Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, January 24, 1901, Page 2, Image 2

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

    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Per year tl 00
If paid in advance 1 "0
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements arc published at tlie rate of
otic dollar per square fur one insertion and fifty
writs per square for each subsequent insertion
Kates by the year, or for six or three months.
»re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Letful and Official Advertising per square,
three-times or less, 5"-'; each subsequent inser
tion iO cents per square.
Local notices 1(> cents per line for one inser
ftertion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent
con-ecutive insertion.
obituary notices over five lines. ID cents rer
line. Simple announcements of births, mar
riages and deaths will be Inserted free.
business cards, live lines or less. per year;
over ttve lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local inserted for less than 75 cents per
issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The .lob department of the PRESS is complete
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
work. PARTICLI.AH ATTENTION PAIDTO I.AW
PRINTING.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
ages arc paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
lor in advance.
An echo proposed to a girl in the
"whispering chamber" of the cupitol
They Wanted a at "Washington the
other day, and she
Preacher. . , .
forwarded a reply
that, opened an avenue of lifelong
bliss before the delighted vision of a
bashful swain. Under th<? direction
of an enterprising guide he located
himself behind a pillar at one end
of the chamber, and she behind one
at the other end. They could thus
communicate by "Nature's tele
phone." "Can you hear me, Grace?"
he whispered. ••Yes." "It's funny,
ain tit ? Say, Grace, I'm going to ask
you .something. We've known each
other for a long time, and—er—"
"Oh, I hear you splendidly," said she.
"And—er—well, you know that—"
es; oh. what were you saying?"
"Well, that I—" At this moment the
faithful guide who is responsible for
the story turned away. "It's not the
capitol that those two want to see,"
he remarked as the pair skipped down
the stairs. "It's a preacher."
Another interesting wrestling
match, in which cowboys figured,
took place near Globe, Ariz. There
•were three cowboys ana a mountain
lion, or big wildcat, in it. The cow
boys routed the lion out of somt
rocks and tried to lasso it. One of
the men shot at the beast and knocked
it over, but. when the three cowboys
dismounted they found that it had
only been stunned. The animal,
which is simply an enormous wild
cat, then jumped upon one of the
men, crunching his left arm and bad
ly lacerated his body. But one of the
cowboy®, who had exceptional
strength, caught the beast by the
throat and a front foot. Another cow
boy seized the hind foot, while the
third ran in and cut the animal's
throat with a small knife.
• The New York Sun reports that some
thieves broke into a man's house on the
eve of Christmas, drank his whisky, car
ried off his cigars and his best cToTir**,
and left this message: "Merry Christ
mas ano Happy New ear. We regret
this sincerely, but necessity compels
us to leave our old clothes. You un
derstand that it would not be safe to
carry a bundle. We would not have
taken your things had we not known
that you could replace them. We
thank you for your entertainment."
As a matter of fact, were not these
burglars more polite, more moral, even,
than the people who borrow your hooks
and never return them?
At the Indian reservation near Co
velo, Cal., the other day an infuriated
bull broke out of the corra! and start
ed through the grounds. Several ex
pert cowboys tried to lasso hiin, but
could not do so, and a cowboy known
as "Chub" Baker was thrown from his
horse and seriously hurt. .Just then
another cowboy, Wyatt Jordan, gal
loped up, and, jumping from his horse,
seized the bull by the horns and forced
him into a near-by corral.
An elephant was made to climb four
flights of marble stairs leading to the
women's reception room in the Chicago
Athletic clubhouse the other night. He
took three steps at a time. The ele
phant, whose name was Barney, took
part in an amateur circus given by
members of the club, and there were
four young lions in it.
Christmas day was the birthday of
four members of the family of Rev.
A. E. Ballard, of Ocean Grove, N. J.
Mr. Ballard was 80 on that day; his
6ister, Mrs. Elmira Canfield, was K2;
another sister, Mrs. Margaret Stains
by, was 72, and Mr. Ballard's grand
child, Anna S. Ballard, was 12.
A horse, fresh from the country,
which was being led up Broad street
in Newark, N. J., saw a trolley ear,
probably for the first time in his life,
and, falling back on his haunches and
trembling violently, toppled over and
died. According to a veterinary *ur.
geon he was killed by fright.
A number of Beading (Pa.) capital
ists have bought a tract of land near
that city, on which they expect to raise
silver foxes, opossums, raccoons, jack
rabbits, minks, weasels, skunks, wolf
dogs, beagle hounds, pointer and setter
cogs, and other animals for their fur
or fk'ns.
MB FROI Bill
Progress of the Various Measures
Now Being Considered by
Congress.
THE ANTI- SHIPPING BILL ALLIANCE.
Fierce Kale War on Ooenn Freight*
In Prospect If Shipping Hill I*
I'lutril Which Will Incrfant- tlie
Receipt* of Farmer*—The Foreign
Lobby.
[Special Correspondence.]
As 1 write, congress is about to re
sume the session, after the holiday re
cess. In the house the work is so
well advanced that members are able
to take things comparatively easy,
but. in the senate public business is
far in the lag. and it would- seem, if
some of the rumors current are true,
that little will be accomplished in
"the greatest deliberative body in the
world" beyond the necessary passage
of the great appropriation bills. There
is even some reasonable doubt as to
whether these will be squeezed
through before the clock strikes the
closing hour on March :J.
* « *
In the senate the only important
measure disposed of is the Hay-
Pauncefote treaty, and.even this is
rot a finality, because the concurrence
of (ireat Britain—by no means as
sured —is essential to its adoption. All
the other great measures, such as the
war revenue reduction bill, the army
reorganization bill, the Nicaragua
canal bill and the shipping bill, yet
remain to be acted upon —these apart
from the annual appropriation bills
and the myriad of other bills of lesser
importance. At the rate that the sen
ate has already proceeded, it would
take several years for the bills named
to secure consideration and final ac
tion. It must be apparent from all
this that the senate must wake up.
and abandon its drowsy dallying and
begin to work in real earnest.
* * *
Senator Pettigrew, of South Dakota,
has'lifted himself again into ihe pub
lic eye. He is quoted in the columns
of the New York Herald as saying
that he has perfected an alliance with
Senators Allen, of Nebraska, and But
ler. of North Carolina, to talk the
shipping bill to death, in order to
either prevent its passage, or prevent
the passage of sufficient other impor
tant legislation to compel the presi
dent to convene congress in extraor
dinary session immediately upon the
close of the present session. The only
reason advanced by Senator Pettigrew
for the course he has mapped out
for himself and his colleagues, is Sen
ator Banna's identification with the
bill for the upbuilding of our ship
ping.
• * *
Senator Pettigrew, without a shad
ow of foundation, alleges that Senator
Banna has promised that the shipping
bill will be passed, in order to repay
certain contributors to the republic
an campaign fund during the last
campaign, who are interested in the
bill in question. Senator Pettigrew
concocts his own story, wholly out of
his imagination, then declares it to
be true, and proceeds to act upon
that theory. The yarn has absolute
ly no kind of basis in fact. It is a
pure invention and utterly without
substance. The democrats may just
as well be charged with having re
ceived contributions from the foreign
shipowners, whose powerful and weal
thy lobby is actively and determined
ly at work here in Washington at this
minute, to defeat the shipping bill,
because the great bulk of the opposi
tion in congress to that bill is on the
democratic side.
» * •
The reason that this foreign ship
ping lobby is so active is because their
principals well know that the passage
of the shipping bill means a long
drawn-out war of ocean freight rates,
in which the reduction that the fierce
Competition will compel will wipe out
profits for a long time to come, and.
they greatly fear, give American ships
nn impetus that will equip them to
eventually wrest the larger part of
the carrying of American imports and
exports from the foreign ships now
monopolizing it. Senator Frye has said
that so fierce will the rate war on
ocean rates become, as soon as Ihe
shipping bill gets into operation, that
a reduction of 23 per cent., or $30.-
000.000 a year, will result in the single
item of charge for carrying away our
exports and bringing hither our im
ports.
• * * *
Such a reduction in freight rates
would enormously increase the sum
the farmers of the country would re
ceive for their entire products. The
price paid for our great wheat staple,
for instance, is the Liverpool price,
less the cost of transportation to Liv
erpool. The price thus paid govern*
not alone in the quantity exported,
but also in the entire quantity con
sumed at home. If, therefore, the
war of ocean freight rates predicted
by Senator Frye should be precipitat
ed by the passage of the shipping bill,
aid a saving to the farmers of only
live cents a bushel on wheat should
follow, in this one item alone our
farmers would receive about $3,000,-
000 more than they will receive other
wise—based on a total crop of Ota,-
000,000 bushels.
* » *
Tint this is only one item. Tal<e our
cotton production, averaging, say, 10,-
000,000 bales per year, worth, the
present year, about S3O per bale, OT
a half a billion dollars for the total
crop in the United States. Nearly
three-quarters of our entire cotton
is exported in its raw state, and the
CAMERON CODNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1901.
ocean fre'ght bill is enormous, appro*
inutliiifT Hose to S2">.OIiO,OW). A irduo
tion here in the cost of transport;!
lion on the ocean IIIOTIP would cfTecl
a saving to our southern cotton grow
ers of over $(>.(10(1.000. and there would
be a saving of $2,000,000 more on th«
portion retained for borne con.sump
tion.
• * »
According to the totals on these tree
products of wheat and cotton alone
I have pointed out a net saving to our
farmers of $11,000,000, and this sum
represents not much more than one
fifth of the total saving thai would be
effected if such a reduction in ocean
freight rates should occur as Senator
Krye predicted. For anyone to say
that the farmers of the country are
not affected by this bill, and are not
interested in it. is to fly in the face
of the most vital facts. And this ex
plains. as 1 said iti the beginning, why
the wealthy, powerful foreign lobby
is so determinedly at work here to
defeat the hill. They don't want
American ships to compete with them
for one thing, and they want, them
selves. that $.')0.()00,0(j0 a year they are
threatened with the loss of if the ship
ping bill is passed.
* * *
These facts and these figures explain
why it is so easy for the necessary in
fluences to he brought to bear upon
certain men in congress, at times, and
especially men whose reputations have
completely vanished, and who are
about to drop into well-merited obliv
ion through their repudiation by their
own constituents, to prevent legisla
tion helpful to American interests, and
to favor, at American expense, for
eign interests. It is nothing short o?
a national scandal, to say nothing of
the enormous losses in dollars and
cents and in the perpetuation of our
weakness upon the seas, for senatorial
courtesy—so-called—to stretch so far
as to enable a fag end of a minority
to defiantly proclaim its determined
purpose to hold up the entire legis
lation of the nation, if need be. to de
feat a measure of the most vital coi
sequences to every American eitizeh.
J. B. M.
REPUBLICANS WILL RULE.
Tlie Denioerncy of tlio Northern nod
Western Stntc* Make a I'ltifnl
Showing.
It is figured that the republics ns
will have a majority in the next sen
ate which will be Imost two-thirds
of that chamber. This is more of a
preponderance than the republicans
looked for, and more than many of
them desire. It is just what might
hhV2 been expected, however, from
the vices and lunacies of the demo
crats in the past few years. Bryan
ism is responsible for the disasters
which have come to the democracy.
The disasters were worse in Bryan's
second canvass than they were in his
first one. They will be still worse in
his third campaign if the plans of his
supporters to give him another nomi
nation are carried out.
Not since the middfe of Grant's serv
ice as president has there been such
an extirpation of the democracy in
the senate as has taken place in the
past few years. After the withdrawal
of the 11 states which constituted the
confederacy the republicans had' a
two-thirds majority in the senate for
years, and part of the time- they had
a three-fourths vote. But abnormal
conditions prevailed at that time.
The absence of the 11 states and the
22 senators from the democratic sec
tion of the country naturally put that
party far down in the scale. For
years the democratic vote in the sen
ate varied from nine to eleven, while
the republican roll in that time
ranged from 36 to 58.
In the present situation all the
states are represented. There is a
democratic party in the entire 45
states, but in most of them it has
become so weak that it has not the
slightest influence in the elections,
«r even in determining the sort of
candidates which the republicans
put up. The republican as
cendancy is so great in the larger
part of the country that, the party
never takes tlie democracy into the
account. There is scarcely a democrat
in the senate from any of the great
tier of states of the north and west.
Outside of the states in which slavery
existed in ISGO the democratic party
has no standing, and in some of those
states, like Delaware, Maryland and
West Virginia, the republicans are far
in the lead. Nor is this the, worst
that can be said for the democracy in
this connection. Not only are the
democrats in the present, day reduced
to the low estate in the senate in
point of membership which they had
in 1801-73. but they lack the leaders—
the Bayards. Hendrickses, Saulsburys,
Thurmans, Johnsons, Bavises. Bucka
lews and others—who gave the demo
crats a dignity and a strength which
went far toward compensating them
for their comparative diminutivenets
in numbers. At the present time the
democrats in the senate are ns feeble
in character as they are in number.
They are not strong enough to form
that powerful opposition which is nec
essary in a popular government even
for the well-being of the dominant
party. Never before since the de
mocracy was founded by .Jefferson a
little over a century ago has that
party been as feeble and as contempti
ble in the northern and western states
as it is at this moment. —St. Louis
G lobe-Democrat.
IT." 11 is said that subscriptions to Mr.
Bryan's new paper are "pouring in."
Mr. Bryan is one of the few men in
our history who lias made money by
running for public office, lie has really
had no other lucrative occupation. So
it may be that- the notoriety that h«
has wou in two unsuccessful campaigns
will prove a valuable asset for him in
his new venture. —Indianapolis New*
(lnd.).
A FITTING REBUKE.
idmlnUlrrril by n Heroic Mraaon^r
Hoy to a Cowardly and
Stlniry Man.
There was a trifling fire in a west side
street, the other day which caused a good
deal of excitement and incidentally gave a
fat man a lesson in courtesy. '1 he fire
utarted in the apartments where the man
and his mother lived. The man started
about the time the fire did and got down
four (lights of stairs to the street before his
mother knew what was up. When she dis
covered the lire she promptly fainted, says
the New York Mail and Kxpress.
Meanwhile the fat man stood in the street
yelling: "Save my mother! Save my
; mother!" A messenger boy who was pass
j ing stopped, saw the smoke, ran tip tba
I stairs, aroused the woman and brought her
1 out in safety. The neighbors cheered and
the fat man looked uncomfortable.
"Here, boy," he whispered. "Here's a
I quarter for you."
| The boy's face expressed his disgust.
"Aw, save it,"he said, "and buy yourself
i -om<- nerve food."
j The crowd laughed, the fat man blushed
1 and the boy went whistling down the
street. He didn't know that he had been a
hero, and the fat man felt himself a coward,
dewiirc of Ointment* for Catarrh
That Contain Mercury,
ns mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely derange the whole sys
tem when entering it through the mucous
surfaces. Such articles should never be used
except on prescriptions from reputable
physicians, as the damage they win do is
often ten fold to the good you can possibly
derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure,
manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo,
()., contains no mercury, and is taken inter
nally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. In buying
Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure yon get the gen
uine. It is taken internally, arid made in
Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testi
monials free.
Sold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Sherlock Holme*.
"What will you gimme on this?" asked
the musician.
The pawnbroker took the battered tuba,
fingered the keys, noticed the wire netting
across the big end and asked:
"Kay, does a feller have much fun trav
eling with them one-night burlesque com
panies?"—lndianapolis Press.
There I* nt ins* of People
Who are injured by the use of coffee. Re
cently there has been placed in all the gro
cery stores a new preparation called
(JRAIN-O, made of pure grains, that takes
the place of coffee. The most delicate stom
ach receives it without distress, and but few
can tell it from coffee. It does not cost over
J as much. Children may drink it with
great benefit. 15 ets. and 25 cts. per pack
age. Try it. Ask for GRAIN-O.
The Ke*u!t.
Towne—Newman took part in an auto
mobile race not long ago."
Brown—"lhat s*o? ilow did he come
out ?"
"On crutches, about a month later "
Philadelphia Press.
I.ane's 112. amity Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to
he healthy this is necessary. Acts gentlv on
the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head*
ache. Price 25 and 50c.
Inopportune.
"See exclaimed the shopper, ex
citedly, "there's a man just dropped dead in
tnat bargain crush!"
"How inopportune!" cried the floor walk
"We have not yet opened our under
taking department."—Philadelphia I'rtss.
To Core a Cold In One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it fails to cure.
25c.
The commonest grub looks good when a
fellow can't eat. —Washington (la.j Dem
ocrat.
Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green's
Sons, of Atlanta. Ga. The greatest dropsy
specialists in the world. Read their adver
tisement in another column of this paper.
If you desire to be contented don't appre
ciate favors by comparison.—Atchison
Globe.
Each package of POTXAM'S FANELESS
DYES colors more goods than any other dve
and colors them better too. fckld by alj
druggists.
Know thyself, by all means; this is an ac
quaintance which never ripens into love. —
Detroit Journal.
"Do you think?" asked the landlady,
"that death ends all?" "Not for four or five
days, in the case of a turkey," said the sav
age boarder, who had won his position of
star by sheer brutality.—lndianapolis Press.
I fmrrMi jCfISTORIfi
i M For and Children.
CASHIIMPe Kind You Have
laglS 1 ! Always Bought
similatingltieFoodandßegula- pjfi $
ting the Stomachs andßowels of fefl .Bears the X.»
x /{/M•
I 1 Sl S nature /M
[ nessand Rest.Contains neither ll p A M
Opitim.Morpliine nor>lineral. 01 /ft *\ I F
' NOTNarcotic. j|| ll -If*
fbapt of Old LrSAMUEL PITCHSIi |§§ .
j" Pitmpkui Seed'" iS 1 rjj W
j4Lx.Se/utei ♦ M n Jfik
IfoekelU SaUt jjvK « -
JtnUe SettL *■ jjaj' A A 1 W
I f\ iJiw Ba!
i}k J iS<r»Q
Aperfccl Remedy forConstipa- i | V for* UwD
Hon, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea jSf 8 baj
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- pi ffl ft.
ness and Loss of Sleep. JS| \Jr pQf II VP B
Facsimile Signature of
_________________™ C CKNTAUW COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY
ffTH?dTIOQ V NEW DISCOVERY| gives
fc# VP 0 quirk relief and cures worst
cases. book of testimonials and 1<» duyi' treatment
ITi ce Dr. U. H. UKUKN'B SONS, Box D, Atlanta. U«i» |
GT S ~
Frances
r\ <^\
MISS FRANCES M. ANDERSON, daughter of HON. JUDGE °
ANDERSON, of Virginia, is at present in Washington, D. C., as
i Corresponding Secretary of the Higher Educational League, of
! that city. Cured of la grippe by Peruna.
MISS FRANCES M. ANDERSOX,
Corresponding Secretar.v of the
Higher Educational League, writes
from the "Astoria," Washington, D.
C., the following:
"About two months ago 1 was taken
very ill with la grippe and was obliged
togo to bed. I took three bottles of
Peruna with very beneficial results,
and was able to leave my bed in a
week and regained my usual strength
very soon.
" I have nothing but praise for Peru
na and recommend it to those simi
larly afflicted whenever 1 can."—
Frances M. Anderson.
La grippe is, strictly speaking, epidemic
catarrh—that is to say, a variety of acute
catarrh which is so contagious and runs a
course more or less definite, the same as
scarlet fever, whooping cough, etc.
During the acute stages of la grippe it is
not a very fatal disease, but the condition
in which it leaves the system has caused the
death of a countless number.
Indeed nearly every person who lias had
la grippe within the last three years finds
himself more or less deranged by the per
nicious effects of this disease. The major
ity of those who have escaped death find
life scarcely worth living.
If this vast multitude of people could only
know with what certainty Peruna would
relieve them of all the bad effects which la
grippe has brought upon them, what an un
told amount of suffering could be averted!
Thousands have already heard how quick
ly this remedy will cure in these cases and
have been saved; but tens of thousands have
WHEN WBITIXG TO AltVKK'J'lSiilta
plruae atute that you uw U« AJvei tl»«-
neut In tblt puper.
not yet heard, and continue to suffer on,
dropping into the grave one by one.
Peruna cures catarrh in all stages and va
rieties, whether acute or chronic, and is
therefore the most effective remedy ever de
vised for removing all the derangements
which follow la grippe.
Samuel M. York writes from Union
Grove, Ala., the following letter:
Dear Sir:—"Last week 1 was taken with
la grippe and catarrhal deafness. I wrote
you for advice and followed your direc
tions. After taking two bottles of Peruna
I found myself well of la grippe, and iny
hearing was fully restored. My health is
better than it has been in five years.
"My wife improved in health verv much
after taking Peruna."—Samuel M. York.
Mis® Caroline J. Kahl, Otisco, lnd., writes
as follows:
"Three years I had la grippe and
pulmonary trouble. I was very sick.
I had hemorrhages of the lungs nearly
evrey day for a year, and three bottles
of your Peruna cured me. The doctor
said I had consumption. lam now In
better health than 1 have been for
many years.
"I highly recommend Peruna to all my
neighbors and friends. Peruna is my favor
ite medicine. I shall always havePeTunain
the house."—Miss Caroline J. Kahl.
If you do not derive prompt and satisfac
tory results from the use of Peruna, write at
once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement
of your case and he will be pleased to givs
you his valuable advice gratis*.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of Tho
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0.
C 35 For 14 Cents
■ ®ail the following rare teed noreltlM.
■Sk yfl lplzft.liiar lllood Tomato S«ed, $.15
■ . "-jV\ 1 " Northern Lemon S«»d, .15
|y 1A I 1 *♦ Uima'a Ftiorllr Oulun .10
I ■ I I M 1 ** Emerald Greta Cucumber beed, .10
V I 1 »• City Garden Beet Seed, .10
| h* II 1 " 13-Daj ltndlih Seed, .10
Ii f (11 " IttX. Market Lettuce Seed, .15
Jhym -,/ i JjrSj 3*• Brilliant 112 lower B«ed, .15
1 A 112 Worth SI.OO for 14 Cent*. I
Bwy flu ■ Ahore 10 packages rare novelties we will
mS R} fl nail TOU free, together with our great
ny gtjf ■ illustrated <1 Catalog, telling all abuul
S I f*nl*rr*n Billion Dollar Grata
■ jl I Alno Choice Onion Heed, (JOc. alb.
HL 1 Together with tltou*anda of earliest Tega-
T/'IXTOL table* and farm seeds, upau receipt of 14c.
Y l ' I \ Y\\\l • n,! thl* notice. When once you plant
r II I I I i/ll Balxer'a Seeds vou will never do without.
la 3 or 4 Years an Independence Is Assured
IJ f you take up your homes
HfflMßre Klyjl |in Western Canada, the
lland of plenty, lllus-
I»f 41 JA 1 1 rated pamphlets, giving
J experience* of farmers
J** 10 hav ® become wealthy
a| figin growing wheat, reports
} lIW of etc , and full
I tiniaSl information as to reduced
I railway rates can be had
- ■IIIHII I—-U— ou application to the
Superintendent of Immigration. Department of
Interior, Ottawa, Canada, or address the Under
signed, who will mail you atlases, pamphlets, etc.,
free of cost. b\ PEDLKY, Sunt, of Immigration.
Ottawa. Canada: or to.M V. McINNES, No. 2 Morrill
Blk., Detroit. Mich.; D. K. CAVKN, Columbus, Ohio.
FREE ELECTRIC BELT OFFER
rfSStflßlT# THAI in your own borne, we
furnish the genuine and
|H —v ""irrt imftti 11 Ti mIT
,NU CIKKKM KLECTKIC BKLTTF
tLfcV/-' J'hrvh J Ufa to any reader of thlc panel
L-lln, '. T 1" »<l.i*rivi T.ry lav'
en.ll ponltlv»((aftra» COSTS
. ALMOST NOTHING compareS
witu most all other treatments, tar.. wh.a all other .l.e
--lrl« belt., appliance, an.l reneOle, fall. QUICK CURE for
morothonoOallmenta. OXLVBURKCURK for allneiTous
aiseasen. wuakueßßoH and disorders. For complete
catalogue, cut till* »d. out op.l mall to UM.
SEARS. ROEBUCK & CO.. Chicago.
MSHORTHANDaddeR
As much superior to ordinary uddltlon as atenog.
r»|,liy Is to IOIIK writing. Wimple, rnpld, aecu*
rale, C:in add and prove quicker than any adulns:
macblne. «» nental Mt rt.llt. A child pan become
proficient In (JO days. I.Vimpkle Inairnctlona ia
4 lenaona. Heat prepaid on receiptor Jl. Jl.eiirncr
ean re iujbur:.o many times oyer teachiuu others
Address UIOI.AHI) I»ITK. CO.,
La Nalle Street. - I'IIICAGO, ILL.
A. N. K.-C 1848