Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, January 08, 1903, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION.
r'er year 12 00
112 p*ld In advance 1
ADVERTISING RATES:
Adrertisements are published at the rate el
•ne dollar per square fur one insertion and lift J
cents per square tor each subsequent insertion.
Rates by the year, or for six or three months,
»re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legnl and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less, #2; each subsequent inser
tion 10 cents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for one tnser
•ertion: 5 cents per line for each subsequent
consecutive insertion.
Obituary notices over five line*. 10 cents per
line Simple announcements of births, mar*
riaKex and deaths will be Inserted free.
Business cards, five lines or less. S5 per year:
over live lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local Inserted for less than 75 cents pel
issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the Prkss Is complete
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
work. Pak'iu li.au attention i'aidto Law
Printing.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
Kes are paid, except at the option of the pub
her.
I'apcrs sent out of the county must be pale
lor in advance.
Henrik Ibsen, the Norwegian author,
loves to keep his hair in disorder.
This is said to he his one vanity. Ho
always Carries a little toilet case, con
taining a looking glass and a comb,
which are attached to the lining of his
gray hat. He will often remove his
hat to look into the mirror to see how
his hair is lying. If it is not rough
enough to suit, his fancy he uses tho
comb to give it the requisite tangle.
There has recently died in Canada,
in abject poverty, Samuel Napier, tho
man who discovered the largest nug
get of gold the world has ever seen.
It was found in Australia and meas
ured two feet, four inches long; ten
inches wide, and two inches thick. So
great was the excitement over the dis
covery that Queen Victoria command
ed Napier to come to Buckingham pal
ace, where the nugget was exhibited
to her.
Tho United States department, of '
agriculture is at present investigating
the curious behavior of certain plants
growing on the western prairies,
which are known as locoweeds. "Ix>
<o" in Spanish signifies crazy. Cattle
and other animals feeding upon loco
weeds suffer a derangement of the
brain that prevents co-ordinating
movements. Several weeds belonging
to the bean family are included in this
poisonous category.
The census shows over 5.000,000 of
women engaged in gainful occupations
in this country. There are over 1,-
<IOO,OOO engaged in agricultural pur
suits. 500,000 in professional service,
2,000.000 in domestic service and 1,-
('OO,OOO in manufacturing and mechan
ical pursuits. The female farmers in
clude laborers, farmers, overseers,
gardeners, florists, fruit growers, milk
farmers, stock raisers, herders, tur
pentine farmers, wood choppers, lum
bermen and raftsmen.
One of the curious trades of New
York is that of the smelling expert, a
man who earns his living literally «»y
following his nose. He is employed
by manufacturers of perfumery. It is
his business to judge of the charac
ter, quality and value of the materials
hat goto the making of perfumes.
Much of the perfumery made in this
country is imported from France in
the form of pomatums, and extracted
with alcohol. The smelling expert
judges the quality of pomatums.
A dredger, claimed to be in some re
spects the largest ever constructed,
has just been completed by the Golden
Gate and Minor works, of San Fran
cisco. It is designed for building a
levee on one of the most considerable
of the islands in the Sacramento river
delta. The boom is of extraordinary
length and describes a circle having a
diameter of 310 feet, allowing the em
ployment of material at great distance
from the shore line. The bucket holds
io tons and the boom is 155 feet long.
Following the lead of Mrs. Stuyves
ant Fish, ultrafashionable New York
women are taking to sitting in theater
boxes with their backs to the stage.
Mrs. Fish originated this fad a few
evenings ago, hardly looning toward
the footlights even, much less attend
ing to the play, and keeping up an
animated but subdued conversation
with three friends. Another fad of the
hour among New Yorkers is to abbre
viate "Thank you" until it sounds et
actly as though the person were say
ing "kew."
Members of a Canadian woman's
club, organized for literary and so
ciological study, with a college woman
as president, are said to have beeorm)
so interested in the servant problem
that they have resolved to raise the
standard of domestic service by going
out to serve themselves. The authoriiy
also states that these clubwomen have
found their own town too conservative
to carry out their plan in, and tho
president anil five members have de
cided togo to New York and take
places with some of the families of
that metropolis.
Native Japanese engineers and man
agers hate developed to a tremend
ous extent the copper mines of Ashlo,
hays Japan and America There are
1 o.iiiiii person* employed in th»- riiln»-s
and at t le furnaces, who, with their
families, make up a city of 17,h0u.
Japan is now the fourth in rank of IN)
copper prndu' liik countries, and tho
mines of Ashlo. owned by Furukaw.t
Ichlbel, of Tokyo, produce one third
the total of the empire The average
«iiir per day at the mine* for labor
».<• ts 13 eenit. together with a stated
Quantity of ore exUai led
ONLY A MARE'S-NEST.
Tariff ITI A form OrKiin Make* A 1)1*-
covery Thnl l« Straniee hiiU
Truly Startling.
Not long .since the treasury depart
ment, iiv tile ease of certain imports
of steel, ruled that duty must he paid
upon them not at the price at whieh
they were invoiced, but at that charged
to domestic consumers in the country
from which they were shipped. Obvi
ously, such a ruling had to be made,
otherwise it would he impossible to
prevent undervaluation. I'he justice
of the method was recognized by the
representatives of the allied powers
when they decided that the customs
tax to be collected by the Chinese
should be based upon the value of the
articles at the place «'»f import, and
not upon prices whieh might be made
for the purpose of capturing trade or
whieh were fixed low in order to tie
fraud the government, says the Han
Francisco Chronicle.
Hut now comes the Hoston Herald
with a charge that the ruling demon
strates that the American protective
tariff is in effect an export bounty
system. It says: "If the construction
of our treasury department is to be de
pended upon and is to be applied to
our own practices, then the congress
of the United States is paying export
bounty to certain American industries,
a practice which may be open toconsti
tutional objection." ltadds: "Wheth
er it would be possible, if the I nited
States courts should decide that the
treasury dejxirtment was correct in
its construction concerning this llus
sian proceeding, to bring our own
beneficiaries by government bounty
before the courts, as obtaining uncon
stitutional privileges through con
gressional action, is a question wfiich
at least will bear careful considera
tion."
If the question is carefully consid
ered, certain facts will lie ascertained
which the llerald seems to have com
pletely overlooked in its anxiety to
make a point against American manu
facturers. Foremost among these is
that its assumption that the practice
of forcing out goods at lower prices
is one j>eculiar to protective countries
is erroneous. It is as much in vogue
in free trade Great Hritain as in the
United States. There are few manu
facturers in that country who will not
make sacrifices to establish trade with
foreigners, and in doing so they follow
a practice which is merely an exten
sion of the rule adopted in the conduct
of domestic business of getting rid of
surpluses with as little disturbance to
the local market as possible.
If it is right and expedient for a
merchant who sells muslin at ten
cents a yard on Saturday to one set
of customers, to turn around and sell
muslin of the same quality for seven
cents a yard on Monday, then it is
not immortal or improper for manu
facturers to resort to the same
course. The circumstances are pre
cisely analogous. Jn each case the
aim is precisely the same. The mer
chant, after selling' all he can at ten
cents a yard, tries to yet rid of the
remainder of hi.s stock at sevei.
cents a yard. The American manu
facturer endeavors to get all he can
for his product in this country, and
he takes what he can get from the
foreigner. If he could obtain th-j
same prices for his surplus from the
latter as from the domestic con
sumer, he would cheerfully do so. it
is absurd to think that lie would not.
and it is equally absurd to imagine
that the American consumer would
he benefited by imposing a restriction
on American manufacturers which
would prevent their following the ex
ample of enterprising depart mer.t
stores of unloading excess stocks as
quickly as possible.
The economic strabismus of thi
Herald prevents its seeing that one
of the reasons why the American
consumer is able to pay so much
more for goods than most foreigners
is because the manufacturers of the
United States are not subjected to
repressive measures. They are prac
tically encouraged to let production
expand. As a consequence the re
sources of the country are energetic
ally developed and there is a larger
share for all those who assist in their
production. That this is true the
statistics of consumption abundantly
attest, and, being true, the people
have a right to account Ihemselves
prosperous, no matter how domesti'':
prices may compare with those which
obtain in other countries.
The only persons who have any
thing to complain of are the foreign
ers who are the victims of the dump
ing process, and they will be full#
justified in taking any steps which
may put an end to the practice. That
they are likely to do so is suggested
by the vigorous objections to dump
ing which find their way into print
in free-trade Kngland. Although the
gospel of cheapness is preached by
liritish economists, it is noteworthy
that they are beginning to realize
that when it obtains at the expense
of tin* domestic producer it is dearly
paid for by all classes. Production
is the mainspring of prosperity, and
anything that strikes a blow at it
must prove detrimental to a country.
This is a truth which sophistry can
not disguise even in (ireat Itritnln,
where cheapness is extolled, but
where it i nevertheless clearly
recogni/ed that the cheapness which
pl-ows I|l tructive to domestic in-i
du.-li \ is undesirable. It is onl.\ 1/
American free trader who »till sirf
fer- from the hallucination that it
is w.'f for the COII inner to seek to
profit at thi- expense of llie pro
ducer.
•?I he next democratic candidate
for president it*list come from a ic
|»nlilii'iiii state, mile** lie hails from
Netiiil.l. Illii 'tie Inland, Ml-Oiiri ut
lli' tonth -t. I.oui (ilobi l)i n.oerat.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1903
LIVING NOW COSTS LESS.
Prosperity jind Plenty In Kolililiik
the UemutTula of Their Purty
Mir Cry.
Much has been said recently of the
high cost of living, and it is true that
as far as ju ices for the necessary com
modities ai*e concerned 11)0" has been a
record-breaking year. Hut there have
been causes for this in natural condi
tions entirely apart from the manipu
lation of syndicates, to which the un
thinking have been disposed to attrib
ute t lie advance in prices, says the
Troy Times.
Last year's short corn crop was one
of the principal causes producing the
advance in the prices of commodities.
This advance was felt not only in
cereals, but also in the prices of cat
tle and meats. In July, 1901, the index
prices of commodities in proportion to
consumption stood at 91.509. When
the damage to the corn crop became
fully known the index number rose to
95.330. In May of this year the ad
vance in the prices of cattle and meats
as well as cereals sent the index up to
102.239.
Hut the enormous cereal crops of
this year have sent this representative
figure from 102.239 in May to 99.579
November 1. The falling temperature
and its effect on eggs, milk and other
articles caused the slight advance to
100.449 on December 1, but this figure
was lower than at the corresponding
date in 1901, which, when the prices
of coal owing to the strike are taken
into consideration, isa favorable show
ing.
With the large corn crop and the re
duction in the price of meats, which
has already been announced from Kan
sas City, and with the better supply
of coal which may reasonably be ex
pected, now that mining is resumed
in full, there is reason to be
lieve that, the cost of living will stead
ily decline, and that, when the great
prosperity and activity of the coun
try are taken into consideration,
prices will not be a cause for pessimis
tic criticism. The New York Commer
cial says:
"Altogether, It would eeem that the in
dex number will not again rise to the
figures of lasl spring. While it ennnot lie
hoped that the cost of living will be re
duced to the figures for 1596 and I.S97—in
deed, such a decline would not be natural
in view of the general prof]>erity and busi
ness* activity existing throughout the
country—yet it can be reasonably ex
pected that the cost of living will at least
be reduced to the level of I.SSS and I.SS9.
When tho general conditions existing
during the two periods' are remembered
such a decline would make a decided
ly favorable comparison for the present
period of prosperity."
This result may rob the demo
cratic party of a war cry, but it will
be pleasing- to purchasers of commodi
ties, and will help to prove that the
reasons assigned by those who, from
political or other motives, attack the
present conditions in ibis country
have been, voluntarily or ignorautly,
deceptive.
THE "ANTI" SUPERFLUOUS.
Timely and \\ Itr Warning That
Should He Home in >1 ill <1 !»>'
LeKialatum.
Xo liil! iliat can be properly described
as "anti-trust" deserves the considera
tion of the congress. "Antd" in this
connection has the meaning'of "hostile
to,"and there is no reason nor even
excuse for the enactment of legislation
hostile to all industrial combinations
that are loosely classed under the head
ing "trusts." In his message, Presi
dent lloosevelt sounded a warning
agaiinst. hostility to these combinations
as such. We should be hostile only
to the evil that is in some of them,
says the Albany Journal.
This warning should be borne in
mind, for it is timely and wise.. It
should be heeded as well in the giving
of a name to legislation as in the fram
ing of a proposed law. Legislation re
lating to trusts should be for their
regulation only, not for the accom
plishment of the purpose indicated by
the use of the prefix in question'. And
it should l»e described as "trust legis
lation." "Anti-trust," applied to any
measure that might be justly enacted,
is as much a misnomer as "anti-rail
way," or "anti-insurance," or "anti
bank" would he, applied respectively
to laws relating to the management
and operation of railroads, insurance
companies and banks, and to the su
pervision of the two latter by state
governments and by the national gov
ernment , respectively.
Away with "anti-t rust."
COMMENT AND OPINION.
ICThe Monroe doctrine and "man
ifest destiny" seem to fit into and
complement each other, all in the in
terest of American expansion and in
disregard of the anti-imperialists.—
Troy Times.
E Of course. Mr. Bryan has the right
to enjoy prosperity honestly won, and
nobody objects to liis possession of u
private fortune. Hut it does seem a lit
tle out of order for a man so sit uated to
go up and down the ea rt h bewailing as
calamitous a condition of things under
which lie thrives so well. Troy Times.
B 'Secretary of the Treasury Shaw
declaims that lie will do nothing to
help Mpeculators out of financial difli
eulties. Nobody can object to Ilia
decision, if money enough is pro
vided for the transaction of the legi
timate business of the country noth
ing more can be asked, Cleveland
Leader.
€ The action of the bolide in appro
priating #.">oo,o<MMo be used in the pros
ecution of trusts under the provisions
of the Sherman anti trust law settle*
the i pies lion as tow hat posit ion (be re
pnblit-nii party will tube on the trust
question in li«» 4. Without committing
itself in details it will be against all
corporations and combination* eli-
Hiiyeil in tb< unlawful restmint of
limit. liidiiiuapolik Journal.
FIGHTING AGAIN.
Venezuelan Rebels Attack Presi
dent Castro's Troops.
l*ro*l<leii( ("MNtro's Iteply to Ilic Pow*
IT* Contain* a Mow Propo«al llint
In Nut Likely to be Accepted
-HluekuiletVUl Priibulily
be Continued.
Willemstad, Island of -Curacoa, Dec.
C9.—Gen. Yidal and five other leading
supporters of Gen. Matos who had
Sought refuge here left the island of
Curacoa Saturday morning in a sail
boat, which took them in the direc
tion of Cumarebo, near Coro, on the
Yenezuelan coast. The departure of
these men is taken as proof that the
revolt against President Castro is
again active.
The Yenezuelan revolutionists have
assumed active hostilities against
President Castro. There occurred on
Saturday a lively engagement be
tween 1,200 revolutionists under Gen.
Jtiera and government forces at Cau
yarao, in the vicinity of Coro. He
tails of the engagement are lacking,
but it, is known here that the revolu
tionists had artillery. The govern
ment forces were commanded by Gen.
Castillo. Gen. Kiera retained his po
sition.
London, Dec. 29. —A dispatch from
Home says it has been semi-officially
announced that under special agree
ments the blockade of the Yenezuelan
coast by the allies will continue dur
ing the arbitration of the issues.
Washington, Dec. 29.—The Yenezu
elan government is now in possession
of the complete notes of Great Hri
tain and Germany containing the
various reservations made by those
governments before the decision was
reached that the issues between Ven
ezuela and the European governments
having claims against her should be
referred to The Hague tribunal for
arbitration. The I'nited Slates hav
ing acted as an intermediary in the
steps leading up to the acceptance of
arbitration, now turns over to the
Venezuelan government the formal
work of completing the basis for a
full hearing before The Hague court.
The notes were transmitted to the
Venezuelan government through I'ni
ted States Minister Howen at Caracas.
Senor Haralt has prepared the fol
lowing statement for the press:
"Venezuela agrees to pay all her
debts, the payments to lie guaranteed
by a certain percentage of the cus
toms receipts, or by the flotation of
a special loan, also to be guaranteed."
Caracas, Dec. 31. The state of
Barqtiisieto, capital of the state of
Lara, which for some time past has
been in possession of the Venezuelan
revolutionists, lias been recaptured bv
government forces. The towns of San
Carlos and Tinaquillo have also been
reoccupied by the government. The
revolutionists at Harcpiisimeto evac
uated the town after losing 112 men
killed and 325 wounded. There was
hard fighting in tin- streets and
suburbs of Barquisimeto for two
days.
Berlin, Jan. 8. —President Castro's
reply to the powers, through Minis
ter Bo we n, is substantially an un
qualified acceptance of the proposals
to arbitrate and the accompanying
conditions. The foreign office here
received his answer yesterday and is
satisfied with its spirit. A further in
terchange of views, preparatory to
signing the protocol, will take place
in Washington. The only really im
portant question to be settled is what
shall be done with the blockade. A
continuance T>f the blockade is re
lied upon to hasten the conclusion
of the arbitration preliminaries, es
pecially on the part of Venezuela.
Rome, Jan. 2.—Foreign Minister
Prinetti has received through Am
bassador Meyer Secretary May's note
communicating President Castro's
acceptance of The Hague arbitration
in principle, but with an additional
proposition which the government at
Washington does not support.
Brussels, Jan. 2. —It is said here
that an arrangement has been con
cluded with Great Britain ana Ger
many to submit the Belgian and
Dutch claims against Venezuela to
the international peace court at The
Hague at, the same time the Anglo-
German claims against the South
American republic are taken to that
tribunal.
Caracas, Jan. 2. —President Castro
said to a correspondent yesterday:
"If a settlement is not reached it
will be because a settlement forms no
part of the plan of the allies; in this
case the prolongation of the present
situation would be disastrous for all
concerned. The solution of the pres
ent difficulty depends more on the
allied powers than on Venezuela."
A Chapter of J a pan cue Horror*.
Victoria, H. C., Dec. 89.—Corre
spondence received from Yokohama
by the steamer Tartar includes de
tails of a horrible baby farming con
spiracy in Osaka. An elderly woman,
her married daughter, husband and
two other persons have been arrest
ed for infanticide, and it is learned
that since they started operations
this year 300 children were killed.
The Japan Times has an account of a
Japanese of Koohi having been mar
ried to a corpse. The bride-elect
committed suicide on the eve of her
marriage. The body was recovered
and, at the request of the dead wo
man's parents, the ceremony took
place between the living and the
dead.
Huiilgaiiirrir I'liiy* favorites.
Caracas, Dee. 31.—t'nlted States
Minister Itowen has received infor
mation that the Dutch steamer Prinz
Maurits ha i entered certain Venezue
lan ports blockaded by the British
fleet and discharged her cargo there.
Special permission for the Dutch
••learner to do this was obtained from
Commodore Montgomerie, of the
British cruiser ('harbydis. The Ital
I in cruiser Ohivnuiii Bausan ordered
the I'rin/ Maurits away from port,
li'it Commodore Montgomerie direct
ed that she discharge her cargo. In
['ma as this i> held to be a di .-rim
muliou aguuul Aiucricta fcttuuiers.
A *INE COUNTRY.
Realdeut of Ohio Sn>« Wcilem Can
ada la an iili-ul Uml for Farm
trs anil ItuneUcra.
A delegate from Ohio to Western
Canada says:"The whole of West
ern Canada seemed to me to be a
very fine country, but I spent most
of my time about thirty miles east
of Lacombe, in Alberta, near what
is popularly known as the coal banks
on the Ked Deer Kiver, and I am
very pleased to report that the coun
try appears to be everything that the
Agents of the Canadian Government
have claimed for it. Good water can
be obtained almost anywhere from
17 to 40 feet, and fed generally by
springs. The natural hay and grass
were magnificent in their growth and
wild pea vines very heavy. 1 met
some of my friends who moved there
seven years ago and two brothers
who had absolutely nothing on their
arrival seven years before now own
two and a half sections of land and
175 head of cattle. They told me that
they did not feed their stock all win
ter, in fact, never saw them again
until the spring, when they came
home fat and without loss. I gath
ered oats 6 ft. 4 high and running
from 75 to 100 bushels per acre. It
appeared to me that all grasses, wild
and cultivated, grow to perfection
in any part of Alberta that I saw,
and the farmers were cutting frotn
two to three tons of wild hay to the
acre. I found the climate very de
sirable in every respect, and I am told
that the winter is the finest part of
the year. There is plenty of coal and
wood to be had near at hand for the
hauling, and such is my satisfaction
with the country that I acquired
some land and have put a bunch of
cattle thereon. I can confidently rec
ommend Western Canada as a suit
able place for farmers to immigrate
to, and can assure them the kindest
treatment by the people there, so
much so that one does not distin
guish the fact that we have left the
boundaries of the United States."
ITugh Spender, of the Westminster
Gazette, one of the British Journal
ists who visited Canada this summer
(1902), says: "We fell in with a
young farmer from Somersetshire,
England, driving a binder round a
hundred acre field of wheat in West
ern Canada. In conversation I found
that he came from within fifteen
miles of my old home in Somerset
shire. Here was the very man we
wanted. He had come to Manitoba
ten years ago, with a capital of sl2
on landing. In England he had been
employed on a dairy farm, and earned
eighteen shillings a week. He now
owns 320 acres of land, his' horses,
buildings and cattle, and expects to
have 4,000 bushels of wheat this sea
son. We had heard of such things
in the old land, but they did not seem
credible, until we came to this liv
ing example of the strides that it is
possible to make in Manitoba. Had
this man remained in England, it is
pretty safe to say he would still be
earning no more than eighteen
shillings a week, while in the same
period in Manitoba he has become a
substantial and prosperous farmer."
"I know a man who commenced in
Assiniboia, 15 years ago, with no
means; no capital. To-day this man
owns 7,000 acres of land, some 30
horses, 30 or 40 bullocks, cows, etc.
He has built a good stone house with
his own hands, and has now married
and is doing well, with every prospect
of increasing his means in the future.
Western Canada has the most exhil
arating, bracing climate I ever knew.
All that is required in the settler
is perseverance, grit, patience and
hard work. I w.ill guarantee the
country, if you will guarantee the
man." From letter from a retired
officer in the British army.
Wherein Hp Wa« Dlflrrrbl.
Mc.Jigger—Oh, he's a regular hog. Ha
wants the best of everything for him
•elt".
Thingumbob—Well, we all want that.
"Yes, but he always manages to get it."
—Philadelphia Press.
A Saapfct.
She—You didn't stay long in London.
He—No, I couldn't stand it. Over there
everybody knew me for an American rignt
•way. Here, in New York, no one ever
•u»peets it. —Smart Set.
Stop* the rotiiih
and works off the fold. Laxative Bromo
Quinine Tablets. Price 25 cents.
It is a good thing that talk is cheap
It is desirable that the necessities of life
should always he within lasy reach of
the masses.—Puck.
I)o not believe I'iso's Cure for Consump
tion has an equal for coughs and colds.—J.
I''. Uoyer, Trinity Springs, Tnd., Feb. 15, 1900
"Some men," said Cncle Kben, "takes
■ heap o' credit for bein' patient, when
dey's only jes' dilatory.' —Washington
Star.
If you are coughing, take Dr. August Koe
nig's Hamburg breast Tea.
Every man reveals himself when !■« de
scribe* another Ran'* Horn.
For Infanta rjid Cliildren^
01 ' The Kind You Have Always Bought
RECORD OF THE PAST.
The host guarantee of the future i»
the record of the past, and over fifty
thousand people have publicly testified
that Doan's Kidney Pills have cured
them of numerous kidney ills, from
common backache to dangerous dia
betes, and all the attendant annoy
ances and sufferings from urinary dis
orders. They have been cured to stay
cured. Here is one case:
Samuel J. Taylor, retired carpenter,
residing at 312 South Third St., Goshen,
Ind., says:"On the 25th day of Au
gust, 1597, I made an affidavit before
Jacob C. Mann, notary public, stating
my experience with Doan'e* Kidney
Pills. I had suffered for thirty years
and was compelled at times to walk
by the aid of crutches, frequently
passed gravel and suffered excruciat
ingly. I took every medicine on the
market that I heard about, and some
gave me temporary relief. I began
taking Doan's Pills, and the
results I gave to the public in tliestate
ment above referred to. At this time,
on the 19th day of July, 1902, I make
this further statement, that during
the five years which have elapsed T
have had no occasion to tise either
Doan's Kidney Pills or any other med
icine for my kidneys. The cure effect
ed was a permanent one."
A FREE TRIAL of this great Kidney
medicine which cured Mr. Taylor will
be mailed on application to any part
of the United States. Address Foster-
Milburn Co., Buffalo, X. Y. For sale
by all druggists, price GOoents tier box.
cJ
Via Dubuque, Waterloo and Albert Lea.
Fast Vestibule Night train with through j
Sleeping Car, Buffet Library Car ami Free |
Reclining Chair Car. Dining Car Service i
en route. Tickets of agents of I. C. R. R. ]
and connecting lines,
p A. H. HANSON, 0. P. A., CHICAGO. (J
To n
JRf
PLEASANT
fsfTk*
THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW
AND MV COMPLEXION IS BETTER.
My doctor say* it acts gently on th» stomach, liret
and kidneys and is a i>lf«.iHant Iniativa. Tins drink it
made from herbs, ana if. prepared for use an Ga«uy
tea. It is called ♦'La.uf'n Tea" or
LANE'S FAMILY MEDICINE
All druggists or by mail 2,"» eta. and 50 ct§. Buy it tc.
day. l.unr'N Family Medici no move* the
bovrrlN enrli day. In order to bo h#>*ltUy Ihisu
necessary. Address, Box £!!5. Le N. Y.
aaasaMaa»k
J aRE YCU SATISFIED ? 1
Eg Are you entira'y satisfied with n
I the goods you buy and with the
H prices that you pay?
I Over 2.000.000 people are trading with
I us niul getting their goods at -wholesale
I Our 1,000-page catalogue will lie sent
f] on receliit of 15 cents. It tells the story.
I l CHICAGO