Plymouth Weekly Democrat, Volume 14, Number 51, Plymouth, Marshall County, 26 August 1869 — Page 4

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The Valiiiiirton ' Regency." Tt is not a pleasant spectacle at a time Bke this to witness, atfwhatlpains the Chief Magistrate is to take as little pari in the tlutii-s of the Executive office a- hejpossibly can contrive. 'When military sat raplike Canbv. in Yinriuia, arc threatening to upset a State Government, jnst created by the peopk th rc with Federal onViab likr Marshal Harlow, here, opposing Stale judicial process with Federal guns, it scarcely becomes the Preside! to be act in-; as if be ha 1 abdicated bifl oAee, and was qnitc indifferent as to what rjntrages the bad, or weuk.Jor foolish men around or about him put upon the people. Inthi-way.it comes to pas-, that his Becwtary of the Treasury, Mr. BcmtweH, plays fast and loOttB with the Wall str T stock johbefi and fold gamble r& The merchant and business men eooaplaia but the President, who ouirht to have some influence over his C'hancelloj of the Exchequer, neither bears nor heeds, even if he understands. DffAgain, this same Mr. Bootwell, with other members of the Cabinet, are guilty of the scandal of direct Interference in state elections (as in Tenneice but Genend (irant looks on, and says nothing even if ha knew what to say. He pe rmits his "ministers" to do as they sec tit no matter how wrong, or how w ieked, the doing may be. Revolution! have been precipitated, ere now, by much leM unwise messages than that which the President is said to have sent to Marshal Barlow yesterday to keep his prisoner that is, to set at nangbl the action off the loeaJ civil authority "at all hazards." True, we have not among us, as vet, that inflammable popular feeling that drove the Bourbons out of Madrid, the Other day and which years before, compelled the Orleanirf Citizen King i decamp from Paris in a hurry but. it seems to us. we have nun among its, who are dotag all they enn, one way and another, to create aoane anch feeling; Radicalism, and Radicals, when thus left by itself, unchecked, run, as il'by an unerring instinct, into revolution. If Qen. (Irant had not been in sogreal a hurry to go to the watering-places, yestefdny, it WOVld have made him a wiser man. we su-pect, had he tarried in New York to sec how dangerously his sabordinatesare running the Federal l ernment " maeliine," and Imw full of peril to the panes of the commnnity would have been a verbal order, even from (Irant personally, to resist the process of our Courts, by his bayonets, "at all ha.ards." He is President of the United States we know but we know also, lie is sworn to execute the laws, and not to resist them. We know, too, that he is the servant of Unpeople, and not their master. The more we think it over, the more impressed are we with the narrowness of the escape we have had from a serious conflict the effect of which must baTC been felt from one end of the Union to the other. The trouble with (Irant is as we have said, he leaves pretty much all gOTJ rnment, and all the details of government, to the weak and sometimes foolish men around and about him. lie has no controlling mind. He seems to have as little taste as aptitude for civil administration and hence his satraps and suitor dinatea, left to themselves, are constantly involving him in complications, which must not only compronii-c his popularity with the people, but shake their conlidencc in him, as a safe man to be at the helm of State. In all kindnex, we would advise the President to try and be President in fact, and not In name. Let him trust less to the JBsjejMy, which his Cabinet members seem to be engineering at Washington, to save him the trouble of attending to his own proper duties for though a " RegenCT may be well enough as a feeler towards the "cominr Empire," we do not think any considerable number of our people, just yet, are pre pared to put up with it. We do not know whether the CkinsHnTs love of the turf and kindred pastimes leaves him any time for t he study of history or not but if so, he will lino that nearly all the Chief Magistrates who have been suddenly expelled from place during the last two hundred years, owed their expulsion, tir-t, to their own neglect of public duty. and. second, to trusting too much to Cabinet undVihngs and other subordinates of the M Regency," or "the Crown.' Mm York hTrjWM, AuguM 11.

Fair Play, The Republican papers arc pitching into poor Grant in a fearful waj'. So are the Democratic ones. Between the two sfools the unfortunate man is likely to me to the ground. To be stabbed under the fifth rib in the house of his friends, and pumnieled black and blue in the porch of Iiis enimies. is a fate too dreadful for a man who hadn't lernKeiiooghtoieinaju 14 Genemi of t ) Armies of the United States" at the plc.sinir little salary of .s:j(J,uM) a year. Gautiin.itzen on his couch of lire, or Dnmieaj on his bed of steel, had a comfortable tunc of it to poor (irant. It's driving him cray. It is false to my that he as of unsound mind betöre this thing commenced. He was not. lie had not nan mind it is true, but he was sane, and really shrewd at a bargain. It is the bitter attacks of Iiis friends which arc unsettling his mind. As for softening his brain, we hop' it is not true : but if it be, the causes arc clearly nil her physical than mental. Hut, in any ease, even if he were mentally and physically robust, he could not stand it long at this rate. Wendell Phillips leads off with the scream l the condor of the A ndes, SWOOBS down terrific as the roe of Arabian story, and digs his BUfinflgaic talons to the very heart of poor Kraut. Then comes Dana bland ly famcionO) and classically Incident, and scalps the poor man with a Mull oyster knife. Massa (Jreeley taps him next, gently as a literary Hill Sykes, on the bark "of the head with the leaden dttng fthol of tin- Tribuns, and the poet of the Pod buries him in anew free trade Thanatop -i-i. All over the count i v Kadi ' da and Dement?, Rodcndoi and Xothinir at-all-o's, are jeering, HCoJding, pomsdhnj and cursing poor Giant, The situation is a terrible one. We begin to pity him. If we had time we would defend him. As it is, we must postpone that deadly lively amusement till after Pendle toais ejected in Ohio, and Horace con gmjtumtm the country on having secured a fc-ntleinan of such eminence, when tin y UUfdM have had to -wallow Valaadigham. Meanwhile we assure the Irreal American Gifl Enterprise L lysses of our sympathy, and hint to him that lie hM only to give us a chance to makca million in any honest (?) official way, and we'll jrr, halves with him. Meanwhile we in. si Hi that only one fellow shall hit him a a time; and further, that it shall be turn alout, ffarsl a Republican and then a Democrat, m thai the poor mas may have a chance for his life. Two to one isn't fair. Mm YWk Courier. .Intime Dent's Letter to Secretary Boiilwell. Wianiaiiiosi, D. C, Aug. 17, is an To the Boa. Geo. & Boutwell. Sib : I shall make Mule apolojrv for a k bag your attention to r letter, and lent for the nature of its con ttm. Von uj re the first to deny the po. d orthodoxy of my friends and mys and, by all tlx rules of the forum, 1 1 entitled to a de fense. Again, you he i an office of tin Republic, and your acts, therefore, are legitimate subjects 0f criticism by the hmnSSlsst ettmsa thereof But in some marjects we are alike ; tor instance, w are both aspirants for place, with !hi.- differ snanj i You aim to be the aei President.

with every assurance of success, except in the opinion erf the people, while I seek an humbler place, with my hopes in disastrous eclipse, except in the judgment of Mississippi. So, in tin- probable results of the future, we both stand adverse to the judgment of the country. In the pursuit of your ambition you are ungrateful and Unscrupulous as to the means of success, four organ, the New York Sun, in the same breath, ridicules the capacity of your master, and dwells with emphasis noon your peculiar fitness for his office. V"i r "excellent toool. Mr. Tulloch, became so reckless in the manipulation of your Department, in the interest of your ambition, and SO deficient of the wi-hes of the President and the country, that, to STC yourself from an exposition of popular indignation, you found it convenient to trans'ter him to another sphere of scandalous at i Ity, where his talents might be exerted with equal Bed and less effrontery. Virginia, Tennessee, Mississippi and Texas, not to mention anything so humble as myself, were obstructions in the way of your success, because through President Grant's intervention in excluding the proscriptire clauses from t heir TganiC law, these States are brought into the Union, and firmly welded to his support. Now, this is in direct conflict with your systematized plans, for what General Granl gets, in the next Presidential election, clearly Boatwell will not get, and therefore have you denounced the Conservative Republicans, who are for (irant, that you may obtain the proscripthre Republicans, who are for Boutwell, and by some strange, dexterous management, and occult political strategy, yon have so worked upon the confidence of the President as to cause him to flourish the club, with which you intend to break his head, by inducing him to join in denunciation of the Conservative Republicans, a party created by his magnanimity, atul triumphant through his encouragement, lint, sir, your purpose is easily duv Deniable, and has a two-fold object namely to destroy the National Republican party in the South, and then to reconstruct from its shattered fragments, a Boutwell party, with no Richmond in the field to strike for your crown, lint, if you cannot succeed in this scheme of desperate enterprise, you mean to ruin, a result from present appearances much more likely to be reached. Your official intervention for Wells, for instance, irave 30,000 majority to Walker, four letter to Stokes gave Tennessee to Benter by an overwhelming vote of 70,000. Your marvelous political sagacity, now active in Mississippi and Texas, will repeat your calamity, and again overwhelm you with discomfiture and defeat. Superadd to tin s.' n i;lts of your unapproachable folly the imposition on these States of your ironclad oath, and the alienation is complete, landing them in the outstretched arms of Democracy. I'ut the consequences of your folly do not stop here. Ohio and Pennsylvania and other States will decide political status in October, and the North will echo back the condemnation of the South, and peal in your ears this fact, that then- is iill left enough of the incorruptible virtue of the Re uhlic to rebuke you for a wanton suppression of that most sacred riirht, the elective franchise. Hut, sir. this will not deter you from your mad course. Von will still persist, until every prop that supports our party is stricken away, and the whole grand superstructure tumbles about our cars in hopeless ruin. When you were appointed Secretary of the Treasury, and unanimously confirmed by a Senate of every shade of political opinion, dil you not take an oath to administer your office impartially and for the exclusive objects of its creation to collect the revenue and control the finances of the country? I- not that office the property of the nation, and yourself only clothed for a thne with a little brief authority? Then, sir, how do you explain this perversion ot its legitimate uses and functions into a in ans and au instrument of oppression, to force and compel an election of obnoxious rulers upon the people ot the Sooth f Is such a c mrse consistent with your oath of ollice, or do you call this a gltat moral idea? But, Mr. Boutwell, though you have thus prostituted the power of your office for purposes of oppression, wit hout the warranl of conscience, or law, it may be that you can tell me by w hat authority you assume to pronoun- upon my political orthodoxy ? Who constituted you the infallible Pope of Republicanism? Who gave you authority to hurl the political anathemas of the party? Again, what right had you to commit the administration to your policy? Have you yet to ham that you arc only a part of the administratioii, and not the whole of it, though your friends believe that a monomania has seized your mind on that subject, and that you verily believe yourself the State ? Very respectfully, Louifl Dent. Ollicial Partisanship.

A LETnen from Judge Dent to Mr. Boutwell has appeared, castigating the latter for his hostility to the candidature of the President's brother-in-law for the Governorship f Mississippi, and bnputinej to 1 im designs n the Presidency. It u plain from this document, whatever the Judge's other qualifications may be, that he can indite a stinging epistle. He complains with much force of Mr. IJoutwcll using the power of h;s ome, which he was sworn to exercise impartially and for the public interest, actively for partisan purposes; also of his undertaking to pronounce upon his (Judge Dent's) political orthodoxy. It does not appear that Judge Dent would have any particular objection to Mr. Boutweirs interposing in his behalf, or to his pronouncings political eulogium upon him. Vet the question he has i d ed is an important one, ami this assault of bison the Secretary of the Treasury will have signal value should il at all conduce to make official men open their eves to the gross impropriety of their taking active parts in political contests, entering the political rings, and there giving and receiving blows as ordinary combatanta This mttsl be highly detrimental to the public Inten sta. Whilst public officers are engaged in political strife they cannot he attending to the business of then' offices Neither can their minds lie fitted for the calm discharge of their duties. There certainly is no occasion for official persons thus withdrawing themselves from their proper avocations. There is an abundance of leaders and partisans forthcoming to do battle for cvry party. It seems not only indecent and detrimental to the public Interest thai official persons should act in this way: it appearto be altogether at rarhtnee with constitutional principle. In England, the various mini a. rs and public officials may be members, of the House of Lords or Commons, and are at liberty to lake part with a certain reserve in political questions ; but acarcely in electioneering coa tests for any office. Judges are altogether excluded from the House of Commons, manifestly lor the purpose of impressing their minds with the neutrality and devo tedness to their proper lunctions that should be their characteristics. Is it too orach to infer that the exclusion fromCmv pre - or the Senate of such public officers. as Secretary of the Treasury was meant to inculcate n similar lesson F It can make no difference whether the tontest is for the Governorship of a Sta'e or a seat in Conrn a wie ii we read or hear of Louis .apoeon f,r hjv. ministers (HCtattngOf sugj iting to the cities or departments of France the names of mndJdates to be elected by them, we Ibel shocked at the grossnesi of the net, and rapidly conclude that ( onstitutiona! liberty can be hut a name Wheys, SOch scandals are practised. And, If appaiK ftfi ;uade hv panic 01 h

individuals to General Grant or to any of his ministers for their opinions or support of political candidates, or those opinions are offered without any solicitation, and are found to have weight, how, in this respect, docs free America differ from imperial France, unless to the disadvantage of the former? Missouri lit publica n, August i .

Mr. Pendleton's Letter of Acceptance. Cincinnati, August 10. Mr. Pendleton's acceptance of the nomination for Governor will be published tomorrow. He compliments Rosecrans and others who were before the Convention, and concludes as follows " Governor Hays, in his speech at "Wilmington, forgot to allude to the Fifteenth Amendment, and his views on that important question. In discuaafng the finances he Hud, ' We are in the midst of profound peace, yet money is scarce and business is depressed.' He might have added that employment is difficult to be obtained; that labor is badly rewarded; that industrial pursuits are all hampered; that enterprising men engaged in business are standing on the very verire of bankruptcy ; that interest is enormously high ; that the taritl" is most oppressive; that the internal taxation is most unequal, unjust and onerous; that dead capital is exempted, and active capital and labor weighed down; and, warming with the picture, he might also have said that for eight years the Republican party had been in absolute possession of tue government ; that a Republican Secretary of the Treasury has now control of the money market of tie country, and tha' ' "WSj hh) power Still further to contm. t he currency, to increase the hard times, and I buy over-due bonds at one hundred and twenty dollars, which by law he is entitled to buy at par, thereby taking twenty dollars for every hundred from the tax-payer and giving it to the bondholder. The farmer, the merchant, the manufacturer will ask why these tilings are so? What is the cause? What is the remedy? They are important questions this fall. They touch us all. Democrats and Republicans alike. They rise above the domain ot mere partisan in politics, and should be considered with the calmest reason, the purest motives and the best Judgment. In this spirit I shall discuss them as soon as I am able to take part with my friends in the activity of the campaign. Of the result in October we need have no fear." A Comet Sensation. P.VR Vc.KAriis similar to the following are going the rounds of the press: "For more than ten years past, scientific men of the world have told us that during tin' months of July, August and September, this year, the most wonderful comet the world has ever known would appear; also, that it would approach nearer the earth than any comet ever before; that either the comet or the planet whereon we live would have to change its course or a collision would be inevitable. This comet is several times larger than our earth. According to astronomers, it is the same one that preceded the wars of Greece, and was followed by a terrible contagion in Persia. Several years after it reappeared, and was preceded by a most terrible war with Koine, which piled the dead in the streets of the Eternal City, until there were not left enough living to bury the dead. This same comet is paying its respects to our sphere again. It may be seen by the naked eye on any clear night in the northern part of the heavens, at from 11 to 12 o'clock, and from that time till daylight. It will grow brighter and brighter as it approaches the earth." How far there is any truth in these statements we proceed to show : 1. Xo such prediction has ever been made by any scientific man, so far as known. The story was originated in a quarter which no astronomer worthy. regards as trust"2. No stich comet appeared during the month of July, nor, thus far, during the month ot August. & There is no comet visible as described; the only wanderer now seen in that quarter is the planet Jupiter, who, although he has been held responsible for the performance of many atrange freaks among the comets, is far from being "hair-like" him self. And, finally, though we do not mean to say that a comet, hitherto unknown, may not now be approaching ttie earth, certainly none that has hitherto appeared, and whose return is a matter of accurate calculation, is nearing us. But we do not know of any report from any scientific quarter that any such celestial "body is isible anywhere. Therefore, if any credulous persons have been made Unhappy by these portents dire of plagues, and desolating wars, and rrasli ot worlds, they may dismiss their fears and be legitimately and mfely miserable about the weather. Chiess0 Trihunr. m M1S( ELLANEOrS ITEMS. A Hack of JSci li'toics The Chip aways. It Is unwise to WORT about that which cannot be helped, and foolish to worry about that which can be helped. Therefore, worry not at all. Yousra BwHA 14 We don't go down Grand street, for I haven't paid my tailor his Christmas bill yet, and if lie should see me, he might feel embarrassed." A wao, seeing a door nearly off its hingi s, in which condition it had been some time, observed that when it had fallen and killed sotneone.it would probably he hung. Taj heart is six inches in length, four inches in diameter, and beats seventy times per minute, 4,100 times per hour, 10',8(H) times per day, and 37,770,000 times per year. It is said that the horn of a rhinoceros consists of numerous hairs firmly united together, and that when the animal becomes old the horn becomes smaller and finally disappears altogether by a process closely resembling that 1 y whic h men hemine Dual at an MftBOed age. An Ahaiiian Li oiiiNo Plant. "For the first time," says Palgi'ave, the traveler, " I met with a narcotic plant, very common further south, and gifted with curious qualities. Its seeds, in which the deleterious principle seems chiefly to reside, u hen pounded and administered In asmau dose, produce effects much like those aacribed to Sir Humphry Davy's laughing Lra; the patient dances, ahajps and performs a thousand extravagances, till, after in BOUT of great excitement to himself and amusement to the bystanders, he falls asleep, and on awaking has lost all memory of what he lid or said while under the influence of the drug. To put a pinch of this powder into the coffee of some unsuspecting individual is not an uncommon joke." Tattlino " Children, (and older people too), don't talk against each other, calling one ugly, another stingy, another cross, behind their liack. It is the mean tsJ sort of talk. Even if they are ugly, stingv, or cross, it does you no good to repeat it. It makes you love to tell of faults it makes you uncharitable. Your soul grows smaller. Your heart loses its generous blood when you tattle about your friends. Tell all the fjood you know about them, and carry the sinsto your own heart, or else tell them to Ood, and ask Him to pardon tin m. That would he Christ like. If any body o ils uhout Mary doing or saying a mean, or nicked hing, call t mind some virtue that htaic possesses, and hold it up to her praise. Vor triff 0tf mk It arn t- make thiN a UnMt "

FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.

USEFUL RECIPES ETC. If you wish to become bald-headed, mearanai or cap au tue tune. Bleep in a close night-cap, and keep the hair well sopped with any fatty oil or tallow you can buy. To expedite matters, bathe with liquors, bay rum, esc. ; but Beware f dean mn r t(i xtp. Alt. decently-inclined persons should use a tooth-brush dailv. Nothinc can be more con lucive to health. We have heard peoplt brag that they " never cleaned their teeth in their lives." Such an admission is just as creditable to themselves as an assertion that they never washed their !es, nor small-toothed their hair. Ktchittge. BLACnnsnnv Wink. Pour boiling water over your berries; let them shmd until cold; then mash the berries, strain throuirh a cloth, and add two pounds of sugar to every gallon : mix sugar and juice thoroughly and let it stand for eight days: then strain again; dissolve an ounce of isinglass to alz gallons wine, and mix in before setting away for use. Exchange. PsntSKKVnra Cohn. A lady sends the following recipe to the Farmers1 Club: Mfy method is to cut from the cob and put it down in large stone Jars, two fourths corn and one of salt, by measure ; mix well. We have no trouble at all in keeping ii good all the year round in that way." Allot her contributor says : " There is as much difference between corn scraped from the cob and that cut from the cob as there is between corn-starch and an ordinary hastypudding. I have tried several ways, and find it ready delicious only when it is scraped from the cob immediately after it is husked. Then put it in dishes about the stove and ovens and dry m soon as possible. To Makaos a Rkaklmg Ffonss. Whenever yon perceive a horse's inclination to rear, separat your reins and prepare for him. The instant he is about to rise slacken one baud and bend or twist his head with the other, keeping your hands low. This bending compels him to move a hind leg, and of necessity brings his fore (eel down. Instantly twist him completely round two or three times, which will confuse him very much, and completely throw him off his guard. The moment yon tve finished twisting him around, place hi-1 ad in the direction you wish to proceed, apply the spurs and he will not fail to go forward. Cut sn iNo and Drawing SmOKKS. Every edge-tool will operate most effectively when it is wielded with a drawing stroke. A person may press his bare hand on the keen edge of a ra.o" without cutting the skin. But let the hand or the razor be drawn on a trifle, while pressure is being applied, and the cutting edge will enter with far less pressure. As many cutting; instruments must be worked with a crushing stroke, it is of great imporance that the cutting edge be brought to as perfect ah edge as practicable, by means of a fine-gritted oil-stone Axes, chisels, planes, and the knives of most straw-cutters, are all operated with a crushing stroke. Consequently, alter such edgetools have beer ground on a coarse grindstone, the edge should be rubbed up with an oil-stone until the cutting edge is as sharp as the edge of an excellent knife. H( artk and Home, To Pbbsbrvb Quinces. The oranne quince is the best to preserve, reel and core the quinces, cigh a pound of crushed sugar to a pound ' quinces; put the peel and cons into a kettle with just water enough to cover them Let this simmer about two hours; then strain the liquor, put it back into the kettle, and put in as many quinces as the liquor will cover boil them until they are tender, take them out and put them on a flat dish to cool; put in more until they are boiled, then put the BUgar in, and let it boil until it becomes a syrup; then put tnM many quinces as the syrup will cover' let them boil about thirty minutes; put them on a flat dish to cool ; and then more until they are all ooilcd ; then boil the syrup until all the water is boiled out of it. When the quinces are coot, put them into tbe jars and strain the syrup while it is hot through a very line sieve on we quinces. Mm. Put wim's Bedpt lj"k. PitASTnn. Abraham Broad, of New Jersey, furnishes the Farmers' Club with the following bit of experience: "One of my farmers planted corn in a field, forty rows of which nearest the building 1 planted myself The night before I planted I put the seed to soak in warm water and rolled it in plaster wdiile planting. I remember of getting an ear last March, near Newark, of a friend. I planted the ear dry without plaster, planting directly across the forty rows, and where the ground was as good ü any. This morn ing l mllcil llie attention ot the t.miier to it. rnere had been no piaster put upon any since planting, and we decided that there was almost half difference, that which was rolled almost twice as large, of S good healthy color, the other having a sickly yellow shade. The soil is a heavy day loam." , CntAxonra the Colos ov Plowkbsl Onr young readers will find much Interest and pleasure in the following experiment tor the above purpoae : Take a trmspoon(ul of flour of sulphur, place it in an oM saucer, ami set lire to it with a common Mien; when it gets fairly burning, take some high colored tlower double ones are the best, such as a double Dahlia or doable Zinnia and hold it above it, at such a distance as to prevent its lieing burnt by the name of the sulphur, and the tips of tbe petals will be changed into another color; for instance, a double pur- j pie Dahlia will have the petals lipped with white, or a doable red one will be-1 come tipped with yellow, and If the Dower is exposed long enough, the whole Mower will become changed in color. Care must ' he hail not to inhale the fumefl ol' the sulphur, nor shonkl it be done in tin- bouse, for it may fade tbe color of the curtains, paprhaDging8, or furniture, besides filling the house witb unpleasant fumes. On the piazza or some sheltered place in the open air is me oesi piace ior uoing h. aearm and Ilomt . Ciieiinihf rs, anil their Culture. Tiik cucinnher should bfl regarded a B I profitable num crop, rather than as a rege table, to be extensively Cultivated in mar ket-gardena To raise the early van ties, we plant six or eUthl aeeds in an in -it. .1 shI (about tour inches aqnare) in a cold franse. When the plants have come out the rough leaf, and are beginning lo run, they should be set out in good ground, and cultivated the sann- as the late crop. In this way we avoid the numerous bugs and tb as, whose depredations c ause mi much For an early oul door crop, sehet rich, liht, or mellow soil, free (rout clods or stones. Alter having it thoroughly pul refined, draw rather deep furrows the enfire length of t he held, three ami a half to four and a half feet apart (a "-mmI cloversod, plowed twice, is the beat); then draw cross-furrows the nunc distance apart. At tbe intersection deposit a huge ahoTelful of good stable or barn-vard manure. I lav ing gOJM over the ticid thus, with a hoe draw i;ood mellow ground upon the manure, making a hill, and level the top ott" nicely, discarding all lumps or stone-; witb I In- hoe 1 ben draw a small quantity of the ground away, drop from t.. ti n ends In a hill planting about one or one and a half inches deep, and not rH tiemanure. When they begin to show themselves, keep all weeds, etc, hoed down, lad tin. ground wil ptlnrtd ami ooltlyated,

as the future crop depends, in a great measure, on the strict observance of this rule. jftThen they have run so as to interfere with good cultivation, and the blossoms have et discontinue the cultivation.

as to continue it will only result, in a diaajnished and unprofitable crop. For three or four weeks they arc liable to be infested with a variety' of insects. The striped bugs are their greatest enemli 3. They do not attack the plants until the dew has been dispelled by the action of the sun. As a sure remedy for these troublesome pests, we use air-slacked lime, sprinkling the plant! with as much as the dew will absorb before it has disappeared, continuing the application until all signs of the hugs have disappeared, which is generally in one week, or a little longer. The same practice is prescribed for the destruction of fleas, etc. To save the seed, leave some huge tine ones, and, when ripe or turned yellow, take a tub, made by sawing a barrel in two, CUt the seed out of the cucumber, putting the seed (herein. In two 01 three weeks, after fermentation has taken place, wash the seed with water by halffilling a bucket with the Beed,and filling up with water, repeating the washing twice, stirring them up briskly with a stick. All the good seed will sink to the bottom of the bucket, nndtthc light refuse seed will float on the top, when the water and refuse can be poured off, leaving only good, plump seed, all of which arc sure to germinate. After the water has been poured oil", spread the seed on B board to dry, taking care to bring them in before a rain or before sundown. When perfectly dry, put them into bags holding two to four quarts, carefully labeled, and put in a dry, cool place; we generally hang them on a nail, out of the reach ot rats or mice, as iney prove very destructive to this kind of seed. Immense Quantities of cucumbers an raised for pickling, and they almost seem a distinct kind, as they never attain a large size. They are planted late in the summer, just so as to be ready for pickling before frost, and when sold in a small way, bring from J?t to $2.50 per thousand, which makes it a very remunerative crop. Cucumbers should be picked before they begin to turn yellow, as it injures their sale very much. The following are the names of some of j the most extensively cultivated varieties: While Spine, a variety which is cultivated j for market to a greater extent than almost all others; of medium size, and dark green, retaining its color wiien picken, i longer than any oilier variety. Long Green, a well-known variety and much esteemed ; is rat her large ; an excellent table variety. The Gherkin is raised exclusively for pickling; small, and rather full t prickles, which make it unpleasant to handle The Manchester Prise, and several ot lier-, are of various repute among gardeners and truckers. Hearth inl Home. Diarrhea. This is a very. common disease in summer time. Cholera is nothing more than exaggerated diarrhea. When a man has died of diarrhea, he has died of cholera, in reality. It may be well for travelers to know that the first, the most Important, and the most Indispensable Item In the arresl and cure of looseness in the bowels, is absolute quietude on a lied ; nature herself always prompts this by disinclining us to locomotion. The next thing K to eat nothing but common rice, parched like coffee, and then boiled, and taken with a little salt and butter. Drink little or no liquid of any kind. Every step taken in diarrhea, every spoonful of liquid, only aggravates the disease, if locomotion is compulsory, the misfortune of'the necessity may be lessened by having a stout piece of woolen flannel bound tightly round the abdomen, so as to be doubled in front, ami kept well in its place. In the practice of many ye irs, we have never failed to notice a gratifying result to follow these observances. HaWe Journal of Health. "i i! YouKG Folks i ok Skptkmp.kr. Chapter JSVL of Mr. AJdrfcSra -siory af a Bad Boy" h devoted to a graphic account of how the had boy and his companions conspired together BBd effectually astonished the Kiverinouthniw. I other contents are: ahout by t. M. Brewer; At Croqael Hamming liirds. Discovery of tin' Madeira Islands, by Janea Parton; Uardening for tiirls. continued; Lot at Sea. by Geoririana M. Craik : The Apostle of hike Superior -wii h a Mao hy J. II. A. Hone : Little Sweet Pea: Lawrence mwig the Iron Men. by J. T. TTUWSridgC ; Dream of the Little Hoy who would not Kat his t'rti-ts. by j A. M. Dia: Swing Away a Smi. with Music; i Etoand the Kveaiag Limp: Our Lettei Box. Bari eral appropriate DJartrathfa, An equally rich number i pmini-c d for October. Published by , PtonjM, Ooooon A: Co., Boston, Mass. f&OOper aniiiKi: three copies. fSJI; live. :x.0J; ten, I $ft.6e; twenty. tl.00, with extra copy. Simrle milliners. 20 Cell The Atlantic Monthly kok Septem Hm rnntaiiw W'liv II !.- '.! aamJ aM I Canada, by Rev. waiter Mttchell; Was Refchenbaca Right?; The Foe in the Household pari VII. - by Caroline Cbeeeboro; The True Story ol l.idy Byroovs Life, by Harriot Beocnsr Btews, aeah Flint. Joanwy, by Kayard Taylor: My Comrade audi, by .1. T. Trow "bridge ; A Lone Woman's Trip to Omaha tad Deyaad; CoaBaciaa sad the Chinese, by h'ev. Jane's Fn eman Clark: The Fir-t Cricket, by W. D. Howells: Oabrielle de Bill .Him Part HL- hy BearyJaawt, Jr.; U-Sonlag atWashin.irtoii. by James I;irtii : The Gavhwaf Dors, by J. Jackson J.trvis; A Poetical Lot. Published by Fiki.os. OaaoonJt Co., BMTiwaoal street. Bostoa, Ma-s. $ I. (Id per year : twocopie fLSt' live. ?lf.(Kl: ten. anMS; single numbers. :!, cents. The Children's Hour.- The Septeanber namher eontaina the Banal amount of rhtdrti reading matter both entert ainiuu' and instructive for the little folks, with suitable illu-trations. Published by T. S. Alma A Sons. Phila.'e lpbia. Pa. Single copies per year. M; one copy three years, .1.00; live copies one year. $.".00: ten eoniea, and one extra. 10. (HI. Single iiuiiiIkts, 15 tents. Sample number, 10 cents. Gobanr POM Skptkmuku. The steelplate, " The Cottage Home," fas as usnao view of I he cottage- the good wife leimr engaged in prepariaa for '"' return of tbe laniilv to the noon -day meal. The la-hioii plate contain- six figures, and the inlriinhai sheet thirty aeTea of the latest aaaion dcitgtM. A plate of children's faahions la also irivcn. ) Umy Ul.Un are contained in the work department. Original and plnamni atortea, ahetchea, poems, ninahls household receits. etc. Address L. A. QODST, Philadelphia. Obmi oopjr one year jf;;; two copies ." ; three, 97.80 ; four. ?Uil; live, and one extra. 11 . oijht. and one extra, f-.Il ; eleven, und oue extra. fflAO. Airrm k's HoMB M v; .i.k. The number for Septeniler OOntaiaa " Not Mp-oll." a new laaaparaaee story, by the author at "Tea Nhrhta in a llar-Koom,' with full paga illustration. Ariliur's si ory of 1 he QnahfJBi and t he Arni-trones'" is coneladed. "The Daarinaaof Medbury." hy VüsSula F. Towiisetul. is continued. Other entcrtatalBg stoiies.i hahkm Intellisaea and BhsSiattSns, ponn. Sftj arayi Ot cooking gaaM, etc, naake ap the Italnrrr of the September a umher of thai peasant nainaaaiarian T. s. harai a A Boas, SOS and 8H chestnut atreet, Phitadebjihta, Pa. Shnjle aaanjhar, Htinh, Bbaa aahacripUoo. Sa.0Sper year ; one ropy three ye trs. $0.00; three eoptae one year, nLSftj lour t opic-. Mt; t iht copies, and extra flMO; Hhsea eopies. and one exn i. fU) oo Home Magaahaw and Once Month. IS.00. Hoaae Haan inc. Once a Month, ClnMien .-. Hour and I.nly'n Hook. UM, O.nck a Month. The second paper of "Curiusiiies of Animal Lite ' is Ihnsnhsi in the Sept. ini.ei anntber, aocoaaaManaa by five iiiiiftratfoaa, OhaaaMa ai.. and xx. of the original story

enncien " in- mm nl Taxburv are eive-n. The i i-in lining ontein-of the ninety-six pae-es of tliio ' ninnher an- BMMH1 up ot original an. I aj lerted ' storie-. skeiclies. poeiip, and m i.-nMlle articles of an entertalnini; and inttruetive chataeter. Our a Month is pnltltslied b v T. S. A in II I it ,t Söst, 1'hiladelphia. Pa. MI a aaajf !n iSB0e three eoplv, SX; six eopies. and ouw fxtrn, 10M t-n M ons extm, f m.uo.

espies, M rent-. Every afcecriber to this niairazine for IMS, or to the Horn Maffazlntat Oäl'lmt's Ihmr. is entitled to order the beautiful enirt.ivmg The hagsl of lec"-the regular price of which i- gun lor aim.

A Life-saving Itefnrinatisiu A radical ehtagi hM been iabeaeat in the practice of medicine. Physicians have ceased to torture and prostrate their patients, insicut f paB iier down, they build up: instead of asaultin-' n ture. they assist her. Cnppinir. leeching:, blistering, venesection, calomel, antimony, stupifyin- narcotics, and r:isiii)i: purgative, once the favorite resources of the faculty, are now rarely resorted to even hv the most dofBMfJc members of the profession. The old creed was that disease was -ome-thincr which must be expelled by violent artificial means, irrespective of the wear and tear of the vital organization in the process. The new Breed recoj:-ni.-'s the improvement of the general health a- essential io the cure of all local ailments. Item" it isthat HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS, Um most potent vegetable tonic that pharmacy has ever hroiiirlit to the as-i Ma me of nature in her strnirirles with disease, has been conlhlly approved by practitioners of the modern school". It is pleasant torcflect that reason and philosophy have at last been victorious over the errors of 'the pa-t. and that thou-antK and tens sfttSMSSnSS, OlhasMUl being are alive and WCÜ to-day. who would induhitahly be mouldering in their graves, had they been subjected to the pains and penalties which were decan ed oithodox and indispensable thirty or forty years Preventive medication was scarcely thought of then ; hut now it is considered of paramount importance, and the celebrity of the stanoaki isVhiOKANT. AUnUTIU ANI" r.KSTOKATIVE of the age (a title which HOSTETTER'S BITTERS bare fairly earned by their long career of mceeoaX mainly due to its efficiency us a pbotkctive i-kki'-ARATION. A ooarrc of th P.fTTKKS is urgently recommended at this season of the year, as a safe and certain antidote to tbe aalaria which prodaces later-mitt-in and leniittent fevers, diarrhea, dysentery and other maladies. A Sikgulau Proposition. Dr. Sage has undoubtedly discovered a perfect specific fur C':tt:trrii. judging from thr universal satisfaction and approbation which we j hear expressed by several persons w ho . ' have used it. K. V. Pierce, M. i)., of Buf falo, X. Y., the proprietor, as will be seen by reference to our advertising cdumna, lias go much confidence in the Remedy, as to offer a standing rew ard of (500 for a ease of Catarrh that he cannot cure. The remedy is said to be very mUd and pleasant to nse. It may be procured by enclosing sixty cents to the proprietor, or of any Druggist in the land. Toledo Blade. Tin: T,rs:- is the Great Laboratory or tiik Hi man System. When once destroyed they can never he made sound aL'ain. We should remove the first cause which tends to their destruction. When MVeaate forming, it is indicated tyaceagh or pains in the cheM. or difficulty of breathing. NowALunts Lum Hai.m will check these symptoms at once, if it i used in time, and prevent fatal Consumption. For sale hy all Dni'L'ists. Tdf purest and aweeter. Cod-Liver OU in the wor;d Is Hsi.arrt & Caswell's, made on the seashore, from fresli, selectet livers, by Caswkll, Hazakd & Co., New fork. It Is absnlntely pur an t ir?et. Patients Who have once taken It prefer it to all others. Physicians hav? decided it superior to aDy of the other oils in market. CaaRpei ftSJtSa, lace, roue It skin, pimples, rlnjr-w-rm, salt-rhHum. ami other cutaneous atl- ctlons, cured, and the skin made oft and smooth, by uslne taaJamaMT Ttr.Sip made by Caswicll, Hazard & Co-, N w Yorit. It Is more convenient and asily applied than other remedies, avoiding the trouble of the prcasy compounds i.ow In use. EVERY ONE arho reada this should send hnii--i' ai- ij lor the "The Ww to Wkm.th " It coatt but three cents. Hundreds are making monev hy h lim: ihb advice. Addree rNlON INS'riTCTE association. Oberlin, Cftrio. The Hot Popular Medicine ExUuitl PERRY DAVIS' PUN KILLER i "HE TAIN KlI.I.Ki: N laaBj applicable ami efficacious to voting or obi. rpuR i.IN" KILLER 1 i both an Internal ami Externa! tteiaadjr. rpHE PAIN KILLER will cure 1 Fr er au l Agoa when other remedies hai (ailed. 'I'll!: PAIN KILLER should A used at the first maiiiff-tati Ih' ition of Cob or Cough. nPBE PAIN KILLER A Is the Great Family Medicine of the ae. rpHE PAIN KILLER A Will cure Painter's Colic. HPHE PAIN KILLER A l good for Scalds and Burns. fHE PAIN KILLER 1 Has the Verdict of the People in its faor. 1 'HE PAIN KILLF.i: Cues l'niersal Satisfaction. rpiIE PAIN KILLER 1 Beware of txi i tnoxa and Coi v IBBVBITS. HE PAIN KILLER Is an almost eertai'i cure tor HOLFIIA. and lias. Wllnoai Oo'ini. iKfli more ikt'Ssiiii liieuritm tins tern ble (iisease than any other known remedy, or even the must eminent or skillful Phyatehma. la India, Africa andChtna. where I bin dreadful dtaeaae htaver lore or leaf prevalent, the PAIN KILLER la eoaatdered, by the nati' es as well as European residents in tlie-e climates, A SURE REMEDY. rpiIE PAIN KILLER each Pottle wrapped with full directions for use. TUP- PAIN KILI.FW is vol l bv all X Urueirists and Dealers in Family Medicines. KSilonJ BA liA it V. AI'lresaü.LV iwfn., N. Y. BH'NT1KS! I'oii-loiix : All Wnr Clmlaaai ! Itaek :iy, p;iy for lost borses, rations, prize navy par, everjttsaf; falturo inj t!?rx no miner, ftlM chum la luat, vrite me with atampa, I natu nrnri'rri Also lo a Ckateial Law and Land Buaineaa, at J AKVI8 & SAKFOUD'S, No. 1. I Iii Laäiille Ktreel, CUeaan. ! FN. ttUMKLlV - IHto L. Hew Haven. 1 o n ii, FALL SFSsIOV begins Sentetnlier 13th. CaUiloi;ues sent on application. I N Ii F. I I ( TF. As well a obscene words and storie I titter, sear my soni, pris,,n than who hear nana, and brhajl tta Hooa of tlielr soids on niv own. WANTED ! A(JKT for 1'rof. lKO.V Laws of Business With rt 1 1. Pirk nos wn Poena ks all Taaafl aonoan in iiui Sran n hik Dvtaai. St Tbucophii i s ro: .v. LL 1.. Professor til Law in Harvard t iii erslt , and author of many Luv Books. A Nbw k.mik aoa Ktkiybo&t. Kzptaialac the ri-Wa, atatoa and tMtmtti aael all tbe relations of lite, as well as every kind of eontraet and teaal iiliBfltiati Bo pttut, mil , nr.-uriff and minultr thai no person ran afford to lie without It. Ktnbodyitiz in popular form the results of IIa1 labor and lttdy of thn nio-l pup nlar and MeeaaalW i iter ol' law ImioKs in the count rt. Woam tkn mm raa raaoa skkh kok it. furritt$fte tt n 'to "ini asraata Iii" a . Snd for descriptbe elreular. Addirss .lo FS. JL' NKLN .V t o., tn)li-h. 167 South ( lark St.. Chicago. Til. lsllf-1 s. VINEGAR! Ask vo'ir llrocer Tor PSeaaora -ClItKK VlNKtiAM. A most Splendid Hriine. vtarranieti pun ami 10 nr up ntckleHST PREMIUM at the t '. S. Fair, bl 8tle K:iir. anrl 'hleatro c Kir. Largest works ot Ihr kliel in C. S. i-lstablished titw. 33 and 34 1 SUte St., Chicao. Ti rtrinn . M. SI'KNCKR CO., UratMeboro. Vt For parttculur. ilSWEET bWBBT üfiNiKK. fa tenrrrtm ed e.iaal aoee ar doar-to ttn aulphau- (bitter) Quinine, will the Important advantatre o' iv-lne wjt lntead ot hater. SVlLPNIA.UOrm PTTKtriBD of ltd iekcnlnaraml po!nuour properties, tt m the mn; rt -rot AN0ÜYNK aatt L;()OTH ISO OPl&TK yet dlsrov ereU. QUININE Svapnia tMr ana ny orui:"""-. pr--v.rlhed hy the heat laiyslrlnn Miirteoniy n stcums. RirrCo. MannrHi'''irln-Cheiiiinln. New York AGENTS WANTED ! roa "Wonders of the World," OOMPRISINH Start ling tneiilwnts, lnterestlujt Prmoa and WoaSW fnl Kventa, In all Countries, all Age, and atnon all l'eople. By C. O. KoiiKnbkbu. OVER m THIHISWB lll.l STi;Tll), By the most dtstlnßuiMie.t Artist tn Knropc and America. The largest, net elltn, best Illustrated, most ri eltlnc anmsinK, Insti nellve., entertatnlnn, at art 1 In 5. iSMOWSa nnd attraetive nhscriptlon hxk ever pab llshert. Bend for elrenlnrs with let nis at once Al1ros, rSIVED STATES PIBUSIIING (C, tnaj j. in, k üuaiaa. ümtmmM x - . n -m 9 CU (I II tn r- i " J (tpvri oofiio tinting. Ceiling 1 Eave Gutters, rfc. Adaressn J ft J. FAT &. SONS. Camden. Mew Ja?. I U sawanatw jasass. Jas m".i.jiull .'mwmrM I

HBST-CLAS8

Chicago Houses. TAPWEM. J. V. & CO., Import, J ft M and 4 Wahash Ave I? JobbcrE in Dry Good, and Notions HAKKIS S. H.t . 61 south CanK! v A Lock. Fire r.nd Dnrrlar Proof afc Ll' td 6i im nnKtöa? Mr-iafacttired by tbe I iß s aft- ! 9 5 I i a o "a c tr m I Northwestrrn Fire KxHuiKitllttr CO. WASHinoTOS eT.. cmcaoo. TT.e Bo-ir! of DaMrfflSai and t'ic Fire Commit tonen of Älcaco have recommended meto treu. -a ' 1 ,'ro 'iction. V. '. lUr-;, Lr.te f re Ma."!.'. . o C:y luv rejkr.! aicra on f.le ta his wnreiK-uae ot nreBMSVa materials, fr Weil bi. a- the t.-e- tl.ine of tne kind tn use. Jo. V. t-'arwe'l Co.. t-av Bollcl.i the rviTilea of ;e.liir.,i the:u to their cuatomera, aa ho h T .Mi .r r. -'-'' 1 '' r NOWOPEN ! CUR GREAT WESTERS HOLLAH ÄflflSE AT 158 Stiito S1.. ( liimsro. RRAN II OF S. C. THOMPSON & CO. IM Federal streit. Bast. Oar ORE T TESTERN BR W II HOUSE has hem eatablis t Kir the ihuimx ..r ti... l .. i, nre-s chaijei.. an 'I that thev uiav receive their boo TS 111 ill' MlvMl'!1! I " '"I 'JT' t i in l..r.,.i. l... 1, iv.. t..ii i. iiTi. " as Aeni ior in ihm. a . .- . 1 . . . T LAB HOUSES of the East, will . ".lit ' ih-ira;hai.ti.e to .it-jti rSrecUl with Our Chicago Bi auch ! Tli. .mailt v of our Coi are fnllv I ii :tl. and onr terms to Agents are not excelled by aai HI bit l!" 'H in onr line of lniities. .UJKMS WANTED eaery tow-n ah 1 vlllafju ill lis' Western Stntcs. t'EKTI KM' ITKst Kivhu: a Complete 1 1 1 of arlieks that will K-sold for nie Hollar ra.-h, W soMatthe rate. if Ten Cents rach. T-n for al.HC Ji). w ith coiiiiuivi.iii. lor SJ.nti : :a. with eouiniisM.tn. lor f t.iW: I a:nl eoniiiussiou. lor fti.(H ; 100, it Ii eolif mission. f..r ain.no. Any i'rson senShaC-Spr n Ctnfe) Of Twentv. can have aeominisslon one or ne Ibnowlnf! aitlcVa: ir yarSa Mteettng; H Wetara PhotoBranli Alhnra; it nnartn Honey Conb t,uilt ; Ladi " Benee Battoo Boota, or your eltoiee of nniiKToiis otlier article for alove Club iianie 1 on circular. Kor n Vtmh of T,iri . one ot the folio -a inu' art i -rim : ; var Is sh-iin: l pair Howy OoaaS V'titis ; liinr articles from Kvehanro Liu Ve.. Äre. For ii I "liib of." i xi v . pair MaiM-lictor Quilts ; Bt yards Bberttox ; patroT Vooi Blanket; aosecs National Pictorial Dictionan-. u ith HNNi parje. and W BMfKVtaffi; -ix ulkJea iron HMtaMa; Uat, e. Kor ii ( lull ol'Oiir Utnulrnl ." " inir : in article-troin Kxckance I Ä1. 4u-. raraarf Mqtt fei all t aata j Ri j,iai mkI tank or l'ostoiiiee Money unter. We take pleayaara in reStrrfac ttio- ntojSwsa ne-r haS loalinr M es. to the larj-t Kvpress Compaaj tat the United States, taeAaaa ut MEBca-orra Uxmsr ExntKse Conraarr, M to W a aaliinfton Btreet, Boston, M i--., and through Ihem to tln-ir Apetlt thrassjpKMBl Ike country. W SBrfni POK lift I LARK. ,f S. C. THOMPSON Sc COM 1.5S State Stree. Cnaansnsj III., OR 1SC FI BI ltl. ST.. KONTO N, Tfs. INOF.LliATF.. As ajefj gkaneat words an! atortaa I Btter, am iu soul, poison those ho hear them, and bring the lil.KMl ol tlielr -Ills oil III V ov u. I'lfallihlc for t HnnlrH Vmnu Por aaana than a century the feeble and the li-. i-' t have been ilrinkin j strength and health from the Melter Sprinir. At Icnftfa ils properties l,ae ! BM universalized. The mount. tin moed not at Mahomet's call, hut chemistry, more ootctit. pl ie s the Selter Water at every invalid"- command Takkant's Kfkkijvks i st pBLTSCB aJUBlI te re-creation of that aronAerfld NMcttc for Srsftepala bUionsness. constipation, and ireueraJ debility. BOLD BV ALL DRUtiCtWTS. FRIGHTFUL DEVELOPMENTS ! At last the people Itave ernt the fact " tlironzh thetr hair." that liair dyi-s impn-vtii ited a ith acetate of lead and other metallic -nits are i iiuKicoi s rmßT i i iTurfi When Uiey s.H' tin! nstSIHe -cUiment at the bottOM of the bottles. Iliey kno that tin- disustin slulf liter jrttU nrawrf acaa l't n. ftaj aaiE, UKRibra, tot a amaleas ViearastaMs c, and tlml it, pure and ntc icioii-. in Cristadaro's Excelsior Hair Dye, aSbeSJRer th -anet..n or lrot--or t hlltou'- t'm antee that it contains " nothing deleterious." CRISTADORO HAIR PRESER V ATTVE a- a DrpHHins, acl-s like a charm on the hair after leiuc. Try il. Frki'ERIi'ktown. Knox Co., O., November 2, tSSR. f LimWOOTTS l!KKWKI,l,Paar Sa : frxvi e I vour scoitl R.M lacket Axe per express, and now scknoakUre tbsanie ,'..riho lHMief;t of all uIiomc de-in s or nei'estilf te uiakrn Ite teaabaaaa la chop aitb an se, I tult say: fr, ilia Red .lacket : and, as the Banrwa Conti tiae'htddt h at a doctor's opinion without his reasons j ot Huh alne, I ill uie mi- n:iH,.n- y -t The llet Jacket eis! SVuMJi thaa the eosasasai bit. .s,'.-...r it hcins round on the cut, it din not stick in the nooS. J oti Kutt chopHT with the coinmoii ae mnsl dlseovet that there is aa much Ultor and -ttvnlh epet,.htl In taklu: the aa out of the cut as in niakttu! the blow. o.f--Tti(s with the Ki'd lackfl i- 11 ' oidcd. and Iron, one third to on. halt I lie labor i- ed in etiltite ihe s:ine uuanlity. h'lfli Bj putting in the same labor that is meaaary w Ith a common are, you can easily make at lea-i thtrtyUirse pec cent, more w ood in the same time ara Kate I r. Wtltiii;an honest man in your li.'l Jacket oo these test-, and if it tails, it-fund hini hu nune . Resin cUullx , ours. " IIAKKl Bl 1WTN For sale by all respotiilHe tlealers. and Ihe manulac turers. I.IVriM TT A It KFW VIA.. I'M ism noil, l'v , sole owners of t olbort's MM HiiX Jacket Pataats. an D 0 ?V9 V ' . uinDll New York Offloe, 87 BEEKHAN ST.

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