Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, April 10, 1902, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION.
f'rr year 0(1
112 paid in advance 1 jO
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at, the rate en
•ne dul ar per square forone Insertion and llftj
•ents per square fur each subsequent insertion
Rates by the year, or for six or three mouths
«re low ar.d uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legal and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less. each subsequent uis<sr
tio i . 0 ( cuts per square.
Local notices lu cents per line for one inser
aertion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent
consecutive insertion.
Obituary notices over Ave lines 10 rents per
line. Simple announcements of births, mar
riages and deaths will be inserted free.
Husiness curds, five lii:*s or less. Sfi per year;
over live lines, at the regular rales of adver
ting
No local inserted for less thaiji 75 cents pe/
Issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The .lob department of the Press is complete
Siirt affords facilities for doing the best class of
W rk. I'Alt'l K l I.Alt *1 TLN I ION PAtD'J'O I.AW
PlllNTlNd.
No paper will be discontinued until arrcar
fgi s are paid, except at the option of the pub
isher.
l'apers sent out of the county must be paid
for in advance.
The ymithful-looklng Representative
Lessler, of New York, will no longer
bo mistaken by members of congress ;
for one of the pages of the housa.
Each of the latter now wears a big
button on which the word "Page" is
printed.
The Prussian budget for 1902 in
cludes appropriations of 20.000 marks
lor further study of, means of pre
vention and early diagnosis of typhoid
fever. 10,000 marks to the committee j
for cancer research and 53,000 for a i
cancer hospital and laboratory.
There is no fitting monument on j
the grave of Salmon P. ('base, in Cin- I
cinnati, 0., only a simple stone bear- j
ing an inscription of four lines and \
reciting that he was "Senator, Gov
ernor, Secretary of the Treasury, Chief
Justice of the United States." His
daughter, who idolized him, rests be- j
side him.
There are now about 150 vacancies j
in the grade of ensign in the navy, j
which number will be reduced by j
about 40 when the senior class of the
naval academy graduates in June. It
will take probably four or five years
to fill up all the vacancies under the
present arrangement, by which the
number of cadets can be increased.
The youngest governor in the Union
Is the newly inaugurated governor of
the state of Washington, William Mc-
Croskey, aged 28, who recently suc
ceeded ex-Governor Rogers. .Mr. Me- ;
Croskey, who is a native of Tennes
see, is a son of the Rev. Solon McCros- j
key. a Methodist clergyman. He was !
graduated at Grant university at
Athens.
M. Hamard, the French sculptor,
has just completed at Paris the model ;
of the statue of Marshal Itochambeau,
to be presented to the city of Washing
ton as a companion to the statue of
Lafayette. The work of casting the
bronze will begin this week, and it is
hoped that the finished statue will be
ready to send to the United States i
next April.
Casualty lists from South Africa
have reported so many accidental j
woundings, some of theme fatal, as to !
give rise even in England to the idea !
that there must lie many men entrust
ed with arms who do not know how
to use them and unwittingly injure
themselves or their comrades. As
many as four or five cases of this sort
have been reported in one despatch.
Princess Irene enjoys the distinc- j
tion of being the only princess of the
blood and lady of a reigning house of
Europe who has ever visited China.
When Prince Henry was in command
of the German naval forces in the Chi
na seas she went out, via the Suez
canal, to join him. and remained with
him three or four months, traveling to
and fro by ordinary passenger steam
ers.
At 5 years of age hoys are mainly
taller than girls, but the girls appear
to equal them at the seventh year, and
continue thus up to and including the
ninth year, after which the boys rise
again above the girls for two years.
At about 12 years the girls suddenly
become taller than the boys, continu
ing until the 15th year, when the boys
finally regain their superiority of
stature.
Wordsworth's "An Evening Walk,"
original edition of 1793, brought $320
at a recent l.ondon book sale. His
"Descriptive Sketches In Verse," 1793,
brought $330, and "Poems," 1803, in
two volumes, sllO. Coleridge's !
"Poems," Bristol, 1797, was sold for
s7<>; Walter Savage Landor's "Simon
ides," Bath, 1807, for $95, and Gray's
"Odes," from Horace Walpole's
Strawberry Hill Press, 1757. S2OO.
The playing of billiards by students
has been prohibited by the State Ag
ricultural college of Oregon. The ac
tion was by resolution of the faculty !
and makes suspension the penalty of I
violation of the rule. In making the j
announcement in chapel President
Gatch said an examination of the col
lege records showed that 80 per cent,
of the failures in class work were by
students who frequented billiard halls.
According to the chief of the bu
reau of chemistry, "fancy jellies of
al' sorts are now made frcm cores
and parings of apples; th.-> by-pn
ducts of jelly making are s 'tit to Eu
rope to be turned into ehampagn :
colored jams and jellies yield exeei
hnt dyes for coloring textile fabrics,
and a fine 'Ohio wine' is made from
copl tar dye, glucose and alcohol, with
out recourse to any product of the
.vine."
BRYAN STILL ON DECK.
Tline In a I. (trice ami I'otenl ICleinent
of lln* Urnivvracy Sllrkint;
to 111 in,
Mr. Bryan's recent visit to Washing
ton has set a great many persons guess
ing. Perhaps the most philosophical
consideration of the matter, taking
into view Mr. Bryan's relations to the
active forces of his party, is that made
by the Washington Star. It notes two
suggestive things in connection with
the visit of Ihe late candidale. One of
them way that of his reception on the
senate si le of the capitol was less
cordial than <>n the house side, and
the other that the younger men of the
party are ihe ones who seek him out.
The Star adds that Mr. Bryan was never
a favorite with the democratic mem
bers of the senate. His prominence
upset too many senatorial hopes and
interfered with the old system which
lodged the control of the party in the
hands of a comparatively few veterans.
The Star adds:
"Mr. Bryan hue from Ihe outset beer tb»
choice of Ihe younger men of the party.
They "whoopi d II up" for him at Chicago
at the time of his tlrst nomination. A
young man himself, handsome, confident
and elequent, he appealed to thetn stror»gly.
It tickled thrm greatly to see hitn elbow
hi:; way to tin' front and displace veterans'
j like Bland and Boles and Blackburn, and
when he did so they seized the standards
i In the convention hall and formed that
marching procession of howling < nthuslasts
whose demonstration made the nomination.
And the young men of the party are still
very proud of their young leader. They
cling to him even In <3t fi at, and neglect no
opportunity to testify to their admiration
and devotion.
"We see, then, in this the difficulty under
which the democratic party at present
j labors. The older members are anti-Bryan,
j They have supported him twice, but they
see his shortcomings as a leadt rand are
| not patient under a proposition to try him
! again. Time is a great element in their
calculations. If they are to witness there
turn of their party to power it must be
! soon. The younger men are nrit disturbed
by tills consideration. They, too, want to
| win, but when Mr. Bryan says that the
I party can afford to wait for success and
; must meanwhile stick to principles they
I harken to a man of grit and character.
\ Still, if success is to be achieved the older
Inn n and the younger men must get to-
I gether, and under Mr. Bryan or somebody
else work like the nation with but one end
In view. A party divided ayainst U.-
j cannot win."
Mr. Ilryan himself probably knows
; the situation as well as anyone, says
the. Troy Times. lie understands that
i his strength is with the young, the
! emotional and the ardent but largely
undisciplined element of bis party
the element which is not discouraged
| by defeat, because that serves to give
[ him a romantic and sympathetic inter
est in such eyes. It is harder to bring
this element into the traces of stern
j party rule the rule which recognizes
the fact that to succeed there must
be concession, sacrifice of personal
preferences and unison in essentials
jin orderto win success—than any other
with which political management line
to deal.
That element of the democratic par
ty a large ami potent one is still
solidly with Mr. Bryan, if appearances
igo for anything. \nd be also has his
grasp on the party machinery. If tlie
older democratic heads in the country
at large and the grave and reverend
seniors of that party in the senate
think Mr. Bryan has passed so com
pletely that he is no longer to be rcck
j oned with in computing chances tliey
; are making what appears to be a gi
! gantie mistake.
HARD TIMES THRIVERS.
It 1* Only U lien t»ic f'mintry Suffer*
from Ady Tliat DcmocrntN
Are Happy.
The democrats of the senate have
prepared u report giving the reasons
why they are opposed to the passage
of the ship subsidy bill. As a matter
of course they attack the bill on the
ground that it is "wrong, unjust,
vicious, and pure class legislation."
That was to have been expected. The
democrats always denounce proposed
republican legislation in) that way.
The Dingk-y tariff bill was so de
nounced. yet it has brought unexam
pled prosperity to the country. The
bill to establish the gold standard was
so denounced, yet it has restored busi
ness confidence. In fact, tlie republic
ans have proposed nothing in the way
of national legislation within the past
40 years that has not been opposed
by the democrats on the ground of
viciousness and class favoritism.
For that reason little attention will
be paid to the democratic protest,
against the passage of tbe ship subsidy
bill, Regardless of the merits of this
measure, it may be said that the dem
ocrats are always ready to denounce
any legislation, says the Cleveland
Leader, because they can always prove
that prosperity will afford an oppor
tunity for the people to make money,
and thus defeat the party of calamity
j at the polls. It is only when the coun
try is suffering from adversity that
the democrats are happy. When mills
are idle and men are walking the
streets there is little chance to array
class against class. The surest proof
that the people do not trust the demo
crats or pay lasting attention to their
appeals to class prejudice is found in
I tlie fact that whenever there are hard
I times the voters always turn to tlie
| republicans to restore prosperity, and
they are never disappointed.
The ship subsidy bill may not pass,
but if it does its failure will not be
due to the opposition of the democrats
who attack it as "wrong, unjust, vi
cious, and pure class legislation."
ITTW. J. Bryan has written an article
reading Grover Cleveland out of the
democratie party, at the same time de
claring him a political traitor, a
trickster and a back number. Hecent
ly, if appears. Mr. Cleveland wrote a
letter to a southern admirer in which
he expressed his gratification that the
party "has shaken off the dreams that
have afflicted it." The article is Mr.
Bryan's answer.—Chicago Tribune.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1902
SHOWING THEIR GUILT.
DemoorntN Urrnllf Ex*reined Over
Ibe I'roiHiKetl Southern lit
veatiieatfoii.
The spasms of the democratic con
gressmen unci newspapers over the re
publicans' purpose to investigate the
suppression of ihe negro vote in the
southern slates are a confession of
guilt. All that the Crumpacker meas
ure, which t lie republicans oft he house
intend to pass, asks for is the appoint
ment of a special committee of 13 to
inquire into the disfranchisement of
voters in cert ain oft he southern st at es
and to report to the house. The meas
ure, proposes to have an intelligent,
unbiased investigation made of the
question, so that the count ry can know
just how far the spirit of the four
teenth amendment has been violated.
It seeks information and not legisla
tion, says the St. Louis Globe-Demo
crat.
If there be any "force-billism" or
"bloody shirt waving" in this proposi
tion, let its enemies make the most of
it. But there is nothing of the sort.
The committee will make a report,
| but will not make any recommenda
tions one way or the other. The abuses,
Jif they are found, may goon indefinite
ly so far as the special committee is
concerned. There is 110 general desire,
so far as has been revealed, fov the
I passage of any bill to invoke the pun
i ishuicnt on the offending states which
I the const it 111 ion provides. A few mem
bers have favored such legislat ion, but
! nothing of the sort is contemplated
j now. Nothing of the kind is attached
| to the Crumpacker proposition. Xoth-
I ing is hinted at by any republican
i which would justify the chnrge that,
j tliere will be any enforcement of the
! principle of equality in the suffrage
which the constitution assures.
There are at least two reasons why
the democratic shrieks of "bloody
shirt ism" are foolish. They show that
the democracy knows that it is open
I to the charge of vote suppression \\ Inch
| is made against it. The shrieks can
| not have the faintest influence on the
action of the republican party. To the
extent to which the republicans pro
pose togo, they cannot be deterred
i by the threats of the bulldozers of the
I democracy in the north or in the south,
j All that the republicans ask is that
1 the truth as to the situation in the
j offending states be laid before the
j country. The democrats are afraid
of the truth, and for an excellent rea
] son. The truth will hurt them, and
they try to prevent it becoming known,
j TTI this attempt to hide their guilt
| the democrats will be beat en.
FUNSTON'S STRONG PLEA.
Some IMnln Truth* for till' niKCKlion
of the Tnj.vsiJ SympiillifxerH ill
J'liiw Country.
In a characteristic talk to the meni
bers and invited* guests of the kotos
club of New York, lien, l'unston on
Sat unlay eveninggavecounsel to which
all men in 1 his country, \\ hatever t heir
oflicial or social station may be,
i should give heed. After relating'some
I of his experiences in ihe Philippines
land dwelling upon ihe forbearance,
I the patience and ihe charity shown
: by the American army toward the re
i bellious natives, he proceeded to do
i nounee the men in the I'nited St- teg
| who by their speeches and writ, 7s:
j are keeping ihe- spirit of insurrec*. "on
alive in the archipelago. Then he said:
"Think what you please about the jus
tice or Ihe propriety of taking the Ph i>- ,
pines and of holding them; think as y.,i;
please, but for heaven's sake keep j.jitr 1
mouth shut until we Bit this \v;ir stttl'd
and the sovertignty of the I'nited SU.i<> i
settled, and then get togi tln r In the c< in
try and pull hair and tight It out among
yourselves."
In these few words Gen. Funston
stated the gist of the plea that lias !
been made by every loyal American, I
fromthclate President McKinley down,
who ever expressed his sent iment s rel
ative tot.lie trouble in the Philippines.
So long as armed foes are opposing
; themselves to the men whom this gov
j eminent has sent to enforce its just
authority it is not the time to discuss
1 academic quest ions of right and wrong,
j While a vestige of the insurrection re
j mains il is the duty of every American
j citizen to give such aid as lies in his
power to its suppression, or at least, to
I refrain from giving moral aid and com- j
fort to his country's enemies. When j
I the last . Tagal insurgent has laid down
his arms and acknowledged the author
ity of the United States there will be
time enough to discuss the question of
the ultimate disposition of the archi
pelago.
No man has a better right to tell
Americans what their duty is in Ibis
matter than Gen. Funston.says the Al»
bany Journal. By his brave and efli
eient service for his country he has
won it.and none is better qualified to
give counsel, lie has had the experi
ence that gives wisdom. There is no
American so old and so wise that he
can affordi to disregard the words of
the intrepid lit 1 le warrior, the staunch j
patriot, from the state of Kansas.
COMMENT AND OPINION.
ITT fl -ee trade paper speaks of the !
"proffered Cuban half loaf." It is Cuba I
itself that rejects the whole loaf.—St. j
Louis Globe-Democrat.
ICllaving tried it twice himself, Mr. j
Bryan is convinced that a democrat j
who has proved that he can be elected
president must be a traitor. —Detroit 1
Free Press (Dem.).
tT7"lf the Philippines are put on a'
free silver basis Mr. Bryan may be in j
doubt as to whether he ought to keep
on sympathizing with them or not. — 1
Washington Star.
U William Jennings Bryan's plan of
building his barn before he builds his
house is in line with the good old dem
ocratic precedent of working back
ward. —Chicago inter Ocean.
fflMnpt Milliliters Come KIIkH.
A cabinet officer who not very long ago
retired to private life started to build up
anew his law practice. A corporation cats
was sent to him by a brother lawyer. Meet
ing that lawyer later, the ex cabinet. miiua
tier asked what he ought to charge.
"VVhait d.id you think of charging?" asked
his friend.
"Well," the reply was,"l thought a thou
sarwl dollars would be about right."
"My dear fellow," the other lawyer re
| sporided, "if you do that you will never get
I another ease. Ex-cabinet ministers are a
j luxury, if thoy arc worth anything. Send a
j bill for $5,1)00 retaining fee and you will get
a check to-morrow. Then adjust your regu
i lar charges at your leisure."
| The thing was done, with the result pre
| dieted. It is said that tiie gentleman in
question made in a month as much as the
sum of his salary during his en.tire official
term.—X. Y. I'o.st.
925.00 TO CALIFORNIA.
Every<lny, Ilurinu March nml Aplrl
Phenomenally Low Kates to the
I'acJUe Count anil liilerme
llinte I'olntu,
j Colonist Excursions open to all. Later on
at intervals duringthesummerspecial round
j trip excursions to the Coast at less than
One Cent Per Mile, going one way, returning
another. An exceptional opportunity to
visit any part of all parts of the Great "West
for pleasure, education or business. Peo
ple with interests at various points will
show you attention. Address a postal to
\V. Ji. Connor, General Agent I nion Pa
cific, Southern Pacific Kys., 53 East 4th St.,
Cincinati, Ohio. Write on the back: "Sena
details low rates to California," adding
your own name and address, «I-o those of
any of your friends, and you will receive in
return information of fascinating interest,
great practical value, of educational anil
business worth. Whether or not. you are
thinking of taking this delightful trip or
looking to better vour condition in life, it
will pay you, your family or friends to
write a postal as above. As the colonist
: rates open to all are good during March
and April only, send your postal to-day.
IVII'KM anil Flntn.
TTerr Meyer Lutz tells the following story:
"Conduct ingonce in Bradford, I noticed that
the clarinet player, a young but clever and
i steady lad, jumped up a good deal during
' the progress of the opera. 1 found that his
j father, who played the trombone, sat just
I behind him, and every now and then he
| gave his son a kick, with the remark: 'Look
j out. Sammy! there be a flat a cummin.' "
1 Mainly About People.
A Handsome Menu Card.
It is a noticeable fact that the dining car
department ol tiie Grand Trunk Railway
System is second to none on the American
Continent, and new improvements and mod
ern inriovj! ions are continually being made.
J he < afe-P.irlor (mis which have been run
ning 011 Dearly all of the divisions of this
great System are a constant ton ice of praise
from the travelling public. The company
lias recently altered the style of the menu
cards used on all ot the dining cars and cafe
parlor ears, and lias gotten up a very hand
some and neat bill of fare that appeals to
the artistic sense.
A Fall are.
Mrs. Finnigan- An'did yer husband injoy
the eilibration?
Mrs. Hogan N'ivir a bit. T'ink avail
thini whusitles a-blowin', an' no wurruk U)
sthop! .Tuijge.
Karlicdt (tannian Slillet.
Will you bo short of bay? If so plant a
plenty of this prodigally prolific mii.cl
5 TO K TONS op men II \Y l'Kll ACRK.
Price HO lbs $1.90; I(kj lbs. %•:{ < (», low freights
j Ji hn At iSalzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis.
Feminine Pinpricks. Elderly Spinster—
"Ah, dear Julia, you can't imagine how I
dread to think of my fortieth birthday!"
Julia "Why, dear? I)d something very
1 unpleasant happen then?"— Punch.
Sweat or fruit acids will not discolor
goods dyed with ITTWVM FADELESS
DYES. Sold by druggists, 10c. package.
Ihe Poet "No, the editors never burn
my poems." The Friend "How is that?"
'I he l'oet "I write them on sheet® of as
bestos." Lond on A n swers.
Stop N the Conjh nll tl Work*
Off the Colli.
Laxative Broino Quinino Tablets. Price2sc.
Woman's love is like an ill-spent fortune
, —we never know its value till we lose it.—
1 Answers.
WjllWD L'jl 1 |
C,l.!' - 'v. .' / One may Bail the seas and visit every land and everywhere will find, .1?, A \ ; \ \
'-■•• ""/ that men of affairs, who are well informed, have neither the time \ *■ • ; \
/ nor the inclination, whether on pleasure bent or business, to use those _ iv.;'A \ \ ; \
I medicines which cause excessive purgation and tfien leave the internal :"''\ \ \ \ \
I organs In a constipated condition. Syrup of Figs is not built on those ! y V \ \ \
I lines. It acts naturally, acts effectively, cleanses, sweetens and strengthens ;r \ \ \ \ \
I the internal organs and leaves thera in a healthy condition. . j\\ \ \ \ \ \
I If In need of a laxative remedy the most excellent is Syrup of Figs, but | \ v'. \ \ \ \
I when anything more than a laxative is required the safe und scientific plan ; vi-s \ ' \ \ \
/ is to consult a competent physician and not to resort to those medicines • Hi' ' A'A- \ \
I which claim to cure ail manner of diseases. : ?•>.'> ',
I The California Fig Syrup Co. was the first to manufacture a laxative remedy j ,\ \
■i' •I which would give satisfaction to all; a laxative which physicians could : !
'• / sanction nnd one friend recommend to another; so that today its sales probably \ J/ \ \
| exceed all other laxatives eoiublned. In some places considerable quantities of I • \ J : '• \
I old-time cathartics and modern imitations are still sold, but with the general R \ J
I diffusion of knowledge, as to the bct>'. medicinal agents, Syrup of Figs has come l\ \ / \•. i \ \
I into general use with the well-infa-med, because it is a remedy of known value ry \ / . \ \ \
J and ever beneficial action. IV". i-'Y \ i V \ \
The quality of Syrup of Figs is due not only to the excellent combination of j \ / \ ' \ \
the laxative and carminative principles of plants, known to act most beneficially IV \ / \ \ \ \
on the system, with agreeable and refreshing aromatic, liquids, but .also to the M■ /. ''■■ '• \ \ \
orginal method of manufacture. In order to get the genuine and its beneficial I\/\ '• • \ \ \
effects one should always note the full name of the Company —California Fig I X/ ' •• ■ '*
Syrup Co.—printed on tho front of every package. I
A Noted Knight Templar
Owes His Hsatfi to Perm.
Colonel T. I'. Moody, a prominent
Knight Templar, is well knownin every
city in the United States west of Buf
falo, X. V., as a Jeweler's Auctioneer.
In the city of Chicago as a prominent
lodge man, being a member of the K.
T.'s and also of the Masons. The cut
shows Colonel Moody in the costume
of the Oriental Consistory Masons,
32nd degree.
In a recent letter from 5900 Mich
igan avenue, Chicago, 111., Mr. Moody
says the following:
" For over twenty-five years /
suffered from catarrh, and for
over ten years / suffered from
catarrh of the stomach terribly.
" I have taken all kinds of medi
cines and have been treated by
all kinds of doctors,-as thousands
of my acquaintances arc aware
in different parts of the United
States, where I have traveled, but
my relief was only temporary,
until a little over a year ago 1
started to take Peruna, and at the
present time / am better than /
have been for twenty years.
"The soreness has left my stom
ach entirely and / am free from
indigestion and dyspepsia and will
say to all who are h oubled with
Catarrh or stomach trouble of any
kind, don't put it off and suffer,
but begin to take Peruna right
away, and keep it up until you
are cured, as you surely will be if
you persevere.
"My wife, as many in the southwest
can say, was troubled with a bad
cough and bronchial trouble, anil doc
tors all over the country gave her up
to die, as they could do nothing more
for her. She began taking Peruna with
the res-ult that she is better now than
she has been in years, and her cough
has almost left her entirely. The sore
ness lias left lier lungs and she is as
well as she ever was in her life, with
thanks, as she says, to Peruna. Yours
very truly, T. I'. Moody.
Catarrh in its various forms is rapid
ly becoming a general curse. An un
doubted remedy has been discovered
by Dr. Hartinan. This remedy lias
been thoroughly tested during the
past forty years. Prominent men have
come to know of its virtues, and are
making public utterances on the sub
ject. To save the country we must
save the people. To save the people we
must protect tliem from disease. The
disease that is at once the most preva
lent and stubborn of cure is catarrh.
If one were to make a list of the dif
ferent names that have been applied
to catarrh in different locations and
organs, the result would be astonish
ing. We have qften published a partial
list of these names, and the surprise
Ki-|it on TillUlllK.
Hook W'iiat has become of that office
boy of vours who used to take everything
he could lay his hands on?
Nye—lie's in the Municipal hospital—
took smallpox.—Philadelphia UiC'id.
Auk To-Day for Allen's I"6o(=lCnse.
It cures swollen, aching, tired feet. At all
Druggists and Shoe stores. y.">c. Sample sent
FUEE. Address A. S Olmsted, Le Hoy, N. Y.
"Don't say "1 told you so" to a man in
up to his waist, or he will walk in up to his
neck. —Atchison (ilobe.
Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever
used for all affections of the throat and
lungs.—Win. O. Endsley, Vanburen, Ind.,
Feb. 10. 1900.
Every man over-estimates the value of his
acquaintance.—Atenison Globe.
Colonel T. K
Catarrh Twenty-five Years and
Was Cured by Per una.
caused by the first publication of it to
all people, both professional and non
professional, was amusing - . And yet
we have never enumerated all of the
diseases which are classed as ca
tarrh. It must be confessed, however,
to see even this partial list drawn up
Sn battle array is rather appalling 1 . If
the reader desires to see this list, to
gether with a short exposition of each
one. send for our free catarrh book.
Address The I'eruna Medicine Co., Co
lumbus, Ohio.
to Count.
Chicago iV Northwestern K'y.; dining the
months ot March and Api il $30,00 from I hi
cago to Helena, Butte, Anaconda, Ogden
and Salt < it}'; $30.50 Spokane; $33.00-
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, Seat
tle, Tacuma, Vancouver, Victoria and «■
large number of other points. Tourist
Sleeping Cars daily to the Pacific Coast,
For maps and particulars apply to near
est ticket agent or address \Y. li. Kniskero,
LJ Filth avenue, Chicago, 111.
I.onliliiK for It.
Easterner- Did the cyclone do much dam
age to your farm?
Kansan How cm I tell till I find it?—»
Columbus (0.) Journal.
Dropsy treated free b.v Dr. 11. 11. Green's
Sons, of Atlanta, Ga. The greatest dropsy
specialists in the world. Read their adver
tisement in another column of this paper.