Plymouth Weekly Democrat, Volume 14, Number 44, Plymouth, Marshall County, 8 July 1869 — Page 4
Andrew JohusonN Visit to Washington ! His Opinion or Kraut. Washington Correapoiidence of the N. Y. Herald. Ex President JonNSON Hrrived here ; thUevcniu and was waiud upon soon j after reaching the Metropolit hotel by your correspondent, who found the Ex-' President comfortably quartered in one of She'ly's best parlors, and looking quite fresh and hearty. Andrew J hnson, plain citizen, received your correspondent with the same cordiaiitv and kindness that distinguished him so highly while an occupant of the whiie house. "Glad to see you, sir." said the Ex President, at the same time handing a chair to you correspondent, and sitting down himself. " Sit down, sir." Correspondent I came to pay my respects, Mr. Johnson, and, at the same time, to learn if there was any particular object in your visit. Johnson Nothing public, sir. I have some private business to attend to here, and I have aleo a son at Georgetown College, the only son left to me now. I came to see him and at'end the commencement of that college. Correspondent I believe, Mr. Johnson, you are the tirst Preside. siaefl the time of John Qaincy Adams who has revisited the capital after retiring from the white house. Johnson (laughing) Really, ?ir, I don t know how that is. My attention was never direr e;l to the point before. It may be so, however. Correspondent Well, Mr. Johnson, to chaDge the subject, what do they now think of this administration down in Tennessee ? Johnson I don't know that you ought to ask such a question. People would be very likely to attribute an unfavorable opinion from me as prompted by improper motives. You know very well, sir, for you were familiar with my views while I was President, what my estimae of Grant was, and I don't know of anything that has jiince occurred that has caused me to change my mind tte slightest. I know Grant thoroughly. I had amnle opportunity to study him when I was President, and I am convinced he is the greatest farce that was ever thrust upon a people. Why, the iittle fellow excuse me for using the expression, but I can't help pitying him tbe little fellow has nothing in him. He hasn't a single idea. He has no policy, no conception of what the country requires. He don't understand the philosophy of a single great question, and is completely lost in trying to understand his situation. He is mendacious, cunning, and treacherous. He lied to me fHerantly, by G d, and I convicted him by my whole Cabinet ; but that even would have been tolerable were it the only instance, but it was not. He lied on many other occasions. I teil you, sir, Grant is noth ing more than a bundle of oetty spites, jealousies, and resentments. And yet they say Grant is a second Washington. Only think of it; when you compare him with Washington or Jefferson where is he? Why he is so small you must put your finger on him. He, a little upstart, a coward, physically ano" intellectual v. to be compared to George Washington. Why, it makes me laugh. I have more pity f r the man than contempt, for I have no spite against him. But I fear for the country when such a man U likened to the Father of his Country. Why, just look at the inaugural of Washington. He speaks about his fear and trembling In accepting the Presidency, even af'.er all his experence and success. But this little fellow Grant, an upstart, a mere accident of the war, a creature without the ability to comprehend the philosophy of a single i'reat question, says in his tiutUgiirm, " I know the responsibility is great, but I accept it without fear " la that like Washington or Jefferson f Pshaw ! It's monstr us to think of. Grant, I tell you, sir, has no ideas, no policy. Why, Washington con sidered that a man's greatness was measured by his morality, by the standard of his soul. And I have always considered that the more soul a man had, the more he developed the soul or intellect within him, the more Godlike be became. But, sir. Grant lias nothing. Pnysically, and mentally, and morally he is a nonentity. Why, sir, his soul is so small that you could put it within the periphery of a hazel nutshell and it mirht float about for a thousand years without knocking against the walla of the shell. That's the size of his soul. Just look at the man sitting at a Cabinet council. He has no idea, no policy, no standard, no creed, no faith. How can he guide the people ! How c n he impress any great improvements or moral ideas upon the people? He has no object to look forward to, no k-ading aim to draw the people toward any particular end. He sits there with hii Cabinet. One member ha bought him a house in Philadelphia, another has given him $50,000, another has given him a c irriuge, and so on. It is degrading to the office Of President of the United States to have such a man there. They talk about his generalship. Well, he was a mere incident of tiie war. Men sad arms were supplied in abundance, and his forces were so massive that they aimply crushed out the re ?llon. It would have been done had ( ant never been born. Therefore he v a mere incident. But the little fellow h ome to think he is somebody really, j n't help pitying him when I think ho- well I know him and what an inflnitessh al creature he really is. I often t: ink that about the fl.test place for r-ant is at some place in the country where there re cross roads I have been at those places and have often noticed the scenes. At one corner perhaps thre is a sma'l blacksmith's shop. At unoihe' corner of the cross roads there is a grocery store, at.d at another a house where the squire meets to settle cases. Well, I have often noticed at such a junction of several roads that when the squire's business is over some fellows will propose a horse race, and to give ir'-erest to the thing a barrel of cider and perhaps a half gallon of whisky will be stf.ked on the resuit. Now Grant is just suited to auch a situation. His ideas are of the cross roads order, and he has not a thought above that. Correspondent What do you think of the general situation now ? Johnson Weil, I think we are tending to despotism or anarchy, unless a proper direction is given to the disorderly elements at work. We are threatened with an aristocracy of bondholders. A moneyed aristocracy, they say, is the moät detestable ; but a credit aristocracy, which is only the shadow of the substitute tor money, is worse still ; for it is the moneyed arist-x:racy adulterated. I gay the bondholder is a credit rial t octal. Here is the producer, raiding his whmt or his corn. What is it worth to him f He MÜI It for the credit of the bondholder. The bondholder gives his ere lit to the producer, in exchange for the latter's goods, and says, " You may take our credit, but we will put tne gold and silver into our pockets and take your produce al.-o " When by and by the producer finds the Credit Valueless, whit will he b worth y When the great revulsion eo-jies, what will be our condition ? Where .8 all the gold and silver that has been dui? from oarovi soil and coined in our own mints ? Where is it all gone? Can yon tell me, sir! I don't speak of such a" we iinpr.rt.-i, but what we coined ourselves that vast amount dug out of our own earth. Why, it n locked np in the vaults of the credit aristocracy. Now, sir, it is ;. singular thing that no country yet has ever paid off a great national debt without repudiation. It may startle you to hear it, but it ig true. Look over history and you will
find I am right, and wherever you will find a permanent national debt, one that has not been paid off, you will find there is no freedom Spain is not free, England is rot free, because each of those countries has a permanent national debt. It is in the natuie
of tldcgs, for wherever there are power and moneyed aristocracy there is always a desire for a union between the two. Here we have an executive power controlled by the bondholders. Grant is rukd by a miserable set of hucksters, and bondholders. He is in their hands completely, and therefore we are in danger. The country is in peril, for the bondholders are striving to rule the Government. The people ought to be made to understand this condition. The people need to be indoctrinated with the truth, and vou gentlemen of the press can do iu You write a great deal and all that, but sometimes you write things and shoot off to the public without due considerate m. Yen do a good deal of nartn, and it tak s a eood deal of time to remove the effect. Now you have an opportunity to do go d by explaining these matters to the peop'e through the press. The tarnier and producer, no matter how humble, are always disposed to do what they think right. You can show them the right. They have an interest in doinc what is best, but you must explain what the best course is, and then tiiey will adopt it. So you must make them understand what produee is worth and what the credit of the bondholder is good for. You must give a proper direction and thtse will follow. Correspondent What do you regard as the proper course for the crisis f Johnson Why, sir, 1 sometimes wonder whether there be not some strange hallucination over me. I put my hand to my head and ask myself if I .in sane. I find myself using arguments thai were deemed sensible and irresistible by tome of the greatest mi ids of the country, and yet they are unheeded, perhaps laughed at. I have found myself obliged to think deeply, when I Wal President, over great consti'utional questions I have rilled to my aid the most capable minds in the country, and have drawn from them their advice and wisdom, and then comparing all, aud adviipg what little might arise in my own mind, I have endeavored to present a close, cogent, logical statement to the people, and yet I have seen such arguments fall upon the public mind jut lie water on a duck's back. They roiled off without making an impression I have been almost stunned at the apathy in the public mind. Talk of the Constitution and the liberty of rights that used to be held sacred and inviolable, and you are deemed scarcely worthy of an answer other than laughter. What we want, what the country demands, is solid, cons'.ituiional Government. Take my own State of Tennessee, and I only u.-c it as an illustration, there all the wealth, all the element that pays the taxL-s, that combines the intelli-ut-uce and respectability of the State, is deprived of the ballot. Fifty thousand negroes, with 20,000 whites, make a government there for 1,200,000 people. Soventv thousand out of a voting population of 200,000 make the laws, while that 70,000 does not represent the wealth, respectability or intelligence of the State. Seventy thousand voters enslave l.'tO.OOO voters and a population of 1,200,000. Further on in the interview, speaking of Grant, the ex-President said : As I said before, he is a mere accident. There has been a great social upheaval, and Grant is left on the top and thinks there is something in him. It is precisely like a volcanic disturbance. The natural condition of the earth is broken up, stratum after stratum is broken through, things are disnlaced t.nd turned upside down.and what should b at the bottom is thrown high up. That is just Grant's case. Why, Ben. Butler ha i a -vonderfully correct idea of Grant. He used to come to see me much at one time, and expressed the profoundest contempt for (Jrant. His estimate of Grant was about the same as my own. He thought that Grant could be made to do anything, that he could be made a complete tool, and that if he desired he could have himselt been invited to Grant's house. It happened precise'y so, afterward, just as Butler boasted. You remember Butler was invited to Grant's house, and it was brought about by Butler bimself. Butler understands Grant thoroughly. I have no hesitation in declaring that Graut is a mean, avaricious, cunning, spiteful man a complete bundle of petty jealousies, spites, and lies. He has no courage. I made him fairly quail before my glance at the Cabinet meeting when I asked him about that famous correspondence concerning Stanton. I asked him question after question, and he quailed. When I finished he stood up, took his hat in his hand, and in a mean, sneaking way, said, 14 Gentlemen, have you any more questions to ask?" and slunk out of the room. I convicted him of lying and cowardice then, and you remember all about it, sir, for you published it at the time. The ex President said a great many other things spicy and interesting, but as the hour is so late I am obliged to break off. The Assassination Conspiracy. A Statement by Spaugler. Edward Spangler, one of the alleged conspirator in the plot to assassinate President Lincoln, who was sentenced by Military Commission, in IMS, to six j ears, imprisonment at the Dry Tortugas, and pardoned by President Johnson in March last, has made a full statement, under oath, of his trial and imprisonment, in which he asserts his entire innocenc. This will be published here to morrow. Spangler, it will be remembered, was a carpenter or scene shifter at Ford's Theatre, and was on the stage when Booth jumped from the box alter shooting the President. He also took care of his horse and brought the letter to the theatre in the afternoon a few hours preceding the anamination. The evidence was circumstantial against Spangler, one witness intimating that he attempted to obstruct the pursuit of Booth across the stage. The Military Commission seemed to have some doubt of Spangler's guilt, as he was sentenced to six years imprisonment, while Mudd. 0 Lauehlin and Arnold were sen tenced for life. In the opening of his statement Spangler says that he heard Payne, Harold and Atzcrodt, who were executed, implicate that famous witness, Weichman, in that part of the plot to abduct the President. Weichman's evidence caused the conviction ot Mrs. Surratt. Spangler opens his statement as follows. He says I have deemed it due to truth to prepare for pub lication the following statement at a timewhen I hope the temper of the people will give me a patient hearing of my arrest, trial and imprisonment for alleged complicity in the plot to assassinate President Lincoln. I have suffered much, but I solemnly assert now. and I always have since I was arraigned for trial at the Washington Arsenal, that I am entirely innocent of any fore or Rfter knowledge of the crime which John Wilkes Booth Committed, save what I knew in common with everybody, after it took place. I further solemnly assert that John Wilfccs Booth, Or ant' Other ncrann niivar m. n t i i . , . , 1 t,. me any plot or any intention of any plot ior toe aoauction or assassination ot President Lincoln ; that I did not know, when Booth leaped down to the stage from the box at the theatre, that he shot Mr. Lincoln; and that I did not in any way, so help me God, assist in the pe- And I further declare that I am entirely innocent of any and all charges made against me in that connec
tion. I never knew either Payne, Surratt. Atzerodt, Arnold or Harold, or any of the so called c inspirators ; nor did I ever see any of them until they appeared in custody. While imprisoned with Atzerodt, Payne and Harold, and afur the trial was ever. I was allowed a few minutes' exercise in the prison yard. I heard the three unite in asserting Mrs. Surratt's entire innocence, and acknowledge their own guilt, confining the crime, as they did, entirely to themselves, but implicating witness Weichman in the knowledge of the original plot to abduct, and with furnishing information from the office of the Commissary General of Prisoners, where
he was a clerk. Spangler then goes on to detail his imprisonment, how he was arrested, released and rearrested, the suffering he endured from the padded hood drawn over his head during his incarceration, and the punishment inflicted on prisoners at the Dry Tortugas. Washington (June 23) Dispatch to the St. Louis Republican. The Sensi .Hon of Dying of Starvation. About a fortnight a?o the Sun pub lished tbe story of Richard Wüsod, a young colored man, who had been accidentally shut in the hold of an Aspinwall steamer, and had existed nine days on board without food until his arrival In this city He was sent to the Colored Home, in Sixy-fifth street, and having regained his strength, lately returned to Aspinwall On reaching the home he was unable either to tand or sit unsupported, or even to speak. His pulse was flattering, his eyes were dull, and his feet and hands were cold. His tongue was sMgh'ly coated, his frame trcmuou, and he vomited water of a syrupy consistence. A loud systolic murmur was also heard at the base of his heart. An ounce was given him every fifteen minutes of a mixture consisting of two ounces of whisky, a pint of water, aud four ounces of milk, until he became com posed and w;is able to sleep. In half an hour his pulse strengthened, and his general aspect improved. Before dark he was able to speak and sleep soundly. The next day one ounce of milk and one ounce of beef tea we: e given him. On the following day he was much better, and was allowed a moderate amount of meat, vegetables, and bread. This treatment was continued until hi? full restoration to strength, care being taken to keep him always slightly hungry. On recovering his speech, he retailed his experience. He is a native of Nassau, aged 20 years, and had never been afflicted with any severe sickness. He fell asleep in the hold of the Iiising Star after eating his dinner, and on awake 'ing found himself closely packed between two bales of wool, with but about twelve inches between himself and the ceiling. He said that he did not fall asleep again until his arrival, but this seems incredible. All e-florU to make himself heard proving fruitless, he resigned himself to his fate. He experienced no pain, and his hunger, though great, gave him very little uneasi ness. He could take no account of time, but two or three days before reaching here, to the best of his judgment, he was annoyed by a constant buzzing in his ears, his mouth was dry, and his saliva was thick as paste. After arriving he found his sight, hearing, touch, and smell unimpaired, but his sense of taste had departed. New York Sun. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. "Sistkrs of C II abity "Faith and Hope. What grows bieger the more you contract it ? Debt. " I oo through my work," as the needle said to the idle boy. ' But not till you are hard pushed," said the idle boy to the needle. A pauper recently left a Massac hu setts alms-house because she could not have sirloin steak and green tea served at midnight. The Louisville Courier-Janrnal makes this unkind fling at the Huh : Two rich men have recently died in Boston and left no legacies to Harvard University. It is supposed Harvard will try to break the wills. A lady in San Francisco was thus addressed by her female cook, not long ago : " Are you going to use your horses this evening?" " Yes, I am ; why ? " "Oh, pshaw ! " responded the cook, " I meant to have gone out with them myself." The Way of the World. Determined beforehand we gravely pretend Tu ask the opinions and thonghta of a friend ; Should hit differ from ours on any pretense. We pity bis want of boOi judgment, and sense ; Bnt if he falls into and flitters our plan. Why, really we think him a sensible man. Little four-year-old Masie had long been vrinly endeavoring to pucker his mouth iuto shape for the whistling of a nntior.al tune he had heard upon the streets. At last, in despair, he went to ilia mother, exclai iliing : Ma, I'se so little I oin't make a hole big enough for Yankee Dooium to dit out ! 44 When a young lady is very frivolous." said a gentleman with a Pecksnifflan air of speaking in general terms, and meaning some one in particular, 44 1 pay very little attention to what she says. Her remarks pass in at one ear and out at the other." " That is upon the principle that things pass readily through a vacuum," rejoined the lady. The following intoxicating toast was offered by Mr. Stearns, at a festival given to the National Division of the Sons ot Temperance, at Washington: '"Woman More beautiful than flowers, more delicious than strawberries and cream; the purest spirit of the age, she is far more intoxicating than wine ; we love her, and she cannot help herself." A barrister noted for his absence of mind was once witnessiug the representation of Macbeth, and on the wiich's replying to the Thane's inquiry, that they were " doing a deed without a name," catching the sound of the words, he started up, exclaiming, to the astonishment of the audience, 44 A deed without a name ! Why it's not worth sixpence." Hou than five thousand pounds of so u milk curd were used in Chicago last year, as a combining agent for colors, by the manufacturers of dyes. By the use of acids the curd is transformed into an adhesive substance which is a combining agent for different colors. Without it, they could not be printed on cotton or woolen tissues, to remain perfectly fast thereafter. Amono the laughable incidents of the recent election riots in Paris, was the case of a pickpocket caught watch in hand. A crowd seized the culprit and would have handed him over to the police as a robber, but the th'ef, as he was being carried al-mg, rafced a lusty cry of " Vive la Republique 1" The 00MCOMMI was that he was torn by the police from hit; captorn, and will probably get a week's instead ot a year's imprisonment. In a iteneral order issued November 15, 1862, President Lincoln commanded that "Sunday labor in the army and na?y be reduced to the measure of strict necessity. The discipline and character of t ie National forces Bhou'd not suffer, nor the cause they defend be imperiled, by the profanation of the day or Name of the Most High." Attorney General Bates, of the Cabinet, wrote: "The laws of the land made for its account ought to be 18 Strictly enforced as the laws for the protection of personal property. If tbe Sunday laws be neglected or despised, the laws of person and property will soon share their fate, and be equally disregarded.''
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USEFUL RECIPES, ETC Cure fok Cancer An exchange states that a Portland man has cured one of the most dangerous cases of cancer by drinking red clover tea and applying a red clover compress, and thinks it will prove an infallible remedy in all cases. To Make Pencil Marks Indelible. A great many valuable letters and other writings are in pencil. The following simple procesu will make lead pencil writing or drawing as ideliblc as if done with ink : Lay the writing in a shallow dish and pour skimmed milk upon it. Any spots not wet at first may have the milk placed upon them lightly with a feather, take it up and let the milk drain off, wipe off with a feather the drops which collect on the lower ediio. Dry it carefully, and it will be found ro be perfectly indelible. It cannot be removed even with India rubber. Exchange. TrME To Graft Trees In reply to a correspondent, the editor of the Gardener's Montldy si.ys: "For 'grafting generally,' any time is good when growth is going on and there is not too much sap in the cion ; the amount in the stock makes less difference. If there is much in the ciOD, it is liable to rot before the uni. n takes place. If cions are taken fr.im healthy trees, and kept. Jrom drying sprouting or othr injuritr. grafting m:ty go on from early spring till midsummer. Those who praise one week more than another, are those whose unlucky ' time has rather been due to other circuuitt.aces." Beet Root. Beet-root, when pickled, will keep as long as any other kind f pickle. Wash it perfectly clean, but do not cut away any oi the fibres; boil in a large quantity of boiling water, with a little Salt, for half an hour; if the skin will come off easily, it is done enough. Lay it on a cloth, and with a c arse one rub off the skin. Cut it into slices, put it into a jar, and pour over it a hot pickle of white vinegar, a little ginger, and horseradish sliced. Cover close. When first taken from the ground, beet-root may be kept for winter use by placing in layers of dry sand ; the mould must not be removed from about the root. To Pickle Onions. In the month of beptembcr choose the small, white onions, take off the brown skm, have ready a very nice tin stew pan of boiling water; throw in as many onions as will cover the top. As soon as they look clear on the outside, take them up a quick as possible With a Slice, and lav them on a p.lpnn clot h ; cover them close with another, and scald some more, atjd so on. Let them lie to be cold, then pu:. them in ajar, or glass, or wide-mouthed bottles, and pour over them the beit white wine vinegir, just hot not boiling. When cold, cover them. Should the outer skin shrivel, peel it off They must look c.ear. Fumigating Out Door Plants Some one having inquired, through the Country Gentleman, how to do thin, a correspondent replies : 44 Tell 4 R,' who asks tor information how to fumigate out door plants with tob-ceo, to invert over the plauts a suitable szed, one headed cask, tub or keg, and put a few live coals in a dish und r the cafk, and place a little tobacco on the fire, and the fumigation will soon be completed ; or a funnel made from paper may be inverted over the plank", and smke blown from a fumigator, under it. A cheap and available fumigator may be made from a common tin spice box, with a suitablelengthed hollow steal fastened to each end of the box ; the cover may be made movable. Fill with tobaocoaud place live coals behind, and blow through, directing the smoke by the stem, where desired. Hoop-skirt Pörings may be used in making paper funnels, to better keep the paper in form an shape." CURB for Snake Bites. About 'wenty years ago the Smithsonian Institute embarked in a series of experiments testing the practicability of neutralizing the poison of snakes, founded purely on chemical basis, which deveh ped great results. The fact was illustrated thit the poison of the most venomous rattlebnake can be neutralized in an incredibly short time. After the most extraordinary results from all the experiments witnessed, there was promulgated from the Institute at the time above mentioned, the following simple but certain cure f r snake bites, and for the sting if all kinds of insects : Tr ty grains of iodine potassum, thirty grains of iodine, one ounce of water ; applied externally to the wound by saturat ing lint or batting the same lo be kept moist with the antidote until the cure is effected, which will be in one hour, and sometimes instantly. The limb bi ten should be corded tight 10 prevent circulation. The liquid should be kept in a viol with a glass stopper. 8UGOK8T10N8 TO BATHERS The following suggestions to bathers have recently been issued by the Royal Humane Society of London, and are worthy of consideration : " Avoid bathing with.n two hours after a mea! 44 Avoid bathing when exhausted from any cause. 44 Avoid bathing when the body is cooling after perspiration ; but b ithe when the body is warm, provided no time is lost in getting into the water. 44 Avoid remaining too long in the water ; leave the water immediately there is the slightest feeling of chilliness. 44 Avoid bathing altogether in the open air if, after having been a short time in the water, there is a sense of chilliness with numbness of th hands ami feet. " The vigorous and strong may batbe early in the morning on an empty stoiUHch. 44 The young and those that are weak had better bathe three hours after a meal ; the best time fur such is from two to three hours after breakfast. "Those who ....u subject to attacks of giddiness and faintness, and those who suffer from diseases of the heart, shouM not bithe without first consulting their medical adviser." Cultivation or Ituckwheat. It has been eai 1 that buckwheat occupies the same position among the grains as the donkey does among animals useful but not popular. It will grow on the poorest of sandy soils, can be sown later than any other grain ; and is one of Hübest crops for cleaning the land and lor killing the wire worms an ; other injurious grubs. It has been extensively used for plowing in as a manure. But though it h proveel beneficial for this purpose, it is not as good as many other crops that might be used, such as white and red clover. Buckwheat is ofr u sown too early. When too early, the hot sun is apt to blast the flowers. In s.me arts oi New KDgiand it is sown early in June, even before the corn is planted. It 18 beat to 80W thus early in all sections where there is danger of frosty nighm en ly in the ltll, as a slight frost olU n fattMyi the crop In Ohio it IS usually not sown an'il July. We must endeavor to steer be'wcen tbe two danger, blasting of the flowers in the Summer, when sown early, and the destruction of the crop by frost iu the fall when sown late. It succeeds well sown on clover or grass sod. Formerly it was contidered best to break up the land in the spring, but late ly the practice is to pasture m land, and break up immediately before sowing. From three pecks to a bushel is the usual quantity of seed. ( f the use ot buckwheat we need not speak. Everyboely likes buckwheat cakes on a cold winter
morning. It is good food for poultry. Hogs thrive upon aod are fond of it. When crushed, it is good feed for horses ; more nutritious, it is said, than oats. It is good for milch cows, increasing the quantity and richness of the milk. The amount of seed per acre is governed by the strength and condition i f the soil. On poor lumov land one bushel nr
acre should be used ; ou strong, mellow soil, from half a bushel to three pecks will be sufficient. Ohio Farmer. Insects Hurt rnl to the Rose. Rose cultuiiMs are frequentlyd'.sappointed in the result of their labors, by seeing the foliage and flowers of their favorite plants eaten by insects which appear to baffle all attempts to destroy them. One of the most destructive insects, the roseslug, is the larva of a saw By. (Selandria rosa), which so closely resembles the slug worm taw-fly a? not to be easily disii -gui shed from it Th s sw-fli-s come out. f the ground at various times betweeu ihe20th of M;;y and the middle of June.antl immediately lay their eggs by thrusting their .aws obliquely into the skin of the leaf, anl depositing an egg in each incision. When the young slugs are produced from the eggs, they eat the upper surface of the leaf in irregular patches, leaving the vein and the skin skeletonized. Tney cast their skins several times, and finally drop to the ground, and burrow into the soil the depth of an inch or m re, forming little oval cells cemented wi;h a little gummy silk. Having performed their transformation and become flics, they emerge from the ground eariy in August and lay their egirs for a second brood. These enter th'; ground late in the fall, acd remain in their cells until the ensuing spring or summer. After numerous experiments with vaious mixtures, a solution of whale-oil soap, in the proportion of two pounds of soap to fifteen gallons of water, nas been found the most certain remedy, cot only for the rose slug, but also for plant lice, red spiders, canker-worms, vine fretters, and other pests of the garden. A common sprinkler wiil answer forap plying thi; mixture to the upper side ot the haf, but in order to reach the under side, a garden syringe will be necessary. This mixture dots no damage to the U av.-o and On thi8 account, ia nrefralile to mXl others that sire recommended for a similar pu r pose. Exchange. SB sj i Pruning Trees. Set a ereen hand to prune trees, where umos oi any size are to be removed, and the chances are ten to one. that he will commence at the top, and saw through tne nmb ur.tu it talis by its own weight ; tearing down the birk and wood, inflicting a great u,ly wound, which may require years to heal, and which, if not carefully protected from the weather, will cause such decay as to destroy the tree. The method commonly recommended to prevent sucn injury is to begin at the bottom, and cut half wTav throuch. and then finish from the top, or with very large oniMs, u nave tnem supported bv a crotched pole, or Ditch fork, held bv an assistant below; but we have found a better plan, and quite as easy, to be to make two cuts, the first at a eonvenient distance, say a foot, from th j point where " we wisn trie unit) removed. This tho;t stump can. excent i-i the ms,- of verv large limbs, be easily held in one hand, a. l y . - ... wnne me nnaicut is made with the other After a larye limb is sawed otf. the Mir face shwuld be pared smooth; and t r ihia purpose, we have often found a common carpenter's chisel, about two inches U. t a - wuie, much more convenient than a pruning knife. To prevent decay, there is nothing better than one or two coats oi good oil-paint; and it should be as near trie color oi the bark as possible, so as not to uisngure the tree. All tools used in pruning, should be of the best quality and kept as sharp as possible. It is poor economy to u?e any others. Limbs are sometimes cut too close, but for every such one. there are a hundred not cut cl se enough. Every cut, large or small, shou d be made in a smooth, clean, woraman-ime manner ; a poor workman is 8oon known by hacking off a limb with a uuu autre, leaving as many fatets as on a multiplying glass. Tiiton's Journal oi aoriicuiiure. How Eggs Hatch. Pkoplk have an idea that the hen sits on the egg for a certain time, and that 1 a . wnen the time comes for hatching the chick bursts forth. There never was a greater mistake. The chick, until lib-r ated from the shell 14 by outside aid," is as lncapaoie oi motion as it formed a solio with the egg, which it nearly dots. You might as well enclose a man in an iron boiler, and tell him lo get out without tools, as expect a chick to get out of the Shell without help. The chick grows and swells in the inside of the shell, until at lat the excrescence on the point of the beak of the bir.i presses against the inside of the shell, and bursts up a small scale; of course when it does this, it at the time breaks " in that spot "the inside skin of the egg. This admits the hir ; in a short time it breathes and gets strength to cry loudly. The hen then sets to work to liberate it ; she brings it forward under the feathers ot the crop, and supportin. it between the breastbone and the nest begins the work of setting her progeny free. She hitches the point of her beak into the hole formed by the raising of the scale by the chicks beak, and breaks away the egg skin or shell all round the ureatet-t diameter of the egg. The joint effhftl of ÜM hen wituout aud the Chick within then liberate the prisoner, and he struggles into existence, and get.s dry under the feathers, and with the natural h at of the hen. All female birds, which set on their eggs to hatch them have the hook in the beak strongly developed. Even the broadbilled duck and theg ose nave these books speeially developed, and ith them thev liberate lb. ir young. Iu Ahstra i t, where everything st ems to be by contrarias, it is the cook of the brush turkey that hatches the eggs and not the hen. It would be interesting to know whether the hook of the beak is better adapted for this serviec in the male of that bird than in the feniah ; the hook ou the beak of the ordinary cock of the common low is quite different from that of the hen it is adapted for wounding in tight, but not for the hatching of eggs. Exchange. H Y a strange coincidence, peace itself is, after all, the greatest army contractor in the world. The Ht amd Okkiinal Tovio or Ikok. Ptiospfcorw nl ChI'sryh. known 1 Kerro-Pnop,'Htel Kit lr of Callny. ll-irfe. The iron restores color to nw blood, the phnnptinruft rooewi wasteof the nerre tisane. nl the calis&y give natural, healtkital tone l ll.e dlmllve orgitnii, HMMtgl rurlnfC dyBp"!' lu Its varlou form, wk"lulnt!-s, (jener! dVbilliy, dpretsloil Of S.lirl; Sis . th h8t nrafenttv. niralntit Imr mmi azue. One pint conttln the rtltaia of one ounce or callnaya, and one tfHspoonfUl, a grain Ol Iron nt ihorhoruR. Manutactur'd only by CaIVSJU, Hazard ft Co.. mif w to Caswell, Mack Co.. New York. Sola by Uruggl'"--Two years ago we called attention to the excellent qualities off O. A. Prince fc Co.'h Organs and MeV leou8, manufac tared in their extensive establishment in Buffalo, N. Y. Since that time the resources of these enierprisiDg manufacturers have been so vigorously developed, that with the facilities now at their command, they have improved even upon those superior qualities of their Instrument to which we then bore witness. This improvement is particularly discernible in the appearance of the articles they now
tier tO the public thir unlendid finish
their elegance, atd that xmiifiitp uvmnto. try and beauty that render them desirable as parlor ornaments. For the use of small churches, bunclay school?, Academies, and ior private renaences, where the attri butes most valuable in such i n Rt r n rr r0 c can be sppreciated, the Organs and Meloaeons or frince & (Jo. are unequaled, as the extraordinary demand for them attest If xi a . . . mm iur. la. a. Moweii, ot Indianapolis, is the agent, and can always exhibit a fine assortment. Elastic Stone-Roofing. From the Chicago Tribune. We arc nlwnvs rleu-ri tn n th.. aiuniinn .-.r -. j m . ..w u .iii.ui Iiu , r i the mih'.ir tn nnvthintr rf r("i morit arts . 'J lis tit, aUM. tUI 1 c porter bavin? had occasion yesterday to call at Ii., nilii.k ..i . v. .. u ; ei . . . .- "w -"v7 vuiuigu elastic Btiine-uooniig Company, was o murh pleaeed with their arruili.,. . .U , L. . i j a. a m . muuicuiP mm ue ceu in not reirain irom L'iviiit? a etaort account to the Tribune readers. This company was orgaui.ed about a year ago. aud have put up a ciramodion? manufactory. 50 by TO teet. i""uu oai-emem, nitea Wim steam power and machinery ample Tor their wants, and located on the Chicago, Burlington A (Juincy Railroad, between Elalated itraet and Newberry avenae. Tbey htve established local agents In nar'y 30(1 of the laree-t towns- tn the Wert, from Bnfl.ilo, N. Y., to Omaha, Nebraska, where they have another factory and branch, and are having numerous orders for mnterial from 11 directions iaily,a? a glance at their shipping book wiil show Their roofing i composed of coal tar thickened by tbe addition of kaolin, or fine-ground pore lain clay, that it miy not run from the extreme nC summer heat, and also rendering the maieri il fire-proof: to this they add a preparation of diiolved India rnnber and glycerine, and the whole is thorough y mixed hy machinery. The principle of the roof 'is, that upon applying the material hot to the surface of the felting, th: rubber not being combined bnt simply admixid, rises to the surrac ;. forming a film or envelope orer the snrrace protecting it from the ctlon f the atmosphere rhe glycerine, which will not evaporate keepn ItHHvaj- elastic, SO that it will not crack from co.d. L'pon expressing some donbt as to the fire-proof Properties of a composition COmpoed ot such inflammable material, the Secretary, Mr. C. F. Hlnmsn, proposed tn demonstrate the point. Takirn.a large sample bo.trrt nearly five f.-et gqnare, Mr Hlnmtn natto a flre covering a a: ace two feet in diam-iter. which burned furiously for fifteen muiutes, when the burning brands were thrown off and a w.-oge-shuped piece cut from the centre to the on'fde of the burned portion, and ap.i turning it hack the boards were found hare v warmed and neither course of felting broken, and the second conrse unharmed. Messrs Campbell and Whitman, lrsuranee agents, wh:; were pre-ew, suggested building a large flre on the ground, and placing the rool above, which was done, and the flre fed with wood and coal tar, to m ike as great heat a possible. After burning nearly twenty minutes, durit g which nine the sample was so completely enveloped in flames at times that it could not be seen, the board were burned through, yet the roofing failed to srive way. A few minutes later the felt in;' was broken through with a stick to allow the flames o pass through, and even then the flre confined itself to the boards and would not spread over the roof. After homing twenty-five minutes the test was concluded satisfactorily Nearly three-quarters of an honr on both sides ol a rumple, and the roof yet undestroyed. We append the following certificate from Campbell. Whitman & Wallace, insurance agents : T Whom it m iy Conarrt Chicago. April 14. li9. We wt nesse.1 a test of the flre-.-ro f qualities of the Ch cgo b lastlc tone-Ko Cng Company at the'r w irks t0s afternoon, and concurln the ciescriptP n above gi 'en. The te t w tue most severe, and Its suc-ess the movt complete, ct anything of tbe kind we have ever witness 1. at the are will not spreid upon the uriac i, n r the material run through, feeding the tla i es, if M-otn below. The rooting ha our u tqu lti t app oval, and in insulin a building wou d consider It a y .fer risk, if covered win the elaatte stone rooting, than any ottie- rootin? mat-rial In our kuowled;. Campiikll. WmiMAM & Wallici 4 the Best. This is sound advice, especially, since we give it in reference to medicine, and in order to learn which is " the best," let merit be the test. The American market is flooded with all sorts oi vile and dangerous nostrums, and thon-anda of human Bret are constantly placed in jeopardy by them. Itut there are reveral really invaluab'e medicinal preparations which every family in the land ought to poeaeaa at all time. Iforemo-t among them i- .VI-qiLElCS UEKB BITTKKS which bum rally e-ublifhe.rt its claim as the moM efticicious componnd extant for purifying the blood and eradicating diseases arising from a d -ordered stomach, liver, kidneys, intestineetc. It is used in many hospitals, asylums, dis pensatoMes, prisons, etc., and -ecommended by a larL'e number of acknowledged leaders or the medical p-ofession, and has conquered an im naenee leid solely on the strength of what It c m aud does do in preventing, checking and curing ilis- ase. Everybody should use it for Indigestion, Dyepepcia, Fever and Ague, acd Bilious complaints generally, Kidney diseases, Liver com plaint, &c. Words of WHsiit for Wires and Mot hers The aperiotttj of IIOSTEITEK'S STOMACH BITTERS overall other tonics and correetives, asartmedy for dysjepsia. biliousness, nervous affections, and all complaints of the visceral orL'ans, and as a preventive of malarious dicorders, is proverbial ; but perhaps it is not se generally known that the ingredients of this famous iuvigorant and alterative exercise a powerful and most beneficial influence in that nnmerous and I a. tressing class of ailments, of which eo many thousands of delicate women are the patient, uncomplaining victims. The special troubles of the sex, conimencirg with the dawn of womanhood, and extending over a period of from thirty to thirtyfive years, are as readily and certainly relieved hy The operation of this admirable vegetable preparation, as any of the complaints common to both sexes, for which it it recommended as a specific. The attention of mothers is invited to its balsnnrc effect la those peculiar cases of functional irregularity and irritation, which, when neglected or mal reated, destroy the health and shorten the lives of so many invalids. There is no need for the powerful and dangerous drugs too often resorted to in such cases. The mild tonic and restorative action of the BITTERS is all the assistance that n itnre requires in Its straggle to overcome the difficulty, and a vast amount of suffering would be spared to the sex, if they placed implicit faith in this who'esome vegetable iiivi'oran. corrective, and nervine, and discarded the pernicious nostrums advertised by ignorant and mercenary charlatans. m Dr. Scott, the proprietor and editor of the Lebanon Star, is a prominent physician. Perry Divis' p.iu Killer, the old and well kaowa rem. dy, which has acquired a world wide renown for the cure of sudden colds, coughs, etc., weak s'omacb, general debility, nursing aore mouth, cankered mouth or throat, liver complaint, dyspepsia or indigestion, cramp and pain in the stomach, bowel complaint, p inters' colic Asiatic cholera, diarrhe i aud dysentery, has lest none of its good name by repeated trials; but COBunaee to occupy a prominent position in v ry family medicine chest. Lebanon Star, Dtc. ISM. ltiott. Agent" are wanted by the American Tfe In. Co. ol Philadelphia. See adverti- 'meut elsewhere. m m Sw alvrritHKment of J. t. Caan a Oo, Kactne, Wis. pATENTS,-Mgwa Jk ' Editors Ncieniiflc I A ineric;i ii, 37 Park Ko , w Tort. 1 wen - t ie" veera' experience in eibtain'ng AMKK1CAN and ht'KOPEAN PATENTS. oitlnu'us i o chance. A pamnliiet. 1C8 paxes oi law and lnlttriuatton tree. Address as alove. C. O. D. C. O. D. flLTUH WATCHES. LATEST IMPBOVRJf BNT&. K I I.I.Kit iV CO., (tats M. C. Chapman A Co.) M ill"! U IU CIO. . duun Bl., w. x. We will sent, an order, single WALTH.VM WATCH K-. tn soil i BoM and Sliver cases onlv. tv exuresa to any p.-trtoi the t utted States, to paid for ou deMv eiy, after exatntnation, at wholesale prices. The buyer to pay all express charges. I lie J m. a'.y's (iiirmil r M--nt with each witch. IW aeiid ior Illustrated Circulars giving full tnio--matron IfllirßAP I As y"ar etrocer tor Pauasuio's lintUHIl 1 Oioaa ViNaoaa. A uioat suleudid article. Warranted pur and to preserve rdcklea Killer I'UKMH'M at th - l .S. Kalr. ill. State Kalr. and Chicago City Kalr. Largest works ol the kind In II. r. wini'livif! i--. f v i i ,-sTTfm ' i . Health's I. II. ioo Elixir. Tt in h! mott worth while to have a tonch of Dyspepsia, or a bilious heHdiehe, or n twinge of hi.iou col e, or a feeling of debility In order to realise the dflikrhtitil effect of Tarrant's KrncRvrw knt Sn.i.KR ArmiiENT. The remedy, as it hhhMag iu the goblet like rhampigne, at M pleasant, so refreshing, thai it is positive enloy hi (i I tan ririllh it Mini n i aa f it- .-vHCiiant Mini ami bilious prcparaMon, it Is far more efticirious than any ol the stckenitif drugs usually scribed. .
soljj Ii all ine euiT.
I GOOD FAMILY MEDICINE. ALLEN'S CELEB RATKI) LI" No BALSAM Cares Col 1 ugh ano Consumption ALLEN'S CELERKATKO LÜNO BALSAMCurea Bro chitia. Asthma and CroapALLEN'S CKLKBHATKO LUNG BALSAM Imparts mrneth o the wem. ALLKN'S CELKBKATLD LUSO BALSAM I nla.-aiit to t lice ALLEN'S CKLKBHA IED LCNO BALSAM alays jrves ssfsfa- Hon or tli money will be rafundeL It is recommenced by pronvnent Phylc'ans . sjid while It Is nlesa-'t to take and harmless In It nature, tt is a powerful remedy t. r caring all SM 01 the Langs. Sold by all DKreeum.
SUMMER TONIC! Dr. s. o. Rkhardson's SHERRY WINE SITTERS ! The Celebrated Vw gnglaad UeneSy FOR HABITUAL CONSTIPATION. Jb,u.",,,c Fever mid A.n. . (letter I Debility, and nil Diaeaara arlninic Irom h Diaardered Motiiuch. Liver ar HowelM, much an Acidity or the stoma, h, in-tijrestlon. Heartbnrn. Lom ot App.'tltc. Coti veno, isi.n.i and Bleeding Pile Iilssrust ot Food. S m Kr icUoaa Sinkin- 0J f-uui' taCOl the Pit o: the Siumach. Dunne of Vision r l.twneiii of tlif Skin anl Eve-. Pa'n tn the Kid. Back. Chest or Limbs, and in all cmS Whwi a OMC s necesaary. wurre a J.N. Harris & Co.. Sole Proprietors, CINCINNATI, OHIO. For Sale by nil Medicine Dealera. DR. iiANSOM'S mi nun Tim Dr. Rv Bom's Hire 8 nip anl Tola, 'n addition to l. zrA ents fnr o'dinary Hive Si'rui, contvns Balaam of Tolu, D-coctton of Sku- k Cahbige Koot, Lobelia a--.d Hops; a combination that most commend It to every on- a aSMrtOT n-iu 'y for CYobo, VF boopingLouKh, Asthma, BronchitiH.Coushgan'iColda, Indeed, tor all aficttons ot the Throat and Lungs where a cough medicine ts necessary. This Syrup Is carefully prepared under the per'onaf direction of a regular physician of fr twenty years' practice, whose Blyna'ur is attached to the directions on the bottle. Its very r-leasanf' tas'e makes it an agreeable medlc'ne for chl drrtfc evry p. non sh u!d kop a bittle ot Ran-s-nTs HIVE SV KIT AND TD LC n the hon not only as a unlveraai Couifh Medicine, but a a unn an. rendy remedy for sadden attacks of Croup a moot the children. Rememb r that Contitnptlon is caused, in cases, hy neglecting a s.'teht cough. Greatest Discovery of the Age ! DR. A. TRAMPS Magnetic Ointment! This remarkable an t most interesting remedy is composed of the eonc-ntratf-d Jalces of the most powerful and the most soothing Plants aud Roots tn nature, cten.lcally com .tned and tnsolated la well sealed jMaas bottles, a: d charged by a powerful Battery: Thus p. aesslne In addition to tta uperior medical virtues, stronir maskktio and Klotkic properties, profoundly penetrating, and eminently quieting and soothing. It relieves Pain and Inflammation at once, (whe.i frequently applied,) relaxing tee strained muscles and nerves, givln? new 11 e and vitality by its die giving qualities, to Paralyzedparte and Chronic or tong s'andlng Complaints and VTeakneases. allayln N.-rvous pain. (Veuralgla.) Irritation, and Removing Obstructions like a charm, indeed all who have uel it, speak of It as trnly a wonderful medlclDe, and esteen, it by far superior to any and all other external remedies in use. If applied in sean It Ih an uniailtB remcty for tlie Croun, Dlptheria, 8ore Ihroat. Intiauimatton of the Lungs. Bowels, Liver. Kidneys and other Organs, Rheumatism. Spinal Irritation. A-na in the Breast, and at 11 times cures Nervou Headache, Neuraleta, Soie Kyes. Kar AMie. I ootn Ache. Ague lu the Face, Pirn oles and Eruptions of all kinds. mU Bruised and Spnfned Limbs, .urns, Frozen pattai rhr.blatns, indolent and long standing Sores, Wound Ac. Ac. It wll! also restore the Hair to the Bald Head, and prevents tb Hair from tailing. Prof. H. Anderson's DERM ADOR Im a Liquid,' Liniment for External Appllt all ou, FOR MAX OR BEAST, A Valuable Combination Discovered by a Celebrated Chemist. Its free application to Inflamed sores, and snr faces, on both Man aud Beast, In a ery short time relieves the pain ai:d soreness, and the hot, angry and redu -- face beeomes cool, moist and natural, and by continued application and attention, the part la soon restored to health. IMPORTANT TO HORSEMEN Prof. Anderson's Dermador Is the beat Liniment in use ior tiorses. Thla factlsshown by numerous letters from all parts ol the country. A late o.ie read as (oltowt: ' W.- have been experimenting with "inr Derm idor on horseUesh, nd find It a very su rtor remedy; um h s"p rlor to the famous "Gargling Ml," or any other lialmoat we ever used in our Livry Stable. Please end us two ooz. u la-ce bvulea by express C. O. Ü. Your rnopectrully, - WAT-iON A OOOPtfK. Waverly, lud." DR. J. R. MILLER S Universal llapetk Halm Cures, as It bv Magnetic I'.fliience, N. ura'gta and all nain, nd Is tnereiore very iro 'rly leraMd -1 Maguetlo Ba m." It I purely a vegetable prpara:lon. ft has no eoual a- a r-ni"ty for CMOLEKA, CMuLKKA MOi.r.l'S, PIARKHtKA. DV8..M KRY. COLIC, and a'l BOWEL COMPLAIN Ts. It- ituiely use will cur OoMa. tjroup. Dl.'t.ierla, 0.ulny. and all Throat alteetlona. When properly used. Fever a:.d Ague, nd other I'oiuplainU inci tent to our western auc lOuUiern clima'.ea, are easily bro .en up. FEVER A XI) AttUB. Cleanse the system ; thn. as the time for a ctill draws on, cover warmly In bed and take a cupful of hot water, with one or two teaspoon! a Is of the Magnetic B ilm iw et'-ne-l with hrowu sogar, alao bathe the back and l omach with the Halm aud remain quiet. Kepeat. if necesaary. IfAII lbs abovr .vledlcluew are old by Druggiata Everywhere. Dt RANSOM & 0t, Prop's, IJUFFAIX, IM. "V. )WSNTEL.-ÄGtNTS--''UlV,,:,,;i: CfllXi:. I'oee f..'.. 'It..-vlu ;-- I I. .t KiilllnJ II . I - t ..... . 1,1. . . . . . . L . . Ms.-hine e t r I ii 1 .ih.M I ...... t,.... I . A 1 ii T ti -', . . n nun Ii.1. grata. a.',ttAi1 RICAX KNtTTIXlMIU'lllV'lii.l v i . . M,, 810.00 l'KI lA l.l A It a N I KI- II Agents to sell the MoMK sanTLi Siwimi Machixb. It mak'-s the loox rriTcu, alik on both nioaa, haa the under feed, an t is equal In eve v respect to am Sewing Machine ev r Invented. Prio. . Warranted lor 5 years bend lor elrcul r. Ad.lrevt .lonaaoN. CLabk a Co . Boston. Maas.. nruinirr-. 1'-. or St. Le.ola, Mo. Muaket -HOT I.I V- Unrrauled to Nho.,1 cloe a id kill tfo tarda, race, 4-4.AO. Wanted. -Army Guus and Krvolreis. Send stamp lo- ijrUe list U ties, Sho' G im. It Silver, to JoilN TOn'm iVS WiKK. Pittsburgh. Pa. SWEET Swiit Ou ih 1 k a, m (Oirniai -fd eoual iue tor dose--to tha ulpha'e i 'utter 1 IV ul 11 me. with the Important advantac-n of iM-mg "eet Imt ead ii ntlter. KyaPKia. isOpii m Pi bikiko 01 its ickeuiui; anl iolsoiioua QUININE Svapnia propcrtiea, .t la tne mead perfect AN01.YKK and SOOIH ING i P.Alfc yet discovered. I W sold bv Itruimsia. rr--scrlbed oy th best Phye1c1rw. Made on u v Stearns. FarrACo. Manufacturing Chemists. New 101k. ATTENTION FARMERS! What Threshing MasMM and Hore Pover iMfcflat First Prliea at ihe State Fairs ior 1)S8 in the lour freat gral'i er ' . States, I.1.IMHS, WISCONSIN, IOWA A M MINNESOTA That ol J. I. Case A Co.. Haoinb, Wiaoor-iw, with their celebrated Woodbury Mount. .1 More Power. They are the ruosi extensive manufacturers of I'hreahlug Machine in the Uniteo stairs f . ' V i..ir describing the Thresher and the Mounted Power, and alao the Cltmai and Pitt P., wer made hy them. SOOOS AI.AKY. A.ldreasC.S Piano Cm... N Y. 17 ItPliUVMKNT Aw.'poc. Vor particulars, ad!i drea Ii. M. SPr-N !KU A CO.. Brattl. lx.ro. Vt. banu. LoateaBP. Prea't. C. r Hikmin, Sec'y. T0Kvt'ry fih aud Town, AClENTS BY TUB AMERICAN ii mi a bj IN life Insurance Gc. or PHILADELPHIA. Apply to nnrr-t UOT' - . . A.U-AC. M auvtv. St. tXMila, MoW H . 8. Kwiu. CtnctnnaU, Ohio. Kbrlkv Hu Toledo. Ohio. 1 1 Ha mm kb. lw Motn., Iowa, rowim Job, e'btcaco. HI. H 1 , t , inn .r 1 . ,t I., mo. CAPTION.-IM not he immd nihoi edier Ialtiiiiig a f arurthlesKmst-kroiiiuaehiii. . under the aiu m r ,4hmrU(. Our. i ihr only avntuor a rail I.-Baal clMui maclUDa mauuihctuTWl. I e hcai isactuna iauulacturl.
WANTED -AGENTS -?K 0 ' .7..1. 1. ."' -"'' O" CSKNCTnK IMl'Kvri . i-MMl.N fcFNSK V KEWtta W IHM TI - HMMalaS ill nt.''. ",ni. fr, luck, quilt, cor.i, I ul, luai l ad o- , oiler I Hl t ms ikT liunaer. PH .) gla, I oily miii','1lf""',nir. aPa .II pv ' .! f.w an nw, M (hMt nttMVtam.r', hi" I" m u tf- t. . .i r. - i '' tlini. .ni. Ii mmlfs Hm I t aie Koch BBtrh. I". rr paoaa lit.-!, on W rut. iimI tili the ciortl mum I hr null. I l't
siilioiit tesiiuvii. VVe wy Aren fiaii ."Ai. irBi h r.il .'m 11. - , r, r4.o,ii i f. . -n vtnh f w il. -ir"'i.t mm I .....I.. 1,1... M-'i M !l a .. I'l 1 I Ta
