Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 44, Petersburg, Pike County, 13 March 1896 — Page 7
———————— AGRICULTURALHINTS CONVENIENT PIGGERY. Description and Illustrations of Chwp Boj Hoiuc tod I'«n*. These peas "may be eit her single anil movable, or built more cheaply, two or more together. The u-ual size of a farsowing pen is six by seven f<*et. The walls. which are double, face the south, in the accompanying fig- 1* the front |§ walls, D D D, are three feet high,pad the openings above three by six feet. £ach opening may be-closed with a swing door, B, as shown in pen one. To open this door for ventilation and light, or other purposes, sw ing it back as shown at C in pen adjoining, and the
HU. 1—CONVENIENT CHEAP 1HO BllEIf. Fame wooden bolt tbat fastens the door when closed may by a very simple arrangement be made to secure the door to the rafters out of the way. The openings E E E let the pigs out to be i fed on the floor in front, which floor Hi ay, if required, be divided by portable panels at a a. When a more expensive hog house is wanted, a double row of pens may be constructed, that will admit sunshine to all the pens through glass. I have noticed several built after the style shown in the annexed drawing. The size for eight pens is 24 feet long by 20 feet wide, which makes the pens six by eight feet, with a four-foot hall running between their two rows. The main j :' ... .. w. ‘
IIO. 2—EIGHT-REN HOG HOCSE, CLASS WES DOWS. elevation, see A A A in Fig. 2. is si': feet, there being' one window in' the same for each pen. The second elevation at It It B is four feet, the windows placed in it admitting plenty of sunlight into th* back row of pens. i itr. 3 is an end view of the same building. The rafters, A to* 1). are 31 feet $ inches long, and Joined with the IS-foot $ra iters It If at 11 feet 8 inches from the eavjr. The short piece J; C is attached to point of long rafter, and to, short rafter at C. The space
i /*•!*•_Jl. JL » K». 3—EXD VIEW ErtUIT-rcrf itOQ IIOUSK. ft long, rafters from C to A is not ihcttbtd, so there is very little to ob* st i net the sunbeams. The gate® to the several jh*iii tra placed along' the hallway, and should be just four feet wide, so that when opened they will reach -across and close the hallway, which nil! be found a great convenience in handling pigs, as it enables one person unaided to sort cut and separate b number, and arrange thennas lie may wbh. As to the Honors for pig pens, there •te divergent opinions. That the dirt • lk*-*r is the Igpilfhier l have no doubt, but it is far more troublesome to keep in pood order.If board doors are used, tie . should not be nailed down, but so put in that they may be taken out. Great care also should lie had that a Ctitck ,ln the :\>ojr does not admit a dninght of air. Again, serious .objections are rained egninst building a lot of pens under one roof, some' breeders favoring individual pens that can l»e moved from pkioe to place. For brood sows at furrowing’ time a single pen is fur preferable. For wintering a lot Of hogs ts i larger one is letter. As’many as to to U*0 pigs can be arranged in the eight-pen shed cliove described, and •till there need be no trouble. Use disinfectants freely. Sprinkle with carbolic acid. Use mercurial ointment to keep jwns free from lice. Change the bedding frequently. Give the pig' t!ie| run of the pastures on pleasant days. With this kind of care your cluster of pig pens will be all right,— (S. jW. Waters, in St. Louis Journal of Agriculture.
LIVE STOCK NOTES The Dorset or the Shropihirc arc excellent for early lambs. Lambs that can be marketed by the middle of February are the stock that bring* m biff money. A writer says that it i* the food and sot the breed that gives quality to the lamb. Oh, come off, brother. All the feed in creation cannot make a Merino lamb equal to a lamb of the mutton breeds. It requires both breed and feed to do the business.—Farmers Vuice. We think the best way to feed h> to cut it up, corn and stalks together, and feed in the manger in the stable. A great deal of good fodder is wasted bv feeding out of doors scattered in a yard and allowing the stock tc tramp on it. TH silo is another good way to save the ecru and it makes tine feed. A wise choice of methods of preparing and feeding the food has much to do in determining profit or loss. The cheapest production of fleat^by horse, e»*wf or sheep, or of milk, is w here all or the larger part of the foot]; ia secured by the animal grazing in a good pasture. Simple methods of preparation are beat «a a rule.
POULTRY TREADMILL. Keeps Hens on the M ove I n til They Qlve Vp an Esc. From England comes the news of a new and ingenious way to mate hens lay. The plan has only just been put ! into operation, but already it has been attended with some measure of success., Its inventor is a young man named Herbert Bernands, of South Totten* ham, one of the districts Of London, who was driven to hatch this device out of his fruitful mind because of the worriiuent his hens caused him. Day after day they would not lay, and they flouted and they scouted him by walking around and taking things very easily, much to his financial loss. So he put his wits together and made these domestic bipeds “walk the treadmill” until they laid. His machinery, an elaborate bit of carpentering, consisted of \ what is *called in England a “hen run,-’ which was n sort of Midway Plaisance for poultry. It was a beautifully working miniature treadmill. A hen who had * done her full duty was allowed the full privileges of the “run;” a hen who had | not, and from whom Mr. Bernands considered an egg to be due, was placed, in spite of all her fluttering, upon the treadmill, and made to walk it until she evened up her score and delivered an egg. The weight of the “new laid'’ would act upon u spring and the hen would then be liberated to the enjoyment of the “run.” Not quite all the details have come to hand as yet, but this much is mown, that the poitltry treadmill was a great success, and a sure shot to get eggs on demand. The only thing a lieu could do, once placed within, was to go up and up until she got over her sulks and was ready to deliver the egg Had it not been for a most unp'easant : misadventure on Mr. Bernands’ part, he might be celebrated among poultry I inventors to-day. Instead of thut he ■ is now doing “a month’s hard" in the 1 local workhouse, where most of his j time is taken up in walking the tread- | mill himself. For, lacking the lumber j to build his “hen run,” and bis ex- ] ! chequer being slightly low in consequence of the ingratitude of his poul- ; try, h? appropriated his building ma- I terials from a stock of wood that had j been stored in the irumed ate vicinity to be used as flooring for some new < houses. The theft was not discovtred 1 until after the “poultry run" was com- j plated, but when it was found out the j ! owners of the lumber were exceedingly ' wroth, and. refusing to recognize budding genius, they put the ease in a magistrate’s hands at once. So the treadmill for feathered bipeds j has now been torn up, and the hens are i pursuing their life of ease in the ordi- I rury • manner. Mr. Bernands will soon be <>ut of jail, however, and will then j construct a “run” on even a larger scale ! than before, taking care this time to se- j I cure his lumber legitimately.--N. V. ! Journal; ** SIMPLE ROOT CUTTER. i Device Which Ha#i lleen l'*wl la Scotland tor SI any Year*. The root cutter portrayed below was in use in Scotland 30 years sgo and the | past summer 1 made a trip of two 1 months and found* this same root ent- | ter still in use even vthere they were -utting up roots for “Sihead of winter finders (steers). Tuflaips are what they kisc there chiefly in the way*-of roots, 1 but the climate there is very favorable to their growth and 1-saw fields of 30 a<cr"s<—r—,
BOOT cmi.\c M AUU EAST. acres that certainly looked immense, j A hard wood plank 3\'s feet long1 and 12 inches wide has a square cut out about l^eeenter and two pieces of wood (a and b> are fitted with knives, w hatever skse ; 1 desired for the roots intended to be cut, ; and bolted on the bench. Four legs lor ! it to stand 09 having been inserted, a piece of hard; wood (a^ is cut to come down on the edge of the k a ires aud this is fastened to u board or handl^(c) attached to the stool part by hinge. A ' short fork is used to catch a root aud . place it in the hopper. But one motion and one stroke are required for each root cut. It enn be dime very quickly. 1 The knives can be put in to cut slices o» iny thickness, as at d.—W. C. Gibson, Farm Superintendent National Home, Wicou&in, in Farm and Home.
Brt*d m » Caul* rood. An English farmer who is feeding ; >reud to . stock apparently finds it u' cheap as well as a satisfactory ration. ; i t would be interesting to know if others if his class are doing likewise. The fact Would seep) less strange if the j farmer were feeding his own wheat j i crop, but inquiry has elicited the state* j incut that the farmer buys the wheat j :nd has it ground all one way and j baked in an ordinary manner, using the j ; bread for hia dwn table as well as for j j cattle. Uia plhn of feeding is to com* oience with about four pounds per^day | for each feeding beast, gradually in* creasing tbe allowance till, when finish* ] tng off. eight pounds per day are giv- | : ?n. The bread is sliced up with a long ! | slicing knife, similar to that used on | -.mall farms for s)$ring turnips by ■ hand. The farmer speaks of the .bread I n the highest terms as a cattle food, laying that all cattle are particularly fond of it and grow and feed on it in a I nost satisfactory manner. If you hare coal ashes, sift them, ana 1 .pread the sifting's over the floor of the ihcep stables. It is next best to planter. The space around the entrance to the lives should be kept ao clean that dead jew can readily beseem
PEOPLE. Mm«. Jules Fnvre. the widow of the politician who negotiated with Prince Uismarck for the capitulation of Paris, is dead.' 'For 20 years she had been at the head of the Ecole Normale for Women at Sevres. It is declared by English genealogists that a monument in a church in East f Sutton, K?u»y to the second wife of I Laurence ^Washington proves the lat- : tor’s descent* from the founder of Balioi i college at Oxford, and the brother of | John Ealioi, ifing of Scotland. Ex-Congressman Harter, who comI mitted suicide recently, once described himself as "a Jeffersonian, whose in- | tluenee politically is conservative, for safe measures and against radical, unsound and meddlesome legislation, a ! juict man in manners, a plain man in | dress and a studious man by habit.” Morris M. White, of Cincinnati, and | Francis T. White, of New York, broth- | crs, end graduates of Earlham college, | a Quaker institution in $liehtnond, Ind., | have' given the college $25,000, to be | added to the endowment fund and to be | known os the John T. White themori&l fund, in honor of their father. _ !
GLEANED ABROAD. Henry Furniss, whose political caricatures have hitherto been drawn from the conservative point of view, is now making pictures of parliament for the liberal Daily News. Large deposits of platinum have been discovered at Fitfield, in New South Wales. One bed of piatiniferous lead ore is a mile long and from GO to 150 feet wide. The crude metal contains about 75 per cent, of platinum and sells on the tie id for six dollars an ounce. A Druidical dolmen has been transported from Brittai.y and erected again in its original form over the grave of an archaeologist named Piketty at Mention, outside of Paris. It is called the dolmen of Kerban, comes from the neighborhood erf Locktnariaquer and consists of 14 blocks of granite. Dr. Weldon, head master of Harrow school, makes a plea in the Church Monthly for J he severance of sj»ort from gambling. He describes horse racing as “the sport of kings, the noblest exercise of the physical powers of the noblest of animals," and asserts that in ancient Greece no one ir.nde a bet at the Olympian games. THE OLD “STATE OF PIKE.” Once Extended to the Pacific Oreaut-Stte of the Largest Nursery In the World. From Vu Si. Loui* Hrpubltc. The county of1 Pike is older than the State of Missouri itself, having been laid out in lSli*. The town of Louisiana was laid out in the same year, so that Louisiana, Mo.* and the “Stateof Pike" came into history at the same time. ,] When the Territorial Government established Pike Coont'y its southern boundary was the northern line of St. Charles County. The western line was along the divide between the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, to tho extreme northern liue of the Territory of Upper Louisiana, and . . . extended to tho Pacific Ocean on the west and to the forty-ninth degree of north latitude .... One of the biggest institutions in Louisiana, Mo., is the Stark Bros. Nurseries .... Eighty years ago there came from Kentucky to Pike County the late Judge Stark, then a young man fresh rrom Old Hickory’s New Orleans campaign. He started the nursery and planted the first grafted orchard in the State, having brought the scions on horseback from Kentucky. & The business has descended from father to son, and is now conducted by the third generation, assisted by the fourth. This firm has more than l,0u> salesmen and wants as many more;' business men. professional men, mechanics, farmers and others, however inexperienced, are taught the business and work the iyear round—receiving good pay weekly. The company employs more people in its offices than would be necessary to rim a large manufacturing concern. The extensive packing-houses are connected with the railroad bv special trfick, whence hundreds of car loads o-f tree's are shipped annually. The nursery grounds embraced number of farms convenient to thecitv. and ever, extend to link port. III., where there is a plant of several million trees. A peculiarity of the concern is the establishment of large orchards. These orchards, in *24 states, aggregate nearly 50, OeO acres, 8.500,000;roes, on the partnership plan. The firm is also interested in nearly as many more trees on the co-operative arrangement .... The Nurseries have been beneficial not only to their home, but Missouri owes no little of her prestige as a fruitgrowing region; to tho progress aud work of „ development of this firm. Tus brakeman's “ail aboard 1'’ ere long Will be of little worth, When from the air ship rings the song, “Come, all gel oil the earth __-Truth. ^
THE MARKETS. 2 New York. March 9. WM. ('AITLE-Xatlre Steers.."t 3 90 ©94 bO COTTON—Middimir . © FLOU R—Winter Wheal. 3 SO © 4 .'v WHEAT -No.* Red.*. © W CORN-No. 2.. 3$ © Sfcia OATS-Na2.... © « FORK-New Me**. 10 * © 19 H ST. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling. .v 7*© 7\ BREVES— Fancy .steer*. 4 (L © 4 73 Medium.... 3 IS © 4 4■ UOGS Fair u».Select.. 3 70 © 4fc SHEEP— Fair to Choice. 2 ■£> fa 3 40 FLOUR—Fa teats.. 3 W © 3 7* Fancy to Extra da.. 3 Bo © 3 4a WHEAT—Na 2 Red Winter. © 72 CORN—No. i Mixed. JO © «S OATS— Na t ... •• •... • .... RYE—NaS... .... 3< TOBA(XO-Lu*f% . 3 00 Leaf Hurley. 4 40 , iz w HAY- Clear Timotey _ V 00 © 13 Uu BUTTER—Choice Dairy. ..... 14 © IB EGGS—Freah.... © >1 FORK—Standard Mens (New). 9 r7H© 9 90 UACUN—Clear Rib. t>H© H, LARD— FrimeSteam..... u ^ CHICAGO CATTLE—Shipping. 3 Si Q 4 7V HOus—Fair u> Choice. £ 7J © 4 14 SHKKF-Fairto Choice. t So © 3 4. FLoUK—Winter Pateuta...... S;0 © 3W Spring PateatA..... 3 1U © 3 40 WHEAT—Na 2 ~pruiK.... *4 © «> Na 2 Red. el*© »*> CORX-Na . © OAia-.Nai .. © »> FORK—Mews (u«w).. ^. IN © 9© KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shi pping Steer*. . 3 2V © 4 25 UOGS-Ail G.-aue*. 3© © » o' WHEAT—Ko 2 Red... © 71 OATS—Na g.. © CORN—Na 2..4... . 23*© NEW ORLEANS FLOUR-High Grade.:.. 3 10 CORN-NaS..... 34 OATS—Western..... .... .. SM HAY—Choice...... 17 0) FORK—New Meat* ......... bacon—sid«».«i... © 'JOTTOX- Mdd hoc .i,.... 7R© 7* LOUISVILLE. WHEAT-Na 2 Red....... 72)4© 7*N OOKX—Na2 Mixed.,.. 31 © *tv OATS—NaSMixed............. ti © **» POKK-New Mesa. . .. . ..1»V © »>*• BACON-dear Hi0. 9)4© COTTON—MidJling.,,. » '«* i
The “Lone Star'’ Is waring--the flair of the free* Then strike for Texas, if men yon would be. Mo idlers are wanted, the thrifty and wise. To wealth and high station can equally rise. Where corn, oats and ootton; the richest at loam. Which yields to the settlers provisions and home. Trees of every description arise on each hand. Prom alluvial soil to the rich table fend. Here springs are exhsiustless and streams never dry. In the season from winter to autumn's bright sky, ? A wide panorama of prairie is seen; Of grasses of all kinds perennially green. Here millions of entile, sheep, horses and goats Grow fat as if stall-fed or fattened on oats. Mo poverty is found in the mighty domain. To the man who exerts e ither finger or brain. Here are homes for the millions, the rich and the poor. While Texas opens wide her hospitable door. She has thousands of acres—yes, millions- -to emptors can dwell. Her terms will be easy with those whom she deals. While security, all, in their title can feel. Buy land while *tis cheap, and the finest select, 'Twill, young man, prove a fortune when least you expect. , Old man, for your children, buy. file tt away; A Godsend 'twill prove on some rainy day. For a pamphl et fully d escribing this wonderful country address Gaston Meslier, General Passenger and Ticket Agent Texas and Pac .flo Hailway. Dallas. Texas. Low-rate Home Seekers* Excursion Tickets will be sold to all points in Texas on April 7, April St and Slay 5. Take advantage of this great opportuni ty.
Sa idar ilbscmnee. By upholding the sacredness of the Sabbath we are advancing the Holy Father’s work in bringing about Christian unity the world over.—Rev. Father Malone, Catholic, Brooklyn, N. Y. WHERE DID YOU GKT THIS COFFEE? Had the Ladies" Aid Society of our Church out for tea, forty of them, and all pronounced the German Coffeeberry equal to Rio! Salzer’s catalogue tells you all about it! 35 packages Earliest vegetable seeds $1.00. If you will cut this out axd send with 15c. stamps to John A. Salzcr Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., you will get free a packagb of above great coffee seed and our 14S page catalogue! Catalogue alone 5c. postage. ' (k) » \ :i" - Cowardice. The biggest coNvard is not always the man who refuses to fight. It takes more courage sometimes to turn away from a brawl than to plunge into it.— Rev. Washington Gladden, Congregationalist, Columbus, O. Don't Be Too Late for the Steamer, And don’t omit when you arc packing up your effects preparatory for the voyage, to include among them a supply of Hostettcr’s Stomach Bitters. the great remedy for sea sickness. Travelers for pleasure‘or busi-, ness seeking foreign climes, or who loco-' mote by steamboat. or train, besides yachtmen and inariuers. testify to the remedial and preventive efficacy of the Bitters, which is incomparable for nausea, headache, dyspepsia, biliousness1, rheumatism, nervous I and kidney trou ble.
Anna—“Is it an interesting story!” Daisy —“Extremely interesting! 1 don’t thing I skipped 20 pages.”—Tit-Bits. Bess—“If I wore in your shoes—” Madge —“Don’t talk of impossibilities.’’-^Boston Courier. WliieB Traveling, Whether on pleasure bent, or business, take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly aud effectually on the kidneys, liver, and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches, and other forms of sickness. For sale in 50 cent and $1 bottles by 'all leading druggists. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company only. Great names debase iustcad of raising those who know1 how to use them.—Rochefoucauld. * ' ! Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. No fits after first day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and #2 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline, 9 tl Arch St., Phila., Fa. ' “You told me you and Harry loved at first sight.” » -Yes, but we quarreled on acquaintance.’’—Trut tv_ Toe Grip of Pneumonia may be warded off with Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Bike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. If there is anything in'a young man the Routgen rays should bring it out. Beecham’s rums for constipation 10c and 25c. Get the book (free' at your druggist’s and go by it. Annual sales 6.000,uw boxes. Wickedness wny prosper for awhile, but at the long na he that sets all knaves at work will pay them.—L’EstFange. 1 have found FIso's Cure for Consumption an unfailing medicine. F. R. Lotz, laud Scott St. Covington, Ky., Oct. 1,1694. I know no such thing os genius; it is nothing but lti.be r md diligence.—Hogarth. For Aluiino Hoarseness and Irritation or TUE Thiioat, use “Broim’» Bronchial Trvchu." 25c a jot. Avoid imitations. To be proud of lemming is the greatest ignorance.—His nop Taylor.
Ht w*» This 1 We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cure«l by Hail’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chbnkt -!fc Co., Props.,Toledo, O. We, the under signed, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe hips perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West Sc Tkujlx, Wholesale Druggists, To* ledo,0. Waldisg, Kixxin & Mahvix, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly u poo. the blood and mucous surfaces of the systdin. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold; by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall’s Family IPills are the best. Wb are commonly taught our duty by fear or shame, but ho# cau they act upon a man tv ho hears nothing but his own pruises i —Johnson. ----.
. article for leas money t rotten. It makes Porajina ao« GAivaatreUanerTllUa*
ararftmr ana r uen wwra, biffi oniA »w Frames, steel KwhJ Cutters sad ?«• «$&% Grinders. On application it will naj<*;, > Si® at tiifwe articles that St will furutsa t Tammy 1st at 1 3 itas i«u»1 price. It si Tacks and Picnc* at Ml kinds. Send tor catalogue^. I2tfc, BsckwcU sari FUteorc Sttects. CfclssteWE HAVE BffiAflBUg
Bllreet to the consotoeesale prices. Ship anyor examination beforetTeryihlmt warranted. 'Styles of Carriage**, styles of Harness, 4* les Riding Saddles. Ite for c&tatocrae.
vay: y '/clmaki cakkiauk & HARNESS nFQ CO. W. II Pratt, Secy. elk.hart, ixd.
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I Premium No. 1 Chocolate f L'jjj Made by Walter Baker & Go., Ltd., : | jtj Dorchester, Mass., has been cele- : Z 3j brated for more than a century as : Z a nutritious, delicious, and fleshforming beverage. Sold by gro- *; cers everywhere. ;; Best Quality! Largest Size! Lowest Price!
The Ins and Outs of It.' ' f‘ ■ 1 HI ou get best wear out of a coat, best work must have gone into it. You can’t get good bread out of \ pool four. . , Moral: You can’t get the best out of anything, unless ' the l est is in it; and the best has to be put in before it | can be taken out. Now, we have a rule to test those sarsiiparillas with a big “best” on the bottle. “Tell us | what's put in you and we’ll decide for ourselves about ' the best.” That’s fair. But these modest sarsaparillas say: Oh I we can’t: tell. It’s a secret. Have faith in the label.”. . . Stopl There’s ope exception; one sarsaparilla that has no secretito hide. It’s Ayer’s. If you want o know what goeslinto Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, ask your octor to write for the formula. Then you can satisfy yourself that you get the best of the sarsaparilla argument when you get Ayer’s. Aaj doubt left t Get the “ Cwbooi..*^ It kills doubts b«t cure* doubter*. * Address: J. C-Ay«rCo.,LoweU,M*r!w
POTATOES CflLZEff^ /Northern @ro'
The OLD BLUE-BACK SPELLER WIMI erstwhile ] thumbed t.y S«»{ mao/ who read I three wards ■ And I the old familiar! picturel — faebj heart recalls a| different scene. 1 but all remember I well bow, cribbed I eabiaad and con I ffoed while »un-| shiny afternoons dragged th • i 1f alo « Innydhj alone, thi log akin to pttyl grew Into real »d 1 miration for th»| “young
HOT tome do»*. either for wort* or atoned aad bull-dcgf* to (trite bey* on t or STARK Treeefi - not leave* awly Tested 7® Year*. When joe plant* Stark true, you «» depend upon P® -- - --flunk afford to take ehaacea Bo maa want* to'*»***o* i‘®*h*root of a tree, or dig it up. Ju*t when old enough to eewty a TBJUt » isolfc by it* fralV. Stark treo^bear fnatfc —the Sneec teHnee fca» trier Pro^"f^“1.f.°.rt -.js-ssS, !®'Sias.r;7Min;.:.,rsa£-J.,^53 earth m bcautftal or *oo«t.H Bo war»rl. thea thafWt^ a Jewel of purest ray aereae ‘• worth a email forgjf* oor that we were tried to pay" full «M«M9 ft>r a etnffjb tree: A rare ornament, aredt hut aanal! »P»tM h«» square. Bean la two yean. Controlled by ue tinder patented trade-mark. _ 6AUSXKS and CLCTt-XaKBffR WATHta-rASh TiT WWJWy ■Pltaa*it Keen! Witteee-fcMHUAU, Be.. MtUOW.IV STARK BROS Nl*gg55{BI£ ■■■■i Morahlae Habit Cttreii b% *»« tat W» (tey». No ray till enretk. m. i. STEPftgKS, UbaachetJUk. OPHia tuf'&vsxsssffmau, w. ep TIllr OK* ra»*«ner «tmtees A. N. K.,ft 1606. WHIX VKIT1XO W A0Vmi«BB» PTLKJkd* in iU»
