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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1895. 17 P A Z sl S 7 WA RN ’/Z/,,fl;/f?;// el NS, W —~ bwill frankly say for myself thatif I had W W, = PRESTON SCHOOL OF INDUSTRY, IONE, CAL. [From a photograph by C. L. McCafferty.] sone take offense at the title of this for the idea is not to hurt the ong men of ‘the grand old military )i -of ‘the .Hudson, but to help the k boys in the new military school of California Sierra. The institution is under the control of a board consisting of three members, who are appointed by the Governor for terms of four years each. The board appoints the superin- tendent, secretary and military instructor; all other officers are appointed by the superin- tendent, with the consent and approval of the board. * * * Theschool consists of three depertments; namely, academic, military and inaustrial; and eech boy is a pupil in each de- partment.—From the Preston School Circular of Information. Six years ago the State framed a bill to ] years of service there; that he drew wages from the first, and of course had a round sum ready for him at the end; that he had | to keep an account of every cent spent out | of it, and must know and report regularly | and exactly what is due him, but that he was never allowed to touch one cent while at school, and that of course the same rule | prevailed at Preston. She kept turning about and looking back over her shoulder,and I thought some one was outside waiting for her. | When I was done talking she turned quietly about without a word, leaving the | money. I went on with my writing, ex- | pecting her back all the time. At last I | got up impatiently and went to the door land looked all about. I have not seen or € OARL BAN INDUSTRY, K8, SUPERINTENDENT OF THE PRESTON SCHOOL OF IONE, CAL. make a sort of State prison annex for boys, to be under the same directors. But by degreés we grew far away and above all that; and to-day, with an expenditure of lecs. than' $200,000, we have, out of that first-crude idea, and away up in the foot- 11s of Amador, one of the most splendid military schools on the globe. ing is.an honor to the State, and the boys are an honor to the building and the bean- tiful grounds. In the list of twenty-three officers and employes, such as head cook, foreman, matron of the hospital, teachers, garden- ers, carpenters, and 8o on, I read the name of only ene watchman—one man to watch ! { 1 { i { | | | | 1 \ A Possible West Point. nearly 200 boys! “This beats West Pointon | the Hudson all to. pieces. | A few days before setting out from home to - visit this ‘new military school a pale littls woman with a threadbare black shawl over her shoulders came shyly in at my | open-door where I was busy at work and | laid down a'small gold coin wrapped in a | WOTh pieeé of paper. *'I read that you are going to.the Preston | Schoel in Amador, and I want you to give | this to a little boy up there.” I explained that even the richest boy in ‘West Point could not have a single 10- The build- | heard of her since, and have no idea who | she was or where she came from. And now will you take a run with the | superintendent through the splendid red sandstone schoolhouse in Amador? The | stone 1s quite like that of which the | Bpreckels palace is being built on Van Ness avenue, and taken from a quarry only four miles distant. It is on the top | of ared hill and the grounds are nearly 400 acres in area and dotted with native oak and pine. Olive trees and other semi- tropical plants are set here and there, and | the grounds in time will be singularly | beautiful. The water is exhaustless, with a fall that carries it twice as high as the tower of the highest building. As you ap- proach the main edifice you note that every side of the red hill has been torn and washed away by miners in days of old. The campus, the garden, the drill and parade grounds, all have been made pre- sentable and pleasant by the boys leveling down little mountains of tailings and fill- ing up pits, ditches and reservoirs. Some- times they pick up pieces of gold and gold- | flecked quartz. Mr. McAuley, who mined | hereabouts forty years ago, told me that when passing along near here aiter a shower, he saw something shining in a | little rivulet, and picking it up he found it to be a piece of gold weighing $56. You expect to hear quite a racket as you enter the stately portals where two hun- | dred boys are housed, eh? Well, if is as | quiet as a church, and yet as busyas a | hive of bees. The only boys eligible are | those between 8 and 18, the noisiest period | of all, and yet not one loud word or act. | And the secret of itall? Kindness, gen- tleness, confidence. Mr. Bank, the super- intendent, begged and finally got permis- sion to take eight boys, eligible because of extreme youth, from San Quentin; and, although a stranger to them at first, he | soon so won their hearts that he, with only a single companion part of the way, took | the eight boys all the way to Ione, put pretty military uniforms on them, and | with only their words of honor for bond | made them free little gentlemen and his | daily companions and the companions of | his family. I do not know who deserves the warmest praise for this, the boys or the man. . I only know that this marks a new era in the brotherhood of man. The books of record kept here are curi- ous and thorough. They are all based on the idea that nobody is bad, only unfor- tunate. A boy may be born and finally brought here with but little inheritance in the way of brains. The facts are all set down, and the plan is to build up his for- tunes where deficient. The next thing that strikes you here, after the profound stillness, is the perfect cleanliness. I may say I never saw perfect. cleanliness before. Of course the roaring cataracts of water everywhere have much to do with this, ceni piece to handle during all his four but even a flood could not keep an army of two hundred little soldier boys and their barracks so sweetly clean if they were not daily disposed to it, and drilled and drilled and continually drilled to perfect cleanliness. After leaving the secretary, in charge of the books, the only person encountered so far, if we except the forty or fifty boysat football away down on the campus, we as- cend the wide stairway to the schoolroom. No guards, no watchman, nobody, tiil we enter the schoolroom, fitted up like any other first-class schoolroom. Here is the teacher in his place with about fifty boys in military uniforms before him. There is one black boy and one brown boy; the others are white. The larger half of all the boys in this Preston School are from San Francisco. Sticka pin here: bear this ugly fact in mind and use your influence to keep young people out in the healthful country. These fifty boysat their desks before us will be at their books but a short time. Then they go to their military drill for two hours, giving place to another like number, then on the industrial depart- ments for two hours, then the military parade, then supper, then “taps,” then bed. Near the schoolrooms are the dormito- ries and the hospital. Clean! Clean and sweet as lilies of the valley; a matron in charge; a young man, one of the ‘:ca- dets,” in charge of the drugstore and studying hard to bea chemist. One pa- tient only in all the 200 sweet little white beds, and he asleep. From the great tower and the roar of water still away up there we looked down at the spruce young soldiers, gentlemen on their honor at drill; also some at football, further on; also some in a garden of their own plowing and planting. When the groundsare in order each young soldier is to have a garden to himself and isto be perfectly trained in the trade of ‘‘the grand old gardener and his wife.” From this stately central edifice we passed back and down to the tailor-shop. where the boys are trained under a com- petent teacher to make their own uni- forms. Then we went to the buitding, in charge of the matron, where each boy, like a German soldier, must in turn wash his own ciothes; then to the shoemaker’s shop, and so on. Then we passed far on, through woods and fields, where boys were at work burning brush and paving the walks to the dairy. Boys thick here, too—boysallaround, busy, happy, smiling, quiet and respectful. Such buckets of foaming milk from the dozen Holsteins and such merry milkers! Then the calves and the boys feeding the calves, teaching them to drink milk, hold- ing their arms lovingly about the necks of the youngest ones and talking ‘“baby talk” to them. In the great stables—for they have to use strong horses and many of them to get these grounds in order and keep their crops growing—the same order, interest and civility is seen among the young sol- diers in this newest military school of America—and may I say the best ordered ? Ido say it, and say it advisedly, for my experience with the like is not of a day or a year, but of a life. If we have to haye soldiers —and we must had my deserts when a boy I should have been appointed to a place like this, had there been such, and so, perhaps, amounted to something—maybe have risen to be a mighty soldier; for I had the strength and endurance, often the ferocity of a wild beast; but, being so entirely imaginative and battlesome, I really had not sense enough, hali the time, to keep out of trouble, and needed just such a place as this. And yet, I was not wicked, or lazy, or covetous, but gave away all I ever earned or found in the mines, In fact, I reckon I was just about such a boy as the average young fellow here at this Preston Academic Military and Industrial School. And the little boy and the strange woman in the threadbare shawl! Well, as I was being shown through the dairy, a little fellow followed me and thrust a little package into my hand marked ‘For Mother.”” It was quartz and gold, of no great value, except that it was “for mother.” SoIhaveabit of gold quartz and a small gold coin for some one. At the station next morning Superin- tendent Carl Bank introduced a tall, pale young man with a Jewish name and face as a correspondent for some paper. I avoided him at first, but seeing that he was very timid I took his hand, and, questioning him, found to my surprise that he was at school by order of court. He was very pale, and his voice trembled as he made open confession of crime, but he seemed very earnest in his resolution to be a writer, and even an honor rather than disgrace his parents. “What will the world think of us when we are of age and leave here?’ he asked, with eyes to the ground. “The world, my son, will think just about what you think of yourselves. The world is a good, honest old world ana GENERAL MILES AT HOME, Some Description of the Daily Life of Our New Com- mander. IS DEVOTED TO HIS FAMILY. Military Experiences in the Far West. Mrs. Miles Chats About the New Woman. WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 16.—If | there is a happy household at the capital this winter that of our new commander of the army must certainly be counted, and if there is & woman who is a proad wife and mother Mrs. General Miles can surely be so called. With ber husband ranked as one of the highest officials of the Nation, two handsome children and a host of rela- tives and friends in town, it is safe to say that there is no happier woman in Wash- ington to-day than Mrs. Nelson A. Miles. General Miles has leased for one year the brick house on the corner of G and Twentieth streets, a section of the town which is full of old residents and is com- monly known as the “‘army and navy quarter” of the city. It is only three blocks from the huge white War, State and Navy Department, and is in a neigh- | borhood of pleasant people, for just op- posite is the home of the famous Arctic brimful of heart for a boy who does his best; and the world \)’ill say that a boy who goes up from a prison door goes much | explorer, General A. Greely, and on the | next corner is the big old-fashioned resi- | dence of Secretary Herbert. The Miles PRESTON SCHOOL OF INDUSTRY, IONE, CAL., SHOWING CADETS WORKING ON DRIVEWAY, further than the boy who goes up to fame and fortune from a palace door, and de- serves and shall receive at least equal honor and respect for his greater persist- ence and endeavor.” Honor and glory to California for thi brave and most Christian work in all the world, and I take off my hat to the man at the head of it, as well as to his brave and honest boy-soldiers, not one of whom has yet done a single act, so far as I could find out, that can throw a shadow of reprcach on the institution or their companions in arms. JOAQUIN MILLER. The Heights, November, 1895. HULL OF THE ELBE. Depths. The North German Lloyd Company has sent a professional diver to try and locate the wreck of the Elbe and to report about the possibility of gettiug at bodies which may be still held in the wreck, and also to attemptto extricate what valuables might be got at. He reports the following: “We set out on the wrecking steamer Elise and hovered for almost two weeks around the spot where the Elbe sank. She lies listed to the port side at a depth of | over forty fathoms (240 feet). Favorable results could therefore hardly be expected. In spite of this we tried our best to de- scend to the vessel, but among six profes- fessional divers, two Germans, two French- men and two Englishmen, not one could dive deeper than 170 feet. I attempted it once daily for six consecu- tive days, but when I got to the depth men- tioned, which was the greatest depth reached by any on board, the pressure of the water upon my body was so powerful BOYS AT LEISURE, [This illustrates a corner in the library as seen nightly duving our long winter evenings. Some are playing games, while others interest themselves in books, papers, magazines or con- versation, about an hour and a half being spent in the reading-rooms each evening. I sum- ‘mer the time is usually spent on the playgrounds.] for a while, I guess, as the millennium' seems not yet quite at hand—why not make them out of this clay, that has by chance got a little banged up in the begin- ning? Believe me, it is none the worse for that, but may be even better for the bang- ing and battering. Of old time, when theonce famous glass- blowers of Venice found a flaw in a piece of work or got it distorted in some way, they turned it into a flask or fiasco. I will not assume to file confessions here for other men, nor intrude my own, but I that it seemed to me all the air was pressed out of the body. It was aifficult to breathe; the ears began to pain and bleed, and a numbness seemed to permeate the head, which I concluded was the be- ginning of waning consciousness. Since, with a diver attired in a scaphander suit, loss of consciousness would be fatal, the at- tempts to reach the Elbe had to be aban- doned. g “From the deepest point I reached I could see the hull of the Elbe as through a fog. She is listed to the pori side and the masts and the smokestacks could plainly be seen.”’—Philadelphia Record. Its Weird Appearance in Ocean’s Dark | house runs quite a distance on both streets and is a large and admirably planned mansion. This residence was selected by | Mrs. Miles as it had been leased for three | years by a friend who wished to give it up | before the expiration of her term, and as i Mrs. Miles was weary of house-hunting | she took the place at a year's lease, hoping | that by next year she may be able to get a | home adjoining that of her uncle, Senator Sherman, to whom she is most devoted. The interior of the house has grown, under the nimble and tasteful fingers of | Mrs. Miles, into a cozy home, and many | of the souvenirs of their early life in the | West are scattered about the pretty rooms. | The big hall ends in a stairway, which Home of General Nelson A. Miles, Washington, D. C. runs to the rooms above, and on the left of this hall is the parlor, a long apartment which runs the entire length of the house. Its polished floor is covered with rugs, handsome pictures look down from the walls and about on dainty tables are pho- tographs of friends and other pretty orna- ments. On one table stands a huge earthen pot decorated with scenes of In- dian life in Arizona, and from a corner of a shelf a bronze bust of an Indian chief in full feather looks down in massive rugged- ness. The little sitting-room on the right hand is warm and bright, and when the sun comes creeping in through the big bay-window it dances about on shining picture-frames and many quaint curios standing side by side with the most mod- ern of civilized inventions. At the back of the sitting-room is a small picture | gallery, and it is here that most of the | many relics of Indian life are placed. A huge painting of the general in full uni- form 1s hung in view, and the likeness is a | striking one. General Miles spends all of his day | down at his office in the department, and | the evening he devotes to writing on his book, which will probably soon be issued from the press. ’,Fhis volume will embody his experiences in his many campaigns, and wilI; be full of thrilling interest. The general is a most domestic man and never spends an evening away from his family, caring nothjng for club life, and always being acconipanied abroad by his wife and daughter. 5 ;7 There are but two children in the family, the oldest one a young lady in society. This is Miss Cecelia, who is a handsome irl with a graceful figure and a fondness or out-of-door sports. She is an excellent rider on horseback and on the wheel, is fond of society and will be among the pelles of the coming season at the capital. The other child is a boy of about 13, a very fine-lookinE lad with clear rosy skin and pretty blue eyes, while his athletic figure gives token of a lithe, strong man in the future. His name is Sherman, being so called after his mother’s family. Sherman will attend school in this city, and when he is grown, so he now declares, he will adopt his father’s life and go into the army. 2 Mrs. Miles is not going to_be lonesome, for her sister, Mrs. Senator Cameron, lives put a few blocks away, and a little further on is the home of her uncle, Senator Sher- man. Mrs. Miles was a Miss Sherman, and met General Miles at the home of General Sherman while she was on a visit to Washington. She was married in Cleveland, and then went_to liva with her husband at Fort Hays in Kansas. “I never had any remarkable experi- ences;” she laughingly remarked recently in reply to a query regarding her early life in the West, “though there was a good bit of wild life then in what are now the most cultivated parts of the country. Our first post was at Fort Hays, a station then commanded by General Custer. We lived very comfortably here, but it was a hard ride to reach any town, as the railroad was in process of construction, and we had to make use of rough construction trains. “Life at a little army post off on the borders of civilization was very dull and the climate of Kansas sometimes a bit hard, for there were terrific storms, which are so graphically described in Mrs. Sherman Miles, Son of General Nelson A. Miles. General Custer’'s book, 'Tenting on the Plains.” The ladies spent their time in looking after the quarters and sewing, and I remember that I labored many a weary hour over an old quilt which is now a keepsake, but it brings back to me whenever 1 look at it all of the hard times we had when the officers and men would go out on the scout and we women dragged on the slow-footed hours till their return. We often went on camping ex- peditions. Then there would be a fishing party and sometimes a buffalo hunt. At such times all of the ladies who could would join in the chase. “The men would start out in front and scare up the buffalo and the ladies would ride on at the rear. But we never failed to be in at the end of the hunt and many of the ladies were often up with the men 1n the mad rush across the plains, for the horses would catch the spirit of the chase and rush away as if mad at the heels of the galloping black herd that covered the prairie before us. When the hunt was over the men would cut out the tongues of the dead animals and take the hides for robes. I have now several fine robes that we got while out West. But that time, though it was not so long ago, was quite different from now, for there is scarcely a buffalo left and railroads have opened up what was then a dangerous land, inbab- ited by savages. “I never saw an Indian fight, but one winter we were quartered in the midst of hundreds, who behaved most peaceably. There were often a great many prisoners brought into camp, but these were sent away to other places. ‘“The winter that General Miles tirst spent in Montana I was in Washington, for my uncle, General Sherman, who was at that time in command, would not let me go to that region with my baby girl. The next year Ispent with the general, and it was one of the most desolate places to be found in the Union. The cold was &0 intense that most people can have no idea of it, and we passed our time in trying to keep warm. Butthe worst part wasour journey southward, which we began when the ther- mometer was 20 dezrees below zero. We traveled in ambulances and had to be covered with buffalo robes all the time to keep from freezing. When we camped at night a fire was built, yet it made but little impression on the air, which was like that of the pole. We traveled in this way for several hundred miles, and the memory of the journey will never be forgotten. “Irom my own experience with the In- dians I will say that I have a high respect for them and that mostof the army people have the same opinion. The bad Indians are principally those which have become degraded by contact with low white men, who have taught them all of the vices and none of the virtues of civilization. In his way there is a great deal of native dignity about an Indian, and in their speech an unusually poetic spirit, which even the most warlikedisplay. The best thing that can be done forthe Indians is to have them educated right where they are, for it has been the experience of all that those who are taught at home seem to be more docile than those who have been sent East and acquired an_arrogant manner and super- ficial knowledge which unfits them for their part in life. Not that education is not good for them, but it is best when it is conducted out on the reservations. “I do not think the Indian is lazy, but, if he is taught how to labor, he will make an honest workman. When his blood is pure Indian, he is generally a fine man and one of good morals till contaminated by de- raved example from the whites who fol- low on the heels of the opening of a new country, but ‘half-breeds’ are a dangerous and bad set. It is said thatan Indian edu- cated in the East is the most ferocious of all when he turns again to his savage ways.” Mrs, Miles is a very handsome woman, with a rounded, graceful form, which she dresses most stylishly in rich gowns. She has an aristocratic carriage and easy but dignified manners, which show her perfect training in the school of courtesy, and the facts that her whole life has been passed in the best society in the country, and that she has been called upon to play the part of hostess so often, have given to her nat- ural grace a very attractive charm of easy cordiali?. Mrs. Miles is an admirable housekeeper and thinks that, as a woman’s sphere is in the domain of her own home, it is her most pleasant duty to make her home a bright one. Everything goes on in per- fect order under her watchful eye, yet her servants are most devoted, for she pos- sesses the tact to ‘““not notice” when a servant makes a mistake, and she thus by kindness secures the best of help. Mrs. Miles is nothing of the “new woman” in her manner or life, and while she isa woman of broad mind and wide expe- rience, and one who keeps abreast of the times on all subijects of the day, she does not think that it is exactly a woman’s place to invade the domain of the lawyer and doctor. She approves of all healthy out-of-door sports, and admires the woman that is able to help herself when necessity urges, but she has a great abhor- rence for a masculine woman, tfiinkinzthnt the greatest charm is in a brilliant mind united to an attractive person of a true woman, not unsexed by aping the fashions of men. Bismarck Worship. The worship of Bismarck is a measure of the German’s love of his constitutional federation, and this love of unity and em;lzire will not decrease after the peovle hall have learned that Germany’s unity was achieved less by Bismarck than by a current of public opinion well represented by the then Crown Prince Frederick, or, as he was affectionately called, “Unser Fritz.” Bismarck not merely did not create Ger- man unity; he was personally strongly opfiosed to it. e was then, as he remains to-day, typical of the Prussian landed aristocrat— loyal to the Prussian crown and incapable of any views broader than the acres from which he lived. He believed in a strong army as a means of conquering new territory from his neighbors, and also for preventing popular aemonstrations at home. . He beleved that Prussia was destined to be the only German state of importance, because he believed Prussia capable of forcing one small state after another tq accept n rule~Cosmopolitan. NEW TO-DAY. EXPERT TREATMENT, With 2 Prompt an_dl’ermanent Cure at the Nominal Fee-Rate of $5 a Month, All Medicines Included—Read the Statement of Mr. Wigmore—The Common Symp- toms of Catarrh. Great numbers of people suffer from the ma- lign poisons of catarrh as from other subrie chronic maladies, without any correct or defi- nite idea of the nature of their aflliction. The following symptoms have been carefully ar- ranged by Drs. Copeland, Nealand Winn to en- able many sufferers to understand just what it is that ails them. Many diseases known under various specific names, are really of a catarrhal origin and nature. Every part of the mucous membrane, the nose, throat, eyes, ears, head, lungs, stomach, liver, bowels, kidneys and bladder are subject to disease and blight by catarrh. The proper course for sufferers is this: Read these symptoms carefully over, mark those that apply to your case and bring this with you to Drs. Copeland, Neal and Winn. Ii you live away from the city send them by mail and ask for mail treatment. In either in- stance, and whether by mail or office treatment, the patient may be assured of the speediest relief and cure possible to medical science. No better evidence can be furnished to substan tiate this claim than the statement of Mr. Alexander Wigmore, an employe of the San Francisco Stove Works, and who resides at 23 Perry street. ALEXANDER WIGMORE, 22 PERRY STREET. Four yvears ago Mr. Wigmore was treated for catarrh at the Copeland Medical Institute with the result that he was completely cured. That shows that the treatment cures. A few days ago Mr. Wigmore was again inter- viewed, when he said: “You can républish my statement made nearly four years ago, and can add that I have not had even the slightest re- turn of the trouble, showing conclusively that the cure is permanent.” That proves that the cures are permanent. The followin g letter proves the mail treate ment a success: an Luis Obispo, Nov. 14, 1895. Dear Doctors—I will need nomore treatment, asIam now satisfied that I am cured. You can publish my statement to that effect. I much for the interest you have taken in my case. THEODORE THORP. CATARRH of the HEAD and THROAT. The most prevalent form of catarrh results from neglected colds. Speedy and inexpensive cure by the Copeland system. “Is the breath foul ?” «Is the voice husky " Do you spit up slime 7 “Do you ache all over?”” “Do you blow out scabs 2" “*Is the nose stopped up ?” “Do you snore at night 2 “Does your nose discharge ?”* “Does the nose bleed easily 7 “Ts there tickling in the throat ™ “Do erusts form in the nose ?”* «Is the nose sore and tender ” “)o you snceze a great deal 2" «s this worse toward night ?” “Does the nose itch and burn ?”” «Ts there pain in front of head ?* «“Js there pain across the eyes ” «Is there pain in back of head 2 «Is your sense of smell leaving 2 “D6 you hawk to clear the throat 4Is there a dropping in the throat “Is the throat dry in the mornings “‘Are you losing your sense of taste “Do you sleap with the mouth open “Does the nose stop up toward night ? This form of catarrh is the easiest to cure. CATARRH of the BRONCHIAL TUBES. ‘When catarrh of the head and throat is left unchecked it extends down the windpipe into the bronchial tubes and after & time attacks the lungs. Speedy and inexpensive cure by. the Copeland system. “Have you a cough?” “Are you losing flesh?” “Do you cough at night?"” «Have you pain in side?"” “Do you take cold easily?” «Ts your appetite variable?” “Have you stitches in side?” “Do you cough until you gag?” «Aré you low-spirited at times?” «Do you raise frothy mucus ® “Do you spit up yellow matter’ “Do you cough on going to bed?’ “Do you cough in the morning?’ «Is your cough short and hacking?” “Do you spit up little cheesy lumps?” «Have you a disgust for fatty foods? “Is there tickling behind the palate?"” “Have you pain behind breastbone?” “Do you feel you are growing weaker?” *Is there a burning pain in the throat?” “Do you cough worse night and morning?” . “Do’ you have to sit up at night to get breath?” 1i you have these symptoms you have Catarrh of the Bronchial Tubes, ks CATARRH OF THE EAR.' Catarrh extends from. the throat-along the.’ Eustachian tubes into the ear, causing defec- tive hearing. Speedy and inexpensive cure by " . the Copeland system. s your hearing failing Do your ears discharge? Are the ears dry and scaly 2 Do the ears itch and burn? “Is the wax dry in the ear “Is there a throbbing in ears?” “Are you gradually getting deaf?” «Have you pain behind the ears?” “Is there a buzzing souad heard?” “Do you have & ringing in the ears?" “Are there cracking sounds heard?”” «]s your hearing bad cloudy days?” : “Do you have earache occasionally? “‘Are the sounds like steam esca) m% 2 “Do you constantly hear noises in the ears?” “Do your ears hurt when you blow thie nose?” ¢s there a roaring like a wateriall-in hiead?”. “Do you hear better some days than others?"™ “Do the noises in the ears keep you awake?”- “When you blow your mnose do the fears crack?” Gors, “Is your hearing worse when you have & cold?” 5 CATARRH OF THE STOMACH. Catarrh of the stomach is usually caused by swallowing poisonous mucus, which drops down from the head and throa: at might. Bpe!edy and inexpensive cure by the Copeland system. }“Is there nausea?” 7 *“Are you constipated 7"’ «Is there vomiting?” “Do you belch up gas?” *‘Are you light headed ?”” “is your tongue coated?” “Have you water brash?” “Do you hawk and spit?” “Is there pain after eating?” {‘Are you nervous and weak?"* “Do you have sick headaches?” “Do gou bloat up after eating? “Is there disgust for break: ‘“Have you distress after eatin ‘Is your throat filled with slime o KD“ at times have diarrhe: s there rush of blood to the head?” * s there constant bad faste in ‘the mouth®” “Is there gnawing sensation in the stomach?"* “Do you feel as if you had lead:-in stomach?” “When you get up suddenly are.you. dizzy 7' “When stomach is empty do you feel" faint?"? “Do Jon belch up substances that:.bur throat g ,ltomuchv is_full -do you féel op- ““When pressed ?’ % % 3 have you have Catarrh of the Stomach,’ or what is commonly called Dyspepsia. : $5 A MONTH. N than $5 a month ask 10!.11’{ 0 fee larger than $5 gg disease, Our motto 1s: ““A- Low F Cure. Mild and Painless Treatment.” Tie Copeland. Mediat i, PERMANENTLY LOCATED IN THE " COLUMBIAN BUI SECQND FLOOR, 916 Market St Next o Baldwin Hla, Over Beamishs, COPELAN: Ww. H.