Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 32, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 February 1886 — Page 6
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THE' INDIANA STATE' BE!NTJNEL WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 3, I8SC.
OUR FARM BUDGET.
SeiTitr Esrses cn the Fana- Wintr Firmisg Preeeiriag iEi-Fc33. anshiE,e and Crop Winter Tran4plntlag Xfce Vat f Koohtl of torn-How JYeedng BerartU the Soil liouehvld 1 1 int Turok Notes, Ltr. The Forsaken Frnltte. Aptinst tbe weoded bilnf t stands dtidnt ci it uM'l uorce, "taring throu-'.i It broken light ou wasted lands. W hr- oll-t;ir. harvests: crow. l'Dp)cweO, ir.-onn, by scythe unshorn. The poor forsaKou farnwieldi lie. Dnec rf h and rife w Ith colder corn And pale green breadths oi rye. t C( healthful herb and tfover 1-erett. Tte garden plot no hot.sev.iie ksps; ffcartxyh weed and tangle only left The snake, iw tenant, reeps, A Ml: spray, once blossom clad. Sway lare l?.'ore the empty room; ' ctide the rtxiriess jrch a sad, I'athetic red tomj blocuis. Hi tra k, ia mold f dust und drouth. Cn boor and hearth the -; jirrol leave, imi in the flreies chimney s mouth His wtb the pile.r weaves. The leaning barn, about to füll, Resoon! no more on husking eves; V cattle low in yard or stall. Nj ihre her beats his sheaves. Po sad, m drear! It seems almost fsotae haunting Treeuee makes its sign; That do n yon hadewy lane some glust li.gtt irive his sjtvtral kine! J. Whittier la the Atlantic. Heavier Triors- on the Karin. (Western Agriculturist. ke South, published at Marshall. Tex., las the following about lisbt teams in the FCUth tit is lamentably true on the Western iarms ns well, but the "benefits and advantage of the draft horse on the farm is becoming a recognized fact, and as fast as we can raise good jrrade draft horse our progressive farmers will have them cn the farm even if the my buyers do oiler such hijrl prices for tlem. A draft team is as profitable on the farm as in the city, as is shown by the .South : "One of the severest losses entailed through the enti re cotton belt in every department where animal motive power is used is from defective or light teams. It is almost beyond cttnputation the loss thus sustained., Kvery team must have its driver, and if the team can only do half work it of necessity reduces the product of the driver'.s labor one-half. In tillic? the soil the loss is stiil jreater. as not only is the amount Cf plewinfr one-half less, but it is so shallow and defective that the land produces only half a crop, and that of an inferior quality. -TKa Iraft bnrwo inilnijrrir f mm th? rin.l. point assumes vast proportions, and is vitalJy connected with successful farming and very transportation industry. No one thing could add so largely to our income in the cotton States as heavier farm andtranswrtation stock. This alone would make ail the difference between failure and success. This ahne would secure us a profit that in a fewyears would give us independence an.l wealth. We are glad to note progress in this direction and such progress as will be permanent and profitable. If the farmers in every county would club together and purchase a f.rst-c'.ass French draft horse stallion, a few years would witness a wonderful change in the horse stock of the county and would pay better than any investment on the same arr.ocnt. Grangers or the Farmers' Alliance could co-opera te in such an entei prise and make it proti table to all concerned.'' Winter farming. This is the -oaon of in-door farming, to distinguish it from s immer work in the held, and it may be Made the most profitable part of the year. A distinguished painter was ence asked by an ambitious worker in oils and canvas what he mixed his colors with, to whom he promptly replied: ''L'rains, r, brains." It is the same way with successful farming. After all has been said about fertilizers that is to be said, it still remains to add that no fertilizer is worth much that is not both mixed and applied with brains. For the progressive farmer the winter is the thinking time, the season for laying in stores of information on agricultural subject for stuly and reflection. No other class of men are situated so favorably in this respect. The farmers may be said to go to school in winter as truly as when they were 103-3. The neigh borhood clubs, the local institutes, the coun try meetings, the farmers' meetings like those kelu weekly in Iloston, the attendance on lectures and public discussions, and, above all, long, quiet hours for reading and rejection, constitute all together an annual opportunity and privileg-? for farmers whi' h few, if any other men are orlered all through their lives. The men of acres, therefore, who idle away this precious seaon u;on which we are now fairly entered, deserve reproach rather than sympathy. Their fields are certain to bear the crops of the winter's planting. As water does not rise higher than its source, 0 it is ioios3ible to show intelligent farming without the previously accumulated fund of knowledge on the subject. It should be the aira of all farmers, those who work small farms quite as much as those who work the- largest ones, to make winter the season for the regular pursuit of certain selected studies bearing directly on their vocation. No merchant or professional man or mechanic succeeds in his chosen calling without the exercise of continual thought and even assiduous study, the results of which h- energetically applies to the work be may have in hand. Why should the cultivator of land expect that he alone may be exempted from similar conditions? That he is not and can not' so exempted is fully show.i by the superiority of the well informed and reflective farmer over his eareiess, habit-bound, blind and stumbling neighbor. Tbe farmer who knows how to employ his seasons to the best advantage is the only one who deserves the name of farmer. ; Winter Transplant in;. 1 ;ourCoai;try Home. 1 Large tree may Ire transplanted with tolerable safety" dJ' removing a large ball 01 frozen earth with the roots. A trench may be dug around the tree two or three feet from the trunk; late in autumn, sufficiently !e?p to sever all tbe larger horizontal roots. The hole for the reception t the tree should also . be dug before the ground freezes; then in winter, at a time when tbe -oil at the base of a tree is frozen solid, back the forward trnr-k r.f a farm wa?on asriinst the trunk, lift th- . tongi.e erect and strap it firmly to the bo'ly. Then loosen the trew at the ha-e by digging under it ftithcieiitly to cut the taproot. Attach a rope near the top of the trunk, an 1 by theaid of a team the tree may be lifted from its'l'ed and laid prostrate, the heavy oase resting across the axle of the trues. Then hirh.th" team to the rear uf the truck, and thetre may Le- readily dr:i.rjred to its place. As a thorough tfranring will be necessary to counterbalance the loss of roots, it is a matter of economy to cut array a comid'-rable part of the top before the removal. Treaerving fence. I'ot; An I'ngUsb farmer writes: After all that ha been advanced in-favor of other comjonnds, it is very doubtful for ordinary country work whether there h anything handier, cheaper, or more effective than comic on coal-tar lor coating fences and otLer wood it is desired to protect from the ei'ects f the weather. Much, howeter. will depend cn the -ay in which this is u-ed. To c jver moitt wood with this substance, whe ther it proceeos from the natural moisture or atmospheric dampness, is verybad policy. To insure anything like snccess in the matter of durability tbe wood to be operated upon must ie as dry as possible. This, of cour-e, is equally true of paint, but it w ot Ur bat ire are new epeakicg. When tbe wood-work
to be coated a dry as can te, atd the tar
applied hot, there need le little fear that it fail in its rnrio-e. -The chief dithculty lies in the matter of pota at the surface of the soil. Many plans have been tried to over ome the decay which almost invariably ets in here first. Kven here tar is valuable; but according to experiments which have been made to test the best method o applying it, it appears that the most sutisiactory results have been obtained when the wood is barred. As to the way in which this charging should be eüected, there seems tote -cope for ingenuity. One gentleman has tried the plan of hrt covering the extremities of the posts, which are st in the soil, and' then burning the tar oil' again. This, it is alleged, mikes a sur:'a:e which will resist decay. If this is so, the operation is simple and is worth trying. The charring should le carried to some distance above the ground level, and after the fence is erected the whole of it above the ground can be coated to make the appearancen nilorm. The plan of first heating the ends of the po-ts and then dipr.ing them in boiiing tar is :i to answer well. sunshine and Crop. Feasant proprietors, says a London journal, as we all know, are going in the near future to convert Kngland into a very 'aruen of Kden. Flowers are to blossom in every field, and jam is to exud from every hedgerow tree. The cow will low over its moon-calf in every thirty-three acre plot, while all the hens of Italy and all the bees of s-witzerland will hum and cluck ronnd every cottage door. The brutal skeptic who hints a doubt as to the possibility of realizing this idyllic vision is told to look at what a bold peasantry have accomplished in the channel Island. l!ut when we descend from tbe poetic heights of imagination to the dull prose of facts and figures as given in meteorological reports, we may s?e rea-on to doubt whether the hanne! islands .ire not the exception tnat proves the rule. 1 uring the first eleven months of lss.Jersey ami Guernsey had hours of sunshine. The most favored districts of the 'adjacent islands of Cireat l'.ritain and Ireland'' had only l,"d."; while most parts nad Considerably less than this. When a comparison of temperature is made the difference is even more striking. The accumulated legrees of heat above 42 Fahrenheit are much the same in the two cases or, in plain I Ingiish, the Channel islands are scarcely hotter at an average than Kngland ; but the average amount of the degrees below 42 Fahrenheit in the former case is only VMl; while in the south of Ireland and Devonshire it Is Co; and in tbe east and midland districts of England it is l.r0. In other words, the farmers of the channelislands crow their plants through the winter in the temperature 01 a con-ervatory without incurring any outlay either for glass or tiring. The Cost of a Jtuhel of Corn. There is a statistician about the Palmer House who desires to impress everybody with economic fact?. Said he yesterday: "IK you see that man over there? Weil, he's a farmer, down near Elgin. There he goes with a friend; thev're going to g t a drink. The farmer will pay for it. Now, let me see. That man will sweat two mortal hours next spring to plow enough ground to ra!e one bushel of corn. That bushel of corn lie will sell "for thirty cents. He is going in there now to spend the thirty cents i'or two drinks. Therefore, the farmer and the corn have parted. Now. let me tell you what becomes of the -orn. A bushel of corn makes seventeen quarts of whisky four and a quarter gallons. The distillery gets its first profit 40 cents a gallon. There you are: 2 for that bushel of corn. Now the Government comes ;u. '.o cents a gallon ')."', added to the tJ. makes r.'-. That brings the product of the bushel of corn down to the jobber and the wholesaler and Cnallyj by several siacre?, to tbe rehiik-r. Iy the tune it reaches the latter the bushel of corn, or its product of tour and u quarter gallons, has been reduced onehalf, which man eight and a half gallons. There are sixty drinks to the gallon that is theavernge eight and a half gallons mean 27o drinks et 15 . ents each there we have f4'..V as the consumer's price for a bushel o; con:, which the fanner raises and se'ls for :k cents. Who says thsre is no industry in this country? But the fanner we saw just now spent his whole bushel of corn in the price of two drinks, ami the people who do not till the soil iret awav with p;.:;.'. Hon Freezing Itenetits the Soil. American Agriculturist. J It is a well-known fact that water in the act of freezing expands considerably and with a force that is irresistible. It is the freezing of water in their crevices and pores that causes the rocks to be graduallv worn down and "weathered,'' as it is called, into the sou. It is this also which is continually reducing the soil to finer fragments, and which breaks up the hard clogs and mellows ground. Fall plowing or spading agists this fVtct by breaking up the compact soil into lumps, which are further broken into small particles. As water and air, then, only a t upon the surface of these particles, it is clear that the smaller they are the more surface is exio-ed.to the weather, and the soil is made soluble. If a bloc k of hard soil of 12 incheTube is ex posed to the weather there arc Hl xjuare inches only of it affected ; if it is broken up into cubes of one inch 10,3 w square inches are exposed to these beneficial Influences; if the soil is further broken up in fragment of 1-12 of an inch there are more than 121.0m ssiuare inches thus atTeeted. This fact shows how greatly the effect of frost benefits the soil, and, therefore, how necessary it is that the land'should be fall-plowed, and opportunity given for this beneficial action of the weather. In the garden, even, all the soil possible should be spaded before it free.es. UUl'sjKHOLD HINTS, Win n roasting a chicken or small fowl there is danger of the legs browning or becoming too hard to Ve eaten. To avoid this take strips of cloth, dip them into a little melted lard, or even just rub them over with lard, and wind them around the leg. Keruove them in time to allow the chicken to brown delicately. Parsnip balls are excellent for an entree. Parboil six large parsnips and let theai get quite cold, then peel them and grate them: beat two egtrs until very light and mix with ti e prate I parsnip, adding enough Hour to giw coherence to the mixture; flour your band and make small l!at balls. Have hot lard ir. a shallow kettle and drop the balls gently into it- Iry them until they are well browned on both sides, send to the table very hot. A fruit-layer cake is a delicious novelty m cake-making. Take one cup of sugar, half a cup. of butter, one cup and a half of iloar, half a cup of wine, one cup of raisins, two eggs, and a half teaspconful of soda. Pat these ingredients together with care, just as if it were a very rich cake: bake it in three layers and put fronting between the frosting to be in ado of the whites of two eg, with enough powdered sugar 0 make it thU k. The top ot the cake may 'a frosted if you .choose. A comparatively inexpensive cream cake is made of two ups of sugar, two cups and three-quartf rs of another cup of flour, half a cup of sweet milk, four eggs, a piece of butter a lnj-'e as two er;r, one teaspoonfal of cream of tartar, haif a teaspoonful of soda, this may be baked In three or four layers. The cream is made of one cup of sugar, half a cup of liour, two eggs, the whites and yelks beaten f-eparately and the whites beaten to a stiff froth, and one pit of milk, Iet this cook until it is thick, let it cool, and then flavor with vanilla. A delicate whito pudding is made by soaking one teacupful of gelatine in one pint of coid water, let it stand for an hour, then add one pint ot boiling water, the juice of two lemons, and two cups of sugar. Strain this, and add the whites of five eggs beaten to a perfectly stiff froth. Let this become quite cold before serving. The sauce for this puddii.g is made of one quart of bqilinsj milk ; beat lie yelks of five eggs with ball a
- .1 il " -VTT, 1
cur 01 s ugar anu sur icio me nu.fc. nen this coels Mavor to your taste. The quantity her; y iven will be sutVcient for nine goodsized dishes, or with less generosity, a tenth may be distributed. Here is an excellent rec-iipe for chicken croquettes, which are so popular now and so frequently served with salads at evening par ties: I'oll two medium-si. ed cl.-Kke-is until they are very tender, chop them ne, add one pint 0! ream, almo-t a half pound 0: butter, with a liberal allowance oi salt and rep per, The easiest way to shape these is to press some 0: the mixture firmly into sxa'.i moMs, or shallow cups will do; fry them in hot lard until they are brown: some, covki rrefr -al-ad oil to "butter, but clariCed butter gives a much more agreeable tlavor and a Letter eo'or. Oranr1? custard to serve in cups is a dainty dish ; the juice cf ten large orange, the yelks o: ten eggs, a heaping teacupful of powdered su-rar and one pint of cream: put the S'tjrar ;i.nd crar.ge juice "together in a porcelainlined saucepan, and set it 0:1 the stove: stir it constantly until it bubbles, tuen skim it, and set it where it will cool; beat the ye: ks of tbe eggs very light and add them, to the orange and sugar, thenstir In the cream; let this cook very slowly until it is 0 the desired thickness, then pour it into cups. The whites of the eggs should be beaten very dil5 gently, and a teacupful of powdered su-rar be beaten with them; put r. large spoonful of thus on the top of each cup. Here is a capital hint from I'auiine Adelaide Hardy, who writes in Nood Housekeeping on the preservation o: the hands: "Many housekeepers have rough hands in winter, which grow very painful, cracking open on tb" Knuckles, the cracks exten P'n into the palms of tbe hands. They take their hands out of hot soapmd. or standi, to h.iug clothes in the wind. If they did not use hot water, and the hands were thoroughly dried before going out, this would be avoided. A pair of. whtte wool lea stockings, cut otl'J rounding at the ankle and sewed across, with a thumb sewed in, make a very comfortable pair of mittens for hanging up and taking off clothes. Pin them last to the sleeves with large safety pins, before going our, having fir-t stretched the arm upward, then they will not come loose and tbe wrists will be protected. After bringing in the clothes, if the mittens are put in the clothes-pin bag the will be kept clean and in tne right place. Hands are injured in very cold weather by lack of protection at tbe wrist?, as larg-veins and arteries are exposed. The blood is chilled in Eassing into the hands. F.very one can not ave handsome, white and -bapely hands, bnt cverv orje can have ckan and comfortable hands." FA KM JiOlES. Upward of 144,( head of cattle were shipped to Great Uritain from Canada the past sea-on. Our 'onsuls in almost every country in Europe report that American leather is rot in demand. The manufacturers of loots, shoes, harness and carriages state that it is n-t of the desired color, and that; it do'" not last well when worked up. Tire farmers' pool organized at Tuscc-la, for the purpose of selling corn in bulk, seems to be working successfully. They sold an installment cf 0.jo busisel- to" Indianapolis parties at twenty-eigat cents advance on the home price of four cents. They still control among them over luo, bushels. It appears, from recent siati-tics, that Ir?' land has a larger percentage of live stock to every 1' oi her population than any European nation the percentage being for the whole country Tit o, or nearly four times as much n .reat Britain while in the Province of Munster, one 01 the for great Irish Uivis'ons, live stock outnumber the Inhabitants. A good recipe for gluing leather to iron is as follow-: A good quality i glue should be used, and after soaking it in water until soft it should be dissolved in vinegar with a moderate heat, then thoroughly mixed with one-third of the bulk of white phie turpentine. Peiore applying tbe glue paint the iron with some kind of lead color, then when dry apply the glue, while hot, with a brush: draw the leather on quickly and press m p.ace. The shell of an egg is simply carbonate of lime, and is almost identical 111 composition with chalk, limestone, oyster shells and clam shells. The lime, however, is not all derived from the lime eaten in the shape of shells, lime-tones, etc., but also from the food, as all kinds of irrain contain lime. It is best to supply lime directly to the hens, however. When given as pounded shells the pieces serte to assi-t in grinding the food in the gizard, any portion not appropriated being rejected from the body. Every bee ma-ter should take special pains in spring to ascertain constantly the amount of store each hive contains. If he has uncapped most of the honey, and this has resulted in a larger supply being required to maintain the increasing number of bees, it is evident the hive will starve unless sirup is applied to it, or honey in considerable quantity is being gathered. A stimulated hive requires additional care in this respect, aud its wants must be supplied artificially, if they are not satisfied naturally. There Is no way to make good cheese except by using the whole milk. Skimming the milk at night and adding the skim milk to the morning's milk, will not answer. It makes a fair quality of cheese, but the difference in price of the better article will be more than the value of the cream taken on. Our anaiian neighbors, knowing this fact, have secured the English markets, where American cheese was once in demand. It does not pay to make a poor article. There is a small gain at first, but a heavy losr. in the end. When Henry 'lay, of Kentucky, was in active life he imported from Spain four red shotc. This was in 1S37. Mr. Clay was well plea-ed with these red hogs, und bred them on his farm at "Ashland" for a number of years. They were probably the original blood from which the southern-bred Kentucky family of red hogs are descended. Some of these red hogs may now be found in Kentucky, changed in characteristics by continued crossing with the local breeds, and sreneraHy modeled after them, but, like all families of red hogs, retaining with remarkable tenacity the red color. The factory system has worked a revolution in cheese making in this country, but it has tiot done so much tor butter making. The bulk of cow butter is still made on farms, and there is one reason who it probably will continue to be. The skim milk is of great value for feeding pig and other purposes, while the whey from cheese Is worth little or nothing. The dairy system of butter making will probably insure a bette-and more uniform product, but there is another diriiculty to be taken into account, which is the loss from churning the cream from a great number of cows together. It is very well for a farmer to turn a few sheep m a rough neclected field and let them trim down the briars and weeds if he will provide them with s,ullicient good food. In this way the old field may be turned to good account by the foaling of sheep njon it, but for regular business one can not hope to raise sheep in this way. A good pasture, roots for winter feeding, well-made clover Lay,-and jrood. careful attention and management are essential to success. Sheep are fond of a variety of food briars . and weeds and such things. Confined to that diet they run down fast. They thrive on substantial food. Many farmers do not feed turnips, because the stock will not partake of them when they can get better material. Something depends upon the manner in which the turnips are . fed. No animal cares for a hard, woody or frozen turnip, nor should the roots be "fed without some preparation. The better method is to seam them and add ground grain, but the majority of farmers object to the labor of such proceeding. A toot-slicer however, may le used, by which the turnips may be sliced. They should then be covered with water overnight, pprinkled with meal
and salt the- next morning, ar.d fed. They are, of course, not as valuable as hay, corn, fodder or grain, but they serve an excellent dietary purpose, increasing the appetite and assisting to keep the animals in good condition. In roanr.g-.ag live sto k a main thing is to look to the comfort of theanirral. So animal thrives at the same time that it is cold and -uneasy, while a quiet ar pearance is a sure indication of thrift. When the ot serving farmer sees a restless and rnea-y animal he :nay know something is wrong; he will treat it to remove the cause if he studies his best inte-ests. We do not maintain but that some animals are by their very natures restless und-r any treatment; such will usually be found unthrifty and tinj rotltable in the same dei-ree, and had better be weened out, unltss, perhaps, there is some clance of reforming them. At the present rate of destruction to our orchards it will only be a few years until the app'.e, now so beautiful, will be classed among the luxuries. The great orchards ot Central Illinois are rapidly going to decay, and in some parts oi löwa'aud Minnesota the farmer are cutting down the trees and avow their intention to iuit trying to raise apples. It is stated that during the past twenty-five years the apple trees were winter killed three times', eight years apart earn tim , which has discouraged the cultivation of a nples in those States. The pear tree is alsoa sulferer from the severe winters of the past two years, 0 per cent, of them being killed. A correspondent of the ltural New Yorker says:. "I have reason to believe that copperas will prevent the grape rot. In a small vineyard in Massillon. O., where a quart of copperas to tho square rod had been sown in July for three years there had been no rot, while other grapes in the same neighborhood have rotted more or less every year. They formerly rotted in this vineyard.'' According to the above the copieras, tobe sown, must have been pu'ven.'.ed. Whether the eilects are due to destruction of the spores or a deficiency of iron in the soil are not stated, as copperas (sulphate of iron) is soluble, and also an excellent disinfectant. It is cheap and worth a trial. Extracted honey should be thoroughly skimmed of all bits of comb, or other subStance?, before it is marketed. It is often damaged by b-u:ig run into whiskv barrels, which have charcoal on the inside of the staves, and particles of this get fnto the honey, spoiling its appearance. Clean barrel? are indispensable. omb honey must be white, well capped and put up in a neat, attractive manner. Only thus can the producer obtain the top-:'gure of the market. In New York the principal demand is for honey in glassed sections or in paper boxes. In the West such are unsalable. In Cincinnati the market reqtu res it in un glassed sections, but with the crates glassed. Congress is to be a-ked to nur-e the beetsugar industry of California after the French ierrcan fashion, only '.WOO a res of land, it is said, would be required to produce as much beet sugar as is now consumed in the United Stab s, and more than that area of land is available in California alone, without mentioning Oregon and Washington. Curiously enough, one of the arguments u-ed by those who ask for special protection for bee-'t sugar is to the efiect that the climate of California is snperio- for beet-growing to to that of any other producing country. At present the production of beet sugar in California is only about 1.2-f tons per annum. Would-be llax-growers will be glad to hear that an impetus is likely to be given to the revival of that industry in England and Ireland by the invention of a machine which accomplishes tic remarkable operation of scutching llax-'traw without producing any tow. At present for every twenty stores of scutched i!ax there are six or seven stones
of tow; but the new machine prepares every particle of the fax fiber without this waste. The straw is separated from the fiber by the rapid action of perforating pins. In Lille and the surrounding districts of France hundreds of the machines are being introduced, and it is there considered that the invention will revolutionize the industry. An orchard of some .," 0 trees, planted near Trenton, N. J., under a former owner, failed from vellows and other causes to pro duce either trees or fruit A new owner dug out all the old trees, and again planted the orchard, using as a fertilizer kainit and bone dust in liberal quantities. The orchard is now six years old, is a marvel of beauty, and bears abundantly. A more healthy orchard can not be found. We find plenty of cases where there are new orchards planted after old ones failed, and they grew finely. We find in all such cases the orchard had a new owner, and that seemed to be a great benefit to the trees. Neglect cd the former owner was replaced by careful attention and fertilizers, and always in all the cases we observe the complete eradication of disease. i-ooks Like a Cold Hlooded Murder. I.! i.as, Tex., .bin. :. The shooting affray reported from here yesterday proved to be a serious affair. Only three iersons were shot, but the deveiopraeuts are sensational and attracting almost universal attention. All the parties shot were colored .Jc"--e Ponn er, a middle-aged man ; Martran t Youny. his sUi-daughter, aged five year-, and Henry Johnson, aged sixteen years. Uouner was instantly killed and the other two fatally woun.led. Detective Duncan, of Daila, and Deputy Sheriff secly, of Freestone County, who did the Killing, will stick to the statement made, by them that they went to Bonner's house to arrest him as a horse-thief, and were lired upon hy parties insiile with hliottruns aut pistols, and that they reiurm-d the fires, that the ksiling was done in self-defense, but the remarkable feature of the tragedy is that neither of the ottii-ers received a scratch, ortieers who have made a thorough investigation ot" the premises assert that all the bullet holes found in the house sh'w that they were made from shots tired inward from the door of the cabin, through which theotticers entered, and that 110 evidences were discovered of shots tied outward by the occupants of the cabin. The evidence taken before the Justice is volnminons, aad the jury returned a verdict that Pcnuer' death was caused by gu--h'Ä wounds ini'dcted by shots firod from weapons in the hands of one s-ely and two other parties, to the jury unknown. Ihm can admits be-ins with iseely and shooting, but the witnesses from amoug the occupants of the house only identified seely. Who the third party was is a "mystery. The story of the negroes, with surrounding circumstances, make il appear credible, and is far different from the statements of Ihmcau and fsecly. Kobert Johnon ssid he had ju-t returned to the house Lorn Tfork with his brother Henry, when two men rushed in and began tiring without saving a word. Bonner fell, as did also the littl girl. Johnson and his brother ran ontsidc. and there Henry was shot down by another man. Josephine Davis, who was in the house at the tim of the shooting, fustii'cd to the same effect, I'uncj-a and .-eely are still in custody at the County Jail, and the Grand Jurv, now in session, is investigating the tragedy. The opinion prevails lhat iudictments for murder will le returned against Duncan and Seefy. Pnblic opinion, as expressed on tne streers and iu public place, u not complimentary to them in connection with '.he tragedy. Aaulte.l on Mi llrblat Kve. Cl r.vEi.ANi, Jan. .T0.Joseph Simons a young man of Milwaukee, advance anent of rtsco's Dramatic Company, ciiuvj to levelanda few days since to he married to Miss Ida Abrains, and, while the wedding preparation were in progress, topped at the residence of o. Strauss, Miss Abrams' uncle. Friday night Simons had a telo(rrara to aeiitl and left the house for that purpose. As he was taking his departure his artianeed exclaimed: ' Don't go. Jo. I have a presentiment that something will happen to you.'1 lie laugheU a.wr- ber fear nl went out. Shortly after II o'clock two policemen found him lying senHeless on St. (.'lair street, in the busiest part of tho city. Ho had been assaulted and robbed oi fi60, aaho explained when he recovered consciousness for a moment to-day. He lies in the hospital in a dying condition,' and his intended wife Is almost crazy by the calamity. Tond's Extract is known everywhere, and well merits its reputation as the "People's Remedy," and ''Universal Pain Destroyer." For over forty years this great vegetable compound has proved its eilicacy, and never failed to doits duty when brought into use. It has won its greatest renown as a suoduer of all pains and inflammations, and should be in every household. Pond's Extract cures Kore Throat, Quinsy, Inflamed Tonsil, Wounds, Bruises, 'Piles, Catarrh, etc.
A WAR OF WORDS
Eft-eei "Old Tetaap" Shermaii and General E. F. Frye. (jrorral Sbenuan DtBiei Svayinjc That'-H.-vd C. F. Smith Lived Crant Waal ) Have Di'appea0td to History After Houelon.'' New York, Jan. 20. The Evening Test will print a new letter from Genemi B. V. Frye to the editor ct the North American Keview, relative to the controversy between General Sherman and General Frye as to the former's remark comparing Grant with General C. F. Smith at the time of lonelson. It closes with a copy of a letter written by General Sherman last September, in which the criticised phrase is to be found: No. ."0 East SixTV-rniF.D Street, Nr.w York City, Jan. 21), lsSl. j To the Editor ef tho North American Keview: Sir In an article called "An Acquaintance With Grant," published in your December number, I quoted General Sherman as hav ing said since Grant's death that "had C F. Smith lived, Grant wouid have disappeared to history after Donelson." I cited this speculative opinion from the highest officer in the army, thinking it would illustrate and ! lend interest to the general proposition I asserted concerning the effect of chance upon the soldier's career. I do not see that the speculation is injurious to General Grant, General bherman or anybody else. General Sherman, however, made my citation of it the subject of a correspondence with you, in consequence of which you discussed my statement in vour January number, and announced that General Sherman had called upon J'ou to repudiate, the sentiment attributed to him. This was followed by a letter from Genend Sherman to Pev. Geo. Morrison, dated January 12, published in the daily papers of the DJth, in which the General says: "It is utterly impossible that I could have written or sjHoken the words as quoted in the December number of the North American Keview, and that I could have written the possitive expression that had C. F. Smith lived Oeneral Grant would have disappeared from history, is an impossibility." Adding, "I am conndent in good time we shall learn on what authority or hearsay this publication is based' Tüie issue botweeen General Sherman and me is whether or not I quoted him correctly. In your February number for an early copy of which 1 thank you General Sherman says, coupled with much personal abuse of me, that I "invented the quotation for the purpose of questioning it," and that I, "when cornered will dodge the issue' In view of the foregoing facts. I need make no apology to the public for feeling called upon to establish the validity of the quotation I made. General Sherman himself is my authority. The remark that had C. C Smith lived Grant would have disappeared to history after Donelson, was wntten with the General's hand over his signature, word for word as I gave it. That there may be no ground for misunderstanding concerning the languageused and the connection in which it was employed, I append a verbatim paragraph from a letter in Genend Sherman's hand writing, dated September iss.3. As intimated in General Sherman's letter to Mr. Morrison, there is a marked difference between speculating "w hat might have been had Genertd Grant srone to the rear and '. F. Smith fought the battle of Shiloh: what might have been had Washington accepted his warrant m the P.nglisu Navy, and the positive expression that had "C. F. Smith lived. General Grant would have disappeared irom history." It is not my province to explain the relation between the two. Either, however, would serve the purpose with which I quoted General Sherman, namely: to illustrate the general proposition that "chance is an important factor in the race of glory," by citing the implied opinion of General Grant's especial friend that it was true at a particular stage of Grant's career. Perhaps I ought to add that the order from which I quoted was shown me on account of its supposed historical value, and with no referece to the expression I quoted.. Observing the fitness of that expression to the subject on which 1 was engaged, and having the consent of the person to whom the letter was addressed to make the citation, 1 did not hesitate to do so. The correspondence of which the letter is a part was between two officials Colonel Ii. N. Scott and General Sherman upon a popular subject that implied no secrecy whatever, and the repudiation of my quotation was no doubt a surprise to 'olonel Scott, a3 it was to me. Please publish this note in tht- next number of the North American Ileview, and on account of the character and authority of the denial use the fac simile plate herewith for printing the extract from General Sherman's letter. Yours truly. James B. Fkyi:. Extract. nl2 Gakrisox, A v., St. Lot is, Mo., ) September I, J olonel X. S. Scott, War P.ecords, Washington, 1). C: IM:af. S ott Now as to llalleckG'rant. I had the highest possible opinion of Halleck's knowledge and power, and never blamed him for mistrusting Grant's ability. Had C. F. Smith lived Orant would have disappeared to history after Donelson. Smith was a strong, nervous, vigorous man when I reported to him in person at Fort Henry. With greatest respect, your friend, W. T. Shprmax. The North American Review for February, published to-day, contains the correspondence which led up to this communication of General Fry, and furnishes the key to the controversy. It consists of a 'letter from General Sherman to the editor, dated December 1, asking the latter to inquire of General Fiy what his anthoiity was for attributing to "him (Sherman) the phrase "Had C. F. Smith lived. Grant would have disappeared to history after Donelson," and of General Fry's answer, dated December r, also to the editor, saying thst as General Sherman does not deny the correctness of the statement to him, he (Fry) deems it best to "let tbe matter rest where it is." He adds that if the correctness of the statement would be denied, he would feel called upon to substantiate it. These two letters are followed by others of the same general tenor between the same parties. On the 13th of leceniber. General Sherman wrote a letter to IL C. Drum, Adjutant General of the Army, bringing the controversy with General try to his attention, and concluding as follows: I have never authorize! fen ral Fry to speak for me in matters reou'ring the use of pree lancuage. and 1 surely take direct issue with him iu the modern monstrous newspaper doetrine that a reporter may publish any falsehood, or guess, leaving the victim to follow it up with a denial or oualitlcatittn. 1 assert, moreover, that- General Kry is au otlieer of the army, snbje-l to 1 i--ri-pline and bound in honor to answer such an luouirv as was addressed to him. I therefore wil!. with all due restK-ct. lay the matter before the honorable (Secret ry of War, and invoke his authority to compel oeueral Fry to disclose the ouree of nls information, or to oualifvhis positive as-ertiou that "Ceneral Shermnn ros h far . to have said, since ieneraf dram's death, that if '. K. 8mith ha.l lived, Ocneral Grant would have disappeared to history after Donelson." With great respect, your servant, . T. Shkkman, General. On the 23d of December Adjutant General Drum replies: The question how far the unauthorized ue. by an officer of the expressions of another may render the former amendable to discipline, Is a diilicut one to answer. eieeiallv when tho language imputed ia not offensive or calculated to east odium on tue peateror writer. 11 tne nuoiauon ued bv Ceneral Frv in his article were false aad scandalouu. r so garbled a to five a false impression of your utterams. he haa laid himself oDtn to araTe accusation, but as there U not hin? to indicate that the state ment is of that character, or that his iotentwatodoyouinjn;iceor injury, the Secret rv id War instruct me to sav that he can not ace that it ia Id ti pwr, cadcr toe law, to take
in this r ae tfco action sngfjestc-l in vour letter. At tte same ;in.c lie in cf cpin.cn that th-3 cucsicn raised i one ot pood maune-s and pror er t OTirUiy rather tban of eon?nct 6 il ectiiis oenerfcl Fry to military discipline. I am. General, very respectful!. vo-:r obedient fcrvatt, . 'I..'". Dr.: :. Adjutant iencttl. Then follows two letters from Gneral Sierman, as follows: rlJ 4 khison AvF.Nt r. Si. Lo..:-, Jan. 2i. Allen Thorndyke Kice, Ksq., North American he. view, New York. Dear Sa. I Lave tbe Ileview for Jarr.arv and notice the maimer in which you tr-at the She r-n'su-l rye matter. It is- well aud skiüf'illv done, t ut you do not know Frye as well as r.rcat and I o id. He invented that inotation to set up a m.sa of at-aw for the honor of iaoeking it down. ren-rl tyrant always regarded him Fry-- as one cf the men most a.-tive in spreading tho li.-s aboc.t us .t sluloh "supri-e.'' "'"Rvonettd in our beds," "demoralized.' "a cowering mass on ihe river har.k," etc.. etc... r.nd his Decemlcr articles 'how that .rant listened to him. as he could not. help doing, replying little. Now for illustration send to an Nostraiid for a little book, published in is4, "The Army I nder Buell.' Frve, on page : "During the seien months, including the winter season, te 'Bue!!) organized Hnd disciplined an army which had no superior, etc.: moved with the nif in bory of Iiis army to Pittsburg Landiucr, resued General '.rant's army at the battle of .Shi lob, and converted thtis disaster of the tirst day on that memorable field into & victory on the m-oud day. ' Again on pai:e 10: "l'resMBg their advantage, the i cion armiesof tbe Tennessee, under drain, and of the "bio, under Trtueii. concentrated at l'ittsburg handing, on the Tennessee, when being attacked on the t'.th of April, they gained the victory of Shiloh.'
j nen vunt to "".ranis .Memoirspages and aui. and read his plain, truthful narrative: -Gen eral BueM did not reach the field of battle until the first day w as over. He came out to me. a mile and a half from the landm-r, after dark, with Frve find others, ud 1 talked with both. On that first day we had fought from morning till night short of one division oi our army U.ew Wallace's), had sustained a loss of S.0O men and inflicted alike loss to our enemy, holding our ground against superior numbers and covering every vital part of our position." We of the Army ot the Tennessee claimed a victory iit ninht. Lew Wallace having arrived w ith O.OoO men before Bueil appeared. General Gr.-nit ordered me in person to assume the otiensive. the next morning at daylsght. Now . on the morning of the c.tU of A pril. W'bIlaee was only sixty miles off, and we erecied him momentarily; stiil he did not cross tl.e bridge which J covered till niL'ht. One division of Uuell's army (Nelson's) which had marched from Nashville to s'avanali, was tliure on the evening oi April .". and General Grant ordered it tomar. h toward Piithhurg lauding. The lieing was heard at Savanah early the morning of the tllh, vet the division did not start tili the afternoon of the ith, and its advancing brigade (Ammen's) only reached tne Landing alter dark. aft-r the day's tattle was over, losing, as .enera! ornnt describes, two men killed and one wounded. (Official rcqsirt one killed, two w nun led. i That uiitbt the rebels were as much demoratyzed and more ihn we Buell got up two other 'divisions 'riueiiden s and Me ook's and the battle on the 7th was a "walk over." the losses bciu? not, onefourth oi the day before. We were everywhere vivtorious. We did not know that We hd leen surprised and slaughtered in our beds. We lielieved we had oetended our iwsition till reinforcements, near aud long expectep, did arrive, until the newspapers eimic 1 torn the North full and complete. i utr families mourned us as dead, with the bPih of shame that we had sit down like a pan-el of cowards to be-knocked over with clubs. These flcco.itus were written by cowards and fugitive who tied from the Held" and did not stop until they reached 1'adNcah. rairo and i'inetnnati. Their accounts were verified !y rion '.who never commanded even a brigade, and who reached tiie battlefield from the rear, also prosentiug a sickening sight, and who s-'ir. fortii fheir reports damaging to 1 lie brave and calhnit id n of the Army of Tennessee, who did t'gtn Laril and STceesfully ou the 6th of April. Is. ;. eneraldrant'r account is as near correct and true :s any sincie man who was on the field can mükeit I an have no newspaper conirovt-sy with Jen ra! Frye or auyltody e!-e. if avertable", but when Frye scut me his' volume Isj ore referred to, I called his s.fvntion to the renewal of his old cont-ovvr-y, sent the lettr through .enerr.l ;ritit, who August 1, lissf, wrote me that ho, too, hc.d noticed Frye's "assumptions,'' but ir. his ie. moires he would confine himself to the s:taplo stmemeut of facts. Frye loves no;criey, eemrovesy : is wordy, but not profound. He wants to e considered li'iell's mouthpiece and thecham"piou oi the Army of the Cum ber hind. He uotvs me. refuses to give me thesourceof hi quotation, but admits his liiilutity to issue. 1 will be pleased if you call on him u substantiate his ..uestious. Very truly yours, etc., W. T. suekman. No. '.'12 GajumsoX, Aven-'T, ) s r Lor is. M..., January 10, isS-t. 1 Allen TLorndyke Kice. Jls.p, F.Jiior North Amsrl11 Pevicw : Peak sn: I approve your comment wh-!y. I can fuive no controversy with (Jeneral Frye, who, in my judgment. Is a man of words, not of deeds: who. when cornered, w ill dodge tho issue and run 0!' iiLo an entirely different matters. 1 w rite hundreds of letters of which I have no 'opic-'. I meet thousands of people with whom I eKt compelled to converse, and with those I mignt have speculated :is to what might have iwseu had General J. F. Smith lived, and had General Grant gone to the rear after the l.attles oi Henry and Donelson or shiloh, hut that I ever questioned his peculiar qualities and abilities is tiirply impossible. You know that 1 asked thro tgh you of General Frye to give me the source of his quotation not only once, but twice, and h-; waatc-d the matter to remain as it was, when he knew that I feitagrieve! at what I lielieved a faKenuotatiou. Yet up to this day he has withheld a compliance with that simple request, cf course, 1 believe he invented the quotation lor tbe purpose of questioning it, and showing his friendship after death for the rann whom :u life Le. attempted to malign. With great resoect. Vour friend. W. T. skerman. The last letter in the list is the or.e from General Sherman to Ilev. George Morrison, of Paltiinoie, previously published in the newspapers, in which General Sherman denies that he could ever have used the positive expression attributed to him. Arrested on a Charge of Malpractice 1 niLAi k; 1 in a, Jan. J. W". Howard, a delicate featured man who alleges thai he is twentyfive years old. but who would be readily takn for a youth of eighteen summers was arrested la-.t evening u a hange of criminal malpractice. Lena Kerthling was at the same time errest-H on a cbfge of being an accessory to the crime. The arrests were based uon the declarations of Cecelia Brown, a mn rried woman, made to District Surg on Hazel, who was sent to make an Investigation of the ease.. Mrs. Brown said she had visited the man twb-eand that he had performed an operation upon horat each visit, and had alo given her a lot of pills, which she had taten. He tu u-ssisted ou both occasions by tue woman Bcrthling aud had In-eu iaid S15 for his service, Howard has been known in police circles for over a year as "Dr. Dubois," tinder wLich name he opened an office at Ninth and Cherry t treets aud advertised extensively as a specialist. He holds a diploma from the famous Philadelphia College of bogus "Dr. Buchanan" fame, and lor a time appeared to d a thriving business. He el.-o figured us a proprietor of two or three specific, ti.tlteiiies. About a year ago ho was arrested on a 'bärge of criminal malpractice, and on conviction was sentenced to an imprisonment of eighteen monies, but, owing to a strong pcssure brought to bear upon the C'urt by his friends, the sentence w as reduced to nine n:onths, the Judge offering as a reason for his action the youthfuiuess and inexicrten(e of the prisoner. As soon as Lis sentence was ompleted Howard openid another o'l.ee in a different locality, but under the same name. His actions were eyed with suspicion and his movements were closely watched, but there were no grounds upon whi'ih an arrest could le ba1! until yesterday. Mrs. Brown's condition is very critical, and she is not ex ted to live through the night. Her ante-mortem statement has been taken. Freight Train Wrecked. 2'iti Mti 1;:, Jn. :!0. A Kcott llaveu (fa..) special gays: A freight train on the Pittsburg, McKeesrnrt nd YougMogheny Railroad ran into a land slide early this morning, and was bi'-dly wrecked. Conductor Graham and Fireman Elliott were buried under the debris, and are believed to have both been killed. A later dispatch report F.lliott and Grah.im both dead. KnuiU'-er ieonre MoKibben and Brakeman William Mahler were i,infully, but not v rioiisly injured. The tracks are covered with debris and trains are all delayed. A WUo Ileform. The biibit of administering quinine in powerful doces. as au antidote to malarial maladies, was once dangerously common, llappllly trils practice has undergone a u ile reform. Not only the pub lic, but professional men have adopted, not whob y, of course, but largely, Ilotetter's Stomach Bit ters at a sale botanic biibstitutc for the pernicious alkaloid. The consequences of this cnango are most important. Now fever and ague sufferers are cured formerly their complaints wero only for the time relieved, or half cured tho reiiicdy eveatnally falling to produce any appreciable effect, except the doses were increased. A course of the Bitters, persistently iollowed, break up the worst attack- and nreventa their return. The evl dence in favor of this sterling specific and household medi!ne is of no amb gnons character, but poaitive and satiistactory, and the sources whence it proMd are very Bumeron.
Jfcj. Bj
READY RELIEF The cheapest and hest n-.ei!e:ne for farcer use Irj the world. Cures and prevents cold's. Sore Throats, Hoarseness, Stiff-reci;, Bronchitis, Head ache. Toothache, Kheumatism, NcnraZgi. Diphtheria, Influenza, L'irLcu.t fcreatbiLc,- Asthma, quicker and more complete than any kuowu remedy. It was the find and Is the only PAIN REMEDY That Instantly stop the most excruciating pains, allays Inflammation ad eres eoicstioas,. whether of the Lungs, stotneca. Bowels, cr other glands or organs, by one a pp.icatiun. In From One to Twenty Minutes! Ho matter how rlotent or excmc'atirg tte painethe Rheumatic. Bed-ridüer. Infirm. ' CT: ppied, Nervous, Neuralgic, or prostrated with d.Meatv may suffer, Radways Ready Relief! WILL AFFOF.D INSTANT EA&E. Iiflimnatloi af tie Kldirvn, luCsMBittoi je tka Bladder, Iafiamnatloi f the Bawtl. Oirrstltra f tie Laags, PalpltatUa r tie Hurt, By terlea, Crtnp, Catarrh, Sciatic, Piins Ii tie rket. Bark rLirabs.Brui.es, Spt ins, CU liilla, aid Aga Chili. The application of tkeF.EAPY BrlLIE to tho part or parts where the difficulty or paiu exists. wm anora ease ana comiort. IK TERN ALLY. Thirty to sixty drops in half a tumbler of watet will in a few minutes cr.re Crsrar, -qsmts. fsont Stomach. Heartburn, cict Headache, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Diarrhea. Dysentery, CoUc, lnu in the üowehi, ana aJ. internal ptnuu. It la Highly Important that Kvery Family neep a supply or Radway's Ready Relief Always In the house, its use will rrove berefieial on all occasions of pain or sickness. There ia nothing in the world that will stop pain or arrest the progress of disease us quick as the Kcady Ileliei. ft is pleasant to take as a tonic, anodyne, or soothing lotion. Where epidemic diseases prevail, such as Fever, Dysentery Inlluena. Diphtkeria, Scarlet Fever, I'heumonta. and other msliznant diseas.-. KADWAY'S HEADY BELIEF will, if taken as directed, protect the system again-: attacks, and if scucaI with sickness, quickly cure tte patient. Traveler: should alwtvs .-arrv a bottle of RADWAY'S BEADY BELIEF wi'ta them. A few drops in water will pre vent sickne-s or r uins from a change of water. It is tctur thau French Brandy or Bitters as a stimrJaut MALARIA IN ITS VARIOUS FORMS! Fever nn.l Ague Cored FOB 50 CENTS. There Is not a remedial cetst In this worla that will cure fever and e.gue and stber malarroua,. bilious and other fevers aide 1 by Kadway'a Jrlliaij60 quickly as Kadway'g Lef.dy Belief. FIFTY CEISTS PER BOTTLE. SOLD BY LEU'jGIiTS. DR. RADWAY'S Sarsaparillian 1SILVIIT The Great Blood Purifier! Pure blood makes sound f eh, ttrong bone. an2 a clear ekln. If you would have yoirr fich tm, your bones pound, and vour complexion fair, uV-DR-KADWAY'S äAKaAPARlI.l.lA KLS0LVENT A remedy composed of ingredients of extraordinary medical propertica essential to purify, heal, repair and invigorate the broken down racv wasted Dody Quick, 1'lee-ant, fcale aud 1'crma-. nant in Its Treatment and Cure. No matter by what name the complaint may be designated, whether it Le scrofuls, consumption, syphilis, nicer, sores, tumors, boils, erysipelas, or salt rheum, diseases of the lungs, kidneys, bladder, womb, ekin. liver, stomach or bowel, either chronic or constitutional, the Viru is inp the Blood, which supplies the waste and bnildaand repair these organs and wasted tissiits of thosystem. If the blood is juLeaiUiy the process of repair must be unsoaud SKIN DISEASES, HUH0KS AND SORES. Of all kind, particularly Chronic D!sf iOt th gkin, are cured with great tertainty by a eoorto of Radway'sfsartapanllian. We mean obstinat cases that have resisted all other treatment. The skin after a few days' use of the ta rsaparll Ban become clear arid beautiful. Pimpleablotchea, black rpots, and ekin eruptions are removed, eores and ulcers foon cured. Pervma suffering from Scrofula, Kruptive D.fees of tbe Eye. Mouth, Ears. Legs, Throat anl Glands, thar have accumulated aud ppread. either from nncured diseases or mercury, may rely rpon a euro , if the Sarsaparilia is continued a ufLckat fcm to make its impression on the tyttem. ONE DOLLAR A EOTTLH. DR. RADWAY'S. BEGGLMISG FILLS. For the enre of all flo-dcr of tue Ftoniaeh,. IJver, Bowels, Kidneys. Bladder, Nervous D?eases, Loss of Appetite. H-aüa be. is!.:p-.tin Oostiveness, Indigestion. Dyspepsia. Biiicnness. Fever, Inflammation of the we's. illea, and ail derangements of the latcrcal Viscera. Burely vegetable, containing no mercury, mineral, ot deleterious drugs. PRICE, 23 CKTS PER IIOX. Sold by Mil Drug1t. DYSPEPSIA! Hundreds "of me'adles spiiDK from tft complaint, Tbe symptoms ol this diverse are th symptoms of a broken down tmach. Indigestion, Flatulence, Heartbnrn. Acid Momaeh, l ain after Kating riving rine otmetinoe t- tho mo excruciating code ryrotis, or Watr Brna, wc, etc. DR. KAP WAY' 9 PriXf are a cn re for this eotm plaint. They restore mength 10 the ttomach, and make it peifom Us functions. Tbe sjaptorn s of DvFpepoia disappear, and with them tho liability o"f the Byrdem to contract diseases. Takt-, the medicine according to directus, and observe what we ear la "Faie and True" respvctliHi diet, Bead 'FALSE AND TBUE." 8end a letter stamp to DR. KADWA1 k CO., No, S2 Warren street. New York. information worth thousands will b w to you. TO TOE I.t.IC. Be rtfX and aH for EJLv. AT'B, ana l& b ;ihfi."i WW,! U ca u -ci tcj.
