. Bryan was renominated. His
party cannot win. and his defeat will
forever settle him.
"Should he be st:ccess'f-:;l he would
convert democracy into populism, and
1 can apprehend no imoit serious na
tional calamity than populist prin
ciples of political economy be even
given a trial. They are unsuited for
the times and unsuited and unsafe for
a successful government."—John M.
Palmer.
A Pilfer Inn: Bryan it e.
Mr. Webster Davis, ti e self-consti
tuted champion of the Boers, who re
| signed as assistant secretary of the
| interior because of his dissatisfaction
j with the administration, has still fur
i ther displayed his dissatisfaction by
flopping over to Bryan. He signalized
his flop by making a speech at the
ratification meeting in Lincoln which
greatly pleased the sixteen to one can
didate as; well as the notification com
mittee. Charmed with his oratory,
the democratic national committee
promptly arranged to have him ap
pear on the stump in various cities as
a Bryan spell-binder. Their enthusi
j asm, however, suddenly cooled when
|it was discovered fhat some of his
| Lincoln speech was stolen almost
i bodily Tram one of James A. Garfield's
1 speeches. It was about 16 parts (Jar
field to one Davis. It is not likely now
that tilt; Bryanites will be so eager
for 'he oratorical services of a man
who shows such a disregard for the
use of quotation marks. Chicago
! Tribune.
! l7Mr. Khrich. who was a prominenl
gold democrat in 189ti and is a gold
| monometallism is going to support Mr
I liryan because he thinks the gold
i standard to Vie permanently estab
i lished. He differs from Bryan. When
• senate and house are democratic and
- Mr. Bryan president a free silver coin
i nee law will be passed, unless Mr.
• Bryan and his followers are fal*e to
i their pledges.—lndianapolis .Journal.
I I Z.TBryan is fairly started on his sec-
I ond race for the greatest prize of po
r litical ambition. The indications are
s that he will make another spectacu
t s lar. energetic and dangerous fight, onl v '
- to fall in the end. That will be final,
J •—Cleveland Leadtr.
I'EKIN IS CAPTURED
Allied Troops Attacked the
Capital of China.
KILLED 300 3IONCiOMANS.
The Japanese Lost 100 Soldiers
During th<* Fighting.
LEG ATI ON ERS AR E R ESC T EI)
The I lifted Stulr« t'omnnl at < lie Foo
Traiiftiilit* n ICeport Irolii a Japanese
Olllcer Ki'Kuritinv the Korflsucr»'
Kntry Into the City.
Washington, Aug. 18.—The act ing
secretary of state makes public the
following plain telegram received
last evening from Air. Fowler, the
I'nited States Consul at Che Foo:
'"Che Foo, Aug. 17 (received 7:55 p.
in.) —Japanese admiral reports that
the allies attacked I'ekir. Irom the
east on the 15th. Obstinate resist
ance. In the evening the Japanese
entered the capital with other forces
and immediately surrounded the le
gations. Inmates safe. Japanese loss
over 100. Chinese 300."
'1 lie officials here were aware of the
fact that the stronghold f>t' the Uox
<• i's was in the Chinese city and that
for the allies to attempt to force
their way through it into the Tartar
city, in which the legation compounds
are located, might mean a threat loss
(if lite and possibly defeat. 11 was
also known that the imperial troops
which have sided with the Uoxers
were many of them in or near the
Chinese city and that much of the
artillery and rifle fire which has been
ponred into the legations had been
from the walls separating- the two
cities. These facts evidently were
communicated to (>en. Chaffee and
the other commanding" officers of the
allics.
Realizing these obstacles, it ap
pears the allies decided to attack f h"
city by the east gate. There are four
entrances to the city on the east, two
leading 1 to the Chinese city and two
to the Tartar city. .lust which of
these was selected as the attacking"
point Consul Fowler's dispatch does
not disclose.
The .Japanese force engaged with
he advance, according to the under
standing' of the officials here, num
bered 10,0(10 men. so that the loss suf
fered by them was about 1 per cent.
No mention is made of the losses of
the other armies,
\ cabinet official said yesterday 1
that, uncpiestionably ihe native ( hris
tians in China, said to number sever- i
al thousand, will lie included in any
arrangement made between this gov
ernment and China incident to the
cessation of hostilities.
At the present stage of the Chinese
situation this subject has not vet been
serionslv discussed by the cabinet,
but there is no doubt, according to
this member, that the United States
is in honor bound to protect them
and will look out for their security.
"What will be done with them?" he
was asked.
"That has not been decided, but
rest assured that in their disposition
the honor of the I'nitd States will be
fully preserved. It may be arranged
for them togo to the Philippines, or
one of many other plans that are
available may lie adopted."
It also was stated that, while the
matter has not been formally con
sidered. the indemnity to be collected
b\- the I'uited States will be not only
for the families of the victims, but
also probably to compensate this gov
ernment for the expense it lias been
put to in prosecuting the campaign.
"It has not been a heavy expense,
compared to the Spanish war." he
said, "but it will be sufficient,
er with the indemnity to.'lu families
of missionaries and other victims an 1
for all loss to property of the United
States government, or of American
citizens, to make it a very serious
matter, financially, to China."
London, Aug. IS.—"l'ekin was re
lieved on the night of the lath." Till*'
message was received last evening at
the imperial customs office in Ijmdun
from the commissioner of customs
at Che Foo. It is the only official
message that has reached England in
confirmation of the earlier reports.
Proceeding to discuss the probabil
ities of a cessation of hostilities, the
Morning I'ost assume" that the Uni
ted States is willing t i ahai ion any
idea of further aggressive action, but
it questions ilie disposition of tier
many and the other powers lo agree
to such a course.
The Merlin correspondent of the
Morning I'ost says he learns that no
formal request for an armistice has
vet reached the powers and that it is
improbable that any swell request
will be granted.
The other papers comment guard
edly upon tin- situation, owing to the
lack of definite news when the editor
ials were written. Most of them ad
vocate a stern inquisition regarding
outrages and the punishment of the
leaders, even if they have to be pur
sued all over China.
The Daily Graphic, in a paragraph,
apparently inspired, says there is no
reason to believe that any of the
powers will repudiate the previous
understanding to respect the integri
tv of the empire and the dynasty,
adding that the proposal to land a
I'ritish force at Shanghai originated
not with the British government, hut
with the Chinese, who at the same
time urged that this should not be
done if likely to lead to international
complications.
Shanghai dispatches say that Empe
ror Kvvang Su accompanied the em
press dowager to llsian I'u much
against his will. Prince Titan com
mandeil the rear guard of the impe
rial escort, of which Boxers formed
65 per cent. All the palace treasures
were sent to llsian Fu.
Pale
and ■*
Weak
Women
Beauty and strength In
women vanish early in
life because of monthly
pain or some menstrualP
Irregularity. Many suf
fer silently and see their
best gifts fade away.
TydiTE. Pinkhare'j VegetablTl^ompotlvr^
helps women * preserve)
roundness of form and
freshness of face be
cause it makes their en
tire female organism
healthy. It carries wo
men safely through the
various natural crises
and is the safeguard ot
woman's health• <
The truth about this
great medicine is told in
the letters from women
being published in this
paper constantiym'
«lu LARGEST MAKERS: I
C pa> of M° n ' B §3 an "; |"F
si efft> 83.. r jQshocs in the! ■ g.
fc- H|t world. Wo sell; I •
c ; MB I more 53.00 aud In
6 " j $3.50 shoos than: lj
g? HB|any other two |B .
| 112 HR| manufacturers iuVB s
•? IwGfit The reason more
• P/Smi W.L.Douglas $3.00 •gt o
■tf/an J 5.5.50 shoes aro Ty, •
£f Btmrf sold than any other
Efff make is because they are
best in the world. <j&
M>f A jj!4.OC Sh(te for $3.00. V,
A ssSho
f/Over 1 .000.000 iC p
wsam
| The Real Worth of Our $3 and $3.50 Shoes [J '
\ compared with other makes is $4 to $5. a
\ flaying the largest 83 and >3.50 shoe bosl- B
\ nessiri the world, and a perfert system of Em
s manufacturing enables tis t«> produce a
'I higher grade S*.oo and s3.&i shoes than EM
glean be had elsewhere. V"ur dealer MM
la should keepthein; we give one dealer H
H exclusive sale In each town. Em
g T:tU»* no nuhkiitiitr! Insist/gr
Hon havingNV.L.Douglas pho'-s with B9
W nameandprlceNtainpedonl>ottoni./r
JA If your dealer will not get t hem forflf
ML you, send direct to fa<tory. en-Mr
la closing price and 25c extra MM
la for earring**. State kind of MM
ia leather, size, and width, &112
plain or cap toe. Our
w. nhoes will reach you
NEBRASKA
THE LAND
OF PLENTY
I wonder why it is that so many
men spend their days working hard
on rented farms, barely, making
enough to get along, with no great
prospect ahead of owning their
own homes, when within a few
hours' journey is a land of plenty
Nebraska —where all kinds of
grain and fruit can be raised with
the least amount of labor; where
cattle and hogs fed on corn bring a
handsome profit; where the climate
is healthful and churches and
schools abound; where land is
cheap and can be bought on very
easy terms.
Think of this, and if you want
information about the country send
to me for"The Corn Belt," a
beautifully illustrated monthly
paper that tells'all about Nebraska,
and also for"The West Nebraska
Grazing Country," an interesting
illustrated booklet containing a
large sectional map of Nebraska.
On the first and. third Tuesdays
of each month during the balance
of this year cheap excursion
tickets will be sold over our road
to Nebraska, so that people may go
and see for themselves. Ask your
ticket agent about this.
P. S. EUSTCS,
Con'l Paia'r Agt. C. B. A Q- R.N.
CHICAGO, ILL.
Everybody
enjoys custard made from Burnhani'e
Cream Custard. Just dissolve in hot milk
and set away to harddn. Indorsed by physi
cians as a healthful and nutritious food for
Children and Invalids. All Grocers are giv
ing a 10c. package free to a purchaser oi a
package of Burnham's Hasty Jellycon the
finest Jelly preparation. <'nl, r to-day.
I fi nirc I When I)octnr« and others fall to relieve
LAuiLd • vmi.try N. K. M. II.: it never fails Hoi.
free. Mr,. IS. A. lto\#an, Milwaukee, \Yi«.
Best Cough Byrup. Tasies Qo<>d. Use
In time. Bold by druggists. I*l