Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, November 07, 1901, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRiSS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Per year t! 00
If paid In advance 1 "0
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rate of
•ae dollar per square for one insertion and fifty
tents per square for each subsequent insertion
Rates by the year, or for six or three month*,
•re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legal and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less. >2: each subsequent inser
tion 10 cents per square.
Local notices lu cents per line for one inser
tertloni 5 cents per line for each aubsequeul
aonsecutlve 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. S5 per year;
ever live lines, at lha regular rates of adver
tising.
No local inserted for lesi than 75 cents per
Uaue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PRKSS IS complete
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW
PRINTING.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the option ot the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
Cor In advance.
Commenting on the amount of *T
penditure of trolley system in larga
cities the United States Investor
points out that in Brooklyn the larg
est sum was paid during the fiscal
year of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit
Co. of all the large cities of the Uni
ted States. It was $1,143,062. New
York followed with $700,000.
The north has had 16 presidents and
ti.e south nine. No president has ever
been elected from the territory west
of the Mississippi river. Only two of
the southern states, Virginia and Ten
nessee, have ever furnished presidents.
Northern men have occupied the exe
cutive office about 6.'! years, southern
men about 5.5 years, taking it for
granted that President Roosevelt will
serve out his term.
In London they have a street lamp
•which provides a stream of boiling
■water and dispenses tea, coffee and
cocoa. The iieat of the lamp warms
the water and by dropping a cent in
the slot a gallon of boiling water may
the lind. Two cents hyou i.li! 1 ?,
tmgar, tea, coffee, etc. The light and
fc' ilt arc provided by the city, which
ifO-operates with a private corpora
tion that furnishes the rest.
A member of congress has signified
his intention of offering a bill in con
gress to have the name of the l'hilio
7>ine Islands changed to MeKinJey Is
lands, and to have the stamps sur
charged McKinley. This would not
change the individual names of The
islands, such us Luzon, Saniar, I'anay,
etc. It is said that there will be n<>
effective opposition, and that the bill
is quite certain to become a law.
Statistics published in Derlin re
garding the results of open-air treat
ment of tuberculosis show that the
utmost success has attended the new
method. In Hanover out of 142 cases
J2l have been declared cured. In Sa»
ony, a country in which consumption
is very prevalent, out of 98 patients
over 60 have lie en cured. In liaden
the open-air treatment in the pine
woods has resulted in 205 cures out of
240 cases.
The possibilities of the wireless tele
graph mechanism as a meons of com
munication on the ocean are constant
ly being revealed and new achieve
ments recorded. The steamer Cam
pania, which arrived in New York
from Liverpool and Queenstown the
other day, after a rougrh voyage, re
ported that she was in communica
tion with the unseen Lucania, her sis
ter ship, for five hours on the night
of Tuesday, October 22.
If Dr. Schitlz, health commissioner
of Milwaukee, can carry out his ideas,
kissing in that city will undergo a
marked decrease. The commissioner
has become an ardent advocate to the
germ theory, and fears that too inii h
kissing will contribute to the propa
gation of disease. For the present
Dr. Sehulz confines himself to con
sumptive or those suspected of hav
ing that disease. Such persons are
asked not to indutee in osculation.
The czar lias .just sanctioned a re
markable engineering project— thu
raising of the surface of the water of
the Sea of Azof 14 feet 0 inches, by
building a dam near Kerteh, 9 miles
long. In the wall immense sea gates
are to be made for the passage of
ships. There will also be outlets for
the snperfioits water. The cost will
he about $25,000,000, the interest, on
which will be paid by the ships trad
ing to the Azof.
The tallest chimney in America was
completed but a short, time ago at
Constable Hook, N. .1., and in it is
found a safe solution of the smoke
nuisance with which every city has to
cope. This great smokestack is 116.)
feet high, ltencuth the ground the
foundation is 15 feet deep and 45 feet
square. Beneath the foundation sev
eral hundred piles were driven. The
40t,al cost of material and construc
tion was $50,000. The diameter at
the bottom is 30 fset, at the top It
feet.
Ma.j. Lee Richardson, a prominent
Delta planter, has launched a unique
movement to revolutionize the cot
ton picking industry. Finding it im
possible to harvest the season's crvp
on acocunt of the great scarcity of
Jfesrro labor, lie made arrangements
•with an old Choctaw Indian chief ill
one of the interior counties to import
a large number of Indian braves to
the Delta, and' the experiment has
proved such a success that the did
chief has been sent back to bring an
other squad.
IRISIWTEIE
Report of the Commissary
General.
IT COST MILLIONS.
Expenditures for Year Wero
$15,022,228.
TROOrS WELL SITPLIED.
Nrnrly 100,000 PrrnoiiK, Civilian*,
Knlilierii uiwl I*ri»oii< a r«, Were Cared
for in tiie l'liilli|>|iiiir« Division Iroiu
a It use 7,000 Mile* llialaut.
Washington, Nov. 2.—The report of
Gen. John F. Weston, commissary
general of subsistence, shows that
the total expenditures fur the
subsistence of the army during the
fiscal year were $15,622,228. The re
ceipts for the sales of subsistence
stores during the same period were
$3,290,234. An interesting- feature of
the report is a statement from Col.
Woodruff, chief commissary of the
army in the Philippines, in which he
says:
During the first three months of
the period covered by this report
stores here had, from various causes,
become greatly reduced, but owing
to the grand response made by the
commissary general to every call
from this otflee and the energetic ac
tion of the purchasing commissaries
in San Francisco and New York, this
was speedily corrected, and this divis
ion was soon supplied as no other
army of its size has ever been sup
plied in the world's history.
During the period covered by this
report the be supplied
extended from the great wall of
China on the north to the island of
Borneo on the south and the island of
Guam on the east, 'There were 4SO
stations in this archipelago, besides
the troops jn China and the prison
ers in lluani.
In addition to the 6(5.000 troops an r l
3,000 officers in this division, the sulp
sistence department supplied the deli
cacies for the sick, rations for 4,000
prisoners of war, 1.800 marines, many
of the stores for the navy, rations
for 1,000 civilian employes and sales
stores for the army, navy and marine
officers, Philippine commission and
attaches, and Americans employed by
the army and by the government in
its treasury, post office, interior and
educational departments, metropoli
tan police, nat've police and scouts,
transports, etc. In other words,
nearly 100.000 persons, occupying a
country almost destitute of meat and
vegetables, or rather food supplies
suitable for Americans, were sup
plied largely from a single base, 7,000
miles distant.
He denies any illegal purchases of
champagne, and says that the pur
chases that were made were neces
sary for sick and debilitated troop 3
who purchased it at 82 cents a pint.
Gen. Weston's report deals quite
extensively with the Chinese cam
paign, and quotes from officers who
•were in that expedition to show that
the troops were well supplied.
Injured In a Wreck.
Little Rock, Ark., Xov. 2. —The
westbound passenger train on the
Little Hock & Fort Smith railroad,
which left Little Rock for Fort Smith
at 8:45 o'clock Friday morning, was
telescoped at Mayflower by a west
bound freight train. The rear coach
of the passenger train was demol
ished and six passengers were in
jured. A. T. Osborn, of Hot Springs,
Ark., received serious injuries. B. K.
I'ligh, New York; C. A. Ault, Little
Rock; C. J. Tumptin, Peaksville, Mo.;
Miss Nellie Randell, Conway, Ark.,
and Rev. ,T. H. Smith, colored, of
Waco, Tex., were slightly hurt.
<'onvlrte<l of .Tliirder.
Toronto, Ont., Xov. 2. —Fred Lee
Rice was convicted here Friday on
the charge of murdering William
Boyd. IJice is the only survivor of
the notorious trio of Aurora bank
burglars. The murder occurred on
June 4 last. Boyd and another con
stable were escorting the three pris
oners to the jail when some one
threw two loaded revolvers into their
carriage. In the desperate fight for
liberty which followed Constable
Boyd was shot through the head. The
other two robbers are dead. Jones
was killed in the tig"ht in which Officer
Boyd was killed and Rutledge com
mitted suicide.
Preparing for \V«r.
Paris, Xov. 2. —"The sultan has or
dered the completion with all speed
of yie defences at Salonika. Smyrna
and the entrance to the Dardanelles,"
says the Constantinople correspon
dent. of the Echo De Paris. "Sub
marine mines will be placed and
troops mobilized at points where dis
embarkations are likely. A violent
anti-French feeling prevails and fears
are felt for the safety of the French
residents in Turkish cities, Con
stantinople excepted."
I.nw i« I'liroimlitiilloiiul.
Columbus, 0., Xov. 2. —The supreme
court Friday declared unconstitu
tional the teachers' pension law un
der which public school teachers in
the city of Toledo are assessed 1 per
cent, of the annual salaries for the
purpose of maintaining a fund for
the assistance of retired instructors.
The law was held to be special legis
lation. 'I lii- decision applies to sim
ilar laws in Cleveland, Cincinnati
and elsewhere.
« ill Sl:* Thro I.
Milwaukee, Nov. 2. —William Raash
stabbed his wife twice with a pell
knife Friday and then cut his own
throat. The woman will recover bill
Raash will die. The two had not
been living together for some tinu*.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1901.
SANTOS-DUMONT'S AIR SHIP MOTOR.
This Is the motor In the airship with w hlch the plucky inventor, M. Santos-Du
mont, has been striving for the Dtutsch prize at Paris for a dirigible balloon.
FORTY VESSELS.
The Xavjr Department Will Auk t'oii"
lircM to I'rovlde lor Their Construc
tion.
Washington, Nov. 2.—Over and
above the four warships for which
congress directed him last session to
prepare plans as a basis for appro
priation at Hie next session, Secre
tary Long - has before him the recom
mendations of the board of naval con
struction, looking to authorization by
congress of the 'building' of 40 more
naval vessels of all classes, from bat
tleships down to tug boats. The
plans for the two armored cruisers
and two battleships, projected by
congress last session, already have
been prepared and look to the con
struction of about 16,000 ton battle
ships and 14,000 ton cruisers. The
battleships and cruisers additional to
these which the construction board
proposes probably will be of about
the same size and general type. The
board's complete plan is: •
Three seagoing battleships of about
16,000 tons displacement. Two ar
mored cruisers of about 14,500 tons
displacement. Six gunboats of
about 200 tons. Two colliers of about
15,000 tons. One repair ship of about
7,500 tons. Six training ships of about
2,000 tons. Four picket boats of
about 650 tons. Four tugboats.
While the above appears to be a start
ling' amount of naval construction to
recommend to congress, it is stated
that it. is after all nearly a repetition
of the program submitted to that
body through Secretary Long by the
construction board last year, and is
even smaller than the aggregate ton
age proposed to be authorized by the
general or Dewey board.
ELEVEN DEAD.
Aa » Ilrmilt of the Administration of
Diphtheria Antl-toxlu Kleven < bli
rt ren Die of Lockjaw.
•St. Louis, Nov. 2.—The list of
deaths attributed to lockjaw as a re
sult of the administration of diph
theria anti-toxin manufactured by
the city chemist, now numbers eleven,
two more deaths'being reported Fri
day. Eleven other children are re
ported to the health department as
suffering from lockjaw, with slight
chances for recovery. The cause of
lockjaw in each case is said to be
poisoning from the city's diphtheria
anti-toxin.
The health department has now
begun the free distribution of teta
nus anti-toxin for injection into the
blood of diphtheria patients who have
been inoculated with the infected
serum and thus exposed to lockjaw.
The investigation ordered bv the
city coroners to determine positively
the cause of the deaths of the eight
<4iildren who are alleged to have died
of lockjaw following the administra
tion of the city anti-toxin is being
pushed and it is expected it will be
completed in a few days. Three of
the most experienced bacteriologists
in St. Louis are making tests with the
anti-toxin and the serum taken from
u»e spinal columns of the dead chil
dren.
A it ace for Liil'c.
Chicago. Nov. 2. —Bight children, ac
companied by their parents, ended a
1,500 mile race for life last evening at
the Chicago Pasteur institute. An
other child will arrive to-day. The
youngsters, ranging in age from 4 to
!) years, came from Colorado Springs,
Col., where they were bitten last Sun
day by a dog affected with the rab
bies. Fearing hydrophobia their
parents began the long journey to
have their children treated. The
victims were met at the institute by
Dr. A. Logorio, who administered the
first injection of serum.
Flooded by a Cloud bur«t.
Rosswell, N. M., Nov. 2.—The town
of Rosswell was flooded Friday by a
cloudburst. The water on Main
•street was three feet deep. V<> loss
of life has been reported so far but
several buildings have been washed
away.
Melr to a Fortune.
Middletown, X. V., Nov, 2.—Miss
Sadie Winslow, daughter of a poor
farmer at Sackett's Lake, has fallen
heir to a fortune of $125,000 through
the death of her uncle, John Winslow,
of Los Angeles, C'al.
AN AM i HASH.
Local Freight and Work
Train Collide.
TWO MEN WERE KILLED
Two Fatally Injured and
Eleven Others Hurt.
RUNNING AT HIGH SPEED,
The Freight Crashed Into the Work
Train ut Flymotith, Ind.—Not One
of the Crew Kmcaped Injury—Bad
Wreck ou Pennsylvania Itoad.
Valparaiso, Ind.. Nov. 2. —Two men
were instantly killed and a dozen
others injured in a collision at Plym
outh, Friday evening between a local
freight on the Pennsylvania road and
a work train of the Clifford Construc
tion Co., of this city. The dead:
Joseph Clifford, of the Clifford Con
struction Co., Valpariso.
Conductor Tompkins, of the work
train. v
Fatally injured: Charles Coyer,
of the Clifford company; Brakeman
Johnson.
The accident occurred at the bot
tom of a steep hill. The local freight,
running at high speed, crashed into
the work train, which consisted only
of a locomotive and caboose, in which
were the crew of 15 men. The cars
and locomotives were smashed into
bits and the dead and mangled under
the wreckage. Wrecking trains from
Plymouth, Chicago and Fort Wayne
started immediately for the scene.
Trains on the Pennsylvania railroad
were delayed for several hours. Xot
a man of the work train crew escaped
uninjured, and it is feared several of
them are fatally hurt.
Boiler Blew Cp.
'Pittsburg, Nov. 2.—A Lake Shore
& Michigan Southern locomotive,
leased by the Pittsburg & Lake Erie
road, blew up Friday night near Sha
nopin station, killing Harry Walters,
of Sheraden, Pa., and severely injur
ing F. Sullivan, of Cleveland; ' W. 11.
Porter, of Ashtabula, and 15. S. Joy,
of Youngstown. Walters was a Pitts
burg & Lake Erie engineer, who was
j piloting the Lake Shore <Sr Michigan
Southern crew. Of the injured Sul-
I livan, who is badly scalded and suffer
ing from shock, may die.
$142,161,200 for Pension?,
Washington. Nov. 2.—'The PStiiYiate
for the expenditures of the interior
department during the fiscal year be
ginning next July will aggregate $170,-
000,000, of which $142,161,200 is asked
for pensions and the administrative
■work of the pension bureau, $1,964,-
720 being for salaries of the bureau
personnel and $:S50,000 for the inves
tigations by special examiners of pen
sion cases.
Killed tile Marshal.
Prescott, Ark.. Nov. 2. 11. C. Cox,
city marshal of Prescott,was shot and
killed by Charles Levy, colored, Fri
day afternoon. Cox attempted to
arrest Levy on a trivial charge. Levy
escaped. Citizens generally closed
their stores and officers arming them
selves, started in pursuit of the
negro.
Dying front Smallpox.
'Sioux City, la., Nov. 2. —Late re-,
ports from the Winnebago Indian
I reservation in Nebraska are that sli
of the 1,000 Indians on the agency
have died of small pox, which is epi
j demic there, and as the medical force
'of the reservation is limited the
disease threatens the destruction of
the entire tribe.
No New ('»«•«,
Glasgow, Nov. 2.—N'o additional
eases of the plague had been official
ly reported up to a late hour Friday
night. Two hundred employes of the
Central Station hotel are confined to
J the hotel for observation.
ADULTERATION A SCIENCE.
Defective Work of the KnglUli (iov
«rinncii( Laboratory During lUe Paul
V rn r, ,
The principal chemist of the gov
ernment laboratory has presented his
report on the work of that depart
ment for the past year. Of the sam
ples of tea submitted 252, represent
ing 2,062 packages, were refused ad
mission for home consumption on the
ground that they contained exhaust
ed leaves, -were unsound or were
mixed with sand or other substances
within the meaning of the act, says
the Leeds Mercury.
The 3,828 samples of finished beer
taken from 1,586 publicans were ana
lyzed, and 598 or 15.6 per cent, o'f
the samples were found to have been
tampered with, either by having been
diluted or by the illegal addition of
sugar. The present year shows an
increase of 1,442 samples, but the re
sult of the xmalyses, generally, af
fords no evidence of any falling off
In the practice of diluting beer.
The quantity of tobacco cleared for
home consumption and 'the average
amount consumed per head were 81,-
116,999 pounds and 2 pounds in 1899;
80,955,037 pounds and 1 pound 15%
ounces in 1900, and 83,561,083 pounds
and 2 pounds Vi ounce in 1901. Fig
ures of exported cigars and cigar
ettes are remarkable us showing liow
increasingly popular is the practice
pf smoking cigarettes, and they also
show that the consumption of British
made cigars is increasing abroad.
Eleven adulterated samples of to
bacco were found to contain licorice
or glycerine.
Legal were taken in
35 eases in respect of samples ana
lyzed for the protection of the rev
enue. The penalties imposed
amounted to £3,766, in addition to
which tobacco . the value of £277
was forfeited s containing an illegal
ingredient or an excessive percentage
of oil or water; 142 of the cases were
disposed of in court, and in 139 re
sulting In penalties amounting to
£1,689, the analysts attending to
give evidence. The other c.ses were
settled by the board of inland rev
enue for compromise fines amount
ing to £2,077, the defendants in 15
cases preferring to pay the full pen
alty.
For diluting or adulterating beer
130 persons paid penalties amounting
to £2,574.
The considerable increase in the
number of samples examined for the
homo oflice was largely due to the
work in progress in connection with
the use of lead compounds in the
manufacture of pottery. The total
samples examined under this head
numbered 195, of which 91 samples
were fruits submitted by various
firms under home office regulations
for the determination of the propor
tion of readily soluble lead.
A Little Knowledge, Etc.
The possession of a little legal law
is like the possession of a revolver;
its timely use may be a great protec
tion to a man, while its abuse, on the
other hand, may get him into the
most serious kind of trouble. Rut,
if he applies discreetly, and careful
ly, his knowledge of the law, he will
not only be relieved of the necessity
■of employing a lawyer, in many in
stances where one would otherwise
be needed, but he will be able to
greatly facilitate the work of the
lawyer when he is called in.—Gen. B.
F. Tracy, in Success.
Plenty of < liuuee for Her.
He had been reading about the
woman who kept house on $2.70 a
week and still had so much trouble
with her husband that she was about
to apply for a divorce.
"Do you believe it?" he asked.
"Why not?" inquired his compan
ion.
"Oh, it looks to me a good deal
like a matrimonial advertisement. A
young woman—and she is young—
who can keep house on $2.70 a week
certainly won't have to be w'thout
a husband long."—Chicago Post.
Mrs. Ellen Ripley, Chaplain Ladies Aid,,
Grand Army of the Republic, No. 7, 222
10th Ave., N. E., Minneapolis, Minn.,
Strongly Endorses Lydia E. Pinkham's-
Vegetable Compound.
"DEAR MRS. PINKHAM : —Your Vegetable Compound cured me
of ulceration of the womb, and getting such a complete cure I felt that
the medicine had genuine merit and was well worth recommending
to other sick women.
" For fifteen years I have been your friend. I have never written you
before, but I have advised hundreds of women to take your medicine, in
fact it is the only real reliable remedy I know of for a sick woman,
" I have not yet found a case of ovarian or womb trouble whicF*.
has not been relieved or cured by the faithful use of Eydia E..
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
" You have brought health to hundreds of women in Minneapolis as
you have no doubt to others over the country."— MßS. ELLEN RIPLEV.
SSOOO FORFF.IT IF THE ABOVE LETTER IS NOT GENUINE.
When women arc troubled with irregular or painful menstruation,
weakness, leucorrhcea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bear
ing-down feeling, _ inflammation of the ovaries, backache, flatulence.,
general debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration, they should
remember there is one tried and true remedy. Eydia E. Pinkliam'a
Vegetable Compound at onee removes such troubles.
No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and.
unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures
of female troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine.
Pnrndlne for Spopfnm^n,
To him who knows not where togo, ther»
can be no better place suggested titan the
l'ocono mountains, lying rn the northeast*
ern part of Pennsylvania, along Uit t>eauti
ful Delaware river. Whether you go for
health, or sport, you can hardly experience
the latter without acquiring the former.
The elevation of the mountains varies from
1,600 to 2,000 feet, and are one dense growth
of jiine and fir trees. Deer, bear and other
large game are plentiful, and though the
region is visited Dy thousands of sportsmen
every year, there seems to be no n ticeablo
decrease in the attractions offered. The
Focono mountain hotels, camps and game
preserves are readily accessible by the
Lackawanna Kailroad, the great trunk line
between New York and the Great Lakes. •
Truth In Ad vertlitlngr.
Mr. (lettit—Well, that place where w»
boarded this summer advertised the truth,
anvwav.
Mr. Haz7.it—lndeed? That was a novelty.
Yes, sir; it advertised: 'Summer boaici—
era taken in/ " —Detroit Free Press.
An Incomplete lloune,
We run wild over the furnishings of x
house; its furniture, carpets, hangings, pic
tures and music, and always forget or neg
lect the most important requisite. Some
thing there should be always on the shelf
to provide against sudden casualties or at
tacks of pain. Such come like a thief in
the night; a sprain, strain, sudden backache,
toothache or neuralgic attack. There is
nothing easier to get than a bottle of St.
Jacobs Oil, and nothingsurer to cure quick
ly any form of pain. The house is incom
plete without it. Complete it with a good
supply.
Knoirledgp and Speech.
„."One great trouble," said Uncle Ebeir,
'is dat when a man is smaht enough to
say anyfing wuf hearin' he is also smabt
enough not to talk much."—Washington.
Fost.
2nre of the Complexion.
Many persons with delicate skin suffer
greatly in winter from chapping. Fre
quently the trouble arises from the use 01.
impure soap and cheap salves. The face;
and hands should be washed only in clear,
hot water with Ivory soap. A little mutton
tallow or almond oil may be used after the
bath to soften the skin. ' ELIZA It. PARKER.
A Smart DOR.
A gentleman advertising for a lost dog
says the animal answers to the name of
Nancy, living or dead. That's a smart dog.
—Tacoma Ledger,
Beat for the Bowels.
No matter what ails you, headache to a
cancer, you will never get well until your
bowels are put right. Cascarets help nature,
cure you without a gripe or pain, produce
easy, natural movements, cost you just 10
cents to start getting your health back.
Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put
up in metal boxes, every tablet nas C. C. CY
stamped on it. Beware of imitations.
It Seemed So.
Strawber—Was her father willing to help
you out?
Singerly—That's the way he acted.—Town
and Country.
To Cnre it Cold In One Dny
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c-
Hl» First Hour In the Country.
Mother—Why, baby, what's the matter?
Baby (who has been stung by a bumble
bee) —The automobile-bug bit ine.—Judge.
Hale's Honey of Ilorehound and Tar re
lieves whooping cough.
Fike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute-
Foreigner—"ln American polities I un
derstand the office seeks the man." Amer
ican—"That's all wrong! A representative-
American wouldn't have an office that
sought him."—Ohio State Journal.
A kind heart is a fountain of gladness,
making everything in its vicinity freshen
into smiles. —Washington Irving.
I am sure Piso's Cure for
saved my life three years ago.—Mrs. Thos-
Robbins, Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y.,.
Feb. 17, 1900.
It is easy to convince a woman, but she
will not stay convinced. —Washington (la.)
Democrat.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color silk,,
wool or cotton perfectly at one boiling.
A boy's ides of revenge on his parents ia
to refuse to get his lessons at school.—
Atchison Globe.
The friend that fails us is better lost.—-
N. Y. Sun.
Bronchitis Can Be Cotcd
With Hoxsic's Croup Cure, speedily. 50 cts-
An old-fashioned remedy—sending for the
doctor.—Puck.