Rensselaer Republican, Volume 23, Number 11, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 November 1890 — Page 3
rrjACOBS OJV TRADE pggp|i|ißp, MARK^i Rem^^^aiN rn~ -— ~- CffEES PEOHPTI.T AND PEKMASTESTLY RHEUMATISM, lumbago, Headache, Toothache, j NEURALGIA, | Sore Throat, Swellings, Frost-bites, jSCIATICA, j Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Scalds. j_ THE CHARLES A.-VOGEIER 00 3api-,., Bm PURIFY VOUR BLOOD. But do not us 3 the dangerous alkaline ' and mercurial preparations which destroy ! your nervous system and ruin the digestive i 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 discoyery of this reliable and safe remedy, and all its ingredient* 1 are vegetable. He gave it the name of Prickly Ash Bitters! a name every one can remember, and ip the present day nothing has been discovered that is so beneficial for the BLOOD, for the LIVER, for the KIDNEYS and for the STOMACH. This remedy is now so well I and favorably known by all who have used it that arguments as to its merits are use-IT less, and if others who require a corrective to the system would but give it a trial 77- 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 SCOTT’S EMULSION fOf Pure Cod Liver Oil and HYPOPHOSPHITEsj of Lime and Soda Is omlorsod and prescribed by loading I physicians because both tlio Cod Liver Oil j and lhjiiophonphitcs nro the recognized J agents In the euro of Consumption. It la ) as palatable as milk. ( Scoff’s Emulsion ICimilsion. It | la a wonderful f lesh Producer. It is the J Bear Itemedy tor CONSUMPTION, Scrofula, Bronchitis, Wasting' Bis- j eases, Chronic Coughs and Colds. { Ask ror Scott's Emulsion and take no other J DECEPTION. This may look like poetry, bat It j Only demonstrates bon easily the eye * Hay be deceived. The ear is sometime. ' Deceived by the cry of *‘jnst at good 1 ' By some druggists nho, when Dr. White's Pnlmonsris is called for, Use their persuasive powers to Induce yon to take something elsi On which they make a larger Profit, and should yon allow their Sophistry to overcome yonr better lodgment, yon will discover the Deception only after yon hava Used the staff and foand it Worthless. Ton will then monr* In vain the loss of yoinr good Honey, for there Is no other Gongh remedy as good as the Fnlmonaria or that will cure a Cough as speedily and permanently. Syp. White Pine and Tar THE HOUSEHOLD REMEDY For the Cure of Coughs, Golds, Croup Whooping Cough and LA GRIPPE. It never falls to effect a speedy Curo. Price 25 and 00 Cents. For Sale by all Dealers. Prepared by the Roosa & Ratliff Chemical Co., < Cincinnati, O. GRATEFUL—COMFORTING. EPPSSCOCOf BREAKFAST. “By . thorough knowledge of the natural lav which govern the operating of dlge-tlnn nhd null tl <n, and by a careful appllo atlon of the fine from ties of weli-arlected Cocoa, Mr. Spo* has provld onr breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured he\ erage whloh may save us many heavy doctors' billIt Üby the Judicious use of suoh articles of di that a constitution may bs gr dually buUt upunli Strong enough to resist every tendenoy to dlseas Hundreds of subtle maladies arc floating arouud u ready to attack wherever there Is a weak po nt. Wi may esoape many a fatal shaft by keeping our selves well forttHed with pure blood aid a properl.' nourished frame.” —"OoU Service Oasetto." Hade simply with boiling water or mil e. Sob: only In half-pound tin*, i Grocers, labelled thus: v JAMES EPPS Ac CO.. Homoeopathic ChomLt;, Loxdox, Enoland. BEECH AM’S PILLS ACT LIICE MAGIC ON A WEAK STOMACH. Cents a Box. OF ALL DWUCCISTB. kA DR. W. H. S AUBE It special attention to private H' M lise.see of male and r female Regulating remedies so ladies n M furnished. Cures Sterility. Hup , MS ture , Piles. Fistula, Fissure. Spec ii.W'airTlWphiatorrhipa, Impoteney, Oonnr SSNP‘'*S*Bwsrhcea and .Syphilis. Call on or aW>a..,joJK6ad dress him. at !>«*.; S. IllinnlHHtwlWH'tt., Indianapolis,lud. Alllotto-, ntalning 26 in stamps answered confid-ntia NEW Pension Law THOUSANDS NOW ENTITLE® WHO HAVE NOT BEEN ENTITLED. Address or forma of application and full Information. WM. W. DUDLEY, late commissioner or PENSIONS, Attorney at Law, Washington, D, Us (Mention thfc paper.)
FARM AND GARDEN.
The first step in changing from summer to winter dairying will boto have the cows bred in December or January bo that they may drop their" calves it the fall instead of the spring. If you propose to make the change next year it is not too early to begin laying plans mow.'. ' .s. .■ ' J. - ■" ■ v : : '
The American Agriculturist says that a fowl that will lay from 175 to 200 eggs from January to December should be considered worth while keeping. The Pekin duck will do it, yet some farmers have forgotten that such a thing as a duck exists. Beside being good layers they rear a great many in a season, maturing in eleven weeks. They are sure to market at a good profit It is an open question whether it pays the farmer to hold any sort of produce • ‘for a rise. • * In the long run the butter maker who holds two or three months pays 50 per cent, on the venture. The market nor ihe consumer does not want butter that is old nor that-has been held for a rise. The butter that brings the highest price is that freshest made. The good butter made yesterday always sells highest, and is fir3t inquired for. The most successful butter-makers are those who sell their butter as fast as made and try to make the bulk of it between October and June.
The cheapest pork is made from bogs that are never wintered and that may get a good share of their sustenance during a long season upon pasture or upon a good range. In the north clover is becoming our universal pork producer. In the south a range with plenty of mast from the various fruit, oak and nut trees supplies this place even more cheaply. It is not necessafy that a hog should be a “razor back” to thrive upon such fare. Any good, thrifty shoat will feed himself in the woods from June until November, and then by the middle of December can be fed up to a weight of 200, which is quite heavy enough for the production of good bacon. - . The breeding of the "family cow” is a department of our live-stock industry that is too generally overlooked, The department of agriculture estimates that the number of cows kept in the towns and villages is more than 1,000,000. A largo proportion of these owners would gladly pay a good premium for an animal that just suited them—a liberal, rich milker, free from all blemishes, and kind in disposition. No matter what her breed or pedigree if she fulfills these conditions. Such a cow is hard to find, as every one can testify who has sought, and when found can only be obtained at a "fancy” price something more than her value either for beef or for the commercial dairy.
There is a steady Increase In the popular appreciation for fancy poultry in this country, but it has not reached as high a pitch as in England. At the Chrystal palace poultry show last year there were nearly seven thousand entries. The highest-priced bird shown was the Asiatic Cochin, specimens of which were sold as high as $292 a head. Specimens of the Brahma sold at $245 each, and black Spanish from $97 to $195.- Even at prices much below these the successful brooding of fancy poultry affords gooo profits. It is one of the out-of-door industries that is peculiarly adapted to women, requiring nice, painstaking, and close attention to de. tails rather ttian severe labor, A beginner would do best by confining attention strictly to some one popular breed, branching out into others only after procuring a good degree of practical experience. A new milking machine, which is an embodiment of the bell and the suction tube, is being experimented with in Scotland. The machine consists of an iron suction tube, which is fitted all round tho byre and above, the cogs, and from this an india rubber tube descends to the vessel into which tho milk is to be drawn. A belt is hung over the cow’s back, and from this belt a close vessel into which the milk is to be drawn is suspended. Four separate india rubber tubes about a foot and a half long terminate in this vessel. and on the other end have tin necks which go on the teats of the cow. They do i not not grasp the teats, but fix themselves by the force of suction to the udders at the roots of the teats. Ihe suction force is supplied by a force jiump.whieh ean be easily-managed by a boy. The lid of the closed vessel is of gloss, so that the milk-maid can see at a glance that the four different streams of milk from the seperate teats are coming all right If this machine proves practicable and the cotton-pick-ing and corn-cutting machines are finally perfected, three important steps will have been taken toward lessening the drudgery of agriculture. Potatoes for the JJw inter should remain in the ground until they are thoroughly natured, and then well sun dried before being stored away. The best way to store them is in shallow bins in a cool, dry, dark cellar. If there is a lack of cellar room pits may be used, and, if rightly Aiade, are excellent for preserving the tubers.' They should not bo placed in the pits, however, uhtil just before the advent of winter, and then should be buried below the surface of the ground. It is a mistake to throw the tubers in a heap on the surface and then cover tbe conical pile with a heavy blanket of straw and soil. They need air as much as warmth. The best method Is to dig a pit about four feet deep and .as large as required, being sure to locate in a dry, well drained soil. Fill this with potatoes to within a foot of the surface, and then lay stout supports, covered With earth and straw over the pit. Make the covering rounding, so as to shed rain, and in-
sort at intervals small chimneys of boards or tiles for ventilation. An handling the potatoes carefully avoid bruising or breaking the skins, as this induces decay. If put into such a pit as we have described, dry and sdund. they will come out in perfect condition in the spring. We have often suggested lu these .columns the value of timber plantations and have urged that rough fields, or such as for any cause may have proved unprofitable in ordinary cultivation, might be most profitably put to such a use. A recent issue of the Tradesman re ports that an experimental black walnut grove in Michigan is now rapidly nearing fruition, and that the owner may reasonably expect within a very few years to reap the harvest of the most profitable crop over planted in this State; and the owner’s greatest regret now is that he did not enter more extensively 1 into the business. The certainty of large returns is the great feature of the business of growing the afore valuable sorts of timber, Black walnut is in demand throughout the country, and its scarcity is becoming yearly (Apparent. It is one of the most valuable timbers that can be produced by cultivation in this country, and is hardy and thrifty. Though slow of growth and requiring many years for the giving of money returns, a small plantation of the trees will begin to add at once to the selling value of a farm, and the value will increase with each year’s growth. The minimum value of a black-walnut tree at twenty years is put at S2O, with a yearly increase of $2 in value thereafter. A single tree becomes, within a short lifetime, of more value than the acre of ground on which it is grbwn, and hundreds can bo grown to each acre. The growth of new towns throughout the South has been almost phenomenal during the last decade, but in many instances there has not been the corresponding growth in the agricultural districts surrounding them which there should be to assure permanency and continued prosperity. This want is now being met by land companies which have procured large bodies of land adjacent to good towns and are selling it off in small lots of from ten to twenty-five acres to truckers, fruit--growers, and poultry and dairy men. In one case, where the company is endeavoring to promote market gardening on a largo scale, a canning factory has been erected as'an adjunct to the enterprise, so that the surplus products, if any, can be economically saved. Capital, eo'-operating with labor in this manner for the promotion of new agricultural enterprises, can hardly fail to produce good results. It can seek out, as the farmer hardly can do single Handed, the most favorable basis for such operations. It can promote markets and apply the most successful business principles and management to the affairs of agriculture. The tendency of the times is toward centralization, combined efforts, the pooling interests, and against the old rule of • ‘each man for himself.'” ThAtnoro that agricultural producers can unite under single management the more economically can their matters be conducted hnd tho stronger will be their position. ALLIANCE NOTES. The Prohibitionists and Farmers Alliance of North Dakota united in a State ticket this Fall. The Legislature of Georgia will have an overwhelming majority of Farmers’ Alliance men at its next session. ~~ The Alliance men of Lumpkin county, Ga., announce their intention of opening a co-operative store at Dahlonega. Tho Alliance in Kentucky numbers eighty thousand men, divided into IUO county alliances and over 2,100 sub-, ordinate associations. The Alliance of Buncombe count)', N. C., has organized a Farmers’ Exchange in order to secure the best possible terms in buying and selling. The Alliance of North Carolina will establish a school that will provide a liberal education for the farmers’ children at absolute cost prices. Each pupil will pay his or her proportion of the amount expended iu boarding and teaching the scholars. Tho school will be locatid at Moorehead City, N, C,, and will accommodate three hundred pupils. ,
Tlie Farmers’ Alliance is making the Illinois election contest a very interesting affair this year, and the two old parties regard it thus far as an unknown quantity likely to work any amount of havoc to their well laid plans. It is conceded that tho Alliance will certainly elect some members to the State Legislature and the fear is gaining ground among old party politicians that those may hold the balance of power iu the Lower House.
Truly a Railway Hero.
Richmond Time*. 7 ■ ■ " In the evidence taken in the case of John W. Winn, freight conductor on the Richmond division of the Atlantic Goast Linb. who was killed at Kedfiold Station, on the Petersburg railroad, one Thursday morning, in attempting to get on the caboose while tho train was in motion, it was shown that Winn fell und tho Wheels of the caboose passed over him, cutting bis right leg off between the ankle and knee, his left leg off between the knee and hip, hiß left arm off between the elbow and shoulder. Wbon he was missed the train was backed and he was found conscious. he wtfuld allow anything to bo done for him ho directed the brakeman. who came to his assistance to take oharge of his train und put it on the siding, so as to prevent collision with a passenger train. He then made this brakeman examiij'i the switches used so as to make sure that all was safe. He then remarked that he had performed his last duty, as he would never be able to work again.
WHAT CURES?
Editorial Difference of Opinion on an Important Subject. What is the force that ousts disease; and which is the most eonvenient apparatus for applying itt How far Is the regular physician useful to us because we believe in him, and how far are his pills and powders and tonics only the material representatives of his personal influence on our The regular doctors cure; the homoeopathic doctors cure; the Hahnemannites cure: and so do the faith cures and the mind cures, and the so-called Christian Scientists, and the four-dollar-and-a-half advertising itinerants, and the patent medicine men. They all hit, and they all miss, and the great difference—one great difference—in the result is that when the regular doctors lose a patient no one grumbles, and when the irregular doctors lose one the community stands On end and hotvls.—Roohester Union and Advertiser. Nature cures, but nature can be aided, hindered or defeated in the curative pro* cess. And the Commercial’s contention is that it is the part of rational beings to seek and trust the advice of men of good character who nave studied the human system and learned, as far as modern science lights the way; how far they cam aid nature and how they can best avoid obstructing her.—Buffalo Commercial. At is not our purpose to consider the evils that result from employing the unscrupulous, the ignorant, charlatans and quacks to prescribe for the maladies that afflict the human family, We simply declare that the physician who knows something is better than the physician who knows nothing, or very little indeed about the structure and the conditions of the human system. Of course, “he aoes not know it all.” —Rochester Morning Herald. I have used Warner’s Safe Cure and but for its timely use would, have been, I verily believe, in my grave from what the doctors termed Bright’s Disease.—D. F. Shriner. senior Editor Scioto Gazette, Chillicothe, Ohio, in a letter dated June 80, 1890. All pugilists 16ok alike—or at all events they have a striking resemblance.
HOW’S THIS?
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for Any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO . Props., Toledo. O. We, the undersigned, have known F. -J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions, and financially able to carry ofirt any obligations made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, O, W aldisg, Kin nan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the 'system. Testimonials icnt free. Price 78c per bottle. Sold by all druggists. How fond an old man is of tho young boy who loves to hear about things. Men think house cleaning easy, but unless a woman uses SAPOLIO the proverb is true, “Easier to rule a kingdom than manage a house.”
MUSICAL.
There seems to be little going on in musical circles of late, but there is much talk, among musical people, of the marvelous cure of Miss B—- —, the high contralto singer, who has long suffered from a severe throat or bronchial affection, superinduced by Catarrh in the Head, and who has been perfectly cured by the use*Of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Eemedy, coupled with; the use of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. For all bronchial, throat and lung affections, and lingering coughs, it is an unequaled remedy. When complicated with Chronic Nasal Catarrh, its use should he coupled with the use of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. Of all druggists.
IP YOU HAVE »o appotlte, Indigestion, Flatulenee, SickHeadcahe, “all run down” or losing flesh, you wHI find toil’s Pills Jmt what you need. They tone up the weak •tomach and build up the flagging eaergiea. " a >- Al»o, Mother, lan and testimonials address, with stsfnWws. O. W. F. BmrDXR, 243 State St., Chicago. Ask your Druggist to order it for you. MENTION THIR PAPER was* vunse n soymtusu. STEREOPTICON Hattiry*** Optical Co, CH & A S G °* MAGIC LANTERNS.
Comes Every Week finely Illustrated Read in 460,000 Families. TREYDUTHS i =p Five Double Holiday Uambera jggSfaT Thanksgiving. Christmas, New Year’s, Easter, Fourth-of-July. FREE TO 1691. WSmffi To any New Subscriber wire WILL CUT OUT and send u* tbl* advrrtiaement, with namo and Po»t-Ofißce addres. and SL7S, we will send Tho Youth's Companion FREE to January 1,1891, and for a fhll year dW from that date. This offer Include, ths FIVE DOUBLE HOLIDAY NUMBERS, and all the ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY SUPPLEMENTS. fflftElHAJ•«£*§#
“The heated term is upon us,” said the week’s washing as the lady of the houses began to iron them.
Foolish Martyrs.
There are martyrs and martyrs. Some were wise in the loftiest, gome are silly In the most improvident sense. The word improvident txactly applies to the latter class, since they neglect to provide against threatened danger. We commiserate, but we can not respect them. Among the silliest are martyrs to rheumatism, who might have prevented dally and nightly recurring torture by - the use of Hoetetter’s Stomach Bitters, a blood depurem more efficient in removing the virus of this complaint from the circulation than any thus far brought to the notice at the general community and the medical profession. It promotes greater activity of the kidneys, the channel through which blood impurities, productive of rheumatism, gout and dropsy, are principally expelled, and it Imparts a degree of vigor to digestion and assimilation Which has a most favorab e bearing on the general health. It also remedies biliousness,kidney troubles and malaria. Some people would be worth a good deal more to the Lord if they didn’t talk so much in claBS meeting. Nearly every article sold is cheapened, in cost of production, at expense of quality. Dobbins’ Electric Soap is exactly to-day what it was in 1885, absolutely pure, harmless and uniform. Ask your grocer for it. Look out for imitations. Many postmasters lost their heads at Mr. Clarkson’s hands, but that gentleman himself resigned without being axed. You make no mistake if you occasionally give your children Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers. It is a nice candy and while it never does harm it sometimes aoes a world of good. The detective may be a sharp man, but the professional card-player is generally a sharper. Foul poisons that accumulate iu the blood and rot the machinery of the system, are eradicated and expelled by using Prickly Ash Bitters, a medieine that will not irritate the stomach or bowels. It acts in a gentle manner on these delicate or gans, and restores health in every case Beecham’a Pills cure Bilious and Nervous Ills Sound Advice— Don’t go around looking for a flaw in your neighbor’s eye, Imt keep your own specks well dusted ana watch the corners of your own side of the street. If you feel out of sorts and have a bad taste in your mouth, with headache and constipation, take a few doses of Dr. White’s Dandelion, for you are bilious, and this medicine will cure you. Best, easiest to use and cheapest.-Piso’ Remedy for Catarrh. By druggists. 50c
sir:.... i Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Hiss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. Popham’s Asthma BpeMUMBLx « It rifle gives immediate re/ilfiffA. ,i||| I r\ lief, it is believed to be BwvP .ilraljl | 3 the Best ASTHMA Remt 1 edy known to humanity. .;.ffljJlßmwraffi j As evidence we eive a Trial package FREE. f °THOrfi r paFkAM^ T 2i»i Ridge Aveuiie, Philadelphia. m fN FAT FOLKS REDUCED E »/> It Jf ''When 1 began treatment two months ago I wa* almost lielj plesa, A. VN. / f \ \Y/ I pained me so I could not do my I I 111./ /work. I was staffed up and bloated, conld not sleep. I have lost 28 lbs. in two months ana Oh! I feel so well Ido my work with ease now. I oan cheerfully recommend alt suffering with stoutness to you. I will answer all letters with stamp.” Mbs. Eras M. MuiiLiCAtf, 3d and Spring Sts., Quincy, 111. , PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. No starving, no inconvenience, harmless and no bad effects. Strictly confidential. For circulars and teett monials address with 60. in stamps. Dr. O. W. F. SNYDER, 243 Btate Bt. Chioaoo. mtiVl ION THUS FAPCR wamse to mtuiiuu.
PENSIONS The disability 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 areincluded. Ifyou wish your claim speedily and successfully pros- INIIC6 TIIIIICD ecuted, address, dAMCd lAnllblt) Late Commissioner of Pensions, Washington, D. C.
gW» 4^3hould;ma.kemeirhouses looker wit-h SAPOUO jrfjfa Try & cake in your-nexb- iff®' MXm house-cleaning ■**** ImSf*' A SENSE Of DECENCY Constrains many people to hide the dirt of their kitchens. They make the kitchen a secret chamber, into Which it is forbidden to enter; but half the trouble which they take to hide the dirt and the disgrace which it entails, would keep the kitchen dean, and all its pots and pans bright as s dollar, that is, if they use 1 BAPOIiIO - Isl Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. ICI l±l Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the f | Ufl taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists.
; That Tickling \ In your throst arises from catarrh,Andas catarrh . ** ?, constitutional disease the ordinary cough medicines all fail to bit the spot. Wtat too nead IS » constitutional remedy like Ho<«’e Sariaparllla. which, by belli)in* up the general health, and expolling the scrofulooH taint which is the caoee of Sftturb and consumption, has restorddto tMrfficl health many persons on whom these diseases Mem to have a firm bold. Many nnsoltcted testimonials prove beyond auestlon that Hood’s Sarsaparilla does positively cure catarrh. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists, tl; six for IS. Prepared only by C. I HOOD <Si CO., Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar -VASELINEFOR A ONE-DOLLAR BILL sent US by mall we will delivor, free of all charges, to any person in Aha United States, all of the following articles,earefully packed. One two-ounce bottle of Pure Vaseline, - - 10 cts. One two-ounce bottle of Vaseline Pomade, -15 “ One jar of Vaseline Cold Cream, - - - - 15 •* One Cake of Vaseline Camphor Ice, - - - 10 “ One Cake of Vaseline Soap, unscented, - - 10 “ One Cake of Va.BeltneSoap,eiquisirelyscented,2s “ One two-ounce bottle of White Vaseline, -- 25 •• sl.lO Or for postage stamps any single article at the price named. On no account be persuaded to accept from your druggist any Vaseline or preparation therefrom unless labelled with our name.because yon will certainly receive an imitation which bua little or no value. Liiesebrongh Mfg. Co., 24 State St. N. Y. IMwmwflius BIANOS n R °ANB I rsl6o to *lso(>U*lAfc, S6OO. -for Instruments or fimrge double what we oslc. Catalogue free VfflJH i MAItCHAL A SMITH PIANO CO., jfeaAgSM 235 East Slat St., N.Y. ® /jOMEB\ ~ / op \ BIN6HAMTON V& N. Y. a I \.O. Jfc ,-¥/ BARBERS’SHEARS,B,B%,9In., jAIOO^W^ JIADTSON BATTLES BA2OBS.|L2&V*~Z) TRUE APOLLO BING RAZOBS, 2.00 Sent by mall. Alltno & Lodge, Madison, Ism. Refer to your Post-Master. Mention this paper. jflfTjTiHS tiHIUMi )I “J 311 ICI A*] young men and women in this | aTI H laid lIIM *T owe their fives, their, «!>*,'Chtldheei harinf. | .raises. DOUBLE 4% ■ ■ ■■ All SIMs chsaputhM Breech - Loader ■■ I 1 ■■ Before yeg I" , “ ■ “HI M I >‘T, Mad ,wiap Car In HI BH Ciulosue. AddreM RIFLES»2.Ofi|I 1111 ■! POWELL 4CLMEIT, ,- r l£y9( I ■ 180 Main Street, PISTOLS 75* WATCHtSr cuxnu. Im Cincinnati, Okie. fa ■ IspilTA I Instructions FREE On I LAI IVI to inventors. Write at p U I PfU I ' once for hand-book o I d I L.II lUI information. J. B. CRALLE & CO., Washington, D. 0, PEINE, it KttSnSESL'VSZ relief for cold or perspiring feet. On sale everywhere, or Sent free on receipt of SOcte. Semple package free at ctoree, or mailed for a dime. Illustrated Pamphlet Free. TH* PKDINM CO.. WORLD B’LD’G, W. Y. HITPIITA In von tors’ Golds MAI pN I \ or Honr to ° bt » in * I ft | [.IB I 0 Patent, seat free. PATRICK O'FARRELL. Att’y at Law,Wa»h .D.C nrUOIASI JOHN W. MO7ARIS DtNbIUN Washington, D C r Successfully Prosecutes Claims. I Late Principal Examiner U.B.Penalon Bureau g yrs In last war. 15 adjudicating claims,atty sines A p AMONTH Q Bright Young Men or wLkit: Board for 0 Ladies in each County QjP. W. Ziegler & to., St Louis. n A TE* Al *1” O F - A. LEHMANN PATENTS Washington, D. C. Send for circular* IN u 46—00 INDPLIB
