Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, September 06, 1906, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MUI-LIN, Editor
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
f'cr yenr., 12 08
112 p*id In advauce 1 *4 j
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the ruts ol
•or dul ar per sq': .re for one insertion and Uft> j
cents per square, citcli subsequentinscrtiou i
Rates by the year, nr for six or three month*,
%re low and uniform, and will be furnished ooi
«pi lieat.on.
Legal and Official Advertising per square
three times or less, -. e;tch subsequent inset
tio i • 0 icuts per quart:.
I.ocai notices lu cents per line for one Inset
•eriion; 5 cents per line for each subsequent
con ccutive Insertion.
Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents pn?
line. Simple announcements of births, mat •
napes nil deaths will be inserted free.
Mo* Iness cs:n:s. five It: es or less. 45 per yen
ever no lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local Inserted for less than 75 cents pei
Issue.
JOB PRINTING-
The Job department of the PKKSS Is complete
■nd afford. facilities Tor doing the best class of
Wort. PMUII LA it ATTKNI ION PAID TO I.AW
PKIMTIKCi.
No p.io r will bs discontinued until arrear
tfes are'paid, except at the option of the pub
■her.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
lor in advance.
The Universal Gifts.
An old farmer was talking of his
boyhood to a group of young people
not long ago. It had been lived —that
far-away boyhood—early in the last
century, in a country place remote
from towns. He described its meager
conditions —the houses, in which such
things as "conveniences" had never
been dreamed of, the coarse food and
poor clothing, the scanty schooling,
the few holidays; no magazines, al
most no books, no entertainments or.
sports except an occasional sleighing
party; no "junketings," no celebra
tion of ChrifitmiiH or Nov Year, ro
vacations from work. "Nothing that
you young folks have to-day," he fin
ished, "except weather and other
folks; but I tell ye," a flash kindled
In the faded eye, and the fine old head
lifted proudly, "1 tell ye, folks cared
jest as much for life in those days as
they do now." "Weather and other
folks" and the opportunity of living—
the great universal gifts to all man
kind through all the ages. They stand
like mighty mountain peaks, steadfast
and unchangeable among all the
changing philosophies, civilizations,
powers. Sorrows come often, and
sickness and defeat; there are lives
eaten by poverty and dwarfed by con
straining circumstance, yet, says the
Youth's Companion, to every life these
three things are given—the joy of sun
shine and blue skies, the cheer and
comradeship and inspiration of other
lives pressing upon his, the opportu
nity W> hope and dream and do bat
tle, to learn daily more of himself and
his fellow man and God. All over
the country are eager young people
looking for "chances" to do, to learn
and be. This is as it should be if
only the longing means watchfulness,
not discontent. "Chances" come only
to open doors. But while he is wait
ing let every eager soul remember
that the three great gifts are his al
ready to use or to neglect—Nature
and "folks" and the privilege of living.
Marine Drunks in Oil.
A farmer recently pointed out the
defects of a mural painting in the
lowa capitol dealing with rural
scenes, and the New Orleans Times-
Democrat relates how a sailor upset
the notions of a lover of marine ob
jects: "I'll take a sailor along with
me the next time I buy a sea paint
ing," said a millionaire. "1 bought two
marines last month, and yesterday my
old friend, Capt. Salthorse, had a look
at them. Salthorse said: in this pic
ture we've got a trading schooner in
charge of a tug towing away from a
rock-bound coast through a fearful
jumble of sea. The schooner's main
topmast is gone, and all sails are
lowered except her staysail, which is
being hoisted, though she is towing
head onto the gale. Why that hoist
ed staysail? All hands, I suppose, are
drunk. In the second picture,' con
tinued Capt. Salthorse, 'the principal
boat, an 18-footer, is racing, yet has
no flag flying. That's as incorrect as
it would be for you togo to a din
ner party minus a shirt. The crew
of this boat are getting the spinnaker,
and if they lower away both spinnaker
and boom will be in the water, for
they have neglected to let the boom
go forward. But, I know what the
trouble is with them. They, too, are
drunk.'"
"The English sentence grows short
er and shorter," said an essayist.
"Spenser, Sir Thomas More, Lyly
and Sydney used sentences of the
average length of 55 words. Nowadays
the sentences of the average journal
ist are only 15 words long, says the
Philadelphia Bulletin. Bacon intro
duced the short sentence. At a time
when everybody else was using 50
■words he took to 22. Praise be to
Bacon. Macaulay used a very short
sentence. Its average length was 23
words. Dickens' average was 28.
Thackeray's was 31. Matthew Ar
nold's sentences are long, but beauti
fully balanced. They are thirty-seven
ers. Henry James' are longer, and
though intricate, graceful and well
worth puzzling out. for in each of
them a wonderful meaning is con
cealed. They are thirty-niners. Kip-
Jing's sentences are twenty-oners.
HAS MUCH MEANING
PRACTICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF
THE TERM "STAND PAT."
It Meant a Great Deal More When
Hanna Injected It Into Politics
and It Means More as the
Years Roll By,
"But what does it mean to stand
pat?" This is the question propound
ed in a double-leaded and rather nerv
ous editorial by the New York Mail
of July 28. It is easily answered. To
6tand-pat means now precisely what
it meant when that non-political eu
phemism was projected into politics
by Mark Hanna flve or six years ago.
Mr. Hanna saw a country on the top
ware of a sea of unparalleled prosper
ity. "Stand-pat," said he.
He saw domestic production in
creasing at a tremendous rate to meet
domestic demand. "Stand-pat!"
He saw domestic labor fully em
ployed, at increasing high wages.
"Stand-pat!"
He saw savings bank deposits in
creasing at the rate of half a billion
dollars a year. "Stand-pat!"
He saw railroads carrying more
freight and passengers and building
more miles of new road than ever be
fore. 'Stand-pat!"
He saw 10,000,000 farmers with
paid-off mortgages of the tariff revis
ion period of 1893-97 and buying pia
nos and automobiles. "Stand-pat!"
He saw an internal trad«f amounting
to twenty billions a year and growing
very fast. "Stand-pat!"
He naw a foreign trade pass the
two-billion mark and growing at the
rate of $200,000,000 a year. (It is now
over three billions.) "Stand-pat!"
He saw the outside world taking
more and more of our agricultural
and manufactured exports. "Stand
pat!"
He saw a big increase in our im
ports alike of non-dutiable articles
for use in manufacture and of dutia
ble goods of the competitive sort.
I "Stand-pat!"
He saw that the duties collected on
Imports were yielding ample revenues
for the government's increasing re
quirements. "Stand-pat!"
He saw the excess of exports over
Imports bringing to us annual trade
balances averaging more than half a
billion dollars. "Stand-pat!"
He saw in consequence a vast in
flow of gold, which in the past ten
I years has added $700,000,000 to our
supply of yellow metal. "Stand-pat!"
He saw American securities held
abroad sent back to aid in settling our
favorable balances of trade, and the
' amount of American money sent
abroad to pay interest and dividends
011 foreign capital invested in tills
country reduced to less than half
what it was ten years ago in a tariff
t revision period. "Stand-pat!"
He saw the United States paying off
its debts to foreigners and rapidly be
! coming the money center, as it has be
come the industrial center of the
I world. 'Stand-pat!"
He saw, in short, the most extraor
dinary prosperity, the highest rate
' of wages, tho highest standard of liv
j ing that the world has ever known,
] So he said, "Stand-pat!"
What Mark Hanna saw five years
| ago is to be seen to-day on a much
bigger scale. If he were living to-day
he would again say, "Stand-pat!"
He did not say, nor does anybody
now say, as the Mail seems to think,
that protection is "a hoop of iron," an
| inflexible, inexorable thing that will
I never permit of the change of a single
i tariff schedule. The Mail ought to
; know better. That is not the stand-pat
| attitude. That is not what stand-pat
! means. To suppose it is to suppose a
I silly thing. Free traders and chronic
tariff reformers ought to be given a
monopoly of that kind of supposing.
This is a stand-pat year. So will
next year be, and the year after that,
! and many years after that, we should
all hope. When a different condition
comes, and when revision of tho tariff
!is called for to promote the general
j good—when a decrease of some of
the schedules and an increase of some
of the schedules shall obviously work
to the advantage of the country as a
whole —then tariff revision should
come and will come.
Should it come any sooner than
that? The best statesmanship of the
country says 110. The business inter
ests of the country say no. The wage
earners of the country say no.
That is what it means to stand-pat.
When the Test Came.
A Democratic contemporary makes
the reckles assertion that "the declar
ation in the Democratic platform that
tariff taxes shall be levied for revenue
only strikes at the very root of the
trust evil." It is well known that
this has been the fundamental princi
ple in Democratic doctrine ever since
the party came into existence and is
inserted in every platform. But we all
know how it works. There are some
lessons that burn through bitter ex
perience into the dullest brain, and
this is one of them. Those cannot
forget if they would that "tariff for
revenue only," when given an oppor
tunity for a test during the last ad
ministration of Grover Cleveland,
struck at the root not of trusts, but
1 of prosperity, that it paralyzed the
entire commercial and industrial fab
ric of the nation, drove millions into
financial distress and bankruptcy and
caused unparalleled misery and suf
fering. It is like the old story of
burning the barn to kill the rats that
ore eating the wheat. The barn is
lost, but the rats escape and lay low
for the coming of another barn.-—Bay
City Tribune.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1906.
SHALL BRYAN FIX THE TARIFF?
If He Gets the Chance Every Vestige
of Protection Will Be Eliminated.
Mr. Bryan is a free trader. In his
latest generalized manifesto he says
the tariff is one of the issues he will
discuss hereafter. But Ibis Is not a
question on which he. 1* likely to
change his record in the least, nor
can he modify it essentially without
violating all Democratic precedent.
In all that he has said or written in
the past Bryan has wholly condemned
the principle of protection in a tariff.
His most noted speech in congress
was a long and elaborate argument
against any protection in any sched
ule. He contended that the constitu
tional rights of the people forbid the
inclusion in any tariff rate of a pur
pose to build up American industries
or to protect American wages against
open foreign competition. He heid
that a tariff should be based entirely
on public revenue requirements, and
that American manufacturing inter
ests and the wage earner connected
with them should adjust themselves
as best they can to foreign production
and wages. This is free trade and the
Bryanites should not balk at the only
term that squarely expresses their
position on the tariff. They are not
tariff revisionists. All parties are for
tariff revision as occasion arises. Re
publicans have revised protective tar
iffs again and again, but always kept
them protective. Bryan and his party
are against any protection.
In half a dozen words Bryan could
have stated that he is now, as always,
a free trader. He prefers to postpone
a statement of his tariff position. If
this delay could mean that ho would
consent to any protective schedule, ho
would be on Republican ground. He
may juggle and befog his tariff views,
but multiplying words will not change
his free trade intent. Business men
should realize this fact. Wage earn
ers should keep it in mind. In pro
tection Bryan is an absolute destruc
tionist. With such a man at the head
of executive affairs the policy would
be to sweep away every vestige o{
protection, a purpose that appears in
everything he has ever said in discus
sing the tariff. A business upheaval
would necessarily be the result.
American industries would halt until
they could get their bearings in tho
markets and in margins of profit,
i With this condition would come a cor-
I responding loss in the scale of wages
I and opportunities of employment.
Mr. Bryan is trying to retreat from
j his former paramount issue under cov
jer of what he calls the quantitative
I theory of the money supply. He
maintains that he was right about
free silver, but that the unexpected
increase in the output of gold relieved
the strain without lessening the
soundness of his chief financial theo
ry. Some quantitative things have
happened since 1896 in American in
j dustries and foreign trade also. Ex-
I ports of American manufactures in
| the fiscal year just closed were about
j $600,000,000. The total in 1896 was
| $229,000,000. The quantitative jump
in selling our manufactured products
abroad has been 160 per cent, since
Bryan made his cross of gold speech.
Our whole foreign trade is larger
than ever before. Another quantita
tive point is that steamships are
much larger than in 1896 and cross
the ocean in less time. With free
trade they could pour in a mountain
of foreign merchandise every week,
compelling our industries to close
down and our workmen to hunt a
1 new vacation. Mr. Bryan may defer
I talking about the tariff, but he can
not change his spots.—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
Southern Tariff Sentiment.
H. Clay Evans, nominated for gov
ernor by the Republicans of Tennes
see, is not unknown to lowans. He
spoke in Grimes hall, Burlington, sev
! eral years ago and made a favorable
I impression as an able debater and at-
I tractive ortor. He is a man of a good
I deal of force of character and will un-
S doubtedly make a lively campaign.
| The Republicans of Tennessee and
I North Carolina are organizing for
! strong campaigns and are not with
j out hopes of success, due in part to
J Democratic dissensions in those
states, and in part to a growing pro
tective tariff sentiment in the south.
A half century ago Tennessee and
North Carolina were whig states and
the Inherited protective tariff beliefs
have been reenforced by favoring in
dustrial conditions under the Dingley
law. It will be hard work for the
lowa revisionists to convince either
Tennesseeans or North Carolinaians
that the time has come to scale down
the customs schedules to let in for
eign merchandise which those states
are now producing. Burlington
Hawk-Eye.
Buying Diamonds.
In the tariff revision period of 1896
this country's importations of all
precious stones amounted to $6,712,-
415. The following year, ending June
30, when the effects of tariff revision
were still upon us and the Dingley
law had not yet been passed, the im
portation was only $2,672,598. After
nine years of Dingley tariff prosperi
ty our total importation of precious
stones has risen to $40,247,010, or
about 15 times more than in 1897. Of
this forty odd millions imported in
1906, $10,574,654 were uncut diamonds,
whose value was doubled and trebled
by American labor. Nine years ago
almost nobody could afford to buy
diamonds, thanks to tariff revision
downward. In this stand-pat year
1906 practically one-half of our entire
population, counting in babies and
paupers, is buying diamonds at tho
rate of about 75 cents per capita.
CAME BACK.
!
W. H. Latimer, Notorious
Swindler, Returns
TO PHILADELPHIA.
Man Who was One of {he Organizers
ot the Provident Investment
Bureau Surrenders.
Philadelphia, Aug. 31. —William IT.
Latimer, familiarly known as "Hand
some Harry," manager of the Provi
dent Investment Bureau, which was
forced out of business 18 months ago,
and who has since oeen a fugitive
from justice, surrendered Thursday.
He was held in $2,000 bail by United
Slates Commissioner Craig for trial
in Ihe federal court.
With Frank C. Marrin, alias Judge
Franklin Stone, and Stanley Francis,
alias Arthur S. Foster, Latimer was
jointly indicted in September, 1905,
charged with conspiracy and using
the mails to defraud. These three
j were alleged to have been the or
j ganizers of rhe Provident Investment
Bureau, a get-rich-quick, concern.
They were also accused of being tho
; principal officials of the Storey Cotton
! Co., a swindling scheme which failed
; in March, 1905. Francis was a'vested,
j convicted and sentenced to five years.
i Marrin and Latimer escaped.
Latimer said he fled to l.o.iJon,
| "vhero he met Marrin and Miss Sophie
i Beck, a friend of Marrin's. He trav
j eled through England. France and
; Canada and was finally arrested in
Calgary, province of Alberta, North
west Territory, but was releas. d, as
his offense was not extraditable.
Weary of wandering he finally determ
ined to come back and give himself
up to justice.
NIPPLE WAS AN EMBEL'LER.
Startling Statement Made by the Re
csiver for the Real Estate Trust
Co.
Philadelphia, Aug. 31. —Examina-
j lion Thursday of the list of securities
i held by the defunct Iteal Estate Trust
I Co. developed the fact that Frank K.
! Hippie, president of the institution,
who committed suicide, was an em
bezzler. The authority for this state
i ment is George H. Earie, receiver for
the Trust Co. Mr. Karle declined to
I say what securities are missing, but
he declared that Hippie had hypothe
i cated $65,000 worth oi the paper, se
; curing $50,000 for tho securities,
which he never returned.
Receiver Earie further declared
that President Hippie embezzled tho
$5,000,000 he loaned to Adolf Segal,
the | ronioter. These loans, .Mr. Earie
isserted. were personal transactions.
"Although made in the name of the
bank the directors had no knowledge
of them, consequently the money was
stolen by Hippie," said Mr. Ernie,
i The suspicion entertained that Hip
pie committed suicide w«is confirmed
Thursday by Joseph King, coroner of
Montgomery county. When he made
the announcement Dr. Albert H. Head,
tiie coroner's physician, was standing
near and he added: "You can say
that Mr. Hippie blew out his brains.'
Must Give Full Weight.
Chicago, Aug. 31.—City Sealer Jo
seph Grein, in whose department is
the supervision of weights and meas
ures, has issued an ultimatum to the
packers, to butter factories and whole
sale and retail dealers in lard and but
ter, that the public must be given full
weight in all packages of lard and but
ter, or the city will prosecute them
In hundreds of cases in which it lias
secured evidence against them. The
ordinance calls for a fine of SIOO on
every package of lard or butter in
which the weight is short.
Ohioans Won Five Prizes.
Sea Girt ,N. J., Aug. 31.—1n the na
tional military tournament yesterday
a feature of the day was the perform
ance of riflemen representing Ohio,
who carried off second, third, fourth,
lifth and sixth prizes in the off hand
military match from a field of 227
competitors. The Second troop, Phil
adelphia City cavalry, won the car
bine team match, the Denver City
Troop won second prize and the First
team of Squadron A, New York, third
prize.
No Indictment.
New York, Aug. 31.—The grand jury
on Thursday handed a presentment to
Judge Rosalsky in which they said
they had gone through a great mass
of evidence concerning the alleged ice
trust, but did not find sufficient upon
which to base an indictment.
Arrest of Alleged Train Wreckers.
Petersburg, Ind., Aug. 31. —William
Aulrey and Shirley Erwin were ar
rested Thursday, charged with caus
ing a train wreck on the Southern
railroad four weeks ago at Carbon in
which four lives were lost. Both men
deny the charge.
In Vain.
"Why don't you write something
original?" asked the editor.
"What's the use?" replied the au
thor. "If I do my friends merely ask
me why I don't write something in
teresting."—Casseli's Journal.
Poor Father.
Family Friend —So they call you
Jack, the same as your father. Isn't
it awkward when your mother calls
to know which of you she wants?
Little Jack —Oh, no; when mother
wants me, she always says "please."
DEPARTURES.
What in the Bible days of ol<J,
Hid the ungodly man when told
To take himself without the foldf
Tarried not.
j Requested by the ancient Creek
Some other spot on earth to seek,
| How did the rude barbarian sneak?
Kxephotizei (Lighted out).
I What, when we had our civil strife,
I Did Keb or Yank to save his life,
| If 1 lightened by the drum and llf«-f
Skedaddled.
! What did the hostile Mori man ,
; When, chased by the American,
; He l'rom the prickly bayonets ranf
Hiked. *
' U»'w doth the yellow dog to-day,
i If loitering idly or at play,
j Proceed when kicked across the way?
Heats it.
[ What does the corner loafer do
When ordered by the cop in blue
To disappear, and quickly, too?
Gets a move on.
When-, coming home at break of day.
The husband hears somebody say:
| "Please, burglar man, do go away?"
Takes a sneak.
; The aged lover bends above
The hand of bis young lady love—
With what word does he get the shove?
Scat!
When little boys and girls at play
\ AVish one of them togo away
What do the precious darling say?
Skiddoo!
, What will the editor give me
When these poor rhymes he has to «eeT
; Who'll bet my number will not be
23?
| —N. Y. Sun.
When Fortune Frowns.
The man, relying on the adage, nat
urally supposed he had nothing more
to fear, so you cao imagine his con
sternation when Opportunity knocked
al hij door a aecond time.
"Farewell, a long farewell, to all
my goodness!" he exclaimed; and
then, without another word, for he
was a brave soul, he went out, and
became rich, and lived happily ever
after. —Puck.
Discriminating.
A thoughtful hostess gave a chil
dren's party, and decided it would be
healthier to serve only mineral wa
ters.
One little girl tasted of her carbon
ic and laid the glass down.
"What's the matter, dear? Don't
you like charged water?"
"No, ma'am. Please may I have
some water that you've paid for?"—
Life.
The Dog's Fault.
"So Jinx is drinking again, eh?"
"Yes."
"But I thought he had sworn off?"
"So he did; but he started drinking
again because of his dog."
"Because of his dog?"
"Yes; tho first night he went home
sober his dog didn't recognize him,
and he had togo away and get drunk
before he could get in the yard."—
Houston Post.
The Last No.
"See here, Mr. Popper, I've told you
'no' for the last time," said the fair
maid, severely.
"Hurrah!" ejaculated the persistent
suitor.
"What do you mean by that?"
"I'm going to ask you again, now!"
—Cleveland Leader.
Ought to Sell.
"Have you any hooks on Ashing?"
asked the man, entering the book
store.
"Why, yes," replied the wise clerk;
"here's a very good work called 'The
Liars' Companion!'"—Yonkers States
man.
Yet Once Again.
"Where are you going, my pretty maid?"
"I'm goin a-tlshing, kind sir," she said.
"May I go with you, my pretty maid?"
"1 don't fish with clams, kind sir," she
said.
—Chicago Tribune.
Quiet Observer.
"We are offering special induce
ments this season to purchasers oi
our machines," said the automobile
manufacturer.
"So?" rejoined the quiet observer.
"Have you built a hospital for them?"
—Chicago News.
Art and Business.
Summer Boarder —It is so picture
esqu to watch the cows come home.
Farmer —There's more nianey in it
when they stay on the railroad track
—New York Sun.
G.SCHMIDT'S/ —
HEADQUARTERS FOR
FRESH BREAD,
J popular """ cv r^..
be BAKefy ' #
CONFECTIONERY
Daily Delivery. AH orders given prompt and
skillful attention.
WHEN IN DOU3T, TRY The* hire Mood (hat««t cfyo^
OTDfIMI? i— . ■ nna have cured thousands o*
OSf T n I niillu n 'XX/cnses of Nervous Diseases, such
r _ - Ws&ytTvL. S Debllitr, Dizziness,
13 AfllU I ness and Varicocele,Atrophy, &c.
AuAIn I They clear the brain, strengthen
vigor to the whole bolnr. All drains and losses are checkeS permanently. Unless patienu
aro P'OP cured, their condition often worries them into Insanity. Consumption or Death,
Mailed sealad. Price $1 per boa; 6 boxes, with iron-clad legal ruara'«f e to cure or refund titf
%Hn money, #5.00. Sand for frco book. PEAL MwlClNtf CltVftiftAdb
Wm ml* b| A. 0. bodsca, Diaigist, BaptHut, Fi.
THE
Windsor
Hotel
Between 12th and 13th fit a., en Filbert St.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Three minute* WALK from the Reading
Terminal. "™~"
Five minutes WALK from the Peng's R.
R. Depot.
European Plan tl .00 per day and up tarda.
American Plan $2.00 per day.
FRANK M. BCHEIBLEY. Mounter.
S The Place to Bnj Cheap i
) J. F. PARSONS' £
mmm
l Send model, Bketch or photo of Intention for l **
/ free report on patentabllltv. For free hook, i [
TRADE-MARKS
iDManT^mirDßaiVs
B A safe, certain relief for Suppressed
■ Menstruation. Never known to fall. Hafel
■ Buret Speedy! Satisfaction Guaranteed
■or money Hefunded. Sent prepaid for
■ 11.00 per box. Will Bend them on trial, to
■ be paid for when relieved. Ham plea Free.
[ UNITID MEDICAL CO., DO« T«. UMMITIII P«.
Sold in Emporium by L. ITaggart aw R. O.
Dodson. - -■ - -
LADIES
DR. MUM'S MID.
Safe, apeedy regulator: 25 c*nta. Drugglsta or maC
Booklet free. DR. LaPHANCO, Philadelphia, Pa.
[hlesblSS
A A D. IfAU. TboapiM, B+f%.
Orili4 B«hoot«, SuuiTlUa, H. C., vriuc : "I «»□ aajr
TK»J *% all R»« TLAIM for iheaa." Dr. 1L D*R»r«,
&*▼*• lMk W. Ya, wrlUa : " TH«7 (It* tilrtritl utU
f»OUOB. Dr. H. D. MOOLLL, ClArkabvrg. Teaft., vrltMl
" X» ft praatlca »112 tS jtui, I h»va fovad bo rtm*4; U
AQW_L jobm." Fbwb, M Cbstts. FLAMYL* ft—. TOLA
FEF MAJ , TIN HUOY, LANCASTER. PA. •'
Sold In Emporlaa* tey Tanrart u4 &. C
Dodao*.
I
EVERY WOMAN
Sometimes needs a reliable
112 monthly regulating medicine^.
3r* DR - PEAL ' S
PENNYROYAL piLLS,
Are prompt, safe and certain In result. The genu,
tne (Dr. Peal's) never disappoint. JI.OO per boi\
Sold by R. O. Dodson, druggist
For Bill Heads,
Letter Heads,
Fine Commercial-
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Kinds,
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