Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 June 1895 — Page 7
BEST nr THE VOBUh 1 \ \ \Yv\s / \ xtilm \s \yu\v\ wrwa\\e4Jly @THE RISING SUH STOVE POLISH in cakes for general blacking of a stove." THE SUN PASTE POLISH lor a quick after-dinner ahine, applied and polished with a cloth* Mens Bros., Props., Canton, Haas., U.S. A. Grinding Evil. The most deadly and insidious of drugs, chloral, seems to be steadily increasing its ravages, particularly In the large cities. So many cases have been reported In New York of men found senseless in the streets from the effects of what the police call “knockout” drops that special orders have been given to investigate the drug stores in certain districts and put a stop to the gale of the poison without the precautions required by law. Why? It is said that dew will not form on some colors. While a yellow board will be covered with dew, a red or black one beside it will be perfectly dry. WQMAN’S[SUFFERING. RELIEVED BY MAIL. HOW IT IS DOSE. How a Woman Works for Her Sex. CSrECUL TO OCB LADY HEADERS) Seated at her desk in the bureau of correspondence, this wonderful woman opens her letters from all parts of the world. A few extracts from their contents tell the story.— FBOM lowa. ”lam In a very oad condition. ■ My courses have stopped from JNI catching cold; and the pain is Ks fearful. lam all bloated up; and 4 4'T the pain in lower part of my body _ I -< ia terrible. My back and bead all the time. What shall I K JSEt&o for it? ” Miss L . *>^ w ' bes Moines. from Mrs. Lizzie Decline, 224 Grand Hew Jersey. Street, Jersey City, relates hei . miseries resulting from worn! o-e. \ trouble, from which she was re llcred and cured by the timely t X u,c °f Lydia E. l’lukham’s VegeAIA table Compound. She ends her ’ letter by saying, “ I owe all to TKOU Ohio. Mrs. Newton Cobb, of Manchester, 0., writes: “ I used eight bottles of your Vegetable Com—pound, and I am happy to say It Sfeß lihs cured me of painful menstrualions and backache. My luffcring every mouth was dreadful. IWf The doctors gave me morphine to ease the pain; nothing to cure me. Oh, I want to tell every one what cured me I I wish every , suffering woman would write aud get your advice.’’ from Miss Jennie , Chicago, Illinois, slates that she is twenty-two years of nee; occupation, snleswoman in largo dry goods store. {MI » Coaslant standing lias brought rHsl en womb trouble, tlie symptoms of which she describes fully. She \ says: “ Help me if you can. SS | There are .several girls X know mmrtfafim wlio have written to Mrs, Plnk- > iSSltv* and been cured by her adrice nnd medicine.” FROM Alias Mary Smyiie, who resides pKtNS’LV’N’A. at 2078 E. Susquehanna Avenue. Kensington,Phlla., writes: “I am Me* a working-girl, and must stand eleven liours every day. I have twfeis suffered terribly from painful WSf&jfr menstruationsnndkidney trouble. At times mv head was so dizzy W I could hardly see. A friend rec■taa ommended your Vegetable Com. 9HL< pound. lam a different girl now: S no more aches and pains. Oh, thank you, thank you I ** The above extracts from many hundred letters received daily by Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., go to show how easily ailing women can obtain advice and relief. Write to Mrs. Pinklvam. —Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, the most successful female medicine known to the world, can be obtained of any druggist in the land. Brings comfort and improvement and lends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the’neeas of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting In the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval, of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup bf Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c ana $ 1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed,*you will not accept any substitute if owed. ■afaegM/aaiJOHNW.MQBBm ItNOIUN Washington, D.TE K&CT.’mEm'fiSSSSltefe ■ Syialnl—twar, l*»4jndlcatlngnllm*. rttyalnoa, DATCMTC poma« K» i mp» on > Y AI Cn 15 unt " !*««•» oC tain ad. Write for Inventor's Quid*. MfJLHItIMMIIrtJI XiTMPBm In time. Bold by drofylaU. Hi
TORRID ZONE BURSTS.
PAST WEEK HAS BEEN A RECORD BREAKER. Mercury Climbs Up and Peeps Over the Top of the Glass—Many Deaths and Prostrations Be ported—Crops In Many States Burning Up. _ Hottest in Years. There Is not much in the way of weather that the United States cannot dish up in the course of twenty-four hours. Indeed, coincidently there may be every conceivable variety fashioned into a sort of meteorological. mosaic, making up what maybe styled one unified aggregation of universal climates. As a matter of fact the American weather nowadays is not, strictly speaking, weather at all; it is an assortment of samples, no sample warranted to “hold.” According to former rules of computation and average It should be intensely hot do wmßonth; whereas the region of the magnolia has been deliciously cool, refreshed by abundant and frequent rains, with no.w and then a delicate, barely perceptible pinch of frost in the air. In New York, where a reasonable degree of heat would have beep admitted, but cool breezes normal, all records have been broken for hot May weather. ~ While New York was sweiteriugin this way Colorado had lost herself in eight or ten inches of snow. While Texas was being deluged with rain Indiana was burning up with drought. Other sections pined for a patter of rain upon corn leaf and wheat ear, and a cloudburst came aiding to drown out a part of Nebraska. Now, all this is indicative of bad management somewhere. The distribution is performed in a buuglingly incompetent manner. .This business of - turning on a burning glass where the earth is already parched and the' peopio baking, emptying clouds into lakes, and sending a, surplus of rain Into a State that has an instinctive aversion to water, has been carried to a stupid •xcesß. It is time a stop were ordered.
Record for the Week Appalling. Tuesday’s torridity was the climax of a hot week that brokje the record of twentyyears. In Chicago every day the mercury climbed up several times took a peep over the top of the glass. Not since the bureau began regulating the weather had the corresponding week let loose so much caloric. The excessive heat was due to the south wind, the scorching breath from some Mexican inferno that so often sweeps* Across Kansas and Nebraska, leaving death, destruction and mourning in its track. The record shows a remarkably high temperature from an early hour and A striking drop during a shift in the wind. Chicago did not get the worst of the heat, for at Indianapolis, Louisville and Charleston, S. 0., the thermometer registered 100, making the first century record of the season. It was 98 at Washing-' ton and Norfolk, Va. The maximum of 66 was reached at Detroit, St, Louis, Springfield, 111., Cairo, Nashville, Memphis and. Cincinnati; New York, as usual, played a second to Chicago, with only 94. Boston had a lucky day, having A sea wind which kept the record down to 60. At 7 o’clock at night Ohio and eastern Indiana were still sweltering under a temperature of 90 to 92. The Rocky Mountain region was enjoying compensation for the suffering of last week. Beyond lowa and Minnesota the temperature was down to 60 or below. In Colorado and Wyoming it even went as low as 50. There were general rains, with more or less thunder, in lowa, Nebraska And Colorado, and those sections will probably get more showers later. This Is likely to prove the longest spell of wet weather the arid section of the West has had for years. Cairo and Nashville also reported showers. Government correspondents sent In the following as the highest marks for Monday: , v ;
Abilene BS| Little Rock 94 Bismarck 62 Louisville 100 Boston 60 Marquette 72 Buffalo 74, Momphis 96 Cairo 9o; Miles City 66 Cheyenne 60i Milwaukee 78 Chicago 98 Minnedosa 62 Cincinnati 9C[ Montreal 70 Cleveland 90! Moorhead 56 Davenport 92! Now Orleans 84 Denver 56!New York ~. 94 Des Moines 84!Omaha 82 Detroit 96 Oswego 80 Dodge City 68 Palestine 90 Duluth COi Pierre 48 El Paso. 84! Pittsburg 94 Erie ............. 88! Port Huron 94 Galvestoh 86| Pueblo 72 Grand Haven 90; Rapid City 64 Green Bay 78i St. Louis 96 Helena 66! St. Paul 80 Huron 60! Salt Lake City.... 66 Indianapolis 100! Sioux City 76 Jacksonville 92! Springfield, 111.... Qfl Kansas City s 84! Springfield, M 0... 88 Knoxville 00! Toledo 94 La Crosse 88; Washington 98 Many cases of sunstroke are reported. In New York it ia safe to say that at least twenty-five persons have died during the last five days as a result of the heated term, and that over 150 have been prostrated and taken to the different hospitals of the city. In Chicago four persons died Monday from sunstroke and many others overcome by heat will not recover. Philadelphia reports seven deaths and nearly fifty prostrations as Monday’s addition to the heated term fatalities, while Baltimore and Pittsburg each record four fatal cases. The mean temperature for May from 1871 to 1895 is shown In the following tablet 1871 68 18i» «i 1888 63 1872 66 1881 61 1889 57 1873 62 1682'. 61 1890 63 1874 68 1883 53 1891 63 1878 64 1864 66 1892 62 1876 69 1886 63 1893 62 1877 67 1886 67 1894 66 1878 65 1887 00 1895......60 1879 58 The highest notch reached during May, 1893, was 94 degrees, the lowest being 82 degrees. On seventeen days the temperature was above normal, and on fourteen it was below normal. The weather has been more freakish during May this year than in twenty-five years before. On four days—May 4, 29, 30 and 31—thq records were smashed, the mercury beating its competitors in former years. Crops Burning. Up. The most gerious condition which ever confronted the farmers of Illinois, Indiana, lowa, Wisconsin and Michigan reigns in many localities, and every crop is threatened by serious danger—wheat, corn, oats and hay. There has been less than half the asnal rainfall this year, and many es the smaller streams are now dry, while wdUa and cisterns have been dry for weeks. The hot wave of this week' has made ihe condition more alarming. 80 long as it Was coefl the^g rowing vegetation halif Its color, but nnaer the influence of
the sun and wind of this week vegetation of ail kinds is withering. Many of the meadowa are already in August brown. The bine grass pasture will not much longer afford grazing for the cattle, the farmers say, and the wheat and corn are both in danger of being destroyed.
RUIN IN MEDICINE VALLEY.
The Dreadful Effect of the Flood -Plainly Discernible. Death and destruction rushed hand in hand down Medicine Valley, Neb., on the crest of a raging flood. Swelled by the heavy rains until its banks could no longer withstand the strain, Curtis Lake burst from its restraint, and Monday’s sun shone upon a valley of desolation through southwest Nebraska. Thousands of dollars’ worth of railroad property has been destroyed, miles of meadows that-covered-the earth with a carpeting of green are now a muddy waste, dotted with wrecked buildings and drowned live stock. No lives were lost. Most of the damage is to crops where, the fields were flooded. The first intimation Curtis citizens had that the locality was threatened with disaster was the bursting of the lake’s banks with a roar that could be heard several miles, and a wall of water ten feet high rushed down the valley, carrying everything in its path. Houses, freight cars, live stock and a mountain of debris were caught up and dashed about like feathers. The fine roller mills which occupy the east side of the great ravine received the first shock of the torrent and the building was ruined. A few hundred yards below the mills Medicine river passes under the railroad tracks of the Burlington. When the flood struck this narrow defile its progress was impeded, but only for an instant ~Tfaeir~the heavy-embankments gave- way and the wall of water rushed through, cutting a path 100 yards wide. The railroad company’s loss is about $25,000. As the wall of water passed beyond the city it rapidly spread out over an immense "Territory, nnd its powers of destruction were correspondingly decreased. The damage, however, was merely shifted, as the extensive alfalfa meadows for many miles to the south were flooded several feet deep, and all details from the south where the torrent passed indicate very extensive damage. Farm products of every description were engulfed and in many In* -stances -where the homes of-the farmerswere in the immediate vicinity of the valley the disaster was almost ruinous. Small buildings were washed away or undermined in such a manner as to be rendered worthless, and in some sectiohs the water rose so rapidly as to seriously menace the lives of families.
FEELS THEIR PULSE.
The New York World Polls Congrcso on Money Matters. The New York World publishes a telegraphic poll of the next Congress, as far as obtainable, upon the silver, tariff an 4 income tax questions. The World sums up the result as follows: In a general way it may be said that out of 116 members who gave unequivocal answers to the silver question, fifty-five are unqualifiedly in favor of free coinage, forty-four favor bimetallism, generally with a proviso of an international agreement Only seventeen can fairly be classed as favoring a single gold standard, and the attitude of some of these even is not definite. Sontk and far western States are almost unanimous for free coinage. The South Central States are almost unanimous for free coinage. The North Central States lean towards silver, with an international bimetallic qualification and it is only in New York, New England and adjacent Eastern States that there is any avowedly gold standard men. In regard to the tariff, only twentyeight members are against all changes, while thirty-five want moderate changes, and thirty-eight are pronounced for radical changes. Few are free traders. Moderates are chiefly those who think changes will be necessary in order to increase the revenues. Tbe income tax question brought out many sharp and piquant answers. Forty-nine Congressmen say they favor the principle of the tax. Forty-seven oppose it. A great many %vaded the question or failed to answer it. A few details by States will be interesting. Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, North Carolina, South Carolina, South Dakota, Virginia, Washington and Wyoming are solid for silver, so far as heard from. The bimetallists are chiefly in Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, lowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, 'Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Vermont have gold advocates. Alabama, Arkansas, Texas, the Carolinas, Georgia, Louisiana and most all other Southern States are solid for the income tax. New York and the East are generally opposite. Elsewhere the division is nearly even.
GRESHAM’S DEATH MASK.
A Perfect Plaster Cast of the Face of the Late Secretary of State. The plaster cast of the face of the late Secretary Gresham has been completed and the sculptor, U. S. J. Dunbar, has made two photographs, giving effective front and side views of the cast To the man who will be unable to see the face of the dead these pictures will give a strikingly accurate view of the features of the Secretary,; calm and peaceful in death, with the lineaments of strength, firmness
DEATH MASK OF GRESHAM.
and dignity still present. Aside from the value of the cast as a representation of the Secretary’s features in death, it will have ita chief purpose as the most accurate guide for the perficted bust of Mr. Gresham. The cast is but a mechanical process, but the hand of the sculptor will now fashion (ho clay into a complete representation, giving life to the eyes and 'expression to the features. One of the last acts before the remains of the Secretary were robed for death and committed to the casket was to maka the plaster cast of the features.
The Sybarites.
In the south of Italy there was once a flourishing Greek colony called Sybarite. The town was well situated for commerce, the surrounding country was very fertile, the climate was the finest in the world, and for some centuries the Sybarites were industrious and enterprising, carrying on a profitable trade with other countries and heaping up immense wealth. But too much good fortune finally proved their ruin. Little by little they lost their habits of labor and thrift, and Instead gave themselves up to pleasure. Finally, leaving all kinds of necessary work to their slaves, they laid aside the cares of life. and speat tbeir days in eatiDg and in dancing and In listening Tofine musierbr iu attending the ■ circus and watching the feats of acrobats or performing animate.—St. Nicholas; -
A LIVING SHADOW.
REMARKABLE TRANSFORMATION OF A NORTH CAROLINA MAN. Strange, but True, Story from the Lumber Regions of a Southern State—Verified by Personal Investigation. tFromthodreenville, N. C., Reflector.) The following interview has just been given our reporter by Mr. G. A. Baker, the overseer at the farm of Col. Isaac ASugg, of Greenville, N. G. It-will interest anyone who has ever had typhoid fever. Mr. Baker said in part: “I was living in Beaufort County, and on the 2d day of October, 1893, I was stricken down with typhoid fever. I had the best physicians to attend me, and on the 15th day of January, 1894, I was allowed to get up. I was emaciated, weak and had no appetite. I could only drag along for a short distance and would be compelled to sit down aud rest. This continued for some time and 1 began to give up hope of ever getting well. I lost my position In Beaufort County, and having secured one in Pitt County, clerking in a store, I undertook it, but was so weak I could, not do the work and had to give it up. The disease settled in my knees, legs and feet. I was taking first one kind of medicine and then another, but nothing did me any good. I was mighty low-spir-ited. I moved out to Col. Sugg's about four or five months ago and commenced taking Dr. Williams’ l’ills. I took three a day for about three mouths. I began to regain nty appetite in a week’s time, aud then my weakness began to disappear, ond : hope sprung up with a blessedness that is beyond all telling. At, the expiration of the three months I whs entirely cured and could take my ax and" go in the woods aud do as good a day’s work as any man. I was troubled with dyspepsia and that has disappeared. It is also a splendid tonic for weak people. I say, Mr. Editor, God bless Dr. Williams; may he live for a long time. I know he will go up yonder to reap his reward, for he has done a wonderful lot of good. Tell everybody that asks you about Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People that if they will come to me I can certainly satisfy them as to their merits. 1 always carry a box of pills with me, and whenever I feel bad I take one.” We were forcibly struck with the earnestness of Mr. Baker, and his statements mayribe relied on. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills ebntain, in a condensed- form, ail the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore scattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness, either in male or female, and all diseases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid on receipt of price (50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50), by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Stupendous.
Very few people understand the enormous scope of the operations of a modern railway company. There are now probably nearly 900,000 perspns employed directly by the railways of the United States, and if any account te taken of the families dependent on many of these employes it will be seen that possibly 2,000,000 of the residents of this country derive their support from these companies.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
Is a constitutional cure. Frlce 75 cents. Shakspeare must have been an omnivorous reader, for his plays show odds and ends of learning gathered from every quarter.
If Ton Are Tired All the time, without special exertion—as tired in the morning as when you retire at night—you may deiiend upon it, your blood is impure and is lacking in vitality. That is why it does not supply strength to nerves and muscles. You need Hood’s Sarsaparilla To purify and enrich your blood. A few bottles of this great medicine will give you strength and vitality, because it will make pure blood. Get Hood’s. Hand ’c Pillc car e habitual constlpallUUU S i HIS tion. Price 21 cents. Beecham’s pills are for bil-. iousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all* of them. One of the most important tilings sot everybody to learn is that constipation causes more Umn half the sickness in the world,especially of women; and it can all be prevented. Go bf the book,free at youi druggist's,or write B.P.AllenCo. 6t., New York. Pills,io* and 254 a box. Annual aalst more than *.000,000 box a*. ■ prate llliarrn "rl’emole. iliu cW HbL (11 0 HR (71 Lll inlwlotl. ( harm ill* ue» (ilTiratratM). "The Trtnle Wedding, or Secret* Revealed.” Agent* making SlO to KO week!,; circular* frea.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report RpyallS ABSOLUTELY PURE
Chess.
In the course of excavations on the pyramid-field at Sakhara, there has been brought to light a wall painting on which is portrayed a high official playing chess with an opponent—a-very thin mam Tbe walT painting belongs to the time of King Teta, of the sixth dynasty, which Lepsius has assigned to about 2700 B. C.; but Prof. Brugsch, with new evidence before him, has put it back to about 3300 B. C. Like very many other games, the origin of chess is lost in antiquity; but there has heretofore been no evidence-of such a remote antiquity as this. In very early times a kind of chess was played by the races in Hindustan, by Whom it was believed to have been gradually carried to Persia. Then the Arabs became acquainted with it, and carried it towards the West, so on to England, where the game was being played at the time of the Norman invasion.
It Sticketh Closer than a Brother.
Does the rheumatism. Cut oft all relationship with it by the aid of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which severs the bond without loss of time, if you use it promptly and persistently. No testimony is more positive and concurrent than that which establishes its efficacy in this obstinate disease. Use It with assurance of good results for malarial, dyspeptic and nervous tronble, constipation and biliousness.
Peripatetic.
Amos Markham, of Memphis, Tenn., Is fond of moving. Since his marriage, in 1860, he has moved fifteen times. His twelve children were born in twlve different States.
Tobacco-Twisted Nerves.
Millions of men keep asking for stimulants because the nervous system is constantly irritated by nicotine poison. Chewing or Smoking destroys manhood and nerve power. 1 It’s not a habit, but a disease, and you will find a guaranteed cure in No-To-Bac, sold by Druggists everywhere. Book free. The Sterling Remedy Go., New York City or Chicago.
Deer in Scotland.
In all, it has been estimated that over 2,000,000 acres is devoted to the maintenance of deer in Scotland, and that about 5,000 stags are annually killed. I could not get along without Piso’s Cure lor Consumptton. It always cures. Mbs. E. C. Moulton, Needham, Mass., Oct. 22,1894.
Must Make Her Head Ache.
The crown worn by Queen Victoria weighs forty ounces. Mrs. Winslow’s Booronro Stout for Children (settling: tottena the gums, reduces inflammation, alius Min. cures wind colic. ID cents a bottle.
Dr. PIERCE’S PLEASANT ■— JR PELLETS SICK HEADACHE, BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, Vfcvi&t DYSPEPSIA, POOR APPETITE, gMUMUMI and all derangements of the M w i Stomach, Liver and Bowels, Of all druggists. finSj ONCE USED QUL* ALWAYS IN FAVOR. m lEWIS’ 98% LYE La Powdered and Perfumed. ■Us (PATENTED.) La The etrongeet and purest Lye made. ft Unlike other Lye. it being a fine |S»A M powder and packed in a ran with W removable lid, the contente are always ready (or use. Will make the beet returned H-rd Soap In 20 minutte without boiling, it is the beat for cleansiDg waste pipes, disinlectMM IDK rinks, closets, washing bottles, MW paints, trees; etc. _ PEJTOA. SALT MFO. CO. wuaummtm Uen'l Agte.. Phlliu, Fa.
“A Handful of Dirt May Be a Houseful of Shame.” Keep Your House Clean with ~ SAPOLIO ——— '' '—"■■■ 1 > 1 11 SANTA CLAUS SOAP ; It will not only make their clothe* clean bat when ia late years the carta | 1 1 of the household come they will know best how to meet them. There j | are a great many women who have learned a lesson of economy and 1 1 cleanliness by the nse of Saata Clans. Sold everywhere. Made only by I The N. K. Fair bank Company, - Chicago. 1 ———
Dyspepsia
prepares the way for,worse ills to comet, Itipans Tabules annihilate dyspepsia. Oss gives relief.
First Gold Coins.
HerodotussaysthatCroeaus was th* am TOler to wder goTdcbrnsmade. "
INf# CURES THE WORST PAINS la from ms «• twenty minutes. Not ons hoar after reading this advertisement need any one a utter with pala. ACHEB AND PAINB. For headache (whether sick or nervons). toothache, neuralgia, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and weakness In the back, spine or kidneys pains around the liver, pleurisy, swelling ol the joints and pains of all kinds, the application ot Radway’s Beady Relief will afford lm» L mediate ease, and Its continued use for a few days effect a permanent cure. 49*lt instantly stops the most excruciating pains, allays inflammation and cares congestions. whether of the lanes, stomach, bowels or other glands or mneous membranes. STOPS PAIN MTFlfty cents a bottle. Bold by Druggist* BADWAY &, CO.. New Yobx. * ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR V lIISI BJEST ★ OD Lids lONS, New York. ★ Kaphael, Amato, Habeas, Taw The TJNXNE REVEBHIBLE' sre the Best snd Most Economic-si Co liars and Guns worn; they are made ag fine cloth, both sides finished alike, and, being re-ver-lble, one collar is equal to two of any otbsr kind. They jit well wear well and look well. A box of Tsa Collars or Fire Fairs of Cuffs for Twenty-Hre Cents. A Sample Collar and Pair of Cuffs by mail tor Bta Cents. Name style and size. Address REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY, v riimii it.. iii nit » hut v.. mitm. C.N.D. v No. 24—95 WHEY WRITING TO ADVERTISERS II plegee say yon saw the advertisement fas this paper.
