The Corner Stone, Volume 5, Number 11, College Corner, Union County, 15 March 1876 — Page 4
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Toxic fob Fowls. The Southern Fanner says it is a good plan to keep on hand the preparation of sulphate of iron, so often recommended by experienced poultrymen. It i3 frequently useful in the poultry yard, and it is thought, in a measure, to ward off some of the ailments to which fowls are subject. It is a useful tonic during the moulting season, and a great benefit to fowls in cold winter weather. During the summer it serves as a disinfectant, keeping the drinking vessels from becoming soured or foul. Its constant use in the water, however, is not to be commended, since, by such a course, its efficiency in cases of real need would be less marked. Several formulas have been given for preparing the solution, so as to have it in convenient form at all times. Some of these make the solution too weak. The following will be found to be right, and the proportion being all "ones " the formula is easily remembered. In one gallon of warm water dissolve one pound of sulphate of iron (copperas) and then add one ounce of sulphuric acid. Put the mixture into a jug, from which it may be used as needed. To one quart of drinking water add one teaspoonful of the solution. It gives to the water a rusty appearance and a pungent taste. Cost of the Nutritive Elements of Manure. According to Professor Stockbridge, the chemical elements in a bushel of corn should cost forty-one cents. This refers only to the three leading elements. After applying manure for fifty bushels he recently obtained ninety-four bushels, worth, according to his estimate, one hundred and thirty-four dollars, with the stalks, which ought to pay well, as he thinks, for labor, taxes, etc., over and above the cost of chemicals. But he has here evidently omitted to mention the exhaustion of the soil. Having supplied j the necessary elements for fifty bushels only out of ninety-four, it is clear that the other forty-four bushels have been obtained at the expense of fertility previously existing in the soil. If it cost forty-one cents to restore to the earth the nutritive elements taken out by each bushel of corn, then the charge for manure on the ninety-four bushels will be thirty-eight dollars and fifty-four cents in addition to the cost of applying it. Now the cost of seed, interest, taxes and labor, including harvesting and husking, is, according to Dr. Sturtevant, thirty-eight dollars and forty-two cents for "an acre yielding eighty-two and a half bushels. If we add to this the cost of applying the manure, the total per acre will be about eighty dollars. This leaves the Professor a margin of fiftyfour dollars as his profit per acre. But the cost for each bushel, if the stalks are charged as usual four and a half tons at eight dollars per ton will be forty-six cents. But here let us repeat, what we have oiten said before, that this raode of estimating stalks is not correct. The total cost of the crop should be divided between the grain and the stover in the ratio of their actual value. Effect of Camphor on Seeds. Certain curious and all but forgotten experiences of much interest to agriculture and gardening have lately been revived by a German savant. Very many years ago it wa3 discovered and recorded that water saturated with camphor had a remarkable influence on the germination of seeds. As of many other useful hints, the stupid world took no notice of this intimation ; but a Berlin professor, having seen the record of it, appears to have established . the facts that a solution of camphor stimulates vegetables as alcohol does animals. He took seeds of various sorts, some being three or four years old, and possessing a slight degree of i vitality, and placed them between sheets of blottiii"paper. Some of these he watted with pure water, and others with camphorated water. In many cases the seeds did not swell at all under the influence of the simple moisture, but in every case they germinated where they were subjected to the camphor solution. The experiment was extended to different kinds of garden seeds, old and new, and always with the result of showing a singular awakening of dormant vitalism and a wonderful quickening of growth. It also appears from the professor's re searches that the young plants thus stimulated continued to increase with a vigor and vivacity much beyond that of those which were not so treated. When pounded camphor was mixed with the soil it appeared to exercise a rather bad effect upon the seeds. The dose in the latter case was possibly too strong. At all events, this action of camphor is werthy of an examination by seedsmen and gardeners, and even farmers might determine how far wheat and barley may be profited by the strange power this drug appears to possess over the latent life of vegetable germs. Household Helps. Crackers. Take one lance cupful of bread dough, very light, and roll it out on your molding board ; then spread on a piece of butter and lard together, as large as a goose egg; dredge a little Hour over it, fold it up, and pound it with something heavy a long time; take A email piece at a time, roll out very thin, stamp with a clock key and bake quickly. Orange Pudding. Four sweet oranges peeled and picked to pieces and put in a deep pudding dish, with two cups of sugar. Put a quart of milk, the yolk of three eggs, and two dessertspoon-
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fuls of corn starch on to boil. Take off, cool it, and pour it on the oranges. Then beat the whites to a stiff froth, put it over the pudding and place it in the oven until it is of a light brown color. To Boast Birds. Take larks, partridges, snipe or any other small birds; cover them with sage leaves, fresh if pos sible, then envelop them in slices of I bacon, put them down to a good fire and baste with butter ; sprinkle a little salt and serve in the gravy. Chicken Jelly. Half a raw chicken, pounded with a mallet, bones and meat together; cold water to cover it well. Heat slowly in a covered vessel, and let it simmer until the meat is in white rags and the liquid reduced one-half; strain and press through a coarse cloth ; season to taste, return to the fire, and simmer five minutes longer ; skim when cool. Give to the patient cold, with unleavened wafers. Corn Dodgers. One quart of corn meal, a tablespoonful of lard, two eggs, a teaspoonful of salt ; scald the meal with the lard in it with boiling water, cool with a little milk, add , the eggs (beaten light), beat very hard for ten minutes, make them thin enough with cold milk to drop off the spoon and retain their shape in boiling lard; serve hot; have the lard boiling hot when you drop them in. Useful Information. A distinguished physician has said that if his patients would eat a couple of good oranges before breakfast, from February to June, his practice would be gone. Salt of lemon is the best material for removing stains of iron mold, but it should be used very sparingly, as any excess will destroy the fabric. There is no simpler method for preventing cider growing sour than mustard seed. After the cider has fermented and reached the desired palatable condition, put one pint of mustard seed to a barrel of cider, and bung tight. A hospital surgeon writes that the digestion is mainly governed by the nervous system, and the nervous system is soon shattered by broken rest. To deprive a man of his sleep and then expose him to cold is simply to exhaust his reserve of vital force aud push him half way toward the goal of a complete breakdown. Every one should know that hot water will restore cut flowers that are faded by being worn on the dress or carried in the hand. Cut half an inch from the end of the stem, and put it directiy into boiling water ; the petals will smooth and resume their beauty in a few minutes. Colored . flowers will revive most perfectly, for white flowers are inclined to curl and turn yellow. .The thickest textured flowers will be restored the most wonderfully. Flowers will keep fresh after this treatment almost as long as they would have done if freshly gathered. A correspondent says: I often hear persons disputing about the age of a sheep, to my surprise, be it said. For them to tell the age of a sheep nothing is easier. The sheep's front teeth the first year are eight in number, appearing all of a size. The second year the two middle ones are shed out and replaced by two much longer than the others. The third year two very small ones appearone on either side of the eight. At the end of the fourth year there are six large teeth. The fifth year all the front teeth are large, and the sixth year all begin to show wear not till then. ilotv a Prince Gathers Glory uith a Gun. The tiger hunting of the Prince of Wales in India is not quite as fierce, exciting and dangerous as that kind of thing has been found to be by some of the other adventurous sportsmen of the jungles. Dr. Ilussell describes the way in which the Prince enjoyed the sport. Armgd with a rifle, he was placed in the second story of a house, which was loopholed and well protected, and the doomed tiger was roused from sleep and driven toward the house. The Prince fired at the unsuspecting beast, hit it, fired again as it fled, hit it as it staggered away in death, mounted his elephant, fired into it twice more, and it was dead whereupon the carcass was borne off in triumph on the back of an elephant. Aud for many a year after the Prince's return to England the cured skin of that tiger will remind him of his adventurous exploit as a tiger hunter in the East Indies. A Taunton man of forty-six has had a checkered career. He has been shinwrecked once, narrowly escaped baking in a railroad accident, has been runaway with times innumerable, was shot in the neck at Gettysburg, had a taste of the horrors of Libby prison, fell overboard from a whaler, aud before being picked up left two fingers in the mouth of a shark ; was drafted twice, had his right arm broken in two places during the first New York riot, stood on a barrel with a halter around his neck, in an Alabama town, at the outbreak of the rebellion, from sunrise to sunset ; and in 1863 was crushed under a falling building during a California earthquake, and was without food or drink nearly fifty hours. Taunton, by the way, is not very far from the town where Jimmy Blanchard came to light. The plainest row of books that cloth or paper ever covered is more significant of refinement than the most elaborately carved efagere or sideboard.. W. Heechcr.
The Lady Ifhn liisenrrted Wanhiny ton's Unit.
The elder sister of Miss Mary Cary had i married Ueorge William Fairfax, at whose house he was on a visit, when she captivated a young man who paid her his addresses. His affection, however, was not returned, and the oiler of his hand was rejected by Miss Cary. This young man was afterward known to the world as General George Washington, the first President of the United States of America. Young Washington asked permission of old Mr. Cary" to address his daughter before he ventured to speak to herself. The reply of the old gentleman was, "If that is your business here, sir, I wish you would leave the hou.-e, for my daughter has been used to ride in her own coach." It has subsequently been said that this answer of Mr. Cary to the strippling Washington produced the independence of the United States, and laid the foundation of the future fame of the first of heroes and the best of men our immortal Washington ; as it was more than probable that, had he obtained possession of the large fortune which it was known Miss Cary would carry with her to the altar, he would have passed the remainder of his life in inglorious ease. It was an anecdote of the day that this lady, many years after she had become the wife of Edward Ambler, happened to be in Williamsburg when General Washington passed through that city at the head" of the American Army, crowned with neverfading laurels and adorned by his countrymen. Having distinguished her among the crowd, his sword waved toward her a military salute, whereupon she is said to have fainted. But this wants confirmation, for her whole life tended to show that she never for a moment regretted the choice she had made. It may be added, as a curious fact, that the lady General Washington afterward married resembled Miss Cary as much as one twin sister ever did another. Lishop Meade's " Old Churches and Families of Virginia." A. Xorth Vttralina Anniversary. The battle of Moore's Creek, North Carolina, was fought on the 27th of February, 1776, and its centennial has just been celebrated with enthusiasm by the people of Pender county, in that State. The supporters of King George in that conflict were, for the most part, Scotchmen, who had been adherents of the"bonme" pretender and had emigrated to America after the defeat at Culloden. They became staunch supporters of the House of Hanover, and after the hostilities in New England the loyal Governor of North Carolina, seeing that the king's strength in that division of the colonies lay with these people, issued a proclamation concerning "a most daring, horrid and unnatural rebellion against the king's government" and calling for the support of all loyal men. The Americans were commanded at the battle of Moore's Creek by Gen. James Moore. They numbered about one thousand, aud there were about sixteen hundred tories. About fifty of the tories were killed or wounded and many more were taken prisoners ; the colonial troops lost one man, and two of their men were wounded. After the battle the Highlanders throughout the neighborhood were speedily disarmed aud their leaders were imprisoned. t'ivitl 1'ortrait of Xtioleon. Napoleon was neither d.irk nor fair. He had dark chestnut hair, eyes gray, complexion of a pale brown, without any red in it, and a smooth bkin. The brain was large ; the skull belonged to the largest development ever known. His circulation was slow, the pulse counting forty beats a minute ; he perspired little and was insensible alike to heat and cold, hunger andnhirst; his chest was prominent, and his limbs well proportioned; his height was five feet two inches. Of a lymphatic temperament he could support alike excess or physical and intellectual exertion. It was a constitution of granite. Warm baths, coffee and strong wine restored his circulation. His intellect was vast and many-sided, applying itself to details and generalizations ; made up of prodigious memory, that rapidly tcok account of place, number and cause, and the bearings of things ; a genius in fine, eminently practical and positive. The Prince of Wales has not only spent the $300,000 voted for his personal expenses in India by the British Parliament, but has disbursed an additional $100,000 on presents for the pompous maharajahs of the Indian empire, and another appropriation is to be asked for during the present session of Parliament. The Prince claims to have given the most of this money to the poor of India, which is a very excellent argument to make before Parliament, and it will doubtless cover an avalanche of extravagance. The annual production of leather gloves in France is estimated at about 2,500,000 dozens of pairs of firsts, seconds and third sorts, the average price ranging from thirty-five francs to forty-six francs per dozen. We may value the production approximately at 100,000,001) francs ($20,000,000). Tfa ree-fourths of this production goes to foreign countries, a circumstance due to the elegance and good quality of the products. The number of persons employed in the business of manufacture is about ninety thousand. Knee-kreecuks and silk stockings are coming into fashion again, and saw mills are beginning to hoard their sawdust. The turnip came originally from Rome.
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The last seen of Don Carlos an 1 hi.s "army" the two were in a one-horo wagon en route for France. Fanny Fern is credited with having advised her daughter never to let James Parton pass out of the family. A sea-seiipekt has been discovered in Lake Michigan with fins striped like the American flag. The finder has been sent to Binghamton for his health. A company of native Chinese merchants has been formed in Hong Kens for the purpose of carrying on a direct trade between China, England and the United States. It takes thirty men a month to make a camel's hair shawl. But lovely woman never thinks of that as she throws it over her shoulders and asks her husband if it looks well behind. Belle Plain, Ia., claims the smallest woman in the world Maggie Minot. She is eighteen, twenty-seven iuchvs high and weighs thirty-one pounds. Tom Thumb is six inches taller. Surgeons say that ringer nails, bitten off, often find lodgment in the stomach, where they remain for years adhering to the tissues and ruining one's feelings. Don't bite your finger nails. A jewel, which was formerly in the possession of the Diamond Duke.Charle? of Brunswick, has been sold to the Emperor of Brazil for eighty-five thousand francs. This ge:n is a ruby of rare value. President McCosh, at the opening of the one hundred and twenty-ninth year of Princeton College, said that during the seven years of his Presidency gifts to the amount of $1,250,000 had been received. The bogus Bessie Turner keeps gabbling away and getting rich. Meanwhile the genuine Bessie sleeps in a trunk in Jersey City and locks it on the inside so that she can be certain of her noct u rnal wh e reabou ts. The State of Georgia exempts from taxes cotton aud woolen mills and machinery for ten years from the time the mills are started. Ther. is one mill in operation in Augusta, containing 23,000 spindles, which has made a dividend of twenty percent, among the stockholders. During the present Empercr Alexander's reign of twenty years, Russia has gained 30,347 square miles of territory, 2?,54G,C00 in population, and 93.COO,C00 roubles in revenue, and the public debt has been reduced 50.000,000 roubles. A rouble is about seventy-five cents. Catarrh of the bowels, the disease with which Speaker Kerr of the National House of Representatives is dangerously ill, is not unlike catarrh of the head or throat. The gastric juices become diseased, and their ordinary uses are suspended, producing total inaction of the bowels. The disease does not yield readily to treatment, and usually terminates fatally. An enterprising speculator has offered $50,000 for the exclusive privilege of sweeping out the buildings at the Philadelphia Exposition, and offers to give suitable guarantees that he will keep the floors perfectly clean. He expects to make his "pile" by charging each exhibitor a small sum and sifting the sweepings, which are sure to contain valuables. Wlicrt1 I , It All Come E rtm T Pints ami quarts r-f lihliy Catarrhal discharges. Where does it nil come from? The mucous membraue which lines the chambers of the nose, ami its little glands, are diseased, so that they draw from the blood its liquid, and exposure to the air eh:!:: ires it to corrujit.on. This life-liquid is needed to build up the system, but it is extracted, ivnd the system is weakened by the loss. To cure, train tlesh and streussh by usinc lr. Pierce's Golden Medical biseovery, which also acts directly upon these gtaiids, correcting them, and npply Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy with Dr. Pierce's Nasal Douche, the only method of reaching the upper cavities, where the discharge accumulates aud comes from. The instrument nud both medicines aold by druggists and dealers ia medicines. There is a little town in New York State where every man and woman has been converted, and some of them are paying back tea and coffee borrowed six and seven year ago. PlMrLES on the face, rough Bkin, chapped hands, sakrheum aud ail cutaneous ail'eclions cured, the skin made soft and smooth, by the use of Juniper Tar Soap. That made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York, is the only kiud that cau be relied on, as there are many imitations, made from common tar, which are worthless. An Integrant Artit le. Tr. Tctt'8 Hair IAyc is a crtsat triumph of chemistry. Being free from nil injurious qualities, ita floct is so natural tbat tlio cfctsfot observer wouUI not obsprTe it. 1 1 imitates Nature to perfectiou anJ is sold all over the world. Ir. Kchenck Ntandard Iteiuedlr. Tho MHniiartl remedies for alt diooanes of the tnnifs Rrn SM'KK.NcK'a Pi i.mumc Svm-p, JrufNcs'i j-ka Wski Tonic, ami Sen knck's Mashraks Pu.i.s, an.l, if taken In furB tlie Iuiiks are destroj pti, a pretty cure is effected. To these threw medicines Pr. J. II. Scheiick, of Philadelphia, owes his unrivalled success in this treatment of pulmonary disease. Tho Pulmonic Pyrnp ripens the merhid matter in the luues ; nature throws tt off by au eay tipeftoration, for when tho r'deKtu or mat tf r is ripe a slight cough will throw it otT, the patieut has rest and the hint") begin to heal. To enable the Pulmonic Pyrnp to do this, Sehenrk's Mandrake Tills aud tH-henck's Sea Weed Tonic must lie freely used to cleanse the stomach and liver. Sciienck's Mandrake Tills act on the liver, n niov. inn all obstructions, relax the pU bladder, the bile starts freely, arid the liver ia soon relieved. t. henck's S Weed Tonic is a erntlo stimulant and alterative; the alkali of wblch it is coiuped, mixes with the food and prevatitsaourimr. It n.!n tlie dieestioD by toniua up the siomach to a lo althv condition, se that the fooii and the Pulmonic .srii will make cood t bad ; then 'he luntra heat, ami the patient a ill surely net well if care is taken to prevent a freh cob). AllwhowiMi to consult Pr. Sehenck, either personally or by letter, cun do so at his principal orhre, corner of MTH ausl Aki ii bi rkkth, t'hiladelplua, every Mondav. Seliem R's iinslieines are sild by all drucsi-sts tlirouiiliout the country. REVOLVERS ! ! E rJK $3.00 tt-fn fhf f ...v runiwl I,mwj C;acn ! t.-au VIM Wtlhkj, ij.
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"-:- mrj t ; t-f-.-- s 11 " T I 1 1 1 1 II nr.i-S.-1 .ti. it-T',rt4V..r '.. ' X.VUUil A W C. !. l.lt!Nl,T A 11... ,f Vi!E . Rf; I !.!. ? . psid. M''Nir. U JUS t i, 4n. 1 1- . riirttr LlcLIl o it imi.. a. i. t y csRVa-ii!i- f.r it; las p,c ho ,,,; k"y f.r ci r." sti 1 tet m- lo Kh. k l.i -i it, Nf - V'tk. W2 P27 5 PI A 5toTH and travf lineet!je to eV.n 1 ""'"V"1 cr 0X-'D TO p E4LFR.in.VerT AoTiit ilanufctorin Unci.uU. O TTy TTIotrtttpd Floral Cntnlngrao fnr 1STO 1" now re I'rtie !m i . i f . .. WiLUisi Ii."Bowri-rcu,Uj WarrcaMikstoti,M "2 fii E3t A I nii.i,ixr:KY f m W i W M ibsLal MOItK. tiM Lease, Kistures and St''k. CUR IT. Ot. ( trie oldest .thiols ia UluiiuMi. i' r rue at.d parbf'iil.ir., a( ir--. .ni LLKX . ( tinrlanall. . Pensions. Pensions. rpiioK woiindrd. iptnred, or who -ntr 5e i 1 u i.n in thist'.S. service, witl r i p. n-..n f- t i ! .te ..f J:., l.r.". if ! ..y nj i.iv 1 . f .r- .1 .. 1 CircHl.H-.rrer. Ci. K. AKSc'LM, Cmciii.-.aii.'o- ! . WVTpy- lew intellicvnt La !:.-. i ! C-m-.o I nuilitl to h. it or. i.-r. f..r Cft. i. in-rt !, t w;ork. ' i.'-ir-.v, r ;. 'M,oW Jr,. tr.e t.K'it f:.r 1 t elitentlial tmies. AH ewr-- nji nrr! i; . (', - . en.,s ri-tuire.1. I'l ST1N, (ill. MAN a t !., Hart- I lord, Cotiu.; ihicavo. lit.; I tm ii.u.iti. t 'uo. ) AGETJTS! 150 NEW BOOKS I art. Hiisr mim rrrr v m mtsrirrs tx c. a j KI (U'lliO AHO l-HOM-Jr.. TVH ' I y Minine pijea. bindmca. iliustratiou. etc. Ai are ! I'n-i.-.i, !..( r works on every by rt-k a.-t j on , ue it,, ti it t fat iHM.k. when you c.n rank tuc Ofre by .rerin Cll-lulm-tl cboi.-e of ISflr Our i A3-nt h the ijM-.lefrwt. and are d.d:elt-d wiifi j their quick ab. F.ut m,t to seed f -r pariiculnrs at i o to Viutv i'rfci.ts:iiu Co., is.tn. il- i Business l .tfrnf.Kcm, r?.;rrH'i' t ' . i.'i t.'i h-r (?-.i i i :tIt r3 St'tl't fir -vf riin, C fTf .it:T iVtnl-l to .-H the tri.tt Ma- I J.lJUJ ti.oi-ry aij.t J-nriiv pArkake. the ir--t, in... t e-.mptete and l-t seiimc p i. U.v la the worbi. j ?a;ui i a w.th cmil.-ir el ti-i 1 p.at-d i-ei-bt- J i !.. shirt mid and c liar button, ity mail 34ci. . ii.lslncort.il ChroliK and Novel' !- sent Iree. "111 K MAI. NOV CLTV CO., lilt lialutt-r St., . I. nil A-" pi I bill r-J JLL-:ixxJ .1- .... " i I . u.. . , . ...... S. A T. t .... ,. .... ! . -,. F -r 1 . ti.-- r-. ..... ..t . . .. i . ... .. , ,- , ; l.o.r. 1 ' Ks ! '-' .(...' r -T., r ' i.-1-rl-e.-r FtV alt D'StAitS -!--' I. - . i , j.,,.. i-. i .. ; i h-e and out Hohoel Phrrn.viM.-t -J....-.,r,. f . . ... .... it . .... f .....,...-. i- f IT II 1 i-L - ' - . . ! ; - -- ' - v ! l , z 8UHaisss t. T'ar-;i,c:fi;iS!tii,c. uo Youn own printinc.; AVI T2i:miiQ piizss. j Vrinter.. rVhaeK .m-,.-C.., M...I- j t T .. h V rur v.v, nt.-i lil.OOOin Ten mt vie. PrcY' f-om "-.OO to i.i.l.iu ; " 1 ;BNJ.O.WOunS4CO.vrftiM i . ., ,..,- .... ,,, . aiiaUiri Printinie Material, Vii itanir fur Cautue 1 4 i caia' su iio''ca i - , i..uut;jki4u Llul I kulti Bay tie Ecit. A. I Tn a. .i:-v... r rail fcl 1' ; . I er i A v , .1 It I l-. .... - . . . . .Vlaiti. 1 HO! "for" Vow A!! j TO HUMEKV. It-! t- r I and at llieaper Tr:. . j CTii not t- had hi the World th.a lr.-m t o- taua K I It. Itiiil o. t-.-ii an 1 ' I.iu - ie . ro i iv n- i-.. j lhure W iter ;.bu o! -i: t . Half KariT.vk.-- Ir rut: :- i r-tsr-iout aiol b.-k wi:h Free fare tti iturehiurrv, I 1 r.ptive I'linti b t i-U ?1 e , f ,-r 1 Mlltinn .rrf-rMl- nt lilsil Sii.'ii 1'.. K. T -rei. ! a-nl Irvx-. Address I K. it. lumti lime j 1rty. fe H?tr.4oipu M . ti lc. 1 I.. -!- 'iur I Uii(i. lottnu J(il li.l'tl.ii'll ' .. j levud t Ofcllllkllalutlei' f- CENTS'l'wil wr'te tf pwr f.ie tA 4y . JlnnlLiiza t i i Li LiITo.29. O tie rle el .COO e. 5.. Tt'.t eJ ef Ibe t -tt!e .!--. i f I, !.v.... i .-i'lr.t. t I. v . .-!.-: vl .., (TM, , , , i . . . t---r,i .. f Dust'n, Cilnipn is. Co.. ii.-...'e4, i -... , ... .,:-. ... 9 t i.ovr.it, timothy, niAia: n ;i-, . Aitrt- ski ds omo.v m:tv ;; SEND FOR PRICE LIST. 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