The National Banner, Volume 7, Number 29, Ligonier, Noble County, 13 November 1872 — Page 4

Agricultural ley‘n{ment: At e bt es A CONDUCTED. BY JONABHAN FIMMONS, -

Keeping WinteFiApules. . A correspondent of 4 Izié’-Faéi@ey 3 oy R e A " writes tmmggsu Liof twenhy years! ex-. perience in keeping" apples| way g“bc summed up i 8 fow word &3* eep them dry, ¢ool irely mep the external air. ‘After ‘trylog. sarious : experiments, 1. have, finally dbpt_afi;ghe | following method as' beitig the cheapest and moggexpeditions: T I cofomence gathering winter fruit' about the fil;lt of ‘October, and finish, if possible, by .the 20th of thesame ; leaving those kinds least affected by the frost and which are most tenacioug of the pa . rent stem till the last. Hard frosts are injurious to apples for late keeping. After the dew ig off, and the apples become dry in the morning, I commence picking with the band, and put them immediate Ay and carefully into well mede flour bar. rels, made expressly for tlie purpose—_they should be air- tight—head them up, lay them down on their sidés, and-when done gathering, wheel them| to an outhouse or open shed, where Ilet them re- . main until severe weather sets in, when they are taken into the cellar, and remain[' undisturbed till wanted for| the market. It would be better to take them under: shelter each day as they dre picked, to prevent the sun from shining on the bar rels, for, as Isaid befor¢, the whole secret of preserving apples isiin kedping them as dry and cool as possible without freezing. Apples should be pickéd bnply in dry weather. I have a cellar exjpressly fitted up for keeping apples, as it will not do » for'the cellar to be warm enqugh. to keep other vegetubles.. It must be well ventilated. I leave my cellar windows open through the winter, unless in very severe . weather; and when warm |weather approaches, I close them throughi the day /and open them at night. When the air is warmer on the outside than in the cellar I keep all closed up tight, and vice versa. £ raf

I never repack or open my apples, for - sodoing it lets: in & newjagent of de - composition ; the air in the barrels becomes in a great measure deprived of its decomposing properties, : Having a scanty supply of| barrels last fall at gathering time, I had|a lot of old salt barrels recoopered, making them nearly air tight. Into a pdrt of these I put winesaps. On opening them in the apring, I found they bad kept one hundred per cent, better than the same vari ety that were put into other barrels, which, I attribute to saline influenges. A very great error of managing apples used to be, and still is, practiced by many: fruit growers ; that is, putting apples in bins or on garret floors to ge through the “sweating process,” lcaving them until they become shriveled bpfore putting them away in their winter guarters. Thus the apple loses its flavor as fwell as its vi: tality ; for the aroma that edcapes is noth ing less than minute particles of the apple itself. ! ’ : I have observed that late keeping ap. ples, as & general thing, |have thicker rinds than those that mature eariier. This is peculiarly the case with the Rox burry russet. If lam correct in this observation, it is a strong argument in favor of close keeping; for the rind serves asa protection against the eseape of the aro ma of the apple, and consequently against the effects of the atmosphere. There is no apple with which I am acquainted -that emits a greater odor than the Sum: mer Queen, and none more frail. - Facts for the Houschold. 3 To Remove Pimples from the Face,— Take the bark of an elder jstalk and put it ic a’pint of rhubarb wiu}a, then take a teaspoonful once a day; an | ounce ot the elder bark is sufficient. | - A Peach Pudding.—One qpart of peaches cut fine and well flavored, one desert plate of bread crumbs, three eggs, one pound of suet ehopped fine, one nutmeg, and one glass of wine. Ser]ve with wine gauce; i .

Apple Float.—To one quart of apples, partially stewed and well mashed, put in the whites of three eggs well beaten, and four heaping tablespoonsfull of sugar; beat them together for-fifteen minute and eat with rich milk'and nutmeg. - To Cure Enlarged Neck.—Take two tablespoonfuls of salt, two of borax, two of alum; mix enough wnter to dissolve them ; (two tablespoonfuls of water is sufficient); apply to the enlarged part every day for about three Weeks. - To Wash Calico.—To prevent calico from fuding while washing, infuse 'three gills of salt into four quarts of water; put the calicoin while hot and Jeave it in till cold. Ia this way | the colors are - rendered permanent, and | will not fade by subsequent washings. | Preserving Sausages.—After the sausages have been hung three weeks in a dry, moderately warm room, pack them in a box or cask between layers ot clean, dry oats. In this.way they will keep dry and moist until warm weather. Keep the box in a cool, dry plac‘f. : . Dish for Breakfast.— Take halfa dozen good cooking apples, cut them in slices of about a quarter of an inch thick, and drop them 1n & pan of fresh hot lard ; fry brown, serve bot with .sugar sprinkled . over. b ily M S i ol T Wi il Beaut!ful Pink Dye.—Thko three parte cream tartar and one of céchineal, nicely rubbed together; tic a teaspoonful in a mustard bag ; put this with a_quart of boiling water ; dip in the articles to be colored, previpusly cleaned and dipped in alom water ; if wished| stiff, put in a little gum arabic. ' . : - Homiiny Breakfast Cakes.—Mash 'the cold hominy with a rolling. pin, and add a little flour and milk batter,so 4s to ‘ malie the whole thick enough to form in--10, little cakes in the band, orit may be ,‘f?‘ upon t'heg;d;@ with a spocn. Bake rown, eéat , and declaré you néver ;gedanything better of the batter—cake ind. - fead

. Bweeney in Horses. i+ Sweeneye% shoulder in(}lorsea is.not a 'disease of the shoulder ¢ i‘sipgl{lgflzébut is & representative of ‘other \diseased” parts, through sympathetic action of the limbs from the feet. ' | . A horse suffering severe pain from bone - epavin, for months, will exhibit sweeney or shrunken hip as a result of the morbid action of the diseased, partsy All diseases of the fore feet affect the shoul. ders. - Canker, contraction, founder, grav-, el, prick from a vail are »/ffections of the feet only. Some people will say that such & horse is chest foundered, while the herse apparently perishes in the chest. Tiis is caused by |the hovse stand: ing with his fore feet stretched out for. ‘ward. If a man were to remain with his ‘arms stretched forward, hia chest would suffer in thbe st:ime way. | Contraction is not so much & disease as, the resuit of bad ‘mam;gengm on the part of wfié’?m*‘%‘m in shoeing the horse. i

Late Broods of, Chickens. . Many hens, especially cunping old’ ones, steal their nest late| in the season, and perhaps about the m‘jl(]idle of August: come off with bruods of chickens. They" are (oo often. negleeted, or as they get _large enough for broiling just as cold 'G?hgm comes.on, are’ruthlessly slatght- . ered, from the fear they fjill not winter: v!gll.thlf uret;l for’dnd kept growing du’, Triug the winter; they-will the next sum mer proveé aé'dMlua le fowls on the'} farm, since they' will commence laying.| -aboat the time ::,e older | ones cease, and | farn 180 plenty of eggs juet when the are | : m ;Cm:;tw d-v‘ m(" &% grh 'fiive‘;‘ -ry faraer shiould Ty B ;1;;,@broods of chicl 10 e rolo L

! ' I /Mow e Trap Raw. - The gebt and cheapest way to trap rats that I know of, is to select the place most, frequented by them,and take a common post auger and bore.a hole in the ground from six to éight-inches in diameter and three feet deep. Remove all the earth. that bas been excavated, and all sticks or straw\filt' ely. away, leaving the other suUrrou in%s‘ ‘aB nearas possible the way you found them. It the weather is dry and it is hard for the rats to get water, pour a little around the trap; 1f ‘there is plenty of water, put a very little wheat flour around It. You nogw have one -of the best rat traps ever known, In their wanderipgs at nighs for food and water, ‘many of htfi\l_'at“s_, not seeing the trap, will fall into ¢, dnd, raising a cry, otbers coming to their relief will fall inalso, I have 'seen as high as sixteen caught in one night, ameng which were all sizes, from. the common mouse to the full grown rat. - When they are once in, it is Impossible for them’ to escape, as they can neither dig, climb nor leap cut, - Tol.get them out of the trap, take a smell stick and placeon the end of ita large wire with a sharp point, made in the shape of an arrow head. This, when stuck in them, will bold them -wuntil you carry them away some distance from the trap to kill them. Try the above ;E))lan, and if you® domotisucceed in catching ratg I shall never say. ‘“rat trap” to you again. : :

o ~*'[Correspondence Laporte Argus. | % . ON THE WING. ’ | Friexp Wapsworrn :—The passengers on board numbered about 300 steerage and 80 cabin. If the touring season to Europe had not fast been drawing to a close we ghould have had mdre than double the number. . For the first half of summer the: first-class boats were so crowded that many persons had to make application for a berth weeks before starting. Every returning summer season sees the tide of tourists. gwelling in vast proportions. In fact areturn trip does not involve much more financial outlay than a season spent at a fashionable watering place near home, provyided, like Cowper’s house-wife, though ‘‘on pleasure bent” one maintains ‘‘a frugal mind”’ while . doing .the freie’ Rhein or making a circuit of the British Isles.— Our passengers were from all points of the compass, representing almost every civiliz ed race under the sun, Spaniardb, Germans, Irish, French, English, Scandinavians, with, of course, a’ goodly proportion 6f “live yankees.” Some were coming from Australia, some from New Zealand, Frisco, the Mississippi Valley or from “away down East.”’ | It is remarkable how 'soon the icy barriers of caste and creed melt away before the genial warmth of ' good feeling that almost invariably springe up'between people who cross the seas to | gether, with nothing but a plank between ' them' and eternity. This “is, no doubt, 1! chiefly owing to the fact that they are bro’t | in -such close proximity with one another on ship-board and thus have an opportunity of seeing each others good qualities and ‘vcorrecting the false impressions received “at a distance from"” the jaundiced eye ot prejudice. We were all good friends after having been a céuple of days at sea; and as we parted on reaching port addresses were exchanged and the warmest protesta tions of friendship made between men of every creed and clime. . ‘ My cabin companion was J. B. Courtenay, one of the night editors of the New York T'ridbune. The gentleman sported a white hat, of course, in honor of *‘Uncle Horace,” ‘and was quite confident that the “‘sage of Chappaqua’’ would take' possession of the White House by the 4th of next March.— Rev. C. 0. Berggren, formerly pastor of the Swedish church at Attica, was kind enough to linitiate me on the way into some of the mysteries of the Scandinavian tongue. Among other celebrities whose acquaintance I formed on board was Hen ry E. Hoote, Eeq., exd\lt‘iyor of Sheffield and cousin to Henry Shaw, Esq., of St. Louis, who donated a splendid park to. that city. The Hon. H. E. Hovo]e,, is a good specimen of the ‘“fine old English gentleman,’’ well informed, practical, somewhat aristocratic and formal at first but friendly and communicative upon further acquaint ance. He had been making a tour of ob: servation throughout the States and was well pleased on the whole with our republican' institutions but denourced in immeasured terms the corruption that like 'a kanker is gnawing at the very vitals of ‘our body politic. He is a strong anti-Pro-tectionist. He remarked that the repeal of the Corn Laws, effected through the ipatrumentality of Lord John Russell, introduc ed a new era of plenty and prosperity into Great Britain, and that the true maxim for the United States is that of the above mentioned stateamas, “to buy in the cheapest market and sell in the Hearest.” There was & wealthy ship-owner, of New York, on board, a man of great energy, intelligence and sociability, who wore an immac- . ulate white head-piece like the member of the Zribunc staff. He stated to me that the Confederate cruisers had cost him $40,000 in- marine risks and the detention of vessele in East’ Indian ports, and was for settling the little ‘‘onpleasantness’” of 'the Alabama claims in Pat’s fashion, with a sprig of shillelah, unless the “perfidious Albion” should consent to pay damages both consequential and direct, if such were the judgment of the Geneva Court of Arbitration. ~He lamented the decay. of our _mercantile marine, observing that the grea.lf ‘Atlantic trade was chiefly coufined to forseign; hottoms, and that of the many splendid line of steamers now plying between our vsea-boa‘rd towns and the various eountries of Europe not one among thom all sails under that emblem of libeaty and progress, the stars and stripes. ' : \7'(Among our passengers were also individuals in whom the lovers of romance

| WO?ahag{ye taken starge “share of stock;” in fact, 8 Digkens or Dumgs would have found aufp‘.o material for a sensational volg_géeig.pwwgaovemd literature. T heard & conversation carried ‘on in French one | day relating to & young French or Spanish nobleman on board. He was an only child, the idolof his parents. He had fallen in love with a girl of inferior rank in soeiety. The course ‘of true love mever ' doth run smooth; ye cruel parent was in a rage, reproaches and menaces of disinheriting.— Young Count still faithful as the needle to the pole; expelled by the “governor’ from ancestral halls, goes to America to acquire wealth and fame and then roturn to wed the ohivice of kis affections. No gold lying in the streets of New York ; the paths to’ ‘eminence too rugged ; works as a porter or 'soullion in a hotel; becomes penitent and -#'old man” forwards the “sinews of war” ‘%O “his prodigal who returns homeward -orest-fallen and diserichanted, with an ex-ti’-e"mely‘ovin'e} expression of countensnce. !

'{Th‘is'young man had a counterpart in an | flrEngli-sh girl who had turned her back to . the domestie penates and “*braved the dangers of the deep” to' meet her +lovyer,” ‘the first mate of anm ocean steamer. He -bad plighted hig troth to unite his fortunes "With ‘liers for better or worse until desth

should them part as soon as she shouid land in New York. - Sweet William, however, unlike the tar of theatrical notoriety, proved false to his pledges. He had skedaddled to parts unknown with a more attractive yankee lass whom the Squire had made his better half,-and his black eyed Susan was compelled to return to her mama’s apron strings, a eadder but wiser woman. / : Moral: Aristocratic youths with little brains and delicate frames need not expect to amass fortunee during a few week’s stay in foreign lands, and romantic young ladies had better get married at bome, for a bird inthe hand is worth two in the bush.

Besides the best of company and social converse we had many other sources of interest and occupation to ward off the monotony of sea life. Some whiled away the hours in pacing the deck from midships to stern while others occupied themselves in the saloon in reading or playing an afistocratic game of chess or whist. The lovers of the weed smused themselves occasionally in the smoking room with a quiet little game of draw poker or seven-up for the cigars or a bottle of champagne. Even the children had their swing and quoits on deck in fine weather. On Sunday the men were all mustered in sguads along the deck by the life boats, and presented a pretty gpectacle in their regulation dress of white pants tight around the waist and very wide towards the feet, blue jacket with broad, square collar, large black cravat, and low crowned glazed hat. Immediately after the Captain read in the saloon the service of the established church' for those who wished to attend. We always listened with pleasure to the wild, melancholy song of the jack tars as they tugged away at the ropes. Théy sing in a minor key corresponding to the weiridness of the surroundings—the moaning of thé ocean and the wailing of the winds—one or another of them generally leads, the others joining in choru¥at intervals as the time comes for a ‘spull together.” - o Again the sea was continually assuming mew phases that spoke in a language intelligible to the lover of nature. I have often spent -hours at night in gazing from the stern rail at the glowing, sparkling pathway made by the ship’s propeller acroes the ocean in the wake of the vessel. This curious phosphoric light is caused, according to the opinion of the late Dr. Scoresby, by the presence of myriads of animaleulae in the water. At timesduring certain counditions of t'he atmosphere the crests of the waves are.all aglow with this scintillating gilver light. The sea, too, as well as the land, has its living beings that relieve the golitude of the scene. Birds of the tempest, flocks of storm petrel swept the billows or poised theu}sefves on light wing o’er the seething waters. Shoals of porpoise gamboled around in fine weather, flying fish darted out of their natural element when pursued by some monster of the deep as though they were inhabitants of the air -above ; the whale spouted up tall columns of ngjax‘- at & distance, and the shark, the ecavené%r of the sea, hovered around the ship looking for prey. We watched with interest the appearance of every new ship on the ocean and whenever a sail orcloud of smoke rose from the horizon every passenger.rushed on deck and every opera glass left its easing. The banks of Newfoundland for a few hundred miles toward the deep sea were covered with fishing craft at anchor; we could see the hardy fishermen in small boats that were tossed about like 80 mary corks on the wave, drawing in their lines and hauling the cod fish on board. These sand-banks form the bed of the sea for over 1,000 miles. The average depth of water over them I believe is abou! 40 fathoms while it ranges from 2,000 to 2,500 in the ocean beyond. : ‘ Another object of interest with us was the taking of the sun’s altitude with a quadrant by one of the officers for ascertaining the degree of longitude or latitude and especially the ¢heaving of the log.’’ The common log is a thin board forming a quarter of a circle of about six inches radius, balanced by asmal]l plate of lead on the circuldr part or more usually & small canvas bag in the form of a cone ; the peak of the sack is attached to a long rope called theflog line which is divided into equal proportions. oorresponding to an equal number of geographical miles. When the log is to be heaved the open end or mouth is turned up and fastened to the rope with a pin. Itis thenflung into the sea where it is kept stationary by the resistance of the water. One of the men holdsa half minute glass and as soon as the sand runs out the line is stopped. | The number of fathoms of ‘rope run out indicate the veloc~ ity of the ship. Thereis also a ps.u;nt log coming into general uge. It conmsists of a brass tube about eighteen inches long with machinery inside like clock-work. This is worked by a small fan or screw which is exposed to the action of the water. On removing a slide a dial-plate appears with, three hands; one of them indicates every 100 miles traveled, ancther every 10 miles and the third every single mile, so that the distance ' tre,veled in a given time may be seen at a glanee. But the greatest event of the day was the hanging up of the logboard every afternoon. - This board is divided inte. several columns which contain respectively the ship’s speed, latitude and liongi&udfl, ‘direction of the winds, vessels seen or spoken to at sea, etc. ~ Eneed not tell you there was a . sensible contrast bthéen the temperature at sea and that of the main land which stood above 90° in the shade when we started — I don’t think the thermometer ever indicated above 60° during the passage. The average warmth of sea water is 55° to 70° but it falls as low as 49° over the Banks. 4 i e i

- At length on the morning of the 13th of the month, as Aurora with rosy fingers rolled back the veil of night béfore the refulgent glory of the king of day, our enraptured eyes were grested with a view of “the “Green Isle of the ocean.” Before us lay rugged headlands and in the distance the Kerry mountains marked with robes of mist loomed up against the sky like sheeted ghosts. About eighteen miles to the North the Skellig rocks rose out of the ocean presenting the outline of some vast cathedral shrine like that of Milan. The Skelligs are the terror of all the old maids and bachelors in the Emerald Isle. # A legend of the country asserts that all those unfortunate devotees of single blessedness are compelled to migrate to those craggy ‘ocean rocks on every Shrove Tuesday night where they must do penance until Ash Wednesday morning when they return home faint and weary. In Ireland, Shrove Tuesday is the day in which the majority of marriages take place during the year. - ; Yours, 8.

A writer in the American Agriculturalist says be has foand "his eows will always let. down their milk when inclined to hold it up, if he gives them* some salt to lick. o]

- CURRENT ITEMS, , A man of letters—the postmaster. Student labor at Cornell has earned $BO,OOO. - . : There will be no immediate Cabinet changes. School for Scandal—A Presidential canvass. - Painter’s epitaph: “He died and made no sign-”’ - - . - It has been settled that the primitive whale was a dwarf. ‘ Chicago now claims a permanent population of 350,000. ’ “Prayer and P lls” is the title of one of Holland’s editorials. o ~ The Baroness Burdett Coutts took Stauvley right up in her arms. ‘Stephens Pearl Andrews is out on bail. He left the Alwato injail. . A Barlington, lowa, book firm advertises Bibles “‘superior to any other.” AThe postal railway service has been increased during the last year 10,000 miles. e :

~ There is a shoemaker’s journal lately started ; be sure you ask for the last edition. o Pen-makers are a bad lot. They make people steel pens and then say they do right. Henri Rochefort has been permitted to go to Versailles to marry the mother of his children, . L ~ The proof-reader at J. R. Osgood & Co’s is a greatstraveler; he goes over the Atlantic, mounthly, - . . The Earl of Shaftesbury is building anew town for workingmen a short distance out of London. - : Blotting paper is made from soapweed in Colorado, which is in great profusion on the Western prairies. - An undertaker’s office recently bore the following cheering inscription :— “Gone for a dead man, bac,’k goon.”” . It will ‘goon be as fashionable in England to come to the United States as it is for Americans togo Yurrup. To find out the number of children in a street beat a bass drum.: To find out the number of idle men start a dog fight. - : = ' The following is the proposed advertisement of a Western tailor: “Wanted—two or three steady girls to put on pants.” .

A printer recently made ‘Be Ye Therefore Steadfast,” the text of a minister’s sex'éinqn, ‘Be Ye There for Breakfast,” ' A cynical bachelor, in speaking of ladies’ ball dresses says: They wear bat little here below, but they wear that little long. , : A contemporary thinks that the man who advertised a dog,: and de seribed it as Al, should have described the beast as K 9. » _ A merchant who was noted for his stuttering, as well as for his shrewdness in making a bargain, stopped at a grocery and inquired : ‘ . John the fool, says that pious hack dri}grs are scarcer than plaid zebras, aud’ plaid zebras are scarcer than toad stoolr with cane bottoms, . - American travelers have, it is said, in the last two years, purchased over four tbowsand “quills with which Lamertine wrote Jocelyn.” ' The building in which the Vienua Exhibition is to be held next year will hesix times larger than that of the: great Paris Exhibition of 1867." ' - Ifany person has doubts whether advertisements are read or not, let him put something he doesn’t wish seen in an obscure part of the paper. The English papers call the steam whistle the ‘American devil.” We no better. He is the youth that comes down stairs and asks for copy. . “’A number of wealthy Hebrews in New York intend to start a daily newspaper, and say they are willing to risk half a million of dollars in such an enterprise, . : b

A pair of old breeches with $BOO in ‘the pockets, went through a destructive machine in an lowa paper mill the other day, before the operatives discovcered the funds. » . A backwoods pair innocently dis~ robed in the elevator of a Nashville hotel. They afterwards remembered that they ‘thought the room was rather close for a bed-room.’ ‘ A model bill, made out by an.old farmer against his neighbor, read as follows: ‘Neighbor A, Dr. to B. to horse and wagon going to mill once since and twice before, one dollar.’ It requires more delicacy of touch, a better acquaintance with the inper emotions of the heatt, and grander pathos of sentiment to make a declaration of love than it does to putup a stove. A little boy, attending the Episcopal church. for: the first time, innocently whispered to his mother, as the rector appeared in his white robe. ‘Does he put that on to look like the Holy Ghost ¢ ~ Uncle L—‘Sammy, tell me, have you read the beautiful story of Joseph ¥ _ Sam—Ooh yes, uncle. Uncle—Well, then, what wrong did they do when they sold their brother? - Sam—They sold him too cheap,unG "1 thise™ oF ¥ A political orator in New Orleans recently ‘quoted history’ by referring to ‘the iron coffin. of De Soto, containing the gold trumpet presented to the illustrions discoverer by Queen Victoria,’ o : ‘Why, you fool !’ extlaimed an inielligent auditer, ‘Queen. Victoria wasn’s born for mere’n two hundred years after De Soto died; an’ how could she give him a gold trumpet?’ : - ‘She left it to him in her will,’ solemnly replied the orator. b “How m-m-many t-t-t-turkeys havé you g-g-got ¥ ; : - “Eight, sir,” replied the grocer. : “T'~tt-tough or t-t tender ¥ A . ‘Someé . are tender .and some are tough,’ was the reply. e L ‘1 k-k-keep b-b-b-boarders,’ said the ‘new customer. ‘P-pick out the t four t-t=t-toughest t-t-turkeys, if you please,’ The delighted grocer very willingly complied with the unusual request, and said in his politest tones: : ~ “T'hese are the tough ones, sir.” .. 'Upo’nh’ wgieh the merchant c«;.dl_:ly\; ut his hand upon the remaining four, Il t-t-take th-th-th-these!' -

A good story is told of a lady whose husband died far away from bome, and it took so long for the remains to redchher that his relict had quite recovered from her grief, and was giving a large lunch party when they fioally arrived. A wagon drove up to the door and a large box was handed out, Curiosity ran high among the ladies at the window, and with one accord they exclaimed. ‘Why, Mrs. Jones, what can that be? Up went Mrs. Joues’ eye-glasses, and" aftera glance, ehe cooly said. ‘Why, it must be Joues come home. Charley, run down and open the door for your fath~

Really somehody ought to get up a map of the United States for the use of English editors. Sometime ago the Saturday Review told .its readers that the *Legishture of the State of St. Louis’ had been ‘petitioned by the woman suffragiste, and now we have the London Telegraph talking aboat the election of Hartranft as ‘Governor of Philadelphia.’ | 0

DAUCHY & CO.’S COLUMN. M eR A NN o A IDOIN’T BE DECEIVED, bat for coughs, colds, sore throat hoarseness and bronchial difficulties, use only ELL'S | CARBOLIC TABLETS WELL'S ' CARBO : WORTHLESS IMITATIONS are on the market, but the only scientific preparation of Carboiic Acid for lung diseases i- when chemically combined- with other well‘kndwn remidies, as in'shese Tablets, and all parties arecantioned against using aoy other. IN ALL CASES of irriation of the mucous membrane 'these Tablets should be freelv used, their cleansing and healing”proverties are astonishin. BE WARNED, never neglecta cold. it is easily cured in iss ineipient state, when it becomes chronic the cure is exceedingly difficult, use Wells’ Carbolic Tablests as a Bpecific, * JOHN Q. KELLNG@G, 18 Platt St.. N. 2 Sole Agent forthe U.S. Send for circular; Price 25¢ per qox. . w 4

‘ Send stamp for Illustratedicamlogue n Building. AJ. Bicknell & Co., - ? 27 Warren Bt., New York

Builders | 30w4 5

SOMETHING NEW, 6 salable articles, sell at sight. Catalogues and 1 =ample gee. New York Manufactoring Co-, 21 Courtlandt St., New York. Sow 4

Agents | Wanted |

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Bl 2nexag) Thed-Nectar a Pare Chinese Tea % ,3<'ifi33!..§.‘\ The best Tea Imported. . Warit ‘.f‘},\“,,l ranted to suit all Tastes. : & Put up in our trade mark HalfAP~ 'Pound and Pound packages on A 1R ‘ ly, 30 a&d 60 pound boxes. For S/e l DN \ sale at wholesale only by T(S =9 Ihe Great Atlantic and Pacific Ao = Tea Company. P. 0. Box, 5506 New York City.

Agents wanted to canvass for the great combination TO-DAYX, : The Great Illustrated People’s Week= ly the best and cheapest paper published. DIO LZWIS and a corps of most popular authors write exclusively for it. We give a copy of the unparalleled chromo, = 5 JUST SO HIGH, to every subscriber. Agents take from twenty-five to thirty names a day. No business pays like this. Send for torms, and secure territory for this great enterprise at once. MACLEAN, STODDART & CO., Publisbem, 177 West Fouxft‘h‘ St , Cincinnati, O

‘ ‘.T. ANTED.—Experienced Book Agents and Canvassers, in all parts of the Unired Srtates to sel the: MEMOIR OF ROGER BROOKE TANEY. Bhief Justice of ihe Supreme Court of the Unit ed States. [No book heretofore published in this coantry, throws so much light on our constitnti onal and political history. It isa work of extraordinary interest and of permanent value to the historian, lawyer, the statesman, the poiitician. and every class of intelligent readers. Sod by subseription only—exclnsive territory given. For t rms, for this and other popular works, addres MURPHY & CO , publishers, Baltimore. ; ; ‘2w

ds > % $75 10 $25( per Month &y where, male to introduce the GENUINE IMPROVED COMMON SENSE FAMILY SEWING MACHINE. This machine will stitch:hem, fel}, tuck, quilt, cord, bind, braid and embroider in the most superior manner.. Price only $l5. Pally licensed and warranted for five years. We ‘will pay $l,OOO for any machine tba?wti;ll» sew a stronger, more beautiful, or more elastic seam than ours. It makes the ‘‘Elastic Lock Stitch ™ 'Every pecond stitch can be out and still the cloth cannot be pulled apart without tearing it. We pav agents. from $75 to §250 per month. and ex penses, or a commission from which twice that amonut can be made.. Address SECOMEB; & Co., Boston, Mass ; Pittsburg, Pa., Chicago, I, or St. Louis, Mo. : ; 30wd Gl e S e R e R

| AG° NTS--WANTED.

el ety Cheap Farms! - Free Homes! On the line of the UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD. 12,000,000 acres ot the best Farming and Mineral lands in America. . £,000,000 acres in. Nebraska, in the Platte Valley, now for sale. g . Mild Climaté, Fertile Soil, for grain growing and stock raising unsurpassed dy any in the/United States. : : Cheaper in price, more favorable terms given, and more convenient to market than can be found else where. : | Free Homesteads for Actual Settlers. - The best location for Colonies—Seoldigrs entitled to a Homestead of 160 acres. S Send for the new descripte pamphlet, with new maps, published in English, German, Swedish and Danish, mailed free everywhere. Address 30w4. | T O.P.DAVIS.! . Land Com’r U. P, R. R. Qo., Omaha, Neb. SR g e ] ~ DUTY OFEF TEAS, THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA COMPANY have business connections with all th= prineipal ports of China and Japan, and impor their teas direct from place of growth, thus saving the consumer from 5 to B profits. | It is now abo®t 12 years since tho Company was organized—and it has been a splendid success from the very first. This was due to the fact that we imported and sold only oo ~ The Best and Purest Goods and distribnted them to our customers in all parts of the United States, for one small profit ouly. between the tea-glower and the tea-consumer. We originated the system of supplying consumers in distant parts of the conntry with teas, ar New York cargo prices, on the Clubplan. And since we adopted this plau we have saved the people of this country Millions of dollars annually, in the cost of this artiole of every day necessity. ' Seud for Club circuiar, whick eontains full divections, premiums, eto. Great American Tea Company, |3l and 33 Vesey Street, P. 0. Box 5643. NEW YORRK.

AU, TuROBERsS | _ e s7JURUBERAY; BLOOD PURIFIER

It is not & phyic which may give temporary reliet to the sufferer for the first few doses, but which from continued use brings piles and kindred diseases to aid in weakening the invalid, noris it 8 doctored liquor, which, under the popular name of “Bitters;" is so extensively palmed off on the pablic assovereign remedies. but is a most powerfal Tonic and Al terative, prononnced so by the leading medical aathorities of London and Paris, and has been long used by the regular physicians of other countries _with wonderful remedial results. . Dr. Wells* Extract of Jurubeba - Xs there want of action in your Live er and Spleen? Unless relieved at once the blood becomes impure by deleterious secretions, prodnolnq scrofulous or skin diseascs, Blotohes, Felons, Pustu usOmkor. Pimples. &oc. : Take Jurubeba to clesnse, purify and restore the vmq‘Md blood to healthy action. Have you a Dyspeptic Stomach? Un less digestion is frompily aided the system is debilitated with loss of vital force, poverty of Bleod, Drop sical Tendency, General kang‘i ‘or Lassitude, Take it to assist reaction, it will impart youthfu. vigor to the wesr“nfierer. £ = . . - Have youn Weakness of the Intestines ¥ You are in danger of ii¢ Diarrhoea the Dreadfl inflammation cf the Bowels. - - Hlave you Weakness of the Uterine or Urinary Organ?® You mast procure instant relief to suffering worse than death. Finally it should be frequently taken to keep the system in perfect hmth"%_é‘vi‘nuim otherwise in mwor- of malarial, 1 itie or dontagiouns JOHN Q. EELLOGG, 18 Platt Btreet. New York, ; mim,mm United States, Price, One Dojlar per ~Bend tor ciroular,

: s - T 2 e 1 e E ik s : 3 i z | ‘.. ¥ ’ 3 $ : " 4 ';"4; 4 :. i ”I 5 v'. 3 . Yot R eAT T e e i B 2 ¢ ST . . ~-J" £ *»A, 2 i '\l’: s 4 2 a 2 : L ' . — SELL THE OELEBRATED - ' JEWETT & ROOT STOVES. ¥ e =k 2 ‘. st £ i i = L ' e 4‘ » Lo &'a" |"rz“.: e il ’!‘;‘B T i t : : ; : : : [ RO e i E i : : ;@&Qmflg‘x f‘%‘fi%fli %ik .li% o . do. s AL i e ‘ j:\:T R G gl '¢-B { I ! 2 . 1 z.;il-;‘.fihw'm,;l.;ii;“,f.';l-,::-:: T \,gf,"',:ll;’?:‘r‘; ikt e i e : 5 : 5 SR bon ! T R it = % St - SST 1\«\1 syt ,h_t:;i “‘»ii’.’flii:'ii"fi‘;(‘ ‘;‘g:‘)" i i 3 s i e7(O S i SRR 1 1 : ‘ i - Lo i SRt SR U . i 0 j . im S “i‘"ég'?&#"' i [ir & ; ) Re s L I e T e [ i I 8 i %‘?riqfil‘lp’:§‘&f§;w,ai!':‘"m;fi,m fihi] it v;.!-fi;f;‘;(i ;’L*",; : : Foßia : = : : o x%it R R i ! : SN ] -":-’.f?i':"l’5“-'.'&2‘1‘}?51:'»}'-'»"!Tf;’fi;":. IR i,;‘g:,,%i%u I g S A "k; 5 Heat ‘ e ‘,*;?é‘%’lg“‘ fi ",“g Lé vqfi;uifiuu:‘ }‘ “”!1.:::}:. L - : e A SA e e e e e BRI R e dop s e == ee e e S MR LA : ’ e ‘ SRt ;‘f}r"{fi’i* RN Sl i ' e I e e it TS A vL e : : : ‘?‘}7””';@:'%‘! (e "fi i SRR BRI T se e 3L Rich M R [ R - 2 : s cie iSTeyW e | e T iAR o Sl ' Sißggatbean RUR 7 S NG R¢ G B RN - b G | ek e (o - O ev A R 3 Aol e ' ; Sl e fl"’(@ gl |BIR SO gl e B : i iRAR e )RS Eeeee s ' ‘ e A !:fi"Th i t“iw“‘p'r i[ g i,.‘:/"l”)‘i"v{.af-,'\' e S RERRY f T iy r g ik ITR E RIE 3 RIY AANG/ZE RN R R : i 5 s : Do iR R R s f SRR /,, \“ i e T T AP RS Bet AR S ettty | A ROV 47 RN e eel i gt T S <=, , CERL A e i|B AT N e o i ; 1Y e e a 8 T T s LR R i RS Rl (el o) SRS N WBS e : | 4 ] L i e Ufifi“?\lmu‘.x‘im dhiliatin g ik igl il Ml | s PRI Wy 4 Ni g sBN ot 8 etk SO B e SRESSRRE ‘ ‘ : oiko:isB i R el P il AN\ T i pSRaE o L 1 : . £5O ?3 Bawd g ICUL e PR gAW eA A Y e ' ‘Ll‘)\#‘é l‘; g ARI YAN il g Lt : et ',_Q il Rl 772 N 6§ i ATR i l({& e ,l?!g“_i{/,’:é’f{‘g : e : e T ii ! ({k 1).;:, kb 14 e R B # 2 % if; Sy | o s v SAR TN ¢ l (it G SR SR R e e AN B YRS | : : | ; S \.»_Mn{.‘\;{‘i.\@v I}it 18 I"\ AN ‘SI3 i : i ilg {’J-z g':-,:;}%f._; H]’lZ ;fi;z gi ¥5% SN RN L™ "'.': I iA e &) , il i SR L S (g« x e I\,o?\\\\3“ T 1 e e 1 el i Zeiife";‘,E’fli-‘il@:ifieii"‘{fg p A e B - ,??a;v;%i.,\fii,"fifil';’ui‘u;i':[fli:fi‘lf i a 8 ; I . | (Ve T ||| e S s N E: Z N e i SRR . YL A e = AR e = ST Y b L e U 2 < ,‘--‘._—,,-:gf;__.»-—f—‘f"“ =. 3 £ . i ('f“" & o -PS—2 e ¥ . T 2 ; == SSEd vicHTVAY LeEEe ; y AR o o ] {

4 - ' = EVEL R. e . -_ : oA ’ \\'\’, = ‘ % ‘ : % . ".AA '—" ST AIR W AGON, 4 n 3 (G R N bz » \ e B LN : >2t i) Siik » _’ 7 43 : L ¢ 2 ¥ 5y ¢ - -]. = . : fi-?fi‘rnzfilfil?i’,‘"tifimnv'w!lw»‘!'u‘flw"“*‘"f"“’” ee e ’“’"‘“"""’"““‘”"“'”“;}:?il oy T'* il o LD it i ‘.(”‘ i i ‘,“,.;“ il »-;:-;:;,‘;,5;".;7[,;‘;".,,;;. A ii i | :‘“;.:‘i‘, ABl £ ; ;fi"!fih;?éflfi[];‘ L WMWM'M”! hfi‘]fl‘fi”'iu%:k«’fi SR R et ;:. i ~mv"!::ji;gp ¥ > ,:';:"r F%;JMI‘WA%{[fi W;’fixfi%?fi%‘&lhfim li , ‘h.y.munw “"v f,L m‘%lfi iB] j g S eoo SRR L s T W | y WH’} fi‘rfi’“fk W AR ]GI »fi‘éfi%@zl{?fi.flfl' s AN LRSS At D R Rl v *qf'gl' A 4{?:* i e | £ 3 i i 4_"4'l\ ":‘""!‘)"::‘1!“1!5 ~'sJ!,l'!f"‘.,u.’ ,’(j‘!,iEjM-“lY' A ,Ad?‘r "fi!;i'»’i,'f’,!};‘,.'im i}‘ '?"‘,,‘;;[l‘('!‘L' =;-Zv'a-’_,.l;fjx!!,fl{l“ it 4 ’h;m i ,',{'}”, 1,.%’@ A T R B | < e Ne SR R o [ e wxaé;dw‘m@}% NG ey se el U /,u:mflgfi;n;m W 2 i SN\ 0 NS X ' i S\ e s-P, AT LT Ret M - M ; e — eBN e B | I /NN ol e ez | A )\?\ YN) SO L ;«;'=¥ ‘)_m R \‘i\ ‘a v £ \:\ o \,/,' s e "Rk ’ S \\% > el 2 ' ISSS/ R 2 o Wk W™= i ' | NN AN\ < 7/ = [ AN/ R (=F ———— Q[ 2 == = i NN &V A- - =\ &N\ = =aS =\ £L— Emaane e o NN A = . == %Ez —> ie e e e )AN e \3' e e * % e'f = e e S ;;;_ W z@:’ , .:.;_—% =S R e A e :':-i:_'_—f_:—fi e sirht e e Se P e G e e Sl e TTTN 0t g e e e S 5 eee e e o e B R TRy iL e PP, s Cmn =i Tty '_".l&‘:;_-77::7?:—':——;.‘:?7:;—_:. ¥ e S e T SRR etk st = s e o el eN G R ) 2 2 4 £ e e Ss el i % Ligonier, Indiana, August 2d, 1871, —tf i h e e s 2

NEW ADVERTISEME NTS,

i ; § FELLOWS’ O Compound Syrup of Hypophosphites umpouzd Syrap of Hypophosphites @ 2 A new and peculiar combination of Hy- .= & pophosphites, invented by an English o -j.g'Chemist. It contains the prominent inZE g= Egredients which constitute the Blood, Sz =< Brain, Muscles and Nerves of ithe bealthy =S -/ =human body, nn? re-establishes, in the 22 == Sold and young, vitality and power of eni % & = «>durance. It is particularly adapted to @ = %Sall depressing and wasting diseases,— = M Price,-g‘l.o(_). o | > = FULLER & FULLER, Chicago. s ib I e ee R GBEAT CURIOSITY. — A $3 Magazine of the highest order for $l. Agent wanted in every town, on a nezmual income: Send 10c. for Specimen to **Smith’s Dollar Magazine,” 51 Liberty St.,New York. J . 4

OPEN ALL THE YEAR. St. Louis, Michigan, Mhtneue Springs. ‘The first Magnetic Water discovered in America! [1869.] Has been visited by over 10,000 persons. ENTIRE ROUTE BY RAYLROAD. Neuralgia, Paralysis, Rhenmatism, Gout, Diseases of the Bladder and Kidneys, Dyspepsia Impotency, and all diseares of the Nervons System. Contracted Joints, General Debility. Fine Batus. For pamphlets containing description, analysis of wlgter, and all other information, address MAGNETIC SPRING COMPANY, St. Louis, Gratiot Co., Mich. Chapped Hands and Face, - Sore Lips, Dryness of the Skin, &c., &e., Cured at once by HEGEMAN’S CAMPHOR ICE WITH GLYCERINE. It keeps the hands soft in all weather. See that youn get HEGEMAN'S, Sold by all Druggists. Price 25 cents: sent-by mail for 80 cents Manufactured only by HeeemaN & Co., Chemists and Druggists, P.O. Box 2228, New York. ASTHMA. The subscribers are Manufacturer’s Agents for R. W. Read’s celetirated ASTHVA RELIEF, the best remedy for Asthma yet discovered. Instant relief guaranteed or purchase money refunded. The. medicine is put up in three sizes, which retail for 23¢., 50c,’ and $l. Personsremitting price, will l.ave the medicine sent free by mail or express.— Also sam'fles sent free to any who desire.. ETHRIDGE, TULLER & ('O., Rome, N. Y. / AGEN'I‘S Wanted -Agents make more mon'y at work for us than at anythiu% else. Bnsiness licht and permanent. Particulars free G.'S'rmsox & Co., Fine Art Publishers, Portland, Maine. : : »5" . < Epilepsy or Fits Can now h'e certainly cured by a new and 'safe'rem-; edy, regardless of the ovstinacy or duration of the diseage. The fits are stopped from the beginning of treatment. For particulars, address ey § ; Dr. J. WALSHE, 26-w4 - Box 423, Lincoln, Illinois.

REMOVAL! Having moved into my New Brick, onthe corner of Cavin'and Second Streets, opposite my former place of business, I will be pleased to have my friendscalland see my stock of | FURNITURE OF ALL KINDS! - : alsothe great ‘ ; e L=P T e ST S oz N BNy A | o Dhsediter iEE , - YEOMAN’S and JONES' G e R At AIEERSFe s, L Spring Bed Bottoms, which only need to be used to be liked. Positively NO HUMBUG, - COFFINS of Al)~li;g3_qohutantly kept on hand, and trimmed to order. Funerals attended with Hearse when desired. Bell pullinside the door. : _ R . W. A.BROWN. © Ligonier, Aug. 2,1871. tf, .. FINE PRINTING DONE .AT THIS OFFICE, =

Dr. Crock’s Wing if%ax, L b 10 YiEAaNt s A ‘Public iest’ | e ‘{L R o A‘IIIIS ,YO«‘,“T' T 2 ""‘”'.y ‘ ' ~ Pf\u—« :;7li YR DR.CRCCQK'S 3 r'—_.‘,: R s Ly l;::»‘;':%{‘fi ‘\:J:{"‘r) : eoy o ‘;. -.l ~:‘:vht Y= TAR - To have néégfi?e o ogudle o merit than - any SRR .similar preparas =Ei - tiom ever’ offered v dhepublics o Itis rich in the medicinal galfties of Tar, and unequaled for Aiseass ‘es of the Throat and Lungs, performing the most remarkable ‘cures. Coughs, Colds, Clirohicflt)“?ns’. 4 effectually cures them all. Asthma and Bronchitis. “Has cured 80 many cases: - it has been pronounceda - - specific for these complaints. For pains in Breast, Side or Back, . Gravel or Kidney Disease, Diseases of the Uljmmg Orgaits, Jaundiceorany Liver Complaint, | Luh e Teliakngegual; It is al,so,a«sngreriorl'l‘onié, e . Restores the Appetite, Strengthens the System, -~ - Restores the. We:‘a}k and: : = Debilitated, Causes the Food to Digest, . - Removes Dyspepsia and. - 2oceal s Jndieestion, Prevents Malarious Fevers, ~ (Gives tone to yous Sirteni. TRY BR.CROOK’SWINE & TAR

A sure and. permanent cure for- Liver Complaints, ' Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Biliousness, Fever. ‘a;i;ld[ _Afgue,‘; Sick Headache, Jaundice, Piles, Loss of Appetite, Imperfect Digestion, : ‘and all 'difséésjes arising from ’‘a = disordered state of the Liver _a;‘nd:Blood..v It acts directly on the Liver, increasing the flow of bile into the stomach and bowels, and by its cathartic prop-

erties purges the system of all diseased matter. As a family medicine, it has noequal. - SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. . Price $l.OO per Bottle, . ity PREPARED BY %' -1 - W. B. HURD & €O, NASHUA, N.H, . “BOLD BY FISHER BROTHERS, AGENTS: FOR LIGUNIFR, IND = ALSO, SKINNER & MENDENHALL, ALBION, INDIANA. .~ JOB PRINTING ’ Neatlyand éyxrgedii}nsiyzéiééfiégd:mt;",g k-’t'__f:,. NATIONAL BANNER OFFIOE

: ’ ~ 7 %S THE NEW DISCOVERY B _ln Chemical and Medical Scienc . ! -\ o AN oY : S @ Q}\frfl ANG WePee Yoy E A Ve DL Lo Tes %{%&{gg b 5N7 B 2 ot ol & g e 5 (5 e b odll g shgisile, BT =6 vl S [l NEerdEa T 2 <RSI G 03 - &\ a AH“Z&‘M%«‘%"”&}{"{l ‘r"_/';)’ 1 o\ ey o T\ iy SRS i i A RADE MP\R“L'_;( ~<3'\ NN e iDre Bel, GARVINYS = 12 < 3 : . : T IVES - SOLUTION & COMPOUND ELLEE: : S e U PIRST AND ONLY SOLUTION (/i anads in one mixture of ALEL "HHIE. T ELVE valuable active principals of thi: well Enown curative agent, i . 3 i s PINE TRISIS SIAT, - . UNEQUALED in ‘Conghs ~Cclis. Calg-rh, : Asthmia, Bronchitis, u:i:i\c\.;;:mvi/vfi:?;:-., o CTOCUREBES WIS EOGU D IOATL. A recenteold in tinz: {n si2 Lavinss and also. by its VITATISIN G PR EYENG and STE . MULATING effey o -iui fa- peueral systemty " i 3 remarkably efiizio b’ i o d : IDISEASES GL' FTME IBLCOD.. - ikcluding Serotulayhu: I Byupuonis of the skiq = Dyspepsin, Diseases off the liver aii Nidneys, -Heart Disease, and General Debiidjy. : " 'ONE TRIAL CORV:INCEDT PSR S L - Volakile Soluticn ¢ Tar - For-INHALATION, withon' npplicution of * o HEAT. J_fircmarkabfy VALUARLL discoveryy . asthewhole apparatus ¢an becarrind in the vest " -pocketyreadv.at any time for tic inoss otivctual .+ and positively curative usein 'All Diseases of the NOSI I EIROAT S and LURNES, i Seon R TS COMDOTRT) ¢ : - Tar’ and Mandrale Pill. ~foruse in connection with the EIIXIR TAR., .is-a combination of thio TIT 6 wost valuable - S ALTERATIVE Medicines Kiiwn in the Profession,’and repders this 111 l wiltiout cxception . the very best ¢ver ofiered. ; "ThQ'SQLU'J.‘IUH anld C()MI‘()U.\']_\.ET.TXIR of 8 without doubt the Best remedy known iny °, ‘caseg of. : - CHOLERA AND VELLOW FEVER. [ Itisa Specific for such diseares, nud should be- . keptin the household of cvery fuuily, cspecindly” - durjng those months im which | 1 'CHOLERA AND YELLOW FEVER : ‘filiabtfuto prega;l. Aismevn guaniily taken . ddaily. will prevent ‘coniraciivi tiese terrvible ’jdise%sés." : e x¢_ terrible * - Bolution and Compound Llixir. £3OO per Bottle . Volatile Solution for Inhalition ss.ooper Pox . Tar and Mandrake Pils, focis per box. - ... -Bend for Circular of POSITIVE CURESN _to your Druggist, orto Sy 5 LJF.HYDE & €O., il daihon s SOTE PROPRIETORS, . 110 E, 22d St., New York. FOR SALE BY C.ELDRED, LIGONIER.

S FOR SALLE!? . » ¥ X . T WILL sell loheap for cash, or on easy termsof I “payment, the vgluable Stock and Grain Farm, 'lntegy owned by James McConnell, and knownas f'coneistin%- of over three hundred acres .ofilaVnd. / about 5 miles south-east of Ligonjer, in the sotth‘west quarter of section 81, town 35, north ranged east, and north-west quarter of scctidn 6, town 84, Dorth range 9-east, embracing soil, timber, living - water and general advantages, making itone ofthe -miost desirable farms, especially for stock raising in Noble county, e ko .- ALSO :—Lots No. 6, 9. 11, 15, 16. 26, 27,28 and 29 in Wood’s Addition éo Ligonier; also, lots 7 and 8 : i?':bltt)ckdt, and 7 and Bin block 3of ‘l;(,‘u’ler 8 Addion to Lligonier. - S ; Agt s " ITLE GUARANTEED BY ME. < Abol to Taac ~ Enesis oo Higlpy 2t o '\ ) ¥ * J- k'l f;v . iy y : Feb B 4 . Suiwo RO m&m de