Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, February 06, 1902, Page 7, Image 7

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

    OUR DUTY TO CUBA.
The pence of Cuba is necessary to !
the peace of the United States; the
health of Cuba is necessary to the
health of the United States; the inde
pendence of Cuba is necessary to the
safety of the United States. The same
considerations which led to the war
with Spain now require that a com
mercial arrangement be made under
which Cuba can live.—Secretary Koot's
Report.
1 most, earnestly ask your attention !
to the wisdom, indeed, to the vital j
need, of providing for a substantial j
reduction in the tariff duties on Cuban j
Imports into the United States. Cuba j
has in her Constitution affirmed what j
we desired, that she should stand, in i
international matters, in closer and j
more friendly relations with us than
with any other power; and we are
bound by every consideration of honor j
and expediency to pass commercial
measures in the interest of her mate- !
rial well-being. President Roose
velt's Message.
Story of nr. Halle*.
Dr. William llailes, oft lie Albany Medi
cal college, is very fond of a joke, and can
give as well as take one. Among tiie stu
dents in anatomy is one who answers to
the somewhat unusual cognomen of Crow j
•—when he answers at all—for this student
was, as the doctor facetiously observed a
neck after the opening of collepe. when
for the first time he answered toll call,
a rare bird. After an unusually prolonged
period of abseneeism, the student present
ed himself the other day, and one of his
classmates tried to explain that he must
have been detained by a game of crjwkuet!
The racket which succeeded this remark
made no impression on the dretor. With
out heeding the diversion, he proceeded to '
exiircss his great pleasure at the wander
er's return, and then convulsed the class .
by quickly remarking: "Why I am <U
lighted to sec you, Mr. Crow, what is both
ering me is whether there is any necessary
connection between .ne absence of your
raws and the 'cav s' of your absence."—
Golden Days.
FROM SASKATCHEWAN, WEST
ERN CANADA.
In a letter written from Prince Al
bert, Saskatchewan, one of the dis- !
tricts of Western Canada, by Henry
Laughlin to Dr. C. T. Field, of Chase,
Michigan, and which appeared in the
Keed City (Michigan) "Clarion," ap
peared the following:
"If any one should ask you how I
like it up here, tell them lam pi rfect
l ly well satisfied; for me it is just the
t place. 1 have as good a piece of land j
< as ever laid out doors. Wouldn't ex
! change it for the whole of Lake county, I
or at least the township of Chase.
"Of course 1 have not been here |
very long, but as much of the country !
as 1 have seen, it cannot be beat any
where. We had as good crops here last
fall as I ever saw, and everything gets
ripe in good shape. We had as good
ripe potatoes as I ever ate in my life.
There is no better place for stock on j
j the continent than here. Horses and
cattle will do as good running out all j
winter here, as they do where they are
fed all winter there. Have built me a
residence and now all I want is a wife
to keep house for me. I have some
breaking already done on.my place, but
next summer I intend to have more
done and then I will be ready for busi
ness.
"We have had a very fine winter so
far. It has not been much below zero I
if any, except about a week in the mid- !
die of November. It has been quiti !
cold the past day or two. We are in
log s'.anties, and they are just mud
died up on the outside, and nothing-lias
frozen on the inside as yet. There is no
wind or rain, just nice steady weather
all the time."
Apply to any agent of the Canadian
Government.
The Wrong Number
The telephone girl and the bill clerk, to
whom she had promised her heart and hand,
were sitting m front of the fireplace talk
ing about the happy days to come when
they would be one. From one little detail
to another the talk finally drifted to the i
subject of lighting fires in the morning.
On this point the young man was decided.
He stated it as his emphatic opinion that it |
was a wife's place to get up and start the
fires and let her poor, hardworking husband
rest. After this declaration there was si
lence for the space of about three quarter!
of a second. Then the telephone girl thrust
out the finger encircled by her engagement
ring and murmured sweetly but firmly:
"King off, please. You have got connect
ed with the wrong number."—W. G. Jack
sun, in the Salt Lake Herald.
The Four Track Newn.
There i» much of education and enlight
enment in the dainty little monthly maga
zine, "The Four-Track .Sens," which comes
to us from tiie editori;U workshops of the
passenger department of tiie New York :
Central & Hudson Kiver llailroad Company. :
Its pages are filled with interesting matter
regarding travel, our expanding commerce, 1
and the development of our transportation j
facilit ier The January number is devoted 1
largely to California, the idea of the editor !
being to give special attention each month
to that portion of the world t:> which people !
\re at the time traveling. The leading ar
icle on this subject is "The Land of the ;
unset Sea," written by Luther L. Holden.
)ther interesting features are "Lgypt Then j
d Now." by (ieorge Fade; "Tnc P? i
nee of Reality," by Jane W. Guthrie; a 1
Hell of Hudson, New York, by IT. R. !
in, and much that is entertaining in !
> and well-edited departments. There :
Iso valuable contributions on the cut
■n of prunes, olives, grain and Sugar !
50 cents per year, 3 cents per copy* j
ss communications should be at!- ;
1 to George H. Daniels, Gtberal Pas- j
Agent, Grand Central station, New
**• '
Eflleacloun.
n't something be done, Maria," whis-
I the host, "to make the time pass more
<lyJ"
I'll try," whispered the hostess,
i'hen, turning to those near her, she said,
n a voice loud enough to be heard through
out the room, "in about half an hour from
now Miss ljowler will favor tiie company
with a song.—Chicago Tribune.
SALZER'S LIGHTNING CABBAGE.
This Is the earliest cabbwre in the world
«ntl a regular gold mine to themarUetuardcuer
•na farmer. . .
By the way, there is lots of
Utiijj money to be made ou e#r
««?t liest 'cabbage, beets, peas,
radishes, cucumbers and the
For lSe- and this Not !<?•
TtfTl TT the Jehu A. Sala;r Seed Co.,
Wis., will send
you liceir mammoth catalog
Hind 150 kinds of flower and vegetable seed*.
JisrketgarUeaetV catalog. He f/ot, tags, k.
HIGHWAYS IN EUROPE.
France I'robnbly Ilns the IIcm( I.nut
fur llnili<fnic anil ltt>i>uiriiiK
I'ubllc Hoikln.
Two knadred j'ears ago England
had the worst roads in the world, be
cause the peasantry living on the
roads alone were required to work
; them. In speaking- of them Maeauley
I says "that a route connecting two
great towns which have a large and
flourishing trade with each other
; should be maintained at the cost of
the rural population scattered be
! tween them is manifestly unjust. It
' was not until many toll "bars hud
; been violently pulled down, until the
i troops had in many instances been
forced to act against the people, and
until much blood had been shed that
a good system was introduced."
Every class now contributes to the
maintenance of the road system in
England. The French have probably
the most efficient laws and regula
tions in the world for the building
and repairing of highways. The min
ister of public works has the general
superintendence of all roads and
ways by land and by water. There
are four classes of road recognized
• by law, namely: (1) national, (~) de
partmental, (I!) military, (4) cross
| roads. National roads are built and
kept up by the national treasury.
Departmental roads are a charge
upon the departments through which
they pass, and part of the military
roads are kept up by the government
and a part by the departments
i through which the roads pass.
The cross roads are kept up by the
communes, though sometimes in
thinly populated regions these com
munes receive assistance from the
government, especially when these
roads become of importance.
The national roads are paved like
a street, having an average width of
52y g feet. The departmental roads
are 3!) feet wide, and the military and
cross roads are of variable width.
Piles of broken stone are placed at
convenient distances and a man is
| constantly employed in repairing each
section.—American Asphalt Journal.
CHESTNUT CULTURE.
Metlioilx Employed by n Peiiiinyl.
vnnin Gentleman Who Una
a Grove of —(>s Acren,
Coleman K. Sober, of Union county,
I'a., owns the largest chestnut grove
in the United States, says the Phila
delphia Press. It comprises 205
acres, with over 100,000 tsees. Mr.
Sober is a wealthy lumberman of
Lewisburg, whose object is to render
profitable the millions of acres of
wild mountain land in the common
wealth. When a boy of 12 he asked
his father, while grafting fruits, to
graft some young chestnut trees, but
was only laughed at. Five years
he carried out his boyish idea, on
| land too rough even for sheep pas
ture, the waste of lumbering opera
tions, on the sides of Irish valley,
eight miles from Shamokin. Pine and
oak were cut down a generation ago,
leaving chestnut standing. Cutting
these down, young shoots sprung up
which were grafted with scions of
Paragon, a crisp, sweet nut, five
times as large as the native chestnut.
This fall Mr. Sober harvested his first
crop, 30 bushels, worth $7 a bushel,
and in a few years his returns will
be by the thousands. In fact, the
estimate for next year is about 3,000
bushels, which, at SO, would be $lB,-
000, from land not worth $3 an acre
for farming purposes. Mr. Sober .lid
the first grafting himself, with a lit
tle assistance. The last two seasons
he employed eight grafters for five
weeks, each man averaging 300 trees
a day. Ninety per cent, of the grafts
were successful. The groves are pro
tected on two sides by "lire roads,"
arid all brush is carefully burn-ed.
Game chickens are kept to prey on
j the chestnut weevel, and sheep to
keep the grass down. Mr. Sober fa
vors transplanting seedlings rather
than planting nuts.
DURABLE FLOOD GATE.
—
Much Cheniter Tlimi (i, t . <)j,| \\ ay of
I'uttiiiK a Hock-Filled I'en on
Pwl> *l<le Of (lie Creek.
1 wish to explain the following io
the people that live along small
streams, who have trouble in keeping
their water gaps up. Take four ties,
mortice them half through near the
j middle in a slanting direction. P"t
I two of the tie* together so that they
: will fit tightly, then nail a atrip of
plank on each side of your frame SO
tbey cannot come past. Be careful in
I /Li O ITTIJ V. HM[_ l
1M,7 7sT a
ECONOMICAL FLOOD GATE.
cutting your tics so that when put to
gether they will be in the shape of a
, letter X. Fix both pairs alike, placing
a frame on each side of the creek, then
j gink them down in the bank or rock
! bar about a foot which makes them
I solid, then lay your pole between the
, forks of the ties and you are ready to
bang your gate. This is a m itch cheap
; eT gap than the old way of putting a
; pen on each side of the creek and fill
i ing it with rock.— Charles S. Keen, if?
i Epltomist.
CAMERON COUNTY PRKSS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6. 1902
HOW MTXK IS TAINTED.
I)lNU!«reenl>l> , < Vlavor f* line to IVeg
lected I'nninre Pleliln anil Care
leMNUi-MM of Milker*.
The most unpleasant taste of taint
ed milk which appears in a good deal
that is shipped to market in the fall
and winter is due lo a large extent to
the condition of the pasture fields and
the carelessness of the milkers. Noth
ing probably prejudices city people
more against drinking milk than to
taste this disagreeable flavor. Hairy
men who are careless in their methods
do a great deal to condemn milk as a
daily diet. More and more people are
coming to the conclusion that milk
forms the best diet provided by na- :
ture, but people will not drink it so j
long as they have their sense of clean- :
]ii ess and healthfulness offended by
this disagreeable odor which comes |
from careless milking and feeding. If
the trouble could not be remedied
there would be some excuse for its
existence, writes C. S. Walthersin the
M assacliusetts Ploughman.
Most of the odor and tainted flavor t
comes from weeds allowed to grow up j
in th<- pasture field. These weeds are \
ignored by the cows when the pasture |
is good, but when fall comes, and there j
is little else to eat in the fields, they |
will eat weeds. Now these weeds ab- |
solutely produce no good at all. They |
do not nourish the cows nor make
milk. They simply taint the milk,
cream and butter, and spoil its chances
of sale. Therefore, the dairyman who j
permits the weeds to grow in the pas
ture fields in the autumn is prac
tically injuring his own interests at I
both ends. The weeds which are sys- j
tematieally rooted out and cut down !
every summer and full cannot long j
persist in growing, and the combat will |
become easier and easier every year. !
But one season's crop tluvt is allowed i
to produce seeds will counteract the I
good work of several years on the part j
of the dairyman.
The matter of cleanliness in milking ;
is one that should not need emphasn'z- j
ing. and yet the dirty, filthy methods \
followed on so many farms is sufficient j
evidence that careless methods are !
still followed. The milk that has a
eowy flavor is tainted by (he dirt and j
filth that drops in the milk pail. Care- |
less milkers are responsible for it, and |
they should receive their lessons in
cleanliness by those who handle the I
milk. If we would but remember that
all such tainted milk hurts the whole
business, and in most cases ruins the
dairyman who practices the methods,
there might be less poor milk sjiipped
to market, and less poor butter made
on the farm or creamery.
WORTH CULTIVATING.
KaetM anil Klg-uren Whli-li Show Thnl
Our Dairymen Should Cultivate
Home Market*.
The American home market for
dairy products is the one that should ;
engage the attention of American cow !
keepers. We have the best market in
the world and a market that is con
tinually increasing its demand. Many
of our states and territories do not
make enough butter to supply their 1
home demand. In a recent report of
the dairy commissioner of the state of j
Washington we find that last year that
stfite imported from other states 4,400,- i
000 pounds of butter and 1,413,000 ;
pounds of cheese. Though there are !
200 creameries and 100 cheese factories j
in the state, the supply of dairy prod
ucts is that much short. The popula
tions in these western states is increas
ing at a great rate, as well as are the
populations in the great cities of the
country. Although some of the west
ern states that import dairy products |
are really so situated that it would be !
possible to produce the dairy foods ,
needed, yet the habits of the people are '
such that no great and rapid advance I
in that direction can be looked for. j
They are absorbed in other pursuits I
that they deem more profitable. These I
markets are susceptible of great de- |
velopment, and with proper methods |
of distribution the amounts consumed j
would be very much greater than at
the present time.—Farmers' Review.
ANTI-KICKING DEVICE.
Althouuli Exceedingly Simple 111 ton-
Htruct ion II Hun Always lleen
Found Effective.
Take a strip of hard wood one-quar
ter inch thick, 1 >/, inch broad and 2C !
inches long. Dress it smooth with a !
plane and bore a hole in each end the
narrow way of the board. Passthrough
the hole a small rope or stout cord
and tie a hard knot in the end. Put
the other end through the other hole
and draw up the rope until it is just
long enough togo over the hook joint
(T €&»
k
C< \ ft ) /
|
CUKE FOR KICKING COWS.
when in position, and then put a knot
in that end also, as shown by the cut.
Sew or rivet on a strap on the middle
i of the board, on the flat outside put
j a common wood screw and have a hole
j in the leather strap large enough to
i slip over the head of the screw. This
i completes the device, which is placed
; in position by wrapping about the
hock joint and buttoning strap over
j screw head. — I). L. Young, in Farm and
Home.
In the Sheep'ii Favor.
It is in favor of the sheep that they
will yield a profit under conditions so
■unfavorable that other farm animals,
under the same conditions, will be un
profitable.
THE OLDEST MAN IN AMERICA
Tells How He Escaped the Terrors of
Many Winters by Using Pe-ru-na.
MR. ISAAC BROCK, ItOIIN IN IU'NCOMRE CO., N. C., MARCH 1, 1788.
111s age is //■/ years, vouched for hy authentic record. He says:"l at
tribute my extreme old age to flie use of i J e°ru~na. "
| / Burn before United States was <
( formed. <
S Saw 22 Presidents elected.
/ Pe-ru-na has protected him >
< from all sudden changes. /
i Veteran of four wars.
) Shod a horse when 99 years (
\ old.
Always conquered the grip
/ with Pe-ru-na.
/ Witness in a land suit at age
\ of 110 years.
' Believes Pe-ru-na the greatest
) remedy of the age for catarrhal
diseases.
ISAAC BROCK, a citizen of McLen
nan county, Texas, has lived for
114 years. For many years he re
' sided at Bosque Falls, eighteen miles
i west of Waco, but now lives with his
son-in-law at Valley Mills, Texas.
A short time ago, by request. Uncle
Isaac came to Waoo and sat for his pic
ture. In his hand he held a stick cut
from the grave of General Andrew
Jackson, which has been carried by
him ever since. Mr. Brock is a digni
fied old gentleman, showing few signs
So Stupid.
"Who was that you just spoke to?" asked
| the first Chicago woman; "his face was
rather familiar to me."
''l believe," said the other, "his name is
Jenks —Henry .lenks."
"Oh! to be sure. How stupid of me! He
was my first husband."—Philadelphia Rec
ord.
Mnrill Gran Queen A (re*cent Itoute.
New Orleans, February 11th. Greatest
Mid-W'inter Fete in the world; wierd and
beautiful. Low rate excursions Queen &
Crescent Route. Finest train service in
the South. Two fast 24-hour trains every
day in the year from Cincinnati. The
| trip through the beautiful southern eoun
i try is a holiday in itself. All inquiries glad
ly answered. Free printed Matter. W. C.
i ltinearson, G. P. A., Cincinnati.
1 Mcftil Accomf»linlinicnt.
"Mrs. Hedder never has the least bit
j of trouble getting through the shopping
j crowds." said Mrs. Fosdiek.
"Well, she was the best, basket ball player
in college," Mrs. Keedick explained.—De
■ troit Free Press.
"Take keer of voh money," said Uncle
Eben, "but don't think so much of a dol
lar dat you loses de opporchunity to git
busy an' earn one or two mo'.'—Washing
ton Star.
Somehow the vojtu of the people doesn't
always sound like what it is said to be.—
Puck.
| ♦♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦
I St Jacobs Oil |
X The grandest remedy In the World because I
| X It never fails to cure X
X RHEUMATISM X
X NEURALGIA X
X SCIATICA X
1 X LUMBAGO X
112 PLEURISY 4
T HEADACHE T
TOOTHACHE
t FACEACHE T
I EARACHE T
X BACKACHE X
X STIFFNESS X
X SORENESS X
X SPRAINS ■+
X And alt Bodily Aches and Pains. It penetrates T
X and removes the cause of pain. X
X Conquers Pain t
ifli
By making investment in the stock of the
Sampson Gold Mining Company. Shares only
1214 cents per share, sure to be worth a dollar.
For particulars and prospectus address I,ACK &
I fcCliMIT£, Jiaukers & Brokers, Uakcr City, Or*.
of decrepitude. His family Bible. is
still preserved, and it shows that the
date of his birth was written 114 years
ago.
Surely a few words from this remark
able old gentleman, who has had 114
years of experience to draw from,
would be interesting as well as profit
able. A lengthy biographical sketch is
given of this remarkable old man in the
Waco Times-Herald, December 4. 1898.
A still more pretentious biography of
this, the oldest living man, illustrated
with a double column portrait, was giv
en the readers of the Dallas Morning
News, dated December 11,1898,andalso
the Chicago Times-Herald of same
date. This centenarian is an ardent
friend of Peruna, having used it many
years.
Tn speaking of his good health and
extreme old age, Mr. Brock says:
"After a man has lived in the world
as long as I have, he ought to have found
out a great many things by experience.
I think I have done so.
"One of the things I have found
out to my entire satisfaction is the
proper remedy for aliments that
Sold bv C 8 Douglas and t hM >estShoe dealers
everywhere. CAUTION I The Kenuine have \V. L.
Douglas' uamoand price stumped 011 bottom.
Notice increase of sales in table below:
lflD8=: 141,10(1 I'nlra.
BHiWBBi
1 Hl)f» _ **»«». 1 Pairs.
1900 m 1.250,751 Pairs.
111111 w miiaiMMMiiiiiiiw iw mil
1901 = 1,506,720 Pairs.
Business More Than Doubled In Four Hears.
THE REASONS : , „ ,
W.L. sells more men's 83 00 and
$3.50 kUohsthan an\ other two manTTs in the world.
%V. L. Douglas sa.oo and S3XO shoes placed side by
side with $5.00 and $6.00 shots of other makes, are
found to be just as good. '1 hey will outwear two
paw s of ordinary $3.00 and $8.50 shoes.
Made of the best leathers, including Patent
Corona Kid, Corona Colt, and National Kangaroo.
f'aat Color Kj*•.:«•( 1 and Always Mack llook« u«ii>d.
W. 1~
Sli<»4'« l>y mall Ss*»o. extra. free.
\V. 1... l>«Mtjcl:iw. IrvM-kton, *>»«'«■
HTuEs'4TV"vr>Kl { f 1 p u'id! A trial P
Genuine stamped CC C. Never sold in bulk.
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
"something just as g;ood."
OLD SORES cured
Allen's Ulcerine Salvo cures Chronic L'leem, Bone fleers,
Srrofuloiift 1 Irt-m, Variroif Ulcer*, Indolent deer** Mercurial
I Ir.-rv, Uhlit* s.,llluf?, Milk »«•?, Kraeina, Sail Itheum. F«»er
Sore*, nil old anrca. Positively no failuro, no mmn-r
Btuuding. llj ««ail. 25c and 50c. J. P. ALLEN , St. i'ttlll, VUIU.
DROPSY
case*, liuok of testimonials atul IO days' treatment
Free. Ut. 11. 11. tilt ken a bON*. «ox D, ATLANTA, ma.
n QPI Q Qfl ATKM Van Huron's KQeti-
B 5 fit m 0 19 "*** 1 matic Compound is
fSdr Bra m Q I tho only positive cure. Fast ex-
Ofv ■l| B ■ perience speaks for itself Depot
HI I *** Ave., Chicago
are due directly to the effects of
the climate. For 114 years / have
withstood the changeable climate
of the United States.
"I have always been a very he-althy
man, but of course subject to the lit
tle affections which are due to suddes
changes hi the climate and tempera
ture. During my long life i have known
a great many remedies for coughs,
colds and diarrhoea.
"J had always supposed these affec
tions to be different diseases. For the
last ten or fifteen years 1 have been
reading Dr. Hartman's writings. 1 have
learnt d much from his books, one thing
in particular: that these affection*
are the same and that they are proper
ly called catarrh.
"As for Dr. Hartman's remedy,
Pe-ru-na, / have found it to he the
best, if not the only, reliable rem
edy for these affections. It hats
been my standby for many years,
and / attribute my good health and
extreme old age to this remedv
"Jt exactly meets all my require
ments. it protects me from the evil
effects of sudden changes; it keeps me
in good appetite; it gives me strength;
it keeps my blood in good circulation.
L have come to rely upon it almost en
tirely for the many little things for
which 1 need medicine.
"I believe it to be valuable to old
people, although I have no doubt it i»
just as good for the young, i should be
glad if my sincere testimony should
become the means of others using this
remedy, because 1 believe it to be tli?
greatest remedy of this age for ca
tarrhal diseases.
"When epidemics of la grippe first
began to make their appearance in this
country 1 was a sufferer from this dis
ease.
" / had several long sieges with
the grip. At first / did not know
that Pe-ru-na was a remedy for
this disease. When / heard thai
la grippe was epidemic catarrh, i
tried Pe-ru-na for la grippe and
found it to be just the thing.
"It has saved me several times frcau
a siege of the gr.ip. 1 feel perfectly
safe from this terrible malady so long
as 1 have Per una at hand. I hope that
Dr. Hart man may live to be as old as I
am, to continue the good work ut
teaching people the value ofhisgreatt
remedy, Peruna.
Very truly yours,
For a free book on catarrh, address
The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.
If you do not derive prompt and sat
isfactory results from the use of Peru
na, writ e at once to Dr. Hartman, giv
ing a full statement of your case, and
he will be pleased to give you his va3-
uable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President ol
the Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus
Ohio.
£1 0.00 for 1
I MAGIC CRUSHED SHELLST^K'
| Best on earth. Sell at SM6 per iito lb. bagt K
I f 3.75 forsoo lbs.; fS.fiO for 1,000 lbs. #&
lirmm
IWiWSPHBSMrSBI Nvery farmer Air. ov&
fI " un^'or< '' no eucuui
itfSrjl Irj increasing year by yc*;
Z2 )& fa I land value incremt'CW
stuck increase*,
did climate. sreellenl
Vfai school® and churches. low
* f* 112? taxation, hlvh prices fo»
wilfjSj 2flrafi?B cattle and grain low rail
L dtfTKUff WHW" way rates, and every
j possible comfort. This is The oondiUoij of *hc.
; fanner in Western Canada—Province of MnuUot*.
and districts of Assliiibo a. SaekaitiinTfaa airti
Alberta. Thousands of Americans are now »:a*Ue4
. there. Reduced rates on all railway? for » C>H»B
--j seekers and settlers. New districts a.x-bf'uw ouenec
; ui» this vear The new forty-pane AT 112
WESTfcKX CANADA and aii Other j'Torruw.-
tlon sent free to all applicants. K. I > i.!>LKT,
. Superintendent of Immigration. Ottawa. Canada*
> or to JOSKI'H VOUN(i. rdvu Si»te St.. kusvCoMun
I bus. Ohio; N. M. WILLIAMS, Toledo, O.; CanadSmc.
Government Agents.
WHISKY AND other
%Jr riO Swl habits cured. Wo wuuK
worst cases, Hoc* and references FKRK. W»v
B. At. WOOI.JL.UYf- ito* :s. Atlanta.
WUEN WHITIM9 TO A»VEKilW.tt>.
lileaie itutc that you auw the AdverUw
i meut In ttu« puper.
A. N. K.—C ieoa
bfl Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Uafcf f)*V(
C 3 In time. Bold by druggists. v*¥
7