University of South Carolina Libraries
aedeky Ai1 Lg Prompt Its benedcWa cf fects awe U=SLUal lef very quicky Makes rich, red, pua system--elears the brain-str A positive specifc for Bi Drives out RheiSatISm and is a wonderful tonic and body F. V. LPPMAN, PICKENS Notice The Pickens Railroad Coriipan 8th'day of June 1912, beginning depot at Pickens, S. C. it will. ti thorized agent, offer and expose cash all the -refused and un< which the charges have not beel Parties to whom these articles the sale by paying charges befoi NO. Name 1. Heath, Bruce, Morrow Co, 2. No name 3. W. J. Powell-1 pkze (2 c 4. No name-2 boxes Tobaco 6. Wm. Rosemond-1 sack ( 7. Keowee Supply Co.-5 bo: 8. Plckens Bottling Works 9. Keowee Supply Co.-7 bo: 10. A. C. bmith-1 box Medi 11. No name-1 barrel Croci 12. J. L. Baney-1 barrel Ci 1 doz. G. 1 box Not 13. No name-1 bdil. Plows, 1 barrel M 16. M. C. Dodgens-1 Sewini 17. No name-lot Pots, Skill 18. W. J. Kopp-1 Can Oil. 19. No name-1 Package D. 20. 1 Box Soap, - -1, E. H. Hines-i ease-Stoc 22. Central Mfg. Co.-8 Rolb 23. No name-2 Cans Syrup. 24. Dora Leslie--I Boxed Lai 25. No name-1 Box Starch. 26. P. W. Smith-2 Boxes _G 27. No name-1 Box Mediciz 28. Wm. Rosemond-1 Bugz 29. C. H. Rice-1 Brl Cider, 30. ,J. B. Seaborn.-1 Box G 31. Moore & Mauldin-2 Brh bon- Pkg. 2. No names-1 Box. 3. J. K. Manley-i Box. 4.No-nanme-1Box. 5. A. Sheriff-i Box. 8. W. E. Stephens-i Pkg. .No name-i Box Drugs. 8. A. T. Turner-i Box. 9. H. A. Richey-1 Pkg. 10. No name-1-Caii. 11. Lola Harris-i Doll Cari 12. T. D. Harris-i Pkg. 13. Gee. E. Biddeford-i Pks 14. L. F, Robinson-1 Box M 15. T4D. Harris-i Bdl. (Casi 17. Nofiame-1 Book. ~ 8 1' Box Mede. 19F B~ iIims-X Box Ml 2EL,. HGrandv-1 Pkg. -21. B. L. Henderson-i1Pkg. 22. ' W. C. Seaborn-1 Pkg. 23. 3. M. Crenshaw-1 Pkg. 24. Katie Ferguson-i Pkg. S25. Nnm-~g 26. A ) ~n1Pg -.27. 3 .Bl- o ec 48.Nonm-BxMec 29. Fle hrlyiB -0.No name-i Pkg. 3 A . A. Canno-i Pkg. 3J . B. FBol- Box Sedc *3,No name-i Box Soap, 31. " 1 Boxk oap 0. ".- 1 Book. - 41. . A. Hester-i Pkg. 34. Win.e Mooenemoe-1P 35. Pirlie Ryce-1 BoxSo. 46. W. . Myneys-I Box SMa 48. ". K Boeens- Soap. 40.) 1 Bok.Mdc 41. W. A. Holer-I Pkg.M 42. Henr Master-i Pkg. M 5. L.A.br Richey- Pkg. .4. W. A. Myteri- BooMe 47. H. Aalln-iyI p g 48..y Ligh C&mnt- PowegC.-] 495 vryKre-7k. 19 58. A. P. Holder-I Pkg. 52. . Hnry Porter- PkM 60. W.eA.tSel-oriel-4 Boon 57. "Our Personal P] We laas be~n in business I istn or.~ some time, and we areding o build up trade by always advsn u Zpatrons right. o henweteUu that webv tnd beck of it with the manufacturer's ron clad guarantee, backed by ourselves @UCan dcpend upon it that we giVe our i.vce not in order to sell a few bottle t mfzedicineO to skin suffererbbut be Uewe know how it willepou *Sha6' it we help our patrOns. Wekep. inStock anid sell, all the well sknremedies. But We will say SIf you are suffering from any a kin trouble. eczema, polsS hottt, we .want you totryau1 -w ds ot*o d the. Presrg, ti fl Goes not Go the work, thin ,Poke Root and Potazd=u) Powerful Permanent Stubborn cases Good results are yield to P. P. P. lasting-it cures when other medi- you to stay cured ines are useless P. P. e blood--cleanses the entire agthens digestion and nerves. A Poison and skin diseases. tops the Pain; ends Malaria; builder. Thousands endorse it. SAVANNAH, GA. DRUG C-0. of Sale. Y hereby gives notice that on the at 10 o'clock a. m. at its freight rough the undersigned #1 V au for sale to the highest bid(der for aimed freight and express upon paid as listed below. have been shipped can prevent e day of sale. Articles 1 sack Beans. 4 cds Tobacco. da) 3 Bxs. Tobacco. )yster shells. ces Tobacco. I box Glass. - ces Can Goods. ine. - ery. ockery, 1 box China. 3askets, 1 pail Candy. ions. pd. Baskets. ty. Bottles. Machine. )ts & etc. B. Foot Plows. h Food,. I Stand. Roofing. 2P. ss,. ie. y Body.. L Box G. Ware. Ware. . Syrup. ESS. ae and Ots. c Hdw. g. Medc. [ed T. Tyo. eneaangr Gedc.te Skndufer.s f ew dospaper.smlewshaple Gu antl.Adterelleetob ermneSuner rs bottD. D.l Laortyorie nofhiago. alon to ergeand otanhe haei . so ng w tthesit itak, awyo theitch fee stnthy. And ooethe res asmtebe ahd awa terptome y thle D.hD DXI. LaoaoD so hcg.i opoe haf tmo. fglyerine,. oil mof wit ergee andyb ohreaing. soolthig oln nremdentoas.nd fee you are the adwye wamnt you ppryItedo oniv no.Z)ayuY guarantee. FREE HAND FOR -DEMOCRAT -Opportunity Before the Party tO Show Themselves Worth of Trfust fnd .Confide e.-, Reports from the, national capital indicate plainly that the tariff board is not handing out fbr publicatiOn any statements of what it is going to rec ommend. But they indicate quite as plainly that the Republicans have most to fear from what the board may say when it is ready. They are cats and dogs on the tarit question. Some are for revision up. ward, some for revision downward, and pthers want no revision at all. What ever the board may say about cost of production can not bring them any nearer together, but is more likely to drive them farther apart. On the other hand, the Democrats in the present Congress have been un expectedly harmonious in dealing with the tariff, and nothing the board can say is likely to produce discord among them. They have a free hand. They can use any facts the board may report and reject whatever they And to be at variance with fact. They are in a position to gain credit for fidelity to the pubHe interests by treating the board's work on its merits. They can earn applause for going farther than the Republicans in ac cepting anything good the board may offer, as well as In rejecting anything that ought to be rejected. It Is to be expected, therefore, that they will refrain from wholesale con gemnation and evince a readiness to avall themslv@e of anT 6oQ4 q tion, regardless of its source. By so, doing they wtl eommend themselves to the people as public servants worthy of still further trust and conMence.-Chicago Journal. Looks Like One on T. R. Recently a dinner was given to Oscar Straus In honor of his long ca reer of public service. Naturaly, Theodore Roosevelt was present, and was one of the first called upon for a spee. With little preamble the- ex presidentt launched into an apprecia tion of his ex-cabinet officer's public record. "Believe me. gentlemen," he said, "when I dalled Mr. Straus to my cab iet I was considering no questions of religion or race or station. I was considering only his IttLess for the oMoe to which I had elected him. Neither &s - German ior as. Jew was Mr. Straus called to my cabinet-but simply as the man most fltted for the position." The next speaker was Jacob H. Schiff, who, as everybody knows, Is a bit deaf and at times absent-minded. After the proper greetings the finan cier began slowly. "My friends," he said, "when Mr. Roosevelt wrote and asked me whom I considered the best -Jew for the position-"New York Evening Post. Good and Bad Trusts. Mr. William Randolph Hearst In a late magazine article gave a very clear advance analysis of the recent Roosevelt outbrieak before It had vent in the columns of The Outlook. - We quote an incisive paragraph: "The Roosevelt method Is to divide the trusts Into good trusts and -intc bad trusts and to..go to .extreme lengths in assailing those that were declared by him to be the bad trusts, and to equally extreme and some times illegal lengths in aiding and protecting those that were declared by him to ber the good trusts. "But the good trusts and the bad trusts of Mr. Rosevelt had no differ entiation in econonilcs, :but orily in politics. The - good -trusts were the trusts that supported Mr.. Roosevelt, and the bad trusts were the trusts that politically opposed Mr. Roolie velt." Another Democratic Chance. The currency reform plan puts an other splendid opportunity up to the Democrats who control the lower branch of congress. The progressivel Democrats of the country and theor representativeB at Washington may not approve'the'monetary plan which Is generally called the. "Aldrich plan.' But they will study It. for the merit there Is in It -and will approve 'It If they find it meritorious. The chance Is another such one as the reciprocity bill offered. The Demo crats took that up, found it good and put It through. In doing It they made the biggest hit with the country they have made in a generation. If they act as promptly and open mindedly with the currency measure they will make at least as big a hit. Kansas City Star. Smooth Polities. Standpatism insists that one who would deprive it of some of the plun der that it derives from an extortion ate tariff must be a free trader. It is the confusion and complications in the public mind growing- out of the wholly fictitious contention for the impossible represented by the words "free trade" that smoothed the way for the McKinley, the Dingley and the Aldrich-Payne tariffs, Always Wall Street's Friend. A Roosevelt editorial In The Outlook boomed prices in Wall street. Wall treet, then, must be honest at last. N1othing that Roosevelt ever did or said was intended to harm Wall street. If It be true that the President did ot know there was to he any refer nee to Mr.. Roosevelt in the govern mnents petition for a dissolution of the Steel trust, that Is one more reason why he should have been attending to ils executive duties instead of touring the country.. The Man Who Lost His State. What the state of Ohio Is doing te William H. Taft and his political for' tunes Is almost too ghocking for repe tition. In 1908, because he was a fa, vorite son, it gave him a plurality of 89,000, but at the same time It elected Judson Harmon governor by a plurali ty of 19,000. In 1910, after a year and a half of Mr. Taft in the presidency, it reelected Mr. Harmon by a phu rality of 100,000. This year every im portant city in the state went Demo cratic by big majorities. Without wishing In any manner to disturb the mourners we should like to ask the standpatters If It Is their Intention next year to go to a Demo cratic state for their candidate? The man who asks the fetrher for a girl's hand has already been passed upon by the family down to the baby. A man expects a girl he is engaged to to command him to do a thing, and SPOILSMEN IN SADDLE CONDITION TODAY IN NATIONAL REPUBLICAN POLiTICS. People Have Little or No Opportunity to Declare Their Preference for a Leader When the Con vention Meets. Are the people to have anything to say about the presidential candidates of the Republican party next year? There is a pretense in some places that they are to be consulted, but all the indications point to the renomina tion of Mr. Taft by the officeholders almost without opposition. At a time when the popular demand for dih t primaries seems to be keen and reierendums and recalls are every where in operation or under discussion It is more than strange that a function ofsuch importance as this should be left practically In the hands of spoils men. This is no new condition in na tional Republican politics. In 1904 the officeholders nominated Roosevelt. In 1908 Roosevelt nominated Taft. Few young Republicans remember a aational couvention in which there was a contest. The last one was in 1896. Since then candidates have been made by omAll coteries, and the great con ventions, costing so much time and money, have had little to do beyond registering decrees made long before they assembled. Most people will admit that if a di rect prImary could be held Mr. Taft would have much difficulty in securing a renomination. Yet so well do the : fficeholders have the situation in hand in most of the states that the party managers now claim all of the dele gates except about 60. The next Re publican convention, therefore, will be a body representing the Toft adminis tration rather than the people, just as the ,Repub!ican convention of 1908 rep a body representing- the Taft adminis - The failure of public opinion to as sert itself in Republican conventions is due in part to the peculiar attitude of the-leaders of the Insurgents. These men are riding for a. fall, as they say in the British Parliament. They look for Taft's nomination and defeat. They then expect to reorganize and assume the leadership of a discredited party. It is this situation which makes true progressives In both parties despair of Republlcnluism In any of its branches as a progressive force. Such vigor and virtue as It has are not to be found In Its leadership. Once in offioe, stand patter and, Insurgent'alike value party. above country. Once in office, stand patter and insurgent alike hesitate to cut the thievery out of the protecting tariff-the one institution that blocks true progress. With Republican leadership so un responsive to the popular will, It must be that the rank and file of the party will be strongly. inclined next year to break away from machine-made tickets and trust-made platforms, propped up chiefly by spoils, selfishness and insin cerity. The Democratic convention can give the keynote of victory to the campaign by perfecting its representa tive character, by -givig the people an opportunity to be heard and by ac complishing Its work with wisdom and moderaton.-St. Louis Republic. At Home and Abroad. "I say boldly that what I look for werd to is nothing less- than a court of- the nations-an areopagitic court, to. whose conscientious and impartial judgment peoples- shall submit their disputes, to be decided according to the eternal principles of law aid equity."-William H. Taft. -Knd we say boldly that, like charity, the eternal principles of -law and equity should begin at home. :More important to Americans than fantastic thieories of peace and arbitra tion and more important that a new Areopagus is the question of justice in our laws and policies and good faith in their administration by government. If we could get one' conscientious and- impartial judgment on the wrongs and disputes that vex our. commerce,. industry and politics we should be In much better position to enlighten a world that is no more benighted~than we are.-New York World. ~ What Has Mr. Taft AccomplIshed? Mr. Taft has much reason to ask himself. what has been gained by his two months' tour. To be sure, he has broken the long distance record for presidential trips, made hundreds of speeches, covered thousands of miles and beeri gazed upon by millions of people, all of which has been faithfully chronicled by his priivate secretary. Evidently he enjoys that sort of thing or he would not do it. But that Mr.. Taft has strengthened the administration with the country or bettered his po litical prospects -is extremely doubt ful. One certain effect of such a per formance as he has just completed has been to cheapen the presidency and to lower the dignity of the office in the eyes of the public.-New York World. How Many? Wrong-doing such as was perpe trated by the Standard Oil trust and especially by the tobacco trust should not only be punished but if possible punished in the persons of the chief authors and beneficiaries of the wrong far more severely than at present. Theodore Roosevelt in the Outlook. How many "malefactors of great wealth" did Mr. Roosevelt send to jail for violating' the Sherman law when he was President? How many did he con vict? Can he name one? THOUGHTS OF LOVE The modest man is the last to tri umph over a woman.-Robert Hichens. Every man is unusual to the girl who is fond of him.-Horace W. C. Newte. Love is like the measles; it has more power when it attacks one late In life.-Constance Howell. Love is a thing to a large extent In Its beginnings voluntary and control able, and at last quite Involuntary. H. G. Wells. Love seeks mutuality, and grows by the sense and hope of response, or we should love beautiful in animate things more than we do.-H. G. Wels. Men like to be comfortable, and the man has yet to be born who can be :omfortable on a pedestaL. The ordi nary pedestal is too narrow, and the oin ary Isen broad.--Curtid But One Course to Secure True Peace of Mind SEEK FIRST THE SAVIOR .1T HERE are three things which greatly disturb the peace of mind of many. Fortunately, these causes of their unhappi ness are all covered by defn nite promises of God. And just In the degree that they trust him to make good those promises will they be relieved of anxiety and made hspy. The first of those disturbing causes relates to their temporal neoessities. It Is expressed in these words: "What shal we eat, what shall we drink, wherewithal shall we be clothed?" These bodies of ours and of. those de Pendent upon us-how shall they be provided for? Their wants are so many and so constant; the income is so slender and so uncertain; there is so little bread for a rainy day or for the time of old age. Shall we not come to actual want? Here is the promise-it is only one of many relating to the same thing: "'The young lions do lack and suffer hunger, but they, that trust in the Lord shall not want any good thing." That promise has been the only bank ac count of many a widow and aged one, and has never failed. God's care and support are as constant as your need. Your Heavenly Father knows that you have need of all these thingh. Put yourself in his care. Lean back upon his promise. If you pass through the wilderness go out each day to gather the manna which rains from the clouds. It will come some way, from somewhere. Not in armfuls or basketfuls, perhaps, but in daily ra tions. Sufficient unto the day is the provision thereof. Not In dainttes and luxuries, but in plain, substantial, healthful diet. It is ours to plan and execute the best we know how; it is Gd's to- do the rest. Look to God's Promise. The second cause for worry relates to the providences of life. So many thinis occur that are, oh! so hard to bear. Hard-earned money is com letely lost. A fair reputation Is ruth essly assailed. One dearly beloved is taken away and the heart is deso ate and lonely. Sickness enters the ome, and weeks and -months are penit watching solicitously by the bed ide of one whose lifetide, so recently n its nlow, is slowly ebbing away. Here is the promise: "All things work together for good to them that ove God." Do youi love God? Then acept the pr-omise and trust him to ufill it. He can do it. He will do It. ust the experiences through which ou pass are what you and all those affected by them need. "Behold, hap y is the man whom God correcteth. herefore despise not the chastening f the Almighty." Oh, for that sweet and tender, yet firm and unshaken trust in God that will lead us to put ourselves into his ands in order that he may by hastening and correction, so mold nd fashion us that our characters hall unfold in beauty- and our high est destiny shall be worked out. 'Oh, for a trust In God that will make us feel, that what he orders Is best, that e cani make no mistake, that he does not put one single grain mo're of bit terness in our cup than .is needed to ake it medicinal and curative. Be gin with God. Accept him as your rd! Then believe that all the oc urrences of life are surrounded by him and result In his glory and your good. That will contribute in no small egree to your happiness. Make Sure of Soul's Salvation. The third cause of unihap~pfness with many is their uncertainty with regard to the salvation of their souls. They have good reason to feel disqul eted if they have not made their peace with God.. The relation of the soul to God is f the first and greatest importance, deserving and demanding considera don and settlement. And it naturally omes up, whe'n we are reminded of the flight of time nnd of the passing away of so many whora we knew and loved. No question' is settled finally until it s settled right. It is so with the salvation of the soul. But note! God would free us from all anxiety about this great matterA He has sent his Son Into the world to live as our ex ample and to die for our sins, thus making our salvation possible. Then he gave us a simple direction what to do to make our sal',ation iare, viz., to repent of sin and trust in Jesus Christ. No one can say, "I cannot do that," for God makes it possible for every one who really wants to. What peace is ours when our sins are for given! What assurance we have that ll is well when we have left this mat ter entirely in the hands of our great Ldvocate and Savior and Judge. Trust God to supply you with all things needful for the body! Trust God to bring good to you out of ev ery experience of life. Trust God. above all, through Jesus Christ his Son, to work out for you a free and full salvation!-Rev. Amze Vennema, D. D. Open the door of your heart for Christ, and he will open the door of heaven for you. EFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR Big heads are worn mostly at home. The run you pay for is more fun to he mar. you pay It to. ro him who bath shall be given, specially when it's trouble. Even if a man is a hundred years old he thinks he looks only ninety. People ride in taxicabs to hide the fact that they really can't afford street When a man threatens to kiss a girl he runs a big risk of her getting in ignant if he doesn't. What a man can't understand Is how a woman would rather write let ters than enjoy herself. . The capacity of a man's family to spend money is only limited by his - apcit tent it for them. TARIFF AND THE TRUST High Authority Gives Voice to Opir Ions That the Country Will Do Well to Heed. John H. Davis, head of the bani Ing house of John H. Davis & Co beieves that the long session of con gress that will convene soon need no be looked forward to with apprehen sion, for he believes that it will tak, rational action upon big public ques tions, including a consideration o legislation to regulate "trust" activ1 ties and probably a reduction of th tariff. In the November circular o his house be says: "What the country seems to be los ing sight of is the obvious truth tha the root of the American trust ev] is the protective tariff law. Our trust are effects and not causes. They ar the direct outcome of the tariff. Th high prices by which they profit an for which they are blamed are the re sults of the prohibitive duties upoi imports, without which such price could not be maintained no matter t what extent monopoly might be pra ticed. It Is most unfortunate tha this basic fact is not kept more pron inent before the American people whose anti-trust sentiment is only th< expression of a revolt against higl costs. "It Is relief from the high cost 0 living that the country demands, an, the agitation should be, first of all for tariff reduction. With that accom plished, the trust question will tak care of Itself. Without It, neithe prices nor monopoly will be Coi trolled. It may be doubted tha cheaper tobacco will result from th disintegration of the tobacco trusi but it is certain that it would follov the lowering of tobacco duties. It I unlikely that steel products -will fal much In price if the steel trust is dig solved, but no one will question the they would be materially lower if th duties on imported steel were rf duced. Indeed, the proposition Is s obvious that it admits of no .argt ment. Lower the tariff and -inflatio: will cease. Monopoly extortion, ei cessive capitalization and high cost will disappear. Competition of th, proper sort-that of America with the whole world-will be restored and th, natural development of our superio resources and of our commercia ability will follow."-New York Timei An esteemed contemporary start out to prove that Taft is a greater foo of the trusts than Roosevelt. MI Taft Is surely entitled to any comfor that can fairly be extracted out of sl modest a distinction. For Trust Lawyers. If we are to judge from the prevail Ing voices of lawyers and ex-presi dents, neither big business nor littl< business can know where It standi under the anti-trust law. The rule o reason may guide the courts, but hn, shall It .guide business or the lega and political.advisers of business? Meantime a large business, with fee sized by the effulgent light of lawyer's reason, goes Into the lega market for advice of where It standi under the law as now interpreted Will Samuel Untermyer turn awa: saying he can not answer? Will Joh: G. Johnson, of Philadelphia, throw ul his hands? Will De Lancey Nicol Or Richard Olney, of Bostozi, or Will lam D. Guthrie, or Francis Lyrid Stetson? Is any big business or the attorne: therefor incapable of knowing when I is combining with the intent and of fect of monopoly? Or when It is en gaged in blackjacking competitors ou of existence through local price max ipulations, exclusive agreements, re bates and otherwise? ' President Taft is himself a grea lawyer. He thinks business me1 should be able to answer these queE tions without legal advice. But wil our other great lawyers have It unde: stood that they could not advise I asked?-New York World. Some Wage Statistics. Statistics as to the volume of busi ness that is being done, as to th< banking returns, the trade in this lini and that, the wheat crop, the stoc1 market and what not in the financia and industrial world have been show~ ered upon us. But so seldom do w< get wage statistics that they ar somewhat of a novelty. The stee workers in this country, who are prc tected from the Inrush of pauper-mad steel by a high tariff, get, for the mos part, $1.50 a day of ten hours, and ar themselves but newly arrived from Europe. The cotton goods factoriel in New England are protected by high tariff, yet the employes in these factories are the poorest paid In the country. In Massachusetts three fourths of the adult male wage-eari ers receive under $40 a month, and th< adult females under $35 a month One-third of the adult male workers in the cotton factories earn less tha: $8 a week. Two-thirds of the people of the United States live by wages and the majority of the wage-earneri support their families on less than $1: a week, In spite of the fact that thi cost of living has doubled in 15 years Something New Under the Sun. This suggestion of Roosevelt ani LaFollette for thq Republican ticke next year is mos interesting. Thb e-president has. the Steel trust be hind him and the Wisconsin senato1 Is the embodiment of the westeri wrath at all trmpts. Between then they would expect to round up all the conservatives and the progressives It will indeed be divorting. though noi surprising, to see Theodore Rooseveli running as the Wall street candi date.. Winthrop College Scholarship and Entrance Exam ination The exatmination for the award of va. ant scholarships in Winthrop College md for tha atdmis~on of new s udent rs ill be held at the County Court Hlo';e mn Friday, July 5, at 9 a. m.A; :ants must be not less than fifteen year f age. When Scholarships are vae-mt fter July 5 they will be awardled to hose making the highest average at his examination, provided ther meet he conditions governing the award. pp icaits for scholarships should write o P::sidtent Johnson before the exam tation for Scholarship axami nation lan ks. Scholarship~s are worth $10l0 and free uition. The next session will open septemnber 18, I912. For further infor. nation and catalogue, address Pres. D. . Johnson, Rock Hill. 8, 0. [-lve You Paid Up? CASTURIA It I I:For Infants and Chidren. RG I Ul The Kind You Have ALCOUOL3Always Bought A~egetablePrepaf oidsk "ZgBears the, 1 A 1W A tklStomaisad*- o I 333k, Signature ~f PomotesD igestnf nessandRestcojntainsnetSo Opium.Morphine nor j NOT NAIR C OTIC.. In or Use WcnesanLssim. Fori Over Ore i Thirty Years NEW YORK t IzWinCASTORIA Exact Copy of Wrapper. 'Mee*ramacomme. iwwn *. mop Trpoe Ea ana Telephone svconteFr Arteeponue ooleFamt. ddres ~~meames Leine prandenot foth S~ci outo selyour lant Gabte ad F~rsrs LneAepammen ~7ELE~AUC SHP NGLE H EA S~TH, BRCEt, AtMtRO G.,Pces8.. BURISMETAL IGE N GALV LAIDR ROOFING n _ _ -turt swHN LE Spritaa " Ast. priee~.ee ' cu~~ftta epo eth IIEA~il, BRJOHN M TOR0.PikN, Ssma .B.URRISS MTA SNGneoS. AN Ph ines iti seto.45 aemrehue qe Picewiteo goottin n thrsin gleWontmrk, R. L Davsctis Proprwethv ocsprio oay " pyng Tu onrcionAN asowic"tes W " A M .foe youNErhealeyhosehnyo