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The commonwealth. (Greenwood, Miss.) 1896-1923, January 09, 1904, Image 3

Image and text provided by Mississippi Department of Archives and History

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn89065008/1904-01-09/ed-1/seq-3/

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EELIC OF THE PAST.
The Talamancans a Forgotten Peo
ple of the Isthmus.
Their Ancient laafte» aad CuKtoui«
Have Not Been Affected by F<
Centurie« of Mcil lei a I Span
ish Civilisation.
Within less than 100 miles of where
the United states intends to complete
the greatest interoceanlc ditch the
world has seen, in territory where the
newly created republic of Panama is
situated, there dwells an Indian nation
that is to all intents and purposes
identically the same to-day as it was
when Columbus first discovered the
western hemisphere. These are the
Talamancans. who Inhabit a few square
miles lu the mountains almost midway
between the two oceans and but a com
paratively short distance from the
Panama railroad, though it is much to
be doubted if they have ever seen it or
are aware of its existence. The Scien
tific American says that although for
upward of four centuries the medieval
civilization of Spain has surrounded
them on all sides, they have neither
been contaminated by its influence nor
exterminated by its kindness, as wastbe
case in Cuba aud otherSpanish colonies.
Their language is still their own, and
seems to have lost little of its original
character through contact with the ex
ecrable mixture of English, Spanish and
French spoken by the lower classes
throughout the West Indies and along
the Spanish Main. Living in virtually
an unknown region, at least three days'
journey from the nearest settlement,
their solitude is seldom broken. The
visitor is received with the greatest hos
pitality. and is welcome as long as he
desires to remain. Their visits to the
outer world are infrequent, rarely ex
tending beyond the nearest port, and are
undertaken only in quest of luxuries.
Extra fowls and porkers are bartered on
these occasions for tobacco, gewgaws
and ammunition. The spear and blow
gun are used more than firearms for
various reasons. The former are not
only infinitely cheaper, but usually more
effective in the hands of the Indian than
the cheap muzzle-loading fowling piece
of French or German origin with its pa
per-like Barrel—the only arm he can
afford to purchase besides the machete.
Their language and customs in some
respects resemble those of the score or
more of widely differing peoples that
are scattered over the territory lying
between the Mexican border and the
Isthmus. Their ancestors doubtless
To
the
ape
m
v
: J
TAI.AMANCAN ROYAL PALACE.
Built Hun
(Unlq
Structure That W
dredw of Years Ago.)
served Aztec masters ior centuries be
fore Cortez appeared on the scene to
impose a worse slavery upon them, for
they are not of the superior race of
which so many reminders in the shape
of gold and silver ornaments, stone idols
and curious specimens of pottery have
been unearthed in quantities in
of the Central American states, and be
ing the opposite of warlike, they could
easily be held in bondage.
They are not idolaters in any sense of
the word, nor do they profess religion or
hold public worship of any nature,
though their belief tends more to fear
of an evil spirit than faith in a good
one; in fact, the Talamancans present
an instance of a nation without doctor,
lawyer or priest, the "sokee,"
oral
corre
sponding to the medicine man of the
North American tribes, usually combin
ing the functions of all three. Polygamy
is the most important feature of their
domestic relations, few if any of the ]
members of the different tribes being
content with less than three to haif
dozen wives, while his Talamancan
majesty might weil exclaim
Launcçiot: "Alas!
nothinge." His seraglio is usually bet
ter provided in point of numbers.
The government of this Indian nation
is entirely hereditary, and it is aston
ishing lo iearn of the mtyiy points of the
doctrine of primogeniture as practiced
by (he reigning families of Europe, with
which they are familiar,
are naturally few in number, both the
legislative and judicial power, as is
usually the case where no fixed princi
ples of either have been acquired, be
ing vested exclusively in the king. In
common with others in his position the
world over, he is a despot, and rules
according to royal whim where thisdoes
not conflict with long-established cub
tom. The marital relation Is held
cred. The engagement of a girl begins
within a few hours of her birth, the
bridegroom-to-be making a contract
with the parents at thaï time. It is
usually consummated when she reaches
the age of ten or twelve, a custom that
is responsible for great disparity in the
age and longevity of the sexes.
with
Fifteen wives is
Their laws
A
his
and
so
Found After Maux Years.
A pocketbook containing |50 in gold
. was lost eight years ago by Mrs. Davolt,
of New Boston. Mo. She never heard
from it until the other day. when the
money was found in a peculiar way. A
young man rode up to the Davolt home
ind tied his horse to a tree near the
house. When he returned for the horse
he found that it had pawed a pocketbook
out of the earth. It was the one Mrs.
Davolt had lost eight years before.
Plar wifi, Elephant's Head.
A remarkable animal was lately born
at Rye, England. It is a boar pig, with
the head and features of an elephant.
Ore ear is of Immense proportions, and
a trunk protrudes from the forehead.
Between the trunk and the snout there
is a huge eyeball containing two pupils.
The Für-« Step.
A failure to start oiten saves a mis
erable fitiBL— Chicago Daily Newa.
are
ciai
a
SOME MIGHTY APES.
Valuable Collection Recently Pro*
•en ted to Philadelphia Academy
of Natural Science«.
The Darwinian theory of the descent
of man may soon be studied at close
range, owing to generosity of a promi
nent Philadelphian. Dr. Thomas Biddle,
who has just returned from Europe with
what is believed to be the most com
plete collection of anthropoid apes ever
owned by one person. The specimens
were obtained from various sources ami
prepared by the German taxidermist,
Umlauff. Among them is a fine speci
men of that rarely secured animal, the
gorilla. On account of its immense
strength and ferocity when cornered it
has been most difficult even to obtain
a dead specimen of the gorilla family,
it being necessary to risk life in order
to track it to its lair in the interior of
Africa. The specimen secured by Dr.
Biddle was shot by a venturesome Ger
man. George Zenker, near the Yaunde
station, Western Africa, a little to the
north of the equator.
The New* York Tribune says that the
height of this gorilla is a little over
five feet, and the strongest man would
f.
j
j
I
is
of
lyj/
z/
' ,s .
JfcJraY
NS
¥
AN AFRICAN GORILLA.
(Posed for the Camera by the Natives
Who Killed Him.)
probably be a plaything in its hands.
To some monkeys, despite their lack of
good looks, the expression "cute" may
apply, but it i? not possible to so de
scribe the gorilla. With his Hat nose,
enormous jaws and protruding teeth,
the thick neck and bulging chest, this
ape is far from the human ideal of a
handsome animal.
When he can, the gorilla will run
front a man, and as no one has been
particularly anxious to come to close
quarters with him, it is not possible to
speak with assurance of his mode of
life. It is said that he travels for the
most part on all fours, and only rises
on his hind legs to resist attack. It
is also said that he builds himself a
home in the trees.
The collection contains three speci
mens of the chimpanzee. One is the
ordinary chimpanzee, another the bald
chimpanzee and the third a variety
called the Koola Kamba.
The chimpanzees are more intelligent
than the gorilla, and have been trained
in captivity to do tricks. Naturalists
have been long at odds as to the number
of their species, as well as those of the
orang-outang, of which a line specimen
is included in the collection presented
to tne Academy of Natural Sciences in
Philadelphia by Dr. Biddle. The speci
men presented by Dr. Biddle has a
great lateral expansion of the cheeks.
23
a
the
so
BISMARCK OF JAPAN.
MnrqtilK Ito, Who««* Death I« Alleged
to Have Iteei
fin n tic «I by a
Tokio AiMnioln.
Marquis Ito, a plot against whose life
has just been disclosed, is a statesman
of great renown, and also an able naval
and military officer. He commanded
the fleet in 1894 when the Japanese
ships, though considerably fewer in
number, destroyed the Chinese
navy.
¥
1 ,
;</
r
THE MARQUIS ITO.
(Japan's Greatest Statesman and One of
the World's Cleverest Diplomats.)
Ito has been prime minister on two or
three occasions, and for 25 years has
been the dose adviser of the mikado.
He has traveled extensively in Europe
and America, has studied political sci
ence with the utmost care, and at times
has been called by his admirers the Bis
marck and the Gladstone of Japan,
COREAN OFFICIALS.
The Noble \rt «1
-M|il«e<l—Hlnek)
er> in Officialdom.
>f Gi
ift 1« Not De
id Drib
ni
In view of the negotiation» now being
carried on between Russia and Japan,
the picture which we give here of Coreaff
government officials is specially inter
esting. At least 20 per cent, of the
whole population of Corea belongs lo
the official class, for every one wants to
live a life of ease at the expense of his
fellow countrymen, says Golden Penny.
A Corean government official does not
think so much of the honor of serving
his country as of ihe opportunities he
has for effecting "squeezes," that is to
say. the levying of blackmail, the re
ceiving of bribes from persons having
business with his superior, the right to
travel everywhere at the public expense
and other "pickings." The government
appointments are open to competition,
so every one ought to have an equal
chance.
The successful candidates,
however, are usually those who pay the
best, or have the most interest. There
are eight governors of provinces lx
Coreo, and 332 prefects, and each off!
ciai has. according to his rank or « ealth
a body of secretaries, seal bearers, tax
gatherers, soldiers, polie« and otta
servants.
FARMER AND PLANTER.
!
THE MAN WHO KNOWS HOW.
The Parmer** luce«*«« In 1004 De*
pend* Largely l pon Well
Matured rimming.
it
of
It is worth while to plan. All real
success is the result of plans. Plans
well laid and persistently carried out
do not often fail. The success of next
year's plans will depoDd to a consid
erable degree upon the plans made
now.
All who have observed closely this
1903 have seen a year of extraordi
nary weather conditions. Through all
of these many have come with good
crops. These planned well in 1903.
Deep soil, which was not stirred wet,
has produced good crops in spite of
the peculiar weather conditions. These
soils have absorbed the excess of rain
and resisted the excess of heat and
drought. Thousands who grew rest
less and plowed wet lands, have seen
their mistakes emphasized by the fail
ure of the crops. We should all learn
from these extremes of weather the
wisdom of deep, fall plowing, and
shallow spring and summer cultiva
tion.
We should learn to trust and co
operate with providence rather than
try to force providence to bend to our
plans and yield to our errors. Nature's
laws are ail good and change not at
our bidding. Obey them and you will
succeed. Violate them and you will
fail.
a
in
on
There are many lessons we should
heed, but one very largely affecting ail
of our success deserves careful eon
j sidération: We can not force success
j no matter how much we try, when
I we go contrary to nature's laws. This
is true of each one of us, atjd it is true
of all of us. It will be the same if
we all join together. We can not pre
vent water from washing the land if
we plow shallow'. We can not make
soil productive if we plow wet.
For years past we have done all we
could to force a very large yield of
cotton, but we plowed shallow and wet
and fertilized foolishly and we failed.
This year we greatly increased the
acreage in cotton and greatly in
creased the quantity of fertilizers.
But we have signally failed to produce
a large crop. Imperfect stands, fail
ure to come up promptly, growing off
slowly, rust, bol! worm, caterpillar,
etc., have made a light yield. And
now this is cut short by an early, kill
ing frost. The full extent of damage
from the frost, will not be known until
the picking Is ended. Week after
week we will realize it more and more.
We bear men argue that a half stand
will make more than a full stand. If
that be true why do we plant for a
stand and hoe for a stand and plow for
a stand? Why not just change our
plans and half do the whole business?
This argument will not do. We have
never been able to pick any cotton
from the missing places In our fields.
Our cotton has grown upon stalks
and not in the open air without any
stalk. The crop is short; the price is
nigh. If we «ell slowly we will see
still higher prices.—Southern Culti
vator.
ere,
bee
it
is
of
is
in
a
THE TURPENTINE INDUSTRY.
0,eratui
tux the
In the Sooth Are Adnpt
v Method of El.
tract 1 ng Turpentine.
The discovery of a new way of ex
tracting turpentine, made two years
ago by Dr, Charles H. Herty. working
under the direction of the bureau of
forestry, I,i resulting in a complete
change of methods by turpentine op
erators all over the south.
In a bulletin published- last spring
by the bureau of forestry the claim
was made that the experiments with
the new cup and gutter system of
turpentining had resulted in an in
crease over the old boxing system of
23 per cent, in the amount of the
product extracted. This figure has
now been raised to more than 3G per
cent. In other words, Dr. Herty's sys
tem, when universally adopted in the
south, as it is bound to be sooner or
later, will have raised the turpentine
production of this country oy more
than a third, provided the samo num
ber of trees are used. Two years ago,
when Dr. Herty first made known his
discoveries, he put 20,000 cups into
operation. Last year this figure was
increased to about 400,000. This year
a conservative estimate places the
number of cups to be used at 3,000,000.
The figures give some indication of
the rapidity with which turpentine
operators are adopting the new sys
tem. The change of methods has been
so rapid that the pottery company
which undertook to supply operators
with earthen cups has been unable to
keep up tfith its orders and has been
obliged to refuse contracts for over
two million cups. It is safe to say
that the majority of the large turpen
tine operators in ttiis country have
given up the boxing system and will
extract their turpeutine by means of
cups and gutters.
The economic saving of this new
discovery is enormous It not only
causes a great increase in the amount
of turpentine produced, but it is a
most important factor in saving the
pine forests of the south. Every one
knows that trees from which turpen
tine has been extracted by the old
method—"boxed" timber it is called—
soon die from the wounds inflicted on
them. The cup and gutter system,
on the other hand, is not fatal to the
life of the tree, and does very little
damage to the timber.
The bureau of forestry has arranged
to give the personal assistance of Dr.
Herty to turpentine operators who de
sire to install the new system.— U. S.
Bureau of Forestry Bulletin.
a
of
in
as
a
THE VALUE OF LEGUMES.
Ritracting
I'VrtlllziiiK
From tbe Air One of Their
Most Valuable Fonction«.
Material
Natural laws of plant life are very
Instructive to tbe tillers of the soil.
Prof. Voo'i b
, w-iu Is reliable, made
very clear, in some experiments how
cow-pcas take nitrogen from the at
mosphere and deposits it in the sol!.
He grew plants in large pots, so that
he could tell exactly what happened
to the soli. Before the row-peas were
planted the soli was analyzed so that
the exact amount of nitrogen which
It contained was known. The cow-peas
were grows without any fertilizer, and
! and the tope »ere cut off eloee to the
soil about as one would In making hay.
After this crop was taken off the soil
was analysed again and It coats iced
more nitrogen thaï. It did before ttts
crop was planted. Let us think wh*t
that means. Here was average soli
which produced a fair crop of cow
peas, and still had more nitrogen left
than before! No one will believe that
the nitrogen climbed into that soil and
lay down, a willing captive! Nitrogen
isn't built that way—it is constantly
trying to escape, and such experiments
prove that the cow-pea is one of na
ture's policemen and that he knows
how to arrest the runaway. We un
derstood from this what it means to a
field or farm to have a crop of cow
peas growing every few years in poor
er soil. Another thing which Prof.
Voorhees has shown is the fact that
the gain of nitrogen to the soil is
greater when no nitrogen is used as a
manure. It seems to be settled that
the cow-pea is like a majority of hu
mans. It will not hustle for its nitro
gen unless it has to do so. On a poor
soil and well supplied with potash and
phosphoric add, the cow-pea will se
cure nitrogen from the air In rich soil
or where nitrogen is added as a fertil
izer, the plant will lake that first of
all. Therefore the way to use peas is
to plant them on the poorest soil and
use a fair dressing of potash and acid
phosphate with them,—Southern Agri
culturist,
I do not think it would be possible
to get as good an egg yield a» I repot t
without the best of care in feeding.
My poultry have been fed three times
a day, just as^carefully and thoroughly
as work horses or fattening stock.
Another thing which will add largely
to the profit is to market all surplus
poultry as early as possible. A duck
ten weeks old will cost less than bait
what one will four months old, and
will bring just as much money. Early
chicks no larger than quail will often
bring more money than those that
are kept twice as long. During nearly
the entire four months in which my
eggs were sold, as reported, the huck
sters were paying but seven cents per
dozen in cash, and the grocers eight
cents in tra^e: but by contracting
my eggs to a largo boarding house,
warranting every egg to be fresh, and
seeing that it was so, I received al
ways two cents or more above the
market price. When no nest eggs are
left in the nests, and one person gath
ers the eggs every day, keeps thorn
in a cool place, and markets regularly
on a given day each week, it is per
fectly safe to warrant the eggs, for
they can not be otherwise than per
fectly fresh and good—Southern
Farmer.
amJ
will
cap
"'I
The Bee Hum! ne*«.
There are bee keepers and bee kcî^p
ere, bee fanciers, and bee cranks
practical bee keepers and imitation
bee keepers. The latter class »re
those who have heard of some one
making big money out of bees,
those who have a neighbor that has se
cured a good crop of honey and sold
it at a fair price, and they imagine he
is getting rich fast, so they want some
of it, too. They imagine that all that
is necessary is to procure a few colo
nies of bees and set them under the
shade of an old aple tree and after
that hive the swarms and take the
honey in the autumn. They think that
bees gather honey from the time the
first flowers bloom in the spring un
til frost has killed all vegetation in
the late autumn. Should any such
bee keeper read this article I would
advise him to do one of two things,
either sell his bees to some one *ho
understands caring for them or else
make a thorough study of the business
and make a practical bee keeper of
himself. And I might add right b*?re
that he must not expect to do this in
six months or even within one year
progressive Bee Keeper.
HERE AND THERE.
—In nearly ail cases a hog that !»
kept penned up in a close pen with i
board floor will get stiff or become
criplod in some way.
—Recently a carload of acorn fed
razor-back hogs from Arkansas
shiped to Kansas City and brought
the highest prices on the market.
—The soil for Irish potato«:
spring should be deeply and thorough
ly plowed now, or as soon as convent
ent, and the sooner it is convenient tilt
better.
—Large Yorkshire pigs have been
bred In England for a hundred years,
with the view to producing lean meal
instead of fat. Hence they are called
"the bacon breed."
Tf
next
—There is no fertilizer that varies
true as stable manure
so much In
This variation Is caused by the man
ner in which the stuff is kept and the
amount of fitter it contains.
—A goose has been known to sit foi
a month on a stone, when her eggs
have been taken from her. Hens will
sit nearly as long
Here is more fidelity than commue
sense.
—Cotton seed meal is an excellent
addition to the daily ration of fowls
of all sorts. If mixed with oats and
bran, put about one pint of ihe
meal to a gallon of mixture. We have
used this with good results for sev
eral years.
—Geese are grossere and will do
well on any green pasture. If they
have access to a creek so much the
better, but they can bo successfully
grown without water to swim in. But
in fattening they need some good,
sound grain every day.
—The blackbirds are eating the boii
weevils. Mr. V. J. Hutcherson, a Tex
as farmer, reports that his son killed
a blackbird, in the craw of which were
21 boll weevils, some still alive. Ht
thinks it is a good Idea to encourage
the blackbirds.
—The only change betwoen summet
and winter feeding for fowls should
be that which is unavoidable, except
that more corn may be given in win
fer than summer. Green feed and
meat scraps can be made to take the
place of grass and Injects which
abound in summer.
—Closely calculate how many acres
you can cultivate In any given crop in
an average season; then reduce thal
number to one-third and plant. You
will make more, provided you put as
much judicious cultivation on the two
thirds as you expected to put on the
larger are »
a door knob
?
?
I
?
?
ll
ADMIRAL SCHLEY
ENDORSES PE-RU-NA.
Pe-ru-na Drug Co., Columbus, Ohio:
Gentlemen : '7 can cheerfully say that M rs. Schley
has taken Pe-ru-na and / believe with good effect."
W. S. SCHLEY.
Washington, D. C.
A DMIRAL SCHLEY, one of the foremost I
notable heroes of the Nineteenth Century, i
A name that starts terror in the heart of every !
Spaniard. A man of steady nerve, clear head, j
undaunted courage and prompt decision. j
Approached by a friend recently, his opinion
was asked as to the efficacy of Périma, the
national catarrh remedy. Without the slight
est hesitation he gave this remedy his en
dorsement. It appeared on later conversa- [
tion that Périma has been used in his family,
where it is a favorite remedy.
Such endorsements serve to indicate the
wonderful hold that Périma has upon the j
minds of the American people. It is out of
the question that so great and famous a man
as Admiral Schley could have any other
reason for giving his endorsement to Périma
than his positive conviction that the remedy
is ali that he says it is.
The fact is that Périma has overcome all
Ask Your Druggist for free Pe=ru-na A Imanac for 1904.
< lut nil
Tin* Manila A
l»iou 1.1« t* !•'<» tiii<J.
lut* <lif*«*overeri "thr*
He
lit
I» iii.iing an
ndenng Dawn. \ Buotini«'
editor <*i t ht* T
just utartcd
l okyo.
TR
the public:
greeting
"Thin paper ha* come from Her
it
dart« it« circulation with millu
ium* ot numbers. Ehe rays ot the mid, the
f the .»tars, the leaves of the trees,
he blade« of gross, the grams of «and, the
hearts of tigers, elephants, lions, ants,
amJ wojueu are it* subscribers. 'I hi« joi
will henceforth flow in the universe a;
rivers How and the oc
ami
I
beams
nul
he
•an* «urge.
The Kffeet of «looping in Car*.
the contracting of cold. which often
ult« seriounly to the lung«. Never
neglect a cold, but take in
Cherokee* Remedy of Sweet (»u.
time Tavior'n
and j

Mullein natures great cough
At druggist«, 25c., 50c., and $1.00 a
bottle.
"That
cap and a pa
"'I o serve hi* own end*, 1 suppose,
ton Tiger.
They who court lame never w
Rain'* Horn.
u Brow
ha* just bought n f
»f skate*.." "What lor
Pi in
it.—
HEALTH
is the
Most Important
No one can tell good baking powder from bad merely
by the appearance;
The price is some guide, but not
Some cheap brands ma
unwholesome ingredients.
There is one safe, sure way, i. e., to follow the
recommendations of the
infallible
an
one;
raise the dough, yet contain
%
di
U. S. GOVERNMENT ANALYSTS,
THE HIGHEST AUTHG! ^ '5 ON HYGIENE
THROUGHOUT THE »/ORLD,
THE BEST HOUSEKEEPERS EVERYWHERE
BAKING
POWDER
PURE
ROYAL
ABSOLUTELY
V'<sf'*ot"OX"CX"C<"af"Cg"0<'*ct"Cg-c<"Ä , *o<-*c<**c<"OC**ot'*c<'X'*ot"Ot'-o4-cg"CX''Ot
?
Make Lazy Liver
?
You know very well how you feel when your liver don'
Bile collects in the blood, bowels become constipated and
whole system is poisoned, A lazy liver is an invitation for a *
thousand pains and aches to come and dwell with you. Your X
life becomes one long measure of irritability and despondency À
and bad feeling. S
I
k
our
k
CANDY CATHARTIC
[•73
Tnr
[•j
?
Act directly, and in a peculiarly happy manner on the liver and
bowels, cleansing, purifying, revitalizing every portion of tile
liver, driving all the bile from the blood, as is soon shown by in
creased appetite for food, power to digest it, and strength to
throw off the waste. Beware of imitations! 10c., 25c. All
druggists.
?
i
J.
JR
W
ll
Best for the Bowels
II :
ALL-STONE CURE. "Craemer'* Calculus Cure
w ■ W««a« VVBIH« 1« a Certain Remedy FOR GALL STONES,
Ston** in the Kidnty». Btouen intho Urinary Bladder or Urwl.MlfoiiM**», falloir Complexion. Jaunfl
and Ml fttomacbTroiibltn rear; I Dug from Billon <ne»*. Writ« for uarllrnlar*. Ifroar dragfdnt <1
not h«epfkerder from WM. «IRA KMI'.lf- 4 IOO h. Grand Av«*., HT. 1.01/1«,
ï>xu/aaz«iTff wjd •upi'I.y you z>zb.bot.
G

.Ion I,
iliiiM.,
ÏIO pinp .M«!, ■ Ml- I*
etl, bhmnmn.
-i H ilf
l
the
Mi
H iq:yi
"AI
w I
.' ctrlaiiiicd Mi*« Speit/.,
J H.ilHle.fd
Vlr HuKKiii* had
tfhou!_(iei>." Stra\
wiiew I heard hi:
telling my father that
m old head on young
i
fork* off tTe
Quinine Tablets-. Price 2ft ce
i
Id. Laxative Ihonio
A
mille o
Itii
1Vo> Cure for Cons
lath
hie medic!
fckvnvuel, Oc
î for cough- and «..Ids.
N W.
«• N. Feb. 17, 1900.
(J
Nobility of char

loopholes w
door* Marv K Wilk
hen it
!'"• provid
v. Hi huge
Putnam Fädele»
per package.
I
J)\
cost but 10 <•(
it«
digenre,
Kelt-indulgence i* tiir
ciet of
Chn-ago Tribune,
I opposition and has won its way to the hearts
i of the people. The natural timidity which
! so many people have felt about giving
j dorsements to any remedy is giving way.
j Gratitude and a desire to help others has
inspired thousands (
testimonials for Périma w ho heretofore would
not have consumed to such publicity,
Never before in the annals of medicine has
it happened that si
and international
•n
t |>coplr to jrive
J MU /III
many mon ot national
reputation have been will
ing to give mu)uaiifipil and public endorse
ments to a proprietary remedy. No amount
of advertising could have accomplished such
a result. Périma has won on its own merits,
Périma cures catarrh of whatever phase or
location in the human body. That is why it
receives so many notable and unique, en
dorsements.
Address The Périma Drug M'f'g Co., Co
lumbus, Ohio, for free literature on catarrh.
AW EXPERT.
lie
etl h Confidential <Tf*rl.*hl|>
«um» Ht* Could lit* Ven
itr<
C oiilltlfiilliil.
that shortl
Iter he
i
Mil ll
head <
he
P«>n by a
old
•p
il
g'
id an ap|
\d the
.«•■4 of thut tie
pui
I < tact lii.it 1 na»
J> busy
Mi. Shaw. "I
t of an hour, lor It
it
I he
■ e bette
P
; pleasant a
old eh a p as

bng.it. el t p|
d H
(»I
t of hi*
V felt
•-go.
I hat he c
ply with lit
Kpiesl.
he info
II
ha
he did
ot see h.
hi
i.«
gi' 1
appointment Tin- did mit. da
I pel
the least.
s spirit
"Now.
' hi it! he. "as I »eel
3 »Ht pec
these .-o
liarly
<'ll qualified to till one
b de n I ial eleikstiip». I hope that you will COD*
rider
v application J
•liier."
I
. wagging his head a«i*t
he added earnerth :
"Oh.
ipt <•*•*. y ely,
cnfideuti.il !"
1
j
Millions of U.M.C. Shot Shells,
are Bold each year. They are
made in the largest cartridge
factory In the world.
Tbe UNICH METALLIC 6MTR1DCE GO.
ORIQGEf'Or.T, CONN
Your denier
atilt them.
Catalog *cnt
upon request.
m
It
m
E
IfDROPSrpil
-ÆgrjW cire 30 to to days. Trial treatment free.
STUB Or. H. H. Green'« Sens. Bo« D. Atlanta, «c.
P ATENTQ ds-pngobonk'rang,
JlTZOB JaS K.'jvàehtnsOmTixt;.
A. N. K.-F
L'OOO
»nt» r/KITIAB TO UtVEItTIftKIiH
»»« the AU vertu«»
plüiite «täte that yn
meut la lbtij>aii6».

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