Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, April 21, 1910, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.!
H. H. MULLIN. Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
fer year ** l 1?
• paid In advance I M
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rate of
»oo dollar per square forone Insertion and fifty
etnts per square for each subsequent Insertion.
Rates by the year, or for si* or three months,
•re low and uniform, and will ba furnished on
application.
Legal and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less, a 2; each aubsequent inser-
V.o i! 0 cents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for one lnser
serilon: 6 cents per line for each subsequent
•on ecutlve Insertion.
Obituary notices over fire llnea. 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, inar
rinpes and deaths will be Inserted free.
Business cards, five lines or less. S6 per year,
over five 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 PIIESS Is complete
•nd affords facilities for doing the best class of
work. pAIIIICL'LAII ATTENTION PiIDTO LAW
PRINTING.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
rges are paid, except at the optlou of the pub
aher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
for In advance.
' ■ 1 - ■ -■
Ready.
Lord Granard was once visiting
some of his tenants. One of the farms
he visited contained a large assort
ment of live stock in a more than
usually healthy state, and halting be
fore a sty he said to the owner:
"Those pigs of yours are in very fine
condition." "Yes," agreed the proud
farmer, "if we were all as ready to die
as them, my lord, we'd do."
Something to Be Thankful For.
It's pretty tough to be poor, not to
use a stronger expression; but when
one reads of the many accidents by
land and sea in which so many are
sent to sudden death a man ought to
feel thankful sometimes that he is out
in the country pulling the bell line
over old Balaam. —Sylvania Telephone.
Footprints in the Sidewalks.
Hiram (looking at a dog's footprints J
In the cement sidewalk) —Don't it beat •
all. 'Mandy, how them scientific fellers |
dig up stones like that there af'.or j
they've been buried a million years!
I'll bet ye the animal that made them
there tracks lived before the flood.—
Judge.
Living.
Exalt the straight, set aside the
crooked, the people will be loyal. Be
have with dignity, they will be lowly;
be pious and merciful, they will be
faithful; exalt the good, teach the un
skilful, they will grow willing.—Con
fucius.
The Better Way.
Said She —"Wouldn't it be grand if
we could only see ourselves as others
Bee us?" Said He—"Well, hardly;
but it would be grand if we could
make others see lis as we see our
selves."
If You Want to Be Liked.
Don't when people say nice things
to you, think that they must necessar
ily be insincere. It is quite as natural
for some persons to put their nice
thoughts about you into words as it
is for them to breathe.—Home Chat
A Strong Minded Locality.
Stranger.—Can you tell me if a
woman can make a w:'ll in this place?
Native. —She don't have to. Every
.voman in this place has one already
made.
Little Revenue.
"Is there any money in poetry." in
quired the hopeful amateur. "Not for
me," replied the editor. "Few poets
are able to pay for more than one in
sertion."
Friends.
After a man passes 50 he is pretty
fortunate if he doesn't find more ac
quaintances on the tombstones in the
cemetery than he finds on the door
plates in town
A Pretty Fix.
Lady.—l give it up. I cannot fix on
which of these two hats 1 like better
Attendant. —Ah. then, how is madam
ever going to vote? —Judge.
Fateful Premonition.
A little English girl named Frances
Cole write in her hook at school:
"This is my last sum." The next day
she died
Where Credit Is Harmful.
Reasonable credit may help a work
Ing man in poor circumstances, but
unreasonable credit only tends to
crush him.
The Wiseheimer Says.
It isn't always a sure sign that be
cause you are unhappy without a wom
an you will be happy with her.
Aid to the Hearing.
It Is said by anatomists that people
hear better with their mouths open.
Too True.
A friend in need is a bore indeed.
Judge.
K ilov.'att.
A kilowatt almost exactly equals
one and one-third horsepower.
Dutch Proverb.
He who sows brambles must reap
thorns
Mast Be a Goal.
There can be no progress svhen
there is no end in view
PARTY NOT INJURED
REPUBLICANS UNHURT- BY FAC
TIONAL STRUGGLE.
Minor Differences of Opinion Will Be
No Bar to the Presentation of a
Solid Front to Their Politi
cal Enemies.
A chapter of dramatic Incidents
fraught with great, even intense, inter
est to the representatives of the peo
ple in congress, and perhaps of as
great interest to the country, was
closed when the appeal from the ruling
of the speaker that the Norris motion
was out of order was supported by a
vote of 182 to 160. That vote Is fated
to stand out In the history of parlia
mentary struggles as a landmark. This
means a radical change from the proce
dure in relation to the organization
of the popular branch of congress. The |
possession of the power conferred
upon him through the framing of the
rules has been a potent asset of the
speaker, and in the case of Speaker
Cannon it was the power with which
he held in check the tide of insurgery.
Eliminated from the proposed commit
tee on rules to be selected by the
house itself, he is a shorn Samson.
The Insurgency is the element of
the Republican party to which Speaker
Cannon referred when he declared that
if they were Republicans, then he was
not one. It is n\ost unfortunate that
the issue should have been raised.
It is unfortunate because in the flush
of their new power the insurgents will
be difficult to direct in the* paths of
appropriate and needed legislation. It
is unfortunate because it gives an un
warranted color to the contention of
the ready writers ol the magazines
that there is a tendency toward a coali
tion of permanent nature between the
radical wings of the two parties. It
j is unfortunate because It indicates that
| a spirit of restlessness, unjustified by
j conditions, exists. But the so-called
i victory is not apt to materialize the
j importance the persons quick with
J conclusions advance for it. The Demo
i crats will find it a boomerang. They
had counted upon playing the card
of Cannonism to their advantage to
secure control of the house. Now they
have wiped out the leading issue and
! are dependent upon the bounty of
| Republican allies for any consideration
i they may secure. As a matter of fact,
it has been an unholy alliance, an ill
ordered and ill-assorted coalition; it
is a rope of sand, and when the house
io presented with Republican measures
it will vote them without regard to the
Democrats. There is only a difference
! as to degree between the radicals and
j the conservative Republicans in their
j adherence to the leading Republican
; proposals. All the Republicans be
j lieve alike in the essentials of the
I party faith.
The temporary defection does not
j represent any weakening. The radi
j cals themselves declare it means a
j strengthening of the position of Presi
i dent Taft with the lower house. The
radicals can never secure Democratic
support for their Republican positions,
and they will find their true alliance
where it has always been. The fight
has been against the speaker, and it
has been, as far as it went, a success
ful fight. The party is as coherent
and as firm-fronted as ever. The Dem
ocrats have nothing to be gratified
over, and the clearing of the atmo
sphere of the main cause for insurgen
cy will tend to dissolve the ingredients
into their component parts. There is
[ apt now to be much less heard of in
surgency since the alleged cause for
its existence has been set aside. Speak
■ er Cannon has endeared himself to all
lovers of a good, square fighter by his
unprecedented contest against deter
mined odds.
As it was an odd fight, as well as a
tight against odds. The Democrats
thought to ride upon the wave of the
victory against the speaker to a de
lirious success, but they found their
limit very shortly. Despite the frenzy
of the hour of victory, despite the cries
of the Democrats for the evacuation of
the speaker's chair by Mr. Cannon, de
spite the fact that a Democratic reso
i lution to declare the position vacant
was actually introduced amid scenes
i of the wildest disorder, the speaker
held tenaciously lo his position and
the Republicans could not be induced
to perpetuate folly or injustice per
, sonal to Mr. Cannon. A defeat it was,
bi. it was not a defeat for the party,
nor was it a defeat of the general bal
ance of the dominant party. The Dem
ocrats already are beginning to realize
it was a meal of cljaff they were so
eagerly grasping for.
, Country Is with Taft.
The impression which President
Taft's many speeches has left upon
the country is that of an honest frank
ness, joined with the intention to do his
best and to take the consequences. It
is rather more than likely that as this
administration proceeds it will, slowly
perhaps, but none the less surely, com
mand public confidence, because of the
'■ clear honor and the right intent of the
man at ttie head ol it.—Springfield Re
publican.
Roosevelt's Consistency.
President Roosevelt is to be com
mended tor refusing to talk politics
* in spite of the great pressure to which
his desire to please his Journalistic
friends doubtless subjects him His in
nate perceptions are usually sound.
p While his impulsiveness has
olten evoked criticism, such instances
as these of the tenacity ol his purpose,
onc<; entered upon, are deserving of
n more than passing notice - lioston
Transcript
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1910
HIGH PRICES ARE GENERAL
Statistics Show Them to Be Universal
the World Over—Folly to
Blame the Tariff.
Meat prices have advanced In all
the principal producing and consum
ing sections of the world, according
to compilations just made by the bu
reau of statistics of the department of
commerce and labor. The figures
which the bureau has compiled consist
chiefly of the export prices of tho
principal meat-exporting countries of
the world and the import and quoted
wholesale prices In the chief meat
importing and consuming countries.
The chief meat-exporting countries
are Australia, New Zealand, Argen
tina, Canada and the United States;
and the chief meat-importing coun
tries, the United Kingdom, Germany
and, In a less degree, the other Euro
pean countries. All of the meat-ex
porting countries show higher prices
per pound in their exports In recent
years than those of a decade ago,
and all of the meat-iinportlng coun
tries show higher rates in their Im
port figures and in the current market
quotations.
ALL MUST BE COMPROMISE
Points Voter Should Remember When
He Considers Pending Or
Passed Legislation.
President Taft's talk about "the in
terests" and their efforts to shape
legislation at Washington will do good
If It makes the average voter under
stand how inevitably fierce is the con
flict in all legislative halls, how steady
and strong is the pressure which law
makers and executives have to resist,
and how large a percentage of law
has to be the result of compromise be
tween conflicting desires, varying, of
course, in their degrees of self-inter
est or altruism, but most of them
normal, prudential and simply there-
I suit of a passion of loyalty to a given
| cause or project. "Good," "bad,"
| "half good, half bad," personal, cor
porate, national and international in
terests are forever In conflict, and
to choose between them wisely and
with devotion to the ideal welfare of
l the greatest number of persons af
| fected becomes Increasingly difficult
| as society becomes more complex and
j reliance on formal law more complete.
Taft's First Year.
If any one should attempt to locate
| any largo failing of Mr. Taft as presi
dent, temperamental or otherwise,
| such a quest would prove fruitless,
jMe has made. In all substantial re
j spects, a thoroughly good president.
! His appointments have been strong
j and made on a very liberal basis, so
far as partisan or sectional consider
ations are concerned. lie is a thor
ough-going civil service reformer. Ills
work for retrenchment—one of the
nation's greatest needs —has been
earnest and effective. He has accom
plished even more In liberalizing the
j tariff than did either of his recent
| predecessors who attempted to check
j the greed of the special interests with
| the influence of the White House. One
j can hardly wonder what would have
happened to McKlnley or to Cleveland
had they held the office after the
country had been educated by seven
years of Rooseveltism, and sur
rounded by a new journalistic atmo
sphere committed to radicalism. It Is
I probable that Taft's first year has
j been his hardest one, and that the
sterling merit of the man and the sub
' stantial worth of his administration
I will, as time goes on, appeal to the
j ultimate common sense and fair play
!of his fellow-countrymen. They can
j not fail to see, as they stop to reason
| for themselves, that they have no real
grievance worthy of the name.—Bos
ton Transcript.
"Uncle Joe" as a Statesman.
It is because Uncle Joe is so thor
oughly human, as well as a man of
extraordinary Intellectual resources,
that he is able as a septuagenarian to
hold his own In the tremendous scram
ble and uproar the country over to
down him. He has shocked us awfully
sometimes with the vagaries of his
speech. We don't like the way he tilts
his cigar and cocks his hat. The chip
j 911 Ills shoulder is a perpetual menace
I and aggravation. But despite all these
exasperating effects upon our conven
| tional sensibilities, he has a grip upon
I the public affairs of the country which
thus far has withstood a tempest of
j hostility and abuse.— Rochester Demo
| crat and Chronicle.
Anti-Tariff Argument Refuted.
Some of the over-zealous tariff rip
pers are making a great ado about the
difference in cost of food in the city of
Detroit and in Windsor, just across the
river in Canada. They claim that
j "articles of food cost an average of 25
j per cent, less in Windsor than in De
j troit, altogether due to the tariff." Al
j together due to the fact that iu Wind
j sor there is no work, while the Cana
j dians are breaking all speed records in
I their efforts to get employment in De
j troit. Tariff and employment are syn
onymous; free trade and poverty are
children of ignorant parents.
Is the Country Ready for This?
We have no doubt there is one sure
remedy for high prices. It is easy,
too, if the country is ready to try it.
j Simply take the tariff off of every
-1 thing. The wage earner's job will van
| ish and he'll have no money to pur
| chase what the farmer raises at any
I price. The resultant fall in prices
j would be something fierce
: The eyes of the nation are on con
! gross during those days, and respon
i all.i'.ity will lix itself where it belongs
DANCE IN HIDEOUS MASKS
Participators in Lamaist Church, tho
Lorsar, Festival Wear Garb
of Demons.
Now York.—lf you happened to be
alone in the woods at night and should
meet such creatures as shown In the
accompanying photographs what
would you do?
Run!
Of course.
Put these are only pictures of
masks identical with those worn by
participators in the greatest festival
of tho Lamaist church, the Lorsar, the
New Year's feast held at the begin
ning of February in remembrance of
Buddha's victory over the six heresies,
No. I.—The Monkey-Paced Demon,
No. 2.—The Tiger-Faced Demon. No.
3. —The Guardian of the Spirits of
Chinese Priests.
the victory of the true religion over
infidelity.
Writing of it in "Trans-Himalaya,"
Dr. Sven Hedin says of its celebration
in the monastery town of Tashi-Luapo:
"Lamaism is only a corrupt form of
pure Buddhism, and under an outward
varnish of Buddhistic symbolism has
incorporated a number of Sivaistic
elements, and has also retained the
superstitions which in pre-Buddhistic
times found expression in wild fa
natical devil-dances, rites and sacri
fices. The object of these ceremonies
was to exorcise, banish or propitiate
the powerful demons which reign
everywhere, in the air, on the earth,
and in water, and whose only function
is to plague, torture and persecute the
children of men. Lastly, Lamas dance
in hideous masks with large evil eyes
and Mephistophelian eyebrows, dis
torted features and huge tusks; oth
ers represent mythical wild beasts, all
equally terrible."
HAS WORKED HIS WAY UP
William S. Kies. New Solicitor of Rail
way, at 31, Heads Big Legal
Department.
Chicago.—William S. Kies, who re
cently became general solicitor for
the Chicago & Western Indiana rail
way, is a native of Minnesota. Left
an orphan when two years old, he
worked his way through school and
later through the University of Wis
consin, supporting himself at the uni
versity mainly by working on the uni
versity paper.
After his graduation, nine years
ago, he came to Chicago and took a
position as investigator for the Chi
■cago City Railway Company. When
John P. Smulski was elected city at
torney in 1903 Mr. Kies applied to
him for a place in his office and re
ceived it. Three years later he was
made chief trial attorney, and in
three years won about 90 per cent, of
his cases.
This record attracted the attention
of many legal firms and corporations,
and Mr. Kies finally accepted an offer
from the Chicago & Northwestern
railroad to become its general attor
ney in Chicago. lie has held that po
sition since 190 C, and now, at tiae age
of 31 years, he finds himself at the
head of the legal department c: an
important railrvad system.
Experienced.
Johnny —My papa and mamma arc
divorced.
Freddy— Which have you got the
;ustody of?
Farmers should eat more oatmeal.
Although the farmer of today is able
to buy almost anything he wants to
wear or eat he isn't paying enough
attention to food values when it comes
to his own table.
He feeds his stock carefully, avoids
over-feeding and selects the stock food
that he believes will give the best re
turns in strength and general efficiency.
If he has been watching the exten
sive researches and experiments on
the question of the best human food
for muscle and brain he will heed the
advice from all sides to "eat more
Quaker Oats."
Quaker Oats is mentioned because
It is recognized in this country and
Europe as the best of all oatmeals.
Feeding farm hands on Quaker Oats
means getting more work out of them
than if you feed them on anything
else. 61
THOUGHT SO LITTLE.
ChollyChumpleigh—l'm not afraid,
dontcherknow, to say what I think.
Miss Cutting Ilintz —You may not
be afraid —but you ought to be
ashamed.
BABY'S SKIN TORTURE
"When our baby was seven weeks
old he broke out with what we
thought was heat, but which gradually
grew worse. We called in a doctor.
He said it was eczema and from that
time we doctored six months with
three of the best doctors in Atchison
but he only got worse. His face, head
and hands were a solid sore. There
was no end to the suffering for him.
We had to tie his little hands to
keep him from scratching. He never
knew what it was to sleep well from
the time he took the disease until he
was cured. He kept us awake all
hours of the night and his health
wasn't what you would call good. We
tried everything but the right thing.
"Finally I got a set of the Cuticura
Remedies and I am pleased to say
we did not use all of them until he
was cured. We have waited a year
and a half to see if It would return
but It never has and to-day his skin
is clear and fair as it possibly could
be. I hope Cuticura may save some
one else's little ones suffering and
also their pocket-books. John Leason,
1403 Atchison St., Atchison, Kan., Oct.
19, 1909."
A Mean Scheme.
"Is your wife home?"
"Yes; I got tired of having her
away."
"But I thought she intended staying
four months?"
"She did. I got the office boy to
write on a card; 'Better come home.
From a well wisher.' And she took
the first train after receiving it."
Money and expense are not essential to
artistic homes and attractive rooms. One
dollur and fifty cents' worth of material
will completely trans'orm a crude, inar
tistic room into a graceful, dainty apart
ment.
Really it is good taste and skill that
makes the home homelike. That dainty
touch is worth twice as much as money.
Wall paper is expensive—it costs money
to buy it, to hang it and again to re
move it. With the use of the alabastined
wall there is only the slight cost of the
material -any one can brush it on —and it
is not necessary to wash it off the wall
when a fresh coat is required.
It is very easy to mix, very simple to
apply, but "the results are simply beauti
ful. A whole house can be done at just
a little more than the cost of a single
room when ordinary materials are used.
And this is true, that now that we have
eo much better materials for use in the
decoration of our homes, that wall paper,
common kalsomine and paint are now as
much out of date as the old time white
wash, tallow candles and rough hewn
floors. Mere money is no longer an es
sential in good housefumishing inartistic
home making.
The new materials and labor-saving ma
chines are most welcome to usaal and
every thoughtful woman, every woman
who cares for her home, is quick to utilize
them.
Another Investigation,
Roble Maiden —Is kissing proper?
Encina Youth —We might investi
gate. Two heads are better than one.
—Stanford Chapparal.
How to Make Good Coffee.
First, last and all the time, have a
clean coffee pot. Don't wash it with
common yellow laundry soap or pow
der because that makes it smell bad
and gives the coffee a sickening taste.
Easy Task soap sterilizes coffee pots
and all cooking utensils, making them
clean, sweet and wholesomely healthy.
That's the beauty of Easy Task soap—
it is just as good for cooking vessels
as lor cloth or painted work or glass
ware or china. Not an expensive soap
—five cents a cake.
No Funds.
"Wasn't that a runaway marriage?"
"Yes, and a stay-at-home honey
moon."
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach the dis
eased portion of the car. 'J here is only one way to
cure deafness, and that la by constitutional remedies.
Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this
tube is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Im
perfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed. Deaf
ness Is the result, and unless tho Inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condi
tion. hearing will bo destroyed forever; nine casss
out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which Is nothluf
but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for s'v case of
DeaTness (caused by catarrh) that cannot »>e cured
by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars. Iree.
F. J. CHENEY A CO.. iolodo. U
Fold by Druggists. 75c.
Take Hairs Family l'Uls for constipation.
One woman can stir up more trou
ble than a dozen mere men.
AFTER
DOCTORS
FAILED
LydiaE. Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound Cured Her
Knoxville, lowa. "I suffered with
pains low down in my right side for a
year or more and was so weak and ner
vous that I could not do my work. I
wrote to Mrs. Pink
. . ham and took Lydia
I'inkham's Vege
.. |wf table Compound
H# an< * I^ ver an d
Wa r—©i i am glad to say that
* your medicines and
Hr kind letters of di
r\ /■ : : rections have done
: : ' ."" more for me than
anything else and I
4*n 1 WPTvwV the Dest physi
•' 1 ' cians here. I can
. • ■ '' ' 1 1 do my work and rest
well at night. I believe there is noth
ing like the Pinkham remedies."
Mrs. CLATJA FRANKS, E. F. D., NO. 8,
Knoxville, lowa.
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, made from roots
and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be
used with perfect confidence by women
who suffer from displacements, inflam,
mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir
regularities, periodic pains, backache,
bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indi.
gestion, dizziness, or nervous prostra
tion. •
For thirty years LydiaE. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound has been the
standard remedy for female ills, and
suffering women owe it to themselves
to at least give this medicine a trial
Proof is abundant that it has cured
thousands of others, and why should it
not euro you?
If yon want special advice writ®
Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass.,for it*
It is free and always helpful.
Stops Lameness
Much of the chronic lameness
in horses is due to neglect.
See that your horse is not al
lowed togo lame. Keep Sloan's
Liniment on hand and apply at
the first sign of stiffness. It's
wonderfully penetrating goes
right to the spot relieves the
soreness limbers up the joints
and makes the muscles elastic
and pliant.
Here's the Proof.
Mr. G. T. Roberts of Resaca, Oa.,
R.F.D. No. i, Box 43, writes: "I hav»
used your Liniment on a horse for Swee
ney and effected a thorough cure. 1 al
so removed a spavin on a mule. This
spavin was as large as a guinea egg. la
my estimation the best remedy for lani%-
cess and soreness is
Sloan's
Liniment
Mr. H. M.Gibbs.of Lawrence, Kans.,
R.F.D. No. 3, writes: "Your IJni
ment is the best that I have ever used.
I had a mare with an abscess on her neck
and one 50c. bottle of Sloan's Liniment
entirely cured her. I keep it around all
the time for galls and small swellings
and for everything about the stock."
Sloan's Liniment
twill kill a spavin,
curb or splint, re
duce wind puffs and
swollen joints, and
is a sure and speedy
remedy for fistula,
sweeney, founder
and thrush.
Price 60c. and SI.OO
Slonn'i hook on
horaen, cuttle,
nml poultry tout
free. Addreit
Dr. Earl S. Sloan,
Boston, Mass., XT. 3. A.
LADIES' FAVORITE SEWINGROCKER
An wdispcnsible item in borne
furnishing-A low scat .durable And
e&sy- Sewing And nup.se. rocker*.
If you do not know Sinclair Gm>mf
Sense Chairs you do not JUJOW lUfbest
in all tf>&t majses a-cbaardcsirable.-
Comfort And durability: .»
We manufacture arxl warrant ||fll
64 Distinct Patterns of V&M.
.Dependable- Home Seals. ra&jg
Write for FTEEBOOKLET \F~
THE SINCLAIR- ALLEN T ~£7-' » 1
MOTTVI U.E..N.V.
Tbt PrandrUltoirantcd Double g/
Hay's Hair-Health
Never Falls to Restore (iroy Hair to It*
Natural Color and Reality. Stops its falling
' out, and positively removes Dandruff. Is not a
Dye. Refuse all substitutes. 9i.0» ;»nd sr>c.
Bottles by Mail or at Druggists.
Send ioc for large sample Bottle lulfcfc
Pbilo Hay Spec. Co.. Newark. N. J., U. S. A.
jyin N . JRF.RTN.I3L* z JTXH
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NATURE'S CREATION
SAVES CONSUMPTIVES
| C. D. MORGAN. Hipnodro.ua Bldo-. Cloveland, 0.
•- RIFT J jy..- NCJ - rLLMEBB
PATENTS
rauiituaavurusea nee. it. mowm, u.fc