Ligonier Banner., Volume 37, Number 8, Ligonier, Noble County, 22 May 1902 — Page 1
[52.00 PER YEAR.]
B O Salel . STRICELY E UP-TODATE Clothcraft They are Vthe Besf. Particu- | .lars can be had by calling on M. Jacobs & Co.
Full line of Seasonable and , . Fashionable Suitings. I haye opened my shop in the Kerr building, in the room -~ formerly occupied by the U. S. Express Office. Am ready to show a big line of Spring Samples and Up-to-Date Piece Goods. . @ee me before Buying Your Spring Suit. ¥.IL SCOII.
)'{ A 'I, g () F%’ s é by “‘} v/r/{;;“"l- w‘fll' 2 \ o ) g,fif’l’ ;’2@‘ 2 [ 7 [ e o Fi} s Tl . L 1 i | T W ‘\-\,,3\\: "fi\l* S | . /’,, e @ | _ —B962—— - - By Marvelous, we now offer his services for the season of Igo2 at the following places: Mondays and Tuesdays at Henry Kreager’s barn, Cromwell; Wednesdays and Thursdays at Albert Prough’s barn, at Burr Oak; Fridays and Saturdays at Ligonier, at barn of old Ligonier Live Stock Association. Colts that are the get of Lord of the Manor are - selling at top prices---$2OO, A. H. SMITH, - LLEwIS SMALLEY, r Owners A. H. SMITH, ]Jr. Biliousness is a condition characterized by a disturbance of the digestive organs. 'T'he stomach is debilitated, the liver torpid, the bowels constipated. There i 8 a loathing of food, pains in the bowels, dizziness, coated tongue and vomiting, first of the undigested or partly digested food and then of bile. Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets allay the disturbances of the stomach and ereate a healthy appetite. They also tone up the liver to a healthy action and regulate the bowels. - Try them and you are certain to be much pleased with the result. For sale by S. J. Williams. : , b-bt You never heard of any one using Foley’s Honey and Tar and not being satisfied. Schwab & Co., Wawaka; M. L. Hussey, Cromwell. 5-bt :4’ 2 # Fol?'}d' s Honey ana Tar for children,safe,sure. No opiates.
Che Ligonier Banner,
LIGONIER, NOBLE COUNTY, INDIANA, THURSDAY, MAY 22, 1902.
l IhC W Ol’ld,S Colorado; : Michigan, = Canada, . The Adirondacks, St. Lawrence River White Mountains, : Or the ' Sea Coast of New England, Best reached by the ' ; . . “Big Four” For full information and particulars as to rates, tickets, limits, etc., call on agents “*Big. Four Route,” or address the undersigned. WARREN J. LYNCH, W. P. DEPPE, : Gen, Pass. & Tick. Agt. Asst.G,.P.&T.A - CINCINNATI, OHIO. : | boapresmantGienes. In a letter of recent date, Hon. Lucius N. Littauer, Member of Congress, 25th. New York District, writes: l ‘I take pleasure in commending to the publie the Dr. B. J. Kay Medical Co., of Saratoga Springs, N. Y. I am acquainted witk the members of this company and believe them to be men of integrity and honor, who would not put out anything but honest goods, and any statement that they may make I believe to be worthy of public confidence.”’. Dr. Kay’s Renovator has, to our knowledge, cured many cases of Stomach, Liver and Bowel Trouble. Sold by druggists. L Foley’s Honey and Tar contains no opiates and can safely be VgiVen to children. Schwab & Co., Wawaka; M. L. Hussey, Cromwell. 5-bt TO CURE A OCOLD IIN ONE DAY, Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All ‘dmggists refund the money if it fails to Cure. Price 2fcents. R
Thirty-Four Bodies Recovered from -the Fraterville Coal Mine in Tennessee. ‘ TERRIBLY MUTILATED BY EXPLOSION. Immediate Burial Necessary—Few Bodies Identified—Later News from the Work of the Texas Tornado— Governor’s Appeal for Aid Receives Ready Response, Knoxville, Tenn., May 21.—A special to the Sentinel from Coal Creek says: At six o’clock Tuesday morning the bodies of 34 victims of the terrific explosion at the Fraterville coal mine Monday, lay in the old Armour supply store ready to be dressed for burial. All of the bodies will be buried in the Leach cemetery just east of town on a little mound where the United Mine Workers of America will be asked to contribute a fund to build a monument to the dead and where a section has been bought by them. Five hundred women and children were present to see the bodies and to identify them is possible. The burials began at noon, as some of the bodies were torn and charred and a hasty interment was absolutely necessary. As a result of the terrible force of the explosion the faces and heads of some of the faces are torn as if they had been pummeled. Two bodies have the heads completely severed. : The number of those whose bodies have been recovered or who are known to have been in the mine when the explosion occurred, all of whom are supposed to be dead, run over 150.
Superintendent George Camp and others who worked all night have gone almost through the entire _course of Fraterville and Thistle mines and are now assured that the other missing bodies are in the rooms and wings leading from the main channels. Air is being pumped in the mines, but a sickening stench has ‘arisen from the corpses inside and men find it almost impossible to work without stimulants. Doctors are on the scene to render -any assistance. State Mine Inspector Shiflett arrived Tuesday night. - TEXAS’ STRICKEN TOWN. Ninety-Tweo Lie Dead ~--Governor's Appeal for Aid Responded To. Goliad, Tex., May 21.—Ninety-two dead and 103 injured is the result of the terrible work of Sunday’s ‘tornddo. This historic litdle city was literally swept from end nd by the rushing winds .and 150 hou¥s were razed to the ground by the shock. A revised list. of the dead among the white people follows: i Pinkie V. Lott, daughter of W. W. Lott, aged 2 years; Marguerite Pope, aged 4, daughter of Amy G. E. Pope; Mrs. Mattie Johnson, aged 60; Mrs. J. J. Stople, aged 80; Sidney Stople, aged 18: Owen Stople, aged 9; Miss Myra Hord, aged 17: Susie Hord, aged 20; John Agerstein, Marvin Agerstein, aged 17; Alice Maddox, aged 17; Ruby Maddox, aged 2; infant three weeks old, Mrs, J. G. Purt, aged 50; Maud Purt, Alice Purt, Mns. Mary Harbison, aged 45; Reginald Harbison, boy; S. W. Diall, Vernell Savage, aged 5; Joseph Savage, aged 8; Mrs. Smith, of Rockport, Tex.; Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Casey; Maud Casey, aged 18; P. Harring, Sr.; Joel Agerstein, child; Alwin Agerstein, child; Ruby Agerstein, child.
The remainder of the dead are negroes.
Of the hundred or more injured it is believed that 20 will die.
In response to the appeal off Gov. Sayers subscriptions have been raised in many of the larger cities, and food and.other necessities are now on the way to Goliad. The Soathern Pacifie railway officials announce that that road will transport all supplies free of charge. . .
The militia company from Victoria is on duty here, and the soldiers are giving assistance where they can. Many bodies were burned Monday and Tuesday, and a systematic relief corps has been organied. Deadly Waterspout in Kentucky. Cincinnati, May 21.—During the storm which swept over this locality shortly after 11 a. m. Tuesday there was a water spout in the Lewisburg hills, just south of Covington, Ky., which caused a wave of water 20 feet deep and 100 yards wide to come down the hill and submerge the valley. The frame house of the Millens was carried over four blocks and dashed to pieces against the Covington ball park grand stand. The bodies of Mrs. Millen and her child have been recovered. Their household effects floated in every direction. The water was 20 feet deep at places on the ball grounds. Thehouse of Mrs. Watson was submerged, but she and her three children were rescued. A stable with four horses was also carried into the ball park and the horses ‘were drowned. It is thought there were several lives lost besides the Millens, Towa G, A, R, Encampment, Des Moines, la., May 21.—The twen-ty-eighth annual encampment lowa G. A. R. opened Tuesday with 1,500 veterans present. Gen. Grenville M. Dodge, of New York, arrived Monday night from Council Bluffs, where he had dedicated the Kinsman monument, accompanied by John Lindt, of Council Blufts, slated for department commander. Te e Ao - Not Yet Given Their Liberty, Quelec, May 21.—Gaynor and Greene, after the hearing before Judge Andrews, Tuesday were rémanded to the cdre of the sheriff of Quebec, and, with two detectives kept to watch over them, have returned to the Chateau Frontenac. 4
Sampson and Schley. ‘The time has come when the exact truth, in part creditable and in other part discreditable, to both these admirals should be told. Sampson was a pedagogue, faithful, precise, narrow, honorable, yet with a side for snobbishness which badly showed itself more than once. He was the favorite of a system which ought to be rooted out of the Navy Department, but which‘is, we fear, more firmly established there now than it was ever before. Schley is a valiant, magnetic, vain, unquenchable and well-nigh übiqutious demagogue. He will through his arms around yvour neck and call you by your fiyst name the second time he ever saw you, if you are a man of power or influence. But neither bravos nor blowers nor gasconaders are always or necessarily cowards, and this agile, artful and expert gallery-stim-ulator and grand-stand performer is not a coward or a weakling. The endeavor to make him out to be such has been an effort which has played itself into the hands of his partisan, with a skill politicians might envy, prestidigitateurs covet and fakirs despair to equal. Accident brought him into better relations toopportunity,on acritical occasion, than Sampson could attain,and the effort to capitalize, for Sampson,that to which Schley was entitled, has been a contemptible and nauseating effort which has led the American press, the American congress and the American people to do something more than justice to Schley and to.give something less than his relative due to Sampson. The whole controversy—and it is a pitter one—the whole scandal—for scandal it was—may be said to be chargeable to a bureaucracy of favoritism in the Navy Department, which controlled those who should have crushed it out and which sowed all the seed that naturally grew to a fruit of fraud, of folly and of shame. The ‘‘captains’ who have reaped the rewards of their course, who have dishonored the function of testimony and who stained with partiality and prejudice the escutcheon of the navy, set up Sampson as thieir leader, but really made him their tragic vietim. They intended to make Schley that victim, but they have, by a natural recoil, overmade him, far overmade him, into a hero or a martyr, or into an immortal, or into a miracle of providential vindication, or into any like thing, which he is not. We do not believe the harm to the navy will be repaired in a generation. We are very sorry that the vietim of it, who was to be the beneficiary of it, so long suffered mortal illness and mental eclipse, and we cannot without gensibility recognize that his passage from moribund conditions into death as a merciful exit in circumstances of which the existence amounted to a calamity; to be deplered, and to a crime that could well have been relentlessly punished.— Rrooklyn Eagle, - The Way to Do It.
Among other industries which the city of Newcastle has gained in recent months is a piano factory, for which a building is now being constructed, 1,000 feet long and three stories high. This industry was secured through the efforts of the local Comnercial Club, and no part of the state is robbed for its benefit, as it comes from outside. What has been accomplished by the Commercial Club of Newecastle is equally within the grasp of other cities of the state, at present lamenting the absence of industries for its unemployed population. Terre Haute is a splendid example of what can be done by direct effort along similar lines. Greencastle has also moved in the same direction and other cities outside of the gas belt are showing similar purpose. While natural gas is a wonderful inducement, cities and towns outside the gas belt possess advantages almost as great in improved shipping facilties, easy access to markets, raw material and cheap coal. Indiana naturally 1s a great distributing point for the county at large, east, west, porth and south, and eastern factories eventually must come here to hold their trade. KEvery city and town in Indiana has some natural advantage with which to increase its industrial interests, and it only needs a wide-awake commercial club, such as Newcastle and Terre Haute seem to possess, to reap rich reward. The Hig;:;:l_\‘o‘;i_(—);:torical Contest. The High School oratorical contest at Island Park Assembly, Rome City, Ind., July 30, 1902. This day has been set aside by the Island Park Assembly for Hillsdale College day. A part of the day’s program will be devoted to a High School Oratorical contest. The prizes will be given by Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, Mich. : Because of the very satisfactory resnlts of the High School oratorical contest at Island Park Assembly last year, another has been arranged for this year. - . The arrngements of the programs will be under the auspices of the High School Exchange. An excursion train will probably run from Hillsdale by way of Waterloo, Ind. - The rules and regulations for the contest are as follows: I. CONTESTANTS. Any student who is certifled by a teacher asbeing in the grades or high sechool Sthis includes graduates of 1901) is eligible. tis desired that the names be sent to the Hiih School Exchange three weeks before the date of contest. . 11. ORATION, ; a--It must be original. b--1t must not have more than 1,200 words. ~¢—Four copies must be sent. to the High School Exchange two weeks before the contest. 111, MARKING, The oration will be graded one-half for thought and style, and one-half for delivery. Three judges will mark on each. : IV. PRIZE. First. A gold medal and a certiflcate for one year’s tuition including incidentals at Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, Mich, Second. A silver medal and a certificate of ten dollars for tuition or ineidentals in Hillsdale College. ; 1 , Third. A certificate of five dollars for tuition or incidentals in Hillsdale College. Certiflieates may be transfered within one year to any one not having matriculated in the college. Address ; S HicH SOHOOL EXOHANGE, i A o Hillsdale, Mich,
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
Hugh and Emma Rankin to John Beeson, 80 acres in section 7, Kikhart township and 80 acres in section 12, Perry towuship, $l. ; George Jenkin and to Susan Beeson, same as above, $4.,875.50. John Marker to Austin and Anna Rex, lot 5, Yeager’s addition, Ligonier, $5,000. . Jacob and Jennie Sheets to Len A. Banta, 80 acres in section 25, Sparta township, $2,5600. Elmer Weeks to Flora Weeks, land in Noblesville, $4OO. Marion and Amanda Bachelor to Solomon Mier, lot 32, Smith’s addition, Ligonier, $1,500. Rachel Monroe to Reuben Monroe, lot 1, Jones’ addition, Brimfield, $2. Alice and John Wagner to Wm. L. Parker, undivided 2-9 of 12 and 46-100 acres in section 33, Green township, $B3. ; ; National Bank of Greencastle to Charles Cobbs, lots 10, 11, 18 and 19, Keystone plat, Orange township, $250. 2 Carnie and Addie Stewart,by sheriff to The E.T. Kenney company, 34 aeres in seetion 29, Orange township, $2OO. Delila and Mendon Mead to Mary Campbell, lot 12, Sunnyside, Wayne township, $5O. Ephraim and Fannie Walters to Henry Franks, land in section 13, York township, $75.
Daniel Rumbaugh, administrator of estate of John Ackerman, to Nathan Wyatt, 20 aces in section 29, Orange township, $1,150. Byron and Nellie Gray to John M. Richmond, 1 acre in Wolf Lake, $lO.
Kendallville, ; Lewis Deenis has been quite poor- ¥ : Dr. Goodwin was at Rome City Wednesday. ' W. R. Neal returned from Indianapolis Friday. W. D. Schwab of Wawaka, was in the city last week. Mrs. J. G. Rockwell returned Saturday from Lagrange. D. A. Snyder transacted business in the east last week.
Mr. Zigler of Rome City transacted business here Friday. Mrs. Lamb of Rome City, spent Thursday in this city. . Trackmaster Werley of Elkhart, was in this city Friday.
(Geo. Billman of Wawaka, was on our streets Wednesday. Mrs. Pete Dolan and daughter of Avilla, were in this city Friday. Mrs. Kokenge of Avilla, was in this city shopping, Friday. : Mrs. Swihart, mother of Mary Iddings, is making her an extended visit. Mrs. Jerry Brandeberry of Wawaka, has been a guest at the home J. D. Kelley. Mrs. Mary Barhan of Mt. Pleasant, was calling on relatives here last WednesdayMrs. Albert Allen of Air Line Junection, is spending the week with her husband. : J. M. Johnson transacted business at Decatur and Monroeville the latter part of last week. Mrs. Kate Isbell and daughter Allie spent a few days the guests of relatives.ln Fort Wayne. Rev. Father Noll and sister Gertrude were visiting their parents at Fort Wayne last week. Mr. Perkins of Fort Wayne, was the guest of his son, Eugene Perkins and family a part of last week. ~ Areh Crofoot of Chicago, came down Saturday evening and remained over Sunday with his wife and other relatives. :
J.H. Eley and M. S. Browand returned Friday evening from Indianapolis where they attended the dedication of the Soldiers’ Monument.
“Tt is with a good deal of pleasure and satisfaction that I recommend Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,” says Druggist A. W. Sawtelle of Hartford, Conn. “A lady customer, seeing the remedy exposed for sale on my show case, said to me: ‘I really believe that medicine saved my life the pastsummer while at the shore,’” and she became so enthusiastic. over its merits that I at once made up my mind to recommend itin the future. Recently a gentleman came into my store so overcome with colic pains that he sank at once to the floor. I gave him a dose of this remedy which helped him. I repeated the dose and in fifteen minutes he left my store smilingly informing me that he felt as well as ever.”” Sold by S. J. Williams. ; 5-bt
z\@ g 0 73 Pie Authorities j have all reported that the dest mince pies are made with : Y Qurg? NONE SUCH g 5y -@ PR MINCE MEAT It will please you to know that every GOOD grocer in tewn has an ample supply. 1t is sold “compressed”’ in clean, sealed packages, not from open, mussy buckets, Ten Cents a Package, Merrell-Soule Co., Syracuge, N, Y.
¥ ¥ Albion Democrat. ¥ @
David and Hannah Morgan to Isaac Pachen, land in section 33, Wayne township, $5OO. Peter Parr, sr., to Peter Parr, jr., 80 acres in section 12, Wayne township, $4,200. - Samuel and Carrie Cook to Anthony Harter, lots 230, 231, 232, 259. 260 261, Tiffin addition, Albion, $7OO. ‘Byron and Nellie Gray to James Luckey, 1 acre in Wolf Lake, $l5. John and Sarah Mce¢Dowell to Ruth Mayfield, lot 54, Baker's addition, Cromwell, $5O. Sarah and Frank Blair to Daniel Zimmerman, part of lots 2 and 3, Brown’s Ist addition, Wawaka, $l5. - Lewis and Sarah Smalley to Nora Tyler,lots 1 and 2, block 3, Fisher & Company’s addition, Ligonier, $4OO. Chauncey Hiaam and Annie Poyser to David Jourdan,land in Springfield, $5O.
John and Mary Lower to Orpha Landon, lots 37 and 38, Wawaka, $26.
John Pollock and other trustees of Universalist Convention of Indiana, lots 44 and 45, Jacob Baker’'saddition Cromwell, $l.
Wm. and Susan LaFong to Sparta school township, $l5O.
Emma Fairbanks and others to George Fairbanks, 53 acres in section 25, Allen township, $l. Abram H. and Mary Smith to Abram H. and Minnie Smith, 33 acres in section 20, Perry township, $1,500. :
Ephraim and Jennie Krieger to Michael Krieger, lots 55, 56, 95, 7 and 8, Spencer & Wheeler’s addition, | Avilla, $1,500.
Cosperville News. All is not gold that glitters. Gather the dew-drops while they sparkle. | Ira Marshal, of Goshen,spent Sunday here. _ Remember, covenent meeting next Saturday at 2:30 o’clock. — A number of young people froin here spent Sunday at Rome City. Mr. LaFong and wife. of Kimmell, visited John Zimmerman Sunday.
Mrs. Lillie Wheeler and (laughter Mildred are visiting Mrs. Shaw this week.
Mrs. Anna Spurgeon visited her sister-in-law, Mrs. Coldren at Topeka Friday. ' Daniel Rose and family, of Kimmell visited with their son E. J. Rose Sunday. - Geo. Piper and wife, of Ormas, visited at the home of Thomas Shaw last Sunday. John Wood, of Mathews, attended the funeral of his uncle Thos. Shaw last Sunday. ; Mrs. Rheubottom will deliver the memorial address at this place Decoration day. Willis Fox and wife, of Albion, attended the funeral of Thos. Shaw last Sunday. ' Herbert Geiger and wife, of near Albion, spent Sunday with Bert Tschabold and wife. )
Mrs. Wm. Stuff and children, of Ligonier visited at the home of- Mrs. John Gappinger last Sunday.
Jonathan Shaw returned to his kome in Ada,Ohio,Monday. He was here to attend the funeral of Thomas Shaw.
D. A. Shaw and family, of Butler, returned home Monday after attending the funeral of Mr. Shaw’s father, Thos. Shaw. : ‘ . Schools to be Consolidated. _ The schools of Etna township are to be consolidated and within a year all the children of the township will be under one roof. The- advisory board of Etna township composed of Franklin Hunt, Monroe Trumbull and Jesse Miller, voted to place-at the disposal of Trustee Jones the sum of $B,OOO to be used in the erec~ tion of a four-room brick school house, sufficiently large to accommodate all the children in the township. An architect from Richmond, Ird., has prepared plans and specifications for the new building and the trus't.ee will advertise at once for the letting of the contract. Itisthe intention to have the building ready for use by the time school begins in September. The new building will be located in or near Hecla and the children from the entire township will be conveyed to and from school in vehicles at the expense of the township. It is believed that the arrangement will give the children of the township better educational advantages and will work to the satisfaction of the patrons.—Columbia City Post. '
Feor Rent. ) : A nine-room residence just west of the M. E. church; in good condition. Call on G. W. Hussey for information. Miss Florence Newman, who has been a great sufferer from muscular rheumatism, says Chamberlain’s Pain Balm is the oply remedy that affords her relief. Miss Newman is a much respected resident of the village of Gray, N. Y., and makes this statement for the benefit of others similarly afflicted. This liniment is for sale by S.J. Williams. b-bt For SALE CHEAP—The old Harmon Arndt property. Address H. A. Stauffer, Goshen, Ind. :
Try the new remedy for costiveness, Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets. KEvery box guaranteed. Price, 25 cents. Forsale by S. J. Williams. b-bt
D PISOIS'CURE FOR
Ision of N R G
URES WHEBI LSE FRILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Bold by druggists.
CONSUMPTION ean so T ey
VOL. 837--NO. 8
Baking Powder _ Most ‘healthful leavener in the world. Goes farther.
Stable Disinfection. i The disinfection of stables after a period of constant use should be a part of routine practice. Dairy stables in particular should be disinfected twice a year and oftener if the conditions demand it. It is not possible to give many stables that thorough disinfection that is possible in houses,because their construetion will not admit of it, butitis possible to do very much and at little expense.
The ideal method of disinfection is by means of a gas as that would have the power to penetrate everywhere. The effectiveness of this method depends upon securing a large volume of gas and maintaining it fer some time. Unless the stable can be made tight, a gas will be of little use. For all practical purposes the gas produced by burning sulphur over a pot of coals is the best if used in conneetion with steam. The dry sulphur fumes have little germ killing power, but when combined with the steam in the air it forms a compound that is deadly. The boiling of water and burning of sulphur should go together. Formaldehyde gas is not so efficient for stable disinfection as many would have us believe. A very practical means of disinfection that may be used under almost every stable condition is by whitewashing. This is not expensive for material and is very easily applied by means of an inexpensive fruit spray pump. The lime should be thoroughly slacked and strained through cloth and made just thin enough to work well through the nozzle. One man can apply two coats of whitewash with a pump and reach all parts of side and ceiling of a room in about one-fourth the time required with the brush. Whitewash will kill or hold the germs with which it comes in contact. It hasthe effect too of making the barn lighter and cleaner. After the first spraying, one application will usually be sufficient if given regularly. Asthe business of supplying milk to cities and creameries is of large proportions and depends upon cleanliness, this precaution of disinfection should be regularly followed. AW, BiTTing, Do V. S.,M. D. : Veterinarian.
San Francisco, Cal.,, and Portland, Ore., . Excursions—Lake Shore Ry.
May 26 to June 7 inclusive, the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. will sell excursion tickets at less than half rates to San Francisco and Portland and return, good returning for sixty (60) days. Stop over will be allowed in certain ‘western states. For full particulars ask ticket agents or write to A. J. Smith, G.P.&T. A., Cleveland, Ohio; also ask for copy of “Summer Bargain Days.” 7-3 t
seoir's Emuision
of Cod Liver Oil is the means of life, and enjoyment of life to thousands: men women® and children. c
When appetite fails, it restores it. When food is a burden, it lifts the burden.
- When youlose flesh,it brings the plumpness of health.
- When work is hard and duty is heavy, it makes life bright. o : e
It is the thin edge of the wedge; the thick end is_food. But whatis the use of food, when you hate it, and can’t digest it? - : :
~ ‘Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is thefood that makes you forget your stomach. .1f -you have not tried it, send for free sample, its agreeable taste wil) M ECOTT 4 BOWNE, Chemists 405 Pearl Street ' “'New York. -50 c. and $1.00; all druggists.
| 25 CTS | oW
