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About Grant County news. (Canyon City, Or.) 1879-1908 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1888)
a Piliilnil i?1 L P Fisher CANTON CITY, GRANT COUNTY. OREGOJg, THURSDAY, JULY 19,1888. Number 17. Volume X. r I 1TT1TTT i L' L 1 T 111 I V J ' """ Merchants' fx. JJI 11 " " &ranl Co. News. PUBLISHED THURSDAY UOKKIXG, UY D. I. A SB DRY Editor and Proprietor. COUNTY OFFIC!ALPAPER Subscription $3 00 Six Months I 50 fl?hreo Months 75 TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS JiMpii square for first, mid $1 per square ttt each subiuqu.nt insertion Regular odvirtuin cc roade known on op plication. No ccrtificite given until all dairies . id All Heading Notices in Local 'Joluuin will be charge;! at the rate of 20 cents per line for first, and 10 cts each subesquent inser tion. "3" special rales to regular advertisers. WE ARE PREPARED TO EXECUTE ifFine Jo. Printing OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, CHEAPLY Posters, Dodders, Billheads, Let tfrheids, Noteheads, S nto ments, Invitations, Tickets, Curds Etc, etc. PRINTED TO ORDER. OFFICIAL niKECTOKY: On. J ude . N. R. Msixcy. Olerk J. T. Mafl Treasurer N. H. Bole'. Commissioners i J- .H-Afc?,V-( II. J I. Davis. Surveyor J. H. Neal Sheriff W. P Gray Assessor Cb Timms. School Supt E. Hives. Stock Inspector. ..... T. H. Curl f. L B. Ison ( James A. Fee Dist. Jud'cs Disr, At'orney J. L. Baud PROFESSIONAL CAIIDS. OPvIi, M. D. Canyon City, Ogn. Office or Main Street in Riming formerly occu pied by Dr. Howard. D .. G. W. 1JARUER PliVHicinti A Surgeon. Canyon City .... Oreuon. Formerly of Iowa, ha located her;, and will attend I'Vofeoiuna! enll day or nljrlit. C OiHec opjio-ite Sews Otike. N. II. HO LEY. Dontist Canyon Citv Oregon Oflice in Citv Hotel. G. I. HAZELTINE. CANYON CITY. OREGON. E. A. Knight, DENTIST. From The Dalles, has permanently located at John Day City. ALL WOBK WARRANTED. J A- SWEEK, fi ttoi ev-at-Law Cany C -- Oregon. JARRISII & COZAD. ATTORNEYS AT LAW Cannon City, Oregon. p 15. RINEARSON, M. D., Physician and Surgeon PRAIRIE CITY - Oreg n. JLAY TOD HUNTER. OonstalDlo, n.icL Collector. Canyon City, Orec All lnlnrc entruntcd to hln care wll receive prompt attnii.n. and all money vlll be paid ai fHt a cjliecU-d. Attorn9y-at-La.r.v t AND Notary Public. Prairie Cty - - - Oregon. Also Agent for tbe sale of School Lands. 5-30U LAID AND WATER CLOCKS. How Time iih 5-'orm?ri3- Moasurcil The Invi ntlon ofClorkN Ami Watcher. The greatest interest will he fotunl n the history of the origin ami de velopment of clocks ami watches. The lir.-t gnomenor .sun-dial of which we Jiave any histotical notice is that of Kimr Ahaz. about 740 years before the Chrsilian era. It is menlioind in 2 Kings 20: 11: "Ami Isiiah tJio the shadow ten degrees backward, by which it had t:one down in the dial of Aliaz." The ancient.s used hiMiiisphoriral dial plates, with the radius which throws die shadow running north and south ; tlnisi- now in hkc :m ihit. With 1." ! fdge of theshadow radius foituingau anfrl'. with the horizon equal to the litl.tu.lu in which they are situ.itcd or parallel to the earth's axis. Al li.itih it was pos.Mhle to tell the t.me by a mathematieally aijusle.l Miu-dial to within a few ininir.es, hey were in a gieat measure snper edud at a very ea ly date by clepsy lnr and sand-glass. The most usral .'orin of clepsytra, or water rhiek1?, ;eems to have been a uradiiateJ et-sel containing a tloat, into which ;a!er dropped t'.om another vessel, he tloat as it ros... indicating the iine of day. The sand clucks, or : lasses, seem to have been very timilarto an ordinary hour-glas-: of she present day. These are supposed to h ivebeenof eatly oiigin. Caudle locks were a later method of mark ng time. It is rather remarkable .hat, long before the invention of wheel clook.s, plarietariuins.or orrer ies were well known. The fust modern planetarium in England was one made for Lord Orrery, whose name has been since generally given to these machines, ami that our fore fathers looked upon the planetary motions as the true measure of timo may be proved by the fact that the li si clocks constructed nearly always showed various astronomical phe n mena, in addition to showing or striking the hour of the day. Veiy little is known, it would seem, ab"ut the Urst invention of wheel clocks, no two wiitcs seemingly agteeii.L' as to the exact period of their introduc tion. Although some historians as-.-ign it to such an early date as even the sixth century, it is not very prob able that they are coircct, the words hojologium, horologe, etc., having been applied indiscriminately iu oM writings to any machine for meastiiing tune. It is pietty certain, howeve that i locks diiven by weights, and striking automatically, existed in the eleventh century. The oldest clocks in England were that of St. 1'auiVv'athedral. London, ami one at Westminster, which latter was paid for out of a line imposed by Edward I., in the year l'JSS, upon Sir Ralph de Ilengham, chief justice of the King's bench, for corrupt prac tices. St. Paul antedated the latter by at least two years. Fiom these dates the manufacture of clocks would appear to have become a set tled industry in England, although the first authentic description we have of the interior of any wheel clock is that of one made by Henry de Wyek, a German, for Charles V. of France, in l.'!7!. which has been not inaptly styled the "parent of modern time-kt epers," since, except that it had no pendulum and only an hour hand, it was verv like in principle the clocks of the present dav. It consisted of a train of wheels driven by a weight, and had a veiti cal cr verge escapement with a vi brating balance, but no spiingithe balance, instead of 1 eing shaped like a Hy wheel, was iu the form of a T, upon the two thin projecting aims of which concentr'c notches were cut. Two small regulating weights were suspended from the aims, and it was by r-hifting these from notch to notch, or from the center, that the clock was made to go faster or slower as reqmrcd. The discovery of the isochronism, or equality of time, of the pendulum is attributed to Galileo, who observed that a chandelier swinging in a church at Florence, Italy, performed the vibrations of the long and short arcs in the same time. It was he who first conceived the idea of applying the pendulum to a clock; but llmgens, the Dutch philosopher, was the first to investi gate thoroughly the mathematical theory of the ptwn'tiltun. The first watches wore made at Nuremberg, Germany, about tho jear 15i'0, where the mainspring is paid to have been invented by Peter Hele, a clcckmaker of that town. They were furnished with the verge escaptment, similar to the one in Do Wyck's clock, the want of control over which, no doubt, suggested the idea of the fusee adjustment, which was invented about the year 1520. Clair les V. of Germany :s said to have taken great inteiest in the per fnimance of these early sjeciinens of horological art, ami to have kept several of them going together. They appear to have been In common use in England in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, and are mentioned by Shake.-peare in "Twelfth Might' lint it was not until the invention of the balance spring, about the year HUSO, that any rapid progress 'was made in the ditection of good time keeping. The invention of the balance firing is assigned both to Iluygcns and to Dr. Kobeit Hooke, an Englishman, ami it is claimed that it must rest with the latter, whose enunciation of tho theory of its iso chronifm in the words, "l't tensis sic vis" (as the tonsion so is t he force), showed that he was well acquainted with its nroneities, although this axiom, which is called "Hooke's law," is true only of ceilain lengths of spring fixed at the ends at ccitain positions. Repeating work was in vented in the year lu7f by an En glish clergyman named Runow, who was, howe'ver, opposed by one Dan iel Quarc, a watchmaker, in his ap plication for a patent for his invention, and in favor of whom tho King Mames II.), on appeal, rendcied a Iccision. Fiotn the latter ratt of the seven teenth century the science of liorolopy l.'adily improved in England. Facio utroihiced jeweling frnm Geneva in ?;0; and CJeorge (.Jraham. a watch maker's apprentice, invented the ylinder escapement in the same yer.r. This escapement, although found to be a creat advance on tha verge, was soon almost discarded, owing to the rapidity with which tho brass escape wheel cut in tho cylinder, which was of steel. This, indeed, caused the introduction of rub)' cylinders, but the diiliculty and tX tense of making rendered them : .. 1. 1 , c i: . t..i... uuauitiiuio mi tiriiiiiiir vwiiunua. up, and the horizontal escapement, with a small steel wheel, was, until vety recently, almo?t the onlv one applied to their watches. It is in deed generally made now, but the superior qualities of the lever are s"owly asserting themselves in that countrv, and are gradually driving it out of the market. X. Y. Sun. Why the XMUor Ih II tlri and Tooth It 8 . " You may never have remarked that literary men are apt to In come toothless sooner than other people," said a dentist to me yester day. "The phosphates which should go to renew the hair and teeth, are consumed by the brain with such rapidity that the dentist ami barber have to be called into re quisition by brainworkers more frequently than by any other class. If, iu addition to hard brainwork, unvaried by frequent periods of rec reation and repo.-e. the subject is a heavy smoker or drinker, the decay is so much the mure pronounced." Interview in N. Y. Star. ' Whosvr statue is that? " he asked. " That's Fairchild. Erne. son," sard General "() Iiillv?" " 0. no; Ralph Waldo, the Sphinx, von know: potrt, philosopher, and Yankee.'' "Oh, I know. It is one of those d d literary fellows that old Cam eron ha I a row with years ago. Well, that is about the only way one of those fellows could get intooliice." Some of the newspapers are wrest ling with the question: " Will the corning man lie?" Perhaps not, but if not he will never go into business or polities. The is one latest thing in card cases, of white plush, and it is in- terlined Euchet. with violet or heliotrope VnriouN XotrN. Iras3 is seriously affected by mer cury, copper is less affected, and iron is not affected at all. The best as well as the cheapest way of using pennyroyal to get lid of fleas, ft to use the herb itself; the oil, of course, cannot be used where the inconvenience attending it would be greater than the evil to be over come. According to the .Amciican Journal of Pha m.icy, Ilagar recommends the follow ing in case of painful dentition : Chloroform, ten drops; tincture of Spanish crocus, hah a drachm ; honey, half an ounce; glycerine, one ounce. To he rubbed on tho gums to allay irritation. The process of curling feathers con sists in heating them slightly before the fire, then stroking them with the back of a knife, when they will curl. The increase in strength due to seasoning of different woods is given as follows: White pine, ! per cent. ; elm, 12.I5 per cent.; oak, 2(5.(5 per cent.; ash, -14.7 per cent.: beech, Ul.lt per cent. Shoe-dressing: Gum-shellac, half ( a pound ; alcohol, three quails ; dis io!ve, and add camphor one an I a half ounce; lampblack, two minces, j The foregoing will be found to give i an excellent g'os, and is especially adapte 1 to any leather the surface of which is roughened by wear. In filling up cracks in walls paint ers experience a great nnnovanco rom the rapidity with which the or dinary plaster of paris and water "sets." A icmedy will be found in using vinegar inste id of water. Mix the same as if water was used, and the re.-.uU will be very much like putty; the plaster will remain p'astic for about half an hour, finally becom ing perfectly hard. For the sharpening of tools, instead of oil, which thickens and smert's the stone, a mixttue o: glycerine and spirit is re ommended. The provir tions of the compositions vary ac cording to the class of tool to be sharpened. One with a relatively large surface ia best sharpened with three parts of glycerine mixed with 'ne p.ut of spirit. A graver having a small cutting surface requites only a small proline on the stone, and in such cases the glycerino should be mixed with only two or three drops of spirit. Dr. Jellinek has found that a tlrop of cocaine extract pioduces ana sthe ia of the larnyx, a point of the ut most importance in diphtheria and other grave throat-disoasos. Dr. chrotter made use of tho cocaine a short time back In operating on an old polypus. The operation was per formed with complete succoss in five minutes. The smell of paint may be taken lway by closing up the 'room and netting in the center of it a pan of lighted charcoal on which have been thrown some juniper-berries. Leave this in the room for a day and night, when the smoll of the paint will be one. Some persons prefer a pail ol water in which a handful of hay is soaking. ThiB is also effectual In" re moving tho odor of tobacco-smoko from a room. A clergyman in Central Illinois is reported to have startled his flock a low Sundays ago by the announce ment; " Homombor our communion services next Sunday forenoon. The Lord will be with" us during the morning services and the Bishop in the evening." " PNEUMONIA." 1 Why not Cull jyW Terrible Scourge by lta.Bigbtful N'muo? '" Many a strong, well-built man leaves home to-day ; before night he will havo-a chijl and in a few hours will be dead I ' . This is the way the dreaded pneu- monia takes Jiople oh". The list of;notablo men who are its victims is appalling. it sweeps oyer tne land like a scourge and destroys poor and rich alike, m 'T i riVL-i .bvervono ureAus it. its coming is speedy What causes it? 1 Pneumonia, we are told, is invited by a certain condition of the svstem, indicated if one has occasional" chills and fevers, a tendency to cold in tho throat and lungs, rheumatic and neuralgic pains, extreme tired feel ings, short breath and pleuritic stitches in tho side, loss of appetite, back ache, nervous unrest, scalding sen sations, or scant and discolored fluids, heart flutterings, sour stomach, distressed look, puffy eye sacs, hot and dry skin, loss cf strength and virility. These indications may not appear together, they may come, disappear and reappear for years, the person not realizing that they are nature's warn ing of a coining calamity. In other words, if pneumonia does noTcTairn ' as "a victim' the persons having such symptoms somo less sudden but quite as fatal malady cer tainly will. A celebrated New York physician told the Tribune that pneumonia was a secondary disorder, tho exposure and cold being simply the agent which develops the disease, already dormant in the system, because the kidneys have been but partially doing their duty. In short, pneumonia is but an early indication of a bright's diseased condition. This impaired action may exiHt for years without the patient suspecting it because no pain will be felt in the kidnevH or their vicinity and often it can be de tected only by chemical and micros copical observations. Nearly 150 of tho 740 deaths in New York Citv the first week in April (and in six weeks 7S1 deaths) were caused by pneumonia! The disease is very obstinate, and if tho accompanying kidney disorder is veiy far advanced, recovery is im possible, for the kidneys give out en tirely, and tho patient is literally suffocated by water. The only safeguard against pneu monia is to maintain a vigorous con dition of the system, and thus prevent its attach, by" using whatever will radically and effectually restore full vitality to the kidneys, for if they are not sound, pneumonia cannot be pre vented. For this purpose there is nothing equal to Warner's safe cure, a remedy known to millions, used probably by hundreds of thousands and commended as a standard spe cific wherever known and used. It does not pretend to cure an attack of pneumonia, but it does remove the cause of and prevent that ditease if taken iu time. No reasonable man can doubt this if he regards the personal ex perience of thousands of honorable men. When a physician Fays his patient lias either bright's dise'ase or pneu monia he confesses his inability to cure, and in a measure he considei s his responsibility ended. In many in stances, indeed, persons are reported as dying of pneumonia, heart disease, apoplexy and convulsions, when the real cause of death and so known by the physician is this kidney con sumptionThousands of people have it without knowing it and perish of it because their physicians will not tell them the facts ! The same fate awaits every one who will not exer cise his judgment in such a matter. A canvanser called on a Ao:king man fur his vote, but he was out, ami the wife put in an appearance. "What are the politics of your husband ? " asked the agent. "I'm not quite sine, but I fancy he is a Conservatory," was the re ply. (American Register. ays an exchange : "M. Pasteur's father was a tanner." We alwavg had an idea that the old man must have had something to do wilh bark, because his son is so familiar with it. Ha! ha! ha! Don't you 3co the point? No? Why hark, don't you see, dogs bark tan baik, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha. (Copy righted.) Peek' Sun. The offer of a Chicago merchant to pay several thousand dollars per annum for the privilege of suspend ing an illuminated business poster from the pulpit of a fashionable church in that city, has been respect fully declined. There are some discouragements under which tho industrial interests of tho country languish that Congress cannot abate Brooklyn Union. "Those are rather nice-looking sleeve-buttons you have on: pardon mo for asking of what material they are made?" "Dead gold." "Dead gold? " (examining them). "Well it must have been dead an enormously long time." "Why?" "Because it has been dead so iong that it has turnedinto brass." Har per's Bazar. Troud Parent "How's that for a babv?" Old Bachelor "Well, my ex- ririanco with babies is limited, but should think this one might possi bly bo worth bringing up. (Struck suddenly with an idea..) Why not try it?" Life. By the ueo of gold-coated selenium plates, Mr. C. E. Frills expects to accomplish tho important object of converting tho greater part of tho energy ol light into electrical en ergy," which may bo again trans formed into light as roquired. i! Overholt -DEALERS IN- GENERAL MERCHANDISE, CANYON CITY, Or. - A?y ... w. . . -lien PRAIRIE J. W. BATEF, Proprietor. The Culinnry Department is in charge of Cotnpeteut and Exj erienced C oks, who sn-f.-j n0 labor to do honor lo '.he palates of the Public. i'3: JE 23-IrL In Connection with this Popular Hotel is at all times supplied with the 13e:;t Brands of Whips, Liquors and Cig:rs. ir-C sami'u: rooms for comm? rcial !Rvvei.i:s:s. jz T IIOliNTOX WILLIAMS A ( tc: n ey-:it-T.:nv, CANYON Cl'l Y oRl'iiON Otlice at the court iiause. S S. DENNING. A( t o r ii ey-:i t-I.n -.r-Lo.vo Creek - - Oreoon .1 M-CCJLL'JUGH. Vo!:i.y Public. Canyon City - - Onrot.x flrofliee with M. D. Clifl'..rd l.ttnd AH pi." find Collfrtioin j'totnptly atten ded to. Jt.-itli and .Mort;.-i:i! drair, cm: cliaivcf rCi-')iil)'-. W. A. WitsiitHK. . Nat. ?! mon. Lnfcevii'w, Or. It'irn?, Or. WILSHIRE & HU030.1 Attorneys at Law LAKE VIEW AND lUMINS, OREOON. Will prai-tltw in the Circuit Court at Camoi.' City, ami licfore the I". S. Land Ollioc at Lake-view-. Any hn-diu-jx in the L.-ml OSice ontrnti -J to u1 will receive the most i:mni attention. tJST" Uutd rases solicited. F. C HORSI.KV.M l. Ci RA II t ATE OK Til E UNIVERSITY Ol I? wnsylva.-ua, April S, 1S-IA Canyon City, Crcpron. ("Mice in hisBi ngStore, .Main Street Irders for Drugs promptly filled. Xo professional patronage solicted in' rss directionsare strict! followed J. OLLIVER 0 1' I 3 ). ). ' I JohnDay Rfsilk Ran 1 Fresh milk delivered daily to my customers in dohn Day ami Canyon cities. Give me your or ders. Ouvr.u. Canyon-Mitchell RTAGK LINK! Jewctt & Tracy - l'mprietors. Sta; leaves Canyon City with the U. S. Mail at 4 a m. on 'Tuesday. Thursdav and Sahndav, and ar rives Monday, "Wednesday and Friday. CITY HOT ML MAIN STKKET Canyon City, Oregon, GROTU Sf THOMPSON Proprietors. Traveling men will find this a . pleasant and desirable placo at i which to stop. Give us n Tall S-KIS.Y'TAl- REGEN ERATO HtRVE TQHIU rerotvea all consequences .Il7udicti;renjttu. --yr.coaruffoiindTii fro-nh. rrc raikiieM of aiu J and bodj; Kem vbtlit jr. Srtn-1 Iiiaartion. Jrt Mnnlicoi, ntc oorlr.nrrqu nrl'iT.t.'r and r1orntlr-. Tar Ur U i- 3AEfi H. CO Uo J. UnL'tlo. H. Sf MuMriek run tr . - ii. X'lTY, OR. 7- E. MALL, AT THR- O Id Posfc0 ffics Building. DEAI.i.R l.N- Rogers Smith's Plated "Ware, WATCHES, JEWELP.Y, OUTLEIU Optical Goods an.i Stationery. CAKE3 C!T FULL HOLLER Flouring Mill. Littleton & Palmer Bros. Proprietors. Try our Flour ami bo om- con vinued that it is First-class in ev cry parsicu .v. Order.! Train a isttiuco Fromptl XttOA I I t ITJ?2?3FIIC Oanvov City Ohegon ltts or J-hi)1 itntle in do;. or lientl ruj.ilrtl. All Work V.V.rrajttra riri-el.w BIT SALOON!" JAXYOX CITY Oregon Hugh Smith, prop'r. khi: li 'iiori. ;t..oV tit ike Pur?, of WinH .n.' The n-M ci-r- in t te .VSnrkct. A Hrlitly urduriy l.ej i Riidnctcu 5U n n F cn. "Call Zcaln AT TUCKER jj- CARSON'S, Prairh City Oreg or s 1 Wh-r j-n:j c-tn srt drink f nrre?t Wine . and Unucrj, ir urnefcc a sood Cixar. HORTHERH 6R0WfJ FUKTS AMD SEED3 Arr ckno-ii..trd the hft, hi'iti? harfiler, more priMlartivp nd yield U. ti-r cn-p. ( -"ink n.i.usviiA ri?r MTi.ont.r ((b-.( .ul, h-u-t .11-1 v t I- rt AY fit CO , cr-iri". .v PETER KUKL. !L!?ery MM Stable. Horses boarded bv tho day or wetk at reasonable rates, and good TrtHfcV:, Stor U srotnii ami luLuii cut- of in III- lie: t H.-iliL- manner. T-Mil twit hj r d livi'.xd Ht any tjiur itf thedtj or nisht. Singh and Donbh teams to ht. Aj!-t: f rSt rk Wnllnr. ('rtf.tnd. Or., for 'we StuiiimSwr wa;iii. Empire roir.r. J. I. t.t. im! t!n,".li..r-, and a I ather iiwie ulMtt ittrrri--1 itlnir r .tMvu. Etcrytfting '.vfttraitti-d -ttd t the low ft prit-r. Canyca Cit, Grmit Co Crnou. Wbticctto Shecimocn . The- Sto.-kuien and residents of ."ihi.-.s V.dii-v and vicL.itv have rin:izd and ph-djed ibemstdves to tt.) ai! il-it llicv ca to keen )'i"t f their ir.net nt order lo prett-er their own sti;e.'c :.nd pro ne r Irii J.-wv t. TU'hkj Chi Mttck, J"t A. r-w. .tui lir--tlwr. r .- Unr-r. V,-)l,ii Si.t. :: d :;,tHii., K. II-.Hitl, j... A I. I'lh-i . " . I'H.it. J..ki Cr ' c Wi . !.. Cl-urK-t !:MiM. I - Selwi I i b. V. K. c..r. W. I). RakiT. CqiUvh- Mir. II. U. t-htHe. E Rii-ki-y. I.irtott Hili. J. I. --. V. M .at. r r"rKfri-: Vivt;trMHhl, K. illwir, A. lt..xaL J. W. Trt'. K.I nilTKle. ti-tl - St f a p "? Malaria, i-sver z:d Aau Dumb ChHs,Wtnd Colic, Biilous Attacks, eic. Tlioy i.roiluco regular, urtural evne u:ttfins it'vcr gripe or interlt-r with daily hiisinejcK. A.s a family tf-Urine. thev slumlil have a place ii; every household. Price, 2u ceitU per box. Sold Ever7wlier. OOicc, 44 Murray StM r. IT. ADVERTISERS Can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of advertising1 in American Papers by addressing Geo. P. Rovell & Co., Newspaper Advertising Bureau, lO Spruco St,, New "York. Send lOctc. for lOO-pga Pamphlet CT3 YOU CAI. BCT CM. the Meii ant! forfeit toixicro factory itt :Sn ttvrJ ii in Jersey City, N. J. X this fa:try n;iitc3 tie pt-pcl ard trld-famc-l Cr.ax Tlu -, l'..c ac'atmtlxcH stand arJI for jrit-cla chewiuj u!c:co. it th factory v.-aj csV.l.hcu as ago as t last yesr (i!CC) it rcatlc and sold the eaorn ous iHtantlty ft 27.jC.,.3o its. cr fourteen ll eu sand toss cf tobacco. .t tbtt was n:ors tlwa cnc-scvecth cf r.U the tf baccn made in the United State notwith standing that there were 9C6 factories at wart. f in the last 31 years this factory has helped support the United States Government tft the extent of over Forty-four million seven hun dred thoaml dolkrs (;i,;ixi,cuo.i) paid" into the U. S. Treasury in Interna! Ucvenuc Taxes. the pay-roll of this facttr- i about $t,oco,. 000.00 per year or $20,000.03 per vrcelc. . this factory employs aboct 3,500 operatives. : ihis factorj- nuiics such a wonderfully K&od chew in Climax Plus that many other factories have tried to imitate it in vain, nnd in despair now try to attract custom by oCeriws larger pieces of inferior foods for the fame price. t this factory nevertheless continues to increase its business every year. it this factory belongs to and is operated by J Yours, very truly, T. LORILLARD CO. n TV TOBACCO, ! . Am u t " ! ' w 1 h3- I r .'-.;Mt H fflBr. iy 1 "i -"iTrTTrTWirr"'' ' ""' sssa ! -Jr - T . w i T. a, w -t-rag-