THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. A.NNA DICKINSON'S CASE. MISS SUSAN DICKINSON TROVES AN EVEN BETTER WITNESS THAN HER SISTER. SHE PAID ANNA'S BILLS. In the case of Anna E. Dickinson against various parties for imprisoning her as a lunatic Miss Susan Dickinson, sister ol Anna, and one of the defend ants, was a better witness than the fair plaintiff. She gave her tcstimory in a clear ringing voice, and stumbled but once during the long and weari some cross examination to which she was subjected by Judge Daley, of New York, Dr. II. B. Meredith, of the Dan ville Asylum, was the first witness called He produced the certi ficates of Miss Anna Dickinson's in carceration. Thomas V. Barlow, an attorney of Philadelphia, and a mem ber of the State Board of Association Charities, testified that when he visited the asylum in an official capa city at Miss Dickinson's request with Dr. Whetherill, secretary of the Charities, Miss Dickinson, in a dra matic manner, said that she did not wish to speak to him. He thought from her manner and appearance that she was insane, and he had seen a number of cases of insanity. On cross-examination he was forced to admit that he did not know whether she was insane or not, but he thought that when a woman in an asylum refused help when it was tendered, as it was to her, that she was insane. Miss Susan Dickinson, during the course of her voluminous testimony, remarked that she had not talked to her sister since the Danville incident, bad not recognised her since that time aad never would. She denied that her sister had earned as much money as represented. In 18S4 she was worn out and run down on ac count of hard luck. In 1SS6 she was more nervous and worn out and filled very few engagements. At that time the witness snpported her. In iS33 her sister was in no condition to earn money. The witness declared that she still has bills to pay that were contracted for Anna. In the fall of 1S90 Anna stabbed the witness in the hand with a tailor's shears and quickly forgot about it. She first talked of conspir acy in January, 1891. She wasted money on dresses, took a great deal ot stimulants and frequently had the smell of whisky on her breath. "Can you tell how much liquor that in 1889 Anna told her that Susan B. Anthony, Frances Willard, Ma dame Rhea and other prominent women were conspiring against her. Allen Kggleston, who was present when Anna was removed from her room to the asylum, testified that Anna on that occasion was either drunk or insane, he did not know which. C. W. St. John sore that he had sold Anna whisky, brandy and raw alcohol, as well as porter, by the dozen bottles. Mrs. J. Griffiths had dressed Anna to take her to the asylum and she acted and appeared insane. Mrs. Mary J. Marsh, super visor of the female department at the Danville Asylum, said that from what she saw of Miss Dickinson while she was in the asylum she most positively thought her insane. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on Descriptions from reputable phy sicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mer cury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surface of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internr.lly, and made in To'edo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co., Testimonials free. teiTSold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle. LOOKING PCS BOGUS FORTUNES. ISAAC JENNENS' DEATH RECALLS MANY NOTORIOUS SWINDLES. NO GREAT ESTATES IN CHANCERY. The recent death of Isaac Jennens, of Gloucester, should recall admonitory reminiscences of the wretched swindle by which he lost his fortune and be came an inmate of the County Poor- house. The story of the Jennens estate be gins in Philadelphia in 1821, when an Lnclish engraver named Uingiey, claiming to be a great grandnephew of the original Jennens, began to solicit subscriptions from persons of that name for the purpose of recover ing their lost inheritance, but he was not very successful, took to drink and died in our Almshouse. Then the your sister drank during the month of matter languished until 1844, when a February, 1801 ?" "I bought from one-half to one gallon a week, and it all went into her room." When the witness was asked what profanity her sister had used during the year previous to her departure for Danville, witness said she sometimes beard her call down " damnation up on Ben Butler." Witness said Anna used chloroform almost constantly for a yrar so she could s'eep. During Anna's illness witness said that Gen eral Ben Butler sent two or three checks for $500 and three for $250; Mr. Borne of New York, $250 : Sena tor Allison also contributed and the Actors' Fund sent $280. On Wednesday the cross-examina hon 01 Miss husan Dickinson was resumed. The questions asked her had little bearing on the trial except that they furnished opportunity for rebuttal testimony later. She denied having written to ueorge w. unucis in the hope of raising a fund of $20,000 so that both she and Anna could take a tiip abroad. Mrs. Laura Holloway Lanford had sent them St so, which she declared was from a fund raised for both sisters, and Frances E. Willard had shown much interest in Anna's case and had offered to assist her, John Baldwin, the conductor on the Bloomsburg road train on which Anna was taken to Danville, swore that Anna said to him : " Conductor, I want you to send a telegram to ex Governor Pattison and Jay Gould Tell Robert E. Pattison that we must have universal suffrage." Her face was swollen, her eyes glared and she acted like an insane person. She wanted him to send a telecram to Jay Gould for $1,000,000 Martha Brown, a servant employed at the Dickinson residence in West Pittston, testified that she first noticed that Anna acted strangely on the Monday before she was taken away. She heard her swear, and once, be cause she would not obey an order, chased her out of the house and yell eci alter ner, " uorae oack, you mue devil." Witness saw Anna take Susan by the throat. Susan was always kind to her sister. Lagrange Eglei ton had seen Anna with her hands on Susan's throat, and Anna said to him " fake my sister away, 11 she is my sister and not a devil. Mrs. Stanton, of Tittston, a dress maker, said Anna first appeared strange in August. 1890, and wanted the witness to pull her finrers and toes. In a short lime she threw her self on the floor on her stomach and kicked hard and furious. She lav there for an hour. She used to hear Anna frequently use the word damn, and her conduct was often peculiar. Becoming excited on cross examina tion the witness said that her opinion was that Anna was crazy drunk. i rs, Susan Glenn, of Wyonvng, testified very smart englishman, nameo Shields, took it up, and for twenty-five years made an income out of such men as Isaac Jennens and his associates. In 18153 the latter became interest ed in the recovery of the money that Dr. Samuel Jennens, of Ipswich. En gland, left in 1765. Making no will nor having any heirs, his property went into the English Chancery Court. There was 700,000 in money and large estates in Norfolk. An associa tion was formed and tor a long time the office was maintained on South Twelfth street. The entrance fee in to the association was so and in 1870 there was a membership of 100 persons. 1 hese were not an cranks, but men prosperous in business with reputation for sagacity and shrewd ness. An Englishman named Jarboe took Shields' place. He was a veritable Micawber, and his rolling periods, were rich in promises, lie wouui produce legal papers beautifully writ ten with huge wax seals, and tell that at last a decree had been pronounced in their favor j a few more months would see them in possession of wealth that mocked the slow gains of harsh and continuous toil. But a few dollars were still neaded for stamp duties and fees. The collection was made and so it went on for twenty yeats. The latter meetings were not all harmonious. Jarboe was knocked down and well thrashed on one occasion. The late Judge Kelley was the foeman the association dreaded the most. He had several clients connect ed with the affair, and in order to open their eyes he communicated wuh the town solicitor 01 Ipswich, England, and was told by that official that no such man as Dr. Sam Jennens had ever lived there, and the alleged fortune was a myth, but the Judge declared to the writer that this informa tion had no effect in bringing back his clients to right reason and com mon sense. From i860 to '84 two attorneys and three English adventurers divided not less than $8,coo a year from the Jennens swindle, and the proverbial result of ill gotten gains iouowed. Jarboe, broken in health, is still alive, all the rest died drunken paupers, and the writer a year ago saw a police man dragging the wife of one of the lawyers through the Etreet to the Fourth district station house, a wretched, fallen woman. The fate of some of the victims was pitiful. The widow of a naval officer was left an annuity of $300 r-s , 1 n 1 ivr annnm. sue was only 48 ana yet bold her annuity for $600 to pay assessments levied by the Jennens Association. Isaac Jennens paid out in cash $17,000, and beyond a1! doubt not less than $300,000 went nto the pockets of the adventure! s who woik ed the enterprise. This is only one of similar under takings. Sixty years ago the $100, 000,000 of the Hyde estate nearly turned Lancaster county upside down, and Thaddeus Stevens prose etited a man who had collected money for pushing the claim. Stevens hated James Buchanan, and was delighted to learn that he had paid $100 for a share in the prospective millions. So he put Buchanan in the witness box and fairly tore him in two, but Stevens' matchless impudence was fairly met when the other side brought a witness who testified that Stevens was himself a subscriber, and that he had, moreover, paid money for the same object for the benefit of Rose Barrack, a notorious character in Lancaster at that time. This was for years an irritating reminiscence to the great Commoner. There is now a Scotsman named Martin in this city exploiting a claim to an alleged fortune left by James Aiken, of Ayrc, Scotland. 40,000. 000, he says, have been waiting clai mants since 1753. He called on L. C. Harting, Fifth street, above Race, not long ago, with the benevolent purpose of making that gentleman rich, as his mother was a Scotch Aiken. Hi3 terms were $50 for a typewritten statement of the claim, but he was at once shown the door. While nothing can exceed the greed and credulity of those who are caught in these frauds, the slightest intelli gence is equal to the task of exposing them. The Gray's Inn Law Almanac is one of the means. In i860 an act was passed by the British Parliament escheating to the crown all unclaimed funds that had been in chancery for over fifteen years, and the amount taken was .2,327,823, and on the 23d of February, 1894, the funds in chancery amounted to only 65,000. This at once disposes of the ,40,000,- 000 01 the Aiken fortune. There is now a movement, backed by abundant capital m Cleveland, Ohio, to recover the Holmes estate, and it is alleged that 400,000 be longing to it are now lying in the Irish Court of Chancery. In fact, in 1894 there was just .15,000 in cus tody of that court. Again in 18S4 the statute of limitations was applied in all cases where the estates had reverted to the crown, and after twenty-one years recovery was barred save by act of Parliament. It is therefore impossible that an estate, either in lands or money, can lie unclaimed for a century, as all of, these alleged fortunes do, but nothing can match the creed or equal the credulity of Americans, and they will still listen to stories of supposititious millions, that make the adventures of Aladdin and his lamp probable. 1 imes. NOTHING LIKE IT. Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy Makes Another Remarkable Cure. (From the Times Union, Albany, N. Y.) Four years ago, Mrs. Markham, who resides on First Street, corner of North Swan, noticed a sensitive spot on her left limb. It was apparently nothing serious, but soon developed into a sore, and before long the limb was a mass of ulcers. Markham em ployed some of our best physicians, but obtained no relief. In fact, was told that nothing could be done for her, so for four years she suffered with these dreadful ulcers, which had eaten their way to the bone. A little less than a year ago, an acquaintance told her about Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, and that he believed she would find relief in using it. Mrs. Markham's four years of suffering had made her skeptical, the more so, as she had ob tained no relief from any of the phy sicians who had attended her. The friend offered to send her a bottle of Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy if she would try it. He did so, and there was such a decided im provement that she concluded to give the remedy a fair fst. To day, not quite a year after taking the first dose, the ulcers have disappeared, all that is left to show what she has suffered, is a swelling on the ankle of the left limb, which is fast disappearing. Mrs. Markham is naturally strong in her praises of Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, and feels that but for it she would now be a helpless cripple, if not a corpse. Such a straight forward endorse ment needs no comment. Dr. Ken nedy's Favorite Remedy cures dis eases when taken according to direc tions, it acts directly upon the kidneys, liver and blood. In cases of nervous ness, dyspepsia, rheumatism, ulcers, old sores, blood poisoning, and Bright's disease, it has made pronounced cures, after all other treatments have failed. 2t. ABOUT THE FARM. A clep i stall makes a clean cow, and a clean cow makes clean milk, and clean milk makes good buttor. It Is said that 100 sheep rewilnry folded will fertilize eight acres of land In one year so as to increase the ylold , 100 per cent The stock of hogs kept on the farm 1 may be exported to Improve or retro- grade, according to the ability with which they are managed. Don't get the Idea that high color ing of butter con make an inferior grade bring a first-clans price. It won't work on the same customer but once. The records show that the United States now export annually about 25, 000 pounds less cheese than fifteen or Blxteen years ago. ' Last year showed a further decrease. The Gormantown Telegraph says that. If a cheese factory is located la a good dairy district and farmers per sist in sending only inferior milk to it, the closing of that factory is only m question of time. Observe regular hours in feeding, says a writer. The stock that is fed at stated times soon learn not to look I for feed at any other time and is mora contented than it would bo if fed . whenever it comes handiest, It is very easy to keep a customer for your butter product if you can give him an article of fine quality and one that is uniformly so. A good lot to day and a poor one to-morrow will ruin your reputation in any market A writer flays he knows a man who ' made $35,000 breeding and feeding swine, but he did not know enough to stick to the business. He is now a pauper. The hog is a better friend to the pocketbook, years together, than 1 almost any other stock. 1 It is believed that to this date some , 60,000.000 bushels of wheat have been fed to live stock, chiefly to hogs, and j that if wheat remains low and corn continues at good prices, 80,000,000 to 90,000,000 bushels of this year's wheat 1 crop will be fed to domestic animals. , Most all of our weed pests are an- I minis, and we are to blame for their j reappearance because we let them go 1 to seed yearly. Even the dreaded Russian thlRtle is of this class, and , can be got rid of If fought persistently! in this manner. Extermination is the 1 word for all our "tares." j It is quite possible to feed beos in ' the winter on Biigar syrup, and to take most of the honey in the fall. Sugar I is much cheaper than honey, pound i for pound, and honey is more than half water. The purest white sugar is used and boiled to a thin syrup. This pre vents souring, which would otherwise occur, and would be fatal to the bees, as it produces dysentery. Give the hogs the run of a pasture, with good water and comfortable quarters to sleep, and feed ground, soaked feed, and there will be a hand some profit on the investment. If hogs are kept up in a small lot and fed on dry corn alone, and that shovel ed out in mud, dirt and cobs and drop pings from the herd, you need not ex pect to come out without loss. An exchange says: We have dug several sugar beets, weight four pounds and over. Suppose we raised a four-pound beet on every two square feet of ground on an acre; that would be equal to 80,000 pounds. At 12 '4 per cent, of sugar that amount would give 10,000 pounds of sugar. At four cents per pound this would be worth $400. An example of the enormous de crease of the value of farm lands in England is afforded by a recent sale of 8,000 acres for $5 an acre. The same land was sold thirty years ago for $40 an acre. The land tax and the tithes which are collected for the sup port of the church amount to 60 per cent, of the rent paid for the use of the land at the present time. It is estimated that the Arabs have two methods of estimating what will be the height of horses. By the first a cord is stretched from the nostril over the ears and down along the neck; this distance is compared with that from the withers to the feet; the colt will grow as much taller as the first distance exceeds the second. By the other method the distance between the knee and the withers is compared with that from the knee to the coronet. If it has reached the proportion of two to one, the horse will grow no taller. The Rhep'a Covering. The wool of the sheep is an efficient protection against cold, so long as it is kept dry. When wet it only adds to the sheep's discomfort, as the wool, being porous, exhales moisture very rapidly and cools its body accordingly. With a dry place to sleep in sheep will never suffer from cold except at the lambing time, when a warm place is always necessary. In rainy weather it is better to keep the sheep shut up in their shelter. They are anxious to be out of doors sometimes, when, if they had reason sufficient to think, they would know they were better un der shelter. The owner can judge bet ter when they ought to go out than they can Judge for themselves. 3ro j Fine PHOTO GRAPHS and CRAYONS at McKillip Bros., Bloomsburg. The best are the cheapest. J. R. Smith & Co. LIMITED, MIlrTON, Pa., PIANO TTTTHWPTTPt.'lVO I By the following well-known makers 1 Dr. Humphrrvs'Speclnrs are scientifically nu I lr ! v ccicfullr prepared Remedies, used for years In Vim,ll.I K) private practice and for over thirty yoars by the ....! with ntim aiiwpM. Everv slnalo Specific a special cure for the ntaeane named. KntlbCt 1 -Fevers, ConiJItitml, Inflammation!., U-Wormn, Worm Fever, Worm Colic !M Woilior 3-Teclhlnc Collo, CrylnS. W'akcfulneaa .li.l VSV 4-Ularrhea, of Children or Adults VD m Ttr-... i tilt t. .&! -NrnrnUI, Tcwthacho, Faceaohe. SIS Ilallct &Ila lM. 4 jk i.kkuIh. Till Imianoaa fntiRtlfifltlnn. 2.f lt-riapprcHKFd orl'nlnfnl Periods... .415 Can fllsO fumish ailV of the i ' hit.. T.m Proruna FerloUS v.t 1 - " i3-i roup, i.nryngnin. noarwnoM ui cheaper makes at manufacU 1.1-Hnlt Ithrtim. Erysipeloid Erupttonf.. .il.l . -r , i 1.1-lthpumatlxm. Kheumatlo l'olns 'it XXQX pnC6S. UO DOT DUT H S:Krrrha: rrcoiXnekd. l piano before getting our prices. MO-Wbooplns I'ougn . , JJ Kidney Plm-nnea I US-Jirrvotis lirbliity 3 TS t:- nKoi-nThroal.Oulucv.UlccratcdThroat.ti5 U " 77 " DR- HUspeHc.S for GRIP, 25. On application. rut up In small bottles of plcnwint peUets, Just m aA km rwn.i.t. nf ant tirtii.lll An receipt nf Brit. ! iiitP..'nUAL(Eulri-dAHvird,liLDrm. Till' in iMiiicia.aiin.lt).. Ill a I IB William fll.. NKW TORI. ... ... . iiiii.iii.iiiiiiii mm as- m- mM a-M iiiu uuiuivii WHAT i r OTfivr rnnvnnv 1 1 H It M 1 1 1 h N i lb 1 1 Al MACHINE OS m 1RO N I Heart Disease Kulieved ia 30 Minutes. Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief in all cases of Or panic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in 30 minutes, ami speedily effects a cure. It is a peerless remedy for Pal pitation, Shortness of IJreath, Smoth ering Spells, Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of a Diseased Heart. One dose convinces. Gold ly W. S. Rish ton. 6-i5-iy. Frost In Ksrsrs and Apples. 'An egg expands when It la frozen, and breaks its shell. Apples contract so much that a full barrel will shrink until the top layer la a foot below tha chine. When the frost is drawn out the apples assume their normal size and fill up the barrel again. Some varieties are not appreciably injured by being frozen if the frost is drawn out gradually. Apples will carry safe ly in a refrigerator car while the mer cury is registering twenty degrees be low zero. Potatoes, being so largely composed ot water, are easily frozen. Once touched by frost they are ruined. WILL DO. IS NATURE'S OWN TONIC. Stimulates the appetite and pro duces rcirestunpc Bleep. GIVES VITAL STRENGTH TJ hURS'NQ MOTHERS. Checks wasting dieonps, Rtops niRht sweats, cures incipient consumption. Increases strength and flosu. MAKES RED, P.ICK BLOOD, Promotes healthy lung tissue. Will Rive the pale and puny th3 rosy caeets 01 youm. CUBES ALL FEMALE COMPLAINTS. Hakes strong; raen and women of wcutiings. WRE'S IRON TOH'O PILLS Care all Wasting Diseases end their sequences, BRONCHITIS, CONSUMPTION, &c, have no coagulating; en'eet on the ooutonU. of the Ftomuch or its lining;; consequently do not hurt the teeth or caus conBtipstion or diarrhoea, as do the usual forms oi Iron. 10 days treatment 60o, pamphlet free. If not kept by your druggist, address GILMORE & CO.. CINCINNATI- O. For sale In HloomBlmnr, Pa., by norm filiOS., Druggists. i--i ly MONEY LOANED Do you want to borrow money on cnultablo terms 7 Do you desire to pny off a morttrmre and rr-bor- row i lie money at 5 per cent. Interest annual ly r Would you enro to be bo glttiated that you eould reduce I lie mortgage against your home by nuvlnir off a Hinall it mount monthly and at t lie end oi each year receive credit for all paid? With Interest being charged only on ri'iimlnliiL' rjorllon of loan. Would you like to buy your family a home 7 II i, read the following : I renresent a Company that has embodied In It a plan all the le.iiurea enumerated above and many more. . an j nu sec any rcusini w ny jnu tiould nay a large lntcrcHt lor money wnen you have iochI gecuiliy 7 an you present any good asnn wny it is noi as wen iu receive initus mi lv as to wait from 7 to 10 years as one dues In manv of th Asioclat Ions 7 Is not t lie n- Miii'iicni ol Interest yearly better than waiting many years for lirouis 7 iturrowera uncier tne elan rep'esemcu oy me Ht.ume uushiui.'iv mi risk us each fl.oi pild on the loan Is credited on the mortgage, thereby reducing It In pro portion to tne amount paiu. Hullillnir Associations have benefitted hun dreds of t lions. lids, so did the old cars that ueie propelled ny norsi s. our plan is as nir supeilor to ituuuing Associations us toe troiiey ctll'S nre to l lie nni u in iiiiikicu muse curs, m rni. .My time Is loo much occupied to answer ques tions lor tne curious, out iuosb seeking iiiior lnnilnnfor the betterment of their condition will receive mil intorii anon promptly, we oi fer an Investment to those who have a small amount to save monthly that has no superior us to s fciy ana seldom 0(iiuiea ior prom (.'all or write. S. D. NEYHARD, omce coli'miiun uirig., BLOOMsnrita, PA, l-i-Um. i noor. uox .-i. IS NOW IN COMPLETE WORKING SHAPE, and is prepared to fill all kinds of planing null orders, and foundry and machine work. The plant is well equipped, and all orders will be filled promptly, buops on sixth street, West of Woolen Mill. 10-26 ly. PFe, FOR THE SCHOOLROOM 444 If it' 1 tnyl.int nttdtd m a irJoo room tr tsvr it. W rt HraJ quartrrl for BlatkboarJt, Dftki and Stall, Crsjrent tnJ Erattrs, Mapi ami Glotti, Inks mint Information. H'kat u Ml you, you tan dtftni on. Evtrytking wt nil you it fuaranltrd. Wt do hmintst on the " monty-baik " plan, and do moro busintu tkan any olktr koust in onr lint. Wt want tvtry tody inttrtstrd in vkool work to kavt onr tatalornt, 10 wt tan Jo ttilt mort ouiintlt. Catalofuttfru. 444 65 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK Andrews School Furnishing Company 3 kjA44444444444444:x Amarlcitn Been. In America it has been observed that bees often bore tubular corollas in or der to get at the nectar ot flowers, in stead of entering by the mouth aa humble bees do in Europe. In essays on the cross fertilization of flowers this supposed anomaly has been the rubject of much comment. It now ap pears that the humble bees ot 15uropo and America have identical habits in regard to the manner in which the visits to flowers are madn, and that it Is the class of insects known as the carpenter bee, or the borer, which works In the outside manner indicated. FRAZER AXLE GREASE Best In the World! Get the Genuine ! Sold Everywhere ! loin-iy. ELY'S Catarr nTTAV'TUT VUTi Bi'Tmf n is quickly absorbed Cleans the Nasal Fassages, Allays Fain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Kesiores the Sense of Tast and smell. IT WILL CURE A partlele Is applied Into eaeh nostril and Is I aureealilo. 1'rl' e 50 eentH it t hnimtsm. liy mill rei-litere d, ro eta. tLY UltoTII KIIM, 5 Warren hi., w FEMALE PILLS. hiw Discovtnr. . ver faiis. A uuw. 1 . liubio and ! rttllet tur ut preMiil.eiefshirB.K'-iuiir or luilnful ni.-lv stmtiua. how uwxi br over ,ou ladle monthly. Invluoratel tl.: orjrai Mewarooflmltatloiif , KjJ paiwr. i.'rliol. or U ia boi . ' ioalM Id plain wrappor. ,.''., 3 Tampa lor pai 'lmilura. Salrt by l.ojM llru.rl.l. AJJrrrai Plf8 MtflltAl ASSOCIATION, CLlcatfo. liU 8old by O. P. HINGLEK. caveats and Trade Marks obtained, nd l a!' Patent business conducted ior jiuk 'K?''. ...nr. n ,TV n a PAT- ENT OF KICK. We Have no sub-aneptle, J business direct, hence ean transact paietu o"- nuns In less time and at, Less cost imu mote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo, wun a;"' tlon. We advise If patentable or not, . charge. Onr feo not due till patent la MJri. ene.es to actual clients In your blate.Couniyi ur town, seal free. Auuress C. A. KNOW & C() Washington, 0 0 (Opposite U.S Patent Ofllee.) 4 AY-FEVER DREAKFAST SUPPER. GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. preinreU m.MIH t 4 For Ure:tl;last X I j li i I I in fmin I'HllfiirnlH White ttheat. DelleliiUH, Kcniiomleal. Orneers sell It. 1 lie Juim I. t'uuliijf Co., 153 iMimie M , N. y. I B-8-H. U. OA BOIUNC WATER OR MILK.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers