Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, December 02, 1909, Page 2, Image 2

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CAMJJH CJUffi FliiSS.
H H. MULLIN. Kd.tbr.
rtibliHiuHi Every Thursday.
TEHMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
ftr year <*
y pal 4 lu sdvanco 1 W
ADVERTISING RATES:
Adrerttsements are published at the rat# oi
Cue dollar i>er square for one insertion and fifty
• at* per square for each subsequent Insertion
Hates by tho year, or for six or three mouths,
k'< low and uniform, aiul will be furnished on
• prllcation.
r ,«*nl and Official Advertising per square
tUree times or less. <2; each subsequent inser
(l* i . 0 cents per square.
Local notices lu cents per line for one lnser
s*nlon: 5 cejits per line for each subssqueul
•oi. ecutlve Insertion.
Obituary notices over Ays lines, 10 rents pe?
Ita*. Simple announcements of births, uiar
tiiefs and deaths will be Inserted free.
Business cards, five lines or less, l» per year,
•vrr h've lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising
No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per
Issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the Pkbss I* complete
di.6 affords facilities for doinu the best class of
Unrll. PARTICULAR ATTIH'I'IOH PAIDTU LAW
PKINTINO.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
uts art paid, except at the option of the pub
usher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
let In advance.
Amount of Rainfall.
Recent authorities assure us that
'lf all the rain which falls upon the
.earth were allowed to accumulate in
a basin of the same area of the terres
trial surface, it would almost be a col
lection of night feet deep at the end
ol the year. The heaviest rainfall
known upon the earth occurs upon the
mountain slopes beyond the head of
the Bay of Bengal and amounts upon
the average to 610 inches, or nearly
5) feet, in the course of the year. One
inch of rain implies a fall of 101 tons
of water upon each acre of ground.
Washington's Appearance.
Washington stood six feet two
inches in his boots and weighed 200
pounds. His hands and feet were un
usually large, and his strength was
enormous, but his voice was always
ineek. and his lungs were never in
keeping with his otherwise powerful
physique. His nose was large, his
eyes of a bluish gray, and his hair
ehestnut-brown, his inouth was large
sind the lips were us a rule tightly
compressed.
Government's Expenses Abroad.
In Brussels there is an interna
tional bureau for the publication of
customs tariffs, and the United States
pays annually as its proportion
ate share of tho expense. More ex
pense still is the annual membership
fee of the United States in another in
stitution with headquarters in Brus
sels. Every year $2,270 is paid by
this government as a contribution to
the maintenance of the international
bureau of weights and measures.
Has Filled a Long-Felt Want.
A Frenchman has invented a sys
tem of making glass so tough that a
piece one-tenth of an inch in thick
ness will withstand heavy blows from
a metal .hammer. This will enable
people who live in glass houses to
throw stones without thinking seri
ously of the probable consequences.
Early Use of Spoons.
Tn France the use of spoons was
not general until toward the end of
the fourteenth century, according to
common belief, but. there is a question
about this, for the will of Saint Remi,
who baptized Clovis in 4<H>, disposes
of several implements supposed to
have been spoons.
In Its Place.
The librarian of a medieval library
In Baltimore was puzzled recently to
know what to do with a book entitled,
"The Hirth of the Locomotive," but
at length she placed it among the
hooks on "Diseases of the Newly-
Born." —Publishers' Weekly.
Proper Sphere of Sport.
Sport—manly sport—happily can be
and is carried on without necessarily
being connected with gambling, not to
the deterioration, but to the improve
ment of our national physique and
character.
A Remarkable Woman.
A New York husband is suing his
wife for divcrce on the ground that
she takes his money and keeps it. If
she keeps it she must be a very re
markable woman.— Providence Tri
bune.
Atrocious Act.
An Arizona cowboy stopped a stri
fe. II of passengers, and made thern all
wait while he read a potiu of:; 2
verses dedicated to his Mary .lane.
There are some things as bad us
shooting.
She Expected es Much.
"I never thought fhe would do me
such a mean turn," said Mrs. Jeffer
son .ludd, "but then it was just ict
ly what I expected."—Kansas City
Times.
Height of Extravagance.
'That fellow seems to be extrava
gant." "Hopclet. !y. He spends his
own money just as if i; were the gov
ernment's." —Louisville Courier-Jour
nal.
The Tempered Wind.
The Lord tempers the wind to the
shorn lamb, but not to the man who
thinks it is heroic to £> all winter
without an overcoat.
A Hero.
A'n ost r.r.y man can be a hero to
the lady for whom he provides thea
ter tickets, if he gets them often
enough.
mm
i OF A i
iWEEK'S EVENTS!
• •
• #
«
• Latest News of Interest •
• •
J Boiled Down for the J
• Busy Man. I
• •
ooeeeee***eeo*eeeeeee*eene
PERSONAL.
Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt and chil
dren have returned hoine from their
European tour.
Miss Bessie Wood Aspinwall of
Newburg, N. Y., and Lieut. Hayden
\V. Wagner, IT. S. A., of Dekalb, 111.,
were married at Newburg.
James L. Davenport, first deputy
commissioner of pensions, has been
appointed commissioner, to succeed
Vespasian Warner, resigned.
President Taft has named Chief
Justice W. J. Mills of the New Mexico
supreme court, as governor of that ter
ritory.
Baron Rosen, Russian ambassador
to the United States, and the baroness
sailed on the Kronprinzessin Cecilie
from Cherbourg %ir New York.
Miss Annette Gardner Munro of
Portland, Ore., has been selected as
dean of the women's department of
the University of Rochester.
The resignation of Vespasian Warn
er. as United States pension commis
sioner, has been accepted by Presi
dent Taft. Mr. Warner resigned be
cause of the illness of his son.
The duke of Roxburghe fell and
broke his right leg while riding with
the Quorn hounds. The duchess, who
formerly was May Goelet of New-
York, is at his bedside.
Admiral Seymour of the British fleet
presented the flagship Inflexible with
a silver bowl for its wardroom to com
memorate the battleship's part in the
Hudson-Fulton celebratiou at New
York.
John G. Carlisle, ill in St. Vincent's
hospital in New York, is showing not
ed improvement.
Samuel Gonipers, John Mitchell and
Frank Morrison were unanimously re
elected as heads of the American Fed
eration of Labor at its convention at
Toronto.
GENERA. NEWS.
Records which Dr. Frederick A.
Cook, the arctic explorer, will submit
to the University of Copenhagen to
prove his claim that he reached the
north pole April 21, I'JOH, were in the
possession of Walter Lonsdale, Cook's
secretary when he sailed from New
York on the steamer United States for
Denmark
Vote on the English budget has been
postponed for a week because many
peers desired to speak on the bill,
thus upsetting the plan for an early
prorogation of parliament outlined by
the house of commons.
After 150 more bodies had been dis
covered in the Cherry (111.) mine ef
forts to carry them to the surface
were abandoned because flames threat
ened the main shaft. Efforts on the
part of the Chicago firemen to put out
the fire proving futile, the mine was
once more sealed and it is probable
that the bodies of the dead miners
will be incinerated. All hope that
any of the men are alive in the shaft
has been abandoned.
The disabled steamer Puritan was
safely towed to South Chicago after
a 24-hour struggle in a storm on Lake
Michigan. Many of her 40 passengers
and some of the crew were exhaust
ed by the storm of the many hours
in which the boat drifted in the
trough of the sou.
To raise enough money to pay the
indebtedness on the Christian church
at Beaver, Okla., the congregation has
taken lip farming and it sold a crop
of broom corn grown on a 40-aere
field near the church. All the work
was done by the congregation, headed
by the pastor. Rev. B. K. Coffey.
Representatives of France at Wash
ington will soon be housed in a mag
nificent new embassy. Approval of
the architects' plans for the building
has been announced. The contract
will be let and the work begun soon.
France will expend $1,000,000 on the
embassy.
Six Italians, two women, one man
and three children, were burned to
death in a tenement house fire in
Brooklyn, and several others injured
by jumping out of upper-story win
dows. One hundred persons were
asleep in the building when the Are
broke out.
High school and college instructors
of the middle west attended the an
nual meeting of ihe Central Associa
tion of Science and Mathematic Teach
ers at the University of Chicago,
The tenth annual international live
stock exposition opened in Chicago
with a record-breaking list of entries.
Five young people, members of a
wedding party, were drowned in Mus
kegon (Mich.) lake when a launch In
which they were crossing the water
capsized when the party became panic
stricken through the ignition of some
gasoline. Five others of the party
were saved.
Ten persons were seriously injured
and 20 slightly hurt at Joplin. Mo., by
112. g.is explosion in a laundry. The
building was badly damaged.
Virgil Weaver, a merchant of Ven
ice, ()., convicted of arson, cut his
•hroat with a razor in the jail and
died immediately.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1909.
■Evidence that Chauffeur lamp, who
Borne weeks ago drove an automobile
containing two persons besides him
self into the Chicago river, and all
three drowned, was incompetent, hav
ing had but lour days' experience as a
driver, was Introduced at the coron
er's inquest. The bodies of the two
pacsengers of the taxicab have not
been recovered.
The new SOO,OOO building of the
University of Colorado, the gift of
United States Senator Simon Guggen
heim, was dedicated at Boulder, Col.
Addresses were made by Senator
Guggenheim, President Baker of the
university and others.
A gift of $424,000 from an anony
mous donor hi\s been made to the
Children's Aid society of New York.
During the year the society has re
ceived more than $1,000,000, the
largest fund in its history.
A delegation of college girls, under
guidance of the College Equal Suf
frage league, is arranging togo to
Washington to present a resolution
calling for the interference by this
government in the imprisonment in
England of Miss Alice Paul of Moores
ville, N. J., who smashed the window
at the banquet of the lord mayor of
London.
William McCormick, aged".l years,
a student at the Moody Biblical insti
tute, Chicago, while temporarily de
ranged leaped from a third-story win
dow to the pavement and was killed.
The St. Paul mine at Cherry, 111.,
which has been sealed again owing to
the ravages of fire, will probably not
be reopened for three months.
The United States navy is to be re
organized from the newest leviathan
of the Dreadnought type to the arm
ored cruisers and auxiliaries, if the re
port of the Swift board, named some
months ago togo to the bottom of the
naval situation, is adopted.
President Taft ate his Thanksgiving
turkey with his family, there being no
guests at the White House. He ex
pressed his delight at being able to
eat "real food" without being forced
to make a speech.
The barge canal proposition voted
on at the last, state election at Ithaca,
X. Y., which authorized the state legis
lature to spend $5,000,000 for connect
in lakes Cayuga and Seneca, was car
ried by a majority of about 15,000.
Gov. Augustus E. Willson of Ken
tucky, acting as chairman of a com
mittee to fix the date and place of the
second annual conference of gover
nors, announced from Lexington that it
will be held January IS, 1910, at Wash
ington.
During October there were 75,60S
immigrant aliens and 10,701 nonimmi
grant aliens admitted into the United
States, 26,451 United States citizens
arrived and 1.610 aliens were de
barred, according to the October bul
letin of the immigration bureau.
While engaged in settling a board
bill of $22.50, over which there had
been a dispute at Gilbert, Minn.. Aga
pito Fuciarile stepped around the
table, and, pulling back the head of
his landlord, Louis Grilla slashed his
throat from ear to ear with a razor.
The officials of the Homestake gold
mine at Lead, S. 1).. closed down the
works for an indefinite period, head
ing off the strike which was to be
declared. Two thousand five hundred
workers are affected.
In a fasnionable apartment on West
Fifth street .New York city, Mrs. Daisy
von Marlow, a magazine art editor, re
cently of Dayton, 0., died, supposedly
from the effects of poison.
Samuel Gompers in an address be
lore the National Civic federation, in
annual session at New York city, dis
cussed the need in this country of new
laws to cover the subject of employ
ers' liability and to provide adequate
compensation to wage earners injured
b accident. He charged that the law
yers would prevent the obtaining of
the wisest and best laws in that mat
ter through finding insurmountable
constitutional objections.
The casualty record for football this
season includes 26 deaths and 69 play
ers injured, with the Thanksgiving
day games yet to be accounted.
The Coliseum building, an immense
amusement hall in San Francisco,
was destroyel by tire The loss is
SIOO,OOO.
Internal revenue figures show that
the total receipts since June 30 last
have been $106,608,353, which is an in
crease over the same period ol 1908
of $6,043,773.
'The safety of a ship going to a
port which is closed or blockaded in
lact or in theory is a question lor the
interested parties to determine and
act on and not a question for determ
ination by the officials concerned in
clearances."
The new laboratory of physics at
the I'niversity of Illinois was formally
opened in the presence of many
notables, the dedicatory address be
ing delivered by President Pritchett
of the Carnegie Foundation.
The Indiana Academy of Science
held its twenty-fifth annual meeting
in Indianapolis. Dr. A. L. Foley oi
Blooniington presiding.
Capitalized at SIOO,OOO, the Wright
Company of New York has been incor
porated at Albany, N. Y., "to manufac
ture, deal in.and operate machine?.,
ships or other mechanical contriv
ances for aerial operation.
By the latest estimates of the Pan
ama canal commissi* n the big water
way will require nearly $400,000,00u to
complete.
The ocean liners Lusltania and Ara
bic 'bat reached Queenstown reported
-overe weather in crossing the At
lantic
.Mrs. Goldea Friedlander of Carmel,
.V J., bitten by a dog live weeks ago,
dead of hydrophobia. She paid
mile attention to the wound until a
lew days ago, when she applied for
ireatnient in New York. She was sent
to Bollevue hospital, where she suf
lered intensely.
INSANE IN KILLS
FIRST OF S 01 LIST
CLAIMS HIS HEAD HAD BEEN
OPENED AND THE NERVES
TAKEN FROM IT.
CRIMERAMPANT EVERYWHERE
Robber and Deputy Die in Fight and
Policeman Kills Man who Wound
ed Companion—Cowboys
Shoot Up Town.
Buffalo, N. Y.— Because the name
of Franz Stendts stood first on
a list of eight which Charles
Strohl, a baker's employe, intended to
kill, Stendts was shot and instantly
killed in the reading room of the pub
lic library here by Strohl, who has
been pronounced insane. The shoot
ing came without warning and alniost
caused a panic among the people in
the room. The murderer rushed out
of the building, pursued by several
persons and turned into an alley, ex
changing shots with his pursuers, one
shot striking an officer in the hand.
Strohl was cornered and caught in a
harness room.
To the police Strohl told an impos
sible story of persecution by Stendts
and others. He had a list of eight
persons, all of whom he said he in
tended to kill. Stendt's was the first
name on list. Strohl's delusion was that
before coming to America from Ger
many, Stendts had carried him into a
dark room and tied him to a table.
There, aided by others, Stendts had
drilled holes in his head and extracted
nerves from his body.
Cuts Throat and Is Slain.
Jacksonville, Fla. — After cutting
the throats of Burt Woods, a
showman attending a carnival here,
and John S. Smith, a companion,
Jesse; Altman was shot and killed.
Altman and Smith first quarreled with
Woods, leaving him dead in the street.
Smith and Altman made their escape
to a suburb, where they also quarreled
and Altman cut Smith's throat. As he
fell Smith snatched a revolver from
Altman's pocket and fired, killing him.
Farmer Killed by Policeman.
Woodbury. N. J.—After seeing
a fellow policeman shot in the
leg, it is alleged by Antonio Dilessio,
a farmer living near here, Policeman
Merchant shot and killed the farmer.
The latter had been involved in litiga
tion over the ownership of a farm, and
the case was decided against him.
The policemen were trying to serve
an ejectment order when the shooting
occurred.
lowan Slays Father-in-Law.
Davenport, la. —Gus Neibert, a
Davenport musician and watch
maker, shot and killed Dan Gilbert,
his father-in-law. firing four shots in
to his body, almost anyone of which
would have been fatal. He then
boarded a street car, rode to the po
lice station and gave himself up.
Mother and Daughter Killed.
Williamson, W. Va. —Mrs. Charles
Daniels and her sixteen-year-old
daughter were shot and killed at their
home near Devon, Mingo county,
while defending the house against a
sheriff's posse seeking to arrest Dan
iels. on a charge of murder growing
out of a feud.
Cowboys Shoot Up Town.
Englevale, N. D.—Two cowboys
fatally shot Louis Maxwell, a far
mer, took possession of Englevale for
12 hours and finally departed with
armed citizens in pursuit. The cow
boys, known as the Grant brothers,
have not been found.
Robbers and Deputies in Duel.
Beoiidji, Minn. —One of two bold
robbers was instantly killed and
Deputy Sheriff Andrew Johnson was
fatally shot in a fight following the
dynamiting of a safe in the village of
Puposky, 17 miles northwest of Ber
midji.
RETAIL TRADE STILL EXPANDS
Cold Weather and Opening of Holiday
Buying Stimulates —Some Hesita
tion in Wholesale Lines.
New York City.— Bradstreets says:
Colder weather and the approach
of the holiday season have con
tinued lo stimulate retail trade and
measurably improve reasserting trade
with jobbers. Rains or snow, while
temporarily retarding country trade by
making the roads bad, have checked
excessive growth of, or insect damage
to, winter wheat and given a good
quantity of moisture to the growing
plant, thus placing that crop in good
shape to enter the winter.
In wholesale trade there are, how
ever, some intimations of cross cur
rents tending to restrict fullest activi
ties. Industrial reports are generally
of large, in some cases record, output
for the season, though here again, as
for instance in the case of iron and
steel, undiminished activity in buying
is noted in finished products, while the
raw material market, particularly pig
iron, is quieter. Production and ship
ments are at record heights.
Three Wreck Victims Drown.
Tillamook. Ore. A life saving
boat, which had on board sev
eral passengers from the steamer
Argo, which strrck Tillamook bar,
was overturned on Garibaldi beach
and two women and one of the life
saving crew were drowned.
Balloon Collapses; Two Dead.
Berlin', Germany. Dr. Brenekmann
and Hugo Franeke, the two most dar
ing members of the Aero club of Mer
lin, have been killed through the col
lapse of their balloon "Kolmer."
Pennsylvania
Happenings
The deputy factory inspectors have
all received Chief Delaney's orders for
the enforcement of the new law and
it is understood that vigorous work
will be done.
State game wardens say that hunt
ers in a number of sections are saving
quail for the next season. In many
districts propagation will be followed
out.
State receipts at*the close of busi
ness the other day amounted to $3,-
837,116.50 in excess of what they were
at the same time in 1908 and $1,664,-
419.11 ahead of the best previous rec
ord.
The several western Pennsylvania
brewing companies, which have been
cited into court on the charge of mak
ing and disposing of ice contrary to
law, are cited to appear in Harrisburg
for hearings.
State Game Commissioner Kalbfus
and his wardens and deputies are en
gaged in watching the state game pre
serves. There are three of these, lo
cated in Franklin, Clinton and Clear
field counties. They are closed to
sportsmen.
General orders have been issued
from National Guard headquarters an
nouncing the death of Col. Ezra H.
Ripple of Scranton, assistant adjutant
general of the National Guard. The
orders recite the splendid military
record of Col. Ripple, who served in
the Thirteenth, Thirtieth and Fifty
second regiments.
Heavy orders for new equipment
were placed the other day by the
Pennsylvania Railroad Co. and the
Philadelphia & Reading Railway Co.
The former company ordered 125 new
locomotives. The Reading company
ordered 2,000 new steel cars, 1,000
from the American Car and Foundry
Co. of Berwick and 1,000 from the
Standard Steel Car Co. of Middletown.
The loss by forest fires in this state
during the present year will fall con
siderably below that of last year, says
Forestry Commissioner Robert S.
Conklin. Last year's losses approxi
mated a million dollars, although the
state lands did not suffer as much as
those privately owned. Alinos* 00,-
000 acres were swept by fires last
year, about one-seventh of the area be
ing owned by the state.
In reply to its question sent to gov
ernors of the various states asking for
opinions as to the cause each state
and nation has for observing Thanks
giving day this year, the following
is from Gov. Stuart: "On Thanksgiv
ing day let us remember the poor and
needy, the widow and the fatherless,
the sick and the distressed. Out of
our abundance let us assist the unfor
tunate, remembering that the great
est virtue is charity."
Adjt. Gen. Thomas J. Stewart has
announced that a general order would
be issued about the middle of Decem
ber, giving the changes to be made in
the National Guard to make it conform
to the Dick militia bill. The order will
be issued by the governor, who will
approve the proposed changes when
they are worked out. I nder the Dick
act the state guard must be made uni
form with the regular army by January
21. The last legislature passed a hill
to enable the governor to make
changes as required.
As a result of the brewery compa
nies' hearing recently the representa
tives of 45 companies decided that
there were two questions which should
be fought out in the courts in order to
test whether the brewing companies
were within their rights in disposing of
ice as alleged: First, whether brew
ing companies can furnish, give or sell
ice beyond the point of delivery; sec
ond, whether special charters must be
taken out to manufacture ice for sale.
Some of the companies furnish ice
only to point of delivery. Others give
away what is lefr at delivery or sell
it at a low rate. Both are contended
lo be violations of charter rights in
Kerr's petition.
Figures compiled at the close of
business at the auditor general's of
fice recently show the receipts of the
state for the fiscal year, which will
end on the last day of this month, will
reach the unprecedented total of $29,-
500,000, with a possibility of going
beyond that limit. The receipts at the
close of one recent week's business
amounted to $28,730,462.92, which is
$3,573,017.25 ahead of the same day in
190S, and $1,703,330.20 ahead of the
same day in 1907, which was a record
breaking year. The expenditures of
the state, however, have been unus
ually heavy. The slate had a balance
on the first of the month of more than
$8,000,000, which has not been serious
ly affected.
More suits against dealers and mak
ers of fertilizers and cattle feeds are
probable. A recent batch of analyses
shows violations in both eastern and
western sections.
It is reported that tests made on
the Sunbury, llazeltou At Wilkesbarre
division of the Pennsylvania as lo the
efficiency of train dispatching by tele
phone shows that it is impossible to
run trains as speedily with the tele
phone as with the telegraph, and
therefore the telegraph service will be
retained for emergency use.
Good Work Goe* On.
During the year that has passed
■lnee the international congress on tu
berculosis met at Washington, one in
stitution or orgainzation for the treat
ment or prevention of tuberculosis ha*
been established every day, Sundays
and holidays included, according to a
bulletin of the National Association
for the Study and Prevention of Tu
berculosis. Fifteen new beds in hos
pitals or sanitoria have been provided
also for every day of the year.
Taking No Chances.
"What did Barker do when he dis
covered that his wife and chauffeuv
had planned to elope in his car?"
"He oiled it thoroughly, and put it
in first-class shape."
WANTS HER
LETTER
PUBLISHED
For Benefit of Women who
Suffer from Female Ills
Minneapolis, Minn.—"l was a great
sufferer from female troubles which
' Ca d. S6 b a j c wea || ließß
much of whatL^dia
etable Compound
.-qßJgj* I *'-'; - ■ had done for other
&: ' suffering women 1
felt sure it would
;say it did help mo
■BMJH pains all left me, ?
Pew stronger, and within three months
was a perfectly well woman.
"I want this letter made public to
■how the benefit women may derive
from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound"—Mrs. JoiinO. Moldan,
2115 Second St., North, Minneapolis,
Minn.
Thousands of unsolicited and genu
ine testimonials like the above prove*
the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, which is made
exclusively from roots and herbs.
Women who suffer from those dis
tressing ills peculiar to their sex should
not lose sight of these facts or doubt
the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound to restore their
health.
If you want special advice write
to Mrs. Pinkbam, at Lynn, Mass.
She will treat your letter as strictly
confidential. For 20 years she
lias been helping sick women in
this way, free of charge. Don't
hesitate write at once.
For sore throat, sharp pain
in lungs, tightness across the
chest, hoarseness or cough,
lave the parts with Sloan's
Liniment. You don't need to
rub, just lay it on lightly. It
penetrates instantly to the seat
of the trouble, relieves conges
tion and stops the pain.
Here's the Proof.
Mr. A. W. Price, Fredonia, Kans.,
■ays : "We have used Sloan's Lini
ment for a year, and find it an excel
lent thing for sore throat, chest pains,
colds, and hay fever attacks. A few
drops taken on sugar stops cough
ing and sneezing instantly."
Sloan's
Liniment
is easier to use than porous
plasters, acts quicker and does
not clogupthe poresof the skin.
It is an excellent an
tiseptic remedy for B||«
asthma, bronchitis,
and all inflammatory _
diseases of the
throat and chest;
will break up the
deadly membrane in
an attack of croup, B I
and will kill any kind n B
of neuralgia or rheu- 9 H
matie pains. I , I
All druggistA Icoep ft 3
Sloan's Liniment. ft —B
Pries* 25c., EDc., S SI.OO. 2 SI
Dr. Earl S. Floan,
BOSTON, MA S3. WDmBBZ JuVUM*
Best for Children
S
m atst vttMUftt ym (§sKHS«ft%DS
Pj Gives instant relief when little throat 3 j|
rfi arc irritated and sore. Co-,Sains fl
' no opiates and is as pleasant t j lake ||
r. as it is effective.
All DrugguU, 25 eeots. )I