Rensselaer Republican, Volume 23, Number 2, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 September 1890 — Page 3

AU on one side—j the offer that’s made by the proprietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh : Remedy. It’s SSOO reward for an incurable case of Catarrh, no matter how bad, or of how long standing. They mean what they say; they’re responsible, and the. offer has been made for years. It’s all side —you lose your catarrh, ’or you’re paid SSOO for keeping it. But it’s safe for them, too—they know you’ll be cured. i 1 Dr. Sage’s Remedy produces pet* feet and permanent cures of Chronic Catarrh in the Head, as thousands can testify. “Cold in the Head” ‘is cured with a few applications. Catarrhal Headache is relieved and .cured as if by magic. It removes offensive breath, loss or impairment of the sense of taste, smell or hearing, watering or weak eyes, and impaired memory, when caused by the violence of Catarrh, as they all frequently are. Remedy sold by druggists, 50 cents.

PURIFY YOUR BLOOD. i But do not uoo the dangerous alkaline Md mercurial preparations which destroy your nervous system and ruin the digestive power of the stomach. The vegetable kingdom gives us the best and safest remedial agents. Dr. Sherman devoted the greater part of his life to the discovery of this reliable and safe remedy, and all its ingredients are vegetable. He gave it the name of Prickly Ash Bitters ! a name every one can remember, and to the present day nothing has been discovered that L is so beneficial for the BLOOD, for the F iIVER, for the KIDNEYS and for the STOMACH. This remedy is now so well and favorably known by all who have used x it that arguments as to its merits are useless, and if others who require a corrective to the system would but give it a trial the health of this country would be vastly improved. Remember the name—PRICKLY ASH BITTERS. Ask your druggist for it. PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO,, . _ ST. LOUIS. MO Walter Buhl & Co. MANUFACTURERS of = FURS'S jggk WEABBTZIKLARGESTIMPOHTifOI ebs or i S SEAL SKINS * *Ek« in th ® country and make a specialty iMnwMlSte,. of sddng ■ M SEAL JACKETS IJf | J SACQUES A < I I NEWMARKETS ill jsjß.&c., &c> Ask your mer’JswJWEfflßp’ chant for them. WALTER BUHL & CO., DETROIT, MICH.

OWEN'B - ELECTRIC BELT •AJMTX3 BUSI»ETrSOH.Y. Patented Auc. iB, IBS7, Improved July 30.1889. DH.OWEN'B ELECTRO%<iroWSiggw< GALVANIC BODY BELT suspensory «ui IVW RrnWn'“ eur * Rheumatic ComrrJ .V General fjaiww-^'ar.J Nereotn Debility, BfcltjMWEPS*^' Kidney D '»♦!«"», Mervouineaa *//4!|W‘ Tremblinf, Sexual ExEviction, Wasting of ®"** 'mLeP; eases cans *d by Indiscretions io ,Are 'KIR- Married or Single Life. IT TO BKSrONßini.l faBTIKS OX SO DATS TRIAL. ELECTRIG INSOLES. ■Also an Electric Truss and Belt Combined, lend So. poelaee tor nu Uluit’d book, n< pues, which will be eaty on fa plain ceded nvalap* KMtlonthu paper. Addreeo OWEN ELECTRIC BELT * APPLIANCE CO. 806 North Broadwnw. ST. LOUIS. Ma 836 Broadway, MEW YCBK CITY. TAROID A new method of compounding Tar. SURE CURE for PILES, SALT RHEUM TAItOID co ,IW Randolph St. Chlaaao. Price 50c. Indiana Druggists supplied by D. Stewart and A‘ MsUOr AOo.. Indianapolis. —— -

tl EWS’ 98 per cent. L XsTT/e: Powdered and Perfamed. [PATENTED] A The Strongest and Purest LYE made. Will make the beat perfumed Soap In 20 minutes without boiling. It is the best for disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, drains, ban els, prints, etc. . - r. PENN. SALT M'F'G CO. Gen. Agts., Phils., Pau ADVICE TO THE ACED. Age brings infirmities, such as sluggish bowels, weak kidneys and torpid liver. Tutt’s Pills have a specific effect on these organs, stimulating the bowels, gives natural discharge '•a. and imparts vigor to the whole system. >ie>iAAl<* New Law. to’.OOO nt NOI Vlw O soldiers, widows, f*and relatives entitled. Apply at once. Blanks | and instruction tee, SOULES * CO., Atty'S '♦•Aingtou.P.d.

FROM OCEAN TO OCEAN.

An Unbroken Line of States From the Atlantic to the Pacific. —• new York Tribune. “How many people realize,” remarked the geographer, “that since the admissibn of Idaho and Wyoming we have a belt of States extending all the way from the Atlantic to th* Pacl(fic? This was accomplished, in fact, ’ when Idaho came in, a few days in advance of Wyoming. I wonder who will be the first traveler to go from Maine to California without stepping his foot outside of a sovereign State pf the union. There may be a little good-natured rivalry on this point when'the matter comes to be generally understood; and I have no doubt that forty or fifty years hence numerous claimants to this honor will come to the front. It might be interesting, also, for the people who think they are acquainted with their own country to Undertake to name in order from east to west, or -vice versa, the States that lie along the norther border of the United States. Of course the admission of six States to the Union in one year is without precedent, and there is no possibility of its having a future parallel. The only portions of the country not under the government of some State are the District of Columbia, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Oklahoma, the Indian Territory and Alaska. Four States formed out of these seem possible within,-per-haps, a quarter of a century, but no more for an indefinite period in the future. To look back at the past. Florida, lowa and Texas were all admitted in one year—lß4s. That was the nearest approach to the admission Of six which President Harrison has had. the honor to proclaim. We have now twenty-five States east of the Mississippi river and nineteen west of it. When four more western States are constituted, that river will almost exactly divide the Union in two. so far as the number of States is con corned. In extent of territory there is, of course, no comparison between the “halves.”

REMEDY FOR DOG BITES.

It Consists Simply of a Solution of Salt and Vinegar. “A Woman” writes from New Rochelle to the New York Tribune. I should.like to say a few words on the subject of dogs and dog bites. lam a lover of animals, especially of dogs. There are six dogs lying around my feet while I write. Three belong to a neighbor, three are mine. Two of them I took off the street, “old and sick.” six years ago. In their day they had been valuable setters. I have been bjtten by dogs repeatedly, once severely. A pet dog of a neighbor’s was very sick, and I was attempting to relieve it. It bit me in the left thumb, just below the nail. That member became black :.s-iar-down as the wrist. It remained so • until the nail came off. The owner talked of hydrophobia and said that the dog had not tasted water for two weeks. Had I been afraid I should, no doubt, have taken nervous fits and died. The verdict would have been hydrophobia. But I simply applied a solution of salt and vinegar—a little more vinegar , than salt—washed the wound with it, tied a clean rag around the thumb, keeping it saturated well with the solution, and moved the rag so that a fresh part covered the wound, at intervals. This remedy was once applied to my wrist by a colored woman in the south for a snake-bite. My arm was then black, hard, and painful. The remedy acted like a charm. In two hours the discoloration had disappeared, and with it the pain, and only the needle mark where the fang had entered was visible. Again, I was bitten by a weasel in the Grand Central depot. A girl had it in a bag and had placed it on a seat next to mine, remarking that it was. a kitten. I placed my hand on it. Quicker than thought a couple of teeth punctured the joint of my left forefinger to the bone. I compelled the girl to tell me what was in the bag. My finger was badly swollen and painful before I reached home, some hours after. I used the same simple remedy with the same speedy result. I have also applied it successfully in other cases.

The Search for Pretty Wives.

Ladles’ Home Journal. Girla to be successful to-day, must have something more than pretty features. The men who are worth marrying are looking for something than pretty faces, ooy manners or fetching gowns. They are recognising full well that women are progressing at a pace which will quicken, rather than slacken. They realize that the woman of to-morrow will be brighter in mind than her predecessors of today. Hence, they -are looking for wives who will be the equal of that of Tier neighbor. Beauty is being considered an adjunct to common sense. •>I want a wife who knows something, who is worth having for what she knows; not one of these social butterflies,” said one of the greatest “catches” of the last Ne w York season to me at the winter’s close. A-d he expressed the sentiments of thousands of the young men of to-day. The scent for pretty wives is over, and the lookout for bright, young women has begun. And the girl who to-day trains her mind to knowledge will be the woman of to-morrow. There is a prospect tir-u somebody will make a mint of n>«M»y out of Stanley’s lectures in America. The lecturer ar.d his wife wH! be carried from point to point in a gal&ce car now building for that special purpose.

PREY TO CONSUMPTION.

The Ranks of Medicine Fighting the /" Disease. Philadelphia Record. The establishing of a new hospital in Philadelphia at which consumptives will be treated, and that disease studied thoroughly in all its phases and details, has awakened interest not only among physicians but the public at large. It is natural that a great interest should be taken in the matter when the fact is considered that consumption probably causes more deaths in Philadelphia within a year than any other disease. Even at this season, when cholera infantum mows down little children by the hundreds, consumption of the lungs comes second on the list of mortality, with about sixty death to its credit. OVER ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND A YEAR. Well-grounded medical statisticians claim that nearly one-eighth of all the race dies of consumption. This figure holds good in the United States as well as in other countries. The census estimate of the number of deaths in the country in 1880 was 756 ( 898. Then the population was 50,000,000. To-day it is about 65,000,000. The mortality list will, therefore, foot up to almost 1,000,000 this year. If consumption kills one-eighth of them it will cause the death of 125,000 in the United States during 1890. These figures are enough to startle physicians into a more thorough investigation of the causes and remedies of the fatal disease. Never before has there been so much attention given by the medical profession, not in this country alone, but in England, Germany, France and Italy, to the study of consumption as has been devoted to it during the past year or two. The awakening appears to be universal. ITS TERRORS DECREASING. But, notwithstanding the fearfully large number of people who annually succumb to this disease, there are those, and they stand high in popular and professional estimation, who maintain that consumption is on the decrease; that it does not kill any more people in England now than a century ago, although the population has increased many millions; that more people who take it recover than was the case formerly; that those who do now die lived longer after contracting the disease than did those who died a hundred years ago. SLIGHTLY CONTAGIOUS. Dr. Charles W. Dulles, of West Philadelphia, is one of those who claim that consumption is on the decrease, because medical men know more about the disease than they did years ago. Speaking on this subject he said: • •! don’t think consumption is dying out, but it is certainly decreasing. More cases are cured now than ever before. The hospitals for the special treatment of the disease have much to do with this. It is otten callod incurable, but there are very many cases cured to-day. I think this disease can be prevented by disinfectants to a certain extent. It is the generally accepted opinion now that consumption is slightly contagious. This is a com-mon-sense view of it, at least. “The treatment is simpler nOw than formerly. Judicious exercise, good air and proper diet are the main things now relied upon by the physk cians. Physicians all over the world are studying the disease to-day as they have never before studied it,” Spraying the lungs, or inhaling gasses, has long been used in this country for a remedy. The consumptive bacilli are perishable, but the whole difficulty lies in getting at them with an antidote. One of these spaying apparatuses succeeds in effecting a complete separation of the desired active medicinal poison from theiiquid in which it js incorporated. The spray is exceedingly fine and dry, but carries with it all the antiseptic needed. “The other apparatus is one which sends air heated to nearly or quite 200 degrees centigrade into the lungs. The bacilli are destroyed when they come in contact with this hot air.

ABOUT PEOPLE.

General Ezeta, of Salvador, is the youngest of all Presidents, being only twenty-seven years of age. Senator Dixon, of Rhode Island, is said to have a marvelous memory for facts and figures. The Rev. Robert Laird Collier had s life insured for $75,000 for the enefit of his children, Baron Hirsch, said to be the richest private person in Europe, is coming to America this autumn. John Orth, the ex-Archduke John of Austria, has established himself in business at Buenos Ayres. Louise fiMichel is getting restive. She has expressed her intention of going to Russia to join the Terrorists General F. E. Spinner, ex-Treasurer of the United States, is steadily sinking. He is now almost entirely blind. The Marchioness of Londonderry will pay a visit of a few weeks tn America. Cadet Whittaker, who was so badly hazed at West Point a tew years ego, ,is teaching at a colored military ' academy at Sumter, S. C. John G. Whittier has attended the small church of the Society of Friends in Amesbury, Mass., he lives, for fifty years. Mrs. Bridget O’Donnel, who was buried a few days ago at Holyoke. Mass., was followed to the grave by, eighty-five direct descendants. It is now given out that one of Mrs. Stanley’s wedding gifts was a check for $50,000, therefore the loss of a few spoons by theft does not weigh so heavily upon her as it otherwise would.

CHANGE.

tast<ear she was a blonde; A bold brunette la the, African not wither nor decay Her great variety.

Its Excellent Qualities

Commend to public approval the California liquid fruit remedy. Syrup of Fig*. it i a plowing to the eye and to the taste, and by gently acting on the kidneys, ‘ liver and bowels, it cleanses the system effectually, thereby promoting the health and comfort of all who use It.

Berlin.

Harper’s Magazine. Our first wanderings through the streets of Berlin did not fill our souls with that thrill of joy and that sympathetic trepidation of the whole being which we experienced when we first visited Venice, for instance, or Florence, or Constantinople; nor did they excite that wonderment and eager desire to appreciate which we had felt in the great American cities like Chicago. Berlin is absolutely wanting in charm, whether, of situation, of gennral aspect, or of historical souvenirs. It is a modern city, but its modern aspect has no marked character, and next to no originality. From the time of Frederick the Great, who was the founder of its prosperity, down to the pnesent period of active transformation, which dates from the Franco-German war, the architectural history of Berlin was almost entirely one of imitation and adaptation. The street architecture, until within the last ten years, has been absolutely null; mere rows of box like habitations, pierced with the necessary openings for light, ingress and egress, without any Regard for agreeableness of proportions, lines, and distribution of masses. The public buildings, of which several are grandiose, have been erected for the most part, under the influence of mistaken admiration for the models ©f ancient Greece.

A Wealthy Bank, The Chemical National Hank, of New York, with a capital stock paid in of $300,000, has a surplus fund ot $6,000,000, or twenty times the capital stock. Loans and discounts at the last statement, July 18, amounted t0521,380,080. The total deposits amounted to $28,733,289, and net reserve amounted to $8,785,932, or nearly 35 per cent of the deposits. Dividends are declared bimonthly, which in 1889 aggregated 150 per cent on the capital stock. Advertising Is Not a Crime. Chicago Journal. The time will come when a man or a company can advertise their medicines and rank with any “regulars.” It is a relic of the past, this opposition to any regular physician who sees fit to make his business known through the newspapers. Particularly brief will be the time in which public officials can engage in a crusade with the old fogies.

A Hint to Wives.

The wife of to-day might find the biography of her grandmother profitable reading. She was not wise-in Greek and Hebrew, and never dreamed of Ibsen, yet was a gentlewoman to the core, in whom the heart of her husband safely trusted, because she did him good and not evil all the days of’ her life.—Helen Jay, in Harper’s Bazar.

Meeting His Notes.

W ashington Post: “You were pretty badly in debt when I saw you last,” said a Congressman to one of his constituents. “Are you meeting your notes now?” “I should so,” was the reply. “I can’t turn a corner without running into one of them.” The adulterations of food articles to causing much injury to the health of consumers, who are unaware of the pernicious character of their household purchases. Much sickness and suffering would be avoided jif all table preparations were as pure and healthful as Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder and Delicious Flavoring Extracts.

Some of the census enumerators must have been born tn Padua. “Struck tiie Golden Mean” as the Blood Purifier. The Detroit Free Press says: “Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup, prepared by the Charles Wright Medicine Company, of this city, has struck the “Golden Mean” in the treatment of all blood diseases, and its success is an evidence that an honest, pure and valuable medicine, Is not incapable of attracting the attention of every family. There seems to be but one opinion as to its merit as a family This is the real secret of the success of this wonderful remedy: Its perfect and speedy action in removing all impure and poisonous matter from the blood. No home should be without it, as a thorough and effectual blood purifier for young and old. For sals by all druggists. y. Hibbard’s Rheumatic and Liver Pills. These Pills are Soientiflcally compounded, uniform in action. No griping pain so commonly following the use of pills. They are adlapted to both adults and children with perfect safety. Wo guarantee they have no e-iual in the auro of Bick Headacru. Constipation. Dyspepsia. Biliousness; and. as an iqipetiior, they excel any other prepath. Uon. , The phonograph has not yet some into use in the National game, though it can not be excelled in keeping a record of past bawls. . Good wives grow fair in the light of their works, especially if they use BAPOLIO. It is[a solid cake of Scouring Soap. Try it in your.next house cleaning. 1 - ■■ D Sometimes you’llfind a ball-player who is a diamond in the rough, and then again you’llfind one whois a rough in the dia m o nd. Is Prickly Ash Bittbrs good for anything! Read what Frank Griggsby, of Dodge City, Cm, “ F ® r x thre ® y«“» I suffered from a disease that my physleians pronounced incurable. My friends had given me up to die, when I was induced to try your remedy. I took it for three months and have gained 82 pounds in weight Am a well man and Prickly Ash Bitters saved my life. lam under lifetong obligations to this and will usvsreeaso to recommend lb’

of Advertising. Chicago Herald. No matter how much advertising pays it certainly costs. A single page in an issue of the Century, taken for advertising purposes, costa $500; in Harper’s, S4OO down to SIOO. A yearly advertisement ip one column of the ( New York Herald coeto $80,804 for I the lowest, and SIBO,OOO for the hight 6 * 4 priced columns. These figures I will doubtless be of interest to men who invest $2 or $3 per months, and flatter themselves with the idea that they are extensive and liberal advertisers, and that because of their investment they Ought to control the columns and dictate the course of the publication. Edgar—Miss Edith, I-—ah—have something most important to ask you. May I—that is— Edith, (softly)—What is it, Edgar? Edgar—May I—Edith, would you be willing to have our names printed in the papers with a hyphen between? _. .. Safety from a Pestilential Scourge. JKIw. fK>m i he . d, »? ue - not a medicinal merely checks the paroxysms, is nf Il wha, . e T e ’; endemic «nAr?riu. n^ rl ?. pl ’ 6v, 1ll s ' Qnlnlne does not thj’ 2 n ~, The ®“ ief reason why Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters has won such im-P-eparesthe system iSJTiS mal .t rial T est - This it does by bracing toning the physical organism; regulat“J al fIOW aDd diStribU lion of the animal fluids, and establishing digestion on a sound basis. Not only is fever and ague prevented, but the worst tynes of the dis ???*,•« conquered by ft. Such Is the only condrawn from the overwhelming fa vor. It I»equally efficacious constipation, livercomplalnt.gener.at debility and rheumatic complaint, and ft w reliable diuretic and nervine.

Earched earth is not good for the growth of parched corn. oL Horse Cave, Ky., says. Hall’s Catarrh Cure cures every one that takes ft.’’ Sold by Druggists, Nowadays the man who takes the cake must be wealthy, if it is a cake of ioe. □ Parents’ you do yourselves and your children great injustice if you fail to give your children Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers. Many little lives are sacrificed bv such neglect. * Between the bogus lord and the bogus lard this country has a hard time of it. A Sensible Man Would use Kemp’s Balsam for the Throat ® nd Lungs. It is curing more cases of Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Croup and all Throat and Lung troubles,than any other medicine. The proprietor has au. thorized any druggist to give you a Sample Bottle Free to convince you of the merit of this great remedy. Large BotUeu 50 cents and sl. ' The man who goes to a seashore resort for change frequently comes back without any. For washing flannels, Dobbins’ Electric Soap is marvelous. Blankets and woolens washed with it look like new, and there is absolutely no shrinking. No other soap in the world will do such perfect work Give it a trial now. The decline of Agriculture- -A boy’s refusal to remain on his father’s faign. Beecham’s Pills cure Bilious and Nervous His Bronchitis is cured by frequent sma doses of Piso’s Curefpr Consumption

My Head IsTired Is a Common Complaint just Now Both Mind And Body Are Made Strong By Hood’s Sarsaparilla PENSIONS The diiAbillty bill is a law. Soldiers disabled since the war are entitled. Dependent widows and parents now dependent whose sons died from effects of army service are included. Ifyou with your claim speedily TANNER, Late Commissioner of Pensions, Washington, D. C, OLD CLAIMS rEHvIUHd Settled under NEW Imw. Soldiers, Widows, Parents send for Wank applications and information. Patrick O’Farrell, Pension Agent. Waahlnsrton. n. C.

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■ * YOUR ‘*- r J ATBB** Mb Hair Vigor?! ÜBK It preserves the hair, ' Wl the ,caI J MVAY^iMPer 7 111 everywhere tho dressing. “I have used Ayer’s Bair Vigor fur promo ting the growth of the hair, and think ■ it unequaled. Far restoring the hafr to its original color, and for a dressing, it cannot be surpassed.”— Mrs. Geo. LaFever, Eaton Rapids, Mich. “ I was rapidly becoming gray «nd baM; but after using two or three bottles of Ayer’s Hair Vigor n»y hair grew thick and glossy and the original eolor was restored. I haveno hesitation in recommending this dressing.” —Melvin Aldrich, Canaan Centre, N. H.® Prepared by Dv.XC. Ayer 8k Co., Lowell, MassSold by Drn«J»l» and Perfumers. ®/MN£B\ 7 OF I BINGHAMTON! I*’ BOREWELLSII money! Our Well Machines are the moat fit} lIIVIIUI S MBLiAßLS.ovaAßts.snccßssrcL' Ljl] issa. They do MORE WORK and IPeC'nK greater profit. 5? bU They FINISH Welle where Sil YJ PM ethers FAIL! Any size, t inchoi CoM Inches diameter. KuTkJ LOOMIS & NYMAN, TIFFIN. - MOTHERS’ FRIEND aud CHILD BIRTH l«) IF Ua»D BSFORR CONFINSMSNT. Book to "MoTnsns - ' MAiLEncracK. BRARFtBLR REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA. GA Bold bt all Druggists. M HALF RATES — To THE — ■S? Farming Regions WEST, SOUTHWEST, NORTHWEST. Fornartlealsra call oa yoer Ticket Agent or addreea P. 8. g&STIS, Gaa'l Pae.. Agt., C. B. R Q. IL R-.CMoago. I I EUCDV DCDRMi e»" ‘“» n ■"*' 1 I EVEnI rEIIOUn pretty stet by usings 1 / simple, natural method, the discovery of a I A noted French chiropodist A lady writes: “J I /\ have used two packages of PEDINE, and 1 X A the result Is wonderful. I wear a Ko. 2 shoe I 11/1 now with esse, although heretofore requiring ; lafi alarge'3. It has exceeded my most sanguine I 11/ expectations.” If you are Interested In the / flr subject, send for free Illustrated pamphlet I’EDINE la safe, harmless, and unfailing £/ By mall, aacurely sealed, 50 cents. THE PEDIHE CO., 258 BROADWAY, NEW YORK NEW Pension Law, THOUSANDS NOW ENTITLED WHO HAVE NOT BEEN ENTITLED. AddreM or forms of apnlicatlon and full information. WM. W. DUDLEY, LATE COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS, Z" Attorney at Law, Washington, D, Vs (Mention thia caper.) txrivi. fitch: co. 102 Corcoran Building, Waahington, D. C. Pension Attorneys of over 25 years' experience. Succeesfully pros ec ute pensions and claims of all kinds in shortest possible time. aa-NO fee UNLESS BUO CEBBF UL. ntbICIARI JOHNW.MOBKIfI IJCiIOIvIV Washington, D. C r Successfully Prosecutes Claim*. I Late Principal Examiner U.B.Pension Bureau 3 yrs in last war,ls adjudicating claims,atty sinos ROUBLE ■ W 88 H Alttluas eaeaear if »6.^ ,r Q I 111 Qss siyflys 8 PJI 111 riRH* J young men and women In this ■ S<W | country owe their lives, tbekr a B 8 I health and their happiness to It 411* J M Rid<re’« Food, tueir daily diet ta Wteffl A-lArflMl lafaacy and haring By Drugglsto, WOOLRYCM*!?<* HENC IA M C Thousands EnU. U EL nl w I Iw Cl tied under the New r Act. Write immediate y for BLANKS for ap->-I plication, J. H. CHALLE & CO., Washington, D. C. AHHIM Habit. The only certain rIU Iwl and easy cure. Dr. J. L. Stephens, Lebanon, Ohio. aL Bend 4c, tor circulars and tertlmonlala AddrasL M. u. «. F. BBTBg*, SMS Steto SL, rtHiai. t Name ibis paper when yon write. IN U 21—90 INDPJLIS