Pike County Democrat, Volume 25, Number 36, Petersburg, Pike County, 18 January 1895 — Page 7
THE FARMING WORLD. A profitable: industry. lea tv Why a Farmer'* Wife Wants W< En(ae« In Durt Baiting. Dock raising- has proved so profitable jvitli me. that I am anxious for other srotnen to try this branch of the poultry business, as a means of making money At home. They require less trouble and attention than ehiekens; are freer from vermin, and are exempt from the numerous diseases whi$j| make the profits in chicken raisin? a ucertain. Ducks are excellent foragers afltt after tiiey are a few weeks old obtain a large pert of their food in this way. ’ Duck eggs ar;. UjsCh^tehed under a chicken hen. The.,'ducklings should bo kept in a pen until they are three weeks old, when they may be put with the old ducks. For the .first twentyfour hours they seem, drowsy and eat nothing, after that feed cornmeal moistened with water or milk, until Jhg? 5*5 2?ver*l iy««k< old, they rhUuld htTe part w’not-? grain. Ducks may be raised without water to swim in, if given plenty of fresh water to drink, but they grovr faster, larger, and are more thrifty, and keep them* cleaner if they have access to • pond,or other good swimming- place, i The Pekin duck is the most Valuable variety. They grow very large, mature early? are hardy, good layers, and have snowwhite plumage. They weigh rom twelve to sixteen pounds per Docks &ra great layers, ccjufllh^Poing in February and continuing Until October. They are ready ibr market when, they are six or eight months old and bring the liigluest prices when marketed in July and August. If they ^are dry picked the fea thers bring frocn forty to fifty cents per pound,, and i|j the down is kept separate from the feathers it commands a high price for down comfortables and pillows. The plumage of the white varieties is easily dyed and can be made into ornaments for hats, feather trimmings, fans, etc., and sold .at a good price. So the profits ou ducks are made in several different ways. *©n their bodies, Jer the market, their feathers and down, which always arc in demand. Sued on the eggs, which sell for a higfaer price than ben’s eggs. Any woman desiring to increase her income will find ducks; very profitable and easy to raise. And after giving ■them a fair trial 'will be convinced (that there is twice as much money ’in 'them that there ‘is in chickens, without near the vexation, and trouble.-— Western Rural.
TRAP *OR RABBITS. Faulty Made «ad AUJuftnd by Amf Bright Ikrmer B*ty. The accompanying sketch shows a trap for rabbits, mini: or other small animals. It is the most humane trap I ever saw, aad can be 'easily made and adjusted bf-any of our farmer boys. Six-inch 'boards are required and should be four feet long. A is the trap doofr, which is held ajp by two cords attached to the lever, which rests on the fulcrum C. Ees the trigger, which is a short stick made as seen’ iu ethe illustration, - and is attached to the end of lever by a short cord. The tagger passes through a small hple in.the top of the trap and catches
on the front edge. The sketch shows the trap set. Grain is used for bait, but carrots, cabbage, etc., are much liked by bunny. ' r~“ Place the bait at the farther end of the trap, so that it cannot be gotten put without touching the trigger, which .hies up, and down drops the door and poor bunnj is a , prisoner and not a hair injured. This acay of catching rabbits is not so cruel as that of steel traps, by which, if not taken -out soon after being caught, they will twist around until the foot comes aft, Whi'-h is dreadful, and. besides jour rabbit is gone, which is a disappointment. Try this trap and see if you &> not like it, boys.—Mtc. A. C. McPherson, in Ohic Farmer. An iKeonnmteal Incubator. An incubator, both cheap^ and accurate in its work, can be constructed by taking a shallow box large enough —- to hold several dozen eggs. Fill the . bottom neafc’y with clean, fresh horse manure and over this [dace several inches of road dost. The eggs can be put in separate rows and two or three layers of blankets placed oner them. The eggs are carefully turned by hand each day and moistened in lukewarm water. After the chicks hatck'out the blanket is raised several inche. above the dnst and the little clucks permitted to run. scratch and be fed and kept comfortable until ready , to remove to poops.—Farm and Home. " House PlaaSs In Winter. On very cold nights it is someisenes difficult to keep the house plants from ^freezing. A few of the-tenderer kinds Stray be removed from the colder window to the middle of the room, a ad the others covered with newspapers. Planing newspapers against the window sash will prevent asuch of the ifeeat of the room from escaping. 'Where .there are many plants, a useful plan U to place # couple of lamps, or a *mnll oil stove, between the flowers And the window, and light the u just before retiring. The coldest time will occur in the early morning, wh#a the house flres are the lowest, pad tb« lamps will then be at work.
A l'ECQLUA CASE. -< r— Physicians Ptuuslsd by the Experience of 24ra. Bowen. Roipital Consumption. „ if 'romlk* Record. Philadelphia. Pa.) Last <!■!/ the Episcopal hospital admitted a womiui whose pale aud emaciated face and racking ooagh proclaimed her the vit> tim of cooamption. She gave her name as Mrs. Bailie &. Bowen, wife of Wm. G. Bowen, residence, JtWil Meighan St., Philadelphia The case was diagnosed and she was told plainly that she was in an ad* vanced stage of consaagption. The examining physician even showed bcr the sunken place at her breast where the cavity in her lung was supposed to exist- She west borne to her family a broken, disheartened woman With de ath staru!? tattl In the face. Hurt watt the beginning of the story, the end was told by Mrs. Bowen, who no longer expects to die, to a repjwter who vis|ted her home. “The ifLrsp symptoms of consumption came in the fonnj^f-'tenible sweats, both ni£it and day. From (April until September i was constantly <*ki and kept wrapped up in hlankets through the hottest weather. A terrible cough took possession of me, nay breast ’’’as sore to the sUjrhtest touch, and my limbs were like cold clay. The hardest rubbing with toe coarsest towel would not create toe slightest flush, and the least eo* ertion would so exhaust me that * could barely gasp for waterv “I went to toe ao^llid In July and they diagnosed ay case as alove stated. It was ^len the clpuds were the darkest ‘rftti ton first glint of sunshine came. Mr. Bhelmerdine a friend, who lives around at 1844 Clementine St., staid to me one day: Mr*. Bowen, did you over try Dr. Williams’ Piak Pills for Pale People! 1 had never beard of the medicine, but in my condition could not turn a deal ear to anything that offered relief. It was after considerable thought and Investigation that I concluded to discontih&e all the medicine I was taking, ncludipgwd liver oil, and depend entirely ink Pills. I began to take the Pills, u.— with but little encouragement. The irst sign of improvement was a warmth md a tingling sensation in my limbo, finally the cough disappeared, my chest ost iU soreness and I began to gain flesh loti I was fifteen pounds heavier. All this [ «wre to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and I moot praise them toe highly ” Mrs. Bowen Is a kindly faced lady of Middle age, a church member well-known aid highly esteemed. She looks to-day well and strong, nd it seems almost injossibUs that she was ever given up by iminen'i physickvas as an incurable can mmptive. Yet”.uch is the case beyond all lispute. „ . Dr. Williama' Pink Pills contain a& the dements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are for sale by all druggists, »r may be bad bv mail from Dr. Williams* Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y., for 5U4 per box, or six boxes for &.5U.
PERSONAL POINT! Caft.cJonathan PutKiiam, pf Bath» Me., thinks he is the oldest/ pilot is active service in New England. He is only a few weeks sk<*rt of eighty-four years of age, and as Motive, steady, and as sure as ever. Mbs. Chablf.8 Roberson, of Lawrence. Kan., wife of the pioneer governor, told the story of his life -the other day bo> a phonograph cylinder, which is to be preserved by the estate historical society. , ' Josephine Suweeknszka Javoska. w ho is said to be a grandniece of Pulaski, the Polish patriot who fought for this eountry in the revolutionary war, and once a countess in St. Petersburg, sells newspapers ’in front of the post office in Brooklyn. Benjamin Colons, of Blaine, Me., is eighty-six years-old, and saw a railroad train for the first time a few days ago. His eyesight has always been good, it may lx; well to *ay. He was delighted with the cars, and took a ride in the cab With the engineer. Dr. Tat.mage is said to receive S50C for a lecture ami sometimes $1,000. He makes more money out of his* lectures than any other tnan on the platform. Col. Ingersolfs price is $500. while Dr. McGlynn, Joseph Cook and others of the same rank of lecturers command S100 to $150_t_ THROUGH EUROPE. Tank: cars are used in France for the transportation of wine. B , When lovely women were -sold in ancient^ Babylon, ;the money thus raised was used to: dower the homely ones. | Gambling on the next rain and its duration has become so great a vice in Calcutta that the government has been called upon to suppress it. Two famous hotels, Claridge’s in London and Jleurice’s in Paris, have recently been' sold to make way for newer structures. Both have housed kings and emperors, and found their way into literature. At Holy well the miraculous well of St. Winefridc lias attracted such crowds of pilgrims that the authorities have given notice to Father Beau clerk, •to whom the waf. is let, that they will (terminate his lease in May, in orator to obtain better teems for the town. ?
KANSAS SPHIILOSOPHY* Everything a man lilies to dbo a woman can prorei&s wicked. There is one lEMng colder than tt he t«mb—a, room warmed by a grate fire. The letter men And women know each other the Hess they say afamt ideals. KoTnrso seems se rrery terrible to a woman if it is ccraraitted in the name of teix. „ - Thebe was a time when a man who , was herd up tried to hide i t, bnt these is no sueh thing1 as hiding i t now. Tide women do not -rdb birds’ nests of eggs, 'Wit they use .the birds after they nrj} hatched, to ormxnent their hats. The cwaly time a mas eft experience takes his wa$r into his confidence is to tell her, tie iisaot making any money.— Atchj|P <Kfugu> Globe. MEDICAL SCIENCE. Hast may he itaansplantedL, and wider proper condbiosus will grow as wwll in Us new as in its na&tral situation. A French physician reports a- case of h&eeoRgb suc^easfnlly treated by tellingsnuff wjtail sneezing wtm provoked.
PLAY TIME. Fob over four hundred years November 13 was deserved in England as a festival. It commemorated the death of Hardlcanute and the accession of Edward the Confessor, by which, the country was delivered from the yoke of the Danes. Tme movable Christian holidays are Easter, Ascension day (ten days before Whitsunday), Ash Wednesday, Good Friday, Palm I Sunday, Pentecost, Sexagesima Sunday and Trinity Spnday. All depend for their date on Easter. Tine Festum Sancti Petri ad Vincula, held on Angnst 1, was the continuance of a Roman festival in honor of the victory won by Octavius QVCT AfithQny at the battle of Actiun, Its observance' I was continued, but its object changed | hjT CThm ?f A fOT;tmgut after Easter the English formerly obsciwed a festival called Hock Tide. It was customary for the women to go out into the streets with cords and bind the men whom they met until the latter purchased their release j with smell contributions of inffTTfryThe Greek holiday a and festivals were very numerous. There were fifty beginning with the letter A, and besides the*j special festivals there were times set apart for the Isthmean, Nemean, Pythian and Olympian games, all of which were popular holidays. SCIENTIFIC NOTES. Loan Kelvin holds that the internal heat of the earth has nothing to do with climates. The earth, he says, might be of the temperature of whitehot iron two thousand feet below the surface, or at the freezing point fifty feet below, without at all affecting a climate. A French railway has lately arranged its telegraph lines so that alt & prearranged signal the wire$ are switched from the telegraph instruments to telephones, thus enabling the operators either to talk verbally or to ceanmunicatc by the telegraphic code at will. Commodore Melville, U. S. N.v expresses the opinion that not. only speed but maximum economy in fuel Will be attamc'd through the use of the triple screw in steamships, each acting independently of the others, the center one alone being used for slow cruising. Other expert naval engineers concur’ in this opinion.
Referring to the decreased mortality a_mong children in some countries, it is interesting to know that the sanitary condition of a region may in a measure he guaged by the infant mortality | 'that is, the death rate of children in a district is a sort of hygienic barome ter of the surrounding physical and moral atmosphere.—Popular Health Magazine. _ , FACTS FOR FARMERS. It is the small number of good cows, carefully attended to and well fed, that yield the most profit. A straw radk is a nice thing to hare in the barn yard, if yon forget its existence at feeding time. Are any of your cows bringing yon into <lebt?_ - H yon don’t know is it not time that yon should know? How muck fe<d can your best cow turn into butter? She ought to ha re erery ounce that she will eat. A clean stall makes a dean cow, and a clean cow makes clean milk, and clean milk jmakesgood butter. After you gat your blood, says a swine grower, then everything depends upon your feed and care. Tb^ long winhrr evenings afford the city unemployed -abundant time to think about the farm as a money-mak-ing institution. Farmers in "Pennsylvania are feeding chestnuts to hogs. It is said that the crop is immense and the picking of them hardly profitable. Toe Connecticut experiment station recommends 400 pounds of superphosphate, 400 pounds of nitrate of soda and 250 pounds of muriate of potash for the growth of potatoes. PROVERBS ABOUT PAPERS. Rank papers by bigness, you’ll rank pictures by siaa. Who never changes his newspaper need never change his mind. **■ Read everything in the paper, anti you have read nothing in the paper
TH£ MARKETS. New York, Jan. 14. 1893. CATTLE—Natire Steers.I 4 25 @ 5 00 COTTON—Middling.. & 5* FLOUR—'Winter What..,.-.. 2 85 & 3 15 SJo. 21ted.. .. «!**«» (S3*i >.. 52 @ mi 2.. 31)4® 36* m Mess. .. 12 75 ® 13 25 ST. LOUIS. Middling........... .... BEEVES—Fancy Steers. 5 00 Medium.. *4 SO HOG'S—Fairto Select.. 4*10 SHEEP—Fair to Choice.... 2 25 FLOUK—Patents..» 2 55 Fancy to Extra do.. WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter... CORN—No. 2 Mixed..,... Oats—No.2 ..._....... RYE—No. 2... TOBACCO—Lugs...... Leaf Burley. HAY—Clear Timothy. B U ITER—Choice Dai ry... EGGS-Fresh.. PORK-Standard Mes*<New). 11 87 BACON—Clear Rib . LARD—Prime Steam.... CHICAGO CATTLE—Shipping.. 4 00 HOGS—Fair to Choice... 4 25 SHEEP—Fair to Choice........ 2 50 FLOUR—Winter Patents._ 2 50 Spring Patents.. WHEAT—No. 2 Sprint;.. No 2Red..... CORK—No- 2 . ... OATS—No. 2..... PORK—Mess (new)... KANSA# CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers...»_ HOGS—All Grades^..... 3SO WHEAT—Nc..2 Red.... 52 OATS-N*. ?... .... CORN—No. 2... 41 NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR—H$*iiGrade ...... 2so a soo COUN-Na *£.._... . 50 (§ 51 OATS—Western. 37 «« 37* HAY—Choioei.. 15 00 ® 10 00 PORK—Neur Maw -... BACON—Sides....... .... COTTON—Middling....... : LOUIS VILLE. WHEAT—No. 2 Re A ., 55*® MM CORN-No. 2 Mixed tear)...... 42*9 42S OATS-No I Mixed..% . 3s*@ S3* PORK-NewMess.. a 00 ® 1*00 BACON-Ctear Rib...... 7 ® v 7* CX7TTON—Middling.... Q IS 8 5 8) 4 75 & «A) © in 3 10 ® S 50 <00* *4* 45* 201% 425 Sit W* *«% 2*
I The Rise of the Buckwheat Cake v .< \ > The leaven of yesterday ruins the cake of to-day. Don’t spoil good buckwheat with dying raisingbatter— fresh cakes want Royal Baking Powder. Grandma .used to raise to-day’s buckwheats with the souring left over of yesterday f Dear old lady, she was up to the good old times. But these are days of Royal Baking Powder*—freshness into freshness raises freshness. And this is the way the buckwheat cake of to-day is made: Two cups of Buckwheat, one cup of wheat flour, two tablespoons of Royal Baking Powder, one half teaspoonful of salt, all sifted well together. Mix with milkinto a thin batter and bake at once on a hot griddle. Do not forget that no baking powder can be substituted for the “ Royal99 in making pure, ( v sweet, delicious, wholesome food# \ ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
No enjoyment. however inconsiderable, is confined to the present moment. A man is the happier for life from having made once an agreeable tour, or lived for any leugth of time with pleasant people, or enjoyed any considerable interval cf imocent; pleasure.—Sydney Smith. HAKKKT GARDENERS GROW RICH. There is lots of money made in ;arly vegetables. Everybody admits tbs t the very earliest vegetables are prod need from Salzer’s Northern Grown seeds. Think of having radishes in fom-teen days; lettuce in twenty days; pot ttoes in forty days; peas m forty-six lays, and splendid cabbage in fifty-five days from day of sowing seed! Ij^TOU WIUi CUT THIS OCT AXOSKSDn with $1 money order to the John A. Salzer Seed company, LaOosse, Wis., you will get free thirty-five packages earliest vegetable seeds and their great seed catalogue, or for six cents postage a package of Fourteen Day Paws Radish seed and their seed catalogue, [k] Even political silenceis golden, but much of the political talk is leaden.—Tonkers Gar fzette. Result of Eitensive Improvements. The Louisville^ Evansville & St. Louis Consolidated Railroad, familiarly known as the “Air Line,” has shortened the running time of its passenger trains between St, Louis and Louisville one hour and twenty minutes; but the many improvements recently made in the roadbed, bridges, tunnels, equipment, etc., will admit of a still faster schedule, which will be made effective as soon as necessities may require. The facilities this line now gives the traveling public make it the favorite line between St. Louis and Louisville. All trains depart from terminals later and arrive earlier than competitors. The patrons of the Air lane can not fail to appreciate the efforts of the management to furnish accommodations superior So any other line. Between Evansville and Louisville, where no competition exists, this being the only through train service route, .the time has been shortened one-half hour. “But what earthly use is lit to discover the North Pole! I can’t see.” “It will save future expeditions. ”—Harper’s Bazar. * We think Piso’s Cure for Consumption is. the only medicine for Coughs.—Jennie Pinckard, Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1,1S94. Age begins on the day you begin to conceal it.—Fliegende Blatter. 4 “
LEAVES ITS MARK —every one of the painful irregularities and weaknesses that prey upon women. They fade the face, waste the figure, ruin the temper, wither you up, make you old before your time. Get well : That’s the way to Jook well. Cure the disordeas and ailments:tliat beset you, with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It regulates and promotes all flb< proper functions, improves digestion, enri lies the blood, dispels aches-and pains, mel tncholy and nervousness, brings refreshia j sleep, and restores health and strength.' It’s a powerful general, as well as nterii <i, tonic and nervine, imparting vigor and irength to the entire system. Mrs. Aren* ULXICH. of /Shu Creek. S tir/o Co
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writes: I enjoy good health t isks to Dr. Pierce’s P» i rite Prescriptiou and * Go Iden Medical Disco rry^ I was under doc ors' Care for taw pears w Lb womb disease, and ; raditallv wasting In stungtli all the tine, t wa ; so weak that I could sit :p in bed only a fewjnor.renta. for two years, fco i.neuced taking Dr. Pitrpe’s Favorite Presexif on and five 4 *"* -* J ~— lfa - ><w>f Thaw his‘Golden Mtical Discovery,’ and fay the tine 11 had taken ooetalf doxnen bottles I was tip and ’ goingwhereuer I pi eased, and have had goad health and been rer • strong
A booi of i68 p(gH4o “ Woman n4 Her Disease#-’* mailed st+Ud. on receipt of to cents i« stamps Jar postage. . dtires*, Woki.d # PftMiSJAKT Mr.PICAI. / JSOCJAtaos. &i Haul Steel. BuAJo. N.T.
—That simple pressure, when it is very great and long continued, is capable of producing effects ordinarily obtainable only by heat has been shown in many ways, notably by the experiments of Spring, the Belgian chemist, who demonstrated several years ago that two or more metals could be forced thus to form an alloy at a tern perature below their fusing points, and that chemical combination could be induced by similar methods. ECZEMA lof this disease. I vis and vas treated by Linen, but was not I- ' all things had pi| All fade ► termined to LII11 M try 'and ia four | ||||IVIdm»1 ■’ * ired. The terribl; < not a sign of it lei alth built up, aod any return of the <LCHILDHOOD From eariy child-( hood until I was * grown my family, spent a fortune trying to cure me \ } of this disease. I visited Hot Springs i and .tras treated by the best medical lmen, but was not benefited. When' --1failed I de-( . s.s.s. . auu m u ■ ■■ ■■■ months was1 ; entirely cured. The terribl; eczema1 of it left My and I havei _1 any return of the disease. I have eften I recommended SjS.S. and I have sever __ . vet known a failure to cure. _ ' *3EO. W. IRWIN, Irwin, Pa. . ' — Never fails to cure, even when all other 1 remedies have. Our l treatiscon blood and , l skin diseases mailed ^ ' free to any address. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO. AtUWa. Ga. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, Of R0XBU8Y, HASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never^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. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the rightquantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, tike needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused bv the ducts being stopped, and ahvavs disappears in a week after taking it. iRead 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 ai. bedtime. Sold bv all-Druggpsts.
Be Independent! * su*J pour all your life ! <3et a farm of your own and in a few years you win wonder why you remained in the cities and paid rest. You can secure good of the United States ftovernment FREE OF COS'L along the line of the Lake Superior division of the CHICAGO, IIILWADXEI: ft. ST. RABL RAILWAY, in North era Wiscowsin and Upper Michigan, or you can liuy at iow prices on easy terms. Address (5. E. ROLLINS, m La Salle St.. Chicago, HL so runs HOF SEEDS We have sold lire seed* fagotabla. Tiowei. Gnu*. Grcia —for half a hundred yaars—Book about ail sued* that gvow—no cotond piatra plain statement^ of plain toed (act—«• pot erorythice into send quality—Send ad'postal for it. __ PLANT SEED CO., Aid N. Fourth Street, St, Louis, Me. POTATOES $2.501 a Bbl.j .worm oT POTATOES for Srad to ( UusMt «r jw»r» of POT A itacrlnk Tki “Korml k mMT sa^KS&v.£2?;5'u*^ £ Prim ___tow Yarkar” «t»«o m oarIrnora a yield of 744 bash*!* per a m dirt rkrap «ar errat Seed Hoofc. ^ it4; m
A parvkst: was pWing a large dinner party to show of! bis new dicing-room. Th* ceiling was gorgeously updated, the wal*paper had cost a small fortune, but th® dintier wa# execrable. “What do you think it all!” he asked the wit beside hint. J f prefer less gilding and more carving. — Tit-Bite. ■ ■ __ * WORLD’S-FAIR * 5 HIGHEST AWARD L ^ "SUPERIOR WUTfhTlON-THE ItFET ^ MBDICINALr Has justly acquired the reputation of being The Salvator for Invalids ^The-Aged. An Incomparable Aliment for the Growth and Protection of INFANTS an# CHILDREN A superior nutritive in continued Fevers,. And a reliable remedial agent in all gastric and enteric diseases;, often in instances of consultation over patients whose digestive organs wepe reduced to such a low and sensitive conditio*, that the IMPERIAL GRANUM was the only nourishment the stomach would tolerate when LIlrE seemed depending on its retention ;-A And as a FOOD it would be difficult to' conceive of anything more palatable. Sold by DRUGGISTS. Shipping : JOHN CARLE & SONS. New YorkWALTER BAKER & GO.
The Largest Jlanatactorers ox PURE, HIGH GRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES On thik Coatiawi, kar* r*c*i*«t HIGHEST AWARDS and Food EXPOSITIONS ttalQco tt» DnteH ProecM, no AIkn» lie* or other Chemic*!* or Py« * a» n«sd in anr of ihrir nmuretiraB.
TMr d»Leioni BRt A K rAST COCOA n'ltcL^mg r •OLD BY wtoccn* everywhere: . WALTER BAKERIiCqTdOHCHESTEB, HASS. For DURABILrrKEOONOMY^ND forGENERAL BLACKING IS UNEQUALLHL Has An annual Sale qf3.oootonsl JW^WE ALSO MANUFACTURE TH& FOR AN AFTER DINNER SHINE"ORTu TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH MAKES NO OUST. IN 5&I8 CENT TIN BOXES. the only perfect past e. Morse Bros^pRoFs. Canton,Nassl .PJS'2-SHCU^E. TOR 8oM by D-N'-S U fvi P-T LON ■ A. N. K., R 1635. trHES WKITIXC 10 AOVKHTlVSitS fLIitB Mato Oust in n* tito iiNrtiMwM te tUfe.
