Pike County Democrat, Volume 30, Number 17, Petersburg, Pike County, 1 September 1899 — Page 3
COMFORT FOR STOCK. Rafebiag Post Placed Here aad Tkcra ta Skadeles* Paatnrea Will Save the Peace*. In pastures where there are no trees or underbrush, stock will often rub against fences, causing considerable Injury, particularly if the fences are made of rails or boards. If rubbing posts are provided this will be obviated to a certain extent, and the stock given considerable comfort. Two con
FORM OF THE RUBBING POST. ▼enient forms are shown in the illustration. The one at a is simply a post 't set in the ground at an angle, and the ; one at b consists of two posts with a top piece. One of these posts must be considerably higher than the other, so • that the upper piece will slope. The ; posts must be set firmly in the ground j and the top piece mortised in; other- j wise it will be broken off.—S. C. Millie^ j In Orange Judd Farmer. THE SPARROW HAWK. Investigation Proves Tliat the Farm* ' er Has No Better Friend Than This Perseeated Bird, -• ' | In many sections the sparrow hawk is recognized as a trufe friend of the . farmer, though in others it is included in the general warfare waged by farm- ! ers and sportsmen against hawks of ; all descriptions. The value of the spar- j row hawk lies in his habit of feeding on small rodents; He is a rapacious bird, and destroys great num^rs of these farm pests; also grasshoppers. Farmers are slow to appreciate the • value of birds ofLprey. If one young ! chicken is devoured by a hawk a year, the whole race is condemned and no ! account taken of the 500 mice and ’ young rats he may eat during that ’ period. Mr. W. B. Hall, of Wakeman, O.. was county clerk while the Ohio j hawk law was in force, and he issued 46 j "bounty certificates for sparrow hawks, j He examined their stomachs.and found them all to contain the remains of grasshoppers, beetles and meadow mice; not one held any signs of ehickens. The investigations of the department of agriculture are more conclusive yet, showing hundreds of mice against every chicken.
WITH A LESSON. Ho?v a Tramp's Politeness Wap Awakened by the Sight of a . Model Creamery. l I will relate an amusing incident 1 saw happen in a creamery 1 visited a short time ago, writes G. B. Lawson in Creamery Journal. The creamery was as clean and "neat as any could be. There was not a speck of dirt on the floor or abou+ any of the machinery. The door opened and a tramp cam" in with muddy boots on. It was rainy at the time. He made one step on the inside and stopped, as soon as he saw the condition of the room, looked at his muddy feet, took off his hat and apologized for coming in in such a hurry with so much mud on his feet. If that creamery had been dirty and grimy, as some are, that tramp would not have stopped at the door and apologized, but would have gone in and gotten the buttermilk he wanted without looking at his feet. Brother Buttermalcer, do you keep your creamery so clean that a tramp will stop at the door, take off his hat and offer an apology for coming in? If not, try it and see what a difference it will have on the looks of the place, and also on the quality of the product made. Crescent Cnrculio Mark. Wherever a fruit is stung by the curculio a crescent-shaped mark is left that gradually deadens the portion of . fruit inclosed, so that the sap will not j flow so freely. This deadening of the I fruit will extend to the stem and loosen its hold. Inside this cresceht mark th" curculio egg will be found. It used to be supposed that the curculio could not lay its eggs without making this mark. It does not at least, but the two operations are entirely separate. Instinct teaches the “little trick” to deaden the skin in order to stop the flow of juices,* which might flood and destroy the egg she is about to lay. This deadening of the sMn causes the fruit to ripen prematurely, so that when the egg hatches the worm has ripened instead of green fruit to feed upon.
Germs in the Fore-Milk. With regard to the number of germs, present in the fore-milk, Prof. Harrison found that in the first few strains of j-' milk removed from the teats they varied from 18,000 to 54,000 per cubic centimeter; while the numbers present In the remainder of the milk amounted to only from 890 to 4,800 per cubic centimeter. These figures clearly demonstrate how important it is that the first/ few drops of milk from each teat should be milked into a separate receptacle and subsequently thrown away, and should on no account be mixed with the bulk of the milk.
I ROADS NEED REPAIRS. A Connecticut Low Wisely Provides That They Should Be had* Whenever Heeessnry. As the state is preparing* to spend nearly $200,000 a year for road improvements, including the salary and expenses of the commissioner and deputies, it is not only fit but absolutely necessary that provision should be made for keeping the roads so improved in good condition. Experience shows that many towns will not do this. From carelessness or parsimony they allow what has been made a good road to deteriorate from the moment the original work was completed, and nothing deteriorates much more . promptly than a neglected highway, i If the state has paid half or two-thirds the cost of the improvements it has am- ! pie ground for requiring that the towns it has aided shall use proper diligence to retain and continue the benefits of the spate’s contribution. In this sense the clause in this year’s5 bill which directs the commissioner to see that proper repairs are made from time to time is the most important feature in it. It is founded in both justice and
economy. That the danger of neglect is no idle fancy is known to all who have looked into the results of road-building in Connecticut thus far, but it is opportune to quote a few lines from the Ansonia Sentinel on the subject because that excellent paper illustrates the position from the experience of its own bailiwick. It says: “This will compel the repairing of the roads which, owing to neglect and inefficiency, are fast be- ! coming worthless, such as the road ; in Ansonia and Derby, laid two or more .years ago.” Towns will have to remember that it is one thing to build roads because they can have half or two-thirds cr threequarters of the cost paid by the state, and quite another thing to undertake i the responsibility of creating and i maintaining good roads. -The former ' phrase has described the situation ! thus far. Towns have been urged to j vote roads so as to get “their share of j the state appropriation.” They could buy a road for half price or less, and so they were ready to do it. But every road builder knows that money - so j spent is wasted unless a contin- J ual annual outlay follows *t. Von j might as well buy a steam en« j gine and try to run it without ! constant care as to build a good I road and leave it alone. Under the ; old system some roads have been built | which would not have been touched if j the condition for proper maintenance j had accompanied the appropriation. ‘ No community which" will not keep up j its roads after it gets them cares j enough about good roads to be helped { in obtaining them.—Hartford Times. RELIABLE BRAKE BLOCK. ■____ i Used with Success by the Tenmatera in the Mi)outslnoas Regions of the Northwest.
A three-cornered block (a) of wood i is fastened by chains or wired to the ! brake beam of a wagon so that it will j drag on, the ground about two inches j behind one of the rear wheels of the j
EFFECTIVE BRAKE BLOCK. wagon. The driver stops to rest his-! team, and instead of applying the j brake, the team is allowed to slacken j* its t>*arc.es.so the weight of the load will i rest on the self-acting chock block, j When the team starts again the team ! merely has to start the load instead j of having to pull against the brake un- j til it can be loosened.—Orange Judd Farmer. 11 # FRESH DAIRY NOTES. When milk is to be taken to the creamery do not mix the milk of the night and the morning even if it will save the use of one ean. The milk cow must be kept clean; the milkers must be clean at milking time; and the vessels in which the milk Is put must be clean at all times. Do not aerate the milk in the stable or in the lee o^ the stable. The air in which the milk is aerated must be' pure, else the milk in being aerated will suffer more harm than the aeration will do good. Milk for the creamery must be milk in its proper condition. The farmer that has permitted his milk to get into bad shape had better feed it to his hogs or poultry than attempt to haul it to the creamery where it will be likely to spoil a hundred other batches of milk.—Farmers’ Review. The Boiled Butter Bulaen. One of the worst and most insidious enemies of good cream butter is process or “boiled” butter. When butter becomes so bad and rancid as to be absolutely worthless for any purpose, it is melted to its original oil, treated with alkaloids, freed from volatile oil, re-crystalized, and then churned with •our milk to freshen it. This produces a thoroughly renovated and it is claimed wholesome butter with a g-xxl body which will easily show a butter fat content of 80 per cent. From a standpoint too of chemical analysis, it cannot be considered adulterated nor an imitation. The only protection the producers of good frfesh butter have is to insist that this manufactured prodset shall be sold as renovated or boiled butter.—Journal of Agriculture.
A PASSPORT IN MISSOURI Vkea a Straaater Sajra “Cora Paae* the Host Replies “’Light aad Comte “I read something in the Sun the other day, taken from a Richmond paper, about the decline and fail of corn bread in the south,** said a man from Missouri to a Sun reporter. The Missourian continued his remark in an aggrieved manner: “I haven't betn down south for a good many years, but if it has gone back on corn bread you may expect to hear of niggers going back on watermelon. Out in old Missouri corn bread, old-fash-ioned, sure-enough pone, is still served in the best families. In some of the first-class hotels of that state they put corn pone under the head of dessert. I reckon you know that there is also the -corn dodger, and then there is the hoecake, and then there is the ashcake— all made out of cornmeal. But the corn pone is the piece de resistance. When a„stranger goes into a Missouri house and says he likes corn bread, ’specially corn pone, the cockles of the heart of the Missourian warm toward that stranger at once. It comes jpighty nigh being a passport to the best society in my state. ‘T know of one man who was made to feel very much at home by his familiarity with corn bread and its habits in a Missouri home at a time when he was very much under suspicion. He had been sent to investigate a matter by his superior. He arrived at the bouse at a late hour. The folks had gone to bed. He aroused them by hallooing from the road. When the man of the house appeared and called off
the dogs he asked the stranger what he •wanted. The stranger was not just as satisfactory in his reply as was desired, and the man of the house told him he had better go further up the road for entertainment for himself and beast. The stranger had his reasons for wanting to stay at the house where he had just made his call. He said it was prettj- hard when a Missourian couldn't find shelter in any Missouri home where he made application. The man of the house asked him: “‘Are you.a Missourian?’ “When the stranger replied he hau that honor, the man of the house kind, o* hesitated, and then asked: ‘Have you got any credentials?’ “ ‘Have you got any corn bread?’ asked the stranger. “ ‘What kind?’ was the query. “ ‘Pone,’ was the reply. “ ‘Light and come in,’ was the hospitable invitation. “When the stranger was in the house the Missourian apologized for keeping his guest without the gate so long by explaining that there were a good many peddlers about the country, and he was 'particular as to whom he admitted. “ ‘I don't want you to feel any uncertainty about me,’ said the stranger, ‘and to- convince you that I am a Missourian and entitled to your hospitality, I can tell you right where that corn bread is kept. I’ll bet I can find it in the dark, it’s in the skillet in the lower part of the kitchen cupboard and the milk that goes with it is out in.the springhouse in the back yard.’ “The Missouri host extended his hand to the stranger, and, shaking the latter’s hand earnestly, he* said: ‘You could come mighty nigh getting into our lodge without the grip or the sign.’ “That was an actual experience, and when you are in Missouri and want to be taken care of in the proper way, just you call at any Missourian’s home and say ‘corn pone.’ ”—X. Y. Sun. FRENCH LAW. Hoif Complication* Arising from Ex. changing Wive* Are Untangled.
A law suit arising out of a very complicated conjugal situation has just been decided by the Paris courts. In 1SS6 M. and Mme. Dutoe were neighbors of M. and Mme. Gertron. M. Dutoc laid successful siege to Mme. Gertron’s affections. His wife informed M. Gertron, who persuaded her that retaliation was the best revenge. The situation lasted six months, when suddenly all was discovered. No altercation ensued. The two husbands simply exchanged wives and signed a contract engaging not to take any legal measures. A year later, however, they arranged for police raids on each other, anA, after much difficulty, due to “the unworthiness of the plaintiffs,” both succeeded in getting divorces. Then M. I^utuc married Mme. Gertron, and M. Geriron married Mme. Dutuc. All this time the four were" on perfectly friendly terms. They remained so until other questions arose. In the matrimonial reshuffle M. Gertron kept his own two children, and took in the three of his new wife. Lately he claimed half the cost of keeping the whole five from M. and Mme. Dutuc. M. Dutuc, he pointed out, was the father of three of them, and Mme. Dutuc (ex-Mme. Gertron) mother of the two others. The amount claimed for the two years during which he kept and educated the five children was 47,000 francs. M. Gertron has lost his case. The court declared that the Dutucs owe nothing to the Gertrons, because the obligation of parents to bring up their children is not an in solido obligation. Consequently, the parent who has alone discharged th£ obligation cannot afterward claim repayment from the otbei of half of 4fhe sum he or she had thus voluntarily disbursed.
1'IT-BITS. 100,000 Parisian gourmands dev pounds of analls daily. Three-tenths, of the earnings of Belgian convict are given to him on the expiration of his term of imprisjomnent. Some of them thus save more tfconey in jail than they ever saved before. Rouen, which was known to the Romans as Rotomagus, is- perhaps the richest of all the cities of France in medieval architecture. It has often been called the Manchester of France, on account of the importance of the cotton manufactures. j „ It is stated, ;in support of vaccination, that in Austria, prior to vaccination becoming general, out of e\ ery million inhabitants, 38,541 died of smallpox within a period of 30 y< ure reduced to one-tenth—ni 745—in the corresponding the general adoption of vacci The parliament building in ton. New Zealand, is the wooden building in the world.: lington, and some other New Zealand towns, almost every house is constructed of wood. Large churches, even, and important business premises are built of the same material. Cape Town enjoys a certain distinction in respect to the height of its constables. Police Constable Andrews is a veritable giant. His standard is six feet eight and one-half inches, and he is said to be the tallest policeman in South Africa. ’ Police Constable Lang figures next with six feet four and onehalf inches. There are five i^en ranging from six feet three inches to six feet four inches, three men between six feet two inches and six feet three inches, 12 men from six feet one inch to six feet two inches and Iff? between six feet and six feet one inch, WHAT THE LAW DECIDES. The right to read medical books to the jury for the purpose of proving the symptoms of diseases is denjied in Bixby vs. Omaha & C. B. R. & Co. (Iowa), 43 L. R. A. 533, although they are admitted to be standard books, Where they have not been referred to by witnesses whose testimony is to be cojntradicted bvthem. j
The acceptance by a defendant in a divorce suit, over whom no jurisdiction was obtained, of the deerep rendered and his remarrying are held in Hekking vs. Waff (C. C. A. 1st £.>, 43 L. R. A. CIS, insufficient to stop him from'Sisputing the validity of a subsequent ex parte proceeding in the divorce suit by which the judgment is opened and a decree for alimony entered against him. An injunction against thp construction and operation of an electric railway on a public street without legislative authority tsffenied in Birmingham Tracti<5n company vs. Birmingham R. & E. Co. £\la.), 43 L. li. AJ 233, on the ground the construction of the road worrfabe a mere private trespass for which compensation coc Id be had at law. The rule that freedom from contributory negligence must affirmatively appear and is not presumed is adhered .to in McLean vs. Perkins (Me. i, 43 L. R. A. 4S7, in case of the drown ing of employes while going to their work in an old punt with a crack in one side calked with waste and a part of qne end split off, when they were all drowned, and there is no evidence as to jthe cause or manner of such accident. FALL FASHION FANCIES A great velvet season is predicted. The miroir velvet will be again used by fine trade. j Old rose tones are among the novelty coverings for fall, and bid fair to have good measure of favor. The majority of feather ornaments are in natural colorings apd black and wbi+e. I
XHiS MARKeXS. CATTLE-Native Steers....» COTY ON—Middling .. FrOUr—Winter vi'fteat... WHEAT—No. 2 Red. CORN—No 2. ... OATS—No. 2. tOKK-New Mess. ST. JLOU1S. COTTON—Middung . BEEVES—Steers .. Cows and Heifers. CALVES—(per HO). HOGS—Fair to Choice.. SHEEP—b air to Choice.... Fro cr—Patents tnew).... Clear and Straight. WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter wORN—No. 2. OATS—No. 2. BYE—No. 2. TOBACCO—Lugs . Leaf Burley HAY—Clear Timothy (new) BUTTER—Choice Hairy... EGGS— eresh PORK—StandardMess(new) BACON—Clear Rib. LARD—Prime 5*.eam...„.. CHICAGO. CATTLE—Native Steers.... HOGS—Fair to Choice SHEEP—Fair to Choice.... FLOUR—Winter Patents... Spring Patents... WHEAT-r-No. a Suring. No. 2 Red.. CORN—No. 2.....i OATS—No. 2..E..... PORK—Mess (new) Now York. Aug. 28. 4 25, <ti $ 6 .... K) 2 2a (a 7a%® .... <a> s 76 w <ta '4* (g .. <U 22%«f 4 26 2 50 5 00 4 25 2 2a a r 2 75 72 2 GO 4 50 7 50 15 ti 8 «tf 12 © 0 'a <$» 9 4 50 4 25 2 60 2 60 2 40 KANSAS CITY. CATTLE-Native Steers.... HOGS—All Grades... WHEAT—No. 2 Red OATS—No. 2 White. CORN—No. 2 Mixed NEW ORLEANS. 71%@ 73V4<i! 7 00 4 75 4 00 70 23 29 8 26 25 9o 77% 40% 26 00 6 SO 26 00 90 m 60 26 7214 22!22% 58 50 00 50 17*a 1214 00 5% 5% 65 90 50 60 70 ' 72*474 23 8 21% 36 3 40 14 50 FLOUR-High Grade CORN—No. 2.. OATS—Western . HAY—Choice . PORK—Standard Mess.... BACON—Sides . COTTON—Middling LOUiSV WHEAT—No. 2 Red..L 70%@ CORN—No. 2 Mixed.L 32%% OATS—No. 2 Mixed.L 22 @ PORK—New Mess—,.[ 9 62%4i BACON—Clear Ribs.L COTTON—Middling .[ .... © 6 3 « & £ 15 I10 & 10 75 n 24 29% 90 42 29% 50 25 6% 5% 71% 33% 22% 75 r*
Ache IK» Vo»r Feet Shake into your shoes a powder for the feet. New Shoes feel Easy, ions. Swollen, Smarting, and Sweat ag Feet. All Store* sell it, 25c. Sampi dree*. Alien S. Olmsted, itn<t Ban? Allen’s Foot-Ease, It makes tight or Dares Corns, Bundo;, Callous, Sore, Jnggtsis and Shoe i sent FREE. AdLe Roy, X. Y. Sate. •1. think Dewey - _—, tan be trusted to a new admiral’s hiiirorm that suita She select__ him, don’t you? . He—Oh, yes* It isn’t rted man.-—Puck. t if he were a mar- * I Lane’s Family More: the bowels eacl be healthy this is necessi the liver and kidneys, ache. l*rice 25 and 50c. ledtelae. day. In order to y. Acts gently on Cures sick headPeople spend a tembie lot of time in getting mad, and. feeling sprrv for it.—Atchison Globe. F The Best Prescript Ion for Chills anil Ferer Is a bottle of Grove's Tasteless Chill Toxic. Itis simpliy iron and quinine in a tasteless form. Noetmf-nopay. Price, 50c. He—“I know better tlhan to propose to a girl I can’t get." She—"Do you?” He— “Yes; she might change her mind.’^—Town Topics.
TV Care a ftUjla Qae Bay Take Laxative Bromo duinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 23c. Burglars go on the principle of; helping themselves, and they dirn't go to jail, untu they can t help themselvjes.—lloiden Days. We have not been without Pisos Cure for Consumption for 20 Wars.—Lizzie Ferre!, Camp St., Harrisburg' Pa., May 4, *94. Man has his will—but woman has h*>r way. r-O. W. Holmes. Hall'i Catarrh Care Is taken Internally. Price 75c. » .1 Lying's a certain mark of cowardice.— Southern. -
An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of tlie well known ' remedy. Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fie SFeip Co., illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxative principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form ipost refreshing to tlie taste and acceptable to the system. It is the one perfect strengthening laxative, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome hahitual eonstipatiou permanently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and substance, and its acting on tlie kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. In the process of manufacturing figs are used, as thev^an; pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the California Fig Syrup Co. only. In order 15© get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. * SAN FRANCISCO. RAT. ! LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N. Y. For sale by all Druggists.—Price 50c per bottle.
“For six years 1 was a victim of d yspepsia in its worst form. I could cat nothing Out milk toast, and at timesmy stomach would not retain and digest'even that. Last March I oegan taking CASCARETS and since then I nave steadily improved, until I am as well as I ever was in my life.”! _ David M. Mckpht. Newark. O.
Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do 3ood, Never Siexeu. Weaken, or Gripe. JOc. 25c. 5Gc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Slrrtiag Rnwli Cviapaai. ,f Ueegw, koBtrnl, Sew Terk. 91 MO-TO-BAC Sold awl aunrantecd by all druggists tc ClIBE Tobacco Habit. 5000s of UNSOLICITED TESTIMONIALS SAY Permanently cures all Itching. Burning. Scatey. Scalp and Skin Diseases, such as Salt Rheum. Kesema. Scald Head.Chilblains. Piles. Burns. Baby Humors. Dandruff. Itching Scalp. Palling Hair (thickening and making it Soft. 8bky. and Luxuriant:*. Ail Face Eruptions producing a Soft. Clear. Beautiful Skin ana Complexion). It contains no. Dead. Sulphur. CantharIdes or anything injurious. An easy, great seller. Lady canvassers make ft to a* a day. Druggists or mail Me. Capillaris Manufacturing Co„ N. T. Address X. HILL lUNSFULD. AgCr 9L£.\ JUD6C. M. J. > MAHS.~fE tips ^
A Letter to Mrs. Health to Mr$> ArchamNi [tsrrzs to xs&. rixxtmm mo. *xag& ‘ Dear Mrs. Pisxha*—For lm» years I felt tired aads© weak and dixxy that some days I ■could hardly gw and: food pairs in the le eeorrb*** child I p«r much of tta toyonani of Lydia ML. tpound. around the house. . ache all the time and not digest and had s womb and troubled and kidneys were “After birth of weaker, and good you bad done, hare taken six Pinkham's Vl.^__ __-r- g, box of Lozenges, one box of Liver FQhw one package of Sanative Wash, and fcwday I am feeling as well as I ever dT When I get up in the morning I fed fresh as I did when a^giri and eat sleep well and do all of my work, ever I feel weak again shall where to get my strength. I your medicine cured me.’*—Mbs. Saxjous. ABCa^*BO, CdARLEMOST, Ma«, The present Mrs. Pinkham's experience in treating female ills is unparalleled; for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham *i»#. for sometime past has had sole ehaxgw of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women a year. All women who safw are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkbaaa at Lynn. Mass., for advice, which i be promptly given without charge. ATTENTION* COMRADES, art You Ready to Attend
IAMPMEIT * AND COf Tickets will bo on sale 4, 19»». Good to *6 not later than Sepiembt epon deposit of ticket u nut St., not earlier t han ft. 1399, ami payment of : at time of ttepo<, an c leave Philadelphia to a a leaving PbilndefeMai. iSlBt with proviso tfaaa Joint Agent, 1333 Cfcaa(h* pt. 5 nor later than Step*, ns of so cents per MettaaUsion of return lim&llm
fISB SUMP
POMMEL SLICKER
Keeps both rider and saddle perfectly dry Ib thie hardest storms. Substitutes wiltdisnppoint Ask for x&y? Fish Brand Pommel Slicker— It is entirely new. If not for sale is your town, wmtefor catalogue to A. J. TOWER, Boston. Mass.
W. L. DCUCLAS $3 & S3.50 SHOES
Worth $4 toSS i other makes. Indorsed by ov&r ^'1,000,000 w cares ALL LEATHERS, ALL STYLET TIKCkVUNUi.i.lt.l.* “ “ asa>« lad pri« ut I ■ 'Take no substitute ei tobe a« pood. ' Largest wak.es* H>t S3 and *3.30 shoe* t» tte world. Your dealer should trrp thetn—if bo*, we wtneesdvm
"apatron receipt or price ki Uiati of leather, size ami width, pl&ta or cap to , Catalogue B Free, W. L DOUGLAS5HQE CO.. Srccktcn, Kaos. —Ncso ho jrood. bat it costs more tbho the poorest. __- E ITfi P*n#aBr»«y Car*A No Bts or “II O ousm-.ss after first da/ s nse of Dr. Great NerTe Restore^- 'S3 trial bottle and t___ free. Cr.R-H.KiaNK. Ltd . set Arch St..Phii*^ JT*. READERS OF THIS PAPER DESIRING TO BUY ANYTHIN® ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMN* SHOULD INSIST UPON BAVINS WHAT THEY ASK FOR. REFUSING ALL SUBSTITUTES 03 IMITATIONS. A. N. K*—fifc — 1776 WHEN WHITING TO A9V1 thflt VAtl aoiw “w
SCHUHS mad! PILLS
