Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, January 22, 1903, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON CODNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TEKMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Per year '2 00
U paid In advance 1
ADVERTISING RATF.S:
AdTerttneiiients are published at the rate ol
#ce dollar per square for one Insertion and tlfty
cents per square for each subsequent insertion.
Rates by the year, or for six or three months.
»re low and uniform, and will be furnished o»
application.
Legal aad Official Advertising per square,
Itaree times or less, 32; euch subsequent inser
tion SO cents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for one lnser
■ertlon: 5 cents per line tor each subsequent
«on-ecutivc 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, >5 per year:
over live lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per
issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the Prbss Is complete
»nd afTords facilities for doing the best class of
work. Particular attention i-aioto Law
Printing.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub-
Eher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
lor in advance.
The producers of alcohol in France
are somewhat disturbed because of the
new invention by which alcohol is
manufactured by synthesis by means
of acetylene. Although the process is
as yet too costly to endanger their In
dustry. the members of the Society of
Agriculture of Nord. in a recent meet
ing, memorialized the government ask
ing that a duty of i'/ 2 rents a pound to
be placed upon carburets.
R. If. M. Jantzen, a Pittsburg en
graver, has engraved the alphabet and
eight other letters and figures, making
thirty four in all, on the head of an
ordinary pin. This surpasses any
feat of the kind on record, and re
quired the best of skill and patience to
accomplish. The alphabet alone has
been engraved frequently heretofore
on a pin head, but the task of adding
eight other characters is very difficult.
Reports have been submitted to
President E. H. Harriman, of the
Southern Pacific railroad, for the con
struction of a tunnel nearly seven
miles long through the Sierra Neva
da mountains, at a cost of about sl4-
000,000. Such a tunnel would cut
down the summit grade about 1,500
feet, and would enable the company to
dispense with all but three of the for
ty-two miles of mountain snowsheds.
Steps having been made to organize
a union of Austrian locomotive engi
neers, the minister of the interior for
bade the formation of such a union, on
the ground that it would be a danger
to the state. The organizers appealed
to the imperial court, alleging that
such a prohibition was In violation of
their political rights. The court has
decided that the prohibition by the
ministry was legal and well founded.
The weaving of stone into material
for clothing, the making of flexible
and lasting granite trousers, black mar
ble coats and fancy onyx waistcoats
may be a possibility of the future, the
weavers say. Already curtains are
made of asbestos and cloth manufac
tured from chalk, while a certain spin
ner has an armchair covered with a
soft and silky fabric of Titian red,
which he wove toilsomely out of rock
red shell.
Automobile sign posts to serve as
warnings of dangerous turnings, de
scents, or faults in the highways will
be placed throughout France by
spring. The system of posts as de
vised by the technical committee of
the Frensch Automobile club is ex
tremely practical. The idea was tak
en from the cyclists' sign posts, al
though the motormen's signs are more
novel and at the same time more
easily read.
Mr. Carter IT. Harrison, wife of the
mayor of Chicago, has become the re
cipient of a decoration at the hands
of Henri Merou, the French consul, for
her work in advancing the interests of
the Alliance Francaise. On behalf of
the latter M. Merou presented her with
a handsome gold medal suspended
from a clasp in the form of a rosette.
The medal Is the insignia of an officer
of public instruction, and is higlrly
prized among educators.
What is undoubtedly the smallest
horse in the world has just been
brought to Tampico, Mexico, by Ta
biato Eposito and sold to A, J. Morri
son. of I job Angeles, Cal., for a large
price. This Tom Thumb of eqtilnes,
which is appropriately named "Lilli
putian," stands just high enough to
reach to his owner's knees, and weighs
only 73 pounds, though fat and plump.
The pony is seven years old and 22'
inches—five and a half hands—tall.
In some respects Venezuela is the
most interesting country in the world.
It is larger than France and Germany
put together, having a greater area
than the states of Texas Colorado,
Idaho and California combined. The
best watered region of the emth. It
hi'-' over 1.000 navigable rivers, the
mightiest of them being the Orinoco,
which is one of the biggest rivers on
the globe. The delta of the Orinoco
Is nearly i I urge as that of the Nile.
The largest sewer In the world Is
ni -ring tomphilon In ("hl< ago. it
will be nearly two and a half miles
long, i»o 1 12( t inside dintii"ter, and
thrt.u h d will pie tie flow of (Hmi.ooo
gallons of w«t< r every minute. The
i' which will be known as the
Thirty til- lb in w conduit, I but an
ot ier artificial v*ln that Ch|itu?o 1
to Mnpln) i i Ifiiiftifiln »ii irtti i i
land > u of I,tike Michigan Into h hit.;.
Pmh rvolr for the cjty'g municipal and
cotuumrclfcl tie ds,
HOW MUCH TARIFF REFORM?
TIiMP In \ob»<ly Tn-ltay lie ma nding
Free Tradi't Wihnt Into lie
lionet
'Hie democratic leaders are gener
ally agreed that the tariff will he a
leading, if not the leading, issue in next
year's campaign. They are preparing
for the fray with that idea-very firmly
fixed in their minds. But what will be
their demand iu the premises? How
fur w ill they propose going in the mat
ter of revising the present- scedules?
For years, says the Washington
Star, the democratic party was known
as the party of free trade. Men like
Mr. Watterson, Mr. Mills, Mr. Vest,
Mr. Russell, of Massachusetts, and the
late Frank Hurd, of Ohio, all avowed
free trade principles. And they were
very influential in shaping their party's
course on the tariff. Mr. Watterson in
two national conventions defeated an
effort, to straddle the issue, lie in
sisted on a straiglitout declaration,
and got it-. Mr. Cleveland's-success in
JBB4 was achieved not so much because
of any specific declaration of his party
in its platform as because of the divid
ed sentiment of the republicans re
spect ing Mr. Blaine.
But in 1802 Mr. Cleveland was elected
on a platform which promised tariff
reform, in- heroic form. At last, it
seimed, we were, to have a measure
which should express to the country
the meaning of 16 years of vigorous
tariff agitation- Ten thousand lead-
THE OLD AND THE NEW.
n ? n ufuu (
The New—l wonder if the old guy will know enough to move on
I ing editorials and twice that many
eloquent stump speeches were to be
written into law. But congress balked.
The measure that had been promised
could not pass that. body. A great
many people, it so turned out, had been
writing and talking on the tariff ques
tion either without sufficient know
ledge of what the country wanted,or
what their party was able to perform.
There were democrat s w ho proved to
be as pronounced protectionists as any
republicans in commission; and be
tween them they made a spectacle of
the tariff plank of the democracy's
latest platform. A hodge-podge tariff
bill which recognized the principle of
i protection as distinctly as the McKin
ley bill had done was passed, and the
free traders were routed.
Nor have the freetraders recovered
their old form. Nobody to-day is de
manding free trade. On theeontrary,
many of the men wlw followedit he free
trade banner so long are now declar
j ing that thje country will not have free
| trade, just as they are declaring that
! the country will not have free silver,
j But how much tariff reform do they
! now propose? What is their line of
i thought on that subject? How far
away are they from their position
; when they were challenging the pro
| teeted industries to a struggle to the
death? The tariff is undoubtedly a
live i>siie, and the time has come for
both sides t• > be specific.
PRESS OPINIONS.
.
tr?"A movement to rejuvenate the
! democratic party is another reminder
;of the manner in \\liich history repeats
itself. Washington Star.
If "The three great speakers," says
a democrat ie contemporury, "are < lay,
Blaine and Ueed, and the last was not
the least." These deinoernt> discov
eries of the superior merits of the op
| position should be more prompt. —St.
Louis (ilobe-Democrat.
I C r.Mr. lirvan saysif (jroverf levelund
is tin' kind of man the reorganiKed
denioeraev wants to run f«»r president
the reorganized democracy should run
that kind of man. But .Mr. Bryun
doesn't ay there is a ghost ol a cltance
for either the disorganized or the re
organized democracy to elect a eun
dioati and there isn't so long a-
Mr. Bryan ei nt reds a largea following
as jlll v\ marehvs uuder bis banner.
1 roy Tiiu«
I It wan in K a gland thut u court de
cided that good* hol«l simply as
"woolen gooi.> f * in ed not contain a
purl ieh 1.1 w kiil. lii so thoroughly
undei tood In the trade ia Kngland
that woolen Hoods ili> not eonta a Wool
that tlo court- 111 not hold a sale of
fubrii eotupiix i| entirely of subsli*
tuli to In- fraud. And yet the free
tilde |<ap< i • t> ll u» that nothing for
nvrn i> in ,< d with Bit -h wool in
the uiaailfaet ui I' of wool 111 Imeause
tin- Brill a have fret wool liioaaup
oil.- Journal,
CA.MERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1903.
DEMOCRATS HAVE NO CHANCE.
V lit tin nit nit luue jtnil Without «,
l.eader, tin- Outlook for Tlti'iii
Siever Was Darker,
The Boston Herald, vvjiich has no
bias against the democracy, lias been
looking* over the ground, and says it
cannot see any chance for that party
to carry the country in 1904. It looks
at that 137 majority against the dem
ocrats in the electoral college in
1900, knows that the majority would
have been much bigger in 1902 if a
president liatl been elected cliis year,
and does not understand how tliey
can escape defeat by a very large ad
verse vote two years lience. The Her
ald is not exhibiting any feeling in
the matter, but tells this as a contri
bution ti> the political philosophy of
the time, says the St. Louis Globe-
Democrat.
Many other intelligent, newspapers
are in the same quandary as our Hus
ton contemporary. In fact, very few
democrats, it is safe to say, look for
victory for their party in 100-4. No
leader is in sight around whom the
bulk of the democrats would rally.
Bryan has bis own faction, but most
of the democrats cast of the Missis
sippi are against, him, and he himself
does not look for another nomina
tion. llill has been discredited by
the defeat in New York, and by ilie
socialistic coal plank in his state
platform, which was denounced by
many representative democrats out*
side of his state and by some in it.
Even bis candidate for governor, Bird
S. Coler, took pains during the enn
\iiss to say that he did not favor that
expression. Gorman has very few
friends among the masses of the
democrats, and Cleveland, who is
mentioned in connection with the
candidacy by a few democrats, is im
possible, of course.
Moreover, the democrats have no
issue, so far as the country has been
able to learn, which would raise up
a leader or attract any considerable
number of voters. They have been
forced to drop silverism, militarism
and imperialism, they dare not make
a light on the tariff, and there is no
issue for them in the trusts, for Ihe
republicans have preempted that
question. The outlook for the demo
crats was never darker two years be
fore a presidential election than it is
at. this time. Their party is so de
moralized and discredited, in fait,
that it is of no use even as an opposi
tion. From present indications, it,
will enter the coming canvass under
the cloud of foreseen, deserved and
over w helming defeat.
'SILVER IS DOOMED.
Even In the Ilenitrlited Ciinntrtei
M here Trade Stiiismitc« H In
I'jiMMiiiK Away.
In the Philippine islands there is a
currency problem It has been pre
cipitated by the recent depreciation in
tlie price of silver. A permanent solu
tion of it will not be attempted at this
session of congress, but some remedial
legislation will be passed that will re
lieve the (list ressing condi t ions ere a ted
by it. The lesson of the industrial dis
organization now prevailing in all
countries using a silver standard is
that silver must everywhere speedily
give way to gold, says the llrooklyn
Kagle (ind.). The United States will
of necessity lead the way by effecting
a change in the currency system of
their colonial dependencies in ihe
farthest Pacific, and Mexico is expect
ed to follow suit with a promptness
that will bring China, India and the
-traits settlements rcaiiih into line.
The necessity of seen ring n promise
of common and definite action agaiust
silver i - the real reason win the con
gress will not coinpre hen.- iveh dis
cuss the proposed current \ substitu
tion during this SI ciott. The em pel
allou of rh na and Mexico is earnestly
tie iii 11, ttml w hili the ailhe.-ii.il ( ,f the - e
nation to tin {.'old standard is b,\ no
Imai nil e\l lit Ilitliu if the remote
future, the etleittrnge meiit of their
ami -iHcr iTlllmi II I to the point
where radical reform becomes ne«-
essai y K guaranteed best ty the ir
i' tilde h !_• '• of com me relit I t t. uts,
A little longer übmiskloji to the evils
of it Mi tuitiktrd and tin tuitions
that now have recourse to it will bury
it lietoiul tie pofcoibility of riMirree-
COWARDLY CKIME.
Editor Gonzales Is Shot Down
by Lieut. Gov. Tillman.
Wound Probably l'a(i*l Shootliia Oc
curred on a HIIN.V Thoroughfare
in t'oliimbuit, S. Onteouis
ol uii Old Filed -Tillman
Taken to Jail.
Columbia, S. C'., Jan. 16. —Xarcisso
Gener Gonzales, editor of the State,
is at the Columbia hospital in a crit
ical condition from a pistol wound in
flicted by James 11. Tillman, lieuten
ant governor of South Carolina, and
a nephaw of United States Senator
Tillnia n.
The shooting occurred on Main
street, at the intersection of Gervais
street, in full view of the state capi
tol, the most frequented corner in Co
lumbia.
It was just a few moments before
2 o'clock Thursday when the cry was
passed along the streets that "Jim
Tillman has shot X. <l. Gonzales."
The offices of the State are on the
same block as the scene of the shoot
ingl and in a few moments a great
throng had assembled. The excite
ment and indignation on the streets
was intense. Mr. Gonzales was taken
to the office of the State, where phy
sicians pronounced his wound very
dangerous and probably fatal.
Policeman Poland arrested Lieut.
Gov. Tillman and took him to police
headquarters, where he was relieved
of two pistols—the one with which
he shot Mr. Gonzales and a second
large revolver of 38 calibre. From
the police station he was taken to
the county jail, where he is under
protection of officers. The only cause
attributed for the shooting is that
during the recent primary election
Mr. Gonzales bitterly opposed Lieut.
Gov. Tillman iu his race for the office.
During the progress of that, cam
paign Mr. Gonzales in his fight to de
feat Mr. Tillman had denounced Him
as a "criminal candidate and a prov
en liar."
ft was this and otiher such editor
ials. it is supposed, that goaded Mr.
Tillman to the desperate deed of yes
terday. Since the first primary. Au
gust 2fi, 1902. Mr. Gonzales has had
nothing to say about Mr. Tillman ex
cept to comment upon the result of
the primary.
The trouble T>etween the two men
first grew out -of a fist fight between
United States Senator Tillman and
Senator McLaurin on the floor of the
United States senate.
Maj. Mioah Jenkins, who was with
Roosevelt's Rough Riders in Cuba, and
who had won a record for braver}",
was to have been presented with a
sword by the people of South Caro
lina in recognition of his courage and
the fame which he had won for his
state in the Spanish war.
The presentation was to have been
made by Lieut. Gov. Tillman. When
President Roosevelt withdrew his in
vitation to a state dinner in Wash
ington which he had sent Senator
Tillman, because of the fight the lat
ter had in the United States senate,
Lieut. Gov. Tillman refused to present
the sword to Lieut. Jenkins.
Mr. Gonzales took up the matter
in 'his paper, the Daily State, and bit
terly denounced Tillman, lie repeat
ed the denunciations made previous,
on many different occasions, and
even dared Mr. Tillman V> deny the
charges which he had made. The
charges Gonzales made were spread
all over the south and made a deep
sensation.
FIVE BOYS KILLED.
Were Struck by an Hvprotw Train
While 4 oanllng Doun Hill.
South Bethlehem, Pa., Jan. 16. —
Five boys, whose ages range from 13
to 15 years, while coasting last night
were struck by a train on the Phila
delphia fir Heading railway and in
stantly killed and another was fatal
ly injured. The dead:
Dennis MeGinley, John Coyle, Owen
Cahill, Patrick Cahill and an un
known boy who was mangled beyond
recognition.
John Heubner, the sixth victim, is
said to be at the point of death.
The boys were coasting on a bob
sled. The railway crosses the street
at the bottom of the hill and the sled
and express train reached the cross
ing simultaneously. The engineer
was not aware of the tragedy until
he reached the station, a mile dis
tant from the scene of the accident,
when the blood and bones on the pi
lot of the engine gave him the first
intimation of the occurrence.
I*re«ldciit l» Asked to Ylftlt Toledo.
Washington, Jan. 1(5. —-Col. J. C.
Bonner, president of the MeKlnley
memorial association, of Toledo, yes
terday extended an invitation to the
president to attend the unveiling of
the MeKinley memorial, which was
erected by the citizens of Toledo.
The date of the unveiling has not,
been fixed, but will be named to suit
the convenience of the president,
should lie be able to be present. The
probability is that it w ill occur about
th- 1 time the president starts on his
western trip in the spring. The pres
ident told Col. Bonner that he would
attend the unveiling if he could so
arrange his affairs.
hay* He I* Not a t'andldate.
Now York, Jan. 16. ~ Mayor Tom L
Johnson, of < Vteland, who is here
on a busine-,* trip, was a-ked last
night rt-t trding the has '- of tlm
tat emeu t. that he will be a candidntd
for the democratic nomination for
governor of Ohio this year. "I am
not a candi I i.te for the nomination,"
I Mr. Johnson. "and if Mr. I'l.vo
hi'i made tuv -ttch announcement us
's attributed to him in the dispatch
■in ylb Id. published in tho
'lneianntl Times Star, he ha - done so
.vit'iout luy tttthorlzalioii. | U in nut
• seklii'* tcli a uouiinktiou."
Thanked by Thousands
Hundreds of Qrateful Letters Daily te!l how the Free trial of
Doan's Kidney Pills brought relief to Invalid-Drifting People.
OAKLAICD, CAI..— "I got your trial box of
Doau's Kidney I'ills and thank you very much
tor them. I think they are worth their weight
in gold. I gave them to my son and they
helped him go much that I bought two boxes.
They have done him more good than the doc
tors could do. They said he had Bright's
Disease and could not get well. His urine
was green and his back nearly killed him.
Now he is nearly well. I have five other sons
whom I have advised to write you, as I
would like to convince them of the merits of
T)oan's Kidney I'ills." —Mrs. LEIGETT, 7G2East
17th Street, Oakland, Cal.
NEW ORLEANS, LA. —" I take pleasure in con
gratulating you on your Doan's Kidney Pi'.ls.
I received and used the sample and then pur
chased a box of C. L. Cusaek <fc Co., Ltd. I
must say I have been cured of dizziness by
them, and have not had the slightest sign of
this so-called vertigo since the use of Doan's
Kidney I'ills. I will recommend them to a
great many others whom I know suffering from
dizziness and kidney complaint. It is true,
since using the pills, every one I meet remarks
about how well I look. Thanking you for your
free trial box."— GEO. JUNNOVILLE, care of
Preston <fc Stauffcr, New Orleans, La.
IT WAS A GREAT SCHEME.
Bat There Wmnll Snftlclvnit Induce
ment to Make lit a. Sure*
\V 1 a nr r.
"Among several tracts of wiM land I
own in tne northern part of the state,"
taid a wealthy Detroiter the other day,
according to the Free l're.-s, "is an ex
tensive cranberry marsh. I know that a
great many cranberries are gathered there
every season, but 1 have no objections
to that. About three months ago 1 got
word that a certain man, liviug near the
marsh, had constituted himself as an agent
and was ready to warn the public off.
1 a.-ked for particulars and the 'agent'
came down here. He was an old farmer
with avarice in his eye, and he proceeded
to explain:
" 'Colonel, I heard that a gang of fel
lers was comin' over from the next coun
ty this fall and goin' into camp on your
marsh for two weeks to gather berries,
and so i did some talkin to keep 'cm
away.'
" 'Don't you always gather a large quan
tity yourself?' 1 asked.
" "Oh, yes. I guess I gather and sell
about '2O bushels a year, but then, I'm
living right there, you know.'
" 'And that makes a difference?'
" 'Of course. I'll tell you wiiat I come
down for. I want to build a S4OO barn
next spring, and I want to do it from the
sale of cranberries. If you'll just give me
a lease of that land for a year or two I'll
keep everybody off and make enough clear
money in two seasons to do all my build
in' and repairin'.'
" 'And what am I to get for such a
lease?' I asked.
"The old fellow did some hard think
ing for a minute or two. and then cam*
to a conclusion and rep!id:
'Well, colonel, I'll be 1 unged if I don't
send you down a bushe! ot cranberries,
and I'll pick 'em myself and se» that
they are all right! Come, now, you ate
what kind of a man I am!' "
Alloy of Vanity,
"Men have died for love and worms have
eaten them," but the love that drives a re
jected suitor to self-slaughter ha* a large
admixture of the baseallov of vanity.—N. V.
World.
Helping It Atone.
Lady Visitor—What a handsome man,
«nd how kind and gentle he looks.
Prison Warden—Yes, ma'am. He is one
of the loveliest murderers we have.—Chi- '
cago Vews.
Appropriate.
Mrs. Sharps—They call the bell boy in the j
hotel "Buttons," I believe. I wonder why? I
Mrs. Sharpe—Probably because he's al- j
frays off when you need him most. —Phila- j
delphia Press.
Stops the Cough
snd works off the cold. Laxative Bromo
Quinine Tablets. Price 25 cents.
Well Posted.
Undergraduate (to chum) —That Mis*
Slick is the finest conversationalist I ever
met. She knows all the track records for
three years back.—Chicago Daily News.
Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infalli
ble medicine for coughs and colds. —N. W.
Samuel. Ocean (irove, N. .J., Feb. 17,1900.
Most of us fee] that when we have ac
knowledged a mistake we have more than |
atoned for it. —Indianapolis News.
rftsiowMi^ e u " ave
p Always Bought
Avegdable PreparationforAs M * **
\ slmilatingllicFoodandßcgula- ia m
ting iheSlomaclis and Bowels of s |g
n" —rr ~: —~ TT I Signature /AU
; Promolcs DigcjMton.CheerfuH M J& Jr WM"
ness and Rest-Contains neither m p #[ JP . p
Opium, Morphine nor >lincral. E| 01 'I jj
>i'OT NAUC OTIC. & & \\ y
affHd UtS.U/.CELPmXWI fH *\>V
* \ SB
lu*h*lU So/it J JfepL/m 9
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illtmSeed-* 1 JKJm IJI .1*..-'" H
f/vr.W HJfOr I J V JIA. 0 MB
•> W.Jiwt / ■ RJ _J.
Aperfeel Remedy forConsUpa- m[ )S ft' 1 ' Ww ti
i lion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea '|| I^*
Worms .Convulsions, Feveris- 48 I f" „
• ncss and Loss OF SLEEP. || \JP |" y T !1 UH j
iii I'acSuniU- Signature of ]M
gI 6arS
-
Aching barks are eased. ITip, back, ani
loin pains overcome. Swelling of the
limbs and dropsy signs vanish.
They correct urine with brick dust sedi
ment, high colored, pain in passing, drib
bling, frequency, bed wetting. Doan's
Kidney Pills remove calculi and gravel.
Relieve heart palpitation, sleeplessness,
headache, nervousness, dizziness.
FREE: ASK AND YOU WILL FIND*.
; Please send me by mail, without charp-o.
; trial box Dobu'b Kidney Pills.
| Name
| Post-offle®
State
; (Cut out coupon on dottod llneit an-l mail to
Koeter-Milbum Co.. JJufT&to, N V ;
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Cenulno
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Boar Signature of
Am I*—-Simile Wrapper Below.
torj »»«n m mat «n»>
- «*Mluwic(n.
!PAfTITOC HMI HEADACHE,
!uAl\l Old roa DIZZINESS.
SfTTIS FQH BUJCI'SBESS.
iWIUrO FOB TPHPID LIVER.
| m FO3 COKST4PATIQS.
llSj M FC3 SALLOIf SKIM.
Iroa TCEcc^piExioa
a CMON» u*m f^xiATuwi.
flgfSfr I FwpblT Vespet^ti
■ 1 JUJAJJ ■ jrnwfjwi 11
CURE SICK HCAOACHS.
- 2
fl RE YOU SATISFIED? I
jgpgl Are you entirely satisfied with p§
the goods you buy and with the H
prices that jou pay?
Over 2.000.000 people ore trading with &
tis and getting their goods at wholesale H
Our 1,000-page catalogue will be sent if
on receipt of 15 cents. It tells the story. M
1 CHICAGO I
The house that tells the truth. JjJ
>■— —M
FREE TO WOMEN
ft 311 s9 "^ 0 P rovo 'be healing and
I ivlV.\j B lv" M cleansing pow«y of »'u*tliio
AiiU»optio we will
1 y? mall a large trial package
ft ff with book of instructions
1 absolute y l'rce. This is
I not a tiny sample, but a larpo
1 w.^-g vt package, enough to convince
I anyone of Its value. Women
si i i all over the country arc
~ praising Paxtlne for what it,
ihas dune in local treat
ment t>l female illw. cur
ing all inflammation and discharges, wonderful
as a cleansing vaginal douche, for sore throat,
nasal catarrh, as a mouth wash, and to remove
tartar and whiten the teeth Send to-day; a
postul card will do.
Mold by riruiruUts or lent i»o«t|»nld by ufiO
cent", lurtfe box. Nnltat'u<*Uoii ffnuruiiceed.
'IIIE R. PAXTOSI t'O., fiOl t'olumbua .IT.,
Hoatoit, MHfel.