The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, January 08, 1903, Image 3

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WIRELESS PIANO.
Success After Inventor Toiled for
; Thirieen Years.
Ira F. Gilmore, of Blocmington, ni,
has invented a wireless piano upon
which he has experimented under many
disadvantages for the last 13 years. In
the beginning of his venture he tried
first in the United States to get his
reeds made and failed. So he
Jent to work on a piece
of steel one quarter of an
inch think and six inches wide, drilled
it and filed it until he had made a five-
‘octave comb reed, and placed it on a
bridge and sounding board. Then ke
picked and hammered it and discov-
ered that he had a fine hard-tone, one
that had been eagerly sought after for
many years by all who tried to im-
prove the tone of the wire piano. He
then began to search for a music box
manufacturer, who could manufacture
the comb reeds or music tongues. He
corresponded with a firm in Switzer-
land, the real home of the music box,
several years without avail. So, after
finding that he could not get the music
tongues made either in his own or for-
eign countries, he and his sons under-
took the task and were successful.
They made a rough model of the wire-
less piano at an agricultural machine
shop under great disadvantages. They
made the combination—the music box
reed with the piano keyboard—and
their efforts are crowned with suc-
cess. :
Indigestion, congested liver, impure
blood, constipation, these are what afflict
thonsands of people who do not know
avhat is the matter with them. They drag
along a miserable existence; they apply to
the local doctors. occasionally, and some-
times obtain a little temporary relief, but
the old, tired, worn-out, all-gone, distressed
feeling always comes back again worse
than rver, until in time they become tired
of living, wonder why they were ever born,
and why they are alive unless to endure
constant suffering. To such sufferers there
is a haven of refuge in Dr. August Koe-
nig’s Hamburg “Drops, which was discov-
ered more than 60 years ago, and which is
a wonderful medicine. One trial will eon-
vince the most seeptical that any or all of
these diffictiities may be removed, and a
perfect cure effected by taking Dr. August
Koenig's Hamburg Drops. Get a bottle at
once before it is too late.
The fellow who still has the first dollar
I eer earned is pretty apt to hold on to
the last.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
With local applications, as they cannotreach
the seat of the disease. Catarrh isa blood
or constitutional disease, and in order to cure
it you must take internal remedies. Hall's
Catarrh Cure ‘is taken internally, and acts
directly on tha hlood and mucous surface.
Helis Catarrh Cura is not a quack medicine,
WM was prescribad bv one of the bert physi-
cians in thiseonnbry for yearsjpand is a reg=
ular prescription, It is composed of ths
best tonics known, combined with the best
blood purifiers, acting directly on the mu-
cous surfaces. The perfect combination of
the two ingredients is what produces such
wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send
for testimonials, free.
¥. J. Cuexsy & Co., Provs., Toledo, O,
‘Bold by druggists, price, 75.
i Hall's Family Pills are the best.
The eyes may be the mirrors of the soul,
and, furthermore, they can satisfy a wom-
an that het hat is on straight.
Many School Children Are Sickly.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children,
mused by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children’s
Home, New York, break up Colds in 24 hours,
cure Feverishness, Headache, Stomach
Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy
‘Worms. Atall druggists’, 25c. Sample mailed
free. Address Allen S . Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.
English has been made a compulsory sub-
ject of study in Austrian schools.
FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervous-
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Xline’s Great
NerveRestorer. $2 trial bottleand troeatiso free
Dr. B.H. KLIrEe, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
The: Czar of Russia has established a ten-
hour working day.
Mrs. Winslow’sSoothing Syrup for children
teething,softenthe gums, roduces inflamma
tion,allayspain,cures wind solic. 45¢. abottle
Fossil coral, found in Fiji, is the best
‘building stone in the wor .
tL
Piso’sCureisthe best medicine we ever used
for all affections of throat and lungs.—Wi,
€Q. ExpsLEY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900.
Of the 1000 parts of the moon, 578 are
wisible to us on the earth.
Coughing
“1 was given up to die with
quick consumption. I then began
to use Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. 1
improved ‘at once, and am now in
perfect health.”’—Chas. E. Hart-
man, Gibbstown, N. Y.
It’s too risky, playing
with your cough.
The first thing you
know it will be down
deep in your lungs and
the play will be over. Be-
gin early with Ayers
Cherry Pectoral and stop
the cough.
Three sizes: 25¢c., 50¢c., $i. All druggists.
doctor. If ne nays take it
ig Ihe e says. If h he you not
to take go then Sort fake it, jie
t] m., ear
Leave it with Bm, oR GO., Loweil, Masa.
; : rages
ae rencrl LOT, Never sold in balk.
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
sssomething just as good.”
D rR oO P S NEW DISCOVERY; gives
quick relief and eures worst
ozses. Book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatment
¥ree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SOMS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga-
03.
pojoRicitie
GIRES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS,
st
@ Best § ough Syrup.
1 tim mo. Sold o Shes So fe
2 NRA
_ When Grapevines Overbear.
‘With grapevines overbearing is the
usual cause of imperfect ripening.
When the fruit does not mature well it
ig certain that the wood is unripe. It
should be cut back severely in the fall
aud the canes covered lightly with
earth or brush and straw. on
Tine
The Temperature o the Cellar.
The cellar, or other place in which
fruit or roots are stored, should bel
kept at a temperature of about forty
degrees above zero, if possible, which
temperature is not low enough to per-
mit of freezing and keeps the crops
cool enough to prevent rapid decay.
Keep Tools in Conaition.™
How many of the tools are dull or
implements rusty cannot be known
without an examination. Repairs
should be attended to now before
spring opens, and as tools and imple-
ments are in good order will facil-
itate work it is important that this
matter receive attention.
Cultivation of Small Fruits.
‘A general discussion of this subject
at the summer meeting of the Missouri
State Horticultural Society brought
out the fact that thorough cultivation
is necessary for all varieties. H. W,
Jenkins prefers surface cultivation
through the season... Wheat straw
mulch reflects heat and burns up ber-
ries. Discussion on dewberries brought
out the fact that they were not profit-
able unless grown in sufficient quanti-
ties for carload shipments.® The’Dbest
method of managing is to destroy old
canes every year and let new ones
come up the following spring.
Selection of Winter Layers.
Puilets should be selected for the fall
and winter layers. As a rule, hens
that have passed through the molt do
not lay profitably before January,
hence they should be fed in different
lots as it is not necessary to give them
an egg-producing diet. Six months is
about the average age &t which a
flock of pullets will begin laying. Of
course, there are generally a few in
every flock that lay yeunger. Large
breeds usually ave older than that.
As a rule, the very early hatched pul-
lets are the most profitable. During |
the last half of their first year pullets |
lay two-thirds of the time if well fed. |
—Cora Wright, in Orange Judd Iar-
mer,
Securing a Pure Ifilk Supply.
The place where the greatest care
Is needed in order to produce a first-
class product is on the farm. The bac-
teria which develop bad flavors or
which cause souring must be kept out
of the milk from the:start. Milk when
freshly drawn from the udder, under
the most thorough sanitary conditions,
containg very few germs which will
cause either souring or bad flavers.
There are two general sources of -such
germs—the air, from which the sour-,
Ing germs come, and the dust and filth |
of the stable trom which the germs
preducing the bad flavors are chiefly
developed. If this statement be true,
1nd bacteriologists are generally agreed
that it is, the natural conclusion is
that any system of supplying our
cities with pure milk which does not
control the producing end of the busi-
ness must fall short of success.
No farmer can afford to take the
precautions and supply the conditions
necessary to the production of a sani-
tary milk unless he is paid for his
product. A plan which would guaran-
tee the farmer four to five cents per
quart for his milk will solicit his at-
tention even if greater expense is need-
ed in producing.—Professor Charles, in
New England Homestead.
A Various Purpase Building.
The cut shows a building constructed
upon a bank, that will prove conveni-
ent for several uses. In winter the
room in the bank is used for the stor-
age of roots and other stock foods,
while outside is set a boiler for cook-
ing the same for hogs, poultry, etc.
In this open shed water can also be
heated and hogs dressed, o hoisting
arrangement being prov aed “overhead
During the hot months of summer the
bank room is thoroughly cleaned and
used as a milk room, the open shed
outside being used as a shady place
for churning and working the butter.
The building will thus be found ex-
ceedingly convenient all the year
around.—American Agriculturist.
Winter Spraying of Fruit Trees.
The spraying of fruit trees during
the winter should not be neglected.
Before the leaves staft the trunk and
every branch of the tree should be
well sprayed with a solution of one
pound of copper sulphate In twenty-
five gallons of water to check scab,
codling moth, bird moth, tent cateb-
pillar, canker worm, plum curculio
and San Jose scale on apple trees, to
be followed.up after the blossoms fall
by the regular bordeaux mixture of
four pounds each of sulphate of cop-
per and lime to fifty gallons of water.
Some prefer to use six pounds sulphate
of copper instead of four pounds, but
we are not sure that this is any better
than the other, while for peach trees
that nave put out their leaves the
use of three pounds of sulphate of
copper to six or nine pounds of lime
is thought strong enough for fifty gal-
lons of water. But we are now speak-
; ing of a winter spray before the leaves
come out. The mixture of fifty pounds
each of lime, salt and flowers of sul
phur is used on the Pacific coast for
the San Jose scale, but in our Bastern
climate it does not seem to be as ef-
fectual, as the frequent rains wash it
off. A mixture of pure lime made as
a thin ‘whitewash and used on peach
trees two or three times in the ‘winter
has been recommended as a spray
that will keep the leaves and buds
from starting early enough to be
killed” by the spring frosts.—Boston
Cultivator, _ -. Tm. er
TE Re aetE
rrp ey
Farm Dairying, i :
It has been very noticeable of 1...
that the papers are giving a gre
of space to the subject of far 5
ing, whereas a few years ago t ~The 7
filled their columns with articles in
favor of the public creamery, if, in
fact, they did not, as was frequently
the case, slander private dairying.
Like ¢very movement, the Yublic
creamery had its reaction. Creameries
were built where none were needed.
Large ones were built where small
ones only should have been planned.
Some were built where there may have
been milk enough, but no dairy knowl-
edge among the patrons sufficient to
insure intelligent handling of the farm
end of the business.
Now the private dairy is coming
again to the front. It is more and more
recognized as a very important item
in agriculture.
A startling feature in the dairy
world just now is the failure of large
numbers of public creameries. Com-
ing at a time of great prosperity it
has been a matter of comment and
speculation as to its capse. From
dispatches appearing in the news it
gecems that these failures are attrib-
uted to good times—strange as it may
seem. It is claimed that high prices
for grain and beef have enticed so
many away from dairy work that the
milk supply has fallen off until the
creameries can no longer: run at a
profit. The same dispatch says that
farmers ‘who are in dairying and are
thus left with closed creameries in
their neighborhoods are urged to or-
ganize co-operative creameries.
‘We fail to see.just the point here,
Conditions will be much the same,
whether a creamery is co-operative or
otherwise, so far as supply of milk and
economy of operation is concerned.
It will be much better for these dairy-
men to go into private dairying and
be at once independent of the public
creamery.
And it
is short-sighted policy to
inevitable reaction must come, and
when it does, dairying will pay when
every other industry is suffering from
hard times. It has been so in the past,
and history repeats itself.—M. A, Car-
son, in American Agriculturist,
Concrete Poultry Houses,
A Western poultry keeper, T. W.
Geer, of St. Francois County, Mo., has
solved the problem of eggs in winter,
and sound, unfrested combs in the
spring.
ple and inexpensive way. At the same
time he has insured fertile eggs in
midwinter, something ordinarily very
POULTRY HOUSE TO SECURE WINTER EGGS
hard to obtain. He has accomplished
this by means of concrete poultry
houses that are free from dampness
in the most rainy seasons, and as
warm inside in the coldest days as a
cellar.
In constructing the house an eleva-
tion is thrown up a foot or more above
the surface. In this elevation the
stone base for the walls is laid, then a
frame of any good stout material is
made, as shown in the illustration.
The base piece is imbedded in the con-
crete, and the wall is made two inches
wider than the wooden uprights, on
each side of them, and as the wall is
carried up, the uprights are inclosed
in the concrete.
lime and sand, small stones, cheap,
broken bricks and pieces of hard wood.
In fact, any hard substance may be
worked into the wall. It is leveled up
and ‘smoothed over by the lime and
sand mixture.
At first the originator used cement in
the latter mixture, but, finding the
lime answered as well and cost less
than one-third as much as the cement
Lhe abandoned the cement. When
finished the walls are smooth and
white, will last a lifetime and harbor
no vermin whatever. In making the
room Mr. Geer uses a four-inch scant-
ling placed on edge. On top a water-
proof roof is laid. Under the rafters
tongued and grooved ceiling is nailed
and the four-inch space is packed with
forest leaves or some other inexpen-
sive material. Double windows, with
stout shutters for the night defy the
frost.
In houses of this character Mr. Geer's
fowls mate and lay all winter. Feb-
ruary 6 he took off an incubator hatch
of 162 chickens from a total instalment
of 225 eggs tested down to 199 fertile
ones. He attributes the high per cent,
of fertility of his eggs in winter to the
natural warmth of his fowls in the
concrete houses, which is superior to
. the artificial warmth generated by
furnace or hot water pipes. In houses
of this kind the early-hatched pulletd
and the early molted hens lay all. win!
ter, little chickens thrive and grow;
while the incubator is unaffected by
any change of temperature outside.—
Henry B. Geer, in New England Homes | yy
control of the Virginia
stead.
St.
and they cost $11,
500,000.
The latter is made of
| abandon dairying because other lines’
1 are paying so well just now. The
He has done it in a very sim. |
Louis has 504 miles of sewers), traction system in
TYE MARKETS.
PITTSBURG. :
Grain, Flour and Feed.
Wheas-No. 2 Fel. coisrerssrenses sassinnnd 68 70
TW i . 61 62
Cort xo. 2y eliow. ear. 55 56
. No. Tier shelled. 51 52
53 54
87 874
36 3eig
3 9% 4 00
3 90 3 95
1625 1650
L1260 1330
. ..20 50 o »
Brown middlings........ 17 50 5
ran, ug 17060 1725
Btraw—Wheat 875 92
08s... i $7 9%
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery. ..8 82 3%
Ohio I 3 3) 32
ancy country re 20 21
Cheese—Ohio, new 14 dy
ork, new. 14 1414
Poultry, Etc.
Heng—per W..cunyriass:ense 13 14
Chickens—dressed .’ 15 16
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh.......... 29 30
Fruits and Vegetables.
Green Beans—per Das....euninn$l : 225
Potatoes—Fancy White per bus...... 35 70
Cabbage—per bbls. 7 9
Onions—per barrel R35
BALTIMORE.
Jour inter Patent ..... 3 80
heat—No. 2 red..,.. 7746
Corn—mixed...... 61g
ZEB cesses suiesiivirise sv sa san - RT
Butter—Ohio creamery... ....c.ceeee 8
PHILADELPHIA. ’
Flour— Winter Patent. 400
Wkreat—No, 2red.. 7634
Corn—No. 2 mixed. oR
Oats—No. 2 white. . . 41
Butter—Creamery, extra... 834
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ a 25 =Y
NEW YORK.
Flour—Patents .cce..evnns 400
Wheat—No, 2red 79 80
Corn—No. 2.. : 9 60
Oats—No, 2 White. 891g 40
Butter—Creamery .... 27 80
Eggs—Stateana Penns 30
LIVE STOCK.
Central Stock Yards, East Liberty, Pa
Cattle.
A A Ch. CHAMBERLIN, M. D.
OF WASHINGTON.D.C.
PROMINENT PHYSICIANS
USE AND ENDORSE PE-RU-NA.
4 C. B. Chamberlin, M. D., writes from 14th and P Sts., Washington, D. C.:
> * ¢¢ Many cases have come under my observation, where Peruna :
has benefited and .cured. Therefore I cheerfully recommend it
for catarrh and a general tonic.”’—C. B. CHAMBERLIN, M, D.
LEHI VVILHIVNN
2D
Medical Examiner U. 8. Treasury.
Dr. Llewellyn Jordan, Medical Examiner
of U. S. Treasury Department, graduate of
HOU s ESET Ides oe Columbia College,
¢ and who served
three years "at
West Point, has
the following to
+ say of Peruna:
®Allow me to
express my grati-
t tude to you for
the benefit derived
F from your won-
derful remedy.
One short month
Prime ears. 1500 to 1600 1bs.......$ 560 585
Prime, 1300 to 1400 bs. . .. 5% bX
Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs... . 550
Yatholitrs........ =... 480
Butcher, 900 to 1000 10s. ...... 440
Common to fair........... 850
Oxen, common £0 fat. ............. 2 425
Common to good fat bills and cows 250 400
Mileh cows, each. ..............,..." 500 8500
Extra milch cows, each... ..... 1800 9600
Hogs.
Prime heavy hogs 660 665
Prime medium weights . 650 655
Best heavy yorkers and medium... 635 650
Good to choice packers............ 6 15 620
Good pigs and lightyorkers 615 620
Pigs, common to good...... 52 6B
Common to fair..... 600 625
Roughs ... 52 610
Stags 4 50 52%
“Sheep.
Extra, medium Wwetliors oe $400 42
ood to choice ... 3 50 38)
Medium ... | 27 32
Common $0 fair 1 3¢ 250
dambsclivped... .....0..... 000 575 590
Lambs, good to choice, clipped... 400 560
Lambs, common to to fair, ciipped.. 300 42
Spring Lambs. ....... vein ee reien 600 62
Calves.
Veal, OXIra. .... 50. phmias ane 760 900
Veal, good to choice.............. 300 550
‘eal, common heavy ... 250. 500
eal, common to fair... Korres . 300 H550
REVIEW OF TRADE.
Business Year Opens With Fine Pros-
pects—Increase in Wages Helps
Purchasing Power.
R. G. Dun & Co.s Weekly Review
of Trade says: Despite the interrup-
tion of a holiday, taking of inven-
tories and other disturbing elements
incidental to the closing of the old
Jear, the past week has been far
from dull. Consumers were not per-
ceptibly lessening purchases, while
the approach of higher freight rates
accelerated shipment of goods. New
wage scales have become effective,
largely enhancing the purchasing
power of the people. The new year
opens with every prospect of excep-
tional activity in all branches of
business. Railway earnings thus far
available for December show a gain
of 7.7 per cent over 1901 and 10.9 per
cent over 1900, while for the full
year there are increases of 4.1 and
16.5 per cent respectively, notwith-
standing the heavy loss of coal traf-
fic. The declines in clearings for the
last week are not actually as unsat-
isfactory as the percentages would
suggest, owing to the fact that last
year’s figures include one day of
January and those of two years ago
embrace two days of January, when
payments are abnormally heavy. The
question of higher freight rates com-
plicates the situation regarding iron
and steel, but new orders are con-
stantly coming forward, and the ac-
tivity of plants would equal capacity
were it not for the fuel shortage.
Quotkhtions of all products in this
industry are fully maintained, with
a tendancy toward still higher prices
hecause of freights and fuel. The
fitst advance is expected to occur in
wire nails. No new features have
developed in the footwear situation,
prices remaiging firm and order
books full. Domestic hides are dull,
prices again declining. Textile mills
are busy, with only a hand-to-miouth
home demand for cotton goods, bu
export buying for China continues
large. Farm products weakened as
visible supplies increased, and re-
ports from the west indicate that
much more grain is offered for ship-
ment thar the railroads will accept.
Exports of corn are steadily gaining.
For the week at Atlantic ports 2,-
335,403 bushels were sent out, com-
pared with only 347,193 bushels in
the corresponding week a year ago.
Atlantic exports of wheat, including
flour, amounted to only 1,495,061
bushels. against 2,705,044 bushels a
year ago. and arrivals at interior
cities were 3,773,265 bushels, com-
pared with 3,736,369 bushels last
year. Wool tends upward, ship-
ments to the mills continuing heavy
and inquiries numerous.
FRANK GOULD Has CONTROL.
Secures Possession of 122 Miles of |
Virginia Street Railway.
Announcement was made in New
York that Frank Gould had obtained
Passenger
which operates a
Richmon.t.
Power Company,
| prophets
and |
has brought forth
y a vast change and
4 BOW
self a
00 0eodobo tobe boo oooode
Dr. L. Jordan.
art irrs
well man
Steel Road an’ Agreeable Surprise.
That steel road in Murray street,
New York, laid as an experiment by
the Automobile Club of America, is
serving so much better than the
said it would that the
chances are it will be generally
adopted in the cities where machine
riding is popular. To the general
surprise, it has proved less slippery
in ice and snow than cobbles are, for
cobbles have round edges and tip the
hoofs of horses slightly forward or
backward. Wheels of all vehicles
move with ease when they leave the
granite and touch the flat plates of
steel.
Novelty in Tops.
The latest novelty in tops is one
that whistles and sings as it goes
round. In the hollow upper portion
are a pair of metal discs and a ham-
mer, while round the side are sev-
eral holes leading into the hollow.
The air is sucked into the hollow
chamber through an opening at the
crown of this new toy, and is driven
through the openings in the side,
causing a whistle. The hammer
strikes the discs and so prcduces the
ringing.
THE PINKHAM CURES
ATTRACTIEG GREAT ATTEXTION AMONG
i WOMEN.
Mrs Trans afford, of 243E.
114th St., N.Y. City, adds her tes=
timony to the hundreds of thou=
sands on Mrs. Pinkham’s files.
When Lydia E. Pinkham’s Reme-
dies were first introduced skeptics
all over the eountry frowned upon
their curative claims, but as year
after year has rolled by and the
little group of women who had been
cured by the new discovery has
since grown into a vast army of
hundreds of thousands, doubts and
skepticisms have been swept away
as by a mighty flood, until to-day
the great good that Lydia =.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
and her other medicines are doing
among i of America is
attracting the attention of many of
our leading seientists, physicians
and thinking people.
Merit alone could win such fame;
wise, therefore, is the woman who
for a cure relies upon Lydia E.
: Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
and I after months of suffering. Fellow-
sufferers, Peruna will cure you. ’—Dr.
Llewellyn Jordan.
Geo. C. Havener, M. D., of Anacostia,
D. C., writes:
The Peruns Medicine Co., Columbus, O.:
Gentlemen—“In ny practice I have had
occasion to frequently prescribe your val-
uable medicine, and have found its use ben-
eficial, especially in cases of catarrh.”’—
George C."Havener, M. D.
If you do not derive prompt and satisfac.
tory results from the use of Peruna, write
at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state-
ment of vour case, and he will be pleased
to give you his valuable advice gratis.
consider my- }
Address Hartman, President of The
Hartman Sanit arium, Columbus, 0...
pore $ AD
UNION MADE
W. L. Douglas makes and sells mora
men’s £3.50 and $3.00 shoes than any othel
two manufacturers in ‘the world, which
proves their superiority;
they are worn by more
people in all stations of
life than any other make.
Because W. L. Douglas
isthe largest manufacturer
he can buy cheaper and §
produce his shoes at a
lower cost than other con-
cerns, which enables him
to sell shoes for $3.50 and
$3.00 equal in every
way to those sold else-
where for $4 and §
W. L. Douglas
and $3 shoes arew
n by thousanc SO Sonuhe
have been paying $4 and $5,not believing they
could get a first-class shoo for $3.50 or $3.00.
He has convinced them that the style, fit,
and wear of his $3.50 and $3.00 shoes is just
as good. Plac ed side by side it is impossible
to see any difference. 2 trial will convince.
Notice Increase i Sa W2, 203,883,221
in Business: oO
A gain of 8,850.
W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 CILT EDGE LINE,
Worth $6.00 Compared with Other Makes.
The best imported and American leathers, Heyl'a
Patent Calf, Enamel, Box Calf, Calf, Vici Kid, Corona
Colt, and National Kangaroo. Fast Color Ehriats
i Caution; othe gepuine have W. L. UGLAS
pric ce stamped on Tovgras
lus. Catalog free.
GELS BEROC ITON, RIASS,
Ee im Vaseline
PUT UP IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES.
A Substitute for and Shee on ust: ard
other plaster, and will not Lis nny
ae.
skin. The pain allay 1 ons
this article are wonde: . ne oot
ache at onte and relieve he, a
We recommend it as the t A. Xternal
counter-irritant known, also xte raal; remedy
for pains in the chest and Tle and all rheu-
matic, neuraksic and gouty complaints. A trial will
prove what we claim for it, and it_will be found to
be invaluable in the household. Man Y
“It ig the best of all your pre arstions,? People say
ol e, 15 ont at all druggists, or hw dealers,
or by sending this amount to ug in x
Wwe Ww ill send you a tube by mail Dose stamps
No article should be accepted by the public unless
fhe Sue carries our label, as otherwise it is not
genu
Ghesghrouch Manufacturing Co.
17 State Street, Now York City,
SLANG
The Slang Dictionary of
Slang. Only Dictionary of
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nearly 4K up to-date slang
We rds and phrases with defi-
nitions. Instructive as wel
as amasing. Price 10 cents,
stamps or coir Bly ng Pub.
—CEEE—S C0. 503 th Ave. N.
3 3 ~~ 2°0,0
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Bevalvers, Sword I'y Pr MAN,
679 Broadway, N. Y. Saints, 100 stratious, free.
PATENTS.