Newspaper Page Text
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i, PLAGUE OF INSECTS.
A STORY OF GRASSHOPPERS’ RAV
AGES IN A KANSAS VILLAGE.
On the Railroad Track—Stopping a Pas
senger Train—A Scene of Destruc
tion Never Before Dreamed
of—ln the Kitchen.
[Cor. New York. Tribune.]
“It is impossible for one who lias never
teen the grasshopper in all his glory and
Vigor, “ said an old resident of Kansas, “to
Realize what e. visitation from these pests
means to the farmers here. When I first
came here to live the neighbors used to tell
me about what they had passel through,
and I laughed them to scorn. Their stories
of trains being stopped by hoppers, and
whole fields of corn being destroyed in a
single day, seemed to me to be simply ab
surd; but I was destined to learn by bitter
experience that half had not been told me.
When I looked at one of the narrators in an
incredulous manner, be would say: ‘Well, I
think you will have a chance to see for your
self before the season is over, as the hoppers
were iu Nebraska last season, and it will be
a miracle if wo do not have a call from them
soon.’
“I was employed on the railroad at that
time, and worked with a section gang whose
duty it was to keep the track for a certain
portion of the road in good condition. Stor
ies of the near approach of the grasshop
pers and tlie destruction being wrought by
them were becoming more frequent day by
day, and we were constantly on the lookout
forthem. Finally one bright August after
noon, as we were working in & cut in a
large piece of woods we heard a roaring
sound in the trees coming nearer and nearer.
I took it to boa heavy breeze. One of the
men who had lived there many years, and
who had often entertained me with his re
collections, looked up and exclaimed:
“ ‘Here come the d—d hoppers, curse
them!—and all my summer’s labor in my
garden will be thrown away.’
STOPPING THE TRAIN.
“In a a grasshopper lit on the
ground beside me, and then another and
another, and'in less than five minutes the
ground was covered with them, and still
they came, lighting on our facts, on our
hair, in our mouths if we were unwary
enough to open them; on the bushes, any
where and everywhere. In an hour it was
almost impossible to see a bit of ground, and
the bushes were so loaded that they were
bent to the ground. The road between the
rails was one living, jumping mass, and the
rails were almost out of sight, so deep were
they getting. Still they continued to come,
and I found myself wandering if they would
Siever stop. It was almost impossible to
Work. If you looked up suddenly and did
Dot shield your eyes in some manner they
would come with such force that, striking
you in the eye, they would almost blind you.
We could not step without treading on them
and crushing them, so thick were they.
“The,place where we were working was at
the summit of a slight grade in the road.
Up this grade a passenger train soon came
rushing along. The grasshoppers did not
succeed in getting off the rail, and thousands
were crushed, greasing the track and the
wheels of the engine. Before the train got
half way up the grade it began to slacken
its sjieed, and then we saw the driving-wheels
of the engine slipping round and round, but
not taking hold of the rail. Sand was
thrown beneath the wheel, but the effect
was only temporary, and the train came to
a stop. Brooms were fastened on the en
gine just in front of the wheels so that they
touched the rail, sweeping the insects aside,
and after much effort and a long delay the
train succeeded in starting again, and
worked its way slowly along.
A SCENE OF DESTRUCTION.
“Whenever the pests had settled on any
thing green they began at once to eat, and
such appetites as they possessed! And such
a taste as they were blessed with. Their
first tid-bit was the common smartweed,
and in an hour’s time there was none of it
left anywhere in sight. But they did not
object to anything unless it had a sweet taste
—that they would not touch. The leaves
began to disappear from the trees and
bushes as as if by magic. On our way home
that evening we had to pass a large corn
field, the owner of which and his family had
spent their whole time that season in culti
vating. Such a scene of destruction I had
never dreamed of as was presented to my
astonished gaze. Where only twelve hours
before stood a forty-acre field of corn so tall
and thick that a man’s head could not be
seen anywhere in it, and all just coming out
in tassel, nothing remained but the bare
stalks, looking like so many reeds.
OVER THE GARDEN WALL.
“Turning away we made our way home
with fear in our hearts for our own gardens.
I went around to the back of the house to
see what was left of the neat beds that had
been my pride; only that morning I had
been boasting to my wife that we had the
finest garden in the village. Nothing re
mained but the sweet potatoes and the inner
red meat of the watermelons. The outside
had been entirely eaten away, leaving about
two wagon loads of the sweetened meat ly
ing in the sun; in ten days more they would
have been ready to pick. The cabbages
were all eaten clean from the stump; the
beets, carrots, beans, and all the rest were
all gnawed close to tie ground. I turned
away heart-sick and sat down by the front
door. In front of the house was a high
picket fence, and as the sun went down I
noticed the grasshoppers gathering on the
fence like chickens going to roost; before
dark you could not see between the pickets.
The fence looked like one living mass of
grasshopper-; the side of the house was aLso
thickly covered. The rooms in the house
were full of them; they were heaped
on the chairs, the curtains, the table, the
bed. They leaped into the food being pre
pared for our supper. -It was impossible to
keep them out, as the weather was very
warm, and the doors and windows were all
all open.
HOPPERS IN THE KITCHEN.
“For the next few days we could not place
a dish of anything on the table without hav
ing one or more tumble in it before we could
eat the contents. After going to bed we
could not move without them, and then
they would crawl over one’s face, causing a
very unpleasant sensation. They would eat
through a piece of cloth or muslin and soon
destroy curtains or clothing if they were
not closely watched. The next morning I
went to start the fire, which I had fixed all
ready to light the night before. I had left
3ne of the lids off the stove, and as I ap
plied the match to the paper I heard a
great commotion inside. I looked in to as
certain the cause, and found the stove full
of them, and soon they were roasting in fine
style.
“In three or four days there was nothing
green to be seen. The country looked .IS
barren and forsaken as a desert’’
THU SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES: FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1885.
•HOMESPJN” FROM FLAX.
How Our Grandparents Blade Cloth-
Details of the Process of Manufacture.
[Mansfield (Ohio) News.]
The farmer proceeded to state: “The
dudes and delicate ladies little realize the
fact that their grandparents or perhaps their
own parents were, in their younger days,
considered more intelligent, and as much ad
mired in their homespuns, as the dude in his
finest broadcloth, or the belle in her choicest
satins. In those times girls knew how to
wash dishes, spin—less about crazy patch
work, and drumming on a piano while the
mother did the labor of the household
alone. ”
“Will you be so kind,” asked the man with
the pencil, “as to describe the process of
manufacturing ‘homespun’ cloth?”
“Yes, that’s the way it is with you young
sters; it would be curious to you now of
course, but nevertheless I’ll tell you as near
as I can. Well, when the flax was ripe, all
hands went into the field and it was pulled,
tied in bundles and stood up in bunches.
When it was cured it was gathered in and
the seed flailed off. This was in the fall of
the year. In the spring it was taken out to
a sod field, spread out and water poured
over it, unless it rained a great deal.”
“Why was that done?” asked the scribe.
“So it would rot, you see. The wooden
quality of the straw would rot and
the fibrous part toughen. Girls and boys all
turned out to turn it over, and see that this
was thoroughly finished before going to the
breaker. The breaker was a machine made
of slats in such away that when the upper
part was raised, it would leave the lower
slats about an inch and a half apart The
flax was laid across this and the top brought
down upon it The upper slats would go
down in the spaces between the lower ones
this way (illustrating with his hands). In
this way the straw was crushed, and then
drawn over a hackle. A hackle was made
something like a comb; long iron spikes
driven in a board is how the hackle was
made, and over these spikes the broken flax
was repeatedly drawn.”
Here the narrator paused to think, and
gave the reporter an opportunity to catch
up writing; after which the reporter asked—
“what came next?”
“Well, I think—yes I remember now, we
took a wooden paddle with sharp edges, and
holding up the then hackled straw, struck it
with the edge of the paddle. This we called
‘scutching.’ Then the women folks took
care of it spinning it into thread and then
wove it.”
“How did they accomplish this?” was the
next question by the interested “knight of
the pencil.”
“Well.” proceeded the farmer, “you see
the broken flax was scutched so as to separ
ate the rough pieces of straw from the fibre.
Then bunched up it was placed upon a dis
taff, next run over a little flyer and then
wound on a spool. The thickness of heft of
the thread was governed by the spinner who
drew the flax off of the distaff and rolled it
between her fingers. Well, you know how
it was from that on; the threads were
woven on a loom and many a farmer lad
was gaily attired in homespun.
Congressmen Who Smoke.
[New York Graphic.]
Governor Curtin smokes six imported
cigars a day, which cost him 75 cents.
Congressman Glascock, of California, is
the cigarette fiend. He smokes three packs
ages a day.
Senator Blackburn, of Kentucky, smokes
the strongest kind of three-for-a-quarter
cigars.
Congressman Haynes, of New York, uses
a meerschum cigar-holder which he has
owned for eighteen years.
Congressman Deuster, of Michigan, always
changes his brands. He is fickle in his tastes.
He smokes nothing but cigarettes.
Congressman Cassidy, of Nevada, always
has a cigar in his mouth, and he smokes at
least a dozen a day, which cost him at least
15 cents apiece.
Congressmen Tom Bayne, Arnott and
David Paige, smoke the very finest brands
of imported cigars, but they are abundantly
able to stand the expense.
Leopold Morse, the millionaire Jew con
gressman of Boston, smokes imported cigars
and lots of them. His favorite attitude is
with his hands in bis pockets an 1 one of
these cigars in his mouth.
Tom Ochiltree never uses tobacco. Will
iam Walter Phelps and Judge Kelley do not
smoke, and Perry Belmont neither smokes
nor chews. Ben Lefevre chews constantly.
Reagan, of Texas, likes good fine cut, and
Speaker Carlisle is fond of the chewing to
bacco known as “peach blossom.”
A Fan on a Large Scale.
[Calcutta Cor. Boston Journal.]
The punka is a cloth mounted in a frame
some three or four feet wide, and as long as
need be, suspended from the ceiling by two
ropes or eords, one at each end. Indwell
ings and offices they hang over the table,
the bed and the desk. In church they hang
over every other pew. Cords attach one to
another, and a whole section is moved by
a line leading from it through a hole in the
wall attached to an upright pole, the lower
end fixed in a cannon shot in a tub of sand.
Men called punka wallahs are stationed at
each one of these, making a row of perhaps
a dozen on each side of the building, and
when the congregation begins to assemble
each sways his pole back and forth with a
motion like Kennebec raftsmen at their
sculling oars floating down river. These
punka wallahs make a striking feature, tur
baned and dressed in white, with twisted
girdles around their waists.
A Little Deal in Cranberries.
[Chicago Herald.]
Chicagoans will indulge in speculation. A
few days ago a peculiar deal was made in
Kohlseat’s lunch-rooms, near the board of
trade. Two operators, who knew each other
by sight only, happened to sit side by side.
After finishing a plate of corn-cakes each
called for cranberry pie. “That’s pretty
good,” said one to the waiter, upon finishing
it; “give me another piece.” “Slake it two,”
said the other. The two operators eyed
each other. Not a word was spoken, but
there was no misunderstanding. No. 1
pulled out a S2O greenback and placed it on
the counter between their plates. No. 2
covered it with a S2O silver certificate. “An
other piece of that pie, waiter!” sang out
No. 1. “Make it two,” echoed his rival. In
another minute the astonished waiter put
up two more pieces of the red pastry.
A minute and a half elapsed and No. 1
shoved his plate over and called out: “Fill
her up again!” “Make it two!” came the
echo. In two minutes this was repeated.
The waiter neglected his other customers
and stood wonderingly before the pie-eaters.
In about two minutes and a half No. 1,
breathing hard and speaking with difficulty,
groaned out: “My check, waiter.” Another
piece of that pie,” sang out No. 2 cheerily.
No. 1 walked away. No. 2 took one mouth
ful of his seventh piece, picked up his check
and the two S2O bills, flung the waiter a
silver aiid made his exit.
BITTER
Prompt in Action,
KiinmJ unequalled
P® —IN—
jfL RESULTS
LADIES’ TESTIMONY.
Fl Rheumatism and Neuralgia.
“I suffered severely from Rheumatism in
my limbs and Neuralgia in the head, my kid
neys were not performing their proper func
tions. I resorted to Hunt's [Kidney and
Liver] Remedy, and was completely cured.”
Mrs. L. G. Tanner, Providence, R. I.
“Prosperity gains friends, adversity tries
them.”
Another Laty.
Mrs. Thomas Atkinson, of Providence, R.
1., savs: “1 was confined to m.V bed. A friend
urged me to try Hunt’s [Kidney and Liver]
Remedy. I had taken less than three bot
tles, when I was able to resume my household
duties.”
“Be devoted to one thing at a time.”
The Weaker Sex.
My kidney’s became afflicted and weak ;
Hunt’s [Kidney and Liver] Remedy gave me
the desired benefit. I couslder it a cure.”—
Mrs. Florence L. Wood, Bridgeport, Conn.
“True friendship Is eager to give.”
Mrs. Rockwell’s Heart Disease.
“I have been severely afflicted with heart
disease for a number of years; my trouble
was caused by Inaction or my kidneys. I
cheerfully recommend Hunt’s [Kidney and
Liver] Remedy to all who may be afflicted as
1 have been.”—Mis. A. O. Rockwell, Pearl
street, Providence, R. I.
“Without health all men are poor.”
Minus 156 lbs. Water.
“I was tapped eight times. I had one hun
dred and fifty-six pounds of water taken out
of me. Was treated by seventeen different
doctors, and Hunt’s [Kidney and Liver]
Rkmddy has cured me. —Mrs. David North,
Ecorse, Wayne county, Mich., May SO, 1883.
$1 25 at Druggists no other."O
Send lor Illustrated Pamphlets of Solid Tes
timonials of Absolute Cures.
HUNT’S REMEDY CO., Providence, R. I.
C. N. CRITTENTON, Gen. Agt., New York.
DEAF AND BLIND.
How an Atlanta Woman was
Made to See and Hear.
AX INTERESTING STORY.
Miss Minnie Wallace resides with Mrs.
George Fickland, 41 McAfee street, Atlanta,
Ga., and from her own lips a Constitution re
porter learned the following story:
Several months ago she became almost to
tally blind and deaf, and could not tasle any
thing exceptsalt. Her bones became the seat
ol Intense pain, her joints were swollen and
painful, and eventually her whole body and
limbs became covered with splotches and
small sores. Her appetite failed, and she
gradually lost flesh and strength, and had but
little use of herself, as her limbs and muscles
were paralyzed She, as well as her friends
and those with whom she lived, despaired of
her recovey. Her sufferings, combined with
loss of hearing and taste, and blindness, were
truly heartrending.
All treatment from physicians and the use
of medicines seemed powerless. Her dis
ease was blood poison and rheumatism.
As she now seemed well and hearty the re
porter asked what wrought such a wonderful
change.
“I used a medicine recommended by a
friend,” she replied, “and before one bottle
had been taken I began to see and hear. The
second bottle relieved all rheumatic pains
and improved my appetite. When I had com
pleted the use of six bottles my eyesight and
hearing were fully restored, sense of taste re
turned, and splotches disappeared, soresail
healed, and my strength ana flesh restored.
1 now feel as well as I ever did, and my
friends, as well as myself, are astonished.”
“What was the Medicine?” asked the re
porter.
“Botanic Blood Balm—B. B. B. was the
great remedy that a' ted so powerfully on my
disease and cured me. I never experienced
any unpleasant symptoms from its use, and
its action is so quick that it surprises all.”
The reporter then sought a physician who
knew the case, whereupon he handed us the
following lines:
“1 examined the above case of blood poison
and rheumatism, before and after being
cured, and certify to the main facts above
stated, and must acknowledge that the B. B.
B. effected a most wonderful cure in this
well-known case.
[Signed] ‘‘J P. DROMGOOLE, M. D.”
Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., will mail a
32-page book free, filled with magical effects.
For sale by
OSCEOLA BUTLER,
Savannah, Ga.
Without Money
AND
Without Price!
We have just issued a most wonderful and valuable
new book, which treats of diseases “peculiar to the
female sex,” and have spared neither pains nor money
to make it worthy the perusal and confidence of the
women all over the land.
Every M>'-her, wife, sister and daughter in this
e >untry is deeply, aye, vitally interested in this grea
work, and should send for it without delay.
It will be sent to any address in the United States
Free of Cost!
Read it carefully, study it well and you will glean
from its pages information that may prove more valu
able than all the wealth of all the Rothschilds, more
precious than all the gems of Europe’s royalty!
I! MAY Sm W II!
dive Post Office and write name plainly, and ad
dress
The Bradfield Regulator Co.,
P. O. Box 28, ATLANTA GA.
Bradfield’s Regulator and Mother’s
Friend
For Sale by OSCEOLA BUTLER, Comerßnll
and Congrees.streets.
COLUMBIAN HOTEL,
Saratoga Springs, - - New York.
311 J. JAMES M. CASE,
Os the Pulaski House, will open this superior Family Hotel about June 15th. Elaborate Im
prov jments have been made. Cuisine under PROF. FELIX LOUMENA, late of Windsor
Hotel New York. Rooms beautifully furnished, facing Congress Spring Park. Attendance
and appointments unexceptionable.
Terms: §3 per Day; 512.50 to S2O per Work
Bellevue Hotel ad Summer Garden
JACOB LUTZ, - - PROPRIETOR.
Special arrangements made with Committees for Picnics and Parties. A fine Brass and
String Band always on hand.
I3atliing Sriiffe for Hire. Board, by the
Month or Day.
GOOD COOKS AND THE BEST OF EVERYTHING.
ATiisio by Jung's Brass I? find DaiLy.
■I—I
‘BMg~ i '"wSjjw 7 iRSSw"
- *am ’v- . 'MI
' |||Hi|l|l|
»11? 3 ! <*j u* u l l ibp ft
i; jßKgqa '...«' : a
Our Wide-Awake Buyer
IN IVEW YORK
Keeps us constantly supplied with NEW ind INTERESTING BARGAINS, as well as with
the latest Novelties in our 25 Departments.
On May lltli,
We will put on our counters 100 pieces of Simmer Si k« at the uniform price of 33c and 49c.
These represent goods which were lever purchased for less than 75c to J 125.
Our Black Silks sell more rapidly than ever, because they cannot besurpassed in quality
nor iu price.
We are making immense sales tn Summtr Cashmeres Albatross and Fancy Dress Goods '
forour assortment, and prices are just what the people desire.
In Housekeeping Goods,
Such as Table Damasks Napkins, Doylies .Towels, Sheetings and Pillow-casings, we are
al ways ahead. We off-r this week for instaice 9-4 Sheetings at 11 cents, and the best quality
of Pillow case Cotton at B%i; in fact, extraordinary bargains all round.
We Have Never Sold More Hosiery
For Gents’, Ladies and Children, in fine giades, than we do now. The reason Is, we have
just what the people want at half value. Ii surely will pay you well to examine this de- .
partment.
And as to Our Parasols,
We can safely say it will be worth your while to look at ours, for we can give you anything j
you want at such prices that will please you
Do not forget that we are Headquarters on Gloves, Notions, fancy Goods, Ladies’ Under- j
wear, Children’s White Dresses, Infants’ Robes, Lace Caps, Handkerchiefs and White Goods.
UEMEMBER ALWAYS
We know the wants oft he people and we try our very best to please them in every way—in
the’choice ot the selection and in prices,and no matter how grea; bargains other houses offer,
we never allow them to undersell us.
OVV I 1> WEISBEIN.
BEGINNING MMDAY, MAY 11,
AT
JACOB COHKJZKr’S
152 Broughton st.. Great Sale of Domestic and
Imported
TOWELS. TOWELS. TOWELS.
Having a larger stock than needed, we propose to sell at# sweeping reduction Towels
that cannot be duplicated in this city at double the prices. W? quote:
100 doz. Figured Towels at 50c doz.; cost Me.
lOOdz. White, Colored Border, at $1 dot; cost $1 43.
86 “ “ “ “ at #I 2L> doz.; cost Si 68.
52 “ “ “ “ at 4SI 50 doz ; cost $2 08.
30 “ “ Fancy “• at 25c apiece. $3 50 doz
18 “ “ Imported, worked border, s<jc api*»c“, $6 doz
12 “ “ Band Embroidered “ sOc “ $8 50doz
No charge for showing good
MOTHS ’ MOTHS ! MOTHSJ
We have now on hand a fall supply of the well known HANAHAN TARINE MOTH
PADS, for preserving woolen goods and carpets. It Is alsb an exterminator of Bugs,
Roaches and Mosquitos. One Pad In a box or trunk will keep U free from moths, Bugs,
Roaches, etc , during the summer season. For sale by
Jacob Cohen, 152 Broughton Street
Remember our 50c. White Damask, worth sl,
LEGAL DIBECTORY.
tTm /nob wood,
Attorney and Coanaallae a* Law,
111 Bay street, np ataira.
W. 8. Chibholm. B. G. Ebwul
CHISHOLM A EiWIN,
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,
Aberoorn street, cor. St. Julian and Bryan.
Wm. Garbled. P. W. Mbldbim.
Emtt.b Nbwmak.
GABBARD A MELDBIM,
. , Law Offices,
1 R. 8.. Richakds. Wm. M. HkywalU*.
RICHARDS <k HEYWARD,
Attorney! and Counsellors at Law,
8 Drayton street.
aurus E. LESTEB. THOMAS P. RAVENEL,
LESTER * RAVENEL,
Attorneys and Counsellors-at.Law,
3 Whitaker st.
J. R. BAUSSY,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
Office, 6J Drayton street.
B. A. Denmark. 8. B. Adams
Wm. LbS. Gignilliat.
DENMARK & ADAMS,
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,
105 Bay street.
GEORGE A. MERCER,
Law Office,
Corner Drayton and Bryan streets, OTM
Southern Bank.
W. G. Charlton. W. W. Mackall.
CHARLTON 4 MACKALL,
Attorneys-at-Law.
Office, corner Bull and Bay streets,
Up stairs. ».
ROBERT FALLIGANT,
Law Office,
120 Bryan street, up stairs.
>. J. O’OONNOR,
Law Office,
108 Biyan street.
~~ GEO. R. BEVANS,
Attorney-at-Law.
Offioe, corner Whitaker and Bryan streets,
Up stairs.
M. A. O’BYRNE,
Law Office,
108 Bryan street.
N. C.
Law Office,
Nr-3 Bull street, up stairs.
RICHARD F. JOHNSTON,
Attorney-at-Law,
No. 1 Bull street, up stairs.
JOS. A. CRONK,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
111 Bay street.
~JOHN SULLIVAN SCHLEY,
Attorney-at-Law,
118 Bryan st.
CHARLES N. WEST,
Attorney-at-Law,
Bryan street, over Southern Bank.
W. HAMPTON WADE,
Attorney-at-Law,
S. YATES LEVY. S. L. LAZABON.
LEVY * LAZARON,
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law.
101 Bay street.
Philip M. Russell. R. Wayne Russell
P. M. & B. W. RUSSELL,
i Attorneys-at-Law,
Northeast corner Bryan and Whitaker.
Alex. R. Lawton. Henry C.Cunningham
Alex R, Lawton, Jr.
LAWTON A CUNNINGHAM,
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,
Office, 114 Bryan street, up stairs.
J E Wooten. a H MacDONELL
WOOTEN A MACDONELL,
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,
Office, 118 Bryan street.
WALLACE W. FRASER,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
118 Bryan Street
ISAAC BECKETT,
Attorney at Law and Conveyancer.
12 Whitaker street.
HENRY MCALPIN,
Attorney at Law.
Will attend to business promptly at 135
Bay street.
H. B. JACKSON* J. L. WHATLEY
JACKSON A WHATLEY,
Attorneys and Counsellors at>Law,
118 Bryan Street.
M. J. O’CONNOR,
Attorney-at-Law,
No. 3 Whitaker street.
CHARLES M. TYSON,
Attorney-at-Law.
Ocala, Florida.
JOHN W. WILSON,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
Over Southern Bink.
F. G. DuBIGNON,
Law Office,
120 Bryan street, up stairs.
WM. CLIFTON,
I,aw Office,
No. 1 Bull street, up stairs.
J. J. ABRAMS,
Law Office,
116 Bryan street.
A. MINIS, Jb.
Law Office,
6 Drayton street,
L. W. BRICKMAN,
30J WHITAKER STREET.
Manufacturer ot STENCILS and BADGES.
LOCKSMITH and BELL HANGER ELEC
TRIC DOOR BELL and HOUSE NUNCIA
TORS to Indicate room. HOUSE and BUR
GLAR ALARMS put up and satisfaction
guaranteed..