Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, March 10, 1910, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAKJJfi CUUS'i'Y PilisSS.
It. H. MUI.UN, Kd lor.
rublih.icU livery Thursday.
TF.KMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
#er f«r •»«
y paid to advance > i 0
ADVKRTISINQ RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rale ot
l&e dol ar per square forone Insertion and fifty
)<Btt per square for each subsequentiimertlon
Rate* i>v ill* yar.or for six or three month*,
ftr« low and uniform, and wIU be furnished on
k pplication.
Le«sl and Official Advertising per square
I'irse tlmo.i or lets. 52: each subsequent in»er
»ien ; 0 cents per square.
Loral notices 1" cents per line for one lnser
s-riion: 5 cents per line (or eaen sub»equeu>
•»t).reutlTe Insertion.
Obituary notices over Are lines. 10 cents per
l!«* Simple a-snoum eroents of births, mar*
« »«'« mid deaths w.ll be'lnserted free.
Uuslnoss cards, fl»e lines or less. »f> per ye#r.
»»er tlve Hues, at lbs re«iil.ir rates of adver
tit'ng
No local inserted for less than 75 cents per
issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the Pkk*s is complete
/nd affords facilities for doing the best class of
) rk. P*bti<jul*u anm rioN piibtu Law
I'RXNTINO.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear-
Sfct are paid, except at the option of the pub-
Usher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
tor In advance.
Courtesy in Young Girls.
Young girls are apt to be somewhat
thoughtlessly discourteous, and are
quite oblivious of the irremediable
evil often wrought by want of thought.
Such girls should bear in mind the
lesson in courtesy given by a father
to his daughter. "My child," said he,
"treat everybody with politeness, even
though they are rude to you. For, re
member that you show courtesy to
others, not because they are ladies,
but because you are one." —Home
Motes.
Rice Market Yields $200,000,000.
The world's market for rice, meas
uring this market merely by the im
ports of the principal countries of the
world, amounts to from $150,000,000
to $200,000,000 per annum. The Im
ports of rice into the principal coun
tries of Europe in the latest available
year amounted to about $52,000,000
value; into Asia and Oceanica, SBB,-
000,000; into North and South Amer
ica, exclusive of the United States,
512.000,000, and into Africa, $6,000,000.
Ho, Girls!
"Don't be concerned because of your
lack of good looks," says a writer.
It's the real dope, girls. Take it from
us that a freckled, skinny girl, with
a codfish complexion, who can draft a
design for a toothsome mince pie is
head tind shoulders above the peaches
and-ceam beauty who don't know a
flour sifter from a baseball mask.
Correspondent Wants to Know.
Here's a funny thing. One fly can
spoil all your food. One toad can eat
$19.40 worth of flies in a season.
(These figures from the secretary of
agriculture.) We have 8,000,000 flies
in our kitchen during an ordinary
summer day. How many toads should
we keep?
Another Good Old Tar Heel Word.
Besides Sampson county, Onslow
comes forward as a shipper of Jeru
salem oak seed. "The seed, in mo
lasses, as an old-time domestic rem
edy," we are told, "can be swallowed
more mellifluously under the name of
'Juzelymake.' " —Charlotte Observer.
At the Bottom of It.
"What started him 011 the road to
success?" "Well, I'm not sure; but
I think his parents had something to
do with it in not bringing him up
from babyhood in the idea that he
was one of the marvels of the age."
Regrettable, Don'tcherknow?
"These exchange editors make me
tired," exclaimed the self-worshiping
poet. "Here they are crediting a
poem of mine to some fellow named
Byron."
Rather a Long Life.
An Arizona woman 11G years old
who used tobacco for 110 years is
dead. Little girls, beware of her sad
fate. It Is awful to live too long. Cut
out chewing tobacco at the start.
Mars' Canals.
Bill —"I see a wise astronomer is
telling the people that he has no
ticed some disturbance on Mars."
Jill—"Perhaps it's one of those canal
mules kicking again."
Good Thing to Remember.
I alk," said Uncle Eben, "is supin'
tike rain. A certain amount is wel
come an' necessary. Hut doggone a
deluge!"
Wanted.
Knicker —There is room for a new
invention. Uocker —For instance, an
alarm clock to strike the psychological
moment.
Literature.
Literature gives life to the ideas
of the moment, and poetry crystalizes
ideas into forms that can be remem
bered.
One of the Few.
"De man dat's his own worst en
emy." said Uncle Eben, "is one o' de
few people dat makes any real prog
ress toward lovin' deir enemies."
The Daily Problem.
"Are you interested in what is in
table rapping?" "No; I am more in
terested in what goes on it."- Balti
more American.
By Proxy.
"The king is going to raise some
pin money by starring his court jest
ers in vaudeville." "He'll try to live
by his wits, eh?"— Kansas City Times.
CANT STAND T HE SUNSHINE
S _^=r r --~ 3
. .'£* v '^— v .1 GJEfO*!'/
-* /</i.vv/T
CAUSE OF ADVANCE
HIGH PRICES OF FOOD NOT DUE
TO TARIFF.
Foreign Demand for Our Products
Has Enormously Increased —Coun-
try Vastly Better Off Than
When Prices Were Low.
Talking of the high prices of food
and the means, if any there bo, to pre
vent their going higher, it is remark
able that no one in Washington has
paid any attention to one obvious
cause of the advance which everybody
feels. An enormous quantity of our
food products is exported, chiefly to
England, and the demand abroad has
enormously increased during the past
quarter of a century. Great Britain
during the year 1908 imported food to
the value of $1,220,000,000, almost all
of it for her own consumption. Of
this vast amount $250,000,000 was for
meat, while the importation of wheat
was about $25,000,000 less. Her im
portation of meats as recently as
1878 was less than 8,000,000 hundred
weights, whilst in 1908, it reached
nearly seven times that amount. Only
during comparatively recent years
have we had any serious competition
for this great market, but lately Ar
gentine, Australia and Canada share
the business with us. The increase in
demand, however, has more than kept
pace with the new sources of supply.
The price of nearly all the world's
food, available for the world market,
is therefore fixed, not at the source of
supply, but at the chief point of for
eign demand. It is not easy to see
how, under these conditions, any
abatement or even abolition of the tar
iff on food by this country could ap
preciably affect the price at home;
while it is still more difficult to un
derstand how the tariff, high or low,
can increase the home price, since we
import scarcely any food, especially
the great staples. We might get some
meat and wheat from Canada if there
were no tariff, but not at a price less
than that which the Canadian pro
ducer could get for his stuff in Eng
land, freights being equal.
Whatever be the cause of high
prices it still remains true that the
country is vastly better off to-day than
it was 15 years ago when prices were
so low that the farmer was losing
money on everything he raised, and
the urban populations were idle and
could not afford to pay even the low
prices which food brought. If it could
be managed so tbat we could have
plenty of employment at high wages,
and at the same time get all our needs
at the lowest figures, all the difficul
ties of life would be solved. Or, if we
could sell everything we produce at
present prices, and buy everything we
need at the prices of 1896, we should
have something like the millennium.
We commend this simple problem to
reformers generally, and especially to
the statesmen at Washington who,
with such sound and fury, are looking
for the goat.
The Statehood Bills.
With the introduction of the New
Mexico and Arizona statehood bills in
the senate the first step has been
taken toward doing justice to these
rich and enterprising territories.
There would seem to be at this time
no sound and legitimate reason for in
terfering with the manifest right of
these territories to become part of the
union. The Republican party spon
sored their admission in its last, plat
form and the president has recom
mended it in unmistakable terms
through his recent message.
It is up to the Republican majority
in congress to see that justice is done
and the pledge of the party fulfilled.
There has been some argument on
the part of extreme partisans that if
Arizona and New Mexico were granted
statehood they might send Democratic
representatives to congress. Such a
petty, unstatesmanlike attitude cannot
be too roundiy condemned.
As if politics had a right to be heard
in a matter of simple national justice?
It will not hi" the least memorable
fact connected with the Taft. adminis
tration if, during its course, the United
States are rounded out ifiCo one com
pletrj, homogeneous whole.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, igio
LITTLE CAUSE FOR ALARM
Idea That President Taft Is to"Run
Amuck" Among Corporations
Is Absurd.
A short memory is a snare some
times.
The few who have critically and un
favorably compared Mr. Taft with Mr.
Roosevelt in respect of his "quieting"
statement the other day about his
anti-trust intentions have set a trap
for themselves. They forgot that un
der like conditions and to the same
purpose Mr. Roosevelt once announced
that he had no intention "to run
amuck among the corporations."
So, also, Mr. Taft said, "sensational
statements as if there were to be a
new departure and an indiscriminate
prosecution of important industries
have no foundation."
To silence the scaremongers with
their foolish alarmist rumors of an in
discriminate raid on big business
merely because it is big, President
Taft took the trouble to reiterate his
position, and impliedly to assure the
public that neither he nor Mr. Wicker
sham had been bitten by the anti-cor
poration mad dog and gone rabid.
liufainess men who took stock in the
wild rumors of impending indiscrim
inate raids on the great producing and
wage paying organizations of the coun
try, and that is as much as to say on
the reviving national confidence and
prosperity, paid Mr. Taft a poor com
pliment. The former judge and model
civil governor of the Philippines is not
going to turn weathercock, or destruc
tive, or seeker of the cheap and fleet
ing popularity that comes of rout to
the galleries and the sheet iron thun
der of the professional "trust buster."
In his message of January 7 the
president made his policy and attitude
on the trust question very plain:
The economic advantages of com
bination are fully recognized, and the
aim will be to conserve advantages,
while preventing abuses.
There will be no prosecution with
out good and sufficient evidence of
wrongdoing.
All tli.it corporations and combina
tions ha\e to do in order to keep out
of trouble with this administration is
to live up to the spirit of the anti-trust
law.
That law is unfortunately vague
and we believe, with Mr. Roosevelt,
that it ought to be amended. Dut it
very certainly was not intended to
cripple and terrorize the great legiti
mate, fairly conducted industries o!
the country, and will not be so acted
on by this administration.
As for the attitude of the courts in
regard to strictly literal interpretation
of this, in terms, too sweeping and in
definite statute, let us quate what the
court said in the joint Traffic associa
tion case in 1908:
The act of congress must have rea
sonable construction, or else there
would scarcely be an agreement or
contract among business men that
cou'd not be said to have, indirectly or
remotely, some bearing upon inter
state commerce, and possibly to re
strain it.
Minimum for Minimum.
Senator Knox announces a complete
agreement between the United States
and Germany on the tariff on the line
of his policy of securing for us the
fullest opportunity in foreign markets.
Minimum for minimum is the basic
principle of the new convention. The
matter of maximum rates is entirely
eliminated, and there will be no dis
turbance of trade between the two
countries, as at one time was feared.
The conclusion of the negotiations
was quickened by the sincere desire
of botli governments to avoid even a
temporary suspension of friendly rela
tions, as would have been the case if
the present agreement were permitted
to expire before a new one was" en
tered into.
Good Republican Doctrine.
The power of states to impose fair
and reasonable conditions on outside
corporations desiring to enter them
for local business remains untouched.
The right to refuse to. license outside
corporations without giving any rea
son remains intact. Hut the power tc
exact unreasonable terms or practice
extortion lias been substantially ]irr.
I ited by the latest decisions
A CHEERFUL PROSPECT.
"Well, young man, what do you
think of my daughter?"
"Rather thin."
"That will improve; at her age I
was like that."
Why He Was Lonesome.
Tommy, whose varying points of
view are illustrated by the Farm Jour
nal, had not yet learned the Golden
Rule. Neither have a good many of
his elders.
"1 should like. Tommy," said his fa
ther. "that you might find some boy
to play with you. Now what's the
matter with Johnny Jenkins and the
little Dobbs boy?"
"Pooh! Why, they're a whole year
younger than I am," said Tommy, con
temptuously. "I couldn't play with
them!"
"Well, there's Jack Spear and Willie
Harlow. Won't they do?"
"Yes, but they're a year older than
I am," said Tommy, wistfully, "so the
mean things won't play with me."
Meaning of Cemetery.
It is not correct to say that "ceme
tery" means the "city of the dead."
The word is from the Greek "Koime
tcrion," meaning sleeping place, not
the place of the dead. There is nothing
in the thinking that it was originally
intended to convey the idea that the
departed were really dead any more
than there is in the old Hebrew term
for cemetery—"Bethaim"—the house
of the living.
Comparison Shunned.
"You didn't cry at all at the mati
nee."
'■' No," answered the reposeful girl;
"1 couldn't think of such a thing."
"But the young woman with you
wept copiously."
"Of course. Her lace handkerchiefs
are ever so much more elegant than
mine."—Washington Star.
THE STORY OF THE PEANUT
SHELLS.
As everyone knows, C. W. Post of
Battle Creek, Michigan, is not only a
maker of breakfast foods, but he is a
strong individual who believes that the
trades-unions are a menace to the lib
erty of the country.
Believing this, and being a "natural
born" scrapper for the right, as he
sees it, Post, for several years past,
has been engaged in a ceaseless war
fare against "The Labor Trust," as he
; likes to call it.
Not being able to secure free and
1 untrammeled expression of his opin
ions on this subject through the regular
I reading pages of the newspapers he
lias bought advertising space for this
1 purpose, just as he is accustomed to
for the telling of his Postum "story,"
and he has thus spent hundreds of
thousands of dollars in denouncing
trades-unionism.
As a result of Post's activities the
people now know a whole lot about
these organizations: how they are
honeycombed with graft, how they ob
struct the development of legitimate
business, curtail labor's output, hold
up manufacturers, graft upon their own
membership, and rob the public. Natu
rally Post is hated by the trades
unionists, and intensely.
He employs no union labor, so they
can not call out his men, and he defies
their efforts at boycotting his products.
The latest means of "getting" Post is
the widespread publication of the story
that a car which was recently wrecked
in transmission was found to be loaded
with empty peanut shells, which were
being shippei from the south to Post's
establishment at Battle Creek.
This canard probably originated with
President John Fitzgerald of the Chi
cago Federation of Labor, who, it is
said, stated it publicly, as truth.
Post conies back and gives Fitz
gerald the lie direct. He denounces
Fitzgerald's statement as a deliberate
'alseliood, an underhanded and coward
ly attempt to injure his business, hav
ing not the slightest basis in fact. As
such an effort it must be regarded. It
Is significant that this statement about
"the peanut shells" is being given wide
newspaper publicity. In the "patent
inside" of an eastern cwintry paper I
find it, and the inference naturally is
hat labor-unionites are insidiously
spreading this lie.
An institution (or a man) which
will resort to moral intimidation and
to physical force, that will destroy ma
chinery and burn buildings, that will
maim and kill if necessary to effect its
ends, naturally would not hesitate to
spread falsehood for the same pur
poses.
We admire Post. While we have no
enmity toward labor unions, so long as
they are conducted in an honest, "live
and-let-live" kind of a way, we have had
enough of the tarred end of the stick
to sympathize thoroughly with what he
is trying to do. He deserves support.
A man like Post can not be killed, even
with lies. They are a boomerang, every
time. Again, we know, for hasn't this
weapon, every weapon that could be
thought of, been used (and not simply
by labor unions) to put us out of busi
ness, too?
I am going to drink two cups of
Postum every morning from this time
on, and put myself on a diet of Grape-
Nuts. Pully for Post!— Editorial in
The American Journal of Clinical Med
icine.
How often do you eat this food?
A short, time ago there appeared In
the columns of one of the prominent
magazines an article on building brain
and muscle by the proper selection of
the foods you eat.
A good many people were surprised
to find oatmeal placed at the top of the
list of foods recommended; but if the
article had appeared in an English or
Scotch paper every reader would have
expected to see first place given to
good oatmeal.
As a matter of fact Great Britain
and Europe come to us for tremendous
quantities of Quaker Oats because it
represents to them perfect food, being
the richest in flavor and best in clean
liness and purity, of all oatmeals.
Americans should eat more Quaker
Oats; the results would soon show
themselves in improved conditions ol
health and strength. 55
Does He Love Anybody?
Von Moltke had some few human
failings. He loved his wife devotedly,
but conquered his alma mater, Den
mark, even after she had educated him
for the military service out of her
poor, stingy pocket. But Kitchener is
a machine man only. He loves neither
man nor woman. His spear has
never known a brother, as its sharp
point has hewn asunder the bodies
and souls of the sons of women.—Bos
ton Post.
Two Bad Cases In England Cured by
Resinol Ointment.
I have been using Resinol Ointment
during the last few weeks lor a
varicose ulcer on leg and can bear tes
timony to its cooling and curative qual
ities. Have never found anything to
equal it. I was recommended by my
sister, Mrs. Cairus Ladykirk, Norham
on Tweed, to try it. She had been
treated 14 months previously without
effect, but was entirely cured by Res
inol Ointment.
Robert Davidson, Gateshead on Tyne.
Belgium Has No Navy.
Belgium is, perhaps the most pros
perous state in Europe, as well as the
most thickly settled. The late king's
reign was at least marked by an enor
mous advance in wealth and social re
form. One of the country's special ad
vantages is that its international neu
tralization permits it to dispense with
a navy, while the Belgian army is
maintained on a very small and inex
pensive basis.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot roacb
the Heat of the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or consti
tutional disease, and In order to cure It you must take
Internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken In
ternally. and acts directly upon the blood and mucous
surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is not a quack medi
cine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians
In this country for years and Is a regular prescription.
It Is composed of the best tonics known, combined
with the best blood purifiers, nctlni; directly on the
mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the
two ingredients Is what produces such wonderful re
mits In curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHKN'KY CO.. Props.. Toledo. O.
Fold by Druggists, prion 75c.
Tukc llall's Family i'llls I or constipation.
The Perverse Sex.
"Hinkley's got a wonderful head. All
his woman readers are simply wild
over that serial love story he is run
ning in the Daily Stunt."
*4low did ho clinch 'em?"
"Why, ho printed the last chapter
first."
■mportantto Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infanta and children, and see that it
In Use For Over .'{O Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
A Thought Reader.
"So you are studying telepathy?"
"Yes," answered Senator Sorghum;
"my object in life has been to find
what people are thinking and then
say it first. Any reliable system
would simplify my labors immensely.''
—Exchange
Free to Our Readers.
Write Murine Kye Remedy Co.. t'liica-
K<). for 4S-paße Illustrated Kye Book Free.
Write :ill about Your Kye Trouble and
they will advise a» the Proper Appli
cation of the Murine Kye Remedies in
Your Special Case. Your Druggist will
tell you that Murine Relieves Sore Eyes,
Strengthens Weak Kyes, Doesn't Smart,
Soothes Kye l'ain. ami sells for 50e. Try
It In Your Eyes and in Baby's Eyes for
Scaly Eyelids and Granulation.
The Graveled Geometer.
Euclid was boasting of his abilities.
"But," cried his wife, "can you find
why our gas bills are just as big as
when they charged a dollar a thousand
cubic feet?"
With a moan he sped into the night.
Distemper
In all its forms, among all ages of hdrsei
and dogs, cured and others in the same
stable prevented from lining the disease
with Spohn's Distemper Cure. Every bftt
tle guaranteed. Over 500,0J)0 bottles sold
last year. $.50 and SI.OO. Hood druggists,
or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted.
Write for free book. Spohn Med. Co.,
Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
A Benefactor.
"Are you doing anything for oth
ers?" asked the philanthropist.
"Sure," answered Mr. Crosslots, *'l
make a garden evej-y year for the ben
efit of my neighbors' chickens."
DRUNKENNESS is unworthy when
you can have it removed without any
body's knowledge. Acme simple home
treatment will do the work. Write E.
Eortin, Dickey ifldg., Chicago, 111., for
free trial.
Commonplace though it may appear,
this doing of one's duty embodies the
highest ideal of life. —Smiles.
AI M"VS (,CN(i BALSAM
Is the old reliable Cornell remedy. Found In every
droit storoand In poeticallyevery bon o. For hule
by all driiiftfists. Sac, f>Uc and 11.00 bottles.
The family tree of a bunko man
must be a slippery elm.
Mrs. Wiunlow'ft Soothing Syrup.
Forrblldren teething, softens the minis, reducesln.
Humiliation.allays pain, cures wind colic. 2oca Louie.
it is easy to offend people who have
BO use for you.
WHEN YOUR BACK ACH ~S SUS
PECT THE KIDNEYS.
Backache Is kidney ache, in moat
cases. The kidneys ache and throb
with dull pain be
cause th're is in-
J s< j2Lr' 2/ flamniation within.
| You can't bo rid of
fy \) \ji the ache until you
steals cure tlie cause—the
kidneys.
2 Doan's Kidney
■•/(I - PHls cure sick kid-
H / Vvv. l neys - G> s - Warren,
r J %p% 1517 No. 7th St.,
)■' a )i.: Uoise, Idaho, says:
? . I. J'' .'<! "An Injury to ray
H - ylj V&t back >' Ciirs aso left
& Agf me lame. I had to
til n use a can0 > and it
j? Ha . S-.p hurt me terribly to
P £n : .Agsgi»y ! s stoop or lift. The
kidney secretions
nauw passed too frequent
ly. For five years since I was cured
by Doan's Kidney Pills, I have had no
return of the trouble."
Remember the name—Doan's. For
sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Labor to keep alive in your breast
that little spark of celestial Are called
conscience.—Washington.
IMPOSSI IM.K TO FIND ANYTHING
better for sideache. backaches or stitches than
J'frry Dnris' /''tinkillf. (Set the largo si»e, it is the
Cheapest. A t all druggists, 26c, 85c and OUc bottles.
There is always work, and tools 10
work, withal, for those who will.—
Ruskin.
PII-ES CURKD IN 6 TO 14 DATS.
PAZO OINTMISNT ix guaranteed to cure any rase
of Itchint!. Itlimi. I'.li'i'ilinK or I'rotruUioK Piles ia
6to days or money rclunded. bUu.
Landlords and tenants can never see
through the same spectacles.
AFTER
FOURYEARS
OF MISERY
Cured by Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound
Baltimore, Md. "For four years
my life was a misery to mc. I suffered
from irrogulari
: ginsr sensations,
/'ffiK extreme nervous
;ift■ ness, and that all
■■M pone feeling in my
. sgf stomach. 1 had
A L.j ' piveu up hope of
• is -. ever being well
V . Jjr'i? when 1 began to
* take Lydia E. Piiik
>x Hani's Vegetable
/ Zv/•// / / > (Compound. Thou
/'//// /// 1 felt as though
— L ■' ■ L — new life had been
given me, and I am recommending it
to all my friends."—Mrs. W. S. FORD,
2207 W. Franklin St.. Baltimore, Md.
The most successful remedy in this
country for the cure of all forms of
female complaints is Lydia E. I'ink
ham's Vegetable Compound. It ban
stood the test of years and to-day is
more widely and successfully used than
any other female remedy. It has cured
thousands of women who have been
troubled with displacements, inflam
mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir
regularities, periodic pains, backache,
that bearing-down feeling, flatulency,
indigestion, and nervous prostration,
after all other means had failed.
If you are suffering 112 rom any of these
ailments, don't give up hope until you
have given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound a trial.
If you would like special advice
write to Mrs. Pinkliam,
Mass., for it. She lias guided
thousands to bealtk, free of
charge.
Make YOUR Roof Trouble-Proof
SLATE IT
Costs DO more than artificial material and
you will have a roof that will alwolutely
protect your building for centuries with*
out one cent of expense. Nothing in
existence can equal
SHELDON'S Srftsr.
ROOFING SLATE
for •trenflrth, durability and r-conomr.
Our free book, THE HOOF *?, teiis \\ li\ .
It's jours for the asking.
F. C. SHELDON SLATE CO.
GRANVILLE. NEW YORU
Hay's Hair-Health
Never Falls to Restore Gray Hair to lis
Natural dolor and Beauty. Stops its falling
out. and positively n move - Dandruff. Is not a
D>e. Refuse all substitutes, ft oo and 50c.
bottles by Mail or at Druggists. LAC t
Semi ioc for large sample Bottle BlItL
Philo Hay Spec. Co.. Newark, N. J . L". S. A.
DYOLA DYES
H> fast, beautiful colors 10c per package it dealers
If not in stuck, hcntl us 10c stating color desired.
ONE DYE FOR ALL GOODS
Color card and hook of directions free by writing
Dy-o-la, lturlington, Vermont.
DYOLA DYES
TAKE A DOSE OF
,P
Vht fctSl MMCMt YSK
F It will inslanl'y relieve that racking cough. J|
j Token promptly it will often pie vent II
til Asthma, Bronchitis and seriou* thioat and ;g
[HI lung troubles. Guaranteed safe t.ad very if
K! palatable.
LAU DrugfiUti, 25 cents.
t-ara 111 )■■