Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, November 21, 1907, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULIJN, Editor.
Published 12vfry Thursday*
TKRMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
P»T YEAR 90 00
If paid iu advance 1
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements arc published at tlx? rate of
puc dollar per square for one insertion and fifty
v'tnis i>er square for each subsequent insertion.
Rates by the year, or for six or three month*.
%re low and uniform, and will be iurnishcd on
application.
Legal and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less, 5'J: each subsequent inser
tion fU rents per square.
Local notices lu cents per line for one inser
serilon: 5 ceuts per line lor each subsequent
con-eeutive insertion.
Obituary notices over live lines. 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, mar
-1 .acres and deaths will be inserted free.
Business cards, live lii.es «»r less. 15 per year;
mer tive Hues, at the regular rates of adver
t sing.
No local inserted for less than 75 cents per
issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job d« partmentof the PRESS is complete
end affords facilities for doing tin- best class of
V.-rk. PAK'llcri.Ali ATTENTION FAll> 'l'O LAW
Printing.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent wt oT the county must be paid
fur in advance.
The dearest friends to-day may be
the most desperate enemies to-mor
row.
There is more in this pompadour
matter than appears on the surface —
"rats," for instance.
Says the Baltimore American, "No
torietj and fame are the twin sisters
of eccentricity." Must mean triplets.
American theatrical companies are
to tour British provinces. Newcastle
will be kept abundantly supplied with .
coals.
The fortune of $3,000,000 left by the
late Robert Pinkerton shows that it
sometimes is profitable to mind other
people's business.
There is every reason in the world
why the farmer should feel compla
cent. who has a few hundred bushels
Df wheat stored away.
Europe is getting ahead of us in the
balloon industry only because the war
office over there doesn't care what it
does with the taxpayers' money.
Although the steamships are getting
awfully fast, even the best of them
will carry dining rooms and sleeping
apartments for a few decades yet.
The substitution of radium as a.
money metal would be a great con- j
venience J'or tin.- men who are en- '
deavoring to collect all the coin in the
world.
Dr. Emil Koenig of Berlin says that
the decay of the entire human race is
imminent. He should not take so se
riously these reports from Pittsburg
and New York. '
"Men who think rise." says a Phila
delphia paper. Still quite a number of
men glued to street car seats are in a
brown study when a tired woman en
ters and clutches a strap.
If the sprightly young collegians
were as swift in their studies as they
are in their class rushes, remarks the
Cleveland Leader, what a wealth of
wisdom Ohio would have in a few
years!
The navy says the army can't shoot,
and the army says the navy has to
give vaudeville shows in order to get
recruits. It may yet turn out that
the militia is the most efficient branch
of the service.
The claim of Dr. Seweli that most
alleged mad doss are really only suf
fering from thirst, will not, however,
encouragi many philanthropic souls
to rush out with a pan of water and
offer them a drink.
Ernest Thompson Seton, writing in
a current magazine on the "Marriage
of Animals," remarks casually that
domesticity is "notoriously bad for
the morals of animals," and cites the
dog as i conspicuous example. The
immorality of animals! Heavens and
earth!
A New Yorker, who is courting
trouble says that bold, high foreheads
are not evidences of intellect, because
children and women have bolder and
higher foreheads than men. When he
gets through being scalped by the
women he will realize that a bold
tongue is no evidence of intellect.
Twenty-four millions of dollars is
the official estimate of the amount of
money expf nded in Europe this year
by Americans touring in automobiles.
The basis of the calculation is that
there are 8,000 touring parties, aver
aging five persons each, spending $lO
a day for two months. Great guess
ing!
The will of Henry.l. Bryor provid
ing that no grandchild who uses to
bacco or intoxicants or frequents sa
loons before reaching the age of thir
ty, shall inherit any of the property
is surely a safe and sane document.
If a man reaches that age without
having formed bad habits it is almost
a certainty that he never will.
Believers in woman suffrage and the
most scornful disbelievers will unite,
unless they were born without humor,
in enjoying a social comedy presented
by a recent election in a small town,
says Youth's Companion. Two wom
en were nominated to succeed their
husbands as members of the school
committee. Some citizens, who do
not favor women on the board, nomi
nated the husbands for reelection. The
excitement waked up many men who
had not voted on school questions for
-•ears, and with pathetic loyalty to
their sex, they swelled the vote for
the husbands to overwhelming defeat
c{ the wives.
SAME OLD FALLACY
ELLIS H. ROBERTS TALKS "HORI
ZONTAL REDUCTION."
Would Juggle Tariff to Suit Condition
of Treasury—Constant Disturb
ance of Business Conditions
the Inevitable Result.
One of the iatest plans for insuring
disturbance of business conditions is
that advanced by Ellis H. Roberts, a
former treasurer of the United States.
The present treasury surplus worries
this gentleman. lie foresees the possi
bility of a continued increase that
shall bring the surplus to $100,000,000,
and to avert this lie woud reduce the
tariff.
First determine what the proper sur
plus should he, and then cut down col
lections to fit. Horizontal reduction
will do it. That was the "Bill" Mor
rison plan of some 25 years ago. Mor
rison, however, was not so much wor
ried about the surplus as about pro
tection. He wanted to secure in time
the removal of all protective duties.
Roberts professes undiminished re
gard for protection, though he would
not hesitate to lower duties that are
needed for protection in order that the
treasury surplus may be decreased.
His plan seems simple—very simple,
considered broadly, but extremely
complicated when it comes to working
out details.
If the tariff is going to be so regu
lated as to fit the turplus, then, of
course, the tariff must he changed as
often as the surplus changes. When
the surplus rises beyond an agreed
sum the tariff must be again lowered;
and when the surplus drops below the
"ideal" figure, then the tariff must be
raised.
To illustrate: Having reduced the
tariff, and our surplus being, say,
$20,000,000, congress sees fit to appro
priate an additional $300,000,000 for
Panama canal construction, for deep
waterways, for rivers and harbors, for
irrigation, etc., etc. Accordingly the
surplus disappears and a deficit takes
its place. Up goes the tariff again,
and so on, down, up, and down again,
as tiie surplus diminishes, increases
or disappears altogether.
The tariff would be about as stable
as a thermometer constantly changed
j from a refrigerator to a boiler room
j and back again. Production, labor,
| wage paying and wage distribution
through trade channels would never
know what the tariff was going to be
for any considerable length of time.
Under such shifting conditions no one
need be told what would happen to
business.
The Roberts plan of horizontal re
duction is based upon the erroneous
assumption that ihe present tariff
schedules are uniformlj protective.
Such is not the case. Some schedules
are already too low. Proof of this is
found in the fact that we are now im
porting competitive commodities at the
rate of nearly $000,000,000 a year.
Would Mr. Roberts like to see that
amount increased? it certainly would
be increased if we should cut down
the tariff in order to cut down the sur
plus.
Suppose this heavy increase of du
tiable merchandise should increase
the aggregate of tariff collections and
so increase the surplus.
What would Mr. Roberts do in that
event? Would he reduce the tariff
still further, and thereby still further
swell the imports, or wotikl lie raise
the tariff once more with a view to
shutting out imports? Would he, by
tariff reduction, swell the volume of
competitive imports that, once admit
ted to our market, must displace an
equivalent quantity of domestic pro
duct ion, domestic employment, domes
tic wage paying, domestic waue spend
ing? Would he do this for the sake of
reducing the surplus?
Does Mr. Ellis 11. Roberts, in fact,
' know precisely what he would do or
would like to have done with the tar
iff? Has he any conception of the eon
sequences of what he would do after
it had been done? The answer would
seem to be that the ex-treasurer is
floundering around in a mess of cmd 1
ideas and does not really know enough
about the tariff and its workings to
entitle him or his views to serious con
sideration.
Let Well Enough Alone.
The success of the Republican party
beginning with the election of William
McKinley was the result of the decided
stand taken by the leaders in the in
terest of protection.
The prosperity of the country to-day
is due to the development of Ameri
can industries guarded by a protective
tariff.
The rank arid file of the Republican
party are content to "let well enough
alone," and the vote at the coming
presidential election will undoubtedly
demonstrate that a good many Demo
crats about the United States are of
the same opinion.—Scranton Tribune.
Are Already on the Free List.
The Washington Democrat is much
worried about the tariff on print paper.
If the duty was removed it is not like
ly that the price would be affected in
the least, for there is no place from
Where print could be imported where
the freight rates would not he pro
hibitive. Not long ago the Democrat
wanted the tariff removed from logs,
out of which wood pulp is manufac
tured, and now a number of more pre
tentious papers are talking the same
tiling. The joke of it is pulp logs now
are .admitted free. —lowa City Repub
lican. J
CAMERUN COUNTY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1907.
STRAUS TO COTTON GROWERS.
Free Trade Speech Said to Have
Caused Apprehension.
"Cotton Growers Startled," is the
headline over a newspaper report of
the peculiar anti-protective speech de
livered before the National Associa
tion of Cotton Growers In Washington
on the fourth of October. Why should
the cotton growers have been startled
at the speech? With few exceptions,
the cotton growers are Democrats
who persistently vote for free trade
congressmen from their southern dis
tricts. We would expect applause, not
apprehension, when a champion of
their pet idea makes a deliverance in
such harmony with their past predi
lections.
Mr. Straus did not tell them of their
dreadfully wrecked condition under
the operation of the Cleveland-Wilson-
Gorman free trade act, nor of the
wondrous good fortune which had be
fallen them in spite of themselves
through the Dingley rescue, nor of the
splendid achievements of American
trade and commerce through our pro
tective system, through which our for
eign commerce has grown phenom
enally and furnished consumption for
their productions; but deliberately ad
vised these intelligent gentlemen that
the time had come to call a halt to
their onward and upward progress,
and encouraged them in follies the
hardships of which had pinched them
time and time again under free trade
conditions in the past.
If these cotton grower.: were really
startled we welcome thi: an evidence
of a dawning sanity, not heretofore
visible, and trust we may soon see
them putting into effect their disap
proval by their votes against the pol
icy which they have so much good rea
son to fear.
Call for More Men.
Congress is to be asked to furnish
3,000 more enlisted men for the United
States navy. Most of our readers,
probably, do not understand exactly
what this means. The number of
men authorized in 1906 was 37,000.
The proposed increase will bring the
navy within handshaking distance of
the United States army. Do the peo
ple of the country understand the im
portance of sea power? These facts
would indicate it. Never before was
the navy so near to the army in size.
At the outbreak of the civil war the
United States navy had only 7,600
i men. At the end of the war 51,500
| inen were enrolled. After the civil
war a blight fell upon the navy, but
that blight is past. The country feels
the need of a powerful, efficient navy,
and it now possesses one that, on pa
per, in number of enlisted men, is
nearly three quarters the size of the
one which helped to bring the civil
war to a close.
And no one disputes the fact that
the 3.000 men now to be asked for are
needed. We have been building ships
! so fast that all of our vessels cannot
be putin commission at one time
without the extra men. Since it was
deemed wise to build the ships, it
must be wise toman them.
The war scare in the Pacific was
baseless, but it will have this effect at
least —it will incline congress to lend
a readier ear to the requests of the
navy for more men. Inasmuch as it is
now argued that we must have a
strong fleet in the Pacific as well as in
the Atlantic, congress may listen at
tentively even to the plea of the navy
for two or three new ships, lint this
part of the program of the navy will
certainly come in for more discussion
than the other.
An Expert Diagnosis.
Wall street may wail and specula
tors may take the most pessimistic
I view imaginable regarding our future
! financial and industrial status, but the
| great producers cannot be stampeded.
I There could be no better authority
j than Willis L. King, vice president of
' 'he Jones & Laugh lin Steel company,
! one of the largest of the independent
; concerns. Mr. King says very tersely:
"There are only three things that
j should, in my opinion, affect adversely
I the progress of this country—famine,
, ;>oslHence and free trade. Wt can
j safely trust the first two to Provi
dence, and 1 hope the Republican
party will continue to look after the
I third."
He adds that the west does not
share in the pessimism of a portion of
thi! eastern press; that conditions do
not warrant alarm, hut simply ''ad
monish thoughtful men that the tre
mendous expansion of the past few
years must rest until the financial
equilibrium of the country is reestab
lished."
Mr. King concludes a very optimistic
declaration with the following:
"The country is certainly richer
than it was a year or even three
months ago. The farmers have har
vested a seven billion dollar crop, and
the mines have added many millions
to our wealth. It is the part of wis
dom, therefore, to await the future
with confidence, and not be carried
away by a fear of something that is
.not at all likely to happen."
The positive opinion of men like Mr
King is worth far more tfian the va
porizing of certain editors who have
no practical knowledge of real condi
tions.
Another View of the Case.
In his Kentucky speeches Mr. Bryan
claims for himself the credit of tin
policies of the Roosevelt administra
tion. President Roosevelt has done
nothing not approved by Republican
platforms; consequently, Mr. Bryan
must have been a convert to Repub
licanism all the time. This view o!
the ease is more plausible than thai
any Republican can be a Bryan Dem
I ocrat.
HADE A WILL JUST
BEFORE HE DIED
EX-BANKER BARNEY LEFT BIG
ESTATE TO HIS WIFE.
HE WAS WORTH $2,500,000.
His Will Directs that His Estate be
Incorporated and Administered by
Trustees—He Carried $185,-
000 Life Insurance.
New York City.—Mortally wound
ed by his own hand Charles
Tracy Barney summoned his family
and lawyers to his bedside and after
reviewing his business affairs and
giving expressions of his wishes in
certain matters, dictated and signed a
will in which his wife was nuide the
principal beneficiary. This matter
disposed of, he submitted to the op
eration through which his physicians
had hoped to save his life, A half
hour after the lawyers withdrew the
former head of the Knickerbocker
Trust Co. was dead.
This became known Friday through
a statement made by Albert S. Mil
bank, of the law firm of Masten &
Nichols, Mr. Barney's attorneys, and
explains the presence at the house
when the coroner arrived Thursday
of Arthur 11. M-'\sten and George L.
Nlchol;
Barney made a will two years ago,
but this lie subsequently destroyed.
The original document provided for
the same distribution of his property
as 'did the final paper except for
changes necessitated by shrinkage in
values. When the original will was
drawn Barney was estimated to be
worth between $7,000,000 and $9,000,-
000. It is believed that the estate at
present will net about $2,500,000.
In Thursday's will the hanker di
rected that his estate should be in
corporated and administered by a
board of trustees chosen from his
former associates in the directorate
of the now suspended Knickerbocker
Trust Co. Barney directed that his
wife should be the chief beneficiary
after iiis debts were paid, lie further
willed that the agreement made some
time ago with his creditors should be
lived up to and such of the estate as
proved necessary be used to discharge
his obligations. The only reservation
made was in the matter of his life in
surance, which amounts to $185,000.
These policies are incontestable and
are to be paid to the widow. The
trustees of the incorporated estate
are the executors named.
New York City.—Charles Tracy
Barney, the deposed president of the
Knickerbocker Trust Co., and until re
cently a power in the financial world,
shot anil killed himself Thursday in
his home. His loans with the bank, it
is said, are amply secured.
TRADE LANGUISHES.
Collections are Poor and Dullness in
the Iron and Steel Industry
Increases.
New York City.—R. G. Dun &
Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says:
Liberal receipts of gold from abroad
and a large increase in bank note cir
culation tend to relieve the financial
stress at New York, but the interior
is now feeling the scarcity of cur
rency and commercial activity is re
tarded to some extent. Dispatches
from leading cities indicate conserv
atism in preparation for future busi
ness and irregularity in collections,
with most favorable news from agri
cultural sections in which the crops
are being marketed as freely as the
supply of money will permit.
Return to normal conditions will be
hastened by large exports of farm
staples supplying credits abroad upon
which the much needed gold may be
Imported. Official returns indicate
that exports of this nature were val
ued at about $100,000,000 in October
and the outgo of grain and cotton is
on a still larger scale this month.
Financial pressure has affected the
iron industry, curtailing new con
tracts for all forms of finished steel.
Few new orders have been received
by mills and some deliveries on old
contracts are deferred because funds
are not available.
. A DARING CRIME.
Four Italians Held Up a Paymaster
and Robbed Him of $5,000.
Passaic, N. .T.—Four armed Ital
ians perpetrated a daring robbery
on the outskirts of this city Friday,
holding up a paymaster and carrying
away a satchel which the police say
contained between $5,000 and $7,000.
Three of the highwaymen were ar
rested after an exchange of shots
with the police, but the fourth escap
ed with the booty.
Paymaster William Knapp, of the
Werthan & Aldrich Co., dyers, of
Delawanna, N. J., two miles from
here, started Friday afternoon to
drive to this city, where he intended
to deposit the money In a bank, lie
was alone and unarmed and was Hear
ing the city when four men armed
with shotguns stepped out from be
hind trees and ordered him to stop.
One of the men seized the horse's
head, two Covered the paymaster
with their guns, while the fourth
climbed into the wagon and seized
the satchel. Keeping Knapp covered
and warning him not to make an out
cry the men disappeared.
The Judge Set Aside the Verdict.
Grand Haven, Mich. A jur>
on Friday found William siiini
mel guilty of the murder IS month?
ago of Martin Golden, a storekeeper
at Denlson, but Judge Padgham set.
aside the verdict and severely scored
the jury, declaring the evidence,
which was entirely circumstantial, did
not warrant the verdict. The judge
released Shimmel on SSOO bond.
Bank Cashier Suicided.
Kansa:; City, Mo. J. B. Thomas,
aged 63, cashier of the Bank of Al
bany. Mo., committed suicide Fridaj
by shooting, in a hotel here.
A BULLET ENDED HIS LIFE
C. T. BARNEY, A NEW YORK
FINANCIER, SUICIDED.
He was Recently Deposed as President
of a Trust Company Which Failed
for $60,000,000.
New York City.—Charles Tracy
New York, Nov. 15. —Charles Tracy
Barney, the deposed president of the
Knickerbocker Trust Co., and until re
cently a power in the financial world,
shot and killed himself Thursday in
his home. His loans with the bank, it
is said, are amply secured, and when
he was forced from Its presidency he
was, to all intents and purposes, elimi
nated as a factor in banking circles.
What, ill effects his unexpected taking
off might have had on the financial
situation generally had long since
been discounted.
in distress of mind over the dissipa
tion of his private fortune and the loss
of his high standing among business
associates, intimate acquaintances find
the hidden drift that broke his health
and reason. And even much of his
wealth might have been saved. At the
time that Barney was dying at his
home a handful of friends at a down
town office were concluding an ar
rangement by which the loose ends of
the banker's many enterprises were
to be gathered up and financed by a
stock company which, if not wholly
successful, would at least rescue from
the wreckage sufficient to insure his
future financially. The conference
broke up at the announcement that
Mr. Barney was dead.
Mr. Barney, who wan in hi", fifty
seventh year, shot himself early
Thursday while alone in his chamber
on the second floor of his home. The
bullet entered below the heart and
lodged under the left shoulder blade.
He died about 2:30 p. m.after suffer
ing intensely.
Mr. Barney was president of the
Knickerbocker Trust Co., which clos
ed its doors at the beginning of the re
cent financial crisis. The institution
was one of the largest trust companies
in the city and had liabilities estimat
ed at from $00,000,000 to $70,000,000.
Mr. Barney had long been prominent
in the financial- life of New York and
was interested in many enterprises.
lie was born in Cleveland, 0., Janu
ary 27, 1851. lie was the son of A. 11.
Barney, president of the United Ex
press Co. Alter graduating from
Williams college in 1870, he married
Miss Lilly Whitney, sister of William
C. Whitney.
PEACE CONFERENCE OPENS.
Representatives of Five Central Amer
ican Republics Meet at Washington.
Washington, D. C. —ln the red
room of the Bureau of American lie
publics, amid the smoke, not of bat
tle, but of the flashlights of photo
graphers, the peace conference of the
Central American republics convened
Thursday. The ceremonies incident
to the opening of the conference were
informal. As if by prearrangement
the plenipotentiaries of the live Cen
tral American republics parties to the
conference and the officials represent
ative of the American and other gov
ernments interested in the conference
arrived at the bureau at about the
same time.
Elihu Root, secretary of state, and
Senor Enrique Creel, the ambassador
from Mexico, representatives of the
two governments which had called
the conference into session, were es
corted to the conference room by com
mittees of the plenipotentiaries.
In addition to the conferees and the
officials directly interested in the con
ference there were in attendance offi
cials of the American state depart
ment and of the Bureau of American
Republics.
Secretary Root and Ambassador
Creel were presented to the plenipo
tentiaries and a few minutes were de
voted to conversation. At 2:45 p. m.
Secretary Root, was introduced to the
conference as temporary chairman. In
accepting the chair the secretary de
livered a brief address.
As the representative of Mexico,
which joined with the United States
in calling the conference into being,
Ambassador Creel made an address.
Senor Luis Anderson, of Costa Rica,
for the conference, responded to the
addresses of Secretary Root and Am
bassador Creel.
Permanent organization of the con
ference was effected by tl:e election
of Senor Luis Anderson as perma
nent president.
Fond of the Sea.
King Alfonso of Spain is very fond
of the sea. lie and Queen Victoria
Eugenie find one of their greatest
pleasures at San Sebastian in the
long daily swim. Both are perfectly..
at home in the water, the young
queen having early acquired the art
of swimming in Solent waters.
G.SCHMIDT'S, 1 —
—•«___ MEAPQUARTERS FOR
||M FRESH BfiEAD,
|| popular /'^rcU
*Ji-3} n ml*:-'
If "^oOAHery,
CONFECTIONERY
Daily Delivery. Allordnrsgiven prnmptand
skillfnl attention.
JirT?W WHEN IN DOUBT, TRY Th-j»f)aTOß»rafhyr J [ o ry« 1
|F®3 STRBB3 A ' r*,*/M3imfc*SA
A «&.'•''> the dig«tl« n
/%1 - i 'Ta, _, ... . . . . BW.fs'ct, unfl.lfciflart « Withy
i^^ 1 vV N X.-T*rS whole brlnp. All drains and lone# trc chvtfcf.a frr.fi iJtfcss
it*' J*SmSIvSrV, ,ftrc rropcrly cured, their condition
WffiS&yXHFT-'*" <d Price $t per oox; 6 U>xe'«,wltb IfoliV}ln^7gJ , or r«fu ' '
Va»i«>V»*» >nou«!y,js .x). Send for lice took. Adieu, P£Al. li&CftJIWS CUw £t>
Iml ut!s bj tt. O. Liodara.PiaggUt, Kmpailius.P*.
S Hit Nit. to Bo; Chop >
5 J. F. PARSONS' )
HLullftMMA
Safe. tpeadj regulator: 24frjQt«. TtolMU&ft* mat;
Uookiaifree. UK. iJui'kAiicO. PlnLufelplila, Pa.
EVERY WOMAN
Bpn>rfun<;3 r.ectis a retfrtbki
* mouUriy rc;;: Taltog znediciaoL.
Mi BH. FeAUS
pENMYIOYAL piILS,
Arc rirompt. safe amlcerUiijoinrosult. The penu.
too (.'Jr. real's) ae»er dUuppoU-C. J 1.60 -per boK.,
Bold by R C. Dodson, druggiM
II LUB ES CO 112 f$E fiftc S| i
' KIPNEY TfiOBBLEI
"SDfIGT'S" taken Internally, rids the blood K |
of the poisouourt matter o,"nd eci<3s"which S
are tho direct causes of those diae&ses. J
Applied externally it affords Klmoat in- S
atant relief from pain, whilemierniaaent U
cure is being effect**! by purifying the «
blood, dissolving the poisonous sub- H
stance and iemoviDt it from the systom. H
DR. S. D. BL AMD I
Of Brewton, Go., wrttw:
••I bad b**eu a sufferer tor a number of years §"
with Lumbago and Kbotimatlsm Jn my arms j§
and legß,and-tried all tberemmllvti tbat I could a*
gatbor trorn aiedtoal work<s and also consulted |v
wltb annmborof tbe beet f»lrVjriotaiie { but found Hi
nothing tl»at gave the relief obtained from m
•«&-DltoP.H." I chall prwilh«< ftlu my practice afl
for rbuiuoatfem aad kluUred dIWMMi"
If you arc snfterloff Tflth Hlwinnattfno, raj
Neurr.lt>la, iiklney Trouble or any kis-fig
KH dred disease, writo to us /oratrial bottleßJ
K of "6-DROPS/' Wid test it yourself. 0
® <, 6-^>ROE*S ,, can be uoedotiy length of Eft'
£5 time without acoulrlnff a "th*a£ Jrabit."gSj
ffi as It !s entirely fr«« of opium. cocaine, |p
r.i rlcobo). luud&&u;£, occi other similar »'l
lucrredlentc. fc*
LtrgeSlce no*M<s rH
}.« fl.ua. I«r SftU
•ISWAKSOS EHt'JCmiS CCR£ CdrWV, E
-
For Bill Heads,
Letter Heads,
T inc Commercial
Job Work of All.
Kinds,
Get Our Figures,