Rensselaer Republican, Volume 22, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 July 1890 — Page 7

TOPICS OP THE TIMES.

•‘Oar Country's Dangers and Defences” was tiie subject of thaßev. Dr. B. F. De Costa's sermon at the Church lof St. John tiie Evangelist yesterday paorning, says the N. Y. Sun. The moral dangers, he said, to which the (country is subject, if not so evident as the physical dangers, should be just as much a source of alarm. The low type of morality end the prevalence irreligion among the American people fwere the most vital dangers of the taation. * “We are now passing,” said the preacher, “from an age of force to jan age of reason, and we must distinguish between the real and false defence for our nation. Physical force as a false defence, for it is already overreaching itself by the perfection to which firearms have attained in the last few years. Naval contractors and (speculators raise a cry of alarm about -our- 8,000 miles of undefended sea (coast. We need a navy only for police duty on the high seas, for the oth,er nations know our fighting ability and would not dare attack Us. Our (Statesmen are calling for steel cruisers land all that kind of trash and nonsense. We shall need a museum Agherewe can store away Aheasessruisprs, which will soon become as useless as the stage coach of the past.” Dr. De Costa declared that justice to foreign nations and to our own people would be a sufficient defence, and concluded with an appeal for a pencion for all soldiers of the late war.

, People who live in trees or employ them as places of refuge are apt to be particularly miserable specimens of (the human family, for their choice of ia home invariably implies that they tore not strong enough to meet their enemies on the level. The tree village recently discovered by Sir William j&f&cgregor in New Guinea is the most remarkable that has been reported in a long while. Some ways inland be found a wretched, half-starved remnant of the Velburi tribe. In one of their settlements all the villagers live jta a single enormous tree, on whose wide-spreading branches four houses, pvith two stories each, had been con. Btructed. Wide platforms are built in (front of the bouses on which are piles k>f stones, kept to hurl at Intrusive (persons. This wretched people are in E recess of extermination by a powerful nd warlike neighbor. The most numerous tree villages that have been found are along the [Dua branch of the Mangala River, north of the Congo. The explorer who discovered them last year says jthe natives are the poorest and most (wretched people he has seen in Africa.

Mr. Stanley b»,s now told his story pt the Stain relief expedition, and the two other stories remain to be published. These are the stories of Emin himself and of the Rear Guard, for both of whom Stanley has some sovere (criticisms. Rose Troup, one of Stan* ley’s officers, whom he left at- Yamjbuya, has had his story of the Roar Guard in type for more than a year, and would have published it months (before we knew where Stanley was if Aho Emin Relief Committee liad not invoked the law to prevent him. It is (understood that a book by Herbert Ward will appear as sooft as he is at liberty to speak, and the wealthy relatives of Major Barttelot are anxious to vindicate his memory by publishing extracts from his diary, showing what a pickle he was in at Yambuya. They will all have a chance in October, when the pledge of silence ceases to bind them; and as soon as Stanley’s book gets into the hands of Emin it will not be surprising if that accomplished linguist expresses himself with great vigor and in at least twentylanguages.

Russian notes range in value from one ruble—about 60 cents—to ope hundred rubles. The different denominations are of different color, and as the notes advance in value the size increases until the one hundred rublo note is about eight inches long by four broad, They are all of them very neat, and some of them contain fine portraits of the rulers. * * * The city of St Petersburg, Russia, is, perhaps, the most admirably governed municipality in the world. The cityhas a population of over one million, The streets are kept as clean as a floor, and the water, which comes from the river Neva, is as clear as crystal. They have a splendid system of lighting, some of the streets being lighted by electricity, but the wires are all under ground. The poles on which the lamps are placed, and the telegraph poles, are all ornamental and of the same height. Wood is burned and the city Is free from smoke, as the manufacturing establishments (use anthracite coa\ which is brought from England. T&e winters are long and very cold. They do not mind it 'much, however, for they dress warmly In furs. The houses are all of brick, covered with white porcelain, and in , order to keep out tb6 cold the walls are made from one foot to one fo6t and a half thick and the windows are all double. The summers are shock but very warm. They have plenty*of .strawberries, but Indian corn cannot be raised. There are not over a dor.Cn American families in the whole city The publication of patent medicine advertisements in Russia is combined .with great difficulties, and tooth powider, cosmetics, medicated- soap and (similar preparations are comprised (within the category of patent medicines. The article must first be submitted to the examination of the medical authorities. If they approve of It they place the manufacturer under bonds that he shall make bis prepara-

tions for the market precisely according to the sample they have examined. Hereupon they give him a certificate which must be deposited with the medical censor. The latter again gives him a certificate which must be presented to the general censorship bureau. If the General Censor has no objection to the wording of the advertisement it may go into the pajiers. If one and the same advertisement is tobe published in twenty different papers it must go through this process from the medical commission down to the oensorship bureau for twenty different times. The name of the paper in which it is to be published must be specially mentioned, and the wording and size of the advertisement designated in the original application and approved by the various authorities. Now, in order to do away with this laborious process, or at least with the repetition of it in the case of each publication, the Medical Council or the Minister of the Interior proposes to have each authenticated advertisement of this kind published in the Praviteljßtvennig Yiestnik, the general Official organ of St. Petersburg, and to allow all other papers to copy it verbatim ad liberatim from that paper without extra revision. Of course the publication in the first, as in all the subsequent instances, must be made at the expense of the advertiser.

MAKING A SPEECH.

It Usually Involves a Very Serious Physical Strain. Philadelphia Telegraph’s Washington Let er. It may look like a very easy thing for a member, having his speech written, to deliver it during the course of an hour in the House, but it is not such an easy thing as it looks. The average speaker gets a deal of athletic exercise in the course of an hour’s speech. There are some members in the House who can stand and read a speech without lifting a hand except to turn the pages, nnd almost without changing position; and there are others who can talk all day without getting tired; but the average speaker perspires as if he were sawing wood. An off-hand speeoh of ten minutes does not count, but the man who throws his arms in the air as if whirling Indian clubs, hammers his desk like a blacksmith, and dances all around the place for an hour or more, is taking very violent exercise. Experience has taught some of them that it is not safe to make such a speech without taking extra precautions against cooling off too quickly afterwards. I know several members who take extraordinary precautions. They do not speak often. They know for weeks beforehand that they are to speak, and after all preparations are made for the speech itself, and the day comes for the effort, they have a servant bring a complete change of linen and underwear and a heavy overcoat to the Capitol, and wait with these things at hand until the speeoh is ended. Then the speaker, with the perspiration pouring off him, rushes to the cloakroom, where the servant stands with the coat ready, and throws it over his shoulders as soon as he comes within reach. Next, the member, with the. collar of his overcoat turned up high, tucks his dry underclothing under his arm and makes for the bath-rooms. There he enters the waiting-room, where the temperature is high and there can be no draught, being under ground, and Waits to cool off a little preparatory to a bath. There is no more work for him in the House that day. When he has got his bath, he makes for his lodgings as fast as he can, and stays there until thoroughly rested.

A Priest at Andersonville.

The only authorized representative of the Christian religion who possessed enough of it to visit the thirty thousand men in the prison pen w 6B a Roman Catholic priest, Father Hamilton, who came in quite regularly, at least every Sabbath, for several weeks. Ho talked kindly to us, displaying much sympathy for our condition, and administering the last rites of the church to all the dying men who would accept, without any regard to individual beliefs. He stated that strong efforts were being made to bring about an exchange by both the North and South, and that their efforts-would probably soonjbe successful. Upon the strength of this report we concluded to let our tunnel remain quiet for the time, thinking that if exchange failed wo could have final recourse to it. The exchange did fail; and a heavy thunder shower loosened one of the timbers of which the stockade was composed, so that it settled into the shaft, discovering to the authorities our tunnel, and they quickly filled it up.

Brief Historical Facts.

The height of the atmosphere is almost forty miles. Sound travels through water at the rate of 4,800 feet per seco hd. The freedom of the press was first granted in England in 1688. There are more magazines and newspapers published in the United States than in all the rest of the world combiued. The cost of the railroads in the United States has been $9,000,000,000. Over 1,000,000 persons are employed by the railroads of the United States. The average cost of constructing a mile of railroad in'the United States at present is $30,000. The first printing by steam was done in London In ,181?. - L - The first newspaper established in America waa the Boston News Letter, first issued April 24, 1704. The first public performance on « pianoforte was in the Covent Carden Theatre, London, May Is, 1767.

Your Toilet Is incomplete without AYER’S Wt" Hair Vigor,' WLWvjS R preserves the hair, jFHBgwJ keeps the soslp clean, everywhere the k™ l *® dressing. All “I have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor (or promo ting the growth » of the hair, and think it unequaled. For restoring the -hair to its original color, and (or a dressing, it cannot be surpassed.”— Mrs. Geo. LaFever, Eaton Bapids, Mich. “I was rapidly becoming gray and bald; but after using two or three bottles of Ayer’s Hair Vigor n» hair grew thick and glossy and the origin*! color was restored. I have no hesitation in recommending this dressing.’' Melvin Aldrich, Canaan Centre, N. H* Prepared by Dr. ,T.C. Ayer St Co., Lowell, M***, ’ # Sold by Druggist* and Perfumers.

Aphorisms.

To rejoice ia another's prosperity is to give contentment to your own lot; to mitigate another’s grief is to alleviate or dispel your own.—Edwards.. The finest composition of human nature, as well as the finest china, may have flaws in it, though the pattern may be of the highest value—AddisonSo quickly sometimes has the wheel turqed round that many a man has lived to enjoy the benefit of that charity which his own piety projected.— Sterne.

A brave man thinks no one his superior who does him an injury; for he has it then in his power ,lo make himself superior to the other by forgiving it.—Pope. False friendship, like the ivy, decays and ruins the ,walls it embraces; but true frendship gives new life and animation to the object it supports.-Bur-ton. The best rules to form a youngjman, are, to talk little, to hear much, to reflect alone upon what has passed in company, to distrust one's own opinions and value others that observe it.— Sir St. Temple. Nothing is more silky than than the pleasure some people take in “speaking their mnd V A man of this make will say a rude thing, for the mere pleasure of saying it, when on opposite behavior, full as innocent, might have preserved his Mend, or made his fortune—Steele:

A Battle of Parts Beggars.

London Daily Telegraph. People who were quietly passing along the Avenue de l’Opera and the corner of the Rue Louis lo Grand in Paris lately were horrified to behold a battle of beggars. The combat was due to keen competition between the belligerant parties in the matter of alms. A burly medicant known as •Ironleg” was plying his trade in company with a female coibnanion, when a blind man led by his dtmghter passed by whining energetically for eleemosynary aid. The female-friend of “Ironleg” accordingly called the blind man opprobrious names, whereupon she was vigorously attacked by the latter’s daughter, and words and blows were exchanged between the to a terrible extent. While r the women were at war * ‘lronleg” charged at the blind beggar, whom he speedily flung to the ground. In his fall the sightless medicant broke one of his limbs and was carried to the hospital, where the damaged member had to be amputated. “Ironleg” in the mean time has been justly incarcerated pending his trial for assault and battery, and it will be a long time before the philanthropic persons who, disbursed daily donations for his support will see him in his accustomed corner in the Avenue de l’Opera.

Worth Hundreds of Dollars.

My wife used only two bottles of “Mother's Friend' before hor third confinement. Bays.she would not be without it for hundreds of dollars. Had not half aa much trouble as before. Dock Miles. Lincoln Parish. La. Write The Bradfield Regulator Co.. Atlanta. 6a.. for further particulars. Bold by all druggists.

Give the Old Man a Chance.

New York Tribune. We are glad to see numerous protests in the press against the way in which the Old Man has been ignored. The many virtues and good qualities of the mother have been celebrated bothr te poetry and prose, in connection with the lives of all our great men. This is as it should be. Perish the wretch who would blot out a line of this praise. But in remembering the mother, why forget the father, better known as the Old Man? It is true the Old Man is not always a person of ideal physical beauty. You don't feel like writing sonnets about him. and even a rondeau would be out of place in celebrating his homely vir. tues. But he tolled to feed and cfothe the'future great man, perhaps sat up at night with him in his sickness. And in a multitude of ways he denied himself the pleasure and comforts of life in order to give the young man a chance. Poor, patient, brave, uncomplaining, awkward Old Man, how litr tie our literature has to say about him! How generally he is ignored when living, and forgotten when dead!

The Soft Glow of The TEA ROSE le Acquired by Ladles Who Use POZZONijS MEDICATED COMPLEXION i'.T_vb .isi-Ss

Extraordinary Discovery of a Ring.

sote* and Queries, X A servant boy was sent into the town with a valuable ring*' He took it out of itß box to admire it, and, passing over a plank bridge let it fail on a muddy bank. Not being able to find it, he ran away to sea, finally settled in a colony, made a large fortune, came back after many years, and bought the estate on which he had been servant. One day, while walking over His land with a friend, he came to the plank bridge, and there toldhiß story. <<l could swear,” said he, pushing his stick into the mud, “to the very spot on which the ring dropped.” When he withdrew his stick the ring was on the end of it. Intelligent and cleanly housewives prefer pure goods, hence the growing popularity and extended sale of Dr., Price’s Cream Baking Powder and Delicious Flavoring Extracts. It Is only when a man Is complimented that he thinks he is seeing himself as others see him. Any man that puts au article in reach of overworked women to lighten her labor Is certainly a benefactor. Cragin & Co, surely come under this head in making Dobbins’ Electric Soap so cheap that all can use it. You give it a trial. When a man’s temper gets the best of him it reveals the worst of him. ■ ■:< —■ 7TT~ : Wasting away, growing thinner every day. Poor child. You need Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers, and you would soon grow fat and hearty. Mamma, get her some. , Even when a rattlesnake manages to keep its head all right it is liable to get rattled at the tail. - “Well begun is half done.” Begin your work by buying a cake of SAPOLIO. Sapolio is a solid cake of Scouring Soap. Try a cake of it and judge for yourself. One lone, unassisted fly in a bed room in the morning will do more towards making a man get up than all the rising bells in the world. Physicians recommend Tansil's Punch. The man that makes a character, makes foes. We will give SIOO reward for any esse of cat” arrh that cannot be cured with Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Propra., Toledo. O. With fame, in just proportion, envy grows. The best cough medicine is Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 25e Be echam’s Pills cure Side-Headache.

Summer Weakness Loss of Appetite, Sick Headache, Quickly Cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla jjEWIS’ 98 per cent. HMf Powdered and Perfumed. [PATENTED] Jl The Strongest nud Purest LYE • made. Will make the beat perfumed Soap in a) minutes without boiling. It Is the beet for disinfecting sinks, closets, wa*hff ing bottles, drains, bariels, prints. ■ ■ IV. PENN.SALTM’F’GCO. Gen. Agts., Phlla., Pa.

(buau*h*«!«o.> UWASAPOLB (&corgaaii«4~li»!, BUSINESS UNIVERSIT V MJR Sorth Pemjhuu It, Opp. Poitollee. SUB ft 0380 IV, Prlsdpdi ui PnfrUtes. 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 yeas. Enter now. Write to us. Elegant Catalogue, Free. PENSIONS The disability bill 1« a law. Boldiers disabled since the warareentitled. Dependent widows and parents now dependent whose sons died from effects of army service areinciuded. If yon wish your claim speedily SM-fli i TINNER, Late Commissioner of Penalops, Washington, D. C. TREATED FREE. Positively Cared with Vegetable Remedies. Have cored many thousand eases. Core patients pronounced hopeless by the best physicians.. Bret dote symptoms rapidly disappear, and is ten days at least two-thirds of all symptoms are removed. Bend for free book of testimonials of miraculous cures. Ten days treatment furnished free by msiL If you order trial, send 10 cents in stamps to pay postage. 08. H.H.QBEKH 480 MB. Atlanta. fleT nil 181 Habit. The only certain Wr lUlfl and easy cure. Dr. J. H. ■ Stephens, Lebanon, Ohio. Indianapolis Institute l Young Ladies Collegiate and Preparatory. Best Advantages in Music, Painting, French, Elocution, Etc. Elegant New Building. Bend for Catalogue. Jamss Lyox, Principal.

e very WATERPROOF COLLAR on CUFF ■ THAT CAN BE RELIED OH BE up Not to Blfltt! THEM ARK I*Ot tO PtoOOlOF! ■—■■■■ 1 BEARS THIS MARK. # TRADE ■ ElujloiD Mark. HKDS NO LAUNDERIKO. CAN BE WIPCO CLEAN IN A MOMENT* THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. ~ Ip4| Cures where all else flails. Pleasant and agreeable to the RV

Housewives are sow asking motto what they camphor. A Tries Remedy for Bllloruaae*. Those who suffer from disorder or tnaette* of the liver will never get the upper band of the unruly organ so long aa they uas such irrational remedies as blue pills, calomel aadpodephylffn. But from the tried and popular medliine, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitten, they may expect relief with a certainty of obtaining it The influence of the bitten Upon the great biliary gland is direct powerful and speedily felt. The relief afforded is not spasmodic, but complete and permanent The sallowness of the skin, furred appearanee of the tongue, IndlfMUon, coetlveness, headache, nausea, pains through the right side and shoulder, in fact, every accompaniment of the obstinate complaint are entirely and promptly removed by a course of this inestimable medicine, in behalf of which testimony is constantly emanatlHg from every quarter, and from all etoaes of society. Too long deluded the unhappy victim of catarrh in the head. He’s been told that it can’t be cured. Don’t you believe it. It can be, and it is—no matter how bad or of how long standing. It has been done for thousands—by Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy; Other so-called remedies may palliate for a time; this cures for all time. By its mild, soothing, cleansing and healing properties, it conquers the worst cases. Its makers offer, in good faith, a reward of SBOO for a ease of catarrh which they cannot cure. They are able to pay it. Are yon able to take it? The symptoms of catarrh! are, headache, obstruction of nose, discharges falling into throat, sometimes profuse, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody, putrid and offensive; eyes weak, ringing in ears, deafness; offensive breath; smell and taste impaired, and general debility. Only a few of these symptoms likely to be present at onoe. Thousands of cases terminate in Consumption and end in the grave, without ever having manifested all these symptoms. Dr. Sage’s Remedy cures the worst cases. 50 cents, by druggists.

TAROID A new method of compounding Tar. SURE CURE for PILES, SUT RHEUM and all Skin DtaeaSM, Send 8 Sc-etampa for Free Sample with Book 14 Sold by all Druggist* and by TAB-SMDCO., fa Randolph at., ChtMge. Price 60e Indiana Drngglsts supplied by D. Stewart and A Keifor A Co., Indianapolis. OIL OVJHW’B M.owiVIEI.£CTR|f, INSOLES„mAn. OW * I U£ I S2*SPL BELT * appliance go. 806 Worth Broadway, BT. LOVJO. MO. 826 Broadway, NEW YORK CITF. JOL BICYCLES f^nnaCßlaflriri Dandy Safety 835. King of Road 843 Pathfinder 860. ' V Diamond 885. National ...885. 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 ua for catalogue Estimates furnished for repairs. HAY A WHjLITS, 113 W. Wash. St., opp. State House, SV CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH §k PENNYROYAL PfiULS. WJ Red Cross Diamond Brand. The only rcllaM* pm feral*. SaCaaad rn nn. tolleaaA Drugglrt for f s&r Beautiful sea shells, send so ct*. in stamps for a package of various shapes and beautiful colors. By mail postpaid, packed in neat box. Get three of your friends to order with you end get 3 boxes for 11.26. Address A. B. Cabtentek, Glen Cove, New York. MC 1. tOCn A MONTH can be made SI 0 10 #4UU working for us. Persons preferred who can furnish a horse and give their whole time to the business. Spare moments may be profitably employed also. A few vacancies iu towns and cities. B. F. JOHNSON A 00., 1009 Main BL, Richmond, Vo.

WeffliMffgag Most Popular FamljPaser in tie Mr ... Without giving Up any of It* POPULAR FEATURES tt continues to add NSW A** TRACTIONS to its ooiumna. To WOMAN’S KINGDOM. T ™mTcu!gMaranrSaa*. • nrawssnKSn^H!" 1^ THIS NEWS Of THE WORLD IT HAS ADDED TUB SEASON OUR YOUTH’S DEPARTMENT, Edited by MRS. FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT. It le Intended to this department both ENTERTAINING and INSTRUCTIVE not only to the children but to every member of the family. The beet and moet popular writers and educators have been em gaged aa contributors. This department wm equal In the character of Its oontants any publication far young people in the country...——... ——■ — —, A Series of BiMcal Romances, Written by famous novelists, win be another new feature of THE INTER OCEAN. The Rev. Georg Ebera has written the first of the series, entitled “JOSHUA,** which begad to run In the paper in October. This will be succeeded In January by one from the pen of Elizabeth Stuart Fbalp* author of “Gates Ajar,” etc. Her story win be a novel of the times of Christ, and win be entitled “COME FORTH.” Tim famous H. Rider Haggard wffl write a story of the early tunes of Babylon and Jerusalem, to be entitled "ESTHER" There is no doubt but these storlee will attract great attention. In addition to all this every yearly sub. scriber to TBE WEEKLY OR SEMI-WEEKLY WUI RECEIVE A BEAtrrXrCX. KNGKAVXHG Which of itself ought to be worth the prtoe of the paper. To further accommodate its readers TO INTER OCEAN has made a combination with a THE HOME MAGAZINE,' Edited by MBS. GENERAL JOHN A. LOGAN, by which that paper le sent for oa# year with TIB VKKKLI INTER OCEAN for OntDoUmranS Ten Cents. Only thlnk-BOTH PAPKES for 91.10, Thus every one can have reading matter of THE HOT QUALITY at the very lowest price. The price of THE WEEKLY INTER : OCEAN iv |1 per year The price of THE SBMI-WKHLIh... |2 per year Send for sample coplea Liberal terms to postmasters and olub agents. Address THE INTER OCEAN, Chicago.

BORE WEUS !■ monevl Our Well Machines are tbemoet HJI IHWIHb I i BXLiaßts.nDßAaLi.encCßSsrttLt UMI at They do MOKE WORK and They FlNiau wfito whiw S K]{j ethers FAIL! Any (lie. SgsUttll U laches to U inches diameter. nra| LOOMIS & NYMAN, TIFFIN. - PWKKI _ DEPENDENT PENSION DILL, has become a law. f» PER MONTH to all boa | orably discharged Soldiers and Bailors of the late; war, who are incapacitated from earning a support. Widows the lame, without regard to cause of death. Dependent Parents and Minor Children also inter-, eeted. Over 20 years’experience. References in all 1 parte of the country. No charge If unsuccessful. 1 Write at once for "Copy of Law,”’ blanks and falh inrtructions all rnss to B. HwAULUTTER M fJO. (Successors to Wm. Consrd k C 0.,) T. S». Box 718, Washington, D. C. lIEW Pension Law;' II THOUSANDS NOW ENTITLED WHO ■ I HAVE NOT BEEN ENTITLED. Address lor forma of application and full information. WM. W. DUDLEY, LATE COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS, Attorney at law, Washington, D, t>. (Mention this paper.) WM. VITOB <8 00. 108 Corcoran Building, Washington. P. C. Pension Attorneys of over 88 years’ experience. Successfully pros i ecute pensions and claims of all kinds in snort “***' * mJ '° WMM VliLSga »0C PENSIONS^:"' claim. No fee till you get pension. Advice ana blanks free. Write stating cate. #. C. DEKMODY, Att’y at Law, Washington, D. C. PENSIQNSS™ I 'ImIiUIUIiW iSraSSSu.WMemsßMhs±&»«^&gg<3B3i THE DEPENDENT PENSION BILL Grants pensions to Soldiers, Sailors, and thler Widows and Children. Present PENSIONS INCREASED. Write Immediately, stating your cose J. V> DKRMODY. Att'y at-Leir, Chauucey Building, WASHINGTON, D,C. ■% IP* ai A 1 a Thoun&ndu KNTIDLNSIUIIS TLKD under the New r Act. Write immediately for BLANKS for apI plication J. B. CBALLE 4 CO., Woshlngton.D. c. MM niCDQ M. Cormiek ASons, Washington D. C., ACln. O. PENSION ihZi r Successfully Prosecutes Claims. I Late Principal Examiner US. Pension Bureau S yrs in lost war, 15 adjudicating claims, a tty sinoa PENSIONS 2i5 £^'SS jVoskm Ageat, Wedilastße, R. C. Biiiiiii Freeman a money, Washington, d. a Patent , Pension ,Cla ut akd Laud Arroaurvs H. D. Money, lO yean Member of Congress A. A. Freeman, 8 yean Ass’t U. 8. Att'y-Gen PENSIONS sur.,sr r and relatives entitled. Apply at once. Blank I and instruction free. SOCLES 8 CO.,Atty'a. Washing ton, D. C. , DENBION^Si£K%S ItestgS'AafiKWiiaSWES ■ lyraln hat wsr, IS mnflietlu dot—, attysiaesh peyemuc Fat«»to and Government claims rCnOIUnO of all kinds prosecuted by;TBo». McShkcbt, Attorney at Lew, Wesbingtou, B. Cand Fremont. O. 'PATYNTF^Sh^ INC SI-te . MTOPtIS