Newspaper Page Text
-gHES OH PATENTS.
HOW TO 6 — ET TWENTY-fIVt rtUS-
B8 EP dollars for nothing.
inner H*» “ Clear G,n of *
w
jj,naJI Fortune, f,lie
Have Potent- ‘Bat Ma F
Bring Them In Still
Wore.
j WunW y<>« like to moire twenty-five h«n-
[ 1 > 0U wouM 8 “° ' a rrad “ a> j*!**’ *° 1,0
Ui (■>»"« n ' 1 '
for inventions, but it
'“luiWr t0 Ivy,I to inventive handle tlwwauds talent at more, large in ibere tins
HP?* . “jZi practical uotbine results. but encoqrage- Tliaten-
“flgerlient tonrodnee I’rcse Ht-ims Company
Sole the
»*!*•.
jjyp SO HARD AS IT SEEMS.
^V^Mte tutt e^.u eitnpl-, bj and absurdly cheap trivial ones-the that
thing® hat would fctl Somewhat
^ r iti2cn the attention
ashamed ol bringing them to
! M^ a °” ,°" ,B ,ie hu
° »av a at the P r ? rC '
SSta. Bfram patents been on all sufficient hte marvelous to pay
Xe have not lint the
robt of his experiments idei 1 fastening bit man of
SSTSl k conceived the o a
to a child’s ball bo that it
«ytsS» Shut the through whole bridiant « hundred result and rests fifty
tlte'neeille Ca the simple tho device point of putting instead thi of eye at the of
at
other end.
THK IiITTLK THINGS THE MOST
VALUABLE.
i rnmparalively few people regrrd them-
L Tu, M inventors, bat. almost everybody
been struck, at one time or another,
with ideas that seemed calculated to reduce
gome of tho little frictions of hfe. I dually
„,.|i ideas are dismissed without turther
8
f tt "VVhy'don’t windows the that railroad they company cun bo slid make up
I Its car so breaking the pv.KseuKers
I and down without .f 1
! hucts?”exclaimed the traveler were
! running the road X would make them in such
* *§Tt*t was the man grumbles thnt made the cook. this sauce ‘He
tuu thinking of?"
I «...-er Imd to work over a stove, or he would
have known how it ought to huve been
[ etiatig wliois such lutefor a collar brcaklust. button! "If growlH I were the in
: man
the bumnefla IM ma.ko*that woiildn (
0 p oat or break off, or oat th«
back of my Beck.” sufferers forget •
And then the vurtous tin think of
shout their grievances and be to
something else. 11 they would sit down at
the next convenient opportunity, put their and
ideas about ear windows, saucepans, mid
collar buttons into practical shape, find
then apply for patents, they might
I themselves ns independently wealthy as the
I Ba: i who invented the iron umbrella ring.
! or tiic one who invented the fifteen puzale.
A TEMPTING- OFKKlt.
To induce people to keep trnek of their
bright ideas and see wh it there U in them,
thel’rsss Claims Company has resolved to
Oder a prize.
To the person who submits to It the
simplest and most promising invention
from a eonimereial point of view, the
company will give twenty-live liuu-
d.ed dollars In cash, In addition to re¬
funding the fees for securing the pat¬
ent.
It will also advertise the iuventloi
free of charge.
The offer is subject to the following condi¬
tion:
Every competitor must obtain a patent He
lor his invention through *he company.
mint first applv lor a preliminary dollars. searcb, Should the
cost of which will bo five
this search show his invention to be un-
psteatable, lie can withdraw withoutfurther
expense. Otherwise he will be expected to
complete his application and take out a
patent iu the regular wav. The total ex¬
pense, including Govern merit and Bureau
sw, will'be seventy dollars. For this,
whether he secures the prize or not. the in¬
ventor will have a patent that ought to be
» valuable property to lilm. The priqp will
be awarded liy a jury consisting of three re¬
putable patent attorneys of Washington,
intending following competitors should fill out their the
blank, and forward it with
applications: «--,--,1892.
“I submit the within described invention
I in competition fur the Twenty-five Hundred
Dollar Prize ofisred by the Press Claims
Company. >•
II ____ ______
bHO blanks in this competi¬
tion.
This is a com potion of rather an unusual
nature, it is common to offer prizes for the
bert story, or picture, or architectural plan,
all the competitors risking the U>i*r of their
labor and the successful one merely selling
biafor the amount of the prize. Hut the
Press Claims Company’s off*»»• is something
entirely asked different. Each person is merely
to helD himself, and the one wno helps
himself to the heat ml van tuge is to be re-
wardedfor doing it. The prne is ouly u
stimulus to do something that tfoald be well
worth whom, doing without it. The architect
jeertain competitive plan for a club house on
corner is not accepted has spent
ms labor on something of very little use to
mm. Butth'f person who patents a simple
aad useful device in the Tress Claims Com*
competition, need not worry if he
wBto secure the prize r(e has a substan¬
tial result to show for his work—one that
•^command its value iu the market at any
Je muly work lihiin man who uses any article in his
ought to know better how to iiu-
it than the mechanical expert who
BtBdies it only from the theoretical point of
***• (hit rid of jthe idea that an improve¬
^ ment The «an be simpler too simple the to better. be worth The patent-
«to best person
succeeds in combining simplicity
“td popularity, will get the Tress Claims
^UPlfra '^npany’s iponwibilitv twenty-live of hundred this dollars. may
wjSqged from company
the fact that its stock is held
2 >^n.oithe about three United hundred of the leading news-
AUdrPHH Staten.
the Press Maims Company, John
•kT* «"« fc. i mrn W„ > WaBlnuEton. managing attorney, C. (118 1'
V.
If KOI) SANT INFORMATION ABOUT
* letter o r pos tal curd to
-WWEDDMBURn, DERBURN cifiAtni ' (oMPAinr, Attorney,
WABHISOTOH, . Managing D. C.
Ildren.C » Soldiers and Sa..o,. parent^ disabled In the line 8 of '
l»e Army or Nary aim the war.
.CURES.’.
FBTE R S.
Dr. .1, W. N* lulu h iyv:
Atlvwta. G*., August U. 1898.
b or tho bant twn yeurs 1 haw used King’s
l»oyiil (lormoluor in my practice and with
m<«t waf.iwlaotory reamte. I have nseil it in
l’.Yplui-. l'y[ihi.id a .1 Bilioti * levers, and
always with the speediest and beat effect*.
It love:s f ile temperature and breaks up
levers of all kinds common to this lati ude
more nowledge. exp. diously than auy remedy within
mv < From my own experience in
itsuse, whom n on my elf and upon others to
I have recommended ond administer¬
ed it ; 1 believe it would be u good remedy
lor Yellow fever. It is a most, excellent anti-
ceptie., cures f'atarrh. Insomnia. Night
Sweat* and Eczema in all its forms. k i g’g
Royal Oermetucr is emphatically a safe rem¬
edy and leaves no injurious effects in the
system. Johm W. Nrn.us, M. IX,
Mayor, lies I End, Ga.,
$1.00 A BOTTLE, SIX FOR $5.00.
Oermetner ''ills are tho best. Fifty in a
J. bottle, N. 25c. For sale by N. B. Drewry and
Harris t Co.
G.sS.R. NOTICE
We take I his opportunity of informing:
our siibHisribors that the new Commissioner
of Tensions has been appointed. He is an
old soldier, and we believe that soldiers and
their heirs will receive justice at his hands.
We do not anticipate that there will be auy
radical changes in the administration of
pension affairs under the new regime.
We would advise, however, that U. S. sol¬
diers, sailors and their heirs, take steps to
make application at once, if they have not
already tho early done filing so, in order of to secure the benefit
of theii claims in ense
there should bo any future pensiou legisla¬
tion. Such legislation is seldom retroactive.
Therefore it is of great importance that ap¬
plications be filed in the Department at the
earliest possible date.
If U. 8. Soldiers, Sailors, or their Widows,
Children, or Parents desire information in re¬
gard to pension mattors, they should write
to The Press Claims Company, Wash-
ngtoti, !>. Cl, and they will prepare and
send tho nectary applicatiou. if they find
thorn entitled under the numerous laws en¬
acted for their benefit. Address
PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
John Wcdderburn, Managing Attorney,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
. P. O. Box 385.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
fmmm
bfUCCM vi u.r ChiclUMUr-a JlruMh
in Ki Take
es. i with . rubscitu-
_ other, ikl lefutt dangerout
CBlS.w.rCiMl'* 1 CWNji iiafr gf*
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleaiue* and beautifies tho hair.
1 Pruiiiotr* a loxurianl growth.
; Wrvov Falla to Uestore Gray
Unlr to its Youthful Color*,
-es fiOr, scalp sndtUCat <t!*rn»c.* & Druggists hair lalliiif.
f wmsaoms&m'!tsx i i v e
tVeak Parker’s Gincer TOBiC. 1 1 P»in,Take cures the worst Cougn,
i>eak lAinrs, lAingm Debility, iAebiiny, Indigestion, imiifcnion, ruin, iase in tune.50cu.
cure for Corns,
k CO.. N.. Y.
WHEN AT THE
WORLD’S FAIR, ch.cago,
lie sure to call at the uuiquo exhibit of
LIEBIG COMPANY’S
EXTRACT OF BEEF
in the northeast part of tho AfittlfiliLTUBAL
HIJILIUNO, north a sle, iu the Uruguay De¬
partment anti get a
FREE CUP
of delicious, refreshing
BEEF TEA
made from the world-known
Luma COMPANY’;* Extract of Beef.
WESLEVANFE«JJ,E t l»8TIT0TE
Opens Sept. (»*, 1893. Climate and sorroondinrs remodeled, ex-
CHptuiuat Haiidsotna repainted bcnldinaa, inside being and outside,
th urouglily refurnishiu i-onovate<l. Steam
and bath with new pianos, carpets, floor. N— few ac. Labora- T
heat, thoroughly gas light, e»jiiipt>ed rooms on 2" every experience*! teachers, * “■'
tory Enptfch, Ivttm. Germi French,
Advanced Courses in i, board-
&c. Spc<’i'tl advAnt.igtxs in Mufic and Art. *•
fng pupils fro m States Terms moderate. Fi r CaU-
loguob of this celebrated old Virgrinia _ School, ------- address
W.W. KOBKltT.SON. I’rn., Staunton* Stnunt Y»
VIRGINIA COLLEGE
For YOUNG LADIKS, Roanoke, Va.
Opens Sept. 14,1893. A beaatilul and at¬
tractive college home. New Modern buildings,
among the finest ill the South. Im-
provemtnta. New Piano3 and furniture.
Campus ten acres, magnificent mountain
scenery; In valley of Virginia, famed ior
health. European and Ameriean teachers.
Full course. Advantages in Music and Art
unexcelled. For catalogue address the Pres¬
ident. IV, A, HARRIS, D. D.,—I
Roanoke, Virginia.
Carats, Tttda-marks, Design Palonts, CopfrigMs,
And all Patent business conducted for
MODERATE FEES.
Information and advice given to inventors without
charge. Address
PRESS CLAIMS CO.,
JOHN WEODERBURH,
* , Xianr.ging A ttorney,
P. a Box BBS. irzignMKF AC.
v* manap^d by coratbln*tkm
Y? TfaB company Is »
the t^rgest and most Influential ncwsfaipers in the
I'nltedSUtcs, fort he express purpose of proteet*
Ins tlu^ir aub«A*rIbs»r» n^ainst unscrupulous
and Incompetent Fa:cut Asents, and each piper
printing this advertisement vouches for the rnpOMi
MUty and high stand ins of the Press Claims Company
WORK FOR OS
Do^itively have the best business to offer an
found oj th« «»«
ESS'™ %-s S’™
that all succeed the business from the reap start... the advantage "Jj® thut
hoM of 04 t>n< '. ® f F he
arises from the .
that the business so reaa.iy
SwAiaeaa a a uss
A CHMCE TO SOAR.
Men of Learning Attend the
World’s Congresses,
AHB ALSO MSI WHQ RA7E WHEELS.
Effbrt » to Draw Aside the Veil Which
Hides tlie luipenetrabla and Intangible
—A Visit to the Javanese Theater In the
Midway llalsanee—Alleged f[r-;......--- Fun of the
SftFeg**......* v ?Ny •
Some World’s Faxb. Atig. ki\- [Specif.) -
amuuemeut and a groat deal of In¬
formation is furnished by that remark¬
able series of world’s congresses running
concurrently with the Columbian exposi¬
tion. They are held down town in the
great Art institute, and of late tho largest
hall has been packed by those anxiouwto
hear men of world-wide reputation on all
the higher themes. But it is a ruleiu
these United States that whenever » grand
discussion Is advertised on flnanoe or re¬
ligion, spirits of grain or of Jugt men
made perfect, or any other exciting topic,
the great army of tho queer and cruzy
make haste to rush in. Every man with
a “bug" wants to be heard and every man
with wheels In his head, be it on finance,
the social evil or the future of the human
sonl, wants to show the meeting how the
wheels go round.
And really there are more learnea men
who have "bugs” than I had suspected. I
heard one of them the other day in the
African congress. He demonstrated to
his own satisfaction that the whole hu¬
man race was once black, and that the
whites, browns and reds are merely off¬
shoots or modified types. Another speaker,
a colored clergyman, took up the old-time
southern view and demonstrated it from
Scripture: That tho black people are the
descendants of Ham, and added that civil¬
ization took its rise among the Hamites
and that Greece and Rome lenrned the
best part of what they know from the peo¬
ple who wore the ancestors of the negroes.
It was a very encouraging address. Fred
Douglass very appropriately wound up
the African congress, which excited more
Interest than any other to date, with a
savage onslaught on the World’s fair au¬
thorities for "excluding the negro from
the exposition.”
Over one hundred congresses will have
been held when the fair closes. July was
given up to education; August, law,
science, philosophy and architecture; Sep¬
tember to labor and religion, and October
to public health and agriculture. The
largest halls in the Art institute seat 1,500
each and there are many smaller halls, so
several congresses are usually in session
at tlie same time. All last week was
given up to the Psychic congress and a
very remarkable affair it was—so Interest¬
ing that it was actually painful. Men and
women of profound learning, whose lives
have been devoted to matters beyond the
scope of sight or other sense, soared after
the infinite and dived after tho unfathom¬
able and strove to draw aside the veil
which hides the impenetrable and the in¬
tangible. And as to the result Professor
Elliott Coues, chairman, made this confi¬
dent prediction: "It is expected that
psychical and science will be stimulated by the this
congress a close comparison of re¬
sult obtained by different individual ob¬
servations will serve to encourage all alike
to renewed effort. The authoritative pro¬
mulgation of facts by this congress in
psychical science must act as an educa¬
tional lever of great power for good and
react upon many popular errors. It is
probably not too much to expect from this
congress a marked effect upon human
morals and social ethics with even a
remedy for many existing ills and
wrongs.”
*
* *
I thought I could afford to wait else¬
where for these grand results and went for
a rest to the Midway plaisance, as I gener¬
ally do when 1 grow weary of science and
high art. And every time I go there I am
the more oonstrained to say, how very
much like children all these uncivilized
people are. They have much tlie same ca¬
prices as boys, yield to similar impulses
and have upon the whole about the same
general code of morals. As X look on the
gambols of the Dahomeyans and Javanese
my own boyhood comes back to me. “The
past rises before me like a dream.” The
whole Javanese village, theater and fence
included, is bnllt of wickerwork. The
theater is a really commodious affair and
well arranged, yet all the walls and
screens mingled are of plaited stuff, block varieties and
white to form unending
of squares, diamonds and notched work.
The taste of the race is shown in every de¬
tail. Even the post which holds the elec-
trio light is wrapped In matted grass and
the water pouring Into the central tank is
made to turn a bamboo wheel and pro¬
duce a monotonous music on two wooden
drums.
In the theater a dozen musicians pro¬
duce a continuous din which is at once
varied and regular, the effect being of the
plaintive or melancholy sort. The female
aotora, dressed in most gorgeous robes,
moved in such a gentle and gliding way
that it scarcely seemed like acting at all
till the first act closed with a sudden out¬
burst and by pantomime we were made to
understand that the crisis demanded the
appearance of the gods upon the scene.
First came the chief deity with an im¬
mense white mask and took his throne,
with inferior deities on each side, all Bit¬
ting cross legged. Then the devils came,
with hideous black, yellow and dwarfs. green
masks and then the comedian
There was a sort of trial judgment pro¬
nounced, the contestants fought it out
with clubs and the Bbow was over, but
what it meant no spectator knew. As the
audience dispersed the musicians sur¬
prised us by playing Yankee Doodle and
America in pretty good style.
*
‘ • •
When I was a boy in the wilds of west¬
ern Indiana we used to say there were
three sorts of fellows no decent boy ought
to stick up for. One was the boy who
slipped up and hid our clothes or tied hard
knots in our breeches legs when we were
swimming in forbidden waters. It was
necessary to be lively in those days, and as
we wore nothing in the summer season
but hats, shirts and pantaloons, a boy
could dress in half a minute and in an¬
other half be in a thicket not penetrable
by a man. Another detested character
was the boy who would pick a fight and
run and complain if he got whipped. But
the arch criminal was the boy who owned
up when he didn’t have to. If he stood
out awhile and tho teacher whaled him,
we could forgive his telling. Well, these
savages have the same code. They hay*
gGMTCHEDJEM MONTHS
Ed A troublesome skin disease caused
me to scratch for ten month s, and was
cured by a few days’ H. Wolff, use of nPOil BQRB
M. Md.
Upper Marlboro,
SWIFT’SjpECIFIC
1 was cured som e years ago o f White Bweiling
in my leg by o3in and have had no
symptoms of reBES9 physicians ura ot attended tho < ! 1 *:
ease. Many foiled; prominent S. did the work.
me and but 8.8.
FALX W. KIRJCfATmCK, Jfttowa City, Two.
Bwirr 6PK3FJ0 Cowast,
been fighting nnumg ilictusrlves to n se¬
rious extent, especially the Arabs, but be¬
fore white judges or inquirers they are
mum.
Their alleged fun has an awkward re¬
semblance to that of boys. Their women
act very much like little girls who are
anxious to play but half afraid to. And
some of their sports are very rude prftcM-
cal jokes, just os ours t/ere some forty
years ago. In those days we had very lit¬
tle trouble about drying our hair when we
came out ot the water in a harry, for
thoughtful mothers usually kept it short
enough to keep other boys from patting
cockleburrs in It. I well remember what
fun it was when a new boy earns to school,
from some neighboring center of refine¬
ment, Greencastle or Crawfordsville, for
Instance—a boy with long curls, adclicate-
llpped and soft-skiuued blonde of a boy.
How the fingers of our little reprobates
did Itch to get into that hair, and how
they did "rub it in” when they got there.
Now, I fancy that boys of eight or ten or
twelve are nothing but modified savages.
They quarrel and make up, day roll over good and
hug ouch other, fightono und are
friends the next, very much like those
wild people on the plaisance. But there
is one serious difference. While the boys
are only temporary savages these wild
folks are permanently grown up boys with
the passions of men, and they hold malice
a long time in two classes of cases. These
cases, of coarse, are such as pertain to
women and religion—the two subjects on
which half civilized people cun get up the
biggest amount of “mad” In the shortest
time. Boys also have a profound dread of
authority, especially of the law. These
dark races haven’t Boys can be separate¬
ly examined and caught in a lie if they
have made up one. With these Arabs it
is more fan to beat the law than it was to
do the original devilment. The result is
that white wen put in control of them
nearly always adopt arbitrary methods iu
a little while. The Chinese, however, are
said to excel all other races in evading the
law themselves.J and cotfceaUng what is done among
They have got it down to an
exact scici
Dahom«ran I will^ot bore go so is far man as and to say brother— that this
a a
I may want to run for office some day—but
he acts so much like the boys of my time
did and as many of tbcm, I fear, would
have continued to act if they had then
been turned loose, that I cannot but sym¬
pathize with him. The boy who it not in
actual pain and is not hungry forms no
plans for the future, and lives entirely in
tlie present. It is just the same with these
blacks. In short, the childhood of the
man is a good typo of the childhood of the
world. Turn a lot of boys loose in the
woods for a day and they invent very
much as tho savages did. They pass
through the “Stone Age,” selecting the
IMAGE DECOBATOB— JAVANESE VILLAGE,
most suitable stones, muscle shells and
tho like for implements. The strongest
and most daring boy assumes tbt leader¬
ship. He Is chief of the temporary tribe
and the little savages obey him. Yes, ft
appears plain that science can arrive at
the course of social evolution most surely
and rapidly by studying the ways of our
own dear little savages.
1 have at last found something real
naughty on the plaisance. It is at the
Persian theater which has resumed after
a temporary restraint. The warning
checked the performers for awhile, but
they have now turned loose worse than
ever. Thelargeroom was well filled when
I saw the danse du ventre there and at
least fifty ladies were in the audience.
The performance generally was fiat be¬
yond ray power to describe, but as each
successive dunce grew a little more rank
the male lookers on shouted and laughed
and jeered till the place was like Bedlam.
The ladies looked on it very much us they
would on the antics of a lot of lunatics
which in truth it too much resembled.
But I shall not describe the particular
Persian mode of that singular Oriental
dance. It certainly is "suggestive.” And
to complete the parallel above outlined,
It is remarkably like certain ridiculous
performances I have often seen among boys.
*
* *
Of future events at the fair a very Im¬
portant and interesting oue will be ths
Fishermen's festival and displays on Sept.
19 and 20. It is announced that nil the
fishing interests of the world will be rep¬
resented, and all the boats and imple¬
ments used in fishing will appear in the
procession. There will be the skin kayak
of the Esquimaux, the Hawaiian canoe,
the dugout, tlie catamaran, tlie Malay
outrigger, the whaleboat, New England
dory and everything else in that line. At
the congress papers will lie read by ex¬
perts, and all the queer things discovered
and seen by fishermen will be exploited,
from the youth of St. Peter to the success
of Seth Green and his successors.
J. II. Beadle.
The Antwerp Exposition.
The American propaganda has been ap¬
pointed the authorized agent of the Inter¬
national exposition to lie held in Antwerp
next year, and will also act as the com¬
mission for the United States to that ex¬
position. It is not tho intention of the
propaganda to appeal to congress for an
appropriation, as has been customary
hitherto in foreign expositions, but on the
contrary to place the burden of expense
upon the exhibitors who are to be the di¬
rect beneficiaries of the exposition. The
American propaganda is at present en¬
gaged in the formation of an honorary
commission to represent the United States
at the Antwerp exposition. It is intended
to include in this commission President
T. W. Palmer, Charles Henrotln, the Bel¬
gian consul at Chicago, the ex-ministers of
the United States to Belgium, the Bel¬
gium ministers at Washington, all the
Belgian consuls in the United States,
prominent manufacturers interested in
export trade from every state in the
Union, and all the chiefs of departments
of theChicago exposition. The entire ex¬
pense of the commission will be borne by
the propaganda.
BMwmuts fEMAU?
MegulaWJJesI i^m^lSE^SES
JV^
PA
FOR INVENTIONS.
of the incompetency or inattention of the attorneys employed to obtain their
patents. Too nmich earn cannot be exercised in employing Competent anil reii-
able solicitors to procure patents, for the vatee of a patent depcildsgrestly, if not
sntuely, With upon the care and skill of the attorney.
the wievr of protecting inventors from worthies* or careless attorney*,
xml of seeing that inventions are well protected by valid patents, we have rc-
tsmed counsel expert in patent practice, and therefore are prepared to
Obtain PatenU In the United State# and ell Foreign Countries, Conduct In*
terfercncea. Make Special Examination*, Prosecute Rejected Cases,
Register Trade-Marks and Copyrights, Render Opinions as to
Scope Defend and Validity Infringement of Patents, Prosecute sad
Saits, Etc., Etc.
If yon hare an invention on hand send a sketch or photograph thereof, to¬
gether advised with a brief description best of the important features, and you will be at once
os to the course to pursue. Models are seldom necessary. If
others are infringing on your rights, or if yon are charged with infringement by
others, shbmit the matter to ns for a reliable OPINION before acting ou the
matter.
STREET, THE NORTHWEST, PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
BIB F WASHINGTON, O. C-
f . o. box 4M. JOHN WEODERBURH, Managing Attorney.
4a* Cut this out and tend It with your Inquiry. Jtt
UO'Y&UR DAPLOYfcSj
VoR^HoURSADfrY?';
«A Rem-AwertiSm
m H
1139 m
^yyYSLCEP. m
’H J
ORANGE BLOSSOM
18 AS SAFE AND HARMLE88 A8
-A. Flax Seed Poultice.
It is applied right to the parts. It ourea all diseases of woman. Any
lady can use >t herself Bold by AJ,T. DRUGGISTS. Mailed to m ay
address on receipt of $1.
Dr. J. A. McGill Be Oo., 8 and 4 Panorama Plaoc, Chicago, X1L
Foi sale in this city by E. R. ANTHONY.
^ABSOLUTELY FRiI = ^F"CHX^E.” ~
inr meuiber of yuur funUr, we will uatle from It one uf our finest ttree-enuter Ilfs sis*
CRAYON PORTRAITS
•MMsMv
reo y-M wsS
Kxpnw Coin pony, American Exprea, Co. I'nlL*! **•<«• Ezyrew l’o..«»il I Cl. ou** « Cft.. *** Tork s*«l fttt ftaw-
morel*! agencies. Hoping to nodes you kind Csron, wesn. ruporttully ,
CODY A CO., IS S and TC< DcKalb Avenne, Brooklyn, N. Y.
ffTICK.—Cot this out sod return It to m with the Pho tograph y ou deelw ccptaL
_
IF YOU WANT INFORMATION ABOUT
■DTVrCTrMVTC! PENSIONS
ADDRESS A LETTER OB POSTAL. CARD TO
THE PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
JOHN WEDDERBURN, Managing Attorney,
P. 0. Box 483. Washington, D. C.
_ In lete
Honorably discharged soldiers sud ssttors disabled who served ordinary ntnety dsys, labor, or over, whether the disability wsr.
sre entitled, caused if service now partially or and wholly regardless of tlictr for pecuniary manual circumstances,
was wn>OW8of by such or soldiers tiot, and sailors entitled (If *ot remarried) whether soldiwrtdnth
sre Widows
was due to army service or not, if now dependent upon their own tabor for support.
not dependent npon their own labor are entitled If the ftoldler-a death was due to service.
CHILDREN are entitled (if under sixteen years) in almost all cases when then was no
s»rvi«?~/frmu Wirt pABEN h T8a\Vlntitfe'd effeiraof 1 leiw7re*,a d ffL,TdTcVnftnelth»T iid they'sre widow depend.ntupcm itov.anrlovtf nor ehiid, provided heb^owirt heir soldier lohrtr at,r>r fitV died In
_ » # — ar...l — Ago«wfti.o .... A 4 Us., oeo vm» now unnn I t mvil Sltti.
port.
OA lV pensioned under apply for higher rates trader othor
fioldlers sf the lste wsr, one lew, may
taW Thon««nd. ofsol?lcr«dr tow, *wi*n* only from |zto$fO per of disabilities month nnder for the which old tew pensioned, sre entitled but to
higher rates under stew not on account now
also for others, whet her du* to service or not. sines , *1*0 .
Soldiers and sailors disabled in Hue of duty In regular army or navy the war an
Hnwh, Cenek, Cherokee and g^teoi. or Ttov-
Ida Indian Wmn of 1838 to 1842, are «ntJtI*d tuider » MMwat Met. of , disabled ......
Mexican War Boldlmand their widow* aleoentitled, if aixiy two ye*rf «fe or
ofd Claims completed and settlement obtained, whether pension hes been granted under
Rejected claims reopened and aettlement secured, soldiers if rejection Improper of the or illegal. late who
Certificates of service and discharge obtained for and sailors war
have lost their original papers. for _ fee J successful. . . Address, 4j .
Send for laws snd information. No charge advice. No unless
THE PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
JOHN WEDDERBURN, Managing Attorney,
r. O. Box463. WASHINGTON, D. C.
MAGNETIC Instant KMnrsf Fztn. OtLI
n
BtlAU8 - IU
JOHNSON'S ORIENTAL SOAR.
SeMeatn the market. and It highly t» absolutely pnrfumnd Toilet Makes Bonn the an
•Ain soft sad velvety end reotores pure. the lost
oom-
ptexlon) l« is luxury tor On. Bath tor infant*.
DU. N. B. DREWBY. Druggist. Griffin, Gs
Health is Wealth!
Da. x. L. west a NlbvxanoHhais Tuba,
uknt, Dizziness, a guarantee*, Convulsions, specific Fits, tor Hysteria Nerronr
Neuralgia, caused Headache by Nervous oi pros¬ al¬
tration, the use
cohol or tobacco, Wakefullneea, Men¬
tal resulting Depression, insanity Softening and tending of the misery, Brain,
in to
decay anil death. Premature Old Age, Bar
•tnno**, Loss o Power in either sex. Invol¬
untary I,(antes and Susrmatorhaa,caused by
over-exertion ol the brain,self-abuse or over-
indulgence. $1.00 Each box ontams one boxes month lor |
treatment a box, or nix of
|5.Oc, sent by mail.jprepoid on receipt
pries.
WE GUARANTEE BIX BOXES
to cure any can*. With each order received
by us send ior six the boxes, purchaser accompanied written with $5,00
will our guar-
toe to refund the money if the treatment
does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued
only by Dr. E. B. Anthony, Drnggirt, Sole
agent. 41 Hill street. Griffin. Ga.
Receiver’s Sale. ..
By virtue of nn order granted by the Hon.
John J. Hnnt. Judge of the before Superior Conrt
ol Flint Cironit, 1 will sell the court
bouse door in the lily of Griffin, daring the
legal hour* ol sale on Tuesday, the 22d day
of August, 1893, the following described
property, to wit:
One lot in the city of Griffin situated on
the cast side III the ttraeks oi the Georgia
Midland and Gnll Railroad Co., bounded on
the west by New Orleans street beginning at
the corner of the first alley south ot and
running New parallel wilh Broadway running street, south and
snid Orleans street, and
for (97) ninety-seven fret, bounded ou the
south by colored church property, said
south line running cast from New Orleans
street for (117 ) sixty seven fret, bounded on
the cost by the property formerly ot 11. II.
Johnston, now of the Farmer’s the Co-Opernthc by
Manufacturing Co., und on north
said alley, together with improvements lo¬
cated and situated on said lot. consisting of
a frame building used for a ginnery nnd for
the manufacture of fertilizers; also one forty
(40) horse-power engine (Allas make) with
all the machinery attached to and coo-
neeled with the M«me; also six (IS) cotton
gius(t'wo Vau Winkle ond four (iulletts);
threeof said gins having sixty (00) saws
ami hrecha'ing seventy (70) saws each;
also in said building in connection with
said machinery oue lintvr; one seperntor
and one huller, and also one steam eoltoa
press, together with the belting, shafting,
pulleys, pijnug, etc., used in connection with
all of said machinery; also all old gins and
of aud machinery in said
building, following properly to wit: One
Also the
lot in the city of Griffin, bounded on the
west by New Orleans street, running along
mid street two hundred nnd ten (21U)leet,
bounded on the north by Broadway street
nnd running along said street flftv (50)
feet, thence due again remth forty sixty-five (40) feet, ((15) thence feet,
thence east
south to an alley, tbeuce due west n!o g
snid alley to New Orleans street, upon which
laud is situated oue brick building used for
the manufacture ol cotton seed oil, in which
b ilding is siiuated eighty-five one (85) Luue horse-power, A Bradley
Uotliss engine, boilers and healer und
together machinery with two therewith connected one nnd
all tUe
being used und known us the Cotton Seed
Oil Mill; oIbo tho water lower and the water
works and all the machinery concreted
therewith, nil ol the above enumerated prop¬
erty and all other property on said laud.
also one-eighth ol au acre of land situated
in the city of Griffin. Spalding county, Geor¬
gia, hounded on the north by Slaton alley,
east by property formerly It. [1. Drake, belonging to R.
H. Johnston, ltow Tutwtlor south by
properly known as the Manufacturing place, now Co.,
Farmers (Jo-Operative other that
bounded west by described, property, i*
the ginnery lot herein the sume
being the land ou which tlie warehouse ol the
said company is located, together with the
conveyors, pulleys and other niucbmery
therein contained, said lot fronting on Sla¬
ton alley eighty-one (81) feet ami one huii
dred and thirty-six (18(1) feet running south.
Also ono lot froniing Solomon street
eighty-six (86) feet more or is.*, and being
eighty-thiee feel deep, running back north;
bounded on the south by Solomou street,
westby the colored church lot, north by seed
warehouse lot, and east by properr j of Mr*.
M. E. Wilson, on which is located a frame
office building containing a desk, safe and
office fixtures.
A*so one lot (vacant) fronting on Fdghth
street thirty leet. running west north along Slaton
ulley eighty feet, tneuee thirty h it,
thence east eight c feet to an alley; being part
ol lot No. 4. in sqnnre 82.
Also all Hie guano notes and accounts das
said company made prior to Beptember 1st,
1893, and all renewals thereof (aggregating
about $8,500.00.) A list ot said notes and
accounts ns lar as it is at present practica¬
1'ierk ble to obtain, having been filed with the
ol doubling Superior Conrt lor the In¬
spection oi ail parties ut interest. The
terms oi said side will tie as follows:
The sale will be at pu blic outcry bnt no
bid under $32,000.09 will be r-ceb *1.
Ail immediate payment ol $2,000.00 will
lie required either in cash or In the certifl-
rates issued by the receiver if accompanied
Ur wriltiootw*. LUC l - < Cl V > • ftvx.x, uu MW
same duy and at the same pi re proceed to
res-ll the property under like requirement*.
ihe remainder of I he purchase price slnul
be payable ns follows: (>nc-tliird on Octo¬
ber 1st, 1898. without interesi; one-third on
March 1st, 1894, with interest from date of
sale at 7 percent, per annum: one-tliird on
June 1st, 1894, with interest Irom dale ol
sale nt 7 per rent, per annum, i’romireory
note* to lie given for said deferred payments.
Title to remain in the receiver until the pnr-
g-ssc money » iully paid. one-tlerd t-be
If the puymeut oi the first of
deferred portion be not in mb- on tlie 1st day
of Oct. 1898, the sale shall he void
anil tlie $ 2 , 000.00 prev ously paid shall lie
forfeited and the receiver will immedl ,trly
take possession ol the said property and re.
sell the same.
Payments may be made ia cosh, receiver's
certificates, first mortgage lainiis of said
cum puny, the interest ae-roed thereon and
any other lien the amount and priority of
which has been fixed by final judgment of
the conrt, according to their priority. lb-reiver,
BOSWELL If. DRAKE,
Farmers Co-Operative Manufoctnring Co.
of ffiMM^andla er«^l»*teEC* s,
Vd with tee"spMia<M t beeoic SiavoxinVm Ataman?
far Iks liquor appstit* to uls.
KSLDOH eo.. ggsrrowrt*-, TftWM**
SS WM SftsW S Mftt*-alft— -r
and Whiskey Habits
cured si home wiih-
dn. Bock of Por¬
i'S sect FBES.
Do You P
Want to
BUY,
SELL,
RENT
or
DEAL
in
REAL ESTATE.
Also Do a General
Auction and
Commission Business.
G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
Beal Estate Agent.
TALES FROM f
TOWN TOPICS-
2d
More than LEADING KSWS-
PAPEKSra North America havecompfeaeotsd
this .dually publication concede during that its iu numbers first year, afford aad oul- the
brightest aad most er.wrtaieiag reading that
Pan pc had.
Published ist day of September, Drrmiher,
March and June.
Ask Ncwadealcr for it, or tend the price,
60 cento, in staapa or poaal note to
TOWN TOPICS,
SI Weti 234 St., ifar York.
from 0T This brilliant Quarterly neoeaof it Toxw mt mad* Tone*, op
the rwrv.«r yea t t
but ( ;r>Gt a »"t th e hrm stories, Blrsirtift. the feed bur*-
ieaqne*, pocma. witticism*, unique etc., from
uumhrrs of that journal, a dmitt edly afi
the crispest- rocien. most complete, and to
Nlffi A!U» tteJlKK the most hints
tog weekly ever itsued.
Subscription Price:
bn Irytez, ynymr, • - HM
IxlM Tnm 7m Tn'.n, ftrytar, 189 ,
natntHkM, . . - 8.88 '
Tiwnr Tones met 3 months os trial for
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promptly M—uM-Mtb furwerdod, | Am rt-s* ri