Jasper County Democrat, Volume 1, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 February 1899 — Page 7
A CONGRESSMAN Cared off Catarrh of Lons Standing. EwCancressman A. T. Goodwyn. Ek€tegßßmm A. T. Goodwyn, from Allritumm. wince* tare- following letter: lUe* fftecuHiu. Heim Manufacturing ComB*ny,, tfliiiimfimt,. Ohio: •ftemaeminß—fi have- now used two bottle* «ff PVnuvua. suit am * well man to-day. I «uiuiC Cb«l nto- good effect* at your medicine tteflnw 0 Unit used It a week, after suffering wtfc&i uanuntiii Sir aver * year. Respectfully, A. X. GOODWYN. “ drCirutk tin It* various forms is rapidly beearning ai naduuai curse. An undoubted W«ueil}y has- been discovered by Dr. Hartmum Ditto- remedy bos- been thoroughly tested! dlur.ng tine past forty years. Prominent mam ituxe- coins rw know of its virtues and mb* masking puiiilir uttemnees on tire subject. To- same- nbe- country we must save tbe peoTo su.ve rile- people we must protect tttleun Qrmu disouse. Tbe disease that is at a me- ntor most prevalent and stubborn of *m» is- oatiarrti. Public men of all parties ■'"'ucsiiss- in Pr-m-oa a national catarrh wmiedhr of unwpiaJed merit. Send to Dr. SBitrrnmm.. Columbus, Ohio, for a free book «n caroiirrit. I HARD WHEAT Is* variety which brings BKffjßSnf from 5 to lets, per bushel I more than an v other vay 3¥*z g* gm I r-et v mown. It is on the 1 atJwgTdC* pLI -Viicat rtelxis of Western ' anada that such a grade [j y p '■» grown, and a farm of 9 every bona tide settler. Butr ~oiTUc-.uar>r-.-tjpiy ut Department of the Intern urr lOeawwk, w.'aimiii or j. u rough ton, 1123 Souwuium, illdg . i'hiinfjii £U. ; T o. Currie. Stevens ffiiuE. Vkufc. JL V. Vcfnnes. >o. I Merrill Block, Swft-m. **n-h.; to fnven. Bad tte Mich.: -fas. (Wr-Mw*. BMBffCi£*..Ktdk.; X. lion holomew. 30t5 sth SB,. Des Alim ns,. L—wa.-agents forGov’tof Canada.
m. flcmecE m sykp of ms kiuemtl only to the originality and aunofiirilJy <a£ the etotnbi nation. bat also totii* i£ssr«- ami skill w.-.h. which it is ■nuns&ctsrsd by scientific processes fcntTTO to the- CAnrffoaxiA Fie Syrup Gw. omEy. ami we- wish to impress upon sH ttlbe importance of purchasing- t.hp fcrne ami arifrinail remedy. As the gunsEns-Syrupa£F%s is manufactured by fflhe Fls St rtf Co. a of that fact will ■seise time us avoiding the worthless inrifr.Miiiina. mnamifaetared by other parthes. The- high standing of the Cat.--*ie*u Fra. Stott Co. with the medicaiii professiom. aoxsE the satisfaction wfindb ehe genuine Syrup of Figs has giker to Biijilimus. of families, makes The same of the Company a guaranty «ff tike excellence of its remedy. It is Car on advance of all other laxatives, ■s St auto an the kidneys, liver and feswefe without anritatinjr or weakening ttauun, and it does not gripe nor GkinmHESIMPGO. Utog^ttpor agremsmig HHHBI J - [pitin fly Swp.
BLIZZARD IN SOUTH.
DEEP SNOWS AND HIGH WINDS CAUSE HAVOC. Eastern and southern States Para* lyzed by Cold Wave Of Uitprecedeated severity—Peril to Shipping— Tropical Fruits Badly Damaged.
The protracted cold wave 111 at recently held the Northwest in its grip, lattr ex* tended U> the South and East, changing tts Tofni east of Ohio into that of blffezard Of almost unprecedented ferocity, and carrying its below-zero weather far yut iuto the Gulf of Mexico. The storm, as a whole, was phenomenal for its vast extent and its extreme severity. New York was practically paralyzed under the fierce blizzard that, swept over it, with the wind at tifty miles an hour, the thermometer at 8 degrees above zero, and the soon coming down steadily for twentyfour hours. Three feet of snow in Washington city, forty inches in Maryland, and twelve inches in South Carolina continue the story of disaster and suffering : southward. Kentucky seems to have suffered the worst that the thermometer could do. In sunny Georgia drifts of snow ten feet deep and a temperature of 15 below are reported, while the waters of the gulf are said to have been frozen a mile out from shore. The suffering everywhere was pitiable, but in tlu> South it was worst, because the cold was so unprecedented. There is something appalling in the thought of zero weather along the Gulf of Mexico. The suffering among the ill-clad and 'poorly housed negroes and indigent whites in that laud where frost is a, rarity must of necessity be extreme. Severe damage to crops has been one of. the results of the cold snap. Florida has suffered enormous loss. The pineapple industry has been dealt a serious blow. The extent of the damage to the Orange groves cannot be definitely stated at present, hut reports agree that many trees are killed. Early vegetables are ruined. Throughout the South early fruit crops have been mined. Cotton planters have suffered heavily.
CAPTURE OF ILOI[?]O.
American Ships Bombard and Troops Take lnsurj-ent i'troneliold. The Uuiteil States forces under Brig. Gen. Mller captured Iloilo, capital of the Island of Painty and scat of the so-called government of the Yisnyas federation, on Saturday after a bombardment. The rebels set the town on tire before evacuating it: but the American troops extinguished the flames. There were no casualties on the American sides <b'a. Miller, tin receipt of his instructions from Manila, scut native commissioners ashore from the United States transport St. Paul with a communication for the rebel governor of Iloilo calling on him to surrender within a time stated, and warning him not to make a demonstration in the interval. The rebels immediately moved final- guns and prepared to defend their position. Thereupon the Petrel tins] two warning guns, the rebels immediately opening tire on the gunboat. Tie- Petrel and Baltimore then bombarded the town, which the rebels, having set on fire, immediately evacuated. American troops were promptly landed and extinguished tin-fires in all cases of foreign property, Vuit not before considerable damage had been done. It is believed that the enemy's loss during the bombardment was heavy.
JARO IN AMERICAN HANDS.
Another Battle Fought More Serious than That of Iloilo. The village of Jaro, a mite north of Iloilo, was captured on Sunday afternoon by a battalion of the Eighteenth infantry. It was learned that the rebels were assembling there, and our troops were dispat' h«-d to make a reeonnoissaiiee. It was not expected that any serious resistance would be made by the insurgents, but they made u better defense than was anticipated, with tlie result that the American josses were heavier than in the capture of Iloilo. Lieut. Frank Holies of the Eighteenth regiment and four men were wounded. Lieut. Bolles' injury is slight. The enemy resisted for about an hour and then retired into the hills, taking their dead and wounded with them. Their forces numbered about one thousand men. Iteconnoissance developed that the town of Molo had been deserted by the enemy.
MILLING TRUST SUCCESSFUL.
Most of the American Spring Wheat Mills in the Deal. The Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin says: “It was admitted here to-day that the flour mill syndicate, of which Thomas A. Mclntyre is the head, had carried the day. All Duluth mills except Freeman's and a small concern are reported to have been secured, in addition to the majority of the mills in Minneapolis. It is also learned that the largest mills in New York and Buffalo, in addition to several large Milwaukee plants, have been captured. It is believed that when the concern is fully organized a large majority of the spring wheat mills in the country will be found in the deal. The capitalization of the trnst, it is reported, will be about $35,000,009.”
LOOK FOR WAR WITH ENGLAND.
Correspondent Says French Officials l x pee t a Conflict. The Toulon correspondent of the Loudon Daily Mail, remarking on the extraordinary activity at the arsenal there abd generally in the French naval works, says: “It is believed that M. Lockroy iminister of marine) expects war with i Great Britain within two years and it is notorious that a war with England is being preached in official circles. Troops are being poured into Tunis and Algeria and war material is being dispatched to all the colonies. French officers openly boast that they will sweep the, British fleet out of the Mediterranean.”
Warship Near Being Sunk.
While the blizzard which has swept the Atlantic coast was at jts height the Unit 1 - ed States cruiser Marblehead had a narrow escape from being sent to the bottom in midoeean by the "Cuuarder Etruria. Only the best Of seamanship by the Etruria’s captain prevented an ocean horror, the vessels passing each other so closely together that a biscuit could have been tossed from one to the other. Between T,OOO and 0,000 poynds'of plug tobacco is yearly furnished to the- penitentievy inmates in Mississippi.
Moscow Foundling Hospital.
Moscow has a foundling hospital large enough to hold 7,000 persons. It was founded In 1764, and at present takes In children at the rate of forty a day, or about 15,000 a year. There are twenty-six physicians and about 900 nurses.
Aged Woman Rides a Bicycle.
The oldest bicyclist is a woman aged 93, who is an adept rider. Most people could enjoy health until old age if they took precautions to prevent diseases of the digestive organs by taking an occasional dose of HostetterV Stomach Bitters. Even after dyspepsia, indigestion and constipation have secured a foothold the Bitters will afford relief.
Unavoidable Delay.
A Voice—ls that you, John? You ought to be ashamed of yourself! The Cabman—Maybe he will be tomorrow, ma'am; but he Is in no condition to be ashamed of himself to-night. —Puck. >
Sent Free to All.
The John M. Smyth Company, 150 to ICO West Madison street, Chicago, is the largish household furnishing establishment in the world. Their immense and beautifully illustrated catalogue, showing style and quality of all kinds of furniture, carpets, bicycles, sewing machines, china, lace curtains, office and church furniture, is sent free on application. This great catalogue not only illustrates the styles and quality, but gives prices for all articles as well. It should be in every family.
Bromus Inermis Grass!
It’s the greatest grass on earth— Salzer says so. This grass yields 4 to 7 tons better hay than timothy in dry, rainless countries; yields even more than that in Ohios Ind.. Mich., Wis., lowa, 111., Mo., Ivans., Nebr.. Mont., yes in every State of the Union! Salzer warrants this! Potatoes $1,20 a Bbl. Send this notice to JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO.. LA CROSSE. WIS., and 10 cents postage and receive their great Seed Catalogue and sample of this grass seed and nine other farm seed Itareties free. (c. n.) The diamond is the hardest substance kuown—excepting the heart of the pawnbroker who refuses to advance more than 10 per cent, of its value.— Chicago News.
$100 Reward, $100.
Tiie reader of this paper will be pleased to learu that there Is at least one dreaded disease Lhal science has been able to cure In all its stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity.' Catarrh belli*; a constitutional disease. requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease. and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O. LWSold by Druggists. 70c.
William Nail was recently married In Cincinnati. Happy man; no woman can drive a nail.
Try Grain-O! Try Grain-O!
Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a pne-kageof GKAIK-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it. like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. Vi the price of coffee. 15c. and 25 cts. per package. Sold by all -grocers.
The spots on a man’s reputation look about ten times larger to others than to himself.
Every One Knows.
Why trifle with a sprain when every one knows that St. Jacobs Oil used in the worst case will so strengthen the injured muscle as to make it the best remedy for this dreaded pain.
The Duke of Westminster spends, cm an average, $250,000 a year on charity.
It IMP <HL^ If it was only health, we 1 might let it cling. But it is a cough. One cold no sooner passes off before another comes. But it’s the same old cough all the time. And it’s the same; old story, too. There is first the cold, then the cough, then pneumonia or consumption with the long sickness, and life trembling in the balance. Ayer's j Pectoral
loosens the grasp of your cough. The congestion of the throat A and lung-, is removed; all in- MQk fhmmation is subdued; the WM parts are put perfectly at rest Fjf and the cough drops away. It m has no diseased tissues oa BN which to hang. bH Dr. Ayer’s I Cherry Pectoral 1 Plaster 3g draws out inflammation of the Vs lungs. w Mdwktm fito 1 Remember we bars a Medical Depart- I mint. If you hare any complaint what- ■ ever andietlre the best medical advice ■ you can possibly obtain. Write tbe H doctor freely, you will receive s H prompt reply, without cost. H m m
Don't Have to Walt.
We don’t have to wait for cold, soreness and stiffness will come on from excessive exercise, but It will go Immediately after using St. Jacobs Oil to soften and strengthen tbe strained muscles.
In Boston.
Mrs. Le Count of Chicago (calling on Mrs. Stimleton of Boston)—I suppose, of course, you have a telephone in your house? Mrs. S.—Oh, my dear Mrs. Le Count, we use direct thought transference; we have a speaking tube.—Boston Transcript.
LARGEST IN THE WORLD.
Chicago Furniture House Ha* Fur* nished Nearly a Million Home*. To be the largest furniture house in the world is a distinction which the John M. Smyth Company, 150 to 166 West Madison street, Chicago, enjoys. Ah idea of the magnitude of the establishment may be gained from the faet that the building contains seven and one-half acres of floor space and that during its third *f a century of business it has furnished nearly three-quarters of a million homes, or more than the entire population of some States. One of the business principles of the firm is if goods are not as represented they may be returned and the money will be refunded. The firm issues a large, beautifully illustrated catalogue of household goods which are retailed at wholesale prices. It will be sent free on application.
The Stage Adopts the Scheme.
“She’s a wbnderful advertiser.” “What’s her latest?” “Getting her agent to mail her a poisoned gumdrop.” Cleveland Plain Dealer.
In Winter Use Allen’s Foot-Ease.
A powder to be shaken into the shoes. During winter your feet feel uncomfortable. nervous, and often cold and damp. Il’ you have perspiring, smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen’s Foot-Ease. It warms and rests the feet and makes wa Iking easy. Cures swollen and sweating feet, blisters and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and is a certain cure for chilblains and frost bites. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe scores for 25c. Trial package mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y.
Manit[?]ba Soil.
In Manitoba you can turn a furrow many miles long and not encounter a stone as large as your fist. The earth, for a distance down from three to five feet, is a rich, black loam, made by centuries and centuries of decaying vegetation.
Onion Seed 68c and Up a Lb.
Catalogue tells how to grow 1,213 bus. per acre as easily as 100 bushels. Largest growers of Earliest Vegetables and Farm Seeds. Earliest vegetables always pay. Salzer’s Seeds produce them weeks ahead of others. Coffee Berry 15c. per lb. Potatoes $1.20 a Bbl. Cutthisout and send with 14c. for great Catalogue and 10 packages of vegetable and flower seed novelties to JOHN A. SALZER SEED COMPANY, LA CROSSE, WIS. (c. n.)
Away Up.
„“Oh, yes. he is a follower of one of the higher arts.” “Well, be doesn’t look it. What does he do?" “He’saprofessional flagpole painter.”
What Do the Children Drink?
Don’t give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink called GRAIN-O? It is delicious and nourishing, and takes the place of coffee. The more Grain-O you give the children the more health you distribute through their systems. Grain-0 is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about Vi as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. ami 25c. • Meteors rush through space ati the rate of twenty-six miles a second. They are not usually larger than a peb ble, and on striking the earth’s atmosphere they immediately dissolve into gas.
Chicago Great Western Increase.
The earnings of Chicago Great Western Railway (“Maple Leaf Route”) for the month of January. 189!), show an increase of $70,617.84. Total increase since beginning of fiscal year (July 1) to date, $257,085.49. The British war office is inquiring into the fact that the uniform of the Salvation army is very similar to that of the Coldstream and Grenadier Guards.
Go to Work.
Go to work on lumbago as If you Intended to cure it, and with the use of St. Jacobs Oil it can be cured very promptly and surely. Rub hard for penetration. The word “macaroni’’ U takeu from a Greek derivation, which means “the blessed dead,” in allusion to an ancient custom of eating at feasts for the dead.
Coughing Leads to Consumption.
Kemp’s Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottlea. Go at once; delays are dangerous. If We have need of a strong will in order to do good, it Is still more necessary for us In order not to do evil.— Mole.
Lane's Family Medicine
Move* the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acta gently on the liver and kidneys. Carea sick headache. Price 25 ••'■o an.
He who lives only to benefit himself confers on the world a benefit when he dies.—Tertullian.
To Care a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine All druggists refundffie money if it fails tocure. 25c. The genuine has L. B. Q. on each tablet. Lord Salisbury was the first British premier to set foot in Australia. - ■ • —■■ "-hre.- . 11 Ml*. S 3 per acre csshibslWW peid.. .J. Mvlhtll, Mrs. Wln*loW» Sooth iso Hraur for Children teething: soitene the sums, reduces inßammatioa. slier* iisut. cures wind colic. 35 cents e battle. 0 , • N,,_ r 1 ...i-m.. i WANTED.—Csseofbsd beelth that R-IP-A-R-SwUl not l-n-at. told 5 crate to Ripens Chemical Oo» Hew York, (or 10 temples sad UNO testimonials.
COMFOBTINg WORDS TO WOMEN. Th* Surgical Chair and ite Tortures May bo Avoided by Women Wkß Heed Mrs. Pinkham’e Advice. Woman’s modesty is natural; It is charming. To many women a fall statement of their troubles to a male physician Is almost impossible. The whole truth may be told to Mrs. Pinkham because she Is a woman, and her advice is freely offered to all women sufferers. R. rt Mrs. O. E. Ladd, of 19th and N - Sts., Galveston, Texas, whose for the good your remedies j HB \ \ have done me. I have used | j I \ pound, three packages of J J 1 Sanative Wash, and one box I suffered with backache, con- IJ stant headache, whites, sick fll J stomach, no appetite, could not //| Ms sleep, and was very nervous. At •jr y yP* time of menstruation was in ter- / J J rible pain. Your medicine is f f worth its weight in gold. I never / J Jfj f can say enough in praise of it. I have j I recommended it to many friends. If only (fbnff all suffering women would try it, there would he 1 more happy homes and healthy women. I thank you for the change your medicine has made in me. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Mrs. Pinkham’s advice, km saved thousands of women from hospital operations. The lives of women are hard; whether at home with a ceaseless round of domestic duties or working at some regular employment, their daily tasks nudes constant war on health. If all women understood themselves fully and knew how exactly and soothingly Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound acts on the female organs, there would be less suffering. IjdlaE.PlHkham'sVegctatleCompoandiaWoman’sßcmcayforWoinai’snii
f—R Handsomely Illustrated Catalogueof HOUSE* mm 8! HOLD cgoos, carpets, bicycles, sewHP®* mdc a® 8 I!™" INC MACHINES, OFFICE and CHURCH FUH- ■ v ■ KITURE, GROCERIES, DRY GOODS, HARDHl H H WARE, SADDLES, also SPORTINC GOODS, H m M al BOOTS and SHOES, CLOTHING, FURNISH* INC GOODS, Etc., sent FREE on application. ■ ii■■ i !»■»»——|t contains thousands of articles which wo Retail at Wholesale Prices. CARPETS, DRAPERIES, LAMPS, DINNER SETS, etc., shown in color-;. People ail over the world buy from It. Why? Because to them EICHT FLOORS (EACH 205 BY 180 FEET) of goods in compact form—GOO pages—to select from. JOHN M. SMYTH CO., 148. ISO. 152. 154, 156. 158. 160. 162. 164. 160 West Madison St., CHICAGO, ILL.
a 01/ everybody you know to null save their tin tags for you The Tin Tags taken from Horseshoe, “J. T.,” Cross Bow, Good Luck —and Drummond Natural Leaf —will pay for any one or all of this list of desirable and useful things—and you have your good chewing tobacco besides. Every man, woman and child in America can find something on this list that they would like to have and can have—FREE l Write your name and address plainly and send every tag you can get to us—mentioning the number of the present you want. Any assortment of the different kinds of tags mentioned above will be accepted as follows:
ft TACS 1 Match Box, quaint design, imported from Japan 2* 2 Knife, onr blade, good steel 25 8 Scissors, 4f«*-tnch, good steel .... 25 4 Child’s Set, Knife, Fork and Spoon 25 6"Salt and Pepper, one each, quadruple piate on white nvlai ... 60 6 Razor, hollow ground, tine Lnglish *feei. 50 7 Butter Knife, triple plate, best quaL 60 8 Sugar Shfll,t-ip ! e plate, best quality 60 9 Stamp Box, sterling silver 70 10 Knife. "Keen Kntter,** two blades 70 11 Butcher Knife, " Keen Kutter,” 8-inch htade 75 12 Shears, " Keen Kutter,** 8-inch, nickel 75 15 Nut Set,Cracker and 6 Pick*, silver 80 14 Nail File, sterling silver, amethyst set, C-inch 100 16 Tooth Brush, sterling silver, amethyst set, 6-inch * 100 16 Paper Cutter, sterling silver, amethyst set, 7-inch 100 17 Btscß.ill, "Association.*’ bestqual. 100 18 Watch, stem wind and set, guaranteed c>od time keeper 200
This offer expires November 30, 1899. Address all your Tags and the correspondence about them to JRUMMOND BRANCH, St. Louts, Mo.
“Cleanliness Is Nae Pride, Dirt’s Nae Honesty.” Common Sense Die- * tates the Use of SAPOLIO j
SLICKER WILL KEEP YOU DRY. 9°n't be fooled with a mackintosh vMV **S-jp or rubber coat. If you wantacoat YtSfi?' that will keep vou dry in the hardest storm buy the Fish Brand £*2* tfeA# Slicker, if not for sale in your 1 I S&flg town, write for catalogue to jYJRwif asThMa POPHAM’SASTHKA SPECIFIC Gives relief In FITS minutes. Send *■ fore Fi(EUtrial package. Sold by Druggists. One Box sent postpaid oa receipt of 4I OS, Mxke>»>s.oo. AddrsssjaoAjsoguin. mu., re. < ai'rl ug U iukL 2*. ceils fee??**! rdor.T’aUoa’worih Vu -M*ke «»d Save Money ” FREE. Address UTA.VDahp YIUBMSC4L Co., WsetSeld, Hew Jersey.
TAG* 19 Alarm Clock, nickel, w arranted ... 2Q< 20 Carvers, buckhorn handle, good steel 20C 21 Six Rogers* Teaspoons, best qusL 229 22 Kr.ivcs and Forks, six each, buckhorn handles 250 23 Clock, 8-day, Calendar, Thermometer, Bart meter 500 24 Stove, Wilson Heater, size No. 30 or No. 40 600 25 Tool Set, not playthings, but real tools. - 650 26 Toilet Se\ decorated porcelain. very handsome POO 27 Watch, solid silver, full jeweled . 1000 28 Sewing Machine, first class, with all attn: hments 1500 29 Revolver, Colt’s, best qualify 1500 30 Rifle. Winchester, 16-shot, 22-cal. 1500 31 Shot Gun, double barrel, hammerlts.s. stub twist „ 2000 32 Guitar (Washburn), rosewood, inlaid with mother-of-pearl..... 2000 33 Bicycle, standard make, ladies* or cents' 2500 BOOKS—BO choice selections—same as last year's list, 40 tags each.
aoa—etaaaaa ; ©t FOR 14 CENTS ' | W« with to min this year yftOQC W-v now customers, and ieuoa affec 1 '{akCgayvi-i pk* u p«> R«H«h 1 Pkp. Early Rij.e Cabbag* £fc I i II Lctif I.'iy u: m V lucnmberllSs I H z tSßS£ ifrss&teil.ffißßpl3 “ BSua^FS^sSUilllli TSHnBT Worth SI.OO, for 1* Cts. su» 1 Above 10 pkgs.. worth 11.00, we will ! KM H mail you free, together with oar H BO Plant and heed Catalogue, upon re- 1 ■ 2f 4l> * and 140 poctaat i l Of fl ; Si . 8..-*. never get along without them. OntUt? vaSKltiattaaijfcfca BliaiKHUtßOO—oa—» MFITiI aiITQ fan U crack MT Book 100 nkk mtn IHL Nil IO qued'n.' * answers, l ulque; cross ! debaters; eras e no end of fun; rare oollertlou; 10 etc. •Uuipa. a K. CLAKK. 30 N. Oth St. Pfclladelpirih. P»T \yHr, plcasi tu
