The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, June 27, 1907, Image 8

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    USE FOR SIGHTING MACHINE.
How Twelve-Pounders on Battle-
. ships Are Aimed and Fired.
Few people are aware of the meth-
ods employed to sight the large
twelve-pounders on modern battle-
ships, says the Philadelphia Record.
It is generally supposed that the
gunner sights these immense cannon
as he would an ordinarary rifle.
Such is not the case, however. An
illustration of the method employed
is shown here, the apparatus being
the invention of a gunner in the
United States Navy. The apparatus
is exceedingly complicated and is
practically useless in the hands of a
novice. In one hand the gunner
grasps an ordinary pistol. This pis-
tol is connected to the firing appara-
tus of the gun. Above the pistol is a
sighting tube and a number of re-
flecting glasses. = By means of re-
\ 1
Eee]
ER fuse ini
LOAN ANAK
3
Sight the Gun.
‘flecting glasses the surroundings are
brought into the range of the pistol.
The gunner need only sight the pis-
tol to hit a certain object on the re-
flecting glasses. As he brings the
pistol into the correct range, the
large gun which it controls is also
brought into range. Pulling the
—ger of the pistol discharges the gun.
“The ‘Skipper Ashore.
“Good
any sort of work that involves .the
handling of men, and especially good
“for such work that is also more
less outdoors, as for instance the su-
perinténdence of piers and the care
of or work on any sort of boats, and
work In and about warehouses, and
that sort of thing,”
man,
of vessels.
“They have to be good and
men to get up to places such as they
have held on the sea, and the quali- |
tics that have made them successful
afloat are equally valuable in any
work they may be called upon to do,
and especially in such work as I
have indicated ashore.
“They are accustomed to
mand, for one thing; they can make
men work and keep them going;
they can get things done. They are
Hkely to be able to pick out the right
sort of men for bosses, if they have
control of many men, and they know
how to handle things and. how. to
stow things to the best advantage.
“They are all the time watchful
and alert, as they hawe all their lives
been accustomed to be ut of ne-
cessity.
tion they
coms-
sed,
know the weather in ad-
vance and always take due precau- |
get |
tions regarding it; they
caught napping.
“Accustomed to taking no chance,
never
but to having men on watch night |
and day at sea, they set watches just
the same on land, and fire, that spe-
cial terror. to. men: -on ship,
with the same care that
afloat.
they would
“You see, the man in command of |
a vessel lives in a world of his own, |
him,
for
depends
look
everything
he
where
and where
on
must out
everything, and so he develops con- |
stant watchfulness and resourceful-
ness in emergency and readiness in |
action; he must be in the nature of
things an able man, and that's why |
the sea captain or mate, retired per-
haps for some disability
impair his usefulness at
sea, may
make In the right place an especially |
good man ashore.
Metallizing Wood in France.
An interesting method of applying
a preservative to railway sleepers
and timber Is described in
trie Electrique of Paris.
consists of the artificial
tion of the pores of the
metal being deposited
wood, the
the application of a solution of some
salt—sulphate of copper, for exam-
ple—by placing the wood immersed
in the solution in a closed chamber
and subjecting it to pressure. The
wood is thus thoroughly impregnated
with the solution. It is then taken
out, and piled up in layers in a con- |
crete reservoir. The first layer of
timber is immersed in the same cop-
per sulphate solution, and also rests
on a layer of jute or other fibrous
material, which is supported by an
electrode made of woven strands of
copper. Similar electrodes are placed
between each layer of timber as they
are piled up to the desired height.
Alternate electrodes are then con-
nected to the opposite poles of an
alternating current supply, and the
current is allowed to pass. The ac-
tion is sald to decompose the solu-
tion and set free metallic copper in
the pores of the wood. Besides the
preservative action in thus closing
the pores, it is said that a certain
amount of copper sulphate is perma-
fiénetly retained in the pores, giving
an additional and a decided pre-
servdtive effect.
BIRDS WITH COLORED HEADS.
Curious Mistake in Classification
Caused by Pollen.
Many birds frequenting flowers
for honey or insects are thus lable
to get their heads covered with pol-
len, says the IL.ondon Globe. And
since the pollen of different flowers
varies in color a bird may become
yellow-headed, red-headed, blue-
headed, etc. This led to a curious
mistake in the case of a New Zeal-
and bird. This bird was a honey-
sucker and a haunter of flowers.
Now, in the early summer it visited
most frequently the flowers of the
native flax, and later in the year fed
chiefly on the fuchsia. The pollen of
the former is red. and of the latter
i and the same, and that the 1«
| of the head was blackish brown.
i collect
| in
I plicated
| use became impracticable.
| not. be said of the one shown in t!
| fltustratfon, which comprises, a sun-
trig- |
men to have in charge of
or |
said a steamship- |
“are retired captains and mates |
able |
Instinctively or by observa- |
they |
guard against and look out for here | : :
| in one of their new hats or suits they
that may |
['Indus- |
The process |
metalliza-
electrically. |
In brief, the method requires, first, |
blue. Hence in the early summer the
bird appeared with a red head. and
was named the red-headed
seeker. But when later in the
it went to the fuchsia its head
stained blue, and it was called
blue-headed honey-seeker. Thus.
a_long time. this bird was thonzht
he two distinct
cently was it found that
headed and blue headed
was
the
tv
1 s 3
the reg-
wore one
al color
For Delivering Mail.
Devices whereby * express trains
bags of mail at on
road without stopping have Leen
use extensively for a number
Naturally, these ® first used
not ‘entirely - satisfactory. and
inventors have been endeavoring to
improve upon them. Many of the
devices patented, although success-
ful in every way, have been so com-
in construction that their
This car-
stations
the
of
years.
were
porting frame in the center of which
Weight Operates Shovel.
| Is pivoted the shooting mechanism,
The lattér consists of a hav-
ing at one end a large bowl in which
is placed the mail bag. On the end
of the frame opposite the mail bag
{ Is a pivoted weight. This weight is
| very heavy and is released ‘by a pro-
| jection on the passing train. As the
weight descends it strikes the handle
of the shovel with great force, swing-
‘ing near the ground the mail
continues on its journey through the
entering the open door of the
mail car as it passes the station.
shovel
alr,
Flatter.
to make true
said. If thot
indeed be a
Mirrors That
is not enough
mirrors,” the dealer
all, ours would
simple business.
“Dressmakers and
quire mirrors of all
need, for ‘example, a mirror that
makes one look taller and thinner.
When they dress a fat, short patron
“rt
were
milliners
sorts. They
re-
lead her to the mirror, and, she is so
surprised and pleased with
change for the better in her
that straight off she buys,
“For masseurs I make a mirror
that, like a retouched photograph,
hides blemishes, wrinkles, scars. The
masseur takes the wrinkled face of
| some. rich old ‘woman, steams it,
thumps it, pinches it, and smacks {it
for an hour, and then holds up to
it the mirror that gives a blurred
blemish hiding reflection. The wom-
an thinks her wrinkles are gone, and
is "happy till she gets home to her
loolis
own true mirror.
‘Altogether I make some tweni;
varieties of false mirrors. Salesman
aud saleswoman in millinery and
dressmaking establishments can dou-
ble and quadruple their business if
they are quick and deft in their se-
lection of the mirror that flatters
each patron best.”
Etiquette in London Clubland.
In some of our ultra exclusive
clubs it is a serious breach of eti-
quette for one member to speak to
¢nother without obtaining a cere-
inonfous introduction beforehand,
says the London Chronicle.
A painful case has just occurred
in a certain old established and ex-
trensely respectable Pall Mall cara-
vansarie. It appears that a newly
joined member, in callous defiance
of custom, ventured the other after-
noon to make a remark about the
weather to a gentleman with whom
he was not personally acquainted.
The recipient of this outrage glared
stonily at its perpetrator.
“Did you presume to address me,
sir?” he demanded, with an awful
frown.
“Yes, I did,” was the deflant reply.
“I said it was a fine day.’ The other
digested the observation thought-
fully.
Then, after an impressive pause,
he turned to its bold exponent.
“Well, pray don’t let it occur again,’
he remarked, as he buried himsel
once more in his paper.
bag |
honey- |
year |
| into the
for |
J ——
OURBOYSAND GIRLS
N
ar——
TARDY TOMM™,
Tommy Brown was always late to
school. He was such a heedless Lo:
that he usually forgot the time wi
played along the way. Nothing coaid
cure him of this bad habit. ova
when his teacher kept him in fio
ball game, in which he
to make him write a thouszund ti
Wds caine
Remember this: Le nunetual us
sun, though others lag,’ he
the very next morning.
One dreadful day, when he
whole hour late, Miss Amy sent him
girls’ to sténd oun 2
stool for two hours and wear a cure
in big letters: “Tara
Wu
Was
roo
printed red
| Tommy."
species, and only re-
I , 3 |
| “would
| sailing
thought
But
After: thai Foramy
never would be laic again.
soon forgot.
At last his
woild teach
“Tommy,” she
you like
picnic
thought
him a lesson.
said
to give
Idlewild
moter
one... day.
the boys =
to on Satur-
| day?”
| I guess!
the |
|
"with a spear.’
“Would I?" cried Tommy. '‘Well,
May 1 ask the whole push,
mother?”
*Oh;, Tommy, why are you
50. slangy? Yes, all the boys.
Let me see, there are twelve of you,
are there not? rive ‘me the list
and: I ‘will telephone: to ' their
mothers.”
Saturday. was clear and cool, and
dear,
ask
Tommy was at the wharf bright and
early. Not a boy was there. Nine
o'clock came.
be seen.
“Mother,” ¥suid .. Tommy, “where
do you think those fellows are?
They're as mean as mud to be late at
my party.”
‘Oh, well, Tommy, they are only
a little late, and that does not count,
you know.” .
Tommy looked rather queer, for
that was his own daily excuse.
By a quarter past nine Sammy
Bangs came; at half past, Jack and
Ted Thompson; still later the three
Masoner boys. At half past ten only
seven of the party of twelve were on
hand.
How those waiting boys did fuss
and fume. The breeze was fine for
sailing, but Mrs. Brown
would be impossible to start without
all the guests.
Every little while Tommy growl-
ed, “Those are just the rudest fel-
lows; catch me asking them to a
sail again!’ : :
*Oh, surely not: rude, - Tommy;
caly a little. late, you know,” ‘Mrs.
Brown would reply.
“All aboard, boys,” ‘called the
skipper. “If you want a run to Idle-
i
A
Tommy stood before the school.
wild to-day, we must he off, as I've
another party at 11.”
“Please, ‘mother,
without Will Bri ?
rid be: late,
“l.ate! Why surely that's nothing,
replied Mrs. Brown.
the captain called ‘‘Too
late for a sail to-day, boys,” Will was
geen running the hill. The
disappointment terrible, but
can't £0
He’s just hor-
we
to S00
Tommy,”
Just as
dow
Was
| there was nothing for the party to do
| but
go home, after a whole
ing’s wait on the wharf.
How did it happen? Mrs. Brown,
wino had arranged with the mothers
cf the boy to have each come at a
different hour, might have told.
But Tommy had had his lesson.
He learned that being late did count.
After that Saturday he was on time
at school every day for the of
the year.
When he had become
nmorin-
rest
very punc-
| tual, his mother let him give another
sailing party for ‘‘the push.” That
Saturday every -boy was on the docl
promptly at a quarter before nine.
What a glorious time they had sail-
ing and crabbing, and such a good
lunch at Idlewild.
Willie's Lion Hunting.
“When I grow up,” said Willie, “I
am going to Africa and kill lions
“Why not kill them with a gun,
Willie?” asked his father.
“Why, all the natives kill lions
with a spear, you know, and I would-
n't want to have the advantage of
them. I would want to fight the lions
hand to hand.”
‘But suppose you ran upon two
lions,” said Willie's father. ‘“While
you were fighting one hand to hand,
the other could slip up behind and
bite a plece out of the back of your
neck.”
ut the matter in a new
light. Willie thought over it a while
and then decided perhaps after all it
was better to a pirate.
Still not a boy was to’
| to
| of state,
said It?
| same.
| company the suite.
I the
| special
ered.
| ter, which arrives daily by
must
| tention must be given to the reports
{ of Ministers from other departments,
I conferences
| times of the day, and long dictations
| given in the study where the Kaiser
| he
correspondence
friends.
| difficulties
| free discharge
PECULIAR MOTOR CAR.
Built for One Passenger Only and
Steered by Foot.
The illustration below shows a
new type of motor car that should in
|
|
1
|
the near future have many support- |
el. Itis a foreign invention, and on
account of its peculiar construction
attracts attention Immediately. In
size it is about as small as a motor
car can be made, there being seat-
Ing capacity y assenger. | ys :
g capacity for only one passenger. | pq companion, and the look deepened.
There {is also a total absence of com-
plicated steering apparatus. The
operating. motor is placed imme- |
diately in front of the rider. On-
lever is sufficient to regulate the
speed and is placed in close proxin-
ity to the seat. Probably -the
peculiar feature is the
steering. This is done means - of
the feet, very mueh like a young box
would steer his.éxpress wagon.
Nios:
method! of
by
The
i ed
THE WAY OF THE TRAIL
Brucie Annie Dunne.
The full moon rose over the
chaperal
wide
desert, turning the into
tawny beauty.
The man got to his feet unsteadily,
with ‘a look of fear in his eyes. His
glance stared across the grim level,
down the faint, white line of the trail,
then back, to fall upon the face of
Sleeping? He knelt feebly, again
placing his hand upon the face of his
companion and the look deepened
As he did so the always smoulder-
ing wrath of his soul toward that
other man-—miles ahead now-——that
man who had robbed them, gwelled
to its height. He had always mistrust-
him, but his hate had never
sumed strength as this. He became
conscious, ‘as he hal! never been
fore, that that man was responsii
for it all, the straved pony,
water bottle, even to the
horror. and certainty of his—and !
his hrot
His distorted brain
the knowledge that plainsman ow:
of the desert, knew it as well
us-
aod
LEAN.
Crowl ..:
her's——death.
wrought upor
as
| 1 + 11
own name, had told him so—knew 1
sa
hands are at all times free, the rider
being able
pleasure.
to ‘enjoy a
Other peculiar
smoke ‘with |
features |
are the size of the wheels and the |
height of
ground.
the frame above
When the Travels.
Even when travelling the
is at work, for being the chief of a
Kaiser
the |
I from
and ‘his brother
ore back
hills. He had
death, ‘to clainy it;
remaining horse, the last d
water.
“But “we'll. live, and
better of him yet,” he
the unheeding form.
A long time he sat there, motion
less as the unconscious, man in
arms, staring down upon the hypn tic
calm of the blank features,
anathemas in his heart,
As he watched the stiff caked ling
began to move, and disjointed wo. is.
whispers, half-formed sentences {li
them, peopling the penetrat
of his
golden
seeret
mine of
far-away
slow
only
of
spot
there in
left then
taking
welll ge
muttered
formi
| silence with fearsome sounds. ‘
Kaiser |
great nation he must keep the Gov- |
Review of Reviews.
A large staff of Government offi-
clals accompanies him. A high
{ ernment machine in motion, says the |
“Jim—tell her
We're rich!—gold-
—her to wait-
—yvyellow gold!—
Then silenc€, a rhythmic pause, and
to—wait for—
yellow gold!
she promised-—golg
me.
Tel}
| the beat of the words again.
offi- |
cial from the Foreign Office attends |
the
makes
duties of foreign politics,
reports on the affairs
receives the orders of
sovereign and keeps up the commau-
the |
{“him!?
nication between the Kaiser and the |
Chancellor. “Then there is a privy
councillor: who takes dictations, do-
ciphers telegrams and transmits the
Besides, two adjutants ac-
For the
messages
very lively exchange
between the Kaiser and
Chancellor special arrangement
is madebytheimperial postal depart-
ment. Telegraphic messages
be presented at once to the Kaiser,
When necessary to be deciphered a
postal official is in the nearest telo-
graph office to attend to this duty.
When the Kaiser is out huntine a
messenger goes after him
case urgent messages must be deéliv-
Even at a late: hour in the
night the Kaiser has ordered that
regardless of his own convenience he
must
in
i shall be awakened if important com-
| munications
arrive. In additions to
these telegraphic reports, mail mat
courier,
be answered; then, also.
at-
must. be ‘held at all
is stopping, be it
Hohenzollern or
Added to
on board of the
in his sleeper
this must be reckoned
| the ‘hours when he is working alone,
consisting of
I paper
| spondence with his wife, from whom
the
cHppings,
reading of news-
the active
corre-
receives a
ths
and
royalties or
daily letter,
with
’
Hunt for a Hangman.
The British army was once in
through the lack of a
hangman. Murder was committed
by a soldier in the Crimea, but no-
| body could be found to carry out the
gentence of the court-martial.
and a
granted to
At
It was announced that £20
would be
man undertaking the
last a man did volunteer.
newcomer to the army.
On the night prior to the date
fixed for the execution they locked
up the hangman in a stable to keep
him safe. In the morning the party
at the gallows waited, but there was
no hangman. He had gone mad dur-
ing the night, or else he was now
simulating madness.
The officer in command turned to
one of his Captains with: ‘Captain,
you will have the goodness to hang
the prisoner!’ The Captain changed
countenance, but he pulled himself
together, and appealed to the serge-
ants with: “Which of you .will hang
this man?”
And to spare his Captain, one of the
men volunteered. He afterward had
the satisfaction of.flogging the man
who had volunteered and failed.
the task.
Protective Colors of Animals.
I seem to trace a faint clue to the
connection between the protective
coloring and the mind in the intense
desire of the fox to remain concealed
and unseen. That this is a possible
theory we infer from the fact that a
blind animal does not change color.
Put a dozen minnows into an ordi-
nary white wash hand basin and they
will in a very short time be of a pale
lcolor. If over ome no change passes
‘we may be tolerably certain that it
is blind.—Dale’s “The Fox.”
i he
of |
L the
A groan choked past the lump in
the throat of the man listening, and
by and by his fevered eyes lifted in
a prayer, slowly, up to the drowning
deeps.
“Save him, oh, God!—not me.
Save
Over and these words
half unconsciously,
the damp forehead
woman would.
Releasing his left
laid his burden
spread coat and stumbled over
dead horse. Vith fumbling
hands he removed the saddle blanket
and dragged it across the
over fell,
while he wiped
48 ‘gently as x
arm
back
cautiously
on the
tO
few ro ns
| to the sick man’s side, where, around
his head and shoulders, by the aid
of this and a chaparal bush. he Iyiit
a sort of screen to shield the starine
eyes from the light of the moon.
This done his gaunt figure swayed
a bit as he stood for a moment an:
looked down at ihe.
pe ing wreck: of him had once
been bigger and stronger than
then with a muttered word he turned
his steps forward to the dim.
trail, tangling and twisting
tuous way, faint and fainter. on to
the point of disappearing uncertainty.
All night the dragging feet shurlod
doggedly, making little heady. ay,
stopping every now and then at short
and shorter intervals, start again
with a flickering spurt of strength as
the thickening necessity
urged, pursued by the thought of
form under the chapparal bush,
Wili3~
helpless,
who
whit
its
1OT
LOT
to
mse of
hack
{ there- -somew here.
He was a |
| "spot,
| steadied, and a great
But when the silver-yellow lich
flooded the east the lone figure ceased
to stumble and hitch along; it sank
down on the crest of a sand dune and
sat bowed its
The came over desert,
and red, and flamed into the face
the man, who stared and nodded. The
man shivered, for the fever had
communicated itself him and had
full control, while the grip of its haze
settled upon him.
Higher the sun, beginning
once its shimmering dance over the
arid waste. It danced in giddy cir-
cles, maddening waves, chasing each
other. deep into the cavernous eves
that stared into vacancy; and by and
by wrought in them
less appeal of a dog's under the lash
of his master. He moved his head to
and fro, and them, blinkingly.
Tuey opened again, shut, opened and
fixed upon a dark spot directly in
the path of the grinning sun.
It grew large and distorted,
to the eyes watching:
opened wider, staringly,
cry
over knees.
sun the rutl
of
100,
to
rose at
the cowed, help-
closed
that
which
flashed and
rose to the
man’s lips—choked wl
a sudden spasm, wild and glad, swept
his face, and he dropped weekly to his
knees.
“Jim—it's Jim! He
to desert—us. He—Jim——" \Vith
this strained, thickened whisper in
his lips he fell face downward in tne
soundless;
| sand.
For a moment he stirred there, then
lay quite still, th eglad light on his
face; just as the two men in the
prairie team drew up, and one swung
down from the creaking seat, a brim-
ming water gourd in his haid.
Regulating Railroad Rates.
The Legisdature of WWashington at
its latest session passed a law making
the maximum railroad fare for adults
3 cents a mile and for children 134
cents,
One Greenlaind whale weighs as
much as 88 elephants or 440 bears.
- gestion,
Heart Strength
Heart Strength, or Heart Weakness, means Nerve
Strength, or Nerve Weakness—nothing more. Pos-
| ftively, not one weak heart in a hundred is, in it-
self, actually diseased. It is almost always a
| hidden tiny little nerve that really is all at fault.
| This obscure nerve—the Cardiac, or Heart Nerve
| =simply ieeds, and must have, more power, more
stability, more controlling, more governing
| strength. Without that the Ileart must continue
| to fail, and the stomach and kidneys also have
| these same controlling nerves.
This clearly explains why, as a medicine, Dr.
| Bhoop's Restorative has in the past done so much
| for weak and ailing Hearts. Dr. Shoop first sought
the cause of all this painful, palpitating, suffocat-
I ing heart distress. Dr. Shoop's Restorative—this
| popular prescription—is alone directéd to these
weak and wasting nerve centers. It builds:
it strengthens; it offers real, genuine heart help.
If you would have strong Hearts, strong di-
strengthen these nerves — re-establish
| them as needed, with
2
7 3
oe
A PROMPT, EFFECTIVE
REMEDY FOR ALL FORMS OF
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago, Sciatica, Neuralgia,
Kidn Trouble and
Kindred Diseases.
GIVES QUICK RELIEF
Applied externally it affords almost in-
stant relief from pain, while permanent
results are being effected by taking it in-
ternally, purifying the blood, dissolving
the poisonous substance and removing it
from the system.
DR. S. D. BLAND
Of Brewton, Ga., writes:
“I had
with a number of the best physicians, but found
nothing that gave the relief obtained from
ONL |
never mean*-— |
*5-DROPS.” [ shall prescribe it in my practice
for rheumatism and kindred diseases.”
DR. C. L. GATES
Hancock, Minn., writes:
**A littlegirl here had sucha weak back caused
by Rheumatism and Kidney Trouble that she
could not stand on her feet. The moment they
put her downon the floor she would scream with
pains. Itreated her with **5-DROPS’ and today
she runs around as well and happy as can be.
I prescribe *5--DROPS’’ for my patients and use
it in my practice.”
FREE
If you are suffering with Rheumatism,
Lumbago, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Kidney
Trouble or any kindred disease, write to
us for a trial bottle of “'S-DROPS.”
PURELY VEGETABLE
“5-DROPS" is entirely free from opium,
cocaine, morphine, alcohol, iaudanum,
and other similar ingredients,
Large Size Bottle 5. DROPS” (800 Doses) B
#1.00. For Sale by Druggists
| & SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE COMPANY,
Dept. 48. 160 Luke Street, Chicago
The Sanitary Water Purifier,
CALVANIZED
Steel Ghain Pump
It is the Best Pump
on the Market.
Operated over cisterns and wells where
depth does not exceed 20 feet.
It will not Freeze, Rust or Rot.
er It the most beautiful,
\ strongest and service-
able, and will produce
more water. It is en-
tirely Sanitary. The
water coming up the
first tube Into the
spout, the over pro-
duction into the wheel
box, draining tbronn
the center tube. The
base is s0 constructed
that the water never
splashes through the
sides. We have used
this pump in the finest
homes in the city in
kitchens, porches and
yards and it has al-
ways proven satisfac-
tory. It is Sanitary
because it is clean. It
purifies the water by
the action of the chain
and the drainage through the center tube
which agitates the water, there being enough
air ventilation in the pump, when in action,
to keep the water pure and tasteless. Ask your
dealer to show it to you. Manufactured by
EVANSVILLE PUMP & MANFG. CO,
EVANSVILLE. INDIANA.
60 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
YER
TraDE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS &C.
Anyone sending a sketch and desorhtion may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable. Communica-
tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
notice, wi*nout charge, in the
"Scientific American,
A handsomely {llustrated weekly. Largest ck
culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3
year: four mon 1. Sold byall newsdealers.
MUNN & Co, 261ewsaess. New York
Branch Office. 625 } 8t.. Washington. D. C.
Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right
Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar
Cures all Coughs, and expels Colds from
the system by gently moving the bowels.
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“