Rensselaer Republican, Volume 23, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 July 1891 — Page 3

A prompt return of your, money, if you get neither benefit nor cure. Risky terms for the doctor, but safe and sure for the patient. Everything to gain, nothing to lose. 'There’s just one medicine of its- class that’s sold on these conditions —just one that could be —- Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It’s a peculiar way to sell it —but it’s a peculiar medicine. It’s the guaranteed remedy" sor v all* Blood, Skin and Scalp "Diseases, from a common blotch or eruption to the worst Scrofula. It. cleanses, purifieß and enriches the blood, and cures Salt-rheum, Tetter, Eczema, Erysipelas, and all manner of bloodtaints, from whatever cause. It costs you nothing if it doesn’t help you. The only question is, whether you want to be helped. “Golden Medical Discovery” ii -the cheapest blood - purifier sold, through druggists, because you oitly pay for the good you get. * Cm yen ask more ? [ The “Discovery” acts equally well all the year round. Made by the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, at 663 Main Street Buffalo, N. Y.

ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when 3jrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant tad refreshing to 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 anly remedy or its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most aealtby and agreeable substances, its oiany excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. eyrup of Figs is for sale in 500 and SI bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it -on hand will procure it promptly for any one who riches to try it. Do not accept any iubstitute. CALIFORNIA FiG SYRUP CO. • SAN FRANCISCO, CAL LOUISVILLE, KY. HF.W YORK. " »'

SPRING MS COME And with it you feG tlm need of ... . > ' to overcome that - feeling of uneasmcsti.and depression which has taken poaeasion of vou. — ——Tiiko • • „ 1 MUTES’Mim • • »< <a «»»» h«t. Sprmg Medictae ~ It purifies theblood,-aidsdigestion,and makes the weak strong ana vigorous. ILL RUNDOWN" la the cry of thousands of overworked, debilitated females. They do not feel real sick, but they are hardly able todrag themselves around. White's Dandelion Is the remedy needed In such cases. It purifies the blood, stimulates the Liver and Kidneys to action corrects irregularities and gives < tone and vigor to the whole system. A*, m m h A AXAKBSIS tlv^Hiiiy ? »t Sh I I H ffl r«U.-£. Ktul ik jin INI.A.U----II I I I V" BLK < UUi: tor PILLS. EJ l| !■ % Pruto, »1; at drnrsUtK o i Co I I hla V New \ouii Cirvr The Soap ¥ . * t that Cleans Most is Lenox.

EDISON AFTER DOLLARS.

Why thev'Great Isrator JDealres to Aocumalate a Fortn*. « ■ *T saw Edison one day,” says an acquaintance, “on the eveof perhaps his most important—certainly his most remunerative —discovery, ridiug in the cars to visit a great foundry in Connecticut. He wore a long linen duster of antique design, a straw hat which was partly frayed at the edges, aud he sat squeezed by the generous bulk of Prof. George A. Barker, of the University of Pennsylvania, intd a corner of one of the amen seats of the railroad car. He was then not only the most famous man on that train, but one of the most famous Americans the world over, and he had all the simplicity of greatness. And on the following day, when he stood in front of a great dynamo, the wind carrying his linen duster at an angle of nearly 45 degrees from his legs, and a convenient morsel of his favorite fineeut revealing itself by frequent expctoratiocs, he was really in the presence of immensity and solving one of the riddles of the ages. Fox- it was there that he got his first hint of the divisibility of the electric lighting current, and it was at that mordent that the Edison electric light was created in his brain.

Even then Edison had no money sense. He bad not learned, as he 1 afterward did learn, that next to his | own intellect the most powerful inj fluence which he could have in the Solution of the problems he undertook to solve was the possession-of wealth generous to a fault, ’ not Sfily'tyith the money which he earned but with his Ideas. It was not until he became associated with I Certain capitalists who regarded his intellect with awe and ms lack of | money sense with something like amazement tinged with contempt, that Edison learned the lesson of the value of money. When he got this lesson he had it thoroughly. He abondoned all of the countless notions which floated to his brain unless he saw in them a money value; he measured his contemplated inventions not by the satisfaction which they would give him or the fame which he would attain, but by their value as business commodities. He employed, just as a bank would competent talent to handle his accounts and his cash, and in course of two or three years he found himself not embarrassed for ready cash, as he had freqently been before not obliged to scurry about here and there to raise money, which was an abhorrent occupation to him, but a capitalists, a man esteemed in financial circles not only as a wizard with wonders at his beck, but a man with a bank account, capable of undertaking great financial operations. He learned, too, to curb his exuberant and enthusiastic nature, and he i put on a mask of severity and coldness difficult at all times for him to maintain, but which he found absolutely essential for liis protection. With his intimates he was a boy again, and he tells them frequently that when he gets through feeling ! like a boy he wants to go. j Edison’s wealth is almost impossi- ! ble to estimate. It is very large, and : he is accumulating now rapidly. The | snowball has got a prodigious size, j and is constantly rolling. As he is [ only 44 years of age he will become one of the enormously wealthy men 1 of the country.

FUNNY FACTS ABOUT EELS.

Why the U. S. Fish Commission Will Not Give Away their Eggs. —Every now and then some one applies to the Fish Commission at VYashingtou for a consignment of eels’ eggs wherewith to stock § pond or stream. The request is invariably refused, not because there is any intention to be disoblidging, but for the reason that nobody in this world knows whether eels lay eggs or not. If they do, man has never beheld them, and to get hold of any is quite out of the question. In case you want to establish eels in your water preserves you can buy young ones by the pailfull at a cheap rate, and they wilbgrow big enough to eat or senci to market within three years.

It may be fairly said that the eel, as to its breeding, is the most mysterious animal in existence. Its method of propagation has puzzled science for centuries and has been a subject of more or less superstitious speculation among many people for thousands of years. The ancient Egyptians bad their own theories respecting the matter. Some authorities contend that eels grow up from librae hairs, which in some strange manner become vitalized. Others have held that they were generated spontaneously from slime, while others still have gravely advanced the belief that they came from the skins of old eels , or even from similar exuviae of water snakes. That eels mate with water snakes is very generally accepted as truth. Most popular among people who get their living from the water, however, is the theory that eels are the progeny of various other fishes. The Sardinian fishermen assert that they are produced by a certain kind of water beetle, which for this reason is called “mother of eeh. ” The Greek poets, who fathered all children otherwise unaccounted for upon Jupiter, declared that this god was the progenitor of the eel. All this mystery about the eel, as science has learned within the last few years, is due to the fact that it lays its eggs, or brings forth its young alive, in the sea, wherenoone has a chance to observe the process.

Other fishes, like the shad, lama the ocean to spawn in fresh water streams,i bnt this curious and slippery customer doe 6 precisely the reverse. The young eels, newly born or hatched, leave the salt water and make their way in armies up the rivers island. Obstacles apparently in- ! surmountable they use the utmost ingenuity in passing, even travelling considerable distances upon dry land in order to get around an obstruction In the spring and summer any visitor at Niagara would descends beneath the great sheet of water at the foot of the falls will see literally hundreds of cart load? of small eels wriggling over the rocks and squirming in the whirlpools. Of course, it is impossible for them to get over the falls and thus it happens that, although eels have always been plentiful in Lake Ontario, there were none in Lake Erie until they were planted in the latter body of water artificially.

Inasmuch as eels must go to the sea in order to propagate their species, they are found not to multiply at all when placed in ponds that are landlocked, although in such places .they will grow rapidly and be bealtby. It costs so little to purchase young ones by the quantity that this is no obstacle to the usefullness of stocking inland waters withthese fish. They have many very important advantages from the economic point of view, inasmuch as they will feed on anything dead or alive, will thrive in water clear or muddy and at any temperature, and requre no Ipokiug out £?r, in rivers like ihc Susqu4hhanua, where gill nets are usecfeeTs are very undesirables It is not unusual, upon hauling the nets in that stream and in others further south,to find that the catch has been entirely eaten up by myriad? of the squirming robbers which have left little beside heads and backbones. It has been found advantageous by tho Fish Commission to plant eels in the upper great lakes and in the Mississippi. They have also been introduced very successfully in California.

In all probability eels lay e>jgs, just as do nearly-all other fishes. The only difference is that they deposit them in the sea, instead of freth water. It is believed that the mother eel dies soon after she has spawned. For a couple of centuries past efforts have been made by eminent scientific men to discover the organs of generation in maie and female eels. It is only possible now to discover the difference between the sexes by microscopic examination. About fifteen years ago the celebrated Dr. Virchow of Berlin published an advertisement for a female eel bearing eggs,offering a considerable prize for the specimen. Within a short time the advertiseSent was copied all over Europe,and err Doctor received such enormous quantities of eels in packages that the affair became quite serious. So many thousands pounds of the very perishable article were consigned to him that it was an important question bow to get rid of the material, and one of the comic papers suggested that perhaps it would be well if ho should make a regulation requiring all samples to be sent smoked. The best way to cook eels is to cut them into sections after they have been skinned properly, dip ikem in egg. roll the pices iii crumes, aud fry them. But there is no point more important than that the backbones should be taken out before the attempt to bite them through.

Sherman's Opinion of Cavalry.

While at Ivenesaw General Sherman was very much perplexed by the incoherent and irreconcilable re- 1 girts from various quarters as to ood’s movement' ‘'l found him.’ - say a friend who was with him at the time, “little of an admirer of calvary he having on one occasion impetuously exclaimed: “1 have broken dowu all the cavalry of this army except Gerards’ division, and expect to soon finish that, when I shall be glad to be rid of them!’ Gen. Elliott indignantly repelled this reflection upon his arm of the service, and by his firotest drew from Sherman a graceul modification of what he had said. But Sherman never did like cavalry, and always maintained that ‘Smith’s Guerrillas' and other divisions of his army of the Tennessee could outmarch cavalry as well as out-fight them.

“I think a large part of Sherman's disposition to underrate the cavalry arm of the service, apart from his impulsive nature, grew out of the miserable fiasco made by General Sooy Smith in his raid in connection with Sherman's Meridian movement in February, 1864, wherein he so completely disappointed the expectations of Grant and Sherman, and, too, in a great degree destroyed the effects of the movement from Meridian. Nor did the failure of Stonemau’s expedition and his capture, with the inconclusive and expensive results of the McCook and Kilpatrick raids, also made in the Atlanta campaign, contribute much to improve Sherman's opinion of pavalry efficiency.”

Lady Dufferia is greatly interested in the women of India. Upon inquiry she found that they have never received any medical aid when they were suffering from physical ills. II they were unable to cure themselves by simple remedies they were left in the pangs of whatever disease had overtaken them, to die horrible deaths. Lady Dufferin cannot let this go on. So she is giving con certs at Grosvenor House for the raising of funds to send doctors to the women of India.

If Charley Ross is alive next November he will be old enough to vote

SOMEWHEAT CURIOUS.

Beer is so extremely popular thai •in Philadelphia last year every votes drank 3,700 glasses—*46,o2B,B2s wa: spent for lager. lY Soho, W. Va.. has a unique rats road station. It is bailt around i giant elm tree and the roof is shapec like an umbrella. - ; Y r • Africa is a land of many tongues The Bible has been translated intc sixty-six of the language and dialeeti of Africa. The actual strength "of the British troops in India is about 71,000 men. the total population of the dependency being 286,000,000. Sometimes a spider’s bite may be both unpleasant and serious. An antidote found efficacious is bruised plaintain leaves spread with cream and often renewed. Twelve oranges which grew on t twig six inches long in Geo. Stone’s grove, near De Land, Fla., completely filled a peck measure and weighed 35 pounds. # Railroads are celebrated for theii rapid The Union Pacific trestle bridge,"near Dalles, Ore., 325 feet long, was recently rebuilt in 2 4 hours after being burned. It is said that in Munich, whict consumes more beer than any othea German city, the family allowance ol the amber fluid amounts to over 56i quarts a year for every man, woman and child.

One of the greatest obstacles t< settlement of vast regions in Al nca ndS’been the tsetse fly. Although harmless to man; all civilized animals die from its bite in two or thre< days. . Two immense gum trees whicl tower over one hundred feet abov< a little church in Gautemala are sixtj feet in circumference, and have push ed the foundations of the church ou> of place by their roots. The grave of Brigham Young if covered by a plain and inconspicuous slab of granite. It lies in an in closed city lot in Salt Lake City, sup rounded by a low iron fence. A few of the Prophet’s wives lie buriec near by. In the towns and Cities of Chili al the shopping of any consequence u done in the evening. In Santiagc the stores ate open till midnight, anc during the hot afternoons, whet everybody takes a siesta, they an locked up. Experiment has shown that whei coal is burned in an open grate front Ito 3 per cant, of the coal escape! in the form of unburnt solid parti eles, or “soot,” and about 10 pei cent, is lost in the form of volatili compounds of carbon.

The city of Jacksonville, Fla., pro tacts catfish in the river as scaven gers. It is a five dollar fine to c&tel one «f them, and ftie fish seem t< know it. The river is full of tham and they vary in size from a baby U a 200-pound man. Graduated bands of insertion sfcripi the shirt fronts of some of the sweet • it warm-weather toilets, the longer oand is of course placed in the cen tjr, those on each side growing shorter as they reach the baric drap eries.

- A five-year-old boy fell into deej water from a bridge at Seattle, ant it was twenty-five minutes before men brought him to the surface witt grappling-irons. He was rolled orei a barrel and at the end of two hours was pronounced out of danger. Regulation boating hats are om inch high in the crown and three in ches across the brim; they are first bandedby a black velvet ribbon,aboui which is placed a still narrower on< -of gold galloon, when wing-like bows of black and gold are perched upon the upturned baek. The oldest living triplets in Penn sylvania are Rebecca, Benjamin and Samuel Roller, of Sumneytown, it Berks county, who recently cele> brated their sevent-sevehtn birthday anniversary. They are three of thir teen children, and all enjoy remarkably good health. A horse at Irvington, Cal., was annoyed while taking his daily mea from a bucket by a flock of hens, especially by one big black hen, anc one day he turned his bucket over or his tormentor and left her impris oned under it, where she remained till the next morning.

Famous Wearers of Bangs.

Cleopatra wore her cow’s-tail red hair banged round her face and ears. Old Mother Eve is pictured with [ loose tresses playing about her brow and temples. Salome, the Carmencita of biblical days, wore a bang; so did Magdalen, the beautiful Queen Bess and the beaux and beauties that Van Dyke painted. Louisa, the lovely Queea of Prussia, pinned her tresses with a star and let them tty again windward about her cheeks; the fascinating Mm. Roland, whose dark, serious, changing eyes no artist could paint, pulled her shock ol brown hair within an inch of her eyebrows and bound it with a fillet: Mine, de Stael, the religious, skeptic, sloven, scholar, wit and queen of the salons frequented by such men as Talleyrand, Schiller, Maribeau, Voltaire, Rosseau, De Lafayette, Napoleon and Louis XIV, openly confessed that, although sne might not wash her face once in a week, her front hair had to be looked aftei every day, and she wore a head-dress of beaded crape with a frill of little spiral curls running across her fore< head from ear to ear that kept in curl, but caught fluff, feathers and any dust that was flyivg. Empress Josephine, Queen Hortense, Mari< Louise and other coquets of the firs' empire banged their nair,

Can You Eat r*U*b, Mi jrltkrat iiatnn afUrnd! If a«t, rscommend t« ion BoaT* hreaparill*. wbiah ctntu » good Mint tIM mb* tlm* M invigorate* the «t»m*ek and k*w*U that th* food U properly digiitod aad all ita al rength asataailatad. . ”1 haia been taking two bottles of Hood'* Sy ■aparllla for woaknet* and no sppotito. With great ploaapre I win aa'l that I think it hu don* ■tnach good breanp* 1 an now a bla to oat Ilk* a man.” J. 0. S. CuoaeuiLißickardson Hotai, Monmouth, 111. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Don't ha induced to boy any other. Inaiat upon Hood’s Sarsaparilla—loo Dose* On* Dollar. - wMMB Tho Ruggedest Path In Ufa If it be but irradiated by good health, is shorn of half its distatefnl features. Hosts of distinguished men and women have uttered regrets for a past when young, full of vigor aud hope, though battling With obstaeles that seemed well nigh insurmountable, their pulses beat, their veins tingled with the glow of joyous health. Chronic invalids, would you once more feel that glow, would you—as of yore—sleep, eat, digest perfectly? Then use, with persistence. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, foremost among tonics, most reliable of vitalizing medicines. Nervousness, dyspepsia, hypochondria, a loss of appetite and sleep, this grand reparative of a debilitated physique and impaired constitutional vigor speedily prevails against. Rheumatic and neuralglo ailments, malarial disorders, kidney troubles, and the growing infirmities of age. are successfully combatted by this benign specific. It is said that Senator Cullom never divulges anything. But wait until he gets in mid-ocean. He has never taken a sea voyage yet. -• Money the Year Round. Miss Smith says: “Can I make $25 per week in the plating business?"’ Yes. I make $4 to $8 per day plating tableware and jewelry and selling platers. H. K. Delnc & Co., Columbus, 0..w11l give you full information. A plater costs $5. Business is light and honorable and makes febney the year round. A Reader. When lightning tries to be funny it is very liable to make even the strongest oaks split their sides. ” Xc. SIMPSON, Marquess, W.Va., says: “Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bad case of catarrh.” Druggists sell it, 75c. The new style of punctuation Is modeled after the railway express train. It has the smallest possible number of stops. Impure Blood is the primary cause bf the majority of disease to which the human family is subject. The blood in passing through the system visits every portion of the body—if pure,carrying strength and vitality; if impure, disease aud death. Blood poisoning is mo9t dangerous. Prickly Ash Bitters will render the last mposslble, and will regulate the system o that health will be a sure result. High living is dangerous. At least the balloonist seems to und it so. <mssar~~Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorla. When she was a Child, she cried for Castorla, When she became Miss, she clung to Castorla When she had Children, she gave them Castorla. FIT*.- All Fit* *to(pp»(l fr«* by Dr. Kline’* Qr*at Xerve ttpstorer. m> Fit* after flr»t day* u«e. Marvellous <-iirue. Tr*atJj>« end#2.oo trial bolU*fr**to Fit Send to Dr. Klin«,S3l Arch St., Pliil».,Pa No Opium in Piso’s Gure for Consump tiou. Cures where other remedies fail. 25c For a disordered liver try Ueechsm's Pills'

A HAOTAL BBMEBT TOS Epileptic Fits, Falling Sickness, Hysterics, St. Titos Dance, Nervousness, Hypochondria, Melancholia, Inebrity, Sleeplessness, Dizziness, Brain and Spinal Weakness. This medicine has direct action upon the nerve centers, allaying all irritabilities, and Increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It is perfectly harmless ind leaves no unpleasant effects. pnpp-A Valuable Book an Nervous la now propwSu on dor his dirootiou toy the KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, 111. Sold br Dru*Ki*ta at SI par Bottle. 6 for 85, T-M-KoHUe.BI.7B. 6 Bottle* foe 89. TA.K.B y Tutt’s Pills The first dose often astonishes the invaUdJ giving elasticity of mind, booyancy of body, GOOD DIGESTION. regular bowels and solid deah. Price,

I CUBE RUPTURE DR. HOm’S ELECTRIC TRUSSES Have Cured 10.000 Baptawi la 1» Tear*. •■I suffered with * douhl* raptor* Sim *‘"' r J?*®rlc Tru»» o*re<l mo la 3ty| ■aoUu. J.G PWILTOT. Sept 24, 'M. Cb»tt*nooe», T*nn •Tow Bretrle Tram oared mj rapture *ue*rln* - jeers. Mbs. A. Docohtt." Abeseon, »• J- <**• A ®°- ••I »m cured sound and a 'Sbj wesrtaf ysar Hsrtrtc i-russ. R. Hlstbt.’’ Dttvls Cltj. In**- Aa*.l7, ». Si. HOfUIZ. IuVEtITM. 180 WABASH AVE..CHICACQ

Indianapolis Business University SgMfcSEsßW3iiteMC ,, " i Cold ia the Head It has uo equal ItuSKKßwhleh 553 3S b v Sffl led *° U ’ e Pj nostrils. ”**’“AUdSH* 37 wm! Wantn. Pa ■

‘German Syrup” For children a medlA Gough one should be abso* - and Croup reli ?£J e : T mother must be able to Medicine, pin her faith to it as to her Bible. It must contain nothing violent, uncertain, or dangerous. It must be standard in material and manufacture. It must be plain and simple to administer; easy and pleasant to take. The child must like it. It must be prompt in action, giving immediate relief, as childrens’ troubles come quick, grow fast, ana end fatally or otherwise in a very shovt time. It must not only relieve quick but bring them around quick, as children chafe and fret and spoil their constitutions under long confinement. It must do its work in moderate doses. A large quantity of medicine in a child is not desirable. It must not interfere with the child’s spirits, appetite or general health. These things suit old as well as young folks, and make Boschee’s German Syrup the favorhe family medicine. ®

nptiLSfflisi THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1891, VIA THE Lake Erie & festers 1.1 “NATURAL GAS ROUTE.” On Thursday, August (I, 1891, the Lake Erie & Western R. R. will run their popular annual excursion to Cleveland, Chautauqua Lake, Buffalo and Niagara Palls at follow!ng very tew mtesq viz.: Peoria .... $7.50 Ft. Wayne . . $5.00 Bloomington . . 7.00 Muncie . . . 5.00 La Fayette . , 6.00 Connersville . . 5.00 Michigan City . 6.00 Rushville . , 5.00 Indianapolis . . 500 New castle . . 5.00 Tipton .... 5.00 Cambridge City 5,00 Lima 4.00 Fremont . . . 5.00 Do not miss this opportunity to spon Sunday a* Niagara Falls. The excursio train will arrive at Niagara Falls 7:00 a m.. Friday, August 7, and wIH leave the Falls returning Sunday morning, August 9, at 6 o’clock, stopping at Cleveland Sunday afternoon, giving an opportunity to visit the magnificent monument of the late President Garfield, and many other Interesting points. Tickets will be good, howevsr, to return on regular trains leaving the Falls Saturday, August 8, for those not desiring to remain over. Tickets will also he good returning on all regular trains up to and including Tuesday, August U, 1081. Secure your tickets, also Chair and Sleeping Car Accommodations, early. Those desiring can secure accommodations in these cars while at the Falls. For further information nail on any agent Lake Erie <fe Western CR.,or address C. F. DALY, aGen. Pass. Agent, Indianapolis, Ind.

PURDUE pfERSITT The State Institute of Technology! » 1. A School of Mechanical Engineering. 2. School of Civil Engineering. 3. School of Electrical Engineering. 4. School of Agriculture. 6. School of Science and Industrial Art. 6. School of Pharmacy. Has an equipment worth one-half million of dollars. Send for a catalogue.. Address JAS. H. SMART, Prca’t. PJpsilsSS'f Cough. aTABRBP]2 Founm ST, L V/ftlAnnfT^itneAMSPOßT.lnd. ru A new methsd of cotnponndlnr Tar. SURE CURE for PILES, SALT RHEUM and .11 akin DUsnssf., Send S trss 8*»IrAKOUM sSrSltidM. Indians DrncrUlssupp'isd br 1>- Stswsrt sod A. Kslfsr A Co.. Indlsnsjolis. . r,.: i.j. ...Il—i .

e rn FAT FOLKS REDUCES Y?\ «». AIM Xante. Oregon iwiuf \ Yi( | ] "Mr »«.itrht w«.U5i i*onJ»,now It lan* iredactioaof l»ln" t«' circular. wi'a fi Jvow r”": MoVieMr’r >• *«*' itMrugo.M ***-XlolS\fcl JOHNW.aiOKIUS nENSION Weahlqgtoo, I». O. r Successfully Prosecutes Claim*. I Late Prludpel hxaminer DAIV don Bureau 3 yr* In lint war.lS adjudicating daima.attyalnee I outs BA66ER & CO. L" .rissi LfeKtaa o PATENT SfcjGITOIIS Tll mmimn Illustrated Hand’Hooii Free. J II A'l'll N' 'VB- <'mlle« Co., WauhlDitOL rfl I Fill lY I>- C. Please mention ttispv llllull JLU per every time you /rite. Pnzraxosra - »» *ll mi.diessi % disabled. *2 lee for lihtuw. '*l?*J***l prrltnrt. Write for law*. A. vv. Ma o*Mt(X a Sons, Wa»hikotu*. P. C * CurciacßAM, O. IM U 81— M ISPftH