Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 15, Number 12, Jasper, Dubois County, 18 April 1873 — Page 2
Ike Uitr ntitt.
C. IX) A SI,
' iV-SFTtf tf BRIEF. THt VAST. The lobby of the Sew Jersey Houm of Uepreseutativea waa the seen, of a disgraceful row ou the morning of the adjournment of the Legislature Iu a debate the day before a Member named i'aae had called the Hon. MW M. Scovill "a perjured man" and "a scoundrel." and wheu Mr. Cole and Johu Hood, member, met iu the hall they engaged in a war of words. Ncovill came up, and. mixing iu the quarrel. Cole ca-' d him a " a liar,' and waa immediately knocked dowu by Kco ill. The Speaker ordered all the doom to be cloned.
but before it waa done Caae rushed iuto the fight, and Scovill knocked him down also, and he fas badly punished while he was dowu. The Mayor of Trenton interposed, and prevailed upon 800 rill to leave the State-House, and the light ended. Cole a face wm much disfigured. .. It ie proposed to take all the
bodies of the Atlantic victim to Halifax and bury them together in a public cemetery, and erect a monument over them. The City Council, on application of the Provincial Government, ha j resolved to place a lot in the cemetery at the disposal of the friends of the dead. One hundred and seventy bodies have so far been recovered. .. .Nixon, under sentence of death at New York, is completely broken down, and the prison officers say if he does not die of fright he wdl have to be carried to the gallows. May 16 is the day set for hiB execution. .... Henry Brieeland, the murderer of John Allingham. has been sentenced to be hung at Washington. Pa. The Hon. ltichard Yates, of Illinois, ex-United States 8eiiator, aud recently appointed a Government Director of the Union Pacific Railroad, was arrested iu Philadelphia, a few nights since. The New York Herald says Miss Nellie ! Grant is engaged"' to Thomas Miu-phy. Jr., I
son of ex-Collector Murphy A large sec-
ings were unroofod, and a great deal of dam
age indicted. IIM, recently, at Aurora, 111 , Mrs. knapp, aged 101 years. Could read the newspapers without glasses up to within a feu wok of her death. . . .Brighaw Voting told the Mormon Conference at Halt Lake that he was getting old, aud wanted a young man to carry out the work ha bad commenced. He has retired generally from business, spiritual and commercial, and it is said he will join the new Mormon colony in Arizona. Twklvk hundred hogs, two hundred cattle, and a large number of sheep were smothered to death on a train between Chicago and Pittsburgh, a few days ago. Nearly every train
that arrives at the East Liberty yards is aaid
to contain more or less stock smothered Chicago has been honored by a visit from the world-famous Boss Tweed Thirty-five of the
survivors of the ill-fated Atlantic have arrived in Chicago It is said that the Mormons are
preparing to leave Utah and settle iu Arizona.
Drigham Young will lead them, and the new colony will be located in the valleys bordering ou the Ban Francisco Mountains. From this last Mormon paradise all Gentiles will be excluded. The Kiowa, Cheyenne and Arapahoe In
dians are prepariug for war, and forts in Western Kansas, aud south of that section, are being reinforced. . . .Charles Hauguinet. Die oldest native inhabitant of St. Louis, has just died. He was born in that city in 1781 A bill is before the Illinois Legislature appropriating 50,000 to tinish the partially completed
monument to Stephen A. Douglas, in Chi
cago. THKS0CTH. Advance sheets of Gould A Co.'s new Directory " give the population of twelve of the thirteen wards of Bt. Louis at 12C an increase of 117.262 over the census of 1870. Chief-Justice Chase has been visiting exConfederate Gen. Bradley T. Johnson, at Richmond Extensive preparations are being made at Norfolk. Va , for the reception of the President at that point upon his Southern tour. WASHISHTOX.
ItEorLATioNs have been issued
says the reports of popular disturbances aud
military Insubordination iu the new republic are greatly exaggerated. . The report is continued that the Carhsts put to death a number of Republican soldiers captured at Berga ; 7 of tlicnt aore heartlessly hayoiiotted. . . . Tbo cause or the Cuban pntrtots continues to look up. News from Havana through Spanish sour-'Of Continus the reported capture of the fortified city and soapor. of Manainllo, and says an immense loss of bootv in
money and muiiitious of war fell into the
In whatever light tln newly-horn !!- public of Spain may lu regarded, thenis no denying that it Iium accomplished its work so far rapidly und effectually. Tin Republic in now loss than two months old, yet it has got through "it It a vast deal f work in t hut brief time. A Madrid letter sums up the situation in a few words. It Iium shut un tin- Hoval
ri-UHk vr T Kiln. Daimtof all nations. 4I I'm is.....
Tum h.i-!iin ,,f Mairv Queen ,,t h, , I are to Im- collected Hnd puhlih. .
ii.r. ii. iv. 1 Hineilt tiiii.l.Ms I,..
and
repair iuiitilt.,
cur
pn-iUoU Um
I tl.
race will eventually tUr,
hands of the Cubans, who sacked the town. l'ulaec, Unit gorgeous building in the
HUM de Oriente where monarchy Iium held revelry for centuries, and talks of I turning it into 11 picture gallery. It has I dissolved the Cent Guards of the King, ' the "Ouanhnnsdel Roy," the finest look ' ing act of dandy soldiers iu the world, with their bright, conspicuous retl unii forms. It has forwarded to Carthagciui, j for shipment to Italy, all the horses and i carriages from the royal Htulilcs which
were the perHonal property of the lute King. It has locked up the crown and ll... ...... . .... 1 Tl I ft t 1
on- eio-wn jrwein, 11 una llllollsliet I JM- j litical oaths and restored to full rank and pay nil the generals and officers who were cashiered for refusing to swear to I the Havoy dynasty. It Iihh decreed that j justice is to be done in the name of the ' Republic instead of, as formerly, in the name of the King. It lias abolished the I quiutus, that odious service bycotnicrip- 1 tiou, in which everv tilth iiiuu whose
An explosion of tire-damp iu a coal mine
near Abertillery, Monmouthshire. Kngland. caused the death of five miners and wounded many others. The exhibitors at Vienna will lie divided into groups according to the character of the contributions. Each group will have a President and two Vice-Presidents. The carpenters are at work on the American building. In the
department of art a fine display is promised. Kngland sends paintings valued in the aggre
gate at 2,000,000. France will contribute 500 1 paintings and Italy 3(10 statues. . . .The Prince I of Wales has just been installed, at London, j as Grand Commander of the Order of Knight I Templar Spurgeon has lasen offered 50,000 I to deliver 50 lectures iu the Unitad States
Menotti Garibaldi has arrived at Barcelona. I and offered tho Republicans his services against the ('artists. The Jesuits have been expelled from Salamanca, Spain The tiraud Duke Alexis has sailed from Shanghai for Japan King William, Prince Bismarck and Von Moltko are go- j ing 011 a visit to the Russian Czar Tho Pope I
it still confined to his bed by illness. . . Lon
don papers announce the death of Dr. Wil
to i,ate
reney. A " Hf'IKNTIKft'
wlioh human ! A ft
into nirus. Tiikiik were 4,088 buaineaa f,lir,, during 1H72, with, lialiilitie ,,f l21,oon,iioo. Tu military establishment ( ;,
Islam! demand, mi nnuual Mm of goo.oon.
A 0110HT story is attached th. ,, md story of the official rmoidetic. .,( ,1 , (hivernor of Missouri. I'kthoijKI'm is beginning h. tnk. (I,. place of coal under the engine I of the steamers on the Caspian.
A 'oMiitKi North Carolinian. Kl, recently allied huuavlf to u I., ho, ami a mother-in-law of I,i. WlI.L, S. Hain M accounted tl popular hallud writer uiuoug Aim J.f.sc.oou of his 71 '-rtlrilr hm Hold. I'm: ex-Prince of France Oaajtf on March 18, his OOTMitooaUi bin . The celebration of tliu event Im .
to tell the story of the destruction of the to pay $100. It has voted a pension of
xuiosn army ... us retreat from tabul m 1,500 R year to the starving wido
r ....... 1. .
: ft- ft. 1 , . . . ,. 1., .r.m, H"iu uu
"I me niy ui .if l orK n as piungei. mo t... . ...,.. . , ., .... , , . , 1 ... Ireasurj Department for the withdrawal of
.tr-. ,UU UlUCI Uftt, m& kUC 1TPU11 Ol II1C
alcohol from bond for scientific purposes uudor the act aaproved February 21. 1H73. Another murderer lias been sentenced to death at Washington The Commissioner of Education has sent out over 17.IKX) letters and 12,000 small packages relating to the Vienna
Exposition A Washington dispatch of the
Ttli says : Pennsylvania politicians arriving here represent the greatest excitement prevailing in that State over the Congressional Apportionment bill pending in the Legislature. The Democratic leaders assert that the measure practically disfranchises 150.UOO Democratic voters of the State. This, they claim, is a pal
pable violation of the Fourteenth Anieiidme.it. in that it abridges tho privileges aud immunities of citizens, aud they say that they will apjeal to Congress for a restoration... The following is the letter of George William Curtis resigning his position on the Civil Service Board : West New Briuuton. X. Y.. March 18. My Dear Sib : As the circumstances under which several important appointments have been recently made seem to me to show an liiiiilniitnA... l.,.,l. A l... 1 ' .
r .. i . . , .ui.uuiiuicui uuui ui uio muni aim teuer oi . .Peter Gdsey, the largest real estate dealer ii . , . . . ., . 71 i the civil service regulations, I resoectfu Iv re-
etrikeof the gas men A. T. Stewart, the New York dry goods king, is seriously ill with Brighfs disease of the kidneys Agassiz is in failing health. The Genesee valley and other parts of New York have been visited by serious floods, involving great destruction of property, and, in some cases, of human life. At Rochester, an incident of the overflow resulted in a sad calamity. A large number of persons were standing on an unfinished wall by the side of the river watching the rise of the waters, when the wall was swept away, and ten or fifteen persons precipitated into the stream. Several of them were carried over the falis and drowned The election in Couuecticut resulted in the success of Logersoll. the Democratic candidate for Governor, by a majority of 3.C09 votea, ever the Republican and Proliibi- j tion candidates. The Congressional deleira- '
tion stands exactly as in the last Congress, namely: First District. Han ley (Jtep. Second, Kellogg (Rep.); Third. Starkweather (Rep.); Fourth. Barnum (Dem): while the
Democrats have a majority iu the Legislature.
name came out of the turn of a lotterv- !
liam Brydon. one of the throe men who lived , wheel was obi iced to become a soldier or 1 ,l,'I,'m''" Wttal August l.V
Bom of the Spiritualist arv .-. u
of insm the IUtloli whether II .,
I or i ii ii a.. t .a .d . 1 . . . a m
Developments made iu the Bank of England TT. , "TT"T "7 " TT forgery case conclusively establish the fact j Is"btllu ,uul urll,,,t ''Iximpion of the
noerai cause, who, with I alvo flooonoitl, did more than any other man to write the death warrant of the Hotirbon dynasty, and afterwards was allowed to die miserable ami neglected by the very men he helped to power. It has passed a decree voting I complete reorganization of the army. Henceforth everv male be-
that the forgeries were committed bv Austin
Bidwell, George McDonnell-. Georgo Bidwell and Noyes. the alleged clerk of the parties. The two latter are now in Newgate, awaitii-g trial Great distress for want of food is reported in the idands on the Irish coast otf tialway A desperate fight is reported in Olo.ine. France, in the department of Stendet.
between two companies of strolling actors.
(ireeloy was, or was not, of then Most of tlietn say lie was ; his u, IfaMii friends say he was n.-t I'm: Host. ui W saya that tb. .street wideiiings in that eitv.i.lr. cidetl upon, is gl.07H.OoO, ami improvements iu immediate ooateojoli tioll Will swell the sum f fSftNflll 'l
Nine were killed oud several injured . Paris j tween nineteen and forty is to lie obliged
to serve his country, without power of """' n warrant for his arrest, a
letters say that of tho $20,000,000 francs sub
scribed in France for the construction of tho imaginary "Memphis and El Paso railroad," 18.000.000 francs went into tho n,li. f
those who engineered the scheme j from tho Prt,Ht i who are to get JO The Captain-General of Cuba has ordered cents a day bonus in addition t,. their
O'Kclley, tho JfcroM correspondent, to be sent pnv. It has changed the fort v-nine civil
A Kl'KINOI-IKI.I. brute put a enhot stove, and the jmlgo said i ,
till
redemption, and the nucleus of tin tu-
tore army is to be formed of volunteer-
to Santiago for trial.
in New York, is dead.
A pcii.mxo m course of construction at Middletown. Ct.. fell the other day. kiUiug six workmen and injuring twelve others Frederick A. Lane, of Erie notoriety, aud a wellknown Wall street operator, has been iguominiously expelled from the New York Century Club for dishonest practices The New York striking gaa men had a sharp conflict with the police the other day. in which the former were put ft rout, many of them with broken heads and belabored bodies. . . .One hundred skilled English farmers, bound for Minnesota, arrived at New York last week. Thk insuaance on Horace Greeley's life.
flOO.OOO, has been collected. Tho policy is the largest paid in the last decade .... The strike of the New York gas men has proved a failure John Hauler, the youthful hero of the Atlantic disaster, visited the New York Stock Exchange the other dav, and received 233.
Mil. ME PILL'S UESWXATION.
Governors of the provinces ami a whole army of oflicials in Madrid. It has been " recognized" by the great mother of
THE WEST. Gex. John W. Wuolt was found dead in his bed at the Newball House, Milwaukee, a few mornings since. It is believed his death was caused by an ever-dose of chloroform A most remarkable accident occurred iu Pike county, 0L, a few days since. John Bailey waa engaged in thrashing wheat with a tenberae machine. The ground being soft, a large quantity of straw had been thrown on the track to make solid walking for the horses. A journal in the machine became so hot as to set the straw on fire, and the flames spread so rapidly, that in a tew minutes tbs machine, a
largo quantity of thrashed grain, and several ricks of the golden cereal were consumed. Five horses were burned to death, and several nth.
era made useless by being cooked to a crisp. 1
une man bad most of bis clothing burned off, bat waa not fatally injured Advices from the seat of war in the Modoc country represent the situation as unchanged, (apt. Jack i" master of the situation, and still defiant The suggestion of the name of D. W. Adams
aa a granger candidate for Governor of Iowa, causes conaiderably fluttering among the party managers. The organization of new granges continues without abatement. Nearty 1,200 are now organized, and the number is rapidly increasing. The members are now discussing what action they will take in the coming campaign. d outside politicians are anxiously watching their movements The town of Parker s Landing, on the Ohio river, has been almost totally swept out of existence by fire, hardly a building being left standing. Tur. farmers are organizing all over Illinois. The Clinton Hryirter says there are 17 organiaations aud 1,800 members in that county, and a co-operative etore in being organized The well-known St. bonis trotting mare. Flora Belle, ha been purchased by Alex. Lewis, of Chicago, for 22,500.... Burlington, Iowa, has been visited by a terribly destructive tornado. A grocery store was blown down, causing the death of seventeen persona, and wounding nineteen others. Many other build-
go my position as a member of the Advisory Board of the Civil Service. In so doing I beg to assure you of my warmest wishes, and of the continuance of my most earnest efforts for the success of your administration. Very respectfully and truly yours.
Geoboe William Cciitih. j His Excellency, the President. The rush of travel to Europe is extraordinary, judging from the applications made to the Htate Departmeut for passports, which exceed in number those granted for any corresponding period. They average about 100 per i day The accounts received from the Indian country indicate a renewal of the atrocities along the frontier The Treasury Department has commenced paying the cotton claims filed under the act of May 18. 1872. Over 1,200 claims have been presented, covering over $6,000.000 Senator Sumner rides out daily, and when within a couple of square from his rest' tonce he '.omea his carriage and walks home. The exercise, slight as it is, tires him considerably, owing to his weak state.
It is announced that there wili be no change
m the tinaucial policy of the Treasury Depart ment Large n umbers of hungry oflice-seek
ers still linger within the shades of the White
House. . .The President will start on his pro
poseu southern trip early in May. . . .Appoint
ments hy tlie President: Charles Gilpin, Surveyor of Customs at Baltimore. H. C. Carter, Surveyor of Cuatoma at St. Joseph,
uu. i-ostmaaiers t naries l.. Nichols, at
Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Louis F. Kloster-
man at Cape Girardeau, Mo.; Daniel F. Braul
I. ridge, r at Louisiana. Mo.; L. B. Cockern at
Carthage, 111.; J. G. McPheeters at Bloomington; Ind.; Robert Shields at Neenah, Wis.; William Tracy at Flint, Mich.; Lucius Whitney, at Morris. III. An appeal has been made by some of the friends of tho Washington Monument Association to the members of Congress who do not want to take their extra salary grab, to turn over the amount to the completion of the
monument. The total amount of the grab ia l,25O,000, which, it is aaid, will finish the monument The frantic appeals of the New York Herald to the President and State Department to demand of the Spanish authorities the release ef 0'Kelley, their Cuban cor. respondent, are unheeded, and are likely to continue unnoticed. A representative of the Herald who called on tha Secretary of State, the other day, waa inquired of if he knew any way by which the Spaniards could catch a few
more tieraui correspondents William L. Scruggs, of Georgia, has been appointed Minister Resident to the United States of Colombia. roRRTan. M. Lotus Joseph Büffkt has been elected President of the French Assembly, in place of M. Grevy, resigned . . . . The Pope has recov
ered from his recent illness.
Revolutionary agents from Spain are ac
tively at work in Portugal. . . .a Madrid letter
The following correspondence has ben pub- llepublics the Unite.! States- and her
lislied : Mayou's Office, Chicago, April 1. To His Excolleuey l S. Grant, President of the United States : Deah Sik : An Executive order was promulgated on the 18th of January, 187:1. against the holdiug of State or municipal offices hy Federal appointees after the 4th of March, 1873. Under this order it would be illegal for me to continue to hold the office of Commissioner of the Civil Service Board unless I resign tha Mayoralty of Chicago. Not feeling that it would be expedient to do the latter at present
I therefore tender my resignation of the ap-
JOVngOOt daughter, the Switzerland of WilliamTell. It has made speeches by tin furlong und issued circulars by the mile. It has passed one ministerial crisis and is npproaehing another. It lias decreed the scqticlchiug of Carlism by the arming of ,r0,000 volunteers to hold the pueblos while the army licks the enemy ; and it asks the Assembly to grant a credit of 20,000,000 to pay the bill. All this the Republic has done and is doing. At the same time its path is beset with dillieul
pomtmeut from you of Civil Service Com-, ties. The armv is not over-zealous. This
missioner, and I hereby tender my thanks , is a great misfortune, but is um bevond
m . i . .2 ft
iui in coiunieucn you reposed m me in making such appointment. I also trust that the rules prepared by the Board and accepted and adopted by you will not lie abandoned, ignored or neglected of enforcement, believing, as I do. that the application will tend to improve and elevate the civil service, and that they are indorsed by the great mass of the American people. Very respectfully yours, Joseph Mkdill. Exec utive Mansion. Washinoton, D. C. i April 9, 1873. ' f Deah Sir: Upon my letum to Washington I tind your le'ter of the 1st iost. resigning the position of Commissioner of the Civil Service Board, on account of your inability to hold that position together with your responsible
office of Mayor of Chicago. I appreciate your
lilltk ft - (li.t ., ............
! - - ii um in hi rrueiiv in iimils Aooa uot include kijlrn . dogs or cuts. TU commerce of ( toMkia incroHsim'. TbototoJ haporta for Yfii ainounte.! to HO7.70M16, ftjpiiwl pMaMT, iJ low 1871. UmI the total n airts for HU vom ÜOBfOJ ;iK;ull.f f74,17Ml& VVihtki.aw Unto. c.Utor of Un N York IYMnm , get a salary "f fl0,(MI I year; Jennings has ytONlO on t. Tilth : Croly has .fJOUon th II Hudson had S'JO.OOO ..n me ami was retired on a pension of gpnmo Fum'F.H seels in immense quin ure smuggled letter envelop , ,: l some of them arc worth .2n an OOJMM M gold. As these letters cailttol I p. i .,1 by ctiatom-lioHnr officers, it fa pr" to hold them till called for and ouooja . the owner to ojH-n before them th, . toms atithoriti. h.
A coMiUNo to the last statist!.--, ti.-
remedy. Castelar and his fri ends have ever cried down the armr, for the armv
has been the only thing which prevented : aggregate mimls-r of failure d
the triumph of their cause long ago. I 172 throughout th- United St.o. . . l?-t,0t!!, involving liabilities amount WMAT AM AWFOl PLACE. j to HS,OM,000. The fidlrtr. In Kl A New York correspondent has beeu " Wregate ,M. ', with liabilities am m to Chicago, and he total like the town, j in to "00. bile for 1870 thrv purticulsrly the smoke. Here is ojaj Wcro 8,551, with H8, J4'J,0UO of habil: way this miserable letter-writer relieves j ,','M his mind (the Lord have mercy on his ' Mm, iviuK iu hltU.n nhuhl j,.,. poor soul): "Chicago leasts of being a enn-howthev Isavethsir Iwbiea ai self-made town, and to that boast' amen'1 ilM(M. tM Tp,.v il i...- .1-. tW
washerwoman of a hotol gathefod a buU in her bundle and carried it off iu her basket. When the mother came to around for her infant and found it not.
say I; for it relieves the Lord of a great responsibility. All, all is black, and th. stifled air is vented with a funeral pall,
so if a stranger from the unamoked Baa)
i -r-T 11 '"W N I around for her infant and found it Oat, reason while I regret that the Board will lose, should gaze upon t is mighty smoke- ; ,i . your valuable services, and in accepting your house of the West, a great uLZuw , , n " T',;n"- ' I""! " T resiguation I be? to thank vou for vour earnest . u ... . laoiin the landlord found it at the Let i labors in tha cause of civil service reform, and 4 ? n W'W "Üo chmiuc n his .,,,, lf 11IIWlll,h,,, ,, .
to assure you that the spirit of tho rules adopted will be maintained. Very roapectfully you-a, U. S. Okant. To Hon. Joseph Medill. Chicago, III. Russia to its credit may be said to be at least honest in its preliminary dealings
with the Khivana. The St. Petersburgh Globe says that the only isane of the expedition to Khiva muat be unconditional surrender on the part of the people to Russian authority. In an abstract point of view, touched slightlv with Re
publican fair dealing, we would call this
course decidedly despotic. But there is one advantage about it. The Khivnns know exactly what they have to expect
ff they resist the invading army. If they bow to the commander and kiss the
ground at his feet, they may be able to retain a portion of their independence. If they show fight, and refuse uncondi
tional submission, they will be charged,
horse and foot, and Khiva will bo introduced without delay to that peaceful
order, the memory of which still "reigns" in Warsaw.
soul: Whether the aspirant for that im
mortal life beyond the grave had not better take occasion by the lia.nl and go elsewhere to die for that subtle cloud of Erebus is terribly suggestive that if
any clay-made Adamite longed for celestial membership in the world to come, it
I mangled. And now comes Minnesota with her
little hog story, which, if true, staiit' the porker aa the moat teuaoious of life of all the animal kingdom. It is related that in the storm which swept v. r that
A Very Oll Man. Harvey Thacker, who died recently in California, was one hundred and twenty-eight years old at the date of death. He was the son-in-law of the famous Daniel Boone, the first settler in Kentucky.
would be no furtherance of his plans to 1 State on the 17th "of January last. rWr
die iu this dark place, for the shrived and heaven-bound soul that is in deep misfortune doomed to lay its mortal coil down here must be content to stay a wandering sprite alsiut tho town until Chicago burns again, or else the Blossburg coal mines fail. " Ugh ! With reference to the proper treatment of drunkards, the Deputy Chief
of Pohco of Boston recommends that, instead of a fine in the case of persons convicted of drunkenness, imprisonment for a specified term of days bo mil ist i-
tuted, that the prisoner be kept at work during that time, and that the proceeds of such labor be paid weekly toward the support of his family. Why not also provide legally for the inquiry as to who sold the intoxicating liquor to the con
victed inebriate, and sentenco the vender thereof to at least an equal term of confinement and labor by the side of his drunken victim, and thus give additional but still inadquate compensation to the wronged members of many an innocent, impoverished family ?
hogs belonging to Mr. Nye, of Filhoof
county, were buried in a anow drift, 'hi the 7th of March, a neritsl of flftv eight
days, the drift was opened and the I" 'rediscovered alive. They were in fair bodily condition, but were unable t use their legs freely, having not eiereised the muscles of the limbs for m long a time. Just after their rescue they preferred slop to a more solid kiisl of food. Mr. Nye is said to Ik an lionest man, and his statement is regards! as strictly true. The hog, it w. ni l seem, can Is? an economical feeder when circumstances so comcl. Fchni
Ct-RK ron Qtrimrr. Himmer hops in vineirar a f-w minutes, until their
strength is extracted ; strain the lioni'l. sweeten with sugar, and take frOqnrtitlj in small quantities until relieved. Steam with the following: Take of muriate of amnioiiiu a lump as large aa a hickory nut, put it in a corTe -pot with i of vinegar, set on tho ftro to get Wm then steam. Coro should Im taken not to swallow the steam.
i
