Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, June 27, 1901, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Per year 00
11 paid In advance 1 M>
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rate of
one doliar per square for one insertion and tlfty
•ent* ter square for each subsequent insertion
Kates t>y Uie 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 inser
tion f-0 cents per square.
Local notices tu cents per line for one inser
aertion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent
oorisecutive Insertion.
Obituary notices over five lines, 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, niar
riuges and deaths will be inserted free.
Business cards, Ave lines or less. 45 per year;
over tlve lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per
tuue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PKKSK IS complete
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
WI rk. PAKTICUI.AU ATTENTION PAID TO LAW
FKINTING.
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 bo paid
tor in advance.
Although there are hundreds of
thousands of women occupying posi
_ „ . tionsof trust in the
A Unrlty Among ,
business world, in
"er Sen. stances are ex
ceedingly rare in which they have vio
lated the confidence reposed in them.
%Vhat had almost become a happy tra
dition under the new business condi
tions by which women have been so
generally admitted to equal competi
tion with men in many of the vocations
of life has had rude disturbance. A
news item from Philadelphia relates
the fact that a young woman, for five
years confidential bookkeeper for a
prominent firm, has been found short
in her accounts SIO,OOO, and has disap
peared. So far as can be recalled, this
is the most serious act of dishonesty
yet charged to the account of the busi
ness woman. So successfully has she
f;tood out against the temptation to
emulate the conduct of her male as
sociates in this direction that the
world had come to regard her as safe
against the embezzlement habit. The
Philadelphia incident will, it is to be
feared, tend to shatter this fond be
lief. Consolation may be found, how
ever, in the reflection that the Phila
delphia "embezzleress" stands conspic
uously alone among the thousands of
honest women who are faithful to the
trust reposed in them amid a deluge
of bud examples set by the stronger
hex.
A well-known woman of a large city
received the following note the other
Heailli.R Off a " I), :,r Mad '
am: I take pleas-
Xuisuucc. . , • .
ure in shipping to
your address a rug valued at .SSO, for
which 1 shall be glad to receive your
check, if you do not desire the rug,
please return it.""The idea!" she
exclaimed. "I never knew such im
pertinence." Then she sat down and
wrote the following: "Dear Sir: I
have ordered no rug from your estab
lishment, and I see no reason why I
should goto the expense of returning
that which I do not want, and which
was sent to me unsolicited." To this
she received the following answer in
due time: "Dear Madam: I will send
lor the unsolicited rug, and I trust you
will»do me the favor to send for the
unsolicited charity entertainment
tickets which now lie, with about 23
others, on tny desk: "The discour
teous boor!" she exclaimed.
An American who was in Peking re
cently says that nobody made any
suggestions to Gen. Chaffee about
"picking up" rare bits of plunder in
that city after the unpleasant experi
ence, of a wealthy American who
thought it well to get a share of the
treasures for America. This gentle
man intimated to the general that he
would gladly bear the expense of
transporting two magnificent temple
bronzes to New York as a gift to the
Metropolitan Museum of Art if the
general would overlook their removal.
Ihe answer he got was conclusive:
"The American caught looting will be
eliot on the spot!"
John Allen, cook, "{jot religion" at
a negro camp meeting- in the suburbs
of hi I'a.so. It affected him .so pe
culiarly that the police ran him in
and locked him up, pending an ex
amination as to his sanity. Elder
lluggins called at headquarters and
remonstrated. "He ain't drunk or
crazy," said the elder to the chief;
•lie's just chuck full of the spirit. He
has been a very bad young man, a
crap shooter and a vazor toter, and
now the spirit has at last taken hold
of him."
In Montgomery county, Indiana, a
fesv farmers bought a switchboard
and tt'li phones fur their own use, pav
ing three dollars initiation and
cents a month. Tolls from nonsuli
scribers met the salary of the oper
ator. This system has been extended
until it serves 40 towns with 6,000 tel
ephones. In a Massachusetts county
200 farmers provide their own tele
phone facilities for six dollars each
u year.
When asked by his wife for money
to buy some flour, a resident of a
western town handed her a ten-dollar
bill. She refused to give him any
change, saying that she was a mem
ber of the liuft'aloes. The husband
bad her arrested, but the local jus
tice dismissed the case.
MODIFICATION OF TARIFF.
Kriniinniilp Policy tit HIP Miiiiufac
turrm H<'eiir<liim Hrilucliuna
iu Certain Ueayeeta,
The discussions which have taken
place in Ihe National Association of
Manufacturers are significant in that
most of the speakers advocated the
adoption of the reciprocity treaties
now liefoie tiie senate and a modi
fication of many features of the pres
ent tariff. A number of speakers
said tliey did not need protection
for their industries. The only lead
ing: industry making this statement
was that of boots and shoes. The
others were special industries cov
ered by patents. Nevertheless, the
general tenor of the discussion was
for a modification of the tariff on
merchandise' which does not need
protection. A number of conservative
speakers feared that great injury
would follow n radical change in the
present tariff. Indeed, the tenor of
all the addresses was in favor of pro
tection as opposed to free trade.
Still, the sentiment was in favor of
a modification of duties and the ex
tension of the theory of reciprocity.
Two classes of people may profit
by n careful study of the proceedings
of the association. One of these is
composed of the ultra protectionists
who are now crying out against
those who have expressed the opin
ion that the Diugley tariff, adequate
as it was at the time of its enact
ment to meet the conditions as they
then existed, should be modified to
meet the changed conditions. The
other class is composed of those who
call themselves revenue reformers,
but are, in fact, free traders, and who
are now breaking a silence of six
yiT.rs by reiterating their heresies,
which every nation but one in the
world has rejected. Whatever modi
fications may be made in the tariff
it must retain its protective fea
tures, because largely to the protect
ive policy the t'nited States owes its
lead in the industrial world and its
present prosperity. Nor must we, in
the elation consequent upon the
growth of our foreign trade, forget
that the best markets in the world
are the home markets, and that it
would be a folly for which labor and
capital would pay dearly to sacrifice
any portion of them for the chance
of competing in limited markets with
a host of rivals. The principle em
braced in the resolution of the Na
tionl Association of Manufacturers
is the true one. and is so well and
concisely stated that it is quoted, as
follows:
"The object of tariff legislation should
be to furnish adequate protection to such
products only as require it, without pro
viding for monopoly abuses. The tariff on
goods of which the cost of production Is
higher in the United States than in fortlgn
countries should be at least what is neces
sary to compensate domestic industries for
the hijjher cost of production."
The foregoing is a reasonable poli
cy because it .secures the American
market to our own people, which is
the present policy of every lending'
nation except Great Britain, which,
because it docs not return to that
policy, is losing ground. Foreign com
petitors, unrestrained by tariff du
ties, are wresting British markets
from British producers.—lndianapo
lis Journal.
AGUINALDO'S TRUE STATUS.
A Criminally I)I»|HIHCI1 Mnrptof Who
KIIUWH Xotliiiifs lint Treach
ery aml (ircrd,
flen. (srant is entirely right in his
estimate of Agtiinaldo, and in his
judgment as to the punishment which
befits that worthy's dignity. Facts
long since revealed have proved that
he is a boodler and a criminally dis
posed marplot, who should be sent to
the stone pile in a striped jacket.
There is not a suggestion of the self
sacrificing patriot in anything that
he has done.
The chance that has made a
public character of him has lifted
him out of the common run of crim
inals only to show that all he knows
of politics is treachery and greed.
He was a traitor to the Spaniards, to
the Filipinos and to the Americans.
All our people might have respected
him as some of them did if in his
contest against American authority
he had disclosed the qualities of a
sincere believer in the cause which
he advocated. Hut he was merely the
cowardly adventurer whose chief con
cern was the money chest, and his
ignoble surrender completely discred
ited his claims as a patriot.
it is to be hoped that if he comes
to this country Gen. Grant's wish
will be fulfilled and that he will be
ignored and treated with the con
tempt that lie deserves. Considera
tion for such a fifth-rate oriental
faker would be absurd except, per
haps, at a meeting of sprinters. With
a good bulldog for a pacer he might
distinguish himself in a 100-yard
dash. —Chicago ftecord-Herald.
tnrThe democratic newspaper which
expressed the hope that, both Sen
ator Tillman aful Senator MeLaurin
would be defeated and "better and
truer democrats be elected in their
places" evades our call for informa
tion as to what is true democracy
and who is a true democrat, if Till
man and MeLaurin and their democ
racy fall short of the standard, by
saying that the true democrat will
be easily recognizable—"if we can
only get him." (ireat Scott, and also
Caesar's ghost! Are true democrats
so searce, even in South Carolina,
that there is so serious doubt that
one can be got? And. however that
may be, the question what is true
democracy and who is a true demo
crat remains to be answered by those
wl.o, professing to be democrats, op
pose themselves to both Tillman and
MeLaurin and the two kinds of de
mocracy for which they respectively
Mtaud.*-Albany Journal.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1901.
THIRD TERM SPECTER LAID.
rrnlilrnl Mclv I■■ le >• Drprivm lie Ind
eral a of One of T1i«»lr I.ouilcxt
lIiMVKfIKM.
Tn language singularly calm and
definite for a paper of the weightiest
state moment, President MeKinley
has put an extinguisher on the silly
third term talk such as Senator De
pew and Congressman (irosvenor
have been recently indulging. While
expressing doubt as to whether their
foolish talk should be dignified with
notice, Mr. MeKinley justifies his
course in repudiating any concur
rence in it on grounds of the lTighest
public policy.
He justly concludes that silence in
the presence of flic reiteration of
the charge that he cherished an am
bition for a third term would ex
pose every act.'of his second term
to misconstruction and suspicion. To
relieve himself and his administra
tion of the faintest imputation of ap
proaching the grave problems of to
day with an eye to renomination in
HlO4 the president has decided to
speak lest his silence might be misin
terpreted.
And, having seen that his duty to
himself and the country demanded a
prompt- repudiation of any thought
of a third term, he has stated his po
sition on the subject in such unmis
takable terms as to leave no ground
or excuse for the revival of the
bogey. There is no loophole or am
biguity about such a statement as
this:
"I will say now. once for all, expressing
a long settled conviction, that 1 not only
am not anil will not be a candidate for a
third term, but would not accept a nomi
nation for it if it were tendered to me."
The only "if"' about this is ex
pressive of the creditable doubt of
the possibility that the republican
party, in view of its acquiescence in
the traditions of the republic, could
be so unwise as to tender a third
term to him. The wording 1 of this
declination in advance of an unsought
and unacceptable honor is at once
happy, self-respecting 1 and conclusive.
It leaves nothing for Senator De
pcw to joke about, nothing for the.
superserviceable Grosvenor to grow
garrulous over.
It strengthens the traditions of the
republic against the third term idea.
It anticipates the harsh croakings
of tlie anti-imperialists, in whose
eyes a third term would be a step
ping stone to nn imperial throne.
And "once for all" it permits Presi
dent McKinley to serve out his second
term mindful solely of its effect, upon
his own fame and the continued
prosperity of the American people.
I!y a few strokes of his pen Mr.
McKinley has exorcised the specter
of a third term for at least ten years.
Before it can lie revived we may have
lengthened the single term to six
years and made the occupant of the
white house ineligible to succeed him
self.—Chicago IJecord-Herald.
HAS NOT CHANGED.
President Meliiuley IteninliiN Firm In
Hl* Former I'unllliin on the
Tariff (lueNtioii,
The democratic newspapers are
making much of the recent statement
of M. .lules Siegfried, a former mem
ber of the ministry of France, that
President McKinley had told him he
was 110 longer an ultra protectionist;
that it was necessary for the United
States to fight for foreign markets,
and that a modification of the pro
tective tariff would be necessary to
accomplish that purpose.
While the president cannot be ex
pected to make a public statement
concerning the utterances of M. Sieg
fried, republican leaoers who are fa
miliar with Mr. McKinley's views have
promptly expressed doubt that he
ever made the statement attributed
to him. Senator Hanna says he
knows the president is in favor of
protection: that he is opposed to ma
terial modifications of the Dingley
law: and that if any concessions are
to lie made to European nations in
the matter of the tariff they shall be
through reciprocity treaties provid
ing for mutual concessions. A mem
ber of the cabinet has made a similar
statement to the Leader's Washing
ton correspondent.
If that is where the president
stands, and there can be 110 doubt
that his position has been stated cor
rectly. he has not changed within the
past ten years. The McKinley law,
which was enacted in 1890, for the
first time gave force and effect to the
theory of reciprocity, and reciprocity
lins been one of the cardinal prin
ciples of republican policy ever since.
Of course, the free traders are anx
ious to see the Dingley law broken
down, and they will doubiless attempt
to bring about that result at the next
session of congress.—Cleveland Lead
er and Herald.
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
CTlSryan says that McKinley is an
emperor. If William J. had got enough
votes he would have reigned as the sil
ver king.—Ottawa (Ont.) Citizen.
E7"Mr. Bryan's last outcry is intend
ed to notify the many thousand demo
crats who would ignore him that they
cannot lose him.—lndianapolis Jour
nal.
C 'Evtry issue which the democrats
have taken fondly to their hearts has
i it her 1. ltd or made its esc a pe. .111 st at
this time the denmcracyis an issueless
organization.—Cleveland Leader and
Herald.
Cl?" The movement in the Arkansas
democracy to turndown Senator Jones
ought to be combated by the repub
lican p:.rly. I'lie senator has contrib
uted a good deal to the gayety of poli
tics. and incid; ntally he has been the
means of incre -Aing the republican
vote in 1 lie country at larg<:.—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
A POLITICAL BABE.
It romm Into the World at Kanu>
City und 111 Purrnti Kiprrl tUut by
1110-1 It Will Heroine a tilalit.
Kansas City, Mo., June 20. —The al
lied third party movement, which its
promoters hope will result before
1004 in a national organization strong
enough to name a presidential nomi
nee, was launched here Wednesday.
It was the outcome of a conference
of reformers from the ranks of the
old parties, and its principles are said
by some to have been adopted wiu» a
view to fitting the views of William
J. Hryan.
The conference was called by Lee
Merriwether, of St. Louis, who, with
other St. Louis leaders in the public
ownership party of that city, came
to Kansas City on Tuesday from a
visit to Mr. Hryan at Lincoln, where
the intentions of the delegation had
been laid before the Xebraskan
statesman.
Mr. Hryan, it was stated, had ex
pressed sympathy with the move
ment, if he had not gone so far as to
support it. At the conference there
were represented populists of all per
suasions, public ownership was ad
vocated, and free silverites, single
taxers and llryan democrats were in
attendance. It was stated that it
was proposed to form a third party
in Missouri, which should finally be
taken up by t*he dissatisfied in the
old parties from other states. A
committee, which represented each
element present, submitted the fol
lowing set of resolutions as the oew
party's principles, and they were
adopted:
"Public ownership of all public
utilities .as railroads, telegraph, etc.
While awaiting the legislation neces
sary to secure public ownership
thi-re should be rigid control of
freight and jvisse tiger rates and
severe penalties for rebates and oth
er discriminations by railroads. Tax
ation of railroads and other public
utility corporations in the same pro
portion as the value of farm ana
other property. Direct legislation
by the initiative and referendum, to
the end that the people may initiate
good legislation and veto bad legisla
tion. A graduated income tax, to
the end that wealth which receives
government protection shall bear its
just share oi the cost of the govern
ment. That whatever is used as
money shall lie full legal tender, is
sued by the government in sufficient
volume for business purposes, and
that volume fixed in proportion to
population. Just- election laws
throughout the state. Home rule
for citizens and abolition of the pres
ent system of using the police as a
standing army to carry primary elec
tions in the interest of dishonest poli
ticians representing still more dis
honest special privileged corpora
tions. Election of I nited States
senators by popular vote."
The committee decided to call a
state convention for some time next
fall. Headquarters -will be estab
lished both at Carthage and St. Louis
and the committee will appoint a
chairman of each county in the state,
whose duty it will be to enlist mem
bers and organize them into county
clubs.
Mr. Merriwether, at the conclusion
of the conference, was asked: "Will
not your movement only result in
turning the state over to the repub
licans? '
"1 do not know, but I would rather
the republicans would win than the
present organization of democrats.
As Mr. Hryan said to me last Monday,
I like an enemy under his own col
ors better than one who steals my
colors."
Atlanta, Ga., June 20.—'1 he At
lanta Constitution, in response to an
inquiry, has received a dispatch from
W. J. Hryan denying that he is af
filiated with the third party move
ment.
THE RED MEN'S MEMORIAL.
Tliry Afck (lie President to Delay llie
IftKiianer or a Proclamation Opening
Their Land* (o Settlement.
Washington, June 20.—Ex-Con
gressman Springer, who is counsel
for the Kiowa, Comanche and Apache
Indians in their suit. to enjoin the
secretary of the interior from open
ing up to settlement their reserva
tions in Oklahoma, has filed with the
president a memorial praying that he
exercise his discretion under the
law and withhold the issuance of his
proclamation for six months after
the final allotments to the Indians
are made, and thus give congress an
opportunity to repeal the present
la w.
The memorial says that Lone Wolf,
one of the chiefs of the Iviowas, is
a Haptist minister and that others of
the Indians are Christians and prays
that the president will not send these
men back to ten the members of
their tribes that a Christian country
•would defraud them «>f their lands.
Mr. Springer says that if the lower
court refuses an injunction the case
will be carried to the supreme court
•of the United States.
A Gre»t ! clieme—on Paper.
Denver, CoV, June 20.—The Times
says: A gigantic scheme is under
way to transfer the railroads of the
1 nited States to the government. A
western financier declares that with
in a few years the Rockefeller, llar
rinian, V.mdcrbilt, Gould and Mor
gan interests would turn over to the
government every line of the rail
ways in the country, the government
to pay the total value of $10,000,-
009,000.
struck Oil.
Xiles, Mich., June 20.—A copious
fi»w of crude petroleum has been dis
covered on the farm of W. W. St ev
ent, about six miles northwest of this
city, during the sinking of an arte
sian well. Dudley Shirley, a South
Bend, Ind., prospector, at once se
cured leases of (500 acres of land, in
cluding the Stevens farm, and will
begin drilling for oil. The flow of
crude oil from the Stevens well is
steady, and indications point to an
inexhaustible supply. The discov
ery of the oil has excited tho funn
els in the vicinity.
IN A DEATH TRIP.
Fourteen People are Said to
Have Perished.
FIREWOItKS EXPLODED.
Ail Appalling Catastrophe at
Paterson, N. J.
TENEMENT HOUSE ABLAZE.
Ten FamllieN Occupied KOOIIIK in tlin
Itiilldinu UcMtroyed—VlctlniM Were
SCitlier I rcmated or Sulfuraled- Fire
men Injured b> a Falling Wall.
Xew York, June 22.—Fourteen peo
ple are believed to have been killed
and a number injured as the result
of a fire following an explosion
among a quantity of fireworks in the
store of Abraham M. Hittenburg, at
l'aterson, X. J., on Friday. The
cause of the explosion is not known
and the property loss will not ex
ceed $35,000. The killed were:
Mrs. Lucinda Adainson.
Mrs. Charles Williams, burned try
ing to rescue husband.
Charles Williams, a cripple.
Harold Itittenburg, is months old,
son of the keeper of the fireworks
store; Henry Hlsasser, six weeks old.
Mrs. Hert Hamber.
Mrs. Annie Lannigan.
Josepit Klvin. 2 weeks old, child of
Mrs. Andrew Klvin.
Those missing and certainly dead
are:
Charles Hamber, (5 months, child of
above.
Mrs. Andrew Elvin was in the
house and has not been seen since the
explosion.
Mrs. Mary Elsasser.
Mrs. Hums, not seen since the
explosion and known to have been in
the house.
Clarence burns, (> weeks old, son of
above.
Mrs. Ann Fcnterman, not seen since
explosion and known to have been in
the house.
Two nephews of Mrs. Lannigan
were with tier wtien she entered her
rooms.
The explosion occurred shortly
after noon and many of the occu
pants of tin- building were out at din
ner. The building in which the ex
plosion occurred was a frame tene
ment, four stories high, with stores
on the ground floor. The middle
store was occupied by Kittenberg.
Ten families occup'ujd flats in the
building. So groat was the force of
the explosion mat a boy playing in
the street naif a block away was lift
ed from his feet and hurled against
an iron fence. One of his legs was
broken. A trolley car was directly
in front of the building when the ex
plosion occurred. The burst of
flame blown out into the street
scorched the sides of the car and
singed the hair of the passengers.
A number of those who were on
the upper floors of the bunding when
the explosion took place were either
stunned and then burned to death, or
found escape cut off and were suffo
cated. After the first explosion there
was a series of smaller ones and
then came a second big explosion
which was muffled and probably oc
curred in the cellar. Every window
seemed to be emitting flames within
a minute after the first explosion. A
woman, her clothing on tire, leaped
out of one of the windows and fell to
the yard below. Her dead body was
dragged out of reach of the flames,
but the flesh was roasted and dropped
from the bones. She proved to be
Mrs. Williams.
Mrs. Williams* husband was a crip
pie. llis wife is supposed to have
remained longer than she could with
safetv in an effort to save him. He
was found burned to a crisp on his
bed.
Some of the occupants of the
rooms dropped from the windows and
were bruised. Others hung from the
windows until the firemen came and
20 persons were taken down in this
way through the fire and smoke by
the firemen, while others dropped
into life nets.
Daniel Dooley, who was in the yard
when the explosion took place, saw
the two Kittenberg children in the
rear room anil rushed into' the flames
for them. He got one of them and
carried it out and tried togo back
for the other, but the room was one
mass of fire and he was too late. 11c
was badly scorched in rescuing the
first child.
While the rescues were going on
the firemen were fighting the flames.
Cap:. Allen led with a hose line in
an effort to keep the fire from the
upper floors, where it was said many
were pinned in. The men had hard
ly taken their positions and begun on
the sidewalk to throw water into the
upper floors when, without any warn
ing. the whole tipper part of the
building above them sagged outward
and feli. The captain and two of
his men were buried under the blaz
ing debris. One of the men is badly
hurt. The building is entirely de
stroyed.
Kittenberg was arrested pending an
investigation. In the debris was
found the head <>f a man or a woman.
The hair is burned off and the fea
tures unrecognizable. The remainder
of the body has not been found. The
bodies taken out thus far are al
most unrecognizable and are burned
and torn by the fire and the collapse
of the timbers of the building.
A»NuN«liia ted.
Yokohama. June 22. Hoshi Torn,
who was minister of communication
in the last Ito cabinet, was stabbed
yesterday at a meeting of the city
assembly and died shortly after
wards. Hoshi Torn was at one time
.Japanese minister at Washington.
The assassination is supposed to have
been due to polities.
ImprpNiMMl I'pnn iria Notice.
The various features for -which the Lacka
wanna Railroad has become noted are in
voluntarily impressed upon the notice of
the passenger, who realizes the luxury of
hotel or club appointment in the electric
lights; the smooth-running journals of the
wheels; the extraordinary cleanliness made
possible by the use of anthracite coal, avoid
ing all dust and nauseating smoke; the
consciousness of being always on time—
which comforts force an ease of mind and
body most favorable to the enjoyment of
the unsurpassed scenery through which its
lines pass. It is but the natural sequence
that the Lackawanna is prosperous in like
degree to its excellence of service, and its
warm friends are equal in number to its
whole list of patrons, for once to test its
service means an ardent admirer and friend
earned for the road.—Van Ktten iJreese.
Colli K 'loo Far.
"This reckless speculation must be
stopped," said the earnest citizen to the
trust magnate.
"Indeed it must," agreed the latter. "In
deed, it must. Why, yesterday two or three
fellows who are not in our crowd at all
made several thousand dollars by taking
flyers. That sort cf thing wol'C do."—i'ul
tiraore American.
Help Wanted.
When we cannot find what we need close
at hand, we must carry our research fur
ther afield, nor must we hesitate to insti
tute an inquiry for same where we i.ope it
may be found, but act as did Mr. I'. T. Mc-
Kenny, of Newton, Indiana, who wrote:
"One-half bottle of your Lotion has done me
great good for a bad eruption on one of
my ankles of nearly three years standing.
Nothing I had before tried had benefited
me. In what nearby town can I find it'!"
If your own druggist hasn't it, send at once
to Solon Palmer. 374 Pearl St., New York,
for samples of Palmer's Lotion and Lotion
Soap.
I)nniter In Old Saylnjgn.
"What a fine head your boy has," said an
admiring friend.
"Yes," replied the fond father, "he's a
chiy of the old block—ain't you, mvboy?"
"Yes, father; teacher said yesterday that
I was a young blockhead." Stories.
Do Voor Feet Ache and Ilurnf
Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-Ease,
a powder for the feet. It makes tigiit or New-
Shoes Feel Easy, Cures Corns, Itching,
Swollen, Hot, Callous, Smarting, Sore and
Sweating Feet. All Druggists and Shoe
Stores sell it, 25c. Sample sent FKKK. Ad
dress, Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y.
The liag-Time Favorite.—"Who is that
quiet individual whom the guests seem to
avoid?" "Oh, he's a famous composer of
classical music." "And that young man
who seems to be the lion of the evening?"
"Why, he's a rag-time piano player."—Ohio
State Journal.
When a mad dog gets after you it's liy*
time. —Chicago Daily News.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Boar Signature of
Sec Fac-Slmilc Wrapper Below.
, ———r -j
Very small cad as easy
to take as sogar.
IRTA HEADACHE,
I*Am trio FOR DIZZINESS.
gPITTLE F£3H BILIOUSNESS.
LLVFR FOR TORPID LIVER.
HPI LL? FOH CONSTIPATION.
M R, WM 9 ' FOR SALLOW SKIM.
IMFFFFFF FOR THE COMPLEXION
FjJm I OBTOtJIB ..r™.™.
25 cants I Purely Ve#ctaMo v /<aS*v»>(Psw<:
' CURE SICK HEADACHE.
i
A feature of the G & I Tire is its special design K
of corrugated tread —will not slip on wet pavement B
or muddy roaJs—safest to buv and safest to ride, w
Detachable—no tools necessary to repair it. If the K
best is none too good for you,CJ & J 'l'ircs arc the I
kind you want. Catalogue free.
(i & J TIKE COMPANY. Indianapolis, Ind.
MM —B
FRAGRANT
a perfect liquid dentifrice for the
Tesfh and Mouth
New Size SOZODONT LIQUID, 25c SF® «
SOZODONTTOOTH POWDGR, 25c Jff »
Urge LIQUID and POWDER, 75c fen
At all Stores, or by Mail for the price.
HALL&RUCKEL. New York.
In 3 or 4 Years aa Independence Is Assured
EM'ftT.1 1 1 112 ><"' t*ko up vour homes
tf lin N\ ef*iem Canada, the
i lareraj t n a|ipli( . alio!l Ut tho .
l"n«lcrviirnert. who will mail vor atlases. pamphlets,
ct".. free of cost. K. I'ICDLEV. supt. of Immoral,
t lon, Ottawa. I n nn da ; M.V.McIN N KS. No. 'J M wr i i 1
Hlk . Mntroit. Mich : K. T. HOLMES, Uoom G, Bi»:
hour Bid#., ludiauapolis. lud.