Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, September 06, 1906, Page 7, Image 7

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HEN AND CHlCrwa.
se Screen in Place of Boards It
Close Front of r ,oop at Night.
t Is a cruel plan which shuts off
air almost entirely from the hen j
with a brood of chicks by placing a
ooard in front of the coop at night;
nor is such a plan necessary If one
will take the trouble to build a coop
or coops after the following plan: j
Build tne ;op after the usual plan, j
sloping the roof to the rear and cov- i
•ring the front with slats except at
jne lower corner, where a door shorn 1
be arranged, so that the hen can be
easily let out when desired. To solve
•he problem of plenty of fresh air
id at the same time freedom from
owling small animals, says the In
dianapolis News, construct a screen;
ijke the frame large enough com
letely to cover the front of the coop
nd cover it with wire netting; at
either side fasten a strap with a hole
i the end, and on the sides of the
■;oop place a screw, over which the j
traps are placed to hold the screen
i
Screen Front for Coop.
In place. To make the screen still
more secure when placed have the
side pieces large enough so that a
long wire nail may be driven in them
about one-quarter the length of the ]
nail, at the end; then sink in the :
■'round at either end of the coop two
lieces of wood, each having a hole {
1 the end, into which the nail In the
end pieces of the screen will lit when
the latter is In position. In this way
U will be impossible for the screen
zet loose. In the illustration, H,
dotted line, shows where the screen
vr'l come when in position; A, the
ue piece of the screen, with the
ong wire nail in position; 3, 3 the i
•takes in the ground to receive the
ails; B, the screen complete; G, the
winging lath by which the door for
e use of the hen is Kept In place,
•1 2, the manner of attaching the
nail strap to the side of the screen.
POULTRY FEEDING.
.it Rule Is Common Sense —Give
Fowls Food That Is Nourishing.
The best rule for feeding poultry is
common sense; the health and useful
ness of fowls does not depend on fol
lowing rules so much as on getting
an adequate supply of palatable food.
Changing the food several times dally
is no better than making the same
Dhanges as often each week. This
may be seen from the rules prac
'.iced by successful poultrymen, says
he Orange Judd Farmer. Notice the
'ollowing:
Mash of bran and middlings, bran
ind corn meal, bran only, various
;rains ground together. These va
lous mashes fed morning, noon or
light, in amounts varying from a
poonful to a crop full. Some poultry
nen give no mash at all. Again.somo
:eep beef scraps before the fowls at
.11 times, others give an ounce every
econd day. Some give as much green
•oue each day as the hens will eat;
:hers half an ounce on alternate
'ys. Some mix grit, charcoal and cut
lover with the mash, others feed
hem separately. It's up to you; but
our neighbor may have equal success
y an opposite practice. Principle is
bove rule.
HOW TO SELL HONEY.
/ay in Which One Farmer Disposes
of His Product With Profit.
Not wishing to send my honey to
jmmission men and help to over
ock the market and lower the price,
have always tried to be my own
lesman. I have tried selling honey
many ways. The most pleasant
id successful way is selling by sain
e. I find October and November the
;st months in the year to sell honey.
I select a pleasant day, put In my
tcliel some nice samples of comb
/ id extracted honey and beeswax,
'■ aunt my bicycle and start for neigh
•rlng towns and cities, says the
■iter in Farm and Home. I visit the
iding grocers and show my honey,
guarantee everything to be as good
the samples shown and promise to
liver honey safe, sound and clean.
;e from breakage or drip, and most
vays effect a sale.
Blood Will Tell,
lood will tell in the poultry yard
in no other farm stock department.
meat breeds boat the mongrel
j so do the laying breeds, each in
own specialty. Never has this
sn better understood than now and
re r has the scrub hen been In sucb
favor.
CONTROL OF SWARMING.
A Device Designed to Keep Down In
crease While Securing Honey.
During the past three years I have
made a good many experiments in
trying to perfect a simple mechanical
device and to evolve a system of
manipulation togo with it that would
unable the apiarist to control swarm
ing effectually, secure a crop of
honey, and requeen his colonies at one
and the same time; and having met
with good success along tho lines of
my experimenting I have concluded
to tell the bee-keeping public the re
suits of my work, writes J. E. Cham
bers, of Vigo, Texas, in Gleanings in
Bee Culture.
In the illustrations, A. represents
the top story of a hive, and B the j
bottom or the lower story, with the |
dividing board and chute In correct j
position on the hive; and the entire
construction and method of applica
tion are so clearly shown that any
extended description is unnecessary.
The dividing board is simply a
board cleated on the two upper sides
and rear end. The front is not cleat
ed, and forms the opening shown at
H. The passage holes are bored |
through ,and covered with zinc, as
shown DD. The purpose of these j
holes is to maintain a certain degree
of communication between the two
hive bodies, and to guard against the
possibility of the young bees in hive >
A deserting in too great force. In
the rear end of the dividing board a
small opening covered with zinc is
shown at E. This serves, as a Wight
hole, ai-J helps to arrest and fix a
certain number of bees; for by num- !
erous experiments I found that, with- j
out these holes to act ao counter
checks, tlio entire force will deceit
from hive A above, thus leaving the
brood and queen unprotected to
starve; but -through the holes D 1J
sufficient nurse bees come up from
hTve B to prevent this, and this trou
ble is overcome.
The chute is made by nailii. % to
gether two pieces of timber, lxl, six
inches long, and one piece lxl, 14
inches long, and covering one side by
nailing on a thin board six inches
Arrangement of Hive.
wide and 14 long, as shown at C, and
attaching a strip of zinc one inch
wide and 14 long over the exist,
shown at G. For deep hives it might
be advisable to make the chute a little
deeper than six inches, in order to
bring the flight of outgoing young
bees down nearer to the entrance
shown at F, thereby causing them to
mix up with the field force going in
there; but in no case should the exit
G be nearer to the entrance F than 4
inches; for if brought in direct con
tact it might induce some of the bees
togo back "by the route they came,
though the perforated zinc acts as a
great check on such an attempt.
In using this device there are three
different systems of manipulating, any
one of which can be used with good
results. The one I use mostly in my
own apiaries is, I think, the best and
easiest for extracting colonies; but
j 1
P' ■ la
I I
4# • 1
>dL {j
Sectional View of Hive.
for comb honey either of the others
Is better. Just as soon as a colony
makes preparations to swarm I be
gin work. Selecting one comb and
adhering bees I make sure that the
queen is not on it. This comb should
contain two or three cells well started.
I now place this comb in the center
of the hive represented by B, and fill
up the vacant spaces with empty
combs or full sheets of foundation, as
bees working under these conditions
can not be depended onto build
combs. I now place the dividing
board in position, as shown in the
illustration, and set hive A over it.
Nailing on the chute completes the
operation for the present, except that
a record of the stage of development,
in which the cells were at the time of
manipulating must be kept, and
should be marked on the hive so as to
be readily seen. With this record to
go by, the hive can be opened at the
proper time and all cells cut, except
one of the best. The hive is then
closed, and requires no further atten
tion until time to remove the dividing
I board and reunite the colony, which is
j as soon after the young queen begins
' to lay as possible.
Hen Utilizes Wastes,
j The hen on the farm utilizes me
waste.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1906.
Scientific Means of Detecting the Pres
ence of Kidney Disease, Diabetes
or Tuberculosis.
Among recent advances in Medical
Science bringing the greatest benefits
to Humanity, Chemical and Microscop
ical analyses for early detection of
Diabetes, Kidney and Lung Troubles,
are probably the greatest. When no
such analyses were made, these dis
eases reached advance stages before
being discovered; especially in women
and children; now, we have only to
send specimens to an Analyst, to deter
mine their existence, thereby enabling
the patient to be treated in the earliest
stage and the progress watched. Sta
tistics show that two-fifths of all adults
having Kidney Disease die within ten
years of their being declined by Life
Insurance Companies. At least 75 per
cent of these could have been saved,
had they taken the precaution of hav
ing an early analysis made. Progres
sive Physicians think it only prudent
for everyone to have an anlysis made
once a year, even if no disease is sus
pected. Through "Preventive Medi
cine" and such popular instruction as
' this by the public press, disease is de
creasing. Intelligent people know it is
better, and cheaper to keep well than
to be made well. Insurance Companies
blacklist many for Kidney diseases, or
Diabetes, who could escape this seri
ous and often unjust action, by hav
ing an analysis made in advance by
an Expert. Once blacklisted, it is dif
ficult to obtain insurance in any
reputable Company. Family Physi
cians are too busy, or without
the special training and apparatus to
do analytical work; but it has assumed
such importance that In New York
City a prominent Physician and
Analyst makes a specialty of it, fur
nishing preservatives and mailing
cases by mcan3 of which specimens
can be mailed even from Europe.
Space docs not permit further de
tails of this important subject, but
those interested can obtain additional
information by addressing Manhattan
Laboratory, Box 97, N. Y. City. The
I cost of such analysis is so trifling,
when the advantages of detecting
these diseases in their early stages is
considered, as to be hardly worth
mentioning. The laboratory only
makes analyses and does not prescribe.
Hia Only Concern.
A well known member of the New
York bar, a man of most patronizing
manner, one day met John G. Car
lisle, to whom he observed loftily.
1 "I see, Carlisle, that the supreme
court has overruled you in the case
of Mullins versus Jenkinson. But,"
he added, in his grand way, "you, Car
lisle, need feel no concern about your
' reputation."
Carlisle chuckled. "Quite so," he
agreed. "I'm only concerned for the
reputation of the supreme court."—
Harper's Weekly.
French State Monopolies.
State monopolies are more than
ever in favor in France as a means
of raising revenue to the prejudice of
private enterprise. A committee of
the chamber of deputies has been ap
pointed, with a foreign minister of
finance as chairman, to collect infor
mation on the possible working of
monopolies on sugar and petroleum
refining, the rectification of alcohol,
and insurance.
Saw Own Contrivances at Work.
Lord Kelvin paid a visit to the Brit
ish schoolship for navigatin®' officers
at Portsmouth, on which are several
mechanical contrivances and appli
ances of his own invention. The prac
tical working of these had to be dem
onstrated and explained to him. Lord
I Kelvin understood the theoretical
principles of the mechanism, but had
never seen them applied and at work
before.
To Survey Alaskan Boundary.
Fremont Morse and L. Netland, in
charge of the Alaskan boundary com
j mission, have left for Yakubat bay,
} where each with a party of nine men
i will survey a strip of the boundary.
GOOD NIGHT'S SLEEP.
No Medicine so Beneficial to Brain
and Nerves.
Lying awake nights makes it hard
to keep awake and do things in day
time. To take "tonics and stimn
lants" under such circumstances is
Jike setting the house on fire to see
if you can put it out.
The right kind of food promotes re
freshing sleep at night and a wide
awake individual during the day.
A lady changed from her old way of
eating, to Grape-Nuts, and says;
"For about three years I had been
a great sufferer from indigestion.
After trying several kinds of medi
cine, the doctor would ask me to drop
off potatoes, then meat, and so on,
but in a few days that craving, gnaw
ing feeling would start up, and I
vomit everything I ate and
drank.
"When I started on Grape-Nuts,
vomiting stopped, and the bloating
feeling which was so distressing dis
appeared entirely.
"My mother was very much both
ered with diarrhea before commenc
ing the Grape-Nuts, because her stom
ach was so weak she could not digest
her food. Since using Grape-Nuts she
is well, and says she don't think she
could live without it.
"It is a great brain restorer and
nerve builder, for I can sleep as sound
and undisturbed after a supper of
Grape-Nuts as in the old days when
I could not realize what they meant
by a "bad stomach." There is no
medicine so beneficial to nerves and
brain as a good night's sleep, such as
you can enjoy after eating Grape-
Nuts."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
I Creek, Mich.
"There's a reason."
THE WHITE RIVER COUNTRY.
In the opinion of one who has trav
eled much and observed closely, the
most truly and rightfully contented
people in the United States to-day are
the small landowners in what Is
known as the Upper White River Coun
try, anywhere from Newport, Ark., to
Carthage, Mo. They are contented be
cause their surroundings are ideal and,
until recently, the great, uneasy, dis
quieting world, with its artificial need 3
and inadequate compensations, has
been to them but little more tangible
than a dream. Here, still existent,
and by reason of their very rarity at
this day and time more delectable
than in the past, are the conditions
which have ever appealed with Irre
sistible force to the independent-spir
ited Anglo-Saxon. Every man is the
supreme ruler of his own little prin
cipality; acknowledging no master
save the law—and possibly his fem
inine helpmeet; cringing to no em
ployer; asking no favors from the
world, save those that his neighbors
freely extend and expect as freely in
return. He lives in a latitude where
the extremes of heat or cold are never
known, and at an altitude that Insures
perfect health. The richest bounty
of Nature has been showered upon
him with unsparing hand, but it is a
question whether he more than dimly
realizes the fact. He accepts as a mat
ter of course the fertile soil which
produces in abundance every cultiv
able growth common to the north
temperate zone, the surrounding for
ests of valuable woods and the under
lying stratas of precious minerals, the
springs and streams of translucent
purity on every hand, the wealth of
fish and game at his very door, such as
less favored mortals annually travel
hundreds cf miles to find. Ho 13 con
tented, but small credit io his for that,
for hew could he well be otherwise
than content? It is sad that such
idealistic conditions may not con
tinue, but it is written that the pres
ent possessors of this favored land
must soon give place to others more
appreciative of Its incomparable fea
tures. A railroad has recently cut its
way through the best of this region,
and the unaccustomed rustle of bank
notes and chink of coin will eventually
tempt the hill-dweller to part with his
birthright. So it has always been In
the world's history—the good things
that are ours without price Invariably
pass from our hand's before we come
to underst ,nd their value. The White
River country will shortly be discov
ered anew by a class of Immigrants
better capable of judging its possibil
ities —the men who seek modest
where the "lay of the land"
will effectually prevent crowding by
too close neighbors, where their cat
tle can fatten on free range, where
the wea th of forest and mine awaits
development by intelligent workers,
and where the game and fish offer en
joyable recreation to all who have
leisure and inclination for sport.
Immense Steel Platss.
The shell and boiler - of the new
Cunarder being built . Wallsend,
England, are said by Consul
to be constructed of the largest
plates in the world. They are silicon
steel, weighing ten tons each. The
boilers alone will weigh over 1,000
tons. Massfve ingots and slabs
weighing 12 and 14 toss, are continu
ally passing through the rolling mills
there for this work.
ri-
BAB > ' COVERED WITH SORES.
Wonld Scratch and Tear the Flesh Un
less Hands Were Tied—"Would
Have Died But for Cuticura."
"My little son, when about a year
and a half old, began to have sores
come out on 1 '.s face. I had a physi
cian treat hiin, but the sores grew
worse. Then they began to come on
his arms, then on other parts of his
body, and then one c?me on his chest,
worse than the others. Then I called
another physician Still he grew
worse. At the end of about a year
and a half of suffering he grew so bad
I had to tie his hands in cloths at
night to keep him from scratching the
sores and tearing the flesh. He got to
be a mere skeleton, and was hardly
able to walk. My aunt advised me to
try Cuticura Soap and Ointment.« I
sent to the drug store and got a cake
of the Soap and a box of the Oint
ment, and at the em of about two
months the sores were all well. He
has never had any sores of any kind
since. He is now strong and healthy,
and I can sincerely say that only for
your most wonderful remedies my
precious child would have died from
those terrible sores. Mrs. Egbert
Sheldon, R. P. D. No. 1, Woodvllle,
Conn., April 22, 1905."
Schools Spreading In China.
A few years ago the foreign mis
■ionary schools were practically th#
only institutions in Foochow offering
facilitioe for the acquisition of west
ern learning. There are now at least
30 native schools fashioned after the
foreign model. Foochow is a city of
600,000 inhabitants, and these schools
embrace about 2,000 students. Post
ers placarded all over the city adver
tise the opening of various modern
schools, which ara springing up in
every nook and corner of the place.
Scarcely a week passes without the
announcement of the opening of a
new school.
Training School for Elephants.
There is a training school for ele
phants at Api, in the Congo State,
where 28 elephants are taking lessons.
The training operations have prodtic
ed encouraging results, says the Trib
une Congolaise.
Beginning of Great Industry.
The first woolen cloth made in Eng
land was manufactured about 1330,
though it was not dyed and dressed
by the English until 1667.
Economy is, the road to wealth.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYE Is the
road to ecouoiuy.
Many a man has declined to follow
a brass band down the street because
he didn't have a gun.
Don't Get Footsore! Get Foot-Ease.
A wonderful powder that cures tired, hot,
aching feet and makes new or tight shoes
easy. Ask to-day for Allen's Foot-Ease.
Aenept no substitute. Trial package FREE.
Address A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y.
Another Triumph far X-Raya.
So successful has the application of
the X-rays been in the tratment of
children suffrlng from ringworm, that
the Metropolitan Asylums Board, Lon
don, has been enabled to discontinue
the use of one of the two Institutions
reserved for such cases.
When Pope Pius Receives.
People who are received by the
pope must appear In full evening
dress, although the hour Is usually at
11 o'clock In the morning. The outer
office looks like that of a good New
York lawyer. A pleasant young sec
retary in secular garb meets the vis
itors. All is very simple, not in the
least awe-Inspiring. Visitors must
kneel and kiss the pope's hand.
England Mourns Dairy Butter.
The London Times asserts that gen
tine dairy butter is a thing past pray
ing for. Four-fifths of the population
of London, the Times asserts, have
never seen It in their lives. Those who
know what It is have great difficulty
in procuring It, and cannot obtain It
in many cases at any price. What Is
called genuine butter in London, the
Times says, is blended and reworked
butter.
ERRORS ABOUT TUB WHITE
HOUB2.
To the Editor:
I noticed somewhere recently— l
would not say positively that it was In
your columns —an article on the White
House which contained several mis
statements.
In the first place it was stated the
White House was first occupied in
1809 and that its first occupant was
President Madison. The fact Is, its
first occupant was President Adams,
who took up his residence there In
1800.
The original mansion was begun in
1792. In 1814 it was burned by the
British and rebuilt In 1818.
Another of the errors In the article
referred to was the statement that
ready-prepared paint is used on the
White House to make It beautifully
white.
I noticed this especially because I
have used com -derable paint myself
and 1 ondered that "cannd" paint
shoulo be used on such an important
buildin * when all painters know that
pure w ite lead and linseed oil make
the bus paint.
It so lappened also that I knew
white lea \ and linseed oil —not ready
mixed pai.it—were ustd on the White
House, because I had just read a book
let published by a firm of ready-mixed
paint manufacturers who also manu
facture pure white lead. In that book
the manufacturers admitted that for
the White House nothing but "the
best and purest of paint could be
used," and said that their pure white
lead had been selected.
Above all people, tose who attempt
to write on historical subjects should
give us facts, even if it Is only a date
or a statement about wood, or brick,
or paint, or other building material.
Yours for truth,
L
How to Put On Giovea.
Open and turn back the glove 3 to
the thumb and powder lightly. Put
the fingers in their places, not the
thumb, and carefully work them on
with the first finger and thumb of
the other hand until they are quite
down; never press between the fin
gers. Pass the thumb into its place
with care and work on as the fingers.
Turn back the glove and slide It over
the hand and wrist, never pinching
the kid, and work the glove into
proper place by means of the light
est pressure, always allowing the kid
to slide between the fingers. In fin
ishing care should be taken In fas
tening the first button.
Beware of Servian Bank Notes.
There is dismay in the Servian min
istry of finance. In the strong room
"in this department, In a specific safe,
were stored the engraved plates from
which Servim bank notes were
struck. These plates were engraved
in Paris and cost a sum of £1,600.
All these plates have within the past
few days been found to be stolen
from the safe, without any visible
sign of the safe having been tampered
with.
WHOOPING COUGH
ne.MUH'H SPECIFIC Shortens ami l.lirh'cni
the lJi>ca*e. Warranted to Cure. Used in the Cleveland
Orphan Asylums. Endorsed by l'hm'-Hans. Sold by
or mulled, b oz. bottle 12 or. bottle # 1.
f-ickcs Drug Co., Mfr*., CLEVELAND. O.
lUiUVCH "Wheat, «0 basket* per acre,
W2 are BSr K UatalOKue a n<l samples kukk.
W IIV ■ Hell Hulirr Hordl'o.BuiW.k.L»Cro»>e.Wla*
A. N. K.—C (1906—35) 2141.
TUMORS CONQUERED
SERIOUS OPERATIONS AVOIDED.
Unqualified Success of Lydla E.i'Pink
ham'a Vegetable Compound In the
Case of Mrs. Fannie D. Fox.
One of the greatest triumphs of Lydia
E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound H
the conquering of woman's dread e»»
•my, Tumor.
The growth of a tumor in so sly thas
frequently its presence ianctauipcetedi
until it is far advanced.
So-called "wandering' pains" may
come from its early stages, or the
presence of danger may be made mani
fest by profuse monthly periods, accom
panied by unusual pain, from thti
abdomen through the groin and thighs.
If you have mysterious pains, if there
are indications of inflammation or dis
placement, secure a bottle of Lvdia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound right
away and begin its us©..'
Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mnss., will
give you her advice if you will wriu
her about yourself. She is the daugh
ter-in-law of Ly;lia E. Pihkharn and
for twenty-fiveycaiahas been a Iriiinj
Link women Ireo at charge.
Dear Mr*. Pinkhazns—
" I take the liberty to congratulate you e»
the success I have had with your wonderful
medicine. Eighteen months ago my iieriixls
stopped. Shortly after I felt so bartry that
I si Emitted to a thorough examination by a
physician and was told that I had a tumor
and would have to undergo an operation.
" Soon after I read one of your advertise
•ments and decided to give. Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound a trial. After
taking fivß bottles as directed the tumor is
entirely gone. I have been examined by a
physician arid he says. I have no signs of a
tumor now. It has also brought my period*
around ono*j more, and I am entirely
well."—Fannie D. Fox, 7 Chestnut Sir-jet.
Bradford, Pa.
SICK HEADACHE
s—l5 —I Positively cured by
F* A DTC DO THESE PIL,S »
\l f\ |\ | L l\o Tliey also relievo Dls-
E tress from Dyspepsia. In-
E digestion and Too Hearty
■ |3» Eating. A perfect rcm
■ll cdy for Dizziness, Nausea,
_5 Drowsiness, Cad T^-ito
* In the Mouth, Coated
Tonguo, Pain In the Side,
I TORPID LIVER. Tliey
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL POSE. SHALL PRICE.
PAQTCD'CI Ger ,ine Must Bear
tmrilCnO Fac-Simile Signature
IE?,
|*MB [REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
You CANNOT
CURE
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con
ditions of the mucous membrane such as
nasalcatarrh.uterinecatarrh caused
by feminine ills, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing the stomach.
But you surely can cure these stubborn
affections by .ocal treatment with
Paxtrne Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs,checks
discharges, stops pain, and heals the
inflammation and soreness. r
Paxtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. M»a».
37,500,000
PEOPLE DIE EACH YEAR
In the United States, alone, more than a mil
lion die yearly from preventable diseases.
GOOD HEALTH
tells why these startlingr facts ,e*lst. OOOD
HEALTH is tlie oldest health journal in the
world, a big handsomely illustrated and ably
edited magazine for tlie home. TPie price is one
dollar a year. Single copies ten cents.
Send twenty-five cents and this advertisement
for a trial three months' subscription.
GOOD HEALTH PUBLISHING COMPANY.
BATTLE CREEK, MICH*
MCD I'CA TIOXA L.
The Greatest Boarding College in the World
University of
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guarantee tiuo faints: Our students
| study and our students behave themsetves
18 Buildings 75 Professors 800 Students
Courses in Ancient and Modern Language', Eng.
Hhli, Iflrttory, and Boonomfrets, Cheniimt-.v, Uiolngv,
Pharmacy. Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical Engi
neering, Architecture, Law, Shorthand, IJook-kcep
ing, Type-writing.
I SI'ECIAL DEPARTMENT FOR IJOYS
UNDEIt THIRTEEN
I TERMS: Board, Tuition, and Laundry, $409.
Send ten cents to the Secretary for Catalogue
Have In your homo or business a
TYPEWRITE &
IIT BUI'CATES. IT AJICSP.9. IT TKACIIK9 QUNINKSII.
Srt.oo up. BUY QUICK before this lot is none.
All standard makes and ingood condition: Kentl:ig
ions, Densmores, Cnligraphs. Theso were reeeived*
from a closing School of Stenography and w dear
the lot cheap. We will send for examination bciort«
yon pay. A good chance to buy. ?| 11 and double
yo-ir monev NKW .1 F.ItNFY F.A(iIA\(JK.
JiO? Uuldwlu Avenue, Jcmj I'Uy, N. J.
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