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AFRAID OF UNCLE SAM
ENGLAND ORDERED DOWN HER
FLAG.
She Said the Sulu Islands, Too, Were
Ours—Captain of a British Merchant
Steamer Gave the Flag to Natives to
Raise for Protection. V
On the departure of the Spaniards
the Inhabitants of some of the Suhi
Islands, notably Palawan, Balbabac
and Kulion, applied for British protec¬
tion, and CapL Pfort of the British
steamer Labuan, visiting Palawan in
response to the urgent request of the
natives, handed to the latter a British
flag, to be used in case of emergency.
On the matter being reported to Sir
Charles Mitchell, governor of the
Straits, and subsequently to the for¬
eign office, the latter telegraphed to
Singapore orders that the British flag
should at once be hauled down, and ac¬
cording to advices just received in Lon¬
don, H. M. S. Archer was dispatched
to Port Royalist, Palawan, to haul
down the flag. From the report of
Capt. Pfort it appears that it was only
on seeing the really critical state of
affairs that he gave the flag to the na¬
tives. The Labuan called at Port Roy¬
alist, Palawan, on February 1, and
found the people In great consterna¬
tion. The Spaniards had left three
months previously, saying that the
Americans would take over the gov¬
ernment in three days. On leaving, the
Spaniards turned adrift, without food,
clothes or money, all the native sol¬
diers. The convicts, too, were set at
liberty, and all arms and ammunition
having been removed the people were
entirely at the mercy of the disbanded
soldiers and freed convicts, who loot¬
ed and pillaged the whole country. On
his arrival Capt.' Pfort was asked by
the head man there if the governor of
Sandakan would afford them protec¬
tion, and he, in reply, suggested that
a letter in that sense should be dis¬
patched to the governor of Sandakan.
Capt. Pfort also handed to them a Brit¬
ish merchant ensign with instructions
to inform anyone seeking to molest
them that the people were under Brit¬
ish protection. He also gave to them
this letter: “Be it known unto all men
that I, Captain Pfort, master of the
British steamer Labuan, having arrived
at this port and found the people de¬
sirous of British protection, have this
day given to the president of this port
a British flag, which I have instructed
him to use and call upon all men to re¬
spect the same until such time as Her
Britannic Majesty, Queen Victoria,
notifies her pleasure regarding the pro¬
tection of this port and the Island of
Palawan in general.” After leaving
Port Royalist the Labuan called at
Curaray and Jilandak ports, on the
northwest coast of Palawan, and found
a similar condition of things, the people
being in terror in the mountains. Pro¬
ceeding to Kulion, an island seventy
miles north of Palawan, Capt. Pfort
found a local republic set up under
Aguinaldo. From this place he took on
board his steamer a number of refu¬
gees. The dispatch from Lord Salis¬
bury to Sir Charles Mitchell in refer¬
ence to Capt. Pfort’s action simply or¬
dered the flag to be hauled down, and
added that the British government dis¬
approved of Capt. Pfort’s action. Her
majesty government stated that Pala¬
wan and the adjacent islands, being
portions of the Philippines, became by
virtue of conquest, American territory.
A DOUBLE-BARRELED CANNON.
Almost as ingenious a weapon as the
celebrated gun which was intended to
fire a bullet around a corner, is the
double-barreled cannon—“the only one
in the world”—described by the Athens
(Ga.) Banner.
The cannon belonged to the Mitchell
Thunderbolts, a company of old men
organized here in 1863 purely for home
defense. One of the company, Mr. John
Gilleland, invented this cannon, and
had it cast at the Athens foundry.
A fifty-foot chain, with the ends at¬
tached to two cannon balls, was the
charge, and the idea of the inventor
was that when the balls came out of
the muzzle of the cannon they would
have a tendency to diverge, draw the
chain taut and mow down an entire
company. The Thunderbolts took the
cannon out into the country near
Athens one day to test it.
It was properly charged, and was
touched off with great ceremony. One
of the balls got out a little ahead of
the other, and then the mischief was to
pay. It had a kind of circular motion,
and plowed up about a quarter of an
acre of ground, the members of the
company in the meantime scattering
in all directions to keep from being bit
by the flying chain.
The old cannon was never used after
that except at an occasional democratic
jubilee, when charges of powder would
be fired. About five years ago it dis¬
appeared. Recently it turned up in a
junkshop, and the city promptly
bought it, and wil mount it near the
Confederate monument.
Penalty of Absent-Mindedness.
A wealthy but absent-minded resi¬
dent of McPherson, Kan., recently
bought a safe in which to keep his
valuables and being unable to remem¬
ber the combination scribbled it on the
plastering of a near-by wall. Subse¬
quently he ordered a calciminer to put
a new coat on the wall. The mem¬
orandum was obliterated and it be-
came necessary to have the safe blown
open.
ANIMAL DRUNKARDS.
nor.es, Fowl., Cat. aud Bee. aa “Shock¬
ing Example.”
In the course of a county court ac¬
tion tried early tills year it transpired
that an ailing cat consumed two bot¬
tles of whisky, says Answers. Now,
that horses enjoy strong drink is a
well-known fact, but that the domeatia
cat Is capable of imbibing will coma
as a surprise to many, who imagined
that the conectlon between the cat and
the decanter was but a stock summer
joke for the humorist when seaside
lodgings are at a premium. It was
probably to a great extent due to the
large quantity of stout that Rory
O’More the effects drank, of when accident recovering received from at j j
an
Kempton, that he survived to carry off
numerous prizes. If prize-winning ;
formed a natural corollary to equine
drinking, British owners wooJd have
reason to look forward to the forth-
coming season with apprehension, for
a few months ago there was discovered
in Paris a horse belonging to a dealer
in wines that is a positive inebriate.
The animal, after many battles of wine
had disappeared, was found one day
hopelessly intoxicated in its owner’s
cellars, into which it was in the habit
seemingly of making its way at night
and helping Itself. The horse was not
altogether to blame, for it had been
corrupted to a certain extent by hav¬
ing its oats mixed with wine when it
was rather overworked, with the result
that it acquired a habit which grew
upon it with disastrous results. Some
few years ago an action was brought
at Oban by a poultry keeper against a
local distillery company for injuries
done to his hons by the said company
having allowed intoxicating material
to flow into the burn at which his
poultry drank, with the result that the
said fowls failed to do their duty in
laying eggs, and, being more or less
always under the influence of drink,
refused to eat and grow fat. During
the case one of the fowls was produced
in court, but its conduct was such that
it had to be ejected. Alas! on making
an undignified exit, half a glass of
whisky was presented to it by a by¬
stander and gratefully accepted by the
somewhat ruffled bird, whereupon the
condition of the creature became con¬
siderably worse. The chicken is not
the only bird that indulges. Parrots
are notorious for their drinking pro¬
pensities, particularly the gray African
parrot, a specimen of which the writer
has seen hopelessly intoxicated and
talking the most absolute nonsense. A
piece of “tipsy” cake was presented to
a Hampshire donkey some time ago.
The animal on being left to its own
devices lost all sense of shame and
proceeded to the larder of its owner
and consumed a plum pudding of con¬
siderable size, two loaves of bread, and
among other trifles a dish of tinned
apricots—an action quite foreign to the
usually well-regulated race. The effect
of a very little spirit made fifty ants,
upon which Sir John Lubbock experi¬
mented a couple of years ago, very
drunk and almost incapable, so much
so that twenty-five sober ants, whose
attention was drawn to the depravity
of their comrades, had the greatest
difficulty in carrying the sinners home,
though they eventually succeeded in
doink so. The locust, however, appears
to , have a capacity for spirit unparal¬
leled in the animal kingdom. Some
months since an entomologist on a
steamer off Gibraltar, wishing to se¬
cure a specimen that had alighted on
the deck and not having a killing bot¬
tle with him, poured raw brandy upon
the insect, but with no result. He
then partially immersed it in more
spirit in a saucer and waited for the
end, which did not come. The locust,
taking a long, refreshing drink, ab¬
sorbed all the spirit and did not die
until several days elapsed. Bees and
wasps are easily made tipsy by a mix¬
ture of beer and sugar. The expres¬
sion “to drink like a fish” is nothing
short of a libel perpetrated upon the
finny tribe, for it has been found that
1 per cent of alcohol will kill a gold¬
fish in one hour and thirty minutes,
while 20 per cent will act on its sys¬
tem like prussic acid.
TO SPEND ON DRESS.
The society women of London spend
enormous sums on dress and yet there
are many women moving in fashion¬
able circles who manage miraculously
on very little to appear well gowned. A
fashionable dressmaker of i^ondon says
among her customers are women
whose allowances range from $750 to
$1,000 a year.
While one gown will cost $S00 and is
destined to be worn but three or four
times one can see how vast a sum can
be expended. The dressmaker in ques¬
tion gives it as her opinion that no so¬
ciety girl can be artistically and hand¬
somely clad on less than $1,000 a year,
and then she must economize in many
particulars. Professional society wom¬
en and leading actresses are the most
extravagant.
Fads account for much of the money
spent. This last winter in London
women wore silk equestrian tights a
great deal, claiming their skirts hung
better and were easier to wear over
them. Corsets lined with kid and
chamois breeches for riding and cy¬
cling—these are some of the expensive
novelties that cost. Royalty is not as
extravagant as its subjects. The trous¬
seau of a princess mounted up to $30,-
000 this spring, but many an American
bride spends more than that. Three or
six dozen of everything in the way of
lingerie mounts up.
The path of a good woman is in¬
deed strewn with flowers; but they rise
behind her steps, not before them.—
John Ruskin.
WAS NEAR TO DEATH.
TERRIBLE ADVENTURE OF JOHN
S. FEE OF OHIO.
A Voyage In Polar Sett*—The Experience
of a Traveler Who Has Keceutly
Returned from the Arctic Region* —
Ho Describes Northern Scenes.
Mr. John S. Fee of Ohio recently
spent more than a year In the Arctic
regions, enduring all the hardships in¬
cldent to such a stay in a land of Ice
and snow. Mr. Fee Is a young man,
possessed of excellent educational ad-
vantages, and has traveled extensively
in both Europe and America. He talks
entertainingly of the remarkable ex-
perience through which he passed
while in the neighborhood of the
north P°>e- He is a personal friend of
President McKinley and Senator Mark
Hanna, and a brother to United States
Consul William T. Fee, who recently
sailed for his post at Bombay, India.
“When I think of all I have expe¬
rienced on this voyage, I wonder that
I am alive to tell the tale,” he said to a
reporter recently. I don’t try to re¬
member, but I am doing my best to
forget the incidents of my voyage to
the Polar seas.”
Mr. Fee sailed from San Francisco
on July 1, 1897, going north, and passed
the Aleutian islands thirty-two days
later. On July 26, the Bering sea was
entered; nine days later East cape, on
the Siberia coast, was sighted; on Aug.
18, passed through the Bering straits
into the Arctic ocean. Herschell
island, which lies in 73 degrees SO min¬
utes and 40 seconds north latitude, and
about 142 degrees 20 minutes and 40
seconds longitude, was reached on
Aug. 24, where the whaling fleet of
fourteen vessels was met on Aug. 27.
Three days later they again weighed
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FEE IN ARCTIC DRESS.
anchor and were caught in the ice and
fearfully jammed; there they remained
fastened for four days, and then the
ice, by the aid of strong currents and
heavy winds, worked off slowly and
carried them 1,000 miles to the north¬
west of Banks Land. There they lay
five days for repairs, tied to the ice¬
bergs, arffi by heroic labors of officers
and crew worked their way out of the
pack. The return trip was then be-
gun, and on Sept. 15 they were again
caught and frozen in. There they re¬
mained all winter, until July 24, 1898.
After several days’ drifting, they man¬
aged to free themselves, and were
again caught in the ice pack, and for
over two weeks drifted in mid-ocean.
They again freed thmselves and on
Aug. 8 managed to get in shore to
Franklin’s return reef, where Dr.
Franklin was lost in 1852. The ship
on which Mr. Fee was sailing was in a
sinking condition and unseaworthy, so
all the cargo was transferred from the
stern and the vessel laid up for sev¬
eral days for repairs. On Aug. 16 they
again put to sea and succeeded in
working their way through the float¬
ing ice. At length the passage back
through the Bering sea was made, and
Mr. Fee found himself safe again in
America on Oct. 13, 1898, less than a
year ago.
Of the whaling fleet, the steamship
Orca, one of the finest vessels on the
Pacific coast, was crushed by the ice
in September, 1897, and was sunk.
Eight of the eighty-two members of
the crew were lost. The Jesse H. Free¬
man was caught in the ice and jammed,
and afterwards fired, that she might
not prove a menace to navigation.
Part of the crew took to the ice, which
afterwards drifted into mid-ocean,
which was the last seen or heard of
them. The steamship Navarch was
also lost, and two of her crew per¬
ished. The steamer Ward D. Hume
now lies at Herschell island, unfit for
service. Only one-third of her crew
remain, the remainder having been lost
or frozen to death. These casualties
will give some idea of the dangerous
experience. The privations which part
of the men suffered can better be Im¬
agined than described. From their al¬
ready scant store of provisions it was
necessary to take largely to exchange
with the natives for fur clothing. With¬
out furs it would have been Impossible
for them to have withstood the cold,
the temperature being most of the time
from 70 to 82 degrees below zero. The
United States revenue cutter Bear was
sent by the government with relief.
By the aid of reindeer and dog sleds
the relief crew succeeded in getting as
far north as Point Barrow, but not to
Herschell Island, The unique expe-
rience of Mr. Fee was the forty-day pe¬
riod of total darkness when the north-
ern lights appeared in all their splen¬
dor. During the remaining ten months
there was perpetual day.
THE PRESS THE THING. W
World Famans Froacher 8oe» th« Ideal
K.w.paper Coming.
Here is an inspiration for a right aa-
bition! If I were not a minister, I
would choose to be a journalist. For
surely no prospect for a life work ever
opened up so vivid a picture of oppor¬
tunity. There is an alluring fascina¬
tion at the thought of the originality,
the resourcefulness, the influence that
may be found in a paper or magazine
that has for its motto, “For a Better
World,” and for its purpose everything
holy. What a magnificent opportunity
to mark out one’s own plan and devel¬
op his own campaign! What endless
possibilities to shape public feeling and
mold private character! Oh, yes, I
know the old pessimistic cry of Uto¬
pian! and visionary! and impractical!
It is not the first time I have heard
practical newspaper men say a paper
cannot be run on strictly Christian
principles without going bankrupt in
thirty days. Nevertheless, oh, ye fu¬
ture journalists, what a splendid oppor-
tunity is offered you to try running
your paper or magazine on new prin¬
ciples as old as God, but applied in
new places!
What we do in the world is not
worth doing, unless It is done to the
glory of God. We have been created
with different powers, and are called
to do different things. But if each one
of us in his own calling works out the
will of him who made us, the result
shall be one result. The world is al¬
ways ready to test what we do by its
standard of “success.” But eternity
will test what we do by the standard of
the “cross.”
Genuine Wife Trading.
Perry (Ok.) Special Chicago Chroni¬
cle: A real case of wife trading ip re¬
ported from Woodward county, Okla¬
homa. Charles Newbern and J. W. Al-
sup were neighbors, and swapped
wives, and now Newbern is living with
AIsup’s former wife and Alsup is liv¬
ing with Newbern’s. Both are farmers
and each sued for a divorce from his
wife about the same time, alleging ex¬
treme cruelty and gross neglect of duty.
Newbern’s wife was a witness for Al¬
sup and AIsup’s wife was a witness for
Newbern. The trial judge remarked
when the divorces were granted that
there was something strange about the
divorce cases. Two months after ob¬
taining his divorce Newbern and the
former Mrs. Alsup were married in
Kansas and a few days ago Alsup and
the former Mrs. Newbern were mar¬
ried in Texas. Now the two former
neighbors are still living near each
other and all seem happy.
Cheap Marriages.
Some of the clergymen in Melbourne
advertise their readiness to perform
the marriage service for the low fee of
50 cents. For $2 the ring and a wed¬
ding breakfast are supplied.
A man must be healthy before he can
be holy.—Mme. Swetchine.
LETTER FROM AN AFRICAN KINO'
It Is not every day that a king regent
of Africa favors the civilized world
with a letter, and extraordinary inter¬
est attaches to the communication here
presented in translation. It is from
Zakaria Kizito, Kangao, regent of
Uganda, and wa3 sent to Sir Henry M.
Stanley. The language in which Zak¬
aria wrote is Kiganda, and the unblot¬
ted and unscratched appearance of the
original manuscript shpws that the
“heathen king" Is facile with his pen.
Twenty-five years ago Zakaria was
one of the pages at the court of Mtesa,
king of Uganda. A few years later he
was a pupil of an English missionary.
In the meantime Mtesa died, and
Mwanga, one of his many sons, suc¬
ceeded to the reign. Mwanga was a
cruel king and persecuted missionaries
and converts, ordered the murder of a
bishop and finally expelled the mis¬
sionaries. Eventually a combination
of Protestants and Mohammedans
turned Mwanga out. This alliance
didn’t last, and Mwanga, professing re¬
pentance, sought to return. Stanley
was in that region at that time, and
aided in the establishment of Mwanga.
When that gifted African got back bis
job he retained it only two years, when
he fled and waged war against the
British. Meanwhile the people of
Uganda put Mwanga’s infant son on
the throne, and installed as regents
three of the principal chiefs, of whom
Zakaria was one.
Last March the English defeated and
captured Mwanga. This is the letter
the regent sent to Stanley;
“To my much-beloved of great hon¬
or, and, sir, my father in mudi love,
Chief Stanley, who has honor, thanks
for my letter which you wrote to me
on Dec. 17, 1898, as you had just got
off your bed. Sir, that—to rise from
your bed on two occasions to write to
me—makes your love to me apparent.
“Well, sir, thanks for telling me the
many works which you do. Sirs, well
done, ‘because it is the trouble taken
by the parent that makes the child fat.’
Because it is the care taken by Eng-
land which delivers us Baganda and
the other lands guarded by England.
Weil, then, we pray much to God, be¬
cause he is in the midst of your de¬
liberations as you take counsel in much
love to guard us who are in Buganda.
“Well done to understand the words
I wrote to you about the Soudanese,
and you replied and understood the
whole matter well. I understood well
what you told me about the English
who called the Soudanese faithful, and
I understood about your love, which is
warm to me and to all Buganda. And,
sir, although you are unable really to
see me with your eyes, I know you
are with me in spirit, and with all the
Baganda and Buganda. In our conver¬
sation we speak very much of you to
this effect: ‘Master Stanley loves us
very much, because he told our friends,
who teach, to send us people to preach
to us the name of Christ our Saviour.’
"Well, then, sir, you have told me
these things, viz.; ‘To hold fast to God'
I % m
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mmm
v/. Will
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6 ,
ZAKARIA Z1KITO.
—Yes, because the laws of God teach
the foolish and give light to the eyes
and to fear God’s wisdom. Were they
(the laws) commenced there, when I
work God will help me, and 'to obey
the Parliament of the English Queen
and those who rank near her in honor,’
as I do.
“Well, then, thank God Almighty be¬
cause the great enemies of Buganda,
and of the English, and of the relig¬
ions of God, God has given them into
our hands. Mwanga, who was King of
Buganda, .and Kabarega, who was King
of Bunyoro, our friends the English
soldiers, who guard Buganda and Bun¬
yoro, routed them and caught them
both, and princes to the number of
twelve were caught in that battle. In
that fight they overcame them and
killed about thirty people, and on our
side five Indian and two Baganda were
killed. Well, we shall find much peace,
because the enmity injures most which
comes from the mist within the coun¬
try itself. Our deeds which we per¬
formed with Captain Fowler and Colo¬
nel Coles to Bilal Aminl, captain of
Soudanese, you have heard before in
the English letters, and Captain Fow¬
ler has returned some time ago to Eu¬
rope. Well, then, my great friend and
father in very much love, salute for
me Mrs. Stanley, my motherland my
little brother Denzil and the other
children. My wife, Elizabeth Kizito,
and the children of my brother and my
people salute you. Salute your wife
and children for us. Well may the
Lord make the light of His counte¬
nance shine on you. Again, sir, fare¬
well, I, your favorite child,
‘‘ZAKARIA KIZITO, KANGAO,
“Regent, Uganda.”
Had Been Shaking Long Enough.
At a recent duel the parties dis¬
charged their pistols without effect,
whereupon one of the seconds inter¬
posed and proposed that the combat¬
ants should shake hands. To this the
other second objected as unnecessary.
“Their hands,” said he, “have been
shaking for half an hour.”
"He is Wise Who
Talks Bat Little.”
This is only a half truth. If noise men
had held their tongues, nxt should know
nothing about the circulation of the blood.
If H were not for this advertisement you
might never know that Hood’s Sarsapa¬
rilla is the best blood medicine.
3&0i€i SaUafmdS^
Rough on thi Doctors.
In Lexington avenue Is a sign which
reads: "To rent—this parlor floor—to
a doctor or a gentleman.” It recalls
the remark of a girl In discussing the
formation of a new whist club.
“It Is very odd,” she observed, “that
from among my acquaintances I have
obtained as members five doctors and
one gentleman.”
Evidently the doctors need not feel
unduly puffed as to their standing la
the community.—New York Commer¬
cial Advertiser.
Lost Sight
Restored and the eyes cured by using
Findley’s Eye Salve. No pain, sure cure or
money back. 25c. box. AU druggists, or
by mail, 25c. per box. J. P. Hatteb, Deca¬
tur, Texas,
—————- .
Godlv love always manifests tenderness
and pity and yet is firm and true.
Pits s: rmanently cured. No 8ts or nervous-
ness a r first dey's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerre Restorer, tv trial bot-tlenndtreatlsefree.
bn. It. H. Kuxs, Ltd.. 981 Arcii Sit.. 1’hlla., Pa.
Laboring lob. under a delusion is an unprofita¬
ble
COUCH SYRUP
Cures Croup and Whooping-Cough
Unexcelled for Consumptives. Refuse substitutes. Gives
quick, sure results.
Dr. Bull's Pills cure Biliousness. Trial , 20 for sc.
GORE YOOR HORSE
of Spavin, Curb, Splint, Capped
Hock, Sore Tendons, Cuts, Kicks,
Bruises, etc., by using
SLOAN’S
LINIMENT]
.Aviso an invaluable remedy for man.
When taken internally it cures
Cramps and Colic. It is the best
antiseptic known.
Every bottle is warranted. Sold by dealers
and druggists generally. Family size, 25c.
Horse size, 50c. and $1.00.
Prepared by EARL S. SLOAN, Boston, Mass.
Why take
Nauseous Medicines T
Are you suffering with
INDIGESTION?
Are you suffering with
KIDNEY or BLADDER TROUBLE?
Are you subject to COLIC, FLATULENClf
or PAINS in the BOWELS?
Do you Ktiirer from HKTENTION or S! IM¬
PRESSION oi URINE?
Do you feel LANGUOR, and DEBILITA¬
TED in the momiug?
WOLFE’S
Aroma! o Schiedam
SCHNAPPS
CURES THEM ALL!!
Pleasant to take, Stimulating,
Diuratio, Stomachic, Absolutely Pure.
THE BEST KIDNEY and LIVER MEDICINE
IN THE WORLD 1 1 1
For Snle by all GUOCHRS and
DRUG GISTS.
REWARD OF SI; US i ITUTES.
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3&$3.50 SHOES
Worth $4 to $6 compared with
other makes.
i-', Indorsed by over
% 1,000,000 wearers.
ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES
T1IK GENUINE have W. L. Dougla**
m name and price stamped on bottom.
ci Take no substitute claimed
to be as good. Largest ma ken
of $3 and $3.50 BlioeB in the
wo rid. Your dealer should keep
the em—If not* we will send you
aw®i a pair on receipt of price. State
kind of leathe :r, size and width, plain or cap toe.
Catalogue <J Froe.
W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton. Mass.
I .
8
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a
Send your name and address on a
postal, and we will send you our 1 56-
page illustrated catalogue free.
1 WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.
176 Winchester Avenue. New Haven, Conn.
hv>:oi 10 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 :
inyour 'V^-^^TED—Energetic man as County Su* ess
yaselng; own straighl and adjoining $18.00 counties: no can-
Yearly salary, per week and
expenses. Exceptional . opportunity. contract, rapid promotion.
turers, P. O. Box 733, Philadelphia, Address Manufac¬
Penn.
DROPSY Book testimonial* SSISS and 10 days’ treatment
canes- of
Fr«se, Dr. H. H. GREEN’S SONS. Kox B. Atlanta. Ga.
r‘ 2W ~L_Ir ST
m
Rost ■Gough Byrun. ■ L Use
lp tlm^. gold by druggists.