Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, February 24, 1910, Page 7, Image 7

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    CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. M'JLLIN, Ed.ter.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS Of SUBSCRIPTION.
(er year •* ®J
ptli In advance 1 °"
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at tlie rate ol
:ae dollar per square forone insertion and llfty
1111 Y-ER square fur each subsequent insertion
Rates t>v the fear, or.for six or three months,
in low a id uniform, »IKI will be furnished oc
v ppltcai on.
Legnl a'id Official Advertising per square
tires tlrm-s or ievs, i'i. each aub.seque.nl inser
tion . 0 oeuts per square.
Loral notices I" cfciils per line for one lnr.er
••rtl.n; 6 ce-nis ptr line for earn subsequent
•on-ccutlve Insertion.
Obituary notices over Are llnei. !0 cents ret
Itmei. Simple a tio'.in -eiiientH of births, mar
riages and deaths w II be Inserted frt^e.
B'.i-lness cards. tl\e llt.es or less. <f> per year,
ptfr live lines, ut the regular rates' of adver
tising.
No local Inserted for less than 7S per
Issue
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PKE*S IS complete
/nd affords facilities for doing the best class of
) rk. PAHTICULAII ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW
» HINTING.
No paper will b« discontinued until arrear
6jea are paid, except at the option of tho pub
sber.
Papers sent out of the county must bo paid
IOT In advance.
—■ -■ - 'imu.. J
MCRb SPUNK NEEDED.
We need here In (he United Stales
a little more of that good old English
bluntness on the part of modest men
and women Who know their own worth,
when men and women of the arrogant
sort get in the way or try to be pat
ronizing, says New York Independent.
Our observation is that nowhere in
the wor'.d are men and women of ex
ceptional intellectual attainments so
lacking in self-assertion as they are in
the United States. This phenomenon
is a comparatively new one in Amer
ican life. Wherever one opens the
documents of American history before
the civil war he is sure to discover in
teresting incidents proving the sense
of dignity and real self-respect of the
American farmer, mechanic, merchant,
teacher, physician or clergyman. It
was something in man himself that in
those days was regarded as worth
while and worthy of respect. It takes
a certain amount of courage for an in
dividual, face to face with a person
politically or financially prominent, to
tell him to stay on his own reservation
and mind his own business. Americans
have been inclined to regard the Eng
lishman's habitual manifestation of
this particular kind of courage as a
disagreeable quality. Perhaps it is.
Hut we are convinced that it is a
necessary quality, and that its cultiva
tion is an essential part of that eter
nal vigilance which is the price of lib
erty.
Many crimes diminish. Defalcations,
in spite ot a popular impression to the
contrary, are far less in amount than
they were. Wealth has grown and
fiduciary responstbilitles swell, but
the total amount of defalcations annu
ally are below those of a few years
ago, jays Philadelphia Press Skilled
Dank burglaries are less numerous
The safe, electric light and electric
alarms have got the better of the bank
burglar. Counterfeiting notes does
not compare with the amount, numbei
and risk, under th«« old bank note sys
tem half a century ago, or in the firs!
20 years of the national note system
bank or treasury, from 1863 to 18S3
Every bank had to watch once foi
counterfeits, as it does not now. To
day counterfeiting is on a petty scale
Post office thefts by officials have a!
most disappeared. Instead of hunting
for them, as its members once did
the postal secret service or force ol
inspectors is principally dealing witt
the use of mails for swindles.
A bank wrecker in Wisconsin has
been sent to the penitentiary for tei
years. The only way to break up this
sort of high finance is to treat its prac
titioners as common thieves who sim
ply take other people's property with
out any formality or technicality
When the man who wrecks a bank bj
juggling its finances is put on a plan(
with the burglar who blows open its
vaults and safes, then there will be £
chance for the law to protect the pub
lie from all classes of ihieves, no mat
ttr how their stealing is named.
"About the only difference betweei
a laying hen and a United State:
mint," says the Council Bluffs Non
pareil, "is that eggs are not lega
tender." There is a difference in theii
methods of announcing their output
The hen cackles, and the mint stamps
A Nebraska judge dacides that i
kiss does not constitute a proposal
Hut it sort o' thaws the ice fort
plunge into the matrimonial natator
ium.
Pittsbifrg boasts of a girl of 14 wh<
organized and managed a gang of bo;
thieves. The eternal feminine seem:
reaching out in all directions in thi:
progressive age.
Th J mono rail system must be i
liummer If it is capable of producin;
a speed of 200 mites an hour whet
lully developed.
The meat of the zibou ot Madagas
car is now an article oj diet in Pari
elan restaurants. The lifcrse may bavi
togo
TO PROTECT CANAL
POLICY ADOPTED BY ADMINIS
TRATION IS CORRECT.
Approaches to Panama Waterway
Must Be Made Impregnable—
Any Other Course Would Be
the Extreme of Folly.
With Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood head
ing it and the other members officers
of high rank and'distinction, the Pana
ma fortification board, that will be
named shortly to undertake the work
of planning the fortification of the
great canal, will be of imposing
character an 4 will inspire confidence
in its The purpose
of the administration is to provjde in
the fullest manner for the protection
of the canal at both its Atlantic and
Pacific entrances. Probably two forts
will command either entrance, and
the approaches will be made absolute
ly impregnable. Just what may be
the final policy respecting the passage
of commerce through the waters of
the canal may not be predicted, but
the policy with respect to the fortifi
cation of the great work is not open
to conjecture. The government is
right in its purpose to leave nothing
to the good faith of the powers.
It is well enough to regard neutral
ity an asset, but there is no assurance
that in the event of war one or the
other belligerents might not ignore
the neutrality engagement and send
its ships through the canal, thus in»
volving tills country in the fracas. It
might readily be conceived that a
situation would arise in which one or
the other of two warring powers
would deliberately violate the neutral
ity of the canal in order to bring
the United States into the action.
With the proposed forts provided
no nation could set aside the principle
of neutrality, no matter how reckless
it might be, for the guns of the fort
would be trained upon the offender,
no matter who this might be. The
necessity for fortification also arises
from the possibility of acts by a bel
ligerent that would ruin the canal, or
at least impair its use during the
progress of the hostilities. There ap
pears to be no disposition upon the
part of any power —England is the
only one with a shadow of right to ob
ject—to interpose any objections to
the fortification plan.
The fortifications at Honolulu are
approaching completion, and those in
the Philippines are well advanced.
The Pacific is gradually being brought
into war trim, so that a foe could not
with immunity, or, indeed, with much
hope of success, attack the posses
sions of this country in the Pacific
section. The absolute essential to the
security of the country's extra-terri
torial domain, however, is the pres
ence of a fleet in the Pacific that
would be able to outmatch ships sent
to attack American possessions.
Mr. Roosevelt Will Speak.
Ex-President Roosevelt has finally
consented to make the address whicli
custom dictates must be made by the
recipient of a Nobel peace prize. Mr.
Roosevelt has until recently stoutly
resisted all efforts to induce him to
comply with this formality, and it is
probable that even now only his re
gard for Senator Root has induced him
to abandon his determination to disre
gard the custom. Andrew Carnegie
has nominated Mr. Root as a proper
recipient of the prize, and some of the
trustees were so sensitive because Mr.
Roosevelt had declined to comply with
the custom that they advised a friend
of the former president that if he per
sisted in his declination there would
be no chance of the prize being con
ferred on another American. When
Mr. Roosevelt learned that his reluc
tance might result in depriving his
former secretary of state of the honor,
he reconsidered his determination, and
while again expressing his reluctance
to "appear before the footlights," he
has instructed a personal friend to
inform the Nobel trustees that he liaK
reconsidered and to ask that the nec
essary arrangements be made for his
delivery of the address at <Christiania
about the time of his prospective visit
to Berlin.
Senator Root at the Hagua.
The United States, in its highly Im
portant and significant role of litigant
before The Hague tribunal, involving
settlement of tlie long standing dis
pute with Great Britain over the New
foundland fisheries, is to have the
benefit of Senator Klihu Root's acu
men and mastery of the facts involved
not only in the long dispute but in
the negotiations which have led ur
to this agreement on arbitration. Sen
ator Root, by yielding to the desires
of President Taft and Secretary Knox
and agreeing to shape tiie American
argument and appear at The Hague
next June, has done a patriotic service
He also has opened the way for a
personal experience in meeting Euro
pean men of eminence and in receiv
ing honors from them, which will
show how highly he is esteemed by
jurists abroad as a great factor in de
veloping international jurisprudence.
Tariff and High Prices.
For those who insist upon the tarifl
as the reason of the high cost of living
a computation in the London Graphic
is worthy of attention. The Graphic
figures that England paid approx!
mately $17,000,000 more for wheat ir
1909 than it paid for the same quantitj
in 1908, $13,500,000 more for bacon
$1,250,000 more for eggs, and nearlj
$5,000,000 more for mutton. This
shows that the problem of a higliei
cost of living is world wide and th<
tariff is not its sole cause.
CAMERON COUNTY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, igxo
MM ED ONLY AT MONOPOLY
Anti-Trust Act Would in No Way
Prevent Beneficial Organiza
tion of Trade.
An exigent example of the earnest
persistence of the representation that
the anti trust art prohibits the benefi
cial organization of trade is afforded I
by the Philadelphia Ledger. In speak- |
ing' Of President Taft's sop to the pro
fessedly alarmed stock exchange that
paper says: , . . , . J
"In his' alVnfiaf message lie pointed
out that the Sherman act, as inter
preted by the intermediate courts in
the tobacco and Standard Oil Cases,
would be equally destructive of all
the large modern organizations, wheth
er obnoxious or beneficial."
There are two or three well-known
facts that show the absolute inaccura
cy of this statement. The president
could not have pointed this out in his
annual message, since in the annual
message he simply said that he would
treat this subject, with others, in spe
cial messages. He did not do so in
his special message, lie pointed out
that certain phrases, in the supreme
court decision in the Railroad associa
tion cape might be so construed; but
went onto show that the subsequent
trend of decisions held what the Dis
patch has steadily maintained, that
the law is not that large and harm
less organizations would be de
stroyed, but that those which restrain
competition and control prices would
be. Therefore, he specifically stated
ai least twice in the message that he
did not regard any amendment to the
anti trust act as necessary.
The nearest that he oame to saying
hat the Ledger says he didjVfis, in.
brief, as follows: If a great trust is
proved in court to have established an
injurious trstraint in trade and monop
the injunction against it would
wipe out its organization and compel
its disintegration. Whence he argued
the necessity of providing national in
corporation to permit combinations in
that plight to organize and do busi
ness in accordance with law. There is
plenty of room for criticising that ar
gument; but the statement of its pro
mise is far from what is averred by
the paragraph above ..Quoted. —Pitts-
burg Dispatch.
Prosecution of the Packers.
The prosecution of the packers
should be pushed this time to a defin
ite conclusion.
For years the belief lias grown
among the people that the law is evad
ed or broken in this important in
dustry, and that a conspiracy or un
lawful combination exists through
which the price of meat is raised
above the legitimate level iixed by a
free operation of the law of supply
and demand.
The abortive attempt during the
last administration —emphasized in
popular mind by the "immunity bath"
episode and the unique reproof of a
federal judge by the president—only
intensified feeling by what seemed to
be a flagrant instance of thwarted
justice and triumphant wrong-doing. In
the meantime the question of high
prices has broadened to include not
only meat but virtually all commodi
ties of common use, and the demand
for relief has become imperative. The
existence of artificial interference
with prices, of unlawful agreements
in restraint of trade, and effective mo
nopolies is now, more than ever, of
poignant concern to the people.
Matter of Much Moment
It is important that the existence
of a "beef trust" be conclusively
proved or disproved. Is is important
that the "trust" or combination, if any,
be vigorously attacked, and if possible
destroyed beyond hope or fear of its
recrudescence, at least in our time.
To that end the prosecution should be
pushed without fear or favor. Many
of these men stand high in the busi
ness world and in the social life of
the community. It is the more urgent
that they be cleared of the prevailing
suspicion against them, or lie punished
as such men should be punished if
they willfully break the laws of their
country.
The prosecution should have the
special attention of the department
of justice. This implies 110 criticism of
either the skill or zeal of the district
attorney. But the very best talent
at the command of the government
should enter into this case, which is
entirely worthy of the personal atten
tion of the attorney general himself.-
The Government's Position.
111 respect of the public domain the
government must act as trustee for
the public. His message puts Presi
dent Taft in the van of conservation
ists and in policy abreast of his pre
decessor. Of the details of his rec
ommendations, more hereafter. But
his characteristic maxim is, legislate
right first, then go ahead. Ours is a
government of law, not (like Russia's)
of autocratic or bureaucratic ukase.
"What is a Republican?" inquires
the New York World. Has anybody
ever answered the World's other in
quiry "What is a Democrat?" —Wash-
ington Herald.
Mr. Taft's Position.
The Republican party has the genius
to perceive the measures that exactly
represent, the stage of progress in the
nation. It has the faculty of incorpor
ating these policlvs and thus it draws
the teeth of radicalism. Mr. Taft is
therefore, a national figure in the lies'
sense of the word. He rises abov<
sectionalism, above fact ionalism, above
any of the considerations that range
men into clans and sects. He is ir
the fullest sense of the term the presi
dent of the United States.
LANDIS IN CALCIUM RAYS
Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, of the Unit
- ed Slates district court at Chicago has gotten
C- y"/ /,2Ss \v back into the limelight with a great splash. The
3- )Jt \ calcium rays are on the judge as strong as they
1 were the day the news flashed to the world that
be ' la( ' " ne( ' *he Standard Oil Company $29,240,-
000. It's the beef trust this time that gives the
fearless Jurist a chance to bask in the limelight
a ?- Iffi, an d before the matter is settled the rays promine
v 4L-« v •*/) *° cover other well-known persons.
Y " ' t"y Judge Landis is only 44 years old and when
X V he put the staggering fine on the books against
\: ' ''' /\>K tbe "daddy °* trusts""Some said it was the im
/f JgV petuosity of youth. Anyway, the court of appeals
didn't take kindly to the fine and Rockefeller
didn't have to dig down in his pocket to pay it.
Several days ago a grand Jury was impaneled
In Chicago. Everything went along smoothly and the alert reporters gath
ered in the court room didn't have material for a scare until during the course
of his instructions Judge Landis paused and said:
"Having In mind the duty of the district attorney, I notified that officer
that on your assembling here to-<lay the court would direct your attention to
the subject to which I have heretofore specifically referred. It Is a source
of profound regret that two days thereafter there began widespread news
paper publication of matter purporting to come from Washington and ex
pressing the intention and determination of certain government functionaries
there as to this proceeding, and alleging, in that connection, their purpose
with respect to certain Individuals residing in this district.
"Without assuming here officially that there is anything behind these
publications except Journalistic enterprise, I caution you to pay no attention
whatever to them, as it will be your duty to conscientiously refrain from
making any disclosure of matters transpiring In your Jury room."
The virtual charge that the president of the United States was purloin
lng his thunder Immediately turned the rays on the Judge and caused conster
nation in Washington. Explanations have since been made, but they don't
seem to explain and Judge Landis is going ahead with the probe. It is said
he will appoint a special attorney, as he has power to do. if the "certain gov
ernment functionaries" —whether this includes the president is not known
are not good.
EGAN PRAISES THE DANES
- .. Dr. Maurice Francis Egan, American mlnistei
to Denmark, who will return in a few days to his
7 % post at t: °P enha ßen after a 60-day leave of ab
I sence, says the Danes are "from Missouri" now
If They have Joined the "show me" class sinc<
<1 ""tr thelr e *P erience wlth Dr. Frederick W. Cook,
iJ) r - Egan has been United States minister tc
y 112/, Denmark since 1907 and is nationally knowr
' among Roman Cntholics ns a writer and teacher
Before his appointment to Denmark ho was pro
fessor of the English language and literature at
fflp'V the Catholic University of America and had beer
~ professor of tho same subjects at Notre Dame
!SL university. Dr. Egan was born in PhiladelphU
\ ymmajmL May 24, 1852. He was educated at La Salle col
i leße ancl Georgetown college and in early life
engaged in the work of editing various Catholic
publications of the country. He has written and edited a large number ol
books.
"Of course when Dr. Cook came to Copenhagen and told us that he had
been as far as the pole we all believed him," said Dr. Egan. "Everybody be
lleved him. Rut the Danes especially were enthusiastic, not only because
they worship learning and are intensely interested in polar research, but alsc
because they love Americans and all things American.
"Let me correct one false general impression. Cook was not given anj
decoration by the king of Denmark. He has no decoration from the king
at all. He was given the gold medal of the Geographical society and the hon
orary doctorate of philosophy of the University of Copenhagen, but nothing
else.
"Cook, in the fire of the hottest cross-examination ever given to any man
was as cool and placid as he possibly could be.
"Heretofore nobody ever has even thought of doubting the word of at
explorer. But from now on it will be different. When a man comes tc
Denmark with a story of having discovered something he will be asked foi
his proofs. Of course, in the case of an old traveler like Peary, people will
believe him."
NAVY ROW OVER THIS GIRL
— United States naval circles are all stirred ur
b y a row wh i ch was caused by the photograph oi
a P rott y sirl. The young woman is Miss Dorothy
Hosier of Evanston, 111., and It seems that she i«
the innocent cause of the trouble. She has gone
/to Boston, where she intends to testify in behall
WBg/ of Paymaster George P. Ault and Assistant Sur
geou Ansey H - Itobn °tt p who are to be court
' TUHE C iw martialed. They are charged with disrespect tc
L 'jW a superior officer, assumption of authority, false
_ ■ ■' hood, insult and conduct unbecoming officers and
;j|\ ■y, \ '' ' gentlemen. Dr. Edward Cowles of Back Bay
.I [ jj|R. >v.- | ' Mass.. makes the charges.
Miss Hesler, who, report says, is the affianced
bride of Dr. Robuett, thus explains the affair:
)- >Ws{' "I was the innocent cause of the trouble. The
——i unwe i C ome attentions of Dr. Cowles caused the
trouble. I went to Boston last November to visit my uncle and I met Dr
Cowles. Once after he had left I discovered that my picture was gone. 1
wrote liiip a note asking him to return it, but 1 received no answer. I called
him up on the telephone and he said he would return it as soon as he found
it, as he had nvispiaced it.
"On the night of the dance at the home of Dr. Howard E. Ames, whict
was the twenty-seventh, he made a remark about the picture. Two of mj
father's friends took exception and demanded an apology. That is how this
disgraceful thing started."
Miss Hesler is a daughter of the late Dr. P. A. Hesler, who died whiU
In the service in the Philippines. She is popular in Evanston society.
Dr. Cowles is a relative of Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt
ARMOUR ON THE HIGH PRICES
- " " "Tlie exodus from the farm to the city and
the natural law of a supply that has not kept
pace with demand are to blame for the increased
ml'/. - \ cost of liv'ng which recently has caused such a
RrKfo''L J furore in the United States as well as other coun
tries," uayp Ogden Armour, president of Ar-
J mour & Co., , ckers, and owner of the Armour
' M / Grain Company.
/ Strange as it may seem, Mr. Armour says he
ImW//'. / welcomes the boycott that has been declared
WmJ J against meat in many parts of the country.
* J "1 welcome such a movement," he is quoted as
jsaying, "because 1 think it may make for lower
vlipimih*. prices. I want to see lower prices."
f/lShv Mr. Armour said he believed increased produc-
IMMMIh, tlon is the remedy for the existing big*
— LUJ .. J— prices and when asked what he considered a
practical way of obtaining it replied:
"James J. Hill has been making some practical suggestions along that
line. The people must go back to ttie farms and farms must be made more
productive. Movements which, like land congresses, have for their object tc
lead people from the cities to the farms, are economically more important
than anything else just now.
"Whether by Irrigation, reclamation, fertilization or colonization, tl:e pro
duction of grain and live stock must be increased. Few of the thousands ol
foreigners who immigrate t/> the United States each year settle on the farms.
They crowd the cities, increasing the demands on production, while adding
nothing to it. Statistics show that."
Sloan's Liniment is the best
remedy for sprains and bruises.
It quiets the pain at once, and
can be applied to the tenderest
part without hurting because it
doesn't need to be rubbed all
you have to do is to lay it on
lightly. It is a powerful prepa
ration and penetrates instantly
relieves any inflammation and con
gestion, and reduces the swelling.
Here's the Proof.
Mr. L. ROLAND, Bishop of Scran
ton, Pa. says: —" On the 7th of
this present month, as I was leaving
the building at noon for lunch, I
6lipped and fell, spraining my wrist.
1 returned in the afternoon, and at
four o'clock I could not hold a pen
cil in my hand. I returned horns
later and purchased a bottle of
Sloan's
Liniment
and used it five or six times be for#
I went to bed, and the next day I
was able togo to work and use my
hand as usual."
OHM Sloan's Liniment
\ . is an excellent anti
||9 septic and germ
killer— heals cuts,
***' jS burns, wounds and
■QSroIGB contusions, and will
piKlluHkiß draw the poison
I I f rom sting of poi-
I jSa? I sonous insects.
26c., 60c. and SI.OO
■ _r*'"i nT.L I Sloan's book on
I I horiei, cattle, sheep
fl —"rcc- ■ atiid poultry sent
■ 1 ■ free. Address v
■ B Dr. Earl S. Sloan,
mmmmm Boston, Man., U.S.A.
WESTERN CANADA
What Governor Doneen, of Illinois,
Says About It:
Den ©en, of Illinois, owns a sec-
of land in Saskatchewan.
Canada. 110 has said in
an interview:
I "An en American lam
■
I fl|| | I markable progress of
■■ » 1 A 112 Weatorn Canada. Oar
I 1w? _ J people are flocking across
IJ^y« I boundary in thou
l%|ry 4 A sands. and I have not yet
%am fly met one who admitted
1» - A n^Kf44 ho had mado a mlatako.
▲ 112 JMBTIII are all doing well.
V*4flß There is scarcely a com*
munlty in the Middle or
Western States that has
not a representative in Manitoba,
Saskatchewan or Alberta."
125 Million Bushels of
Wheat in 1909
x&xm'jtiJ4tAl&4 Western Canada field crops for
'jfiPdm&i 1009 will easily yield tothofarm
ttr i170.000.d00.00 In cash.
ml Free Homesteads of 100 acres,
Ir>VV~2VvtS2 and pre-emptions of 100 acres
ffl twit $3.00 nn aero. Railway and
vtrar- Jl Land Companies have land for sale
fs'f at reasonable prices. Many farm*
**rs have paid for their land out
f//Jl of tho proceeds of one crop.
Splendid climate, rood schools,
excellent railway facilities, low
freight rates, wood, water and
vJZ£ ilumber easily obtained.
or pamphlet *"l>aßt Best West,'
Vnfjj'iiGl■"'•sl particulars as to suitable location
'Kiln'i'if DD( * l° w settlers' rate, apply to
flff/r.»Jf|lM% Hup't of Immigration. Ottawa,
! IVlff or Canadian Gov't Agent.
WMHW I H - M - WILL,AMS
uJMIUm La * BuMdln ° Toledo, Ohio
ffl /fl ftT"O adrlrwi. n«»r»«t yon.) fl)
DP BU/?KHART'S WONDERFUL OFFER
30 DAYS'Treatm^ntV
*n*aMPnuNa.
If you are suffering with any of the followini
symptoms : paius in side, back, tinder stioulde
blades, cick sour bloated stomarh, lienlaclie
constipation, catarrh, liverand kidney disease
rheumaiisin, neuralgia, palpitation of heart
bad blood, RO to to your drug store and get I
30 days treatm»nt of Or. Burkhirt'a Vegetable Com
i oounil and be cured.
112 ' 8
"I have been using Cascarets for In
Bom ma, with which I have been afflictec
for twenty years, and I* can say that Cas
carets have given me more relief than anj
other remedy I have ever tried. I shal
certainly recommend them to my friendi
aa being all that they are represented."
Thos. Gillard, Elgin, 111.
Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe.
10c. 25c. 50c. Never sold In bulk. The gen
uine tablet stamped CC C. Guaranteed to
cure or your moaey back.
IV Seldom See
■ a biff knee like this, but your horse maj
Mi have a bunch or bruise on hib Ankle
Kfl Hock, tititle, Knee or Throat.
will clean them off without laying thi
Bsfors After horse up. No blister, no I* Irjgone
12.00 per bottle. Hook K K free.
AISSORIUNK, il It.. for mankind. $1 and 13
Ronoves Painful Nw'-llings, Enlarged Glands
Goitre, Wens. Bruises. Varicose Veins. Varicosities
01(1 Ho res. Allays lain. Tour druggist can snpplj
and give references. Will tell you in ore if you
write Book free. Manufactured only by
W. I. TOISiU, P. U.K., HUTrmplH St., hpringSrlrl, lui,
DR. J. D. KELLOGG'S
ASTHMA
Remedy for the prompt relief o1
Asthma and Hay Fever. Ask youi
i druggist for It. Write (or FREE SAMPLE.
NORTHROP & LYMAN CO. Ltd., BUFFALO, N. Y
USE CATARRH Oil SCLZ
throat and Hoarseness. A private prcscrtptloi
in successful u»ve for 13 years by a nose and
throat HpecialiKt. Send your address lor liter
a lure anil pric4 list.
FINDLAY MEDICAL LABORATORY, Findlaj, Ohia
7