The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 01, 1889, Image 7

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    hi ai SA
HUMOROUS.
WANTED TO GO FASTER.—''1 was
reading in a paper yesterday,’ he said,
as he halted a citizen in front of the
Soldiers’ Monument, ‘that a duck could
fly ninety miles an hour. Do you be-
lie ve it possible?"
“That is rather a strange question to
ask me, sirl”? replied the other, wi ith
considerable cold stiifage in his voice,
“Yes, I know, but I want to find out,
There are occasions when I have to leave
my house in a hurry, and if a duck can
make this gait, and there is no patent
on it, I'm going to catch on. Perhaps
you never tried to outrun a flatiron, sir.
tp
UxcLeE RasTus Twins.—Twin boys
having been born in Uncle Rastus house,
the serious question rose what naines
should be given them, A counsel was
called.
**Dar’s one thing,” said Aunt Lizzie,
“dat’s got ter be tended to, Dem boys
mus' hab diffrunt ’nitials, lessen deir
handkerchiefs gets mixed up.”
*Dat’s so,” said Uncle Rastus,
flectively,
Then, after a pause, he added, *“Well,
I'll tell We'll call them Edward
an! 'U
o
16-
Ye,
gene,”
nsec ————
SHE SucCceEEDED Too WELL, ‘‘Nel-
said the mother to her four-year-
who was sitting quietly in a
‘what are
Tim 3%
ie,
0: d
one
’
you doing?”
“Drawing
plied Nellie,
‘A picture?” rejoined
glancing over her shoulder-
a pretty one. What is it?”
‘It’s my kitty,” said Nelly.”
‘But it looks more like a tree,”
“Yes, I made it so that my
wouldn’t know what my right
done. And I guess it don’t,
a ————
A Wise COURTIER.—AD
potentate once asked a group
courtiers whom they thought the
er man, himself or his father.
he could elicit no re pls v 10 so dan
a question. At jast a wily old «
said: ‘*Your father, sire; for
you are equal to your father
respects, in this he is superior to you
that he had a greater son than any you
have,”” He was promoted on the
a picture on my slate,’ re-
the mother,
i
i, iq
left
Eastern
of hi
]
though
¢
———————— ss.
Tie OPPORTUNITY CAME.
00d ina doorway on Woodward Aven-
the otl rainy day with an um
hand. and he seemed to be
Fan opportun
along. She "had
Le stepped one,
began:
“Excuse me, but —-*’
“Oh, certainly.” ghi
ned, “You are very, very
always remember it, 1-by
nd she took the umbrella from has
» and tripped away without
ng back, and he turned
ster of the doorway to exclaim:
“There goes a £35 umbrella
idi
ot who has been
we orell
walt-
4
n s SOOT
she
noi i
(30x "|
*y
v
¢
t
to
§
1s an ie
CAREER.—*"*You
dly with your elder
pl: rin-spoken
ng-minded mothe
» head nurse
© rtainly
ih have
daughters.”
visitor the
‘Annie is likely
at the hospital, Maude
brigh pupil at the
wrmal school, and Eunice 18 certain
* & success on the But
We what you are with poor
] ture he and sick-
suff 18 so dreadfully with her
R
di
tiie tO
£ ot
the WRL
stage,
ow 4 1
gong to do
3 1. :
looks so th
Oh, de re is a career ahead for Mil-
: return ed the mother, as she passed
1 fondly through the thin, f
her youngest daughter: “‘we
15 going to be a passionate
10
£1
iu 45g
han
hair of
think
poetess, "
3
she
RECKLESS SHOOTING. —A
that happened in Green
time was the sho oting of
the other night by a policeman,
cop blazed away at the man and
him in the elbow, the ball glancing and
striking the negro in the cheek. As he
spit the ball out he said: **Look heah
white man, you quit dat ‘shootin’ at me;
fus’ thing yun knows yuh gwinter brake
some spectable pusson’s winder glass,
funny
ville for
a negro
The
jot
thing
Some
81
———
A
Quibble—"“You a doctor?
couldn’t cure a ham!"
Dr. Sawbones—“And you,
couldn't try a case of lard.”
The Poetry of the Table.
Why, you
sir; you
In the first place, a starched and
smoothly-ironed table-cloth which, if
neatly folded after each meal, will look
well for several days. Then flowers
and ferns in flat dishes, baskets or small
vases, or else a tiny nosegay laid upon
every napkin. The salt must be pure
and smooth. The butter should be
moulded into eriss-crossed diamonds,
shells or globes, with the paddles for
this purpose. A few pretty dishes will
make the plainest table glow; a small
bright-colored platter for pickles, horse-
radish or jelly; and butter plates repre-
senting green leaves are also attractive.
A few pennie’'s worth of parsley or
cress mingled with small seraps of white
paper daintily clipped, wil cause a
plain dish to assume the air of a French
entree,
A piatter of hash may be ornamented
with an edging of toasted or fried
bread ent into points; and a dish of
mutton chops is much more impressive
with the bones stacked as soldiers stack
centre, each bone adorned with s frill
of white paper. A few slices of lemon
mingled with sprigs of parsley and lids
of hard boiled form a pretty
be more appetizing than beef, veal,
FARM NOTES,
MAuveELOUS VALUE oF THE COT-
TON PLANT.—In his speech at the Dal-
las (Tex. ) fair last October, Mr. W. H,
Grady estimated the cotton crop of 1888
at eight millions of bales, which at $40
per bale of 500 pounds, or eight cents
per pound, is worth the total sum of
$320,000,000, But this sum does not
cover the full value of our cotton crop,
as Mr. Grady further demonstrated,
He said: “Its seeds will yield $60,000,-
000 worth of ofl, and $40,000,000 in
food for soil or beast, * * And now,
under the Tompkins patent, from the
stalk newspaper is to be made at two
cents per pound.” So it seems that our
great Southern staple is not only hold-
ing itsown as a prime factor in the
world’s commerce, but is increasing in
importance, or at least the present plant
Mr. Grady quotes Edward Atkin-
Son as saying: Ye New England could
grow the cotton plant without lint, it
would make her richest crop, If she
had monopoly of cotton lint and seed,
she would control the commerce of the
world.” From the above, it appears
that the royal title of “king”?
to the cotton plant, is not inappropriate,
Just think of the seed alone being worth
one hundred millions of to the
south! 1 doubt not these
be doubled, if the entire
the Southern States should be
utilized. The practice of burning
ton seed for fuel in steam furnaces
ny Portions of our prairie county
andoned. In localities where
iS scarce, steam gins are often run
entirely fuel,
is,
or
1 A §
Seed crop Oi
properly
in
mai
not
wood
almost
¢
Yel §
by cott
Many thousands of
wasted by pure
to sca ter and rot
they do no
Wis
on seed
bushel!
negled
about the
If all
ted and burned for
cattle and the cattle’s manure saved and
applied to our fields, the monetary value
of the cotton seed crop would be |
nhanced. In view of the great demane
hrot ight about by the jute bagging
monopoly for a new and ¢ ch heap :
ging, we have much reason
a great devel opment of the value of
ton stalk bark, The tensile stre:
this fibre | dl Known to cotton
ers, and has at last attracted
tention as a suitable material fo
bagging. Let us hope
y
1
+4 ' § $
anufacture into this
8, 100,
st Feast vas
L, being
gins,
the seed
allowed
thus
fuel were fed to
rood,
largel
tri
tay Bane
tO hope §
+
ui
80
» that & t
that ere
articl
ay add
ittering,
Urposes mm
to the elit
1g Cotton,”
ight em
£ Ki
to BrinLbd A GREENHOU
-AS a matt of ex
ill greenhot
£1 CONOInY
15¢ walls sl
nhouse work.
he
lemp« ie,
sy 2610 weathe
year or two the el
house wall gets
}
i
M2 I
gree
greenho
1
beget
18 LO De re
N THE
of two
ANTS 1 APIARY,—
Wavs ol
Line
i Profess
is destro
! 18 Apiary.
and Bake a he le i
in th
nest
bi-su pt
fill the
clay, ty h
Ti
ants,
umnpled down © quia »
L
80 it
348 ill if #1 i
il Kis all the Ike
VEY a $1
S Very nhammaiie, Lt mu
i x posed, either quid
the fire. Another way isto mi
London purple with thin syrup, and
ciose It ir
1
ERE)
i is
1 a box with wire gauze so tha
ants cau reach it i
FOR GRAPE-VINES — To
grape-vines to grow most vigor
throw a few bones into the
planting out. Opyster-shells
good for the same
AL
but not the be
Boxes
cause
ously
when
also
hole
are
purpose, and
age. Therefore don't waste any bones
in
pones near them, or reduce the
the vines of the vegetable garden.
when compared with dry corn fodder or
with other feeding stuffs, produces re-
sults so satisfactory as to surprise the
chemist, and which chemistry cannot
explain, As the result of
feedi: g tests, it is very generally agreed
that three tons of corn ensilage will
equal in its effects as food a ton of aver-
age hay, But if does not mean that a
with thirty tons of hay and no ensilage,
PrLaxTING CELERY,.~If planting
celery this month, have in mind the fact
that it is a plant ‘Which needs a great
deal of moisture, Consequently choose
a piece of low land which is naturally
somewhat damp. If there are no appli-
ances for watering, such as tanks, hose,
ete,, a good location may be found bee
means of a swall dump. Very good
and pressed into form in a wine- ~glass,
then fried in
green placed in the top of eac
cone. The basket of fruit—peaches,
rs, ErApes or app oranges and
om should bo stofully arranged
and trimmed with leaves and flowers,
The bowl of salad should be ornament.
od with scarlet or orange flowers of the
Sropaolum, their piquant flavor adding
zest to the lettuce, with which they can
be eaten,
§
do duty over a considerable extent of
GROUND oats, corn and barley, with
and half, make splendid feed for flesh
and egg production, Cabbage is the
but carrots, turnips
and beets are excellent if cabbage is not
at hand. Fowls may do well by feed-
ing them grain and vegetables in a crude
state, but a cooked and warm mess sea.
soned for the morning meal will be bet
ter relished and do them more good af
thew raw,
SCIENTIFIC.
The want of a material intermediate
in strength between steel and cold-blast
irons has long been felt by consumers,
says the Tradesman, Itoccurs in cases
of hydraulic cylinders, mill gearing,
trammer blocks, ete., that the best iron
fails to make articles of sufficient
strength without increasing the dimen-
sions to an unreasonable extent, On
the other hand. the high price of steel
castings and their liability to contain
blow-holes offer serious objections to
their adoption in such cases, A counsid-
eration of these facts led Williams,
Arnold & Colley, Spanish Steel Works,
Sheffield, to try and produce a metal
which, though not quite equal to steel
in strength, should nevertheless, be far
stronger than the cold-blast irons made
in this country, and also capable of
producing an absolutely sound casting,
After some years of experimenting,
they have succeeded in making a ma-
terial which they call ‘steel pig,”
possessing some very remarkable prop.
erties, As regards mechanical strength
bar 2x1 inches, bLe.rings three feel
apart, sustains a weight of about two
tons. The strain supported by the
“gray steel,” when in tension is up-
l of fifteen tons per square inch,
of the best cold-blast iron being |
eleven tons, Castings made from the |
soft, tough and quite
free from blow-holes, and canbe made
or
ood blast pressure. The
great
accounts for its remarkable
strength, The process adopted to pro-
duce these results is to purify the best
hematite iron obtainable by removing
half the carbon and almost two-
the silicon, thus leaving in the
product only sufficient quan-
{f these metaloids to render the
gray when cast,
sa ——
H, Viandt writes
value of oil of turpentin e in treats
ment and prophylaxis of diphthena and
be exanthomatous diseases, He states
that he has never seen any of these dis-
eases spread from a sick child to other
members of the family when this rem-
edy was employed. In many of these
cases uo isolation could be attempted,
#8 the nf ther was tl female
nd was obl
snd the
isl f
a 3
tent
nearly
thirds
finished
tity §
Ii
ty of
metal
concerning the
the
ie OnLy i
ged to cure of
well, continually
orth from one
1 was to pour
Irops of
to the
from
xture
carbolic
m of
a
urpe ntine and
water,
a slow fire,
Was «
Gor
ich was
80 Ll at
wh
y
Kept
immer
air of
ig Over
Lhe HICK
tt
:
the room
: the
He cls
favoral uence
pon the ext datio of diy
ugh it is by no me: AS
3 Sn and $1
yg
no th exc
ipreghnaled Ww
wo substance
*
+
i means
im
n le
i
———
A newly patented tpye writer dispen
on and 1s great
other ways, With the
the roller or platen and
mach is entirely
wel only sixteen and a
Phere are only nine
used in its construction. Align-
is secured at the point of §
inste ad of depending 1
justinent or
is in the form a
A ring around the type-bar bas ket
its top. Against this pad the face
e types rests at all times except
f printing. The pad
1 the inked rib
i
plion
es it
sin piilied
exXoet
the
fh
in
of
the
i+
wit
yEL
LH
Key 8
al,
§
i
ine of
net gs
$5] pounas,
springs
nent ring.
ng
: tot
accurate ad
The
the
. ink of
ug
at
of
when in the act of
is said to contain ink enough for ten to
twenty thes as much writing as a rib-
bon, The type-carrier and the guide
carry complimentary bevels, which
serve to preserve the alignment of the
type. he height of the face of the
type from the beveled shoulders is not
exactly the same in all cases, but
varied to secure uniform impression
with a uniform touch on the keys, The
types can b removed or re-
placed, and the carriage with the platen
roll can be readily removed, thus allow-
ing of the use of two or more carriages,
————
The vapor of tobacco juice has been
tested with success as an insect de-
stroyer In hot houses, The tobacco is
is
dish over a fire or flame of a lamp in
the conservatory. Delicate plants are
not injured as by tobacco smoke; the
|
HOUSEHOLD
Ruvpans JAM. — Wash, peel and cut
the rhubarb into two-inch lengths, and,
having weighed, put i{ into the presery-
ing kettle and boil it for a quarter of
an hoar. Then put in three-quarters of
a pound of lump sugar to each pound of
fruit, and boil the jam until it will set
firm. The jam can be flavored with
almonds; to each pound allow four bit-
ter almonds blanched and split; put
them in with the sugar. For lemon or
Seville orange flavor, shred the peel
very finely of one large one to two
pounds of fruit, tie it loosely but secure-
ly in muslin, and put it in with the
fruit before the sugar. Let it continue
to boil in the jam for a quarter of an
hour after the sugar is added, then take
out and throw it away. It is not right,
a8 801ne recipes say, to put shred orange
or lemon peel with the fruit and boil it
as for marmalade, because it thus be-
comes very hard, and instead of being a
good addition spoils the jam,
r—————
CHICKEN BAKED ix Rice.—Cut a
chicken into neat joints after which
season each piece with salt, pepper and
a little pounded mace, Put some slices
“Waar if I were one of those hus.
bands, my dear, who got up cross in |
the morning, and bang things about,
and scold like anything just because the
coffee is cold?”
“John,” responded the
would make it hot for you,”
John is stili wondering whether she |
meant him or the coffee, |
wife, “I
i
——
Poer—*Have you read my verses?’ |
Editor—*Yes, Mr,
them very mue h.’
“How much are they worth?”
‘About twenty-five dollars,’
“Well, here's a check for the amount
and I hope you will publish them soon.’ |
—————
“WiLrLie is like a piece of flannel,”
said Tommy, as he watched his small |
brother cuddled up in the bath tub,
“Why do you say that, Tommy?"
“Because he shrinks when he
washed,”
————————
Forced to Leave Home,
Over 00 people forced to leave their
homes yesterday to call for a free trial pack- |
wge of Lane's Family Medicine. if your blood
is bad, your liver and kidneys out of order, if
yu are constipated and have headache and an
were
sli
of good bacon at the bottom of yo! ur
baking dish, lige the chicken upor
strewing over it a finely minced,
um sized onion. Now, pour a ci
of veal stock over it and entirely cover
11 with bolled rice, Put a cover
the dish, put in a moderate oven
bake for one hour.
s——
HERRIES, —
cherries; boil
of gar
and
CoOMPOTE 0}
quart of early red
quarters of a pound
drop
i: Jet stand fin i
the fire: let boll gently until
herries with a skim-
a dish: add a small
s to the syrup
pour over ti
arly cold.
COMPOTE RASPBERRIES,
half a pint of raspberris hal
Curra f
BUBAT
and v
&1
candies; the ie
to
take out
lay them in
lear;
mer;
until ve
when ne:
ry
3 1
3
cherries
{1}
nis, Ove ounees oO
f
a
f
i
' 3 :
« O53 i 1H »
wales
ater togeth f
» fruit caref
nmer tor five
: raspberries
eT Ali
CONSERVE
Pre pare the
Mora
HOLASSON,
oriening gh
water, oO table
SIAr, and
1%
roll. Bake ina q
ne
sola ginger,
EE K
Porovers.—Two teacups of sweet
milk, two teacups of sifted flour, butter
size of a walnut, two eggs, table-
spoonful of sugar, a little salt; beat the
whites to a stiff froth: bake in hot gem
pans twenty minutes,
Oh
Pre Crust.—Omne cup of
quart of flour, a pinch of salt, two tea-
spoonfuls of baking powder. Mix all
together, handling as little as possible;
Jay on ice in a cold place for several
hours before using.
Cs
lard, one
Ice. Make a
i
| Cunrast WATER
and slugs are effectually disposed of,
One quart of tobacco juice, evaporated
into a house containing 350 cubic feet,
suffices,
Ss ———
(end of a platinum wire or glass rod,
| the mass, and the formation Is much
! more rapid than that of either of the
mt Msi
Card telegrams are much in use in
Paris, There are two Kinds of them
lone like the ordinary postal card in
form and color, and the other blue and
capable of being so closed as to conceal
the writing, They are each large
enough to contain a message of fully
sixty words, When a card is dropped
into the card telegram box of the near-
est telegram office the official in charge
picks it up and has it transmitted
through one of the pneumatic tubes
which extend all over the city, thus
insuring its delivery at that place to
which 1t is addressed in less than balf an
hour from the time it was “posted.”
Af p———
Two cases have been reported to an
English medical society in which the
electro-magnet has been successfully
used for removing pieces of iron from
the eye, Without the magnet it is
thought that the sight of the injured
eye must have been lost in each case,
AI
Built-up wood, like that employed
for a good many back in bottom-
ing chairs, al competes with can
vas for the purposes of the artist and
with binders’ board for book covers,
Its hightness, almost en ire absence of
cleavage lines, and nonsliability to split
are among its commendable features
i of sugar with a quart of water till it is
| quite clear, add this to a pint of red
| currant julee to which has been added
a few raspberries. Strain all through a
hair sieve and freeze.
ToMAaT0 Sovp.—One small beef
bone, two quarts of water, salt to sea-
gon. boil about two hours, then add one
| can of tomatoes, boll [ifeen minutes,
add pepper and strain,
Climate for Consamptives.
The several climates of Florida, Colorado and
| California have each been much prescribed for
| sufferers from lung disease, yet thousands of the
| A far more reliable remedy is to be h
the land,
at home: a remedy
druggists, under the manu.
facturers’ positive guaranice hat,
in time and given a fair trial, it will effect a
cure, or money Jad for it will be promptly re-
turned. We refer to that world-famed reinedy |
for consumption (or lungscrofula) known as
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medieal Discovery. It |
the only remedy for this terrible disease
possessed of such superior curative jloperties
as to warrant its manufacturers in selling it un
der a guarantee,
Don’t hawk and blow, and spit, ht us Dr,
Sage’s ( atarrh Remedy. Of druggists
| every drug store in
that can be used
which is sold, b
and one
Crry MAN-*1 should think you
would find life very dreary.”
Villager-~“Here? I tell you this is
a pretty lively place for its size.”
**I should not suppose, from the looks
of things, that anything ever happened
»”"”
“That's where you are mistaken,
Why, it ain’t two weeks since we had
an eclipse of the moon,”’
A —
Careful summaries of the crop outs
look make by the San Francisco Chron
icle show that, unless the north wind
blows at the critical time, this will be
a bonanza year for grain and fruit in
California
Plissed toilets are a pretty novel
and are simple and easily hed
Only tine; thin stuffs lend themealves
to this wrrangement, however
ansightly complexion, doen't fall to call on any
, | iruggist to-day for a frecs sample of this grand
emedy. The ladies praise it. Everyone kes
Lasrgesize package 50 cents
» of Morocco
it with the wi
vierg
Lai
iv
= 5
A Fa air. Tria
iy reds
great mee
bot
io know
tiie, taken 2 ling to di
of
sonable person tl it «
dicinal merit
s will accompli
We do 1 A clan that every
ih 4 miracy
Ariy every bo
rections, does produce posit 1
“Y was run down from close app on 30
but was told I dosed
ine, ete, 5 4 I de-
and am now
B. Bramisn,
had rn Wa
i Qu whi
Hood's Ba
ng and cheerfu Ww
feelin
#2 str
ing Street, New York Ci
Hood 8 sarsaparilla
spared only
wis 8. Vi
{ O01 & CO 1. 4 Vi Ana
'6 O Doses One Dollar
LEND YOUREAR
TO WIIAYT
WE HAVE TO SAY.
BEST LOW-PRICED
GERMAN DICTIONARY
1OW PRICE 0}
Only $1.00, Postpaid, 650 Pages,
1224 Pages.
STEAL A TF
Ha NADL
Frazer AXxic Grease,
Frazer Axi¢
cheaper than any other, at
{| Ask vyoRmr d
The Greases
enler | t. and
ana
ce ———
ons
wan't have oF
1 Won L Dave 10 «
Keep
Rupture curegnaranteed by
J. B. Ma 3 Arch Phil’a,
ra ratio Or 4e-
{rom t ested by
¥
fer, A
8¢ at Ot i y GW
Misiniess, at
Of cures after
send for
1 paper aj
y
Wild
[leary
FERIENE,
foe, BI1 Ar
IgE
ry it
Jiseaned, Nerv
or
-——
¢ Faroe Islands there
i8 A super-
Tansll's Punch
i
1 ’ 3 a
Industry needs not wish,
will die
and 1
fasting.
Ts
i
ADWAY’
PILLS
Tie Great Liver and Stomach Remedy
| por the care of all disorders of the STOM.
ACH, LIVER, BOWELS, KIDNEYS,
BLADDER. NERVOUS IMSEASES, LOSS
OF APPETITE, HEADACHE, CONSTI-
PATION, COSTIVENESS, INDIGESTION,
I BILIOUSNESS, FEVER, INFLAMMA.
| TION of the BOWELS, FILES anda ali de-
| rangements of the Interna! Viscera, Pure.
| 1y Vegetable, containing no mercury, min-
erals, or deleterious drags.
PERFECT DIGESTION will be scoom.
plished by taking BRADWAY'S PILLS, By
ro doing
D
yspepsia,
FICK HEADACHE, FOUL STOMACH,
BILIOUSNESS, will be avoldaed, and the
food that is eaten contribute Its nourishing
properties for the supper: of the naiural
waste of the body, SOLD BY ALL DRUG.
GISTS, Price 280. per box, or will be sent
by mall, on receipt of price, 5 boxes for Une
oliar, RADWAY & ©0O,, 32 Warren Sg,
New York,
“Since
BE GREE EE
husinegs,
jl LR w ihe fu
I ands Va.’ ye Be
be nFJe
PENSIONS zee
Ps
.
gw 1 y y :
lives upon ho
who have used Plso's
Cure for Consumption
say itis BERT OF Alls
Sold everywhere, Bo.
We
14 Chestnut Street
ADELPHIA.
TTY
ISS EE
OF LATEST IMPROVED
HORSE POWER
Machines for THRESHING & CLEANING
Grails, ss » Mackines for SAWING WOOD
- with Clresiar sad Cross
Cut Drag Saws.
®
regurding
EASYDRAFY, DURABIL YEQUAKTITY OF WORK
Pome vm A.W. GRAY'S SONS,
PaTsnighs s»D S01 MAFUVACTURERS,
BIDDLETOWYN SPRINGS, ™
FRAZER
.. AXLE GREASE.
i Pest in the World uly by the Praser Lubrios
tor Co. 81 Chloago, § NER Louis. Sold everywhere
Y prescribe and tally ep.
dorse Big €3 as Lhe only
specific for the ceriain cure
of this disense
GC. H.INGRAHAM NM D.,
Ammsterdam, N.Y.
We have sold Big GG for
many years, and ii bas
given the best of salle
faction
DR
DYCHE& CO
Chionge, 11
$1.00. Bold by Droggista
REVOLVER
hase one of the ose
ted BMITH & WESSON
arms. The Soest small rm
ever manufactured and the
ret of all experia
mufactured in oalibres 2, * an
or double action, Rafety
Oonstrocied entirely of best qual.
ey wrought steel, carefully inspected for work
smanship and stock, they sre unrivaled for Gules
and mecuracy. Do not be deceived
wt irom imitations wh
Se and are no
iv umrelabie, but The AL A
Bevaivers are al rar ped
Peis with firm's name, address an datos of Cen
1 and are guarantecd perfect in every detail In
i ist upos having the genuine article, and if
i cannot supply you an order sent to address
will recive prompt and careful Rpg
Descriptive and prices form
| Slioilom, ~§f
ITH & WESSON,
| Menten tir vaper Sprimghield, Mansy
JONES
F HT.
“WANTED:
ONE AGENT FOR THISCOUNTY,
To take orders Sof elisrgl SMALL PROTO.
GRAPHS ote ng
LIFE-SIZECRAYON PICTURES:
International Pablishing & Printing Cos
528 MARKET ST, PHILADLPHIA
OR, 4.8. HOBENSAGK,
206 N. SECOND STREET,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Jeading speciatis, in Youthful Sond for
Young Be
. M.,
mies oes is