Pike County Democrat, Volume 28, Number 17, Petersburg, Pike County, 3 September 1897 — Page 3

Shr f ikt (Eounty fmom! H. MoC. STOOPS, Editor ud Proprietor. PETERSBURG. * * INDIANA. WHAT^ MATTER. t care not If the hour be dawn Or daylight's close, or whether The sun shine bright From morn till night. In cloudless harvest weather; One gleam of sunshine from the faes Of her who keeps my dwelling place. Is more than all together! What matter If the cold gray clouds Of winter—yea, what mattorl— Speed far and fast Before the blast. And fleecy snowflakes scatter? ‘One handclasp of her heart-warm hand Will melt the snowdrifts from the land, , And bring the bluebird's chatter! And though each fleeting season bring Its measured mead of sorrow, I drink the wine Of love divine. And look to her and borrow A ray of sunshine from the skies That lie within her honest eyes— And bless the coming morrow! —S. Q. Lapius. in Ohio Farmer. THE conductor of No. 93 put his hand up to his cap in a vague, fumbling way. “If you've no objection—" he began, as he prepared to take his seat opposite the young woman who had been looking out of the window for an hour or so past with a good deal of weariness in her gaze. She smiled. “Not at all,** she murmured. ■ “I didn't know,” he said, “but what you’d not care to be disturbed.’’ lie was a little, spare sort of an an•cic nt, was the conductor. But age never seemed to have torched his joy of life; he was considered as “spry” an employe as any on that road. His brisk little ej es hashed sharply about his pretty vis-a-vis.

“Fine country, this,” he said, slowly, a* if reaching about for something on which to swing a conversation. “Ever been in loway before?" “Oh. yes. I’ve visited here." “Ah; I kinder sensed you wasn’t from loway yourself. Let me see; I misreruember where you are getting off—** "Lincolnville." “Yes. that's it. Lincolnville. Going fishing?” Mild surprise showed in the young woman's face. Her eyebrows lifted u little. “As 1 remember it." she said. “I don’t think that county has any streams or lakes at all." “Oh." aud the little old conductor i gave a roguish sort of a smile, “there’s other kinds o' fishing.” “1 dare say. But I’m married.” “You don’t say! Tears to me you w as mighty young when you made your | mind up. But that’s the way v\ ith them these times. There was my son Tom* The engine whistled fora station just . then, aud the conductor got up and ■ made his way out to the platform. A little dingy depot building, once white; : a sign that stated the tiumber of miles to Chicago and the name of the place; j a Western I’uion sign over the window ; ! a solitary ramshackle omnibus and a few indifferent idlers constituted the scenery that Mrs.George Lennox looked 5ut on from the comfort of a Pullman ; rar that formed No. W's trailer. To . the initiated she gave out at first glance j the air of the town. The something in- | tangible and elusivety perfect that is | entwined with the clothing Of the New | York girl was part of Mrs. Lennox, It j was not, perhaps, so much what she wore as the way she wore it. One can buy the same materials in I.incolbviUc j that one can in New York; but the something, the divine essence of beaut! j fu. externals, refuses somehow to pass beyond the portals ok the. metropolis. A little of tfns reflection came to Mrs. Lennox as she watched the two or three women who alighted at this stopping place and whose home it evidently was. j And then agaiu a feeling of shame came j over her at the harboring of such pettiness; she blushed, and then smiled, thinking of the utter femininity of her reasoning. Clothe*, clothes- what are clothes? There are better things about men and women than clothes; and these better things were as frenqent. as active out here as they w ere in town. Hearts and feelings are the broader humanities.

Mr*. Lennox opepedthe window as the train began to leave the station. The morning breeze came in. bringing with it the faint smell of apple bloom* and the sound of bird* chirping. It waa a world of green and blue. Far ©ver*to the horizon stretched the undulating fields of green, dotted here and there with the brown and black of grazing beast* or the white, smokehaloed farmhouses. And over it ail hung the blue curtain of the sky. Mrs. Lennox thought of the eouth side of Twenty-third street and gave a sigh of relief. The morning freshness came to, her like a tonic. It was good to be in a land of green fields after all! “As l was saying," came the conductor's voice presently, “uiy son Tom. he married at what I sot down as so all-fired young** to be plumb foolish, an* l guess I don*t make any bone;about telling him aa much. But 1 reckon he knew; I reckon he knew.” “They're happy ?” “O. happy’s coons at circus time. And what’s more.” he drawled his words a little as if to add emphasis, don’t reckon any person ever lived that coaid make corneakes like my •on Tom’s wife. When I come off the week’s ran. there’s nothing rests me*s much ns a good fill of cornea kes.” He looked out over the swaying fleets msdlta lively, and Mrs. Lennox, divin

inf that his memory was lingering over j the joys of past corncakea, forebore disturbing him. “Now I wonder,** he began again after a little while, “where you were hatched r The passenger suppressed a smile. “I’m from Pennsylvania.” she said. “You don’t say!” Gladness shone all over the old conductor’s face. “I’m from there myself. I just knew the minute I laid eyes on you that there was something I sorter took to about you. So you’re irom Pennsylvania? Think of that! It’s a great state. I’ve not been back there in 20 years.** He ran his fingers up through his hair, where gray was now the prevailing tint. “But,” he went on with a sudden access of a newer pride of place, “there’s not many states that beat Ioway. Corn, and cattle, and horses, and hogs, and nobody asking what’s the matter with Ioway, and good shingle and plaster ’stead of mortgages. I’ve had runs on a good many roads, but I don’t think I ever went through much better coun- j try than this." He waved his hand in the direction of the outer world. “Yes.” said Mrs. Lennox. “I’ve always understood it was a prosperous state. Still I suppose, going through it every day as you do, it must get rather monotonous. after all?” “Well,** smiled the conductor, “I don’t say but what the sight of a likely face and a word or two with a passenger now and then isn’t to my liking. It’s pretty much of a sameness with me, that’s a fact. It's tear and punch tickets, and put slips in hats, and get orders from the dispatcher and give copy to the engineer, and throw a cup of coffee in the way station, and sleep, and at it again till the end of the run. That’s one day’s ! peace with my son Tom and his wife.” I lit; turned around to note that the reighboring spaces were unoccupied. “I’ve got a notion,” he continued, “that j I’m likely goin’ to be a grandfather one of these days pretty soon.” 11c sighed { a little. “But I’m right sure I don’t feel j as old as that. Now, there’s Matt j Snyder, he runs on the Firefly, that’s j from Oskaville to Keona, he’s a grand- j father, too; but Matt he’s not stout at | all. I never heard of okl Matt acting ] real sociable like with any of his pas- j sengers. But then,” he added, with a gay smile, “I don’t reckon there’s as good people travels on his run as on , this one.”

Mrs. Lennox was wondering’ what the j men w ho talked to her over her shoulder in the opera box would think if they saw her chatting and smiling with a conductor on an Iowa passenger train. And then she thought to herself that an attractive young woman w as doubtless j just as attractive to a little old conductor on a western railroad as to a soc’ety butterfly. It was not her fault if she was created in such fashion that even this little old man. w ho thought he was going to be a grandfather pretty s>H»n, was fascinated by her. Mrs. Lennox felt pleased aud flattered. She

“EVER BEEN IN IOWAY BEFOREr*

thought it would delight her hut* ban a when she told him about it. “I reckon your husband'd be.at the d<t pot to meet you?" said the conductor. "Well, you tell him Jim Watson said he was in mighty good luck to have as like1\ a uomau as you. You tell him that, will you? No offense. Tell him the conductor of No. l*.i said that. There’s the whistle for Lincolnvilie now. Got your traps?" W hen the cars came to a standstill she had caught sighto of her husband waiting on the platform and gave a little jump into his arms, and when the first swift joy of meeting was over the i tiain was once more in motion, and she caught only the wave of the conductor’s ; cap as he swung himself onto the steps j of the last car.

“Ob, Fred,” she said, "and I never said good-by to him!’* And then she told, with much amusement and many efforts to make her husband jealous, the story of how she had made a little old con- | doctor on No. 93 fall in love with her j at first sight. And she treasured the little episode j securely in the fragrant spaces of her l memory until one day when, returning j eastward, she heard a familiar voice in j the seat behind her. “Where were you hatched?*’ Tm from New York,” followed a j feminine one. “You don’t say!” said the first TOice. ! “I’m from New York state myself." It was the voice of the little old con* ductor.—Copyright, 1897, by N. Y. Truth Company. The Slot Idea. In some of the London tenements gas is sold bv a penny-in-the-sJot machine attached to the meter. Soon after the doors of a London theater opened one evening a little girt of about six years of age and her elder sister took their stats in the pit. The 1 ttl<$»ne had been prattling away for some time, when the footlights were turned up. yjxm seeing the sudden increase of light she remarked loudly to her sis* ter: “Look, Nelly; they've put another penny in the slot I"—San Francisco Ar gonaut.

EXTRAVAGANT MANAGEMENT.' RapaWeu OaTtnaieat b Always Very Costly. The result of republican extravagance has manifested itself in unmistakable form thus early intihelifeof the McKinley administration. July was the first month of the new fiscal year, and Secretary Gage's treasury balance shows a deficit of $11,000,000. When the enormous anticipatory imports to escape the duties of the Dingley bill are taken into account, together with the unusually heavy payments into the treasury by the brewer® to save the rebate on beer stamps, the conclusion is inevitable that the deficit is due to the reckless use of public funds. Tbe amount paid out of tbe treasury in July exceeded by $8,000,000 the amount paid out during July of last year. This excess represent® the difference between republican government and democratic government. In other words, republican government costs $8,000,000 more a mon t h than democratic government. One of the items of extra cost was contained in the pension account. Pension payments for the month of July aggregated nearly $15,000,000, almost $2,000,000 in excess of the amount paid in pensions during the corresponding month last year. When the pension lists reached the $30,000,000 mark in the early part of Grant's second administration he apologized for tbe amount and “predicted that from that year on the pension account would decrease. A few years afterward Samuel J. Randall as chairman of the appropriations committee submitted a bill to the house carrying less than $40,000,000 in pensions and explained that the committee believed the high-water mark in pensions had been reached. Instead of decreasing, the amount paid in pensions every year since has increased, and this year the prodigious sum of $141,000,000 was appropriated by tbe republican congress. This exceeds the total cost of any of the various huge standing armies of w^ar-seared Europe. It is more than enough to equip and put in tbe field an army strong enough to successfully cope with any of the finelyorganized and terrible war engines of Europe on land or sea. The absurdity of such extravagance is too obvious to require analysis. Where or when it will stop no man pretends to know. Certainly there is nohope of checking it as long as the republicans hold the

purse- strings. National gratitude has its limits. Men who were incapacitated for selfsupport in sa'&ncr the union deserve national aid. This doctrine of Solon has the indorsement of modern enlightenment. But it is now more than 30 years since the civil war closed. Even if all of the more than 2.000.000 men who fought for the union were alive and entitled* to pensions, under a strict and honest interpretation the amount would not be much greater than it now is. Indeed, it probably would not be as large if rigid honesty were applied tc the question of pensions. The laws have been so loosely and dishonestly administered that the cost of pensions swells when there should be a steady lecrease.—St. Louis Republic. DEFICIT AND PROSPERITY. Protectlontutm Have Been Given the hie hy Cvents. The republican organs positively assured us some months ago th.it we oculd not hope for any prosperity so long as there was a deficit in the treasury. There is nothing in this wide world, said they, in effect, that will take the starch out of business like a deficit. The merchant might as well expect a rush of trade with a roaring lian standing in. his front dooras tohope tododge thesheriff when* there is a deficit in the federal revenues. The catalogue of political ills is a long one, but a deficit is the boss ill and- as good as dny two among the toughest of the lot. The extra session of congress w ascalled to wipe out the deficit and save the country. and yet we are now* in the enjoyment of a high degree of prosperity while the deficit continues to transact its pernicious business at the old stand. Of course, there are those who say that the prosperity we are now enjoying is all on paper, but they are of the breed called “calamity howlers.” They have an interest of one kind or another in hard times; the harder the better. They don’t want prosperity themselves and thty don’t want anybody else to har* ary, and when there are no hard times they try to deceive themselves and others by howling that the times are simply awful. They ore not to be considered. The fact is that we have prosperity in abundance, and in cpite of the terrible deficit. Nothing is clearer than that the protectionist organs shamefully misrepresented the deficit, for we ore aprosperous and happy people with the deficit atill on deck. If the protectionists are not a little more careful about their utterances they may run the risk of getting popular credit for saying what is not so.— Binghamton (N. Y.) Leader.

-The tariff “for revenue" does not seem to be filling’ requirements. The receipts from customs under the new law continue small, averaging’ about $200,000 a day. while it will take an average of $500,000 a day to wipe out the deficit. The whole of the government revenue collected for this month amounts to about $10,000,000, while the expenditures are over $18,000,000, Prosperity cannot stand such inequality between expenditure and income very long.—Indianapolis News. -We are tc>ld in one breath by the republican organs that the effect of the Dingley tariff will be to restrict importations. and thus insure a favorable balance of trade, and in the next breath that the Dingley tariff will also increase the revenues and keep the treasury full of gold. Unless there shall be large importations there cannot be a large revenuecolleeted from importations. lithe Dingley law shall stop importations it will atop revenue.—Philadelphia Record.

WAVES OF PROSPERITY. Protection World on the Swell on* Pnll Principle. Webster’s definition of a ware may be summed up in the term oscillation or instability. Sir Isaac Newton defines a wave as irregularity or unevenness of surface. In the natural world a wave always presupposes an evanescent climax, to be followed immediately by an anticlimax or depression. Thus we have by their own showing the estimate which the blatant heralds of artificial prosperity place upon their own product. These partisan John the Baptists, going up and down the land telling the people to make way for J prosperity, have at least the virtue of ingenuousness. They prate of a tidal wave of prosperity that is not expected j on their own showing to be lasting. \ We are to have, according to these her- I aids, a wave of such prosperity as the | country has never witnessed before, and j all interested are to make hay while the j sun shines, for not being founded on I i rational economics there is no telling j how long the wave may last. The whole theory of tariff legerdemain is based on the alternate swell and subsidence of socalled prosperity. A wave, either in economics cr physics, presupposes a depression elsewhere. Following the physical origin of a wave to its logical conclusion, it is the depression that causes the wave, and vice versa. Prosperity for the trusts and monopolies of the United States, which is the real aim of the tariff necromancers, presupposes depression among other classes, principally consumers and the labor element. Based on robbery, which differs in degree only and not in kind from the piracy of the middle ages or the brigandage of modern frontier life, this kind of prosperity always runs its course when an aroused public sentiment considers it time to call a halt. Whatever of real prosperity is in store for the people of the United States in the near future will be a tardy surmounting of

obstacles thrown in the way of natural recuperation from hard times by the tariff tinkerers. It is to be profoundly hoped that such real prosperity, whose welcome appearance will need no heralds or exploiters, will come to remain with us and not to sweep over the nation with ephemeral touch. Oscillation from the heights of artificial prosperity to the depths of extreme depression constitutes the most hurtful of experiences for the body politic. Steady growth without these alternate extremes is the only sign of genuine prosperity, and such growth is the nation’s assured destiny when the tariff jugglers are suppressed for good —Chicago Chronicle. TO BUNKO THE PEOPLE. The “Sound Money” Scheme of the Republicans. The great cry of the republican party during the .campaign was for “sound money.” It declared that the question should be placed beyond controversy. It had dallied for month after month with other questions, and has finally been checkmated) in this attempt to enact a parliamentary fraud' upon the pebple. All this, too, in view of the fact that the money question is regarded as the greatest which has come before the country in its century of existence. Even after adjournment of congress. Secretary Gage, speaking for the republican party and as the head of the treasury portfolio, which is the j business bureau of the government, de- \ dared that the tariff issue was infinitesimal beside the demand for money reform. Notwithstanding this declaration!, which is but an echo of j w hat the people have already declared, the country is doomed to a fresh period of disappointment. The doctor ; who begs to be called to the side of the sk‘k patieut and then fails to apply the remedy is a wretch indeed, but w hat is he compared to that great doctor j of political ills who went before the ; country on a series of false promises • and w ho is unable to redeem a single one of them? The people of the United States are too intelligent to be further bunkoed j by such transparent schemes, and they j know now, if they did not know it before, that the republican party is but j the creature of corporations, trusts and | rings, which have no other purpose but j the destruction of personal liberty and j i the robbery of their substance.—Allan/ ta Constitution.

POINTS AND OPINIONS. -Isn’t it odd that Mark Hanna hasn’t claimed the Klondike gold strike as a logical outcome of McKinley’s election?—St. Louis Republic. ——The man with a small salary and a large family, to whom the return of prosperity brtngeth only higher prices for the things he buyeth. may rejoice , that he holdeth his job.—Chicago Trib- j une (Rep.). -Consumers now required to pay i higher prices for the tariff-taxed neces- ' saries of life are beginning to realize that it costs money to see the elephant, j especially the pachyderm of the g. o. p. | variety.—St. Louis Republic. -Mark Hanna is quoted as saying j some time ago that “no man in public ! office owes the public anything.’* In so j far as Mr. nanna has any power in the j matter, he has seen that the public j gets nothing, except the worst of it.— | Binghamton (N. Y.) Leader. -The revival of prosperity through t the bounty of nature in this country i and failing crops elsewhere comes despite restrictions on trade for the bene- j fit of plutocrats. The “rake off’’ for j the favored few provided for by the Dingley iniquity is merely a fly in the ointment of the country’s content.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch. -When the Dingley tariff was being made up Alabama ironmanufacturers declared that they did not want any protection, because they could sell their product abroad without any. They have been shipping iron* right along under the Wilton tariff to England and other countries of Europe and they can continue to do eo.—N. 0. Picayune.

•T. LOUIS EXPOSITION. fte Gmt AmmI Event Premia— to One* eln— All Predeeeaeora—The Art Exhibit Will be n Notable Feature, Victor Herbert’s Bead Will Pern tab the Accustomed Concert Music, and the Added .attractions Will be of n High Order. Preparations for the fourteenth consecutive annual St. Louis exposition, which opens September 8 for its usual forty days’ session, have advanced sufficiently to enable a fairly complete programme of arrangements to be announced. The exhibits are gettinglfito position rapidly, and although tne plans differ materially from those of past seasons, there is uo falling off in any respect. The building of the coliseum and the shutting off of what was formerly the north nave has necessitated more economy in the allotment of space. In many instances this is an advantage rather than otherwise, and the ingenuity displayed in arranging and concentrating exhibits will be universally admired. A large force is actively at work unpacking and hanging pictures, and the art galleries will be well stocked with choice paintings. Art Director Kurts and his assistant, Mr. Rhodes,are more than usually enthusiastic. No attempt at crowding has been made, and the number of pictures hung—about 500 — is below the average. The display will, however, be distinctly more popular than of yore, including as it does some immense canvasses,some of which have been on special exhibition alone in several of the larger cities. It is a strikiug tribute to tha St. Louis exposition that the inclusive admission fee is smaller than the charge made in European cities to view individual pictures in the art galleries. Roy bet’s paiutiug, which secured the medal of honor in Paris four years ago, is one of these specialties. Tritel’s “The Conquerors*’ is another. It ia great in two senses of the word, as the canvas measures 25 feet in length. Rachon’s famous Dauphin picture has also arrived.

Other pictures from Paris are by artists of reputation, including Isaby —who sends his “Procession of Cardinals"— Pasini, Cazin, Shermitte, Le Charpentiere, Peloise, Boudin and Japy. Last year's art display at the St. Louis exposition was described by art critics in the east as the most remarkable ever seen in a central or western city. This eulogy will be still more appropriate this season. The added attractions are to be far ahead of the best seen here before. There will be, practically, a new band. The chauge of name from Gilmore's to Herbert's was not a mere matter of form. Victor Herbert has an entirely new band, with a new library containing arrangements of hundreds of what may be termed new pieces. When, last winter, he dissolved the old band altogether and commenced the task of recoustructiug it according to his own conception, his procedure was on the lines of artistic quality first, aud youth second.' He secured both bright, superior instrumentalists, youug and ambitious artists; quick to seize upon and adopt Herbert's metis ods; full of euthusiasm, dash and pride; aud thoroughly capable in musical knowledge; superb in technical facility and skill. In special attractions the exposition mauagemeut has also secured something unique. Alons. Gautier, who will give his aerial equestrian act twice, daily, created a sensation in New York last spring, aud was signed by the exposition management while several cities were trying to secure him. Presilent Boyd aud General Manager Gaicnnie have assigned the following u&ys to the organizations and occasions designated: Sept. 8, Stockholders’ Night. Sept 9, Dixie Night. Sept W, Victor Herbert’s Night. Sept. 11, A. O. U. W. Night Sept. 13, Wheelmen's Night. Sept. H. Jefferson Club Night Sept, 15, Legion or Honor Night Sept. IS. Royal League Night Sept 18, Laoor Night. Sept 20. American Night Sept 21, South Broadway Merchant*’ Night Sept 23. Catholic Knights of America Night Sept. 27. Irish Night and Wolfe Tone Rities. Sept 28, MeGrew Guards Night. Sept 29, North St Louis Association Night Oct 4, German Night Oct 5, Veiled Prophet's Night Oct fl. Vehicle Owners' Night. Oct 7. President McKinley Night Oct 8, St Louis Railway Club Night Oct U. Scotch Night Oct 15, Sunday School Night OJt 18, Spanish Club Night Oct 19. St. Louis Turpers Night Oct 20. Western Catholic Union Night Oct £2, Branch Guards Night

PROBABLY ALL LOST. A Berrying Party DoubtlM Drowned la Uk* Superior. Wist Superior. Wis., Aug. 24.—A party of eight men and women left last Friday in a small sail-boat to go after berries along the south side of Lake Superior, intending to return ounday. Nothing has been heard of them, but the captain of the steamer Gilbert reports passing a capsized sail-boat a few miles out. Searching parties will gc out to look for them. Coal Product of Now Maleo. Washington. Aug. 25.—The reports of the United States mine inspectors for Indian territory and New Mexico show the total coal product of New Mexico during the last fiscal year was 792,739 tons, value estimated »t 11,196,#15, in Indian territory the coal output was 1,302,216 tons; coke ouIduL $L*40 A comical due! was fought by two New York bill postersr'bear Washing ton bridge. They had been covering eath other’s bills, and they agreed t« settle the matter with/ paste brushes, each starting with a full bucket of paste. In five minutes they were a droll sight, each covered from head to heels with the sticky stuff. Seven-eighths of the families of Philadelphia occupy entire houses, as residences. Diamonds have been discovered, in rare instances, in the meteoric stones which have fallen to the earth.

B.&0. S-W. RYJ TTM~B TABTiTB. Train* leave Washington as follows Ibr

m**r BoersD. Ha. «-2:08 a. m* No. II ..... 8:17 a. mf No. 4.7:17 a. m* No. 2...... IHKp-m* No. 8.1:13 a. m+ No. 14. arr. 11:40 p. mf

WEST BOONS. No. 3 — ) :S1 a. m No. IS, I’ve* 6:00*. m \ No. 5...... 8:04 * u No. 7 .13:49 p. No. 1. 1:42 p. m No. •.ll:03p. mi.

+ Daily except Sunday. For detail information regarding rate^ time on connecting lines, sleeping, parts* ears, etc., address THOS. DONAHUE, S Ticket Agent, B. A O. 8-W. Ry., Washington, Ini, J. M. CHESBROUGH, General Passenger Agent, St. Louis, Ms

0 01

THE Short One TO INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI, PITTSBURGH, WASHINGTON BALTIMORE, NEW YORK, BOSTON, AMD ALL POINTS EAST.

No. Si. souths. 7:00 an* No. 33, north .......................... 10:30 any No. 3S. south... 1:23 peat No. 84, north .... 3:45 pan Fer sleeping car reservation*, maps, rate* and farther information, call on your nearest ticket agent, or address, F. P. EEFRIES, G. P. AT. A., H. R. GRISWOLD, A.G.P.A T.A. Evansville, lnd. E B. GUNCKEL, Agent. Petersburg, lnd. BESTTRAINS Kansas City, Montana, Colorado, Pacific Coast, Utah, Washington, Omaha, St Paul, Nebraska, Black Hills, -VIASt. Louis or Chicago. VESTIBULEO TRAINS, SLEEPERS, DININfl CARS. CHAIR CARS (”*.?)« CONSULT TICKET AGENT, OR Fm M. RUGG, TRAV. PASS’* AGENT, ST. LOUIS. MOB i Caveats, and Trade-Marts obtained and all Pat-] [entbustnessconducted for Moocnatc Fees. < Our orricc is Opposite U. S. PatentOrncc 'and ire can secure patent m less tune loan those] [remote from Washington. ■ _ , i Scad model, drawing or photo., with descrip-' 'tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of] [charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. , i a Pamphlet, “ How to Obtain Patents,” with' 'cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries; [sent free. Address, C.A.SNOW&CO

( VPAX1ED—FAITHFUL MEN or WOMKil* ' ’ to tr»T»! lor reaponalble established house tu Indiana. Satar^ rrst ard taper Position permanent. Reference. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. The Natio« pal. Star Insurance Building. Chicago. SO YEARS* EXPERIENCE. Book SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, eMuh^ llhurrsted, Unrest circulation «f _ IBe Journal, weekly,mouth*. Specimen copies and circulation at __ ^sSaiiaa OS Pat*xtb seat freeTAddnS"^ MUNN & CO., SSI Broadway, Mew York. Wanted-An Idea “s3 Protect yonr Meat; they may brtwr yon wealth _«: they may bring J«--EDDERBCRN A Co" Pateat Attorn aey a. Washington. D. C.. for their $1.80) print ottm nod list of two hundred LarenUoaa wanted. TXT ANTED—FAITHFUL MEN or WOMEN *' to traeel lor responsible established house In Indiana. 8alary *7» and ex'ernes. Position permanent. Reference. Enclnan arIf-addressed aiampe I enrelope. Th* Nalien “H1* ‘tvif Iuhttraooo Bulldta*. Obiaaaav.