St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 22, Number 33, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 6 March 1897 — Page 3
H WHEAT. 60 Bus. Per Acre. v «nAw wiws i With Salzer's new crca\SI (•■ ¥ ■.; tlons In Spring Wheat- to he sown before April 25— I wWlffjr you can raise wheat at 40c v\ W, W l/J/t /a bushel and ma ke money. ? .TOj^ How? Why. Salzer's Bl arXEjMk jyfe Vuay vol Wheat has a record of w ifit/ ho bus. per acre, ami right .JBtFW here in Wisconsin it ylehl^MIWi Kh/ e<l * n 181)5 over 200 inis. on five acres. That pays \lSiWyb JEff / handsomely at 40c a bu. w It’s a great'wheat. OATS. T 200 Bus. Per Acre. .p SettS,'/ Lil. // Salzer’s Silver Bl hie Oats w’ Vj? ¥ ewM z Still leads the world, with kWw S 7W a record right here in XvljL sk TYK/w Wisconsin of 231 bushels Y®,W3 SpXl 1 tis per Hire In 18!M1. What N&'TWa 7 f more do you wish ? Don’t l yMFW|MW/ Ibis Io <t all? You sec, WxW" T*® Salzer’s Seeds are bred up ViiVvW 4? vJ t o big y lehls I A barley. 173 Buß - Per Acr ®‘ NJre^liA uS jP /z, Jno. Hrelder, Blishlcott. -£/ Wis., grew, in » 80(1, 173 ■ fz bus.of siilzcr’aSilverKlng WFWjw<#/ Harley from one mcaasSSgH IT Mis/, ured acre, sworn to by \Sbk‘ 2 live witnesses. That’s imX kMO Mg/ menae. but you see SalKife sM NA/ VM zee’s Seeds are bred to x—iMiMHET'O/ produce! That’s why you ijz. get such big yields, just' ■Jkm’lW I try thia! CORN. bus. per acre—that's i h-jf wonderful. U ell. Salzer's \wMiOi.T TdWWr Seeds are bred to yields! POTATOES. 1,667 Bus. Per Acre. «»/ We know you can't beXMwV»: fjy Hevc it it's (<ln big! But W il®u/ Salzer's Seeds are bred to .mbbsyl r y lcl ^ 9, KW? CRASSES. Xf S ft j T argest growers of fresh. .'lie/ IKc l.rawcs and Clou-r VY’® Ai' SSiZM' I Se<-ds in the w <>rld tienco vTwtV «mr seeds are guaranteeil. CWT' nk kSJ J s ” u can bet on our Clover and <>rassSeeds growing! And such yields (Itous of tWfll 1 hay per acre! Well, you ft. T\®r Wf & y/y p ‘'e Salzer's Seeds are bred vA'y?.: riff-lf to bs ® y iel< bs. wW ¥ VEGETABLES. V'FV z / Finest, earliest to be had. "fast* • g ZOur Wisconsin Seeil can’t b® beat. Why buy your ssL* 1 WSt < seeds in stores wiieu for 'vfesi iW' I CBS money yon can buy JKjSy^- them delivered free of us? B,CCATALOG U E * 9 mailed you free, with 10 pkgs.or vegetable and NkiPr flower seed novelties, up^^^SaLl ^^^ OnreC °^ >t 14c postage. Salzer Seed Co., fl LACROSSE, WIS. C.N.U. ta — mo -ar tt it- :r so p r i • 4 J j । ! wW i j ! ’ W.L.DOUCLAS! j *3 SHOE In thVworld. | ’ For 14 years this shoe, by merit alone, has ’ 5 distanced all competitors. • • Indorsed by over 1,1X0,0(10 wearers as the • A best in style, fit and durability of any shoo ■ ■ ever offered nt £3.00. n V It Is made in all the latest shapes and Styles V • and of every variety of leather. • S One dealer in a town given exclusive sale • ♦ and advertised in local paper on receipt of A reasonable order. Write for catalogue to W. ■ L. Douglas, Brockton, Mass. y RMbR’ CURES AND PREVENTS Colds. Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza. Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, FROSTSITES. CHILBLAINS. HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, ASTHMA, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURES THE WORST PAINS In from one to twenty ntnutes. NOT ONE HOUR after reading this adverasement need anyone SVFe ER WITH PAIN, A half to a teasp 'i.nful n hall a tumbler of water w 11 in a few minutes cure Cramps. Spasms. Sour stomach. Heartburn. Nervousness. Sleepli ssne.s, S ck Headache, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency, and all inter^There'ts not a remedial agent in the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other malarious. Bilious and other fevers, aid d by It AD WAY'* I’l 1 1,5,50 cuickiv as HAIiWA Y'S READV RELIEF. Fifty Cents per Bottle. Sold by Druggists. RADWAY & CO . 55 Elm Street. New York ALABASTINE™A pure, permanent and artistic wall-coating readv for the brush by mixing in cold water. FOR SALE BY PAINT DEALERS EVERYWHERE. __ __ । A Tint Card showing 12 desirable tints, EQ f f < also Alabastine Souvenir Rock sent frea I IILL I to any one mentioning this paper. b ALABASTINE CO., Grano Papins. Mich. HW <WfFB tookle , handsomely Illustrated, DD 111? describing Nebraska, her farms 8" K E^'Bz and the opportunities there tor & young m n and tarin rentors to become farm owners. Sia led without eaarge on apilicati n to I’. S. Eustis, General la senger Agent, C. B. & Q. R. H- Chicago, 111. V irt t\m Seo your “best girl” or any object thro' I _l/ h » S flesh or wood, sample 25 eta. Address A UH I U Cathodoscope. Box 615. Philadelphia.
X Pill Clothes. 1 Th© good pill has a good coat. Tho pill coat /^' serves two purposes; it protects the pill, on - CO/ abling it to retain all its remedial value, and it disguises the taste for the palate. Some pill coats are too heavy, they will not dissolve in the stomach, and the pills they cover pass Uy through the system as harmless as a bread ) pellet. Other coats are too light, and permit tho speedy deterioration of the pill. After 30 years • exposure, Ayer’s Sugar Coated Pills have been found as effective as if just fresh from the laborOh atory. It’s a good pill with a good coat. Ask your druggist for (Sh A Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. 5 V," ' More pill particulars in Ayer’s Curebook, too pages. Sent free. J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Masa. Ow
I Wind to Aid the Cyclist. A new bicycle Improvement makes the cyclist join hSnds with the wind • The combination, it is claimed, develops exceedingly high speed. The In- ■ ventor, M. Demange, of Commercy, r France, declares that by his plan the ; cyclist may ride at a speed of from ; twelve to fifteen miles an hour with no . exertion at all, except that required in guiding (lie machine. The contrivance is in form a sort of a turbine arrangement, something like a gourd holloweil out, cut in “gores,” and the "gores” turned a little on their axes. This turbine is placed on dual rods, vertically attached to the forward wheel of the bicycle. A bar projects from the center of the handle bars outward, and to thisds attached the top of the turbine. The turbine revolves on Its axis and catches enough wind to give the worward wheel an added impetus. No matter from what direction the wind blows BALLOON TO MAKE YOUR BICYCLE SKIM, the turbine catches it, and by attachment with the hub of the front wheel communicates some of the force of the wind to the wheel. The turbine practically neutralizes the effect of a beam wind. The twisting of the turbine in its rotary motion works on the rods that attadh it to a ratchet wheel, which revolves about the hub of the front wheel. These rods, work up and down like the piston rods of an engine, and in that way accelerate the motion in great degree? This invention is a marked departure from those designed to give motion to a bicycle without the rider’s aid. Gasoline, electricity and petroleum have all been incorporated in the different ideas which have taken shape as bicycle impellers. The sailing bicycle is also an adaptation of the same idea, and has been fairly successful when under the control of a skilful rider who is also a master of the art of handling a sail. On the Western prairies where the wind blows strong and steady, the sail on a bicycle lias been utilized with tine results. Current Condcnsnt ions. The chrysoprase has been found in North Carolina. Jet has been discovered in a dozen different places. Green crocidolite is found In New Mexico. Marble is said to exist in twenty-four of our States. Our total product of zinc in 1S1K) was 63,G83 tons. Coral, white and red, Is found on the Florida coast. Our total copper production in IS9O was 115,CG9 tons. The hyacinth is found in Maine and the lake regions. Tin is known to exist in half a dozen different localities. Two-thirds of the gold now in use in the world was discovered within tin; past fifty years. The parent of all the varieties of apples is a sort of wild crab, and its home is in the Himalayas. Twenty million dollars’ worth of bank notes leave the Bank of England daily; while sixty folio volumes or ledgers are tilled with writing in keeping the accounts of a single day. The Argentine Government wih shortly order the construction of six new torpedo boats, and likewise projects ordering two new cruisers. Th • total cost of these vessels is estimated at $5,000,000. D. A. Buck, a resident of Waterbury, Conn., once made a perfect steam engine that was so small that the engine, boiler, governors and pumps all stood on a space only one fourth of an inch in diameter an 1 less than seven-s:x-teentlis of an inch high. The engine had 148 distinct parts, held together by fifty-two screws. The diameter of the cylinder was but 1-26 of an inch, and the whole affair, not including the base plate, weighed but three gra^l
i MpkHSS ■Winter’s backbone may be broken, but It is almost sure to be out of the hospital again before spring.—Baltimore Life. No one will object to the aldermen asking for more money. It is their habit of taking it that is so unpopular. —Chicvago News. It is probably a good thing that pistols, elungshots, clubs and knives are barred under the rules of debate of the Kansas Legislature. —Savannah News. The United States now produces 30,000,000 chairs annually, and still it is necessary to hang on to straps, while going home at night.-Cleveland Leafier. A legislative weeding machine to pluck out about two-thirds of the bills that get into Stale Legislatures is one of the needed patents of the day.—Chicago Record. It is understood that the captain of tho Texas has offered to settle the Cuban question by gradually destroying the island with a series of collisions.—Chicago News. The nation will have taken a long step towards permanent prosperity when ew ery municipality, large and small, regards free baths and sanitary school houses tw necessaries of life, and insists upon huvt ing them. Baltimore American. | Miss Susan B. Anthony woifld like t« see a general law compelling every bus’ band to give half his earnings to his wife. A great many husbands who have been giving their wives all their earnings wifi do their utmost to have this law enacted. —Buffalo Courier. Cliicago’H Three Hundred. If Abraham Lincoln’s son’s father could only know of it he would smile his most serious smile and then put his feet upon the mantel and think. New York World. A deliberate and carefully planned movement has been started to segregate Chicago’s creme do la creme (should it be 0100 de 1’oleo?) from the vulgar herd.— Des Moines Register. Robert T. Lincoln has been chosen as the dictator in Chicago society. One can; not help but wonder whet decision Robert would come to were his father an applicant for social honors in Chicago.— Pittsburg Times. There has for a long time been an inner circle of Chicagoans, composed of thosewhose ancestors had settled there before the tire. It is understood that there is now a larger but concentric circle of those whose ancestors arrived before the fair. New York Timos. Tho organization of Chicago’s “exclusive phnlnnx" of "no still goes on. It has not yet been made clear u hat is tho process of natural, or artificial, selection, but the strongest evidence seems to point to residence of ancestors in Chicago “before tho fire” as the principal tesL Des Moines Leader. Gritty Little Greece. It takes little Greece to show tho powers how to get a move on. Detroit Free Press. To Greece wo give our .shining blades every time. Our hearts to you. Prince. George! Boston Herald. » If tho powers hnd a little of Greece’s! pluck the Eastern situation would soon be J settled. Baltimore American. When Greek moots Turk the powers’ stop in and spoil tho fun. It’s a great, mistake. New York Advertiser. The Sultan will never cease to feel that Greece has been a trifle niggardly with her ultimatums. Washington Star. Little Greece isn’t one of the big “Powers.” but she has a fund of ginger that puts the rest to shame. New York Press. The Turkey egg lias been bad for n long time. Greece will do a world of good if she smashes the shell. Chicago Inter Ocean. It looks as if the powers hadn't even tho courage to let little Greeee’jump in and do their own fighting for them. Chicago Record. Wars and Rumors. The cause of Cuba will certainly triumph. Another American football player has gone to join the insurgents. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. It Is tho experience of history that wars do not pay, whether they are between nations, railroads or baseball managers.— Baltimore American. If there is any respite from war excitement or time hangs heavy on their hands, the English can always give a dinner to Ambassador Bayard. Chicago Journal. Judging merely by the pictures that have been printed one would be justified in assuming that the most dangerous weapon of the Greek soldier is his pointed shoe.—Chicago Post. That Trust Examination. What Mr. Lexow needs in his business is somebody to assist him in letting go of Sugar Refiner Searles,—New York Advertiser. It begins to look very much as if some of the trusts would take themselves out of the way if they are only given rope enough.—Boston J lerald. Did Senator Lexow ever consider 'Su feasibility of putting his trust examination on the road ns a faree-cotnedy or a rattling burlesque? -Chicago Times-Her-i aid. I There is something really pitiable about tho ignorance of a clever trust representative when he is brought before a legislative investigating committee.—Chicago Record. The Maternal Congress. The congress of mothers at Washington seemed to know what it was there for better than the other one.—Boston Transcript. A convention of fathers left at homo to mind the babies might give some inside opinions about that congress of mothers.— Chicago 1 Jispatch. The national congress of mothers in ■Washington must not'be confounded with the national congress of grandmothers in session in the same city.—New York Advertiser. Perhaps the congress of mothers could offer a few words of timely advice to the new administration concerning the country's policy with reference to its infant industries. —AVashington Star. At the congress of mothers in Washington Mrs. Helen Gardener of Boston declared that man is a tyrant of the home. It is now in order to hear from Mr. Mary Elizabeth Lease.—New York Press.
Illuminating Insects. ( A widely circulated work on the natural wonders as sea and land says gravely that there are many Insects that furnish a far superior light to our own (lampyrls or firefly, called by children lightning bug.” The groat lantern fly cf India win supply a light which is .quite strong enough to read by. In this instance, the light emanates from the head, instead of from the lower body, as in the firefly. In the Antilles the coleoptera, the Are bug of that region, is of great use, being employed In place of lamps by the poorer people, in Cuba it Is the custom of women to inclose those <inse. sin glass cages, whore they emit light enough io work by. Travelers there’also, whan, passing through the wood by night, atllx a fire beetle to each of their feet, by which their way is fairly light. The Creolee are given to the practice of deftly arranging these luminous insects In their hair, where they produce a dazzling effect superior to jewels. The Regresses at their national dances scatter them over their a.h'y garments, when, In their luminous movements, their Inxlies assume the appearance of being robed in flames. non’t Give Way to Despair, Although you have suffered for a long time from malaria, dyspepsia, kidney trouble, nervousness or biliousness. Know that Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters has cured worse cases than yours, and Is potent to help you as It has helped hosts of others. Rut always remember that trite saying. “Delays are dangerous." Mole hills grow to be mountains In consequence of disregarding it. Che<-k disease at the outset with this IncoiD-t parable defensive medicine. Not So Sinful. Miss Prim—Who is that distinguish-ed-looking man over there? Her Nephew That’s Plunger, the betting man. Miss Prim—How sinful. “They say Plunger won $20,000 yesterday.” “Dear, dear, can't you contrive to Introduce him?” Cleveland Plain Dealer. 9100 Reward, sioo. The reader of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is nt least one drtsuled disease that science has Wn abh' Io cure In all It. stages. sn<l that Is l atatrh. Hall s < atarrh ( uro Is the only iKAitlvecure known to tliu’inc Ih al traternKy. ( atarrh being a constitutional dis I ease, requires a rbnstltmional treatment. Hall's (‘atarrh ( uro is taken Internally, acting dlu i tly <»u tho blood and hun’ous Mil laces of the system, thereby destroying the fm!ndath>n of tho disease and gl'lng the patient strength by building up tho constitution and assisting nature In doing Its work. The proprietors have so much faith in Its curative power* that they offer one Hundred liollars for any case that It falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address. F .1 ( Hl NEY «. CO., Toledo, O. (W~Solil by Druggists, 75c. lJ<»t t |CH. A wash-bottle, for washing gnaon. hn.s l>con devis -d recently. The bottle him no a topper, and conflicts of a conlcnl fln«k with ii gallery round the top, Into which mercury or other suitable liquid. Is poured. In this rests an Inverted bulb finsk. with wide nock, from which a glam tube lends away the gas; but the gas is brought Into the arrangement by a tube which cornea laxlily through the hollow of tho bulb nod terminates | In the cunl'Til flank below within the I washing ll«|uld. F-» Free Farm Labor Bureau. Tn order to n»*i«t the thouaand* of nnM>tiq>|oycd men in < 'he go, the Workit g tnen's H e. • 1 ( 11 i has established a 1 rec Labor Bureau, and is prepared to furnish men to farmers an 1 others in all parts of the country without expense to either. Employers applying should state definitely as to the kind of work, wages to be paid, and if railway fare will be advanced. Address, Labor Bureau^ Workingmen's Horne, -12 < ustom House place, Chicago, 111. Tel. Harrison 243. Effects of Severe Cohl. Travelers In the Arctic regions say the physical effects of cold tluwe are about as follows: Fifteen degrees above, unpleasantly warm; zero, mild; 10 degrees below, bracing; 20 degrees below, sharp, but not severely cold; 30 degrees below, very cohl; 40 degrees below, intensely cold; 50 degrees below, a struggle for life. Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough z at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous. The Way with Relations. She —Have you many poor relations? He-None that 1 know. She—Many rich ones? He—None that know me.—Tld-Bits. No-to-Bac for Fifty Cents. Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No- I'.i Bac regulate or remove your desire f r tobacco? Saves money, makes health ami m .nhood. cure guaranteed, 50c and sl. all druggists. The greatest English novelist was Dickens. His genius took cognizance of all conditions of human life and with justice portrayed the characteristic 3 phases of each. Laue's Family Medicine J ■ Moves the bowels each day. In or’’Mar to be healthy this is necessary. {Acts gently on the liver and_ kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. t Hoarding up money in a miserly way ban never be done without making a beggar of the man who does it. To make the hair grow a natural color, prevent baldness and keep the scalp healthy, Hall’s Hair Renewer was invented, and has proved itself successful. One reason why the world gains knowledge so slowly is that every child muss find out for itself that fire is hot. Piso’s Cure for Consumption is the best of ail cough cures. —George M. Lotz, Hbacher, La., Aug. 26, 1895. The teachers In the public schools of France number 136,800. JUST (ry a 10c box ot Cas arets, candy cathartic, tin est liver and bowel regula.oi maoe. Winslow’S Soothtno SYBUP for ‘"ldldron tc'tbibK- soitens the gums, reauces inflammaticn. pain cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle CMWKETS stimu.ata Uver, kidneys and bowels. NevenilcLen, weaken or gripe. 10c. Whin bilious or costive, eat a Cascaret, candy cathartic. cure guaranteed. 10c, 2oC.
Great Icebergs. Icebergs in the North Aitlantlc this season have been exceptionally numerous, especially near the southeastern extremity of Newfoundland. Incoming vessels at St. Johns, N. F., report passing Icebergs continuously. One field of Ice passed was four miles wide and 21 miles long, and as many as 125 icebergs were sighted at one time from one point. Several very lofty masses of lee are also reported, one being 600 feet high and more Ilian 400 feet long, while another enormous mass, though smaller, was 400 feet high ami GOO feet long. Icebergs of more then 1,000 f-et above the .sea surface have not infrequently been reported in tlie souihorn ocean, 1,500 feet being the greatest h fight recorded, but a berg 600 feet high in the North Atlantic is exceptional. When It Is remembered that icebergs are submerged six-sevenths of their height one 600 feet high above the water surface represents a mass almost a mile high. Why They Obj ct. "Why do your parents object so to Mr. I/ongstop? Edith Mamma objects to h’s shortcomings and papa to his long etayings. New Orleans 'riines-Democrat.
A blight to winter comfort is •===? a ■ / ’Soreness "i Stiffness JIbO A from cold in muscle, joint, or nerve. St. Jacobs Oil warms, relaxes, cures.^ —~ —■ — ' 4 Z^ANOY CATHARTIC j ^^CURECOHSTIPATIOH^X ? * 10 i all :: 1 25*50* druggists; ; V CHSR ANTFPB tfl < ’ llrp an ' ^ vaseof romtipation. Caicarcts are the b!<aJ Laxa- > ' ADDVbUILbI UUrtnanibhU the. never prip or cripc.T.nt cause easy natural results. Sam- 1 pie and booklet Tree. Ad. yi’KLINt; REMEDY ( 0., Chieago, Montreal, Can., orNerr York. 3i7.( Do You Know that There Is Science in Neatness? Be Wise and Use SAPOLIO REASONS FOR USING | Walter Baker & Co.’s I Breakfast Cocoa. I’ 1. Because it is absolutely pure. ♦ . 2. Because it I; not made by the so-called Dutch Process in 1 w liich chemicals are used. j ; ♦ n H|A J- IkNau v. ; the imest quaiity are used. ♦ !• H 4. Because it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired J B 1 ImR ex fi u ' s 'te natural flavor and odor of the beans. x M WhFH 5. Because it is the most economical, costing less than one cent ♦ i ♦lk J n] kcup- ♦ ♦ Rm '«; ( f B Be sure, that you get the genuine article made by WALTER T < A Jlf BAKER A CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Established 1780. ' fey ' “You see, to start with," said a Cleveland, Ohio,'compositor, my work —that of setting'type at the case—allows me little chance fo&exercise, and is too confining for anybody who is in the least subject io indigestion or dysoepsia. . hat ha been my trouble for ycius, and I attrib- , ute the recent noticeable improvement in my physical condition to the occasional use of RIPANS Tabules I first heard of them through a fellow-workman who, on hearing my tale of woe, one day offered me a Tabule and*said he would guarantee it to act on the liver. I took it under protesf, but was surprise^ with the result. It was gentle but effective, and since then 1 havs gradually noied an entire change in the working of my system, and I think that’Ripans Tabules are the best remedy for liver an<f stomach troubles this side of anywhere. They are really in my case a substitute for physical exercise.”
PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. , JOHN W MORRIS, WASHINGTON. D. 0. Lata Principal Examiner U S. Pension 3yr». in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty. PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. i Examination and advice as to Patentability of injjnlions. Send for Inventors’ Gvipe. or How to Get' a Patmnt. Patrick o’FarrelL Washington, HM UF CUREBW H ER: ALL ELS eTa ILSF/ g| Bost Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use Ki tn tirna. Bold by druggists.
Pure Every thought, ■ ■. word and action U takes vitality vX from the blood; every nerve, muscle,, bone, organ and tissue depends on thei blood for its quality and condition,^ — . Therefore pure-’ opring blood is absolutely M^dieinp nficessar y' to ri B ht ' m^uicine living and he aithr bodies. Hood's Sarsap '.rilla is tho great! blood purifier and the best Spring Med-; icine. Therefore it ia the great cur» for scrofula, salt rheum, hunnors, sores, rheumatism, catarrh, etc.; the great nervine, strength builder, appetizer^ stomach tonic and regulator. Hood’s Sarsaparilla druggists. sl,. sb; for $5. Prepared only by C. I. Hood &Co^ , Lowe 1. Mass, .(let Hood's and only Hood’s. Wood’s Pills taken after dinner aid digestion.
—■ - - I CURE VtHJRSELF? | Use Big W for unnatural i / Zia Ito 6 J.y.A j discharges, inflammations, f Gaar>Dued irritations or ulcerations i I not to awiciure. of mucous membranes. I I*-^|Preveata cou'.agion. Painless, and not astrinI l/j£\ITHEEV*NSGHtMIC*ICo. gent or poisonous. ■ CINCINNATI,O.? Sold by I»rnggfM», \ \ V-3. a. 7I or SPTi ^ ’ n Pl a ' n wrapper, \ I by express, prepaid, for "Xo 11 - w ’' or 3 ties, ? ’.75. u Circular sent on request. SnTfllßA OR- TAFT’S ASTIUIU.ENE ASTHMAcu red Neu '7^> Sriid 'ur : ddre.-s. We will mall a iria'b ttle *lf b ,’DR. TAFf BROS., 45 tin St., Rochester. N Y. I lILL, C. N. U. No- 10-07 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS please say yaa saw tbs ad.erciaenaeua tn thlc paper.
