Hemingford herald. (Hemingford, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1895-190?, June 26, 1896, Image 7

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Amongst the notlcunblo inventions
prautctl to Trans .Mississippi inventors
during the Inst week wo find a car
coupling of tho jenny pattern (fronted
to Ucorgo XV. liickcy of Des Moines,
Iowa; a pipe wrench granted to K. U.
Frizelle of Sterling, Kansas; a steam
sawing machine issued to C II. Hillo
brand of Leinars, Iowa; a lottcr box
granted to LI J. Hower of Trinidad,
Colorado, a simple tire tightener issued
to D. L. Leibo of Sidney, Iowa; a reg
ister for telephones allowed to E. L.
Morey of Portland, Oregon; a metallic
basket granted to J. It Coleman of
l'crry, Iown; while Dr. Win. L. Ross
of Omaha, Xcbraslcn, receives a patent
for a furnnce embodying a 6inokc con
Burning fcaturo which is adapted to bo
used in family residences.
Amongst the curious Inventions is a
folding bicyclo framo which can bo
tnkcu apart nnd folded up; a letter box
so nrranged that the mail is automatic
ally delivered from tho box to the mail
wagon; a bicycle alarm actuated by
tho spokes of tho front wheel; a car
cuspidoro adapted to bo hinged below
the seat and bo out of sight when not
in use; a bicyclcattachmentcomprislng
a ilcxlblo framo having one wheel
adapted to bo attached to an ordinary
bicyclo to make a tandem; an engine
for producing motive power by means
of the heat of tho sun; while a Chicago
inventor received a patent comprising
a mattress which Is strapped about a
horse and upon which he rests in lying
down.
A copy of any of tho abovo patents
will be mailed upon receipt of 10 cts by
(J. XV. Sues & Co., United States Patent
Solicitors, lieo Uuildlng, Omaha, Nebraska.
Curiosities of the I.uw.
Meek looking gent "What's
tho
matter, my good man?"
Irato stranger "I'm going to havo
that woman arrested. She Inveigled a
dollar out of me on false pretenses."
"Can you arrest a woman for that?"
"Yes, slree!"
"My! my! Law is a curious thing.
Why, a regular fury of a woman in
veigled me into marrying her by falso
pretenses pretended she was an angel
and the law not only won't let mo
arrest her, but makes mo support her."
Harper's Weekly.
Kcmalo bootb.'acks aro numerous on the
streets of Paris.
Hall's Cntnrrh Cure
Ib taken internally. Price, 7Sc.
The New England Cousorvntorv of Music,
in lloston Maps., hns furnished instruction
to over G0,l)00 pupils ninco 1SJV.1, and itn
jiopu arity as au institution of the highest
excellence is constantly increasing. Its
curriculum is not confined to mwslo u!onc,
tut Oratory nnd Modern Languages have
finely equipiiod departments and tho best
instructors money can procure. Krocinl
attention a'so is given to instruction in
piunoforto tunlup. 'I ho chnrges are low
when comrared with tlio-o of other musical'
bdiools. ProB'ectr.s mailed freo on appli
cation. Mrs. D. A. McCoy, 711 South 27th St.,
Omaha, Neb., writes: "I itm an old lady,
C7 yearn o!d. 1 have been troubled for tho
tn-t twonty years with constipation and
indigestion and slcopless nights, hut since
tuklntr l)r. Kay's Renovator can bleeji like
a chl d and am not troubled iu tho least
with tho at.ovo-naiiitxl diseases. Dr. Kay's
Renovator is worth its weight in ro!I." It
is told by drucRists, 2i cts, and 81, or sent
by mail by Dr. B. J. Kny Medical Co.,
Omaha, Nob. Send stamp for large fciuuple
and took.et.
Mnnv a loy has turned out bad, because
his other tioro dowu too hard on tho grind
B.cn?. yrre fiouiff.
Another opportunity for immigrants
to secure homes free. Nearly 2,000,000
acres of first-class government lands in
northern Arkansas now open for set
tlement. For full information write
to li V. M. Powell, Immigration
Agent. Harrison, Arkansas, enclosing
10 cents in silver. Sec display adver
tisement in another part of this paper.
Doctors afllrm that spirits harden tho
tone o. the voko.
One 1 ImunHiiit Fiirmer Wantril
To j-ettle on one thousand choice farms
on the l.neof the Chicago, Milwaukee
&. St. Paul Railway in Dakota.
These luims are located in twenty
different counties, and are to be had
now at prices ranging from 87 to 515
per acre; u few months hence their
viuue will be doubled.
t'or:i homo or for investment no
luckier chance in tho West has ever
lefore bee u offered. Now Is tho time
to invest. No better farming land ex
ists anywhere. No greater results can
be obtained anywhere.
Scnools itnd churches abound every
where. Nearby markets for all farm
products. South and North Dakota
ar the banner diversified farming and
stock-raising (.talcs of the West.
Everything grows in Dakota except ij
nornneo and intemperance. A new
boom is on. Take advantage of the
tide which leads to Dukata and to for
tune. For further information address or
call upon XV. E. Powell, (Jeneral Im
migration Agent, 410 Old Colony Build
ing, Chicago, Ills.
The trouble ntout sowing wild oats Is,
that the same hand that towi mi lit do the
reaj ing.
FOR THK NAT.ON'AL CONVENTION
PEOPLES PARTY
AT ST. LOUIS JULY UND.
The Wabash, tho shortest nnd quickest
route has I een se.ected as the line from
- Netrubta lor de o.ates and their Iriends to
travel. All trains are eiuipKd with Re
clining Chair Chih, Free, and Pullman
Site: ing cam. Connecting Lines wi 1 sell
tickets over the Wabash at IUi.k-Fahk.
Parties desiring through cars or Bleeping
car accommodation can arrange tame by
tailing at the AVapakk ticket ollk-e. No.
1415 Fnrnam St., (Paxton Hotel Illock), or
write O. N. Ci-ayton,
N. XV. P. A., Omaha, Nebr.
The railroad journey from New York to
Denver covers j,tKtti miles.
Orand ICxcurilon to lluffalo Jalj 6th
and flth.
The National Educational Associa
tion will hold its next annual meeting
in lluffalo, and the Michigan Central,
"The Niagara Falls Route," has made
a rate of one fare for the round trip
plus S2. 00, association membership fee.
(Send stump for "Notes for Teachers,"
containing valuable information rela
tive to HulTalo and Niagara Falls, and
10 cents for u summer note book, fully
descriptive and profusely illustrated of
the Summer Resorts of the North and
East
City Ticket Office 110 Adams street,
Chicago, 111. O. W. RUGGLES,
Gon'l Pass'r and Tk't Ag't-
DEMOCRATIC PARTY.
THE PRINCIPLES OF JEFFERSON
AND JACKSON STILL LIVE.
The Coming Nretlnnnl Cimvriitlou Will
Kr:nlnit tho I'rlnrlplo nf llm Father
of tlin PartyTim TurllT llugatmo
More Moon-lllne.
To a domocmt: Tho financial plank
of tho democratic nntiounl platform
to bo adopted in Chicago July 7 will bo
tho law of tho party. All loyal demo
crats will support it, no matter how
strongly it may declare. Un loyal dem-
ocrn.18 wno no not uko uio piimorm
snouiu voio some oinor uckci. inero
enn be no such thing ns two demo
cratic tickets. The one nominated at
Chicago will bo tho democratic ticket, i
You ask why the Republican papers ,
of Chicago and elsewhere nrc advising j
the Democrats to adopt a gold standard I
platform at Chicago or go down to cor- I
tain defeat In November. In answer j
would say that you can find out by (
writing to Joseph Meillll, William 1'cnn
Nixon or
Times.
H. H. Kohlsnnt Udltor the
Wool' llottout. Cllmix.
Chicago Chronicle: From a Mlnu'o
sota editor The Chronicle has received
a copy of a circular sent out by a Chi
cago wool commission house, which for
convenience sake we may call Wool
worth & Co., accompanied by tho ques
tion, "What can you say to this?"
It may not bo necessary to sny much.
The circular, which may have been
written by the residuary rhetorical leg
atee of Sir Boyle Roach, seems to speak
for Itself, as It were, "through Kb hat."
In their opening paragraph Woolworth
& Co. convoy the Information that tho
wool situation "Is the gloomiest, on
record; it is simply paralyzed."
Emerging from their gloomy paralysis,
they remind their readers that "tho
darkest cloud has Its silver lining, and
sometimes covers the most brilliant
sunshine." At other times, no doubt,
It covers the most silvery moonshine.
"We believe," they cheerfully continue,
"that furrows In the dark depression
of trade are widening; if such be the
case wc will soon realize a change,
with prosperity and confidence again
at the helm." With these parties at
the helm of the plow wo may expect
the furrows In the dark depression not
only to widen but to deepen until they
blossom as the rose on the hill tops
of Damboozland.
It grieves one to learn that "our
flocks are Imprisoned behind the tan
gled web of uncertainty" and that for
eign flocks are increasing in value and
In numbers while American wool goes
begging for buyers, selling nt a dis
count In every market of our country."
But It is cheering to learn from tho
same high authority that "the price of
wool has certainly reached a climax;
there is no doubt that the bottom has
been touched." There's nothing llko
touching bottom, even If It is the bot
tom of n climax, or what prosy people
might call an anti-climax.
What can we says to this? Why,
that Woolworth & Co. aro not second
in a certain kind of talent to tho mayor
of a German town who, in a formal
address to the emperor, said: "No Aus
tria, no Prussia! Only one Germany!
Such are the words which the mouth
of your Imperial majesty has always
had In Its eye." And In their advice
to shepherds to hold their wool in
anticipation of the election of McKln
ley they are not unlike another illus
trious German Count Falkenberg
who urged his friends in the reichstag
to "seize the stream of time by the
forelock."
But Is there nothing serious to say
to this? Yes. The gist of the circular
is this: Hold your wool and vote for
McKinley and a high tariff on foreign
wool. Thus will you get high prices
for your wool. This may be good ad
vice for the wool growers, but it over
looks the wool consumers, who are
much more numerous. It even over
looks the average wool grower himself,
who, under a McKinley tariff, pays out
two or threo times as much in artificial
prices for woolen goods as he gets in
artificial prices for his wool.
The circular assumes that the wool
grower will be ruined Irretrievably if
the government does not help him get
an artificial price for his wool. We
heard something like this a number of
years ngo, when It was proposed to
abolish the internal tax on matches.
Under that tax a combine of a few big
manufacturers enjoyed a monopoly.
Representatives of the combine claim
ed that the repeal of the tax would
ruin their industry.
Notwithstanding
their protest the tax was repealed. As
a result we now havo cheap matches,
and while Diamond Match stock brings
225 In the market wo may safely con
clude that the Industry Is not ruined.
We may be equally sure that while
free wool will give us cheap wool and
cheap clothing It will not exterminate
our flocks. - Woolworth & Co. are ns
mixed In their facts and philosophy as
they are in their metaphors.
"Pmper I.bor" V v vin.
Consul General Judd tcently sent
to the state department au official com
munication touching upon certain fea
tures of the industrial situation In Ger
many. Speaking of this communica
tion, McKlnley's personal organ in
Chicago says: "Mr. Judd Inadvertent
ly reveals the fact that the wages of
German cloakmakers have been grad
ually reduced until an operative is
compelled to pay rent and purchase
clothing and food on $1.25 per week."
It Is entirely safe to say that Mr.
Judd dd not reveal that fact Inadvert
ently. The McKinley organs have
been telling their readers that the tar
iff of 1S94 was constructed In the In
tereets of foreign workmen. They have
I claimed with especial persistence that
! the new law waB n "pudding" for the
operatives of Austria nnd Germany,
who were prospering mightily at tho
expense of American operative. Mr.
Jtuld may havo been aware of this
i claim of tho McKlnleyltes. He may
have revealed the alleged fact regard
( Ing reduction of wngos In Germany
; partly for tho purpose of showing that
j our now tariff was not enriching Ger
; man working people to any nlnrmlng
extent.
j McKlnloy'B Chicago organ proceeds
' to say:
j We havo "sweaters" and swentshops
In Chicago, hut this Is sweating close
j to the starvation point. Freo traders
In UiIb country have answered with
1flrs . n1nriltn,, ,,f ,,, T,PntMm,ut
w tli referonco tn Mm "nnunor lnhnr nf
. . .. ..,..,.... ..,..-r. v .
Europe." But Mr. Judd has injudi
ciously and wantonly contributed val
uable material to the rrote.ctlon litera
ture that will be mado available in tho
coming campaign by giving ofllclnl tes
timony to the fact that there In such
a thing aa the "pauper lohor of Eu
rope." Here we have the old protectionist
trick of setting up a free trade nitn
of straw and bnttlng and punching it
all over tho ring and out of nil human
semblance as If It were a Hying an
tagonist. No freo trader has over do
nled that working people In Europe get
lower money wages than working peo
ple in this country get. There Is no
reason why they should not admit
that. They ndmlt also that tho people
of Asiatic countrlcB got much lower
wages than the pcoplo of European
countries.
Tho point that free traders make and
that protectionists always dodge Is that
working peoplo who get high wages
havo nothing to fear from working
people who got low wages, and do not
need any tariff protection. Working
people In free trade England get much
higher wagos than working peoplo in
protectionist Germany, but they beat
the Germans not only in neutral mar-
, ketB but even in Germany In many
.tJInea of production. Euroneans trot
twice as high nominal wages as Asiat
ics get, yet they Bend their productB
to every accessible part of Asia and
sell them In competition with the prod
ucts ot Asiatic "pauper labor."
Even Robert P. Porter, whose stand
ing as a champion of protection is not
below that of McKinley, has discovered
this fact. Tho protectees havo been
trying to create a scare about Japan
ese competition, and Porter has been to
Japan to sec about it. His report to
the very McKinley organ above quoted
Is to the effect that western nations
have nothing to fear from Japanese
competition In manufactures.
If the .McKinley organ were both In
telligent and sincere It would accept
the testimony of ItB own illustrious
high tariff correspondent and not pre
tend to be Ignorant of the established
fact that men who get high wages have
nothing to fear from the competition
of men who get low wages. It would
be too much to expect that a protec
tionist should be able to understand
why this Is so, but he ought to be hon
est enough to admit a notorious fact
and leave less fat-witted people to fur
nish the explanation. Of course, the
shrewd protectees know how it Is.
Their victims and certain of their or
ganists are the only ones who labor
under delusion.
Hopkins' Itrclprnclty Scheme.
As chairman of a subsection of the
ways and means committee Represent
ative Hopkins of Illinois took much
pains to collect the opinions of Inter
ested parties about the Blaine Bcheme
of commercial friendship by compul
sion. The Interested parties were most
ly pork packers, millers, and makers
of agricultural implements and ma
chinery. From such peoplo Mr. Hop
kins obtained a great bulk of opinions,
mostly identical in substance, and all
of which could be reduced to a very few
pages without material Io6s of either
eenso oc force.
Hopkins prepared a bill after he had
accumulated his stock of Identical opin
ions looking to the Immediate making
of a lot of dickers similar to those of
Mr. Blaine. But DIngley and the rest
of the full committee sat down on that
with all the crushing weight of a dozen
Tom Reeds. These gentlemen were too
shrewd to commit themselves to a poli
cy which they knew could not be work
ed again with any degree of success.
They Were willing to make the most of
the fruit of Mr. Hopkins' labors as
campaign material for the , simple
minded, but further than that they
would not go.
Thereupon Hopkins applied himself
laboriously to the task of strinclne out
' a report of more than a hundred type
written pagos. This he haa completed
and the committee w!U take measures
to spread it abroad among those who
will admire it for its bulk, its profound
Ftatlstlcal aspect and its sonorous title
page, and then put It away with other
profound documents, to remain unread
forever.
rtfy Mlftrrrs In Concrete.
SL Louis Post-Dispatch: The people
have known for many yeara that Sena
tors and Representatives . have been
feathering their own nestE, but they
were not prepared for the effrontery
with which a majority of the Houbo
openly recorded themselves Friday as
petty pilferers of the public treasury by
voting to each member $1,200 a year for
clerk hire, whether he hlros a clerk or
not
Tou Many iron in the I'irr.
Omaha Bee: Huntington ought not to
be pushing too many schemes before
Congress at the earne time. Between
ms ?j,ooo.ooo banta .Monica esiuaidy and
his ICO.000.000 Pacific railroad debt
funding plan he Is likely to EtrJke a
stubborn snog some where.
CRICKS OF GLASS,
A Now UnlMInc Mnterl.'tl Tlinl Opeim t'p
lntrrrntlnc I'n.attilttttfa.
Glnsfi bricks nre the Intent novelty In
the construction of houses to excite tho
wonder and discussion ot nrehltocts,
bu.vb tho New York Journal. Tliwo
bricks nro mado ot blown glass, with n
hollow center containing rarefied air,
nnd they nro snld to bo nn strong nnd
durable ns tho Clay brlckn now used
for building purposes. They freely ad
mit the light. A long list of archi
tectural possibilities In oponod up by
this illficovory. It Is wild that In the
near future mon may bo living In glass
houses. Windows may bo done nwny
with, excopt for purposes of admitting
nlr. It will ho possible to look through
n brick wall without tho use of nn X
ray because tho bricks will be of glass.
People may hnvo to use shades on tho
Inside of their walls to prevent the
public looking In. At tho present time
tho glass brlckB nro being used for the
construction ot conservatories. For
this purpose they have been found es
pecially useful, ns they ndmlt light
from all sides to tho Ilowors and plants
and maintain nn equabla tempcrntmo
keeping out tho cold.
This experiment wnB first tried In
Germany, whore tho bricks were In
vented. Tho walls of a plant houso In
Berlin wcro made of these bricks. Light
enslly passed through tho walls to the
potted shrubs within but it was Im
possible for the cold to find nn en
trance. So successful was thlr, experi
ment that inquiries began to be mado
from various countrlcB asking for con
signmontn of tho brlckB. The first
specimens of tho new glass bricks to
reach this country woro publicly ux
hlhlted a few weoks ngo In the display
of the Architectural league In the Fine
Arts society building of this city.
Enough of the bricks to make n small
section of wall wcro there shown to
visitors, and they were especially In
teresting to the nrchltcctB. It Is said
thnt several orders havo now been sent
from this country to Germany for tho
now bricks which will be used thlB
spring In the construction of hot
houses along tho Hudson. The bricks
are made of blown glass and nro closed
under 500 degrees of heat. They can
be readily Joined by a white cement.
It Is expected that they will be useful
In building roofs In the scml-clrcutar
form without the need of a supportlng
Etructure of steel and iron.
TOMB OF AN EARLY BUDDHA.
Discovery of nn Intcrlptlon Thnt Chung
nn Aerppted Dnte.
Dr. Fuhrer, archaeological surveyor
In the northwestern provinces of India,
has made a discovery which beems to
curry tho origin of Buddhism much
farther back than tho accepted date In
the fifth century beforo Christ, says
the Edinburgh Scotsman. In the vil
lage of NIJHva, In swamps within tho
borders of the state of Nepal, he found
an Asoka pillar, surrounded for half
a mile by vast brick rulna of monas
teries and of a still magnificent domed
tomb of Konagamana. The portion of
the pillar which is still erect has un
Inscription establishing the fact that
the Buddha commemorated Is tho same
us the Konagamana of the Buddhists
of Ceylon, who was the twenty-third
mythical predecessor of the historical
Buddha. The Napalese speak of the
pillar as the smoking pipe of Bhlma
Sen, their giant hero. Tho native dur
bar, or council, is to bo aBked to sanc
tion a scientific Instigation of the
ruins of this once great settlement of
the Aryan tribe of Sakyas, who settled
112 miles to the northeast of the city of
Benares at a date hitherto only con
jectural. Gen. Cunningham, who, un
der lx)rd Canning, began the archaeo
logical survey of India, long ago Identi
fied KapllavaBtu, In this region, us the
birthplace of the historical Gautama
and the capital of the Sakya clan. It
is in the 8ub-Hlmaluyan district now
called Basti, and must have extended
northward Into Nopal, which la still
second in sacrcdncss only to Benares.
Nepal has now a serious dispute with
the Llama government of Lhasa on Its
hands', and is always Jealous ot British
or foreign visitors. But should the
government of India net discourage its
propobed campaign In Thibet thp dur
bar may be willing to help Dr. Fuhrer
to dig on a sufficiently great scale.
Nepal is almost as little known as
Thibet, although it is a protected state
of the government of India, and It
seems time that it was opened, as Kas
mir has been, to the savant and the
traveler.
GREAT INUNDATIONS.
An Inundation In Cheshire, Engl.ind,
A. D. 353. Three thousand persoiiB
perish.
Glasgow, A. D. 75?. More than 400
families drowned.
Dort, April 17, 1421. Seventy-two
villages submerged: 100,000 people
drowned.
General inundation in Holland, A. D.
1530, By failure of dikes; 400,000 said
to have been drowned.
At Catalonia, A. D. 1617. Fifty thou
sand drowned.
Johnstown, Pa., May 31, 1S89.-By
the bursting of a huge reservoir on tho
mountains, the town was almost entire
ly destroyed, and about 6,000 persons
perished. The water In Its passage to
Johnstown descended about 250 feet.
The theoretical velocity duo to this de
scent would be about 127 feet per sec
ond or between SG and 87 miles an
hour. According to tho best accounts
from 15 to 17 minutes were occupied in
the paFsage to JohnBtown, a distance of
about twelve miles. Thus the average
velocity could not have been far short
of 60 miles an hour. The impetus of
i such a mass of water was irresistible,
' Ae the flood burst through the dam it
cut trees away as If they wero stalka
&f mullein.
Tltrjr Mlcht Hnvo to Ymrn,
"It is asserted now," he said,
thoughtfully, "that a Chinaman never
yawns. If that Is so"
Ho unused nnd for n moment seemed
burled in thought.
"If that is so." ho repeated, turning
to his companion, "I feel that I may
assert with perfect hafoty that no
Chinaman ever mot you when you
wcro In a story-telling mood."
Then ho chuckled Boftly to himself
nnd felt avenged for the hour that ho
had put In listening to tales ot preco
cious Infants. Chicago Post.
Home Wtimrt lltillt In u tiny.
Neither nro the obstinate timitidies, to tho
rotnowU ot which tho grout corrective, llos
tetter's Ploninrh Hitters, In adapted curable
In nn hour. Topurslst lit tho uso ot lids
Htntulunl remedy Is no niuro tlinu Just. Itll
loi siioms constipation, iimlnrlii. rliuiiinn
tlsin, Iddni'V complaints and ucrxoiisncss
arenmoug tho complaints which It eradicates.
An honest man can liovcr bo n friend to
a thief.
mSQQQQ$QSS9QG
5 'f-L .8
"A Scorcher."
Battier
PLUG
Tobacco Dealers savt that
"BATTLE AX" is a "scorcher"
because it sells so fast. Tobacco
Chewers say, it is a "scorcher" be
cause, 5 cents' worth goes so far. Itfs
as good as can be made regardless of
cost. The 5 cent piece is almost as
large as the other fellows' J 0 cent piece.
SSSS!SSS
FREE HOMES
Now Open
IN
NORTHERN ARKANSAS.
Tliry rr frrtllr, well-wiUorU, hravlly-tlnitirrrd, tiil prodari, (Train, ir te, frnlu and Tc'aM' In
bumllcv. .North Arkaiuai applra ar nolrd. The climate l drllulillul. wlnirra nilM and tuori. TIiim
laiiutmviubjti't lo luitnetteatt autrjr ot 1M arrv raru. Ort R TIIK TI8K TO fikT a IIUMK. For furtt.tr In.
formallunaddreii
rri.rt... 10..L1.1. aiitrr. E. V. M. POWELL, Immigration Agent, Harrison, Ark.
UTlitfcni to Hank otltarrlwn and IKkjub I'ountj Hank, lluirlxm. Ark
itm
yyyvfrfrvyyyyl
We have made
a study of tires
pounded them year in
and year out by thousands
on our wheel-testing ma
chine, tested them for
elasticity, for speed, for
durability had reports
from riders and agents
everywhere. The wonder
fully elastic and durable tires used on Columbia Bicy
cles Hartford Single-Tube Tires are the result.
Hartford Single-Tubes
are the regular equipment of all Columbia and Hartford
Bicycles. We know no tires so good as Hartfords.
The makers of Hartford Single -Tubes also make Punlop tires
(double-tube), which we will substitute for Single-Tubfi if preferred.
Free if JoSm the agent. POPE MFG. CO.,
oy man xor rwo zent stamps.
Smouldering fires
of old disease
lurk in the blood of many a
man, who fancies himself in
good health. i L,ct a alight
sickness seize lilm, and the
old enemy breaks out anew.
The fault is the taking of
medicines that suppress, in
stend of curing disease. You
con eradicate disease and
purify your blood, If you use
the iitamlnril remedy of the
world, '
Ayer's
Sarsaparilla.
From Uncle Sam,
HfflBT tan
Nearly 2,000,000 Acres of Government Land?
to Settlement
Sff
z
TESTING TIRES AND WHEELS.
HARTFORD, CONN.