The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, August 07, 1901, Image 3

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    ttimawlng lit tawn.
If you wish to renew the lawn this
fall ukp Kentucky blue grass and
white clover, as they seem t. stand
the dfy seasons better than some
kinds. If sown In tile fall the grans
will got a good start and be roa.ly to
grow rapidly In spring. Sow In Aug
ust and September.
To Sirnr fJntMl Cow.
Oood enws can only be secured by
keeping the gi)d calves that fire
from animals which are known to be
meritorious, but the farmers who buy
their fresh cows and sell their calves
when they are but, a few drys old
destroy all opportunities for s: lection.
A good caif, hewever, Is one Hint Is
bred for a special purpjse. ir.id the
farmer, therefore, knows In advance
what It should bo when matured, and
the calf will. If It Is from goo.l stock,
probably net disappoint Ulm.
N lint for 1rlln.
There Is no rule for feeding:, ri each
individual must be considered sepa
rately from the others. It Is r t an
uncommon error to suppose tht the
animals which eat but Utile a.e the
most profitable. So long as an nnlmnl
is capabld of digesting and assimilat
ing food the greater the nmor.nt of
food It should consume, and the morn
profitable the returns, especially with
producers, such a? cows. The propor
tion of food required to suppcrt an
animal and supply waste of tissue Is
less when a large amount of food Is
eaten than when a smaller quantity
is consumed.
II a rrlftfi In a; Off.
"Hardenng off" Is a term well un
derstood by gardeners, but whether
It la properly carried out In prac
tice Is another consideration. We
see so many plants Injured or Irre
trievably lost by hastily pitching
thorn out of the houses and exposing
them at once to the burning sun, that
it appears only right to convey a few
words of caution to those who adopt
o get his plants burned up or In
ured, as the appearance of his flow-
r beds or even pot plants thus
jOfi oil U'i)i1 1 l.a varv mirnt lufnitni-u
or a long lime atterwaros. nen
the plants are removed from the
greenhouse, they require to be grad
ually exposed to the full Influence of
the sun. Of course, where there are
plenty of cold frames, this can be
easily done, but such is not often the
case.
should be chosen, under a wall fence
of some kind, when first exposed, nn.l
If a covering of tiffany or other light
material can be placed over them so
much the better, so as to admit of air
and to screen them from the sun.
This can be removed after a few
days, If possible, choosing dull
weather to do so. If tiffany Is not
procurable, a few branches of ever
greens placed over them will answpr
the same purpose, or mmy of the
Jiardieri kinds of plants can be
placed tinier shelter of trees or
shrubs until wanted to plant out. The
same caution In the matr of hard
ening off, applies to such things as
dentzlas, lilacs, azalea;:, etc., which,
after having done their portion of
the decorative work must not be hast
ily pushed away In corners or out of
the way places to be burnt by the sun
or parched for the want of water.
They will In the near future amply re
pay us by giving forth their rich
store of color, If properly treated and
cared for. F. H. Sweet, in The Eplt
omlst. Canliflower on Nnntly Soli.
The general Impresson is that
cauliflower cannot be successfully
grown on sandy soils, and for the
best results it should be grown on a
lively loam. Experience has proven
to the Long Island growers most con
clusively that It is not th character
of soil, but its condition, that insures
aucecss. The cauliflower, in common
with all other plants, does not feed
upon soli, but upon the elements of
plant growth contained in the soil,
and these can be furnished by the
light as well as by the heavy soils.
Then the question arises can It be
grown without the aid of commercial
t fertilizer? Yes, but I should prefer,
under Bome circumstances. Its use.
(For Instance the cauliflower lias a de.
jclded thirst for sajt, nn element that
ican only bo furnished by the use of
chemicals. On saline coasts the at
mosphere will furnish that to a con
siderable extent, brlt not sufficient for
ts needs, which on Long Island is
urnlshed by the Baits used in the
ommerclal fertilisers.
Last season wns one of vlctssltudeB
vth this cron. and showed In a few
nstances tho value of salt . Let me
tate an Instance, One of our best
ti mers had a field. In which be was
grow cauliflower the past year,
pmpletely flooded by a remarkably
Igh tide, the first in the history of
le farm. When the time for set
, (lg the plants came they were set
re the same as in the other fields,
. p.lch had been given the same pro
(rtlon of fertilizer. When the har
Bt came the flooded field produced
k of, the heaviest crops ever
own, and it has boen stated that
fltt were more than S1U00 per
e, while most other fields were
ol failures. -f
I wore to grow a cauliflower on
audy soil, I should take a piece of
and treat it liberally with well
ted manure, which should be put
' the surface and plowed under
about June 1, then harrowed smooth
ly, and left until about time to set
the plants. Then I should cultivate
as finely as possible, without dis
turbing the sod, and at the same time
work In 800 pounds common salt to
the acre, and lack with confidence for
a satisfactory crop. C. L. Allen, in
New Knrcland Homestead.
I'nrirofltnbln I'mlt Trrrn.
In some enses It will be found that
old fruit trees, though profitless at
prpsent, consist of good salable kinds,
and the question Is, By what means
can such trees be brought Into fruit
ful or profitable condition? A fruit
tree of Ibis kind need not necessarily
be unprofitable because it is old,
though If It la old and has been neg
lected It must be. Wo find that many
of this class of tree are what they
nro tl rouph neglect. The hen.ls have
for years been allowed to become a
tangled mass of growth. The head
wood has become crowded, so that too
many fruits set. and In the end do
not eemn to a salable sire, neither do
they color up as tiiey should do. In
such ca.es the remedy Is simple. The
old, dead growth must be cut out
thoroughly. The mo?s covered hough
miiKt be cleaned. All branches t'.iat
cross and rub ngalnst each other
must be regulalpd by removal, nn.l
generally the pruning or thinning out
process must be carried out In such
a way t'.Mit when finished the heads
of the trerj will be open, and a.!ry,
which will Insure a free crop of the
bept fruits.
If any one will look into the mat
ters with which we deal they will find
that the majority of the profitless
fruit trees we refer to are plnnted in
grans land. The fnct is instructive,
and it Justifies in the most emphatic
manner the denunciations that we
launched against the system for
years. It Is utterly impossible to
grow the best apples and pears In
grass land there can be no d:ubt
about thnt. If we pay a visit in the
fruiting season to the fruit trees set
In grass e shall be struck with the
small size of thn fruits the trees
usually bear. There may be plenty of
apples or pears, but there will be few
good Bled fruits to bo seon among
them. Tillage Is of the utmost im
portance to fruit trees, but this Im
portant operation cannot be carried
out when the trees are surrounded
with grass. Aeration, bo necessary
in the production of lnrgo sized
fruits, becomes impossible, and the
fine Burfacc tilth thnt Is so needful
under good culture cannot bo pro
duced unless the land is open and un
cropped by grass or any crops grow
ing right up to the stems of tho
trees. I.on1on Globe.
tiny and Fertility.
A good way to run down the fer
tility of a fa:m is to.inlse successive
crops of hay on the land without any
special attention to improvel methods
of restoring to the soil the elements
which the hay takes from it. In many
parts of the country, where haying
was formerly very profitable, it is
now a pretty poor sort of farming,
simply on account of this robbing of
the toll. The hay was raised contln
uosly, and money was made thereby;
but gradually the hay crop prove.!
smaller and lees profitable, and In
time the land was good for nothing
else. There are at present many
such run-down farms, and the owners
will tell you that there Is no money
In taising hay. nor in any other kind
of farming. It Is nrt that the price Of
hay is not satisfactory, but the land
which formerly yielded such good
crops falls now to respond.
I believe in raising good hay for
market, and do tl every year, finding
therein as good profit as In any oth
er crop. But years ago I came to the
conclusion that hay a.i a market crop
would not pay unless it was raised
as a part of a good system of crop
rotation. Consequently while other
farms around me have in many in
stances shown unmistakable signs of
degeneration through too heavy hay
cropping, mine Is really in better fer
tility than at the beginning. I have
always contrived to get back to the
land as much If not more than I
took from It. The soil must be in the
right condition to yield a heavy crop
of timothy, and timothy takes from it
more life and fertility than any other
crop. That Is one reason why fancy
timothy hay always brings the high
est price In tho market. Yet with
forethought and planning a big crop
of fancy timothy can be raised almost
as easily as any other hav grass. It
Is all in the rotation and the method.
In this rctation clover ninat al
ways play a conspicuous part. Let
clover follow wheat to add to the
soil all the rich fertility that this
plant carries with it. The clover
crop must be planted often to make
It possible to secure a good catch
without difficulty. The fouble often
is that clover ts used only os a Inst
resort. Oilier crops are planted and
harvested until the e.11 is robbed of
nearly all ta fertility; then it is ex
pected that clover will suddenly re
store the land to its normal condi
tion. This it would do If tt-.a clover
could be made to grow luxuriantly,
but the fact is the Boll is then so
poor that the clover fails to make a
good -catch, and as a result efforts
must be made to Induce the clover
to grow. ThU is much like the ether
crops. It does not pay to let the
soil run down too much. The time
for repairing It is when tho degener
acy first begins. Each year the re
pairs to the soli should be male.
Then we would have no run-down
farms and soils that will not produce
paying crops. C. S. Walters, in
American Cultivator.
Money makes the man, tut man has
to make the money firBt
SHORTYH AND HIS MACHINE.
Bow Tnll TalRrnph Operator's Ovlgl.
nal tile Aii.arl Mixtip.
There Is a telegraph operator III
Kansas City to tall that vvcry one
calls him "Shorty." Home tlmo ago
he brought a new typewriter, and
thereby hangs a tale.
The common everyday machine
wasn't quite up-to-date enough for
him, so he had one ma le to order.
The keyboard Is along different lines
from the ordinary machine and even
the type has a peculiarity unto Itself.
He realized that he needed a word
I'ountliig attachment, but the counters
un the market were ordinary alYalrs,
so he bought a bicycle cyclometer,
and for three months 1ms been put
ting In all of his spare time In an ef
fort to convert It Into a word counter.
Another of "Shorty's" up-to-date
Improvements Is a "secret Bounder."
A "secret sounder" Is an Instrument
which fits over the head and brings
close to the ear the delicate Instru
ment used in receiving mosaics from
tho wire. There Is no sound an .1 1 bit' to
nny one excepting the operator who
Is wearing the device, hence the name
secret sounder. The soun ler Is con
nected by a flexible cord, long enough
to allow tho operator to have a little
freedom. A stranger dropped into
the newspaper olllco where "Shorty"
was employed one evening and, see
ing the man on the end of a rope,
asked why they "didn't take that
feller outside If they had to keep him
tethered up that way."
"Shorty" was at a newspaper ofllee
a few night ago and had occislon
to use his typewriter on a long story.
To say that the copy he turned out
was artistic would be putting it mild
ly It was a work of art. It plensed
him so much that after exulting over
it for 15 or 20 minutes and showing
It to "the gang." he laid it. down on
the table, took his typewriter In and
placed It on the t4egraph editor's
desk. Then he returned to the tele
graph room well satisfied with him
self and every one else.
The typewriter took up too much
room on the editor's desk, and he fi
nally caitne out and asked "Shorty"
what he should do with It. It was
then discovered that he had delivered
his machine to the telegraph editor
Instead of the story.
In the excitement that followed
there was a wild mlxiip of operators,
telegraph editors ,and beer bottles,
and the office devil who came In to
Bee what the row vas about got bo
tangled lift In the wires of the Becret
sounder that they both had to be laid
np for Tepalrs. Kansas City Journal.
AiiiHrlrana In Kurnpi.
The Americans are invading Eu
rope this summer in Immense num
bers. Some of our countrymen are
going there for business, and some
of them for pleasure. Europe has
been acquainted with the latter
these many years, and while the Inn
keepers, shopkeeperB, hack-drivers,
and other useful citizens of tho mon
archies, empires and republics of the
OM World were always glad to see
us, It cannot be said that they re
spected ub. They were amiable, and
were paid for their amiability. What
they chiefly liked about the Ameri
cans was his easy good-nature in tho
presence of a largo bill. An Ameri
can would pay a charge that would
liavo landed the innkeeper in Jail
if It had been presented to the cham
berlain of a king. Perhaps this re
lation between the foreigner and tho
American will remain. There Is a
cafe In Paris which charges an Amer
ican 9 for a $2 dinner, for which a
Frenchman Is charged five francs. It
will bo difficult for this restaurant
keeper to break such an agreeable
habit Most Americans are rich, and
those who are care little for the small
Items of a bill of fare. Americans
who are poor, and who know the lan
guage, are not liked so much in Paris
as the rich Americans, because they
decline to pay more for a dinner or
a drive than is charged for the same
essentials of life to a Russian prince
or a branchisseuse. Harper's Weekly.
Thn Olil-Fnahlnneil Hoy.
At a little dinner of a few old-timers
the other night one of the speak
ers said:
"What has become of the old-fashioned
boy? The one who looked like
his father when his father carried the
sort of pomposity which was like the
divinity that hedged a king In the
time when kinghood was In Its
break o' day. The boy who wore a
bat which threatened to come down
over his ears. The boy whoso trous
ers were made over from hi3 father's
by his mother, or aunt, or grandmoth
er. The boy whose hair had a cow
lick lu it, before, and was sheared
off the same length behind. The boy
who walked with both hands In the
pockets of his trousers and who ex
pectorated between bis teeth whpn
his teeth were clemped together. The
boy who never wors knickerbockers
or a round-about coat. The boy
whose chlrogrnphy was shaped by
the gmynastics of his ton cue. The
boy who believed his father was the
greatest man In the world, and that
he could have been president if he
had wanted to be. ' The boy who was
bis mother's man when the man was
away from home." New York Sun.
Mia Learned Quickly.
Bridget was just over, and didn't
understand the uses of the call bell,
bo her mlstreBS explained that she
was to come to her when she rang it.
The next day milady missed her bell.
She called Bridget to Inquire about
It, and Bridget replied:
, "Sure, mum, I have It, and when I
want you I'll ring it," New York
Times.
SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY,
A writer In the Engineer points out
thit coal exposoM to the air and
wefi-her deteriorates measnreably. A
slow combustion takes place In the
oxidation of the coal' by the air, and
where the heat 1b confined It may rise
to such a degree as to Ignite the
conl.
In 181)9 the area of reserved govern
ment forests In the different British
provinces of India aggregated 84,148
square miles, or 64,00,000 acrea,
more than the fotat area, of England
and Ireland together. The state for
ests of the German Empire only ag
gregate 10,400 square milcB. ,
A Zurich photographer clnlms to
have perfected nh apparatus by which
he has taken photographs of small
objects at a great distance. Some
of his pictures were taken at a dis
tance of 120 miles. Tho Improved
art Is called telephotography, "phot
ographing at a distance," as teleg
graphy Is "writing at a distance."
The theory upon which the Japan
ese work to produce their famous
artificially dwarfed trees Is to limit
the root system and to reduce tho
number of leaves so that practically
only sufficient food Is nsslmllated to
maintain the plant In health, without
there being any surplus to provide
material for added growth. This
counter-checking of the natural growth
Isdone so to such a nicety that a tree
more than 300 years old may not at
tain a height of more than two or
three feet.
It is pointed out by physicians that
transmission of contagious diseases
Is easily possible through the com
mon toilet pin, and persons who make
a practice of putting pins In the
month are warned of the danger In
curred. Pins are used by patients
Buffering from tuberculosis have been
found to bear the germs of the di
sease. Even pins fresh from paper or
box are not safe, as these are often
collected from the streets by children
and sold to pin manufacturers, this
latter practice being specially common
in Euicpe.
- Sable Island, off the coast of Nova
Scotia, where so many ships have
been wrecked, is gradually washing
away, and, strange to say, the Cana
dian Government 1b doing Its best to
find a way to save it. It might be
thought, at first blush, that Its wash
ing away would be the best thing that
could hnpnrn. but the trouble Is that
it will wash down Just below the
surface of the water, and then He
there concealed, an Infinitely greater
danger to navigation than ever. So
an effort Is to be made to keen it
above water, and thlB Is to be done by
planting on it certain trees whose
roots have peculiar binding qualities.
The roots branch out widely and in
terlace, clinging to the sand in such
a way that It becomes a strong wall.
The French Government has used the
trees effectively for this purpose, and
they have also been used along the
Bandy banks of the Suez Canal.
A Small Watclt.
The Dowager Duchess of Suther
land, who 1b credited with possessing
the only crystal watch In existence
having transparent works, made for
tho most part of rock crystal, had the
works removed from a miniature
watch and placed Inside a magnificent
diamond having a diameter not ex
ceeding the depth of four lines of or
dinary type. Small as thlB timepiece
was. It Is surpassed in dlmlnutlvcness
by what was Justly described as the
"smallest watch In tho world," which
was exhibited at tho watch exhibition
in Berlin recently. Made of fine gold,
this miscroBconic watch had the di
mensions of a pea; that la to say, its
diameter of 6 1-2 millimeters, which
is practically a quarter of an inch,
would equal In depth three lines of
type; 480 of these watches would
weigh about one pound avoirdupois,
if there existed any one possessing
a heart sufficiently adamant to per
mit so brutal a weight as avoirdupois
to be applied to bo delicate a mechan
ism. Made of gold and valued at
40), this dainty watch boasts a min
ute hand as long as an ordlnary-Blzed
letter "I" and a half, an hour hand
less than an "n" and a half In
length, and a second hand one-sixteenth
cf an Inch long that would do
mand an Incursion into the nonparlel
font to supply a suitable illustration.
Good Words. '
Canrrnte fltrent Snrrnora.
Canal street, New Orleans, is about
135 feet wide between the sidewalks.
On each side of the pavement there In
a roadway 37 feet wide, on which Is all
the traffic. In the centre of the Btreet,
there is a section 60 feet wide, which
has been known as neutral ground, on
which the local street railways have
laid their tracks. Recently an effort
has been made to Improve the condi
tion of the Btreet and after considera
ble study it was determined to pave
this central section with concrete. Ac
cordingly a regular concrete pavement,
such as that used In sidewalks was
laid down, tho bottom of which ex
tends to the bottom of the ties upon
which the rails are laid. Instead of
being a solid mass, It is laid down in
blacks with sand Joints. Eight inch
sand Joints are provided between the
paving and the rails to prevent spread
ing of fractures which may develop
after a tlmo. This also permits of the
ready repairing of the rails, or re
newing of bonding without great ex
pense. The experiment of using a
concrete surfaceway in streets will
be watched with much Interest by mu
nicipal engineers.
Free
WILL BE GIVEN AWAY BY
REYNOLDSVILLE,
AJ . . "-:-1. J.-v ..--'.,' ( iy: 44vSi!;.,;Ef,'i, , ji v.--i-,,,,- Hiff
,r''"'' V---. Jrlk' 'r-V'- ''K''- t-.- .-.. .v-'S S .yr:- VvVjf WTi lf.ii-j&z
ff" .Tirr .,..AA.4-. . ,V 'ktmmrh .i " .(!, K'H'f1. v' VJil i07,f Mttfi-'
Central State Normal RcnooL, Lock Haven, Pa.
FIRST J?31IZE One fall year at Lock Haven State Normal, Including tuition, boarding, &o.
SECOND PRIZE One term in King's School of Oratory, Pittsburg.
THIRD PRIZE A $35 course in the International Correspondence Schools, of Scranton, Pa
The younj? lady or gentleman getting the
jighest number of votes will be given one full
year at the Lock Haven State Ilormnl School
free, including tuition, light, heat, furnished room
and boarding. This is one of the best Normal
Bchools in the State.
The contestant receiving second highest num
ber of votes will be given one term 12 weeks
at King's School of Oratory, I'ittsburg, where
oratory, elocution, dramatic culture, literature,
Shakespeare study, music, drawing, delsarte
frof, Byron W. King-.
book-keeping are taught. King's School of
Oratory has gained quite a reputation us a first
class school.
The person receiving the third highest num
ber of votes will be given a $35.00 course in the
International Correspondence Schools, of Scran
ton, Pa. A complete commercial course, steno
graphic course, book keeping, complete teach
ers' course, coal mining, mechanical drawing,
telegraphy and 60 other courses are taught by
this school. The winner of this prize can take
up a $35.00 course or can have the $35.00 ap
plied as part pay on any course the winner may
select.
The person getting the second highest numler
of votes can have their choice of the scholarship
in Kings' School of Oratory or the Internation
al Correspondence Schools.
Premium Coupons Persons paying their back
subscription, or in advance one year or more,
will be given a premium coupon which will en
title them to 36 votes forcacli dollar of subscrip-
fitrtolilnK nn Injunction.
"Your Honor," said the lawyer, "my
client bag reason to believe that the
pulire are about to interforo arbitra
rily with lila business, and he would
like to have an Injunction restraining
thom (rom looking at him while he is
at work or touching the tools of his
profession."
"I do not see," snid the learned
Judge, "why we Bhould go so far as to
restrain the police from looking at
your client."
"He is of a very nervous tempera
ment, your honor, and to be watched
while at work seriously disturbs him."
"In that case," the judge admitted,
"the demand seems reasonable. What
Is your client's business?"
"He Is a burglar, your honor."
II U Monej Was Mtulac.
The Kansas City Journal tells this
story: "Frank Anderson was for years
a well-known commercial traveler.who
made Galena. 'Ho waa passionately
fond of honey, and the proprietor ol
the hotel at Galena, at which he al
ways stopped, always had some on
hand for him. On one trip Anderson
took his wife nlong, and as they ap
proached Galena he mentioned to her
that be was gutting to a place whero
they could hr.va some honey, When
the pair were sitting at the supper
table that night no honey appeared.
and Anderson said sharply to the head-
waiter: 'Where Is my honey?" Tho
waiter smiled and said: 'You man
the little black-haired one? Ob, she
don't work bora now,' "
Mars
j Name....
AlilHtKSS.
lis::! :
L. M. SNYDER,
Practical Horee-Shoer
and General Blacksmith,
Hni-He-ahoelnn done in the neateat mannaf
ami by the latent Improved method. K
imlrluK of all klnda carefully and piumplij
done. BATihrxcTloa Udailantsku,
HORSE CLIPPING
nave JiiHt received a complete act of mi
chlno bona clipper of latest ntyle '96 patters
rnd am prepared to do clIppliiK In Ui boat
uoHalble manner at reasonable rate.
Juoknou ttt. near FUUi. UvynoldavUle.Pa,
U. A: McDonald bus boeu appoint
ed recelvt-r for tln W'i'm l.eluiuon
Coal Company, ou pcllllou of ltunlel
Manna, prcHliliMit of tint foinpuuy, ami
(joorgo Voing. of Cleveland.
Twvlve citizens of Hock wood have
been iii'oHi'cuted by Baltimore & Ohio
(.-pedal ucenls for liilerferliin with of
ncera lu the discharge of their duty.
Mnny cattle, are acting queeiiy at
Steubeuvlllo since u dog went mud.
One farmer hns Umt n do.en hog and
a half dozeu entile with-rubles.
The Mill t'reek IceUouse plant, at
YouiiKMtown, wus struck by llghtuiug
ami totally destroyed. Loss, $10,0U0.
BJ I
THE STAR, OF
PA.
tion paid. Any one sending or bringing in a
new yearly cash subscriber will be given a cou
pon equal to GO votes.
Persons desiring to enter the contest "should
begin as earlv as possible. As soon as the
names are setit or handed in to Thk Star office
thevwill be published, but the number of votes
will not be published until June 19th, when th
vote each contestant has at that time will be
published opposite name, and from that to clos
of contest the vote will be published as counted
and returned by the judges from week to week
On Monday of each week (alter June 19th)
the ballot box will be opened and the coupons
counted by judges. ;
M i utrrtiirrrxixrn-TtxvtiTXXXxxxxn
Scholarship Coupon.
: in un txrr
' Write in the above lines the name and ad
dress of the person for whom you wish to vote
and send or take the coupons to the secretary,
j. I. Haskins, the music dealer, where they
will be placed in the ballot box. Contest closei
at 12 M., August 8th, 1901. All business com
munications and inquiries should be mailed
to Thk Star office. Receipts and coupons will
be promptly mailed from The Star office to
patrons.
RULES OF CONTEST.
Contestants must register their names at
Tub Star office.
All coupons must le sent to the secretary
of the committee, J. P. Haskins.
All money collected for new subscribers or
on subscription due must be sent to this
ofTice weekly.
Each contestant will be furnished with
. printed cards certifying that he or she is a
contestant.
F. P. Alexander,!
Thos. F. Adam, Com.
L.J. McEntire, J
J. P. Haskins, Secretary.
ftnd hav curad chouiaada ol
Casot of Nrvoui DLMa,Mt,tiiclt
as Debility, Dtiilnsu, fcleMplc
feeia and Vricoct, Atrophy.Aa
They clear tb brain, trcngtb
the circulatioa, stake dlgeMtoa
penact. ana Impart a healthy
vigor to the whole being. Ail
drains and loues are checked
Clrflnnr Itvaln rmmutttly. Unlet patieats
vuw.tftM&aHI. ar, properly cured, their edi.
tion often worriet them Into Insanity, Cowuana
liov or Death. Mailed seal ad. Price ii per homf
6 boaet, with Iron-clad legal guarantee to cure ea
refund the money. $f oo. Send lor tree book.
Foraala by ft. Alex Btoka.
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or phot fr free report oa patentability. Boch "UowV
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a. tarmi mi ean4 to laaton.(Z
riirf lawtihs or Tiaas- niniu fA
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tti
MTIXY LAWTlRfl OP le Y1AET FEA0TIC,
Anv.uw rftitnii FmnjURtD thhoubh THEM.
w C. A. SNOW & CO.
PATINT LAWYERS
fflSpa. U. I Pattnt Oftlc, WASHINGTON, 0. a
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DR. RIAL'S
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AipraBplaalbBdartalntaiault Taa pa
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