Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, October 28, 1909, Page 2, Image 2

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CAMiRON CUUMTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Ed.tor.
I'ubliHlicd Every Thursday,
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
fer year. (2 04
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•*l( ier square for each subsequent insertion
Rates by tht) year, or for sn or three rnonilia,
fere low and uniform, and will be furnished on
Implication.
r ie»nl and Official Advertlilnc per square
liree times or less. each subsequent inser
to cents per tquare
Local notices lu cents per line for one lnser
««nion: & cents per line for each subsequent
t9n«eoutlve Insertion.
Obituary notices over fire lines, to cents pet
lice. Simple announcements of births. tnar»
r'.sces and death* will be Inserted free.
Business cards, flve lines or less. »6 per year,
ever five lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local inserted tor less than 75 cents per
laiua.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PRISS Is complete
<cd afferds facilities for doing the best class of
Work. PABTICUI-JIK ATTENTION PAIDTO Li«
PRINTIWO.
No paper will b« discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
lor In advance.
Sun Cooking.
A German, Haron Tehernhausen,
was the first sun cook, lie began in
10S7 to boil water, and in 1688 he had
very good success in boiling egs;s.
Sir John Ilerschel and Buff on are oth
er famous names associated with sun
cooking. Sun cooking—roasting and
boiling by sunlight instead of coal or
gas—has been going on for three hun
dred years. There are sun stoves
that roast a sirloin or boil a soup to
perfection. They are only used, how
ever, by scientists.
Malaria in Children.
Dr. Cardamitis says infancy less
than a year old has a higher tend
ency to malaria than any other age.
Malarial children's blood should be
kept disinfected with quinine, as they
are the main carriers of malaria.
Mosquitoes catch it from malarial
children before starting an epidemic
of chills, fever and ague. He recom
mends chocolate quinine tablets, three
grains a day, for children.
The Murderous Bluefish.
A five-pound bluefish passes east
ward from Vineyard sound in the
spring and weighs ten or 15 pounds in
autumn. The bluefish is an unmiti
gated sea butcher and is able to whip
any other species not larger than him
self. He attacks menhaden with such
lerocity as to pack them in windrows
a foot deep on the coast.
Happiness Easily Found.
Happiness is not like a large and
beautiful gem, so uncommon and rare
that all search for it is vain, all ef
forts to obtain it hopeless; but it con
sists of a series of smaller and com
moner gems, grouped and set togetli
er. forming a pleasing and graceful
whole. —Samuel Smiles.
Spectacular Fire.
The most spectacular fire ever wit
nessed in the oil industry was at one
of the Dos Bocas wells in Mexico.
About GO.OOO barrels of oil was burned
up daily for nearly two months. The
flames rose to heights of 800 to 1,400
feet.
Heartless Landlord.
"I used to walk the floor worrying
about how I was going to pay my
landlord," said Mr, Tufluck. "I hope
you have quit all that?" replied the
optimist. "I had to. The landlord
said that if I didn't stop wearing out
the floor he'd raise the rent."
Inventions Discount Talent.
"I wa'n't no good as a musician In
the old fiddlin' days," says Uncle
Henry Butterworth, "but when it
comes to playm a phonygraph I'm
just as good a hand as anybody."—Kan
pas City Times.
Classifying Him.
"I'm just one of the plain people,
sir." said the demagogue to the gifted
orator. The latter looked him over.
"It strikes me," he "that you are
plain enough to be in a little class by
yourself."
Cultivate a Hnppy Nature.
A happy nature is sometimes a
gift, but it is also a grace, and can
therefore, be cultivated and acquired;
and it should be a definite aim with
those who are training a child. —
Sou'.sby.
Good if Hruperly Spelled.
"So you think Swiss cheese is a
wholesome diet?" "Yes," answered
the man with a tender stomach; "only
you must spell wholesome without
the 'v. .'"
Courage.
A good many people who think they
have the courage of their convictions
reverse the decision when they dis
cover that their opinions may cost
money.
Chinese Written Characters.
In their writing, the Chinese make
use of at leant 214 groups of signs,
each group containing from five to
1,351 separate characters.
Daily Thought.
Time is infinitely long and each day
is a vessel into which a great deal
may IK- poured if ore will actually
fill it up. -Goethe.
Photographic.
The photographer never takes peo
pie lor what they are worth, but what
he can get out of them. —Chicago
Nev.s.
FOR SHIP SUBSIDIES
PRESIDENT TAFT HAS PLACED
HIMSELF ON RECORD.
Means That Rehabilitation of Ameri
can Merchant Marine Will Be
Again Forced Upon the Atten
tion of Congress.
The president's declaration at Se
attle that the country was ready for
an experiment with ship subsidies as
one method for the rehabilitation of
the American merchant marine, and
that it was his purpose to urge upon
congress legislation in this direction,
while not totally unexpected, is the
first formal step which has been taken
to commit the national administration
to this policy. For months there have
been signs, in the redoubled activity
of the unofficial advocates of ship sub
sidies in the conduct of their propa
ganda of education, and in the trend
of the consular reports, that it was
the purpose of the government to
back this method of reviving Ameri
can shipping in the foreign trade.
With this backing the fight in con
gress will have a very different as
pect from the subsidy campaigns of
1898 and 1003, and the chances are
thus immeasurably increased that the
country will again make a serious at
tempt to solve a problem which has
baffled American economists.
The logic of the protective system
will be found to support the principle
of government aid for shipping, al
though the contribution of the public
toward the support of private enter
prise is more direct and conspicuous
when given in the form of subsidies
than in the case of import duties, and
there is undoubted weight in the ar
gument that American shipbuilders
and owners are alone in being denied
support in their effort to compete with
foreigners. And aside from the argu
ment from logic, President Taft him
self refers to the next strongest card
of the ship subsidy advocates when
he speaks of the practical difficulty
in which the nation would find itself
in the event of war without the mer
cantile marine from which to draw
its seamen, it colliers and its supply
ships. Congress has both refused to
supply the requisite lleet of colliers
for the navy and to face seriously the
problem of the decline of the mercan
tile marine.
This much said, the case resolves
itself into a balancing of evils. Shall
the United States adopt an expedient
of doubtful value to gain a result that
in the nature of the thing, can have
no certainty of permanence? Shall
we pay many millions to the ship
owners to the end that other millions
now paid to foreign shipowners for
the carriage of our foreign commerce
shall also be paid to American ship
owners? What would be the econom
ic gain to the country of a system
which increased the cost of marine
transportation, and added another
sort of class legislation to the law
books? These are some of the ques
tions which will be now debated with
fresh interest and intensity, and will
be coupled with the additional ques
tion, whether some means other than
subsidies cannot be found for the re
suscitation of American shipping in
the foreign trade.
Free ships in the foreign trade, free
shipbuilding materials, an extension
of the present policy of liberal con
tracts for the carrying of the mails
and discriminating duties in indirect
trade have all been suggested, and all
have been strongly supported. The
point of Immediate importance, at the
beginning of the serious debate of the
subsidy question, is whether some of
these expedients would not accom
plish the desired result without the
evils which the foes of subsidies be
lieve would inevitably attend the
adoption of a bald subsidy program.
The shipowner would doubtless prefer
a direct grant of aid from the public
treasury, but it is more than an open
question, in the light of the experi
ence of other countries, whether the
method would in the end give the re
sults that are so ardently and univer
sally desired.
They Need No Protection.
The superintendent of a South
Carolina cotton mill has made some
Interesting statements to a reporter
for the Providence (R. I.) Journal,
lie says that the southern mills are
earning larfje dividends—many of
them from 25 to 40 per cent, a year.
In most cases what is earned over
ten per cent, is put into new buildings
and improvements. That helps to ex
plain why the number of spindles in
the south has risen in ten years from
4,000.000 to 10.000.000 and why that
section consumed more bales of cot
ton last year than New England and
Canada.
I he big dividends of the southern
mills serve to explain the absence of
enthusiasm among southern senators
for the reduction of the duties in the
cotton schedule and their perfunctory
opposition to whatever increases were
made. It is true that the increases do
not affect the cheaper grades of goods
to whose manufacture the south de
votes itself almost exclusively, but
the owners of the southern mills are
looking forward to the time when they
will begin to rival New England in
the product ion of finer goods.
One can understand why the appeal
of Mr firyan and of the Saratoga con
ference to the Democrats to "rally
once again, boys, shouting the battle
cty of 'tarilf for revenue only" has
no response front those interested in
tin great southern cotton manufactur
ing Indus' y They call themselves
Democrats but they are for n high
protective turiff and the preservation
of their 25 or 40 per cent, dividends.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1909.
EXPERT OPINION ON TARIFF
Country Has Right to Look Forward
to Good Work from the
Commission.
Congress took alarm at the idea of
a turiff commission and consented
only to the appointment of a board
that should secure information to as
sist the president in the discharge of
the duties imposed upon him by the
maximum and minimum section of the
new tariff bill and the officers of the
government in the administration of
the customs laws. The executive
might need help in putting the law into
effect, but an omniscient legislature
required no help whatever in framing
the laws of the future.
The board which has now been
chosen consists of three members who
have made a special study of the
tariff from different points of view.
Henry C. Emery, the chairman, is pro
fessor of political economy at Yale
and a writer of note on economical
questions. James B. Reynolds has
served on commissions for the inves
tigation of foreign tariffs, is assistant
secretary of the treasury and is con
sidered a tariff expert. Alvin H. San
ders, editor and publisher of the
Breeders' Gazette, is chairman of the
American Reciprocal Tariff league,
has worked zealously for the exten
sion of our markets. Is in close touch
with the producers of the west and
understands thoroughly the industrial
conditions and needs of this part of
the country.
The records of these men indicate
their fitness for such an investigation
as may be required of them. No one
can doubt that the appointments were
wisely made, and it is very possible
that the information which the board
secures may have an effect upon con
gress in spite of the exhibitions that
have been given of congressional stub
bornness. At one time it was inti
mated that the president anticipated
this larger influence from the work
of the board, whose duties, even after
the legislative restrictions, are hardly
so sharply defined as to prevent full
reports on various kinds of informa
tion. Facts properly set forth, an
aroused public sentiment, an adminis
tration favorable to a comprehensive
commission plan, may result in a clos
er approach to scientific tariff-making
and let us hope that they will.—Chi
cago ltecord-Herald.
Bryan and Bailey.
Mr. William J. Bryan is making
speeches in Texas in advocacy of the
policy on which he wishes the dis
united Democracy to unite—a tariff
for revenue only, with free raw mate
rials. Senator Bailey is making
speeches in support of a tariff for rev
enue only with low duties on raw ma
terials. He says that was the Demo
cratic doctrine in 1840, when Polk
was president. Mr. Bryan contends
that President Cleveland, wh% was for
free raw materials, represented the
modern convictions of the party.
The two statesmen have been firing
at each other at long range. Some
body proposed that they should have
a joint debate and thresh out the
question. It is one in which the Tex
ans are interested. There are many
of them who, while denying vigorous
ly that they are protectionists, ap
prove of stiff duties on wool and lum
ber, and who disliked the removal of
the duty on hides.
But Mr. Bryan, who likes to he the
only star in the sky, and who, per
haps, is unwilling to meet at close
quarters so strong a debater as Sena
tor Bailey, does not take kindly to
the suggestion. He says he will not
consider a joint meeting unless Sena
tor Bailey shall make a personal re
quest for It. He thinks it would tend
to turn attention from his tentative
platform to individuals—to Bailey as
well as Bryan. The senator says that,
in view of Mr. Bryan's opinion that
a Joint debate would affect the na
tional party, he is averse to forcing
it. How the Democratic party, which
is groping blindly for an issue ac
ceptable to the great mass of its mem
bers, can be harmed by a joint de
bate between two of its leaders is not
apparent. It seems rather as if it
would tend to clear up the situation
and enable the Democrats to know
what they ought to believe and preach
as to the tariff question. At present
they are badly mixed, in Texas as v.ell
as the rest of the union.
Must Hear from the People.
It is understod that the plans of
the monetary commission are still
in a formative stage. Thus far the
work of the commission has been
chiefly that of investigation. The ex
perience of every important commer
cial country, and the results of that
experience in existing financial sys
tems have been studied by experts,
whose reports, which will form the
basis of the commission's action, will
stand as classics in the study of na
tional finance. But uowevor perfect
In Its science the plan evolved may be,
it will require, not only for enactment,
but for its successful application, the
co-operation of the people. To that
end the members of the monetary
commission, In their campaign of ed
ucation. must sit as learners as well
as instructors. And in adopting this
policy of public discussion the com
mission is exhibiting a characteristic
of successful leadership which, while
directing, takes counsel directly or in
directly of its forces and enlists,
rather than commands, respect and
obedience.
President and Party.
Taft's position is impregnable as a
choice of tactics in party leadership.
The party voters will be pleased with
the president's exposition of party du
ties. They will sustain the party ma
jority and keep it in power.—Omaha
Bee.
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I ~OFil * i
! WEEK'S BENTSi
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• Latest News of Interest •
% Boiled Down for the j
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aatlOKltltltllllOtllOlKl
PERSONAL.
Dr. James H. Carlisle, president
emeritus of Wofford college and one
south's best-known educators' died at
his home in Spartanburg, X. He
was 84 years old.
Prof. Irving Fisher of Yale univer
sity says the normal span of human
life is 150 years, and declares the
longevity of man increases as science
and medicine make advances.
Mrs. Josephine Floyd Jones, who
was a member of one of the oldest
families on Long Island, in her will
left, SIO,OOO and her personal wardrobe
to her faithful servant, Hannah Dav
enport, who is to have a grave in the
family burial plot.
Bernhard Dernburg, German colonial
secretary, who is at Kansas City, de
rides the suggestion of war between
Germany and England.
Miss May Clayton, 25 years old.
daughter of a wholesale liquor mer
chant. and Peary S. Tsujl, a Japanese
restaurant keeper, were married at
Seattle, Wash. It was a romance of
the Seattle fair, the couple having
met at the "Pay Streak."
Rudolph Gluck, 19 yen's old. will
sail for Russia from Xew York in a
few days to serve three years in the
Russian army, and so save his moth
er s property at Kaprin, near Warsaw,
from confiscation
Lieut. Foulois of the American army
has arrived in New York after attend
ing the International Aeronautical con
gress in Paris. He says France is
crazy over flying machines, and this
class of craft is bound to supplanr
dirigible balloons
King Manuel of Portugal is con
fined to his bed with an intestinal
trouble accompanied with a light
fever.
William I. Buchanan, former Ameri
can minister to the Argentine republic
and Panama, died on the street in
London Irotn supposed heart disease.
Gonzalo de Quesada, formerly Cuban
minister to the United States and now
a member of the permanent court at
The Hague by appointment of the Re
public of Cuba, has been selected by
this government as an arbitrator in
the case of the Orinoco Steamship
Company against Venezuela.
GENERAL NOTES.
"Gipsy" Smith, the English evangel
ist, headed a procession ol 20,000 en
thusiastic Christian people that
marched through Chicago's South side
"Tenderloin" district. Most of the
resorts closed their doors and there
was practically no disorder.
The Xational Woman's Christian
Temperance union met in annual con
vention at Omaha, Neb. Mrs. Lillian
M. N. Stevens, the president, deliv
ered her annual address.
The one hundred and fortieth anni
versary of the discovery of San Fran
cisco bay by Gaspar De Portola is be
ing celebrated in San Fraucisco and
the regenerated city Is entertaining
guests from all parts of the world.
The National Purity congress Is
holding its annual meeting at Burling
ton, la., and is attended by hundreds
of earnest, practical men and women
devoted to the uplifting of their fellow
Americans.
F. E. Hanscome, cashier of the
wrecked • Mineral Point (Wis.) First
National batik, killed himself at the
grave of his mother. Worry over the
bank's affairs was the cause. Mrs.
John Gray, his aged mother in-law, fell
dead upon seeing his body.
Cleveland (O.) police are Invest!
gating the cause of illness of 14 per
sons who were taken sick after eating
chocolate candy purchased at an East
side confectionery store.
Mrs Richard McMartin of Thompson
vllle, Mich., visiting at Ashland, Wis.,
walked out of the house while asleep
during the night and off the bridge
over the Bay City creek, falling on
the rocks and breaking both legs.
A diamond ring worth $l,lOO, the
property of Mrs. Thomas A. Edison,
was found on the mountain side near
the Edison estate in New Jersey. It
was lost six years ago. Robert Mc-
Carthy, the finder, was rewarded
with SIOO.
Fire destroyed the computing scale
works and other buildings in Dayton,
0.. causing a loss estimated at $750,-
000.
The International Banking Corpora
tion. an American concern with main
offices in Peking, has opened a branch
bank at Hankow.
Jack Johnson still retains the title
of Heavy-weight chamuion of the world,
because he knocked Stanley Ketchel
out in the twelfth round in their fistic
battle at Colma arena, San Francisco.
The fight was furious and bloody. The
colored man was too heavy and strong
tor his lighter opponent.
The seventy-seventh annual meet
ing of the Illinois State Young Men's
Christian association was held in the
new building of the University of Illi
nois association at Urbana.
Members of the Ohio, Indiana and
Kentucky library associations held a
joint conference in Louisville.
The Spanish cabinet, headed by
Premier Maura, resigned and is super
ceded br (me lormed by Se:jor ; Moret,
former premier. This change resulted
lrom the outcry over Revolutionist
Ferrer's execution.
The American Ice Company of New
York is on trial in the criminal court
on the charge of violating the state
law preventing monopoly. The con
cern is charged with creating an arti
ficial ice famine.
A dam at Lake Derkos, which sup
plies Constantinople with water, burst
and 25 persons were drowned.
Calcutta dispatches to London say
10,000 people have perished in a ter
ritlc storm which swept the plains in
the delta of the Ganges and Brahma
putra, in Bengal, India.
According to a report from United
States Consul General Griffiths, at
London, the army of unemployed in
Great Britain has grown steadily and
has now reached proportions that are
causing the government great uneasi
ness.
The grand jury at Chicago has
caused a stir by joining State's Attor
ney VVayman in his demand that the
judges of Cook county courts clean
out the county jury commission in
such a drastic manner as will prevent
any opportunity for jury tampering in
the future.
A copy of a book written in 1810
by Robert Fulton, inventor of the
steamboat, and entitled, "Torpedo
War and Submarine Explosions," has
been sold at auction in New York for
SOO.
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Whitlock of
East Orange, N. J., were so affected at
the prospect of ''losing" their two
daughters by marriage that they went
to their country home to escape being
present at the double wedding. They
■are said to he well pleased, never
theless, with their sons-in-law.
A fund to be known as the Charles
Eliot Norton memorial fund has been
endowed to the Archaeological Insti
tute of America in Washington by
James Loeb, a retired banker of New
York city.
Army officers to the number of .15
started from Fort Meyer, Va., under
the lead of Gen. Tasker H. Bliss, presi
dent of the war college, for a 90-mile
endurance test.
It is reported in Lisbon. Portugal,
that King Alfonso's mind is in a serious
condition because of fear of an upris
ing in Spain and of his own assassina
tion.
King Edward of England is much
exercised over the socialistic demon
strations in connection with Ferrer's
execution and is laboring hard to pre
vent a general election on the budget,
fearing that owing to the highly fever
ish condition of public opinion the
house of lords would be imperiled and
possibly abolished.
A typhoon of unusual severity swept
over the island of Luzon, washing out
railroad beds, cutting off telegraphic
communication and doing much other
damage.
President Taft had the time of his
life on his brother's ranch in lexas.
lie rode a balky cayuse, saw wild
steers roped by cowboys and wit
nessed the rounding up of a herd of
cattle, together with many other in
teresting things connected with ranch
life.
The Minocqua ( Wis.) bank was rob
bed of several thousand dollars by five
men who, after being rounded up at a
small station near there by a sheriff's
posse, turned on the latter with rifles
and made their escape.
The American Antiquarian society
laid the corner-stone of its new build
ing in Worcester, Mass., in connection
with the opening of the organiza
tion's annual convention.
Miss Eleanor Lorraine Beattie, who
was recently extradited from London
on a charge of grand larceny and who
is now under bonds for trial, has ad
vertised in New York for a position
as chauffeur. She is willing to wear
a uniform and pilot a taxicab.
William Fason, a blind negro, who
killed two men in a Paterson (N. J.)
saloon, when he was denied a drink,
was sentenced to 40 years in prison.
W. R. Hearst won a "strike" in the
New York political campaign Saturday
night when he threatened to retire
from the race for mayor and to leave
the fusion ticket to its fate unless his
fellow nominees appeared on the
stage with him.
Two schooners, with 11 persons
aboard, are missing off the Newfound
land coast and are believed to have
foundered in the gale last week.
The annual convention of the Na
tional Woman's Christian Temperance
union opened in Omaha with about
500 delegates in attendance. National
President Lillian M. N. Stevens deliv
ared her yearly address.
Illinois cities and towns celebrated
the second arbor and bird day of the
year with exercises in the public
schools.
The United States supreme court
has issued an order staying proceed
ings in the northern Illinois circuit
court in the matter of the application
of Capt. M. Carter for the allowance
of further counsel fees in the govern
ment's suit against him for the restor
ation of the funds alleged to have
been procured by him through defal
cation.
Attorney General Stead has ren
dered an opinion to the effect thai
the one hundred and twenty-second
article of war does not give officers of
the marine corps authority to com
mand in the army unless detached for
service by order of the president.
Ministers and laymen from all parts
of the country met in Detroit to at
tend the general convention of the
Universallst church.
Abraham G. Munn, retired manufac
turer and philanthropist of Louisville,
died there, aged 91. He attributed
his long life to temperance in all
thinss.
WAS IN NO HURHY TO LEAVE
Prisoner Put Coming Gastronomic Joy
Ahead of a Brief Period
of Liberty.
A colored man from Georgia had
lived in Washington but a few years
when he was arrested for some slight
violation of the city ordinances. Upon
hearing that the negro was in jail, the
secretary of the colored Y. M. C. A.
secured the services of a minister to
go with him and sign the prisoner's
bail bond. They reached the jail
shortly before noon, and told the
negro the object of their visit. In re
sponse to the proffered kindness he
said:
"Mistah Johnsing, I sho is glad you
all is gwine to git me out. but 1
wants you-all to fix it so I can't git
out till late dis evenln'."
Of course the two Samaritans were
somewhat taken aback by this unus
ual request. But a moment later they
lost their breath when, in answer to
the secretary's question, the Georgia
negro replied in a whisper:
"Well, sah, dey's a-gittin' dinnah
ready, an' dey's cookin' greens; an' 1
sho would like to git some o' dem
greens befo' I leabes dis place!"—Lip
pincott's.
THE CLEVER GIRL.
"Your father ordered some wood
from me this morning, miss. Do you
know whether he wants hard or soft?"
"Oh—er—not too hard."
A Frencch Scholar.
As William bent over he!' fair face
he whispered: "Darling, if 1 should
ask you in French if I might kiss you,
what would you answer?"
She, calling up her scanty knowl
edge of the French language, ex
claimed, "Billet doux." —Tit-Bits.
Why Not?
Aunt Spinsterly—l hope that your
opinions uphold the dignity of your
sex, Mamie, and that you believe that
every woman should have a vote.
Mamie—l don't go quite so far as
that, aunty; but I believe that every
woman should have a voter. —Sketch.
Cause of Discord.
She —So they do live happily togeth
er, you say?
He —No. It's the eternal struggle be
tween religion and society. He is as
straight-backed as she is straight
front. —Life.
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50l S?3| Tasteiu the Mouth, Coat
ed Tongue, Pain in the
lOTffliTlrißflß I Side, TORPID LIVER.
They regul&te the Dowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
OADTTD'cI Genuine Must Bear
LAHItno Fac-Simile Signature
W PYlls!
to REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
DYOLA DYES
ONE DYE FOR AIA. (iOODS
in fast, brilliant colors. lOe per package at dealers.
If not in stock semi lUc stafinu color desired and
sann* will be sent with direct ion liook and eolor card.
DV-O-LA Burlington, Vt.
When You're Hoarse Use s
S
m TOR
ij Gives immediate relief. The first j|i
i|| dose relieves your aching throat and J
jlj allays 'ihe irritation. Guaranteed io 8
| contain no opiates. Very; |
Ail Dru'xp.iiiti, 25c.