The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, February 05, 1908, Image 3

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    Jxcts pen&yyeX prompt;
;ly ontue bou els, cleanses
eanscs
it
he svsTem erf ecTuallv.
fassisfs ono in overcoming
on
tipati
hnhiTnn rnnslin
permanently. To get its
benejicial effects buy
the tfenuirve.
nanujacturodi by the v
CALIFORNIA,
lie Syrup Co.
SOU) BY LTADINC DRUCWSTS-604 p-BOTTlE
Bird's Long Flight.
In one unbroken nocturnal flight the
European bird known as the northern
, bluethroat has been proved to travel
from Central Africa to the German
ocean, a distance of 1.690 mllen. mak
ing the Journey In nine hours.
r4j'S,Sf.Vitng'Dance:Nervon Diseases pei.
maneritlycared by Pr. Kline's Great Norve
gestiirer. 13 trial bottle and treatise free,
f. H. R. KUna, Ld.,861 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
William Cross, Secretary of State ii
Oklahoma, slgnB his name officially,
"Bill CroBS."
Piles Cured in 0 to 14 Pays.
Pkzo Oitttment ii guaranteed to cure any
base of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Files in 6 to 11 days or money refunded. 50o.
Japan's National Alms.
The advent of Japan among the
great powers of the world has been
a remarkable occurrence, the most re
markable, perhaps, in the latter part
of the last century, and we may read
ily pardon some observers for being
actually bewildered by it But it
seems to us quite unreasonable and
unwarranted to assume that the event
muBt have some sdnster and malefic
purpose. It is by no means beyond
the bounds of rational conception that
the Japanese are much like other peo
ple, and that a nation should thus
awaken and arise with no thought of
mischief making or of universal con
quest, but with a sane and salutary
ambition to confirm its place among
the" powers as a factor of "peace, com
merce and honest friendship." That
was the ambition of the United States
when it became a new nation. That
was the ambition, now for more than
a third of a century consistently ful
filled, of Germany when her empire
was founded. We know not why it
should not also be the aim of Japan,
and that it is her aim we are bound,
In the absence of proof to the con
trary. to believe. N. T. Tribune.
DOUSE
DOBK
Thousands of American women
in our homes are daily sacrificing
their lives to duty.
In order td keep the home neat
and pretty, the children well dressed
and tidy, women overdo. A female
weakness or displacement is often
brought on and they suffer in silence,
drifting along from bad to worse,
knowing well that they ought to
have help to overcome the pains and
aches which daily make life a burden.
It is to these faithful women that
LYDIA ELPINKHAKTS
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
comes as a boon and a blessing,
as it did to Mrs. F. Ellsworth, of
Mayville.N. Y., and to Mrs. W. P.
Boyd, of Beaver Falls, Pa., who say :
" I was not able to do my own work,
owing to the female trouble from which
I suffered. Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vege
tableCompound helped me wonderfully,
and I am so welltthat I can do as big a
day's work as I ever did. I wish every
aick woman would try it.
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
Btandard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down
feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion,dizzine8s,or nervous prostration.
Why don't you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She tias raided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
DnOP1Ym DJSCOvlBTf
mli, tw oimnwiiii Mti nii.ri,,.M
m. ... SUM'S BUS, S, AUtate.
TRAINING OF PARENTS.
Mr. Abbott Advises fhtm to Cult!
vate Persistence and Self-Restralnt.
"The only alternative I know to gov
ernment by collision is government by
habit," says Earnest Hamlin Abbott
in "The Outlook," in the opening pa
per of a Berles "On the Training of Par
ents." The paper is about the bringing
up of children, but the briefest perusal
will show that the final word in the
title is quite correct. Every collision
with a child is a confession of woak
ness, says Mr. Abbott. For while it
may sometimes be better to let a child
collide with you than with the com
munity, it Is never anything but a dis
aster, and proof that government by
habit is not fully established.
The process of training children is
the process of forming habits, and the
time to begin is when the child is a
babe. That is the time for the parents
to learn self-restraint. The mother's
impulse is to rush to her baby the mo
ment he cries, take him up, fondle him.
A little care, says Mr. Abbott, will en
ablo that mother to distinguish be
tween the cry of pain, the cry of ner
vous irritability and the "plain cry."
If it is a cry of pain she looks for the
cause. If it is a cry of irritability she
"blames herself for having rocked the
child a few moments before, and Bteels
herself against repeating the indul
gence." It is a "plain cry" she exer
cises her self-restraint and lets hira cry
on. She knows that, Bad as it may
seem to hear a baby cry, he has got
to cry to exercise his lungs until he is
old enuogh to go out and play with
the other children.
When the baby has had all the food
that Is good for him, she gently with
draws the food supply. Thus she es
tablishes in herself the good habit of
not indulging him foolishly. And the
child learns to go to sleep without
the whole family dancing attendance
n him, to stop eatimj when ho has
had enough learns, in short dignity
and self command and sweet reason
ableness. Of course, Mr. Abbott points out, the
spi.it of adventure leads normal chil
dren sometimes to sample things not
good for them, and explore places
where they ought not to be. "But
this," he says, "is a tribute to regular
life, and is donlcd to those children
whose whole life consists in a series
of parental experiments."
Mrs. Bwing, in her "Story of a Short
Life," pictures the bewilderment of a
little lad under the caprices of a fond
father whose government was a gov
ernment of moods. Sometimes, by
some curious and fortunate alchemy,
beautiful characters are evolved under
such conditions, but not often. Bad
habits are easily acquired, and likely to
cling, but happily, Mr. Abbott says,
good habits are as hard to break up
as bad ones are. People who consider
pertriss in a child "so cunning," and
who enjoy "encountering the child as
an adversary and breaking down bis
opposition" will have no trouble in de
veloping in the malleable little beings
in their care habitual pertness and dis
obedience. But thone who desire their
children to grow up with a "contented
acquiescence in a regular life" can do
It; it requires no qualities on the part
of the parents but persistence and self
restraint; and it means for the child,
when he grewg up, all the difference
between being a blessing or a nuisance
to himself and others.
American Music In Foreign Lands.
"The same music that I play in Des
Moines is enjoyed as thoroughly In
Berlin or Paris," said Sousa, the band
master, before leaving Des Moines
yesterday. "Many people are of the
opinion that I change the style of my
music when I go from America to Eu
rope, but the same program that the
American appreciates is liked by the
German or the Frenchman. The hu
man family is the same the world
over. The expression of emotions in
every race Is almost identical, and so
music that will make the American
dance or weep will have the same ef
fect upon the Russian, German, or
Greek. My first concert in Berlin was
absolutely an 'innovation in the music
world of that country, and it caused
quite a stir. I would play something
from Wagner and the Germans would
applaud until they were red in the
face. Then I would give them a little
American rag-time. These sudden
changes in the program had a great
effect upon the people of that city. I
was there for one month steady and
played every afternoon and evening.
I believe I have played more in Ger
many than any other musician except
ing a German." Des Moines Register
and Leader.
Paste Jewels.
A well known Illustrator who visited
New Orleans grew most enthusiastic
with reference to the quaint beauty of
the old town. "I noticed a remark
ably decorative effect in a street near
the French market," said he to a friend
"The second and third story windows
of a certain bouse were hung with
pale yellow bamboo curtains. These
were perfectly plain and all of the
same Bhade; yet you can form no Idea
how they set off the old place. They
simply glorified it!"
The friend, a New Orleans man,
was puzzled. "I don't recall the bousp.
Point it out to me the next time we're
in that vicinity."
A day or two later the friends were
walking in the locality referred to,
when suddenly the man from the
North uttered an exclamation. "Tfccre
it is!" he cried. "The house of tho
bamboo curtains! It mi'.st contain s
colony of artists!"
His friend smiled grimly. "That
Isn't bamboo," he explained. "You're
enthusing over a spaghetti factory.
Thy hang th stuff out thr to dry!"
Youth's Companion.
Commissioner Smith vs. The Standard Oil Co.
From the (Railway World, January 3, igo8.
Mr. Herbert Knox Smith, whOBe zeal In the
cnuse of economic reform has been In no wise
abated by the panic which ho and his kind
did so much to bring on, Is out with an an
swer to President Moftott, of the Standard
Oil Company of Indiana. The publication of
this answer, it is officially given out, was de
layed several weeks, "for business reasons,"
because it was not deemed advisable to
further excite the public mind, which was
profoundly disturbed by the crisis. Now that
the storm clouds have rolled by, however, tho
Commissioner rushes again into the fray.
Our readers remember that the chief
points in the detejjee of the Standard Oil
Company, as presented by President Mottett,
were, (1) that the rate of six cents on oil
from Whiting to East St. Louis has been is
sued to the Standard Oil Company as the
lawful rate by employes of the Alton, (2)
that the 18-cent rate' on file with the Inter
state Commerce Commission was a class and
not a commodity rate, never being intended
to apply to oil, (3) that oil was shipped in
large quantities between Whiting and East
St. Louis over the Chicago and Eastern
Illinois at six and one-fourth cents per hun
dred pounds, which has been filed with the
Interstate Commerce Commission as the law
ful rate, and (4) that the 18-cent rate on oil
was entirely out of proportion to lawful rates
on other commodities between these points
of a similar character, and of greater value,
such, for example, as linseed oil, the lawful
rate on which was eight cents. President
Moffett also stated that thousands of tons of
freight had been Bent by other shippers be
tween these points under substantially the
same conditions as governed the shipments
of the Standard Oil Company.
This defence of the Standard Oil Company
was widely quoted and has undoubtedly ex
erted a powerful Influence upon the public
mind. Naturally the Administration, which
has staked the success of its campaign
against the "trusts" upon the result of its at
tack upon this company, endeavors to offset
this Influence, and hence the new deliverance
of Commissioner Smith.
We need hardly to point out that his re
buttal argument is extremely weak, although
as strong, no doubt, as the circumstances
would warrant. He answers the points made
by President Moffett substantially as follows:
(1) The Standard Oil Company had a traffic
department, and should have known that the
six-cent rate had not been filed, (2) no an
swer, (3) the Chicago and Eastern Illinois
rate was a secret rate because it read, not
from Whiting, but from Dolton, which is
described as "a village of about 1,500 popu
lation JuBt outside of Chicago. Its only
claim to note is that it has been for many
years the point of origin for this and similar
secret rates." The Commissioner admits in
describing this rate that there was a note
attached stating that the rate could also be
used from Whiting.
The press has quite generally hailed this
statement of the Commissioner of Corpora
tions as a conclusive refutation of what is
evidently recognized as the strongest rebuttal
argument advanced by the Standard.
In tact, it is as weak and Inconclusive as
the remainder of his argument.. The lines of
the Chicago and Eastern Illinois do not run
Into Chicago. They terminate at Dolton,
from which point entrance is made over the
Belt Line. Whiting, where the oil freight
originates, Is not on the lines of the Chicago
and Eastern Illinois, which receives its Whit
ing freight from the Belt Line at Dolton.
The former practice, now discontinued, in
filing tariffs was to make them read from a
point on the the line of the filing road, and it
was also general to state on the same sheet,
that the tariff would apply to other points,
e. g Whiting. The Chicago and Eastern
Illinois followed this practice in filing its rate "
from Dolton, and making a note on the sheet
that Is applied to Whiting. This was In 1896
when this method of filing tariffs was In
common use.
Now let us see In what way the Intending
shipper of oil couH be misled and deceived
by the fact that do Chicago and Eastern
Illinois had not Elsd a rate reading from
Whiting. Commissioner Smith contends that
"concealment is tha only motive for such a
circuitous arrangement," 1. e., that this
method of filing the rate was intended to
mislead intending competitors of the Stand
ard Oil Company. Suppose such a prospec
tive oil refiner bad applied to the Interstate
Commerce Commission for the rate from
Chicago to East St. Louis over the Chicago
and Eastern Illinois, he would have been In
formed that the only rate filed with the
commission by this company was 6H cents
from Dolton, and he would have been further
Informed, if Indeed he did not know this al
ready, that this rate applied throughout Chi
cago territory. So that whether he wished to
locate his plant at Whiting, or anywhere else
about Chicago, under an arrangement of long
standing, and which applies to all the Indus
trial towns in the neighborhood of Chicago,
be could have his freight delivered over the
Belt Line to the Chicago and Eastern Illinois
at Dolton and transported to East St. Louis
at a rate of 6 cents. Where then is the
concealment which the Commissioner of Cor
porations makes so much of? Any rate
from Dolton on the Eastern Illinois or Chap
pell on the Alton, or Harvey on the Illinois
Central, or Blue iBland on the Rock Island, -applies
throughout Chicago territory to ship
ments from Whiting, as to shipments from
any other point In the district. So far from
the Eastern Illinois filing its rate from Dol
ton in order to deceive the shipper, It Is the
Commissioner of Corporations who either be
trays hl3 gross Ignorance of transportation
customs in Chicago territory or relies on the
public ignorance of these customs to deceive
the public too apt to accept unquestlonlngly
every statement made by a Government
official as necessarily true, although, as in 1
the preeent Instance, a careful examination
shows these statements to be false.
The final point made by President Moffett
that other commodities of a character similar
to oil were carried at much lower rates than
18 cents, the Commissioner of Corporations
discusses only with tho remark that "the
'reasonableness' of this rate is not in ques
tion. The question is whether this rate con
stituted a discrimination as against other
shippers of oil," and he also makes much of
the failure of President Moffett to produce
before the grand Jury evidence of the alleged
Illegal acts of which the Standard OH official
said that other large shippers la the terri
tory had been guilty. Considering the faet
that theBe shippers Included the packers and
elevator men of Chicago the action of the
grand Jury In calling upon President Moftott
to f urniBh evidence of their wrong-doing may
be Interpreted as a demand tor an elabora- -tlon
of the obvious; but the fact that a rate
book containing these freight rates for other
shippers was offered in evidence during the
trial and ruled out by Judge Landis, was
kept out of sight. President Moffett would -not,
of course, accept the Invitation of the
grand jury although he might have been
pardoned if he had referred them to various
official investigations by the Interstate Corn
mere Commission and other departments ot
the Government.
We come back, therefore, to the conclusion
of the whole matter, which is that the Stand
ard Oil Company ot Indiana was fined an
amount equal to seven or eight times the
value of Its entire property, because its traffic
department did not verify the statement of
the Alton rate clerk, that the six-cent com
modity rate on oil had been properly filed
with the Interstate Commerce Commission.
There Is no evidence, and none was Intro
duced at the trial, that any shipper of oil
from Chicago territory had been Interfered
with by the elghteen-cent rate nor that the
failure ot the Alton to file Us six-cent rate
had resulted in any discrimination against
any independent shipper, we must take this
on the word of the Commissioner of Cor
porations and of Judge Landis. Neither is It
denied even by Mr. Smith that the "inde
pendent" shipper ot oil, whom he pictures as
being driven out of business by this discrim
ination of the Alton, could have shipped all
the oil he desired to ship from Whiting via
Dolton over the lines of the Chicago and
Eastern Illinois to East St. Louis. In short,
President Moffett's defence Is still good, and
we predict will be declared so by the higher
court.
The Standard Oil Company has been
charged with all manner of crimes and mis
demeanors. Beginning with the famous Rice
of Marietta, passing down to that apostle of
popular liberties, Henry Demarest Lloyd,
with his Wealth Against the Commonwealth,
descending by easy stages to Miss Tarbell's
offensive personalities, we finally reach the
nether depths ot unfair and baseless mis
representation In the report of the Commis
sioner ot Corporations. The Standard has
been charged with every form of commercial
piracy and with most of the crimes on the
corporation calendar. After long years ot
BtrennotiB attack, under the leadership of tho
President ot the United States, the corpora
tion Is at last dragged to the bar of justice to
answer for its misdoings. The whole strength
of the Government is directed against It, and
at last, we are told, the Standard Oil Com
pany Is to pay the penalty of its crimes, and
it is finally convicted of having failed to
verify the statement of a rate clerk and is
forthwith fined a prodigious sum, measured
by the car. Under the old criminal law, the
theft of property worth more than a shilling
was punishable by death. Under the inter
pretation of the Interstate Commerce law
by Theodore Roosevelt and Judge Kenesaw
Landis, a technical error of a traffic official
Is made the excuse for the confiscation of a
vast amount ot property.
SHIP ENCOUNTERS DUST
8HOWER.
Powder Resembling Flour Falls on
Monterey In the Gulf.
A strange phenomena in the Gulf
of Mexico of a dust shower at sea
was reported by the steamer Mon
terey, which arrived at New York
from Vera Cruz, Progreso and Ha-
vanna.
The Monterey's officers declare that
on January 11, the night before arriv
ing at Progreso, a peculiar white
powder, like flour, fell from the skies,
It was not a volcanic dust, there be
ing no grit in the composition. The
dust became stick after falling on
the vessel.
How the Public Forgets.
It is not without relevance to re
call that on the very day of the Boy-
ertown holocaust an Illinois judge dis
missed the charge against former
Builder Commissioner Williams of
Chicngo, the last of those accused of
responsibility for the Iroquois Thea-
ter fire that cost 602 lives. It was
shown that in that death trap exit
doors were barred, staircases were
blocked, fire escapes were incom
plete and the building laws had been
Ignored. While the country was ting
ling with the horror of the disaster
the determination to mete out punish
ment to those responsible for the
barred exits and the choked fire es
capes that held those men, women
and children prisoners to death was
vehement But four years is a long
time for the public to remain on
guard. One by one the accused es
caped on technicalities without even
the formality of a trial. New York
Tribune.
Stop That Congh
before it becomes chronic. Get
Brown's Bronchial Troches, the best
preparation known for coughs.
All records In the transportation
of passengers across the .Atlantic
were broken during the flret ten
months of 1907, during which 2,000,
000 traveled across.
Only One "Bromo Quinine"
That ia Laxative Bromo Quinine. Lonl;
fir the signature of E. W. Grove. Used tha
World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 2oc.
Mayor Marrow of Benton Harbor,
Mich., threw the key of his grocery
store Into the canal five yeas ago,
and the place has not been locked
since.
Itch cured in S3 minutes by WooiTord's
Sanitary Lotion. Never fail. At druggists.
The Salar Grande sale mine In
Chile covers an area of 80,000 acres,
and contains 14,000,000,000 tons of
pure salt. 5
Mrs. Vlnslowfc Soothing Syrup for Childrea
teUilng,V)tenlhegams,redaoe8innamma
tioh, allays'pTUn, cures wind colic, 26c a bo'ttls
The Italian government Is making
efforts to divert the tide of emigra
tion from tha Sailed States to Africa.
Yield of Beef Carcass.
A good steer properly and at the
same time profitably cut up will yield
the following percentages ot dressed
weight, given In round numbers so
as to be more easily memorized:
Loins, 15 per cent; ribs, 10 per cent;
rounds, 21 per cent; chucks, 19 per
cent; plates, 16 per cent; flanks, 4
per cent; shanks, 7 per cent; tallow,
3 per cent; kidneys, 0.25 per cent;
sausage meat, 1 per cent; shank
meat, 1.50 per cent; tankage, 2 per
cent; loss in cutting, 0.25 per cent.
Moravian Barley and Spcltz,
two great cereala, makes growing and fat
tening bogs and cattle possible in l)nk.,
Mont., Ida., Colo., yes, everywhere, ana
add to above Salzer's Uillion Dollar Grass,
the 12 ton Hay wonder 'J'ensiute, which
produces 80 tons of green fodder per acre.
Emperor William Oat prodigy, etc., end
other rare farm seeds that they offer.
JUPT CUT THIS OUT AND HETUnN IT
with 10c in stamps to the John A. Kiizer
feed Co., La Crosse, Win., und get ti'.air
big catalog and lots of farm teed sam
ples. A. C. L.
Bad Law for Good Purpose.
A bad Jaw for a good purpose.
That is practically the judgment of
a majority of the justices of the su
preme court of tho United States as
to the national law fixing the liabil
ity of employers engaged in inter
state commerce. No one will dispute
that the general purpose of the law
was good In the sense that it was
humane, though there Is room for dif
ference of opinion as to Its efficiency
and expediency. There was also great
difference of opinion among the Jus
tices themselves on the constitution
ality of the law and on the reasons
why 11 was held by a majority to be
unconstitutional. Despite this differ
ence, the actual decision ot the court
is adverse and the law dies a judicial
death. New York Tribune.
Billboards In Peru.
1'he war on objectionable billboards
Is b'couilni' almost universal. In
America, cities cany it on individual
ly, each according to its own tastes,
as they do in Germany and other Eu
ropean cnuntrii-s; in England, It Is
one of the minor parliamentary is
sues. The latfBt war bulletin is from
Lima, the capital city of Peru, and
Is sent to the state department by
the American consul general at
Callao.
The municipality of Lima regulates
all outdoor advertising and owns all
the billboards. It is unlawful to fix
any advertisement on any vehicle or
the wall of any structure other than
the city billboards. An American
firm has recently secured the exclu
sive rights ' to ure these boards for
three years. The character of the
matter used is strictly regulated and
the city receives considerable revenue
from this source This is a new
method of controlling outdoor adver
tising that may be coplel elsewhere.
Cleveland Plain. Dealer.
The Camphor Supply.
All true camphor is sunnllcd by
Japan and China, 80 per cent by the
former and 20 per cent by the latter.
In obtaining camphor the trees are
destroyed. Both countries have pass
ed lawB, compelling tho planting of
young camphor trees, China being
more radical than Japan in this par
ticular, as for. every camphor tree
that Is cut down five new ones must
be planted. Japan planted 3,000,000
young trees since 1900, to which are
to be added half a million planted
this year, and hereafter 750.000 an
nually.
Rubber Plantation for Lease.
The Burmese government proposes
to sell the lease of the government
rubber plantation at Mergul for a per
iod of 30 years, with the right of
renewal tor another 20 years. The
ar.ea contains about 240,000 rubber
trees.
Coldest Time of Day.
The coldest period of the day Is
said to be a few minutes after sun
rise. This Is due to the fact that,
when the, sun first strikeB the earth,
it causes the evaporation of a chill
ing moisture.
II. It. Gnstx's Sons, of Atlanta. Oa., are
the only sm-o-silul lirojBjr Hpecliillpts in toe
wor d. Bee their liber.il offer la advertise
ment la another column of this paper.
The man who Is disappointed In
love should be philosophical and re
member that but for tills he might
have been disappointed In marriage.
Telegraphing From Train.
When a traveler in the grand duchy
of Baden wants to send a telegram
while he Is on the train be writes
the message on a postcard, with tha
rAnilODt thnt It h.A wit-ait mil. m
stamp and drops into the train letter
box. At the next station the box li
cleared and the message Bent
There Is more Catarrh In this section el
tha country than nil other diseases put to
gether, and until the Inst few years was rap
posed to be incurable. For s great many
years doctors pronounced it a local disease
and prescribed local remedies, and by con
stantly failing to cure with local treatment,
pronounced it incurable. Science has proven
Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and
therefore requires constitutional treatment.
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F.J.
Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only con
stitutional cureon the market. It is taken in
ternally in doses from 10 drops toateaspoon
ful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. They offer one hun
dred dollars foranycaseit fr.ils to cure. Send
for circulars and tratimoninls. Address F.J.
Ciienet & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by UrugRists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family Tills for constipation.
The government of Chile has paid
to date $2,818,480 United States gold
for property appropriated for publio
use in the reconstruction of the city;
of Valparaiso.
The difference between literature
and raising bogs is that there 1b al
ways a market for hogs.
11
OUCH, OH MY BACK 1
NEURALGIA, STITCHES, LAMENESS. CRAMP
TWINGES, TWITCHES FROM WET OR DAMP
ALL BRUISES, SPRAINS. A WRENCH OR TWIST
THIS SOVEREIGN REM EDY THEY CAN'T RESIST
Pricc 25c and 60o
L H0E8 AT ALL
aaapsy tn mms, mss fsMtffcwv amf yyw ijb&.-id'
arw or oraarsi varum tnmm mnvotnmri Mi', v ' r-v
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY.
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
C3s Mr. Lm Douglmm mama ansf aa'a
m mny a maauraot war an rna
Id, tseaim Ihmy Aacf thalrA
fit aatrasv wmmr foaoajv ami
oraarsi varua him amwasf HJ ', v :y f v jr.,
aSioaa lm Ittm mWrf in-Hmw. Skua 0:Ji-'r-f ltrd
I flnniriii tA aril tK Gilt PHr. Shu ISaml Ha rnllul it lm Prfcs'
mm wvdg'aiv s bins Mils avugv Wliwa miismi tsv avtfsjaiiviji rt raj
fiVIJ TlOrV. W. T Dntuttaf nam M prtneta -tcmpod on bottom. Tke Km Snbtltait.
BoM by th tt ihoe dlrt rrari wUtn. fcUtoM jjnihUed (rout ftvtor to any part of the woiHl. )Uu .
Uuio Cm ui ftoj widiw W. aU JUOVOlaAJt. OmktM, Mmrnrn