Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, July 14, 1910, Page 2, Image 13

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN. Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
fer year •* <*•
Xpald la advance 1
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements nre published at the rate ot
tat dollar per square for one insertion arid fifty
••818 per square for each subseyuentinsertion.
Rates by the year, or for six or tbroo months,
•re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legal and Offlclal Advertising per square,
three times or loss, (2: each subsequent inser
tion fO cents per squaro.
Local notices lu cents per line for one Inscr
•erilon; 5 cents per line for each subsequeul
toniecutlve Insertion.
Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, mar
riages and deaths will be inserted free.
Business cards, five lines or less. *5 per year,
over Ave lines, at tho regular rates of adver
tising.
No loeal inserted for less than 75 cents per
Us us.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PBESS IS complete
and affords facilities for doing tho best class of
Work. PAHTICCLAB ATTENTION PAID TO LAW
PKINTING
No paper will to discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the optiou of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
lor in advance.
Laborer's Find of Ancient Coins.
While digging in a field in Goth
land, England, a laborer found some
coins dating from the year 1000, and
a further and more exhaustive search
brought to light about seven thousand
Anglo-Saxon and 1,000 Byzantine
coins.
Tho authorities were acquainted
with the discovery, and the valuable
collection is to be transferred to the
museum at Copenhagen. The laborer
was substantially rewarded.
A National Waste.
The United States grows annually
8,000,000 tons of flax straw, which
should produce 2,000,000 tons of fin
ished flax fiber, which, if manufac
tured into linens, would add millions
of dollars every year to the commer
cial value of the United States. This
fiber is burned. We have not one dol
lar invested in linen manufacturing
from American flax, and import up
ward of $118,000,000 of linen fabrics
per annum.
Sermons at All Prices.
"Brethren," said the visiting preach
er, "I'se got a eight-dollar sarinon, an'
I'se got a six-dollar sarmon, an' I'se
got a five-dollar one, an' a three-dollar
one, an' den I'se got one I kin let you
have fur jest' one dollar. Now, I want
you fur to take up the kerlection
right now, an' we'll see which one uv
dese sarmons you wants."
Bloodthirsty.
Boys used to run away from home
with an ambition to go west and fight
Indians. A fifteen-year-old lad left his
home north of Abilene the other day
and when found in Salina said he
wanted to get a Job in a garage so as
to learn to run an automobile. A local
paper adds: "The bloodthirsty little
scamp!"— Kansas City Star.
At a Funeral.
A writer in the London Lancet men
tions lurid incidents at a funeral. A
man was supposed to have run danger
of being buried alive; for when his
coffin was moved a knocking sound
was heard within. When it was
opened it was found that a hammer
had been left in it, and had jolted
about so as to cause the noise.
Not Mixing It Up.
Mrs. Sububs fsternly)—"Norali, aro
you aware that the furnace went out
last night? Why don't you start it?".
New Servant (calmly)—"lt's on ac
count iv nie peaceful disposition,
ma'am; I never shtart anything in an
other person's liouße!"
An Exception.
She (protestlngly)—That's Just liko
you men. A man never gets into
trouble without dragging some woman
in with him. He—Oh, I don't know.
How about Jonuh in the whale?— Bo
ston Transcript.
In the Midst of It.
"Did you find that local atmosphere
you were looking for?" "It found me,"
responded the novelist. "I got mixed
up with a cyclone before I had been
fooling around two days,"—Pittsburg
Post.
Mourning Wedding Rings.
In Russia it is the custom for peas
ant women to have their wedding
rings covered with black crape upon
the death of their husbands and to
wear them so decorated for six
months.
Not Counted.
"Mamma, are th-- hairs of our head
all uumbered?" "Yes, darling'' "Well,
then, how many Is there 1« that wad o'
hulr you have on the dress* r at
night?"
Purely an Observation.
If a Kill thins, site is the only Rirl
who cures for a man. she doesn't care
much for htm, hut If ihe flnda some
other girl think* »ouu thing of him,
begin* to think the world of him.
Bird's Ey» View.
To obtain a bird's eye view of th«.
city of iWrlin, u Udy snap*.both r
mounted a staging at a height of I'flO
fiit on th» town hall. N'u one will
itn tin Inly of glddiiie t,
A ttinsiipos Pisyue.
I.niidt ii h.id a i"'i<«i la I ion of about
two hundred ami illty ihouuni lu
1710, lu which year there were
t,Ub dtgtlu from siiiuiJj i i
SHOW REAL EFFECT
VALUF. OF PAYNE BILL PROVED
BY CUSTOMS REPORTS.
Figures Refute Absurd Claim Made
That the Tariff Had Not Been
Revised With a View to
Reduction.
After many years of tariff contro
versy, in which each side has support
ed its contentions with its own ar
rangement of the • same figures, the
prudent reader has learned to regard
any general conclusions drawn from
tariff statistics with reserve. The
customs reports do, nevertheless, fur
nish the only definite data by which
he can judge the operation of the
tariff. The figures relating to imports
under the Payne bill for the nine
months ending witli April convey irii
portant information upon the actual
effect of the recent revision.
The revenue yielded during this
period, to begin with, $252,000,000, was
greater than was yielded in a like
period by any previous tariff. This
was expected, and by itself would in
dicate an increase of duties. The in-1
crease of duties, however, is shown
not to be in proportion to the in
creased value of importations. The
treasury calculations make the a<l va
lorem percentage on all imports in
these nine months 20.1 per cent.,
which is lower than at any time under
the Dingley law, or even under the
Wilson tariff, which averaged 21.01
per cent.
Of more importance than this is the
statement that the proportion of im
portations free of duty is greater than
under any previous tariff, except dur
ing the period of the McKinley tariff,
which admitted sugar free. This made
the imports free of duty 53.04 per
cent, of the whole. Under the Wilson
law the proportion was 48.82, and un
der the Dingley law 44.31 per cent.
Under the Payne tariff it is 49.89 per
cent, of the whole.
The extension of the free list is gen
erally understood. Controversy has
been chiefly whether the actual duties
upon dutiable imports had been re
vised upward or downward. This ques
tion is answered by the computation,
which shows that the duty collected in
these nine months averaged 41.73 per
cent, upon the value of the Imports on
which it was levied, which is less than
under any previous tariff. The average
percentage under the Wilson tariff
was 43.35; the lowest under the Ding
ley law was 42.41 per cent., in 1907.
We need take these figures only for
what they show, and without reference
to particular commodities. They at
least justify the general claim that the
revision of the tariff has not only re
moved many duties previously im
posed, but has generally lowered the
average of duties retained, while at
the same time the revenue derived
from customs has increased. It is pos
sible to condemn the whole tariff sys
tem or to condemn this tariff in detail,
but the charge that under the pre
tense of lessening it Increased the
tariff burden is not sustained by the
facts that are now available.
HAS PROVED ITS GOOD FAITH
Government's Triumph in Sugar Re
fining Cases Stands as a Rebuke
to Calumny.
The conviction of Secretary Charles
H. Heike of the American Sugar Re
fining company is a smashing answer
to a vast deal of cynical comment
, which lias followed this trial from its
original inception.
It has been freely said that the gov
ernment would never really seek to
punish the higher officials through
whose orders the outrageous weighing
frauds upon the government were
i ; committed. It was stated, with that
air of inside knowledge which Amer
| leans so keenly like to ussume, that
I Congressman Herbert Parsons, son of
' a leading sugar refiner and former
chief of the New York Republican or
ganization, had been able to exert per
sonal and political power sufficient to
confine tho punitory proceedings to
the dock weighers and laborers. And
it was generally asserted that the gov
ernment never did and never would
"go after the higher tips" anyhow.
Nevertheless and notwithstanding
all these bits of wisdom the secretary
of the American Sugar Refining com
pany now faces the same prison sen
tence which faces his humble sub
ordinates. ilis trial has been conduct
ed by the government with excep
tional ability, his guilt lias been estab
lished. Moth the conduct and the out
come of the case should Incline pub
lic opinion toward a larger recogni
tion ul the good faith of federal prose
cutions.
T<ii iff Attack 111 Timed.
Ileinoerits who expect to put Ite
, publicans oil the defensive mi the
: tariff schedules will find out their uiis-
I take when th>' campaign opens up. It
i will be the same old kind of a fight,
j with tie- same old rt lull. Last Liver
pool l(i view.
Proper Credit Withheld.
When thi* adriluistratli'u doe* some
tlili g preeminently lt< > • veiling the
louulry d>M not »e« MI to llm<- to It
ll'id is this Injunction against the
i railroads The middle went ought to
b' aflame with -rttrnilyint lor Taft
and U i. i. i I, it ld He pub
lit an
Whl l» the democratic party has
fcei n unwilling to alio* tie u.w tariff
a trial no d« Ily lot. !.< • u neeesswry. j
In itwill .i II M law baa vindicated itself
(loin tin itart
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1910.
SAFE IN REPUBLICAN HANDS
Practical Impossibility That the Demo
crats Will Soon Control Na
tional Legislation.
"I would rather be speaker for two
yearn than United States senator for
18," Representative Champ Clark of
Missouri is reported as saying. He
added that "the Democrats will con
trol the next house as aure as you are
living, and I think 1 have a good
show for the speakership."
Mr. Clark may be exaggerating a lit
tle about that 18 years in the senate
as not to be compared with two years
in the speaker's chair, but due allow
ance must be made for enthusiasm. He
really believes that the Democrats are
going to sweep the country, and that
he is going to succeed Uncle Joe Can
non.
Well, suppose, for the sake of argu
ment, he should; what could he accom
plish? In any event, the senate would
be Republican. That would mean, of
course, that the house over which Mr.
Clark would preside would be rank
failure. It might stir up the country
by its radical opinions on the tariff
and on trusts. It might threaten to
do all sorts of things. But what could
r it do in reality? It would, 110 doubt,
offer the senate legislation of a char
acter that, could it be adopted, would
bring the nation to the verge of bank
ruptcy, but the senate would promptly
reject any such propositions. No doubt
the house would give an entertaining
performance, and no doubt, too, Speak
er Clark would add the grace of ring
master to the circus; but doesn't he
think that the country would tire of
such exhibitions after a bit and would
seize the first pportunity to hasten
back to conservatism?
And, In that event, what would be
come of Speaker Clark, the leader of
a lost cause and of a repudiated
party?— Philadelphia Inquirer.
President's Rebuke of a Congressman.
Why all this pother about the dis
inclination of the president to receive
Congressman Francis Burton Harri
son? The New York congressman
made some offensive remarks about
the president. Does he then expect to
kick a man publicly one day, and ex
tend a hand to him privately the
next? Mr. Harrison charged the presi
dent with having antedated his sum
mary of the Balllnger case with the
intention of deceiving the public,
though but very few people have been
so unkind as to credit the president
with anything more than carelessness
in the matter. Some politicians en
tertain the convenient belief that they
can impute bac} motives to an oppo
nent one day and exchange courtesies
with him the next, so lightly do they
regard a reputation for veracity, and
so slow are they to credit another
with sensitive feelings. While a con
gressman ought not to be lightly de
nied access to the executive, never
theless the Taft rebuke to Mr. Har
rison is reassuring, inasmuch as it ad
vertises the existence of delicacy and
good taste in the White House. It Is
well that the public man's feelings do
not becom - too callous about matters
of honor.
Tariff and Cost of Living.
By all means let one or both of the
congress investigating committees
show the relation of the tariff to the
high cost of living.
For example, that cotton has been
going up and up with no tariff. That,
with a woolen tariff, clothes are as
cheap as they ever were.
For example, that anthracite coal
joined the upward procession; no
tariff. A tariff on many cotton manu
factures, which hiive scarcely ad
vanced, though raw material and
labor have.
For example, that sugar is dearer
with n tariff reduction than It was
when the duty was higher. That, with
a duty on hides, shoes did not go up;
now prices of shoes are mounting;
free hides.
There is plenty men l . Let's have it
all, faithfully and officially. Then,
perhaps, the people of the United
States will understand that this cost
of living question is a problem rather
deeper than the average shallow pate
that undertakes to show us why
something is that isn't nnd something
isn't that Is. —New York Press.
Firm and Manly Protectionist,
Vice-President Sherman made a
forcible and effective address in St.
Louis, where he spoke before the Citi
zens' Industrial association, most of
his talk ri-lutlng to the tariff and to
some misconceptions r< Knrding the
present law. Disclaiming any special
reverence for particular schedules or
concern for any one cl'iss of Interests
ns against others, the vice president
took firm and manly ground as n pro
tectlonlst. lie is for protection as the
bent guarantee of American employ
i m< nt at American wngeri, and, as he
Added, "Itemuse I believe we should
make at house nearly everything we
I can, 11. •tend of buying It shroud."
Coupled with this, was an egpo it lon
of the ne< 1 -My of a intilf system by
' which to obtain revenue for the gov
| 1 rnment -Troy Times.
The President and the Bench.
In little tn.re than a year the 11«• i
j deui h;»H ha t two vacant 011 the Su
prwme bench to nil. and Uitf Ailed llu m
| both in t was I 1 the approbation
'of the country rt-iardb « of party,
i This Is a great achievement, but apt
to he undervalued or overlooked In
1 the mli-t of hubbub about manors
strictly political lICIIIK a lawyer of
, the Hist elans himself the president
Is a so'"I judge of his pnifi natotial
brethren, and has ciosi regard for the
j churn <>r and dignity of the bench 1
HOW LANGE MAKES SILVER
Bcranton Alchemist Tells Secret of
Turning Base Metals Into More
Precious Stuff.
Scranton, Pa. —Dr. F. W. Lange, the
Scranton physician and amateur al
•hemist in whose laboratory Charles
C. Dickinson, the banker, inhaled the
fumes which were the remote cause
of his death, has given out a signed
statement discussing his supposed dis
covery of a means to transmute base
metals Into silver.
Doctor Lange's first experience with
metals was gained as an apprentice
tinsmith in Scranton, where he was
born in 1861. He began work in the
tinshop when he was fifteen and by
working days and studying nights,
saved money nnd prepared himself
to enter Wesleyan university, at Mid
dletown, Conn. He was twenty-three
when he entered college.
He studied chemistry under Pro
fessor Atwater and biology under Pro
fessor Conn, and after taking his de
gree of bachelor of philosophy in 1888
Dr. F. W. Lange.
entered Hahnemann college, In Phil
adelphia, where he was graduated in
1891. Since then Doctor Lange has
practised medicine and has interested
himself in several industrial enter
prises.
In his statement, which he calls
"The true story of Dr. F. W. Lange's
sensational discovery," he discusses In
very general terms his reported dis
covery of at least a piece of the phi
losopher's stone and says:
"What I have been evolving may be
an apparent confirmation of the the
ory of alchemy, in which, however, I
have no interest, as the things that
interest me are only such things as
can be done scientifically."
At the same time he asks in large
capitals; "Is my new metal silver?
Does Its manufacture mean that I
have transmuted metals?" The doc
tor answers his own question by say
ing he thinks it is.
"An investigation of the chemicals
Involved In the preparation of a new
smokeless powder," Doctor Lange
says, led him into Investigation "along
the lines of nitrates and chlorides
and the carbonates." "Incidentally,"
he says, "I met a party who threw out
a statement that led me to investigate
the combination of certain matrices by
the use of which synthetically larger
quantities of the elementary matter
could be developed."
This then Is Doctor Lange's specific
claim that he is able to combine sil
ver with Muxes and obtain a greatly
increased amount of silver. The old
alchemists believed that silver would
breed silver and sold.
As to how far in his opinion the
growing of silver can he carried. Doc
tor Lange says that the report that he
can make a ton of silver from an orig
inal small quantity is quite ridiculous
and that he has succeeded "In mul
tiplying molecules In that proportion."
Reviewing his discovery Doctor
Lange says that while his discovery
"may be an apparent confirmation of
tho theory of alchemy," that doesn't
Interest him, and thut he does not
care "to waste time about the phi
losopher's stone."
Bunyan's Birthplace.
Judith, countess of Huntingdon, the
niece of William the Conqueror, who
founded tho abbey which gavo Its
name to the hamlet of Klstow gather
ed about Its gates; Sir Humphrey llad
cllffe. Into v'-ose hands the property
passed at ' Jlssolutlon uf the mon
asteries; and the Hlllesdon family,
who afterwards built thHr mansion
there, would be but names on a rarely
turned page of history; the church,
with Its separate tower and Its peal uf
ancient bells, the obi finest house 011
till- tiling" green, the stump of a crisis
recalling the fairs that were held
there, would be no goal of pilKi'lmago
but fur a later name whose rauk upon
the roll of fame sh< ds back a light of
Interest upon all the detutls of its
place and circumstance Kb tow gained
Its patent of nobility In IiSV through
the birth of John Hunyau, and the visi
tor comes to It In Hei memory of his
early years, lie stands In the door
of the church tower to recall liunyuti
ns a ringer of the bells, and walks to
tlu itreeit to see an Imaginary game
of tipcat, and enters the old Moot
hall to revive tlu memory of Dun
yan's "unregen<«rete" dam lug T. P's
Weekly.
A Complst* Equipment.
"tfuppo.e there shouldn't t>« a flood
after all.'* said Japhet afttr be had
fed the animals
"Our fortune I. made anyhow," r»
piled Noah "We b.ive the material
for the greatest i'lulu Tout's t'abio
production on earth "
MIGHT HELP HIM.
"Do you think Miss Pink would
marry me If I should ask?"
"She might Women are proverb
ially foolish."
SKIN BEAUTY PROMOTED
r"
In tho treatment of affections of tho
skin and scalp which torture, disfig
ure, itch, burn, scale and destroy the
hair, as well as for preserving, puri
fying and beautifying the complexion,
hands and hair, Cuticura Soap and
Cuticura Ointment are well-nigh in
fallible. Millions of women through
out tho world rely on these pure, sweet
and gentle emollients for all pur
poses of the toilet, bath and nursery,
and for the sanative, antiseptic cleans
ing of ulcerated, inflamed mucous sur
faces. Potter Drug & Chem. Corp.,
Boston, Mass., sole proprietors of the
Cuticura Remedies, will mail free, on
request, their latest 32-page Cuticura
Book on tho skin and hair.
Grief is the agony of an instant.
The indulgence of grief is the blunder
of a life.—Dunegan.
Stimulate the heart to love and tho
mind to be early accurate, and all
other virtues will rise of their own
accord, and all vices will be thrown
out.—Coleridge.
Right Name at Last.
"Let me show you our latest novel
ty," said the clerk in the haberdash
ery. "Here is the 'north pole' collar
button. Named in honor of Cook and
Peary."
"By Jove!" laughed the humorous
customer. "They couldn't find a better
Dame for a collar button."
"Why not?"
"Because it is so hard to locate."
Good Scheme.
"It's a shame," commented the
frlond of the restaurant proprietor.
"What's a shame?" asked the res
taurant man in surprise.
"Why, that you should give that
pretty waitress all the tough steaks
for the patrons at her table."
"Oh, I pay her extra for that. You
see she is so pretty not one man
would kick If the steaks were so
tough they pulled his teeth out."
Paired.
She was an amiable old lady, and
volunteered much information to the
fair stranger who had come down to
pee an important event in the country
tow n —the laying of the foundation
stone of tho new church.
"Yes," prattled the old lady, "that
is the duke and duchess, and the
couple behind them are the mayor
and mayoress; and those two to the
right are the vicar and —er —vixen."—
Ideas.
A Tart Tongue.
Col. Robert C. Carter, at a Nash
ville banquet, was talking about cam
paign comrades.
"Then there was Dash of Company
A," he said. • "Dash had the reputation
of being the nastlcst-tongued man in
the regiment.
"It was Private Dash, you know,
who, out foraging one evening on a
rich estate, came accidentally u|s)ti
the owner's wife, a grando dame lu
evening dress.
"Dash asked her for food. She re
fused him. He asked again. But. still
refusing, she walked away.
" 'No,' she said, 'l'll give you noth
ing, trespassing like this! I'll give
you nothing. My mlml Is made up."
"'Made up. is It?' said Dash. 'Like
the rest of you. eh?'"
f >
Post
Toasties
with strawberries and cream.
A delightful combination
that str. ngly appeals to the
UpjK'tltC.
The crisp, flutfy bit* have
a iliatiiHtive il.tvour an.l am
ready to MIVC from the
I kuge with ot cooking.
Convenient,
Appetizing,
Healthful food.
"The Memory Lingers"
|ikg. Idt*.
tamily iliv, Ik. I
KM| ,m 1 areal C'U. , Ltd
|UUI« Creek. Mult
k )
To Make Table Cloths Last.
Table linen is expensive. It costs
more today than it did five years ago.
When It begins to wear in holes, to
come from the wash with worn spots
that tell how soon It will be no good,
no wonder the housewife despairs.
Cheap, common soaps full of caustics
that eat the linen are greatly to blame.
Easy Task laundry soap is an enemy
to dirt and stains and a friend to the
table linen. Get two five cent
try it, and if it does not surprise and
satisfy you the makers will return
your money.
Honored by the Governor.
EfTusive compliments have been
paid to Governor Marshall many,
times, but it remained for an old Irish
woman to cap the climax.
The governor met her at a funeral
which he attended the other day and
she was full of reverence for the Indi
ana executive.
"Ah," she said, "an" 'tis the guv'-
nor," and she swallowed up the gov
ernor's slim right hand in her own
right hand, made large and muscular
by many days of toil. "Yis, 'tis the
guv'nor, an' it's glad I am to see ye,
guv'nor, an' indade the corpse is hon
ored by your prisince."—lndianapolis
News.
How's This?
We offer On« Hundred Dollars Reward for any
case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall'o
Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. O.
We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney
for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly hon
orable in all business transactions and financially
able to carry out any obligations made by bis firm.
WALDINO, KINNAN & MARVIN,
Wholesale Druffists, Toledo. O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of th#
system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cent* par
bottle. Bold by all Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Similarity.
Eva—Then you are not fond of
pressed flowers?
Jack —No, they always remind me
of a kiss through a telephone.
Eva —Gracious! In what way?
Jack —They have lost their sweet
ness.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Not a Musician.
"What is a man called who plays on
a saxophone?"
"You mean what does he call him
self or what do his hearers call
him?"
PERKY DAVIS' PAINKILLER
Is the best, safest and surest remedy for cramps,
colic and diarrhea. AH a liniment for wounds and
sprains it Is unequalled. 25c, 35c and fiOc.
It is quite useless expecting to find
perfection when we do so little to pro
mote it ourselves. —Royston.
WESTERN CANADA
What 1.1. Hill, the Great Railroad Ma en at a.
Says About Its Wheat-Producing Poweri
*'Tho trf«t«it n«o<l of thl. country
11/tiiu l tttatcw) la (mother genera
lion rr twu will l-e the | ro
tiding of homes for Its
PSBR«rpP?| su UiVlent r tietn.
I rl jP® I m it wht-at escorting
IVil 1 coantrjr ure gone, Can
■ I & A A i« to be tho grout
| wheat country.
AI A Th la great rallr«»«l mag-
VV M nat« ia taking advantage
ft I th«* altoatU.n l»y «•*-
f |UH ten»lr* railway ImiM-
Inctoilifnlit ii rioldi
<»f Wfil'Tuimmda,
Upward# of 12S Million
Bushels of Wheat
wer« harvMlrtllii 11KM1. \ reraga
fa of th* thru i mMii.t* *»f Ail-erta.
hankatehewan and Mnnitol* will La
■ JUU|.i«aMI.o( ml hiialiela per
H i i i i 111• *ii«*<if of it*o
an«l IMIJoIIIIII| |»r«*-ent|>t lotia of
jUiL] l*iO mri-a jt $ J prr iwri* . are to
, 4Sr •,r be bad lu theflMrteeet illstrlcts.
WV U M,! 1 Hchoola rotivriilcul, rliniut**
JJWfI I J'l eictllmil, a«il| the %rrjr beat.
LJ I v if « I railway • i-lom* at hand. >»«• k l«l-
Jjl I lII* l»inther rliea|», fu«l rtu) to
■■ I ««'« ami reaaoita l»l«» lu t»rl« e.
\ H'H'T eaalljr prtMt»re<li mitral
\ |<*riiilii| a lUWI'M. Writ" «•
1 rated j' i.tat lleat • «t'' f raa
Ottawa. ( % an !orta I La VauadiaS
" Jfc ttuf##ua*anl Agent.
A H M wilu * m>
?\f\ " t<ar Building loUdo. 0M«
"K (t'ai add real nearaal )Mi, «4j
■a n aa mm Henri |to«tul for
»■ M k la Froo I'mkuge
I la bLi «*t I'ntUiir.
Belter and more economical
than liquid anllMpllc*
FOB All TOILET USES.
Give* una a iweet breath; clean, white,
germ lr«e leeth antueplually clean
mouth and throat purifte* the breath
after intuiting - ciiepeU all diaagraeable
parepiratiun a<ul budy udur* much ap
preciated by dainty toumen. A quick
remedy for tore eyea and catarrh.