Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 39, Decatur, Adams County, 11 July 1895 — Page 3
BEST tx THE WORLD, \ xor t Ox a y) V X\x\s / yawc*. \s uwwt\\t6\j/ Li THE RISING SUN ((&T& sv_ \ STOVE POLISH ■„ )’ c ' le » ,o - penr-at b,ack,n K of a stove. I I«SJ^7' Z THE SIN PASTE V J POLISH for a qui k LABO, ’Jt?u2X after-dinner shine. ■pplied and pol- •*"■" ished with a cloth. Morse Bros., Props.. Canton, Mass.. U.S. A. Small Change in Mexico. Ik id bought some limes, and gave the girl who sold them to me one dollar in payment. Byway of change she returned me forty-nine pieces of soap the size of a water-cracker. I looked at her in astonishment, and she returned my look with equal surprise, when a police officer, who witnessed the incident, hastened to inform me that for small sums soap was the legal tender in many portions of the country. 1 examined my change and found that each cake was stamjied with the name of a town and of a manufacture authorized by the government. The cakes of soap were worth one and a half cent each. Afterward in my travel, I frequently received similar change. Occasionally a cake showed signs of having been in the wash-tub; but provided the stamp was not obliterated, the soap did not lose value as currency. AMB!TIOUS_ WOMEN MAKE HEROES OF MEN. She Wil! Brave Anything for the Man She Loves. [mruiTO ova lily kucibs.) When an ambitious woman loves a man she will spur him to heroic efforts She will dare with fie rigors of ozen North, icouragehim ing dangers almost, sunnountable. Women are by nature ambitious according to their physical and mental strength. Hope and ambition come with perfect health, but vanish before sickness and despair. American women are, unfortunately, particularly subject to those ] ainful female diseases that are the cause of so much hopelessness and misery. Could all women realize the undeniable fact that they suffer unnecessarily, how much brighter life would be! Lydia E. Pinkham devoted her life to the study of female diseases and their eaiue; and she discovered in the Vegetable Compound an absolute remedy. It succeeds in returning the cause of the trouble. Women who rely more upon their own natural common-sense, rather than ou the theories of their physicians, write to Mrs. Pinkham, at I.ynn, Mass., and are soon restored to health. Here is living example: “Four months ago was unable to />*■ -if. stand on my .if* 'S. feet. I bad .P falling of tlie «, jvomb, kidney y '/ * trouble, and inflammation ’ C v. u? of the bladder; ' N aMat the backache /dr and bearingdown pains were dreadful. My physician could give me no relief. A friend said, try Lydia E. Pinkham’t Vegetable Compound, Well, I did. Oh. if every suffering woman would do the same, they would be cured, cured absolutely and entirely, as I am!” Mils. Wm. 51. Mouev, 2t Seymour St., Pittsfield. Mass.
KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the’needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers anu permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millionsand met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kiduevs. Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. PENSION Successfully Prosecutes Claims Late Principal Examiner U. 8. Pension Bureau* i yrs in last war, 15 adjudicating clairai*. atty ainuQ
ALL ABOUT THE FARM SUBJECTS INTERESTING TO RURAL READERS. Device for Removing Racks and Wason Reds—Arrangement for Winding Barbed Wire—Cheap, Portable Poultry Fence—Farm and Garden Notes. A Useful Contrivance. The accompanying illustrations, from the American Agriculturist, represent * contrivance by which heavy racks
and wagon beds can be taken off and on without much difficulty. In Fig. 1 the uprights, a a, are 4x4xß timbers. The crosspieces, b b. are oneinch boards. The crank, c. is from an old self-binder. The timbers at the top are secured by a 12inch bolt, which also bears a pulley. At the bottom the uprights are 2% feet apart The rope may be of any ;
Caa a / / -13 I ■! M 1 ' A I—, r fl
fig. 1. convenient size, and the hook should have an opening of 2V. inches. Drive an old bolt into the lower end of each upright, so that the frame will stand secure. Now set four posts, f (Fig, 2), 12 feet apart each way. nail strips of boards, e, on each side at the top, to keep the crosspieces in place, -j Wbeu you want to unload or load the rack, drive or back in between the posts. Block the hind wheels, set the pulley frame directly behind the wagon, fasten the nook to the bind cross piece of the rack, and with the crank hoist it high enough so that the crosspiece, d, can be put in place. Do the same with the front end, and you will have your rack high and dry. In loading hoist only high enough to pull out the crosspiece, then let the rack down on the wagon only one end at a time. The posts must be of sufficient height to permit of the wagon with the rack on being driven underneath the crossj pieces. The rack should be kept under shed or shelter and will then be in service for several seasons’ usefulness. Anyone handy with tools can easily
‘r~ - FIG. 2. construct such a device, the use of which will soon save enough time and hard work to pay for itself. I To Grow the Largest Melon. The Watermelon Bulletin gives the following directions for growing the largest melon: Select your hill or hills that you want to try for largest melons in your deepest and clearest sand, that has been well fertilized to begin with, not allowing more than two plants to tlie hill; one is better. Now’ perforate the ground with holes, such as a broom handle would make, from near the hill to three and four feet in circumference; then with a liquid fertilizer from stable orcowpen, fill in these perforations, rake the surface and repeat once or twice during the progress of vines, to cover ground. Give for your largest melons i the form, or young melons, with the largest and stockiest stem, as indicating its capacity to draw on the parent vine. For Rolling Barbed Wire. The illustration represents n very simple and convenient method for taking up and winding barbed wire. It is made simply by driving two forked sticks into the ground, so that the forks will be three feet above the surface. in these forks lay a slick two and one-half inches in diameter, and i -' . w - I BABB I'D WIKL IUMH.AW. on one end of this stick fasten a cultivator w’hccl. Attach the wire to the stick, and by simply turning the wheel it can be secured in a compact roll. If a device of this kind is arranged on a frame and placed on wheels, the w ire can be quickly rolled up. By attaching to the loose cud and turning the cultivator wheel the machine will be pulled along as the wire is taken up. and the ; work is done very satisfactorily.—Orange Judd Farmer. — Do Not Thresh Barley at Once. A brewer of Petersboro, Ont, sends this word to barley growers: “When you cut your barley don't thresh it out at once, but let it stay in the stack or mow for a month before threshing to sweat. This sweating is a chemical process which greatly improves barley for malting purposes. Barley threshed as soon as cut never malts well. Bar. ley is better for being cut slightly green and alowed to stand in the field until dry enough’for housing.” Dry Bordeaux Powder. For some years a dry powder similar to bordeaux mixture, that is, consisting of copper, sulphate, and lime, has been on the market under the name of David’s power. In 1887 It was hesitating-
ly recommended by the Department of Agriculture for the use of potatoes. It has, however, been entirely su[>erseded by Bordeaux mixture, since the latter is more economical, adheres better to the foliage, and, according to the experience of most growers, says tho Connecticut Experiment Station, is easier to use. Fitting a Horae Collar. How properly to adjust the collar of a horse, says the Agriculturist, is a knowledge that all men do not possess, and many disagree on important matters. Some men keep the inner surface of the collar soft and pliable. Every time the collar is put on it is pressed and pummeled until it is soft Others, equally as good farmers, never soften the wearing surface of the horse’s collar. but simply rub off the accumulated hair and dandruff. The latter plan is most practiced. The wearing surfaces of ox yokes are as hard as seasoned wood can make them. In purchasing a horse collar take the horse with you and have the collar fitted. A short collar will choke the animal and cause distress. If a trifle too long it will do no harm if raised up at the bottom by putting a pad under at the top. The hatnes should always be buckled close and fitted snugly at the collar. Using the collar on other horses runs the fit 'Portable Poultry Fence. Poultry fence making is often considered a great task and therefore many choice specimens are practically spoiled for breeding purposes. For portable fence construction as shown below, take a piece Ix 6 inches and 3 feet long ; jmnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnni. n nH u UMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji ri M PORTABLE, SECURE AND CHEAP. mid another piece Ix 3 inches and of sufficient length to reach from ground to top of upper rail of panel. Nail these pieces together at right angles and a support is made. Drive a 30-penuy spike nail into the edge of the upright deep enougli to hold firmly and bend upward to form a hook on which to hang the panel. Drive the spike so that when each section rests on it the pickets will clear the ground. The pickets or panci may consist of lath nailed to light scantling. By the use of this fence, you can regulate the size of the yard and if no fence is wanted, it can be taken apart and stored under shelter. —A. F. Whitright, in Farm and Home. Intelligent Breeding. The animals intended especially for j breeding purposes should be fed in a ! manner different from those that are ; being fatted for market. A very fat 1 animal is not suitable for breeding, and I many valuable mares, cows, sows and ewes that are very high iu flesh either , die in giving birth to their young or j fail to produce vigorous offspring. The I many cases of milk fever which occur ' among cows and ewes may often be traced to the use of too much concentrated food and a lack of judgment in feeding. Cultivation of Corn. Practically without exception the experiments conducted in a dozen States, by practical men with scientific accuracy. have given results in favor of the shallow cultivation of corn as compared with deep cultivation. In every case cutting the roots of the corn reduced the yield. The best results are got by a thorough preparation of the ground before planting, and after that stirring the ground to a depth of only two or three Inches—enough to break up the crust that sun and showers form on the surface and to root out the weeds. Agricultural Notes. Improved farming improves tlie farm. Don’t fail to make that damp cellar dry. Keep air-slacked lime iu your coops and about your houses. One advantage with ducks is that if they are properly fed they are rarely' sick. I Turnips and potatoes are best fed by i boiling and mixing with wheat bran, j The best results are obtained when 1 not more than 100 fowls are kept on an : acre of ground. For egg production there can be no mistake in selecting either the Leg- ■ horns, M inorcas or Anconas. One advantage with sheep is that I they will pick up a good living in places ( where cattle would nearly starve. You are liable to infect sound trees I by using on them a knife with which you have cut out diseased wood. It is difficult to decide which is the best strawberry. A variety that sueceeds finely in one locality may be a failure in another. | When plants are set in the ground great care should be taken about watering. In the vast majority of cases ■ evening is the best time. Chopped raw onions given to the 1 fowls two or three times a week act I as a stimulant to the blood and an appetizer. They will do uo harm at any time. The health of a horse depends on the soundness and proper adjustment of his teeth. They are tlie millstones that grind his food, and frequently need attention. Good cows, well cared for, and their butter product well made and judiciously marketed and all the by-pro- I duct used to the best advantage com- ! prise one of the most profitable branches of all our agriculture. When meat production of any kind is profitable, mutton production must be. The sheep is a double source of income, and to produce a pound of ' mutton certainly costs no more than to j produce a pound of any other meat !
A Dinner from the Bible. Spread a cloth of blue, and put thereon tiie dishes and the spoons, and the bowls, and the bread in the basket.— Numbers iv., 6, and Leviticus viii., 31. Salt without prescribing how much and oil in a cruse.—Ezra vii., 22, and I. Kings xvil., 12. Bright shining of a candle glveth light —Luke xi.. 36. Tell them who are bidden I have prepared my dinner.—Matt, xxii., 4. They are strong of appetite.—lsaiah vii., 11. Let us eat and be merry.—Luke xv., 23. The feast is made for laughter, wine makes merry.—Eccles, x., 19. Ye hear all kinds of music.—Dan. Hi.. 5. Grace—Give us this day our daily bread.—Matt vk, 11. Soup—Four out the broth.—Judges ▼I., 20. Feed me with pottage.—Gen. xxv., 30. Eat this roll.—Ezek. ill., 1. Use a little wine for thy stomach's sake.—l. Tim. v., 23. Fish—We remmber the fish we did eat frefly,—Num. xv., 5. They gave him a piece of broiled fish. —Luke xxiv., 42. Bring of the fish which ye have now caught.—John xxL, 10. Every man at the beginning doth set fortli good wine.—John ii., 10. Roast—All manner of baked meats.— Gen. xi., 17. Ye may eat of the roebuck.—Deut ill., 15. Ye shall eat of the wild goat and wild ox.—Deut. xiv., 5. Cause tlie strong wine to be poured out—Num. xxviii., 7. Vegetables—Take unto thee wheat lentils and millet—Ezek. iv., 9. They brought parched corn and beans. —II. Sam. xvi., 29. After that the full corn in the ear.— Mark iv., 28. We remember the leeks and the onions, and the cucumbers and the garlic, —Num. xi., 5. The manna was as coriander seed.— Num. xi., 7. —Good Housekeeping. To Cook Hominy. Thoroughly wash two quarts of horn- ! iny, put it into a well-grensed kettle, 1 pourltig over it four quarts of cold wa--1 ter. Salt the water a little. Let it I cook all day slowly, pouring on hot I water as it dries down. Eaten hot or cold with milk or butter. Fried Horniuy.--Have a frying pan | with hot butter or lard in it: put in as much hominy as required for the meal. 1 Pour over it a very little water or milk ;to keep it from burning. Do not stir j it while cooking, but leave the kernels whole. Hominy or Hulled Corn. Shell the corn, put it in a sack, tie, put in a kettle of water with plenty of ashes, boil half an hour, remove, pour out the corn I and wash uutil the hulls are removed. Then return it to the kettle and boil i in clean water until done. Hominy Fritters.—One egg, one-half ‘ cup of sweet milk, one teaspoon of Hour, , one quart of boiled hominy, a pinch of i salt Roll into oval balls with floured bauds; dip in a well-beaten egg, then in dried bread crumbs; fry in hot lard. Old Virginia Ketchup. Take one peck of green tomatoes, half a peck of white ouions, three ounces of white mustard seed, one ounce each of allspice and cloves, half a pint of mixed mustard, an ounce of black pepper and celery seed each, and one pound of brown sugar, writes Eliza R. Parker, in an article on “Some Pungent Ketch- , ups,” in the Ladies’ Home Journal, i Chop the tomatoes and onions, spriukle I with salt and let stand three hours; 1 drain the water off: put in a preserve 1 kettle with the other ingredients. Cover with vinegar, and set on the fire to boil slowly for one hour. To Keep Out Dirt. Much dust may be kept out of a house closed for the summer by putting a folded paper under each of the win dows, and if the crevices are large wedging the paper into them. See alsc that 110 vegetable matter is left behind to decay, that the stove and pipe is well blacked to prevent dampness, that a bucket of lime is left in the cellar, and that all woolen articles are well cleaned and done up either in paper or linen. Turpentine cloths inside a piano prevent the moths from destroying th« felt. How to Economize. A woman noted for tiie good food provided foi* her family at a comparatively small cost says “I found the outlay for meats the largest weekly item, and so 1 paid special attention to all those dishes made from meats that de not require the most expensive cuts. I buy oysters by the bushel, and open them myself: they will keep a long time in cool weather if you learn bow to lay them on the cellar bottom. 1 can my own fruits and such vegetables as con and tomatoes.” Cherry Pudding. An excellent cherry pudding is made of two teacups of milk, one egg and s pinch of salt, six teaspoons of baking powder, and flour enough to make a thick batter. Tut a little of the battei in a pudding dish and then a layer of pitted cherries, and repeat until all the batter is used. Steam three-quar-ters of an hour and serve with a liquid sauce. Y'ou can use canned cherriei when you cannot get the fresh fruit. The man who is living only for himself couldn't be engaged in any sniallei business.
pSSU? ba test V ABSOLUTELY pure
TOMB OF A ROMANTIC PAST. Venice No Longer a Living City, but Merely a Vast Museum. Venetian life in the large old sense has since come to an end, and the essential present character of the most melancholy of cities resides simply in its being the most beautiful of tombs, says Scribner’s. Nowhere else has the i past l»een laid to rest with such ten derness, such a sadness of resignation and remembrance. Nowhere else is the present so alien, so discontinuous, so like a crowd in a cemetery without garlands for the graves. It has no flowers in its bands, but as a compensation, perhaps and the thing is doubtless more to the point—it has money and little red books. The everlasting shuffle, iu the piazza, of these irresponsible visitors is contemporary Venetian life. Everything else is only a ; reverberation of that. The vast mausoleum has a turnstile at the door, and a functionary in a shabby uniform lets you in, as per tariff, to see how dead it is. From this constatation, this cold curiosity, proceed all the industry, the prosperity, the vitality of the place. The shopkeepers and gondoliers, the beggars and the models, depend upon ■ it for a living; they are the custodians j and the ushers of the great museum— ' they are even themselves to a certain extent the objects on exhibition. It is in the wide vestibule of the square that the polyglot pilgrims gather most densely; Piazza San Marco is like the ' lobby of the opera in the intervals of j the performance. The present fortune ' of Venice, the lamentable difference, is 1 most easily measured there, and that is why. in the effort to resist our pessimism. we must turn away both from the purchasers and from the venders of ricordi. The Rules of Court. Ambiguous phrases sometimes lead to laughable blunders. In South Carolina, rules of court prescribe that not only the judges but also the attorneys must wear robes in court. Against this rule the leader of the bar.—his name was Petigree—stoutly rebelled. He constantly appeared in court in the rough costume of a planter, and the judges pretended not to notice it. One day, however, when he was leading counsel in an important case, and he rose to address the court in his usual pepper and salt, the presiding judge felt compelled to draw his attention to the rules of court regarding the attire of attorneys. Petigree smiled and observed: “I understand your honor to say that the rules of court must be executed.” The judge bowed. “Then, sir,” said Petigree, holding the rules in his hand, 1 read this rule; “ ‘The sheriff shall attend this court in cocked hat and sword.’ I now draw your attention to the sheriff there. His hat is cocked, but most certainly his sword is not.” The Pursuit of Happiness, When the Declaration of Independence asserted man's right to this, It enunciated an immortal truth. The bilious sufferer Is on the road to happiness when he In-gins to take Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, the most efficacious regulator of the liver in existence. Equally reliable Is it in chills and fever, constipation. dyspepsia, rheumatism, kidney trouble and nervousness. Use it regularly, amj not at odd intervals. She Let Him Off. Wife - My dear, I need a little tnore 6t this stuff, and some trimming to match I wish you would drop into Bigg, Sale & Co.'sand get it. Husband a smart fellow Let me see. Oh, I know. That’s the store where they have so many pretty girls, isn't it? “Y-e s.” ‘ Yes. I remember. That blond girl at the trimming counter knows your tastes and will doubtless select ust the sort of trimming jou want. I mean the girl with the golden hair, alabastar skin, blue eyes, and sweet little—” “There are a number of things I I want down town. Never mind, dear. I'll go and get them myself.”—NewYork Weekly.
0N THE road K- B _to recoven*, the -J? ■'L'; young" woman y ' s taking f Doctor Pierce’s jHWWRI Favorite Prescript ion. In i' --Il * >' C maidenhood, woZ’ 1 manhood, wife- ’ V c JwV » hood and moth- / jJtl* { erhood the ‘ Pre- ‘ ’ scnption ’ is a /WrVAItJ supporting tonic /A U' ?. and nervine /y 7 * that’s peculiarly / 71 adapted to her / / needs, regul it- / / * / ing and strength / ening the system ’ / and curing the derangements of the sex. Why is it many women owe their beauty to Dr Pierce’s Favorite Prescription?’ Because beauty of form and face radiate from the common center—health. The best bodily condition results from good food, fresh air and exercise coupled with the judicious use of the “Prescription It reaches the origin of the trouble and corrects it.
“1 he More You Say the Less People Remember.” One Word With You, SAPOLIO
Male corpses float on their faces, I aiu female corpseson their backs, cn account of the different dispo ition of 1 fatty tissues. In the ease of a lean woman and a fat man the positions would be reversed. Summer Tourist Rates. The Northwestern Line (Chicago and Northwestern Railway 1 is now selling excursion tickets at reduced rates to st. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth. Ashland. Bayfield, Marquette, Deadwood, Dakota, ' Hot Springs, Denver, Colorado Springs, Manitou, Salt Lake City, and the lake and j mountain resorts of the West and Northwest. For rates and full information apply to Agents of connecting lines. Illustrated pamphlets, giving full particulars, will be mailed free upon application to W. B. Kniskern. G. P. <k T. A.. Chicago and Northwestern Railway, Chicago, 111. According to an English authority, no fewer than 2U0.000 horses ha e beAin imported into England for hunting and harness purposes during the last twelve | years. Why Put Off. taking medicine until you are sick? You can keep a box of Ripans Tai ules in the house, ami at the first signs of a headache or bilious attack a single tabulew ill relieve you. Nicaragua was t bus named in honor of a chief named Nicaro. Enclose a stamp to any ag -nt of tlie 1 Nickel Plate road for an elaborately illus- - trated art souvenir entitled "Summer Out- | Btlgs.” The word Eornee is of native origin, signifying "the land.” 1 use Piso.s Cure for Consumption both ■ in my family and practice.—l)b, G. W. : I’attekson. Inkster, Mich., Nov. [5, 1894. Abyssinia was the land of the Abassins, or ‘mixed races.” Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Stbvp for ChiMr»>B teething: soit'-iiN t ■ guniß, re<iu< id) illavH pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR ★ The BEST <> <>l Dyspeptic Delicate.lnfirm and AGED PERSONS * JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. * Hsummer VACATION TOURS Special Car Parties. Personfdly Conducted To COLORADO AND THE YELLOWSTOKE PARK FIRST TOUR Twenty P«y«; Cctt ? 190.00 Leaving Chicago Wednesday, June 20 To the Yellow.tone Park via Colorado. Marshall Para Glenwood Springs. Salt Lake City. Six dxjs' tour o| Yeiiotfotone Park. Returning through the Black Hiil% . via the Custer Battlefield and Hot Springs, So. Dak. SELCOND TOUR Seventeen Haya: Coat SIOO.OO Leaving Chicago Wednesday, Aug. 7 To the Yeliowatoae Park byway of Kansas City. Mo., and Lincoln, Neb. Through the Black Hille via Hol Springs. Deadwood mid Custer Battlefield. Six da>s' lour of Yellow-tone Park. Returning via Minneapolis and Lake Minnetonka, . THIRD TOUR Fourteen Daya; Coat $130.00 Leaving Chicago Wednesday, Aug. 14 Through Seenle Colorado byway of Denver, Manitou. Pike's Peak, Colorado Spring*. Royal Gorge. Marshall Pass—Around the Circle —Mount Ouray state ride, Rico, Duraugo, Glenwood Springs and Leadville. The cost of tickets for these Tours includes railroad transportation, sleeping-car fares, meals and lodging, carriage and side trips-everything save the incidental expenses. THE SERVICE IR ALL RESPECTS WILL BS f FIRST CLASS IN EVERY PARTICULAR. Consult your neareat ticket agent in re Kßr n so theM parties, or send for a descriptive pamphlet to T. L GRAP* Manngrr Rnrllnetoa Route Tounb 811 t'lnrk Street, Chicago, I!,’.
Raphael, Angeto, Ku be as, I aa*o The -LiNENE BEVEJ>'HI E"are the Best and Most Economr alOo lar* andOnfis worn ; the\ ar-ni.id oj fine cloth, both sides finished a! ke, and. being r-*-Ver Able, on- collar is equal to two of myo her kind. They jit icell wear ice and lock wel: A box of lea Coi a sor Live Pairs ■ f < lifts for Tw nty-nve < ,’ent«. A Sample (’ liar and Pair of Cuffs bv mail tor a»il Cents. Name style and size. Address Reversible collar company. 17 FBANKIiI ST.. REW YORK. 27 KILBY ST.. BOS7OL I EWIS’S3 ° o LYE I Powdered ,n<! Perfumed. Ls n i Y ' Tlip.s/r.o g sand Lyeuiadfiu Unlike other Lye, it being a fine /2P ow derand packed in a can with ’•remova le lid, (he cout • ts are g ' Hard Soap in jj minutes ar- ,ti <■/.’, It is the ! ' y best for cleansing waste-pipes, WB disinfecting sinks closeta v.aehing bottiea. paints trees, etc. 1 '• " 1 f *■ ( ra Gen Agts.. Phila , Pa. IE.-3 -.Arlcbtuwxi, Mafia, I?. STEM7C Thomas P. Simpson. Wash’n;rton. ■fl I til few n -' N “ fPe ” rTl ’ Tfltent tained. Writefoi Invent r gGuide. I. U. N. 1.-- - - Ao. •? M hen Writing to Adverttßers. say you saw the A*ivertlsement in this paper.
