Plymouth Weekly Democrat, Volume 14, Number 28, Plymouth, Marshall County, 18 March 1869 — Page 4

The Farewell Address. The farewell address of the retiring President is a document which will, in all prol ability, obtain for itself a more candid and impartial criticism in the future than there is reason to expect for it in the present. Still, amid the discredit which the Republican party has brought upon itself the justice of which even its organs are constrained to admit there are many who will read the utterances of Mr. Johnson with a patience that, considering the feelings which they but recently entertained toward him, will be surprising to themselves. Of one thing there can be no doubt: Taking the period included between the time when the first motion was made for impeachment and the present, Mr. Johnson has greatly and justly risen, and Congress greatly and justly fallen in tha esteem of the people of the United States ; and, in proport'on as confidence in the one has increased, confidence in the othnr has diminished. Kb chief magrltrate, certainly of the United States, has ever occupied his place under circumstances more disheartening than those byvhich Mr. Johnson has been suroundeu. Nothing was wanting when he acceded to the Presidential ( flice but conformity to the will of the majority in Congress to have made him the idol of the Republican party. So that he would have used it for the ;t Tgrandizement of the party and the perpetuation of its power, there wa no authority, constitutional or otherwise, which it would not have thrust into his hands. It would have been as liberal to endow him wi'h illegi timate as it became resolute to deprive him of his legitimate functions; and it would have bowed to him, with more than eastern ceremony of reverence, as the formal sovereign, so, that he had submitted to be its actual slave. Willingly, by his own act, singly and without a party to support him, he refused to become the implement to carry out the measures and minister to the ambition of the C'onsrreps'Ional majority, and forthat offense Turins the remainder of his term he became the victim of a persecution as intense and unscrupulous as it was illegal and unjust No man certainly of the present age has lecn slandered and vilified as Mr. Johnson has been slandered and vilified. lf, is difficult to say whether the abuse which for three year? was poured upon him by the puns, and by the leaders nnd orators ot the Uepub.ican party, was most remark able for its copiousness, its malieniiy, its lalsity, or its ingenuity. Every indignity which a party holding absolute power in the state could devise; every falsehood which a party heated beyond the bounds of respect for truth and decency by rage, f untiefen! and ambition could invent were employed to divest him of his influence and to degrade him in the eyes of the world Could he have consented to em1' irk in the cause of the Radical leaders and abet their designs, his path w "nld have been paved with gold and his bed piled with roses. He would have been fluttered as copiously as he has been slandered ; even his weaknesses- M have borne the aspect of virtue! ocr the magic influence of Radical rh ric; and he would have had such an r.isurpnce as party orcan? can afford that he was second only to Washington. The stand of Mr. Johnson in favor of the Constitution was, to all appearar.ee, taken as deliberately as it WSJ resolutely maintained. There arc many reasons to believe that he felt constitutional liberty to be in danger, and that, not without a distinct conception of its consequences to himself, Le resolved to do what lay in Ids powei for its preservation. Whatever may be said of his abilities or of his per sonal character, no impartial man can review the history of his administration without giving him credit for a degree of moral courage such as mere statesmen do not often exhibit. lie may have misjudged ; he might, perhaps, nave been more cfiicieM had he been more politic; but for unswerving endurance and rigid adhesion to what he believed to be right, we n. ty March in vain for his parallel. St. Paul took credit to himself that he bad on an occasion fought with beasts at Kphesus. What was ihc cfflc'al life of Mr. Johnson but "me continued struggle with men heated to the bru'al degree with rate and bent upon his destruction? It was due from Mr. Johnson to himself that he should address the people of the United States at the close of his official career. With no party to stand up in his defense ; with no multitude of organs to sing his praises or excuse his errors, he was manifestly entitled to his day and his hearing, and it must be confessed lhat he chose well the time for making his appeal. While the subject would have a more copious exposition, it will be generally felt that his arraignment of the Radical party is as just as it is emphatic and severe. The revolution which ha3 already taken place in public opinion, touching the relative merits of his antagonists and himself, will give it a force which at no former period it could have possessed. It contains solemn truths upon which the people of this country, if they value their free lorn and desire the restoration of the Government to its former symmetry and purity, will lo well to reflect Missouri Republican. m m Election Frauds. The Radical papers have been making a great commotion over the report of the majority of the Congressional committee in reference io election frauds. But they tail to note the fact that the testimony upon which th maj irity of that committee base nearly all tneir statements, comes from hired witnesses, who, for a com pensation, would swear to almost anything. Nor do they notice the fact that propositions for frauds and repeating on election day were made by Republican politician, and by men who, during the campaign, were placed on a committee to prevent fraud. There may have been some abuses in the naturalizUion, growing out of the great rush which existed during the last canvass, it being the first important election which has taken place since the close of the war. For such as did take place we make no defence, and offer no palliation. We condemn them as much and as unqualifiedly as any person can. We trnst that the investigation will insure greater caution hereafter, and prevent i ven a plea for the repetition of the hue and cry of lh Be who would oppose the admittance ot those born on the other side of the Atlantic to the privilege of the elective franchise, while they would confer suffrage upon the ignorant blacks by the wholesale, The ftct that New York went Democratic is a great crime In the eyes of the Radicals. Ahhamed to own that it is the tryannical and despotic Radical legislation and Radical corruption in office which has made the State Democratic, they started this investigation to prove that it is the result of fraudulent naturalization and repeating on election day. Failing to obtain evidence to sustain their theory in any other way thev opened a school in Jersey City to instruct men to swear as they desired, paying for the same a stipn lated price. It is over testimony obtained in this manner that all this noise is now made, while the reliable evidence proves that as far as fraud did exist, the Radical party is ;ist as deep in the mudasthb Democratic is in the mire Nee York Citizen. A Nkw Orleans widow of lifty years has eloped wuh a youth of two and tweuty. A family of two fried daughters and a sou objected to the match. i

MISCELLANEOUS ITEÄS.

The "Big Injin" of America Ingenuity. " Court'' -two after marriage Getting a divorce. A huckster in Reading recently sold wooden imitation eggs. A teactter in Lawrence punishes ! scholars by putting a spoonful of cayenne pepper in their mouths. The English Judges promptly rebuke 1 any journal of eminence which presumes to offer an opinion on an unfinished law- j suit. An officer of an English regiment in Quebec, who insulted a young lady at the skating rink the other night, was immediately shot by the girl's brother (a mere , lad) and fatally wounded. YELi'CirEDF.s, says the Shanghai Nt M Letter, have ceased to be a novtUy in the streets of that city, and ev n the untaught j Chinese ponies have become so used to j them that they are no longer frightened. An old lady who died in London, in . 171)4, bequeathed a considerable sum to one church on condition that her coffin, in the church vault, be dusted on every anniversary of her birth. The conditions have been carefully obeeived. Two LITTLE girlish book peddlers in Philadelphia make a neat living by soliciting gentlemen to purchase a volume ' " as this isty birthday, please " They tried a chaable newspaper man once too often in the same week. Dr. J.". Dyer's family, in Gloucester, Mass., after a recent dinner of partridges, were all taken ill with d:zziness, fainting 1 and other symptoms of narcotic poisoning. It is supposed the birds had eaten some j poUoiit'Ua berries. Dvrino the recent drawing for the military conscription at Marseilles, a young man drew a lucky number, which c.aued bim such joyful emotion that on reaching home he could not embrace his mother, 1 when he feU dead at her feet. 1 Judy represents a young lady, who hat been taken half a mile beyond her destination in an omnibus, as addressing the conductor : " It's really too bad ! 1 told you, when I first got in, where I wished to be set down!" Conductor " Well, Miss, I let you out as soon a3 evt-r I could find it in my 'art to part with you." A little four year old girl, whorecentV visited 15 iston witn her mniner, was greatly disturbed by the difficulty she experienced iu perambulating Washington street. Finally, in despair, she exclaimed, "I do hope before I come to Boston again that a good many of these folks will be dead, for they do knock my new hat round so." TriE French chemist, Tardicu, extracted the coloring matter from some imported EDglish red stocking?, and introduced a quantity thereof beneath the skin of a dog. The animal died within twelve hours. A rabbit similarly treated died in eight hourn, and a frog iu four. M. Tardieu advises the absolute prohibition of the importation of red stockings. An American confidt nee man, pretending to be the youngest son of Secretary Seward, has victimized certain good people of the Austrian capital to the tune of several thousand Horms. The bogus Seward attempted to escape from Vienna the moment his dupes got wind of his true character, but he was pursued, and will be sent to a penitentiary. At a late fire in London, while the engines were discharging their contents against the front of a home, ma inscription on it became nearly obliterated. " By my sowl," exclaimed a witty Irishman " this is a queer time for a joke." 44 And who is joking V" growled one of the firemen. 44 Why, don't you see, honey, how you are playing upon words V" replied Pat. The military idea of honor has a remarkable force in Belgium. Two common soldiers, recently under arrest, in the same cell, played cards to pass away the time. One of them lost the few sous in his possession, then his clothes, and finally staked his life. He lost. Next morning he wras found hanging to a peg in the wall, hia companion sleeping serenely on the pallet There is a very curious manument in Magnolia Cemetery, Charleston, erected by the late Henry Wise, an Englishman, over the grave of his wife. It is a triumphal arch representing the gate of Heaven, ornamented with sea shells and stained glass. A kneeling female figure rests under the arch, with a model ship and a casKet containing a bouquet of shells, a wedding handkerchief, ring and necktie, a small English flag and other curious relics. The whole is covered with a canvas canopy. A cotkmporary recently said : 41 To caricature the medical profession has been a constant tradition among French wits since Moliere and Bollean." It would seem that the practice is not of French origin. There is a passage in the Bible, which is not unlike some more modern hits at the doctors : 44 And Asa, in the thirty and ninth year of his reign, was diseased in his feet, until his disease was exceeding great; yet in his disease he sought not to the Lord, but to the physicians. And Asa slept with his fathers." (2 Chronicles, xvi., 12 ) Boston Bulletin. II. IP. Manuscript. Horace Grkelry's manual int is no toriously bad, and it is said to require a printer of no ordinary skill to set up his copy if he happens to write in a hurry. The recent newspaper anecdote of an article headed 14 William II. Seward," which Mr. Greeley had returned to him set up 44 Richard III.," is fresh in the minds of all ; but an occurrence still more funny is related which happened in the lribunt office, some years since. A compositor had made so many errors in setting 44 the philosopher's" copy, that it irritated him to such a degree that he wrote the typo a letter, dtecharging him from further duty. The compositor being unable to decipher the contents of the note oa receiving it, took it to the foreman, who explained to him that it expressed that he was 44 not a carefui man and Mr. Greeley dispensed with his services." The man laid down his stick, put on his coat 1 and left. The next day he applied for a situation as as-istant-foreman in a large printing office in the same street. The 1 proprietor inquired if he could bring a , recommendation from his last employer. "All I have is this letter from Mr. Greeley," said the young man, boldly pro ducing the document. The worthy job printer scanned it some moments with a perplexed air. 44H m m cartful man services signed, II. Greeley yes, that will do; we will engage you." And he did, and never learned till . two years afterward that the 44 letter from Mr. Ore, ley," was one of discredit instead of commendation, as ho had supposed. Bonton Commercial Bulletin. The sales of the great dry go-ds house, Field, Leiter & Co , for 1868, were $10, 119,900 exceeding that of any other house in Chicago about $3,000,000 a forcible illustration ol what fair dealing based upon a cash system can accom plish. "Which we consider the number of human beings 'bat di with Consumption every year, the import mm of a medicine that will curu all pulmonary affections that tend to this complaint, and eento arrest the destroyer after it has Indicated it presence In the system, must he admitted to be beyond all estimate. Thin wonder Oi! power is claimed to be possessed by Allen's Lung Balsam. Portale by all druggists. To takb s'a ns out of ivory-handled kniyes, mh thm wish a lit ! moistened salt.

faun emir fjouseholb.

Hints on the care of Horses. All horses must not be fed in the same proportions, without due regard to their ages, their constitutions, and their work. Because the impropriety of such a practice is self evident. Yet it is constantly done, and is the basis of disease of every kind. Never use bad hay on account of its cheapness. Because there is not proper nurisbment in it Damaged corn is exceedingly injurious. Because it brings on inflammation of the bowels and skin dimou. Chaff is better for eld horses than hay. Because they can chew and digest it better. Mix chaff with corn and beans, and do not give the latter alone. Because it makes the horse chew his food more, and digest it better. Hay or grass alone will not support a horse under hard work. Because there is not sufficient nutritive body in either. When a horse is worked hard its food should chiefly be oats ; if not worked hard, its food should chiefly be hay. Because oats supply more nourishment and flesh-making material than any other kind of food. Hay not so much. For a saddle or a coach horse, half a peck of sound oats, and eighteen pounds of good hay are sufficient. If the hay is not good, add a quarter of a peck more oats. A horse which works harder may have rather more of each ; one that works little should have less. Rack feeding is wasteful. The better plan is to feed with chopped hay, from a manger. Because the food is not then thrown about, and is more easily chewed and digested. Sprinkle the hay with water that has salt dissolved in it. Because it is pleasing to the animal's taste, and more easily digested. A teaspoonful of salt in a bucket of water is sufficient Oats should bs bruised for an old horse but not for a youni; one. Because the former, through age and defective teeth, can not chew them properly ; the young horse can do so, and they are thus properly mixed with the saliva, and turned into wholesome nutriment. Grass must always be cut for hay before the seed drops. Because the juice that ripens the seed is the most valuable part of the hay. If they are sv eked out by its ripening and dropping, the grass will not turn into fay, but will only wither and grow yellow. A horse should have at least a pail of water, morning and evening; or (still better) four half-pailfuls, at four different times in the day. Because this assuages his thirst without bloating him. He should not be made to work directly after he has had a fall draught of water ; for digestion and exertion can never tro on together. Do not allow your horse to have warm water to drink. Because, if he has to drink cold water, after getting accustomed to warm, it will give him folic. When your horse refuses his food, after drinking, go no farther that day. Ilecause the pcor beast is thoroughly bo 1 ten. Accidents. When a horse falls whilst drawing a vehicle jump down and hold the animal's head, to prevent him dashing it about to his own injury. Loosen the check-rein (if you arc so foolish as to use one) and the parts of the harness which fasten on the vehicle. Back the carriage, so as to get the shafts and traces clear. Steady and support the horse's head, and excite him with hand and voice, to rise. When you have got him up, pat and encourage the poor animal, and see if he is wounded or otherwise injured. Let him stand still a short time to recover himself, and proceed gently and with greater caution than before. American StozkJournd. How to Saw Valuable Timber. All tough limber, when the logs are being sawed into lumber of any kind, whether scantling, boards or planks, will spring badly when a log is sawed in the usual manner by commencing on one side I and working toward the other. In order to avoid this, it 13 only necessary to saw off a slab or plank, alternately, from each side, finishing in the middle of the log. We will suppose, for example, that a log of tough timber is to be sawed into scantling of a uniform size. Let the sawing be done by working from one side of the log toward the other, and the end of the scantling will all be of the desired size, while at the middle some of them will measure one inch broader than at the ends. After the log has been spotted, saw off a slab from one side ; then move the log over and cut a similar slab from the opposite side. Let calculations be made by measuring before the second flab is cut off, so that there will be just as nany cuts, no more and no less, allowing for the kerf of every cut. If the log is to be cut into three-inch scantling, for example, saw a three-inch plank from each side, until there is a piece six and a quarter inches thick left at th.e middle. The kerf ot the j saw will remove about one-fourth of an inch. When a timber-log is sawed in this way, the cuts will be of a uniform thickness from end to end. Now turn the log dowD, and saw the cuts the other way in the same manner, and the scantling will not only be straight, but of a uniform size from one end to the other, if the saw be started correctly Hearth and Home. Galls and Their Origin. " Galls," as all unnatural growths on trees or plants caus- J by insects are termed, are found on almost every description of vegetable production, oa all parts, such as root, stem, twig, leaf, and even tendril, and of every conceivable shape, size and color. Each species of gall, however, is as a rule confined to a distinct species of plani, though some plants are attacked by a very large num ber of different kinds ; on the various kinds of oaks on this continent, for instance, Baron Gsten Sacken enumerates the discovery of about sixty species of galls, and Mr. Walsh has considerably increased the number. The great majority of galls are produced by insects of the name family and order as that mentioned above. Some are made by saw-flies, some by small moths, some by plant-lice, and others by gall gnats, which are twowinged mosquito like insects, and of which the wheat Joint-fly is not an unfamiliar instance. In most cases, the female insect punctures the plant, and deposits in the cavity one or more eggs, together with a drop of poison; this produces a swelling of the infected part, inside of which the egg hatches out, and the larva feeds on the vegetable tissues till it is ready to come out as a perfect fly. In the case of the plant-lice, the mother insect, as well as her children, inhabits the gall, and brings up an enormously numerous family in the circumscribed area of ofttn times less than that of a pea, far outdoing in this way the exploits, celebrated In nursery and rhyme, of the 44 old woman who lived in a shoe." The so called oak-apple is a familiar instance of an ordinary gall. Of a somewhat similar character are the apples of Sodom, or Dead Sea fruit, often mentioned by ancient as well as modern travelers, and described as beautiful to the eye, but as filling the mouth with bitter ashes if tasted. Until recent times they were considered very mysterious objects, but modern entomologists have discovered that they are actually oak galls, "two inches long and an inch and a half in diameter, of a beautiful rich glossy purplish red, exteriorly, and filled with an intensely bitter, porous, and easily pulverized substance, surrounding the infect (Cyniyt intpna Wested) which has given birth to them. The presence of a live Insect inside a gall that had no visible inlet or outlet, was a great puzzle to the philosophen of olden irjus. Some asciilcd

their origin to spontaneous generation, and derived marvelous prognostications of future events from the appearance of the included insect. Others gravely argued that they were produced from the eggs of insects Is id in the earth, but drawn up by the roots of trees along with the sap, with which they were carried to all parts, finally stopping in the leaves or twies, and there hatching out or producing galls ! An ingenious solution certainly but derived entirely from the imagination. No insect, not even the bee, the cochineal, or the Spanish fly has been of so much value to mankind as one of these gall-flies, that, namely, which produces the gall-nut of commerce, one of the chief ingredients in the manufacture of ink. " How infinitely," to quote the words of Kirby and Spence, 44 are we indebted to this little creature, which at once enables us to converse with our absent friends and connection, be their absence from us ever

so great, and supplies the meaasby which, to use the poet's language, we can Give to airy nothing A local habitation and a name.' Enabling the poet, the philosopher, the politician, the moralist and the divine to embody their thoughts for the amusement, instruction, direction and reformation of mankind." These galls are found on the leaves of a species of oak that is very common in Asia Minor. They are about the size of a school-boy's marble, very hard and round, and rather rough externally. Each one is the home and food of a single insect. The most valuable are those that contain the worm, and which are called the blue, green, or black galls. When the worm has completed its transformation and emerged as a tly, they are calVl white galls, and are not nearly o valuable. Tb3 great majority of galls, though subjects of interest, may be considered injurious to vegetation, and when found upon valuable plants, such as the grape, should be cut off and destroyed. Canada Farmer. -" How to Take Ont Ink Stains. It is certainly very much worth while to know how to take ink spots out of colored clothing. The writer, 44 on a summer's day," when it seemed as if one had enough to lo to support life without extra trouble in the torrid heat, once upset a bottle of ink into her lap, over a linen dress, striped with brown and white, and trimmed with many rows of brown braid. Aghast, the first thought was that the dress was ruined : the second was to dip the skirt at once into warm water, rinsing as much ink out as possible, but. what was left made a rueful sighi hand breadths of doleful thunder-dark color, over the light summer dress. Quick, it was sixain plunged into a warm solution of oxalic acid hot, that it might take eilect sooner. Care was taken to dip only the spots into this liquid (there are some people sc stupid they Will need to be told to do this,) and in a minute they faded, of course, taking the color of the stripes with them. The linen was rinsed in warm water again, and wet with a dilution of ammonia, which changed the skirt to its original color, and the dress was as good as t ver. Henceforth I keep high and sublime courage over aM ink mishaps, sure that acid and ammonia and care will make all right again. The process must, be gone through as quickly as possible, when oncebegun, but it will cancel old ink stains on wool, cotton or linen. Erchangc. R Juvenaling Old Horse. If a horse has been reduced by overdriving, hard treatment and a stinted allowance of feed, so that he has become poor, dispirited and hide bound, it will be an easy task, in most instances, to restore him to a good condition by adopting a judicious cour?e of feeding. In the first , place, provide a spacious box stall, in whicn ne can turn r.ro,-.nd without doubling his neck and body together. If he can have the advantage of a yard during the day, all the better. He may be required to labor every day, if he be handled carefully. Gentle driving and the right kind of feeding will be one of the best means employed to develop muscle and put on the flesh. Every day the horse should have at least four quarts of carrots or turnips, or roots of some kind, in addition to three liberal feedings of cut-feed and meal. Meal composed of one part oats, one of rye or wheat, and a third part of Indian corn, will make excellent feed for such a purpose. A quart of oil meal, mingled with the grain, will be au improvement in the feed. Compelling a horse to eat too much straw with the meal will be ver)' detrimental. The hotter way will be to employ only a few quarts of cut-straw with the meal. Then, if the s'omach is not sufficiently distended, let the animal have access to a few pounds of hay. Feed him ordy as much as he will eat up clean in about one hour. Hearth and Home. A Bear Story. We rembcr a very convcal bear that belonged to Mr. Hammond, and amused with his tricks the mirth loving people of Paris, in Oxford county, many years ego. He was captured when a little cub, and was brought up by hand as one of the family. He claimed the warmest place on the hearth stone, and nestled in cold weather with the dogl before the lire. None of the pet animals about the farm were tamer than he ; and none loved better to climb up into his master's lap and receive his cares, or understood the whims of his mistress when begging for a choice morsel. His serious countenance always gave great effect to his antics; and lie seemed to understand when he caused a laugh among the household. As he was of a prying disposition, and f rever peeping into every hole, the family were obliged to look up every thing, even the closets where they kept their clothing. When he took it into hia head toinake up a nest, it was all the ?:ime to him whether the articles he heaped together were woollen or fur, cotton or silk. If a hen cackled when the egg was laid, Mr. Bear understood it as well as any of the family or the feathered tribe ; and it he was not prevented, he would find it and suck it before the cackling fowl had ceased her song. One Sunday the family went to church, and left the bear alone at home. Bruin improved the opportunity, and rummaged all over the house in real eh of fun or something to eat. In fortunately, the good house-wife had left the cellar door unlocked and ajar ; and it was not long bo fore the bear discovered it and crept down the stairs. Once down in the cellar, he espied the molasses barrel ; and if there was anything in the house be was excessively fond of, it was molasses or honey. Bruin pawed over the barrel, licked the tightly-driven buntr. and was about abandoning it in denpair, when he espied the spile. Grasping it with his strong teeth, he easily withdrew it, and out came the thick mofassos in a steady stream, lo the great delight of the bear, who clapped his mouth to the hole and sucked away with grunts of self Htis taction. The molasses still Bowed and still the bear kept his mouth to the orifice, pausing now and then to take a long breath. At length he was full ; his stomach could bold no more; yet hisappetite was not satisfied, He'squatted on his haunches and viewed the mil running stream witn disgust, to think that the supply was so abundant, and that, alas ! he could hold no more. The mo lasses had now run out in large quantity, and had formed a great pool on the floor ; but liruin dove i n it, and rolle I himself a thousand times in the thick fluid, untjl

his shaggy coat was covered from his nose to his tail, with molasses, dirt, and gravel stones ! There he lay in the sweet pool, the picj ture of self-satisfaction, as cats roll and 1 tumble in a field of the catnip herb. All at once Mr. Bear became sick at the stomI ach ! and it was a new sensation to him I something he had never felt before. As I he grew worse, he thought of his master and mistress, and so crept up stairs to ask I for their consolation ; but they had not

returned from church. Then he crawled up another story, and got into the girls' bed, drawing the snowy white sheets over his besmeared form. There he lay groaning and grnnting the sickest bear ever seen in that part of the country. When the girls arrived they were horrified at the scene, and were going to lay the broomstick over Bruin, when he started on the run for the haymow with the sheets sticking to his back ! It was some time before the beat cot well, and still iongcr before his mistress forgave him Our Boys and Girls. USEFUL RECIPES, ETC. Oat Meal Cake.water. Cut in small Wet meal wi'h shapes, with a cooked raisin in the middle Hake in the oven. In estimating hay by measurement, allow 4o0 cubic feet for a tun in the upper half of a mow, and 400 in the lower half. Vanilla Custard. Coil five cupfuls of milk, put half a stick of vanilla, cut in smsll pieces, to soak in it tor one hour; make the custard; pour it in cups, and cook as for coffee custards. To fre vent Lima beans from rotting when planted early, the Gcrmantown Tchgrnph recommends greasing tbe seed before planting. Do this thoroughly and no rot will occur. TnE Ganlencr Monthly says that immense cumbers of insects might be destroyed in a garden or orchard by using bottles of tweet liquid systematically. This is quite common in England, where they do not let every fruit enemy run riot, and then sit down and cry about having no crops. Du Long, of AIlop, 111., says that mulching evergreens after netting out is Indispensable to their growth. He succeeds beat with .Norway Spruce and Arbor Vibe. Lost but three-per cent, of well rooted trees when mulched. When practicable evergreens should be shaded after sitting out, iu all sunny weather. There is sai l to bo carried off from the .soil nine pounds of lime in twenty-five bushels of wheat, nine pounds in fifty bushels of oats, and fifteen pounds in thirty-eight bushels of barley, Tncre are thirty live pounds of lime in two tons of clover, one hundred and forty pounds in twenty-live tons of turnip, and two hundred and seventy pounds in nine tons of po ales. Seme soils contain an abundance of lime for a thousand years, whi'c , other soils require an occasional application of lime as a fertilizer. The President of tue Frauklin (Ma6s Farmers' Club says: 4,Calves may be most I economic illy fed by taking t hem from the cow during the first week. Having leaned to drink new milk readily, sidm miik, warmed to the temperature of new milk, may be substituted gradually until, at three weeks old, the new milk may be withheld entirely. Oil meal and wheat . brn should now be given, commencing with a tabiespoonful once a day. This should be scalded and allowed to stand a ' short time to swell. After a few days the provender may be given at each meal, and the quantity increased at discretion. It is of the utmoot importance that calves, and ' indeed all young stock, be kept in a thrifty ' condition." Poultry Houses. Tue question is frequently asked: "Wha' is the best kind of poultry house?" and the answer given wiil be as different as the individuals who give them are different. One man is satisfied that poultry thrive well enough with bestowing the very smallest amount of attention on the henhouse. Frequently they assign for this purpose any chance corner in a dilapidated building or exposed situation ; such a one as we would natrrally call, from its space and structure, entirely unfit as a lodgingplace for fowls. These poultry fanciers have occasion, sooner or later, to grumble at the slender revenue from their fowls; and if, in footing up debit and credit, they find their eggn have cost one, two, or three cents apiece, how natural to blame the unfortunate hens, who are innocent and unkuowing stifle jera. The old fashioned ham yard f wls, who pick up their living wherever they can get it also hardened and stinted during the severe experience of their chickenhood can, of course, bear more severe usage than those breeds of more careful descent ; but whether fowls are of low degree or high pedegrce, good generous treatment never fails to produce amply pleasing results. Ity paying close attention to the needs of poultry, it will be found that all sorts of poultry are much the better for comfortable roosts in roomy, well-roofed houses. Perhaps nothing has a more unfavorable effect than a leaky roof and a penetrating draught. It is absolutely Decenary that a poultryhouse should be so situated as to command an abundance of fresh air. If the house is of stone or brick, ventilation can be secured by raising one or more tiles or slat es high enough to save the fowls from the direct current of colder air. If the house be of wood, as is the general rule, and the roof be also of wood or of felt, the same object can be gained by making slight crevices between the boards, or by holes bored through the door. The door Ltaelf may be a loose lit ; by this means sufficient precaution is tiiken against the danger ot cold currents Of air rushing across the heads of fowls. In a house made of boards overlapping one another, the roof may be perfectly tight, and a plentiful supply of fresh air may be obtained from the effect of the sun's rays on the siele boarding and doors. Hence it is that most experienced poultry fanciers prefer wooden houses to all others, and certainly in warm weather they merit the preference awarded to them; while in winter, any too open part can be stopped up with straw or hay. Ventilation is a very simple and easy matter where small movable houses are used, and where they are not confined to one fixed place, as ia often the case when many arc congregated close together. Karinen floors are the beat ; but to re move irom tue lowie an temptation to scrape them up, they should be beaten hard, w M watered on the surface, and then smoothed with a trowel, QKvery morning the houses should be thoroughly cleaned, and the floor ppri.ikled with ashes (wood ashea if possible) twice a week. Dry sand also should be used lrcely. The inside ol the houses, especially the roosts, should be washed with lime every fix months, perhaps oftencr, and the outer door kept open all day, 1 1 rcpt in stormy weather. Sec that the houses are nt overcrowded; give such food as your stock seems to j thrive on best, changing it occasionally ; never withholding sound grain as a por tion of the daily fare, and, as a general rule, let no meal be very soft, especially in the case of chickens. If these simple precautions are taken, success will Ihj deserved ami will be as 1 sunMly met with Jfrftii rid

Paper Houses. Passing along the street the other day, the writer's curiosity was excited by seeing a small house on the side-walk. Was it a model of some famous man's domicil, or had it been used in a political procis sion, or figured at a County or State Fair f Or was it put there as a sample of how houses should be built? On examination, the writer found that the roof, sides and floor were covered with compacted paper or pasteboard, saturated with tar and impervious to air and water, and a non-conductor of heat and cold, making it cool in summer and warm in winter, and protecting the house against vermin. It is put on the studs without sheathing boards, or on the sheathing boards before c?apboardinp, or on the inside of the studs before lathing, or on the lath, and papered instead of plastering, like any wall, on the joists under the floors to keep out cold and noise and on roofs, under shingles or slates, or instead of felt for a gravel roof. And it is so chrap that a house 25 feet by 50, and 20 feet high, can be covered with it, and made air and water tight, and as warm as a brick house, for about twentyfive dollars. The paper can be used before saturation for the inside of rooms, instead of plaster, and be papered or whitewashed. This material is being very generally used, the Rock Hiver Paper Company, No. IS LaSalle street, Chicago, manufacturing it in large quantities at their extensive mills at Beloit, Wis, and Marshall, Mich.; and, like all other new and useful things now-a-days, it is patented. Samples and full particulars by circular arc sent free on application to the company. We have had paper boats for fcuII races, and now we are to have paper houses ! We live in a day of worders. Chicago Tribune. TnK inauguration of Gen. Grant is said to be the firt-t inauguration ot Chief Magistrate of the United States which has been witnessed by the father of the principal character of thrt great national drama. Sloan's Complete Farrier and faille Doctor. Containing full and complete directions for Chcos Ing, Breeding, Hearing and General Management of Hnr?c, Cattle, Slieep, Swine and Poultry. With Ietattod descriptions of their different breeds. Together with a full and accurate account ol all the Piseas to which they are siibj'T.t, anl the causes, symptoms and the most approvedretnedles for the same. Fit th Edition. Enlarged, Improved and Splendidly Illus trated. Fttmi the Fraii it- Formt. The obiects ol' this work are clearly set forth on the tit'e page. We have here In a condensed lorm the lanne wets In relation to the diseases ct' nil our domestic animnls. which arc ordlna'ilv spread throneh several volumes; and on this account we think the book will prove a convenient manual for fanners of small means, or tor breeders, who are enlaced In the raising 01 a varieTr 01 stocK. l lie descriptions 01 tne different breeds of domestic animals and of ponltry, Miouph coGCh-ely written, are very clearly stated. The chapters on poultry, the trottine hors-i and t'ieobleetkmaioto hahits of the hcre.. a-e Interesting and Vi.luable. No similar work in the West has ever ban so fully illustrated as this, either in reject to the novelty v variety of the engravings. The whole mechanical execution of the work is excellent, and ttie book will rtt aa ornament to the farmer a library." Prick $-.00. Mailed postpaid on receipt of price, WALKKR & TAYLOR, Publisher. P.O. Drawer 3NviO. Ch caijo. Hi. fK In ordering the book please eay In what paper yon saw this notice. A'ji nt muted in erery toten nnd rilhig. "True Merit will always Have its Reward." It is certain that no truth ha? ever been more satisfactorily demonstrated in our midst than the above, as may be seen daily in the immense demand for tli it invalnable and popular tonic and ptimulous MISHWER S HERB BITTERS. It is the one thin? needtul for person? whose eurronndinirs are unfavorable for good health, because it is a perfect protection against all morbid influences productive of disease. The present is the most fittintr season for reinforcing the orenns of onr bodies, and insuring our health during the "cold term." We are all more or less negligent, but there are many persons who are always behind in this matter, consequently each change in the season comes along before they are prepared for it. and sickness seizs upon them, followed fcy all its train of il's. Befin now to ward off disease by using MISIILER'S HERB BITTERS every day regularly, and all the characteristics of good health will epring up within and continue wltk you. A Malarious Month. March, that gives ns a new President, is also the inaugural month of many harrastlng disorders. Entangled in its fogs are the seeds of coughs, colds, and of that alternation of frigidity and fire, more widely known than admired, called fever and ague. The only way to avoid these 14 little unpleasantnesses," is to render the system strong enough to fight off the atmospheric poison that produces them, and the best way to endow it with this repellent power is to tone it with HOSTETTER S STOMACH BITTERS. If a wayfarer were credibly informed that a ruffian was waiting at the next corner, be would doubtless turn in his tracks and take a safer route to his destination. With just about Ihc same amount of trouble, the attacks of diseases prevalent at this season may be evaded. Nay, the trouble will be less, for drug stores lie in every one's route, and every respectable drngelst In the Union keeps on hand HOSTETTER S BITTERS. The article is a staple of trade, and it wonld be as easy to find a grocery without sngar. as the store of an apothecary withont this popular tonic remedy. In view of the experience of the nation with regard to the article, during the space of twenty years, it seems almost unnecessary to recapitulate. its merits to Americans. But as onr population is increasing at the rate of a couple of millions a year, in the natural way and by immigration, it may be as well to hint to the rising generation and new arrivals, (the old settlers know all about it.) that IIOSTETTKR'S STOMACH BITTERS is the most wholesome and potent vegetable tonic ever manufactured : that it is a specific for debility, dyspepsia, bilioutness, anü miasmatic fevers ; that it prevents, as well es cures, these complaints and their complications; that it is not " bad to take," and Is absolutely harmless. Isinglass, that used to be a drug at $2 50 per pound, is now scarce at $11. nilPyhfi ("ÄTAH B I IS n irpF CURES PIrUUnHU O eases or the Head and Throat, the worst forms of CATARRH ! Drugsrlsts keep it ; or, a box will be sent prepaid by mall for thirty cents, or fomr fm mm ttoUor, by the proprietor, J. Ul'UNo, No. 1,915, P. ().. New York City. OFFICE OF North-VYestern Fertilizing Co., Cor. Lake TnSalle Sts., Chicago, lit. This company having the control of an amount ot HON EM, KI.OOI) nnd !I EAT, are prepared to otter to Agriculturists a few hundred tona of the MAJTURKS mentioned below. The standard of each article Is or UOTA Kaw Hone Huprr I'hoHphntr of Mmr, Price p-r 'iOOO lb., - - S40 Cnh. CHICAGO KI.OOI MANURE, Price per 2000 lbs., - - 3iCasti. CAM'MKT 11 I 1.1. s HON K OUST, Prior per '200 Ihn., - - .0 u-h. MEAT AM) HONK GDAHO, Price per 'iOOO lb., - M .-h. Discount from above tntoen to K : tr Dealer. THOSK WISHING To TKST these Mannrea. r notified that they must order early or It will be ImpoftMihle to supply them promptly. Adilrew all orders to, NORlH-WESfERN FERTILIZING CO., Cor. Lake A U'allc Ms.. ( hlraco. III. Chicago Steam Dye Works. COOK & McLAIN. 10 South Clark St.. mid M Den I 1.(11 M I III. IIUII. The Largest Dye Works IN THE WKST. I.ATHK8 MLK ANT WOOLKN DKKSSKS ANU SHAWM Dyed and U'loaneil lu a superior manner, in beauItil'ul colors and h . GKNTS C)AT9, VESTS AND il'ANTS, Ore.l ar.d Cleaned. I Bend by KXPKHs.s with direction. StfOOOftH A I. It V. Addrcas U. 8- Piawo Co., N. Y.

A PORTI NEIN AN Y MT ATE.-R'eMt rale New l'v-n! Arllelr, loreveiv fernal1 &ampi92. Addrs8 INVKNTOK. P. O. P.o 4 ISA, New York. lYAVlSON TOOK I RAHFBEKRY IJ I'LANTB. For na! bv th niece, domn, hundred or thouaar. I For particular audr?w, JOHN OA OK A HON. Vlneland. N. J- or 1 6 P Thorn Bt.. Chicago CLOVER IN E A NKW ASP AnVKRABLK NWliTvTK FOR BENZINE! Without lu Unpleasant Odor. Greare Spots, Paint, Dirt, At .. Fiom All Akticlx or Clothik, An l I. FANS the Most Pellrate SILK. K1BBONB, GLOVhß, LAIE, c, HfTHOUT INJURY to the t il,'K OU FA URIC Fvery family need It. f" Ko: nie by all PrunKtsU. In mall bottle. ART, ASTKN A CO., :om! Afcms. IM H. Wan t H. t'hlcaiio.

THE GREAT LUNG REMEDY. WH all those afflicted with Cough or Conacmptlon read the following, and learn the ralue of Allen's Luris; Balsam.

WHAT THE DOCTORS SAY: Am' Woolly. M. D of Koaclnsco conntr. Ind.. says : " For three years pait I have used ftfTTT LrNO hai -am extensively in my rrartlce. and I am attsfied then- Is no better medicine for lung diseases In uc." Isaac H. Doran. M. P., of Logan connty. O.. aari: 'Allim'8 LrKO Balsam not only sells ranldlT. but gives perfect satisfaction In every case within my knowledge. Having confidence In It, and fcn wing that It possesses valuable medicinal properties, t fr- 'It nse it In my dally nract'ce sml with unbounded suc cess. As an expectorant. It Is most certain'y far ahead ot any preparation I have ever yet known." Nathaniel Rar rl. M. !.. f Mlddlebnrr. Yt.. say"I have no rtouht It will soon berome s classical remedial agent for the can-of all diseases of ilie Throat, Bronchial Tube, in the Lungs." Dr. Lloyd, of Oh - , surgeon In tbe army during the war. from exposu? . contracted consumption. He says: "I have no hesitancy in saylncthat It was by the use of your Lnng Dhlsam that I am now alive and enjoying health." Dr. Fletcher, of Missouri, says: I rwrnmnil ronr Balsam in pref-rence U any other medicine for Coughs, nnd it giyea satu faction." Allkn's l.rxfl Palam Is the remedy to rnrc all Lüne and Throat dimcuitles. It should be thoroughly tes:ei before mlnjr any other Balsam. It will cure wher all others fall. Direction tcccmpany each bottle, J. N. Harris & Co,, Sole Proprietors C1MC1ITOAT1, OHIO. TW Fvr Ml by a.'.' Medicine Dealer. II0U TO INVEST 1 DOLLAR! To Invest a dollar profitab'y, -rnd ."V. for a Certificate In Packard & Co.'s Holiday Distribution Of linm. Meloi!-oii. Vn Kin. Jewelry, Ac. Valm-d at 7 jO.OOO. Every article dlpocd of on the fl plnn, and nit to ' paid for until yon know wht yon are to receive. Certificates and circulars sent on 'ecetpt oj 2.V-. r 5 iar tl. PACKARD A; CO., ."JS We-t Fourth Bt, C inelnnatt. i. To inx Wofkixo Clacs. I am now prepared to furnish all ctaaam with constant employ merit at thslr homes, the whole ol the time, or lor ti e spare moments. Business new, light and profitable. Fifty Cent to $." per PTHi'rj, Is eau'ly ran rd 1-y persoas ol either sex, and the BOJ and Rirls ram nearly as much a men. Great indiicenn-nt are offend those who will devote their whole time to the business ; and. that every person who s.-es this notice, riny ,rd me their address and test the bnsinss for themst-lves, I make the following nnparslb-li-d otter : To all who are not well satisfied with the business. I will send (1 to pay fur the trouble of wrltlnjr me. Full yiUialara, direc -Hons. 4c., sent free. Sample sent tv mall for lOrrnl-. Address K. C. ALLKN, Augusta. Mc. FPILEPSY CAN BE CURED. Those hsvinc friends afflicted, are earnestly solicited to send for a Circular Letter of ReferenceVand T-s; ,- monlals. which will convive the mst skeptical ot 'h ruiahilitv r.; the ,Urae. Address VAN Bl'KKN LOCK'JOW, M. D., 36 tirtat Jones-st., New York city. CT A RAMCDIUf rnrrd by "ATKS APFTJ 5 I Alflm tnllltJ ANCES. For d-r ri :t , - pamphlet, address SiMrsoir & Co.. Box -tOTtt. N. V EARLY ROSE POTATO. OSE ft. EAKI.Y ROI4C sent hv mail, post-paid, fl. 4 1t.s. FA I'll. Y RUSK, sent by m.ii!. post-paid. fcJOO. H st ( Spring Wheat In the world; the earliest and most productive Horn-, wonderinl viclillnr Oats -white and MacK- eighlne 41i pounds to the hnshel ; s---Sprins Parley, (ir. s Imsk: Fowls; F-?gs; Hois; the great Feel Cutter. Snul r the KXPEl: I MENTAL FARM JOURNAL nable M'i'iaziue Untied in this rinnitri on y fl.SO pT year. Subscribe, if you want to make vonr Farm p:y Address GEO. A. DfclTZ. CbambcrsbuiT, rV rr itooK a;ents wantfo For a Book of Kare Value, SACRED BIOGRAPHY AND HISTORY. ' BY OSMOND TIFF AST. Has no competition. I have ajent taktne BB avr:ir ol 400 orders per month, and shall be glai to employ slew more good men on salary or commission. I P'iblish my own b-xks, and can give larjre commissions. Address CHAULKS PILL, Chleago. 111. i,mki: CLOVER sei; I). The Ksf Clover, for kaw or BaMtStRSj Is the ALSIKK. ,vt article " AistU (7or-" i n aie ixxneofihi ;ncr. Alslke Clover gives 2 to 3 tons of haw, and to 8 bushels eed, per acre ! (irows on ec vaji' ty uf riolls, aNflass n 4 tcimtcrWW ML The demand for seed Is unprereW der ted. 8e ure It now. before the snrply is exhausted. Sow 4 lb?, only per are. Bent singly, or to clubs, by man or express. chanjt JWiqaaM, on receipt of price. U lb 50 ' lib f 1 SO I 4 lbs. f5.u0 20 lb. 19.00 j lb Bltlbl.... iäO i 10 lbs. 10.00 i WH. Jti.O 4 ." n n i ii- Surprise Oni lib. by trail.. . bs. " ..1.00 libs. " ..1.50 1 pe"K.fj.."0 I i bush.... 14 "J v Nasfc. 1 bush.. 4.00 4 hush .w 7..V) I b bush 5O.00 für Same rates to Clubs, sacks free. p ck, cr more, bv express; the purchas:r to pay charz s. Sow mlv bushels (M lb ) per acre These oats yield . to IX bushels per acre, and welph 4" to 4 lbs. per ntaoa baafcei. 'a-h orders n led promptly. N. H. We get our snpp'te of this wond rfnl Osl itrtti from ti. H. VAN CLINDA, the party that rirst brongh It to public notice. New Sivi.iof I I BHSI Hiv Sanip'e hu' sent for ft ; two d ) lorf T- Rct.Vl price at Factory. ö Amkrioav Hfe .lomvAL. Monthly. 21 pag'S, $1 S per year. No. 9, Vol. I. now ready. Samp cNo. licts Hives, Hny Msf hlne. Italian Bees, Honey .Iar. ete . st retail and whob'sale. Sond lor descriptive circulars. Addr.v M. M. BaLKBiixir, ' National Iter-1 1 ixv Co.. Sec. &Mana r. i m. Cha rle. III. WANTED. I.ndy Atront, in every town snd village, to sell what every ladv will purchase at s'ght. Address Miss MTJWRAY.1 Falb n-st, N. V VINEGAR ! article. Warrant Ask yonr C.rocer for Pttrssiwoa Cidf.b Vinsuar. A most sulendtd FIKS.T PRKM'CM at the U.S. Fair, I'l. Sta'e Fair, snd Chteaeo City Fair. Irrtest works of 'lie kind In U.S. Established IM. 339 A 31 1 Stale St.. Chicago. BlOOMINGTON nursery. OsnsCC Srcd Prime, new. f l" per bushel. OnniM' Planta First class. LOtOtS. iOihk)?.''. Koot iir a lit Apple, packed. 10.000 f0 Seed I in Maple. 1.000 Sv! or . Everzrens, c. (Irn pes Sorts 1.000 first clas Ooneords. f:iV Koses-Dahlias, Gret-nhouse Uedding Plants, &c. end 1 0 rrntn for three Spring Catalogues. Oround open. Send your orders to F. K. PIKKKIX. Bloomineton Wnroery. HI. article, warranted nnre a-d to preserve niekles. I o "er great Inducements to pnrchers f Mniion, Ort n ii and !lelo denn. Instruments rented so that the rent will nay for dem. Kery Instrnment warranted as represented. Fend for circulars. p. n. RALPwrx. SS W. Fonrtk St. CINCINNATI, o. -f The Patent MAUIO OOMH sjBjbv contains no poison, will co' Illniliiil -,. Black or Brown. Sent by mail on receipt ol ftl.4.V Address WM. PATTON . Treasurer Majric Comb Company. Sprlnrflej.l, Mass. Farms & Fruit Lands. The Illinois Central Railroad Company have lor sa!.In tracts of 40 acres and upwards, 750,000 acres of ch t. -farming and fruit lands, all lying adjacent to tbetr road For grain-irrowlni, stock-ralslmr. and every ptrpoaeol profitable agriculture, these lands possess e ry mjul site of soil and climate. TUE I IU IT KECiilOX of Southern Illinois ts noted for Its wonderful fertlli'y In the production of apples, pears, peach' and all kinds of fruits. Purine the season of is;, th- Special Fruit Express tratn brought over 600,000 boxes t peaches and 30,000 bushels of strawberries to Chicago alone, and from thence furnish Ing the Und 'f itsofth' seaon to all the northern markets. ,000 acresoi these lrult lands are now offered for sale on favorable terms. Title In For from thr State. All Station Aeenta are provldtM with plats, sho the lands for sale In their vicinity. 1f Information given npon all points at th office ol the Land Pepartmeut, 5 Michigan avenue, Chlcag'. or a descriptive pamphlet, wtt'i maps, showne th exact locality of all the lauds, sent to any person writing for the same. In any language, to JOHN B. CALHOUN, Land Commission:, i - . ".-. I TOW. LA DIEM. For an artii az a remark able sale, address Mrs. WILSON. 13 Falton St.. New York. 17 D " J)r. Burton's Tobacco Antidote. ARRANTVn TO RVMOVF ALL PItSIRB VO TOBACtY enttriv rVMw m f VitmM, na I aio n r t ii. m p netidtr. It pur")r and rnn.hr Kne, Mood, iDVifttratB tri p stoiSv possesses great nourishing an l utei.irTnei n A Iren rclVshluc. and establishes robnst brabh jfhnAm and rf"tr.-r i yoin cu-ed. Pure FimAri;ta ; r box. r"t Aa intTr.iiifr n-a!ie on the injuitues eSr.'i I touacoo, witn luti t.f uxu n vtc. 11 IT F RAM. Airents . ant' A.l.'r l'a. 1. K Abbott, JerseCitv. a r. TEBTIMONIA' Alf F1M M IVtM01A'S TE8TlSOr I " emptily tested B'itin'i .VoUdotr. and raanot ssv too ru'j h in its prais. It haAraUrd me from a Shior.ihir ndii'n. maed hv the ue olVoban-.i. o :'. M f joul ,itr-4tott uni rrl -fir-iV h .. Mtiufa.V n. Cor. CottseiVirove and ai d m , bsrsfo, III. Si CIsrlfStT. ChtrscA H Pr Bnfn-s ntido V " c "Ted m cf bacco S.'nd two hoses Vr iyn.1t who laugbtd at lh idea ksJaia serine in t n.fiy effects en me. W. A. JlYELRoVXVicliiirsn Southern R. R Par ts t" S. TaSASrJt, t.irj , ttjfr, -Please aaa a supply of ths AsritwTlL The ont !-. s.i Hi sssra aaaa,T. V o . T baaa Fso NswHtrsniaft Ptt Prvrx OsaAMi - here bating bu cured I n IMS v tobs ro t-y n1ng Pr Hv.to-Jn AntidoteV-- dem t S supply fot the puaouers of this iastitnticn. 4 MB ra M Waiden f TT State PriariT. A B TBjaoT. Pr PiiVen-. Antidote r W mnm. 1st K.it baiv eVAJaaaTJ A Ctrr.TMA!sfs TvsTtr sv t'v Bopr A cuitd iu" twothp and m- . if It 'th ie KfvA w Qm-raiFM. KsVys Ratios, Ps FSOM TBSPOLKS HlAXitT ABTFSS, I 1Mi'.' i r ,ji .'Jf-hi iu i pnunU of fi'h fAree w- h At-tiJots. and a", dr r for tabaceo removed W. L. Waft, J raMirn snrTwrai I'ow Jörn!. BlTMlOSS.. kfn OIm bds of Bj Mori's Antidot remomrf alt " th. a Art f-orn t , I take r leakure tri rr omni 1 11 oJk readera T V Mitis, Mi't FOR SALE BV ALL DRUGGISTS. Tradt in i - a TTIOV ' II kW ABS OK IIIÜULU lMITal b AstybrJfÄTV.Vjf. Jul ttoothtr I

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