Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 4, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1885 — Page 6

6

IHIS IlSiiAIYA 6TATÜ bUMLMiL WjiftSUAl. F.lUUfAlU 25, 1685

OCK FAK1I BUDGET.

Tbc Cost of Fattening Prize Steers. Live Stock Notes Management of Colta-Lave8 as Fodder. Heat.Prodaclnic Foods A Good Bat Trap Charcoal Iust Feeillug Top Okiun Huhuld tltats Farm Kotes. Hie Cost of rattening Pria Steer. Philadelphia Record. It is cot only interesting to know that a superior quality of beef may be produced by good feedirg but it is important t understand the mtthid n which the process of fattening was done, and its cost. For that pnrpcEe we wi 1 select some of the prize ani n als of the Kansas Fat Stock Show, and rive the details as made known by the stock -rr en who exhibited the steers. 0' the yoang steers, Cornwall, a Hereford, was calved April 2, 1SS2, ana as the show was held ia October, 1S1, he wa3 two years and six ticnths eld. For the first six months he was allowed to remain with his dam, and then consumed 160 gallons of skimmed milk, having the run of the pasture daring the time he was with the cow. Daring the latter part of his first year he also consumed 1,000 pnnda of hay, ISO pounds of oats, 180 pounds of bran and ninety pounds of oilcass. After his first 3 car he was on pasture the first six months a" the latter part of his second year was fed 2, 0C0 pounds of hay, 510 pounds of ehor' 270 pounds o cilcaka but dannz the whole year he was abo fed 540 pounds of oats and . 40 pounds cf commeaL From his second year to October 25 he was oi pasture, bat w as fed also 2,000 pounds of hay, 540 pounds cf oats, 270ponnds of oilcake and 1G0 pounds of corn on the ear. His weight was 1,070 pounds, and the cost of the food consumed ii not given in detail, but the expense of producing the 1,070 pounds was !6 per hundred pounds. Taking a look at the yearlings we find Logan, an Aberdeen Anzus steer, was calved on October 8, 18S3. For the period to October 8, 1S31, he was allowed to be with his dam five months, and consumed ISO gallons of milk. Was on pasture the balance of the time, and also fed on 1,000 pounds of hay. During 3'j0 days he was given tAO pounds of crushed oats, 45 pounds of shorts and 1G5 pounds of oilcake. Frcm October 8 to October - seventeen days he was fed ISO pounds of timothy hay fifts-cne pounds of crushed oat3, Üfty-on pounds of shorts and seventeen poinds of oikaie. His weight was 900 ponnds. at a cost of S2.GÖ per 100 pounds, ilaking a com par's an between the two steers, it will be notice! that the younger animal was the more pr j Stable, the beef being produced at at an estimated cost of 2 01 cents per pound, while with the elder steer the cost wa3 only a fraction less than four cents per pound. The character of the feed had much to do with the difference in cost with some of the s'eers, for the feeding of the young animals was with a view to promote growth, oats being relied upon principally for that pnrpo3e. Another Etc er, aged two years and six months, received but a small allowance of oats; but daring the period from birth to s'auehter received over 10,000 pounds of Bhelled corn, which many maintain is the cheapsjt focd that can be given. Bat the cost of the beef from the steer which was fed so liberally with corn was $0 47 per hundred pound. The conclusions arrived at are that young stock is more profitable than when allowed to fully mature: that a variety of food, fed plentifully, is best; that ia the early stages of growth milk is aa important factor; that while corn is a clean grain, it does not give as good results when fed alone as when used moderately in connection with substances i ich in nitrogen and phosphates; that more is gained by supplying the needed elements of growth bone and tissue than in attempting to lay on fat without building Tip the structure, ana that the cheapest way to produce beef is to feed heavily, use eood breeds, and push them from the first day's existence, aa Detter prices are also obtained for good quality. Live stock Notes. March is a trying month for live stocfe.aad they will need extra care until the panares produce sufficient herbage. All animils should be kept from exposure to the long, cold storms. We have seen many flocks and herds that were obliged to be in deep mud continuously through tbe SDrln. The vards should be properly drained and the floors of the sheds and feeding-rooms kept dry. Horses have heavy work at this season, and need to be fed and groomed accordingly. Much depends upon the driver; Jet him be patient and gentle. Fretting horses are never doing their best. Milch cows thrive when kept clean and fed with an abundance of wholesome food. Let the milking be done by careful hands, otherwise new cows will be spoiled, and old ones dried oif. Early lambs, with their dams, need warm pens. As the days grow warmer, tbe ticks get more active. Dip the infested sheep in one of the preparations sold for the purpoee. For lice on calves, pigs and fowls, nothing ia better than grease or kerosene. Speak now for June pigs. Give brooding bens clean nests, with food close at hand. Be an "early bird" ia the spring. Management of Colt. It was formerly claimed by some that feeding oats to young colta rained their feet, but that idea has exploded. There ia muca less danger of injury to the feet than ta a stomachs from overfeeding, and as a rule more stomachs suffer for the want of ?ai a than from overeating. The quantity of grain that can be profitably fed to a weanling by farmers in the country where hay is worth only from $10 to $12 per ton, and wher the colt must depend solely upon p3turae from May till November, and perhaps later, can not be determined by the quantity fad by those breeders whose colts are entsredtj trot at two and three years of age, and will have plenty of exercise during the winter ai well as extra fjed during the summer months. Possibly from two to three quarts of oats daily, wi'h half that quantity of wheat bran and all the choice earlv-cut hay it will eat, will prove about as much as conntry farmers can profitably feed under ordinary circumstance!. If the colt gets too much grain or concentrated focd during the first winter, its stomach will not be properly distended, and when turned to grass in the epring, it can not eat enough to keep it in a thrifty condition. Hence its growth is checked at a period when it is important that it should be increased. The feet of colta suffer mach more for the Jack of care in keeping them properly shaped by the aid of a rasp tbaa from excessive feeding of prain. Th feet of every colt should be examined and trimmed at least once a month, so aa to keep all the toes properly shortened, thns preventing undue strain to the tendons, which in time is liable to result In serioo lameness. The bottoms of the feet should also be rasped, so as to be kept perfectly leveL It requires some knowledge of the anatomy of tbe toot to do th j properly, yet every farmer by examining can see when one side of the foot is becoming twisted out of sbape. and by exercising a little ingenuity ran, with a few properly applied strokes of the rasp, prevent detects, which, if not arrested, are sure to detract from the value of tbe animal when ready for the market. Mxt country colta suffrr more from the want of a comfortable bed at night than from a lack of fsed. Leaven it Fodder In Norway. The alder and the ash are much valued br tbe Norwegian prtant as furnishing fiddr for tbeir cattle during the long severs winter In early October, jast before the leaven t hange color, every farmer fills two or thrsa

cl his tarns with email branches cat from these trees; with this food the cows have to be content, for all the hay is required for the boret 8 The work of collecting and storing these leaJy branches Is intrusted to old Touts and younger girls, the latter climb icgrjp into tres when necessary, and dts playtrgas ranch agility and fearlessnesi as ä tcbcol-boy after a bird's nest The fair sex In Norway tare tu do their share of hard

work, and do it uncomplainingly; an old beldame may frequently be seen trudging homeward over the slippery ice-worn rack of a difficult mountain path, beat almost double with the weight cf her years, and snch a bandle of boughs a strong English laborer would consider amply large enough lor him to carry cmM rock yard. Plant Ltce oa Fruit Trees. Ametlcan Agriculturist. Many of our subscribers complain that ants are doing much damage to their fruit trees. Ants nny be to some extent injur ious, but their oeirg round on the peach, cherry, apple and other fruit trees In such large numbers is duo to the preface ot countless plant lies ( Apiides) oa the leaves and youDgt vfgs cf thoe trees. Ants feed uron the sweet iuices that exude from tbe bodies of the plant lice. They sometimes bestow great care upon the plant lice, protectlrg.and providing for them as we do for a cow, and for much the same ietaon. If the lice are removed the ants will seek their food elsewhere. This may be done by showeriDe the trees with tobacco water, or an emulsion of kerosene. With small treej the Jirnba may be bent down aad dippeliaa bucket of the liquid. IIRt-Prrfuciug Fool. f American Agriculturist,! "We frequently are asked questions concerning '..- heating capacity of various foods. One to the point is before us: "Is corn more heating than oat?" The production of heat is one principal funtion ot food in the animal economy, and is a fair measure of the nutritive valne of aoy f 33d when 6UÜicient digestible nitrogenous compounds ar supplied. It has baen determined that the heat-producing power of fat, albumin,, and starch, are respectively 100, 47. 4 and 43 1. On this basis the heat capacity cf corn is highest, and is placed at one hundred in the following list: Corn 100; linseed cake 05; beans 93; barley 83; oats 80; wheat bran 67; meadow hay 50; wheat straw 47; potatoes 00; mangels 13. Linseed cake would occupy a higher rank if it was mora digestible twenty per cent ia not utlliz ?d by the animal. Oats, as appears from the above, is only fcur-fifths as heating as corn. A Good Uil Trap. An effective rat trap is male as follows: Tae a hollow lor, from six to eight inches in (1 aneter, and efijht to ten feet In length. Make a plus of wood to fit one end of the hollow, and fasten it la securely, ilike a second plug to fit the other end cf the log, and lay it aside in the barn. Placs this log upon tie llaor of the barn, near to some hay, fedder, or a pile of corn, so t'aat it will be convenient for the rats to find and enter. It will not be long before they wilt bsgia to carry in litter, and to make n? cf the log as a hidlrgplace in the day-time. Yo;; can see hw they are progressing by not'eing the signs at the entrance to the kg. Dj not disturb tb.a leg for a wet k or more. When a largs number of ra's are hiding in the log. drive in the extra plug and take the log out of door, away from any building or pile of rubVi.-h that the rats could e?cape to. Now call ail bands with clubs, and let one person with a pele drive tbe rats out of the log Or send in a terrier dog te rouse them. There will be a lively time for awhile. Kill ail the vermin and set the "trap" aain. Cbarroal Dust for Poultry Houses. Mr. T. J. McDaniel, York County, Maine, writes us: After an experience of many years in the breeding of common and thoroughbred poultry, I have come to the cocclusian that there is nothing better for the walls cf henneries, than the filling of charcaal dust between the outside and the in-ide boardings. The boards of the siding netd not be matched, or tongue andgrooved, but well seasoned and jointed, thgn what little air gets through brings those antiseptic qualities bo much needed, especially during warm weather. Experiment la Feeding. The Highland Agricultural Socie'y has is sued a report cl two experiments in relation to ensilage, which have been carried out ander its directions. On February 11 six bullcckp, to be led on turnips and oat straw, weighed an aversg9 of- 7 hundredweight, 1 qnaiter, 10; J pounds each, and five to be fed cn silage weighed an average of 7 hundredweight, 1 quarter, IS 2 5 pounds each. When turned out to grass on May 12, the turnip fed Jot averaged 8 hundredweight, 1 quarter. '21 i pounds each, and the eilege fel lot 8 hundred we:ght, 2 quarters, 12 poandä each. On June 17 they .averaged 8 hundredweight, 2 quarters, 8 pounds, and 8 hundredweight, 3 quarters, 6 pounds, respectively, the silegefed animals being still ahead. This was the last test cf live weizht. The bul locks were killed in 'August, when tbe drefsed carcasses of the six fed on turnip? and oats averaged 00 stone 7 pounds, and those of the five fed on silage averaged 42 stone 4 2 5 pounds per carcass. Thus tbe silage-fed bullocks, which started with aa advantage of a fraction ander S pounds of live weight each, finished with an advantage of 2 stone 11 pounds dead weight. The other exteriment was undertaken to test the suitability of s;lage for ewes in winter. No details are.given, but it is stated that the lambs produced by the ewes fed on silage from the date of their birth to that of their sale were not to be distinguished either in size or condition from the lambs of ewes fed on turnips. Raising "Top" Onions. Onion?, lika other ve-etablea, writes a cor respondent of The Indiana Farmer, are s isceptible of improvement, and also of dexn eration. Last season the writer put out a quart of solid, fine lcoking sets, all of which grew rapidly and promised a better yield tban ordinary. Tne tops grew tall and heavy to a surprising decree, but when the Duma oegan to smartly expand taeyaiiai vkled into from two to five parts each, and became tough and stringy. When the tors ot other onions set out at the same time were all dead, these tops were green; and tbey remained quite nresn, though, some what Jaied and lallen, until IJacena her; In fact, until savere co d. I shoved ome cf these shallots (degenerated onioDS) to an xpertenced gardener, who mforma me that they had degenerated in the fol losing way: Onions which o-ar e's at ti top had sent np amid those sets little s'eii which blo-somtd and bore leeis. These seeds had been planted, pern a 9, soon after ripening, and had produced the seta which irouRht forth my shallots. This taught me a lesson; to look well to the character of whatever onion sets, plants or seedi of aoy Bind 1 might hereaiter put Into th9 groaid Do not raise degenerate articles if yon ein avoid it especially a denerate boy compared to man, vh it a shallot is to a true cnion. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. To Briebten oarpets. Carpets may be brightened by dusting with a flannel mop. Pickled Raisins. Leave two ponnds of large, fine raisins on the stems, add one pint of vinegar and half a pound of sugar; sim mer oyer a slow fire half an hour. Rice WafHea One pint of cold, boiled rice, one-quarter cf a pound of batter, oaehalt pint of llonr sifted, five eggs, the wh t and yelks beaten separately; Deat hard, aad bake at once in watne-irons. Oatmeal Cakes. Wet one cud of oatmeal with ore cap of sweet milk; in the morniog add one and one-half teaspoonfala of baking powder, one epg, one half teasnoonfal o salt, one quart of milk and flour to thictsa. JJake in a quick oven. A Hint to Cooks. One of the wisest pre cautions to take when yon are baking is t fcaye the oyea perfectly clean, and yet it is

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ere that Is citen ntg ecied, and many an rtberwise faultless dish has been spoiled by tbe sifting of ashes from the upper grate in the oven. Indian Meal Fadding. One quart of eweet skimmed milk htatd to a scald, and one cup of meal mixed with two thirds of a cap o' molas-es; then stir it into the boiling miik; ktep fctirring until it thickens; one teaspoonful cf salt, pour it into a bakinar dish, tbi pour over it one pint of cold milk, and spice to taste. Bake three hours. P.rtakfsst Pish. A good dish for breakfast la made by chopping pieces of cold boiled or fried ham jnst as fine as it po?siblo to chop them; mix them with cold mashed potatoas. an egg or two. a little batter or cram, or both, form into ball, flour them, melt a little butter in a frying pan, and brown the balls. Serve hot. Gold Cak6. One cspful of sugar, half a cupful of batter, the yolks of tkree es ;3 and one whole egg, half a cupful of milk, oneKurth cf a teaspoonful each of sod and cream o tartar, one and tares fourths cipf als of flour. Mix ths batter and tuar together and add the egzs, milk, flavor and tionr, in the order rsuied. Bake the a oe as siWer cake. JA white frosling Is goodj villi this rake. Dried Peaches Stewed. Wash a pound ot dried peaches, put them ia aporcelain-lmed sarc?pan, with enough warm water to reach three or lour inches above the top of the peaches, and let them stand over night to soak; the next morning set the siu:epaa over the fire, and simmer the peacnej very s'owly for five hours, or un:it they are. ten der; wten the peachei are tender aid to them a gill of any good syrup and enax;! b-own sugar to swetten them, and coatmee o Bimmer tbem until a good consistency is atiain d. Serve them tot or cold. Boiling Fish. After washing ihoronglilv in salted ct Id water, sprinkie the fish with salt and pepper, and tie in a clean cloth with a sprig of parsley. Cover with cold , water, exespt in case ot salmon, when lukewarm water mast bj used to preserve the color. A fi3h weighing one pound will be done in ten minutes after the water b gins to boll. Drawn butter sauce, with a nrabciled egg chopped fine and stirred in at tha last, ia very nice for bass. For a gcod, hot bread cake, take two taV.eepoonfuls of Indian meal, two of molasses, one not at all heaping, one of soda, oae and a half teacups of buttermilk, a good pinch cf salt; thicken this until it is about h&e a thick paste with rye flour; bake in moderate oven for thirty-five minntes. Another way, both recommended by an excellent Bitaority, is to ttirt with a pint of wheat bread sponge. .Mix with this two quarts ot Indian meal and water enough to wet it; then stir in half a pint of wheat flour and a tab'espoonful of salt; let this rise, then kneal it well and put it In tins; when light bako it for an hoar and a half. Sprirg Vegetable Sosp. Cut np a eoodsized onion into very thin rounds and piac these in a aucepan.with a goad allowance of butter. Take cae not to let the onion gat brown, and when it is half done throw in two or thrte tandf als cf sorrel, one lettnes acd " qrxall quantify cf chervil, all finely cut;- -r add pepper, salt, a litte nutmeg, and ki stirring until the vege'ables are narlv c i Then put ia one tablespoonful of p rded loaf sugar and about half a pint cl vegetable Btock; boil until tn onnoES are thoroughly done. Meanwhüs prepare about a doze, ard a half very thin slices of bread about 09 iiich wide and two inches long, taking care that they hiv a crust along one of their long sides. Dry these slices in the oven. When it is ttui to send up the soup, first remove the scum from it, then set it to boil, and when it boiU take it oiTthe fire ad stir Into it the yelk of two or three egs beaten cp wi'h a quar ter or a pint of erf am or rank, ronr ihs soup ever the slices of bread, and serve. 1'iKM NOTES. If the fences have not been repaired th5 work should be done at once, ns the busy season ia fast approaching. Unless the manure is covered during the winter the sno v will do much damage, wben melted, by marling out the soluble portions. It is said that a piece of groand set oat in black walnut and allowed to remain twenty years will yield a larger profit than la any other mode of investment on a farm. In tbe dairy regions of the West the Holsteins are gradually superseding all other classes for the purposes of those dairymea who make a basiness of selling milk only. France, with about the same area as tfis State of Texas, has raiEed this year .'516 OOo -0C0 bushels of wheat about 30,000,000 bushels more than the ciop of 18S3 and iha quality Is excellent. At the Maine State College, during an experiment made to test the quality of ere im frcm twenty cows, the yield in amount ot cream and percentage cf baiter differed greatly, no two giving the same results. Gcod dairying fits admirably into mixed farruic?. There is a suitable return male to the land in the way of manure, and the waste in the manufacture of butter is a greit help in the feeding of calves and pigs. Many as are the conveniences for transporting live steck from America, during the year 18S2 over 9 000 animals were thrown overboard, CGI landed deal and 520 were so injured that they had to be slaughtered as soon as landed. During a discussion at the meeting of the Ohio Horticultural Society a member said that when he grew qninces in large quantities there was no fruit that paid so well as ba!f an acre of the orange variety, and that they did well for a long time. Although pears on apple roots will grow SF.dbeof a dwarfish habit and bear a few years, they are short lived. It will not oav in tbe end to graft on apple roots. Bad or graft on pear stocks for standards and on anges quince for dwarfs. A good Vermont farmer obtains his bes: crops ot spring grain by Bowing tne sed both rye and wheat, the last thing in the fail before tbe ground freezes up. He has prac ticed seeding to grass at the same time wita xcellent result The shortege of the wool clip in Australia this year, in coneeouence of the droazht destroying many millions of sheep and greaily injuring many others, is estimated at 80,000,01-0 pounds, or a quantity equal to all the wool imported into tbe United States. Cabbages will often head if placed, roit downward, in a pit of sufficient depth to bring the tops of the leaves just abve the surface rf tbe ground and covered with straw or hay to prevent severe freezing. In crease the covering as the weather become.' colder. A little charcoal fed two or three times a week to the pis is beneficial in correcting acidity of the stomach, to which bogi are liable when fed upon corn and confined in a pen. They will eat it greedily, and tatten mncn more readily with charaoal than with ODt Tbe problem of sending queen bees by masi across the At'antic has been saccsss folly solved. Frank Benton, of Munich, oermany, reports in Gleanings In Bee Cal ture that he has sent many queens to America during the past seaeon, with only two or tnree losses. A great width between and prominence of tbe eyes indicates a teachable and tractable horse. Width between the ears indicates courage, nobleness and strength of character. Ronndness and elevation between the eyes indicates mildness of disposition and desire ta be caressed and to reciprocate kindness. Mr. L. P. Wheat writes to the Southern Planter and states that in every case where he has administered soft soap to a lot of b ;gt atiected witn cholera they haye recovered. Tbe nmedy is identical with the recjin mendation of General W. C. Wickhana, of Virginia, who had previously made tbe same ta'emrnc While kerosene will take tbe hair off a cow or hoe. rays the New York Tribane, it hs no snch effect on swine, bat assists to eln the cMa nicely, though appealing to make

them itch or smart 'ot a s'io't time. Where objection may te entertained agttns: p ire ktrcstne, it should be mixed with a like qnantity of warm lard. One of the iarge apple growers of Michigan, Mr. L. H- bailey, says he can make mere money out of apples at twentv-five rents a bushel, than from wheat at ?l per bushel. Good apples, be states, never retail in market at as lo'" 'He as twenty-five cents, and seldom get ow forty cents At this rate they are worin donb'e the va'ue of wfcear, acre by acre, one year with another. Fowls can doabtle?s endnre as mu:a bid air as any oth?r kind of firm stock, bat tbey cm not be expected to thrive when forced to rorst where lice are bred in myriads daily. Their droppicgj should be rati oved every few days, aad made inoonons with muck, dry eauh, eawdust or sorse other abforbent, A filth hen houas 13 a sure habitation of croup and ciolara. Liberal estimates place tha cost of keenir g sheep at S2 per heal per year. At current rates fair fleeces will average $2 each, and lambs may be 3timatid at 2 each when

weaned. If 50 per cnt. of the lambs be carried through the income will be 3 for each sheep, or ?l clear proiit. As the sheep consumes ranch refuse, however, and en riches the soil, the profit is stiil larger. 8o says the ktockmaa. Professor Meehan recommends as ornamental evergreen hedges, for boundaries, ths Norway spruce, Scotch pine, hemlock aad Chinese and American arbor vita1. For dwarf di7ldin2 lines he suggests the golden Itetinispora aad dwarf arbjr viuc Almost aoy thick growing shrubs make handsome deciduous hedges. Dwarf hedges are also made of horn beams, dogwaois, fly hoaevsuckles, barcerries aad Japan snowballs. A Western farmer says that hs ues tha following aa a combined food and conditionpowder with excellent remits: O l nieil. 00 pouncsr common sugar, 10 pounds; nae ora meal, 40 pounds; tine middlings, 2 J pound'; fameric root, lj ponnds; anlseseeJ, 10 ounces; ginger, 2 ounces; caraway-sed, 2 ounces; gentian, is ounces; cream tartar, 2 onr.ces; snlphnr, 1 pound, and fine salt. 2 pounds. The amount given each animal is hui stated. lie more crowns a strawberry plant has the more berries one can expect. Pall off ail the leaves after fruiting except two or three, and it causes more crowns to grow, besides bright, fresh and very green leaves. But before one goi.s into strawberry culture he should take account of ths manure he can get, and also find out whether he can get pickers enough when the season opens. It is of littl us to think of raising stiawberries f or maiket w thout manure und pickers in abnndai.ee. PBUsIUENT FOLK'S WIDOWA Famous Woman an seea at Home EE ir Und j ins Love. Colonel HcClure. ia Philadälp'aia Times. Jmt foity years ago. on the 5th of March. lS4f, Mrs. James K. Folic enteied the Wa te House at Wathing'on as th wifo of ihe President and chief lady cf the land. Se had then rescheu even beyond the fall noon tide of her years, a3 more than forty winters bad entered into the ptory of her honored life. Few ol the peopls of the present hare penonal recollections of the gentle gr&o? and easy dignity with which she shone in the circles of the nation's most cultured raeu and women of Ihu day: bat the p'eaBant tradition of the White House that makes the name of Urs. Madison illu&trioua as the mcst belovfd of the early mistresses of the home cf the President is supplemented by tbe lingering memories and oft-repeated tributes ia every section of the land waich tell of the well-merited and mora than generous homage paid to Mrs. Polk while presidipg as the cental f gure of the social jewels of the Republic. fch9 welcomed at her hospitable beard the Clays, the Websters, the Calhcucs, the Bentons, tbe Be'l. the Bachscans cf ocr history, and in all the bitter conflicts of the disputing giants of the 'last geter&tion the moie than respect that grows into the reverence of atfecnon was ccmmarded from all by the lady of the White House. Soon after the retirement of her honored hnsband from the highest civil trust of tbe world he was suddenly called, in the full vigor of his life, to join the great majority beyond, and the whole nation mourned the cemmon bereavement it suffered by the death of James K. Polk. Widdowed and alone, Mrs. Folk fitted the dresmle ss conch of the daid in the green lawn that fronted their beautiful home in Nar hville, end there the ashes of her lord -ncie, m daily view of the one whose life has had a single sorrow that makes ll other sorrows fade into forgetfulmss, Unforgeting as if unforgotten, the incdtst panoply that covers the tomb of her buried love is the shrine to which go out the devotions of each succeeding day, and the room in the bomeetetd where the ex-Pie3idenl tank calmly into the sleep of death has stood unaltered and nnccenpied. save aa widowed love returns to the altar ot blighted but unwearied affection. Thns while a full generation has come and gone has Mrs. Polk kept faithful vigil over her husband's dnst and her husband's honon She bas saen ten Presidents follow Mr. Polk in the chair he so worthily filled, and is likely to see the eleventh suecesTOT before the long halt shall come. Of all the women of the land, the widow of James ir.. Polk has always been accorded the larger measure of the nation's respect and reverence. While ever faithful to the one br'ght memory of her lonj and beautiful life, she bss made friend and Btranger, o d and yourg. high and low, welcome ta her he? pitatlo home, and the visitor to Nash ville wi o does not croäs the threshold ot Mrs. Poik's home and receive her welcome, is forgetful of ne of the mcst delightful portnritifs. Every day her honse bears tua greetirg of the jonrneying stranger, and ths bright faces of childhood, of early men aad womanhood, and of ripened age come and go aa the grand old lady smiles upon them with the weight cf zuore than foar-scora yeeis upon her. I saw her in tbe m'dst of a large reception she bad given to Philadelphia ladies, and althooga bowed with a:e and unable to stand without support, she was sprightly as any of the many accomplitred ladies who assisted ia her queenly hospitality, and her unclouded tnomory and unabated interest in public men and public events made her ever the center of attraction for all. Jt'SjT GUZZLE AXD FAT. The Unattractlvenesa, bat Great Popularity of Kngllth Uriuklng Places. I Robert Laird Collier in Minneapolis Tribune. J Drink lathe cur?e cf England. England drinks coarsely and to excess. England is just about one-third drunk most of the time, and abont one-third of England is drunk all the time. I wriie thus in exaggeration to indicate jnst bow abandoned to drink England Is, juBt as David said he "wept rivers ot teara" to Rive expre-fion to bow very badly be felt One can pat op witi the drinking habit cf France and Germany, but decency Ja so outraged that one can only look upon the customs of England wih little less tnan disgust. In tbe former countries there are no classes wholly given over to drink and ita brutalities; no class that spend all they can earn, or beg, or steal, on drink. Bat there are jat Bach classes In every great town of Great Britain. London, Liverpool and Glasgow are the chief centres of this wretched life. The public-house and gin palaces are the bane of the working classes of England. They are, by their very arrangement, brutalizing In their tendency and effect. These are simply guzzling places, and this is ail tbey are meant to be. There is no light thrown upon tbe picture. Not oae breath of romanca or postry, not one sign of pociability or conviviality Is to be fouDd ia thefe hideous pieces. Yon stand ap at a bar in Penally close, cramped, aingy little rooms and penr down your rum, glo, brandy, whisky or beer, and pay your four to etx cents hr it. There you can etand and drink as lor g as you like so loog as you can pay. No tables, do rhairs, no f ames, no ropers juet gtuüe and pay.

CLEYELINU'S COHiXG.

Ilia respective Inauguration Stirs Up "Washington Capital Gossip. THE CODE IS 11 tLTIMOKE. Special Correspondence of the Sentinsl J Washington, Feb. 1C. 1SSV. Wterever yoa go ia Washington the talk in about I'refcident-eiect Cleveland. The lalie. of course, knowing triat he ts not married, ara qaejtionnit etch other over their afternoon teas at n who will be mistress of the White Houe; bat even this, important as it raay bs to some, pales Into Scs-ignibehiio ss compared with tiat oiner woader who will te in nis Cabinet? Everybolyhis formed an opinion, and each pereoa is just a confident that he is right ts he was when bettlr.g on the result cf tbe elections, eo far, however, Mr. Cleveland bas been kilent, and thete is lifie likeiltipoil that any one except fcls secretary will know the naiccs of tae luesy mei until theaannunteraent I flashed by the tslegrapa over the country. Irobubly it Is In the department, however, that the prtaiest anxiety prevails. Even tradesmen end storekeeper are iateres-ted to know i the cbBnts will be sweeping The wheels ot government, however, must raove on and whatever the cuicomeltwill not b lon before Washington gain resumes it normal condition. Air:a.iy ne w Copgressmen are arriving to prepare a place for their families or familiarize themeis with their new duties. They are boun-i to fee all the sights and go everywhere as persistentIvasif it was a religious duty. The "avenue ' is ciowded daily, as is the Corcoran Gallery, and tomect tbem, do not consider it to be beneath their dignity to spend an alternoon or evening ia tbe Dime Museum. Preparations are being made by hotel-keepers, railroad companies aad tradesiaeu for tbe inauguration ceremonies, and everybooy vxptcis to reap a rich harvest. Tnemtiux o: x eopie irorn all parts of the country wi;l und9u badly be enormous, and the dißiculty at prestni i to know where ah of them can be aceomniodatd, although many of them, will make taeir nay et nlfihts la Baltimore. &Fekiit; oi Uaitlmore, 1 ran over to thetc:tv the ether day to visu some friends, and found in cctveisa'.ion and from tae daily pgpera that an ii-cirteut bad recently occurred to cau$e more tlien a rippie of excitement ia that usually staid and quiet ci;f. It appears that aboat two weeis auo a tCiiimonial ppeartd in the dailv papers siwueu by Dr. James A. Star. art. Health Commls sioi'er under the municipality, certifying to the meri s rf a certain cough remedy, and statin? t .ac an analysis matfe by him bad shown no trie of narcotics, OBiates and poisons usually associe'Jl wila such remedies, and that he believed tha; in aftty and prompt efficacy it could be classed u , new medical discovery. Now, Dr. Steuart, wqo is one of the most reputable physicians in the Soith, is a member of the Medical and Chiraqrical Society of tbe State of Maryland, and some of the members accused tim of violating the code of medical ethics by lending his nane to the Indorsement of a proprietary medicine: but Dr. Steuart s certificate sull remained, and the public necessarily thought, knowing bis profetslonal character, that his reabcns for giving such a testimonial mut have been sound and logical. The matter was widely diFcnsied. and just as people be;an to wonder wiiat tbe upshot would be two itnng happened which, 8 compared to the forme-, were a j L:t-ciat k'jis to dynamite bombs, ihe daily pH pen again contained testimonials as to tbe virtuisct tne meoicine in question, but this time ttty vere from men of the greatest prominence i i ftaie ted cliy affairs, anion;; ethers, (yovemor McLene, Attorney General Roberts. Mayor Latrobe, Colonel Harrison Adicoa, the city postmatfr; E. H.Webter, Collector of tha Port, and otht rs. Ail of these gentlemen test'fied ove' their signatures tbat personal experience and observation of its fcll'icacy in other cases had convinced tbem that tbe rruioly in questwa was a sife au I reliable iamily medicine. Some timorous Individual advittd Governor McLanenot to slija such a paper, but his riply was. "Woy not? I have trie! it mjseli and know what I am writing about." Two days ef.er.vard eppeired another Cirti3ct9 from twenty of the moat prominent physicians in Baltimore and tbe State, couched, if possible, in even stronttr lansuace, and asserting tht the Teratdy was perfectly har mess and most effective: that it whs free from opiates and poisons and that tbty rad demonstrated is prompt efficacy bv practical tens. Thia was a blow to the objecting pbys-iclans, and nothin? e!e has been talked of m the cily slcce. The remedy was R-?d Star Coash Cur, which baa teen discovered by the Chane a. Vogfler Company. Its popularity aacoua remtdy was at once assured aui anotner evidence at.crdcd that we are livioe In an aee of progress in every depaitmeut of taouht. Tbe Charles A Voider Conpeny have alresdy gained a worldwide reputation through St. Jaeoos Oil, which is shipped to every part ot the elobe, and is tse only medicine which hat received gold medais t expositiops. Their publications are printed in fo'irietn Unguapes, and 7.CC0 newspapers la the United Sia'.es contain their adverilit-menta. Their establishment Is one of the sights of Baltimore. Two years ego I visited it tn company with a distinguished inpluh j nrnaUfct. and he expressed his surprise at lta completeness. To day it is, in thorough systeraaiizert working and eqalpmeut. more of awonder than ever, and strangers, who aie always welcome to insptct it, never sea it without be:nj sni prised aud gratified. In educational matters Baltimore Is rapidly coming to tbe front. The Johns Hopkins Uoiversity will eomtnemorste the close of tbe ninth year of its foundation this montn. Students coining to it now from all parts of the world; i -Philosophical and scientific publications covr every field of thought and discovery, and many of its alumni have been fought after and secured lor pro.Vseoi ships in oiher colleges. The doctrine of higher education which it iprofesses to exemplify, ha, however, not prevented those in ctaree from neclecting original and practical reSfarcb, and tbe investigations made by the biological cerarlment have thrown great light oa the qucnicn of oyster propagation, and promise to add much toward aiding an industry, oa the giowin and continuance of which the prosperity of Maryland so largely depends. . Taking Care of Themselves. Boston Letter in Kansas City Times. Feminine Boston is attending this winter "emergency ltctures." Those are, no doubt, of great value. If a girl slip down and sprain her ankle, instead of being obliged to wait till some man picks her np and sends her home in a cab, she quietly takes off her shoe and etocklDg, tucks her skirts on one side, and performs the necessary snrgicil operation on the spot. If she feel faint at a bail, instead of looking around for a man to whom she has been introduced aud into wbcie arms Ehe can without immodesty fall, sbe quietly sits down on the nearest chair, sends her escort for a fw simple remedies, and applies them brse f. Suppose during these beautilul snowv days she is rnn away with runaway witli vy ahorse, I mein. While tbe horse is tearirg along 1 joking f jr ii convenient lan p pest to n;.e in breaking the sleigh, this Boston giil,wilh the coolaes of Galen and the qniet dignity of Hippocrates, selects from her bag some liniment, one ortwOfplinta and a number of strips of linen, aud when at la? t she ii thrown across the horse's back sgainst tbe side of a h?us9. inMeed of screaming or fainting, she applies the liniment nady in her hand, bat-dages np tbe fractures and waika qaietly home to send one cf the grooms for her horse. I believe later in the season some of the lecturs are fo be purely practical, and we shall be told bow to smile upon a mosquito so that he will refuse to molest us, or how to frown upon a wasp so that the wasp will drop dead with fright, or how to convince oneself at a moment's notice that a mouse is more timed tban a 160 pound pirl, and quite unable to scale a dress, either on tbe in the inside or outside, unless belted by a ladder. You see there is no nonseme abont these Tec tares; tbe girls are honestly benefitted by them, and they are besoming more and more popular. Pleasure of Public Speaking. J8p Turpen in Miami SentineLl I Was in Terre Haute with tbe committee of tbe Legislature that visited the State Norrxul school. Dr. Passsge and G. L Reed were of the number. After being ihown through the building we were assembled in tbe chapel and the oratory began. Every visiting statesman annonnced himself in favor of tbe Old FJag and the Appropriation. I can't say what put it in their heads, but presently there was a call for me. I am not proud of my ability as an orator, and an audience may once call me, but it never repeats the experiment. I may not always ba saddest wben I make a speech, but it is surely a solemn thing to hear me. I was one of the historians of tbe Indiana expedition that relieved the distress occasioned by the Ohio Kiver flood. One evening a landing was made on the Kentuky shore, and we partook of tbe elegant hospitality of that Commonwealth. Supper concluded, tbe Kentuckians add rested ns and then we addreed them. Mr. Bjram, the President of the Indianapolis Board of Trade, spoke! Mr. Malott, the r.ailrcad President, spoke! Governor Porter spoke. Lieutenat Governor Hanna spske. Mr. Elder, cf the Board of Health, spoke and tbere were still other prominent orators of tbe occasion. After a while there was a call me. It did not seem hard work for tbm to tar a passion into tatters and I felt auib -tions to do something that would contribute to the elory of my profesion and ray native State, I came forward and commenced,

t-nt wuhed that I was in tbe solitude of my (II before tbe first sentence ended. Bat as tbe beginning was, it kept getting worse, cclmiLating in roel'ive agony. I would as willii gly have been at Shiloh, or firing a Mifsifsippi s'ooDtr with a negro on tbe safety valve, as facing that audience. Imagine a ehip cn tbe Atlantic in a January etcrm. Sometimes the vessel seems biund to tbe sky, and then It dives as if searching for tbe bottom of the deep, rolling, plunging, fctavlng. floundering, poles bare, and mirle d storm aad the sea roaring through the coidage, but still struggling on, and yon will know something of my feeliDgs. Bat the woe was not all mine: the spectacle of my excruciation agonized the hearers. It not only embarrassed cut tortured my friends wounding their State pride. I fU ihat Albert G. Porter would a little rather have tue refrain, or repress my oratorical ambition, wbi e be was Governor cf Indiana. I loved Toner, but Icvizg Gray no less must decline coing anything to blemish the promised splendor of his administration. I was very much obliged to thoie Terre Haute peopi-t for calling me out, and could they have realized what thev escaped when I refused to make a speech, they would be very much obliged to me. A LOST -0 STINKST.

Submerged Lands iu w. South raclfic and the instruction of Their Natives ISan Francisco Chronicle.! Captain William Churchill, before the Academy of Sciences, sought to show by the recoics oi aeep-sea Bounaings ana irorn area- , atolcgical remains that the Pacific islands sra rrli tha rmnnt nf ! tnhnisnail nriiti. nent, who?e mountain peaks and lofty heights are all that remain above the surface of theccean. He deli at length on the subject of a Polynesian antecedant civilization as revealed throogh ancient implement?, statues and sculptured Etone siabs focnl on a few of t he groups, more no'ably the Fejees. The etud es of zoophytes and coral formations takt-n from a depth of 2 0OJ fathoms and morp a'so confirmed this belief of the s'itsider --i of the prehistoric continent. On Pitcaif i - Is'and and also on Tahiti and Tones T-v i uaa been found remains which eLt-d tbe existence of a long-forgotten trice. At Tonga-Tabu a monster triiithon is to be seen. It is composed cf gray volcanic stone, with neatly dresssd edges. It is ten by twelve feet equare, and stands twenty feet out of the ground. It is surmounted by a huge kava bowl. He d?scribed tbe implements and metals in ma b tbe cativeB of eeveral of the groups t'eora the advent of tbe white voysgers, and said that iron and tteel were enknown to them bef are their i icovery by civilked persona. Captbin Churciiill descrited the monolithic s:atues of stcne aod tculptured wood found on Easter Is'and. The monoliths weie found s anding in rows cf five or six, only a few feet apart. They were hewn from vo: cmic rock!, and were either very rude in workmanship or else they have safere d ft m the ravages of time. Oae row cf t i" -'Kt'its was quite weil pre;erved. Each of tLtm wb tea feet high, aad they represented human heads and bodies, with a kind cf cap or other head covering on the top. Tfcese were thesam- statues seen and described by Capn Cook in his works on trav. I and discovery. A finely fcnlp'ured hand of a dancicg girl ahd fae pol;shd wocden slabs, on which were numerous h;eroslyphical figures m long j o wa, bad been discovered in an anc ent and half-ruined stone house on Easter Ulatid. This was th? only relic cf a native written language ever found in the PacirJc Islands. The depopulation cf many of the Polynesian islands through the ravages of disease and ' head hunting" was cxuaienttd upon. Trior to this era of decay thtiehr d been a long period of over population, during which the practice of "swarming," as he termed it, wss often resorted to in rd?r that tbe rernairJrg people might be able to find subsistence on their limited territory. He pointed to well-verified tales of the selection nd sending forth of certain undesirable members cf the tribes from their homes in canoes, to drift abont in mid-ocean until they perished or reached some less crowded island, where they might find an abidingplace. The masses of people crowded together on these small islands must, the speaker argned, have come from a larger ter-"-itcry than that which they latterly inhab ited. Where could they have gone but into the sea? The Drummer' SXaan. The other day a merchant traveler operating for a Philadelphia shoe firm boarded a tiain on the Alton road at Joliet. and was soon attracted by the charming face of a Sucker lass who got on at Pontiac. Ha thought he saw that she waa a sweet, innocent young thicg who had never been around any, and he wended his way to where ehe sat and insinuated himself into her society. 'It is a very stormy day, miss,"aaid the merchant traveler. "Istbat so?'' she asked, with a greatshow of interest. Here, indeed, was a sweet example of rustic innocence. Storming like all the fnries and had been for nine consecutive hours, and yet she seemed to know nothing about it. ''Pojr, credulous, simple thing," he thought. "She'll be madly in love with me in fifteen minntes." "Going far?" he inquired. "Ob, an awful long way '." "How Bweet and childish!" thought the gripsack man. "How far are you going?'' he asked. "Oh, away ofl!" 'To St. Louis?" "My, yes. and further than that." "I'm awful glad. I'll have your comp ty a eood while, then," said be, '"and I kn .w we 6hail be great friends." "I hope so." sbe leplied. "Yon have beans, don't you?'' the dru nmer suddenly asked. "No. I used to have, bnt " "Ah! Ever mied. I'll be your beau on this trip Now, tell me your name, please." "Mat;lda Matilda Haw well, it used to be Hawkins, but it is Jordan, now." 'What! You are not married?" "Kol I poisoned my fifth husband the other day, and jou oh! yon look so swe?t. You look as if strychnine would make such a beautiful corpse ot you. Come, now, wont von marry me?" The drummer exemed himself, and the jolly Pontiac girl and her bean, who sat behind pretending to be s Bleep, laughed all the way to Bloomington Nothing Blade in Vain. "We are told that nothing was made in vain; but what can be said of the fashions ble girl of the period? Isn't she maiden vain? Hood's Sarsaparilla is made in Lowell, Mass., where there are more bottles of it soid than of any other sarsaparilla cr blood panher. And it is never taeen in vain. It purifies the blood, strengthens the system, and gives new life and vigor to the entire body. IUP dosea gl. To color marble a beautiful yellow without injury to polish or hardness: A neutral chloride of iron is first dissolved in Ml per cent, of alcchol, and after gently heating tbe marble to be colored in.an oven or over a fire, the solution in question is applied by means of a brush, a sprinkler, or even bv pouring. The strength of the solution is, of course, proportioned to the depth of the color desired, and care is requisite aiso in re ard to the degree of temperature. For the production ot light tints it - is considered preferable to apply very diluted solutions repeatedly. On the marble becoming per fectly dry it is moistened with water or ex posed to moist air, when the decomposition of tbe salt of iron takes place in the upper etia'a, and tbe process ct coloration is cjm plete, I'll that remains to be done is to polish tbe surface if nec;sary, or it may simply be rnbbed on with a wet cloth. What It Does. Almost every lady habitually uses some kind of hair diessine. It is -a toilet neces sity. Parker's Hair Balsam is the best, be cause it gives gloss and softness, arrests fall ice out, does not soil the most delicate fabric, is deliciously per famed, ciols tbe bf ad eradicate dandruff and promotes a luxuriant growth.

R

Radway's Relief ! The Cheapest and Best ilediciat FOB FAMILY OSE II TBE WOHLD CUKES AM) TRETEN lS Coughs, Co!ds, Sora Throat Kcarsenbss, inflammation, Rheumatism, fteura; Headsclte, Toothache, Diphtheria, influenza. GrScult Broatiiingj It was the first and is the only JPAIIN KKJ1KDY That Instantly stops the cost ercrucatUi rnii allays luflainraation aad curs Oontestioui, whether uf the Langs, Eioasc'a, Bowels er o Cj-J glands cr organs, by cue arpliCaUon. In From One to Twenty .Ktnuie Ho matter now violent or excruciating tUe pAir 1 the Kbenmatlc Bed-ridden, Inflm, Crr. piti Nervous, neuralgic, or prostrated wii Uc--8 rsat suffer. RADWAY'S READY RELI27 WILL AFFOSLD ISSTA.NT ZJL&M. Inflammation ot de Kidneys. infianaiAUcn M the Bladder, lrSammatlon of tie Bowe .s, Cor sea tion cf the Lung. Ilpltation of the Heart, lira" terlcs. Croup, Ulphtheria. Catarrh, laflnenia, Nervousness, Sleei lcesness, Ebemnatlia, Fei tic Pains In tie Chest, Back or Limbs, Lit: ! ice, Kpraina, Cold Chills and Ague Chills. The application of theKEAUt BELIKPtt the part cr part w.tre the difficulty cr pain ea lEts win arord ease and com. 'ort. Thirty to sixty drousln half a tumbler ot watet will in a lew minutes care Cramps, tpasme, f-ons Biomach, Heartburn, tlc Headache, Liarrten, Dysentery, Colic. Mnd ia the Eowela, and all temal pains. Travelers should always carry a bottle of Badwf'm Beady üeiief with tbem. A few "Irop n water will prevent sickness or pains from car-ri of water. It is better than French EranUy or Elw ten as a stimulant. filALARI la Its Various Forms, FEVEE and AG UK. rrvXK a-a AC-ITS c-vrM tor BO erat. Then la not a remedial agent in tie world that wi.l crs Fever and Ague andailothe. aiaiaiiona. r'j:cu:s Scarlet, and other Fevei (tlcifcd by KAD'-VAY'il FLLLfc) so qnicxiy RAD WAY'S HEADY RELIEF. Fifty Cent Far Bottle. Sold by all Drag Sets. DE. RADWAY'S SarsaparyHas ReselYeni. Fare Mood nsafcr ouad Ceah, strong bone ant a clear skin. If 31 j would havo yonr Cesli rm your bones sound itbont carte, and your conv plexlon fair, use KAL-WAY'S AHs APART LÜAJI EoOLVEäX U.e Great Blood Puriücr.1 I?ALSB AND TRUE. We extract from Dr. Radway "Treatise on Dlw ease and Its Cure," as follows: list o dleaj cured by LB. KADWAra SABSAPABILLIAIT BE30LVEa3 Chronic 6kln disease, carles of the bone, hamon of the blood, scrofulous dlseasea, yphiiiüo cocaplaints, lever sores, chronic or old ulcers, ealt rheum, rickets, white swelling, scald head, cant ere, glandular rweilincs, nodes, wasting and cecay of the body, pimples and blotch, inner, djspepsla, kidney and bladder disease, etionta rhenmatoia aud (gas consumption, riavel and calculous deposits, and varieties of tüe above complaints, to which sometime are given peo ions names. In tes were the sybiem bas beea salivated, and cinrcury bas areumuiated aud tocome deposited in the bones, joiats, etc. cananj caries of tbe bone, rickets, spinal curntar, contortions, white swelling, varicose veins, e -c., the Baneparillia will resolve awey those depoi-iu an! exterminate the virus of tiie disease iro-n ma system. A GREAT CöNfflTÜTiOML ESSEDI ßüln d!sease, rumors, ulcers and tor5 ottli kinds, particularly chronic disease of tiie skif aTc cured with great certainty by a coun-eofUj EADWAY'S 8AR3APARILL1AN. We rnetn CM'Jn nate cue that have resisted all other trea.mont. SCROFULA Whether transmitted fron parenu or aoquirtd, U within the curative range ot the SAKSAPAKILLIAX kesoltext. It pofcses&es the sane wonflerful power :n cnriri tbe worst fenas of strumous and eruptive ci charges, syphiloid ulcers, sores of Uie eye. er net-e, mouth, throat, glands, extermüiai'.ns thj virus of these chronic forms of disease Iron tha blood, bones, joints, and Ja every part oi 'be u man body where there exista diseased '.rposiw., ulcerations, tumors, bard lumps or scrotnloTii L animation, this ereat and oowerful remedy wUl extermlnste rapidly and permanently. One bottle conlatcs more ol tiie active printstlfs ol medicine tban anr otiier preparation. Taken In teaspot'Eful doses, while other reonirv fTPornlx tlmf as much. COCK HOLLAH H R4 LOTTLX. Sold by dTOKisu. DR. RADWAV3. REGULATING PILLS Tfcs Great liver and Stomsfli It reedy. Ferf ectiy tasteless, elegantly coated 5 purrM rpgrHate, pnriry, cleanse and itrenrthcji Dr. Badway's 1111s, for the cure of ail di orders of the Stomach, Liver, Eowe.a, Kidney, Bladder, Nervous Dlseaia, Loss oi Appetits, Hcadacbe, Constipation, costlvene, Indijresücrj. Dyspepsia, BUIousness, Fever, Inflammation ci the Bowels, File, and all deranementi of tbe Is toraal viscera. Purely Tecetabio, contai-H.ca tJ mercury, minerals, or GCleierloua drug. Price 25 Cent Per Box Sold by all druggist. DYSPEPSIA Kadwra Saraapartlllan, aided ty Kadsy1 Fill, Is cure for this complaint, it rtorc1 streneth to the stomach, and make It perform lta f uncüona The symptoms of dypepsl diapreCfc and with them the liability oi tbe vs;era to cor tract dlseasea. Take the medicine according ta the directions, and observe wtat wetay ta "ial and Tree" respect in g diet. "Road Falso and True." Band a letteT stamp to RADWAT A CO., "tl Warren street, tew York. lnJcnaittoo weita thousands wia be sent to yon. TO THE PUBLIC. TEi rare and aik tor kadwav, and at Uta tii tum i'JMwar! la ta wfcat lta ktiu

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