Rensselaer Republican, Volume 22, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 July 1890 — Page 3

IN THE POULTRY YARD.

HOW TO INPROVE COMMON FLOCKS. Classification is as indispensable in poultry as in other branches. First, we have the two classes, ornamental and useful. The first includes fowls kept more especially for the embellishment of one’s grounds, as the ornamental water fowls, pea fowls, the quaint Japanese bantams and in fact the whole list of bantams, exhibition games. &c.. &c. Under the class useful, and this is the one in which the average farmer is interested, are the three fairly well-defined varieties, table fowls, laying fowls and general purpose fowls. Now, farmers who make a side issue of poultry are often frightened out of any half formed plan they may have made to improve their flocks by the advocacy by poultry breeders and jourhals of fancy poultry, pure breeds and breeding by the standard. All this involves much more care and money than they can afford. Consequently they let the matter drop and the flocks are left to take care of themselves, which means a sure deterioration both among the flesh-forming and egg-producing birds. A profitable plan for those who are not handicapped with a flock of common poultry is systematic cross breeding, which, properly speaking, means the inter-breeding of two pure varieties. Farmers, however, who"possess a fairly good lot of common poultry may bring about excellent results by grading up the same, carefully culling out as fast as practicable old hens and dung-hill cocks. This done the next step is the crossing of the hens with cocks of some desirable breed. This will bring about in time most of the advantages of cross breeding. In a word, the result will be the same that is gained by introducing full-blood males among live stock. In making the seclection of a pure breed with which to cross the common stock, have an eye to the characteristics desired. For instance, if eggs are the chief object, select a breed famous for egg production. If the neighboring market requires large eggs, then one of the French or Spanish breeds will be in order. If the consumers are not critical as to size, the Hamburgs, which are persistent layers of small eggs, will do well, on the Leghorns, which have a high reputation as layers of medium-sized eggs. The Crevecours, which attain to large size and possess desirable table qualities, present a good cross, as do also the Houdans, where flesh is a consideration. The American breeds afford excellent general purpose fowls and are furthermore hardy and comparatively free from disease. .

THE PEKIN DUCK. me Fokin ducks, of which this country knew coin para Lively, littla Jif - teen years ago, are an important feature on many of the poultry farms in New Jersey and elsewhere, where the ducklings are raised by thousands every year. Indeed, the Pekin duck in some localities has decidedly lessened the production of chickens, the poultrymen claiming that there is more money in them than in broilers. The Pekin ducks are large and uniform in size, weighing at four months from ten to twelve pounds tor the pair. They are hardy, prolific and thrive without ponds, provided they have plenty to drink. —

PREPARE NOW FOR EGOS IN WINTER. A hen to be profitable, says one experienced poultryman, must lay at least 200 eggs in a year. It is generally conceded that a hen has seen her best laying days at two years of age; hence the wisdom of selling off these hens in the spring or early summer. ddse“ohservatldn will teach that many hens lay only every other day. These ought by all means to be disposed of, as they aro not profitable under ordinary circumstances. With eggs in view as the chief object the advice is given to dispose as early 'as possible of • the cockerels, old hens and surplus pullets. It need hardly be told that the enterprising poultry keeper selects the best pullets for his own flock and depends upon them for his winter layers. He brings them to maturity as early as possible with a view to their laying id the early fall. To insure eggs during the winter season, when they command best prices, these pullets are fed with egg producing food, and provided with warm but well ventilated quarters.

CLUCKS AND CACKLES. May hatched chicks are the best as individuals, and the entire hatch is one of greater excellence. Hens that cannot drink whenever they require it will not lay regularly, no naatter how well they are fed. The general purpose fowl is unques*, tionably the most popular. The American breeds are prized because they are general purpose fowls. The American standard of excellence recognizos only three breeds of American origin—the Plymouth Rocks, Wyandottes and old fashioned Dominiques. The oldest of the distinctive American breeds is the American Dominique. The Langsbaws are popular as fowls. Too much stimulating food causes over egg production. The result from such a course will he poor hatches, weak chicks and inferior stock.

KITCHEN HINTS.

If you will put a tin of water in the oven, your cake or meat will not burn. If you will heat your knife, you ean cut hot bread or cake as smoothly as cold. When cooking onions set a tin of vinegar on the Btove, let. it boil, and you will have no disagreeable smell. To afoid the odor that arises when boiling green vegetable*, boil them about five minutes, then cjrain off the *. \

* --- v ~-> —-- - . , * water and fill up the pot with fresh boiling water. A perceptible difference in the air of the kitchen will be the result. Be sure to keep your dish cloth clean, as some physicians claim diphtheria starts from using greasy dishcloths. To take the * -fishy” smell from your skillet after frying fish, put soap and water in the skillet and let boil for ten minutes. Take two large spools, drive large nails through them in the wall, about two inches apart, and hang your broom up, brush end up. When your old oil-cloth is dull and beginning to wear out, give « one or two coats of varnish. It will be pretty again, and wear much longer. Never put milk or butter in the cupboard where cooked cabbage, turnips or onions are. as the smell from them will taint butter or milk in a short time.

To keeps your hands from ehapping, get equal parts of benzine and glycerine, shake well, and rub a few drops on the hands after washing them. It will keep them soft and white. To cook fisli Th its own juice, after cleaning place in a jar with a few cloves and sprigs of parsley, cover it close and set it in a saucepan of boiling water. Keep it boiling for half an hour. TServe’with sauce. - -T ; S

To preserve rhubarb for winter use, wash the stalks and add one pound of sugar to each pound *of rhubarb, after cutting the stalks into pieces about an inch long. To every six pounds of sugar use one-fourth pound of whole ginger. Cover the rhubarb with sugar and ginger and let it stand in a deep dish for forty-eight hours before cooking. Boil the syrup thus formed half an hour, then add the rhubarb, stir it as little as possible to avoid breaking it. When it looks clear, remove the fire and put in jars fpr winter use.

Effects of Deposit in Boilers .

Safety Valve. A large proportion of ruptures and explosions of steam boilers is directly due to incrustation. Water that is apparently free from impurities, And looks sparkling and bright to the casual observer, has, to a greater or less degree, mineral salts held in solution. A very few grains of solid matter to the gallon, whether dissolved or suspended, being thrown down by boiling or evaporation, will in a short time, by negligence in the use of the blow and infrequent cleaning, cause a deposit to be formed on the tubes and shell of the boiler of unlimited thickness. The deleterious effect of this formation is due to its non-conductive-ness. A deposit one-sixteenth of an inch in thickness has been shown by experiment to require 15 per cent, more fuel, while a deposit of a quarter of an inch, 60 per cent more to do the s>ame amount of work as a clean boiler. It is readily apparent that it does not require a great quantity of sediment to very effectually increase the fuel bill and add materially to the cost of production. Not only is more heat necessary to raise the water to the required temperature, but it has not the cooling effect it otherwise would have on the plates. The additional heat soon reduces the metal to the granular and brittle state of cast-iron. The excessive heat causes bags and blisters, necessitating expensive repairs, and in numerous cases only the cohesiveness of the layers of scale averting a serious disaster. Corrosion often takes place between the incrustation and metal, reducing the shell and tubes to a dangerous thinness, in many cases one-half or a quarter their usual thickness. Engineers and boiler operators can not be too careful and observing. Feedwater should enter a boiler in such a way as to carry the impurities toward the blow-off cock. These should be open for awhile two or three times e, day and, in case of bad water, much oftener. r ' l A boiler should not be emptied while it is hot, or enough heat is retained in the brickwork.to bake the deposit, as it is then almost an impossibility to remove the scale. Frequent washing out of boilers is a necessity.

Device for Preventing Collisions.

Washington Special. Some time ago mention was made in these dispatches of the exhibition of a device for preventing collisions of railroad trains. Recently the device was tested practically on the Baltimore & Ohio railroad, with flattering results. The Universal Electric Railway Signal Company, of Richmond, Va., prepared about three miles of track on the road mentioned, by placing a thick wire on an insulated wooden projection about three inches above the track. This wire was an Ordinary iron telegraph wire, somewhat thicker than those used. Two switch engines wero supplied with metallic brushes, which were fixed to brush along this wire in the rear of the fire-boxes. They were connected with telephones in the cars in the rear of the engines. The engines were started out along the track, and as soon as they had approached within about a mile of each other the fact of their proximity was made manifest in each of the cars by the ringing of the telephone bells. It is designed to place these telephones in the engines of regular trains and as soon as the bells ring the engineers can take up the telephones and converge with each other. The system worked to perfection, and demonstrated that accidents by collisions, washouts and such causes can be absolutely avoided by the use of this device. About fifty newspaper correspondents witnessed the experiment.

' The eighth woman to bo admitted to the bar of tjie United States Supreme Court is Kate Kane, of Chioago. '

A NEW HAT MATERIAL.

Formerly Waste Stuff It Is Now Used for Derbys. Many of the cheap Derby hats that will be worn on the streets of St. Louis this spring, says the GlobeDemocrat, will be made of a new material qf which the hatters have just got hold. The stuff is called linters. It is the short cotton left on the seed after the cotton has been ginned by the cotton raiser. He sells his cotton to the merchant and the seed to a mill that makes cotton seed oil. The miller puts the seed through another gin, specially made to clean short dotton from the seed. In an oil mill of small capacity several bales of cotton are annually ginned from the seed in this way. The fiber is broken and very short, and up to a few months ago the mills sold it to stuff bedding with. Its price was about half that of average cotton. The negroes in -the South were the buyers generally, ...but occa- j sionally the mills would get a good big order from concerns that made pil- ' lows and mattresses. Suddenly some- j body found out that it could be made to imitate felt for cheap hats. The experiment then of making hats of linters was tried on a large scale last winter by a New York factory, and the hats were sold to retailers very cheaply for introduction. The test showed that the hats-stood wear, and the oil mills were at once called on by the manufacturers to make contracts for all the linters they could get off the cotton seed. Now linters has gone away up in pi-iee, and is only a few cents a pound cheaper than cotton. The discovery is likely to have a lowering effect upon the kind of Derbys which have sold for $3; and, in fact, some merchants are already using the linters Derbys as “leaders” for their other goods, selling them at half the cost of the felt hat.

Medical Superstitions.

Popular Science Monthly. There is a popular superstition of wide range, based upon I know not what, that it is very healthful for children to play with dogs. A weak child, it is thought, may gain strength by being with a. dog. or, if diseased, the child may be Aired by having the animal *'take the disease”—for exam-, pie. inflamed eyes, or any disorder of the skin. Within a year a college graduate told me, in perfect good faith, of acquaintances—a Boston doctor and his wife—whose little girl had been greatly afflicted with some form of eczema, which they all hoped would disappear, as the parents had purchased a fine dog to play with the child. When a dog is teething, the upper incisors, according to a New England superstition, must be removed as soon as they become loose,or he may “swallow them and have fits.” Perhaps even more generally received is the fancied danger of allowing a child’s milk tooth, after extraction to fall into the possession of a dog or cat, lest the animal swallow it, and the child have a dog or cat’s tooth grow in place of the lost one. The Mexicans and Indians in Texas say that every animal has brains enough to tan its own skin, and so the latter, in the case of the wolf, panther, wild cat and some other animals is mainly prepared by rubbing into the flesh side of it the brains of its former weaTgK A somewhat common fancy among children, perhaps, too, among adults as well, is that “every part strengthens a part,” that is, j that the liver, heart, brains and so on of animals, when eaten, go directly I towards nourishing the corresponding organs in the eater. A similar ..doctrine was worked out in great detail by the American Indians, and is I believe, held by many other savage tribes. It seems altogether probable that such beliefs, wherever found among civilized people, old or young, are survivals from remote antiquity, jand that they are closely akin in their nature and origin to the well known doctrine of signatures which has played so great a part in the systems jf medicine of primitive peoples.

Dr. Price’s Delicious Flavoring Extracts arc not made up from chemical poisons, but natural flavors delicate and grateful to the most cultivated palate. The special recommendations of Dr. Price's Flavors are, that their -purity is perfect, their strength so much greater than other extracts. Buy these Flavors, they are the finest made. First Passenger—Are ye sick, Thomas? Second Passenger (faintly)—D’ye think I’m doing this for fun? “Delays are dangerous.” Clean house • once with SAPOLIO. It is a solid cake at Scouring S< ap used for all cleaning purposes except the laundry.

stvm acvofTtp* zcvturv Ml To core Biliousness. Sick Headache Constipation. Alalarla. I.lver Complaints. take the safe and certain remedy, SMITH’S BILE BEANS ~ the SMALL SIZE (40 Ilule beans to the botUe). They are the most convenient; suit all aces. Priced either slse, 25 cent* per bottle. KISSiNC at 7, i .17 ’ .i_ ph °to-kraTure, W,,,U panel sue of this picture for 4 oeuta (coppers or stamps). '•'* „ J. F. SMITH tCO . Makers of ■•Blip Beans,” St Louis. Mo. Tho Boft Olow of The TEA ROSE Is Acquired by Ladles Who Use POZZONLS MEDICATED COMPLEXION Mention this Paper when writing Advertisers

A Plain Case.

Terre Haute Express. The plaining-mill man met the carpenters daughter. At once he|was most thoroughly floored. And ever there rafter he would and he saw ter. The one whom he fondly a-doored.

No Land on Which the Sun Shines

Possesses greater natural advantages than our own, but there are portions of ihe great grainbearing West and fertile South where atmospheric influences prejudicial to health militate against them, in some degree, as placet of residence. Heavy rainfalls and the overflow of great rivers, which upon their subsidence leave rank vegetation exposed to the rays of the sun, there beget malarial fivers, and there also the inhabitants are periodically obliged to use some medicinal safeguard against the scourge. Toe most popular is Hos tetter’s Stomach Bitters, a preventive that has for over a third of a century afforded reliable protection to those whom experience in the futility of ordinary remedies for fever and ague, has taught to Bunstitute for them. Whether intermittent or remittent, miasmatic fevers are conquered and averted by the superb anti-periodlc and fortifying medicine as thev are bv no other preparation in use. Use it, aad abandon impure local bitten. A pawnbroker, after all, is but a poor, loan man.—Siftings. We moved here recently, and the druggist said he didn’t have any Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers, but when I said I wouldn’t have any other, he said he would get some in a few days, and so he did. I know what Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers will do, and will not give my children any other.—Mrs. J. D. Blair, Burton, Cal.

The Problem Solved---An Unrivaled Blood Purifier.

Found at lasi in Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup. A remedy which expels all pois-i onous matter and taints from the blood. A well known citizen of West Lebanon, Ind., testifies to its value: Gentlemen: It affords me pleasure te state that my wife has received greater benefit from Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup than from any medicine she has ever taken. We have used six bottles, and find it to be the best family remedy and the greatest blood purifier that we have ever used. It is truly all it is claimed to be by its founder. You can not recommend it too highly. Yours truly, . ii . Fiuxk Wallace, West Lebanon, Ind. Sold by all druggists. Prepared only by Ihe Charles Wright Medicine Company, Cetroit, Mich.

Hibbard’s Rheumatic and Liver Pills.

These Pills are scientifically compounded, uniform la action. No griping pain so oommonly following the use of pills. They, are actinted to both adults and children with perfect safety. We guarantee they have nc equal in the cure of Sick Headache. Constipation. Dyspepsia. Biliousness; and. as ta uppedier. they excel any other prepare lion. It is the girl that occasionally “lends a hand” who has a man to ask for it eventually. ——:— M. L. THOMPSON. & CO , Druggists, Chudereport; Pa., say Hall’s Catarrh Cure is tbe best and only sure cure for catarrh they ever sold. Druggists sell it, 7nc. Of course a man who would “hook” a fish would lie about it. A boy never so thoroughly realizes that quarreling is sinful as when he is getting ticked in a fight. six novels free, will be sent oy Cragin & Co., Philad-a., Pa., to any one in the IJ S. or Canada, postage paid, upon receipt of 25 Dobbins’ Electric Soap wrappers. See list of novels on circulars around each bar. Soap for sale by all grocers. Tbe butcher’s honor is always at steak, —Pittsburg Chroniele. Bronchitis is cured by frequent sma. doses of Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Bcecham’s PI Us cure Bilious and Nervous Ills. Bead DR. SARKKK'S ad, in another column

Good As Gold So enthusiastic are thousands of people over tbe benefit* lie-rived from Hood’s Sarsaparilla, that they can hardly find words to express their confidence in and gratitude for this medicine. “Worth its weight ia gold'’ is n favorite expression of these warm iriends. if you need a good medicine to purify your biood, build up your strength, try Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists, fl: Six for $5. Prepared by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. 100 DOSES ONE DOLLAR

IN** WORTH A GUINEA A BOX/»« < For BILIOUS & NERVOUS DISORDERS Such as Wind and Pain in the Stomach, Fullness and Swelling after Meals, ( Dizziness, and Drowsiness, Cold Chills,Flushings of Heat, Loss of Appetite, c Shortness of Breath, Costiveness, Scurvy, Blotches on the Skin, Disturbed l Steep, Frightful Dreams, and all Nervous and Trembling Sensations. Ac. / THE FIRST DOSE WILL CIVE RELIEF IN TWENTY MINUTES. ( / BEECH AM‘B PILLS TAKEN AS DIRECTED RESTORE FEMAUB JO COMPUTE HEALTH. ) \ For Sick Headache, Weak Stomach, Impaired < ) Digestion, Constipation, Disordered Liver, etc., ) \ they ACT LIKE MAGIC, Strengthening tb® muscular System, restoring lon*-lo« Com- S ( plexlon, bringing back the keen edae of appetite, and arousing with the ROSEBUD OF C ? HEALTH the whole physical energy of the human frame. One of the «x»t guarantees / S to the Nervous and Debilitated is that BEECH AM’S FILLS HAVE THE LAR6EST SALE OF ) ( ANY PROPRIETARY MEDICINE IM THE WORLD W 1 _ . . S ? Prepared only by THUS. BEECH AM. St. Helena, Lancashire. England. / ) Sold oy Druggists generally. B. F. ALLEN CO., 386 and 387 Canal St. NewJorii, ) C Sole Agents for the United Stetee. who (Uv»ur druggist does not keep them) WILL MAIL L ) BEEOHAICSPHJUSonRECEiPTofJPRICE^2SctaABO3L<MgiiTIo>MrjiMUP*inty^ “I wept when I was bom.And every day JamM ofscouringso&p used for ail -e# cleaning purposes “All Ah I" Cried the house- “Oh! Oh!" Cried the DIET, wife, “ The Secret I know, no “At length I must go, I oannot DIET can resist withstand SAPOLIO,” I SAPOLIO.” ■ piSO’S REMEDY FOR CATARRH.—Best Easiest to use. ■IT cheapest Relief Is immediate. A cure fa certain. For ■■ Cold in the Head it has no eqtuU. •* ' ESEEI33I ■ It Is an Ointment, of which a small particle fa applied to the *4,

WHAT IS A POPULAR MAN.

A popular man is one who is always ready to take a drink, but doesn’t get drunk. A popular man is one who will listen to a tale of woe from a woman 45 years of age, not mind her crying, pat her on the shoulder, and advise her to be “a good girl.” A popular man is one who sends your baby a birthday present, who remembers you when he has got a couple of theatre tickets he don’t want, and who speaks to you no matter how shabby you look, or who he may be with. A popular man is the concentrated essence of sympathy. He has a smile for everybody’s joy, and words of condolence for everybody’s sorrow. Feel it? It doesn’t matter whether he feels it or not, my friend, it’s manners make the man and, more than any other, the popular man. -- A pocket match-safe free to smokers of “Tansiil’s Punch” sc. Cigar,

> ‘ Hair Mfet ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results-when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Sidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cores habitual constipation. Syrup of figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste ana acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial m its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its Many excellent qualities oommend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. I Syrup of Figs is for sale in &Qs and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly ibr any one whe “ wishes to try it Do not aocept any substitute. CALIFORNIA F!9 SfßllF CO. •ah nummo. cal, t»aurrur. xr. mew roue. m.t., BICYCLES King °* B o ** l Pathfinder SflO. wSfpyWHinMßgaßjp Diamond,.... *BS. National ...SBS, Also a large stock of New and Second-hand Wheels. Agents for Victor, Eagle, Union and Pathfinder. Large repair shop and good workmen. Send to us for catalogue. Estimates furnished for repairs. HAY & WILLIIB, 118 W. Wash. St., opp. State House, Indianapolis, Ind, 1 WA 111 n ■»! young men and women in tbit I. 1 I country owe their lives, their I 1 ■ Ihealth and their happlneaa to II m m S 111 “A Ridge's Food, their dailv diet in ■nnAgAnm Infancy and Childhood having B ATEfMTO F.A, LEHMANN, KA I fclW I O Washington, D. C. Send for circulars.

8 matism, find great re^ i Samparilla. ! “One year ago 1 was taken ill with inflambeing confined to my hous?six came Out of the sickness very much debilitated, with no appetite, and my system disordered in every way. I commenced using Ayer’s Sarsaparilla and began to improve at once, gaining in strength and soon recovering my usual health. I cannot say too much in praise of this well-known medicine.’* Mrs. L. A. Stark. Nashua, N. H. Ask your druggist for E' 9 Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer * Op., Lowell, Maas . Wee fit; six, fig. Worth S 3 m bottle.

TJUMMD SURE CUKlor PILES, SILT RHEUM and ail Skin Disease*. Send 3 2oetamp. for Free Sunpie with Book*»Sold by all Drnrjrfats and by TAK-010 CO., lO Randolph St, Price 50? Indiana Druggists supplied by I>. -Stewart and A Keifer & Co., Indianapolis. Me j EWls r 9B per cent. I|gy Powdered nml Perfumed. [PATENTED) WKi\’/A The Strongest and Purest LYE • made. Will make the best pergflSßg fumed Soap in ‘JO minutes without boiling. It is the b-st for disinfecting sinks, closets, wash n ing bottles, drains, baneli, p iat ■ ■ PENN. SALT M’F’G CO. sctbGeo. Agts., Pbila., Pa. (MUBUibed ISSO.) INDIANAPOLIS (BeariaalisS IMS. BUSINESS UNIVERSITV HIP North Penniylmia 81, Opp. Poitofike. EXZB * 033028, Prfsripili ui Pnprieten,

Best facilities for Business, Short-hand, Penmanship, English and Actual Business Training. Individual instruction. Educate for profit—least expensive in time and money. Attractive City. Graduates hold lucrative positions. A strictly business school. Open all year. Enter now. Write to ns. Elegant Catalogue, Free.. DR. W. H. BARBER, Gives special attention to prlvat |K'-. A diserses of male and female Wi- Regulating remedies for ladie Hr .dNB? Am l furnished. Cures .Sterility, Rup m 1 'WeA* ture, Piles. Fistula, Fissure. Sper uEikwTHr nialorrhoea ' 1 mpotency, Gonor fines and Syphilis. Call on or him, at 96% S. lilinots Indianapolis, Ind. All let "era containing 4c in stamps answered confidtnflai. If *You Want to Know l-OOLeiudeiunilliHasbant the human srsUa. > tl-amr.'l, ,H-me(tuxled, kjalth saved, disease Induced, [How to avopfeOrgyUiivf tjuarana* and indiscretion, [How tojym£)Home)Citrs to aU Jonas of disease, \Bow to curkEr37tJlj Old Byes , Rupture, Phimosis, etc., Mmcto maLKtmhafpv in Marriage and have prise babies, Cid »n oddSlot/f Doctor’s Droll Jokes, profusely illusArated. (lend ten cents for new Lough Cure Book called j MEDICAL SENSE AND NONSENBE,.*t Murray IIIUPnb.Co-.129E. 28tb St., New Yorkj m ROAD CARTS ONLY $lO Best and lawesl PHn { i 'fi of any Carta Had*. Buggies, oaly *55.0®. rh Harneaa Irido aad *IO.OO. \ /JA/HX | Forets, Anvil,, Vila, Sain, Sewing \\y| Ala\ / Maehin**, Sain rs all VaritOaa VX |/JK\ y Su, nan u, ml (aPlia Uu. CHICAGO SCALE CO., Cklenro, lUlaoln, V. B. A. ffirilAlAllA The Disability BUI 1* a KJLAIvIIIIuV law. Soldiers disabled r rlvAllllwA since the war are en kllvlvliV titled. Dependent widows anajparents now dependent whose sons died from effects of army service are Included. If you wish your claim speedily and successfully prosecuted address •~' - JAMES TANNER, Ex- Commissioner of Pension*: Washington, D: C.

DEPENDENT PENSION BILL has become a law. *l2 PER MONTH to all honorably discharged Soldiers and Bailors of the late war. who are incapacitated from earning a support. Widows the same, without regard to cause of death. Dependent Parents and Minor Children also interested. Over 20 years’ experience. References in all parts of the country. No charge if unsuccessful. Write at once for’’Copy of Law,” blank* and full inetructions all rare to B. MeALLUTEB 4k €1). {Successors to Wm. Conard A C 0.,) ir. O. Box 713, Washington, D. C. NEW Pension Law. THOUSANDS NOW ENTITLED WOO HAVE NOT BEEN ENTITLED. Address for forms of application and full information. WM. W. DUDLEY, I. ATE COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS, Attorney at Law, Washington, D, U. (Mention thi* paper.) WM. PITCH cft* iOOu 10* Corcoran Building, Washington, D. C. Pension Attorneys of over 25 year*’ experience. Successfully prosecute* pensions and claims of all kinds in shortest possible time. oauNO FEE UNLESS SUCCESSFUL. • PENSIONS ! EXPERIENCE. i^iit!dgaiaa.d£ajaf;aai; FENSlOfiSgagg titled to *l2 a mo. FeeßOwhen you get your money. Blanks free. JOMtm H. UinrTXk. AU,.V»kUsl—. ac. liii^ nmOIAUO Thousands EN'TID vl N 91 IB SfTLED under the New r Act. Write Immediately tor BLANKS for Ip I plication J. B. CRALLE A CO., Washing ton, P. C. __ PENSION fc&KffV* r SuccessfulTy Prosecutes Claims. I Late Principal Examiner U.B. Pension Bureau 3 yre in fast war,lS adjudicating claims,atty since NEW PEN 61 ON LAW! IN.SM names to be added to the Pension list. Rejected and delayed claim* allowed. Technicalities wiped ont. Have yonrelaira aettled without delay PATEICB OTAMELL Washington, D. C nr*l PI ai o New Law 300,000 II Cfw 91Vw 9 soldiers, widow r and relatives entitled. Apply at once. Blanks I and Instruction free. SOULES A CO.,Atty’s, Washington. D. C- __________ Indianapolis Institute sr Young Ladies Collegiate and Preparatory. Beat Advantage* in Muaic. Feinting. French. Elocution, Etc. Elegant New Building, riend for Catalogue. Jans* Lroa, Principal. AQII |l* Habit. The only certain rill Twl and easy cure. Dr. J- L. Stephens, Lebanon, Ohio. TREES) IN 0 *B-90 IN DPT. IS