Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, June 20, 1907, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULUN, Editor
published Every Thursday.
TERMS OP" SUBSCRIPTION.
Cer jrnar It 01
paid tu advance 1 4#
ADVERTISING RATES:
AdTerti*emipts are published at the rate ol
•ne dollar.-per,squar<vXorf i;e-liiscrilonand.flrn
•«Dts per,j>qu;rr(3fut'-e.iic.li. subsequent. Insertion
Rates,b.v n.h« year, or for six or three 1 month*,
are low-'and uniform, and will b* furnished o it
application.
LegftKantl Official Advertlalnn per square,
three ttme**r>r leas, ni;- each subsequent inset •
<ier> SO ieDts pftr^quare.
Local \ni)Uoeslftws n tape r line for one laser
lf.riii)ir.." (> Lcnj.s. p*-r line for each subsequent
lousocuil'vo itisertlion.
over QT« lines, 10 cents put
line. Slffipleijiifuoun&ewents of- binhs, mm
rtaees.yiiftiUcaihtt will be inserted'lree.
Business «ards.-five lines or less, »5 per year,
over live lines,' at the rsguUr rates of adver
tising.
No I seal Inserted for less than T5 cents pel
Usua
JOB PRINTING.
Tne Job department of lscomplets lscomplets
•nil ufl( rd< facilities for doiu;M he best olas% of
*ork..;P*UT»CCl.Att AT'I'KN HON PAID TO Lid
SfBINTI.NO.
No.pupsr wMI be discontinued until .arrear-
Kes are paid, except at the option of the pub
hor.
Papers sent out ef the oounty must be cald
for iu advance.
■ ——
Took Six Years to Make.
Six years, 540 yards of duchess silk
Ince, 400 yards of silk thread, and an
infinite amount of patience were con
sumed by Miss Amelia M. Redel, of
Marshalltown. la., in making a black
lace dress. Miss Redel conceived the
idea of a hand-made lace dress six
years ago, and immediately set to
work to carry out that idea. She has
just finished her task. The waist and
skirt each are in one piece. The de
sign was worked out over a founda
tion of cambric.
From Society News of the Future.
"At midnight, amid the customary
shower of rice and old shoes, the
bride and groom left by special ex
press elevator for the roof, where they
went immediately aboard the Mars-
American liner Windjammer, which
flew at nine o'clock this morning. On
their return from an extended tour
of the planets, the young couple will
reside on the forty-second floor." —
Puck.
Science's Tobacco Discoveries.
Is tobacco in the form of cigars and
cigarettes an effective germ killer?
Smallpox was prevalent in Canton,
China, during the recent visit of the
duke and duchess of Connaught and
the Princess Patricia, and the visitors
say they were compelled to smoke
cigarettes incessantly as a preventive
of the disease. The duke never ven
tured out without a cigar.
Dangerous.
Cleaning compounds are always dan
gerous. Never use benzine, gasoline
or other like fluids in any room in
which there is a light or fire. These
oils are extremely volatile and their
fumes catch fire at a great distance,
the flames traveling back to the
source. Explosion and scattered fire
are the results.
Big Seller.
"She is very wealthy?"
"Very."
"Money left to her?"
"No; she is the author of a book
entitled 'Hints to Beautiful Women.' "
"I presume all the beautiful women
in the country purchased it?"
"No; but the homely women did." —
Houston Post.
Gold Production.
The production of gold in the Unit
ed States during 1906 is estimated by
the director of the mint at $96,101,000,
which is an increase of $8,000,000
over that of 1905. The production of
silver is estimated at 56,18:5,000
ounces, an increase of 82,000 ounces
over that of the previous year.
A Useful Explanation.
"The climate is very oold in St. Pet
ersburg, is it not?"
"Yes," answered the traveler, "and
fortunately so. The circumstance en
ables an official to argue that he is
shivering because he is chilly instead
of because he is nervous."—Washing
ton Star.
Didn't Always Refuse.
"I've tried to discourage Mr. Nervie
from calling on you," snapped the
stern parent, "but the young scamp
refuses to be sat upon."
"Why, father, you do him an injus
tice," indignantly replied the dear
girl.—Kansas City Times.
Not Dying Out.
The opinion that the natives of Aus
tralia are dying out is not shared by
J. W. Gregory, who writes in the Glob
us that the present, population is esti
mated at 153,000, which is 3,000 more
than the estimated number two cen
turies ago.
The Unpardonable Sin.
"I can't understand why that young
lady boarder is so unpopular. She's
a perfect Venus."
"Yes. but she consumes too much
time at her Sunday morning bath." —
Louisville Courier-Journal.
The Only Way.
"They say you're making plenty of
money in the stock market."
"Yes. I never lose anything."
"Ah! You get straight tips, eh?"
"No; I sell 'em."—Philadelphia
Press.
Meerschaum Pipe Materia!.
Scarcity of raw material is causing
serious difficulties in the meerschaum
.pipe and cigar-holder industry in Ger
many and Austria. Asia Minor is one
the chief sources of supply.
BIGGEST QUESTION
IS THAT OF EMPLOYMENT AND
WAGE EARNING.
A Political Party Takes Upon Itself
Grave Responsibility When It
Encourages Foreign Com
petition.
The question of employment and
wages is the chief issue involved in
the new departure of the administra
tion in the matter of granting special
tariff concessions to foreign countries
which raise their tariff rates against
American exports as a club wherewith
to compel a reduction of the American
tariff. It is the one big question, big
ger than all other questions combined.
It is a question so big as to seriously
menace any political party that makes
a mistake in the treatment of it. That
party will go down to swift defeat
which perpetrates the colossal blunder
of injuring our domestic trade rela
tions in attempting to enlarge our for
eign trade relations.
Ninety-five per cent, of our manu
facturing trade is in our own country
and between the people of our own
country. Eighty-five millions of people
—16,000,000 voters among them—are
vitally concerned in this 95 per cent,
of trade.
Taking liberties with the 95 per
cent, of domestic trade and trying ex
periments for the benefit of the beg
garly five per cent, of foreign trade
have so often proved disastrous to the
political party concerned in them that
"what not to do" would seem perfectly
obvious by this time.
Long before election day in 1908
conies round the practical effects of
the new policy of surrender to foreign
tariff threats will have become visible.
Either the new policy will greatly in
crease the inflow of competitive com
modities, or it will not. If it does not,
we shall have simply hanfied the for
eigners some gold bricks. That, how
ever, is not of overwhelming conse
quence. They hand us gold bricks
when they first mark up their tariffs
against us and then consent to mark
them down again to where they were
before in return for net tariff reduc
tions on our part.
But, if the new policy of tariff sur
render shall work out as the foreign
ers expect it to work; if largely in
creased importations of competitive
goods come into our market and dis
place equivalent quantities of domestic
labor products, thereby diminishing
place equivalent quantities of domestic
total of employment and the domestic
wage, what then?
1 he answer to this question is sug
gested in a letter addressed to the
president of the United States by a
prominent American manufacturer and
large employer of American labor.
Under date of May G. 1907, Mr. Rich
ard ( amplon, of Philadelphia, wrote
President Roosevelt, urging that the
proposed commercial agreement be
tween the United States and the Ger
man empire be not consummated. In
this letter Mr. Campion brings to view
that biggest of all questions, Ameri
can employment and wages, as fol
lows:
With the present high cost of produc
tion in this country, caused chiefly hv
the high rates of wages now prevailing
—which high wages, it can be safely said,
all manufacturers are glad to have pre
vail it Ib difficult for our manufacturers
to compete with imported goods, even
with all the existing safeguards against
undervaluation, but if these safeguards
be removed in accordance with the pro
posed agreement our markets will be
flooded with German goods at prices
which our manufacturers cannot meet,
our markets taken from us, our factories
closed and our workmen thrown out of
employment, unless our rates of wages
be reduced to cover the difference; and
surely, Mr. President, it is only fair to
presume that you are no more willing to
have reduced the wages of American
workmen than are we manufacturers.
Herein is the whole question, dis
tinctly and powerfully presented.
Will the new policy of tariff surren
der, when it shall have been extended
to all the producing nations of Europe,
as in time it must be if extended to
any one of those nations, close Ameri
can mills and factories, throw Ameri
can workmen out of employment, and
reduce American wage rates?
It is a serious question, much the
most serious question which the pres
ent administration has ever had to
deal with.
Where the Danger Lies.
The danger lies in making a hodge
podge of special tariff concessions, one
for each country. If tariff concessions,
either through lower valuations b» me
United States appraisers or by a. lower
tariff, are to be made at a.li, they
should be granted to every country
which grants the United States the
most favored nation" clause, and
against every country that seeks to
discriminate against the United States
this country is abundantly able to pro
tect itself. Our exports are largely
of foodstuffs, and these are necessities
which other nations need. If they
want them let them make such tariff
rates as will admit them. If they
don't there's no need of ill feeling over
the matter. Foodstuffs are staples,
and their market is wide.—Zanesvll'e
Courier.
If She Had Her Choice.
Both senators and every representa
tive Massachusetts has in congress
knoiv that congress is not going to en
act free raw material for Massachus
etts workshops. Roger Q. Mills prom
ised Massachusetts that in 1890, and
that very year Massachusetts sent
more Democrats than Republicans to
the fifty-second congress, if Massa
chusetts had her choice it is quit» like
ly that she would substitute the Wil
son tariff for the Dlngioy. Certainly
she would do so with free coal anil
free iron ore added.—"Washington
Po3t.
CAMERON COUNTY PRHSS, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 19Q7-
EVERY FARMER PROTECTED.
Should Dread Competition of Foreign
Labor Prdoucts.
The editor of an Indian territory pa
per cannot see how the tariff protects
the farmer. He is very probably hon
est in his position, though he is put
ting charity to somewhat of a strain
when he declares "that a farmer can
be a Republican is one of the curiosi
ties of the political situation."
That a farmer who votes in accord
ance with his own so-called class in
terests can be anything but a Republi
can would be still more curious. There
are lots of farmers who are Demo
crats, and sincerely so. but we venture
the assertion that their political creed
is not. based upon a careful study of
their own interests. They are Demo
crats for other reasons.
It is a'-gued that "the prices of near
ly all the necessities he buys are pro
tected at the average rate of 60 per
cent., while the prices of the commodi
ties he produces are made in competi
tion with the world."
Those who argue that way are not
fools. But in our opinion they are
most egregiously mistaken. If the
farmers who are directly protected by
the tariff against Mexican cattle, or
those who are directly protected
against Canadian wheat, should sud
denly find the bars let down, those
farmers at least would soon see where
they are protected. But this is only a
very small degree of the protection
which the farmer receives.
The greatest degree of protection is
that which he icceives indirectly. The
tariff provides him with a market for
his products at homo by putting
wages into the pockets of workingraen
and by enabling the vast and varied
commercial enterprises of the country
to flourish. It is superficial to say
that Liverpool fixes the price of the
American farmer's wheat and corn. It
must not be forgotten that the farmer
more than any other producer is the
victim of the speculative market, with
which the tariff has nothing whatever
to do. But aside from this disturbing
and extraneous influence, which is it
self intimately affected by fluctuating
crops, the price which the farmer re
ceives for his product is determined
entirely by supply and demand. The
supply may be limited by poor crops
and the demand may be increased by
prosperous times. Conversely the sup
ply nmy be abundant and the demand
small in times of commercial depres
sion.
As a producer of hard times nothing
has ever been so successfully tried in
this country as a substantial reduction
in the tariff. When the factories are
idle and commercial industries lan
guish, the farmer finds his most profit
atfle and exter.sive market cut off.
The severest blow which the agricul
tural interests could sustain would be
the enactment of legislation at all ap
proaching free trade.
In protecting industries which fur
nish buyers for what the farmer raises
protection protects every farmer in
the land. The farmer's real competitor
is not. the grower of wheat in Canada
or Siberia or Argentina, it is not the
raiser of cattle and hogs in Mexico or
South America. It is the manufac
turers across the sea, whose products
are excluded by tariffs that keep
American factories running and fur
nish American workingmen and allied
consumers with the means of buying
what the farmer has to sell. —Kansas
City Journal.
The One Thing Certain.
If we can be browbeaten by Ger
many, which is conceded, and, proba
bly, will be similarly treated by
France, what is to prevent six or
seven other Europen countries from
following this clever lead of their
German and French neighbors? And
what becomes of our "sacred sched
ules" if their elasticity can be
stretched so? —Wall Street Journal.
The answer is obvious. The
schedules are knocked out, of course.
When the foreign exporter is permit
ted to consign goods to his American
clerk at "export value," the American
producer can never be certain what
his tariff protection is going to be, or
whether he has any tariff protection
at. all. The only certain thing is that
the domestic wage payer and wage
earner is going to get the worst of it.
The One Important Fact.
The fact of more importance than
all others in connection with tariff dis
cussions and industrial subjects, so
far as this country is concerned, is
that 95 per cent, of all the goods made
in American mills and factories and
produced on American farms is sold
direct to home consumers. It is this
splendid hcr«.<; market which deserves
first and most consideration in all dis
cussions in any way related to it. Only
five y<er cent, of the products of our
country is sold to consumers else
where. Full realization of this fact
will prevent repetition of some absurd
statements which have been made and
some even more absurd movements
which have in recent years been at
tempted.—Houghton (Mich.) Gazette.
Congress Not Consulted.
So far as it goes, it is full-fledged
reciprocity. Germany admits agricul
tural products and certain chemicals
and machinery at less than her maxi
mum rates; in return the president
dares to raise his reckless hand against
the thrice-sacred Dingley schedules
and let in at cut rates certain products
of the "pauper labor" of "effete" Ger
many.—N. Y. Evening World.
It is a fuller-fledged reciprocity than
any which has over been submitted to
congress for its approval, for it pro
poses to admit at cut prices not cer
tain products, but all products of low
priced German labor. No wonder con
gress was not consulted. Congres?
would have turned it down iuconti
nently.
fOR A BIG_ RANSOM.
HARRY ORCHARD PLANNED TO
STEAL AND HOLD THE CHILD
OF HIS FRIEND.
£tar Witness for Prosecution in Hay
wood's Trial Tells of a Series
of Crimes.
Boise. Idaho. The defense on
Wednesday carried the cross-ex
amination of Harry Orchard down to
the actual crime charged against Hay
wood, the murder of Frank Steunen
berg. 'lHie Steunenberg crime was
reached at midday, and counsel for the
defense directed their efforts to an at
tempt to cloud the earlier purposes
and movements of Orchard with un
certainty. Then they emphasized the
abandonment of ail efforts to kill after
Orchard first tracked Steunenberg to a
hotel iu Boise and with a skeleton key
gained entrance to the room in which
the governor was living.
Here they delayed for a moment to
prove that Orchard twice wrote and
once telephoned to Bill Easterly at
Silver City to urge him to come and
join in the crime, and the direct im
plication was that Orchard was en
deavoring to inveigle another feder
ation man into the crime, which would
bring dishonor to the organization.
Then the witness was carried on his
long journey into north Idaho and his
crimes there, including a plot to kid
nap and hold for ransom August Paul
son's child were emphasized. Orchard
swore that David Coates, formerly
lieutenant governor of Colorado and
late a publisher in Wallace. Idaho, first
suggested the kidnapping to Pottibonc
and himself at Denver. Paulson, once
a poor miner, had made a fortune in
the Hercules mine, in which Orchard
held an interest when the property
was not paying; and it was believed
that if his children were stolen he
would "come up" with $50,000 or $60,-
000 iu ransom. Orchard said when he
went to north Idaho he got Jack Simp
kins to enter the plot and together
they went to Coates to renew the
scheme.
Coates was asked to stand up and
Orchard said he was the man. Orch
ard was then asked whether he had
not himself proposed the crime to
Coates, who rebuffed him. and whether
Jack Simpkins had not warned Paul
son the minute he heard of the plot.
Orchard denied both suggestions and
Insisted that Coates was to stay in the
plot and handle the money they hoped
to get from Paulson. Then the de
fense showed the witness in the com
mission of a series of mean crimes
and reduced to poverty, in which he
had to resort to pawning, borrowing
and stealing to live, for a long period.
First he pawned jewelry and guns
for $25 or S3O. Then he accepted the
hospitality of Paulson's home while he
was plotting to steal Paulson's child.
After that, with Jack Simpkins, he
broke into the Oregpn Railway and
Navigation Co.'s station. They were
after a trunkful of jewelry samples,
but instead got a trunkful of shoe sam
ples. Next he tapped a cash register
at liurke for S3O or $lO.
THE WAR IN SALVADOR.
Government Troops Defeated Rebels,
Who Looted Two Towns While
They Were Retreating.
Mexico City.—According to a cable
gram received on Wednesday the
Salvadoran army has defeated the in
vading force which captured Acajutla
on Tuesday and has driven it back to
the coast. One of the leaders of the
Invading army was John Moisant, a
former resident of San Francisco, an
American citizen. He is reported to
have been captured by the forces of
President Figueroa.
It is reported on good authority that
troops are ready to invade Salvador
from three sides. According to this
information Gens. Toledo and Alfara
are on the Honduran border ready to
strike and Gen. Corea 'will enter the
country by way of Amapala.
Managua, Nicaragua.—The govern
ment was questioned on Wednes
day concerning the report that Nicar
agua had declared war upon Guate
mala. The report was denied. Nicar
agua has not declared war upon any
state.
San Salvador. —A force of Nicara
guan filibusters landed at Aca
jutla and made their way to the town
of Sonsonata, where they plundered
the custom house and stole $20,000
from the local agency of the Bank of
Salvador. Salvadoran troops then ap
peared upon the scene and defeated
the Invaders, who fled precipitately
back to Acajutla, where they re
embarked upon some vessels flying
the Nicaraguan flag and made their
way out of the harbor.
Got a Verdict for SIOI,OOO Damages.
New York. One of the larg
est verdicts for damages ever
given in the supreme court in this ju
dicial district was awarded by a jury
Wednesday when Sarah Read was
awarded $101,789 for the loss of her
husband, who was killed by a New
York Central railroad train at the Van
Covtlandt Park crossing three years
ago yesterday. Mr. Head, who was a
paper bag manufacturer, was riding in
an automobile with George Noakes,
Mrs. Noakes and Noakes' son and
daughter. The automobile was struck
by a train. Read was killed and Miss
Noakes and the chauffeur each lost a
leg. The chauffeur recti'ved a verdict
of SIO,OOO and Miss Noakes of $35,000.
Elks Form Tri-State Association.
East. Liverpool, O. —The Tri-State
Elks' association was formed
here Wednesday, lodges from 24 cities
in Ohio, we ,tern Pennsylvania and
West Virginia being represented. H.W.
Smith, of this city, was elected presi
dent and L. I'. Aletzgar, of Salem, G.,
secretary-treasurer.
Powder Mill Blew Up.
Fort Smith, Ark. The corning
mill of the Equitable powder
plant w..s demolished by an explosion
Wednesday. William Coleman,
workman, \V:is killed. Lass 550,000.
THE ERROR OF INTERRUPTION.
"Gracious, Smith, but you have a
fierce cold. How did you catch It?"
"Hang me if I know how. I've taken
off—"
"You idiot! And you- don't know
how you caught it! Why, a child
could tell you. I am surprised that a
man of your intelligence, or supposed
intelligence—"
"I don't see any occasion for such
an outburst as that. You act as though
I had committed a crime. I was sim
ply going to say I've taken off —"
"And you don't know how you
caught the cold! Why, it's a wonder
pou're not in the hospital with pneu
monia! I didn't suppose a man like
you would do that. You read the pa
pers, don't you? Every day you see
interviews with doctors —"
"Excuse me, old man. I try to De
patient with everybody, but you are
taxing my temper to the limit. I start
to tell you I've taken off—"
"Yes, and you ought to be ashamed
to confess it. Don't you see inter
views with our best doctors, urging
people not to take off their flannels
until —"
"Who said anything about taking
off his flannels?"
"Why, you did. You said you'd
taken 'em off —"
"I didn't say anything of the kind.
But I did try to say that I didn't know
how I had caught this cold because I
have taken awful good care of myself
all this spring."—Chicago Journal.
Not Pride, But Caution.
Sweet Girl—Mother', Mr. Nicefel
v is coming to take me out riding
this afternoon. I may go, mayn't I?
Mother—lf he drivers up with span
of spirited horses, you can go; but
if he comes with that broken-dowr.
old nag he had last time, you sha'n't.
"Why, mother, I didn't suppose you
would ever have such a foolish pride."
"My dear, a young man who comes
with a pair of spirited horses expects
to drive with both hands." —N. Y.
Weekly.
Fool Editors.
Mrs. Grubber—Well, well! What
fools these editors be!
Mr. Grubber—Eh?
Mrs. Grubber—Here I writ a letter
to the editor of the Punkinville Trum
pet. askin' what would be a proper
an' inexpensive thing to git fer a wed
din' present; an' here in the paper
he's printed a list of about a hun
dred things what folks give as wed
din' prsents, an' there ain't one of 'em
costs lass than a dollar. —N. Y.
Weekly.
Side Lights on History.
Gen. Sherman was on his memor
able march to the sea.
"Everything seems to be going
smoothly thus far," he said, "but
something seems to tell me that the
end will be disastrous!"
Years afterward, when he found he
couldn't go anywhere without hearing
the brass bands playing "Marching
Through Georgia," he realized that
his forebodings had been only too well
founded.
Far From It.
"Dora, dearest, I love —"
"O! O!"
"Do you interrupt me, Dora, because
you don't want to hear it?"
"That wasn't intended as an inter
ruption, George. Go ahead."—Chicago
Tribune.
NOT JUST WHAT HE MEANT.
Owner —Are you lads aware that no
one is allowed to fish here?
Boy—Why we saw yer fishin' 'ere
yerself t'other day!
G.SCH MIDT'S, 1 —
FOR
FRESH BREAD,
il 6°P a^ar P " ,,cY ™..
rj NUf
#
CONFECTIONERY
Daily Delivery. All orders prompt and
skillful attention.
WHEN IN DOUBT, TRY Th-y have jrood thei«t of jrea,^
MSb!tla : isV& OTflftMO _ • an<ih.<<! cured thoMiand, r*
112 o S t»IJ 4" O DV g c: Nervous Diseases. rurb
r l ' .**. ✓n.l '"'•" r'. zJ&fjf Debi'lty, i'isi;uje»s.Sleeple«».
/W fj) nrjA! "J J ae» and V-aricoccle.AtrophT.ftc.
v *X 112 AGi.iH y ' h <T t!r » *•bcain
\ v . .^|the circulation, make digcstim
X?\\ perfect, and irarmrt a beal'fcy
Jtcr y^^OT *° wholo brloj*. All Hr-nn*- and lot«*n nre chaclreu perm •*- nt!y, •'Uulriia p.-\U*«>*s
arc properly cured, thM.- condition often worries cheat lt.io Insanlt- Consumption or i)c. Ib,
X T a ' ,c< ' Mcesi perboir; 6 boix», vith iron«clM'' < jepats»ujra Voe tocuieor rtfvn-j t ; *
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froi t*ie o/ &. 0. L>utl*< u, Dxutftflot, Emporium, Pa.
i The flat* U lif Chap i
) J. F. PARSONS' £
LA OSES
BR. LaFMSO'S GBMPOUHD.
Safe.apeedy regulator: Cfl ornts. Dnigglata or lulk
Booklet free. DM. IJMLA.S CO, Philadelphia, Pa.
EVERY WOMAN
JmOvSb Sometimes roods A rallabia
Xw monthly regulating medio ta*u
1 JL DK. PEAL'S
PENNYROYAL PILLS,
Are prompt, safe and certain la reiult. Thegena
toe (Dr. Real's) n«Ter disappoint. fI.CO per bast
Bold by R. C. Dodso*, druggist; -,J
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RHEUMATISM!
V BftGO, SCUTICII
NEURALGIA and!
KIDNEY TROUBLE!
"SDKOPS" taken Internally, rids the blood H
of the poisonous matter and acids which M
are the direct causes of theseidlseases. B|
Applied externally it affords almost In- H
stunt reil-f from pain, while a permanent H
cure la being effected by'purifylng the MB
blood, dissolving the -poUoaous sab- B
stanse and removing It from the system. BK
DR. «. O. BLAND , ■
Of Brewtgn,<o«., writes:
"I bad been aiufferer for* number of year#
with Lumbago and 4 Kheun»atlain In «n» armf
and UKfl.anatrledaUXhervmedlea that I oould
gather from raedlcel'wortcOand also consulted
wlthaoumborof tbo beet phvalof ana. but found
nothing tbat'«ave the *e lief obtained from
I ••ball preeerlbe lt4n.ray motto*,
for rfceumatlam andlundred dlaea*ea. ,r
FREE
It you are Suffering frith rheumatism.
Neuralgia, Kidney Tnjuble or any kin
dred disease. write to us for a trial bottls
of DROPS, "And-tea tit yourself.
' S-BROPS" can tje <uged any length of
time without acquiring «°"druft habit."
as it is entirely fre« of ioplum, eocaine.
alcohol, laudanum, and other similar
ingredients.
Ui|e«n Battle, "S-DHOPB" (809 DMM)
11.00. F«rAftle bfJDragtlMU.
BWARBOB ■HfUHATIC 410 RE COBPAIY,
Dept. SO. 1M Lake Street, Okleece.^
For Bill Heads,
Letter Heads,
Fine Commerciai
Job Work of Ali
Kinds,
Get Our Figures-