Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, November 09, 1893, Image 2

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    FREE LAND TUIBUNE.
PUBLISHED EVERY
MONDAY AND THURSDAY.
THO*?. A. BUCKLEY,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One Year 81 ft)
Bix Months 75
Four Months # 50
Two Months 25
Subscribers are requested to observe the date
following the name on tho labels of their
papers. By referring to this they can tell at a
glance how they stand on the books in this
office. For instance:
Grover Cleveland 28June04
means that Grover is paid up to June 28,1804.
Keep the figures in advance of the present date.
Report promptly to this office when your paper
Is not received. All arrearages must bo paid
when paper is discontinued, or collection will
be made in the manner provided by law. A
blue "X" on the paper is a reminder that your
subscription is due.
FRE ELAND,PA., NOVEMBER9,IB93.
In China nearly all people pay
their debts. Tho few that do not
commit suicide to avoid the scorn of
their fellows. If all people in this
country committed suicide who won't
pay their honest debts it would make
a heap of work for the coroner.
"Shall girls smoke cigarettes" may
be a very important question, but it
baidly dignifies modern journalism to
give much space to the subject. Any
girl, or boy either, who has brains
won't smoke cigarettes, and those who
have not, the smoking will not harm.
Life and accident insurance com
panies are resisting the pavment of
$40,000 to the wife and children of'
W. F. Collard, a Cincinnati traveling
man who fell out of an Indianapolis
hotel window and was killed. The
companies say they do not see how he
fell unless he wanted to.
Since its return to Philadelphia
from tho World's fair the old Liberty
Bell will not be hoisted to tho ceiling
in the lobby of Independence Hall as
formerly, but has been placed in a
handsome plate-glass moveable case,
so that the precious relic can be
quickly removed in case of fire.
In the new army rifle a long, taper
ing cartridge, 30 caliber, is used. It
has a velocity of 2,000 feet the first
second. The rifle, with five cartridges
in the magazine, weighs about nine
pounds. Lieutenant Collins says
powder will be noiseless as well as
smokeless soon, and that all warfare
will be at long range.
The southern people aro becoming
as enterprising as their northern
brethren. A North Carolina adver
tiser wants us to give him three
inches of space for confederate money.
Unfortunately, we are not in the cu
riosity collecting business at present,
and give space for nothing but tho
genuine American dollar.
Business men, your local papers
work for you antl the town at all
times. What are you doing for them?
If you would have the people know
what lino of business you're in, tell
them through the columns of the pa
pers—not as an act of charity, no
publisher wants that kind of patron
age, but as a plain common sense
matter of business, both in your in
terest and that of the papers, the
town and the community.
The license clerk of Fayette county
issued a marriage license to a couple
last week whose aggregate age is 116
years. James Bittenhouse, of Smock
Station, and Alary E. Linderman, of
Flatwood, were tho contracting par
ties. Bittenhouse is (i 9 years of age
and Miss Linderman has seen 37
summers. The prospective groom is
a widower. In the recorder's office
he seemed in high spirits over his
second matrimonial venture and an
swered all the clerk's questions in a
loud, clear tone.
Fuctory Inspector Watchorn sends
a report to the secretary of internal
aflairs in which he asserts that the
semi monthly pay law is boldly violat
ed and that children too young to
work are not only allowed to enter
tho mills, but are forced to do over
time. From a humanitarian point of
view this is a matter for investigation,
to say nothing of an inquiry into
causes touching violation of tho state
laws supposed to protect the inno
cents and give to the working classes
tho benefits intended by legislation.
—Philadelphia Times.
The Ar/e, of Boulder, Montana,
says now is the time for the govern
ment to test the question of its inabil
ity to run the railroads more cheaply
and more to the satisfaction of the
people than can bo done by private
corporations. The Union Pacific
Railroad has passed into the hands of
receivers. The government has al
ready paid the actual value of the
road once or twice and will have to
do so again, probably. Lot the gov
ernment take charge of the road, dis
charge the obligations against it, and
then run it on a business basis.
•'Orange Blossom" ie a painless cure
for all diseases peculiar to women. Soiil
fresh by Amandus Oswald.
IN WOMAN'S BEHALF.
A WOMAN IN TIBET.
She I'enetrateg Further Into the Country
Thau Ever White Man Did.
Brief reports have received re
cently of the existence of a young En
glish woman, a missionary, in the wjlds
of inhospitable Tibet Now there
Ls at hand u story of her adventures
from tho North China Daily News.
On May 5 Miss Annie Taylor, the ex
plorer, passed through Chunkong on
her way home having completed a year
of wandering.
Miss Taylor is a medium sized wom
an of Saxon build,with brilliant brown
eyes, the complexion of a traveler, and
the air of one who has suffered much.
Iler bearing, her bright eyes and ani
mated expression show her to be a
woman of resource and imagination,
and in seeing her lively manner, not
withstanding her present weak state
of health, one begins to understand the
influence sho was able to exercise over
the savage peoples among whom she
has been traveling alone with lior life
in her hand. She is full of enthusiasm
for the civilization and conversion of
the Tibetans, which she hopes to com
municate to the people of England, and
this, wc have no doubt, she will fully
succeed in doing. Miss Taylor is the
daughter of a gentleman of means en
gaged in business in London.
Her trip rivals in adventure, while in
difficulties overcome it excels the trav
els of even Capt. Bower and Mr. Rock
hill. With the help of one Christian
Tibetan whom she took with her from
Darjeeling, she penetrated to within
three days of Lhassa, and returned
alive to tell the tale. Hut for the
treachery of a Mohammedan Chinese
woman she engaged in Kansu, there
seems little doubt that she would have
arrived in Lhassa itself. Miss Taylor
says that she first attempted to enter
Tibet from the Indian side in 1887.
£ikkim was not English then, and or
ders were given that no one should
serve her. So, though she had plenty
of money, she could buy nothing, and
was often very hungry. Then she got
fever and had no appetite. Hut after
uinino her appetite returned, until
she did not know which was worse, fe
ver or hunger. Twice attempts were
made to poison her, and for ten months
she never saw another European.
Then she decided to try to get in
from China, and after spending about
a year on the frontier living very quiet
ly, not going out, but constantly re
ceiving Tibetans in her house, she re
ceived various offers of convoys to
Lhassa. Hcfore crossing the frontier,
about which she had no trouble, she
unhappily engaged a Chinaman whose
Tibetan name was Noga. She had two
tents, four servants, and tried to get
ten really good horses bj* promising to
give them at the journey's end to No
ga. One of her first serious adventures
was being attacked by a band of bri
gands with white fur coats,leading each
a spare horse. Two were killed, eight
wounded, and five out of her horses
killed, besides much property lost. Hut
u Lama called out to the robbers:
"They are all women! All women!" so
she was not pursued. Among Mongols
and Tibetans it is esteemed a dreadful
thing to strike a woman, so that all
women go about unarmed, although
every man carries weapons. As Miss
Taylor says, by the Tibetan religion it
lis forbidden to take life, whether a
flea's, a sheep's, or a man's.
On September 28 the party crossed
the Yellow river on yak skins blown
out. with hurdles laid upon them
and drawn by horses. These rafts were
awash all the time, and the water was
ice cold. They then found themselves
in the Golok district which is peopled
entirely by robbers. Their chieftain is
u woman.and Jaws are strictly observed
in her domains, and no bribes are tak
en. The Goloks relate how five Rus
sians came to travel through the coun
try, and they themselves went out to
attack them five hundred strong, but
aould kill none, though twelve of them
selves were killed. Then came another
traveler alone with a tin box. They
all wanted that tin box, and still con
tinue to reproach one another that they
did not take it, but their belief was
that on opening it an army of soldiers
would come out, and they thought tho
same with regard to Miss Taylor's two
cases of chests of drawers, besides
many otlur fabulous tales about her.
in every way people sought to pre
vent hor from entering the Lhassa dis
trict by telling her of fighting going
on. but she found that an afrangoun-nt
ha:'* been landc that travelers should
not be interfered with. It was here,
however, that Noga, after repeated
neis of insubordination, began to use
violence to her, and at last tried to
draw his .-word. It was the Tibetans
\\ lio protected her against h Town Chi
ncve servant, and. saying there was no
-chief t here able to protect her, sent her
on under an escort.
Miss Taylor's hardships would re
quire a volume for adequate description.
For three days they lost their road.
They hud no tent. That and every
comfort had to be sold, her servant hav
ing taken everything ho could from her
before he left. When, on December J4.
they found the road again, they hid
away in the hills for the whole ol
C hristmas day. During all this part of
the journey her sufferings from the
rarity of the air were very great; pal
pitations, gasping*, and inability to di
gest their barley food. Noga spread a
report that Miss Taylor was traveling
with a belt of gold and jewels around
her waist. She had to travel by night,
finding the cold almost unbearable.
Tea froze as soon as poured out, and
for three nights they were only toe
thankful to find refuge in a cave with
barely room enough for them to lie
down, half suffocated by smoke, so as
to obtain a little warmth.
On December 31 they crossed the
Drichu into the Lhassa district, but hae
to stop near Najuca, within three days
journey of Lhassa; owing to Noga hav
ing gone before, revealing that it was
a foreigner coming. A military chief
arrived, and there was a sort of trial.
In the end Miss Taylor convinced the
officer of the truth of her story, saving
the live* of her two Tibetan servants,
; who were aocused of treacherously
leading her into, Tibet. The chiefs told
her that as far as they were concerned
she could go on to Lhassa, but they
I would lose their lives if she did, and
they gave her an official and nine sol
diers to protect her aguiust the Chinese
servant, besides supplying her most
pressing necessities. Everywhere she
found the Tibetans express liking for
the English. They had been especially
struck by the fact that the prisoners in
the Sikkirn war were kept alive, well
fed, and actually supplied with money
to go home with.
On the return journey the horses,
which have to bo fed with goats' flesh,
tea, butter and cheese, suffered so from
hunger that they were always tumb
ling down, until Miss Taylor joined a
yak caravan, and 900 yaks made away
for them through twenty feet of snow.
On January 22 Miss Taylor left the
Lhassa district of Tibet, and on April
12 she reached Tachionlu after hard
ships such as it seems hardly credible a
woman should have surmounted.
ALWAYS BUOYANT.
She Works With a Man of Dry Science
Hut Sho Overcomes That.
A woman who is secretary for a well
renown scientific man has caused much
secrot envy among her sex because of
her abounding vitality she always dis
plays. Some of her less energetic
friends assert that her vitality is posi
tively irritating. She works all day
| {md she stays up as late as she wants
to, having the good times which most
women who work hard dony them
selves, saying they "simply must have
time for rest" She is always alert,
mentally and physicially. This, she
says, is the way she does it: She rises
early. That, at the outset, would
frighten most people out of their desire
to be perennially gay. Her next move
Is more encouraging for she differs
from those disagreeable people who
recommend a cold plunge for the first
act of the day. She doesn't believe in
cold plunges, but she docs dash cold
water in her face, and then eats an
orange or some other fruit in season,
and bathes her face, neck and arms.
By the time breakfast is ready, and
less resolute people are rubbing their
eyes and saying sleepily: "Mercy! Is it
breakfast time?" She has copied her
report of a lecture or prepared soino
original matter for tho publisher. lier
morning meal begins with more fruit.
She is a great believer in fruit and
water, but takes the former internally
and tho lattor externally. Much drink
ing of water, she contends, makes the
ilesh soft and flabby; much bathing
j makes it firm and elastic.
After breakfast comes the long pull
of the day's vvcrk with the learned
man. lie, it is whispered, does not
recognize grammar as his strong point
—at leaHt his secretary does not. Af
ter pursuing the elusive rules of syn
tax and rhetoric through the labyrinth
of his treaties, she goes home a mental
and physical wreck. But she looks at
her haggard face in the glass and
smiles soornfully and inhospitably upon
It. She waves her wand, otherwise her
hair brush, diligently for awhile, and
bathes her face and arms in very hot
water. Finally she heats her hand,
moistened with aromatio vinegar, rubs
the back of her neck well, then looks
in the glass, and, presto! the haggard
face is gone and a rosy one appears in
stead.
Late in the evening the superior sec
retary likos to indulge in a cracker and
some stewed fruit, and the last act of
tho day is her bath. Threo times a
week she indulges in a sulphur bath.
She had shrewdly observod that at tho
I sulphur springs even wrinkled old
ladies came from the baths with a soft
pink glow tinging their yellow cheeks.
Consequently she tried manufacturing
her own sulphur baths. She throws a
handful of sulphur into the bath tub
and the next morning she has as pret
ty si (lush as a three-year-old baby.
She admits that it takes determina
tion to inaugurate this regime, but
claims that once started it supports it
self by the extra energy it superin
duces. And thon she exults. And her
indolent sisters say she is very irritat
ing. "Her spirits are almost animal."
N. Y. Sun.
INTERESTING PARAGRAPHS.
AT a recent special meeting of the
Fellows of the itoyul Geographical so
ciety of England, a resolution in favor
of the admission of ladies as honorary
members was rejected by 172 to 158
votes.
Miss M. MERTA MITCHELL, of Salem.
Ind., was admitted to the bar tho day
after the Indiana supreme court decided
that women might practice law. That
gives her the distinction of being the
first woman lawyer in the state.
TIIE English girl seems to LIE busy
acquiring knowledge. Miss Mary
O'Brien, for instunce, has received a
scientific research scholarship, worth
about $750 a year, for two years. She
has decided to devote herself for that
period to the study of tho nitrogen sup
ply of tho luguminous and other plants.
Miss DUDLEY, an English bicyclist,
holds the record for long distance rid
ing by women. She made tho distance
of one hundred miles, between Hitchin
and Lincoln, in little more than seven
hours, or at an average speed of nearly
fourteen miles an hour. This, too, in
regulation petticoats, not the new stylo
of trousers.
AN effort was recently made to Be
cure the admission of women to mem
hership in the Laryngologioal associa
tion in England. Although the attempt
was unsuccessful the women regard it
as an evidence of advance that the
question should have l>een debated in
the society. They gained a good deal,
anyway, as women are to be admitted
as visitors with power to take part in
discussions.
MRS. STELLA B. COSOEU, wife of ex-
Senator O. D. Conger, of Michigan,
died recently, and her will occasions
some comment. She was rioh and ha
was poor. To him she leaves the sum
of *l5O a month, and makes provision
for his funeral auJ for the erection of a
suitable monument over his remains.
She does not, however, leave him any
ready money—no lump sum—only this
anuuity of II, SOU, payable monthly.
! FISH AND SNAKE YARNS.
UNCLE EPII PLUNKETT, of Mirabella
Falls, Tex., has taught a rattlesnake
to shake his tail to music.
THREE THOUSAND salmon, it is
claimed, were landed by Samuel Good
win with one haul of a net near Port
Angele, Wash., recently.
MRS. O. P. PAYNE, of Gainesville, On.,
killed thirteen rattlesnakes in the lot
around her home, with a piece of fence
rail, a few days ago. They averaged
about two feet in length each.
AN old Maine fisherman has been
living in a dory all summer, cruising
about Penobscot bay catching and cur
ing fish. He has camped in rough
fashion on the islands, hasn't slept in
a bed since last May, and avers he has
had a very fine time.
ONE curious result of the hurricane
that struck the southern coast recent
ly was the killing of quantities of fish.
For many days after the storm the
coast around Savannah and throughout
the stretch where its force was most
vented was strewn with dead fish of all
kinds.
POISONOUS snakes are so numerous
in Venezuela that snake bite is almost
as common there as in India. But there
are fewer fatalities, for the natives
have discovered that a plant known as
the ocumillo, when powdered and ap
plied to the wound, results in a cure in
almost every case.
ART AND ARTISTS.
GIOTTO'S greatest advance in paint
ing was the rejection of the greenish
black color the Byzantine painters em
ployed for the human figure, and sub
stituting the color of nature for the
faces and hands.
TIIE museum of antiquities at Dres
den lias come into possession of an in
teresting marble relief from Rome,
which represents an amient butcher
shop, of oblong shape, and divided by
a pillar Into two equal parts.
A PORTRAIT, which is supposed to be
of Robert Auclirauty, one of George
lll.'s judges, in Boston, is still hang
ing in the supreme courtroom in that
city. The picture is the work of John
Singleton Copley and bears the date of
1707.
MR. BURNE-JONES, the English artist,
is engaged upon the interesting task
of painting a portrait of Mr. Glad
stone's youngest granddaughter, Doro
thy Drew. This little blue-eyed
maiden of three years is said to re
semble the grandfather startlingly.
A GREEK peasant living on the island
of Angina recently discovered a mag
nificent statue buried in the ground,
upon which had been a small planta
tion, and which he had cleared. The
statue was sold to a bric-a-brac dealer,
who sent it to London, where it has
just been bought by the British gov
ernment for the sum of sixty-five hun
dred pounds.
BOOK LITTER.
TIIE sultan is establishing a public
library in Constantinople., All the li
braries of the mosques are to be trans
ferred to it.
TIIE old Indiana homestead of the
family of Mr. James Whitcomb Riley
has been purchased by the poet as a
permanent residence.
THE largest library in the world is
the Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris,
founded by Louis XI". It contains 1,-
400,000 volumes, 30C.000 pamphlets,
175 manuscripts, 300,000 maps and
charts and 150,000 coins and medals.
DR. OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES cele
brated his eighty-fourth birthday re
cently. lie is working on an auto
biography. Few men have in their
time tasted more of the love of their
fellow men than the cheery Autocrat.
AN interesting find is a library of 500
volumes, including sevonty manu
scripts of the tenth and eleventh, and
some with wonderful miniatuies of the
•the fourteenth centuries, which were
recently discovered in a Franciscan
cloister near Itieti, Italy.
THE NOBILITY.
PRINCESS EuLALiKhas been for weeks
past sojourning quietly in London, ac
companied by her two little sons.
THE queen consort of Siam owns a
wonderfully beautiful thimble. It is
shaped like a lotus and made of solid
gold, studded with diamonds.
TIIE only ornament worn by the wid
owed Archduchess Stephanie of Aus
tria is a locket containing on one side
the portrait of her little daughter and
on the other that of her mother, the
queen of Belgium.
WHEN the princess of Wales was
married, the king of the Belgians gave
her lace of the value of ten thousand
pounds. Since that time the princess
has gone on collecting and now her
lace is worth something like fifty thou
sand pounds.
PHILIP 111., of Spain, was not roasted
to death by a roaring fire because court
etiquette forbade anyone to go to his
assistance. He died a natural death,
and the same story is told of a dozen
different raonarchs who were sticklers
for ceremony.
FARMING IN FOREIGN LAND 3.
THE French minister of agriculture
now Issues monthly crop reports, as is
done in Germany and Hungary. In
England this work Is undertaken by
the London Times.
RINDERPEST has been prevalent in
the southern provinces of Russia, being
first brought from the neighborhood
of the River Don, where ten tliousard
head of cattle were attacked.
THE French potato crop hasyLldM
above an average in thirty-four depart
ments, an average in twenty-seven,
and below an average crop in twenty
four departments.
1 HE permission to collect dead leaves
n the forests of Austria, which has
een restricted of late years, has now
H'cn liberally extended, because fod
i dor is so scarce.
AFTER the severe drought in England,
rains delayed the harvest of the cereal
crops, and caused m ildew and sprout
ing in the ear, besides bringing on po
tato disease.
PLEASURE CALENDAR.
I November 9.—"Enemies for Life," at
Treeland opera house. Admission,
25, 35 and 50 cents.
November 17.—8a1l of Eckley Social
Club, at Freeland opera house. Ad
mission, 50 cents.
November 18.—Magic lantern exhibi
tion, "Pilgrims Progress," by Rev.
Thomas Weightman, at Sandy Run
school house. Admission, 10 and 15
cents.
November 19.—Entertainment of Tigers
Athletic Club, at Freeland opera house.
Admission, 10, 15 and 25 cents.
November 21.—Hungarian masquerade
ball, at Freeland opera house. Ad
mission, 50 cents.
November 29.—Fourth annual ball of
Jeddo Progressive Club, at Freeland
opera house. Admission, 50 cents.
November 29 and 30.—Tea party and
oyster supper of Owena Council, No.
47, Degree of Pocohontas, at Cottage
hall. Tickets, 25 cents.
November 30.—8a1l of Polish corne,
band, at Freeland opera house. Ad
mission, 50 cents.
BUSINESS BRIEFS.
Try Fackler's home-made bread and
rolls—baked fresh every morning.
Parties supplied with ice cream, cakes,
etc., by Laubach at reasonable rates.
Downs' Elixir will cure any cough or
cold, no matter of how long standing.
Sold by Dr. Schilcher.
How to cure a cold —"Nothing easier!
take a few doses of Wright's Indian
\ egetable Pills. I have told you half a
dozen times."
Do not suppose that because it is rec
ommended for animals that Arnica &
Oil Liniment is an offensive preparation.
It will not stain clothing or the fairest
skin. Sold by Dr. Schilcher.
A single trial of Dr. Henry Baxter's
Mandrake Bitters will convince any one
troubled with costiveness, torpid liver or
any kindred diseases of their curative
properties. They only cost 25 cents per
bottle. Sold by Dr. Schilcher.
SIOO Reward, SIOO.
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at least one
dreaded disease that science has been
able to cure in all its stages, and that is
Catarrh, Hall's Catarrh Cure is the
only positive cure known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu
tional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken
internally, acting directly on the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system,
llrpreby destroying the foundation of
the disease, nnd giving the patient
strength by building up the constitution
and assisting nature in doing its work.
The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers, that they offer One
Hundred Dollars for any case that it
fails to cure. Send for list of testimonial.
Address, F. J.CHENEY & CO.,
Toledo, 0.
S3T*Sold by Druggists, 75c. *
FREELAND
OPERA HOUSE.
JOHN J. Malinger.
THURSDAY, November 9.
The grandest melodramatic sensation
of modern times.
gUIIS FOB
LIPB.
by Clmrlefe 11. Flcmming.
Tour directed by Mr. R. E. Davey.
A wonderful east. Including THE POWER
FUL EMOTIONAL ACTRESS, Miss
JOAJY CIIA YAK.
Marvelous scenic and mechanical effects.
Singing ami dancing specialties by a powerful
comedy element.
SEE New and magnificent scenery and
SEE wonderful mecfuinical effects.
SEE The realistic storm effect.
SEE The gyjmes' effchmpment struck by
SEE lightning
SEE The beautiful waterfall of real water.
SEE A terrific knife fight.
SEE Explosion of the prison.
SEE Rescue in mid-ocean.
All scenery, etc , carried for this production
will positively be presented.
PBICES:
25, 35 and 50 Cents.
Reserved seats at Christy's book store.
i Entire"' i
[ Vft NDRA si asTre !'
i roR
COSTIVE NESS
, | Biliousness, Dyspepsia, |
. Indigestion, Diseases of ..
the Kidneys, Torpid Liver ,
' 1 Rheumatism, Dizziness,
11 Sick Headache, Loss of 1
1 1 Appetite,Jaundice,Erup 11
1 1 tions and Skin Diseases.
, i Fries 25c. psr bottle, Sold by all Droggiati. j |
Sold at Schilcher's Drug Store.
(ASTORIA
for Infants and Children.
"Oaatorlalsso well adapted to children that
I recommend it oa nuperior to any prescription
known to me." H. A. Ancmn, M. D.,
11l So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T.
"The use of 1 Cantoris' is so universal and
t merits so well known that it seems a work
supererogation to endorse it Few are the
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy reach."
CARLOS MARTYN, D. D„
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church. 1
THIC CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK.
R T R,... | R .
Rlpans Tabules
Ripans Tabules act gently
but promptly upon the liver,
stomach and intestines; cure
habitual constipation and dis
pel colds, headaches and fevers.
One tabule taken at the first
symptom of a return of indi
gestion, or depression of spir
its, will remove the whole dif- :
ficulty within an hour.
Ripans Tabules are com
pounded from a prescription
used for years by well-known
physicians and endorsed by
the highest medical authori
ties. In the Tabules the stand
ard ingredients are presented
in a form that is becoming the
fashion with physicians and
patients everywhere.
One Box (Six Vials) Sevrnty-five Cents.
One Package (Four boxes)'! wo Dollars.
Ripans Tabules may be ob
tained of nearest druggist; or
b" mail on receipt of price.
For free sample address
RIPANS CHEMICAL CO.
NEW YORK.
THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND
NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER.
My doctor says It acts gently on tho stomach, llvor
and kidneys, and In a pleasant laxative. This drink is
made from herbs, and is prepared for use as easily OJ
tea. It is called
LANE'S MEDICINE
All druggist* sell It at. fifte. and SI.OO a pack ago. ft
You can not got it.wond your address for free sample.
Lilac's Family M.-dlcluc moves the bowel* each
Jay. In ord.-r to be healthy, thisli<nee. -,tniy. Addles*
ORATOR F. W<KU\VAKi>, L. KOT, N.
FRAZER GREAIE
BEST IN THE WORLD.
Its wearing qualities nre unsurpassed, actually
outlasting two boxes of any other brand. Not
off e<_ted by heat. lff-(4ET TH E GENUINE.
FOR BALE BY DEALERS GENERALLY. lf/>*
nV l 'N""rD l E -; , r" I F"A"Mi , rY"M , E"b , rc7NEI
|For Indigestion, IIUIOUSBCMU J
H lleaduchc. Constipation, Bud
■ Complexion. Offensive Breath, S
land all disorders of the Stomach, I
| Liver and Bowels. Zv\Y<rbfc3^^^]
I RIPANS TABULES /V jP* Ari
i act gently yet promptly, Forfoct v*' i
i digestion follows their use. Hold |
fby druggists or sent by mail. Box I
5 (6 vials),76c. Package (4 boxes), $3.
I For free samples-address B
Lis. L CO ' 9 N ° W York * j
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE noT^P.
Do you wear them? When next In noed try a pair*
Best In the world.
.# oo
S OO
#2.25 -jsk Itf.'yg
-75
If you want a flno DRESS SHOE, made In the latest
styles, don't pay $6 to SB, try my $3, $3.50, $4.00 or
$5 Shoe, They fit equal to custom made and look and
wear as well. If you wish to economize In your footwear,
do so by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes. Name and
price stamped on the bottom, look for It when you buy.
W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton, Man. Sold by
READ THE TRIBUNE—
—ONLY $1.60 PER YEAR.
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation,
Bour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di
gestion,
Without injurious medication.
" For several years I have recommended
your ' Castoria,' and shall always continue to
do so as it has invariably produced beneficial
results."
EDWIN F. PARDEE, M. D. f
"The Winthrop," 126 th Street and 7th Ave.,
New York City.
i Scientific American
A..—DESIGN PATENTS,
B£ ' COPYRIGHTS, eto.
For Information and free Handbook write to
MUNN St CO., 801 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
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Every patent taken out by UH is brought before
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jf\riwtific JUnmnw
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fr .4
/
It Cures Cold ■ ••..lufiur** •
sa, WLoopirg CJuga, 'v.: hr • A.-.hroa, .•
certain C'.rs ir C iiatt-r.: U.M ..i f.r. t r.U i;* :. .-r J
a sure f i-i r.drr.r '.,!-jr u. Vn • <• .
You vV.\ ::.e excellentr.:. r • , ,
fit -t dure. !d by £ -:s 7 wi'.r.i . . . i
| bo'.tics 50 cents and SI.<LJ.
mm
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Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip-5
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C.A.SNOW&CO.j
PATENT OPFICE, WASHINGTON. D C. j'
WE TELL YOU
nothing new when we state that it pays to engage
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ness, that returns a profit for every day's work.
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Box No 4KO, Augusta, Me.
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