Daily News, Volume 2, Number 148, Franklin, Johnson County, 10 February 1881 — Page 3
^ILKIJTG BY SISALS.
\. jgdevised by enthusiastic bojrs
1
It seemed necessary, therefore, 3ily white flags should bo used. Idled over the problem long and Wth the following result. "f.ch made five flags by tacking a $ vlick, eighteen inches long, to both a strip of white cloth, two feet ten inches wide. (If the build-
Jbuld be painted, the flags should Jl color ihat would contrast with the paint.) Then we nailed loops i, jither to the side of our fathers' j, 4 so that, when the sticks were nin them, the flags would be in the positions:
To
2
fIKS
iWw~
""35#%*'
DAT. FEBRUARY 10. 1881
^xys live some distance apart, *~nt to be able to communicate other by means of signals, ingenious have been the
Jmrpose. But it can in brought rer perfection than has ye* by means of a very fumpV
age of fourteen I had an intiLnif who lived more than a mile home was in plain
jt whose un mine. together a systeu of ^signaling requiring
#er
As we could not alwhen we wished, we
ofdifferent collort xi flags but not quite satisfied with itj for senfi but few communications »e. Then, when we came to test |(£nd the distance was too great of the different colors being dished. The white one Was plainly
•1=1
upper left hand 1, upper ri
position was
•iered I, upper right 2, lower right yer left 4, center o. ^Notice, there »o difference in the
flag*
1.
,pone,
the
post-
„hey occupied determined the comtions. combinations of these positions
2—2 4—1 2 3—1 4 5—1 2 3 5 3—2 5—1 2 4—2 3 6-1 2 4 5 4—3 4-1 2 5-2 4 5-1 3 4 5 5—3 5—1 3 4—3 4 5—2 3 4 5
and opposite each was written ,Question or answer for which it 1. Tho answers likely to be used we placed opposite the short *1 ^nations, to save time in signaling. ,d "Code" lies before me from which the following examples:
»K. No. Morning. Afternoon. Evening. Can you come overt When? Wait till Jind out. Vnn you go a-flthing? 'I to-day Are -u well to-day
3 4, was, by wtit»
1 consent, re»ervel for a commuiuqa* 3n of vita! imjiortance,
"Com* Overf
was never to be used except in time trouble, when the case would warrant #ving every thing to obey the call, ue little expectation of its ever being
It was simply a whins although, many other things, it served a sepurpose in the end. (Mot far from my father's house stood luable timber lot, in which ho took eapecial pride. Adjoining this waft old apple-orchard, where the limbs several trvt»i» that had been cut down, the-*of the remainder, had "»4 -e©.n heaped tog«thsr in two large piles be burned at a favorable opportunity. i#v afternoon, when there was not the *thtest breath of wind, we armed our-
1
ves, father and with green pine ftistha
mt the
brusii-heaps a-fire
fe had made the heap In as moist a spot possible, that there might be less danger of the fire spreading through tin,rass. While the fUimes was getting «iid*r way, I busied myself in gather^ g.'g a#ay Vita of limbs and twigs—some tnem fW"m the elge of the woods— f^Qil throwing them on Ute tire. "Be carvful not to put on any hemlock inches!" shouted my father from his
lap, "The sjnu-ks m«i' snap out into
as he spoke a Uve foal
with aloud snap and fell at my feet, and little tongnes of flame to it«ad through the dead A fiw ttws from my pine bottgh had «»©th-
Ul them, when snap1 w»|- ^ent tee more in three dHhuvnt dirtHiiot^ I rushed to thewsajwt I ^memtewd rowing on several dead hen »k aj-
rowing on several «ean ne kmmches, entirely forgetting
I
spot of spreading fhuaifc, ink*the next and liftg tha*, wh#n. mrlancm* bddnd iftc II saw,Id
first
&aC when, glancing bdV
mr un.
I saw. to my dwmay, tlwt the fin birr* rift again. Abeadof »ne wasan fei Uy ftiei«Wng| heajiwa* spatter ling Tno»Jsly» if prvtfgngto
for a short time.
Wi"
quick!" In a moment he W#» b«tt ireftugfel
kLKR1
the wood* ta
.ij/A sodden inspiration seised me. 'Tin going to signal to Harry 1M I cried. "If he sees It hell come, ana, perhaps, bring help with him!" "Hurry!" he shouted back, and I started to the bain. The distance was short. As I reached it I glanced over to [Harry's. There were some white spots I on hus bant. He was signaling and, of coarse, could see my signal.
Excitedly I placed the flags in 1 &3 4, iml, without waiting for an answer, tore back across the fields tithe fire. It was gaining rapidly. In a large circle, a dozen rods across, It advanced toward the woods en tho other. We could not conquer it. We could only hope to hii*. tier its progress until help should arrive.
Fifteen minutes of desperate straggle, uid then, with a ringing cheer, asanj and his father dashed
My father sat down upon a rock, and, as he wiped the perspiration from his face, he said: "There, boys, your signaling has sawd the prettiest timber lot in the town of HartI'viek! I shall not forget it!"
Were we not justly proud? Two days after I found upon my plate at breakfast a small package, which contained two pretty spy-glasses. '•Perhaps they will enable you to enlarge your 'signal code.'" was all my father said when I thanked him.
We soon found that with the sud of the glasses we could distinguish any color. So we made a set of blue flags, which gave us thirty more communications by using them in place of the white ones. And by mixing the blue flags with the white combinations, over lux hundred communications could be signaled. Thus we could converse with each other by the hour.
The way we wrote down the mixed combinations was, by using a heav figure to represent a blue flfcg as 124 vdiich meant that positions 1 and 4 were occupied by white flags, 2 and 5 by blue ones.
3—4 5—1 8 5—1 2 3 4—1 2 3 4 5 solate at my barn window, I was decombinations were written lighted to see severaljflags appear on his barn.
now, that 1 place Wags in po-
42 4 and 5. (See the above ex-
glances down hia "code" until
^f6n?hea 2 4 5 and Its signification, and Jtfmps answers with a ila« at 1. Shell the following dialogue ensues:
e. 2 5. ml, in a few moments.
iwiallv spent our noon hour conng with* each other in this manner when it became neceasarylbr either eave his station, all the flags. 1 2 3 4 5 put out, signifying "gone.' ..j combination, 1
Eagerly I road: 1 3 4.
initiations, to save time In signaling, into larger drops, and there was every £d "Code" lies before me from which reasonable prospect of a very wet day, fy the following examples: and I thought he must be joking but
111will
recollections that
throng my memory in connection with* this subject, is that of an incident which has caused me many a hearty laugh sinco its occurrence, although at the time 1 did not feel particularly amused.
Harry had gone away visiting, giving me no definite idea of when he would return. So, one drizzling, uncomfortable day, as I was sitting rather discon-
Can you go a-Jlshing
The fine drizzling rain was changing
I answered: "Whcnf"
"Xoit},* was tho reply. Where f" I h.«keu.
"Iiixbetfa jftond." "Are yon in earnett?"
vxect you there
I answered "IVa," andt shouldering my fish-pole, started off across lots. The distance was fully a mile and a half, and before I had passed over a quarter of the distance, the bushes dripping with rain had completely drenched me. When nearly there the increasing rain became a heavy shower but I kept on. 1 reached the pond, but nothing was to be seen of Hnrry. Not a frog could I find for bait, owing to the incessantly pouring rain, and 1 knew it would be difficult to find-a worm. So, after half an hour of tedious waiting and monotonous soaking, I started for Harry's, my patience entvrely worn out.
The rain came down in torrents as, at length, I turned in at the gate and I suppose I looked as forlorn as a drenched rooster, for I heard a girlish giggle as I stepped upo the piazza, but I did not then suspect the truth. "Where's Hurry?" I asked of his mother whom I found alone. "Why, von didn't expect to find him at home, lid you He won't be back for a number of days yet." (Another subdued giggle from the next room.) "You're as wet as a drowned rati" went on the motherly woman. "What on earth started vou out in this rain?'' "It's that Hattle's work!" I burst out angrily, and told her the whole story. "Bear Hie l" she exclaimed, holding itp her hands, despairingly, "f never did see such a torment as that girl is 1 noticed sne has seemed very much tickled over something 1 I'll give her a real scolding!"
I darted put the door and. us I splashed my way disconsolately down to the road 1 heard a voice, struggling between repentance and a desire to laugh, call after IIWi "Forgive me, Charlie, but it was
Two ago
mch
a
joke !M Hftttie never meddled with her broUe erSi signals again. For her mother's di^ pleasure ana the severe cold that followed my drenching more than balanced the enjoyment she derived from that very practical joke.
yean ago I visited my native
town. Resuming my old place by the barn window, I §sted across the intervening forest to where Harry used to stand and signal to me. Tacked up aga-fiwt. the window-sill was my old "signal code," covered with dust and cobwetxft.... Harry was hundreds of miles away, carving himself a name among bis fellow-meu. Of all the friends of former days, scarcely one remained it the old town. And I could only wish, with ail my heart, that I were once again enjoying my boyhood's happy hours.
llxresiKXcu.—There are some faults
tc •~ke orders In the cliurch, the ht»hoi etod that he was |oo young./
S
t^of
If he gasped. w«e»me't short nt—vagifc. "Tbwt I within I a mile, and before you get help it wouldb« t-late
«r* iboi
Sno alone do «*«ythln| «gaix»i
vf
lf 1
\h^ my krri 1 shall hoi* to over-omt '•...t &alt»w said the witty candidate the by, that vice of youth
it
em*
which moat us are aorry to have lost ft
not st all «rtaB* thrt we grow eiu,er wiser or letter by growink oUex axo^rienoe
Imui1
wvll iikened..to Uie
^. rn li^t ef a «»!p, whkh rn^relv il iocs the path have «»ed over u? throws no %ht abesil! Or» to po it in another
form
when we have go*,
experience it la too late to make
smy nse.
it
of I
The Cure for Gossip.
What is the core for gossip? Simply culture. There is a great deal of gOMsip that has no malignity in it. Good sutured people talk aboui their neighbors because, and only because, they have nothing else to talk about. As we write, there comes to us tLe picture of a fiamily of young ladies. We have seen tbem at home we have met them in galleries of art we have caughta glimpse of them going from a book store or a
library,
kr
the scene.
Their arrival infused us with new courage and four pairs of hands and four willing hearts at length conouered the flame, «two rods from the woods 1
rossip,
I
Blue flags can be inserted in the original thirty combinations in the following manner: 12,12$, 128, 1234,1234,1234, 1234, 1234, 235, 235, 2345, 2345. 2845, 2845, 2345, 2345, 2345 and so on.
Among the
manjr
with a fresh volume in their
hands. "When we meet them they are full of what they have seen and read. They are brimming with questions. One topic of conversation is dropped only to give place to another in which they are lAtereeted. We have- left them after a delightful hour stimulated and refreshed, and during the whole hour not a neghbor's garment was soiled by so much as a touch. They bad something to talk about. They knew something, and wanted to know more. They could listen as well as they could talk. They speak freely of a neighbor's doings and belongings. They had no temptation to
because the doings of their nei^hxrs formed a subject very much less interesting tban those which grow out of their knowledge and their culture. And this tells the whole story. The confirmed gossip is always either malicious or ignorant The one variety needs a change of heart, and the other a chaange of pasture. Gossip is always a personal con fession either of malice or imbecility, and the young should not only shun
but by the most thorough culture relieve themselves from temptation to indulge it.
It is a low, frivolous, and too often dirty business. There are country neighborhoods in which it rages like a est.
Churches are split in pieces by it. eighbors are made enemies for life by it. In many persons it degenerates into a chronic disease, practically incurable.
Twenty-four Proverbs in Cooking. MissDod's lectures are full of little Oits of information that might fairly be sailed culinary proverbs. Here are a of them:
There is a greenness in onions and potatoes that renders them hard to digest. For health's sake put them in warm water for an hour before cooking.
The only kind of a stove with which you can preserve a uniform heat is a gas 3tove with it you can simmer a pot for an hour, or boil it at the same rate for twenty minutes.
Good flour is riot tested by its color White flour may not be the best. The test of good flour is by the amount of water it absorbs.
In cooking a fowl, to ascertain when it is done, put a skewer into the breast, and if the breast is tender the fowl is done.
A few dried or preserved cherries, with stones out, are the very best thing possible to garnish sweet dishes.
Single cream is cream that has stood on the milk twelve hours. It is best for tea and coffee. Double cream stands on its mUk twenty-four hours, and cream for butter frequently stands forty-eight hours. Cream that is to be whipped should not be butter cream, lest in whipping it change to butter.
To beat the whites of eggs quickly, put in a pinch of salt. The cooler the eggs the quicker they will froth. Suit cools and also freshens them.
In boiling eggs hard put them in boiling water. It will prevent the yolk frot coloring black.
You must never attempt to boil the dressing of a clear soup in the stock, for it will always discolor the soup.
In making any Batice, put the butter and flour in together, and your sauce will never be lumpy.
Whenever you see your sauce boil from the sides of the pan you may know your flour or corn starch is done.
Boiled fowl with sauce, over wiiuh
crate
the yolk of eggs, is a magnificent dish
for
luncheon.
Tepid water is produced by combining two-thirds cold and one-third boiling water.
To make hiaccaroni tendeVj put it In cold water and bring it to a boil. It will then be much more tender than if put into hot water or stewed in milk.
The yolk of eggs bind: the crust much 'letter than the whiter. Apply it to the Iges with a brush.
Old potatoes may be freshened up by plunging them iuto cold water beforo cooking them.
Never put a pudding that is to be steamed into anything else than a dry mohi.
Never wash raisms that arc to be used in sweet disl.es. It will make the pudding heavy. To clean them wipe inc dry towel.
To brown sugar for sauce or for puddings, put the sugar in a perfectly dry saucepan. If the pan is the least bit wet. the sugar will burn, and you will spoil,your saucepan.
Cutlets and steaks may be fried as well as broiled, but they must be put in hot butter or lard. The grease is hot euough when it throws off a bluish
The water Used in miring bread mast be tepid. If it is too hot, the loaf will be full of great holes.
To boil potatoes successfully: When the skin breaks, pour off the water and let them finish cooking in their own steam.
In making a crust of any kind, do not melt the lard in flour. Melting will injure the crust.
In boiling dumplings of any kind, pot them in the waterone at a time. If they are put in together they will mix with each other.
1
Mystery of Seeat.
No one lias yet been able to analyse or demonstrate the esential action of perfame. Gas can be weighed, but not scent. The Smallest known creature— the very monades of life—can be caught by a microscopic lens and made to deliver up the secrets of their oisanixation, hut what is it that emanates from the pouch of the musk-deer thft fills a whole space for years with its penetrating odo# —an odor that an illimitable number oi extraneous wbsUncai can carry on withwl diminishing its size and weight—*nd what it is that the warm summer air brings to as from the flowers, no map has yet been able to determine. So so subtle, ao imponderable It has eluded wr most deticste weights and measures sud our strongest senses. If we come to tit* eawitfw ofeach odor, we should have made an enormoos stariue forward, both in hygiene and tn chemistry, and would profit mure than the medical ivmaa If It t&sM be a* conclusively •demonstrated that such an odor proceeds from such and socb a cause, as weal-
ready know of sulphur, sulphate, hydrogen, aiaoBUila and th» tike.
Sane birds are always robin. When a man gets tight the devil generally gets loose.
When dogs die do they go to "the happy amne
v»
I
land of can "On bended kiine or, the missing collar button," would be a good title for a work on pro&ne history.
Persons who jump at conclusions are persons who leave Use theatre before the curtain is half way down. "Stealing the livery stable of heaven to serve the devil," is lbe way an honest Michigan deacon got it off in church, ^v?
A city missionary, was asked tliecauseot his poverty. "Principally because I have preached so much without notes," he said. "I am very much afraid of lightning,"said a pretty lady. "And well you may be," said a despairing lover, "as your heart is made of steel."
The product of Bodie—great mines, little mines and saloons or in other words Ophir holes, gopher, holes and loafer holes. The latter predominate.
ANew Jersy colored man whose wife had left him, said: "She would come lwck if 1 frowed her some sugar but I ain't flowing no sugar, do you heah
An exchange says "Give a girl long eyelashes and small hands and she will put np with number six feet and marry all around a curly headed girl with oues-and-a half." nT.:^'
4
it,
n'
Every donkey thinks himself fit to stand with the king's horse every girl thinks she could keep house better than her mother but thoughts are not facts, for the sprat thought himself a herring, but the fisherman knew better.
When a country editor, who is struggling along trying to raise a large family and build up a town on an income of five hundred dollars a year, discovers that a baseball pitcher hauls in four thousand dollars for the season it makes him sit down on a roller box and think.
A Bostonian traveling in England gives his experiences in the
TYawcript
of English
extortieu, as follows I write it with the greatest unction and emphasis alter my name, whenever I am asked to record it, "U. S. Anot that I love England the loss, but my country more and more: and I so regret that I forgot to bring with me an American flag and at least one torpedo for the approaching Fourth. But I have found, whatever the honour and privilege of my birthright, it is not an economy to be recognized here as an American. And recognized as such, at once, you inevitably are.
But how did you know I am an American I said to a chatty, intelligent Englishman, who, like myself had possessed a doorway to get out of a quite heavy shower." "I should not have known,'' he answered, ''had you not spoken." And so niy speech "betrayeth" me everywhere, and everywhere at a cost. An American is, by the average Englishman, supposed to carry a railway in one pocket, and at least
oii^'eiTas a^serva^He^uowsyou!1 He Portable
spots you. You
are
his gudgeon.
Avh-'"
ever you go you hear of the foolish 1 Ui.'irr. Americans have done, until the English idea is that the American exists simply aa shilling and sixpence dropping machine, »nd he keeps the machine well at it. They :ilk of ducks shedding water, bu$ ont sheds these silver favors at every step. I is no economy to be known as an American. It is a luxury, an extravagance, an iinprr.deuce.
Farmers as Poulterers.
It is a singular fact that so few of our American farmers are inclined to give any, or at best but a very small share of their attention to the raising of good poultry. The mode adopted by farmers, generally speaking, to produce chickens is not the most profitable to them, and is rarely the right way to manage for the welfare of their fowl stock.
Hens are kept, if at all, in but small numbers. They are permitted to prowl alxrat the farmer's place uncared for and unnoticed. They lay their eggs anywhere and nowhere. When they want to set they steal their n$sts in some out-of-the-way corner, and squat upon twice as many eggs as they hatch.
When the hen leaves the nest with her chicks she drags them through the wet grass home, and, as the careless farmer lias no fitting accommodations* for them, he can't be bothered with chickeus," it is 'too much trouble to look after these small things," "there's no money in hens," he contends, and he lets them run. They die or live, as the chances favor them.
It cannot be wondered at, under these loose and ill-chosen conditions, that farmere "don't find chicken raising profitable." Few birds can in this shiftless manner be reared, and jione that will ever be good for much for any purpose. And it should never be a surprise to such people that they find no profit in obicken raising.
On the other hand, when in these days of poultry improvement so much is doue and so much is being done, in a paying way, among the amateurs and fenciers of good fowl stock all over the country, it seems to our view that of
all
men engaged
in this work our farmers sho ald make the most of this undertaking. And they can do this, if they, will but attend to the business intelligently—as lias been proven amply and satisfactorily by the few agriculturists who have ateppro aside in this work from the old ruts, and gone about fowl cultivating sensibly and judiciously-
Farmers have plenty of room and land to spare upon which fowls may be kept to advaatge. Cheap houses can be built upon their premises to shelt«r a hundred or two birds, that will give them fresh ypn in, abundance—to use in the house hold or to sell for cash—in th^nghtseaeon.
There Is wry little labor to be performed in the proper care of a few scores of nice fowls during the breeding season.
And a very large percentage upon the cost and keeping, all told, isih* and certain return that may be reahaed to any &rmer anywhere, on a small or laxgr-i scale, where this bnsines* in conducted as it should fe. Why* then, should
ican farmers avail themselves of this plainly rem nnscative adjunct upon their premises?
Th«teisawrte
the nigs or the «heep on a arm. And yet the latter are fed and boosed W everywhere to the entire neglect almost
wffl lo
for Dr»p«r*la,St acral Debility
Nervous l»r«M(ratloa, fro nr. li serves every purpo*« wh*r* Toxic la twoaMarj.
DYSPEPSIA.
iuu\
302
BILLIARD PARLOR
A N
kUngfiettred bf THE DR. BARTER MEDICINE CO., M. 213 North Mata Street, St. Louis.
The stock of cigars on hand is Culled from the choicest brands in the market. R. L. Fuisbie,
qrAbw
w*}|»«oo*farto
payiog brasKhef rnial economy v—Ame-' hmttiy Yard.
the
memsof this thing. the improved breelf mmjtc had a« A Tv*atomtofa T*im
Andwe sojoosly
MANUFACTURERS OF
SAMPLE ROOM.
The Handsomest in Western Indiana*
Finest and Best
WINES AND LIQUORS
of all kinds at the bar.
SASHES, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC.
AND SDEAI ERb IN
lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oiis and Builders Hardware.
CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS. TEIUtB HAUTE, IND.
A
MACHIN SHOP AND
A IN E S O A N O N
Manufactntcr of
No. 620, Main street.
PERMANENTLY CURES,
SIBSST SISXASSS, lira CQUHA.IXTS, CQXSTIPATIOW ni PIUS.
mrver fwlwl to art emcMarujr. Kebon FalrcfaUd, of
JR. AlbMt*. Vt,
pfefely
my*, "tti*
(t a Hogsbon, of Berloihire aayt, "One P**dose wnxUr* for me tn oomiiietely cor
ing a
aerere Liver and
KU\nej
aary
CompUlnt,'
|!t EITHKR L1QI ID OB PUT FORM
IT HA8 WHY? WONDERFUL Wn POWER, mm
Bfcaitw It xti O* tli® L1VKE, BOWILK and K1D5ETH at the same time. H»imal It nrttucm. on* humor* U»*t derelope is
Xidxtej
gjr qttrta of
Uri-
Ptoeaeea, BUirmene—, JtmtOSi*, Ocra*ttptOon, film, or in Bhramtftan, Ketiralc^ Kerroia* awdw «ad Jw*l« OosopUint* gy It la pat up ta Pry Te«ot»l»»e fws, la tarttnean*. m»
of whtoh makwt «i* r-i
talMpMWmm,r^r
lartaf the oogwwienoe Ijr1 tmiSSf
isr
rr
noi
Amer
at the Dscwnars.
WBttS, kICHABBSOJtACO., wnmetvt.n.
KldrMirWort s"» jxMMMietrttde oelel—w p«mttiaU|»ld asnK *a
lpmt*0 4*T
ewetpeepla. xjtyetznajKnnBTKMUD
xt
WELIA.Eiaua^IACO.,1^*^
BLOOD.
refer* Ckreato ChUlt and
/mm/c.
W. S. CLIFT. J. H. WILLIAMS. J. M. CLI
CLEFT, WILLIAMS & CO,
1ST JL JE& JD
j^m^j^TJsrxcD
Stationary Engines. Flour, Saw Mill and
MACHINERY, HANGERS, PULLEYS. SHAFTING. UPRIGHT AND HORIZONTAL STEAM ENGINES-
N. Sixth Street, Terre Haute, Indiana.
HOP BITTERS?
(A Medicine, not a Drink.) CONTAIN*
HOPS* BtJCIIU, MANDRAKE*
DANDELION,
axd th*FtnutsT aj*i
BitfrT M-biucai.Quali
ties or ALL otux* Bi rr**®. E I I E
All DfseMeiof the Stomach. Bowel*, Blood, Liver, Kidney*, and Urlnnry OrRant. MerTou*neM.tApoploMne»#»nl c*p«cl*lly
Female CompUUnU.
8IOOO IN COLD.
Will bo paid for a ewe th«r will not euro or" help, or for anything Impure or injurlott* found in Uiem. A*k your druggist for Bop Hitter* and try them before you *lcep. Take no «ther.
I. C. 1» an absolute and IrretMlblc core for Drunkenness, ate of opium, tobaeoo and narcotic*. ••••Ml 8bmi
ros
Cibcvjjlk
All than «»M by rn«l«ta.
Hop
DltUn
Mff. Co.,
Roe)i«t»f, N. VA Torwto, Out.
CnsittcsB Glircctorp.
CAL. TH»MA».
OPTICIAN AND JEWELER, 829 Main street, Torre Ilautc.
'Atlornerie at £aio,
McLEAN A 8BLDOMRIDGE, Attorneys at Law, 420 Main Street. Terre Haute, Ind»
S. C. Datis. S B. Datt», Notary, DAVIS & DAVIS, Attorneys at Law,
South Sixth Street, over Postofflcc, Terre Haut«, Ind
B.UFF & MORGAN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office—521 Ohio St,, Fred Koss' building.
pjjDsicians.
Dr. A. Drake,
YETERINAKY SUItOEOX,
Office:—24
north Third street,
Vj, *. (Carlco** StaWftH,)
Rkjitdesce:—C24
CALL ON
North Fiftb.
Tr«aue*(#rr^'a#e i.t to horse or caul ni tno4mt« eart. Miu
met
and oalform imsum.
Irftft large practte
CHAS. TALBOTT,
»5Kain St. Fbr
Fainting, Paper-hanging:,
1
ansraMMPM
7-
Galsomining Glazing, &c#
Ail orders promptly attended to. Leave orders at Goeu's Furniture Store.
