Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 15 March 1894 — Page 7
A-T.T. AliONB, both in the way it acts, and in the way It'i sold, ia Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery.
A lone procession of diseases start from a torpid liver and impure blood. Take it, as you ought,
T.hen
you feel the first symp
toms (languor, loss of appetite, dullness, depression)
Mrs. GOEDERT.
Fathor—Wluit would vou advise mo to do with my sou? His pronounciatiou is perfectly terrible. Teacher—Get him a position as brakeman on a .railroad at ©nee. 44
Owe My Life To You That is a strong statement, yet exactly what Miss
A benefit is always experienced fro the first bottle, and a'perfert cure is warcanted when the right quantity is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causcs shooting pains, like needles passing thro'igh tiiem: the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. •, .Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold bv nil DnurpisK
Friendly Regard
Every at Hum
Ah an appetizing, restorative tonic, to repel disease and build up the needed flesb and strength, there's nothing to equal it. It rouses every organ into healthful action, purifies and enriches the blood, braces up the \vhole system, and restores health and vigor.
Mrs. SUSAN GOEDERT, of Rice, Benton County, Minn., writes: I have taken three bottles of your 'GoideD Medical Discovery' and feel quite well ana strong now, so that 1 am able to do my work without
tbe
ieast fatigue."
Guar
antees a
The New Chinese Minister. Harper's Bazar. Yang Yu, the new Chinese Minister at Washington, has quickly made himself felt as a personage of importance at the capital. His legation is the only diplomatic establishment that flies its national flag at all times to distinguish it from other domiciles, and the minister's equipages outshine those of his diplomatic colleagues in elegant correctness. The minister is rapidly acquiring English, and his wife has her English teacher as well. Mrs. Yang returns the calls of diplomatic families, and the quaint little figure in gorgeous attire, flowered head-dress, and three-inch shoes brightens many lev» 5atiou drawing-rooms and dinner tables.
Gertrude Sickler, of Wilton, N.J., has written to Mrs.
Pinkham.
She says: I suffered terribly with suppressed
painful mcn-
strua*
tions.
Doctors could only keep me from having fits each month by giving hie morphine. This continued until I was completely prostrated. "My father at last got me a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound\ which at once gave me relief. Itgdid what the doctor. could not cured me. I never have any trouble now- and have no dread of the comins month. I owe my life to you."
The Greet est Medical Discovery of the Ago.
KENNEDY'S'-"
MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF RGXBURY, KASS., Has discovered in one of our common /pasture weeds a remedy that cures ever/ ,kind of Humor, from "the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple.
He 1K:S tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and r.ever failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book.
is never entertained by the children for a medicine that tastes bad. This explains the popularity among
little ones of
Scott'sEmulsion,
preparation of cod-liver oil almost as pa atable as 1 tnilk. Many mothers have
fenefits
rateful knowledge of its to weak, sickly children.
_£r»p«r»£l_hj^Scfitt A Boqrm. Tt. V. All drnggitiH.
ASTHMA-— —«CURED. FOPHAM'8 ASTHMA SPECIFIC
Give* Relief In Fire Minutei. Trial Ptckage lent FREE. Sold by DrugKilt,. One Box sent poi!-piid on reeeipl of$1.00. Six Bom, $4.50. Add.
Thos.Popham,Phila.Pa
1 AAVCIBTC THOMAS P.BrMtMON.Washington. I EH I D. C. No nttjr's fee until Patent obSr Utltie'1. Wriiaforldyobtor'itOulUe.
MTENTS and PENSIONS Secured. No advance fee
Fitzgerald ft Co,, "«ath and G," Washington, D. AArilTC WANTKD-To eell Belting,
AGENTS
+1
The Importance Things.
J'
PAUL'S ESCAPE.
Trifling
thins counts in the Final Reckoning
Rev. Dr. Talmagc is making a Southern tour and preached at Mobile, Sunday. Subject: "Unappreciated Services." Text: II Cor. xi. 38—"Through a window, in a basket, wp.s I let dowi, oy the wall." Ke said:
Damascus is a city of white and gl is ten in architect ure—some ti es called the "Eye of the East." sometimes called "'a pearl surrounded by emeralds, at one time distinguished for swords of the best material,called Damascus blades, and upholstery of richest fabric, called damasks.
A horseman of the name of Paul, riding toward this city, had been thrown from the saddle. The horse had dropped under a Hash from the sky. which at the same time was so bright it blinded the rider for many days, and. I think, so permanently injured liis eyesight that this defect of vision became the thorn in the flesh he afterward speaks of. He started for Damascus to butcher Christians, but after that hard fall from his horse he was a changed man and preached Christ in Damascus till the city was shaken to its foundations.
The mayor gave authority for his arrest, and the popular cry is: "Kill him! Kill him!" The city is surrounded by a high wall, and the gates are watched by the police- lest the Cilician preacher escapes. Many of the houses are built on the wall and their balconies orojected clear over and hovered aboTe the gardens outside. It was customary to lower baskets out of these balconies and pull up fruits and flowers from the gardens.
They have positive evidence that he is in the house of one of the Christians, the balcony of whose home readies over the wall "J-Iere he is! Here he is!" The vociferation and blasphemy and howling of the pursuers are at the front door. They break in. "Fetch out that gospelizer, and "let us hang his head on the city gate! Where is he?" The emergency was terrible. Providentiallv there was a good stout basket in the house. Paul's friends fasten a rope to the basket. Paul steps into it. The basket is lifted to the edge of the balcony on the wall, and then while Paul holds onto the rope with both hands his friends lower away, carefully and cautiously, slowly, but surely, farther down and farther down, until the basket strikes the earth, and the apostle steps out and afoot and alone starts on that famous missionary tour, the story of which has astonished earth and heaven. Appropriate entry in Paul's diary of travels—"Through a window, in a basket, was I let down by the wall."
Observe first on what a slender tenure great results hang. The ropemaker who twisted that cord fastened to that lowering basket never knew how much would depend on the strength oe it. How if it had been broken and the apostle's life had been dashed out? What would have become of the Christian church? All that magnificent missionary work in Pamphylia, Cappadocia, Galatia, Macedonia, would never
have been accomplished. All his
writings that make up so indispensable and enchanting apart of the now testament would never have been
written. The Story of resurrection would never have been so gloriously told as he told it. That example of neroic and triumphant endurance at Phillippi, in the Mediterranean euroclydon, under flagellation and at his beheading, would not have kind.ed the courage of 10.000 martyrdoms. Rut the rope holding that basket—how much depended on it! So again and again great results have hung on what seemed slender circumstances.
The book was read on all sides until the rough and vicious popula'ion were evangelized, and a church was started, and an enlightened commonwealth established, and the world's history has no more brilliant page than that which tells of the transformation of a nation by one book. It did not seem of much importance whether the sailor continued to hold the book in his teeth or let it fall in the breakers, but upon what small circumstance depended what mighty results!
If you put a bible in the trunk of your boy as he goes from home, let it be heard in your prayers, for it may have a mission as far-reaching as the book which the sailor carried in his teeth to the Pitcairn beach. The plainest man's life is an island between two eternities eternity past rippling against his shoulders, eternity to come touching his brow. The casual, the accidental, that which merely happened so, are parts of a great plan, and the. rope that lets the fugitive apostie from the Damascus wall is the cable that holds tu its mooring tliesbipof Uz church 8 4''
1
1
1
An English ship slopped at Pitcairn island, and right in the midst of surrounding cannibalism and squalor the passengers discovered a Christian colony of churches and schools and beautiful homes and highest style of religion and civilization. For fifty years no missionary and no Christian influence had. landed there. Why this oasis of light amid a desert of heathendom? and crushes the table a'nd would Sixty years before a ship had met disaster, and one of the sailors, unable to save anything else, went to his trunk and took out a bible which his mother had placed there and swam ashore, the bible held in his teeth.
^#~"3MSv£*
in the northeast storm of the centuries. Again, notice unrecognized and unrecorded services. Who spua that rope? Who tied it to the basket? Who steadied the illustrious
preacher as he stepped in to it. ho
[uiiutu Life—Di'i T:timage's sormun. I relaxed not rnuscls of t!ie arm or I dismissed an anxious look from his face untii lbbasket touched the ground and discharged its magnificent, cargo? Not one of their names has. come to us, but there was no work done that day in Damascus or in ail the earth compared with the importance of- their work.
How exultant they must have felt when they rea his letters to the Romans, to the Corinthians, to the Galatians, to the Ephesian-s. to. the I Philippine, ih.2 Colossians, to the
Thessalonians, to the Timothy, to Titus, to Philemon, to the Hebrews, and when they liear.l how lie walked out of prison, with the. _earthquake unlocking the door for him, and took command of the Alexandrian cornship when t!\e sailors were nearly scared to death, and preached a sermon that nearly shook Felix off his judgment seat! I hear the men and women who helped him down through the window and over the wall talking in private over the matter and saying: "How glad I arn that we e.'teeted that rescue! In coming times others may get the glory of Paul's work, but no one shall rob us of the satisfaction of knowing that we held the rope."
There are sai to b3 about sixtynine thousand ministers of religion in this country. About fifty thousand, I warrant, came from early homes which had to struggle for the necessa ies ofMife. The sons of rich bankers and mere-hancs generally become bankers and merchants. The most of those who become ministers are the sons of those who had terrific struggles to get their everyday bread. The collegiate and theological education of that son iok every luxury from the parental table for eight years. The other children were more scantily appare led. The son at college every little while got a bundle from home. In it were thd socks that mother had knit, sittijg up late at night, her sight not as good as it once was. And there also wei*e some delicacies from the sister's hand for the voracious appetite of a hungry student.
The years go by, and the son has been ordained and is preaching the glorious gospel, and a great revival comes, and souls by scores and hundreds accept the gospel from the lips of that young preacher, and father and mother, quite old now, are visiting the son at the village parsonage, and at a clo.^e of a Sabbath of mightv blessing father and mother retire to their room, the son lighting the way and asking them if he can do anything to make ih.'m more comfortable. saying if they want anything in the night just to knock on the wall.
And then all alone father and mother talk over the gracious influences of the day and say: "Well, it was worth all we went through to educate that bov. It was a hard pull, but we held on till the wor was done. The world may not know it but, mother, we held the rope didn't we?" And the voice, tremul ous with joyful emotion, responds: "Yes. father, we held the rope feel my work is done. Now, Lord, lcttest thou thy servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen thy salvation." "Pshaw," says the father, "I never felt so much like living in my life as now! I want see what that fellow is going on do, he has begun so well."
Henceforth think of nothing as in significant. A little thing may decide your all. A Cunarder put out from England for New York. It was well equipped, but in putting up a stove in thb pilot box a nail was driven too near the compass. You know how that naii would effect the compass. The ship's officer, de ceived by that distracted compass put the ship 200 miles off her right course, and suddenly the man on the lookout cried, "Land, ho!" and the ship was halted within a few yards of her demolition on Nantucket shoals. A sixpenny nail came near wrecking a Cunarder. Small ropes hold mighty destinies.
A minister seated in Boston at his table, lacking a word, puts his hand behind his bead and tilts back his chair to think,and the ceiling falls
have crushed him. A minister in Jamaica at night, by the light qf an insect called the candlefly, is kept from stepping over a precipice a hundred feet high, F.
W.
Robert
son, the celebrated clergyman, said that he entered the ministry from a train of circumstances started by the bark of a dog. Had the wind blown one way on a certain day the Spanish inquisition would have been established in England, but it blew the other way, and that dropped the accursed institution, with 75,000 tons of shipping to the bottom of the sea or liung the splintered logs on the rocks.
Nothing unimportant in your life or mine. Three ciphers placed on the right side of the figure 1 make a thousand, and six ciphers on the right side of the figux*e 1 make a million, and our nothingness placed on the right side may be augmentation illimitable. All the ages o! time and eternity affected by the basket let down from a Damascus balcony!
Recently British troops were landed at Blnefields, in tho Mosquito reservation, Central Amprica. Fnr.her details were received, Sunday, W'hlcU st&to that thie occup 1.1.n by these troops was without cause or justification of any kind, and In .direct violation of existing treaties. Th« affair may load to Internatieaal complin* tic*.-
Vor LucK.
Arkansaw Traveler. One afternoon as I was returning from a hunt through a pine forest in Oregon county,. Mo., I came upon one of the settlers and his two boys cutting down trees at the back of the cabin. All were coatless and hatless". the sweat stood on their brows and-they worked like beavers. They seemed to be in a great hurry. "What's your hurry?" I asked, addressing the settler. "Have you talcen a contract to furnish all the sawmills in the county with logs, or have you mistaken these backwoods for Chicago?"
He stuck his ax in a stump and looked up long enough to reply: Well, hit's nuther, edzactly. You see, hit's thus way: This moon's been changed nigh onto four days now, und all this time Eller 'n me has been afeard to look out thu back way after dark, fur fear we'd see it tboo thu bush. And then we've had so much bad luck here lately, too, .ye see. I made up my mind 'at these trees had to come down. Ye see, hit's fur luck."
Up till 1825 Charleston, S. C., had a larger commerce than New York. Kiectricn."
There ought to be an electric machine to jog the memory we forget too much and learn too little. We know what's best, but forget it at the wrong time. Brain action should be like a flash. There are thousands now suffering intensely with neuralaria. Let them remember the cure, St. Jacobs Oil. Its effects are electrical.
Christian I, of Denmark, was overaovon feet tall. There is more Catarrh in ihis section of the country than all other diFCiiscs put together and until the last few years v.-as supposed to be incurable. Per a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and proscribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's itarrh Cure manufactured by F. Cheney & Co Toledo, Ohio, is tbe only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any ease it fails to Ccure. end for circulars and testmonials. Address.
Denmark's dykes are seven centuries old. Wo cannot define It, but there seems to bo an "aroma of love"' about every young lady whose complexion has been beautilied by Gleiin'H Sulphur Soap.
It may be remarked that the prize-light-ers are for the most part men of sluggish' temperament.
Abraham Lincoln's Stories. An illustrated book, unmarred by advertising, containing stories and anecdotes told by Abraham Lincoln, many heretofore unpublished, will be sent free to aay person sending his or her address to the Lincoln Tea Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Hood's
Highest of all in leavening strength.—Latest 0. S. Go?. Food Report.
ABSOLUTELY POPE
Economy requires that in every receipt calling for baking powder the Royal shall be used/ It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 105 WALL ST., NEW YORK.
K. J. CIIEN'KY&CO., Toledo, O.
C8f~75c. Sold by Dr ipgits. Tic.
Virginia €itv, Nev., is 6,400 feet abovo the sea. It Pays.
It pays to read the papers, especially your own family paper, lor often in this way good business opportunities are brought to your at tention. For instance. B. F. Johnson und Co., of Hiclimond. Va., are now advertising, offering paying positions to parties who engage witn them, devoting all or any part of their time to their business interests. It might pay you to write to them.
Sarsapariila
Cures
Miss Ortencla £. Allen
Salem, Mich.
LIVER AND KIDNEY
trouble caused me to suffer all but death. Eightweeks I lived 011 brandy and beef tea. The doctor said he had not a ray of hope for
my
rccov-
erv. I rallied and commenced taking Ilood'rt Sarsapariila and from tho first felt better. I continued and, am now able to assist my mother in her housework. I owe niy life to Hood's Sarsapariila. OBTKNCIA E. ALLEN. HOOD'S CUKES.
Hooo's PILLB cure nausea, sick headache, indigestion, biliousness, Sold by all druggists.
Cough Syrup.
Baking
lltnnted
A haunted house in these practical and unromantic days is something of a rarity, but an individual haunted with the idea that his ailment is incurable is a personage frequently met with. Disbelief in the ability of medicine lo cure is only a mild Torm of monomania, although in some cases repeated failures to obtain relief from, many different sources would almost seem
to justify the doubt. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters has demonstrated its ability to overcome
Hostetter's 5d its ability
dyspepsia, constipation, liver and kidney trouble, malarial complaints and riervonsness. and its recorded achievements in the curative line ought at least to warrant its trial bv any ono troubled with either of the above ailments ©von although his previous efforts to obtain remedial aid have been fruitless. Used with persistence the Bitters will conquer tho most obstinate cases.
Jagson savs that, paradoxical as it miv 6eem. nevertheless tho wildcat quarrels are the domestic ones.
IT IS WELL TO OKT CLTCAR or A COLD the first week, but it is mudi better and safer to rid yourself of it the first fortveight hours—the proper remedy for the purpose being l)r. .Tayim's Expectorant. x\ shrewd barkeeper says that one cash customer is worth a dozen who com# in and shake dice to see whose naftic will go on the slate for drinkr.
Tli« Throat—"Brown's Bronchial Troches'' act directly on the organs of the voice. Taev have an extraordinary effect in all disorders of tho throat.
Detroit's position makes it tho City of Straits. CHKAL' TOOLS. $4.25 buys tho Family Grist Mill: 52 a potato p'kmtor $0.5 a. horsj hoe caltivato:1: $2 acorn sfceller: SI a post-hole auger $12.7 Sa£reat fanning mill i5 a Planet Jr. ariil: and other tools, hartOW3, etc., at lowe prices.
If Will
CUD
Tlim Oil
:IML Send It
With 5c postage to tho Juhn A. Saizer Seed Co.. La Cros e, Wis., you will reeeive their mammoth seed catalogue free. FITS. All fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve liestorer. No tlrs after first dav'a use. Marvelous cures. Treatise ami trial, bottle free to Fit cases, bend to Dr- Kiino l'3l Arch St.. Phila.. P.i.
GOOD BLOOD
McELREES
tWINE OF CARDUl.I
wf/Um
I For FemslB Diseases.
S—ELY'S CREAM BALRfl—1Cleanses tlioNnsall (Passages, iuiaya Pain and Inflammation, Heals I tho Sores, Restores Taste and Smell, ana Cures
limwwjTf I I I
Colchester" Spading Boot-
Gives Relief at oiuro for Cold in Heart. 3 Apply into the Nostrils. Ft. is Quickly Absorbed. 550c. lhruggiste or by maii, ELY EltOS., 0G Warren £t.,N.Y.
K. u.
For Farmers, Miners. hands and otbei s. 'lbc outer or tap sole'extcnds the whole length of the sole down to the heel protecting the shank in dltrhlng, digging and other work. Best quality throughout. ASK YOdliDKALGIl.
Ilniike the Dutch Process
No Alkalies
OR—
Other Chemicals
are used in tho preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.'S
reakfastCocoa
which is absolutely pure and aoluble» I It has morethnn Ihrce.timei thestremjth of Cocoa, mixed iwith Starch, Arrowroot or
Sugar, and is far more eco
nomical, costing leas than ono cent a eup.
It
is delicious, nourishing, and baiily
DIQttTED.
Sold bj Grocers ^Terywkert.
W. BAKER ft CO., Dorohflster, Hu»
KNOWLEDGE
Bring3 comfort and improvement ruxcl 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 tho remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presentingin 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, headache3 and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Fics is for sale by all druggists in 50c and'$l 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.
IS ESSENTIAL TO HEALTH.
•ir rs\
You cannot hope to be well if your BLOOD IS IMPURE.
If you are troubled with
BOILS, PIMPLES, ULCERS or SORES yonr blood is bad. A few bottles of S.
S. S. will thoroughly cleanse the system, rc-novo
all impurities and build you up. All manner of blemishes aro qicad en AWAY by its use. It is tho best blood remedy on earth. Thousands ______________ who have used it say so.
Ky blood was badly poisoned last year, which, got my wholo system out of ordar—dlseascti, and a coustau sourco of suffering—no appetite, no enioymenc of life. Two bottles brought mo right out. Thero is no better remedy for blood diseases.
Trcatite on blood and iktn diseases nailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA, GA.
JOHN GAVIN, Dayton, OMo."
SEND03 SSTOUb
SAVE ElKl AKD
Itemise of 1h« lu^li speed at which Circular Saws *re rut more power is w/isUU in friction thun it used sawing, when the bearings of the shaky, wooden saw frame pet out of hn«.
In the Acrmotor Saw Frame, the only SUel Saw Kruirj ever made, tins difficulty is absolutely and wholly prevant4 because Til HKAKIM.S t'OU 'I'liK SIIAlT AllJC 12AUK BY HAIL BITTIXU IT IN TUK KM)S IIP A I'lKCS
OV
STKI I. Ti KISOi
The stee I tuhm$ and babbitt are then slitted RO as to take up weaa with a bolt. *fli« frame la nil atvrl, very rlylilt »ml r!v»le4 together eo that nefblng ftn get leo«» «r oat «f plate.
Thl
guard so f/tctn Itx the natv at to mukt 11 tttijHwsiiJ* for asty
on#
to get hurt, a point of 1hegreat4*t important* %t%
ba used If if utts/A't lltid hands.
*a«t
$9
The swing fr^me which carries thewodd to be sawed and which automatically returns to its place has also a guard to keep a pole off from the flywheel and yet dees not cause it prcwentvery much of an anyle to the saw. The use of a ?Omch fly wli t-cland 20 inch saw makes this tQsily possible. It is therefo.e, a rery desirable ToleSaw, making it easy te eat •9 anylon? material quickly and safely. Another featurea|
iJhj,.
Slaee we offer this very superior saw frsme with a261u superior saw at a much less i»rice than any cheap imperfect womten frame can lie bought for, we ure sure that the friends of the Aermotor will appreciate the fact that we have agai%^ been doing the public a great service and have distinguished ourselves in redesigning an old article and putting it into a* infinitely improved shape.
Tor a saw of similar uze and quality, and ordinary woedea frame, you would he charged $t)0.
Wt
maA-«
frame and th* superior at $40,
TO MET IT AT $1
this
AM) *N YOl1 A €!!£&€•
for th§ bemtftt of our Geared Aermotor.
We have sold an enormoits number of Tower Aermetor outfits with which saws are used, and A poor saw that runs hartl detracts from their usefulness and their reputation. If we fur* nish a very superior saw at a very low iiricc, many geared ou fits will be houpht to drive them. Wherever one Geared Aer* motor goes, others arc sure to follow.
When wo lako a well known article, redesign it, and put ft in a shape \ery superior to anything that has appeared before, It widens and enlarges our reputntion for doing well everything t«» wnich we put our hands, and this is tho thing that has i* the past brought so much business to our factory, and which in the future, we have no doubt, will bring, practically, all th* business in our line. It is this reputation that we are daily Working for.
Ve believe that this Aermotor Steel Saw Frame and SaiV will confirm and enhance the fame which we have gained in the manufacture of Stet'l Windmills and Steel Tower% hence, for the purpose of scattering th«m so that everybody ly know that a good thing can be had'for a small price, WB OtPGR Til NTfcEl# RAW ANI» WANK Milt flft fA8H AH»
may know that a good thing can be had'for a small price, Wi OtPGR Til 14 NTfcEl# RAW ANI» WANK Milt flft fA8H ABU nvi COPIK9 OK ADHlKTlsmRT Na. ol this series aa pe* conditions stated in No. 9. In our next advertisement, No. 1 we shall talk of galvanising, and mak* an offer that will bow •aiveml Interest. JAw
4*air,
A'o. 1
JSHUOTOtt
CKX
HN.U, INDRL.3
