Newspaper Page Text
12
NYE IN CALIFORNIA.
He Roams at Large in the Luxu
riant Orange Groves.
Why Ho Will Not Vist the
World's Fair.
Something About a Big Hotel and How
It Is Located.
ICopvrlKht. 1803, by Edzar W. Nycf.f
Among the Oranges and Lemons. 1
March, f
The contrast between Maine and south
cm California as rival winter resorts i
very great Here the orange is picked
during the entire year, and it is csti
mated that enough oranges fall oil and
are plowed under as fertilizers each yeut
to supply the new wtate of Wyoming
completely the year round.
It is estimated that established orange
orchards of' a good quality yield 10 pet
cent <>n the investment. Os course poor
brands of oranges just like ill chosen
orchards of poor mis. rable apples, yield
intieii less A young orchard not only
does this after it is in bearing, but in
creases very greatly in value each year
This iidorniaiioii 1 get from old and tried
friends and not from agents, and 1 speak
es]>eeially ot Riverside, where the orange
is found in its greatest perfection aud
free from disease
The banana grows in southern Cali
forma bnt would rather not. K was in
duced to try this country by the taran
tula which flourishes here and loves to
dust off mie s chest with his hairy legs
An amateur Cleopatra here used the ta
rantula with great effect in taking her
own life in theidosing scene, but the bite
of the tarantula Involved so much skirt
, ! mcing ami calisthenics that the scenic
/ eil<a‘t was good and did much to revive
Cleopatra on the coast.
As i write this it is raining great big
ivon csof eastern rain of the wet kind
and yet a hospitable man has tiis open
•> < loriaat the door for me to go riding
f .i the purpose of adding to my collection
<>l scenery
Hospitality is one of the best products
of the human heart, and there is no dan
ger of overproduction, but 1 am so thor
onghly gorged with scenery from the
Natural Bridge in Virginia totheGolden
Gale that when any one says scenery to
me I writhe Orange orchards are rare
and beautiful sights, but when I can sit
in this warm room gathered about a big
coal tire aud see miles of them from the
window why should 1 put on my fur
overcoat ami a mackintosh in order to
freeze and cry out with assumed delight
every nail mile while 1 gradually get
Pomona of the lungs?
> r'j Wlj
z H®Sl
<\ & ®L'/ o— I’l
,;>: '/ f ...j '■ i ■
r 'JI
I
IN AN ORANGK ORCHARD.
Everything grows here that one can j
well ask for except hard wood and coal 1
Coal here mostly conies from British Co :
Jumbia and Australia.
The seasons of the year here don’t j
know enough to come in when it rains i
As a well known San Francisco poet and I
chiropodist so truly and sweetly de I
scribes it
“I'is the land where It’s always afternoon.
The seasonsof which the savants tell us “
are four- viz. spring, summer, autumn )
and winter but they are not used here at ]
all You have to keep a calendar in order
to know whether it’s Christmas or the
Fourth of July, and though roses grow
in great big masses wherever you put
them a bearskin overcoat with the pock
ets full of moth powder should not be
over eight feet away the year round.
in California you don t ask for a room
at the hotel where you get a fine pros
pect. You ask for ouo that the sun shines
on and iu.
California will doubtless supply the
most beautiful and interesting exhibit of
any state at the World’s fair. 1 shall not
go to the exposition, for 1 cannot bear
the humiliation of seeing North Caro
lina s meager showing compared with the
enterprise and wonderful beauty of this
state's exhibit.
An entire orchard of oranges in bear
ing has been taken up bodily, and with
the trees carefully boxed and the roots
and soil complete will be reproduced at
Chicago That is only a little pointer on
the style of enterprise that will crop out
wherever California’s name appears.
1 compare this with North Carolina be
cause on j of the fair officials irom North
Carolina has spoken to r e several times
about her utter negligence iu regard to
the matter and the sorrowful display as
it will appear when compared with other
states. Should this reminder be the
means of arousing a sickly ambition 1
am content.
North Carolina beats the world on ap
ples. and the pokeberry ink grown there
is redder than any 1 have ever before en
countered. As the poet so truly and so
graphically goes on to state:
Oh. how 1 love to write upon the hotel letterhead
And chase a thought with nimble, trenchant
pen.
To squeeze the berry of the poke judiciously
And jerk with Joy a drop of ink!
Oh. what a glorious thing is thought.
Ami whal a toy to make a nation thinkl
In using the above and quoting from
myself I give utterance to a sentiment
that every one has experienced.
The Coronado Beach hotel, near San
Diego, is about the largest hotel at which
1 ever put up so much as I did when 1
same awiv from the plftce. The surf, is
nearu oeaiing witn a low nah 'bf'Jo
boom against the beach. Thia boom
costs one $2 per day. Food, lodging and
| boom each $2. Still that is cheap for a
■ boom.
I remained three-quarters of a day at
the San Diego hotel and then resumed
work. I hate to be idle. The Coronado
: cost a very large sum of money, but did
} i not pay, so a creditor bought it for SIOO,-
; 000, and while he was thinking what he
J would do with it was offered $1,600,000.
i Be accepted it at once, as he already had
r another hotel.
', It was full when I was there at living
rates, say $6 to $65 per day The court
yard contains 80 acres of land, which is
very valuable, as people are constantly
settling up in the neighlxirhood—if they
can The dining room is bounded as fol
low < Beginning at the southeast corner
at a sideboard; thence running 8 poles 2
chains and 8 links to a palm tree; thence
south 11 poles 2 chains and 4 links to a
fir place; thence west 47 degreesß poles 8
cuiun.s and 2 links; thence north 10 poles
1 chain 2 links to place of beginning.
Invalids are admitted if they will agree
not to die in the house. In one room,
under the bell push, the following state
ment was made:
; rWHUBHU need not ring for water, as a t
; good spring will be found in the bed.
The way to find the Coronado hotel on
landing in San Diego is to look first for the
Opera house where we appear The fol
( lowing is a drawing of it from memory:
/ ,ID
,’J 0 o a o a o
A rrprpMentJ* the auditorium. B proscenium.
C dressing room I) people gayly entering.
Inquire there, and you will be shown
the Coronado which you will recognize
1 by the rates which come into view long
1 before the hotel is reached.
! Carriage lure and Mount Hood are the
! two highest things on the coast aside
| from that.
San Diego county is larger than Massa-
I chusetts. but not so thickly populated.
It is a balm for the consumptive if he
i will tea little careful about taking cold.
I The climate and bay are so soft and
i equable that most, every consumptive has
! a nice big palm over his grave.
This statement is not intended to re-
; fleet on the climate Many consumptives
come liere aud live as long as they care
to. Still it is a lovely spot.
At Riverside 1 met my old friend W
J Mclntyre Y ears ago he was the agent
of the government at the seal islands.
i He staid therewith his family for years
I among the Aleut Indians and studied the
whole hhiii imluHtry He made a long
and careful re{H»rt, showing howthe gov
ernment might with a thorough, careful
BupervtHlon kill 100.(100 weals per year and
not damage the plant. This report took
all tits spare time while there. He re
turned in fur garments he aud his wife
; and little girl, and with a head of whisk
i ers tiiat people came hundred of miles
i to see
The New York press was eager to get
! some ol the matter contained in his re
i port but he said 'No it belongs to the
1 government So. although he was not;
rich, hi l was loyal He took the report
to his chief and offered it to him.
The chief who is now no more, hav
ing been ere this judged for his crooked
ness.’ said haughtily to Captain Mcln
tyre. ‘When the government wants a
report from you. it will signify it. Good
morning.' Captain Mclntyre, who was
redheaded then and did not know that
cabinet officers sometimes stood in with
a seal killing syndicate, threw the care
fully prepared document in the grate
1 and began the practice of law. His ad
-1 vice would, if followed, have saved all
I Behring sea trouble.
He has been rewarded, and I am glad
' to see that things are going his way.
I Honesty is not always fatal to prosperity.
California is rioted for its roads and
j streets. 1 took a 12-mile ride the other
1 day without fatigue, ate 16 large navel
! oranges and picked out a good orange
; grove for my wife. Orange groves are
worth from S7OO to $l,lOO per acre, ac
! cording to the age of trees and the quality
or variety of the fruit. Ten acres or
1 twenty is the size of the average orchard.
1 A man can be hired reasonably to take
care of the trees and attend to the mar
keting. 1 took half an acre.
■ II
I®®
EATING SIXTEEN LARGE ORANGES.
I got a good man who promised to take
j care of it at a reasonable price per year
’ and not eat any without consulting me
’ at New York. I thought of this plan my
self and will introduce it into California
The Pacific ocean reminds me very
much of the Atlantic and evidently be
longs to the same family. It contains
' salt, seaweed and the Sandwich Islands
1 The people of California are, after all
j the best feature of the whole country
1 The cream of the ambition, kindliness
’ industry and thrift of the older states is
! i here. It explains why you sometimes
j strike an old deserted village in the far
j east, where only the old or incapacitated
i are to be met with. The young are here.
Booms may come, and booms may go,
! but California will go on forever,
tl
I I P. S.—Thanks are hereby extended to
j I M” Isaac W. Lord, who attended our par-
THE AUGUSTA CHRONICLE, APRIL 12, 1893.
ronnanev at san Bernardino and laugnea
heartily during the evening.
“YES r
Cf all fair wx>men. grave or gay.
The one I ofteneat bless
la she who never falls to say
In tones Inquiring, “Year*
Naught else an well a mas can teach
Ills real thoughts to repress
And seal his Ups and soul from speech
As this mild, neutral “Yea?"
Her charming grace I prize and praise,
Iler worth, her loveliness,
And quite approve of all her ways
Except thia maddening "Yea?"
Life must, I know, perplexing be
Ah baffling game of chess.
But any fate I'll brave if she
Will only not say "Yes?"
I oft resolve my woe to tell.
My grievance dire confess.
But what's the use? 1 know quite well
bU>'ll gently murmur “Yes?"
—Pittsburg Bulletin.
The Wrong Man.
III»'
IL
H i LJi if
fjl Kr i r
M I *
is l \ kt..
.ml .*! 1 Wf’ # i ... A
wj/ bw® $
in.
f/i I fr J I
■ F
......J
*—
rv.
—Harper’s Ba jar.
Polite.
Few of Ezra Hinckley’s frienfe and
few of the village poor had ever tiken a
nteal at his house, yet he was rich though
to have fed ths hungry often “wthout
feeling it,” as his neighbors used to say
But one day a Frenchman, who /id odd
jobs about the town, found hiaway to
Ezra’s heart. I
Ezra rebuffed him once, but axer that
he gave orders that whenever Antoine
came he should have the best thJ kitchen
afforded. /
One night at dinner, after the f oup was
removed, he sat for some momlnts look
ing in pleased anticipation inti the face
of a beautifully browned littleroast pig
Suddenly he heard a movement. He
looked up. There stood Antone.
“Pardon, monsieur, I see 1 nterrupt a
tete-a-tete!” said the Frenchtsin and re
tired. —Youth’s Companion. I
Anxious to Know!
Old Mrs. Boffins—Oh, doaor, do you
think there is anything ,s<riously the
matter with my lungs?
Dr. Pulinon (after caretil examina
tion) —1 find, madame, that your lungs
are in a normal condition. I
Mrs. B. (with a sign of ppus resigna
tion) —And for how long cifc I expect to
live with them like that?—lndy.
To the Poinn
Ten girls in a composlion class in a
Cincinnati school were sold by their
teacher to write a telecam such as
would be suitable to seiJ home in case
of a railway accident yhile traveling
One of the girls WTOter’Dear Papa-
Mamma is killed. 1 aJ in the refresh
meat room.”—New YorJTribune.
The Root Jit.
“What makes you adAire Shakespeare
so much?” /
She—Because he tails about the sqven
ages of man and neve/ mentions that of
woman.—Chicago Int/r Ocean. \
Truly E/gHsh.
“Wheah is Cholli/ I not met
the dealt boy saw a-peek.”
“He went to Lunfion to get his haib
cut.” —Indianapolis Journal-
READING THE FUTURE.
Great Things Shall Come to Pass
in 1993.
The Railways and the Steamships
Will be Obsolete.
Prophecies from Miller the Poet and
Miller the Statesman-
[Copyright, 1893, by American Press Associa
tion.]
Man, having conquered the earth and the
sea, will complete his dominion over ruv
turc by the subjugation of the atmosphere.
This will be the crowning triumph of the
coming century. Long before 1993 the jour
ney from New York to San Francisco,
across the continent, and from New York to
London, across the sea, will be made between
the sunrise and suuset of a summer day.
The railway and the steamship will be as
obsolete as the stagecoach, and ft will be
as common for the citizen to call for his
dirigible balloon as it now is for his buggy
or his boots. Electricity will be the mo
tive power and aluminium or some lighter
meta) the material of the aerial cars Which
are to navigate the abyss of the sky.
The electric telegraph will be supplanted
by the telephone, which will be so per
fected and simplified that instruments in
every house and office will permit the com
munication of business and society to be
conducted by the voice at will from Bos
ton to Moscow and Hoang-Ho os readily
as now between neighboring villages.
This will dispose of the agitation of the
proposition to take the railroads and tele
graphs away from those who own them
and give them to those who do not.
Domestic life and avocations will be ren
dered easier, less costly and complex by the
distribution of light, heat and energy
through storage cells or from central elec
tric stations, so that the “servant prob
lem’’ will cease to disturb, and woman
having more leisure her political and so
cial status will be elevated from subordiniv
tion to equality with man.
The contest between brains and numbers,
which began with the birth of the race,
will continue to its extinction. The strug
gle will be fierce and more relentless in the
coming century than ever before in the his
tory of humanity, but brains will keep on
top, as usual. Those who fail will outnum
ber those who succeed. Wealth will accu
mulate, business will combine, and the gulf
between the rich and the poor will be more
profound. But wider education
activity of the moral forces of the race will
ultimately compel recognition of the fad
that the differences between men are or
ganic and fundamental—that they result
from an act of God and cannot be changed
by an act of congress.
The attempt to abolish poverty, pay debts
and cure the ills of society by statute will
be the favorite prescription of ignorance,
incapacity and credulity for the next hun
dred years, as it has been from the begin
ning of civilization. The condition in the
United States is unprecedented, from the
fact that all the implacables and malcon
tents are armed with the ballot, and if
they are unanimous they can control the
purse and the sword by legislation, but the
perception that the social and political
condition here, with all its infirmities, is
immeasurably the best will undoubtedly
make our system permanent and preserve
it even again, t essential modifications.
, Our greatest city in 1998? Chicago! It
Is a vortex, with a constantly increasing
circumference, into which the wealth and
population of the richest and most fertile
area of the earth’s surface is constantly
concentrating. When this anniversary re
turns Chicago will be not only *he greatest
city in the United States, but in the world.
JOHN J. INGALLS.
The Future of Cotton Manufacturing.
[From Our New York Correspondent.]
Mr. M. C. D. Borden has within the past
year gained distinction as one of the great
powers in a certain branch of the commer
cial and business world. He is an authority
on cotton manufacturing especially, and has
recently completed one of the greatest cot
ton mills in the world. When asked his
opinion of the future of manufacturing in
terests, especially cotton manufacturing,
Mr. Borden said:
Cotton manufacturing in the south has
come to stay. It is going to lie greatly de
veloped in the next century. It is going to
be of vast benefit to that section of the
country. The number of mills will be grei -
ly increased and the quality of the product
steadily improved. This will add million 1
to the wealth of the cotton producing
states.
The pre-eminence of the New England
states in cotton manufacturing will not,
however, be threatened by this great and
healthy development in the south. I do
not look for any serious competition be
tween the manufacturers of the two sec
tions, but. lam inclined to think that in the
next century it will be found that Ameri
can cot ton manufacturers will have wrest
ed the markets of the world from the great
manufacturers of England, who have for
the greater part of this century controlled
these markets. Just as surely as the tide
rises, just so surely American cotton goods
in the next century are going to command
the markets of the world. We have already
almost reached that point. We are compet
ing in some sections of the world with Man
chester, and successfully.
I think this is true, too, of many other
lines of American manufactures. Our peo
ple are slowly, perhaps, but surely reaching
the time when American goods will be in
greater demand than those produced in
Great Britain or upon the continent of
Europe. In the next century the dawn of
that day when our manufacturing suprem
acy is acknowledged will be witnessed, and,
I think, by many people who are now living.
The commercial development of the
United States in the Twentieth century
will be prodigious. Those of us who are in
business life now get some hint of it, and it
is clear to me that while we are to be the
greatest agricultural nation in the world
we are also just as surely reaching forward
for commercial and manufacturing suprem
acy as for supremacy in these products of
the soil. It is going to be a great century
so live in, this one which begins seven years
hence.
Joaquin Miller’s Prediction.
I am not wise or learned in things to be,
but will venture a few predictions. In the
first place, our government will be less com
plex and go forward year after year with
less friction and better results—like an im
proved machine. We will cut off the for
eign vote, the ignorant vote and the ver
dant vote. As we grow better in body and
mind venerable men will have their place
of honor, os of old. If a good man by tem
perance and healthful toil and wise care
preserves his body and mind, like Glad
stone, for example, he has saved the life of
at least one citizen, a brave thing to do of
old.
And it is not fit that such a man should
be put in a prize ring to fight with lusty
young adventurers for his place in the sen
ate. It is already his by right. Let 10,000
entirely qualified voters, representing at
least 100,000 people, send up to the state
capital their oldest man, and it is all on the
register. Let the state then send to Wash
iiuztou its two oldest Glads totes qs .se’-lu
urn., aiirr ho on up io me presiaeui, tutu Et,
on down to the juntice of the peaea. What
a saving of time, temper, tamnhood, money!
When we have grown a generation or two
of Thurmans, Blaines, Gladstones, we will
leave elections in the hands of God, where
we found them. This U my plan, my
prophecy.
As for cities, we will build new ones, on
pleasant, beautiful sites, as men now build
hotels. Even now millions are waiting for
those who will build a new c*ty, complete
sewers, pipes, pavements, all things com
plete, and empty the unclean and rotten
old into the healthful and pleasant new.
We are going to have great cities, such as
have not been. Whereabouts I don’t know,
but all the world is going to town. Ma
chinery has emancipated man from the
fields.
What about big fortunes? Well, I think
we will some day require the bulk of the
rich man's money, when he is done with it,
of course, to build national parks with and
in other ways help the nation which helped
him to get hold of it.
As for literature, our writers will surely
soon turn back to the oriental or ideal, as
against the realistic school, and remain
there. They cannot very well improve on
the Bible, Arabian tales or Shakespeare.
Meanwhile the sensational and personal
newspapers of today will disappear down
the sluice ami sewer of indictable nuisances.
Discoveries? Truly it seems to me that very
soon some new Columbus will come from
among us to launch his airships on the
great high seas and gulf streams that
surge and roll above us. Yefr maybe this
faith is founded on what has been rather
than on any sign of what is to be.
Who will be best remembered? Why,
Edison, of course. Yes, most certainly
we will be handsomer, healthier, happier,
too, aud ergo better, for man is not a bad
animal at all if he only has half a chance
to be good. And he certainly has such a
chance to be good now, and to do good, too,
as never was known before. And he will
do his best with it. Let us believe in him
and trust him entirely, for in that way is
the good Gud. JOAQUIN MILLER.
Warner Miller on the Nicaraguan Canal.
[From Our New York Correspondent.]
Ex-Senator Warner Miller, in speaking
of the Nicaraguan canal project, said: “In
the early years of the next century it is go
ing to be possible to go from NeW York by
steamer to San Francisco or the South
American countries without making the
trip through the Straits of Magellan. The
Nicaraguan canal is as sure to be built as
tides are to ebb and flow and the seasons to
change. If the United States does not build
it, either by private subscription or through
the encouragement of the government, it
will be built by those who live in other
lands. The canal is inevitable, and the ef
fect of its construction upon the destiny of
the United States is something almost in
conceivable.
"It is to be as conspicuous an engineer
ing triumph of the next century as the Suez
canal was of this. The tonnage which will
be carried through it will within five years
after opening exceed the tonnage that
passes through Suez. Its effect upon the
railway problems of the United States no
man can accurately forecast, but it will be
enormous. It is going to furnish means
for the development of the magnificent
wealth of the South American countries,
and if the United States controls the canal,
or United States capital does, this develop
ment will be enormously to our own ad
vantage.
“I cannot speak with enthusiasm enough
of this vast undertaking which is to see its
triumph in the Twentieth century. I don’t
believe any man, however vivid his imag
ination, can fully suggest the enormous in
fluence which this artificial water highway
will have upon the commercial destiny of
the United States. If I should suggest one
half of what 1 believe to be possible I might
be regarded as an absurd dreamer.”
From Chief Statistician Bruck, of the Treas
ury Department,
I believe that in 1993 we will have the
most perfect republican form of govern
ment in the United States that was ever
conceived in the minds of the wisest states
men, and the social condition of the people
will be such that there will be no suffering
from the deprivation of the necessities of
life. All will have happy homes. Vice and
immorality will largely if not altogether
have ceased to exist. There will be not
only great intellectual but very great moral
advancement. We are making wonderful
strides in that direction now. There will
be less government than there is now, and
it will be more simple.
There is no likelihood that the railroads
and telegraphs will ever be managed by the
state, for the reason that when the state
takes charge of railroads and telegraphs
there would be the same reason that the
government should take charge of all other
enterprises which are now owned and con
trolled by individuals, such as street car
lines, manufactures, steamship lines, farms.
Individual enterprise and opportunities
would largely cease. There would be no
incentive, or comparatively none, for in
vention or for individual effort of any kind.
All citizens would simply become wards of
the nation and would receive their portions
from the state and would return to inaction
or indolent effort.
Probably the government will then own
and control all the products of our gold
and silver mines, and they will be held by
the government, as now, for the purpose of
redeeming the paper obligations of the gov
ernment, although such redemption will
largely be unnecessary for the reason that
there will be such stability in our financial
laws that the people will not question the
value of any of the obligations of the gov
ermnent.
The people by this time will have become
educated to such an extent that the vice of
intemperance will largely cease, saloons or
public drinking places will probably no
longer exist, and stimulants of any kind, if
used at all, will probably be only seen in
the family.
Improved methods of treatment for the
confinement and punishment of criminals
will be inaugurated and much more atten
tion be given to their reformation than to
their punishment.
Wealth undoubtedly will be much more
evenly distributed. There will be great com
fort and prosperity with the masses as well.
The condition of the laboring classes will
be less dependent and greatly improved,
and there will be more friendly relations
existing between employers and. the em
ployees, better understanding and greater
equality.
Methods of agriculture will be such and
the improvement in agricultural machinery
so great that all the immense population
of 1993 will be amply provided for, and
American citizens will continue to be the
best dressed, the best fed and the best
housed people of the world.
There will be great advancement in all
the professions in literature, music and the
drama. People will be longer lived. They
will understand much better tqje nature of
their wants and the treatment bf diseases.
They will be better natured and more con
ciliatory; consequently there will be less
need of the laws and laws’ methods. The
whole tendency of the race will be to
ward comfort, leisure, luxury, cultivation,
simplicity in dress and broader charity in
all social relations. The race will be hand
somer, healthier and happier than ever be
fore in the history of the world.
S. G. BROCK.
ALWAYS READ THE CHRONICLE FOR NEWS.
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when.
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers aud cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
LOUISVILLE, KV. AflV WRK, N.V.
LURES ALL SKIN
AND
BLODD DISEASES.
’ PnysiHana'«Ddora< P. i*. P. as a" splen<tid combination.
and prescribe tt with greet satisfaction for the cares of ail
“Fynhllb, Syphilitic RbsnmatUm. Scrofulous (Hcera itfid
Sores. Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Malaria, old
/Ihronlc Ulcers that have resisted all treatment, Catamlf „
nnaccyi?Es
Kr.r.taDPQisoi
st?n ,^!ea*e»?'^kreaST^hrontc Bl ßma!?TomplSul?
curial Pulton, Tetter, Scald Head, etc., etc.
P. P. P. Is a powerful toiric, and nn excellent appetlfW,
fwSbz wße
Ladles whose sy.terns are poisoned and whose blood la in
cures
.r.r.MAiARiA
bjnE7*wouderful ‘tcmSd J
cleansing properties of P. P. P., Prickly Ash, Poke Root
and Potassium.
L.tpt't'- a’ - 'iiics.,
•SruggUs, AHSAfI, OA.
We’re All Glad
Winter’s over. Are’nt
you tired of it—that suit
you’ve had since last fall ?
Wouldn’t one of our new
stylish blue grays do you
good make you feel
fresher ?
Our $35 line are cer
tainly the prettiest pat
terns ever gotten up for j
men. We’ve a $25 line, ;
too, that is better than
most $35 goods elsewere. j
To one who knows, it i.
means a great deal to say
that our suitings as
good as our makeup and
finish. They’ve always
been good—they’re bet
now than ever.
Dorr,
Tailor, Hatter, Outfitter,
718 Broad Street.
Subscribe to the Chronicle. J
‘ i • -