Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, May 12, 1904, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY FRffi
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
r'fr *2 0«
112 paid In advance '. I oO
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rate of
#oe dollar per square forone insertion anil llfty
•ents per square for each subsequent Insertion
Rates by the year, or for six or tlireo months,
•re low aiid uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legal and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less, «" eueh subsequent inser
tion 0 cents per square.
Local notices lu cents per line for one Inser
aertlon. 5 cents per line for each subsequent
•onseeutlvo lnnerllon.
Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per
Hue. Simple announcements of births, mar*
risgev H nil deaths will be Inserted free.
Business cards, five lines or less. «f> per year,
over live lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising
No local Inserted for less than 7j cents per
issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PH«.« IS complete
•nd affords facilities for doint' the best class of
WnrW. PAHTICULAB ATTENTION PAIUTO LAW
PRINTING.
No paper will bo discontinued until arrear
ages arc paid, except ®t this option of tho pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
tor in advance.
The Memory.
Mr. Owen Wister, In his preface to a
new edition of"The Virginian," pays
his respects to"the American memory, j
•which seldom retains anything over j
night." By contrast and as an example J
of how the faculty of memory may be
developed by training, the new transla
tion of a play of Aristophanes, by B. B.
Rogers, an English scholar, is instruc
tive. The greater part of this transla- i
tion "was composed from memory |
when the translator had no copy of Aris- j
tophanes at hand." Porson, the great
Greek scholar of our grandfathers' days, j
might have done as much. He knew
most of the Greek authors by heart as
well as the works of Smollett. Glad
stone in his later years told an inter
viewer that if the first line of any page
of Homer were given him he could re
peat the entire page in the original.
Macaulay memorized "The Lady of the
Lake" by reading it twice. But the com
plaint is with the abuse ordinarily done
this fine faculty by neglect. It is made
to hold athousand temporary trivialities.
It fastens on the gossip of the moment
for the moment only and grasps trifles
ior which an over-night forgetful ness
is a beneficent provision of nature. It
is perverted by inattention and inac
curacy.
Preparation for Travel.
There is one thing which is of great
importance if one wishes to benefit by
travel, says Rev. Minot J. Savage, in the
Four-Track News. One should make
sure what lie is going to see before he
leaves home. The story Is told of Hum
boldt, the great and wonderful traveler,
that on a certain occasion, he was talk
ing to a friend who had just returned
from Palestine. As the great scientist
talked about the points of interest, men
tioning buildings and streets and ruins
in the most familiar way, his friend
asked him when it was that he had been
there. He replied that he had never
been there, but that on a certain occa
sion he had expected togo and had read
up in regard to it by way of preparation.
In London, for example, or Paris, there
are so many streets, buildings, monu
ments, pictures, historic spots to be vis
ited. that no man can expect to be other
wise than lost as in a wilderness, unless
be has read and studied beforehand and
knows what he wishes to see.
Did it ever strike you how insulting It
Is to hang up your telephone receiver
before the person who is talking to you
has finished what he has to say? When
a fellow calls you up, and he generally
has something to say, ordinary courtesy
should prompt you to listen until he is
through as you would if he was address
ing you in person, says the Anoka Her
ald. Then there is another aggravat
ing way some people have and that is
to rush to the 'phone and call some one
up and fail to give their name. When a
person is talking through the 'phone he
rather likes to know to whom he is talk
ing. Of course, these little items are
but minor details, but they are a few of
the details which stamp a person either
as gentlemanly or ungentlemanly, lady
like or the reverse.
King Edward's wife thinks that the
fourpence half penny meals served to the
workmen in a London factory are fit for
a queen. She ate one recently, and said
that she was delighted with it. The pie
containing four and twenty blackbirds,
of which a famous poet once sang, was
r.ot a part of the banquet, but all the
waiters said, as they filled her plate,
"there 's a dainty dish to set before the
queen."
The exampie of the American Arbor
day is the text for an appeal for tree
planting in Ireland. A writer in the
Clare Champion makes a plea for tho
observance of such a day, and ex
presses the belief that it will be as suc
cessful as it. is in this country. It may
possibly cnnance the value of Arbor
day in the judgment of Americans to
know that the suggestion is made to
introduce the custom in the green isle.
It is proposed that Chicago build an
emergency hospital in the center of the
city as a memorial to the victims of ttie
Iroquois theater fire. It is thus that the
world redeems it? losres. In the course
of time the hospital will relieve suffer
ing and save life enough to overbalance
the loss which brought it into existence.
HIS FINAL PLEA—
Mr. BRYAN—"Reject Me If You Will, Madam, But Don't Turn Away
These Poor Orphans."
BRYAN PROTESTS IN VAIN.
Nebraska Man Will Have No Hand
in the Making of the Dem
ocratic Platform.
It is manifestly imposible to write a
democratic platform which meets with
general party approval. The declara
tion of principles put forth by the New-
York democratic state convention is
condemned by Bourke Cochran, talking
in behalf of Tammayy, as "a platform
of platitudes." It is not quite satsfac- j
tory to some of the warm supporters of j
Judge Parker, because it does not in- i
dorse the gold standard and does not |
deal with the Philippine question as the
anti-imperialists wish to have it dealt
with. These criticisms are mild when
compared with those of Mr. Bryan. That
gentleman, who claims to be the only au- j
thorized exponent of democratic prin- j
eiples. says that the platform is "am- j
biguous, uncertain, evasive and dishon
est." He says that it is the work of ;
"cowardly democrats," whose only aim I
is to deceive and to induce "organized
wealth" to subscribe to the campaign
fund.
Nevertheless, it is quite likely that the
platform which will be adopted at St
Louis in July will resemble closely the
one Mr. Bryan disapproves of- In the
last two presidential campaigns the
democrats experimented with unambig- '
uous unequivocal platforms and were I
badly beaten. It would not be surpris
ing, says the Chicago Tribune, it they
were to change their policy and adopt j
a milk-and-water platform, which will j
alienate the smallest number of voters !
and thus make success possible.
Mr. Bryan says:"l do not wish that
the party shall win offices only." But
the desire to get the offices is the con- ,
trolling motive with a large percentage j
of the democrats. They have been out !
in thecold for eight years, and theirhun- j
ger after postmasterships and other 1
comforting jobs. Those democrat feel j
that their only hope of getting the offices j
is to get away from Bryan and Bryanism. j
They will not let him write the party
platform or dictate its candidate. The j
voice they will harken to at St. Louis j
will be that of expediency, not Bryan.
Republican Leadership.
With President Roosevelt as the can
didate of the party, which will include
in its platform the achievements of his
administration as well as of his repub
lican predecessors; with the state lead
er for a score of years, Senator Piatt,
giving his advice and the influence of
his cooperation, and with Gov. Odell di
recting the movements oft he forces with
his masterly skill in marshaling the en
ergies of the party, there is nothing left
to assure victory but for the members
of the party to rally about such repre
sentative leadership and, closing up the
ranks in every county and district, to
work harmoniously for the success of
the republicanism which has done so
much for America and of those repre
sentatives who have done so much for
republicanism.—Troy Times.
tt'This is about the proper time lor
Willie Hearst to quit his yellow kiddhi'.
—St. Paul Globe (Dem.).
£7"Judge Parker is the latest specula
tion underwritten by Wall street. Au
gust Belmont heads the syndicate.—Buf
falo News.
tT7"It is under the Dingley law that the
balance of trade in manufactured goods
shows on t he side of this country for the
first time. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
C~Should Judge Parker miss the nom
ination at the last moment. Dave Hill
might consent to save the country by ac
cepting it.—Chicago Daily News.
we can't help thinking, at
times, that William Jennings Bryan de
served a better fate than togo down with
a thing like the Hearst boom. —Augus'.a
(Ga.) Chronicle.
(CPennsy 1 vania and Oregon waited
just long enough to take a casual glance
at New York's Parker boom and then
carelessly throw a wet blanket over it. —
Philadelphia Times.
E'"The Hon. Coin Harvey, a man who
wrote a book —now forgotten—some
time during the latter part of the nine
teenth century, says it would be unwise
to bring up the silver issue this year.
Please omit flowers.—Chicago Tribune.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1904.
DEMOCRATS IN SAD PLIGHT.
Why the Decent Members of the Mori
bund Old Party Despair of
Success.
In little more than two months the
delegated democrats of the nation will
assemble at St. Louis to nominate a
candidate for president and build a
platform on which he shall stand. Short
as is the time, the best men in the party
and the wisest thinkers are exclaiming:
"What are we to do when we have as
sembled?" Their dilemma has many
horns, all sharp, and any one likely to
be fatal to the chooser. Glance your
eyes over the presidential timber offered
and you will understand how decent
democrats despair of success.
Cleveland: twice president, and vul
nerable as a would-be third termer;
heartily hated in the south and west,
and loathed, not loved, by and for the
enemies he made while in power.
Hearst: a candidate for cash, a huck
ster in the political market, open to at
tack on negative and positive grounds,
impossible of election if nominated, as
his candidacy would be gall and worm
wood to the bone and sinew of his party.
Parker: aD absolutely unknown
quantity who asks support for the things
he has not done, for the principles he
has not voiced; handicapped by the ad
vocacy of David Bennett Hill, wko, as a
political "Warwick," is as conspicuous
a failure as he is a disappointment in
the role of statesman.
Gorman: Maiming precedence over
better men because he is more the mas
ter of political chicane than they, apt in
wire-working, clever in specious profes
sion, ringing hollow and discordant
when his metal meets the blows of earn
est conflict, absolutely impossible in the
west and northwest.
Olney: cold as ice without its trans
lucency, a critic of his fellows and of
the New England Pharisees, hateful to
labor organizations and distrusted by
those of his party who would have to
manage his campaign.
Bryan: probably not a candidate, but
certainly a dictator with a record of
polling the largest popular vote any
democrat ever gained, coupled with
memories of coalesced populism and
blatant cheap money heresies that turn
the stomachs of decent and country-lov
ing men in and out of his party.
What shall the democratic platform
builders use as their salient? asks the
Cleveland Leader.
Anti-imperialism? It would be
laughed out of court. With sad per
versity republicans have killed that
bugaooo by doses of good government,
pacification, and prosperity in all our
dependencies.
Economy? Not an issue. When the
books are examined it is found that the
republic is spending less to-day, rela
tively tei population, wealth, resources,
and results attained, than it did when
Jefferson. Jackson, or Cleveland him
self was chief executive.
Control of trusts? Facts—cold, hard,
indisputable facts—anent the respective
professions and performances of the ad
ministrations headed by Cleveland and
by Roosevelt in this regard would make
such an issue, as raised by democrats
against republicans, ridiculous and of
the boomerang sort.
Truly our brethren of opposed polit
ical laith have their work cut out for
them at St. Louis —rather they do not
know what to cut or what to fashion,
or how. or why. or to what end. Well
may they quote "Love's Labors Lost"
and cry: "Avaunt, Perplexity! What
shall we do?"
a '-Opinions still differ widely with re
gard to what Judge Parker will say
when the time conies for him to say
something.—Chicago Inter Ocean.
C .''President Roosevelt has refused to
interfere in the matter of the illegal
fencing of public lands by the big cattle
owners of the west. The government
officials had ordered the fences removed,
and the cattlemen appealed to the prcsi
! dent, who says the laws must be en
forced. That may displease the cattle
men who have made fortunes by using
property which did r.ot belong to them
but it should please everybody else.—
; Troy (N. Y.) Times.
BEGAN ITS WORK.!
Nearly 300 Delegates in
Attendance.
Thirty-first General Conference of
the Methodist Episcopal Church
in Session at Los An.
geJes, Cal.
Los Angeles, Cal., May 5. —The j
thirty-first general conference of the
Methodist Episcopal church opened at
Hazard's Pavilion in this city Wed- |
nesday. When Senior Bishop Ste- !
phen M. Merrill walked to the front 1
of the stage and rapped for order he j
faced one of the mpst notable gather- !
ings of churchmen in the history of
Protestantism in America. Seated in j
the auditorium proper were 798 rep- j
resentatives of Methodism gathered I
from the four quarters of the earth. j
The great building was a bower of
beauty, fragrant with the bloom of i
California flowers. Fifteen thousand j
calla lilies formed a hedge extending !
entirely across the front of the broad
stage and beneath these a beutiful
frieze work of smilax and ferns reach
ed the floor.
BISHOP STEPHEN MERRILL
Around the railings of the galleries,
with flags and bunting for a back
ground, the same scheme of decora
tion had been carried out.
At the afternoon session Rev. |
James H. Hingley, of (he Minnesota '
conference, was elected conference
secretary.
I.ast night the reception of the gen- 112
eral conference by the citizens and
churchmen of Los Angeles was held
at the pavilion. Addresses of wei- j
come by representatives of the state, \
city and church in southern Califor- j
nia, and responses by prominent, lead- j
ers in Methodism made up the pro- j
gram.
Los Angeles, Cal., May C. —The
Methodist general' conference held
two sessions Thursday, the morning |
session being devoted to the reading j
of the quadrennial address of the |
board of bishops of the M. E. church j
to the general conference, and the af- J
ternoon to the receipt and reference '
of memorials from the various annual i
conferences. The morning session j
was presided over by Bishop Warren 1
and the afternoon session by Bishop
Walden.
The reading of the quadrennial ad- |
dress of the bishops of the church to
the general conference was the tea- I
ture of the day's session. Bishop |
Cyrus D. Foss, of Philadelphia, read j
the address. II elaborately reviewed !
the statistical records of the past four
years and set before the conference |
many of the current problems which !
the church is facing. The present !
membership of the church was re- j
ported at :'.,03L918, an increase of ;
138,025 during thu four years. The j
Sunday-schools include an aggregate J
of 3,124,G44.
Los Angeles, May 7. —Very little !
progress was made by the Methodist
general conference Friday, but the
business is being so systematized that
with a few more sessions to clear ,
away the vast quantity of preliminary j
matter the work will proceed rapidly, j
The resignation of Senor Bishop Ste
phen H. Merrill, of Chicago, was pre
sented to the conference and referred
to the committee on episcopacy, with
instructions to report to the general
conference resolutions commendatory
of the great service Bishop Merrill
has rendered to the church in his 59
years as minister and bishop.
FINED $5,000.
An Oregon Sheep King Pleade Guilty
to a Charge of Conspiracy to De- ;
fraud the Government.
Portland, Ore., May (J.—The cases
of Charles Cunningham, the eastern
Oregon sheep king; Glen H. V. Saling,
Shelby Jones and Dallas O'Hara,
charged with conspiracy to defraud
the I'nited States government of pub
lic lands, were brought to an abrupt
and unexpected conclusion by pleas of
guilty being made when these defend
ants were arraigned in the United
States district court Thursday.
Mark Shackleford was the only one
to plead not guilty, and his trial was
commenced later.
Kate James was discharged for
want of probable cause.
Cunningham, ar. the ringleader, was
immediately sentenced to pay a fine
of $5,000. The others, being consid
ered only as tools of Cunningham,
were let oif with a fine of SIOO in each
case. No one was sentenced to a term
of imprisonment.
Admits the Firm Is Bankrupt.
New York. May G. —Daniel J. Sully,
in an answer filed yesterday in the
United States district court, admits
(hat his linn, Daniel J. Sully & Co.,
is bankrupt. He expresses a willing
ness to lie so adjudged. The answer
is also signed by Messrs. Morse, 1 lad
ley and Fagan, members of the Sully
firm.
A Triple Execution.
Winchester, Tenn., May G. —Henry
Judge, Joe Delp and John Evans were
hanged here Thursday for the mur
der of Simon Uucher and kis wife last
August.
ST. LOUIS EXPOSITION.
Michigan, Pennsylvania and Ohio
Buildings Dedicated.
St. Louis, May 3. —When the first,
regular day of the Louisiana Purchase
exposition had drawn to a close a
flood of light from thousands of elec
tric bulbs that line the tops of the
main buildings, illuminated the
grounds so that day almost continued.
I Throngs of visitors began pouring
into the grounds early in the,' evening
in anticipation of the illumination
feature. Music of bands and falling
waters lent attraction to evening vis
itors. The plaza became the central
' point of interest, as the main exhibi
. tion buildings close at dark.
Michigan's building was dedicated
; Monday. It stands on the brow of the
| plateau of states, adjoining the Uni
| ted States fisheries building.
| The dedication of Pennsylvania's
building came next. The building is
located near the southern boundary of
j the plateau of states and its broad
I terraces command a full view of the
! entire section devoted to states.
Ohio's building completed the day's
: dedication ceremonies. The struc
! ture is located on the eastern bound
[ ary of the plateau of states. Ilroad
j piazzas and stately columns give to
the building an inviting appearance
of ease and comfort, and the mam
moth surmounting dome marks it
with dignity, (lov. Herrick presided
at the ceremonies and introduced W.
F. Burdeii, of Columbus, who made
the opening address. Response was
made by President Francis, who of
ficially tendered the world's fair wel
come to Ohio. The speech of the oc
casion followed by Secretary of War
Taft.
St. Louis, May 4. —The official an-'
nouncemerit of the attendance at the
Louisiana Purchase exposition on
April 30, the opening day, was made
yesterday by President Francis. The
total attendance was 187,793. The re
corded admissions amounted to 178,-
423. The difference between the to
tal attendance and the recorded ad
missions is the number of invited
guests, employes, exhibitors, conces
sionaries and officials, some of whom
were in the grounds all night, and
others of whom were admitted with
out having passes.
RESULT OF STRIKES.
Shipyards in Greater New York Are
Tied Up.
New York, May 5. —All the large
shipyards in the metropolitan dis
! trict, except that of the Boston Dry
Dock Co., in Brooklyn, and the yard
jof Titjen & Lang, in Hoboken, are
! tied up as the result of a strike of the
Brotherhood of Boilermakers and
Iron Shipbuilders of the United States
! and Canada. Five thousand boiler
! makers are involved and workmen of
other trades may be affected. John
! McNeil, of Kansas City, international
| president of the boilermakers, atilhor
j ized the strike. The organization is
J said to have $250,000 in its relief fund
! and the 12 local lodges are also well
| supplied with money. Beginning yes
| terday married men will be paid $7 a
j week and single men $5 a week, out
I of the strike fund.
The yards and shops affected are
| those whose owners are members of
j the New York Metal Trades associa
j tion, which body on Tuesday refused
jto grant the boilermakers' demand
for the closed shop and the admission
: of walking delegates to all shops and
| jobs.
Pittsburg, May 5. —A strike which
j is expected to extend to an interna-
I tional movement against the Ameri
j can Bridge C 6. was ordered Wednes-
I day by the local union of structural
iron workers and bridgemen, and over
j GOO men in this district will go out to
| day.
The strike is called because the
! union claims 35 non-union men were
put to work last Tuesday erecting a
; bridge for the Buffalo, Rochester &
I Pittsburg ro»d at Coral, Pa. This ac
j tion, it is dfcimed, is a violation of the
| agreement to employ none but union
men.
Sam Parks Is Dead.
Ossining, N. Y., May 5. —Sam
Parks, the New York labor leader,
who was sent to Sing Sing prison
t some months ago after his conviction
on a charge of extortion, died in the
J«TO7.L\V V'.v'
J PAEKS
tim '
' SAMUEL. J. PARKS,
prison yesterday. He had consump
tion at the time of his conviction and
had failed rapidly since he was sent
to Sing Sing.
A Lockout of 5,000 Shoemakers.
Chicago, May s.—Five thousand
members of the Boot and Shoe
Workers' union are idle as the result
of a lockout declared by six of ''ie
largest, shoe factories in Chicago. The
manufacturers will discontinue the
use of the union stamp and will here
after run the factories as open shops.
Four Men Killed by An Explosion.
Newport, ind., May 5. —A powder
mill owned by tlie Northwestern Pow
der Co., three miles from Newport,
was blown up Wednesday. Four men
were killed outright and two were
injured. Ten thousand pounds of
powder exploded and the bodies of
two of the men were blown into such
small pieces that they could not be
picked up.
Strikers Resume Work.
Topeka, Kan., May 5. —Santa Fe
officials yesterday announced a re
sumption of shopmen all along the
line from Chicago to the Pacific coast.
MOUNTAIN IS NOW A LAKE.
Supposed Earthquake in New En
gland Thought to Have Been Fall
of Volcanic Cone.
A muddy lake marks the spot in
Maine where a big hill known as
Bald mountain had stood out in bold
relief for centuries and is taken as
proof that the recent New England
earthquake Ijad its origin in north
ern Maine. A guide reports the
transformation complete. Bald
mountain was situated in Tibiquf*
valley, a few miles from the New
J Brunswick line. Natives who live
| near say they always thought th»
hill queer, because at the base were
j boiling springs so warm that one
| could not put his hand in them even
|in winter. Near by is a hill called
Plaster rock, which furnishes plas
ter. This was recently analyzed an<J
found to consist of merely melted
rock and earth, and all this leads to
the belief now that Bald mountain
was the cone of a volcano.
—— mmmmm J
K'hawking and Spitting, Dropping
Into the Throat, Foul Breath,
THROUGH" THE. BLOOD
By Botanic Blood Bnlm (B. B. B.)
: TO TROVE IT, SAMPLE SENT FREE.
| Botanic Blood Halm JB. B. 8.l h«> cured to stay
| cured more cases of Catarrh than allotlieis remedies
combined, 8.8.8. kills or destroys the awful catarrh®l
poison in the biood which causes the symptoms, an J
| thus makes a perfect lasting cureof the worst old cases
SYMPTOMS.
Thepofsonln the blood produces had. offensive, fetid
' breath.bad teeth,and sickness of the stomach;ln somi
{ ca«-es vomiting up clear phlegm; enlargement of the
soft bones of the nose,affecting sense of smelt.ulcera
tiens of the'imnous membranes, hawking, spitting up
lumps, weak stomach, nose bleeding, heacaches.snor
: Ing while asle« p, stopping up of the nose: thin, hot
I blood, all run down, specks flying before ihe eyes/.ow
spirited, etc. Botanic Blood Balm [B, B. P.]forces its
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manently removes every symptom and thus makes
a perfect cure, B, B, B. sends a flood of rich.
! pure blood direct to the affected parts, giving
| warmth aud strength Just where It Is needed.
Deafness. Ringing In the Ears, Head Noises,
j Nearly all cases of aie caused by Catarrhal
Poison in the blood. The air passages become
clogged by catarrhal deposits stopping tlie action of
1 the viDr.itory bones. Thousands of sufferers from
; even total deafness had their hearing per
{ manently testored by taking B, B. B, for catarrh,
j B. B. B, gradually removes the catarrhal deposit from
! the air passages, thus making the nerves oi the ear
' respond to the symptoms of approaching deafness
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the ears or head noises in a few week's t .me. If deaf or
hard of hearing try Botanic BJOOJ Balm B. B. B,
1 It may be the very remedy >our system needs.
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liotanic lilood Balm [It.V.B.] is
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1 Strengthens Weak Kidneys and Stomachs, cures
j Dyspepsia. Sold by ail Druggists, sl. Per I .age
, Bottle.with complete direction for homecure. Sample
| Scut i'roo by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.
. Describe your trouble, and special free medical advice,
to suit your case, will be sent in sealed letter*
i .liiijllils
tHBiM?
Of the Skin and Scalp
Speedily Cured tsj?
Baths with
To cleanse the skin of crusts
and scales, and soften the
thickened cuticle, gentle ap
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Ointment to instantly allay
itching, irritation, and inflam
mation, and soothe and heal,
and mild doses of CUTI
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cleanse the blood.
A single SET, costing but One Dollar,
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torturing, disfiguring skin, scalp, and
blood humors, eczemas, rashes, itch
lugs, and irritations, with loss of hair,
from infancy to age, when all else fails.
Sold throughout the world. Ontlctira Snap, 25c., Oint
ment, W»c., Ke»o;vtnt, 50c. i in form of Chmr-lou Coawd
Pllle, isc. per >ia: of 60). liepote: 1 uMlon. if? Chuiler
hou»e J-q.; Pari*. 5 Hue ile U l'ais ; Doaion, 137 Coiumfeat
Ave. Potter 1 'rut k Client. Corp.. fcilr F'rcj-i*loia.
OUT Scud for ''The oit-ai iiutuor Ciua*