Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, April 05, 1905, Image 2

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1 " ?? ? FOHTP MII ^ TIMES DEMOCRATn I DBLIBHED EVERY WEDNESDAY B. W. BRADFORD. .Terms of Subscription: '.One year 51.oo I Six months ...........'. 50 j months '.. .25] Correspondence on current subjects Is i Incited. but rut responsibility Is as- i Rumed for iItc* views of correspondents. I Anonymous communications will not] he published In there columns. On jppljrajlop to the publisher, ndvertlsfinc j'oti's are made knowp to those Interested. Fort Mill 'Phope (with long distance connections) No. ?tj. APRIL 5.1905. Aftur Ovntnit trots through with 1hn Cx tr his "suhjecta'-' promise to ! i ,L-.. I.;... ho.wi %.?(*? IJIIU III IKlll'li I Among those who nr<* moving for (fence moat effectively is n mod jgt old man named Oynmn. j Ciriaf'Tiher Columbus conld nof rend tli.- future or be would never have tnnde the mistake of discovering tSjinio Domingo. ^%> Atln? to society lendersnnnonnre f b??f kiHHini_r is going out of fueliinn. ! Here's where we refuse to longer j follow the sly leu. Chii h may ho the "innocent by- | ptander" in 1111 ^ 'mhurian light j lint she bus not loaned any money to either of the contestants. Those hall players whpare slow in getting into running condition should have spent the winter with the liuasiatt army. If disinterested friends would grab Kasha and force it to swallow 'he "peace do-e" against its will It nasi a might be much obliged. <%%> Qo\\ Folk Hays that Missouri lias fewer mortgaged men than any {State in the Union. She uIho has more than any other State, in jail. With Japan demanding SSOO,000.000 indemnity, the Czar may decide that men ar?* cheaper than money and that the war must go on. '%/%Mrs. Chadwick says she h?fl forgotten what she burrowed. That's n eoiuinon failing; but the person who lends always has a good memory. It is suggested that Colorado make her next election a guessing match. The plan niters some ad vantages over the present system of making it a slugging match. Rockefeller's $1(10.000 given to foreign missions may not be as g ?od as otfcer peoples money, but lie poor benighted heathens will never know the difference. Now an astronomer tells ns that JiliiH is inhabited and has a large number of canals.' The president may yet lie forced to draw upon .Mars for a man to do that Panama job. , I'll1 Standard oil trust has paid a tine of 5 100 in a Kentueky court. 1 '"here's nothing half way about thoso Kentuckiatis. When they .'lariinto mipple a trust, t!?ey ' never hesitate to employ heroic measures. Texas republicans are complain- ; ing because so many democrats are to be guests at the banquet to be tendered to President Roosevelt at Dallas. A banquet attended only 1 by Texas republicans would lie too exclusive to look anything like a llOIlll I HI" u-liln/un.i 4 ' - ' r , i,u 111iiuiioii a r hief rxecutive. The War. TIip war r>|>ernl ions in. Hip Fnr ! East during tlio pot week have been of Ii11importance in theinselses, ami more attention has been given to the alleged prospects (?f pein e than anything, else. A few days ago it seemed likely that negotiations for n termination of the war wou'd soon be under way, but Ihe situat" hi lins undergone a change which indicates that hoa- , 1 ilities may drag on at least fori s >ine months yet. It seems certain that the feelers regarding possible peace 'terms'' have been put out, but little, if niivthin?? thereby. Russia, it is stated, is sending frof*!i troops and supplies \o the field, hh fast, us possible, nnd from .Japan come reports tlmt fresh Levies <>f troops are being made and I continually forwarded to Manchulia. The Rumuhus now appear to bo centered around Gunshn Pass, a railroad station about 50 miles north of Tie Pass and some 175 tuileg south of Harbin, with the Japanese gradually pressing in on them. Reports Trom Ilnrbin indicate nnonsinesa there,* as if the I RussiauB were not by any means [ 3f >!?*"% ' . | certain Jtlityjt th^y can liojd flint J I point toy any lehgth of lime. If is said that women amii-hji' ' > 1 been ordered to leave Vladivostock, ( ! indicating thai the Russian* expect lh$ popt t(y hq put updei n'e?e j soon. | There jins been considerable j snow in lite section now occupied j by t lie armies, and the roads aye i petting in bad shape, which will ! doubtless retard activity on nny | pronounced scale. In tjie eyes of the world, as hps j hecp the ciit-e for months past. ! Russia is regarded as irretrievably j : defeat- d. ancj it is Ijard to divjne why the Czar should determine to , continue a hopeless struggle, with , the prospect ot indemnity growing daily.?Clnu lotto Observer. Alleged Murderer Captured. Charles Strait, colored, who. it in nHp'tred. allot nnd killed Will 1 Mobley in lower Foit Mill town- j ship on the l}Oth of November, lust, is now (routined in York jail awaiting trinj at the npprouehing term of pourt. Strait was arrested near Salisbury lnat week lipop a wai rant sworn out some time ago I?y : 'Squire J. W. MeEthauoy of Fort Mill. Constable ^hos. A. Mills went i up to Salisbury Friday and carried i his prisoner to York jajl. The murder with which Strait ! is charged took place last November at a tenant house on the plantation of Mr. \Y. J. Stewart. 2 miles south of Fort Mill, at which a dance, or hot supper was being held Strait, immediately upon i shooting hia man. took to the | woods and had not been heaid | from until a short time ago, wjien he was located and arrested at i Salisbury. World's Bloodiest Battle. The estimate by a correspondent I who is with General Kuiot)i|kin I that the Iohs on both sides at the i ! battle ? t Mukden were not least | Minn 200,000 men makes it appear 1 that this combat was fat the bloodj jest ever known. The largest number of troops 1 ever lief.,ro engaged in buttle was ai Arboln, in 1131 15. O., when 35,- ' 000 <1 recks, upder Alexander, put i it) run. a horde ol undisciplined Persians, believed tohavo numberi efi <.>r?q.ouo. Before the present war the bloodiest battle in modem history w.ts that of Leipzig, in ISIS, when 3f)0.- j 000 Germans defeated 171.0U0 French. The Germans lost -47,000 mid the French 150,000. The greatest battle ever fought i in this country was that of Getty*, j burg, in 18(58, when 117.000 Fed erals defeated (58 000 Confederates. Tint losses, including prisoners, were 17,000 Federals and 27.000; Confederates. The Confederates j hist 10 per cent, of their force, being the largest percentage of loss | ever known. I The number of men engaged at i ! Mukden is variously estimated at from 800.000 to 1,000,000. The percentage of loss appears to have 1 been between 20 find 25 per cent. I - Philadelphia ltecord. The News of Gold Hill. Editor Times: I hero is some sicknpsH among our m-ighhors, mostly colds, I think. But some claim to have grip (so called). The farmers are quite busy now planting corn and preparing to reduce the cotton acreage. There is a new girl at George MeKellar's and a new boy at , Dave Gibson's, but we will mention no others now, or some will be harping oyer'-production along' that line. Jinl don't, we beat Hob Tail on diversifying. Well, we thought when Uncle Sam gave ur free mail sorvice we would be fixed for nil time. And then we wanted 'phone eonnec- j tion. ()nr neighbors and brother1 Saiu H?'t 119 right along that line and still we hear some eompli\ininjg. They now pay they have little or no excuse f?>r visiting, audit have to (day at homo and attynd to their own buainess, and. as you know, that is a heavy burden on j some of iir\ Now, if cousin Sain, or any otner Sam, will remedy that de'ect to suit all, wo will crown him hero of all. Willi the advent of April, our 1 mind revertr back to tbe perilous limes we were having in Virginia ' forty years ago this week. Would ( it not be a grand sight to see all the suivivora of Leo'H army in liuti. RPL1XTKH. There is a friendly "war of 1 words" on over in Cherokee as to which of the (iafTney papers has the largest paid Hubscription in the county. One says that any "Misaonrian" who doubts its state. ] nieiit of the fact, they will show ^ him. while the other offers a tifty dollar wager that its claim is cor- ' rect. j In Memoriam. |.v,tda Mass v was .born a; j fin ? Mill, on Mare . lirjj l?sr>. and lived here uuin . years of ace, vrhen slip removed to j Hock Hill. Willi her(jrnnd-nioth- j er, fouj* uprlos unci three mints residing at Fort Mill, she whs a constant visitor to our town, and had made a latin* circle of friends. \Y hen quite a ch id, she was pand\z-d from tlie effects of men msretis. bqt. "on the aijvil of het will."link by link, she had broken (ho chains that bound Ijer, and bad j developed into a sweet and lovely maiden. A child of tjie Covenant, she! early cave her heart to the i'-itviqr, j and was taken liy IJitn on March 110.li., to bo with Hi pi and see His > tflorv. After funeral services at 1 her father's house, the remains I were onnjuiu to Port jhui, followed by the family and many friemlp. i She vvflH buried at Fori Mill, on : March diet., in the presence of a large crowd of weeping relatives' and friends, six of her first cousins acting mh pall bearers. She was sick only a few days and so rapid was the disease that news of her death cntpe as a shopk to her friendp Many and beautiful were the floral designs that covered In r grave ? tokens of af feetion from loving lutndg and lender hearts. "Rest, dear one rest, though tender ties nre riven, Flowers above thy pillow bloom. Thou wilt meet us. dear one, at flio gate of heayen, "When we have laid our bodies iu the tomb.1' ? A FRllSXU. The Pensioner ant! the TaxPayer. i ??? ( (Published by request.) It lias buen said that it is a poor conntry that docs not tukn care of its defenders, or those who endure the hardships of war and tight hor battles; but tho Confederate pensioner appears to he viewed in a different light to all other soldiers, la all civilized countries the peqplp are taxed either to build up the country or to maintain its laws and supjiort its subjects, ami the rate of taxation is us- j ually as high as the people can pay. In this jountrv the taxpayer who i.s forced by cruel and unjust laws to jiaj faxes on liis prnjjorty, valued at any amoiiiit, ranging from ? I o. it the oppression of his pension tax bear m# urut u f up'.j mm <111(1 iii?> .i.tiiu iy that lie seldom meets one of the pen- ' sinners without feeling tlpit t he old iniposter onglit to return his part of tho just money to him at onoo for the support of his futility, and often thinks if' it were returnetl it would pay tor a side of bacon or a sacof Hour. I will now stai<' how oft the poor taxridden people, who pay tax on tliousands worth of property, may honestly | call u)H)n each pensioner for his indi- | vidttal share of this pension robbery. It I have not read the tax rate wrong, tho < tux-payer who pays on $1,000 must \my I 10 cents eaeh year, and in one hundred | years he would j?ay $ 10. Now $1 is 100 cents, and $1 is 1,000 mills, and if we ' change the *1 > to mills we have 10.000 : mills. Now. this 40,000 mills divided among the 14, to.) pensioners would give , eaeh pensioner 4 mills every 10 ) years, or counting by the one cent, he receives one cent every three hundred years front the $U>00 proj<erty man. 'lite above is written for the benefit of the poor tax payers, that they may do- ' man 1 >>f eaeh pensioner- the return of the unjust money they receive as oft as it amounts t<> one cent.?Sledge Ham- 1 liter, in Messenger -Intelligencer. "* * Among liio Acts passed at the; recant ses i n of the General Assembly was one providing for the appoint inent by 1 lie Governor of n game warden in etc-h county. The duty of lite game warden so tip pointed will be to report at eneh term <>f court all violations of the laws for tin' protect ion of game a uti insectivorous birds. The game' wardens have no roil) t)c nan lion save i'xenipt ion from jury and road ' duty, and an to whether it will la* ! practicable to secure efficient officials ( u thin basis remains to be seen. In ?he meantime, however, the Governor stands ready to make appointments, and people interested will do well to take the matter! up with their respective comity , delegations. -? >. Our Heroes. fTnsoril???cl to "Splinter", with the ! b<?jH* that h?* will refresh us with some stories of the gallant hays who wore the gray.] We scatter flowers on our heroes' graves, batch proud Memorial day. And tender memories of years gone by, la the heart and soul hold swav. All honor to our hereon! tho living and dead! Who faced the lead storm with T oo And "made the clmrj*e with Jackson," When cannon loomed like a stormswept sea! I Neath fields of waving golden grain Dnr fallen heroes swtetlv sleep; Mi dear Martyrs, of a fallen cause We your memories green will keep. t hose yet with lis; Their rank tliimiod.) rhoir liair is silvered y.ich gray. And they hear their comrades calling From the peaceful euiup-grouud?far j away. Jf tl\j?ir liohly valiant deeds No facile pen can write the s'ory, And the onward sweeps of tho ages Will not dim their brilliant glory! Fopever on the heights of Fame Monuments of unsurpassed heroism they'll stand And we will cherish those who've onrs throughout our grand South-land. ?Ipso Dixit, -' " ? -r ?r-? A. (). Jones ??nr-?oo n f -" t< r uiV-Ur-ttme-<i r^vie h cm ft. . -.! imate ?>f thirteen and a half million ! ;. >>k for the last cotton crop is tlio i strongest arupment vre have seen as to why the acreage should be reduced this year. Always brin^ y nr JSmrs, Duller i and other pounriy J'roduce to A. i 1 O. Jotiea. ; < Tli.ore will he fiftv-thrpe 81111- i * [ days in tin' present year. T It ope , who find the'lSabbath a dull day ; 1 can console themselves, however, i in tlje thought that won't happen r again in 110 years. Fresh Pork, Beef and Sausage j always on hand at .Join s'. The census bureau on the 28th ! of March issued a bnllptin show- ] iiiLr the total crop of cotton ginned 1 for the season of 1005 to be 12,- . 507,782 bales. I Call at .Tones* and get yonr fresh Graham Flour and Uomc-Grouud j meal. i ] ? : v Tlie superintendent of a Inrge uiaiiufactui ing concern in Ta xing-| * ton last week received 2,200 one- j , cent stamps in payment of a bill i of $22 owed by a small dealer in a near-by town. CHEATED TO DEATH. Kidney trouble often ends lata lly, lint 1 hy choosing the right medicine, K. H |1 Wolfe, of I eartirove, la., cheateddenth. lie says: "Two years ago I hud Kidney ' Trouble, which caused nie great ]>aiu. ' suffering and anxiety, but 1 took Eleo- | trie l'.itiers, whieh effected a complete ' cure. 1 have also found them of great benefit in general deiiility and nerve trouble, and keep them constantly on hand, since, as 1 find they have no equal." W. 13. Ardrey, druggist, guar- I unices them at 50c. Many thousands of dollars worth ' of properly was destroyed in Santa , Barbara, (\d., a few days ago by a ' soy ere storm. LAST HOPE VANISHED. Wlion leading j?*n> si?that \V. M. bmithart, of i t kin. In., hud hicarable consumption. Ins lust hope vanished; but Dr. King's Now Discovery for Consumption, Coughs ami Colds, ; kept him out of his grave. He says:. "This great specific, completely cmred me and saved my life, bince then, I, have used for over It) years, and eousid- ' or it a marvelous thr<Kir and lung cure" I Strictly scientific cure for Coughs, bore Throats or Colds: sure preventivo of 1'noumonia, tiuarantoed, otic and ?1 00 ' . bottles a , Ardrey's Drug store. Trial bottle free. The celebrated JnpHiiese goner* nls, Oyntnn,'J'ngo, ()kn and Ivnroki arc I'reHbyteriniiH ? the three ' Inare elders in the church. FRIGHTFUL MTFFKKINU RK- | L1KVKD. buffering frightfully from the vim-I ] lent jM'isonsof undigested food, C. <i. ( Traysoii, of Lulu, Miss., took l)r. King's New ife 1 ills, "with the result," he ' writes, "that I was cured." All stomach and bowel disorders give way to their tonic, laxative properties. ?;"c at Ar- I drey's drugstore, guaranteed. Spot cotton 7 !-2 cents. ' A DAllKphVlL RIDE often ends in a sad accident. To heal t accidental injuries, use Hucklen s Ar niea balve. "A deep wound ia my foot, from 11 vi dkaMaii! " m'?Ua- fl-l.T. .. I ........ i. i- i m> ii.Hiiinri' j behaolo, <>1 Columbus, ()., "caused me groat pain. \ hysieiuns were l.elpless, I bat Bncklcn's Armea talve quickly ( hen led it." Soothes ami heals burns like magic. 2.*?e at Ardfey's drugstore. A woman cannot love lier neigh- | b?>r an herself, ? specially when tho i neighbor's cows nip ail of theenrly 1 plants ami the t-pi ing (lowers. i LETTER TO SMYTiiK & JONES. FORT MILL. S. C. Dear Sirs: Porterhouse, so much; neck, so much; nil the way down. Just no with paint. Dovoe leud-nnd zinc is the porterhouse. Nobody wants the neck; the between, soiue say, is j good enough for them. Hut Dovoe costs less, not more, than j between. Load ami-oil is between: it is the old-fashion paint But zinc lias come in. Zinc toughens while lead. Devon lead and-zinc is the paint that 1 wears twice as louir as lead ami-oil. I o Mr John N Doitel, Fair Iinven, N Y, t writes: f "MrCharlesHo'.lenliock,of thisplace, t painted his house three years ago with ? Devon lead and-'/ine; Ins father painted f at tl?e smut time with lead uud-oil. To* _ day ttie son s house looks us well a*-, the davit was painted, while the fathers r house has ail chalkc 1 off and needs painting very hadlv. Tho father says he will paint with Dovoenext time." Yours truly i ( F W i>r.voK & Co. ."I 1 r 1'. S. W 11 Ardrey &('<> . soils our paint. ' . i .. . .... ? .i i ,i i . - ..i. M ?> t Paint Yel l! liLt.uv l ok 7.V I to ?1 Oil with Dovoo's (Jloss ('arriag- \ Paint. It weighs .1 to s ?> s. mofetothe i pint than others wears longer and gi\?-s j \ a gloss equal to now work, b'ohl hy \V. B Ardrey AOil I < tsonth Carolina College ( OlTers Spring Course for Teachers? 1 Session from April 7 to May P.1. lf . o. . Apply to president for further iuforniatiou. 5 T | Siiff] Until Vou iiave Sec a IT BEATS 1 See Planter at Belk's oi 3VEc_ : SOU. RAILW^ soijTir rn.iu ycj. 25 T.v Cljarlqttc '>.00 p. ,vr " " 2/ " " il.Uo a. it 5-"J ,, ,, ?? ">0 p. ? ? 33 ? ,, 84 3 a. ,, NOR'111 Praia No. 26 Lv Chester 1 .<K) p. ,r >. ,, 23 " ivola. 2.10 p. ' ? 30 ,, .. 6.10 u. ' >. 31 ,, " 72*1 i>. ' Nqte?Fort Mill is n regular stoi>itiS 2U. 33 and 31. wljieh s'qp eu lis?1 .? Cabbage Plants & &u Cabbage Plan's for sale, and nqw rculy ir.d "Ohurlestou 1 .urge Type VYakefdd", lead in rotation as named. "Succes-.on," Flat Dutch," tin* 51 bqst Hat-head vaiotio Single thousand, > 1.30; 3,?K)0 and <>v r s?l r? mis: i ash with order: or. goods shit C >ii money. Our plant beds occupy 3 acre tndersiami growing them in the oj. u air .ere col?t without injury Plants cnted t A'u have -peeial l<nv rates for tramp irtati 'out rate" plants slxipjied from my arm. ? tj'1't..and name, and grown fr>>m ligh ; nost reliable seed houses in the C'rted S my di^itisfied customer ;\t end of eusou Our Cut toil Seed: Pint of on: 1 : : Stu his your in Charleston on IV ?. 32c 10 bushels and ovi r i\ per Im. i My specialty: l'vompt Shipment .True i.ivt been in the plant business forthirty VV (y C.t'i" if e "The Cr.bbap'riant . V liol ai\ , ,.us| tV. le-.,,.,. Colgate's (joods. Coji^ate'e; S ?nps ,, IVrftur.os ? Dental Powtltv ,, Viohd Talcun Dosmeticiue J livery >ne a premier in iU i^ie. Yuu have to know iiiyhty little to kpoyy what tin, word 4*C loute " on uooda fi n<lts Fi i. We have a hi^' assort mint. Ard rev's !)rugstere. Work Well Done/ o . Tlav e you Table C'loi ha, (;ou liter- ! paines, Doilies, Window Curtains, blankets, etc., laundered hy tin IV'Iodcl Steam Lajndry, of Charlotte, N, C. Prices for laundering t ? ab >ve t!tides cheerful y fnruisln d. Suits pressed doe; suits d y leaned and pressed. .Ve; suits; washed and pressed, 75c; coat or pants pressed. 15c; cleaned and pressed, 25c; skirts pressed, 25 ; deancd and pressed, 50c. < >ur shipments are made Thtirslay mornings and returned Satin lays. VIcElhaneyvParks Co, The Clotiiir.t an J ShorDr, W.H. Wakefield, cf Charlotte, s now limiting his v/ork to EYE DISEASES ami j FITTING GLASSES. | If, having ceased his regular visits to ithnr towns, mu be consul tod .it nil inies mi his olliff'J 5 'J'rvoii St. 1 ?'s ur consultation .?i.i>0 mid nj> acou'ding o tilt- uuluulty of the case. < classes ' :2.50 and up according to lenses audi ranies. l-lN-Uin I lO Ol'It FUl!<kNl)S!i ! We nre now local ?1 at 124 1", ^onneil afreet, Salisbury. N. I'., mtl a 'licit your trade. We huv? ?i hand a c<an|>lct?* line of the > ?t Whiskies. Wini s. Brandies. , file , and ran supply your wan s villi nnyiluiii; hi nur lint*. Our dr. M. A. Teeter, formerly of 'iiarlottivhas personal supervision ?f our shipping department and ill mail orders roreive prompt ami lareful attention at his hands. Ask lor price list and order dank with your order. ^Y. II. 5IOOYKK & CO.. I iA Lit;5 111 * in , N. C. Phono 21$ i I 4 I ~ -r~* ~~*f ? ? .-yr^M? f. A N'T >1R T-fJl l?^ J.( .1 Vhi ^ 'W \ # M' j!ec. nit I n* ention. rHEM ALL. Mills & Young's jStores, HOOD. SCHEDULE, SOUND. ? Fqrt Mill 0.50 p. Ar Chester R 30 ,, 0.4') si. ,. Uulu. 10.15 .. 10.21 p. ?' " 125 8.11 a. " " 11.811 i SOUND. F. rt Mill 2.40 p. Ar Charlotte 8.C ; ? <1.111 p. ,, 7.0. p " 0.13 :i. ., ., O.fcO '. " ? 0.30 p. " " 10.0r t ]M>int for all the above trnius, exctv Nrs. 24 and 20 do not run ^inlaysIsland Cotton Seed. for delivery. "Early Jersey Wakuflei.)' , two earliest sharphejid varieties a.er ' "Augusta Trucker*1 and "Short Sto: sand head in rotation asj named. Prict^ 24 per i iik); 10,000 and over $1 per 100 . O 1) , purchaser paving return charg*son South Carolina a Coast, and v ; tough and hardy; they will stand sc or ohipnieut weigh 20 lbs. i?er 1000 an ion V?v S uit 1;-rn Express Co. No chc. 1 guarantee those that I ship to be tT . grade seeds pureham-.d from two of t tales. 1 will refund puvcluiBu price . i. ph vat lety of fea Island Cqtton n per |*>.ui(l. S?t?:i p r lm.; lqt Vari?>t ios nml S:jtislucd Cnstomor*. '-liivu yt .us. y-;11' Voimn's Island, S. When in the Mark ' FOR GOOD WHISKIES \\ IN EvS, lillAXDIES, ET< CALL UN OR WRITE JoItlxx MoyL 1J. O. Box 97. SALISBURY, - N. ( , * ^ r ./ i t * > C./r'N ' it'i a Pc". t X !. ? vsli.p . r:vr.y~ ' ; . ? I > J i'y.l! a 1 I)! tag I < ' ' ' ''' -i; ; ",nv,: ?9 | : n ! t i itr . mo... ! <c yj . i L'l , ?TC. S :TaB;;S. How ?.. a ? 5 | y ..l . < ' . tl . li'C uuf.. i . .. k .imli g r ? r. T E, V Tl iw Tl ' Rj ' " " ' i; ' ' ! *1 O ! 1 ?..!. ..u. u.1 ? fcjr ' ' ?' ' 1 * i ' : ' ' > . a gi, ::V\ ; ! r.r.r.' : r j. STMJft M3A801 GuLCJ. I cmsoprti t-.v uq, maso. u. c. a. a. n\. xpCRitKce. <in cHAnors ARC T. Somt ui"J* 1, |<b?toor iilc?t?]i (or W iiud (r>^> r\:poi I on |uUunbUillily. K (NT aiiK.h ro;i<lii(tod bofotv All fij .if* ohtalncl thr. \i?>? ??. ADVER- l| OLt>, tr.?. TRAOC-MARKS. PEN- otj COPYRIGHTS nulckly olvIAluod. R. Ke U. 8. Patent Otrice, V r. vei*z:-2BM~*ssmmn? smMini irii ? si KDLI-tms couch g L^-CUHE vkf LLfNCSj j lvi Or, king's I I Disoovere | /Consumption prica R I run oiiu 50c & $1.00 bj ^OLOS Freo Trial. ? 9 8<<.-( .t nnil (luuTke t<r. (jure for all U j| THROAT ? u; LUNG TROUB- B ?r "^iVn,LTm" [ iC|iB*i f ^ V?rcrapt v piocji .t OUHOFEB. 8?flmo !cl, ?l ' ^ A, * P i .r frif r- (" en |<itrntaM!itr. Mo< V !!# ? VV Alnd .mil - ti i IV.tcntamr I Trui* M*rk?. vv Vi r. ?? t? rii.3 cvt r t?? i nv ti t<o - sj' V PATF.NT LAWFSK3 OF VtAUS" PRACTICE.3) A} ?0,G00 PATLNkJ PfU'GUf.FD THMUGH THtM. <A f. All '.III c r.tl.. .ViUliU It'll I.' o V>n-viif YiJ r?to 'i*r^?? (V S'**rC. A. SNOW & C04 ^ PATENT LAWYERS. A * Oop. (J S. Patent Oft.r-, WASHINGTON, 0. C.^ .w?s