Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 8, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 October 1893 — Page 7
/->. SEE TO n | that you’ro not put ofl « with some poor substi ■K H* zk tut®i when you ask foi V sq Dr. Pierce’s Golden ■kR vL/ I A Medical Discovery. Get LS* it of on honest dealer. ry/ As a blood - cleanser, K /T Iw>f 7 strength - restorer, and ]\ |V y flesh-bufider—a certain f X <x'“7 I p remedy in every disease F /ill caused by an inactive /-* liver or bad blood, flwrrfa nothing that’s “just as good"as the “ Discovery.” It’s the only medicine jruaranfeed to benefit or cure, or the money is refunded. ; Glen Brook, If. C. Db. R. V. PiERCX: Dear Sir —‘Twelve months ago I was hardly able to work at alb suffered from nervousness and weakness, had a bed cough. I can work all the time now and tars a good appetite. I have gained twelve pounds since taking the “ Gofdcn Medical Disooreg feel that it’s all due to the PR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME Of Kidney and Liver Complaint, Inflammation of the Bladder. Dr. Kllmar & Co.. Binghamton, N. Y. Gentlemen:— "lt affords me pleasure to give yqti a recommendation for Dr. Kilmer's •WAMP-ROOT, of which I have taken 3 small bottles. It has nearly removed the effeet of the / RHEUMATISM WK about 7 yearastundM /jy aISj ing, also a severe weakXpv ness of my back and JMSMmP kidney*of about io years’ standing and has helped a severe attack of inflammation "KMWHbf'' ’ of the bladder, which i j um Bure SWAMPT. B. Chilson. BOOT will entirely nn me of in a short time. I purchased the noffitineofS. G. Stone, the Druggist hero in taOK.lnd” W. IL Chilson. March, 7, D 3. lilPmg all fa 50 cent* and SI.OO Size. *3aeMT Onida to Health ’ * tree— Conciliation free. Dr. Kflmer* Co., - Binghamton, N. Y. )r. Mister's PARILLA LIVER PILLS Are the Best. 43 Pills, 25 cents. All Druggists. The Greatest Medical Discovery
of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. 30HALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every Kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula Sown to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred :ases, and never failed except in two cases :both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates »f its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes (hooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week tfter taking It. if the stomach Is foul or bilious It will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat ’he best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Read the Label. Send for Book. Young Mothers! IFe Offer Fom a Remedy trfiicA Tnruree Safety to Life of Mother and Chili. ' "MOTHER’S FRIEND” Bobs Confinement of its Horror and Kith. AftertMtngonebottleof "Mother’s Friend” f •uttered but little pain, and did not experience that BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. ATLANTA, GA, f ,f. BOLD DY ALL DRUGGISTS.
issagfo. as SwUMIM 8 Coat WORLD! SUCKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted waterproof and will keep you dry in the hardest storm. The new POMMEL SLICKER Is a perfect riding coat, and covers the entire saddle. Bowareof imitations. Don't buy a coat if the “ Fish Brand" is not on it. Illustrated Catalogue freo. A. J ; TOWER, Boston, Mass. _ $lO A Day Free! Enclose in a letter containing your full name and address, the outside wtappcr of a bottle of Smith’s Bile Beans (either size). Ifyour letter is the first one opened in the first morning mail of any day except Sunday $5 will be sent 'OU at once. If the ad, 3d, 4th. eth or 6th, sr. Ask for the S&fAl-L size. Full list mailed to all who send postage for it (a cts.). Address J. F. Smith & Co. No. 355 Greenwich St., New York, in a barrel of them ’’ Ely's Cream Balm WILL CURE GATARRHnI Price SO Cents. Apply Halm into each nostril Ely Bros., M Warren St,N.Y. WOOD. Elite AMD HALFTONE OCil
FARMS AND FARMERS
How to Handle the Butt A bull is a good deal like dynamite; no one knows when he is going to explode. Dehorning is not a guarantee of safety, for we have read within the past year of several instances where persons were either killed or greatly injured by dehorned bulls. It is necessary that the bull have vigor and physical force, and to supply that he must have exercise. A. L. Crosby, of Maryland, several years ago contributed to Hoard’s Dairyman his method of handling a bull. From the same we quote as follows: Make a pen large enough for the bull to exercise in (mine is about 25x40 feet) and divide it in the middle by a strong partition. The best way to make the fence is to plant a continuous row of posts close enough together so the bull cannot get his head between them and about seven feet above the ground; eighteen inches will be deep enough to plant them. Of course the “holes” will be a ditch wide enough to receive the posts and eighteen inches deep. On the top of these posts nail a board to keep them in line and from spreading. In each division of the pen have a door, and in the partition—at one side —have two strong planks to slip in as bars from the outside of the pen. Adjoining the pen make a box stall with a roof*bver it, and in this stall have a manger and feeding alley. To operate, slip the bars which confine the bull to one of the divisions of the pen; then turn the cow into the other, take out the bars and the bull can enter where the cow is. Afterward, when desired, separate cow and bull by means of the bars and you can enter the division occupied by the cow and lead her out. The only trouble in operating this pen is in separating bull and cow; but an. ear of corn or something that the bull likes will usually coax him from one division to another, or by walking on top of the fence —on the board —you can drive him by means of a long-handled whip with a stinging lash. —— Friends, this pen will give you absolute safety from all danger in handling a bull; it is worth all it costs in saving time used in exercising a bull kept in a stable, and many times its cost from the immunity it gives from the distressing accidents (?) caused by vicious bulls.
A Misfit. Chicago Inter-Ocean. Dr. E. P. Miller, of Kansas, advocates the using of standard bred trotting horses for farm and draft purposes. It seems to us that the doctor has omitted to look at one very important point, and that is the slope of the shoulder. The shoulder of the trotter has a marked backward slope to the rear point of the withers. This must be so to give free, open action to the forelegs. But such a shoulder is in bad shape for the collar and heavy impact of continuous pulling. Such work needs the more vertical line of the shoulder of the draft horse. This teaches us the ever-ruling truth of the old Arabian maxim, “Form is everything to purpose.” In our opinion any effort to make profitable farm horses out of standard bred trotters is about as consistent as growing Jersey cattle for beef purposes.
Turnips. I write of turnip growing in connection with pickles, because I have never found any other conditions so favorable for growing turnips as a cucumber patch, says Waldo F. Brown in the Ohio Farmer. I scarcely ever fail of getting a good yield on such land, and the best crop I ever grew (500 bushels to the acre) was where I had a splendid pickle crop planted Tune 30, after a full crop of early peas. We keep down the weeds in the cucumber plot, and the land is worked fine and is well settled. About the first of August, when there comes a light rain, we sow a pound to the acre of turnip seed and hoe it in very lightly. We wish simply to break the crust and fine the surface and kill any weeds that may be starting. The cucumber vines shade and protect the young tnrnips, and the cool nights of September soon kill the vines and the turnips take possession of the soil. The cost of putting in the crop is very small; a pound of seed worth 50 cents or less and about a day’s work to scratch over the acre, and they can be harvested for three or four cents a bushel. Sometimes they can be sold in bulk at a large profit. I have sold in favorable years by the wagon load at 60 cents and by the car load at 33 cents, but if none are spld they pay to grow for stock food. I do not like them as well as beets for feed, but they cost little, and all stock soon learn to like them. We feed sparingly to our Worses and colts, and liberally to all our cattle except the cows giving milk, and make them the principal food of the brood sows. It is best to/ winter a part of the crop in pits, as they start soon to grow in a warm cellar. I predict good demand and prices for turnips riext fall, for, through large sections of the country, the potato-crop will be a very small acreage, and the probabilities are that the yield will also be poor. Machinery on the. Farm. The loss of time by the use of dull t *ols, or of implements not adapted for the purpose to which they may be applied, compels the fanner to
hire more help than should be the case if he was alive to the opportunities offered by labor-saving appliances. A comparison of the old-time method of cutting the wheat with the scythe and by the present method of cutting and binding the wheat with the harvester, is sufficient to show that the enormous crops of' wheat could not now be grown and harvested under old systems. The labor that once assisted in the fields has been transferred to the workshops, more mechanics and fewer farm laborers being the result. The fact that wheat and corn sell at lower prices than formerly does not imply that’ the profits are less. The expense of one bushel of wheat, before the introduction of the newest improved machines, was more than the selling price of to-day, and the profits were as small as at the present time. Machinery assists in increasing the number of bushels and reduces the cost, which includes all the necessary work attendant on maintaining a larger number of laborers and teams. A comparison of profits will show that labor-saving machinery enables the farmer to secure larger profits now than in former days, and that the work is less arduous and fatigueing. The farmer of half a century ago was daily on the watch for rains and sunshine, and he was also compelled to face delays that often involved the loss of the entire crop, but at the present day he cuts and binds a whole field alone, riding on a seat and can accomplish in a few hours the work that required several days for his ancestor to perform, and he can plow, cultivate and harrow his corn by riding. Potatoes are now cut up for seed, planted, covered and harvested by machines, and the hay is loaded upon the wagon as the horses are walking along the windrows. Vehicles are also lighter and stronger, and the manure can be spread over the ground by an attachment to the wagon. A glance over the field will show a most wonderful progress in the invention of machinery and appliances to be used on the farm, which places fanning within the reach of many who could not otherwise perform the necessary labor, and, strange to say, the wages of farm laborers are higher than before, for improved implements have assisted many of them to work for themselves.
MOUNT SHASTA.
One of the Most Beautiful Solitary Peaks of North America. Cor. Baltimore American. Among the pines at the foot of Shasta is the little town of Sisson. The trains stop here for meals. This js a very good idea, for at Sisson there is always a magnificent feast—for the eye. One could sit for hours at the Sisson station and gaze at Shasta. The feeling is the same that steals over one were he standing before Niagara, or on the seashore, with the boundless ocean before him. Travelers declare that it is the most impressive mountain in the world, for it stands solitary and alone. Unlike Pike’s Peak and many other of the world’s great mountains, it is not surrounded by a number of lesser ones, and its tremendous height—--14,440 feet —is appreciated by the eye. It is sublimely grand, and yet gracefully beautiful. Against the blue of a California sky its curved outlines seem to sweep in the perfect segments of a circle from the apex of the cone to the horizon. Far up on its base, the dark green of the timber line is met by the virgin whiteness of Shasta snow, and then on, up and up, far past the summer clouds, points the alabaster pyramid.
Shasta is an extinct volcano, and at Sisson there is, of course, a man to sell you lava, volcano glass and other specimens from the mountain for which you may be suddenly seized with an ungovernable longing. He also had a telescope, mounted on a tripod, and you can ascend Shasta, via the telescope, at a reasonable price and without guides or weariness. This, of course, does not satisfy the cravings of your genuine mountdin-climber, and especial accommodations are made for him. He, with some other enthusiasts, engage guides and horses and start in the afternoon for the timber line, which is reached at night. The party camps here, and in the morning horses are left behind, and, with alpenstocks in hand, it trudges to the top. The summit reached, faces turn black, noses bleed and luncheon is taken. The descent is effected in a novel and rapid manner. The guides provide gunnysacks, and sitting upon one, using your alpenstock both as a rudder and brake, you slide down on the snow. No one has yet been killed at this species of tobogganing, but both the Coroner and undertakers at Sisson still live in hope. Shasta has two large glaciers. The Whiting glacier is visible from the railroad. It looks like a narrow streak of snow, but it is over a* mile in width, and is seamed with great fissures and crevasses. Its natural color is green. At times a natural banner is un; furled from Shasta’s peak. This is called the “snow banner of Shasta.” It only occurs when the gale attacks the summit and blows the snow in great gusts “streaming against the sky,” as the railroad book has it. The banner is seen most frequently in November.
The cold and frosty days are here. Bet they some comfort bring; We now can have hot buckwheat cakes To stay with ns till spring.
> - < > ; npHE ROYAL Baking others in leavening power, in < |> purity and wholesomeness, and is indispensable for use wherever the best and finest f* food is required. All other Baking Powders contain > ammonia or alum. 2 S* ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 1M WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
WRITING ON THE CLOUDS.
World’a Fair Scientists Experimenting With a Huge Projector. Chicago Record. “The time is coming when a man will sit on his front doorstep of an evening and read news bulletins from the clouds,” said M. E. Sperry, last night. “With a stereopticon the size’of a Krtipp’gun and a fleecy cloud for a screen,” he continued, election returns will be projected in to the sky so that a whole city will know how many precincts have been heard from and what the net gain seems to be. What if there are no clouds? That is easy enough. Make some clouds.”
They made clouds last night which floated out over Lake Michigan chased by nimble search lights. Mr. Sperry, the electrician, and James Pain, the fireworks man, stood with some workmen at the southeast corner of the Manufacture’s roof. Beside them was a search light as large as a hogshead. It threw a ’Straight beam for a mile out over the rough waters of the lake. At that height the wind came strong and frosty. The men were bundled in their overcoats. ~~ More than 1,000 feet out from the breakers which pounded the shore two specks of light could be seen trembling above the water. These lights marked the location of a raft where the cloud makers were waiting. Mr. Pain leaned over the railing, and swung a lantern five times. From the raft, which was nearly 2,000 feet from where he stood, came an answering signal. Then between the distant lights rose a spit of fire, the sound of a muffled explosion was heard above the surf roar, and a bomb lifted itself high into the air and burst. The glaring focus of the search light was swung to the point from which the bomb had been shot, and there it caught a white mass of smoke curling slowly upward. As it rose the white circle of light followed it. “There we have our screen," said Mr. Sperry; “with a strong focus from a projector we could show on that cloud of smoke a picture of Grover Cleveland or an American eagle or something of that kind." Five bombs were sent up, one after another, and each time the search light centered on the clouds of smoke for each discharge there was one puff of smoke from the raft and another in the air where the bomb exploded. That was as far as the experiment went. It had been intended to throw pictures and words from the projector, but the large mirror behind the electric lights acted in a contrary manner, and it was impossible to get a proper focus, The projector is at the southwest corner of the Manufacture’s roof, and has the appearance of an overgrown stereopticon. The mirror is over 3 feet in diameter and from that on out to the last lens is a distance of some 12 feet. The projection of words and pictures upon clouds of smoke or vapor has been successfully accomplished on the other side of the Atlantic, and late experiments at Mount Washington have been accompanied by good results.
A Fearful Revenge.
Texas Siftings. “I have got a fuss on hand with George.” said a recently married New York lady to her mother. “What’s it all about?” “He insists that I shall do the cooking.” “He does, eh? Then do it. I wouldn’t have any sympathy with him whatever."
Cumulative Evidence.
Texas Siftings. Little papa just came in, and he' is as tight as he could be. ■ Mamma —How do you know he is, Fannie? ' _> Fannie-—Because his hat is on one side of his head, 'and when he came into the gate he kissed his hand to y° u - '', -
What He Would Do.
Overheard at a Belgian livery stable: Master—You must be very polite to the customers. New Coachman —Yes, sir. Master —And honest. For example, what would you do if you found a pocketbook in the brougham with 50,000 francs in it? New Coachman—l should do nothing; T should live on my means.
Ken tacky's "Jim Crow" Law.
The law in Kentucky for separate railway coaches for white and black is now in force. The negroes will fight it in the courts.
Why France is Hostile to Germany, Harper’s Weekly. We hear it frequently said that if Germany would only restore Alsace and Lorraine to France, the French would at once cease to be hostile to Germany, and the situation would be relieved of the strain. This is a mistake. If Alsace and Lorraine were thus restored, the French would take it as a demonstration not of conciliatory feeling, but of conscious weakness on the part of the Germans, and the chances are ten to one that they would then revive their old demand for the frontier of the Rhine as the “natural frontier of France," avail themselves of the first favorable opportunity to get it, and thus to wipe out the disgrace of their defeat in the war of 1870 and 1871. But even if this were not so. the decisive fact would still remain that it was not alone the acquisition of the two provinces by Germany, but mainly the formation of the German Empire as the leading power in central Europe, that has excited the bitter jealousy and resentmen tof France, and of Russia also. The dissolution of the. German Empire, the breaking up of Germany into a number cf comparatively powerless states, is the real object of their desire, and until this object is accomglished their hostile feeling will not e essentially changed. In fact, the acquisition of Alsace and Lorraine, with the two great fortreses of Metz and Strasburg, has so strengthened the defensive position of Germany on its western frontier as greatly to discourage a French attack, and it is therefore rather a guaranty of peace than an excitement to war.
A Leading Question.
Texas Siftings. Mrs. Portly Pompous—What does that young man do all the evenings he spends with you in the kitchen? Bridget—Sure, mum, and what did Mr. Pompous do when he called on you before you were married?
When Nature
Needs assistance it may be best to render it promptly, but one should remember to use even the most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy is the Syrup of Figs, manu factured by the California Fig Syr up Co.
Now a Cold is Due to Bact eria.
London Globe. Bacteria are likely to be blamed for all the ills that flesh is heir to. Professor Schenk now maintains that what we call a “cold” is really due to these invisible pests. When one enters a cold room after being heated, the bacteria in it flock to the warm body and enter by the open pores of the skin. Whatever may be said of his hypothesis, he seems to have proved by experiment that bacteria in the neighborhood of a warm body move toward it. The confirmed smoker may derive some comfort from the fact that tobacco is inimical to them.
In Search of a Remnant.
Texas Siftings, I I understand that you are offering some remnants for sale,” said an Arkansas man to a dry goods clerk. “Yes, sir, we have some remnants which we are offering very cheap.” “Wai. I want a remnant for my dog.” For your dog?” “Yes; yer see, some feller’s cut my dog’s tail off, an’ I thought if yer had a rejnnant of a yaller bulldog I mout find a piece that’d fit it."
Cause and Effect.
Texas Siftings. Mrs. McGinnis —The gas bill isn’t as large this month as it was last month. Mr. McGinnis —It ought not to be half as large, now that Birdie is engaged to that young man who has been calling on her.
Hood’s s £>Cures “ For J' ear * rheuma. I K I tlsm ’ neu *‘* , & l> • n d I f I heart disease caused me I BUCh excruciating pains H v / f jkjm fl itust I could hardly enI dure tbem ' Doctors' | I medicine failed to give I' me relief. The palpita' tton of my heart was so severe at times It would seem as if I was going to die. I was growing werse when I commenced to take Hood'h Sarsaparilla. It relieved me and afterwards when I felt a bad spell coming I always took a dose of the medicine and it shortly cured me. lam S 7 years of age and can truly say in my declining years that Hood’s Sarsaparilla his done more for me than all other medicines.** Mrs. H. Pabasom. Chittenango Falls. N. Y. N. B. Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla. Hood s F»Hj_oare the beat family cathartic end liver medicine. Harmless, reliable, sure. ’> ft •
“German Syrup” i I must say a word as to the efficacy of German Syrup. I have used it iu my family for Bronchitis, the result of Colds, with most excellent success. I have taken it myself for Throat Troubles, and have derived good results therefrom. I therefore recommend it to my neighbors as an excellent remedy in such cases. James T. Durette, Early*ville, Va. Beware of dealers who offer you “something just as good.” Always insist on having Bosche«*» German Syrup. •
That Sign of Honor.
Chicago Record. The Tailor —Surely, you don’t mean that you want this coat made with a great hump of wadding in the back? Why, you’ll look like a hunchback.” The Customer —Hush! I'm a member of the Young Men’s Bicycle Society and I’m a candidate for the presidency of it.”-
Not the Right Answer.
Texas Siftings. Female Sunday School Teacher (who is trying to explain the parable of -the good shepherd) Suppose, Tommy, you children were all little sheep, what would J be? Tommy—An old ewe.
A Mitigating Circumstance.
Texas Siftings. Judge Duffy—Why did you assault Dr. Goodman on the street? Prisoner —I struck him in self-de-fence. I own four saloons and he forbids his patients to. drink any stimulants whatever. If that ain f t sufficient provocation . I’d like to know what is. Ambition is a balloon which carries no parachute.
The World’s Fair!
Take It all in all the world is fair. That is. its judgments are pretty generally just No doubt itgbas formed many incorrect conclusions from tho time the caravals of Columbus appeared off the shores of San Salvador to tho present year if celebration, but there are instances of its fairness which can be cited ttnquestlonod It has. after comparative tests, given its award to Hostetter's Stomach Bitten for efficacy in cases ot malarial, rheumatic and kidney disorder, dyspepsia, liver complaint. constipation, nervousness and debility. Among "positive facts without any doubt” this verdict deserves a prominent place. The experience of a generation justifies, and the concurrent testimony of hosts of eminent physicians. bear out its truth, Otve the bitters a fair trial and verify it A good mirror always tells the truth,no matter upon whom it reflects. Fob sick headache, dizziness or swimming in the head, pain in the back, body, or rheumatism, take Beecham’s Pills. Crotf birds, as usual, will soon cease holding their Chatter-caws in the woods.
Beware of Ointments for Cats [?]h that Con tain Mercury.
as mercury wi 1 rarely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through tho mucous aarface. Such articles should never be used except ae prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is .fen-fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, msnufactored by F. J. Cheney A Co of Toledo, 0., contains no, mercury, and is taken internally and act* directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of ths system. In buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure beanie you get the genuine It is taken internally, and mode in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. < heney <k Co MTSold by price 75c per bottle! It is highly probable that the times which tried men’s souls found some of them guilty. ■■ It is the circus clown who realizes In the most practical manner what it Is to have a large circle of admirers.
Unlike tho Dutch Process (TH, No Alk nlies or— Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of L W. BAKER & Co.*B I BBreakfastCocoa ffi ; llT.fl which is absolutely S ! pwe and soluble. Hg i • It has more thanthree times m 3 1 «■ i fc’fi •trength ot Cocoa mixed Ba|LJ p<pp||wlth Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far more economical, ccittng less than one eent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, aad BASILY DIGESTED. Sold by Sneers everywhere. W.BAKBR&CO., Dorchester, Mm D Indianapolis W BUSINESS UNIVERSITY Leading College of Business A Short >■■■-* Bryant A Stratton. Established MO. When Block. Bovstor day and night. 10.000 former students holding paring position*. Widely known. Our endorsement leeport to beet situations. Greet milrood, manufaetnrinc and commercial center. Cheap boarding. Largo faculty. Individual Inst rnction'try experts. Easy par meat*. Enter now. Write today for Elegant Descriptive Catalogue and Paper free. Addreee IriEEB & OSBORN. 1,000,000 ——■■■■ 111 i.neasm ,A DUt-CTU BaIMtOAD CoMPasr in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circulam. They will be sent to you FZI.E3SS. ” ' Addwe HOPEWELL CLARKE. Laud Commissioner, 8L Pau 1, Minn. ' WANTED—Painters, Artists and Decorators to send 10 cents in silver for the "Color Guide,” correct formulas for all colors, tints and paper hangings Address. E. W. Hedges. Indianapolis, Ind. nENSION«SS^S. a c*! Bl yrs In last war, lisdjudicutlngelsuu*. atty Nr" nEAE" E * s abb rub buses bibb UEBr b l P “ k ’’ EsrCsataM. WMspmUseA ar Ham ■ Seewssrsi whew all mudbsfsa. Mrarg WF.Hacoa.ua ■'war. M.I. WiMalasteM st mads vFiCB Fit t ICIiISE -Fine tract «.t timber land. wall localI ed; excellent farming land; no inciunbraaco; will tie Lange for territory in good salable patent- Ad- ■ ircre Lxcnaxoa. CT E. Wawb.Nt. Indianapolis, lad. CAI KVFK WANTED. Free' prepaid outfit oAbLdJUiN one of our agents has earned SAft. 000 In five years. UNION,P. 0.1371. New YorkniTEMTR thomas p.srxpeow.wastiingum. rA I ER I 5 » C. No atty'e foe until Patent obSJSASSiS taluod. Write tat Inventor's Q aldo.
