Franklin Sentinel newspaper, 1900, Part 47

Author:
Publication date: 1900
Publisher:
Number of Pages: 436


USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Franklin > Franklin Sentinel newspaper, 1900 > Part 47


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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And on the same day, and at the same place, im- mediately after the sale of the above described real estate, will be sold at Public Auction all the right, title and interest that the above named Rose Mo Ginnis and Lawrence McGinnis, they or either of thein had (not exempt from attachment or levy on execution) on the Twenty-fourth day of January, A. D. 1900, at two o'clock in the afternoon (being the time the same was seized on execution), in anul to the following described real estate, to wit : A certain traci of land situated in Medway, in snid county of Norfolk, on the northerly side of Village street, with buildings thereon, and known as the Eaton Place, being bounded southerly abou seventeen rods on Village street, easterly about lorty rods on land now or formerly supposed to be. long to one Cushman; northerly about seventeen rods on said Cushman land, und westerly about thirty-three rods on lund of Lawrence McGinnis, being the premises described In a deed of Lawrence AfcGinnis to William Schroeder, dated June 8. 1997 and recorded with Norfolk deed book 788, page 2. und the record title to which premises now stands in the name of Willinin Schroeder.


JEROME B. FITZPATRICK,


Deputy Sheriff.


jan 26, feb 2, 9


ELI PERKINS' " THIRTY YEARS OF WIT."


This book con BLI PERKINS THIRTY YEARS OF WIT tains the Best An- ecdotes, toe Bert Wit and Humor and the Brightest Sayings of the 190 century, This for ume amuses ered reader. It contels mnirth on every p and laughter in every line. This treasurehouse of gladness contain General Sherman' Anecdotes Jokes, Chauncy Depew's Best ries, & night with he folly rebels BU Mye in Laramie, Wild West Extr gerations, Doctors' Wit and Humor, El tue Lawyers, Henry Ward Beecher's Humor etc., etc. This magnificent book Is bound i English cloth with special cover design in gold and InLF, size 5% x 7% and contains 805 pages. p #tpaid on receipt of our Special Offer Price 85 Cents. One of these books should be lo ever hutne. Send for our Special Illustrated Book Catalogne, FREE. Address all orders to THE WERNER COMPANY, Publiabars and Manufacturers, Akron, Ohla


POST OFFICE BLOCK. . 15 to 18c 15 to 18c 16c 20c


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I Grand Organ ISwell, & Bele of Ccebrateal Tobed Beenalone are Smeel Meledla Repde, 1 8.1 ok at Charmingit arur Het ol Pleasin Quality Seeds, 1 Brl ol #1 l'une Since ly Hralilani Velrole Weeds, 1 hr1 of 2 | Hleb Mellom Smooth rt of Pleasing Soll Melodiwas I'elnelpal action consistsof tup


Reede.


CelebraJed Newell Reeds, which fremm leuls: fitted with Hammond Couplers and


so brat Dolge felis, lenthers, etc., beliog ak and find


with a 10x14 boveled palate French IOIFELT, Herkes plat pean! Trantes


With avery PARLOR


OUR RELIABILITY IS ESTABLISHED If YOU


ORGAN


4 00 6 00 8 00


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a s -


HAIR


Bears the Biguature of


Every Patriot


600 Pages .


Coulter (). I.na-


25cts.


THE SENTINEL, FRIDAY EVENING, FEB. 9, 1900.


900 DROPS


CASTORIA


AVegetable Preparation for As- similating the Food and Regula- ting the Stomachs and Bowels of


INFANTS . CHILDREN


Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC.


Recipe of Old Dr. SAMUEL PITCHER Pumpkin Seed- ALx. Seruna + Rochelle Salts - Anise Surd . Appermmint- Bi Carbonat Soda . Harm Sted - Thed Sugur .


A perfect Remedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms,Convulsions, Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.


Fac Simile Signature of Chatt Fletcher. NEW YORK.


At6 months old 35 DOSES -35 CENTS


EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.


words can 'De sent per minute, and those only in one direction. Marconi has demonstrated that, up to a certain limit, tbe distance to which effective signaling extenda varies as the square of the height of the vertical wire or rod connected to a receiving or transmit- ting apparatus.


An effective signal, to he carried one mile, requires a rod 20 feet high; four miles, 40 feet; 16 miles, 80 feet, and so on. Each rod bas a "certain spbere of influence." No metbod has, as yet, been found of shielding any particular rod to render it responsive only to signala coming from one station, and not from others within its sphere of influence. But this difficulty will soon be over- come. Marconi's system bas already been found valuable for commuuica- tion hetween shipa in the navy and be- tween lighthouses and ships at sea. In 1746, Winckler, at Leipzig, trans- mitted signals a few feet without wire connection. Dr. Watson, in July, 1747. sent electricity through the Thames river so that shocks were felt at a re- ceiving station. It is said that in 1748 Benjamin Franklin, by means of an electrical apparatus and without wire connection, transmitted electricity from one bank of the Schuylkill river, which lighted a fire for a picnic party on the opposite bank. After De Luc, 1 in 1749, telegraphed without wires across Lake Geneva, no record appears


INFANT INCUBATOR. (Machine to Graduate the Temperature In the Paris Nursery.)


changes of temperature which nearly always prove fatal. Bebind the glasa plates a mattress rests upon springs. Underneath, through a spiral pipe, a continuous current of warm water runs. This water is heated outside in a little boiler by means of a lamp or gas jet. A chimney carries off vitiated air as well as the noise of the occasional screams of the little creatures, who as a rule cry but little. Pure air from the street flows in, warm and filtered, through a pipe. A new baby is first washed with soap in a batb 98 degrees Fabrenheit, while a newly-sterilized couveuse is being heated. Tbe tem- perature is governed hy tbe needs of the child. Toward the last days of its con- finement it is gradually lowered to about 77 degrees Fahrenheit, and each day the stay outside in the feeding- room is prolonged. While the child is taking nourishment the incubator is sterilized by chemical disinfectants in compressed steam. The children are so clean, the air they breathe so pure, that lying in an equal temperature all the conditions are right for ease and growth.


The well-fed nounous, plump. rosy- cbeeked and lazy, wbo pass their peace- ful days taking nourishment for two. supply the kind of food that nature in- tenda for growing hahies.


It is said that in France they do not raise infants on canned goods and dog- hiscuits, and that the profession of wet- nurse is both dignified and lucrative. The French are a nation of experi-


ABSOLUTE


SECURITY.


Genuine


Carter's


Little Liver Pills.


Must Bear Signature of


Brentwood


See Fac-Simile Wrapper Below.


Very amall and na eney to take us nugar.»


FOR HEADACHE.


ITTLE IVER TRADE MARK TRADE MARK PILLS. CARTER'S FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPIO LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION


GENUINE MUST HAVE SIGNATURE.


11 Cants | Purely Veretabla, Cent Price


CURE SICK HEADACHE


Is Baby Too Thin?


If so, there must be some trouble with its food. Well babies are plump; only the , sick are thin. Are you sure the food is all right ? Chil- dren can't help but grow ; ¿ they must grow if their food } nourishes them. Perhaps a | mistake was made in the # past and as a result the di- I gestion is weakened. If that is so, don't give the baby " a lot of medicine; just use your every-day common sense and help nature a ¿little, and the way to do I it is to add half a teaspoon- i ful of


SCOTT'S EMULSION


to the baby's food three or four times a day. The gain will begin the very first day ¿ you give it. It seems to ¿ correct the digestion and ¿gets the baby started right again. If the baby is nurs- fing but does not thrive, then the mother should take the emulsion. It will have a good effect both upon the mother and child. Twenty- five years proves this fact.


Soc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York,


SIMPLE ROAD GRADER.


Invented by a Farmer Who Is Tan Generons in Secure a Patent nn Hlx Idea. 1 I have been a reader of your valuable paper for two years, and am very fond of it. I have heen henefited by many good hints from the Epitomes of Ex-


SIMPLE ROAD GRADER.


perience, and the many little sketches and drawings which have been made by farmers. Here is an illustration of h mad grader, which is my own Inven- tion. A and B are two pieces of plank 4x10 and four feet long. D is a brace three feet in length. CC'are two ald plow shares with the points off. bolted to tbe timber. A makes a good band ide. E is a piece of an old wagon tire. Nail a board over the top, and you will have an excellent grader .- Fred . MInissen, In Agricultural Epitomist


During a recent thunderstorm western farther lost nine head of cattle by one bolt of lightning. They were standing with their 1.cads through a wire fence and fell in thelr tracks.


"TTx Well We Can't. . "What do you think would be the re- sult if we could see ourselves as others Bee us?


"We'd all be so discouraged that none of us would ever bave the heart to go ahead and be great."-Chicago Daily News.


"The Loss of Gold Is Great ; The loss of health is more." Health is lost by neglecting to keep the blood pure, but it is regained hy purifying, en. riching and vitalizing the blood with the great health restorer. Hund's Sarsapa- villa. Thousands who thought health bad been permanently lost have been made perfectly well by taking this great medicine. Your experience may be the same.


Hond's Pills are geutle, yet always ef- tective.


Everything on the Jump. Sbe-There are 50 frog farms in A mer- 1Ca.


Ile-indeed! Even farming interests tre on the jump .- Yonkers Statesman.


Robbed the Grave. A startling incident, of which Mr. John Oliver of Philadelphia was the subject, is narrated hy him as follows: "I was in a most dreadful condition; my skin was almost yellow, eyes sunken, tongue coated, pain continually in back and sides, no appetite, gradually growing weaker day by day. Three physicians had given me up. Fortunately a friend advised trying Electric Bitters, and to my great joy and surprise the first bottle made a decided improvement. I contin- ued their use for three weeks and am now a well man. I know they saved my life and rebbed the grave of another victim." No one should fail to try tbem; only 50c. per bottle at A. C. Mason & Co.'s drug store.


Try Grain-0! Try Grain-0 ! Aak your grocer today to show you a package of Grain-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The chil- dren may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All wbo try it like it. Grain O has that rich seal brown of Mocba or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress; one fourth the price of coffee; 15c. and 25c. per package. Sold by all grocers,


Many School Children are Sickiy. Motber Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children's Home, New York. Break up colds in 24 hours, cure feverishness, headache, stomach troubles, teething disorders and destroy worms; at all drug gists. 25c. ; sample mailed free. Addresa Allen S. Olmsted, LeRay, N. Y.


Beauty la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. C'ascarets, Candy Cathar- tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackbeads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,-heauty for ten cents. All drug- gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c. 50c.


CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought Chart Fletcher


Winslow (whose wife, who is always on the alert for bargains, has been taken sildenly illj-I'm sure I don't Know what ails her unless she's shop-


Lazy Liver "I have been troubled a great deal with a torpid nver. which produces constipa- slon I found CASCARETS to be ail you claim for them ann secured such relief the first that I purchased another supply sod was com. 1 shall only be too glad to rec- Cascarets whenever the opportunity ommend Cascal 59 presented."


pietery cured


J. A SMITH. 490 Susquebanos Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.


CANDY


ascaiets


TRADE MARK REGISTERED


REGULATE THE LIVER


Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken. or Gripe. 10c. 20c. soc. CURE CONSTIPATION. ...


...


Merling Homedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York,


Bold and rumrenteed by all drug-


NO-TO-BAC RISTE TO CURE Tobacco Habit.


New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad - AND CONNECTIONS. -


EASTERN DISTRICT.


OCT. 22. 1.99.


PASSENGER TRAIN SERVICE. (DAILY RXORPT SUNDAYS, IXLESS OTHERWISE NOTED.) Trains leave FRANKLIN for


BOSTON - 5 15, 6 67, 8 03, 9 00, 9 15, 11 41 & m; 12 50, 5 01 (Ex.) 605, 9 38 p 10; Sundays, 8 26,8 55 & T; 6 26 1 1. Return, 8 07, 8 30 a m; 1204, 336, 432, 510, 6 22, 6 67, 817, 11 17 p m. Sundays, 9 15 & m, 6 15, 7 10 p m. BLACKSTONE-9 15 Am; +23, 745 | m. Return ¥36,1125 m;1410


WALPOLE-5 15, 6 57,803,900,915. 1141,4m; 12 50, 5 01, 5 45, 9 3% p 1, 8 8 20, 8 55 a m ; 6 26 p m. Return, 848, & m11 ; 12 49, 4 10, 5 11,601, 7 10 9 10 p m ; 12 12 a m. 8 10 17 a m, 6 17, 7 64 p m. NORFOLK-5 15, 6 57, 8 03, 9 15 a to ; 12 50, 5 45, 9 38 pi. 8826 a m; 5 26 pm. Return, 1855 & m, 112 58,15 21, 6 19, 17 25, 9 1M |) m ; 12 21 a in A 10 25 a m ; 6 25 p m.


CITY MILL8-5 15, 16 T, 8 03, 19 15 a 1 ; f12 50, 5 46, 9 38 pm. 88 26 a m, 5 26 pm. Return, 18 58, a m : f1 01, 5 25, 6 14, 17 28, 19 21 pm; 1224 am. 810 29 a Tu. 6 20 D m. PUTNAM-9 15 a m; 4 23, 7 45 p tu. 8 811 pm. Returu 7 20, 10 30 a m ; 3 50 p mi. # 7 35 p. m. HARTFORD - 9 15 a m: 423, 7 45 p m. Re- turn, 5 10, 8 30 * Tu ; 1 56 | m.


Retiro WOONSOCKET JUNCTION-6 20 p Di. Return, 7 45, 8 40, 11 30 a m. NEW YORK, all rail-9 15 a 01 ; 4 23 p m. Return 5 00,11 00am New York, via Norwich Line, + 45 p tu. New Pler 36, North River, 6 00 11 L).


Providence Extenslou.


Trains leave FRANKLIN for PROVIDENCE-7 04, 9 04 & m; 1 08, 4 26. 704 P IM. Kets r1, 6 04, 8 10, 12 04 a m ; 4 35, 6 04 p I.


MILFORD BRANCH.


Tralos leave Franklin for


MILFORD-9 18 & m ; 1 12, 4 30, 5 35, 6 50 pr m : 8 6 37 8 00 a m. pm. Return, 6 35,8 21, 11 13 & m ; 3 48, 6 03 p m. B, ASHLAND-4 30 p m. Return, 7 50 a ID ; 6 35 p m.


Trains leave Unlonville for MILFORD-9 25 a m ; 1 19, 4 37, 5 42, 6 57, 8 8 44pm FRANKLIN-6 40, A 41, 11 28 a m ; 4 03, 6 19 p m+ 8 8 15 a m.


GEO.L.ICONNOR, P. T. M. A. C. KENDALL, G. F. A.


Explanation of signs: * Daily and Sundays, t stops on notice to agent or conductor; 1 daily except Monday ; { runs daily, including Sunday, but on Saturday runs two hours later than time given. § Stops only for New York passengers. >> Limited Express leaves Park square, Bos- ton, for New York at 1 p. m. Runs on week days, Arrive in New York at 6 00 p m saine day. Leavee New York at 1 p mo; arrives in Boston at 6 00 p m same day.


J. A. GEB. House and Sign Painter. Plain and Decorative Paper Hanging.


FIRST-CLASS WORK GUARANTEED


SHOP AND RESIDENCE, MCCARTHY STREET. 22-1y


Crescent · House,


FRANKLIN, MASS.


Pleasantly Located.


Heated by Steam. Table First-Class.


S. T. CAPRON. Prop'r.


MEDWAY SAVINGS BANK, MEDWAY, MASS.


M. M. FISHER, President. Vice-Presidente A. M. B. Fuller, A. Park.


Clerk and Treasurer, W. H. U'pton. Trustees-M. M. Fisher, A. M. B. Fuller, Wales P.


Kimball, Sumner Robbins, R.


Ross,


. s. G. Clar 4. Clark, J. W. F. L. Fisher. E. C. Wilson, S. G G. R. Drake, E. B. Stowe. Park, W. H. Cary, W. P. Clark, Thompson, A. Committee of Investment - M. M. Fisher, W. H. Cary, Sumner Robbins, S. G. Clark, W. P. Clark, G. R. Drake.


Diidends declared and payable the first Mon- day in June and December.


Bank open daily from 9 to 12 a. m. and 2 to


MONEY TO LOAN On first-class Bonds and Mortgages.


G.A. Martin, M.D.,


AND .


C.B.Hussey, M. D. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS


Office -. FLETCHER'S BLOCK, MAIN ST


Hours from 8 to 9 a. m. 1 to 2 and 7 to 8 p. m.


DR. O. H. RANDALL, Physician and Surgeon, (Cor, Main and Emmons Sts.) Hours-8 to 9 a. m., 1 to 2 p. m., 7- 108 p. m.


.. Diseases of Nose and Throat a specialty


A.J. Gallison, M.D.


PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.


Office No. 2 Dean avenue. Hours Sto > a. m 1 to 2, 7 to 8 p. m. 12-t1


DR. J. CUSHING GALLISON, No. 2 Dean avenue, Franklin.


Morning, 8 to 8. Office Hours : [ Afternoon, 2 to 3.30. Evening, 7 to 8.


92-tIS


DRS. J. T. STETSON & M. E. POND, DENTISTS


Exchange Block (up stalre), Franklin. Mass, Dr. Stetson at office Mondays and Tuesday Dr. Pond on Wednesdays, Thursdays, Friday and Saturdays.


ATRS. E. F. STETSON CHIROPODIST.


Painless Removal of Corps, Booione and Ingrowing Nails.


Office hours from 9 to 12 a. m., 2 to 5 p. Il. Thursday. Friday, Saturday and Sunday of each week.


9 MAPLE ST .- Near hrick schoolhouse. 18-tf


O. F. METOALF & SONS.


HAY, GRAIN AND LUMBER Shop Work and Cases.


Jul0 1y


5.


PROF. HENRY'S APPARATUS. (Used with Considerable Buccess as Long Ago as 1838.)


of any advance on this line until 1838, when Prof. Henry sent signals from one room to another, 18 feet distant. He used a coll of wire with a transmit- ter in one room and another coil with a receiver in the other room. After Morse had proved, over 50 years ago, that it waa possible to send signals over two wires, he had great difficulty In convincing people that he was not de- ceiving them when be substituted the eartb for one of these wires. He be- lieved that the same messages could be sent without the use of any wire con- nection. On December 16. 1842, be tele- graphed a distance of 80 feet, across the Potomac river at Washingtou, without the aid of wires, During the following year his friends, Rogers and Vail, re- peated the experiment across the Sus- quehanna, at Havre de Grace, a dis- tance of one mile. A pateut wns grant. ed to Lindsay in England in 1554 cov- ering the same method. In 1877 Prof. Gray. in Chicago, sent messages from one end of the Western Electric con- pany's works to the other. using the means formerly employed by Prof Henry.


Prof. Dolhenr. while experimenting discovered that the telephone premier. he was holding bad become disconnect- ed from the wire und that he could still bear distinctly. He raised two wirewin the air by means of kites und with an Induction coil and Morae key und one vertical. wire at the transmitting stu-


tion and his telephone receiver connect- ed with the other wire in the nir and with the earth, be was enabled to tele- graph for a half mile. He obtained a patent in 1886. The same year n patent for a method of telegraphing to and from moving tralos was granted a man named Phelps, and in 1891 a similar patent was Issneil to Edison, The sys. tem was used on the Lehigh Valley and upon the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroads, and was only aban- Joned heenuse there was not enough business to pay to keep operators on the trains. It is yet too early for the uninitiated to more than conjecture as to what possibilities may be opened up by the use of electric currents con. trolled without wires.


It will not make much difference un. less the coming years are to furnish people to enjoy the results of the dis+ coveries of the present time. Depopn- Inting France is using every method known to science to preserve the lives of the little ones who seem to be arriv- ing in smaller numbers each year. Wishing to raise money to popularize knowledge of the Incuhating system. tickets are sold at a box office of the Oeuvre Maternelle des Couveuses d' En- fants, as at a theater, to the long halls filled with what appear to be refrigerat- ors with plate glass front and sides. Each contains a very small baby.


The establishment advertises in the theatrical columns of the Paris papers who and attracts immense crowds would probably not feel much interest in a collection of ordinary infants. But the sight of the rosy little dolls who ar- rived in this chilly world too soon, and who but for the invention of the cou- veuse would have passed out of it to at- tain maturity without a material body. is irresistible. A newly-born infant should not weigh less than six pounds. but many who have weighed little over two pounds have been saved by means of the incubators, whose object it is to protect their occupants from the


menters. LASt November, Louis Gar- chey obtained the privilege of paving a crowded section of one street in Ly- ons with glass to replace Belgian blocks, and the material bas proved so antisfactory that large contracts are to be filled for other European cities, The pavement is laid In hlocks, eight Inches square, and fitted together so closely that no water enn soak hetween. After six months' hard wear it remains as sound as when put down. Its resist- ance is greater than that of stone. It s such a poor conductor of cold that ice does not readily form upon It. Dirt loes not necumulate npon it as readily as upon stone, and it does not retain ml- crohes. The product is obtained from broken glass heated to 1,250 degrees Fahrenheit, and compressed in matrices by hydraulic force. It devitrifies under the process. It possesses all tbe physi- cal and chemical qualities of glass, ex- cept transparency, but resists crush. ing, frosts and heavy sbocks, From old glass, material is being produced for buildings and interior decoration. The possibilities of glass as a building man- terial will be demonstrated in the lu minous palace for the Paris exposition. wbich will soon be completed. EDWARD JULIAN


The Practical Side of It. They talk about the reapers that "singin' In the wheat."


But to tell the truth about it -- they're


a-howlin' at the heat! No feller feels like singin' when he has to stir aroun'


In a cotton or a cornflel' with the a-blazin' down!


They ain't no reapers singin' In the country roun' about: They use to try a little, but the music's given out. Fer when it comes to reapin' you've got to stir aroun',


An' you never feel Ike singin' when the Fun is blazin' down!


-F. L. Stanton, In Atlanta Constitution.


STRUBEIGS


ACTS GENTLY ON THE


KIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWELS


CLEANSES THE SYSTEM DISPELS SEFFECTUALLY, COLD IS HEADACHESOG OVERCOMES M & FEVERS HABITUAL CONSTIPATION PERMANENTLY ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS. TO GET


BUY THE GENVINE - MA


AUFORNIA FIG SYRUP LOUISVILLE


NEW YORK


FOR SALE BY ALL ORUSGISTS, PRICE SOL PER BOTTLE


THE NEW TELEGRAPH


Marconi Was Not First to Send Mes- sages Without Wires.


There Have Been Many Investigators In the Same Field-Infant In- enbution In Parla-Glaas for Pavements.


[Special Correspondence. ]


W


PHILE so much interest is be- ing evinced in wireless teleg- raphy at the present time, and there is so much discussion pro and con as to its practicability, the general public seems to he indifferent as to the exact amount of credit which should be apportioned to the different in- vestigators in this field. When it was stated early in 1897 that William Marconi had invented a method of tele- graphing for miles witbout wires it


WIRELESS TRANSMITTER. (The Instrument Used by American Op- era tors.)


was generally believed that he had made a new discovery, when he bad really been employing well-known principles and improving on apparatus In use over a century ago. But to Mar- coni helongs the credit of having, by means of minute attention to detail and the use of the long vertical air wire, placed one method of space telegraphy beyond. the plane of uncertain labora- tory experiments on to one of certain- ty of action and ease of manipulation comparing favorably with methods of electric communication employing a continuous wire between two places. His apparatus is aimple and inexpensive. It is not likely that wirelesa telegraphy will usurp the place of telegraphy with wires, Each haa a field of ita own. An expert operator can receive from 50 to 60 words per minute, and four messages may be transmitted each way over one wire at the same time, wbile with wire- Jess telegraphy, as yet, only 15 to 20


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New Orleans and Return, $27.50. Happy Is the dalryman or dairywom- The Southern Railway will sell round | an now who bas a well-filled silo, and a trip tickets Washington to New Orleans herd of fresh cows, and cau shlp fresh- ly-made butter to mærket every week. at one fare, $27.50. Tickets on sale Feb. 20th to 25th with final limit returning March 15th. The only route fron New Protecting I'nemseives. Leading spiritualists of the central states have formed an organization to expose fraudulent mediums. York offering double daily trains with perfect dining and sleeping car service New York to New Orleans. Time 39hours. For full particulars, call on or address Geo. C. Danlels, N. E. P. A., 228 Waslı- ington Street, Boston.




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