The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, May 21, 1908, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBUftdt
ft t
WHKN TO VIXI A WATCll.
Itriti.vli Watchmaker lloclrto Mora
I lift In llio Kent Time.
With tho disappearance of tho old
tlmo watch-key and tho Introduction
of the utem-wlndor tho methodical
euro of tho pocket-clock has become
almost n lost art. . Any close oliHerv
er of humanity must hnva noticed
how (ri'cini'ntly absent-minded men
draw forth nnd wind their watches
apparently not moro than half-con
scions of what they are clolnir. 1 e
both the accuracy nnd durability o
a watch dependa to a certain decree
on the time at which It Is wound, nnd
the vexed nue-itlon as to whether thin
should bo done at night or In the
morning wns recently discussed at a
meeting of tho nritlsh Watch an
Clookmakors' guild, says the Phlla
dclphia Uncord.
A member of the guild said he was
often asked by bin cuxtomcrs wheth
er It wns better to wind a watch at
night or In the morning. Soveral
members were of the opinion that It
was better to wind It at night, as In
the morning the mainspring woul;
be colder than It would be after hav
ing been carried about In tho pocket
all day, nnd It was a well-known
fact that steel was much more brlttlo
when It was cold than when it was
warm.
Tho vlco president of tho guild
however, dlasonted from this opinion
I!r said that during the daytime the
watch wag carried about and sub
Jectod to all kinds of irregular con
ditions, nnd that when It was fully
wound It wns able to withstand these
abnormal conditions better than
when It required winding. At night
the watch wns usually laid cn one
Bide In a horizontal position and was
at rest, n3 It were, therefore running
down did not affect It so much. He
believed It. therefore, to bo a decid
ed advnutnge to wind It up In the
morning. This view of the case was
accepted by a majority of the mem
bers of tlio trade present at the meet
Ins.
Depreciation of King.
To be rich 03 n kin wns once upon
a time, tho parallel to being as lu'un
tlfu as an angel and as happy i.. h
god. Hut whereas the an pels ftlll
retain their traditional primacy. ami
the felicity of the gods la still a com
Don figure of speech wth our minor
poets;, the wealth of kings Ii.ih come
to be dwarfed by that of many of
their subjects. Not only that, but
kings have been reduced to pursue
largely the methods for acquiring
riches that their subjects make use
of. Hence It Is that, while Carlos
I remains the king even when he
api tars In tweeds at a cafe chantant,
and the Prince of Wales la Btlll roy
alty when he travels Incognito
through Paris, they both become
quite like ourselves when we hear of
one selling his yacht to reduce ex
peases, or the other being caught In
a t,hi cqueezd In the stock market.
New York Evening Post.
Cremation.
Cremation In this country Is al
moKt wholly confined to persons of
aome Intellectual distinction. The
avtrr.se citizen Is still held in the
fetters of custom, in which senti
ment hug taken root so deeply as to
make It hard to eradicate. This Is
doubtless the explanation of the fact
that cremation so far has failed to
become popular. British Medical
Journal.
Making Vegetarians.
Last year raw an enormous rise In
t ha co3t of all foodstuffs and house
hold commodities In Vienna, meat
wpecla'.ly having advanced in price
to such an extent that the poorer
classes, much against their will, are
being compelled to Join the ranks of
tho vegetarians
I.iuk Moral reeling.
Professor Schuster assert that
"Jilmals lack moral feeling' entlroly,
Bono 01 their acta being Immoral or
moral, in the broad sense, and they
have no trace of a sense of shame or
of honor. Their courage, he de
clares, is "a mere lmpulso of na
ture." From the Optimist Club.
If the waiter, the street car con
ductor, or the clerk in the store,
from whom you dnand so much and
in such an arrogant manner, had
Tour brains and opportunities, you
might bo where they are. Ba
thoughtful and kind.
Deafness Cannot be Cured
by local applications, as they can
not reach the diseased portion of
the ear. There is only one way to
cure deafness, and that is by con
stitutional remedies. Deafnes is
caused by an inflamed condition of
the mucous lining of the Kustachian
Tube. When this tube is inflamed
you have a rumbling sound or im
perfect hearing, and when it is en
tirely closed, Deafness is the result,
and unless the inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored to
its normal condition, hearing will
be destroyed forever; nine cases out
often are caused by Catarrh, which
Is nothing but an inflamed condition
of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dol
lars for any case of Deafuess (caus
ed by catarrh) that cannot be cured
by Hall's Catarrh cure. Send for
circulars, free.
F. J. Ciiknbv & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Convalesce:; s need a large amount of nourish
rnsnt m c;u''y cr.icd form.
&coii . t "..friti f.Tzon is powc..u nourish
rnem ntji.iy concentrated.
ta. 1 1 ft I a . X?
11 rnaKs.i vonc, blood
. ..
puiung any lax on the cl,e:s';ou.
ALL DHUCQISTSi COc. AND SI. CO.
o
Offender, lUvnrel
There'a a new hatpin that'c bound
not to come out, under any provoca
tlon of wind or speed. Where provo
cations of this sort moHt abound,
namely, in an automobile, this hat
pin gots in its spetal Innings. It Is
in fact, expressly designed for "mo
toring" Indies who will not war the
ptnless hood, and whose more beau
tifying hats are not to bo kept on
by ordinary straight pins. Tho new
pin In a long Bplral affair, tortuous
to behold and getting a twisted grip
on tho coiffeur which nothing short
of a dynamlto explosion or the
clever hand that put It In can loos
en. As a weapon of defense for unpro
tected femlnlncs this corkscrew hat
pin beats anything yet put on the
market.
As an encouragement when things
bio at sixes and sevens In tho busi
I'eM end of the house, one woman
has had a board burned with the
legend, "Even this will pass away,"
prd hung over the kitchen sink.
Nicotine in Tobncco.
In genuine Havanna tobacco there
:s not much more than 2 per cent
of nicotine. In French tobacco
about 6 per cent and In our old Do
minion product a little over 1 per
cent, in the Blue Grass tobacco at
least 8 per cent, nnd the Sumatra
leaf of Connecticut contains about 6
per cent
Chinese Teachers.
It is the teacher, the merchant, the
miner, the manufacturer, nnd tho
railroad engineer that China needs,
not the Rqldler or the sailor, except
for efficient police purposes. And
of all these, tho greatest Is the teach'
er. Get him and the rest will fol
low. Shanghai Mercury.
Nutmeg Poisoning.
Cases of nutmeg poisoning, though
rare, are known to have occurred.
Tho death of a boy who had eaten
two nutmegs Is recorded. The pois
on Is in the oil and the symptoms are
giddiness, drowsiness and delirium.
Medical Record.
Growth of the Hlncks.
Philadelphia now hns a negro 'pop
ulation cf 85.000, an Increase of 20,
0C0 since the census of 1900, a larg
er colored population than any other
Northern city, or nearly as many
negroes as Baltimore, Washington
or New Orleans.
Cost of Hauling Conl,
The cost of hauling coal for Its
own locomotives is estimated at 3
mills per ton-mile on the St. Louis
& San Francisco Hallroad, and the
labor of handling it at 8 cents a ton.
The women of Russia and trie men
of Japan are the most expert needle
workers in thq world.
Few person, vould guess that the
smallest things visible to the eye are
the stars. '
Everyone wears silk in Madagascar.
Is it la cheaper thero than linen.
The first gummed postage stamp
waa issued about 1840.
Lo! The Poor Indian.
Nearlv all tha Indian colony of 40
fnmlllea near Ilav City. Mich., have
died in the last few years of con
sumption. The remainder are l.v
Inir In iinvertv. ftlthousrh their wh.ta
neighbors do what they can to tup-
port them.
Wooden Piles Predominate.
Holl-nd has a uerenulal necessity
for wooden piles. In Rotterdam
harbor works of all kind demand
them and the draliage of the Zuydor
Zen as it steadily proceeds throws
out its wooden ramparts in all di
rections. Christians In America.
There are 32,983,156 Christian
communicants in tho United States,
of whom a little more than one-third
belong to some branch of the Catho
lic Church.
FOR
Neuralgia.
Sciatica.
.Rheumatism.
Backache.
Pain inchest.
Distress in
stomach.
Sleeplessness
nnd rr.irclo wilhcut v
,. ti
Moromxa ox the farm.
Dig Machines for Crop Work- Ron
alrnuts for Going to Market.
The saving effected by the mod
ern powerful gasolene engine on the
farm is estimated to be from JO to
50 per cent over horse, man or steam
powor. When not running, the en
gine is not consuming fuel, and its
keep through the winter when in
storage, is nothing. It does not tat
its head off and it takes very little
storage space. Manufacturers have
made special lines cf farm engines
In various sizes, ranging from five to
100 horse-power, both for stationary
work and portable use. Upward of
50,000 such engines have been solj
to American farmers In the lnHt two
years, says Casslcr's Magazine, and
the demand for the present year w'll
exceed any past record. There Is
a gasolantf farm engine adapted lor
dragging heavy gangs of ploughs
across long fields, foilowe.1 by har
rows, cultivators, seeders and har
vesters, in fnct, the land can be
tilled, planted and the crops har
vested with a machine of this sort
without the aid of a single horse and
with very little hired hoi?. In the
grent Northwest the portable gaso
lene threshing outfits are conspicu
ous features nt the harvest season.
They are much llfhter than tno old
steam threshing plants are self
propelling and on rubber tires, so
that they can run easily and Quickly
from farm to farm. The farm help
problem U thus being partly solved
In the Northwest. Even In the
Northwest of Canada scores of theye
machines have been put In operation
in tho last year. The great wheat
crop could not be harvested and
thretihod without such appliances.
The gasolene motor Is no less Im
portant in marketing products. The
modern touring cars and runabouts
sold to farmers are for utility first
and pleasure afterward. By thtVr
aid one farmer says he realized $300
more in one season for his articles
than if he had sold them in the old
way, taking the market prices as
they varied from day to day. An
other farmer having a lot of fancy
poultry mado In one trip $"" more
than tho regulnr profits through
rushing a lond to market during a
day of high prices. The farmer's
wives and daughters have learned to
operato tie machines, and It Is not
unusual to see them peddling farm
produce from automobiles In many
of the Western towns and cities.
Some of them run In from ten to
twenty miles and soil their produce
before noon and get back again In
the early afternoon.
What Is a Candle Power.
Pretty much every one thinks he
knows what a candle power Is the
light given by a single candle, of
course. As a matter of fact candles
differ as much In luminosity as light
houses, oil lamps, or fireflies, and a
candle power is not one thing, but
half a dozen, according to the coun
try where the phrase Is used. In
Grent Britain and the United States
tho Standard light unit Is the amount
given by a "spermaceti candle, burn
ing up at tho rate of 120 grains an
hour, with a flame forty-five milli
metres high," etc. In Franco the
standard candle -Is made of Ftearlne.
and German's candle was, until a
few yeare ago parnffin. Now the latter
country uses tho so-called Hefner
unit of light, tho amount given by a
certain form of lamp burning acetate
of amyl. Another lamp standard
called the carcel. was used In France.
In this purified rape seed oil Is
burned. Because of this unsatisfac
tory international chaos, It is now
proposed that our national bureau of
standards at Washington take steps
to establish a standard international
candle, which would be acceptable to
at least nine countries. The joint
committee of gag and electrical engi
neers which la urging this standard
ization declares that the ohange
could be mado with very little dis
turbance of most of the national
standards now in existence.
MR tr Take 0ne
VP; W 0f th6 LitHe Tablets
'.....ly.AN
mrvixa mT i.Ma
Ii.Vfrn Consumers of Conl Arc Adopt
lug Tills Method.
ruylncf conl on the boat unit b"
(ils is becoming l:icrenn!:.g!y nnd
Hurverily common.
One of tho latest proofs of this 1:1
given in Cnssler's Magazine, which
states that Chicago Is said to have
let contracts for 200,000 tons of
coal on this basis.
In tho cuho of tho Chicago deliv
eries, if tho coal test shows 13,000
British thermal units, moisture 10
per c3nt. and ash 8 per cent., the
price is to bo $2.30 per ton; but if
tho coal varies in" heat unita the
prlco la to vary accordingly.
On a 5,000 ton contract an analy
sis of the conl Is mnde once a week.
Tho sample Is taken by the regular
method and nnalytod and reported
to the consumer and the contractor.
Thought For PipIo Hrjrond Forty.
It Is foolish to fix an age at which
men become comparatively useless.
Some men are yoking at seventy, oth
ers are old at thirty-five.
One of the worst delusions that
ever crept into a middle aged man'a
mind is tho conviction that he has
done his best work, that he is grow
In? old and must eoon give place to
younger men.
Every man makes his own dead
lino. Some reach it at thirty-five,
some at forty, some at fifty; some do
not reach it nt eighty; some never
reach It, because they never cease to
grow.
Look around the world to-day and
see what some of tho men who have
Ions passed tho "dead line" are do
Intr, nnd what they have accomplish
ed. Look nt the young old military
lenders in llttlo Japan, who conquer
ed front Russia. Oyama was twenty
years past his fatal lino when ho
won his great victories, nnd all of
his corps commanders were past
ftft The Marquis Ho, the Grand
Old Man of Japan, her greatest
rtalestuan, rnd tho one who hns
done more than any other to mnko
Japan what It la to-day, Is still active
In tlio service of his country.
Tho lar-ror part of tho great for
tur.es of t h la country have been ac
cumulated after their amassors hava
pc.i'sod forty. In fact, the first forty
years of a man's life are the pre
paratory years, tho years of trail.. ng
and discipline. A largo part of this
Urns he is laying tho foundation
Jus' getting ready to rcur the super
structure. Many of us stumblo
nround many years before wo get
Into tho right place, and then, for
additional years, wo mnko many
mistakes. Most men do not get v.Iso
until they have passed forty. They
may get knowledge bnforo thin, but
not much wisdom. Wisdom i3 a
ripening process. It trices time.
Sacctss Magazine.
Coronation Kouvcn!.
r i
v . , r. w
In honor of the coronv.t'011 r?
Klner Haakon and Queen Ma id o,"
Norway a modal has been rtrnck ii
f.ol'1, silver and bronze, which
rho . s on one side profile iikonotnng
cf tho King and tho Q'leen, on th
ot h"r si.Ie Iho Arms of Norway unj
tho date of the Coronation.
Ciiu:iila'H GrcaOiexi.
Canada Is larger than t!,a United
States by 250,000 aquura miles.
Canada contains one-third of the
troa of the British empln.
Canada extends over twenty de
grees of latitude from Homo to
North I'olo.
Canada is as largo an thirty
United Kingdoms, eighteen Ger
rntmys, thirty-three Italys,
Canada is larger than Australasia
and twice the size of British India.
Canada has a boundary Hue of
3,000 miles between it and the
United States.
Canada's pea coast equals half the
earth's circumference.
Canada is 3,500 mllos wide and
1,4 00 from north to south.
Tho population Is about 6,000,
000, or about twice that of New
York. Montreal Herald.
Take NG
the Little Tablets
d the Pain is
UPtiiitlxV or'tliflCS.
l)1rtloni ultfc meh Till In rivo Laflraftt
English, Cermin, Spanish, Portuguese and French.
No. FOIl Trine
1, Frrrrn, Onmitlnti, Inflnnimiitlnna 21
S. Xhn;m, iirm Ivvrr, or Worm tii'O.iv!
3, Colli-. Cryl.ii; nnl V ukntuliKMi nr luiuuu
4. hlorrhrn. of CbllMrnn end Adult U'i
A. Ilvonnlcrr. C)rlilnK, Kllloui Collo S3
T. t'out tin. Cold, lironchltU a.".
H. Tnnlhnrhn, Farenche, NmirolKl 25
9, llendarlia, Blck Hoadnche, VwtlRti 2 A
10. Ityapepria, Indlffoiitlon, Weak Stomach 8 A
13. ('roup, Hoame Cough, LaryiigltU 8S
I t. Hull Khrutn. Eruption!, Erjralpelu 29
I S. Khrumnliim, or BhMiTnatlo Pain Mt
in, Krrrr and Adtn. Malaria 2.1
1 7. 1'llre, Ullnd or lileedJuK, External, Internal. 2ft
1ft. Ophthnlmln, Woak or Inflamed EyM 'J a
I . Catarrh, lufluonza, Cold In Head 23
90. Whooplnt 'onah,Siaamodlo Cough '25
tl. Aithnia.OppreMed, Ullllcult Breathing l&
ST Kidney Dlirne, Orarel, Calculi 2.1
H. Nenoue Debility, Vital Weakneu 1.IIO
99. More Mouth, FererSoreior Cankor 2.1
30. Urinary Incontinence. Wettln Bed 2.1
3 . More Throat, Qulnajand Diphtheria -i.l
S3, t'hrenle Coneeatloni. Headache 23
77. Grippe, Hay fever and Summer Colds. ...25
A (rmsll bottle of Pleanant Pellet, fit the veit
pocket. Sold by drugglau, or out ou receipt of prloa.
Medical Book lent fro.
finMPIIKEYS HOMEO. MEDKTOE CO., Corner
VNIIIain and John Street. N w York.
XICK.YAMES OF CITiES.
Some of Them Are Fanciful und of
Curious Origin.
Little Rock Is the City of Hoses,
from the floral growths which adorn
it.
Racine, Wis., is known n3 tho Bell
City, from the nature of the articles
made there.
Lafayette, in the Fame state. Is tho
Star City, from tho routes v. h'ch rad
iate from it as a center.
The Shoe City Is Lowell. Mas3.,
for a like reason, as Is Holyoke, la
the same state, the Paper City.
Detroit is the City of the Straits,
from its geographical situation on
the border between Michigan and
Canada.
Indianapolis Is sometimes called
the Railroad City, from lt3 central
situation in regard to railroad con
nections. Pekin, 111,, rejoices in the title of
the Celestial City, from the fact that
it W'as named for the capital of the
Chinese empire.
Hannibal, Mo., is known as the
Bluff City, from its site overlooking
the Missouri Ulver, and not from
any other significance of the word.
Alton, III., has the curious desig
nation of Tasselburgh, from the fact
that many acres of corn in tassel can
be viewed from it.
Duluth, Minn., bears the name of
the Zenith City of the Unsalted Seas,
given to it from itft situation at the
head of the waters of Lake Supe
rior. Another city which derives its
name from its situation, is North
Adams, Mass., called the Tunnel City,
from tho fact that it is at one end
of that "great hore," the Hoosae
tunnel, which was bo many years In
course of construction until its
length of about four miles was com
pleted. Swallowed Gold He Could Not Hide.
Almost an ounce of small gold
nuggets were found to be Imbedded
in the appendix of Samuel E, Graves,
who has just been operated on at a
local hospital, after long suffering.
When he was shown the gold and
told where it came from. Graves ex
plained the mystery. Three years
ago, he was engaged as a pick and
shovel man in the Guggonheimer
miner, near Katalla, Alaska. It Is the
custom of mine operators to guard
the pick and shovel men closely to
prevent them picking up any single
nugget they might chance to uncover.
Graves said he happened to strike a
small pocket of nuggets, and yielding
to the temptation of taking them, he
figured long and deep on the best
way to rob his employers and not be
discovered. He covered up the gold,
nnrl each dnv for seven weeks swal
lowed a few of the tiny particles of j
gold. In a few months he grew ill
and came back to Seattle, and ever
since has been sick until the opera
tion. Now he lays his long indispo
sition to swallowing the stolen gold.
Seattle PoEt-Intelllgencer,
An Americanism.
When a woman "throws a connip
tion tit" nho is In her tantrums. A
tantrum Is a f.t of paeslon or an at
tack of petulant hysteria. Connip
tion is sometimes ufej n'.ono and has
a'lout ha r:ni: manning a:-i connlp
linii ft. 0'-ffisl'.'nr.!ly (In Ms w) It
i cniitm ptt' n. The word v3 'irot
hi New Ka-j'nnl pud Is ali;iot fs oil
r.s Khoile lrlnnd. It Is eoninon
f-:i tli-T'.i t'J l.'iv wh.THVtr t!u' defend
duu ni tn Down Kaftpr. an r t'.J.
Conniption f t is a teiM. :. i ry.' I'.i
e'.iely by woir.iii. To ouniil. V ti
l;i.?.h ' o'e.itly.
If you have
Headache
Try One
They Relieve Pain
Quickly, leaving no t
bad After-effects
25
25
Gone.
PJ A T s kJ
Columbia & Montour El. Ry.
TIJIK, 1 AUI.K IN I.FFI.CT
June I 1904, nnd until f urtlier tice.
Car leave Bloom for Espy, Almedi, Lime
Ridge, Berwick and intermediate points at
lolloWS!
A. M. :oo, 5:40,6:20, 7:00, 7:40, 8:20,
9.00,9:40, 10:20, II:oo, 11:40.
P. M. 12:20, 1:00, 1 :4o, a.ao, 3:00, 3:4
4:20, 5:00, 5:4'), 6-2o, 7:00,7:40,8:20,9:00
(9:40) io;2o (! 1 :oo)
Leaving depart from Hetwick one hoa
from time as j;lvcn above, commencing
6:00 a. m,
Leave Bloom for Ca taw 1st a A.M. 5:30
0:15, t7:oC, 8:00, 9:00, fioioo, f 1 1 :..
I2:oo.
l M. 1:00, t2:io, 3:00, 4:00, $:oo, 6:01.,
j7:oo, 8:00, 9:00, 10:20, (ll:oo)
Can returning depart from Cotawisaa 20
miui'tetf rum time a given above,
Bj First carilenves MnrketStinare for lierwick
on Sundays at 7:00 a. m.;
First cnr'.for Cntnwissa Sunday 7:oon. m.
First cr from Berwick for III 00m Sundays
leave at 8:00 a. m. 1
First car leaves Catawissa Sundays at
7 vi a. m.
il-rcm Power Houe.
Saturday night only.
fP. K. K. Connection.
Wm. Terwilugk,
Superintendent.
El oomslmrg fc Sullivan
Railroad.
Taking Effect Fcb'y 1st, I00S, 12:05 a. m.
KOltTD WARD,
21
A.M. r.M. P.M. A.M,
t t
Hloomshurir n I, ft W... 900 s m t IS 6 00
Bloomstjiinr P ft H 9 02 2 8 17 ...
Paper Mill 9 14 8 62 S 2 C 90 '
LlKhtHtreot 9 1H 2 55 6M 6 SO
Orangevlllo 9 2 8 0S 8 48 6 80
Forks 9 38 8 IS 1M 7 OS
2ner f. 40 18 17 8 67 7 15
Htlllwater 9 48 tm 7 03 7 0
Bnt00 9 66 8 88 7 18 8 16
Edsons rinon8 87 J 17 8 110
Coles Creek 1 0 08 JX 40 7 21 8 it
Laubarhs in 08 45 1 81 8 40
Grass Mere Park flom jn 47 h 8 ....
Central ....10 15 8 52 7 41 9 0S
Jamison Cltv 10 18 8 56 7 45 9 1
8CUTUWAKD
22
A.M. A.M. P.M. A.M. A.M.
t t t T
JamlsnrjClty.... 5 60 10 48 4 85 7 00 11 86
Central 8 68 10 51 4 88 7 03 11 45
Grass Mere Park r oi fii oo ft 47 r7 12
Laubachs 08 ll 02 f fl 18 11 58
Coles Creek 16 12 II 06 4 63 7 22 12 Ot
Rdsons 8 14 Ml OS f4 56 17 24 1 2 1a
Benton 6 18 11 13 5 00 7s 12 85
Htlllwater 8 28 1121 6 0 7 88 12 45
Zam-rg f 85 fll 29517 f7 45 18 58
Forks.... 889 11 521 749 100
( ntrevllle 6 60 11 42 5 81 8 00 1 80
Ucht Street 7 00 11 50 1 89 . 8 10 1 45
Paper Mill 7 08 11 58 6 42 8 18 1 50
Bloom. H ft K t 8.25 2 10
Bloom. D L v. W. 7 20 1 2 10 6 00 8.10 2 15
Train No 21 and 22 mixed, eecond class,
t Dally exc pi Minday. t Dully Hunday
only. I Flag btop. W. C. SNYDER, 8upt.
60 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
(Mil
2 jy Trade Marks
'rVllH Copyright Ac.
Anyone lending- ankctrh and description may
quickly aicertntn our opinion free whether an
Invention I probnbly puteiiinhln. Cnmmunlea.
ticmmitriotlyconUUoiitliil. HANDBOOK on Pnteuta
tint true. Oldeit aiinnoy for necurlnirputeiin.
I'.iiout taken through Muim A Co. recelT
fprriul notict, without charge. In the
Scientific American.
r
A bandfomely lllntrted weekly.
jinriicni vir
culiillon or any eriomiun jouruui. -j w . w -yenr
; (our montu, U Bold bj all newadealera
MUNN &Co JflwYoit
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