{ title: 'Chatham semi-weekly courier. (Chatham, Col[umbia] Co[unty], N.Y.) 1903-1907, July 22, 1905, Page 7, Image 7', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071125/1905-07-22/ed-1/seq-7/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071125/1905-07-22/ed-1/seq-7.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071125/1905-07-22/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071125/1905-07-22/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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-vjPoraaad.'riOre,, in* sector 0* freight -^i^failCo., LP I? V f^tjpi«rifjgr«tjinoi»thi ifnee I VMd m^^^l^TUl^iUai ait been\*© l ^g ^iiliaWroMtle by aJl M ^tl ^'jj^^so.^bti^ptf box* Eo»- |^B«tprjXtfa late Bo*r war In South ^j ^^gie smallest coin in circula- ^tioh ^Sejf^ represented about B!X cents ^ji^alue. Now there are coins of the i ySWe* of about two-cents.. Amine of fuller's earth, apparently Jan* Inexhaustible supply, has been f,opened.-near Afcrcjn, Col. UP28 1$ LOVELY COMPLEXION lork W^. FrtTM That Every Wo- •fJjUy Run I t by Vting \C «tlc«r» Soap. ^''ttrs.'^K^lUiloheDbeitr, wife of the well- ; '£ttdrmO$WeJ«v of .149 Jfalton St., Dew .~y^r ^.Tis ^jyf4.^»A» m ' friend who was just- •-JKjiS^i^ »**''comptestion. When asked .'.whkt gave hear such a brilliant and love-. ly''toittplexionj «he \replied \\A healthy* . iwosuin.'can' be sure of & fine skin if she' Will do Vat •. do, use plenty of Cuticura' Bpap'agd water.' She insisted that 1 fbl- - low her example, which i did with speedy . conviction. 1 find that Cuticura Sonp keeps the skin soft, white and clear, and j. .pi«rentt redneas and roughness.\ Wh* Utmit to Their Cradqlfty. Kansas editors are skeptical. An exchange asked. \What do you think of an artist who painted cobwebs on a ceiling so naturally that the hired girl J wore herself into an ^attack of ner- Toue prostration trying to sweep them down?\ Most of the editor^ say that there may have been such an artlBt, i'vbut, there was •never such a hired | girl.—Kansas City Journal. L fleetly been over his last summer's straw hat with a toothbrush moisten ed in warm suds and ammonia.\I have to be. I wouldJlketo. be prodigaran^d fhave oftea thought tfiat it I could my Sana's\ onr^Iarge quantities- of money I would be fnliy A» generous as gome of my rich neighbors appeir to be. However, thlB announcement displayed by .a-shoe polishingjestab- lishment appealed to me s. day o r two ago, \All shines, 5xients.'\ It was conspicuously painted* on both win- Frogs, Snalfs and Coal Among Them. Complaint is- often made' that the .average daily meal In the ordinary household is a monotonous round of nmtton and beef. In the majority of instances this\slhiple and oftentimes |-unlnteresang cycle oTToorl Is \com pelled on th e score of convenience and economy, although with a little more 'thought and trouble than are usually bestowed on tbjs matter we are convinced that more - variation |dojK *_bJ ^y^P>rto^ .Sffljld bo.,<»nisi a gdi ? ^he„-subject. «H %iff^f- u ^ ^t^a^corateo^ a.jfi3angSTar^o6dj6n coF trivance on the sldewalfc near the door. 'That's a capital idea/ I whis- ^red -to -ttyself-and 1= went in. The jSftt_placard .that grej^ed my eyes when I had climbed into a chair was done ln> large red \and gold letters, and read, 'Holiday, and Sunday shines ft) centB. Oil shines 15, cents.' 'Seme old story, earhe old game',' I mused. \ \There's quite 1 a difference be tween 'oil shines' and 'all shines,'\ I said to the proprietor as cheerfully as I could.' \A difference in the spell ing makes a difference in the price. You ought to spell your \all shines\ \oil shines,\ o r perhaps it would be better to spell your \oil shines\ \all shines.\' By that time I was pretty well mixed up myself. \ 'Me no understand,' said the pro prietor, solemnly, shrugged his shoul ders—and I don't much wonder.\— Providence Journal. __H»o!sOBr» cannot b e too htghlyspdkeaot •Ik oough cure.—J. W. O'BBMK. 82) Third Arenac, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,190J, Intelligence va. Docility. ^Will-people who talk -about dogs ev- l-er learn to differentiate between in' telligence and Socllity? The word \Intelligent\ is used almost unlversal- ly-jin, talking' and writing when peo ple reallly-mean, docility, 1< the readiness of the animat to accept \in- - struction. -NoW, as In human beings, docility is likely to be an evidence of second-rate intelligence, and the degree-of-lntelHge«ce-Ia-ltkely -to- ap pear whon the animal is doing things on his own hook. It Aakesno great difference, .but to the man who tries to think accurately the constant par ade of an obedient animal as one of exceptional mental ability is painful.— Joseph A. Craham In. Outing. Ready to Start. .. Motorist—Are all the tools in the tool chest?- ' Valet—Yes, sir. Motorist—Are all the 1 cushions and ip robes in the tonneau? ••Wet—Yes, sir. Motorist—Is the. tank full of gaso- ;ne? tLValet— Yes. air. , \'Motorist—Have you 'brought down ll our goggles? Valets-Yes, sir. Motorist—Well, run u p t o my room id bring down the roll of*, bills out Imitating a Monkey to Lure a Tiger. To call a tiger the proceeding was as follows: The Mikir, having first as certained that a tiger wa s i n the neighborhood, would climb into a well branched leafy tree situated near where he supposed the tiger to be, and after hiding himself among the branches -as best he could, would com mence to imitate the chattering of a monkey, and break and drop -twigs In the way that monkeys do. Then he would let fall to the ground a bundle of rags, weighted so that the thud when it struck the ground would sound as if a baby monkey had tum bled down from the tree, and at the same time would Imitate the supposed baby monkey cries. This would be the supreme moment, for if a tiger were near I t would often spring out, in the hope of snapping up such a dainty morsel as a young monkey, and then a bullet from the gun of the hid den Mikir might find its billet in the tiger's body. By this meanB the Mikir was said to have killed a considerable -number of tigers, ^and certainly the man's power of mimicry was wonder fully .good. - — The call for deer_. was of an en tirely different nature, the sqund imi tated being the cry of a 'fawn, and as this cry sometimes attracted tigers, too, it had to be adopted with cau tion, because it was used only in open grass land, from which the cal ler would not have had much chance to escape were a tiger suddenly to put In a n appearance.—London Field. (\Serves Igfeatur attention than It has hitherto received and the results in all probability would be pleasing. In this- connection -it is interesting to consider some of the .more or lesa odd materials which man ha s been led to choose for the purposes of food. Environment, of course, must bo a factor in regard to this choice, an d necessity also. I t is hard to Imagine that earth would be used for choice as food, and yet such has been tao case in many countries during fam ine. The Laplanders mix earth witn their bread, the Russian peasant uses a \rock flour,\ and the poorer classes in Hungary are driven occasionally to eat an earth which • contains but a trifling proportion of nourishing prlu ciples. The use of seaweed- as food is un example of the determining factors of both necessity ad a environment. It is not a little astonishing to find what out into the wide, green country tmd Show you a young Peking duck. Ho The flag of Austria-Hungary was adopti is an active little tyke, is the Peking ea ^tosk&JJgQL*- - - • - «>- - - duckling, even when he doesn't date back further than day before yester- j aa> When It comes to swimming he- Jrired.Aobtag,Hot,SweatingFeet.Comsand! Is a sight-reader, and he Is more des- ••onions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, apowder DM Allen's raot-'Kaao. It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting,, truetive to -render grass Than a young Nebuchadnezzar But unfortuntely he is so constructed and flat of back that if by any chance he gets turned wron« side up he cannot turn over again un aided; and unless help comes he lies _ tAere -.5b.d, «5$WB$ the .air with' his. e fans himself to death He is cheerful about it, though, and makes no outcry, appar ently thinking that, because his legs are working he is swimming along according to Hoyle. \My child, a little duck on his back and the average after-dinner orator on his feet are both deserving of the sympathy which we should be ever ready to bestow on the unfortunate, and therefore we should sign all peti tions that are presented to us looking to the establishment of a commission to turn little ducks over and loqua cious gentlemen down, in the hoi>a that If they are prevented from pad dling and gabbling themselves to death they may be of some use here- i after —Tom Watson's Magazine A Mountain of Soft Coal. The largest stock of soft coal to be found in this country, aside from , storage heaps at one or two of the a number of seaweeds are really edl- , , arge western mlnes ,„ owned bv (hp ble and nourishing. Perhaps the best I New York Edison Co at Sha(lv known example in this country ia laver, which is a kind of stew made from a weed, an alga (Porpyhra la- ciniata) The laver made on the Devonshire coast and to be found ir> some London shops, is excellent Th o side, on the Hudson Persons walk ing on Riverside Drive stop and gaze across the river, wondering what the huge black pile is The Edison company has about 160,- 000 tons of coal stored in this yard, b'f the top bureau drawer so that we. N , tff Mtnra , alB!WSl . Ill have enough money to pay our | °_ J.....„ ... Ihea. Then we shall be •tart.—American Grocer. ready to WANTED TO SLEEP, rlana Tl»t a. Ttrad- rr »«i -h »r SHanM Hava.Sack DMlrc^ ?*JLmlnI$tcr speaks of the cnrlous cf> Met, ot. v Orape-Nuts food on him and Ja^Jrtairclieved.hlm. I ^Y^tf -'wiii doubttea* -understand T»ow- 'jS ^ajtettos -ifah rindlgestfon, with .ilU.cli -rj joaed to be trouTjlod ina'de my ,»ot *^Sh 'almost unendurable burden, K^whytit.wns tbajt after my Sabbath |Btk 'ithad:been, performed, sleep was i ?atrM 'fBr »r i^antf phy*Icai;jdistre «a |^^Pif »^'too^^c>er ^i4 Jbegin to -Imptbve.i ffojaj - - ~ - Bombs. When left alone to its natural func tions'nitrogen pursues a perfectly peacefully course, but when m>n suc ceeds\ in capturing it and combining it with other elements It becomes a dire potentiality for evil, as i s ob vious In the recent events of the war in the Far East and in the crime in the streets\ of Moscow. The love of feedom, so to speak, _ characteristic of nitrogen, i s terribly exemplified in the explosion of the bomb In Which it is Imprisoned and bound to other In shells in warfare and i n bombs elements. On the slightest provoca tion—a s'park,7a shock, a fuse—tho nitrogen suddenly expands from seem ingly nothing, as regards th e spac* which it occupies, into infinity. This ia, in reality, what happens when ry- namite, lyddite, or'other unstable ni trocompounds explode when • hurled in \desperate attadks on human life. sea algae, indeed, prove on analysis whIch covers as much grQUad ag e , hl to contain a considerable proportion • cHy blocks If there WM a big coa , of nitrogenous matter, and as they strlke the 8upp]y wouId , Mt lhe com . are usually tender they are digest 1- pany near)y a year A hlgh feQce su ... ble. There are also several sea rounds lhe big coal pl]e wh , ch , g mosses which are esteemed for their | guarded Dy armed watc hmen dav anl tlon, is locked up In an uncongenial spa'ce In these compounds, from which it is set free by very simple means In -an enormously expanded gaseous state with deadly'etfect, returning, in -fact,'\tints normal 'peaceful mlssloa-f once more. It is the analogue of the \sword and the ploughshare; in the nitro-explo8ive njtrogen \18 the mod ern, engine of warfare and crime. In the fre* state Jn 'the Atmosphere it 'aaj^sters. directly to th e quiet and peaceful needs of plant and-human life.—The Lancet. ^T^it\fi^5rJ0B*4c¥loken flies, with 'iufe^^1^^tiif H 'pfopel throuih;;he»vy|plate:glM proved by-a^r ^nt >i»cldent ,-at the little town\ oJti-Wol.My»^iaJit ,Connty.. .- - • .*. ?. -t^roYeiwoSBhVplpd.^f-- -the vlljage;, ^obllyik ^^iiKiarce of -hI*tdnty ,^^Tthe¥a«hoW ^«li/^irfieh a coupl£' ^l^ri^gifeasii^^t^i^ •Ic^Bim'T^f. atoriiirv-.werea\ 1 esculent properties. Agar-agar Is another example of a seaweed yielding a nutrient jelly It is supposed that the * edible birds' nest so highly esteemed when prepa •- ed in the form of soup by the Chi nese, has its'origin in the birds feed ing upon agar-agar. On the other hand, it is said that the substance which the nest is composed of is s-> creted from certain glands which are developed during the nest building season, but which lose this function afterward. Th e viscid substance re sembles the mucin \or albumin excrec- ed by the sublingual gland. The turtle may be regarded as a n -odd *rtlele-of food since 11 Is the only example of an edible reptile, at least •In .this ..country. Progs' legs, again, are rarely eaten in this country .though they are easily digested, possess a deli cate flavor, and have about the same nutritive value as chicken. Neither is the* snail esteemed as an article of food in this country.- though !n France it is .partaken of in large quan tities and so good is I t that it 'has been called \the poor man's oyster.\ The edible snail, however*, is a par ticular kind and is generally collected in considerable numbers trpm Ih o vineyards in the south of 'France. In Spain the snail Is served In a most excellent and appetizing manner and in Paris a dish of selected Snails is reserved for the special use of the gourmet. Coal would appear to be n strange article of food, but. instances are known in which children and cats have been found consuming it in a not negligible quantity. There is no evi dence, however, although Coal con tains an abundance of one of the most important elements of food—i. e., car bon—that in this form it is in th e least degree assimilated.—The Lan cet, night The yard Is about 300 yards back from the pier, where the coal is landed in barges. An endless chain of bags convey the coal from the barges to the yard, So arranged that their contents are distributed auto matically and evenly over the entire area of the yard, and not dumped In one place to be distributed by shovel ers. The coal plant is said to repre sent an investment of $500,000.—New York Press. Fires that Burn for Centuries. There are fiomestlc fires burning in Yorkshire, England, today which have npvpir been out In tHiwlrcd* of years. At the old-fashioned farm houses In the dales of Yorkshire peat is still burned The fuel 13 obtained from the moors and. stacks of it a'e kept by the farmers In their stack- garths. The country round about is noted for Irs \girdle-cakes.\ whfeh are made from^dough bake8' !S 1i ' Quaint pafis suspeh'ded over the peat fires These fires are kept glowing from genera tlon to generation, and the son warms himself at the fire which warmed his sire and his grandslre and his ^rand sire's sire, and which will warm his son and his son's son. There is a fire at Castieton. in the Whitby district, which has been turn ing for over 200 years. The record probably is held by a farmhouse at Osmotherly, in the same district The fire has been burning for 600 years and there are records to show that It has not been out during the last three centuries —St. Louis Post Dispatch^. 4obe -sbnkea -iiit0 -the -shoag, Coras while you Iralk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 23c.; Don't aoeept any-substitute. Sample seat 1 FBM. Address.Allen S. Olmsted, LoBoy, N.Y. The tricolor of France dates from tbe| revolution of 1789. 1 Mre^WlUBlow 's 8oothIng Syrup for tion ,aUBys pain,eureswina oolle, SSc .a bottlo 1 • 1 Walter Rothschild has a zebra which hej has broken to harness. ; SOLID BODY OF FISH. Pennsylvania Lake Has Too Many af the Finny Tribe. ^. Lying between two hills not faf from Hughesville is a small body of water known as \Converse's ice dam,\ or \fish dam,\ that is so full of the finny tribe that apparently it is im possible for a flsh five Inches long to &wim straight The small fish are on top and the Jarge ones below, and in order for a fisherman or flsherwoman to get the bait down to the big fellows it is necessary to make a hole in the water and carefully drop the book down through the wriggling mass. On June 1 Mrs. Irvln Converse and Miss Gladys Koch were at the dam making determined efforts to hook some of the under ones The little fellows on top, however, made such fierce at tacks on the bait that their hooks, time after time, were instantly cleared as soon as they touched the water Many of the little fellows were pulled out in order to make room for the books, but the task had not been ac complished when the reporter left the scene —WilUamsport Sun Snails Hard to Kill. Snails are slow even when it comes to dying, and one naturalist who had mounted a shell upon a card was sur prised to find four years later that the warm water employed In soaking the shell ofT the mount had revived the In mate, which he had long supposed to be dried and dead. Several specimens in another col lection were revived In a similar man ner after they had lain In a drawer for some fifteen years These had not been glued to a card, but had been left lying loose, and, though frequently handled, had shown no signs of life. They were thrown into tepid water with th e Idea of cleaning the shells, but to the surprise of the owner the snails were found creeping about the ba$in when he returned to complete the task ~ Roaming' Bullfrogs. They havg>a. wire Screen now on the bullfrog tank at th e Aquarium. The tsffif i8\a!boUt two. ana a half feet deep, but the able and agile bullfrogs wool J jump out of it: • % The frogs would clamber up on a log that lies in the bottom of (heir tank, placed there to enable thgrn to <et out,of the shallow water in i t when they-wanted to, and from that log,, which reduced their jump by only atoatit six Inches, they would, \jump to the top edge of the tank, to perch there'for a moment and then, jump off t o the floor, to go roaming around the building. The frogs were likeliest to do this at night, when in the dim light It was Ldifflcult_to^ecpyer._thenv and«-it-4s JR^/«aayjM^^^^.bu]lfi»s.J>y the hjto^^uh^W^Sqil^ of the night ^nk£^S*li^f^ij^p^ih^» hand down ^'a^;;aafJ'e^i^^is.^nU'fTOK~oiriy; •^|^;ttJ^P |%lH ^t&« .ten. \fees ^y^y^iat^^^^h^i^e -Jtijnp, aii A Wav '>liaaa^ti 7 ajf^ *wWa> V Anf « r>\ tnscurance Among Criminals. -\\Criminal Insurance,\ said a detec tive, 'Is the insurance that thieves and blacklegs take on in case of ar rest. For instance- You are a second- story man You make about $2,600 a year, the average second-story man's income, and you carry an in surance of $1,000, for which you pay the big premrum^of $125 ar year Now, if you are arrested, th e insurance company steps forward and hands you $1,000 Thus you are able to-get the best of lawyers for your defense. \Receivers fff stolen goods are us ually rich, and it i s these men, as a rule, who carry, on th e criminal in surance business. I know of a crim inal Insurance company in Philadel phia, another in New York and a third in St. Louis. The policies run ,from $100 up t o $5,000 and the pre miums are always enormous. This is because the danger of arrest Is so groat, N \Besid.e§. the criminal .-Insurance, concerns, I Snow of u. curious, benei flcial organization that JsT conducted among tho criminals of'Biluols. Each ,mimT>cr of the organisation pays In ii a^week and in casS /of:' Imprison- ;,hnent.rhis family recely«|£|&-'weekly a«~| Hbnjr ^as his sejitenc^lai'ts.*;—Louis* •.vUleieojirier Journ*L ^S ?!il-.-.' A VIarmer who W^Jmiiclt • troubled-^ by.f.trespassers Amij0§iftS?j^ti^$&r ,'soa- consulted wIth\\i ;ool ^Icat-ffrlend. The£Ibotanlsit lurafihjii££tm< iWfig- the- ^technical BaHje-ofX ^e 'lh ^ut^^^d^^ $a^^i>lae^^^^in^^^\^ Trains Held Up by Moose. A big moose held iw> a passenger train near Blanchard, Me , on day re cently, and th e obliging engineer brought it to a complete stop rather than kill the proud monarch of the forest. BAD BLOOD *I ba d tro&ble with my bowel* wblcb mad e my blood tifipare. My face wa s covered with pimple s wblch n o externa l remedy conld remov e 1 tried Assisted by Cuticura Ointment, thegreat Skm Cure, for.prescr\ m>;, purifying, and beautifying the sl<in P for cleansing the scalp of crurts, scales, arid dandruff, and the stop ping of filing hair, for softening, whitenihg,and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chafings, in the form- of baths for annoying irritations and inflammations, or undue per spiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and f-~r many sanative,antiseptic, purposr- which readily suggest themstlve*, as well as for all the purposes ot the toilet, bath, and narsery. Sold Uirourhcut the world. Potter Drue tc Chrrn JSrjc- Bo****\ anr-MaUod free, -A Bof k lor Women.\ *J3 Cream ™ Separator WOW S25.0O we Mil tin celekrateerbuliOE e CRCAJB SEaaNATOR. caparlty. If pound a per boar ; 450 pound* padt y per hou r tor S29.OCT MO pounds capacity per hou r for •34,00 . a>arant**a° lar eeual ef Separators that RE TAIL EVERYWHERE at trav Sri.00 t e SIIS.O*. OBI OFFER. ^PJSH rater «n *ur JO smy' tr— trtaf plan, with th e blndtnff tntdexr standing aod arreemio t it ytm do no t find by coraparim t*Mtand Urttbat ItwUJahta cloeer -Lim colder BriBc. Akim «aaier, ran Ug-Mer *x>n lUu one-hsUf more txfffc than any ocb«r Creara strpm nxor made, jrwa can p—nnr • tfia iMarata r to mm a t »sr •XBcnme an d w% witl limtv* .Mataiy return an? wwi yaumarhavepaMfWoVaavfcv eaartaa ar aUienrla*. Co t thta a & outfet ciirvaA £ay»£ Co ua, and joa wfj} racafra < tr return null &•*«, pottpaid, oar LATEST SPECIAL 'SEAM SEPARATOR CATALOGUE. YOQ wfll prt art\ i biff offer an d oa r fit-© tri«: proposition an d TOO WOJ r a I celVe th e MOST MTOMISHIHOLT LIBERAL CKCJtV ! SEPARATOX OFFER EVER HEARD OF. Addrrac. j SEARS, ROEBUCK ft CO., CHICAGO. yoa r Caacareta an d groa t wa s m y joy when th e ith'i at«a \ all Qntto a fe w have found relief. O. J . Pnach . 9C7 Par k AYe:TNew York Cit y N V pimple * dlsappeared'afte r a month' s \»t*ady 1 hav e recommende d then * to ai l my friend s an d Best For The dowels f ^^^^^ i n e ouwos ^ ^•aw. CAMmr CATrwmc ^^^f P5ea«-nt . Palatable , Potent,TaiteGood Do-Good KeTe t Steaen, Weake n o r Ortpe, 10c, Pe, 8»c, N<rr»t S old I n balk . The tannine tablet stampe d CCO. Inaranteed t o cor e o r yon r mone y baek 8terllsg Remedy Co., Chlcafo or N.Y. too WUM.SalE.TEM MILLION BOXES INFLUENTIAL IAN WANTED tUn Her ahare . th e atoek o f a dose Par Valne . 10 pe r corporation. . „. . . _ ^ w cent. 4WI<tende.- AiroppottanlfJ-'to r ln»e «Uir and Kpraaentatlta. Don't'nil w It. Addresn for par i lco- lare, Ronell Grai , Fteoa l Arent, Bridg e A Garden 8ta., Brldesbnrc , Philadelphia , Pa . Sr ^Thooi|son's Eye Water FOR WOMEN trouble d with ills peculia r to __ . thei r sez, use d as a douch e i a nurvefbuaiy • ctsaful. ThoroutUydeanies, kill s diieAsegernu. stop* <chJtrces, heals iaflammstioa sat local aoreness, cores leacorrhocA an d nam cstaxib. Paxrine i s i n powder form to be dissolved in por e water, an d i s far more deansine,, healing, eennicida l an d economical than liquid antiseptics (or al l TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL-USES Fo r sale U druggists, CO cents a box . Trial Bex and Book e f Instructions Free TH E •>- Fa«Ton COMPANY BO»TOH . Manat- 10 PER CT. GUARANTEED '-'iS^JSSL^ offers a lfmitf d imnnui ofrAp.t-l -tofck f^r eobecrip - tioo . at par. SVW pfir ahat< Otvidenda of not lfM» tha n 10p * r oont per s^nn m BU &Tantt>«t.. Invvatork. winhlntf t o make an **trinie]y ooo #erTativ e .»Ttse*~ meTit. «>f an y aaionot , in a practically clos e oorp*orav- ifon. ahoald «rft « for parMcnlan* to -da y ROM«( Qrar . Fisca l Airent, Bridg e A Qarde n St«- , BrkW- bnrc> PhQadetphia , Pa . f PISQ S CURE FOR i to Pwa by drnjtrtata. • Taataa . w by drgyiftna. Say Plainly to Your Groci That you -want LION COFFEE always, and be, being a square man, will not try to Bell you any- , thing else. \Vou may not care for our opinion^ tut t , Whftt AIM* mt IilM JawgaKlt if Ma«MS of houoelreepers -who have used LION COFFEE for over a quarter of a cantury^ Jathe»aUiyy\roi »j9^^TOo/o/TO ~ at Bae^' iraaap %a*i evertoi Mpiiaj^jaiiatllj) ? JUm COTI^E ta^MMalty sc. yj^ea-at^iilaMlril^ mwm*&:*mi. •'«§«*>£' em