Bloomington Telephone, Volume 15, Number 130, Bloomington, Monroe County, 2 June 1893 — Page 3

I TBS WAY SHE LOOTS

f0y uuKum Hn wvuuui vpno 4 in is dfldc&ta, ron-down. or V7,T overworked. Sha iiol-

tnia, and pais, and it worries her Now, the way to look wall Htob wall. And tha way to 'be wen, U you'ra any such worn; in, in to faithfully me )r. Pwrce's Feirorita PreKrfptkm. That is tiw only medicine that's guaranteed to build op woman's strength and to care woman's ailments.

in erery "female complaint," irregular! rr, weakness, and in erery exhausted condition of the female system if it ever fails to benefit or cere, you hare your money

A

There is only one medicine for Catarrh worthy the name. Dozens are adrertisecL but only the proprietors of Dr. Safe's Catarrh Remedy say thl: If wc cant curs you, we'll pay you

WHAT OTHERS SAY. YEARS OF SUFFERING FROM INCESSANT SICK HEADACHE.

UF WAS MISERABLE UNTIL 0 YURA BROUGHT RELIEF Lirusi Mtg.Co.:

Gentlemen: Ever since I could remember I have suffered with sick headaches, which would come on at frequent intervals, and were so severe that I would be obliged to taJeo tony bed. Nev

er at any tune was I

;entireiy free from headache, and I re

ally did not know what it was to he

without them. For years I felt all tired out and run down.. Whenever I would have one of my sick turns they would be accompanied by hot flashes and pains ell through my back that made me perfectly miserable 1 took medicine after meclizine, but could obtain no relief. During the past summer I tried PITCH EITS UVURA, and it has done fcc a great deal of gocd. I am free from the Incessant seadache and heavy feeling which troubled me so much, and, ns for the rick headaches, I have not had one for months. UVURA has cored ns, and done me more good than any remedy I have ever taken. Ida M. SMITH, Nashville, Tenn. 42 LIVURA OINTMENT, THE GREAT SKfN CWsT. Cures Ecaeroa, Salt Rhenm, Pimples, Ulcers, Itch, and all affections of the skin. Heals cuts, braises, burns, scalds, etc. Sold by all dxsggiste, or mail. Price 35 Cents. The Ltrxnu. Biro. Co., NashTille, Tenn.

3r TV

ltie$ (OA M. SMITH.

Dvis Hand Cream Separator and Feed Cooker Combined.

Completes! of outfits for a dairy farmer. This sachine has an attachment which, when the bowl fcas been taken out, is dropped into the Separator so that a belt can ran to the churn. Write for further particulars. Rankin Bid-, and Mfg Co., 240 to S54 IT. Lake St., Chicagro, Il, Manufacture all kinds of Creamery Machinery and Dairy Supplies. (Agents wanted in erery county.)

TGIIED TEH

A fmnhlMnme skin disease caused

me to scratch for ten months, and was cured by a few days' use of kUTstfSn M. H. Wolff, InWMI

Upper Marlboro, Ma.

SWIFT'fflPECIFIC

I was cured some years ago of White Swelling m my leg by using IRCS have had no symptoms of reJjQBjQUturn of the disease. Many prominent physicians attended

and failed, out b. a. - ua tne wora.

PAUL W. K2RKFATR1CK. Johnson City, Tenn.

Treatise OB Kotd and Skin x.iseaacs mailed free. Swift Specitio Company, Atlanta. Ga.

by return mall, fall da script!? circulars of

I006TII1W and MOODY'S I1ITO0VXD

TAILOE 8T8TKKS OF DKXSS OTTOIHe. Revittd to date. These only, are the genuine TAILOft 8TBTXM8 Invented and copyrighted by FEOr. D.W. MOODY. Beware of imitations. Any lady of ordinary Intelligence can easily and quickly learn to cut and make any carmen?, in any style, to any measure, for ladles, men and children. Garments fuaran

icao to m perrecuY witnoni tryinir on.

LOOBY Jk CO. ClMCZlfllAtX ,

FREE

m

000

Hubbard J)esiper& EhgratfeK

wood, zrnc asd halttoke cuts.

Ely's Crean Balp WILL CURE CATARRH Price 50 Cents

Apply Balm into each nostril

Ely Bros., OS Warren St .N. Y.

BMSMSMflSS xtffl ft"1 1 " iwmm TrflljCfc' i ncatb. Ha tLIC fl 6Ta trm tonant (fry vrme-

Humiii mil Si W 3e hi laiiniat

O. W. V. SiiTOER. . . Mall Dept. . . MeVlcker1 Thes ter, OUicasro, 111 BE8T POLISH IN THE WORLD.

II sfOL

AfJ

DO NOT BE DECEIVED

with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which j stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn ' red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril- ! liant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package ' contains six ounces; when moistened wil ; make several boxes of Paste Polish : MAS AM AMMUAL SALE OF 3,0Q'

FARMS AND FARMERS. ffect of Thoronirh Tillage. Chicspo Inter-Ocean. An old farmer who possessed a good mind and reasoning powers once said to us: " The great mistake of my whole farming life has been in trying to cover too much ground. I measured my yeaiS operations by the number of acres I tilled, and not by the amount of the crop. I had to spend so much time getting over a large amount of land that I never had time to cultivate anything thoroughly. My advice to my boys now is, A little farm well tilled.' We were reminded of the above conversation by reading the following from Roland Smith in Farm Journal. The three Ps of intelligent farming Principle, Practice, and Profit are so clearly set forth here that further comment is unnecessary. Two neighbors competed in rais ing potatoes. Each broke up a three-acre piece of 3-year-old sod on land adjoining, so it was alike in natural characteristics. Both agreed to use no fertilizer of any kind and to cultivate in the usual manner. Both sold in the same market and used the same seed and same quantity. Following ure the results in figures: Intensive. Common. Plowing 8 7.50 3 7.50 Cross-plowing 7.00 Harrowing a.PiO 2.50 Seed and planting 10.0 10.50 Cultivation 15.00 2.75 Hand hoeing 4.00 30.00 Mowing weeds ri.OO Digging 9.00 13.00 Total cost, three acres. . . .$56.00 Yield 743 bush. 367 bush. Amount realized $371.50 $183.50 Less cost of growing ........ 56.00 4S.25 Profit on crop. $315.50 $135.25 Profit per acre...... $105.15 $45.08 It will be noticed how much larger the cost of cultivation was for the intensive farmer, and yet the net profits are nearly double those of his neighbor. These are due to a heavier yield because of greater latent fertility in the soil and constant stirring to r ender it available and circumvent drought. ' Ewei ami Lambs. Mr. A. O. Fox. the noted Shropshire breeder of Wisconsin, is a man of close observation regarding sheep and thorough energy in carrying out what he has found to be right and expedient. Success with animals can only b-3 obtained in this way. Mr. Fox gives the following hints concerning the proper management of ewes with twin lambs: As the lambs advance in age and begin to partake liberally of food and to require considerable room all twin lambs and their dams should be separated from the flock. Their apartments ought to be very roomy, giving both ewes and lambs an abundance of space at the troughs and racks. This twin flock should be kept separate from the singlelamb flock until weaning time. I usually wean ;;,bout July 1, or as soon as I have my first field of clover mown and cleared. I then put lambs immediately on this fresh' field, and let lambs and clover grow simultaneously. In this way all trouble with scours or bloat is usually avoided unless in an unusually wet season, when it might become necessary to give the lamb a change once a week and to add a ration of clean oats every morning. Care should be taken to keep the proportion of stock upon the clover field such as to prevent the clover growing rank. Lambs permitted to run on rank clover, unless in a very dry season, will not do well. As the season advances the lambs will stand it to be placed upoi the older pasture fields, the grasses of which are more difficult to digest. The rape patch, early turnips, early cut corn fodder, etc., will then in successiou play an important part in their proper preparation for winter.

Tlie Juicy Melon. Melons thrive best in a warm, sandy loam soil, not too sandy and dry but rather low, with just slope enough to drain the land so that it will not be too wet and heavy, writes David J3utlei of Avon, Wis., in the Farm Journal. They grow best on new land or sod. Clover or timothy sod is good, or land that has produced potatoes, cabbage or tobacco is good. A clover sod -where the land is so rich that the second crop will grow thick and thrifty, plowed late in the fall or as early in the spring as the ground will do to work, with a top dressing of 1,000 to 1.500 pounds of unleached ashes, or ten tons of well rotted horse manure per acre, well worked in with disk harrow just before planting, I find by experience to be the very best soil and preparation for a big crop. A compost of horse stable and hog manure on old land, say thirty tons per acre, plowed under and then worked up with a disk harrow, is good. I have obtained best results from horse stable manure alone on old and of any kind that I have ever tried. In plowing old land it should be plowed deep to give a deep, loose soil, and the manure should be well covered. I have tried manuring in in the hill and many different ways; have furrowed out the rows and have ridged them up, and my plan now is to fill the land full of the right kind of manure, pulverize and work it up mellow, and then mark 6x6 feet, raise my hill an inch or two with moist rlirt, drop eight or ten seeds of watermelons or twenty of muskmelons, cover one inch or more, according to the condition of the soil. I used to plant 8x8 feet between rowSj then 7x7, now 6x6. I find

this a saving in land. Better cot the vines off t and not let them run too far. Leave the main vine eight feet and the side runners three or four feet, and the growth and sap will go in :o the melons and not have so much vine to support. I leeve three or plants in a hill, and by cutting the vines back I get as large melons and more of them. About the time my melons begin to come up, or a little before, if the ground is dry, I cultivate them with a finetooth cultivator. This heads off the cut-worm. When I see signs of them in the hills I pick them out. Next comes the striped bug. What shall we do with the worst of all pests in this country? I have had my plants nearly devoured with them. In three days they didn't leave a tenth ofthe plants. But I have outgeneraled them to a preat extent. T prepare a compound of air-slacked lime two parts, to one part sulphur. Mix and pulverize the whole as fine us flour. Wh?n you see signs of the plants coming up, sift this over the hill until the ground is white. Repeat this once in four or five days, putting it on when the plants are wet with dew and ;if ter every shower of rain. This will not only keep the bugs and cut-worms off, but will fertilize and help the plants; the same treatment is good for cucumbers and squash vines. Cultivate every five or six days, and if the weather is hot and dry be sure to stir the ground deep after every shower of rain. Keep the hills free from weeds and grass and keep soil mellow in hill. Do not allow the ground to crust. When the plants are in the rough leaf thin out to two or four plants in a hill as conditions riay need. As soon as the vines begin to meet plow and hoe for the last time. Handle the vines carefully and leave a large, level hill. In a week or two, when the fruit is well set, prune the vines to desired length. I seed to clover after last plowing while the ground is mellow. To prune or clip the vines take a fork handle, saw in one end, take an old hoe blade, put two rivet holes through the blade, rivet to handle, grind thin and sharp. A man walks between two rows and cuts the vines each side of him as he thinks they need. A man will clip an acre or more per day.

Dairy Notes. Sometimes a cow taken away from a farm to which bhe has become familiarized will get restless and give much leiis milk as the result of the change. One of the very best things to do to cure homesickness in a cow and brirg her to her natural yield of milk as ;oon as possible, is for the person vho is to milk her to card her frequently the first two weeks. Disturbed mental state decreases her milk. This is nervous agitation. The carding is grateful to, her and soon makes her feel delighted with her new master and surroundings, and she returns to her normal jmlk yield. A writer in Hoard's Dairyman, finding something wrong about the butter from a herd of fiftv-two cows, made thorough investigation, with the following results: 'Every possible source wafe overhauled, till at last it was traced to the milk of one particular cow which had been observed, when the cows were out at their daily watering, to make persistently for the dirtiest puddles in the yard, and drink these in preference to the running water to which she had free access with the rest. When h?r milk was kept separate it was found that the milk of the other fifty-one was all right." - - Bear and Hasband. Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph, Mrs. Keeler, whose husband works in the lumber woods, came to Kettle Creek, the other day, expecting to meet him at the store and carry a sack of flour three miles to their home, the rond leading through heavy

V1J

LOOKING FOR HER HUSBAND. woods. Mr. Keeler failed to arrive, and toward dusk his wife shouldered the flour and started off alone. About half way home she saw what she supposed to be her husband standing in the road waiting for her. Hurrying to him to give him a piece of her mird, ominous growls warned her that she was about to lecture a big black bear. With a shriek she dropped her sack of flour and took to her heels back toward Kettle Creek. She had run about half a mile when she saw what she thought was ano ther bear coming toward her. She stopped in the road and filled the woods with shrieks that were heard plainly at Kettle Creek, but this bear was her husband, and when she recovered herself sufficiently to recognize the fact she struck him a blow with her fist between the eyes that knocked him flat in the road and then promptly fainted. Her husband had quite a time in fetching her to. but when he had succeeded and she had explained matters they went together toward home. The bear was gone, but he had scattered the contents of the flour sack along tne road for twenty yards.

I There are a

few people left

who still foilow antiquated methods of raising bread, biscuit, cake and pastry with home-made mixtures of what they suppose to be cream of tartar and soda, compounded haphazard,

"Germani

but there are very few The best housekeepers use the Royal Baking Powder instead. Its scientific composition insures uniform results. By its use alone can the finest flavored, most wholesome food be produced. To any housekeeper who has not used the Royal Baking Powder we would like to send our Cook Bock, free. Mark your request "For instruction." Royal Baking Powder Company, 106 Wall Street, New-York.

Value of Roman Slaves. St. Louis Globe-Democrat It is very curious to read in an old Roman history of the prices paid for slaves in the palmy days of the Empire. As a general thing, a laborer could be bought for about $80 of our money, but after a province had been conquered or a great victorv won. hundreds would sometimes be bought for $5 or $10 apiece. After the siege of Jerusalem by Titus the price of slaves fell to $4. Skilled laborers and artisans brought more. A gardener was worth about $300, a blacksmith 1700, a good cook brought $2,500, an actor or actress $5,000, and a physician $10,000; Hot bread for breakfast is regarded as a necessity throughout the South, and the best Southern cooks understand the art of preparing this luxury so that it shall do the minimum of harm to the stomach of the consumer. The protean corn bread is in large measure depended upon to furnish the breakfast table, and it is a difficult matter to make that compound anything but wholesome. Wheaten bread, however, is prepared by the best Southern cooks so that it shall be quickly cooked, light hot, and yet done through and through so that nobody is forced to throw away ihe middle and eat merely the crusts. To Cleanse the System Effectually yet gently, when costive or bilious or when the blood is impure or sluggish to permanently cure habitual constipation, to awaken the kidneys ami liwr to a healthy activity, without irritating or weakening them, to dispel headaehss, colds or fevers, use Syrup of Figs. Queen Elizabeth was not the angeue creature represented in the histories and poems of her own times. Her hair was red, her temper redhot. She sometimes drank too much and at any provocation would curse like a trooper. She frequently swore at her maids, and sometimes struck, kicked and pinched them. The- "life tree" of Jamaica will continue to grow for years after it has been dug up and its roots exposed to the sun. Leaves severed from the limbs will remain green for weeks. Ti:ie tree can only be destroyed by fire. :Hotts This? We offer One Kundred Dollars reward for

any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props, Toledo, O. We the undersigned, have known F- J Cheney for the lost 15 years, and belle re him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially t.ble to carry out any obligations made by th Mr firm. West & Truax, Wholesale drutists,Toldo, O.. Walding. Rinnan & aSrvin, Wholesale druggists, Toledo, O. Hull's ( .'atarrh Cure Is taken internally.acting directly upon tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price ;5c. per bottle. Sold bv all druggists. Cold molasses in a jug is always a disappointment, because it dues not turn out very well.

Profoundly Grateful For Help Derived From Hood's Sarsapaxilla. "I am profoundly impressed with the medical virtue of Hood's Sarsaparilla. I was threatened with cancer, and disagreeable eruptions on my back and other piaces. Tno cancer was appear.ng on my lip. Provident lallv I obtained a bottle of Hood' SarsapariHa, and by the time it was gone, the bad symptoms had nearly all disappeared. I have ussd four bottles, and I believe it has Kaved Me From Premature Death, I am now almost 73 years of age and I work like a tiffer. And I know that Hood's Sarsaparilla has had much to do with my Yicror and strength. Rev. O. H. Powfiit, 2,fti4 Hanover Street, Chicago, HI. HOOD'S Sarsaparilla CURES Hooo'm Pills aie the best after dinner Pills atsistd gestion, cure headache. 85c.

Tht average man doesn't get much of show in a ten-cent circus.

a

yrup

Kneou) agemeiit for the Ffleble. So long as the failing embers of Vitality are capable of being rekindled into a warm and penie.1 plow, just so long there i hote for the weak and emaciated invalid. Let him not. therefore, despond, but derive encouragement from this, and from the further fact thut there is a restorative most potent in renewing cr-c

Yes. thanks to it unexampled tonic virtues. I Hostetter'fi Stomach Hitters is daily reviving .

strength in the bodies and hope in tne minds of the feeble and n-.-rvous. Appetite, refreshing sleep, the acqu sition of flesh and color, are blessings attent aat upon the reparative processes which this priceless invlgorant speedily initiates and carries to a successful conclusion. Digestion is restored, the blood fertilized and sustenance afforded to each lifesustaining organ by the Bitters, which is inoffensive even to the feminine palate, vegetable in composition, and thoroughly safe. Use it. and regain vigor. Safe and sound: A light conducted over the telephone?. WtnfifM). Kas., Feb, 18, 1890. It rives me pleasure to testify to the value of Hile Beans Small; they certainly do all that is claimed for them. T. L. Cairns.

"I

Mv acciuaititance with Boschee'f

German Syruowas made about fourteen years ago. I contacted a cold which resulted in a hoi rseness and cough which disabled me from fill ing ray puipit for a nuraber of Sabbaths. After trying u physician without obtaining relief I 5aw the advertisement of jour remedy and obtained a bottle. I received quick ind permanent help. I never hesi tate to tell my experience. Rev. W. H. Haggerty, Martinsville, N.J. 0

A political ora :or out West was recently alluded to as a harangue outang. Bekcham's 1'iixs aro proverbially known as "Worth a Guinea a box" but thev are sold at ;5 cents a box. A heresy trial is like u dog-fight in a flower-garden l othiug is settled but the towers. All who ne I) bbins' new Perfect Soap praise it us tli- l st "c soap made. It Is worth doubio ;m other 5c soap. Please try it. Your grocr-r ean ffet it of his jobber There is no ai bt that the Chinaman is greatly abused. Even his hair is upbraided. Work for Workcrot Are you ready o work, do you want to make mon"y? Then write to B. F. Johnson & Co.. of Richmond, Va.. and see if they can not hoU you. A strong argtnrent agaiiwt the hell theory is that the devil i a i ways pictured as

having a good time.

One Ont a BtJt Good Paper. Viner, ?e. W embossed. 4c; ingrain, 5c Hold border. c. i yard. 100 samples, all prices, for 2 sianp. Reed, Wall Paper Jobber, Rochester Pa.

HHV

SCIATICA

CURES

Why doesn't somebody get up a trust? It would be sure to work.

yeast

Ore Smaix Bile Bean every night for a week arouses Torpid Livers. 35c per bottle. Doubtless the Chinaman thinks Uncle Sam? abrupt wav of telling him to go is a kind of collar and cuff.

N. K. Brown's Eftsence Jamaica Ginger is a

gentle cent 3.

tonic. None better. Try it, Only S3

ji"

oil

gllJicncs

iMiniwiiiiiMnniBiimMntmwmNK

In the household the children usually find that "p&M is the most martUU and "ma" the most partial.

ReaonsWhy World Fair Visitor Should Purchase Their Tickets Over tho Pennsylvania Short Line. ' It is the shortest route and an excellent lino in every way. It furnishes the best possible accommodations for passengers. It has a reputation for reliability which is beyond question. It runs throuph trains into Chicago Tnion Passenger Station via GRAND CROSSING, within view of and only a short distance from the World's Fair Uroui.ds. and stops them fit Grand Crossing for the express purpose of allow: ni? passengers to disembark at that point, enabling? them to reach the preat Columbian Exposition and the hotels and boarding houses adjacent thereto, in a ride of only ten minutes by :rain of Illinois Central Hallroad or by electric street car line fare by either only five cents. Tickets to Chicago and return, good until October .'list, are now on sale at a 1'eduction of twenty-five per cent, at all ticket offices of the Pennsylvania Short Lines. Your nearest Ticket Agent of these lines will promptly answer all inquiries for detailed information.

AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE

i

For Indigestion, :nitouneu Headache Conntli atlon, Bad z Complexion. Jen ivc Hrcnth, I and all disordor , of llio Stomach, I Liver and Bowej.

RIPANS TA 3ULE3 I act gently yet promj Uy. Perfect I digestion foliows tin ir use, I Unr bo obtained

Application to nearest druxrfst

III M IMIlBMntMMHtiaS

1,000,001) Compant in Minnesota

lar. They will be sect to you

ACRES OF LAND for sale by the Sjjxt Pact. A Duxuth Railroad Send for Mape and Circu

Addrau

HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land ammisaioner. St Paul, Minn.

1

(LfU'CfrB Ul M Washington, D.C. Successfully Prosecutes Claims.

Late Principal Exa; ninor U.S. Pension flurea,u.

3yraiu lat warlSa-Uudicatlujclaiiiu. aUrair

Worn - Bargains! fc rOhenpefit place CD earth to " buy goods. Kneo pants. Uc: tne)3f8ian anta,4ftc4 flannel ovorshiris Nc, tmok'c roano 1ic lb. boy'ii

X 5U it?, "X. Send for pric list, 0. WILL A ED CO.,Wo&

woe, IP.

rAbsolutellyr

4

curce' forPain.

i -A Piromot" Cure.

2--A Permanent Cure. Perfect" Cure.

PILES

I EW I S ' 98 I Powderedan Perfumed Tne strongest and purest Lya made. UnUko other Lye. H btlog n fine powder and packed in a can with r morable lid. the contents nrftivi wftYH ready for use. Will

make tho best perfumed Hard Soap in 20 minute without boiling. It Is the bifc for cleaning waste pipes, disinfecting sinks, closetn, washing bottles, paiuts, trees, etc. FKSN A, SAIT MTG CO. Gen. Agts., Phila., P. - I'armelce'a I'll ftuppoHovlr. Quick Jlellef and Positive Cur yuarau teed Nay to use. Sold by DrugrpisM or ieiit by mail, postpaid. a box.

can be made

nc nn A cocn nn

SI UiUU IU tfJUiUU monthly wor ing for B. F. JOHNSON, Richmond, Va.

U3AHVCpfO$0

The shortest line to Oh Minneapolis, Dtiluib.Otr Portland. Seattle, Toco: Vullfi lielrii.i and all po. The on v line running ?e ty Vestib'ilcd Trains. Tfc fVrs Iwtwcou Tiuliiwiapo rent Pullman Sleeping u uiapa ti mo tables, etc. p S. Il inoin St., Xndiam fl.PA, Chicago.

rnfiro, Milwaukee, St anl Hha,Icr.rer.San .tranclaco. nn, Iais An,:eles, Spokane nte Wt and Northwest, id Pnl'mau Perfected Safe n only line r inning Pining UfiTi l Chfc&go. Manifli5 Parlor rs, For rates lit to 1. D. KaMwtn. D. P. A pOs.lud. James Marker

J'VL. INOPLB

Piso'a Reined foi Ostnrrn M ibt

Rest. Easiest to 'J, and Cheapest.

Sold by arugi! ts or sent by mail.

Ito K-T. EAxai Ine, Warrta, Pftv

a r Than Bahb Wire 'VISIBLE

DOUBLE THE STRENGTH of any other 1 nice; will not stretclj

sua-, or tret ou t of sfc ape. A Perfect

some cnousrh to Ornament a lawn.

UMM iaaiB(iitcj atwauH Mat

DcxcrtptiY Orcaiir and

Testimonial, also lata-Ir-nue of Hartman Ktal Packet Lawn fenoe. Trea

and Flowr Gnardi, Flex

ibla V, uj Hats, etc., FHSS.

UMsaavaawMaMitatjM

urm Fence, ye ntuiw

Writ for prices.

i 4w

RSB

HARTMAN CO,,

DcAVEH falls, pa.

( llti fhaber SI, Raw TT1 6t8 Stat St., Ohlcaa. ( bl -55 8. l ortjta S, Atlanta Q

h'ARTM

BRANCHES

W..

HRRMLES S TO STOCK

Agents Wanted for the

EST WHEEL

N EARTH!

MODEL G. Weight 30 ibs

DETAIL. Frame, Derby pattern, double throughout from rontluuoua senin

Head; heW Iiase. U inches: wheel. 30 inches: Too

inhiiiK: Oeariug, 5? and Oft inrhet); Hound Vank an Ivop froyginu thmufhout. We hate tbe bent and moat a

simple upr fceh n:ad. The

TH E DIERBY FOR 3-Morgan A Wright Pne jmatio.

le throughout from continuous; seain Ittus ste"l tnblpp : 9-iach inches; Tool fcUol B vin; Muunn ann 's Spiral 1'lbe.r Steel

d inch throw : Humber t :ham : Garford Saddle:

. enn lo iilaoOd by ta atalon)4, also tattgaut te bcttrtr.

SIi:PfI FOtt C A.T AI0(;UK. Ak-eatii Wunttxl In iverr Toiru. DERBY CYCLE CO,, 161, ;62 and 163 South Canal St., CH1CA60.

iaer wimom rt-raovinjt the uro, aia are niiy exptaitieo ana inntratea in mv pokes. l'or beauty iiinpllclty there Is no equal. For ervire none can be ma