Plymouth Weekly Democrat, Volume 14, Number 42, Plymouth, Marshall County, 24 June 1869 — Page 4
Tüe Radical Party A Fearful Pictnre. In the course of n article on "The Desperate Strai's of the Radical Party, the NMmd hUäUmotr draws the fol lowing vivid picture ofl that organization : "No party, in any free country under heave n, ever coiniuittt d so many crimes against liberty, law, and civilization as the dominant party have committed for the last eight years, even while they presumed to be the very apostles f litertv, and the foremost and mott pputiess champions of human freedom. Enslaving where they claim to emancipate; destroying where they claim to huild un : underminiue where they
claim to be strengt hen iDg, and making broader the foundations of civil liberty ; rebellious where they claim to be patriotic ; fiendish, almost, where they claim to be saints, they have been beyond all that could have been prophesied, beyond all that could have been believed, a curse to this country, and an example of peculiar t,nd warning lawlessness, treachery, hypocrisy, and crime to every other. True to nothing good ; considerate to nothing established, heedful to nothing wise; faithful to nothing promised ; false to the peace of the country ; false to the unity of the country; false to the institutions of the count y ; false to the black riceandto the white race; false to the great body of the people, with all their manifold and mighty interests, aud false the form of government under which we live ; co, rupt through and arough, even by their own confessions, to very rotenness ; debauched beyord all precedent of example; revolutionary from first to l-ist iria.il thpir i vt mrtnt aims oil Arts instead of deserving party salvation, for wtii h they are striving, as is manifest by their reaching out tot new issues which wiil keep them together, they have richly minted common execration and the gib bet. No one can, with candor and the best M of hi3 reason, survey the course of the party from the beginning to the present time, whose memory has run aloL? pari passet with the acts of the party, fail to ar rive at this c mcluaion. They wou'd seem to have started cut with the idea that the American Union was, one grand battleground for them alone ; one grand olain on which they, like banditti, could build up their fortunes; one boundless fertile field, fron which they were creited to gather spoil?, and which should be to them a rendt .vous and a stamping ground. On this they have shouted, reveled, drank blood, and wa laid at will On this, as do sviges, in 'heir roar iog wilds, have they planned, miirfl d in hypocrisy, campaign after campaign against the American people, their lives and liberties, and in9idi rosly put forth edict after edict against their institutions and the integrity of their L nion. On this tyrants of every sort, little aDd great, frvmidable and contemptible, have been created, and tyrannies of every ort, of little and of great measure, perpetrated. From this have been sen' forth the poisonous distilments that have from time to time worked the public mind well-r ibfh to madness, and by the inocu lated d (stem per fitted the people of oaehalf the country f r cutting the throats of the people of the other half. From this, forgetting or despising the high teachings of inspirations whoe D vine authority no Christian creature questions, have they sought to raise the hand of every man against his brother; to create or perpetuate enmity among fellow countrymen ; or robne them with the hot and merciless spirit of the roaming outlaw, rather than with the spirit ot men born and matured in the lap of peace, to whom the atmospLere of peace is their native air. the ir stormy passions, and to whom sobriety of thought and temperatemiDueoness is an inheritance. From this have they planned, and step by steo, and year by er, calling all passions pr judice. revenges, criminations, and bitter memories to their aid. been carrying out the overthrow of the American Republic, in oroer to the establishment of an empire in its place, as seen in trie existence of public journals, founded under their auspices and supported by their means, -nd openly advocating such a change in the form of government. All this and much more have they done, and taught, and intl cted : and in this course they have come at last to see, or, at least, to fear that the veil which they have worn is being penetrated and the mask torn away by the American people, and they feei the necessity for new devices, new tactics, a new clonk behind which they may vn&uspected, pursue, to their accompli yiaua wuicu laey nave iaid ing now as heretofore W cnt, ur. tiustfavoriug credulity of the oouuthe A Fretaxte. Twf rr-ient elf-ction in tie citv of Washington serves the useful purpose f givii 1 forecast of the future. The riotous violation of law, and resistance of the authorities; the attempts of negroes, exhibiticg all the savage nature of the barSariatj they are, to kill persons of their own race fr exercis-ing the citizens' right of f ree thought and free choice ; the election, amidst scenes of disorder in the nation's capital that would disgrace a community of Fji islanders, of unlettered boot biacbs, table-waiters, porters, and chimney sweeps, the most ignorant evtn of their class, to the responsible offices of municipal government such are some of the early fruits of that most false and dangerous of all modern humbugs, "universal manhood suffrage." But to such scenes and such results the whole country is rushing on, impelled by the pan i -an lusts of the most fauatical and unreaj-onirnr ot men. .Loyal men shall rule,'' is the party shibboleth, and as the party contains not loyal white men enough to rule, a plea must be devised to increase its loyal numbers bv admission of the lately emancipated negro s!ave, with all their dense ignorance, their disgusting supemtit ions, their brutal and barbarous in siinctM, their unthrift, laziness and filth. The plea has been some time before the country , the results are just beginning to appear. It is a thankless task to argue against the prevalent fanaticism on this subject. "Strike, but hear," was the maxim of a generation no longer in existence. Hearing has been dispensed with, and striking only remain. One must follow the tide ; must bellow that the ignorar.i African barbarian is as capable, in the governing business, as the educated American or Europeac ; must forswear allegiance to the public welfare, and be governed by loyalty to the party ; must proclaim that tbe men who established republican government in Ameriot were fools, and that only modern Radicals are w ; must denounce as an ass or.e of the m' st able statesmen the world baa produced fof saying that " Government is a practical thine, mad j for the bappmt-g of mankir.d. ar d not to furnisn art a p-c acle of uniformity to gratify the scMnies of visionary politicians." Kdmuud Burke is dead, and Charles Sumner lives. 1 he ff.rrm r was engaged only in the interests ot humanity, but the latter has undertaken Hao t manage the InterOtts of Jebovuh. One finds k a lit le difficult to suppose that the inu rest of Jehovah, or of humanity, either, were well served in the recent Washing on election. Bat to doubt is to be uisiool. One, therefore, must assert that there never was a more dignified, orderly, and august exhibition of loyaty in the act of governing than that election afforded ; that the nation's capital never before witneased t sublime a spectacle of intelligence, sobriety, and wisd im engaged in determining the public destinies; that never befure were chosen men so capable
and worthy of official station as the Ethiopian bootblacks and. chimney-sweeps who were elected to go vern the city of Washington ! Glorir,u8 gpecttcle! Sublime apotheosis of 9 lightened and progressive America! By all means give us more of the same sor. It us Lave things as they " ought to e." So shall nothing more be needful to our prosperity as a nation, or
to our Time. happiness as a people. Chicago FACTS AN1 FIGURES. In some parts of California wine is cheaper than milk. At Vienna a " New York Hotel " is erecting at a cost of $2,000,000. Mr Bclinoame's two balls in Paris cost the Emperor ot China f 20,000. In San Francisco, there have been returned ninety-two incomes in excess of $20,000. Paper petticoats are now sold in London at sixpence each. Shoes are made of the same material. The number of real estate sales in Sin Francisco during May was 1,034, amounting to $4.222,237. Hartpord, Conn., is to have a rink which will seatfi.000 persons, accommodate 800 skaters, and cost $20,000. A boy aired 13 has been sent to prison for a week, in France, for a seditious hurrah in the presence of the Empress. The Second Adventists, it is said, have fixed upon the lOih of July as the day on which the wurid will come to an end. In Williamsburg, L. I , there is a man 127 years o!d. He is a weaver bv trade. though too feeble to work, is still lively. The number of immigrants arrived in New York during the first five months of this year was 50,630, against 34,577 for the same period last year. Dr Judson bap I zed the first Burman convert in 1819. Since then more than 10,000 Burmans, Karens and Shans, have believed and been baptized. The Queen of Madagascar has been received into the Church of England by baptism, and ordered her ministry to do likewise, under penalties. Mr John E. Owens is, probably, the wealthiest actor on the American stage. His property is said to be considerably in excess of half a million dollars. The number of passengers over Prussian railroad in 1868 was 07,848,665. During the ear 93 persons were killed by rai I way , accidents, and 194 were wounded. Hans Wachen his en, the German feuilleton st, says, in a recent article, that a certaiu Mis Arabella sold, at a fair in New York, 3,000 kisses for a dollar each. A note was found in the pocket of a recent suicide in England, saying : 44 Dear friends, don't believe my wite it she says she has not money to pay for my coffin. The cattle in Swi'zerland amount to 900.000 in number, and are valued at $42,000,000. or about f4. per head The cows
552,000 in number, yield $30,000,000 of:- "A1?I(AL ooserver 0t things in wrmilk every year noia declares that no Northern politician a xr irrv t,,ob ,;, l v 1 ' gould conceive of thr. condition of affairs anln Lh rhree lDC u 8 l0Dg ' cn lhe Republican party there. The and 2 U inches in circumference, has re- : Ä un . h1' ;uc
ceutlv been exhumed in Mont.na ft " i f und buried in the sand, twenty-two feet below the surface. ft'Md-w, reiuruetj dv ne affpnt rt on 0 . , ; , , " SJima gCdt Per80nal income w v ' I TnE Russian church at Sitka, Alaskp 1 ru 10du,WA8 receDt,y robbed of a co ' of the Bible, richly studdied with va',;. ble stones, crosses and other ornarents altogether said to be worth $20,000. ' ! .... I"? ".?rfB? Nw York viijiuw ,..u im-.-ii h ioi on Sixth nue, opposite Booth's Theatve at a of between $300,000 and $400.000. avecot On inns hh a large lasoric Haj erected. is to be The authorities of Dresden and Vienna Ta.l anging birds J rougüt to those n for sale. In Saxony and Austria, the jWigof birda,- destroyers o?W places useinsjects is i'mLimiy recognize. Maine, left hi Am n Lw,ston. home wqUp k three little children 9 x he tati" -e attended church, and wh Än if ' .ned found them busily employed cleaning the inside of a $300 gold w ah with soap and water. Fifteen hundred eggs were accidentally broken in front pf the Batavi (N. Y.J Post Ofti:e not lang since, w the president of the village had tq spread a bärnel of coal tar over the street and then set fire to it, to destroy the smell of bad eggs. A woman in Troy, N. Y., has produced a needleworked picture of Washington, containing nearly 700,000 stitches. It was raffled eff and won by Prof. H. M. Cole man, of Vassar College. Three hundred tickets were sold at one dollar each, A New York lady recently ordered a trousseau at Stewart's lor her daughter's ddl, which received a complete outfit in under clothing, silk and lace. One of the articles ordered was an India shawl, miniature size, at $30, and a lace handkerchief was valued at $12. According to the tieures presented at the Brewers' Congress,' nearly 0.000,000 barrels of beer were sold in 1808. The capital used to produce this ouauitity is valued at one hundred and hve million dollars, and the number of persons employed is stated at forty one thousand. White Pine, the silver mining district in Nevada, received its name from the vast quantities of white pine timber cov ering the mountains in that neighborhood A local paper notices boards twenty-two feet in length and twenty-one inches wide, cut trom the white pine trees. Oae lobr yielded seven hundred and sixty six feet of lumber Workmen repairing an old house in Hartford, Conn., lately, found beneath the kitchen floor a young butternut tree that, without sunlight, had grown to the size of a man's wrist, 'unning horizontally twenty feet. In its course it had picked up an old dinner-fork, and clasping it in a branch, hugged it to the main stem so as to ben 1 it to the curve of the tree, and then adopted it as a part of the butternut family by growing its bark and wood all ar und it The number of children in the Sunday Schools of the United States has been est i mated at about four millions, and of teach ers, four hundred thousand. It has been estimated further, that the cost of maintaining the Sunday Schools of tbe coun try averages about sixty cents a scholar per year. This would make an aggregate of two millions four hundred thousand dollars for Sunday School expenses, which U only the one-eighth hundred part of themount paid by the people of the I'nited States for intoxicating liquors. Tub population of Psris proper, without the suburb?, is 1,700.000 inhabitants, of whom 750,000 are men, 700,000 women, and 250,000 children. About 400 000 of them live on their rents, or are govern ment functionaries, employed lawyers, doctors, teachers, etc. There are 100, 000 of them in the schools, hos pitals. prisons, etc. Two hundred thousand are traders, etc. One million are soldiers r : the army of industry manufcturers foremen, and workingmen The Parisian garrison consists of 35 000 soldiers. Thre are 416 811 workimrmen 285,861 men, 105 410 women, and 25 550 children. There are 1 ,800 steam engines in Paris, amounting together to 10,000 hoiu power.
I I I LT 1 ) L- üfn AW la vi 4 w A I - Ol
c.v ncui-iwu persons in rmce is more distinctly manifested. Those ?innKy Xmf ,ax on.sum8 Ptr0Q8 own nothing, in many inceedm? $10,0X). The larest neomp i atftnep v,. - TZTZSL ;Q nf
Prom the Western Railroad Gazette. INVOCATION To tbe Pearl tie Ha I rod. TRANSLATED ABOCT HALF WAT INTO ENGLISH f ROM THE SPRAUUEHE OP E. JONE8.
Grate streak of iron rale, Hale all bale ! II:." . Kale : It seam no more than forty or fifty years Since firt we heerd of ralrod gears I Earn, Stears! And now low and Bee hold, were rnehin like a streak Strait threw by Rle (no change of kears) an the way from the Atlantic to the peacitique! Eke! Squeak ! Gigh ganttc enterprise witch stretcheth from hether to yon. It beets the 0I4 scrach how fast yew did git on. Jobn! Say, when thigh workmen driv that last gold spicke. Grate Ralrod, diddent theigh make a noable 10 stricke Ike And Mike! Whents comest thow grate monnarck of the moantings From Indyes choral strand to affrics sunny fouritings I Onntings, Bountings ! Who gards thy slumbers neeth the azuie stars. And who ceeps vigil when the grizzly bars Kares And tares ! Dost ever think, when a pore parsnger starts out from Chicago to Sanfran Cisco That he duse it at a tremenduse riek O Brisk, O Fisk, O I Thy rales from cost to coat ore mountings stretch And various growseries to ower laps they fetch. Ketch Setch ! From plane to touring hite thy engynes creep And they dew say that thy fairs, like thy graid is allured steep Peep! Sheep ! How prowd ewe must fele when threw thy canons humming The Wase aud meens comity goes a bumming ! Coming ! Thumbing ! But moast i Prize the, o thow grate hiway. Because ewe carry us threw to In di a. Ehr Say ! And ol the Prodducks of Punjaub ana Golcondy aDd Jhallawer and Kerowlee and Pertanbghnr and Jingpoor and jmoer and Delhi and Singpore and Irawadd-t And Joodpoor Yew lay right down in neat packages conveo-ent for 'amily use. right strait, afore Oar own dore Ore! Hale 1,'rate Civ Eliza of the jrrim Comanches Who en t were equating on their narety hanches Butt now are inteiigent enufT to stele mewls off from our Kan ten 03 Anches Avalanches ! Hale, glorious Ralrod ! after awl I've saide. If i shoalfl travel yower way ken go Ded Hed f As, bein a Polt, I hevn't nary Redd. Kd.. Frod, G eerbread. Enuff aed. Virginia Politic. a ira - . . . aas a "U"SC" " pet-Dag Aoventurers, manv of the di th.. Wpo nronlp aV '.I 1 1 1 to u V vviva wvi PWPw are in a maior'.tv anrl htre the o-reed of prorii .1 1 v.. . v , , osaess, worm lucuinciTrs iukj the rjonfid.ence of the colored people, and their seeming devotion to their mterefts, receive nominations for the various fflces of the State, from Congressmen down. In one Congressional District in th .t State there are three candidates for Congress, all Republicans. Each was detrmined to have tbe nomination. The Convention was called, and the friends of one candidate met in one place and tbe friend of another in another place, and here Lbey -could select their choice without being dist1 irbed by any riva's. This is a new plan and only known 10, or practiced by Virginia Republicans. This is the lei itimate fruit of negro equality and rec instruction seed, Let it grow a little 1 oneer, arid there will be no Radical party. New York Express. What Is not Baggage or Luggage. The Court of Queen's Bench L s decided in the case of Hudson v. the Midland Railway Company, that a spring-horse weighing seventy-eight pounds, and fortyfour inches in lecg'h is not personal luggage. The plaintiff maintained that he had a right to carry one hundred and twelve pounds of luggage, and that this toy, which was for use in his family and was not merchandise, he was entitled to carry free of charge. The county court judge at Derby gave judgment for tbe Company, and the court alllrmed the ruling of the judge. Mr. Justice Lush said : Tne regulation was that passengers should carry a certain weigut of personal luggage, not being merchandise or other articles carried for hire or profit, free of charge. This was an article called a child's toy. It was a spriDg horse substituted for an improved rocking horse, and could not come within the meaning of a toy, which was something to be carried in the hand ; nor that of personal luggage in the sense he had mentioned viz., that description of luggrge which passengers usually carry. Ijndon Railway News. A Cant ion to Merchants. The New Orleans Delta tells a good story of a sagacious country gentlemau who came to that city some days ago with a bill on a highly respectable firm of the place. The bill was duly presented for acceptance and a young member of the firm, a fashionable, showily dressed gentleman, who had cultivated a very dainty mustache, wrote with a gold pen Lis in dorsement on the bill, giving his name in full, thus, J. Templeton Tompkins. The countryman looked at the signature, read it slowly, glanced at the fashionable merchant, who was fantastically twirling his whiskers, and handing the bill over to him, remarked : " Here stranger, cagh this document." " What indignantly replied thenar ohant, "discount my own paper, it is a positive insult" " Wall, I can't help it," said the countryman, " if you don't, I must get somebody else to do it." To prevent his paper rrom getting on ' Change, t&e merchant concluded to cash the bill, and paying over the money to the countryman, asked him quietly " Why, my friend, do you offer me this gratuitous insult of requiring me to discount my own paper f " I don't mean any harm, stranger, but I have jest got a, idear into my Sfrull, that when you see a merchant with that bar on his upper lip, and who writes his middle name out in full, and indorses bills with a gold pen, you may put them down as purty certain to bust up in a week." Stort of 4 BuvfMRK There was a -fury dnriug tbe war or one of ttbarman'a hum mer ho met s Southern country gentlemau in tqe conree of one of his excursions, and stopped blm Cozse out m. in ander that hat, ' exclaimed the hammer ' ipe yon ihtsre." The unlucky victim delivered hia hst. " snw pome op opt ot those Loot-. added tbe bomioer. and tor ordprs being obeysd, "crwi vnt .f tbst cost," said be, ''and be qa:ck about t " Having robbed tbe man sacceMifully also of his sbtrt. bs trjwgers and a Any r ring, tbe bammor was tiding off, when his victim stopped him "Look here, mls ,er." aid he, "you Corset somethinnr,'1 and bu pulled oat a quid of tobacco from bis mouth aud uatuiea 11 to him. that," be added. M Toa'd be rained if joa left Vermont opium farmers are cultivating
farm an!. QouscMi.
USEFUL KECiftS, ETC. A small or moderate-sized tree, says an exchange, at tbe transplanting will usually be a large bearing tree sooner than a larger tree set out tit the same tinv-, and which is tuee&sarily checked ingrowth by removal. Furniture Polish. Take two ounces of beeswax, cut Hue : spirits of turpentine, one ounce ; one drachm of powdered resin ; melt at a gentle bett, and add two drachms of Indian red to give it a mahogany color. j-jjtMON-piKs from nm-BARB The pie plant is örst cutüne, stewed, strained, and to a pint of the liquor is added half a cup of bitter, three eggs, loaf sugar till it is very Bweet, and extract of lemon. Have a rich paste in custard tins, and fill with the, mixture. Whip the white of an egg to a stiff froth, and spread over the top, and sift upon this a little powdered sugar. Bake in an oven not too hot. Autumn Peas. It is not a comm m practice to grow peas for eating greens in the autumn months, but we have found that when planted in August at a depth of from four to six incht s they grow weil and during September commence blossoming ; and when frosts have destroyed our beans, tomatoes, etc, our peas are ready for gathering, and prove a very desirable table acquisition for the season. We sow only the early sorts, such as Carter's First Crop, Little Gem, etc., for this late production. Horticulturist. Repolisiiing Furniture. Oiled furniture that L8 been scratched or marred may be restored to its original beauty simply by rubbing boiled linseed oil, U3ed by painters, on the surface, with a wad of woolen rags Varnished furniture, dulled, may be similarly restored by the use of a varnish composed of shellac disolved in alcohol, applied in a similar mannr. Common beeswax rubbed over furniture and heated by the friction of a woolen wad briskly used, is also an excellent furniture polish. Excliaiige. French Pancakes Take six eggs, separate the yolks from the whites ; beat the whites on a dinner plate to a snw ; beat four yolks with two table spoonfuls of sugar, two of fl ur, and a teacupful ol cream ; add a little salt and a very little carbonate of soda ; put in the whites of the eggs and mix gently. Put one ounce of butter in a frying pan ; when hot, pour in the whole pancake. Hold the pan a good distance from the fire for fifteen min utes; hold before the fire to brown on the top. Dish on a napkin. Put any kicd of preserved fruit over it. Serve hot. A Remedy porCribbino Horses. Mr. Sanford Nowell, of Sanford, informs us that his remedy for a horse addicted to the habit of "cribbiug" is to hucklc a strap around the neck of ahorse just back of the ears and jaws. Have the htrap an mch or an inch and a half i le and buckle 1 tight as the animal will bear. This st ap may remain upon the animal's neck in tbe stall, or harness or pasture Witho ut any inconvenience, and will, he writes, " surely stop the animal from cribbing -' Mr. Nowell continues : "This disease, if you will permit me to call it such, is in my opinion, entirely a nervous disease. I never knew alow lived horse to " crib ; " it is always the high-nerved or highspirited animals that are addicted to it." Maine Farmer. Quick and Easy Cure Tor Founder. Many years ago I learned a cure for founder in horses, whish is so simple, and has proved so successful in my hands, that I send it to you, thinking it may be of ser vice to some of your readers. Clean out the bottom of foot thoroughly hold up the leg so as to bring the bottom of the hoof upward, holding it firmly in a horizontal position, and pour in, say a table spoonful of Spirits Turpentine, if the cavity of the hoof will hold that much if not, pour in what it will hold, without danger of running over ; touch the Turpentine with a red hot iron, this will set it on tire; hold the hoof firmly in position until it all burns out Great care must be taken that none runs over on the hair of the hoof, lest the skin be burned. If all the feet are affected burn turpentine in each of them. Relief will speedily follow and the animal be ready for service in a short time. I ouee applied this remedy to a horse which had been foundered twenty-four hours before I saw him, and he was promptly relieved. In another case, where the animal could hardly be induced to move, his suffering was so great, he was treated in the same manner, as soon as his trouble was discovered, and in less than an hour aftejw.rd8 he was hitched to a buggy and driven some twenty-five miles the same day all lameness disappearing after be hud traveled a lew miles. Soutfarv. Cultivator. m - sPinching Cucumor Vines. I had a narrow border, not more than two and a half feet wide, on the edge of a paved yard, enclosed by a high fence. I planted three cucumber hills in the border, and laid some brush (such as is used for pea vines.) between them and the fence. As soon as they crept up to the top of the brush, I pinched off the ends of the vine which thickened rapidly around the roots, and in every direction, throwing out the most vigorous foliage and profusion of flowers. I did not allow the cucumbers to grow, but watched them, and such as I wished to reserve for the table I picked ks soon as they became of proper size ; all the rest were gathered every day for pickles ; every day pinching off the bud at the end of each shoot. In this way the hill continued fresh and productive until they were touched by frost. Some judgment can be formed of the value of this prae tice when I add that more than a lirrt-l of pickles were idade from three hills, besides allowing a supply for the table. Whenever the leaf began to look rusty or yellowish, it was removed, and every cucumber and the leaf were cut off with large scissors, so as not to disturb or wound the vine There is an advap.tage in having them run up on brush instead of trailing over the ground ; because they are much injured by being trodden on, and by being kept low on the bushes they can be easily and thoroughly examined every day, which is essential, because if cucumbers fre overlooked, and grow very large, it steps the yield of that vine. Cor. Horticulturit Better Tillage. Farmers in general expect a yield of crops more in proportion to the surface of land occupied than the depth of the soil whwreon they prow. Yet it is ol.yious that if one should scatter seed over an acre of rock it would perish 1 if over the rock there was a layer of sod two or three inches in depth, the seed might reproduce itself; add as much more soil and an ordinary yield might renull; and attain if this depth should )c doubled, and made available to the plant, who doubts that proporr tionately large profits would be derived I Suppose this layer of soil exutained plant f od plentifully, but was of a consistent, impervious nature, ao that tbe tender roots oAuld not penetrate it, and make use of its fertility, it would then require loosening, pulveriiog. aerating, and in short, thorough cultivation, and according to tbe depth and thoroughness of that cultivation would be the amount of plant food made available and consequeatly the yield of tb crop. This if practically the condition of most
of our land ; it contains plant food enough to double the average yield of crops, if it were only made available to them, but the unworked sub soil is like rock, confining the roots of plants to the comparatively thin arable surface soil. Instead of coveting your neighbor's lands and putting forth g. eat efforts to secure more surface, is it not more profitable to cultivate deeper that which you alreadv possess, and double its productiveness f With most of our farm crops the amount of roots determines the quantity of products, and roots will develop abundantly wherever there is room and food for them, but tbey cannot push their way into stony lumps, nor live in hardpan layers where there is no air. On many farms underdrawing lies at the foundation of improved culture. The stagnant water must pass off or air will not enter the soil, nor the latter remain loose any length of time after leine siirred. Then comes a fair depth of surface plowing, followed by subsoiling to any practicable depth. This wav of preparing stubble ground for snring" grain is excellent. Before sowing cultivate deep across the furrows with a long toothed cultivator. A seed bed of finely pulveri.. d earth, ten or twelve inches daep, can thus be obtained. We have seen oat-stubble prepared for wheat by plowing to the depth of twelve inches, harrowing, rolling, then stirring the soil nearly to the bottom of the furrow by a long-toothed wheel cultivator, to which four horses were at; ached, four abreast, and all was finely pulverized. Such a chance for wheat on strong loam or clay land is better than most summerallows. Farmers, look to your possessions down in the ground; there are richer mines than those in the far mountains, and the patient worker thereof wins health, peace and competence. Iowa Homestead. The increase of Insects. It is a common remark that insects destructive to fruit and irjurious to fruit trees, have been genera dy on the rapid increase in most parts of the country, rhe cultivation and improvement of the land, and more abundant vegetable growth, and other facilities for tbe multiplication of these depredators, have favored this increase. Remedies are talked of and discussed, but no general effort of an energetic character is madje to crush them. At the present time, aad for years past, sentimental writers have proposed to throw all the work on the birds. But although some of the birds have increased almost as rapidly as the inseets, the latter still multiply. They have proved entirely inadequate for the purpose, although they may have done some good. Instead of looking idly on, and hoping -hat birds
may save the irujt, cultivators must take noia vigorously wjth bolh haD(lg Q(lC auuve man is worth a thousand birds. As an example, we mav mention a ein!. periment on the orchard caterpillar. This .Uoct appears m iavge numbers only oc 1.1. xv w years since, it was iound to be rar,d y increasing, and threatened on the Approach of the growing season to strip, fine young orchard of seveial hund red pear trees. The birds had proved entirely insufficient to check them. a.u ac 1Ve man was set to work first to cut c 4f and destroy the rings of eggs in winVr, and afterwards to swab or ciush the VOUnc lrv in tht-ir iipcIo Thro ays were thus occupied altogether, and wie. nuinoer 01 insects destroyed wa3 est mated at half a million. Clean work was made of them. All the birds in the country would not have done it, judging from the slight impression they made on the caterpillars. In another instance a nurserv of several thousand npr tre h( . ame badly Infested with aphides, but the 00 us um notning. a man with a few pails of strong soap suds cleared them in two days. Naturalists and fruit men have been searching for wars to find some birds that will tike hohl of the, mirciili.vj Their search has not been successful, unless we except turkeys, and those have to be fed with oung larv:e in the fal'en fruit, and not wuh the puncturing beetles. So long as we i.H)K on with our hands in our pockets, hoping that some other animal win ue in work we should perform ourselves, w uiiy expect failure. For a lew years past, during our own experience in employing men, we have the trees bending with heavy crops of plumbs. Before we e'mployed them, we had scarcely a do7jn good ones in a season, from fix dozn trees. -Country Gent. Camphor to keep Bees from Robbing. On account of the great number of stocks I kept in one cellar I was compelled, on wintering them out, to remove only a portion of them in one day, to prevent the bees from mixing up too much. Those taken first were consequently prepared to go to work when those last removed were brought out, and they attempted to rob the latter. When this was discovered, they had already got a good start on some of the stocks, and I was puz zled how to arrest the robbery. At this lime 1 had purchased a small parcel of camphor for some orther purpose, and it strucE me mat 1 might stir up the slug g'flh. and inactive stocks which suffered themselves to be robbed without resütance, by inserting a small piece of camphor in the entrance of their hives. I immediately did so, and was not a little pleased to find that the effect was to frighteo the robbers, and to arcuse tbe inmates of the hive to vigorous resistance they drove off every strange bee. A week later, when I winteied out the bees of my northern apiary all of which ware taken out in one day one weak colony was violently attacked by robbers I pushed a piece off camphor through the entrance, and had the pleasure of si eine the same result Attempts at robbery had entirely ceased next day, although U e colony proved to be queenle83, on examination about three weeks later. lire Journal. An Asiiestos Hat. An individual Riven to jontnt. (ucldenlyi opied In a crowded hotel reading room, ind standing near hini. a person whom he stranth'way demicd upon victimizing. Ky Qeofge," exclaim d n.-, that la a cpiendid hat y.n havt. .111 Where did mini thai nnt Why, you don t know lUe valver of that there article 1 hat's an sisWfll hat ; U kW'! hum!" "Woa'l Iturnr What t'o y.m nie..n "" demanded the kMOCwal listener. "No, Sir it won't. I'll be blowed if It will. You can put that there hat inter the all-fiu-dest hottest Are in 11 creashuu, ami it won't burn. Try ii. Ill het drinks all round lhat it won't." Try it; try it," exclaimed several roicos. At this dM SSt found its way into the fire, where, in about Ave minutes, it was red m ed to hImm. Thf owneraud wean r of the now consumed hat ot had com twelve dollars) began to rage and rave. " Now don't go Inter tantrum ah iur a darned hat," exclaimed the individual min the East, "Iw.imiUken, that's how U was and I want ter do the tai r thl ng. Htn ' your tutnbl, r of dHnft " Lami Wicks A bidy contributes to the Agriculturist the following recipe for making lamp wicks: "Take a strip of Canton flannel three times the width of a wick, double it, so it will be three thick nesses, the smooth side out, and sew tl e raw edge and the doubled edge together over and over. Do not get it too large, and it will burn as well as the best talewick. Every one generally has scraps of "an ton flannel in the house, so that alia wick will cost will be about five minutes' work" An Englishman wishes to know if the children of Hnm were 1 1 a m. , , ni f Thk Atlantic Monthly. The In. r ry feast furnished by the MlaiOXc tor Julv Is Biimmcil up in the followini? table of contents : The I mi miner Qfcoat, hy .1 W. DuPorest; Birch browsings, by .lohn Burroughs: A 8utne. bv Mrs. ft. M I Piatt ! Th sn. in the n i t Tl Si) hst 14
Part V. hy the author of " Victor and .laoine-
line" ; Thomis Crawford a Eulogy, by (;. S. blllard; tiabrielle de Bert?erac I hv Hei . rv .turne Jr.; Three Years as a Negro Minstrel, by Ralph Keeler; The Restored Picture, by J. T.Trowbridge; Marrying a Pickuocket. bv Georre B Woods ; The Greek Goddesses, by T. W. Uigglneon; Our Inebriates, Harbored and Helped; t rench and English Art-Writer, hy Eugene B nson ; Reviews and Literary Notices. The Atlantic is published hv Fields. Osgood Co.. tai Tr mont street, Boston. Mass. f4.0u per year; two copies. f7.00; five, f 18.00; ten, fSO.00; twentyone, fbtl.UU; single numbers, 35 cento. GoDEY's Lady's Rook The illustra tions given in the Ju'y number are : The Wreck a steel plate; Colored Fashion-plate-sir figures; The Siirnal a tinted nirtnr. The Rt. change a handsome wood-cut; A large extension sheet or fashions, containing thirty-nine engravings : Four designs of the latest style of bodices, etc. ; There aro also twenty-two designs of useful articles in the Work Department; A cotiage is aiso given, with tne plans. Mirion Hariand, Ino Churchill. Pique, and Helen Maxwell have first-class stories in this number. The usual amount of valuable instruction Is given in the w ork Department, and many valuable receipts will also be found in their proper place. Published by L. A. Godet. Philadelphia. One copy ovv vow, ?3; two conies. 5: three. 7.5n- four f 10; five, and one extra, ftl4; eight, and one ex tra, fai ; eleven, and on extra, $27.50. Our Young Folks for July. Chapter XIV. of the Story of a Bad Boy relates to the Cruire of the Dolphin and the tragic end of one of the hero's youthful companions, who wa carried out and lost at sea. Tbe other contents are: Lawrence in a Coal-Mine; In the Happy Valley- The Unsociable Colt; Navigation and Discovery before Columbus continued ; How to Write; Twelfth Packet of the William Henry Letters; In the Cottage; Water Lilies: Lady Moon-a Child s Song, with Musie; Round the Evenln Lunp; Our Letter Box. Amply Hint, trated. The publishers announce that an agreeable surprise awaits the reader in the next (August) instalment of the Story ot a Bad Boy. Fields, Osoood Co., Boston, Mass. fa.OU per annnm; three copies, $5.00; five, f8.UU; ten, H&00; twenty, 3 QUO wuh extra copy. Dr. Scott, the proprietor and editor of the Lebanon Sfar. is a proniiuent physician. Perry Davis' Pin Killer, the old and well known remedy, which has acquired a world wide renown far the cure of suaden colds, coughs, etc., weak stomach, general debility, nursing sore mouth, cankered mouth or throat, liver complaint, dyspepsia or indigestion, cramp and pain in the stomach, bowel complaint, pointers' colic A-iatlc cholera, diarrhea aud dysentery, has lost none of its good name by repeated trials . but continues to occupy a prominent position in cv ry family medicine cheel. Lebanon St :r, Dtc. Uflt, 1859. m The Ureat Family Remedy. To prevent or conquer disease is a grand and nohle achievement, aud so surely as the built, snd bayonet will destroy, so surely will the Great Family Medicine snd Household Remedy, IflSiiLER S HERB BITTERS, protect and preserve hu man life. Now. the present is the most important period of the year to prepare the human system by u-insr this celebrated Bitters to- the severe drain Upon its strength which the near summer months will bring, and under which an unbraced, dep'eted and debilitated organism will speedily give way. It is to prevent this evil result that -his Bitters is recommended for both seXOa and all ages It is the most excellent Spring and Summer T. nie ever offered, and wherever ii has imen tntrodneed it is tonnd indispensable to young and old. It purifies the blood and secretions: accelerates the digestive functions; reguIn'es the liver; recruits all the vital forces; tones the entire system and enabies the weak, and nervous to sustain any fluctuations of the temperature or changes in climate. Home On M luns ror the M kly and Debilitated. A If worth whilf to endure penal torture after every meal, when indigestion can be immediately relieved and permanently cured by so agreeable a remedy a- HOSTE ITER'S STOMACH BITTE KS ! Dotx it pay to be compelled by debility and languor to abandon active business, when brain, nerve aud muscle can be braced up, and the hle system restored to a healthy condition, by a course of HOSTETTER'S BlTTERS ! Why approach the dinner-table daily with a po-itive disL'ti-t for all that is savory and delicious, when a vigorous appetite for even the pUli.est fare is created by the use of HOS 1 ETTER's BIT TERS. Is It wise to live m this bright world as if It were a dungeon, gloomy, discontented and miserable, when the worst case of hypochondria can be cured In a week hv such a pleas tnt and wholesome exhilarant as HOS TETTER S BITTER ? Can it be possible that any person of billo.i? habit will run the rifk of remittent fever or bilious colic, when we can tone and regulate She T"at secretive organ witli HOSTE TTER i BITTERS f Is it not a species of moral Insanity for any merchant, farmer, mechanic, or trave.er. to be without the he.-t known antidote to the effects of poisoivd air and impure water, HOSTETTER s BiTTERS V Considering the harassing and depressing nature of the functional derangements to which woman Is subject, is it not astonishing that any invalid ot the feebler ex should hesitate to seek ihe cettain relief afforded in such cas m, hv the genial operation of HOSTETTER'S BITTERS? These are questions of deeper intorest than any of the political dogmas or the day, and those whom tley conce n are invited to give them something more than a passim: thought. Btmsna and Others contemplating buildine, can save time and money by consultu g the practfeal Booka puhlished by A. J. Bickuell A Co., Springfield, III. Descriptive catalogue eut free to aby address. Agents are wanted by the American Life Ins. Co. of Philadelphia. See advertisement elsewher. See a.lvcrtiTnent of J. L Case A Co.. Raclr., wu. h ;oou F.iniLv mmm. ALLEN'S CKLKBBAT&O LI X; BALAAM Cur. s Col s. ..ne-s a'Ki Cotta;ni.t .ii ALLEN'S CKLEBRÄTKO LVsu BALSAM Cures Bro clntia. Astrup a d Croup. ALI.Kn'S CEL KB RATKU LONG BALSAM 1 in parts a'rfntrth o tne sv"em. ALLmCS CEL&BBATlD U NO KALSAM-pl.-aat.t i , f ke ALLEN' hUtBRATKD LUSQ BALSAM ttUays tfi . s s it sia lion or Mm money jrtl' he refunde '. M is reeoininende l hy anMalMM Pfcy-tc MM and unite ti is i leasa tv taxe and harmless in tu -attire, tt Is a powerful reiuedy tor curiLt all utse.ise ol the LunijB. N'J U BY MX DKUGOISTM. SUMMER TONIC! Br. s. o. Itirliardson's SHERRY WINE BITTERS f Ihr t 1 1 armed IM I n-layd KfMfftj HABITUAL CONSTIPATION. J ii ii ii die-, fmvgr mid A iims I .Vim i . I I. -bi'ilv. it ii I nil DiMCRHca arlaing tioui a 1 1 1 1 1 .1 i .I moiuiicIi, l.iver or lllllVflH, hu b II An luv ..I the iBtlMHM h. In.l gstfoa. Heartham, Low J. N. Harris & Co., Sole Proprietors, 4 T4 lVl, OHIO. ir For Sal by all Medicine Dealer. I'KK AT NATIONAL KIKK WOKk lOMf.AM, IMilM DFFOT. I.Yi N BK iTim No. 33 ' ur'land H., New York . fJasqaaJted In Brilliancy, Quail. y and a nortment. ;i(MMSAI.AKY. AddreasU.S Piano o.. N Y
oi aiipniiiA i o.inciir. Ml tll "(1 mi-Cfllllg riltl, Hfsu t of Food S .r Kr i. tlons StU Ine o intterInffot itie Vr of the Stomarh. DiiniieH of Vision, l..wnes of i h- 8ktn hii i Kve , Pain In the bid'. Buck Chest or LI tuba, and in all cases where a Tonic in ueeeMary.
Have Pity rtn th Stohiafli- Pnrhesr tonatiaeate it with lonthsosne pills. Don't dren h It wl'h sick.-niia.' potion-. All the purpsH'e, corrertiw and tili bilious elemenle uecessary for Uta cure of coiiftipai ion, dye papule, liver complaint aud nervoua deMiity, re combined in .hat 'vhilarating hikI lelirioQ tlrauirht Tarravt KrrRHVRareNT Ski.txkr Aprriknt. It Is antl isbrlle. iimitying, invigorating, alterative. In fact It i- iii'i .in, ii sanitary blessings mingled In one cooling, foam ing febrifnee OLD 3 ALL DKUOU18T8.
DR. RANSOM'S HIVE SYRUP ÄND TOLA ! Dr. Rvtom' Rive Syrup and Tola, In iddltlon to Injrrd'enU for ordinary Hiv Svrun, oontHtu Balsam of Tola. D-coctlon ol knrk Cabbage Koo', Lobelia and Hops; a combination that most commend it to every on- as a superior rem- v for Ooa;. Wao pinCongrh, Asthma. Bronchitis, Cönhi and Colds. Indeed, for all an -cttona ot the throat and Lungs where a ccuR-h medicine is neceo-arv. This Syrup tf carsfullj prepared under theperronal direction of a regular physician of over taenty years' practice, whose ilgnaf ore is attached to the directions on the bottle. Is very pleasant taste makes :t an agreeable rued'.c ne for children j every p. rson should keep a bottle of Ransom's HIVE SVRl'P A"ili TOLU in the house, not only as a unlveraai Cough Medicine, but a sura and ready remedy for udden attacks of Croop amonx the children. RemembT tbat Consumption Is caused In most cases, by neglecting a sl.cbt cough.
Greatest Discovery of the Age f DR. A TRAKK'S H tgMtic Ointment f This remarkable and most Interesting remedy is composed of the concentrated Juices of the moat powerful and the most soothing Planta and HooU in nature, chemically com tned and Inflated In well sealed glass bottle, a: d ct.arged by a powerful Battery : Thus poaaess.ng in addition to Its i-npe1or medical virtues, strong Mxexmo asd Electkic properties, protoundly penetrating, and eminently quieting and soothing Ir relieves Pain and TnOammatlon at once (when frequently ipplted.i relaxing t-e strained ni usees and nerves givlnc new 11 e aud vitality by its lire Hiving qualities, to Paralyzeopar's and Chronic or i ng s'andtng Complaints and Weaknesses allaying Nervous pain. (Neuralgia.) Irritation, and Removing Obstructions like h charm Indeed all who have used It, speak of it as truly a wonderful medicine, and esteem It by far superior to any and ali ott.er external remedies in use. If applied in season it is an untailla remedy lor the Crom, Uiptberia S .re I hroa. Innatnmat'on of the Lungs. Bowe s, Liver. Kidneys and other Organs, Rheumatism. Spinal Irritation. Ague n the Breast, and at all times cures Nervous Headache, Neuralgia, Sore Kyea. Ear Ache, Tooth Ache. Ague In the Face. Plmoles st.d Eruptions of all kinds. POr; Bruised aad Sprained Limbs. Burns, Frozen pa te, hllblains, indo'ent and long starling Sores, Wounds, &c. & . It will also restore the Hair to the Bald Head, and prevents the Hair from tailing. Prof. H. Anderson's DERM ADOB ! Ia a Liquid Liniment for External Application, FOR MMM OR BEAST, A Valuable Combination Discovered by a Celebrated Chemist. It free application to Inflamed sores, and surfaces, on both Man and Beast, in a very short time relieves the pain ana soreneas. end the hot, angry and red surface becomes cool. raoUt a..d natural, and by c utlnued application and attention, the part Is soon restored to health. IMPORTANT TO HORSEMEN Prof. Anderson's Iermador Is the best Liniment fa use lor horses. This fact Is shown by numerous letters from sll parts of tbe country. A late one reads as follows: "We hav been experimenting with your Derm tdcy on horseflesh, and n .d It a very superior remedy mu h s'tp. rlor to the tamo us "Gargling OH," or nf other liniment we ever ued Id our Livery 8t'jie PI use end us two dozen la ee battles hyerrMB' C. O. D. Vontv respectfully. " WATSON OOOPalt. Waverl Ina BR. J. R. MJXLTJRS Universal Magne tic Balm CureM if by Msjnetlc Influence, Neurs'gls sad aji taln. and Is theretore very prorerly termed '"slagaetlc Ba m." It in purely a vegetable preparation, ft has no eoual as a remedy for CHOLKRV Cn)LRK. MO .BL8, 1)1 AÜRHCEA. DT8r,N i' ERY, COLIC an 1 all BOWEL COMPLAINTS. Its ilmeiv use will cure Coins Croup, Dlptaerla, Qclnsy. and all Throat affections. When properly used, Fevei and Ague, and otaer comp.alnts incident to our western and southern climates, are easily broken up. FEVER AM) AGUE. Cleanse th system ; then, as the time for a em; draws on, cover warmly lu bed and tage a cu Afn. 0 hot w ter, with one or two taspxnfuls of t,e Ma netlc B Um iw et- ned with brown sugar, al o bth the back snd s'omach with the Balm ana remat quiet- Repeat, if necessary. !l iW All the above Medicines are Hold br Uritggials kverytshere. D. RANSOM & (0., Prep BXJ FFALO, IV. y. Every City Dd Town, mm ST TR I vtme&MERICAN Life Insurance Go. IN PHILADELPHIA. Apply to neare t Genera Agent A. It. ACM NewooMH. St. Louis, Mo. W. H. 8. Ewill, Cincinnati, OOfo. K ski kv lit os. Toiio,Ohlo. J. U. HaMmks. Oes Motne, Iowa. Fowlir a Join, htrago. 111. A ii V KA Tl' Any good and ent-rpriflngp-rson -. make es im in UM next three month- by fXow.n'fc THINK OF THIS Ye who stand with your bvr.d crammed in your pork--U muttering what Shall do to make money We want one good mi, ar; m .n in every loan - ooe wbo can with Js. ' l Watf-to act confidentially 0 OLD HAIDS ?,m,r,8tjrVnted Boslnms no. to be known to yojr i-.-aret friend. Persons in makl!,h- application J'" consider OaemseO es u der ost n not tool vu ge'be OU' ineae. Now k your time or never to mae money " n. lo-e Ä cen Ith pla ily written adoress for oui confidential circular, 'ivleg en I 1' SC Hus Ad r.-v. IK l.A Y fc O.. U!i 1 B'. a .a ay . N TOlINTIEN! Penaten! All War Claim r Sr Back pa. p-ty for lost horses, stlona prtse navy pay everything; failitrrs hy nthrn nomitUr. If theClaim Is jnHr writ - me. with stamp. I si? all mwup. Also do a Oenerni Law and Land B islnees, a J RV1S A SAPPORO'S, S o S. I 1 LasUlle street. Chicago C. O. D. C. O. . flLTIlM M ATCHES. LATEST 1XPKOVESKNT FI LLER dr CO.. (tat- M. C. Chapman Co.) Kcmov. d t. la '5 .lohn St., N. Y. We will send, on order, sieg 'e WALTH AM WATCH Ks, in a. ltd Oold and Silver eaves oi.lv, hy express tc any part of the I'nited States, la e paid for oo deJIv ry, after examination, ai wholesale prices. Tlx buyer to pay all express cargea. Tae Oom. any's guarantee nt with each wtcr PT Send ior Illustrated Circulars giving lull matton. I 1 II Ii II !' ONTll!TWU 1 v',Vrtr Sei Slate and C -univ Rigui to aaanuacturethe (VI brat-d Ant matte Sash raeaSHT, ins..ol Ir "A Noelv." Pr j-i Wetgnt. Cheap, durable, simple. eallj appli-d tad eaoi.ot be eeen when at'ache.i to a wtuSaw. F furth r par tlcuia s eddre s, J.HN HMB 1 tt a CO.. Patentee and Owners, Frederick City, Maryland. (J I I'l.Ot tlKNT Cj dress 6- M. Sfr-NCSR a CO.. For pa-tirulara, adBrattle bora. Vt. yVAIsTED-AGENTS--C II I NR. Prire T!i. !.-t. TO SEI I. Till' AMI 1.1 ( KMTTINO M - -t.. !.. '( -Itii.l U Knlrto,,Msrhineeteriiorntnl. W ill knit .oiw tiu ln- . r inianlr. Uhemlindicrmi.t.t Iren All Hie K VITTIN t MACI1INK -. It. .-t .n. M.. ..r st l ui. Mo. VINEGAR! Ssk yonr Onx-er for Psrssuse's Ctnes VmiiiAi. A most solendi.i article. Warranted pure and to preserve pickles. KIRsT PRKM't'M at the U.S. Fair. Ill State Far. md Chicago City Fair. Largest works of the kind n. n.H. stabllshad 1HAR. SSfld 341 State St.. Cbtcia?.. ATTENTION FARMERS!" What Threahlng Machine and Horse Poer took th First Prizes at .he Slate Fairs tor Wb8 In tbe louv great grain rr-wln; States, ll-I.IMM WISCONSIN, IOV AND !W I W N RM4STA ? That of .1. I. Case A Co.. Ka.'ini, Wie?istM with their celebrated Woodhory Mounted Horse Power. Thev ar- the m.st extens've manufacturer of I'bresh Lsg Machlnm In the 1'uite.i suus .-d f,w ('ocaiar escrlblne the Thr-fhr snd the Mounted Power, and also H.e Climax and Ptife I'owers made hy tbem. 10.00 I'KH lA .I Ml .Mini Agents to sell the Moms Ssn-ri i Sbwinw Maoa - It makes the look stitok, a t k k ok both sior . 'LZL the under fe.-d. an ; ia equal in eve respect to a . JJZT mr Machine ev r Invented Prlc.. ä n " TL years. Send for clrcul r Ad.lreas Johns ro . Bnaton. Maa llttabnrgh. Pa., or , tT.nla M SWEET twssT Ul i tVK g Momin. SW equal d Mf. 1or ooee to the sulphate Center) Qulnute, with tse I ,Hrtant advantage of lieinc aweet Insteao oi bitter. Varjn.setra Pt airtSD 'A Its sickening and poisonous properties. It Is the aiost per feci AMMiYNU and SIKITH QUININE Svaon ta) ISU . PI ATI yet Slaeov . I tWT Rolf ha l ta.., ........ actibed by the best Physicians. Made bv Frederick Stearns t sessut. oettolt. Mlrb. i pt tfANTEO -AGENTS..w .in .i.i.. .. .... fen. t... k. ,.,iit. .., ,r... I. r I " ' i"'-ltIN-i H.rnunu. -,. Ni.-i nil h l' I MrrailT.NI !. 'i 'f ear- 11. Mil . . . ... - . v "f und, T I tlWl t.e ,;,,h e.n w .. .., .Ti . X .ill. ... 1 I.' 1 1 1 tl tf it. Vir.,' . , , ... , , JL. ...litiMtiM. .e.-...' Vents n.sa f . .o.. Kr at apart nth ... I. ... I. A I .V 11 ' ' "'.. I 'h'' '.M t-i. i ... .. in.. . I ' .... . ' ' 1. t . i !, 1. ta . . ihu I'll I Ps . l ...i. 1 'iS -! not be ii,h, ,,,. i, ,,tl. parti. , .a...MnS..n a..MhleN.Mst ir,.iiDHi.hBasaaadrhr ''inrlr OM-a I" the sejkf gvnuiiir snd really CheaD -nu-K... . A.... i B aiu. SSSEI prarbcsA
