Oregon courier. (Oregon City, Clackamas County, Or.) 188?-1896, November 22, 1895, Image 3

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    OLD SOCTJ AND NEW.
SHARP CONTRASTS OBSERVED BY A
NORTHERNER IN ALABAMA.
Tin roar Whits Cut a Sorry Figure
Alongside Ilia Alert and ProgrewilTe Cltl
lent Who An Sink lug Illrmlngliura the
Manrheater of America.
Thme in n paradox in the social inuko
up of northern Aluhiima which is ut
mice puzzling and mtiUHitiK. There are
tunny paradoxes indeed, but tbiH one in
renuirkuble. In the midst of woruont
old cotton fields, red hills and foroiitH
has suddenly sprung np a line of lively
modern cities, und in and nronnd them
in a nuiqno civiliziitiou of u very h h
tinier, tu diiTcroiit from the old north hh
from the old south. Yet all thin new
new, all tliin Htir of industrial life aud
pleasant refinement have not produced
the slightest effect upon the old resi
dents of the hillrt, und from a oity with
(JO, 000 inhubitiiiitH, electric lights and
ruilwuyH, uiugninceut hotels mid pulu
tiul resid'niccs, streets like'Brondwiiy
und churches und school buildings equal
to thee of Boston, one may paws in un
hour's walk to a diHtrict unchanged
wince 1800 excopt by unturul decay,
where leun and luuky men, and loauer
yellow and shriveled women, ait in
"shucks" unfit for blooded cattle, in the
midst of dirt, dogs and towheaded chil
dren, chew uutnral leaf tobacco and spit
through the crack. Innteud of being im
proved, old citizens declare that these
people have retrograded becunse the few
Among them who had any talent and
ambition have been drawn away to the
new cities.
Jnst in front of the hotel where I am
writing is a type of this class. He has a
little bull of scrub stock, clad in a hor
nets composed of rope, leather and old
clothes, in shafts made of saplings at
tached to a curt that would be a show in
any northern city, and in that curt is
his family, nil listless, dnll eyed and
seemingly half asleep. Up onr way we
-smile at the country bumpkin who gazes
in open mouthed wonder at the Rights of
the town und is curious about things
. long familiar to us, but these people do
not stare or wonder or inquire. On this
: magnificent street and in front of a pre- .
SCENE ON SECOND
'tentions opera house they wear exactly
the same stolid air of indifference as at
home. They are as totally destitute of
that intelligent curiosity which is the
germ and motor of progress as so many
JoshaUte6. Their first sight of the rail
way trains does not rouse even a quiver
in their faces. Men who work in tbe
great rolling mills tell me that when
one of these fellows delivers any back
woods product there he never manifests
the slightest interest in the ponderous
. machinery or cares to look through the
place. They haven't even ambition
enough to get diuuk, and if, as rarely
liuppeus, one gets too much whisky, he
does not shout or fight, but drops on the
first convenient spot and goes to sleep.
How did this class originate? There
is a tradition in the south that tbey are
descendants of those trumps and low
grade criminals who were transported
from England w early colonial times,
but I apprehend that the stock must
have been recruited considerably by the
drift from other classes. They rarely
commit crime of any kind and are radi
cally distinct from the "moonshine"
distillers and fighters of whom we bave
read so much. Clay eaters are still found
among them, and I have had a few
pointed out to me, but the tendency of
that class is to die out. The clay most
affected is a peculiar waxy kind without
a particle of grit, and some physicians
maintain tbut the habit results from a
sort of low grade scrofula which affects
tbe stomach lining. This cheesy clay re
lieves the irritation, and hence the crav
ing for it. The negroes, among whom
the habit is very rare, say it is nothing
but shiftlessness. "Day doan' do noth
in, sah, an so day wants to be pickin at
omefin, an day ain't got vittels to pick
at, an so day picks at de clay. " Such is
the learned diagnosis of our hotel porter,
who adds that "day mighty seldom mar
ries 'ceptin 'nioDg 'einselves, always
cousins an sioh. " "A regulah clay eatab,
a durn low down clay eatah," is the
country negro's term of extreme con
tempt It is a pleasure to turn from such peo
ple to Birmingham and its very lively
people. In 1881 1 visited the city, but I
cannot recognize a spot I then saw. The
frame hotel I patronized is gone, and
the site covered by a block of stone and
brick. The city then had 8,100 inhabit
ants; the census of 1890 credited it
with 27,000 and the county with 88,
000, but soon after all the residence
suburbs were annexed and now the
school census indicates a city population
of 62, COO. The city stretches from Red
Mountain to North Birmingham and
from West End to East Lake, and still
there axe 15 suburban towns outside the
limits. So the enstom is to copnt 11 in-
dustritis us Driiid'uthum's which aro i
r!o district nifciamg in the limits of
tlio peculiar oval valley, which wh
niudo by I ho splitting of nn unticlinai
axis. '
In this district are 25 iron furnaces
five rolling mills, many foundries und
minor shops, two cotton gin niuuufac
lories and a grcut variety of minor es
tablishments. "And all this is lint a be'
ginning," siiy all with whom I talk, "for
the great problem is solved. Cumegiea
bave shown that our low silicon ore is
readily convertible into steel by the
Busic process, and as fust as possible all
(he furuuees will be changed so as to
produce tlio kind needed. Carnegies
huve just lionjjht 215,000 tons, and tho
Illinois Stonl company 10,000 tons of it,
bnt only two furuuees at present cuu
turn out this low silicon ore. When all
do so and many more are built well,
tho most riotous imagination can scarce
ly picture the future of Birmingham
There's 500,000,000,000 tons of red
hematite ore in that one mountain aud
plenty more all urouud, and we can turn
it into iron at less cost than anywhere
else in the world." And much more of
the same sort.
But I wanted to know what the labor
ing men were getting out of all this, as
they told some very hard stories while
tho great strike und labor wur was on,
First be it noted that there are 2,000
convict miners in this county, and tho
gentleman in charge allowed me to
range the' vast prison where those tern
porurily idle are confined. Of the 400 or
so there at least three-fourths are col
ored, und so I am told it is in the stock
ade. A good deal of liberty is allowed
and in the courtyard white aud black,
mule and female, enjoy a social equality
which would huve delighted Theodore
Tilton. Incidentally I may add that
interviewed Mrs. Howe, a white worn
an, whose case is interesting an Ala
bama, us she is awaiting final trial on
the chui ge of murdering ber stepson,
She complacently called my attention to
the fuct that she did not "look like a
murderess, " but I have not seen speci
mens enough to be un expert.
There are G.G0O free miners in the
county und about 3,000 more in the dis
trict, and tbe average of the pay roll
for the largest mine is $1.85 per day.
AVENUE, BIRMINGHAM.
This includes in any negroes, doing the
lowest grade work at 80 cents a day,
and many others ut $1. So the estimat
ed daily average of miners proper is
(2.40 per day, and a few of the most
skilled make $3. The highest wages in
the district are paid to the head roller
in a rolling mill namely, $15 per day
out of which he has to pay two help
ers. Similarly tbe boss pnddlers get
high wages und pay helpers, so the
range in the furnaces ' is all the way
from $1. 75 to $4. Common labor is
rarely above $1 a day, and many bun
dreds of negroes are working at 80 cents,
Tbe negro quarters of the city are by
odds the poorest I have ever seen, north
or south. I really do not see how life
can be maintained on the south half of
Second avenue and adjacent streets, and
my guess is that if the city authorities
do not bestir themselves before spring
they will bave a little pestilence to deal
with. A pathetic proof of the narrow
lines on which these poor creatures live
appeared in the fact that several with
whom I talked told me, with a voice of
gladness, that lately the price of flour
had been put down to 55 cents a sack
(25 pounds) and meal to 25 cents.
I need not give the enthusiastic talk
or the figures on cost of material by
which the boomers prove that iron can
be made here much cheaper than any
where else in the world, and that Bir
mingham is destined to he the Sheffield,
tbe Sligo, the Bradford aud the Man
chester, all in one, of the new world.
Investors will investigate, and for oth
ers such figures would be wearisome.
Whether this city is really to have 125,
000 people iu 1900 and 250,000 in JU10,
as the most moderate assert, is more
than I know, aud one man's guess is as
good as another's. J. B. Pakke.
Birmingham.
Prone For the World.
There are in all over 6,000 acres of
prune orchards of bearing age in Ore
gon. There are also several thousand
acres of 1 -year-old prune orchards not
included above, but which will add ma
terially to the total output of fruit A
good crop this year will mean, therefore.
an output of 6,000,000 to 10,000,000
pounds of cured prunes in Oregon.
Remarkable lek.
One of the most remarkable inks
known to the chemist is made of a prep
aration of prussian blue in combination
with nitric and hydrochloric acids. The
writing done with this ink has the sin
gular property of fading when exposed
to tbe light and recovering its color
when taken into the shade or placed in
perfect darkness.
SHE HAD TROUBLE.
And Her Huaband Explained Why She
Waa Without Cook.
She was cvideutly bent upon produc
ing un impression not only upon the old
acquaintance she hud just met, but up
on all the other people in tbe car us
wolL
"Yes, I heard you had come back to
Chicago to live," she said, after greet
ings hud been exchanged, "but really
I've not bad time to come to see you. I
have no cook servants are the plague
of a housekeeper's life in Chicago."
"Ab, I suppose you keep a good
many?"
"Well, you know, we can't get them
well trained, and it'is one person's work
to keep them going. "
"Oh, well, I haven't had much trou
ble, but then I only keep two. How
many" .
"Of course, my house is large and I
am particular. "
"Where are you living now? I want
to come to see you. "
"On the north side. I only wish I
could ask you over to dinner, but it is
impossible so long as I am without a
cook, and oh I am particular about ref
erences I may not be suited for a long
time."
"How lucky that I met you today.
An old cook of mine is hunting a place;
she will just suit yon, for she is an ex
cellent servant, fond of children, seldom
goes out, and"
"How nice I Have yon seen Ellen
since yon came back?"
"I was going to see her today. I nm
so anxious to get Christine a place and
I thought she might hike her, but now
that I've met you I shall not need to go.
I can give her the best of recommenda
tions, so you"
"Yes. I haven't soeu Ellen for a long
time. She lives plainly, I might say
poorly, and, of course, we don't go out
together, at alt
"Indeed. Now, about the cook ; shall
I send her to you, or"
"Oh, don't trouble yourself; I"
"It is no trouble at all. What is your
number?"
"Dear me, I don't believe I have a
card with me. I intended to stop at the
engraver's today, but the fall things in
the shops were bo lovely I forgot all
about it."
"Too bad. However, I can write
down your address; you will find her a
treasure, I assure you. "
"Yes, yes; no doubt. But really, I
am getting along very well, and I hate
to train."
"But you won't need to train Chris
tine. I did that myself, and Id take her
now only I have a treasure already. "
"Yes. Do tell me if you ever see the
Upwells now?"
"Yes, indeed. Tbey have just gone
to boarding. Christine bad been living
with them for a year, and Laura was
perfectly delighted with her. You had
better engage her at once. Why, isn't
that your husband coming in? So glad
to see you, Mr. Van Tompkins. I am
perfectly delighted to see Dora looking
so welL Why, she hasn't changed a bit
in five years. "
"Indeed she hasn't. I think it is won
derful too. Six years married, and tbe
way that woman has worked) Why,
she never bad a hired girl in the house
except once, when the twins had scarlet
fever. Why, Dora, I haven't seen you
blush bo at a compliment since you were
girl!" Chicago Tribune.
Ber Error.
"I nee that yon have been buying a
bicycle," he casually remarked, as they
sat side by side on the sofa.
"Yes."
"Cash or installment?"
"Two dollars a week," she. admitted.
And thus it was she unknowingly
caused him to postpone his proposal for
nearly a year. Indianapolis Journal.
Fleaaed Her.
"If there is anything I like," said
he to bis wife, "it is a woman who
knows enough to be a good listener.
Whereat tbe servant girl at the keyhole
could not repress a smile of satisfaction.
Albany Argus.
Highly Contagion.
Cbol) (reading paper) Gwacinsl
Tbe Pwinoe of Wales has a cold.
Chappie My goodness ! Send out for
some cougn medicine, deah boy. for
both of us. Truth.
A Savins Thought.
Kate (e-pitefully) The men are
All
alike.
Laura (demurely) But some havs
more money than others. Boston Tran
script. Culverts!.
She I really don't think I shall takt
part again in theatricals. I always feel
as though I were making a fool of my
self. He Oh, everybody thinks that!
Pick Me L'p.
Mem
; Among tne witnesses wiio.-prcnra
before the civil court the other, day-in
an action of tort was a mellmcholy
young man with a noticeable arrunge
ment of feutures. When be took bis
place on the witness stuud.the examin
ing couiikoI begun with the stereotyped,
"Are you a married man or a single
niuu?"
The witness shifted about uneasylike
from foot to foot and then answered
eadly, "I don't kuow."
It was the lawyer's turn now to look
uneasy. He glanced at the witness, then
ut the court and finally, running an eye
the length of the young man, as if
about to give a guess on his weight,
usked iu a kind of un amused way :
"You're the first young miin of your
age tbut I ever met who couldn't re
spond either ufTlrimttivcly or negatively
on that all imporiunt question."
"I cau't," said the witness, turning
his head as if tho subject was to him a
disagreeable one. The lawyer usked him
why, and, finding that he must answer,
he replied :
"Well, I was married a couple of
months ngo to . u woman who had hud a
previous nmrriuge annulled on the
ground that she was iusune ut the time
the ceremony was performed. I have
now reason to believe that she was in
sane when site married me. If she
wasn't," and his features relaxed into
a melancholy smile, "I think I mast
have been insane to have married her.
I am going to let the court decide it
later on." Boston Globe.
Making Good the Ante."
Lifa
No Proof of HI Power.
"Ethel I"
"Yes, pupa. "
"I believe you told me once that
young Litewait claimed to be a hypno
tist" "Oh, he is one, papa. I know he ia. "
"He's proved it to your satisfaction,
has he?"
"Yes, indeed."
"Was he trying to demonstrate it
when I saw him kissing you in the con
servatory?" The beautiful girl blushed.
"Yes, papa," she said.
"You considered that satisfactory
proof, did you?"
"Yes, papa. "
"And you're sure it was hypnotism?"
"Perfectly certain, papa."
"You wouldn't try to deceive your
poor old father in a matter of that sort,
would you?"
"No, indeed, papa."
The old man shook his head doubt
fully. "I think it would have looked more
like a genuine case of hypnotism if he
had kissed your mother or me, " he Baid.
"However, we 11 not discuss that. I
have made up my mind, though, that
all hypnotists must keep away from
here. "
"Why, papa?"
"My observation convinces me that
you are too good a subject to make it
possible for any of them to demonstrate
any real hypnotic power to my satisfac
tion. As for yonng Litewait, you may
say to him that I feel certain that I can
hypnotize him so perfectly that he
would never know what hit him. "
Chicago Post
She Felt Dlnonraged.
"You seem downcast," said
Eunnimune's husband.
"I do feel terribly discouraged,
servant is going to leave. "
Mrs.
The
"That's too bad. That makes the fifth
in three months."
"Yes. I feel like giving np. No soon
er do I learn to cook to suit one thun
another comes, and I have to start all
over again." Washington Star,
An Eya to Boalneaaa.
He What did the doctor say was the
matter with you?
She Suid i was run down.
"What did he recommend?"
"Bicycle riding."
"I see; that will make business for
bim, because you'll run other people
down. " Yonkers Statesman.
An Exception.
' "So you have takeu to cycling at last,
have yon?"
"How did you find that out?"
"I saw you on your wheel yesterday. "
"By Jove I I'm glad to hear that
All the refit of my friends happened to
see me when I was off. Kicnmond
Diuputcb. '
A Modern Delilah.
As he leaned lovingly against her she
playfully snipped off a few locks of his
hair.
"Heaven?!" he exclaimed, when he
realized what ebe had done, "yoa have
ruined the tx-xt half back in tbe busi
neda." Brooklyn Life.
Long Proceaa.
must we say farewell?"
'And
he
faltered.
" Yes, " be answered.
She shuddered.
She hated to sit np another two hours.
but he was firm in hia purpose. De
troit Tribune.
Deflaod.
Aunt Jessie Now, Percy, can yon
tell me what "lazy" means?
Percy Lazy means wben yon want
your little gutter to got It lor yoa.
Truth.
YearS
THE OLD
'.ST.- LOUIS- v, . '
Medical and Surgical Dispensary.
Thl I Ike oldeat Private Medical DUpenaary
In he eity of Portland, the Bret Medical Ilia-
penury ereratarted In thl city. Dr. Keuler,
the old reliable tpecialiat, hat been the general
manager of thla Inatilutlon for twclre yeara,
during which time thoutande of eenee have
been cured, and no poor man or woman waa
ever refuaed treatment becauM they had no
money. The St. Louie DUpenaary ha thou-
aauda of dollar In money and property, and I
able financially to make It word good.
The St. Lout Diapenerry haa a eta of the
bet Phyilciana and Burgeoaa In the country.
all men of experience. A complete aet of Sur
gical inatrumenta on hand. The beat Electric
Apparatua la the country, both French and
American. Their apparatua for anatyiing the
urine for kidney aud bladder diaeaaea, are per
fect and the very latent. No difference what
doctora hare treated you, don't be diacouraged,
but go and have a talk with them. It coiti you
nothing for conaultation, beitdea you wilt be
treated kindly, Peraouaare calling at the St.
Lout Diepensary, every day, who have been
treated by aome advertiaing quacka of thla city
and received no benefit. Thla old diapenaary la
the only one in the city that can give reference
amoug the buiineea men and bankera aa lo their
commercial atandlng. fyThey poaitively
guarantee to cure any and all Private Dlacaaea
ia every form and atage without loa of time
from your work or buainea.
DLniiait!ia Cured
by an old German
'. Thia remtJv waa
nilGUIIiailSIII remedy.
Bent to Dr. Keuler a few month ago by a friend
attending medical college in Berlin. It baa
never failed, and we guarantee It
Kidney and Urinary Complaints.
Painful, difficult, too freauent. milk. r
bloody urine, unnatural diachargea, carefully
treated and permanently cured. Pilea, rheuni
atiam and neuralgia treated by our new reme
dies and curea guaranteed.
fllrl Cnrac ?'rs, Cancer. Htc., cured, no
UIU OUlCd difference how long affected.
Private Diseases
of byphilll, Conorhoea, I
Theae doctora guar-
ivphUte, Conorhoea, Gleet. Stricture cured
no amerence n
rhoea, Loaa of M
cured permanen
effectually cured
Young Men
theae old docton
no amerence now long Handing. Spermator
rhoea, Loaa of Manhood, or Nightly Kmiwiona,
cured permanently. The habit of Self Abuae
effectually cured in a ehort time.
Your error and folllea of
youth can be remedied, bad
doctora will give you wholesome ad-
vice and cure you make you perfectly atrong
and healthy. You will be amaied at their auc
ee in curing Rpii AToaanca.. Seminal Loa.
aa, Niohtlt Buiaaioxa. and other effect.
STRICTURE-NO cuttiug, pain or etretcitaf
nleaa accessary,
READ THIS.
Take a clean bottle at bedtime and urinate la
the bottle, act aaide and look at it in the morn
ing, if it ia cloudy, or haa a cloudy aettling ia it
you have aome kidney or bladder diaeaac.
CATARRH
K"We guarantee to cure any caw of
use to many remedies bar failed.
Address
ST. LOUIS
VOX YAMHILL STREET, COB.
Beginning of the Leather Trade.
A ceiifiuR was taken in 1 790, a second
one in 1800, but no statistics were col
lated. A first account of the industries
was iu the census of 1810. The popu
lation was 7, 23 9, 708. The manufactures
of leuther, shoes, harness and trunks
were valned ut $17,9!)5,477. The num
ber of tanneries wab 4,816. Of these
New York hud 807, Pennsylvania 710
and Massachusetts 299. Their yearly
production included 2,608,340 pounds
of sole- leather nnd 44,003 dozens of
calf, sheep uud goat skins. One-third
of the hides nsed came from South
America. They cost 6 jjj cents a pound.
The other raw niateriuls were princi
pally sheep and deer skins. Nearly all
the country folk woie breeches or aprons
of buckskins, fulled or tanned in oil.
Tbe largest tannery at that time was in
Northampton, Mass. It was capable of
tanning 5,000 hides a year. Shoe and
Leather Reporter.
Vitality of Seeda Teated.
Professor Lazenby of the Ohio experi
ment station, in making tests for ascer
taining the purity and vitality of seeds,
notes the remarkable power of reger
ruination which is exhibited by various
species. Different samples of wheat
germinated no less than ten times after
intervals of a week or more, daring
which time the seeds were kept perfect
ly dry. Corn will germinate nearly as
often. Clover and the grass seeds ger
minate but once, as a rule. This helps
to explain why a good stand of grass or
clover is difficult to obtain in unfavor
able seasons, while failure with wheat
or grain from alternate wet and dry con
ditions seldom occurs, provided the seed
is good. It may also be one reason why
certain garden seeds will endure muoh
greater neglect than others. Garden
and Forest.
An Oddity la Toe and DlflU.
There is one curious fact respecting
the animal creation with which you
will never become acquainted if yon de
pend on your textbooks for information.
It is this: No living representative of
tbe animal kingdom bas more than five
toes, digits or claws to each foot, hand
or limb. The horse is the type of one
toed creation; the camel of tbe two
toed ; the rhinoceros of the three toed
and the hippopotamus of four toed ani
mal life. The elephant and hundreds of
o'-her animuls belonging to different or
ders beloug to tbe great five toed tribe.
St. Louis Republic
It ia an indisputable fact that for more
than fifty years, children, from tha age of
three months to ten yeara, have oeen
heaentea ty Sfdman's Sootntng Pow
der. Theae Powders are termed sooth in jf
because the correct mitieate. and re
move, disorders of he system incident to
teething.
To COW 3UMPTIVEO
Tn- underaimed havlne been restored to
health bv aimole mean, alter (iilTerlnc (or
ereral yeara wltb a aerere lant; affection, and
that dread dlaeaae Cobaamptloa, ia amlou lo
make Known to hla fellow tunerera the means
of cure. To tbore who deaire It, be will cheer
full? tend (free of ebarce, a eopr of the nreacrln-
tion oaad, which they will Bnd a eure euro for
Caaeawipttaa. Aathana. Catarrh. Branch.
tie and all throat and lane Malaaiee. Hf
bope all nnmn will try nil remedy, as It I
Inraiuable. Thoee desiring the prescrlpUon,
which will eoet then nothln. and mar antra a
blaaalnt, will pleaa addreaa.
15
Rtf. E.w&rf A. WIimi, IrMUva, N. Y.
Young Men or OldCs.-
failing Manhood, Phyaical Bsceeaee, Mental
Worry, Stunted Development, or any peraaaal
weaknes. can be reatored to PnaraCT Hkal-iw.
and th NoaLK Vitality or Strono Man, tke
Pride and Power of Nation. W claim ay
yeara of practice by' our ezclualve method a
uniform "Monopoly of Bucce." ia treating aH
dieeaaea, wcakneaaea and affliction of men.
IklllflLU UlUvnVLU lanuca, ana nen
Prostration, Female Weakneta, Leucorrl
and General Debility, and Worn Out Wei
aperdily brought to enjoy life again.- Call
wruc particular 01 your caai
meat furuiahed by writing ua
Home treat.
particular. AM
lettera atrictly confidential.
MBDICINR furaUhed free la all Private aa4
Chionic dieeaaee. Consultation free, la prliati
room, where yoa only e tha doctora,
CaT TAPE WORMS "tM
(Samplea of which can be aeea at their oSaa,
from is to so feet long) removed ia a houra.
Heart Disease SlSrJSS"
OUT OP TOWN PATIRNTS, writ for aaa.
tlen blank and Iree diagaoaia of yoar Ueahaa.
enclosing atampa for aaawcr.
AND PILES.
Catarrh or Piles. Don't be afraid U try
Treated with our own remediea.
with stamp,
DISPENSARY,
SECOND. PORTLAND. OREGON
TT7
E. McNElL, Kecelver.
TO THE
EAST
GIVE8 THE CHOICE OF
TWO TRANSCONTINENTAL
R;OUT IE S
VIA
GREAT
VIA
UNION
PACIFIC RY.
DENVER
0NAHA
AND
KANSAS CITT
NORTHERN RY.
SPOKANE
MINNEAPOLIS
AND
ST. PAUL
LOW RATES TO ALL
EASTERN CITIES
OCEAN STEAMERS
LEAVE PORTLAND EVERY 5
...FOR
0AY8
SAN FRANCISCO
For full details call on or address
W. H. HURLBTJRT,
Gen'l Paaa. Agent,
Portland, Ob.
5AWTRADEIt
COPYRIGHTS.
CAN
OBTAIN A
PATKNTf For a
ProinDt
M U N M Ac CO., who nave had naarl;
anawer and aa h
honest opinion, wrna tn
a, wn
ftr
upfnmM id hi patant i
tlona itrlctlT confidential.
.ipw1.no. In th pauot Insinaaa. Commute.
rtftld AMTlV ftV I I r
IHaaakukith.
I Pa
mmu ."win wmtn i nm. Aieoa aacajosiMor SMaaaB
leal and aclantlfte hooka leotrranT
Patents taken through Moon A Co. naaraa
?1 notlojlntb. HentlaeAertra?a3
5htw1o.lT before tbe public with?
out enet to to. mrentor. Thla adenoid papac
i weeaiy, elegantly llinatrated, baa by farta
bouaaa. wltb plana, onablliif bulldsrs to a
ton. and iriifluHMuM
TS"pi aoa now sontrseta. Addreaa
UttMM X CO. Ms Toac. 31 BaSSwAn
For Children Cutting ttwr Ttk
IN USE OVER 'riFTY YEARS.
tell fmtrli Htwt, srmf fit. Ci-ania, ana
pceeewe a aaaif ' 1 mum
4nrlK0 ( awf-a t (.(Af.
V viiwmwua vi ut aoianiino work la tan
w?1?;..3 ! nli. eopiea sent free.
Bunding IVfl tlotvioonthly, kfiea year. Btaala
optee, iS nentaTKrery numbereontalne bmZ
Hful Plata. In eolora. and nhnlnmnk.
i