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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1906)
IBHDBXS5'V???Nr!j?!n??7ii?.v?:' .j&M&HBESiRHiHHHRHHBi F-rwsra?r'?- '- -- r ?-Tx- w 'cisswv5&isss9nfirs'i--' -vt - .-- SKST r-'sjia!MTw ? rrr.. " f J-., w. ..-.. uwi I? -c IS ",-. !-, .- ' : . 1 I! 14 r- l.,.. . , Colunibus Journal R.' aTHOTHER, Cantor! F. K. STROTHER, Manager. COLUMBUS, NRB. Journalism of To-Day. . Tke versatile Emperor of Germany Is the latest critic of modem Joarnnl tam. He deplores especially die lack ef ateparatkm oa tke part of tkose who engage in tke bastaiess of molding pabllc oplajoa. To obtala recogaitioa fa tke mlaistry. tke law, medicine, or rea dentistry, years of application re smiting ia tangible evidence of pro-. Acieacy are required. This, he tklaks, Is as it skoaM be bat ia Joarnalisp, ke sstrrtn, a lad of 29 may sally forth, smtebook ia band, make a collection of kasrlmn ramors. and forthwith pro dace and pablish articles which may act the world oa fire. The Emperor Is apt the only one who cherishes this delusion respecting the method of saakiag newspapers. Even in this en Hgkteaed coantry, many otherwise wen-Informed persons regard with a pedes of awe the smart young man eking aa interview. They behold la tdm one who possesses mysterioas power aad authority. Aa a matter of pact, remarks tke North Americaa Se Tiew. ke Is only a gteaaer of wisps of Information, which la common with tkoasaads of others tnd their way Mto the winnowing machine. Themaa tehlad. unseen by his majesty aad fel- ' low-critics is the editor. It is his intel ligence aad judgment, hardened la the most severe school of mental develop ment known to civilisation, that deter mine what shall or shall aot be given to the public No other profession re aniree so perfect a comblnatioa of ua donbted integrity, alert iatellectaaUty aad dispassionate meats! balance; nor, fa this country at aay rate, does any ether calllag possess these qualities ia kigk a degree. Meanness f Theft. A man who haa been rillag the mail boxes .of at least oae city has been caught. He was apprehended as he sought to cash a check he had foaad la his loot. The fellow deserves a long sentence, for ia this peculiar form of rime there is a contemptible mean peas abseat from some petty offenses. To steal a letter with money or a check within may be bo worse jthaa ther forms of larceny, but there are concomitants that add to the gravity of the act The mail thief does not discriminate. With access to a bag or box, he takes whatever packets come to hand, and those that are worthless to him he casta away. The letter that ever comes may lead to the tragedy ef broken friendship. It may impair credit. Ia it there may be some mes sage of priceless Import Happiness and prosperity may have depeaded ispon its safe delivery. About all these things the thief has aot a care. Mis sives perhaps more precious than their weight in gold are to him rubbish. In destroying them he may be doiag a greater actual harm than in diverting negotiable property. Everybody is in terested ia the safety of the mails no less than others those who never In trust to them anything but written words. When a letter has been prop erly stamped and deposited, says the Philadelphia Ledger, the sender has a right to be secure in the belief that It will reach Its designated place and aot be rifled by a wretched thief. If such a thief Is caught the necessity of making an example of him is obvious. Compared-with him. the ordinary pick pocket seems almost a desirable ele ment of society. He Is the lowest type f criminal vandal. The cost of being a loyal college graduate is increasing every day, de clares the New York Evening Post Ia addltloa to paying for "directories.'' -booklets." "catalogues." "student pub lications' and various forms of "-iaaa" there are class dinners to be sub scribed for. class dormitories to b built class professorships to be en dowed, prises, scholarships, fellow ships and library fouadatlons to be established. There is also a moral aa well aa a naanclal drain upon the re sources of the alumnus. He has to re main faithful evea though his college alays him. He must be ready to ap prove the policy aad evea the speeches of his college president He mast praise the carriculum. He must "root" at games aad races, however laaguld kia iaterest ia them; must defend th taesTective stroke of the crew, errors a the diamond aad oa the gridiron and at last mast send his sons to be educated where he waa educated him self, even if in his Judgment some other college would be better. Ualess ke does all these things with eatha alasm he is tkoagkt to be a churlish fellow without "college spirit" A young Pittsburg man who already has 13.000.000 and. Is heir to half of $10,000,000 more has been neat to a sanitarium a physical wreck, the re sult of overwork and strain ia at tempting to amass more millions. What fraction of reason Is there in an fort of that sort? Ia London society it is considered the proper thing to play jokes by pour lag water or something equally as wet down the back of a friend. Even New port has aot reached this advanced stage of civUIsatkm. The Montreal bank clerk who stole S25.0M didn't get away with enough, however, to entitle him to membership fa the United States Bank Wreckers' .The first fireproof .house seen in England was built by David Hartley la 1778. Iron aad copper plates were mid between double floors. A Kcadslts, Wia, farmer had tniaofc cat oat and is well agate. kia Ha will now begin at once to arasrioad kia digestive tract STANDARD: OIL 5 I ' r Department of Justice Begins Suit at St. Louis to Kill Giant Trust It Ptmtlmi fife Asks Tsmt tist Cmsmmmtimi Be Declare- Umlaw fii ami fettraamm fo, Dtiaf -mmes.-Hklry rf Ike lft- Mtj ami Raw It b Alsftl t. RcmTSM Tnfc The. War an the Standard. St Louis. Petition filed in United States circuit court askdag for disso latfcm of Standard Oil trust and per petual injunction restraining 7S con stituent companies from working with or paying dividends to parent 'com pany. New York. Standard Oil snares dropped 15 points, making net loss of 1SS poiata since Roosevelt's war on tke trust began; total depreciation in stock siace president opened crusade, fl&e.vW.MO; this notwithstanding quarterly dividends of f IS per share. Findlay, O. Prosecatiag attorney' directed by Attorney General Ellis to keep grand jury in session; all Stand ard Oil officials may be indicted; of ficials of Standard Oil company of Ohio indicted agreed to surrender. St Louis, Me, The suit to break up tke Standard Oil trust haa been filed In the United States circuit court here. The petition asks: ' That the court decree that the'eom bination and conspiracy are unlawful under the Sherman anti-trust act That the Standard Oil company be enjoined, restraiaed aad prohibited from exercising aay control over its allied corporations, or aay of theav by the election or appointment of di rectors or officers, or in aay other manner. That the subsidiary corporatloas be enjoined from declaring or paying aay dividends to the Staadard Oil com pany of New Jersey. That the defendants, and each aad all of them, be enjoined from entering into any contract, tke purpose or ef fect of which la to restrain commerce in petroleum1 and its products or to monopolise the same. Tke petition coatalns 194 pages of printed matter, or about 100,000 words, and aa aditlonal 84 pages of exhibits, consisting of by-laws and mlaatea of Standard Oil meetings and organizations, and a map showing the retail prices of oil in every state and territory of the union. What th Petition Alienee, It is alleged in the petition that John D. Rockefeller and his associ ates, the other individual defendants, formed a conspiracy to moaopollze the commerce in petroleum and its products at an early date about the year 1870 aad that the same individ uals have controlled the combination during all these years, in all Its forms, and now control it It was, therefore, deemed wise to state in the petition the complete history and growth of this conspiracy. - History of the Conspiracy. The petition ia logically divided into three periods. During the first one of these periods, from 1870 to 1882, 'the comblnatioa assumed the form of a simple conspiracy that is to say, the defendants, with the Standard Oil company of Ohio, acted together to suppress competition and control the oil business. During the second period, from 1882 to 1899, the combination assumed the form of a trust agreement whereby about 40 separate corporations en gaged in the same business, turned over the management of their busi ness to nine trustees, of which these individual defendants were the major ity, so that these defendants con trolled all of these corporations. In March, 1892. the supreme court of Ohio declared this trust agreement void and ordered itsdissolution. Thereupon, on March 21. 1892, the trust certificate holders met in New ork and resolved to dissolve the trust and appointed John D. Rockefeller, Henry M. Flagler, William Rockefel ler, John D. Archbold, Benjamin Brewster, Henry H. Rogers, Wesley H. Tilford and O. B. Jennings as liquidating trustees the individual defendants being a majority of these trustees. The manner of liquidation was not to sell the property and divide the proceeds among the certificate hold ers, nor to return to each person in dividually the property placed in the trust but all of the stocks in each of the companies were divided into portions in proportion to the number of trust certificate shares outstanding, so that Rockefeller and his associates continued to control all these corpor ations as before. Birth of the Present Trust The petition then takes up the third period of the conspiracy, beginlng with the formation of the present trust In order to accomplish this, la Jan uary, 1S99, they iacreased the stock Testing Butter. Here is a certaia butter test: Melt a little on some hot hominy fat your breakfast plate and taste it The fraud will establish itself instantly. Print butter fetches a bigger price than ordinary tub butter. There ia an extra charge for manipulation aad wrapplag'the pound pieces ia paraffin paper. But in my travels I have met print butter that was made up of "cooking thirds." Make sure of your butter dealer, then go ahead. New York Press. All Is Vanity! "At first,' said the apartmeat house philosopher, "life In a flat seems aa interesting study of humanity, but soon you lose your urbanity,, jnut with your Christianity, fall into profanity, and pass by swift stages from mental inanity into violent Insanity." Misguided Man. A Pennsylvania man "' asserts that bis wife hasn't spoken to kirn in seven years. Yet the misguided maa is sa ng for a divorce. N. O. Timea-Demo-erat ON THE RACK PMltS. of the Standard Oil company of New Jersey from $10,000,000 to $110,000, 000, and .made it the holding corpora; tion and placed the control through stock ownership of all the corpora tions previously held by the trusts Into the said company, and exchanged its stock for the stock so acquired, share for share, issuing therefor $97, 250,000 par value the exact amount of the trust certificates previously is sued by the trustees. The stock of this company waa in creased by a small amount, and ia now $98,338,300. Same Standard Oil Methods. The petition then shows the meth ods employed by the Standard Oil company to monopolize the oil busi ness. These include discriminating contracts with the railroad companies, manipulation of rates, local price cut ting, bogus independent companies, etc The bill sets up among others a con tract between the Standard Oil com pany and the Tidewater Pipe company whereby the Tidewater companies are limited to 11 per cent of certain business in 'Pennsylvania and New York, and the Standard Oil company to receive 88 per cent of the busi ness, the Standard Oil company guar anteeing the Tidewater company $500, 000 per annum profits, thereby elim inating all competition between them. The bill alleges a contract made with the Pennsylvania railroad com pany in 1884, which was' in existence until 1906, by which the Standard Oil company was able to maintain the public charges for transporting crude oil from western Pennsylvania at 40 and 45 cents a barrel to Philadelphia and New York respectively. The Stand ,ard OH company, through its own pipe lines, transported the oil for eight cents a barrel. COMPONENT PARIS List of Corporations and Partnership a Controlled by Standard Oil Com pany of New Jersey and Which Will Be Compelled to Resume Business aa Independent Concerns If United States Wins Its Case. Where Capltaliza- Name. organized, tion. Acme Oil company New York $ 300,000 American Lubricating Oil company New York 100,000 Anglo-American Oil company (Limited) England 1,000,000 Argand Refining company Ohio Not known Atlantic Refining company Pennsylvania .... 5004000 Baltimore United Oil company Maryland 000,000 Borne Scrymser company ..... New Jersey. 200,000 Buckeye Pipe Line company Buffalo Natural Gas Fuel company Bush a Denslow Manufacturing company New York 200,000 Camden Consolidated Oil company Chesebrough Manufacturing company, Colonial Oil company Commercial Natural Gas company. Connecting Gas company Continental Oil company Crescent Pipe Line company Cumberland Pipe Line company Eastern Ohio Oil and Gaa company Eclipse Lubricating Oil company Eureka Pipe Line company .Florence Oil and Refining company Franklin Pipe company (Limited) Galena Signal Oil company..... Indiana Pipe Line company.... Lawrence Natural Gas company Mahoning Gaa Fuel company Manhattan Oil company Mountain State Gas company West Virginia.... 6OO4OO National Fuel Gas company New Jersey. 200400 National Transit company Pennsylvania .. . . 25,455,200 New York Transit company New York 5,000400 Northern Pipe Line company Pennaylvania 1,000400 Northwestern Ohio Natural Gaa company Ohio 2,775,250 Ohio Oil company Ohio 2,000400 Oil City Fuel Supply company Pennsylvania 2,000400 Oswego Manufacturing company New York 100,000 Pennsylvania Gas company Pennsylvania 2400400 Pennsylvania Oil company Pennsylvania 80,000 People's Natural Gas company Pennsylvania 1,000,000 Pittsburg Natural Gas company Pennaylvania 350400 Piatt and Washburn Refining company New Jersey. 14400 Prairie Oil and Gas company Kansas 240O4OO Republic Oil company New York 350,000 Salamanca Gas company New York 30400 Security Oil company Texas 3400400 Solar Refining company Ohio 500400 Southern Pipe Line company Pennsylvania 5400,000 South Penn OH company Pennsylvania 20Q400 Southwest Pennsylvania Pipe Lines company.. Pennsylvania 3,500,000 Standard Oil company of California California $400,000 Standard Oil company of Indiana... Indiana 1,000400 Standard Oil company of Iowa Iowa 1400,000 Standard Oil company of Kanaaa Kansas 100400 Standard Oil company of Kentucky .'. . .Kentucky 1,000400 ; Standard Oil company of Minnesota Minnesota 100400 Standard Oil company of Nebraska Nebraska 1400,000 Standard Oil company of New York New York 15400400 Standard Oil company of Ohio Ohi 3,500,000 Swan Finch company New York 100,000 Taylorstown Natural Gaa company Pennsylvania .....' IO4OO Tide Water Pipe company (Limited) Pennaylvania 25400 Tide Water Oil company New Jersey 5400,000 Union Tank Line company New Jersey.....'..- 3400400 United Natural Gaa company Pennaylvania ... . . 1,000400 United Oil company .'..Colorado 3400,000 Vacuum Oil company New York 24OO4OO Washington Oil company Pennsylvania 100400 Waters-Pierce Oil company Missouri 400400 1 New Egypt Arising. A progressive Arab of Cairo is sinking wells and installing irrigation pumps at the foot of the pyramid of Cheops, and the Sphinx, after gasing thousands of years on sand wastes, soon will be looking out on- green fields. This is one of the many dem onstrations of the change from the old to the-aew Egypt, We should choose for a wife only such a woman aa-we- should choose for a friend were she a man. Short Skirts for Street Wear. Frau Schubert, a prominent dress reform advocate of Hanover, says that traias fit for the drawing-room are not siutable for the street, aad that women with long dresses that out of doors, sweep up all sorts of germs, are a "serious danger to them selves aad to other people" Varieties of Stinging Adder. Ia the United States Pharmacobar it ia stated that there are '1,200 spe cies of cocktail and that each species' haa many varieties. Cloven i It Is alleas that tke defendants. through the Standard Oil company aad,ta,other , catnoiaitoaa,, ara. -gasjad in nredacmg; purchasing and U spnrtlag pet i oleum la tke varioaa producing dtetricta ia tke United 8tatea, principally situated ia New York. Paansylvaaia, West Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky. Ohio, Indiaaa, IlUnoia, Kansas, Indian Territory. Ok lahoma, Louisiana, Texas, Colorado aad California; that tkey own and con trol nearly an. of tke pipelines to said states, and other pipe lines ex- i tending from Kanaaa to the seaboard; also pipe Unas ia Texas aad in cat Iforaia; that they owa a large num ber of tank cars aad steamships en gaged ia transporting oil; and that the said defendants have, through the in strumentality of the Standard Oil com pany of New Jersey (a holding corpor ation), eliminated competition between all. of the separate corporations and monopolized the commerce in oil in the United States. Control the Pipe Lines. It is alleged that the Staadard Oil company has had control of the carry ing business by pipe lines' in and from all the oil producing regions of the United States except Texas, Louisiana and California; that they charged ex cessive aad unreasonable rates, and rates which were discriminatory in favor of the Standard Oil company; that they have refused to furnish equal facilities for receiving aad de livering oil of independent shippers and refiners; that they have refused to transport oil belonging to others than the defendants and their associa ted companies, an,dniaee the month of August, 1900,; have refased-to transport oil of others except in such large quan tities as to completely prevent inde pendent producers and refiners of oil from using their service, and that they have forced 16 independent, refiners now doing buslnesst in Pennsylvania aad Ohio, and producing their crude oil, through the Standard Oil com pany's pipe lines, to sell nil of their export oil to the Standard Oil com pany, thereby eliminating their com petition. This contract was procured through threats of the Standard Oil company to reduce the amount of crude oil which it would sell to the independent refiners. Enjoy Preferential Rates. It Is alleged that one of the prin cipal iastrumentalitiea through which the defendants have been enabled to monopolize 'the commerce in petro leum and its products throughout the Ualted States haa been a system of prefereatial rates, -'and rates dlscrlmi- OF HUGE OIL TRUST. Ohio 10,000,000 New York. 350,000 West Virginia,.... const'd . New York New Jersey. 200,000 500,000 250,000 100,000 . . . Pennsylvania ..Ohio ..Iowa . . Pennsylvania 500,000 300,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 5,000 Not known. .Kentucky ... Ohio Pennsylvania West Virginia..... Colorado 5400000 500400 Pennsylvania 50,000 Pennsylvania 10,000400 ..Indiana 1,000,000 Pennsylvania 1,000,000 Ohio 300400 Ohio 500400 " Different Then. Husband It's strange that. I can never find anything about the house that belongs to me without your assist ance. , Wife How did you manage before we were married, dear? Husband bh, things stayed where I put them then. Chicago Daily News. A man' may not have much faith la doctors, up to the time when the first baby arrives in his house. After that he regards them with awe. A Dangerous Case. One of the surgeons of a hospital asked an Irish help which he consid ered thermost dangerous, of the many cases then in the hospitl. "That sir," said Patrick, as he pointed to a' case of surgical Instruments. " " Naive. Little Sophia has Just been la formed that she has a little sister. Oh, ,how loyely! ,. Please, please let ue be "the one to tell mamma." me Translated for Transatlantic Tales from El Diario de la Marina. aatory agamat tke eeatpstltBfs.of tke . . .?., - -r??. 4. Staadard OQ company, botk'm mm fP fJSJSJkSffJCtBT' ' ? . .T?! ;a mad' nakmaaL.ttamai Vaad kvamt ' ' - .HI' Immm-mCsmU - jeammTwe: mmm--mmvafjssl botkiaterstato rebates, granted to tke Staadard Oil itm Tke bill soea, lato the detaila of maiiy of tkese ratea, aad showa a sys tematic discrimination, substantially all over tke United 'states, so that ratea- from tTtoadard akippiag poiata are, muck lower, for tke proportipmately aad per. ton per mile of peadeat competiag coaceraa. dif erencee ia moat iastaacea to more than a reasoaablerprofit apoa the oil. Some Sample Oieeriminatiena. Tkeregaiar published rate Whitlag. lad., to Evansville, Imt, through Illinois, for instance, waa 11 cents per hundred pounds. Most of the oil shipped by the Standard com pany waa shipped at SK cents aad 6 ceata per. kuadred fpoaade. Tke Staadard aad a. rate from Whiting; Ind., to Oraad Junction, Tenau, of IS cento per hundred pounds, and large quaatltiea of oil were distributed from Grand Junction all over this southern territory on secret ratea which never were published, aa required by law, or filed with tke laterstate commerce commission. Tke petition alleges that for about ten years prior to 1906 secret and mv publlshed rates were made from Whiting, Ind., to East SL Louis, of t, 6 aad fft ceata on the varioaa rail roads, which oil waa destined to SL Louis and to a large territory soutk and southwest of those points, while the regular published rate waa It centa per hundred pounds. Hew They Control Railroads. It is alleged that the individual de fendants and other individuals associa ted with .them and Interested with them in the Standard Oil trust have acquired-large interests in the stocks of the priacipal railroads of the United States aad have caused them selves to be elected or have caused other persons actlag in their interest to be elected aa members of the boards of directors of such railroads. By rea son of such ownership and representa tion on the boards of directors of such railroads the iadividual defend ants have influenced the railroads to establish and malntala the discrimina tory rates. Among the railroads in which the defendants are laterested and apoa the boards of directors of which they have representation (together with the names of directors) are the fol lowing: William Rockefeller Central New England; Chicago, Milwaukee as St Paul; Delaware; 'Lackawanna aad Western; Lake Shore and Michigan Southern; Michigan Central; New York -Central; .New. York, Chicago and 'St Louis; New York, New Haven and 'Hartford; New. York, Ontario aad Western; New York and Ottawa; Pittsburg and Lake Erie; Rutland. Henry H. Rogers Santa Fe. Chicago, Milwaukee and ' SL Paul; Untoa Pacific Charles M. Pratt Boston aad Maiae, Evansville. aad Terre Haute; Long Island. -Henry M.' Flagler Florida East Coast, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Delaware Lackawaana aad Western; Missouri Pacific. William G. Rockefeller Union Pacific H. Clay Pierce Kansas City Southern. SL Louis aad San Francisco. C W. Harknssa Chicago. Milwaukee and SL Paul."' F. T. Gates Missouri Pacific, Wiscon sin Central." - ' The petitioa then recites the Stand ard trust's monopoly of- the sale of lubricating oils to railroads, its unfair methods of competition in the cutting of local prices, the formation of bogus independent companies, the payment of rebates on oil prices, and the divis ion of territory. Telia of Stupendous Profits. It is alleged that by reason of its monopoly the Standard Oil company has made enormous and unreasonable profits on the actual value of its prop erty; that the trustees' valuation of all the property and stocks placed ia their hands in 1882 was $55,710,6984. The additional property purchased or acquired by the issue of trust certifi cates was f 13,319.100. so that the total value of all property controlled by the Staadard Oil company of New Jersey, except such aa may have been pur chased from earnings, is $S,020.7964. according to their own valuation. Upon this capital the Standard haa from 1E82 to 1895, inclusive, paid 1512,940,084.50 of dividends, aad haa created a huge surplus the exact sur plus the petitioner is unable to state, because the Staadard haa act pub lished any statements since 1898. But from 1882 to 1896 Its surplus, accord ing to its own statements, waa $79, 536,025.14. aad it is alleged that Its property at the present timeexceedo the value of $200,000409. . Its annual dividends during the last nine yeara have run from 33 to 48 per cent per annum, ia addition to tms large plus. Aa Interpreted. Mayme George declared he would gladly go through fire and water for me. Edyth That means he win look after the furaace aad keep your wash tubs filled after marriage Chicago Daily News. Perhaps Put to Better Use. A church in London still draws aa income which was bequeathed it for the purpose of buying wood where with to burn heretics. The World's Demands. A man who cannot afford to return hospitalities will find that he need not expect to avail himself of those of his acquaintances to the end of kia career, unless he Is an extremely en gaglBg person. Frances Hodgson Buraett Check en Scorchers. Cyclllsts In Roumania, to facilitate identification, are compelled by-law to have their names on the lamp glasses of their machines, so aa to be legible at night cwcssslnas ami mataiancml t J , 'Jt"":'"."' - smaa jsansfc hiiiii " - 1 "ii.. i ( rami imiimy- ' - .. s- - - . k - - " - - 1 : - - ' .v 1. mmaaaate. and BV uiiVBVjanMna, . mgmmm nr " . . m' m.. -.. s - -. - -7 TllaVfi VmtsmlflHr -imtsi-1 ' lmfedmtetoC-r "i ! It IL - "-ftg- -maaaa "mmr. distsnen I .' ' ". w &- X"". ' ' ; " mm swy r ? HHMMacKHnnoi'amnML nmc'tnaa. ll d tantyoawulkaTa no more symp o Ijaaainr waslt ac saamaajsmM bv These tasmeikaartiliiimi. ' a f satmfactery If tm rifimt -a, I mm t mmataai " m - m Sold byandealaraatS5c ami see. SmalLltL MLatf seaMtttBosr ICFISE SIMTITBTES. FARMS TUT IMW "NO. I HARD" WHEAT fSixtv-three theBbshel). Are aita. ated ia tke Caaadiai Weat where Hoaae ateaaa ef MO acres caa ee oMataed free ay every aettler williaa; aaa sate 10 cmay waa tae i neolatioa. ee 6riv(w TinHify HAS SEEN MADS ACCKSSmS TO MABV KBTS BY THE BAH,WAY CONSTaCCTION that aaa acea yeafced forward aa viaareaeTy ay tae three great railway ceaayaalee. rorliteratafeaadvartkalaraaddreaaSOPEB tKTKNDEKT OF IMMIGaATION. Ottawa. Caaada,ar the faltowiag aataoriaed GotcraaaeatAgeat: - V. . KMCTT. SM Mew Tar Ufa MeatJeathie Vorj Cannot CURE ; aS inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous membrane such as by feaalaJam Bis, aaewui er laHaasmna eyes oy amply dosiagtbe stomach. Bat yo surely cast cava) these stubborn affections by local treatment witk Paxtinc Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease genmschecks discharges, stops pain, and heale tke iaflammation and soreness. Paztine represents the most successful Iscal treatment for fsmladas ilia ever produced. 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