Jasper County Democrat, Volume 5, Number 3, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 April 1902 — Page 6

Chicago, Indianapolis and Louisville RyRensselaer Time-Table, South Bound. - No. 31—Fast Mai 1....... .. ..... <:« “• m No. 5-Louisville Mail, (daily).... ..10:55 a. m. No.33—lndianapolis Mail, (daily).. 1:48 P. m. No. 39—Milk acoomm., (da11y)....... 6:15 p. m. No. 3 Louisville Express, (daily).. tl :25 p. m, •No. 45—Looal freight 3:40 p. m. North Bound. No. 4—Mail, (daily) 4:30 a.m. No. 40—Milk acconun., (daily)..... 7:31a.m. No.33—Fast Mall, (daily).... . ...... »:55 a. m. •No. 30—Cin.to Chicago Ves. Mail.. 6:32 p.m. tNo. 38—Cin. to Chicag0........ .... • 2:57 p. m. No. 6—Mail and Express, (daily)... 3:30 p.m. •No. 46—Local freight 9:55 a.m. No, 74—Freight, (daily) 9:99 P. m. •Daily except Sunday. tSimday only. No. 74 carries passengers between Monon and Lowell. j Hammond has been made a regular stop for No. 30. „ , , No. 32 and 33 now stop at Cedar Lake. Frank J. Rked, G. P. A., t W. H. MoDokl, President and Gen. M g r, Chas. H. Rookwsll, Traffic Mgr, ghiqaoo. W. H. Bbam. Agent. Rensselaer.

Board and lodging. Ratu SI.OO Par Day. FRANK COOPER, Indianapolis, Ind. 2024 HOW STRUT. IijuONMIP *HD COUNIY DIWOW. CITY OFFICERS. Mayor John Eger Marshal Abram Simpson Clerk Schuyler C. Irwin Treasurer Janies H. Chapman Attorney Harry R. Kurrie Civil Engineer 11. L. Grumble Fire Chief Elden R. Hopkins COUNCI LMKN. Ist ward Chas. Dean, H. J. Kanna) 2d ward I. J. Porter, C. G. Spitler 8d ward J. F. McColly, J.C. Chllcote COUNTY OFFICERS. Clerk John F. Major Slier Iff Abram G. Hardy Auditor W.C. Bnlieock Treasurer K. A. Parkison. Recorder Robert B. Porter Surveyor Myrt B. Price Coroner Jennings Wright Supt. Public Schools Louis H. Hamilton Assessor John R. Phillipa COMMISSIONERS. Ist District Abraham Halleck 2nd Distric Frederick Waymire 3rd District Charles T. Denham Commissioner's court—First Monday of each month. COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION. TBUSTKKB. TOWNSHIPS. Joseph Stewart Hanging Grove John Ryan Gillam Lewis Shrier Walker Elias Arnold Berkley Charles M. Blue Marlon John Bill . Jordan Geo. M. Wilcox .. Newton S. L. Luce Keener Thomas F. Maloney Kankakee Stephen D. Clark Wheatfield Albert J. Bellows Carpenter William T. Smith Milroy Barney D. Comer Union Louis H. Hamilton. Co. Supt Rensseleer G. K. Hollingsworth Rensselaer J. D. Allman Remington Geo. O. Stembel Wheatfield JUDICIAL. Circuit Judge ..Simon P. Thompson Prosecuting attorney John D. Sink Terms of Court.—Second Monday in February, April, September and November.

TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES’ CARDS. Milroy Township. Wtn.T. Smith, trustee of Milroy township, gives notice that he will be at his residence in said township on the First and Third Saturdays of each month for the purpose of transacting township business; and business relating to making contracts or paying claims will be done on such designated day. Wm. T. Smith. Trustee. Jordan Township. John Bill, trustee of Jordan township, gives notice that he will be at his residence in said township on the Second and Fourth Saturdays of each month for the purpose of transacting township business; and business relating to making contracts or paying claims will be done on auch designated day. John Bill, Trustee.

•)fafa^ / fafa^fafa^fa /^/ fafa^ / fafafafafafa / fafafai< i £ For me Seoson 011902 me siondord Bred Tromna siallion S • WILKES ABDALLAH NO. 4645.2 ™ Brown horse, 16-1 hands high, weighs 1400 pounds; bred by R. fa P- Pepper, Frankfort, Ky., owned by T. M. Hibler, Joliet, 111. fa fa Sired by the Mighty Onward, the greatest living sire with 168 from 3:06 to fa 3:80 and better; 106 producing sous that have sired 346 trotters and 380 pacers; 57 daughters that have produced 63 trotters and 28 pacers. fa WILKES ABDALLAH’S Ist dam is Jeanette, sired by Woodford Abdallah, he fa fL. by Woodford Mambrino 3:31 1-2. he by Mambrino C'nief; 2d dam, Japhet, sired by Buff ord’s Cripple; 3d dam, Doniphan, sired by Davy Crockett. <>• NOTICE TO BREEDERS. WILKES ABDALLAH will make the season at my farm known as the old fa “Cleveland Farm," in Milroy Township, at $lO to insure a colt to stand and suck, fa Having put services dow’n to the low figure of $lO we insist that mares be returned regular for trial, and anyone parting with mare before foaling time will be fa held responsible for service Wilkes Abdallah Isa licensed stallion under the fa laws of the state of Indiana and colts will be held for service. Mares will be kept on grass at $2 per month and have the same attention as our own. but all fa accidents and escapes at owner's risk. fa (• T. M. HIBLER, Owner. fa . O, Address. Rensselaer, Box 138. D. ART WHITNEY, Manager.

AGENTS WANTED one t ' own to rido and exhibit a sample 1902 model fa B WWa, bicycle of our manufacture. TOV CAM MAMA 910 TO W 11 lfa*<oA IMEEff besides having a wheel to ride for yourself. liA 1902 Model* Guaranteed $9 te sls fn 11 IFAl 1900 and 1901 Models *7 to til fa/ I ill I’ll*oo Second Hand Wheels &fa. ro fa/ ff 'i fall ■■l laken in tradeliy <>ur Clitcago n-tallstorvs. all,® o IOwO Bj \ gill fall fui I,’ W makes and models, good as new ~ ▼ S IM We Bhl P ttn y blrycle APPROVAL to any|fa-• one without a cent d.posit in advance and allow IOTW DAYS FREE TRIAL. ■ w/i k M ■ n 0 rwk ln ordering from us, as you do not need ■ /I I' lirfat HI ■ to pay a cent if the bicycle does not suit you. FnO Wur Wr* fifi lIAT DIIV * wheel until rou have written for our ■ / W H DO HUT BUT FACTORY PRICES & FREE TRIAL OFFER. Hl ’l -fa Tiros, equipment,aundrlesands(>orl IngpxMlsof all kinds, at . far WbkF half regular prices. In our big free sundry catalogue. ConI 10 WE WAMTn reliable person in each town to distribute catalogues for us la vxnm cWkO'Moicis iu.

Monte* Kn,IIUi SUM. Powter Bold by A. F. Long

FARMS FOR SALE. BY Dalton Hinchman REAL ESTATE AGENT, Vernorf?lnd. No. 989. Two hundred and forty-five acres, level, new two-story frame bouse, seven rooms, well and cistern, two tenant houses, two orchards, fair sized barn. 80 acres timber, good soil. Can be bought for $35 per acre. No. 290. Two hundred and efghty-two acres, two houses, one and one-half storie each, barn 50x60, cattle barn with crib 10x50 feet, horse and cattle barn combined 50x70, 6 corn cribs 8x24 feet with driveways, granary with capacity of 2,000 bushels, running water, three fine wells; two windmills; large orchard of all kinds of fruit at each house, 77 acres wheat, 185 acres timothy, three and onehalf miles over pike road to town of 7,500 population. Price SII,OOO. $4,000 cash, balance six per cent., five years. No. 291. Three hundred acres. 220 acres cultivated, 40 acres timber, 170 acres bottom, 80 acres tiled, on pike, four wells, cistern and live water, two large barns, corn cribs, granaries, sheds and wagon scales, medium house, level, yielded from 40 to 70 bushels corn last year per acre. Price SBO per acre. Correspondence Solicited. Rkfkrknces: Judge Willard New. Ex-Judge T. C. Batchelor, First National Bank. Merchants: 9. W. Storey. N. DeVersy. Jacob Foebel, Thomas A Son, Wagner Bros. & Co., Nelson & Son, J. H. Maguire & Co., W. M. Naur, Herbert Goff and Wagner’s plow factory. Anyone that wishes to look over the county, would be pleased to show them whetner they wished to buy or not. Read The Democrat for news. Don’t forget The Democrat when you have a legal notice to be published. I have private funds to loan on real estate at low rates for any length of time. Funds are always on hands and there is no delay—no examination of land, no sending papers east--absolutely no red tape. Why do you wait on, insurance companies for 6 months for your money? I also loan money for short times at current bank rates. Funds always on hand. W. B. Austin. Tell your neighbor to subscribe for the taxpayers’ friend, The Democrat. It gives all the news. Have You Seen? The New Machinery at the Rensselaer Steam Laundry. It is the best and latest improved in the United States. No more pockets in open front shirts. Oijr New drop board Shirt-Ironer matches every button hole perfectly and holds the neck band in perfect position while ironing. Do you realize you are working against your own city when you send to out of town Laundries and indirectly working against your own interests? We claim that with our present Equipment and Management our work is Equal to any Laundry in America. Our Motto: Perfect Satisfaction or no charges. We make a specialty of Lace Curtains. Send us your rag carpets, 5c a yard. Rates given on family washings. Office at G. W. Goff’s. Phone 66. Prompt work. Quick Delivery.

Craft’s Distemper and Cough Cure Fa lea. BOe, fil.oo ger botO» Bold by A. F. Long. '

POLITICS OF THE DAY

Protectionism Doomed. The discontent of the people under the tyranny of protected monopolies Is spreading rapidly. Farmers are tired of paying two prices for the commodities they buy, while they get only the competitive prices of the world markets for the products they have to sell. Laborers are tired of paying monopoly prices for the food, clothing and other articles they consume, while their wages are depressed instead of raised by so-called “protection” from foreign “pauper labor.” Last and not least, the Independent manufacturers are very tired of paying heavy duties on raw or partly manufactured materials used iu their manufactures. They are manufacturing more than can be sold In the home market, but they are doubly hand icapped in their attempts to secure foreign, markets, first, by the high prices of the raw materials they need, and, secondly, by the prohibitive duties on foreign goods which effectually prevent any exchange of commodities. The attitude of the protectionists is curious. They profess great anxiety to extend our export trade. They are eager to pay bounties and subsidies to secure larger foreign markets, but they per sistently refuse to receive any compensation for the American goods exported. This is world wide philanthropy in the most acute form. Meanwhile the people must pay the bills unless they have the courage and intelligence to rebel against this senseless and repressive system. The Philadelphia Record sums up the situation admir ably in the following editorial: “A recent official statement of the trade of the country shows that our imports of crude and partly crude materials of manufacture have reached the heavy aggregate of a million dollars per day. The tariff taxes upon wool, hides, iron, steel, lead, lumber, fibres, ores, caal, chemicals and other necessary materials of industrial use are so burdensome and in many instances so needless for purposes of revenue that, furnishing as they do a serious handicap upon the manufacturers of the country in their struggle for a place in foreign markets, they are building within the Republican lines a growing disaffection. President McKinley recognized the fault In the Dingley tariff, and sought to bring about a measurable relief through the negotiation of schemes of reciprocity. But there is no real solvent for the trouble except in the reduction or repeal of the duties. “The working of the taxes on the raw material of industry is Illustrate* Wy the tax on imported hides. By increasing the cost of leather in the home market the manufacturer is put at a disadvantage In selling his wares abroad at the same time a commodity of the first necessity Is made dearer for the consumer. But this Is not all. The rebate paid to tanners on exported leather made from Imported hides enables the foreign buyer to purchase American leather 5 or 10 per cent cheaper than our own shoe manufacturers can buy It. The purchase of imported hides, with the assurance of a rebate of duty when exported, enables the importer to »keep the home price at the level of foreign prices, so that no protective advantage results to the home producer. In its operation the tax on hides is of no service except to the foreign buyer of leather. It Is a direct injury to leather makers and leather users, and a failure for purposes of revenue. “It Is against this sort of backhanded boomerang protection that there is a steadily growing cry of revolt within the lines of the party which upholds a monster it fears to attack."

A Day of Reckoning Coming. The Baltimore Sun can’t understand why the protectionists still cling to their false and foolish gods. It says: “It is a puzzle to the average American to think why our protectionists continue to tight bitterly for existing high tariff rates, while nt the same time boasting of their ability to sell American manufacturers largely In foreign markets. Year by year they sell more nnd more of their wares abroad and could sell a great deal larger quantities of goods if they would systematically cater to the foreign demand. This means, of course, that they can undersell the foreign manufacturer In his own country and can undersell him here with ease. Then why, unless for pure hogglshness, do they still demand a law to enable them to keep out foreign goods?" It is not difficult to understand why the high priest of protectionism so vehemently Insist that the people shall have no other gods before their great fetich. The protected monopolists have waxed fat under the benficent reign of protectionism, and it Is these same fat, prosperous monopolists that contribute the campaign funds for the use of the protectionist priests. The attitude of the protectionists Is perfectly consistent and natural. Nevertheless, a day of reckoning is surely wmlng, when this great Juggernaut, which has so cruelly oppressed the people, will be overthrown and broken In pieces, and the people will be freed from all the burdensome taxes levied to keep up this mummery of protectionism.

The Public Will Have No Benefit. 'rhe jiayment of subsidies to vessels, whether they carry cargoes or not, Is « gratuity of no use to the public. The payment of subsidies will not have

effect of reducing freight rates a particle. The Frye bill allows subsidies to vessels regardless of their ages. An obsolete type steamer may get a subsidy. If the Senator thinks this kind of business is popular it Is likely to discover that It is possible for its judgment to make a miscalculation.—Minneapolis Journal.

A Subsidy Absurdity. One of the most diverting pretensions of the ship subsidy mongers is that their bill when passed would mean the immediate establishment of a semiweekly line of fast steamers to England; a fortnightly mall to Brazil; a weekly line to Manila; another to .Japan, China and Hongkong; another to Australia, and another to Pago Pago. What are these subsidized lines to do? Is it proposed to drive competing lines off the high seas with subsidy? Some of these steamers would be as idle as a paffited ship on a painted ocean. But that they may be kept iu operation the bill eliminates the former provision that they shall carry cargoes equal to 50 per cent of their registered tonnage. To make up for want of full cargoes they will, It is assured, return at least $3,000,000 of the subsidy in postage! The absurdity of this is seen by the fact that with the exception of the new line to England, which could not absorb a considerable share of ocean mail service, and the line carrying letters to and from the army in the Philippines the new lines would bring small postal revenue to the Treasury. If, as asserted, there be an enormous deficit in the British postal revenues for carrying ocean mails, what would be the probable result to the United States Treasury from this subsidy scheme?—Philadelphia Record.

The Tariff Cannot Stand. It becomes more evident every day that the present tariff schedule cannot stand much longer. The paramount issue of the Congressional elections this year will be the tariff and the old lines will be changed very decidedly. There are many men now demanding a reduction of duties who even two years ago would have stubbornly opposed any such thing. The split in the Republican party on this question is widening rapidly. The Republican press is even more divided than the Republican politicians. Seldom has any party in this country been so much at sea as the Republicans are now on reciprocity. They are famous folk for getting together, but if they can reconcile their differences on this question they will beat their own record.—Atlanta Journal.

Farms Not Making Millionaires. The agriculturist of an agricultural country cannot be benefited by a tariff on agricultural products. But they can be greatly injured by a tariff on the things they use. If they have to pay more than their foreign competitors for the tools they use, the clothes they wear, the food they purchase, the material needed for fences and buildings, they are manifestly handicapped in the contest, and that is what the American farmer Is experiencing. The farm is not making any Schwabs er Carnegies or Rockefellers or Morgans—at least not directly. These suddenly acquired fortunes are not the result of tilling the soil, but the tillers of the soil are contributing to every one of them.—lndianapolis Sentinel.

Leave No Trace of Occupancy. The United States should now keep their hands off Cuba. There should be no coaling stations, no naval or military bases on the island. The government we promised the Cubans has been formed—perhaps with too much interference —and will be finally established on May 20, the day set for the evacuation of Cuba by the United States troops. After that date there should remain no trace of United States occupancy other than those monuments we have erected there in the form of civil and civilizing government, improved sanitation and educational methods. To retain Cuban territory is to retain Cuba. The evacuation must be complete.—Utica, N. Y., Observer.

When the Tariff Shoe Pinches. The iniquities of the tariff are becoming more and more known through the study of the question in specific Instances. No matter how strong a newspaper may be in favor of the high protective tariff it will not be likely to tolerate the tariff on blank paper and wood pulp that takes money out of Its pocket and places it in the pockets of the paper trust.—Memphis Commercial Appeal.

A Wolf in Sheep’s CTothins. The hypocrites are still talking about protecting the American farmer by starving Cuba and making it impossible for the Island to buy our farm products. Just now the ‘‘great American farming Interests” that are calling for this program are located in Washington and go by the name of Henry Oxnard.—Sioux City Tribune.

It la Ever Thna. The Oxnard beet sugar trust is trying to do the biggest business on the smallest capital that ever was attempted by any other trust in the country. With an annual product worth |4,500,000 and no more, the trust is trying to control the entire sugar market for *90,000,000 a year. The tall is trying to wag the dog.—Chicago Chronicle.

OHIO RIVER HORROR.

SCORES LOSE LIFE IN FIRE OR WATER. Between Fifty and Seventy-five Persona Are Killed in Steamboat Disaster—Panic Increases the Horror—Destruction of the City of Pittsburg. Suffocated as they slept, entrapped in their bertha ind burned or forced panicstricken into the river and drowned, over three score persons lost their lives Sunday morning in the destruction by fire of the steamer City of Pittsburg, near Turner’s Landing, not far from Cairo, 111. Those on board the steamer numbered about 150 and the death H-wt may reach seventy-five. Captain Phillips estimates the loss of life at between fifty and sixty. Accurate information probably never can be secured, for the steamer’s passenger list, the only record of the human lives she carried, was destroyed. Large Crew and Many Passengers. The steamer, a big side-wheeler plying between Cincinnati and Memphis, left the former city Wednesday night with thirty-one passengers and took on many others on the voyage down the river. She carried a crew of seventy. So far only a few bodies have been recovered. The work of death in this disaster, one of the most shocking in the history of river navigation, was a matter of but a few minutes. The fire was discovered a few minutes after 4 o’clock in the forward hold of the steamer. All the passengers were sleeping, as were all the members of the crew except a few watchmen and the men at the engines. As quickly as possible runners were sent through the narrow passages in the cabin shouting an alarm to the endangered sleepers. Within a few seconds the whole steamer was alive with frightened passengers in the midst of a rush for life Which began in panic and ended in horror. None took time to put on more than night clothes or to save any valuables from their staterooms. The supply of life-preservers was soon exhausted after scenes of awful struggling, and there was a rush for windows and railings ft> the hope that a leap into the water might avert death in the flames. Meanwhile the members of the crew had launched one boat, and into thia were put the women and children who had been able to reach the deck before the burning of the stairways cut off that means of escape. Force was necessary to check the rush for the yawl, and in spite of heroism shown by the officers their work might have gone for naught if the ropes that bound the yawl to the steamer had not been severed by the flames just as the small craft was filled to the danger point. About twenty o> thirty persons were taken off in this way. Straggle in Water. Those who were left on the boat anc} were still alive Then jumped into tht water, joining their struggling fellows who at the first alarm had sought thers a refuge from the flames. Screams and pitiful appeals for help were heard on every hand as those of the unfortunates who could not swim felt in their lessening strength a warning of their fate. Many passengers clung by finger tips to the burning boat with bodies submerge ed until, overcome by fire or water, they sank to death. Wesley Neeley, a fisherman, rescued two from the wheelhouse. One was a man and the other a woman. The latter clung to the boat until her hands were burned. The boat was insured for $30,000, most of the policies being held by Pittsburg agents.

FRANK STOCKTON DIES.

Well-Known Novelist Passes Away in Washington.

Frank R. Stockton, the story writer, died suddenly in Washington, D. C., Sunday morning. The cause of Mr. Stock; tons’ death was paralysis immediately resulting from a hemorrhage in th* brain.

The author was a guest at the banquet of the National Academy of Sciences Wednesday night, and at the banquet he was taken suddenly and mysteriously ill. The ailment did not at that time appear to be serious, and for a while the sufferer seemed to be improving. By his bedside when the end came were his wife, who was a Miss Tuttle of Virginia, and her sister. He was 68 years of age. For thirty yean Mr. Stockton had been a prominent figure in the literary life of America. In that time he produced a remarkable quantity of surprisingly good fiction. His general recognition by ths public may be said to have begun witS the publication of "Rudder Grange," which for drollery, sweetness and simplicity opened up an entirely new and original field of humorous writing peculiarly American. He was next in public note by a long series of short stories of the most fanciful conceit and puzxllfig realism, chief of which was the farfamed “The Lady or the Tiger?” a tale the elusive and tickling charm of which promises to make it a permanent part of our native literature. Hardly less successful were "The Casting Away of Mrs. Leeks and Mrs. Aleshine,’’ "The Hundredth Man," and "Squirrel Inn.” He was born on April 5, 1834, in Philadelphia, and was educated at the common schools. He intended to be a physician* but took up engraving, and supported himself by that means for several years. He assisted his brother John as editor of the Philadelphia Post, and did the first work under his own name for ths Southern Literary Messenger. His magexine experience began In 1870, Irately he bad lived on a fine old estate in West Virginia, once owned by Washington.

Notes of Current Events.

Reward of *5,000 is offered for Bert Casey, an Indfan Territory outlaw. Democrats of Oregon nominated O. ID. Chamberlain of Portland for Governor. Secretary John Curran Thursday announced that the Kansas Populist State convention on June 24 would be held in Topeka. The Missouri Pacific Railway Company la said to bo negotiating for the three large coal mines at Leavenworth, Kan., and for coal property at Beverly, Mo.

He Hatched a Joke.

Dr. Theophilus Leigh, some tkne mas* ter of Balliol College, would be remembered, If only for the fact that he was 1 Jane Austen’s great-uncle. In addition to this distinction he had an Indefatigable wit—humor ran in the’ family—which kept alert until his death. Two days before he died he showed! himself an incorrigible punster. Onej might look for a casual relation, If bls’ age. 90 years, were not enough to ac-‘ count for his death. Some one spoke of an old acquaint-' ance as having been “egged on to matrimony.” “Then may the yoke rest easy on’ him,” said D_r. Leigh.

A Postmaster’s Discovery.

Lancaster, N. Y„ April 21—Mr. John. Reniers, postmaster of this village, was taken with Diabetes four years ago. For two years he doctored with local physicians as well as several specialists 1 from Buffalo, btrt got no better. Indeed he was gradually growing worse? He stopped taking the doctors’ medi-! cine and commenced a treatment of Dodd’s Kidney Pills. He used in all’ about ten boxes and is as strong and' well to-day as ever he was. He attributes his recovery to nothing but Dodd’s Kidney Pills and says: i “If I could only talk five minutes to every one wpo has Diabetes I am sure I could convince them that they needn’t' suffer a moment longer when Dodd’s Kidney Pills are on sale In every drug store. “I will cheerfully answer any letters from sick men or women, as I think every Diabetes sufferer should be told of Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the remedy that saved my' life.”

A Lovely Roast.

Charlie—Who did you discuss at your literary club to-day? Ethel—The vice-president. She was absent.

C ASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Ashantee grows a tree, resembling the English oak, which furnishes excellent butter. Lane’s Family Medicine Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. A lovable man usually enjoys a high opinion of himself.

Lost His R.he\jma.tism By the use of a bottle of St. J a.cobs Oil. A SIROIANT JIRKMIAH MaHII, of Ardcath, Royal Irish Constabulary, says: «My friend, Mr. Thomas Hand, has been a great sufferer from rheumatism in the back and’ joints for the last four years, during which time he hat employed many different methods of treatment, but obtained no relief whatever, and for the last two years has been unable to walk without a stick, and 1 sometimes two sticks, and was in great pain constantly. I induced him to procure a< bottle of St Jacobs Oil, which he applied with the roost astonishing and marvellous' effects. Before he had finished using the contents of the first bottle he could walk readily without the aid of a stick. and after a few applications from the second bottle he was free from pain, and has been ever since | and although fifty years of age and a farmer, 1 he can walk and work without experiencing any pain or difficulty whatever.” j VoSsus’t CtmATtva Comfovwd, th* gnat raimdy which nuke* people well; it 1* made from th* formula of an eminent London phyeician. Send to St. Jacobe Oil, Ltd., Baltimore, kid., for a fra* ixmpl* bottle.

Good enough for anybody! ;All Havana Filler TLORODORA'BANDS m of same value as tags from 'star: 'horse shoe: ‘spearhead: standard navy: ‘OLD PEACH <J HONEY" and J. T‘Tobacco.