Rensselaer Republican, Volume 22, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 July 1890 — Page 3

OCR PLEASURE CLUB.

LOOKING FORWARD. We’ll abolish competition. With all its wasteful- losses, We’ll tms.b the politician. The heelers and the bosses. No one shall be compelled to worv t~ Tor mo’e than half a minute, , U And he who should attempt to shirk ; Kill find there’s nothing in it; Then, as the next step toward a state Ofabsolute perfection, Each couple shall be free to mate H—By natural seleciion; And there are no good reasons why Along wi ;h death and taxes, We should no! stop the seasons, by A change la the earth’s axis. —Terre Haute Express.

A BAD TEAR FOR HELP. Detroit Free Press. A few miles below Greenville, Ala., we found a colored farmer who employed considerable colored help, and he took us over the plantation and explained his system of working. While we were at the meat house a colored woman came to draw, some bacon. For scales the man had a stick in a balance, with Cat boards at either end. He put a stone on one board and the meat on the other, and cut from the meat until he got an even tip. “How much meat did you give her?” was asked as she vent away. “Fo’ pounds, sah.” “But that stone weighs over four pounds,” “Dat’s what I estimate on, sah, I didn’t dun weight it, but I jess reckoned she was a ieetle short of fo’ pounds.” One of the gentlemen had a pocket balance with him. and when the stone was held up it pulled down exactly five pounds. “Lands o’ massy, but no wonder dese yere niggers been giitin’ lazy!” gasped the man. “I has dun been cheated outer mo’ dan a hundred pounds o’ mSat by dat stone,!” “You’ll have to charge it up.” “Dey wouldn't stand dat, boss, but I shan’t lose anything. Ize already •dun toled my gang dat dere was only forty-eight Sundays and no Fo’th o’ July in diß y’nr, an’so I’ll git five extra days* work outer ’em. Now I’ll dun heave dat rock away an’ work in a three pound one.”

WHY HE BROKE TIIE ENGAGEMENT. She wore a sai’or hat— I should not hare minded that, ■ Nor her patent-leather shoe and gaitcrette; But I saw her on Broadway - Only just the other day, And I thought it was her brother that I met. Tor she had a flannel shirt And, what most my feelings hurt, A pieadilly collar and a Me, A double-breasted saeque. with two buttons on the back, ■ And a blooming English eye-glassfn her eye. —K. M.. in Judge. HANDY WITH THE SHEARS. Tall Boy—Hello, kid. - who cut yer hair? Short Boy—My father cut it. Tall Boy—Hah! Yer father a barber? Short Boy—Naw; he's a editor. NOT TO BE CAUGHT WITn CHAFF. My love, you are bpaii iful. said be, Beauty is but skin deep, said she. My love Is boundless for you, said he, Love will not boil tbe pot. said she. Ah! if you would share my lot. aighed he. Pray, what is the sue of your lot ? asked she. Love makes the world go round, said he. But money cau do it much better, said she. -Bostqa Courier. IN THE MINOR. New York Weeky. Mr. Sealove (at- his sea-shore cottage)—“My dear, please tell your daughter to sing something less doleful.” Mrs. Sealove—“That is not our daughter, my love. That is the foghorn.” J

A MODERN PRODIGAL. His wild oats sown, his money spent, Conn Vivial ceased to laugh— Back to his father's home he humbly went To eat ;he fatted calf. His daddy saw him, as he climbed the bill, But bolted every door, Then cried: “You’ll get of calf ymr fill When you’ve been cowed some moie.” —Erratic Enrique. HE FOUND THE SCHOOLMASTER. New York Sun. We were sitting on the veranda of a hotel at Niagara Falls, when I noticed the man on my right looking sharply at the man on my left,and presently be got up in an excited way and walked about. After a bit he halted before the other man and asked: “Isn’t your name Graham?” “Yes. sir,” was the prompt reply. “Didn’t you used to teach school at Elmira?” “Yes, sir.” ‘'ln 1863 P” “Yes, sir.” , “Do you remember a boy named Godkiu?” “Very distinctly, sir.”* “Do you remember that he put a package of firecrackers under his desk and touched them off?” “As if it happened only yesterday.” “And you basted him for it?” “I did. I licked him until he could hardly stand, and I’ve always been glad of it.” vYou have, eh,” said the other, breathing fast and hard. « “Do you know that tha\ boy swore a terrible oath?” “I presume he did, as he was a thorough young villian,” “He swore an oath that he would grow up and, hunt for you and pound you within an inch of your life." “But I haven’t beard from him yet.” “Yog hear from him now! He stands before you! lam that boy!" “Well?” “Prepare to be lickeu! Iffy time has some at last!” He made a dive for the old peda-

goguc, bnt the latter evaded him, made a huli-tum and hit him dn the jaw, and God kin went over a chair in a heap, then the whilom schoolmaster piled on to him and licked him until he cried “Enough,” and it didn’t take him over three minutes to do it. Then he retired to get-on another collar and replace some buttons, and I helped Godkin up and observed: “You didn't wait quite long enough, I guess.” “Say! That’s where I made a miscue!” he replied. “I see now that I ought to have held off until he had got \ r about 150 years old. The old Is all of 70 now, but he lick * right off the reel, and I’ll never nave the sand to stand up to him again. Here’s thirty years of waiting for vengeance knocked into a cocked hat in three minutes!” O!” hear the graduate exclaim, . “ What is the use of all my Greek ? » Jumping from bridges leads to Shooting the rapids wins a name, Fate la the only thing to blame; O, that I had been a freak?” * —Philadelphia Press. • ~ ■ A SHUT THAT KICKED. Life. He—l have never yet met the woman I thought I could marry. She—No, they are very hard to please as a rule.

KIS HONOR WAS UNTOUCHED. Puck. “Good morning. Judge. How is your Honor this morning ?” “My honor is safe, but my digestion is very weak. ” POOR. BUT HONEST. American Grocer. “It’s not my fault, ” observed the struggling butcher, as he weighed twelve ounces of bone to the two pounds of steak, “if I can’t make both ends meat. ” A MITIGATING CIRCUMSTANCE. Judge a Were you ever arrested before? Sam Johnsing—No. Boss, I nebber wuz. Ebery time I has been errested de policeman grabbed me by de neck from behind.

NOT HOMESICK. Texas Siftings. ' • There are some feelings, innocent enough in themselves, which, nevertheless, a man does not like to express in so many words. If he must acknowledge them, he prefers to do it indirectly, not taking * straight course, but, afi the old saying.is, going “round Robin Hood’s barn." The captain of Company G, Twelfth Vermont Regiment, was strolling in the woods just out of camp, says a writer in the. Salem Witch, when he came upon a member of his company sitting on the stump of a tree, and iookmg as though he had fought his last'tight. “What’s the matter, Bill?" said the captain. •■Oh, nothing, *’ was the reply. “I am all right. ” •‘You look as though you had q St of homesickness. ” ••No, sir, ” said Bill with some resentmenti “ nothing of the sort. ” ' Well, what are you thinking about ?*’ asked his questioner. "I was thinking. ” said the Vermonter. “that I wished I was in my father’s barn. ” '•ln joey father’s ham! What on earth would you do if you were in the barn ?’.’ The poor fellow uttered a longdrawn sigh, and said: “I'd go into the house mighty quick 1”

a stranger’s bluff. . There were a dozen of us in a smoking car on the Lake Erie and Western during the closing days of the last Presidential campaign, and, of course, we compared notes. 7 “Gentlemen,” said a New Jersey banker, “I’ll bet $20,000 on Harrison. ” ••Right now?” asked a man who came forward all of a sudden, having an old carpetbag in his hand. “Y-yes, sir. ” ‘,‘P. y. w., which means produce your wad, ” said the stranger; and opening his carpetbag he took out a roll of bills as big as your leg.” “That is, I will bet $20,000 that he' gets the popular vote, ” stammered the banker. “C. d. w. t. r., which means come down with the rhino, ” replied the stranger, as be fished for bis boodle again. “ I-I haven’t got $20,000 with me r but I-Pll see you later. ” “Exactly. Any of the rest of you gentlemen anything to Say ?” “ I bank od Cleveland,” remarked one. “H. m. d. y. b., which means how much do you bank P” asked the stranger, as he waved his wad on high. “Ob, I don’t care to hot.” “Does any one else ?” No one did, and he took up his carj.- ibag and retreated into the next car. i found him there an hour later, and asked: ' “ Were you betting or bluffing ?” Here’s the roll and you can judge for yourself, 11 he replied as he took it out. > .. ' Pm telling you straight when I say that he had S2B in bills wrapped around an old piece of canvas; not a dollar more. •‘ I hain t got no aristocratic blood In me,” he said as he put the roll away again, “and T hain’t purty nor smart. For thesd reasons I ginerally travel with an effset, which the. same is this: ‘C. a. s. m.’ which means come and see me with, anything in the shape of a beM’

Get H , The Best | Is a good motto to follow in baring a medicine, aa ! well as in everything else. By the universal sat inaction it has giren, and by the many remarkable cut** it ban accomplished, -Hood’s Sarsaparilla has -proven itself unequalled for building up and strengthening the system, and for all diseases arising from, or promoted by, impure blood. Hood’s Sarsaparilla So’d-ky all drugriita, #X: Six for $5. Prepared byC. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Maas. 100 POSES ONE DOLLAR ———-—-*£» —/" ' - OPTO ENJOYS Both the method and result* whea By rup of Figs is taheo; it is pleasant and refreshingto the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy 1 ' of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste ana ao Beptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Svrup of Figs is for sale in 6(V> •nd $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly fbr any one whe wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FtO SYRUP CO. SAN FSAMCJBCO, CAL tamviUE, ii. new ion, n.i.

A Remarkable Fish.

Leisure Hour. Africa is the home of many extraordinary animals, but there is no more remarkable creature than the mudfish, which inhabits certain of the rivers of western Africa, and, as its name implies, it lurks at the muddy bottoms of these rivers. At present, however, it is not necessary to go to Africa to see this fish, as it can be seen by any one who has the time in the reptile house at the Zoological Gardens. At first sight there is, perhaps, nouhingespec-ial-ly striking about this animal; it looks very much like an ordinary fish except for its curious long, slender fins. A visitor who knew nothing about the creature would probably go away with the impression that he had seen nothing out of the common. When the fishes arrived each one was encased in a ball of dried mud, lined with mucus from its body and ted by p„ small aperture to admit of breathing. This “cocoon,” as it is Bonietimes called, on account of its analogy to the earthen case fabricated by many caterpillars in which to undergo their metamorphoses, on being placed in warmish water was dissolved and the fish liberatei, The Habit which the mudfish has of making an earthen case of tbe mud at the bottom of the riygrvjs a most wonderful provision of nature for the exigencies of the climate. The Avers which the fish inhabits are liable to periodical droughts. When such a drought is imminent the fish retires to deep water and excavates a pit, in which it lies, covering itself over with a thick layer of mud. It can suffer with impunity the complete drying up of the river. But the most interesting fact about the creature is that during the timeof its voluntary imprisonment it breathes air directly through an aperture left in the cocoob, by means of lungs, just like a land animal. When the returning rains dissolve the mud and liberate the prisoner it breathes by means of gills, like any other fish.

The name Elizabeth is occasionally still taboed in some family circles because of the objection of a supersensitive parent to being known as “the father of Lize.” Johnson—l see DeWiggs, the actor, is'going to support hts wife this season. Bludso -That’s a good thing; his wife has supported him long enough. If the testimony of-eminent chemists and medical men is of any value, Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powde# is the most perfect made, These itnen of standing in their professions not only recommend its use, but endorse its perfect purity, excellence and wbolesomeness by using it in their own families. t It is only when a man is complimented’ that he thinks he is seeing himself as others see him. Don’t urge children to take nasty worm oils. They enjoy eating Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers and will ask formore. Even when a rattlesnake manages to keep its head all right it is liable to get rattled at the tail. ' - Beech a m’« Pills act like magic oa a weak etoinacb It is so easy to misunderstand people. It is only the constabie who really knows how to take a man. Rich! fragrant 1 dne! are the expressions of those who smoke "TarrsiU’s Punch” sc. Cigar. No Opium in Piso’s Cure fo* Donsump tion. Cures jjhere other remedies fail. 25c Read DB. BAKHxira ad, in estama

A Mountain of Salt.

St- I/mU Republican. A mass of 90,000,000 tons of pure, solid, compact rock salt, located on an island 185 feet high, which rises from a miserable sea marsh on the route Brashear to New Iberia, up the river Teche in Louisiana, is one of the wonders of the world. How this Island, which contains over 800 acres of ex? ceilent land, ever came into existence in such a a locality is a matter of conjecture. Vegetation is prolife and the scenery is beautiful and varied. In the center of this Island which is the only solid spot in the vast expance of sea marsh for miles aiound, rises Salt peak, the largest body of exposed rock salt in the world. Having never been surveyed, its exact is as yet unknown. However, Engineer Brown, who nas visited it says that there is not less than 90,000,000 tons of pure crystal salt ip sight. The dazzling clearness of Salt peak forms a striking contrast with somber lagoons, bayous and salt marshes which surround it on all sides.

Peace on Earth

Awaits that countless army of martyrs, whose ranks ar constantly recruited fro.u the v.ctims of nereouHtregs and ne vous diseases. The price of the boon is a system vile course of Host- tter’s Stomach Bitters, the fines', ami most genial of tonic mrvlnes, pnrsu <1 wl.h reasonable persistence. E-t-ier, t lias?nter, safer this than to s«a<h the vie nail in. department wi b pseudotonics, alcoholic or the reverse, beef extracts, nerv- foods, naicoilc-, sedatives and polso' s in disguise “Tired n* u-e’s sweet restorer, balmy sleep,” is the p ovideniial r cupeiaut of weak ne> ves, «n i this at -riou franchise be ng u ually the c>>nseque ,ces of sou td digestion and Increase 1 vi «r. thegrea atom, chic wtlich insures Both Is t roduct ve also of repo*e at tne required t me Not unref --shed awa ens the indivtdu 1 who uses 1 but vigorous, clear head d and tranquil Use the lit r< also in fever and ague, rheumat ism, kidney troubles, constipation and biliousness. —? — ——

The bucolic editor who was presented with a can of maple syrup wished for many sappy returns of the day. , Have you ever tried Dobbins’ Electric Soap 1 Itdon’tcost much for you togetone bar of yourgrocer, and see for yourself why it is praised by so many, after 24 years steady sale. Be sure to get no imitation. There are lots of them. The wisdom of the owl is all in its eye. J. C. SIMPSON, Marquess, W. Va., ssyu: ‘ Hall’s Catarrh Cure cured >ce of a very b#d case of catarih.” Druggists sell it, 'sc. It is better for a young man to have his trousers bag at the knee than to have his brains bag at the ears. “He that has thriven may lie abed till seven;” Those who use SAPOLIO need not work long hours. Sapolio is a solid cake of scouring soap. Try it. Milkmen are poor people to interview. Naturally they do not like to be pumped.

Summer Is Here

Berkshire (Mass.) Newß. 1 The summer bee is humming and the summer girl is coming while the sprinkling cart the street is going through, and a host of city people, that in summer we shall keap’l, soon be coming up to spend a month or two. The hammock will be swaying in the breezes ’neath the treeses, while the farmer will go haying in the meadow if he pleases, and this ryme would be completer if less rocky were the meter. That’s all.

Don’t read! Don’t think! Don’t believe! Now. are you better ? You women who think that patent medicines are a humbug, and Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription the biggest humbug of the whole (because it’s best known of all) —does your lack-of-faith cure come? It’s very easy to “ don’t ” in this world. Suspicion always comes more easily than confidence. But doubt —little faith never made a sick woman well and the “Favorite Prescription ” has cured thousands of delicate, weak women, which makes us think that our “ Prescription ” is better than your don’t believe. We’re both honest Let us come together. You try Dr. ! Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. ! If it doesn’t do as represented, you get your money again. Where proof’s so easy, can you afford to doubt? Little but active—are Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. Best Liver Pills made; gentle, yet thorough. They regulate and invigorate the liver, stomach and bowels.

PENSIONS tilled to SIS a mo. Vr~ ':o wheu yuu get your money. Bl« nka free. JOSKPII IIfSTHB. til,. w«Jil»eto.. I». t, THE DFPENDENT PENSION BILL Grants pensions toSoldlera, sailora, and thier Widow- a* d Ch'trtren. rHNHItIIH INCRBA-KD. Write immediately. stating your case J.m:B«Oi*v, Ait’y-at-Law, < haunoey Bu 1 ing, WA HI KOTOV, D.O. ItCUOIAIIO Thousands KNrl- □ EL IB 9IU IM OTLED un-ier the New r Act. Write immediately so - BLANK-* for ><pI plication J. B.CBaUKA CO., Washington HCMOIAM J W. MOKRTB, JJ CL IM oIU «W Washington, I) O Prosecutes Claims. I Late Priiiclpol Examiner U (-.Pension mt’eau 8 yra In last war, 16 adjudicating claimsatty since NEW PENSION LAW! SK.HS names to bo added to the Pension Ket. Rejected sad delayed claim* allowed, Technicalities wiped out. Hava yonr claim a»ttW without delay r a TBit K S’FARBSLL. Washington, D. 0 amain lAUO u * 3 0,000 II EL NCI IV# Iw 9 -oldiers. widow r end r* I t vea entitled. Apply at nee Blank I and Instruction free. SOUIES A co^Atty"* MM Mention this paper when writing AdrarUsaa,

YOUNG CHILDREN d AresoUaUetoCreap, sndden Colds, and va- ♦ rious throat troubles, that no family should AYER’S Cherry Pectoral It gives instant relief ““j®**®®*® * P«nn*- •” . I " I have used Ayer’s S* Cherry Pectoral in iny Jr family for thirty vears „ t . and have always found It the best remedy for croup, to which complaint my children have been subject.”— Capt. U. Carley, Brooklyn, N. Y. “ Four of my children were taken down at one time, the past winter, with Influenzas but they were soon cured by the use of Ayer’s Cheny Pectoral and Ayer’s Pill*.”— M. Powers, Bed Lodge, Montana. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer ft Co., Lowell, Mats. Bold by all Druggiala. Price $1; »U boulea, *4. " For a Disordered Liver Try BEECHAM’S PILLS. 25cts. a Box, OF ALL DRTJGK3-ISTS-JBaaammmmmmmmmm . FOR MALARIA, itILE BEANS, It affords me treat pleasure 'o add my testimony to the value of rim th’s Kile Beaus; they are certainly au excellent medicine for bilious attacks and cold. I have given them a thorough trial and can conscientiously recommend them. W. J t’ABDWKLL, IrondaD, Ala. !Try “BILE BEANS SMALL" (40 f little beans in each bottle). Very ? small—easy to take. Price of '£ either size, 25c. JOST’BUY OF £ YOUR DRUGGISTS. I like"my wife I TO USE B POZZONI’S I MEDICATED B COMPLEXION I POWDER" t Because It Improves Hu- * Looks r, and Is as Fragrant as Violets, jfc BOLD KVBRYW lliillAJl. | mm A new method of compounding Tar. SURE CURE for PILES, SALT RHEUK -od all Skin Dlncawn. Send 3 2c-eUmps for Free Sam .'k 72 5? ld S*T . *JI Pn»ggl«t* and bv AU-OID VO , f w Kandnlnb St., Chicago. Price* 50c. Indiana Prnggtsta aupplled by D. Stewart and A Keifer A Co., lodiaitapolis. eßitablUhel ISSO.> IffDIAIf APOLIB (Hwganlwd 18*5. Business universitv Berth Fern j Irani St, Opp. Pntefliee, HUB S 03B0B1T, Frlutpali ui Frtprletent be»t tacilities for Business, Sbort-hand, Penmanship, English and Actual Business Training, individual instruction. Educate for profit—least expend live in time and money. Attractive City. Graduates hold lucrative position* A strictly business school. Open all year. Enter now. Write to us. Elegant Catalogue, Free.

Me lEWIS’ 98 per cent. A „ L LYE 'Wmmt Powdered end Perfumed. [PATENTED] wWBKA JA The Stroogest and Purest LYE •made. Will make the best per■W lumedSoapin 20 minutes without boiling. It is the b-Ht for dlslnfec-tmg sinks, closets, washmm ing bottles, drains, bar: els, prints. MW etc. PENN. SALT M'F'G CO. Gen. Agfa., Pblla., Pa. IfVYou Want to Know 1.001 enrieiW till mtaaboitt the tinman ivstsm. j " jUwifTireXtnePbeinalrd. h&ilth raved, dizeaet <nd wed, Sow to o/ ignoranot and indineretion, jUcw to appaulluneitvre to all forme of disease, I Bow to ourjSttim Old Eye*. Rupture. Phimoei e, eta.. Stole to mafXbehfiftpy in Marriage and have prize babies, 'and an odaNcLof Doctor’s Droll Jokes, profusely illustrated. bendten cents tor pew Lnugh Cure Book called j MEDICAL SENSE AND NONSENBE,* Murray Hill Pub. Co., 129 E. 28th 81.. New York. »B. W. H. BARBER, ves special attention to privat senses ol male and female •gulating remedies for ladie rnished. Cures Sterility. Rup re. Piles. Flstuia, Fissure. Sper atorrbcea, Gonor irea and Syphilis. Call on or dress him, at %% S. Lllnot* Indianapolis,lnd. All let*er„ tamps answered tonfid ntlai EAUTIFUL SKA SHELLS. Send aO cts. In stamps for a package of various shapes [ and neantliul colon. By mail postpaid, j acket, in neat box Get three of your friends to order with you and get 3 boxes for 91.26. Address A. B. Carpenter, Glen Cove, New York. Indianapolis Institute g Young Ladies Collegiate and Preparatory. Beat Advantages in Mnsic, Painting, French, Elocution, Etc. Elegant New Building. Send for Catalogue. Jauzs Lvov. Principal. AmMH Habit. The only cer ain |(J IVI and easy cure. Dr. J. L. | ■ —Stephens, Lebanon, Ohio. DATCMTC WA - LEHMANN, r A I bl« I O Washington, D. C. Send for circulars

lreh?esrbu^ s “^YfflßkcSl'less^ £khFES Burden APO LI 0-*~ JHs'b/soHd caike of-scou ring *oo4* * cle&riindpurposes••• What would you give for a Friend who would take half your hard work off your shoulder a and do it without a murmur ? What would you give to find an assistant in your housework that would keep your floors and walls clean, and your kitchen bright, and yet never grow ugly over the matter of hard work ? Sapolio is just such a friend and can be bought at all grocers, plrio’H tKMfcUY BOR CATAteim.—nest. Easiest to tun -L cheapest. Belief Is Immediate. A eure b certain. Kor Cold in the Head It has no equal. . “***• w

,uY " • ; A Daily Paper FOR . 1 Cent a Day. A daily newspaper now costs but little more than the old-time weekly. The CHICAGO DAILY NEWS is an impartial, independent newspaper. ' It is a member of the Associated Press. It prints all ■ the news and sells it for I cent a day. Mailed, postpaid, for 13.00 per year, or 25 cents per month. This is 13.00 per year less than the price of any other Chicago morning paper. The CHICAGO DAILY NEWS is not a blanketsheet. It is a condensed paper. You can read it and still have time left for an honest day’s work. It is a daily paper for busy people. No one who has the advantage of a daiiy mail service need longer be content with a weekly newspaper. The circulation or the CHICAGO DAILY NEWS is, with a single exception, the largest in the United States—it exceeds that of all other Chicago dailies combined. You ought to read a daily piper. Why not try the CHICAGO DAILY NEWS?

BICYCLES Untidy Safety *35. EaSWfcd King of Itond..._*4B. MdZ Pathfinder Diamond *BS. -am n tj'HUWJdi? National *BS. 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 & WILIiITS, 113 W. Wash. St., opp. State House, indianapolia, lnd, PENSIONS ■ -I-,.- . - v . t The disability bill is a law. Soldiers disabled since toe war are entitled. Dependent widows «i d parents now dependent whore sons died rom effects of army service are included. If yon wish your claim speedily and successfully proa JAMES TANNER, Late Commissioner of tensions,Washington,D.C. DEPENDENT PENSION BILL has become a law. *l9 PEB MONTH to all honorably (Uncharged Soldiers and Bailors of tbe lato war, wbo are incapacitated from earning a support. Widows tbe same, without regard to os use of death. Dependent Parents and Miner Children also interested. Over 20 yeare' experience. References In alt parts of tbe country. No charge if unsuccessful, w rite at once for “Copy of Law/* blanks and full instructions all rare to K. HstLLUITEB Sfc ««». (hucecssors to Wm. Couard A C 0.,) sr. «». Box 715, Washington, D. C. lIEW Pension Law; ll THOUSANDS NOW ENTITLED WHO ■ 1 HAYR NOT BEEN ENTITLED. Address for forms of application and fall information. WM. W. DUDLEY, LATE COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS, Attorney at Law, Washington, D, 11. (Mention this paper.) ’ xxrx*. fITOB «*» 06., 102 Corcoran Building, Washington, i). C. Pension Attorneys of over 25 years’ experience. Successful! • pro#ecute pensions and claims of all kinds in shortest possible time. asJV'O fee UNLESB SUCCESSFUL. mm ! EXPERIENCE. lil 11 ril dfc! ™“ “5 19A 1M I n youn* turn and vomeo in tliis IVhruwhU. WOOL^i^X^ali?,;^ tS&S!£Kqpi@!lS esKara a . 115’5*155 tw w— kts -K - - - -| I*o 80-00 INDPLIS