Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 February 1888 — Page 3
Have You Heard "What Ayer's Cherry Pectoral has done and is doing for thousands in the cure of Colds, Coughs, Pneumonia, Bronchitis, and even Consumption ? For this class of complaints, Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral stands far ahead of all other specifics. George W. Diet, of Newton, Mass., says: “Two years ago I took a severe cold', which, being neglected, was followed by A Terrible Cough. I lost flesh rapidly, had night sweats, and was soon confined to my bed. A friend advised the use of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. I began to take this medicine and, before finishing the first bottle, was able to sit up. Four bottles effected a perfect cure.’’ Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, Prepared byDr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mau. Boid by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, *6. Don't! Doij'tl DON’T continue to suffer from the many ailments brought on by an impure state of the blood when Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla will restore perfect health and physical strength. Use it, and you use the best blood purifier and tonic that medical science is able to produce. It cures Scrofula, King’s Evil, Erysipelas, Boils, Pimples, Sore Eyes, Pains in the Bones, Joint-aches, Syphilis and Syphilitic Symptoms, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Costiveness, Saltrheum,Weak Kidneys, Liver Complaints, Female Irregularities, Sick and Nervous Headaches, General Debility, Low Spirits, Loss of Appetite, Chronic and Constitutional Disorders, and as a Spring and Fall Medicine, as a Cleanser and Renewer of the entire system, Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla is far better than any other remedy made. W GOIWGOIHft! What is more grating to the ears and saddening to the hearts of loving friends who thus behold their dearly beloved who have inherited consumptive tendencies approaching the brink of an early grave! What effort can be counted too great, what exertion too severe that will give to all such suffering ones a new lease of life I And yet the way isopen. Dr. Wiatar’s Balsam of Wild Cherry will give satisfaction when all else fails. Keep a bottle always in the house; a single dose will relieve a painful fit of coughing. JOHN D. PARK & SONS, Proprietors, Cincinnati, O. 1 IT ISA purelyvesetable preraraiiqn M SENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU SMpWD OTHEH EqJJAUY EFFICIENT REMEDIES a M It has stood the Test of Years, JtM.ih Curing all Diseases of the BTOM. ACH, KIDNEYS,BOWELS, &o. It Purifies the MCU r’ ll ßlood ’ Invigorates and ' TA AanAL ■ Cleanses the System. ’ BITTERSj| DYSPEPSIA,CONSTICURES I PATION, JAUNDICE, NLLDISEASESOFTHE i SICKHEADACHE.BILT IVFR |IOUSCOMPLAINTS,&c 1., ™J, iirZ- 1 disappear at once under KIDNEYS I its beneficial influence. STOMACH I It la purely aMelicine I AND Has its cathartdtproper J r* Htios forbids iti use as a il3 Qlnf ELS. | beverage. lilspleas- ■ 'XZcTAA N ant to the tas(, and as h easily taken ty ohildgren as adults. ALLDRUGGISTSIh prickly ash bitters co ELY’S Qatar r H Cream BalmaggrewS Olea nses the trtl Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and “CADI Restores theHb*' / Sense of Taste |M and Smell, Try the Cnre. A particleis applied UAV a PF VF D into each nostril and " Bm.v EuFfc is agreeable. Price CO cents at druggists: by mail, registered, 60cents. ELY BROTHERS. 285 Green wieh Street, New Y’ork. JkWell Drills /I VA FoB Ever* Purpose / J PX ?QLD 0N trial. A■ \ 1 A_3k A Investment a i small, profa I ls\JN> ite large, ar I Send 20c .for L?* & /I B mailing ggfe, u ~ large llliwtrated Catalogue with fuU l ,artlcnlars - > EK Manufactured bv ®IHgOULDS& AUSTIN, 167 4 169 LAKE ST. BmMMmB CHIC AGO, ILLINOIS DCMQIMIC t 0 Roldlen and Heirs. L.BINGruHvlUno HAM. Attorney Washington, D.C i
WARRIORS AGAINST WHISKEY.
<is Gossip. A bout the Temperance Agitation and its Early A dvocates. New York Graphic. The crowd at the up town hotels' last night was larger and more cosmopolitan than usual. Congress adjourned over yesterday afternoon until Monday, and many of the statesmen had left the Capital early in the morning and hurried over to New York to spend a couple of days away from office-hunters and cates of legislation. There were Semtors, lobbyists, Representatives and men with claims and hobbies—the usual melange that fills the corridors of the big Washington hotels during the Congressional season. Strangely enough the question which seems to agitate the Republican brethren most in forecastings is the stand they must take with reference to the temperance agitation, and the discussion last night brought out some old reminiscences of the early struggles for the formation of a party to fight the rum power. “Just look at our Harry Hardwick Faxon, for instance,” said a Maseachusetts Congressman last night,who comes from quite a prohibition district, without being strictly prohibitory himself; “Harry is one of the most ardent advocates of rooting out beer and even light wines, yet I can remember when the shrewd and genial Quaker made a big fortune out of the sale of ardent spirits. And he has never thrown the fortune away on account of the source from which he drew it. Daring war times Harry saw that a tax was soon to be placed on whisky, and the good temperance man bought several thousand barrels of whisky and ram and held them for the expected advance. Lt came and Harry has been a rich man and a strong temperance advocate ever since.” George West, who represents the Saratoga district of this State in Congress, is a jolly, big girthed fellow who came over here from England years ago and made a fortune. He is not by any means an enthusiastic temperance man, but he is a good party man and will follow where the leaders indicate. It is a rather curious fact that in his district, in the county more famous than all other counties in this country for water, Saratoga, the first regularly orgarized temperance society in America was formed. In the little village of Moreau, not far from the famous springs, in the district school house, the first meeting was held. The Rev. Lebbeus Armstrong, who was an old-time preacher up in that section, and who was a good deal of a horny handed reformer in his way, and Dr. Billy jClarke, who was one of the men that had ofttimes fallen from grace and seen the outside of the church, only to be admitted again, were the pioneers in the movement. It was in the fall of 1808, and there were not more than a dozen present of the hundred who attended the meeting that were in favor of absolute temperance, not to mention prohibition, which was then an unthought of question. Another peculiar feature of the gathering was that one oi the elements which later on grew to be the greatest power for good in the cause was sedulously and emphatically shut out of the little school house. No women were admitted to the meeting, and when half a dozen of them so far forgot the prescribed bounds of their sphere as to take their knitting work, and from the vestibule of the school house listen to the discussions of their fathers, hnebands and sons, the Rev. Dr. . 'y - . Armstrong sallied forth from the meeting,and with virtuous indignation drove them back to their pots and pans. - Time slipped along, and the temperance movement gathered strength very slowly. Indeed, the failure to take any radical ground on the question was a marked feature of the early agitation. Not only was there a wide liberality of feeling towards occasional drinkers, but as an evidence of how small thought was given to prohibition in those days it was mentioned by one of the statesmen last night who hails from Massachusetts that the first reformers built a brewery in Boston for the accommodation of the temperance people. The movement was in the commencement really a protest against excessive whiskey drinking, rather than a cry against the use of any liquor whatever. In 1898 the first National Convention of the advocates of temperance was held in Independence Hall, Philadelphia,and over four hundred people were present and twenty States represented—not a woman was among the delegates. Three years later another National meeting was held in Saratoga, and then, for the first time, a woman walked down the aisle of the little church where the gathering had assembled and took her place among the men who had come to advocate the new ism. It was the beginning of a new era,and the presence of that"brave-eyed little woman helj ed the convention in framing the first resolution ever passed in America pledging themselves to labor for the adoption of the principle of total abstinence from intoxicating drinks as beverages. r ' 1 - This woman, wbo waß tha first one that ever sat in a temperance convention, was Elisa Trimble; the daughter of Governor Trimble, of Ohio
who was one of the pioneers in the agitation against whisky. Nearly thirtyseven years after, when Eliza had long laid aside any ambition to shine in conventions and had her hands full of the cares thrown around her by the family she had raised and educated, another effort ’to trample down the whisky business and root out the saloon called the little woman out for another effort in the old cause that still held a warm place in her heart. She lived at Hillsboro in Ohio, where she had married Judge Johnson, who loved his generous tipple and let his good wife do the temperance act for the entire family. When that wonderful women’s crusade began in the West the little lady put herself at the head of it, and during all the months of its agitation, until it faded away in utter failure, she led the praying and singing bands throughout the State. She is alive yet, but the good Judge has put down his foot, and the gentle lady must sing and pray in front of saloons no more. In the early and perhaps toward a somewhat later period in the agitation of the question many of the reformers had peculiar notions about their duties to themselves and the men they were trying to turn away from whisky drinking. .
A Cute Yankee in Morocco.
One very good story is told by Mr. Radford illustrating the “go-ahead” character of the American, says the Liverpool Mercury. There is only one machine mill at Morocco. It belongs to an enterprising citizen of the United States named Cobb. Its erection was utterly illegal. The prejudice against the machinery among English hand loom weavers. Mr. Cobb’s application for the authorization of his mill was rejected, The prime minister would not bearpit, the saltan absolutely forbade the new fangled method of grinding corn. Mr. Cobb, however, went right ahead. He built his mill, he put in his machinery. Only one finishing touch was necessary. The grinding stones were duly delivered at the wharf. But this gave the authorities their opportunity and they calmly impounded them. It was useless going to the Moorish government, so Mr. Cobb applied to the United States representative. He got a formal reply advising him that since the prime minister and tjie sultan had both forbidden the execution of the project it would be idle for him to expect any assistance from .the formal representative of the United States. That letter was all that Cant. Cobb needed. He took it to the local authorities, who had his grinding stones in charge, and asked them if they could read English. “No!” “Then read this,” cried Captain Cobb. There were the arms of the United States; there was an undoubted official signature; and Capt. Cobb said he was going “straightahead” with his mill. Nobody knew what complications might ensue if this determined American were disappointed. The stones were given up, the mill was finished, and the next time the sultan came that way he sent all his corn to be ground by machinery.
Sherman on Grant at Spotsylvania, In the February Century General Sherman contributes an article on “The Grand Strategy of the War,” from which we quote the following: “With the month of May came the season for action, and by the 4th all his armies were in motion. The army of Butler at Fort Monroe was big left, Meade’s army /he center, and Sherman at Chattanooga his right. was to move against Richmond on the south of James River, Meade straight against Lee, intrenched behind the Rapidap, and Sherman to attack Joe Johnston and push him to mid beyond Atlanta. This was as far as human foresight could penetrate. Though Meade commanded the Armj of the Potomac, General Grant substantially controlled it, and on the 4th of May, 1864, he crossed the Hamdan, and at noon next day attacked Lee. He knew that a certain amount of fighting, ’killing,’ had to be done to accomplish his end, and also to pay the penalty of former failures. In the ‘wilderness’ there was no room for grand strategy, or even minor tactics; oat the fighting was desperate; the losses to the Union army being, according to Phiaterer, 17,737, to the Confederate loss of 11,400 the difference due to Lee’s retrenchments and the blind nature of the conn try in which the battle was fought. On the night of May 7th both parties paused, appalled by the fearful slaughter; but General Grant commanded ‘Forward by the left flank.’ That was, in my judgment, the supreme moment of his life: undismayed, with a full comprehension of theimpcrtance of the work in which he was engaged, feeling as keen a sympathy for his dead and wounded as any one, and without stopping to count his numbers, he gave his orders calmly, specifically, and absolutely—‘Forward to Spotsylvania.’”
It is a matter of surprise to many that Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and (Sarsaparilla will cure such a multitude of diseases. The reason is simple ehough. It is all Owing to the fact that this remedy is a perfect blood purifier, and a true strengthener of the urinary and digestive organs. When the blood and these are very few ills of life that can’ fasten themselves to either man or woman; Remember this and use the remedy whenever you fee Itmwell.
<Hhose -Aches down your jimbs Mean* RHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA • OR KINDRED ILLS ■ ffif IJHT Hi® Whither Are We Drifting? Young Husband (year 1900)—Well, did you succeed in getting a girl? Young Wife—Yes, I secured one finally, but oh, John, at such a cost. “What were the the terms?” “She is to receive SSO a week , if she doesn’t like you, but if she likes you I’m to get a divorce and let her have you.” ____________ To the Master Mechanics of Indiana I have been afflicted with rheumatism foi years. Last August became so bad that I was past doing any kind of work. I bad doctored and tried many different treatments, receiving but little benefit. Q. J. Noblitt.of the Crescent Drug Store, Columbus, Ind., advised me to try Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup, which I did, and it entirely cured me. I want to say to my friends, that I believe it to be the best medicine ever put up, both for rheumatism and as a blood purifier. S. Govld, Mechanic. Columbus, Ind., Nov. 14, 1887.
A Missouri Postmaster. ChieagoMail. A letter from Versailles, Mo., received at the Mail office yesterday, announces that the postoffice of that thriving burg is decorated with a placard bearing this strange device: Stamps &2 cents Stamps 1icked................ ......................BR3 cents Stamps licked aad stuck 1 cents
AN IMPORTANT FACT.
An Easy Cure for Weak, Tired and Nervous Feelings. Persons complain that they are weak, tired and exhausted; that they have no appetite, no strength, no life or ambition to work; they become irritable, cross, blue and discouraged; in cases there are pains and aches in various parts of the body, and there is often indigestion, dyspepsia; belching of wind, dull head and general dispirited feeling. Sleepless, restless and wakeful nights follow. Neglect of these symptoms result in excessive nervous prostration or paralysis, with numbness, trembling, cold feet and legs, prickling sensations and weakness and weariness of the limbs. Thousands become prostrated, paralyzed and insane by neglecting the first symptoms, not knowing that the nervous irritability, gloom of the mind, loss of memory, nervous weakness and depression show an exhaustion of nerve force which will, unless the proper restorative remedy is used, result in utter mental collapse and absolute prostration of nerve and physical power. Save yourselves from these terrible results while there is yet time by the use of that wonderful nerve invigorator and health restorer, Dr. Green’s Nervura Nerve Tonic. It is a purely vegetable remedy, and may be used by children or the most delicate invalids with absolute certainty of cure. Its effects are truly wonderful, and it is only necessary to use it to be convinced of its marvelous restorative and strength giving powers. Do not fail to use this remedy, for it is the greatest medical discovery of the century,- and an absolutely certain cure will result. All druggists keep it Price per bottle. Be sure and get Dr. Greene’s Nervura Nerve Tonic; take no other, for this remedy has no equal. If your druggist does not have it, he will get it for you. Its discoverer,Dr. Greene, 35 West 14th street, New York, the great specialist in curing nervous and chronic diseases, can be consulted free, personally or by letter. Use his great remedy and write him about your case.
SYKES' SURE CURE.
The Great Remedy tor Catarrh. The large number of certificates receiveed of the virtues of this preparation in the treatment of this unpleasant disease, abundantly attested its efficacy. It is without a rival. It is the only medicine now on the market adapted to Catarrh that performs what promises and effects not only speedy relief but a permanent cure. * Unlike many nostrums now before the public, it does not dry up temporarily the nasal discharges, but eradicates the producing cause, tbps leaving the system in sound and healthy condition. Ask your druggists for a bottle of 8 vkes’ Cure for Catarrh and you will be healed of the malady. _ mors, Pimples, Flesh Worms, Bine Worms, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Frosted Feet. Chilblains; Itch, Ivy Polson,'Barber's Itch. Scald Head, Eczema. 50c. Druggists or mall. E. 8. Wells, Jersey City. N. J.
< EXCHANGE MULWs. A fitting tribute—paying pour tailor’s bill z An air of newness—A one-day-oid baby. * ; Made out of hole cloth—porous plasters. Get money if you want to get] anything else. Patriotism is the fertilizer on the field of politics. Offen w’en de chile craves sweets,-hit needs bitters. A bald-headed man is a victim of hair breadth escapes. Blessed is the hand that prepares pleasures for a child. A chance acquaintance—One made at the gambling table. Yo’ kin fin’ a’mos’ any ’scuse in de law es yo’ kin pay fo’ de search.
THE SUNNY SOUTH. FROGS SINGING IN JANUARY-NAR-KY BLIZZARD. A Farmers’ Paradise Needing Northern Skill and Enterprise. Your correspondent has had a rather novel experience here in this old battle scared section. It is the latter part of January, and he hears the frogs singing all night long in the meadows, as if they thought it was May instead of January. The tnermometer stands 60® in the shade. One has to make a decided effort to realize that the blizzard is still roaming over the Northwest, and that in New England the severest enow storm in years has just passed. What would our Northern farmers say or think if they were here to see the agriculturalist making for spring planting? Yet I have just met an intelligent farmer here who habitually plants Irish potatoes in February.
This section of the fertile Tennessee Valley ought to be a farmer's paradise, as its climate is neither too hot nor too cold; its seasons are long enough to enable the farmer to raise two crops tn the safne land each season, and the variety of crops that can be raised here is greater than in any section of country I was ever in. There seems to be nothing that can be raised in the North that will not grow here readily, and many things that the northern farmer has only heard of are commonly raised here, such as the sweetpotato, cotton, the peanut,and many other similar productions. In spite of the fact that nature has done so much for this section, farming is in a very backward state. The farmers have continued to raise cotton, as the principal product, and have grown poorer year by year at it If northern farmers would dome down here and buy these improved fanning ‘lands that can be had now for ten dollars to twenty-five dollars per acre, and introduce improved systems of agriculture, the country would blossom like the rose. I am pleased to see that northern people are rapidly coming in here. In this city over half the population are from the North, most of them have come within a year, and I have yet to find one that is dissatisfied, or that is not enthusiastic about the Tennessee valley as a place of residence for northern people. This place is one of the most wonderful in many respects that I have ever seen, A year ago it was a sleepy old southern town, or village, of about 1.200 people; was dilapidated and discouraged, and had a general dead and alive aspect. Now it is a bustling little city of nearly 7,000 people, with car works, foundries and blast furnaces, machine shops, saw mills, planing mills, bridge works, an ice factory, electric lightsand street cars, and all the improvements that make a northern city. No less than thirty manufacturing enterprises have been started here within the last year. many of them of great magnitude. AH this enterprise and all this development has been set in motion by the genius and foresight of one man—Major Gordon—the brother of the present Governor of Georgia. It was Major Gordon who organized the Decatur Land Improvement Company, and who is its President, and under the auspices of this company a 'most wonderful development is-in progress. In my next letter I shall give your readers some of the particulars of this interesting place. W. E. T. Ala., Jan. 20, 1888. —
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried tor Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. - : / Consumption Surely Cured. To the Editor:—Please inform yo,ur readers that I have a positive remedy tor urn abovenamed disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to s»nd two bottles of my remedy free t > any of your readers who have qOnsump tion If they will send me their Exnrees and P. O. addresses. Respectfully. T. A. BICCUM. M. C.. 181 Pearl St., N. Y—LOOK YOUNG, prevent tendency to wrinkles or ageing of the skin by using Lbaubell* OnPreserves a youthful, plump, fresh condition of the features. A transparent, alabaster skin. 11.00. Druggists or exp. E. S. Wells. Jersey City. N. J, MANCE, 'Jails. Scratches, Cracked Heel. Tlirueh, and all diseases of the feet and irritations of the Skin of horses and cattie quickly and permanently cured by the use of Veterinary Carbolia'alve. 50c. and tl at Drunuista
Prepare for Spring It Is none toexrly to begetting ready lor spring, and the first thing that should receive attention is your own system. It you have not been well during the winter, have been troubled with scrofula, salt rheum, or other humors of the blood, you should purify the blood by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. You will then escape that l.idescribable tired feeling which Is so prostrating and often so unaccountable in the spring months. Take Hood’s Saunparilla before 11 is too late. “I taae Hood's Sarsaparilla for a spring medicine, and I find it just the thing. It tones up my system and makes me feel like a different man. My wife takes it for dyspepsia, and she derives great benefit from it.” Frank C, Turner, Hook & Ladder No’. 1, Friend Street, Borton. “ Hood’s Sarsaparilla r r Sold by all druggists It - six for IS. Prepared only by C. H. HOOD & CO, Lowell. Maas. 100 Doses OnetDollar "ROUGH ON RATS,” for rats, mice, bugs. 15c. "Rough on Catarrh.” Only absolute cure. 50c. “ROUGH ON CORNS.” Hsrd or soft coms. 15c. “BOUGH ON TCOTHACHE.” Instant relief.. 15b. Prickly Ash Bittkbs warm up and invigorate the stomach, improves and strengensthe digestive organs, opens the pores, promotes perspiration, and equalizes the circulation. As a corrector of disordered system there .is nothing to ejual it ' ITCHING PICKS. Symptoms- Moisture: Intense itching and sting ing; most at night; worse by scratching. If allowed to continue tumors form, which often bleed and ulcerate, becoming vo-y sore. Swayni’b Ointment stens the Itching and bleeding, heals ulceration, and in many cases removes the tumors. It is equally efficacious in curing all Skin Diseases. DR. SWAYNE & SON, Proprietors, Philadelphia. Swaynb’s Ointment can be obtained ol druggists. Rent by mall for 60 cents. ROUGH ON PILES. Quick, comp lete cure. 5Cc BUCHU-PAIBA, Great Kidney Remedy. 11. WELIjS’ HEALTH RENEWER for weak men! WELLS’ HAIR BALSAM. If gray, gradually w Stores color etegant tonic dressing. 50c. Dr. 8. Owens, of the firm of 8. Owens 4 ZB ■ tion gives more satls&ctlon than any ■ other Cough medicine. I prescribe it ■ In my practice in all cases of Lung ■ and Bronchial trouble.’’ I I 500,000 TIMBER acres i junei OF FIRST-CLASS 1-miMVI In Northern Wisconsin __ Will be sold at #5 OO an sere, on long time, to Actual Settlors. Rich soil—healthful climate—good drinking water- fine market facilities—steady demand for labor and good wages. Purcha-e now and have choice of lands. Fulfinformation, with maps, pamphlet, etc., furnished FREE. Address - LAND COMMISSIONER, . W. C. R R-, Milwaukee, Wis. «f prescribe and fully en>rse Big C as the only lecific fort ho certain cure ' this disease. _ . H. IItfGRAHAM.M. D., Amsterdam, N. Y. We have sold Big G so. mny years, and It has given the best of satistaction. D. B. DYCHE4CO., Chicago, BL 1.00. Bold by Druggists. I CURE FITS! When I say cure I do not mean merely to stop them for a time and then have them return again. I mean a radical cure. I have made the disease ot FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life-long study. I warrant my remedy toyure the vorst cases. Because others have failed is nogeason for not now receiving a cure. Send at once fat a treatise and a Free Bottle of my infallible remedy. Give Express and Poet Office. H. G. BOOT, M. C.. 183 Pearl New York. O s dpoa DIEI nIF LEo Msa Jenruy > Braham Gun AOMIS WANTED | * W BSo great 11 oar faith we cu cure you, dm! H fl WJ MR ■ ■•uff>'rer,wewiUn>anem>ughU>oonvftM»,L2l3l B. 8. lae»t>u> * Co.. Mewuk.M.A Business uhiversitv’ INDIANAPOLIS, IND. ■ Established 37 years. Bert place to secure " a thoroughly practical and sound Business and Shorthand MH-e-erwin Caralova. «nrt Onmmer-<m 'Tn.r-ot, Feme. DATENTS Procured, Prompt Attention; r Good Wort: Fair Charges. Particulars free. CHAS. L. COOKE, 938 F. St. Washington, D C. J'l A ATTreated and cured without the V Alt V r’s Itknife. Book on treatment sent’ free. Address F.L.POND.M.D. Aurora,Kane Co.IU. By return rpail. Full Deaeriptiosi So BK S* Moedy’a Ne* Tailor System of l>re« IF KB I I All CutUag. Moony a JO.. Cincinnati, a. nD TTTIUTHwrPiiIMe Habit Cured In ICto V7T LU IYI3O day a. No pay tUI eared. Dr. J. Stephens. Lebanon Ohio. Drn r I DTfor making Silver Polish Enamel, 10 nLULI I I ets. (silver). J. J. Moran,Salem .Mass. DlLrfliTQ obtained "byE? BINGHAM, Pat ■ HI CN I d ent Attorney, Washington. Dl C. IM D •: - ■ 8 -NS IMPWo When -writing to Advertisers readers will ooator a favor by meo—o-ivig this Paper UnWPßTCPr.BKßreaOurinoesMsCTttqn.bvgG nUUfrom BBYAMT’«nsrisswCsils«eßn«*ls.».Y - . < ' i '
