Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 18, 1891, Image 3

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    Deworeaiic atc
Bellefonte, Pa., Sept., 18, 1891.
Farm Notes.
When hives are to be moved by
‘wagons they should be securely fasten-
ed to the wagon and packed around
with straw.
Plastering lath may be used for fenc-
“ing the poultry-yard. Such a fence
will cost but little, and will last about
four years.
The rakings and scrapings of the farm
may possess but little value, but if
thrown on the manure heap they serve
as absorbents.
Speculation is as dangerous to the
farmer as it is to the city man. Get-
ting into debt to buy more land or more
implements is generally speculation.
It is claimed that the bad condition
of many of our country roads is caused
more by the ignorance of the laws of
drainage than from any other cause.
The heavy rains will not benefit the
quality of melons and sweet potatoes.
Even the ears of corn have failed to fill
out where there has been an extra
amount of rain.
Bartlett and Clapp pears are rivals.
The Bartlett has a reddish blush on one
side and the Clapp has a core. Other-
wise they are very similar, and stand
at the head of the pears.
If agricultural societies would em-
ploy a skillful man to shoe horses at
their fairs and give illustrated lectures
they would accomplish more good than
they do now by some of their transac-
tions.
Gleason says that a horse’s nostrils
are his fingers, and with them he feels
articles to find whether they will hurt
him. He smells every new object very
thoroughly to decide whether it is good
or bad.
It is not best to allow the chickens to
eat the dead bees around the hives, as
they soon get to liking them so well
that they do not stop at dead ones, but
pick them off as fast as they come out
of the hive.
The kerosene emulsion forms a thick
cream, which is diluted with water to
any preferred consistency. It is the
cheapest of all insecticides, but should
not be used on cabbages, as the odor
of the kerosene remains.
Do you save all your manure system-
atically, and use it to the best advan-
tage? Have you water-tight floors in
all your stables? If not, get cement
and gravel, and build them now and
have them ready for winter.
In Europe wherever the sugar beet
is grown the value of the land has in-
creased. Deets are grown for two or
three successive years on the same
land, which will then produce better
cereals and other farm products.
Go over the strawberry rows and pull
out the weeds, in order to prevent them
from seeding, and continue cultivation
between the rows until late in the sea-
son. Any advantage gained now in
the growth of vines will be of value
next spring.
Mr. J. M. Smith tells the Rural New
Yorker that he uses a silo for preserv-
ing the waste leaves trimmed from cab-
bage plants and other garden wastes.
For the last two years he has put his
small carrots into the silo without top-
ping, and finds that they keep nicely.
It must be a close well that is secure
against the entrance of toads. Many
wells that are not cleaned out except at
long intervals are foul from the decay-
ing matter of toads and earthworms,
although the water appears clear and
pure. It is from such wells that dis-
eases come.
With the heavy rains favorable the
purslane and other weeds have caused
much labor to farmers, The best use
tor such weeds is to give them to the
pigs, which will grow and thrive upon
them. Nothing is so sure to make
weeds become scarce as the utilization
of them as food for stock.
Now is the time to seed down for a
lawn. The young grass will become
well rooted before frost, and start off
favorably in the spring. Seedsmen
bave lawn grass seed of proper propor-
tions ofthe varieties best adapted for
lawns, but one part by weight of white
clover and two parts of blue grass seed
make an excellent lawn,
A horse that is subject to lameness
in one neighberhood may escape that
difficulty in anotber section. Tender
feet may impair the usefulness of an
animal on hard, stony ground, but on
sandy locations the feet may not be so
easily injured Street-car horses when
taken to the farms often prave valua-
ble and entirely recover from lameness.
Keep all the cellar windows open
and allow the air to circulate, but use
screens on the windows and door in or-
der to keep out insects. At this sea-
son the cellar should be kept in neat
condition, plenty of whitewash used on
the walls, and all articles that may be
stored away should be arranged for
convenience of access during the win-
ter.
The reputation secured in any indus-
try is equal to the labor and capital,
but to secure a reputation the best ar-
ticles should be produced and special
attention given to marketing them.
Elgin, Ill, which has reached a front
place in the butter industry, does not
possess a siagle advantage over other
sections, but the butter-makers are or
ganized) and aim to put a choice arti-
cle aun the market. What 18 doue in
that section can be done elsewhere,
Complaint is made that county fairs
offer $5 as a prize on a basket of cab:
bages and only $2 on a pair of choice
fowls, yet the fowls must be sent to the
fairs by express, the cost of which be:
ing sometimes greater than the premi-
um offered. As the poultry depart-
ment is usually one of the most attrac:
tive at fairs, the attention of fair man-
agers to giving more encouragement to
pouitry would probably result advan
tageously.
Higher than Eiffel’s Tower.
Chicago Men Ready to Build a Struc-
ture 1,150 Feet Into the Air.
George S. Morrison, of Chicago, has
drawn plans for a tower 200 feet higher
than Eiffel’s. William E. Hale, George
A. Fuller and E. F. Cragin propose to
build the tower. They say it will cost
$2,000,000. The tower is to be 1,150
faet from the bottom of the foundation
to the top of the flagstaff. The founda- |
tion is 440 feet square at the bottom.
The first landing will be a circular plat-
form 250 feat in diameter. Around the
outer rim of this floor a colonnade 15
feet wide and having a circumference of
738 feet will be constructed. The floor
space on this colonnade will accommo-
date 5,000 people at one time.
Besides thie space occupied by eleva-
tor shafts and machinery inside the col-
onade, there will be room for four large
restaurants 45 by 90 feet each, which
may be gotten up and furnished in dif-
ferent ways, such as the French, Ger-
man, Spanish and Italian styles of ar-
chitecture. In addition to these there
will be upon the same fioor numerous
circular and octagonul booths fitted up
according to the style of various nations,
and in which the various fabrics and
ornaments of the nations represented
raay be purchased by visitors to the tow-
er, The colonade bootks and restaurants
upon this landing will be capable of ac-
commodating fifteen thousand people at
one time,
The second landing will be 150 feet in
diameter and may be used as a picnic
ground or a dance hall. Tt will accom-
modate about six thousand people. The
upper landing will be sixty feet in dia-
meter, two or three stories high, and
over one thousand feet above the ground.
It will be the grand outlook of the tow-
erand will accommodate about fifteen
hundred people at one time. Above this
will be the circular railway, carrying
powerful arc lights at night, and signals
during the day. The light-house will
be situated still higher up the tower, and
will be provided with the most power-
tul light ever constructed, while higher
still from the flagstaff will float the
American flag, 100 feet further from the
ground than ever flag floated from fixed
support before. Four elevators will run
to thetfirst landing, capable of transfer-
ring 5,000 people to this level in an hour.
Two elevators will run to the second
landing with a carrying capacity of 1,-
500 an hour, while the two that run up
to the lookout, more than 1,000 feet
high, will make ten trips an hour and
will be capable of carrying 1,000 during
that period. Altogether the capacity of
eight elevators will be 7,500 an hour, at
an estimated revenue of $51,250 per day,
This carrying capacity, together with
the spacious accommodation on the three
landings, will obviate the delays and an-
noyances experienced by visitors at the
Paris tower. The cost of construction
will be about $2,000,000, and a stock
company with this capital can be formed
at once, as more than $800,000 in shares
has already been applied for. The ways
and means committee has this proposi-
tion before it now, and will probably
take favorable action on it.
Story of a Young Man Who Was Bound
to Make a Lawyer.
‘What is the chief characteristic of a
“born lawyer?’ Some people fancy
that 1t is ‘audacity ; but audacity has,
perhaps, spoiled a lawyer’s success as
often as it has made it. Craftiness, an-
other quality often attributed to lawyers
as a class, is as likely to get them into
trouble as it is to win them cases. The
real master quality of a good lawyer, ac-
cording to many authorities, isa ‘‘geni-
us for details’’—an ability to see through
a case to the uttermost particular, and
keep everything in mind ready for use
at the right moment. The following
story has probably been told by more
than one lawyer to illustrate this fact:
A lawyer advertised for a clerk. The
next morning his office was crowded with
Spoligan all bright and many suitable.
e bade them wait until all should
arrive, and then ranged them in a row
and said he would tell them a story, note
their comments and so judge whom he
would choose.
“A certain farmer,” began tha lawyer,
“was troubled with a red squirrel that
got in through a hole in his barn and
stole his seed corn. He resolved to kill
the squirrel at the first opportunity.
“Seeing him go 1n at the hole one
noon he took his shotgun and fired away.
The first shot set the barn on fire.”
“Did the barn burn ?” suid one of the
boys.
The lawyer without answer, contin-
ued. ‘And seeing the barn on fire the
farmer seized a pail of water and ran to
put it out.” )
“Did he put it out?” said another.
‘As he passed inside, the door shut to
and the barn was soon in flames, When
the hired girl rushed out with more wa-
ter’ —- :
“Did they all burn up 7’ said anoth-
er boy.
The lawyer went on without answer,
“Then the old lady came out, and all
was noise and confusion and every one
was trying to put out the fire.”
“Did any oneburn up ?”’ said another.
The lawyer said: ‘There, that will
do; you have all shown great interest
in the story.”
But observing one little bright eyed |
fellow in deep silence, he said, “Now,
my little man, what have you to say?’
The little fellow blushed, grew un-
easy, and stammered out, “I want to
know what became of the squirrel; that’s
what I want to know.”
“You'll do,” said the lawyer; “you
are my man. You have not been switch-
ed off by a confusion anda barn burning
and the hired girlsand water pails. You
have kept your eye on the squirrel.—
Youths’ Companion.
——A contemporary that is wedded
to the monopoly tariff pathetically asks :
“What would the American Saturday
night be without the tariff 2’ It would
be a night when the tired citizen could
pull off his untaxed coat, hat, vest,
breeches and undergarments, robe him-
selfin an untaxed nightshirt, gather
about him an untaxed blanket and
sleep the sleep of the just. Heaven
speed the time !
TIRE.
——The President must have changed
his views on cheap coats, as he is quite a
‘‘blazer’” himself—when a mud-hen flits
in range. 1
A Boy Did It.
He Killed a Desperado and Will Get
Fifteen Hundred Dollars.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., September 4.—
Harman Murray, a notorious colored
outlaw, who has defied the authorities
for nearly a year and terrorized a wide
section of the country, was killed about
daylight this morning by Henry Early,
a colored lad of 17. The killing occur-
red in the swamp near Archer, Fla.
Murray called on Early about 4 o'clock
and ordered him to go with him to
Archer, where he said he was going to
kill some Crackers and then leave Ala-
chua county. Early said he did not
want to go and said he had no gun, but
Murray took Early to the latter’s bro-
ther’s house and made him produce a
double-barrelled shot gun. Both bar-
rels were loaded with buck shot, and
Early put fifteen more bullets in each
barrel. The two then started toward
Archer, having to pass through the
swamp on the way. When they got
into the swamp Early pretended he did
not know the trail and asked Murray to
lead. Murray took the lead andim-
mediately Early poured the contents of
both barrels into the back of Murray’s
head, killing him instantly. Early
then notified the people at Archer and a
crowd went to the spot, brought the
corpse to town and afterwards sent it to
Gainesville. The excitement there was
intense, as several lynchings of Murray’s
confederates have occurred in that vi-
cinity. Early was the hero of the hour
and was mounted on a box, from which
he made a speech describing the affair.
He will get $1,500 reward. Murray
had killed seven men within the past
few months and was as fearles as he was
bloodthirsty.
How to Get a Handsome Husband.
**Whene’er some lucky Indian maiden
Found a red ear in the husking,
“Muska !” cried they altogether:
“Muska !” you shall have a sweetheart !|—
You shall have a handsome husband.”
The handsome man always admires
the beautiful woman. Then simply
make yourself beautiful. Remove all
blotches, pimples, ‘forked signs of tur-
key tracks’’ from your features, by the
use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip-
tion, a tonic to the nervous, circulatory
and procreative systems. Its use brings
roses to the cheeks, and sparkle to the
eyes. Take it, and you will, like the
Indian maiden, find a ‘red ear’ in
good health, an omen of future happi-
ness. Guaranteed to give satisfaction
in every case, or money paid for it re-
funded.
The Question of Cheapness.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
In continuing to denounce cheapness
President Harrison either willfully or ig-
norantly overlooks the fact that cheap-
ness is a relative matter. ‘When every-
thing is cheap nobody suffers. When
some things are dear and some cheap
those who have the cheap things to sell
and the dear things to buy must suffer.
The farmers and workingmen, for in-
stance, who have to sell their products
and labor at competitive prices and buy
necessary articles at artificial prices fixed
by a protective tariff,are heavy sufferers,
and their sufferings are due entirely to
the discriminating policy of the Presi-
dent’s party.
MAkE A Nore oF IT.—Read it over
and over again, spell it out and sing it
until it is indelibly fixed in your mind,
that Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy is an
infallible cure for chronic catarch of the
®head, with all its distressing complica-
tions. Impaired taste and smell, offen-
sive breath, ringing noises in the head,
defective hearing, nose and throat ail-
ments, are not only relieved, but posi-
tively and permanently cured | This is
no fancy of the imagination, buta hard
solid fact, proven over and over again,
and vouched for, under a forfeiture of
$500, by its manufacturers, the World’s
Dispensary Medical Association, Buftalo
N. Y. “A word to the wise issufficient.”
——Divers in the clear waters of the
tropical seas find that fish of different
colors when frightened do not all dart
in thesame direction, but that each
different kind takes shelter in that por-
tion of the submarine growth nearest
in color to that of the fish.
Make No MISTAKE.--If you have
made up your mind to buy Hood’s Sar-
saparilla do not be induced to take any
other. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a peculiar
medicine, possessing, by virtue of its
peculiar combination, proportion and
preparation, curative power superior to
any other article of the kind before the
ple, For all affections arising from
impure blood or low state of the system
it is unequalled. Be sure to get
Hood's.
——Susannah Annesley, who married
Samuel Wesley and became the mother
of the famous John Wesley, was twen-
ty-third child to her father, twenty-
fourth to her mother, and she herself
gave birth to nineteen children.
——Aftertrying many remedies for ca
tarrh during the past twelve years, I tried
Ely’s Cram Balm with complate success.
It is over one year since I stopped using
it and have had no return of catarrh. I
recommend it to all my friends.—Mil-
ton T. Palm, Reading, Pa.
——If the editor of the Statesman
feels himself aggrieved on this or any
other matter the editor of the News can
be easily found. He will meet the edi-
tor of the Statesman at any time or
place bé may indicate and settle any
personal matter, in-the old Texan style,
which is the best.— Austin News.
Business Notices,
} Children Ory for Pitcher’s Castoria.
When baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
| When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria,
! When she had Children, she gave them Cas-
{ toria. 36 14 2y
Liquors.
McQuistion—Carriages.
SQ CHAMIDE BUILDING.——
o—THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE—o
~+|——WINE, LIQUOR A
ND CIGAR HOUSE——||+
{——IN THE UNITED STATES,—1
0
ESTABLISHED 1836.
0
DISTILLER o AND o JOBBEZR
1—OF—¢
FINE—g —WHISKIES. Telephone No. 662.
gdh
IMPORTER OF
G. W. SCHMIET, WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS,
No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue,
PITTSBURG, PA.
fpr
Bar~All orders eceived by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention.
36-21-1yr;
Ely’s Cream Balm.
Lie CREAM BALM. FOR CATARRH.
The cure tor
THE POSITIVE CURE.
CATARRH, COLD IN HEAD,
HAY FEVER, DEAFNESS, HEADACHE.
Ely’s Cream Balm 50 cts.
33-46-1y
ELY BROTHERS,
56 Warren St., New York.
ARGAINS o
eee | [eee
o CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, o
AND
SPRING WAGONS,
at the old Carriage stand of
o——McQUISTION & CO.,
NO. 10 SMITH STREET
adjoining the freight depo
BARGAINS
©
We have on hand and for sale the
best assortment of Carriages, Buggies
and Spring Wagons we have eve had
We have Dexter, Brewster, Eliptic,
and Thomas Coil Springs, with Piano
and Whitechapel bodies, and can give
you a choice of the different patterns of
wheels. Our work is the best made in
this section, made by good workmen
and of good material. e claim to be
the only party manufacturing in town
who ever served an apprenticeship to
the business. Along with that we have
had forty years’ experience in the busi-
ness, which certainly should give us
he advantage over inexperienced par-
ies.
In price we defy competition, as we ,
- have no Pedlers, Pig or Rents to
Bay. We pay cash for all our Foods
hereby securing them at the lowest
sgures and discounts. We are deter-
mined not to be undersold, either in
our own make or manufactured work
from other places; so give us a call for
Surries, Phaetons, Buggies, Spring
Wagons, Buckboards, or anything else
in our line, and we will accommodate
you.
We are prepared to do all kinds of
0——~=REPAIRING——0
on short notice. Painting, Trimming,
Woodwork and Smithing. We guaran-
tee all work to be just as represented,
80 give us a call before purchasing
elsewhere. Don’t miss the place—
alongside of the freight depot.
a 31 15 8. A. McQUISTION & CO.
Printing. Printing :
JEUNE JOB PRINTING. alt Yshy,
ERRINE’
FineZJob Printing Fine Job Printing. P 3
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. PURE BARLEY
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
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Fine Job Printing.
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. Fino Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
FINE JOB PRINTING}
Fine Job Printing.
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_ Fine Job Printing.
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—ar THE WATCHMAN OFFICE.{—
MISCELLANEOUS ADV’S,
Real Estate Sales.
IDER BARRELS for sale at
Pleasant Gap Distillery. Address
J. C. MULFINGER,
36 31 3t* Pleasant Gap, Pa.
HECK-WEIGHMAN'S RE-
PORTS, ruled and numbered up to 150
with name of mine and date line printed in
full, on extra heavy paper, furnished in any
quanity on to days’ notice by the.
32 39 WATCHMAN JOB ROOMS.
HE PENN IRON ROOFING &
CORRUGATING CO., Limited.
SHEET IRON & STEEL MANUFACTURERS
in all its branches for BUILDING PURPOSE.
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR. Circulars and
prices upon applicatron. G.M. RHULE, Ag’t.
36 7 tf. P Philipsburg, Pa
UNS, FISHING TACKLE, ETC.
Persons interested in guns, ammuni-
tion and fishing tackle call on H Oliger,
Agt. Office and shop with Elmer Straub,
boot and shoemaker, opposite the depot, on
237 West High street.
to all kinds of gun and lock repairing; umbrel
las mended, knives and scissors sharpened
Agent for Winchester riftes and shot guns
Call and get price for any kind of a gnn.
36 28 Im
rpue WILLER MANUFACTUR
ING CO.
Sole Manufacturers of
THE WILLER SLIDING BLINDS,
THE WILLER FOLDING BLINDS,
REGULAR INSIDE FOLDING BLINDS,
WILLER SLIDING WINDOW SCREENS.
And custom made SCREEN DOORS for
fine residences.
STAIR WORK in all its branches ready to
pu up in any part of the country. Write
or catalogue. GEO. M.KHULE, Ag't
3610 tf. Philipsburg, Pa.
IDER MAKERS TAKE NO-
TICE.—The undersigned has moved
1s hydraulic cider press io his shop near
Milesburg depot, where he has it in first class
order. 1t does away with sirawbuckets, shov.
eling of pumice, or rolling of barrels, the
teams standing under the building while foad-
ing or unloading.
$500 is offered and will be paid if this press
will not make from one half to a gallon more
cider to every bushel of apples than the ald
style press will make, and it will do it without
waiting.
Always bring capacity of fonr gallons for
every bushel of apples you have. Please re-
member the place, near Milesburg depot.
36 28 2m.* ROBERT BEERLY.
fren BOOK.
1,000 Pages,
200 Original Engravings,
Elegant Bindings,
Published in 3 Languages,
Popular Prices.
FIRST EDITION 100,000 COPIES.
The only Authentic Work by
GEN. BENJ. F. BUTLER.
Exclusive territory and liberal terms given
to reliable agents, accompany application for
territory with $2,00 for prospec tus.
W. KEELER &; Co.
tity:
36 21 5t. 239 8, 6th St., Philadelphia, Pa,
pecial attention given |,
ARM FOR SALE.—A 400 acre
farm, 140 of which is cleared, with lo
ouse and barn, good fruit and water, an
100,000 feet of saw timber, situated in Huston
township, will be sold cheap, either as a whole
or in parts, and terms made to suit purchasers.
ddress R. W. RICHARDS
86 32 2m Julian, Pa. +
ARM FOR SALE.
The John Reese farm, in Union township
will be sold on easy terms.
CONTAINS 109 ACRES.
and has good buildings. Apply to
J. W. ALEXANDER, Att'y.
36 28 3m. Bellefonte, Pa.
ALUABLE TOWN PROPER-
: TY FOR SALE.
The undersigned offers for sale on
easy terms the valuable and pleasantly locaied
bro erty now occupied by Dr. Hayes, on west
ig Serest; Bellefonte. Said property con-
sists of a
LARGE TWO-STORY BRICK HOUSE,
with all modern improvements, an excellent
brick stable and other outbuildings, and one
of the best located lots in the town. Posses-
sion given April 1st,1891. For further particu:
lars address"
MRS. DORA HIRSH,
129 North Duke 8.
35-48-tf Lancaster, Pa.
ARM FOR SALE.
The subscriber, executor of the estate of
John L. Rumberger, deceased, late of Fergu-
son township, offers at private sale a valuable
farm, containing
—EIGHTY ACRES MORE OR LESS.—
Located on the line of the L. €. and L. railroad
about one mile from Rock Springs, Pa., upon
which is erected
GOOD FARM BUILDINGS
of all kinds, with an abundance of pure water,
and excellent fruit. The land and fences are
in the best of order, and everything is in good
Pond jiion and calculated to make a pleasant
ame.
Terms easy and payments made to suit pur-
chaser. A. G. ARCHY, Executor,
36 28 3m. " Pine Grove Mills, Pa.
TNARM FOR SALE-—A very ele
ant farm for sale, situated at Pim
Grove Mills, Centre county, Pa., eontaining
ONE HUNDRED AND FOUR ACRES,
in a fine state of cultivation. It is well im
proved, having thereon a large two story
BRICK HOUSE, LARGE BANK BARN
and other out buildings; also a good orchard
and a fine large spring of water at the buildings,
It is one of the most desirable farms in the
county. Good schools and churches within a
mile of the property. :
The improvements could not be put upon the
farm for the price at which it can be purchased.
Terms easy.
JOHN G. LOVE,
35-43-tf Bellefonte, Pa.
ETI TOIT.
Gas Fitting.
M. GALBRAITH, Plumber and
Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pa,
Pays perticular attentien to heatin buildings
by steam, copver smithing, fermen Jos gh fix.
urest, &c. 26
|
MALT WHISKY!
DYSPEPSIA,
INDIGESTION,
.ad ull wasting diseases caf be
ENTIRELY CURED BY IT.
Malaria is completely eradicated from he
system by its use.
PERRINE'S
PURE BARLEY
MALT WHISKY :
revives the energies of those worn with excess
sive bodily or mental effort. It acts as a SAFE
GUARD against exposure in the wet and rigo-
rous weather.
Take De of a wineglassful on your arrival
home after the labors of the day and the same
quantity before your breakfast. Being chemi-
cally pure, it commends itself to the medica.
profession,
WATCH THE LABEL.
None genuine unless bearing the signatur
of the firm on the label. 2 nage.
M. & J. 8. PERRINE,
81 36ily 38 N. Third 8t., Philadelphia.
Miscellaneous Advs.
HAM AND FOOT POWER
—+—CIRCULAR SAW, —+
IRON FRAME,
STEEL SHAFTS AND ARBOR
MACHINE CUT GEARS,
CENTRE OF_ TABLE MADE OF IRON.
Send for Catalogue giving full description an
prices of our !
HAND AND FOOT POWER MACHINERY
J. N. MARSTON & CO.
8550 ly * Station A. Boston, Mass,
.
ONEY can be earned at our new
line of work. rapidly and honorably,
y those of either sex, young or old, and
their own localities, wherever they live, Any
one can do the work. Easy to learn. We fur.
nish everything. We start you. No risk. You
can devote your spare moments, or all your
time to the work. This is an entirely new
lead, and brings wonderful success to every
worker. Beginners are earning from $25 o
$50 per week and upwards. and more after a
little experience. We can furnish you the
employment and teach you free. No space to
expiain here. Full information free,
TRUE & CO.,
361y
Auguta, Maine.
3000 A YEAR !—I undertake to
briefly teach any fairly intelligent per-
| son of either sex, who can read and write, and
who, after instruetion, will work industriously,
how to earn Three Thousand Dollars ayear in
their own localities, whereverthey live. Iwill
also furnish the situation or employment, at
which you can earn that amount. No money
for me unless successful as above. Easily and
uickly learned. I desire but one worker
from each district or county. 1 have already
-| taught and provided with employment a large
number, who are making ever $3000 a year
each. It's new and oT. Full particulars
free. f.ddress at once, E. C. ALLEN.
36 1y Box 420, Augusta, Maine.
6000.00 a year is being made by
John R.Goodwin, Troy, N. ¥., at workfor
us. Reader you may not make. as much, but
we can teach you guickly how to earn from $8
to $10 a day at the start, and more as you goon.
Both sexes, all ages. in any part of America,
you can commence at home, given all your
time, or spare moments only to the work. All
is new. Great pay sure for every worker. We
start you, furnishing everything. Easily speed.
ily learned. Particulars free. Address at
once, STINSON & CO,,
36 ly Portland, Maine.
NUG little fortunes have been
made at work for us, by Anna Page, Aus.
tin, Texas, and Jno. Bonn, Toledo, Ohio. See
cut. Others are doing as well. Why not you ?
Some earn over $500.00 a month. You can do
the work and live at home, wherever you are
Even beginners are easily earning from $5 to
$10a day. All ages. We show you how and
start you. Can work in spare time or all the
the time. Big money for workers. Failure
unknown among them. New and wonderful.
Particulars free. H. HALLETT & CO.,
361y Box 880 Portland, Maine.