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EES OH PATENTS.
luow TO GET TWENTY-Fivt rtUN-
pgEQ dollars for nothing.
I’iBoer M»» » Clonr Glft ° r “
I Fortune* au^ Losers
Have Patent* that May
BringThcmtn Still
I More. ■I
\ I
m M ,au like‘o i> alt e twenty-five Inin-
dollar*? If you would, rood cat dully
follow* and you may see a way to do it.
it
as
| ' inventive talent at largo in this
Kpleuw ns^ding nothlrn but wieourage-
IgpSt to Droduc-e practical results. That eu-
WTll —— - thj Tress (UIm Company
c fl-
. n.tent strikes most people a* an op-
ssSsaErSjSffa-rsfe w h,Son naientablo the company degree oi desires f™». to dispel. , • It de-
i™ to get into the head of the public a
Smr Cerent, comprehension eomplei, add of ibe expensive fact that inventions it is not
th!!i bring the simple, ties! returns and to cheap their ones-tbe authors,
tat the little, absurdly trivial that
thl things that seem so
thrt the *? average average e ™S”t. citisen citisen would would fed letl somewhat somewhat
astauHsl of bringing 1 „,ri_„ttu-mtot.he them to tiie attention attention
^tn^V^ KslitfOn | ro §U> m B patents iu»h the 1UB on Profits P* all his marvelous
SSSrfCpS Mihher cord to a child’s boll, so that it
*““A comu back to the band when thrown,
, fortune out if liis scheme. The
modern sewing machine is n miracle of inge-
. Soirv—the pr.iduct through of the toil hundred o! hundreds and fifty al
ta»v brains a
««ars but the whole brilliant result rests
«no. the simple device of putting the eye o!
the needle at the point instead of at the
other end.
THE little things the most
I p VALUABLE.
Comparatively few people reg.-rd everybody them-
•r res as inventors, but almost
has been struck, at one time or another,
with ideas that seemed calculated to red nee
aome ol the little Irictions of life. Usually
inch ideas are dismissed without lurther
^“Wmydon’t windows the that railroad they company can lie slid make up
Its ear so
and down without breaking the pi,88«*ngerH
baeke?” mlaiuicd the traveler, I were
running the road I would make them in Rueh
a way ”
“What was the man that made this sauce
pan thinking of?” grumbloH the cook. ‘He
ne* er bail to work over a stove, or he would
have known how it ought to have been
ftxed ”
“Hang such a collar bnttonl” growls the
man who is late lor hreaklast. “If I were in
the business I’d make buttons that wouldn’t
Hip oat or break off, or gouge out the
back of my neck.” sufferers forget
And then the various think of
shout their grievance, ami basis to
something else. If they would sit, down at
the next convenient opportunity, put their
ideas about car windows, saucepans, and
collar buttons into practical shape, and
then apply for patents, they might find the
themselves as independently wealthy as ring,
man who invented the irou umbrella
or the one who invented the fifteen puzzle.
A TEMPTING OFFER.
To induce people to keep track of their
bright ideas and see what there h in them,
til# Press Claims Company has resolved lo
oiler a prise.
To the person who submit* to It tbe
simplest and most promising Invention
from a commercial point of view, the
company will give twenty-live hun¬
dred dollars in cash, In addltlou to re¬
funding the fees for securing the pat¬
ent.
It will also advertise the invenUoi
free of charge.
The offer is subject to the following condi¬
tions:
Every competitor must obtain a patent
for his invention through the company. He
mast first applv for a preliminary search, the
cost ol which will be five dollars. Should
this search show his iuvention without to be un¬
patentable, he can withdraw farther
eipsnse- Otherwise he will be expected to
complete his application and take out a
patent in the regular war. The total ex¬
pense, it-cludiug Government am) Bureau
sss, will be seventy dollar*. For this,
whether he secures the prise or not, the in¬
ventor will have a patent that ought to be
a vuiuahle property to him. The prize will
be awarded by a jary consisting of three re¬
putable patent attorneys oi Washington,
intending competitors should fill out tbe
following blank, and forward it with their
applications: 1892. '
••-,-,
“I submit tbe within described invention
in competition for the Twenty-five Hundred
Dollar Price ofiered by the Press Claims
Company.
KO BLANKS IN THIS COMPETI¬
TION.
This is a completion of rather an unusual
nature, it is common to oBer prises for the
best story, or picture, or architectural plan,
all tlu competitors risking the loss of their
labor and the successful one merely selling
his for the amount of the prizo. But the
Press Claims Company’s oHe- is something
entirely asked diBerent. Each person is merely
himself to heln himself, and t.fp one wno helps
to the best advantage is to be re¬
warded for doing it. The ptiie is only a
stimulus to do something tbut would tie well
worth doing without it. The architect
wbost competitive plan for a club house on
aoertain corner is not accepted has spent
his labor on something at very little use to
him. But lh.: person who patents a simple
*®<1 useful device in the Press Claims Com¬
Ml pany’s competition, need nat worry if he
to secure the prise- vie has a substan¬
tial result to show for his work—one that
w> 1 command its value iu the market at any
Tiie (lain man who uses any article in his
daily work ought to know better how to im¬
prove it than the mechanical expert who
•todies it only Irom the theoretical point oi
new. Get rid of .the idea that an improve¬
ment can be too simple to be worth patent-
who u best simpler the bettor. The person
ana succeeds ia combining simplicity
^“Puny’s popu'arity, will get the Press Claims
The twenty-five hundred dollars.
uejudged responsibility from the oi this company is may held
b about fact that its stock
y three hundred oi the leading news-
IjjiJA ^Address of the the United Press Claims States. Company, John
**“ Wwderhurn, N- managing attorney, 018 F
W„ Washington, u. C.
nu ILOREN,4 PARENTS. Widows,
xndSs-.o,. dltahted in the Mae of
or Ssyy.s(Uief_th 5 war
- -
GERMETUER
- -CURES.’.
feters
Dr. J. W. N, linn a <iy*:
PMiU t the Atlanta. Ga., August 14. 1803.
or nsai two iVmy ^ ears I have used SdSK Kind’s
Royal toy a I Gvrmsluar (iermeruer m mv nMmtida ami miii.
mo*t satislaciorv results. I have used it in
Typhus lyphotd a d Bihou. fevers. and
always with the spew],Set and best effect*.
it Iotc b tl»8 temperature and breaks up
:ever« of all kinds common to this lati ude
more cnowietlge. exp uioaely than any remedy within
mv From my own experience in
its nse, u on my elf and upou others to
whom I have recommended and adiuinist&r-
*v believe it would be a good remedy
« ft*r xellow fever. It is excellent
a most nnti-
c«ptic, Sweat# and cures Catarrh. Insomnia. Night
Ecaema in all its forms. V i g’*
Royal Germetuer Is emphatically a safe rem¬
edy and leaves do injurious effcc's it the
system. Jomn W. Nki ms. M. D.,
Mayor, Weal End, Ga.,
$1.00 A BOTTLE, SIX FOB $5.00.
Oormetuer Pills aro tho best. Fifty in a
* eale b Y N B Orewry and
J N - -
Hnrrij
fi. A. R.NOTICE
We take (his opportunity of informing
our subscribers that the uew Commissioner
of Pensions has been appointed. He ie un
ofd soldier, and we believe tnat soldiers and
their heirs will receive justice at his hands.
We do not anticipate that there will be any
radical changes in the administration of
pension affairs under the new regime.
We would advise, however, that U. 8. sol¬
diers, sailors and their heirs, take steps to
make application at once, if they have not
already done so, in order to secure the benefit
of the early filing of theii claims in case
there should be any future pension legisla¬
tion. Such legislation is seldom retroactive.
Therefore it is of great importance that ap¬
plications be filed in the Department at tbe
earliest possible date.
If U. S. Soldiers, Sailors, or their Widows,
Children, of Parents desire information in re¬
gard to pension matters, they should write
to The Press Claims Company, Wash-
send ngton, the l>. Cl, and they will prepare and
them entitled necessary under application, if they find
the numerous laws en¬
acted for their benefit. Address
PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
John Wedderburn, Managing Attorney,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
P. O. Box 385.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
ramsm
boxes, fipaiol
igSSgb
Mi 10.000 TeiUmODlUi. name
M W mil Di-ueailU.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleancca «nti beautified the hair,
uriant
a AOr, scalp and diseases fl.UO a? At Druggist* hair falling.
V.'eak iCTlSBPte-TSr Lungs, Lability, Indigesti-
iCOX * CO.. M. Y.
WORLD’VfAIR, Chicago,
be sure to call at. I he unique exhibit of
LIEBIG COMPANY’S
EXTRACT OF BEEF
in th<»north«u.sf.j)Rrtof the AGHICTJLTURA L
HJILD1NG, north a ; sle, in the Uruguay De¬
partment and get a
FREE CUP
of delicious, refreshing
BEEF TEA
from the world-known
Liebiq COMPANY’.-! Extract of Beef.
WE3LErANFEM W EINSTiTim
Opens eiiptioual Sept, tl hui.dsome i, 18H3. Climate and surroundin#g remodeled, ex-
tb.JToushly renovated, repainted buildings, inside being and and outeido, outeido,
and refurnished with no# pin iiufl, carpets, Ac. Steam
heat, loat, gas gas iigbt. ii«bt, bath bath rooms rooms on on every < ary floor. tlooi Nsw Labora-
torr Advanced thoroujchly Courses eonipped Enf ish. 2' Latin, r-xperiei perienced German, German, teachers, French.
in m, t n
Ac. Special advantages in Music and Art. 141 141 board- b<
ing pupils from 18 States Terms moderate For ( Oats’
logacd logaos of of this this celebrated celebrated old old Virginia Virginia School, School, addreaf ad« dree*
W.W. R<|BEUTsON» l»rea.. Staantou,Vft
VIRGINIA COLLEGE
For YOUNG LADIKS, RoAnoke, Va.
Opens Sept. 14,1893. A beautiful and at¬
tractive college home. New boildinge,
among tbe finest in the South. Modern Im-
provcount*. New Piano* and furniture.
ten acres, magnificent mountain
In valley of Virginia, famed ior
health. European and \meriean teachers.
Full course. Advantage* in Music and Art
For catalogue addiees the Pr» s-
W. A, HARRIS, D. D.,
Roanoke, Virginia.
PATENTS
Caret!, Trade-marts, Design Patents, CofqrigUs,
And all Patent business conducted for
MODERATE FEES.
Information and advice given to Inventors without
charge. Address
PRESS CLAIMS CO*,
JOHN WEDDERBURN,
Managing Attorney,
P. Ob Box 463. W , A3inNOTO* r D.C.'
1 9 ' r ’tm v-ompany is managed b/ a combhurtlon
the v^rgest and most Influential newspapers In ihe
States, for the express purpose of protccl-
img tlseIr aubaerlbera a^alnat unscrupulous
Incompetent Patent Agents, and each piper
this advertisement vouches for the responsi¬
and high standing of the Press Claims Company-
DRUNKENNESS Or the Liquor Habit, Positively « ure4
by administering Dr. Halses'
Golden Specific.
It is manufactured as a powder, whioh oan
—.and inirumoa < U. 1 Stsrft perfect car* SSM hum fol¬
€ CM in erarr Fella. Tbaayatem a lmpr—njUs
It aarar on— impoeelMlity
with tho liquor the 9peolflo.it et i te becomes to exiat. an utter
app
-SSSSSSc —V SS'c*’"* Ta w
ea Ttm sons of M U S S —
NEW YORK CORRESPONDENCE
E HMRMFiftSh FOB i\Wm HOME STUDY eEES g 3
FORMS OF BEAUTY
Made from All 8ubstances at
i---—. the Fair. -
THE MAEDFA0TURE8 BUILDUfG.
Ita Forty Acre, of Floor Space U a
World', Fair to Itaatf—Display, of
Masnificencc Which Hava Never Been
VqnaUed—Some Forte About tho Con¬
struction of the Great Building lUelf.
Wobld’s FAIR, Sept. S. — [Special.] —
Beneath the high arched and iron glr-
dered roof (itself * marvel of science and
art) of the Manufactures and Liberal Arts
building are gathered the richest results
of a thousand years of the skill and taste
of all mankind from Nova Zambia to Pat¬
agonia. It Is impossible to mention a
substance from grass to gold or from gos¬
samer so light that it must be shown un¬
der glass because a breath would waft it
away, to the hardest flint, but one may
find it there in scores or even thousands of
forms. There one might, if life were not
so brief that dayg only can be given where
months aro too short, trace that evolution
of the arts of every race of mankind and
gather abundant materials for tbe elucida¬
tion of on answer to tbe great question—
why does each nation develop it* arts
along its own peculiar line despite the in¬
fluence of other nations?
On' those forty acres of floor space is
piled a real wealth exceeding that of
many an ancient city of renown, and the
work embodied in the articles has been
roughly computed as equivalent to the la¬
bor of 10,000 skilled men for twenty years.
Are you interested in ivory? There you
may find it in hundreds of forms from tbe
polished elephant tusk down to comical
figures an inch in length on the faces of
which the patient and skillful Japanese
have depicted all the emotions of human¬
ity. In wool? It is not possible in a col¬
umn of print like this to give the bare
names of the fabrics, from delicate stuffs
worth their weight in gold to heavy robes
and oashmere shawls and Navajo blankets
so closely woven that water can be carried
in them. In silk? Familiar as they are,
language can scarcely convey an idea of
the delicate fabrics wrought on the looms
of France by artists (they cannot be called
artisans) of such skill that, it is said, chil¬
dren followed their parents in the same
line of work for two generations before
the hereditary talent was developed up to
that capacity.
In wood there is more scroll work and
of a greater variety than was ever before
collected in one place, and the carvings can
but be mentioned because they cannot be
described. Leather, which seems in com¬
mon so very plain and homely an object of
use, is there the basis for fine art, and
when one sees the changes wrought in it
he is almost persuaded that if no other
substance were available a refined civilisa¬
tion might easily find expression in that
alone. All the metals, precious or useful,
are worked into objects of surpassing
beauty. Under the hands of the Japanese
the common distinction is lost sight of and
iron is made as precious as gold by the
artistic work done on it. In so plebian an
article as clay, including the finer kinds
of earth, there are over 2,000 articles in
every conceivable form and style of beauty
from the $6,000 vase down to bits of pot¬
tery no longer than one’s thumb, but glow¬
ing with color and rich in elaborate deco¬
rations.
Other buildings are merely parts of a
world’s fair; this is a world’s fair. In
bronzes, vases, damascened work and some
other lines it so far exceeds any previous
exhibit that comparison seems ridiculous.
There is a touch of the humorous, too, in
the surprising uses made of many sub¬
stances. Snakeskin does not suggest
beauty, bnt here it is seen in many lovely
forms. The show of parchments is com¬
plete. Vellum is exhibited in every con¬
ceivable style. Grass, grains, gums, wax,
teeth, hair, paper, bark, bone, fish scales,
celluloid, coral, rushes, bamboo, all the
skins of all the animals, leaves and vines
and roots, are all worked into forms of
beauty. The most riotous imagination
held with the loosest rein cannot picture
an artistic form in any substance, but you
may find it here.
And yet there are those who say that
tiie building itself is a greater curiosity—
or rather a greater triumph of skill—than
anything in it. It has often been de-
scribed, but the main points will bear one
more repetition. It is 1,687 feet long and
787 feet wide, with a height along the cen¬
tral hall of 2HSX feet, and deducting there¬
from the roof and the space below tbe
floor the height in the clear interior is 203
feet. The sides and corner pavilions of
course are lower. Over all this central
section extends a single span truss of 382 is
feet. Deducting the side support there
thus a self-supporting, iron arched roof
364 feet in the clear, without a pillar or in¬
cline brace, the largest roof of the kind in
the world. There are 12,000,000 pounds of
steel in the trusses of central hall and
2,000,000 pounds of iron in the nave; and
all these magnificent arches and girders,
all the iron in the roof in fact, were sold to
St. Louis parties before being placed here.
There are over 8,000,000 feet of lumber in
the floor and five average carloads of nails.
One thousand cottages of 25 by 50 feet
each could be placed in the building; and
as one walks through the space occupied
by a particular nation he often comes upon
a separated building which by comparison
seems small till he enters and finds it a
miniature world’s fair. Thirty great stair¬
cases lead to the galleries. Two avenues
fifty feet wide traverse the building in its
two extensions, crossing in tbe center; five
narrow avenues on each side run the full
length and twice as many cross thesesfrom
side to side. In almost every openaspace
in the building and chiefly at the intersec¬
tion of the main avenues are easy seats for
the weary, and high overall are the famous
bell chimes which men of experience and
taate pronounce equal to anything iu Eu¬
rope. At intervals these enliven the mul¬
titude of sightseers with the sweetest mu¬
sic and in the course of a day one may
hear the national airs of the principal na¬
tions, alternated with the world’s famous
hymns and a few light and popular
pieces. I first entered this building I
When was
so overwhelmed that I at once abandoned
all thought of consulting the catalogue or
making a study of any one section. On
whichever side I turned my eyes I saw
such displays of magnificence that I could
not fix my attention on any one detail.
But on my second day there I managed to
concentrate on the Japanese pavilion,
which is a curious and beautiful structure
and literally packed with marvels in deli¬
cate handiwork, leaving barely room for
There is Hope
For everv one who has blood trouble, no matter
tn what shape or bow long standing, been provided far iro-
none of the vital organs tave s o
Jfoes naireil as to render a cure impossible. and ». b tbe d.
to tbe root- of the disease, tbe removes body, and
cause, by expm*mg tbe poison from
at the same time is a tonic to tbe whole system*
However bad yoar case may be, there is hope
FOR YOU.
ss.s. SW Cored ire of blood a most -"U<-. m. Ugnant for which type
79 of chronic tr other remedies
i had need various
ttm b-t.mGcI.vgr-JL -
Treatise oo. Mood, tata
veiaon mailed fro*.
--
one to, walk between the divisions. On
the cupied second dhjr Austria and Germany oc¬
my time, but when I took the
French section for my third study, all I
had seen of beauty s ee med bat an Intro¬
duction. __- ■____
There is the great Dare ease, one of the
wonders of tbe world. There are the finest
bronzes ever produced In France, and
therefore probably the finest in the world.
There are crystal goodsoocMcllcafe clocks
and watches, exquisite pottery and china,
furniture of a beauty and finish to maka
a woman sick with longing and cutlery of
the finer kinds tn almost innumerable
forms. But all theee yield in popular in¬
terest to the dresses. There ia always a
crowd of women before the immense
square of plate glass (the largest which
can be mode) which fronts tbe room (it
goes back in deep perspective like a full
stage scene in a theater), containing the
group called "Robing tbe Briile.”
The room is brilliantly lighted from
above and furnished in the finest style
known iu PariB. A ilttle to the right of
the center and with her side to the spec¬
tators stands the bride wearing the
finest dress that France can furnish. The
other ladies (lifelike—in wax) represent
the various dresses suitable to the com¬
mon types of complexion and figure; and
the man who can stretch himself enough
to get one view over the beads of the wo¬
men needs bnt the one glance to convince
him of what those women say, that each
figure is clothed with a fortune. Else¬
where are Patti and Bernhardt and other
noted artiste (in wax) and clod with a
magnificence that no mere man could have
conceived of as possible. In other pavil¬
ions of the French section are marvels In
every workable substance and so numer¬
ous that at tbe end of a day there one can
but sigh and say, “Well, I have made a
beginning and if I have time I will come
back and see it.”
The circus features of the exposition in¬
crease in number and the attendance has
increased till the paid admissions overrun
a million a week; Every day from 2
o’clock till far into the night there is
something amusing—parades of the plais-
ance people, all sorts of contests on land
and in and on the water, the swimming
matches recently attracting special atten¬
tion. The lake is getting very cold, bnt
daring fellows-still take their plunge from
tho tower to go so far under the water that
one involuntarily holds his breath, and oc¬
casionally a lady utters a cry, it seems so
certain that the diver will never come up
alive. They tell us this must close with
the great swimming matches now on, for
there must be real danger when the water
is so cold.
The great recent event was the Eistedd¬
fod yesterday, which happened to be also
Labor day; but every day is now so full of
incident that a difference of ten or twenty
thousand people in the crowds, or of a few
Shows more or less, is not noticed. To¬
morrow is Wisconsin day, and on the next
A “HEAPEft” FROM THE TOWEB.
day Brazil and Pennsylvania have their
innings. Governor Pattison and his staff
are reported as already here and the state’s
commissioners are either here or on the
way. The secretary tells me the special¬
ties wii] far outdo those of any other state
day so far, and the fireworks at night will
be exceptionally brilliant. On tho 8th the
non-Aryan races will again have their in¬
nings and on the 9th California and Utah
will have their day.
Utah has done wonders in several lines.
Her famous Tabernacle choir, 260 strong,
with President Woodruff at its head, ar¬
rived in time to compete for the $5,000
prize offered by the Eisteddfod aasociaitiou.
Of course I do not mean that President
Woodruff, who holds the chief office so
long held by Brigham Young, came os one
of the choir. He looked old and withered
when I first heard him preach twenty-five
years ago, and it would seem to me the
moss must be growing on him by this
time. In addition he suffered, according
to his autobiography in thechurch papers,
more accidents in the first half of his life
than any other man on this continent ever
suffered and lived.
There Is much complaint that as the at¬
tendance increases extortions increase In
Chicago and l am compelled to admit that
the cost of living has indeed risen. I feel
it in my most sensitive nerve. What I
chiefly complain of is that these restaurant
men are altogether too careful of a fel¬
low’s health. The liquid is homoepath-
ically thin and the amount served about
half what one gets in New York. And yet
landlords are breaking up all around. The
"European” place where I eat oftenest has
been through tbe sheriff’s hands twice
since the fair opened and the third pro¬
prietor is in charge. Today I called for a
chicken pie—marked 30 cents in bill of
fare—and it was a curiosity, cooked and
served in an alleged bowl just the merest
trifle larger than a coffee cupinNewY ork.
I got angry and made a complaint, where¬
upon the proprietor jocularly remarked
that they hail to cut deep to get even for ear¬
lier losses. A farmer could eat three such
chicken pies. I’ve done it hundreds of
times in my farm-boyhood. There is a
paragraph going the roundsgiving the ex¬
perience of a man who “saw the fair and
lived well on a dollar a day.” I’d like to
see him try it cow. He'd soon be quali¬
fied for a dime show on the Bowery, as
understudy to tbe Living Skeleton.
J. H. Beadle,
Altec Calendar Kxplalned.
What is claimed to be the correct inter¬
pretation of the ancient Aztec calendar
was made public at the meeting of the an¬
thropological congress In the Anthropo¬
logical building at the World’s fair.
Scholars of international reputation de¬
clare it to be tbe most important discovery
in its way of the century, as it furnishes a
key to mack of the ancient life and arts of
at least eixdifferent nations that inhabited
Mexico and Central America centuries
ago. The disclosure was made by a wo¬
man, Mrs. Zelia Nuttall, one of the judges
of ethnology at the fair, who read a lengthy
paper before the congress, in which she
explained tbe wonderful calendar.
CURES RISING
..BREAST..
“MOTHER’S FRIE80” Is the greatest
b l e w tug ever
offered child-bearing woman. I have been a
Alio WUIIU MTO | ,
uw. . jus.NLJf.Mram!. Ala.
Montgomery,
Sent by $Lt* express, chargee prepaid, on receipt
of price, per bottle.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.,
MitvaaHreffiM. Ahajwa, Ua,
JOHNSON’S OIL!
MAGNETIC
Inttanl Killer el Pala. • ,
saSSfffcsa?
JOHNSON'S ORIENTAL SOAP.
SSSSSS pterion lon| | le Is a luxury luxury tor tor gsbifc...... the the Bath Bath - ToUtaJtaapoa .. tor »*—r Infanta. oom-
a
m. If B. DUE WRY. I>ru agist. Orffflo; Oa
Health is Wealth!
un. hot;, wests ftEBraasittfaxiK This*,
uest, a guarantee!, Convulsions, specillr for Hysteria KurtoBs
Dizziness, Hta,
Neuralgia, tration, Headache the Nervooe ol pro#- ah
cohol caused tobacco, by WakehiUiiess. nee Men¬
or
tal resulting Dopreeeion, Softening and of the Brain,
in ineunlty leading to misery,
decay and deuth. Premature Old Age. Bar-
renucee, Loee o Power In either sex. Invol¬
untary exertion Losses ol and the Spertnatorhtea,caused brain,self-abuse or over- by
over
Indulgence. Each box on tame one month *
treatment )1.90 a box, or tix boxes for of
$5.0t, sent by mall, prepaid on receipt
price.
WK GUARANTEE BIX BOXES
to cure any ease. With each order received
by ne for six boxes, accompanied with $5,00
will send the purchaser cur written guar-
tee to refund the money if the treatment
docs not effect a cure. Guarunteee issued
only by Dr. E. R. knthotre, Drnjiglst Sole
agent. 41 Hill street. Griffin. Ga.
Salary or Commission
To agents to handle the Patent Chemical
ink Erasing Pencil. The most nse'ul and
novel invention of Ibe age. Erase ink thor¬
oughly in two seconds. Works like magic.
200 $50 to 500 week. percent, profit Agents gentleman making to
per We also want a
take charge of territory, and appoint sub-
agents. A rare chance to make money.
Write for term ■ and samples of erasing Wie.
Monroe Eraser Ufg. Co., 455 LaCrosse,
apr.tidi* lx.
Complete
Manhood
and how to attain it.
hcally beautiful, tbe medical -— book that —- c haa ----- ap-
the most
peared ' d for for yea rifinr
a half-tone Uluati DebUlty In^p^
subjects ijects ti treated ted are are Nervous nervuu» Varicocele, inruimy, 4 The
ten< Husl icy. isband, Sterility, Those Development, intending Marriage, etc.
Every Evi man who would know the grand and the troths,
the plain facts, the old secrets, applied new
discoveries of medical science as to
married life, who would atone for past follies
and avoid future pltCalla, should write for this
wonderful little ~t»ook. It will be sent free,
an d«re.U A-KaBJgJ&J*. „. y.
$500 Reward t
WE win pay U>. .Sot. reward 'or «uy esse or t'rm
JomptiUot, Dj.pta.la. McT llradlwlM, lndlrwllon. to*
nfl-atloa ratios or or Co.tiT.neM Co.(l»«ne» we wc CMirot cord w:t» Wtat’r
Vegetable Ltrcr Pll It, when the directions ere etrtotlj
--.implied with. Thej mw yorolJ Vetretwble. end never
Cell to give K-tlnfaction. »Okwr Coated L»r*e hezer
contenting *> I’UI*, » ecu. . Bewerw of
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DR. HEBRA’S
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p’.cxlo::. KCrfod&ii te'i^CiM _ _
VIOLA SKIM 80AP i» tk«--- m a
G. smsnesR C. BITTNER ----------yqoBtad A Sir CO.. Toledo, T O.
Ordinary's Advertiseme ts.
t r ) tRDINABY
Gaonou, September*, 1898 —Th«
praiser* appointed to Mrs. set Kate apart
months’ support for
out of the estate of Max Goldman,
ceased, have filed their report in my office,
I .at uD persons show cause, if any there
before the Cou-t of Ordinary in Griffin,
IU o’clock, on the first Monday appraisers in
next, why the report ot the
uot lie made the judgment of this court
$800. t. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
Debtors and Creditors.
L$»t all parti** holding claim* the
I). P. Kilter, prment Macon, Name
W, F Elder, adminintrator, at
or Nancy M. Elder, at CreawHl, Ga.,
ly proven, and th *>e owing deceased will
on anderbiKfied and make tl» m n* of
Name. W. V. KLDEH,
Adninifftmtor, Macon, Ga.
•$3 70 NANCY M. ELDER,
Admin’Mrntrix, CnNwidl, G».
Administrator’s Sa.e.
By virtue of an order granted County, by the «ii) «k-I 1
of Ordinary of Spalding door in Griffin, I
before the court h »u«e on
Glut Tuesday in October next, 1893,
the legal hour* of sale, to the tngbedt
der for the purp*wie of dtetrihution.
the h :ira, the - remainder ‘ ' intercut • ‘ in the “ ' foi
lowing described land*, afrer the termin i-
tion of the dower in intute of Martha 8.
8imonton, which wae Net apart to be out
tbe tatafe of W. B. Simon ton, deceased. to*
wit: About one hundred and thirty acre»
iand, more or le»H*, iu AMii’n dietrict, of *aid
county, bounded north by land* of Harper,
«omb by A. W. Qoaaett, went by John Oow*
nelt, and eaet by L t. No. HO, te ing parta
Lota No*. 49 and 50. Terra* eunh.
JOHN E GARDNER,
Adminielrutur *V, B. Himontou.
WORK FOB IIS
a few day*, -nd you will be itartled mt the unex¬
pected success that will reward your effort*. We
positively bar* the best burines* to offer an agent
that can be found on the face of this earth,
•45.00 profit on S75-00 worth of butlueM if
belnj^casilv and honorabivynade bv and pald^to
employ. You can make money fa*ter at work for
os chan you ffftte any idea of. The business if ac
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that ail- succeed from the start. that
hold of the business reap the advantage of the
arises from the successful, round reputation and largest of one publishing
oldest, most America. for rooraeif the profit*
houses In Secure ields.
that tbe business -o readily and handsomely y than
All beginners succeed grandly, and more
realize their greatest expectations. Those who
try it find exactly as we tell worker*, them. There and is plenty
or room for a few more we urge
them pioved, to bat begin hare at once. few If you moments, are already and wish eu»
them advantage, a spare then write at
to ase to us once
(for this is your grand opportunity), and receive
fall iSfTX particulars by return mail. Address,
* CO.. Bos No. 400, Augwat*, M+
PATE
FOR INVENTIONS.
ol tho incotupetency or inattention ot the attorney* employed to obtain their
tT h °* r * c * nnot fx P7ciseil in employing coni|)etent anti reli-
ohU aoUd$MM
entitelv, upon the core and »kill of th* attorney.
With the view of protecting inventor* from worthies* or care lea* attorney*,
and of oeeing that inventions are well protected by valid patent*, we have re¬
tained counsel expert in patent practice, and therefore are prepared to
Obtain Patents ia the United States and all Foreign Countries, Conduct In¬
terferences, Make Special Examinations, Prosecute Rejected Case*,
Register Trade-Marks and Copyrights, Render Opinions as to
Scope Defend and Validity Infringement of Patent*, Suits, Etc.. Prosecute and
Etc.
If yon have an invention on hand send a sketch or photograph thereof, to¬
gether advised with a brief the description beat of the important Model* feature*, *nd you will be at one* :it
a* to course to purmie. are seldom necetsaiiy,
other* ^ ----- are infring > the on y OUr right*, or if yon are charged with infringement by
other*, submit matter to u* for a reliable OPINION before acting on the
matter.
THE PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY.
$18 V STREET. NORTHWEST, WASHINGTON, O. C-
a o. sox 4*a. JOHN WEDDERBURN, Managing Attorney.
aw Cut this out and tend it with your Inquiry. -*»
DoYour ErmoYfcs’
Vori 64 Hours ad
• ...» ^ 4 f i
«A Rkim-AwertiSem
ORANGE BLOSSOM
IS AS 8APS AND HARMLESS AS
Seed Poultice.
It ia applied right to the parte. It ouros all dfaeaaesof woman. Any
lady can uae 't herself. Sold by ALL DRUGGISTS. Mailed to any
addreas oa receipt of *1.
Dr. J. Al. MoGin & Oo, 3 and 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, HL
Foi sale in this city by E. R. ANTHONY,
'ABSOLUTELY FREE OF CHARGE.
CRAYON PORTRAITS jSSSSK
uur Buaouieri i
rftoVoiT, LathKffil
pjWitty, It aathli
In"™*?'-------- etc , w# «ua
CODE * CO., 753 and 755 DeKalb Avenne, Brooklyn, ». Y.
KUTICK.—Cot tbli out to* return It to in with the Ptatasreph you 4 m1i* copied.
IF YOU WANT INFORMATION ABOUT
PENSIONS
ADDBE88 A LKTTKK 08 POSTAL CABO TO
THE PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
JOHN WEDDERBURN, Managing Attorney,
P. 0. Box 463. Washington, D. C.
.reS'f^
dVilt openT iTown »« dependent upon their own lalurr foe unpyort. Widow,
6 th ’ I bo entitled entitled if It the soldier's death svn* dne to service.
no* torn e a r a are re tn* aoidier'a aestn w«* one ro aervice.
"^PA'MNM^rVentfttodlf’taldleVudt neither widow dependent nor t*nd, provided their soldier labor for died In
service, ot from effects of service, and they ure now upon own au|»-
port. It make* no difference whether soldier served or died in lute war or in reenter army or
° aV §>ldfers *f late pensioned under law, apply for Wrier rat** under other
the war, one may
** ,oldier.^dn^winp from $1 fro month under the old law entitled to
Thousandaof to per of disabilities for which pensioned, *re but
hl(her rote* under whether now law, doe not aerrloo only on account now
also for others, to or not, since , .. the afro
Soldiers and sailors disabled In line of duty In roffnlar army or navy war are _ ^
entitled, whether and discharged for of diseblllty Black or Hawk, not. Creek, Cherokee and Seminole or Flor-
Survivors, H^ura their widow#, tbe under
Ida Indian of 1*8* to 1*43, are entitled a recent slsty-twoyearaof net. disabled
Mexican War eoldlere and their widow, also entitled, if aye or
° r ^ofdcUirai completed and settlement obtained, whether pension haa been granted under
Rejected claims reopened and settlement secured. If rejection Improper of or Illegal. who
Certificates Certificates of of service service and and discharge discharge obtained obtained for for soldiers soldiers and and aaiiora i the late war
Bend for laws and Information. Jfo charge for advice. Bo fee unices ancceaefnl. Address,
THE PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY.
JOHN WEDDERBURN, Managing Attorney,
P, O. Box463. ' WASHINGTON. D.C.
Do You?
Want to
BUY,
SELL,
RENT
or
DEAL
in
REAL E8TATE.
Also Do a General
Auction and
Commission Business.
G. A. CUNNINGHAM.
T) H6&1 aa| lt.,4m Estate Aaa Agent. A mwg.1
TALES FROM
TOWN TOFICS.
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versally Ihihpublication concede during that iu number, Bril year, and uni¬ die
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March and June.
Ask Newsdealer for it, or send the price,
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