Rensselaer Union, Volume 3, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 February 1871 — Page 4
CURRENT ITEMS.
Maiwk hea thia aeaaon built fire thouml nil n. Wbich la the smallest bridge in the world bskjgaof the none. A c© UM wjjl not latoxlcate, yet is indkattvooF mtoxicalkm—Air cup. A Califobnian recovered the use of a paralyzed arm by being thrown from a home. » s A colomhi boy in Trimble County, Kentucky, has killed thirty-one eagles in his life-time. Thuuc were two regularly established balloon companies in Faria during the late ■iegrn Why is geology considered a deep ** acienoer" Because it penetrates into the earth. Why are black eyes called piercing? Because they can look daggers when they like.’ Thk beat birth-day gift for your wife is a policy on year life in the Washington Lire, of New York. Governor of Maine has recently appointed his predecessor in office a Justice of the Peace. A chime of bells tn Milwaukee is inscribed: “In memory of Minnie J. Hodges—weight 724 pounds. A resident of Connecticut boasts that ' for eighty-four consecutive years he has eaten his Thanksgiving dinner in the same house. Mb SchExcs being afraid of WS sickness, the Boston Port ntteiw&iiim that “ he may avoid it by ‘ throwing up ’ his commission before he sails." r« rates of the Mutual Life, of Chicago, are as low as those of other good companies; yet it gives its members the 'advantage of Western rates of interest. A Texas paper reports that, since September last, 119,000 ]>eople, with 1,664 wagons, have emigrated from Tennessee and Georgia into the Lone Star State. Dr. Brown Sf.quard says that he believes the time will come when physicians will be called, not for the purpose of mak- ' ing sick people well, but to teach them how not to be sick. It is said by those who profess to know, that there never was a better prospect for a good wheat crop in Kansas than the coming season. The peach crop also promises to be large. They had a snow squall in Vermont the other (toy, which was accompanied by thunder and lightning, a horse being struck by the latter. 3 A religious society in Aberdeen, Scotland, recently * discussed the question whether reading the almanac on Sunday is consistent with Christian duty. Several persons in Titusville, Penn , have been poisoned, none fatally, by drinking water from a well in which a small quantity of white lead had fallen. Dr. W. 11. Neville, a young physician in Philadelphia, who was recently honorably acquitted of a charge of infanticide, had lain in prison three months. Of five little girls who broke through the ice at Portsmouth, N. IL, one day lately, four were insensible when rescued, but all were restored. Am unmarried friend declared the other day, with an expression of countenance almost lugubrious, ‘‘l never cared a farthing about getting married, until 1 attended an old bachelor’s funeral.” A bemefactor of the human raee has nvented, in London, a “ digitarium,”—a mall dumb piano, upon which pupils can learn the whole art and mystery ot piano and organ playing, without making any noise. Fovr married women of Podbizca, in Bohemia, were convicted, in December last, of having poisoned their husbands at a party which one of them had given for that purpose. They were sentenced to penal service for life. A little Boston girl joyfully assured her mother the other day that she had found out where they made horses—“ she had seen a man in a shop just finishing one of them, for he was nailing on his last foot.’’ Dr. Bhtden, of the India Sanitary Com mission, has recently written his annual report on the spread of the cholera in that country. The report concludes with the opinion that this plague cannot be prevented, and that no human efforts can stay its progress. A Michigan court has decided that a physician is not warrantor or insurer of a case, and he is not to be tried for the result of his remedies. His only contract and duty is to treat the case with reasonable diligence and skill. It is estimated that five millions of dollars are annually spent upon the poor in goes to impostors In London, thirty-five millions are yearly expended, and the amount is annually increasing. On Saturday, January 2, the little daughter of Captain Ely Sperry, of Woodbury, Conn., and his son, 10 years old, died of scarlet fever. On Thursday, February 2. his wife died suddenly of heart disease. He had one little son left, a boy of 4 years, but on Friday, February 3, he, too, fell & victim to the fever. The Troy (N. Y.) is responsible for the statement that a couple were married the other day, at Plainfield, Otsego County, partook of their wedding dinner in Winfield, Herkimer County, took tea in Bridgewater, Oneida County, and wereall the time under the same roof. The house stands “ across the lines.” In the case of Elizabeth R. Coffey, against the Home Life Insurance.. Company, which suit was brought in the Superior Court of New York City on a policy for <5,000 on the life of the plaintiff’s husband, and which the company refused to pay, on the ground of alleged suicide, the jury have rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for the foil amount. A disconsolate citizen of New Orleans put the following question to one of the papers published there: “Mr Edyter— That what I wish to ask you is whether strychnine, what the police gives to dogs won't pizen the human being after Bassingers has been fried. Please put in the paper how this is, for if fried strychnine is pizen, I go agin sassingers. Yours, till ptooned.” A resident of Taunton, Mass., has obtained his ice for summer use, for several winters past, in the following manner: Procuring about fifty empty flour barrels, at a cost of twenty cents each, he gradually pours in water, until each contains a solid mass of ice. The barrels are then put away in his cellar, and entirely covered with sawdust As ice is required a barrel is tapped. According to the London Medical Times, the action of cold on a weak heart not unfrequeutly produces death. It caused the death of Lord Bentnick, which occurred suddenly a short time since,- and numbers of bld people are said to have died during the recent twelve days* frost in England, from the effect of cold on an enfeebled heart “ Never halloo until you are out of the woods,” saith a homely Western proverb. Carl Brendel, a Liepsic student, had never heard of it; and after passing through eeven battles and numerous skirmishes in France without a scratch, he was recently writing triumphantly to his sister of his untouched escape from the repulse of £ sortie made by the Parisians, when the gun which a comrade was cleaning, went off, accidentally, and the bullet striking Qkdtatte killed iikn.
A romantic story comes from the African diamond field*. A tweet-looking Keranna girl went to a young Englishman’s claim and began hunting for diamonds. He was too gallant to drive away a #rl, and when she picked Up a beauty of fl gem he promptly offered his hand in marriage, and tows he will introduce his wife to his genteel English family as an African Princess. As a gentleman wu walking the Afreets of Washington the other night, he was accosted by three rufflaos who pretended to be drunk, and asked him the time of night. “ I will tell yon,” said he in his blandest tones. Placing his hands in one of his pockets as if.to draw out his time niece, and drawing forth a revolver instead, he presented the latter and very coolly remarked : “It’s going to strike three!”The ruffians vanished <mt of sight in an instant. The Arts says that water kept in “ silver ” ice pitchers, from a number of families, was examined. Some showed the presence of lead in considerable quantity, in others no trace was discernable. The different length of time which it was contained in the pitchers accounting for the difference, the main conclusion being, that metallic vessels ought to be abandoned for the use of drinking water, as long ns we have glass and china at our command. To Clean a Shot Gun.—A writer in the Hural N<u> Yorker Bays: “I take the barrels otl from the stock; then take vinegai enc'.«gh so fill the barrels, and heat it boiling hot; pour it into the barrels, and let it stand until it*slops foaming over at the muzzle, letting some run through the tubes; then take the cleaning rod and rub the inside of the barrels; then take water, hot enough to warm the barrels, and rinse out until the water is perfectly clear; then, wi ( th the cleaning rod, wipe the gun out perfectly dry, after which put a little sweet oil on a bit of cloth, and rub on the barrels, both on the inside and outside, and your gun is clean. The vinegar removes all stain and smut, and the water and oil prevent it from rusting, or hurting the gun in any way.” The Decatur (Ill.) Magnet of a recent date says: “Some four or five weeks since, a little son, 5 years old, of Mr. Black, a salesman in J. Ullrich & Co.’s grocery, got a grain of pop-corn in his windpq>e, and it was found impossible to remove it by ordinary means. A doctor was called in, and, after performing a slight operation, pronounced the obstacle removed. The little fellow continued to complain,'however, and, on Monday last, while engaged in nursing the baby, he put the infant quickly down, and, placing his hand suddenly on his side, ran to his mother and exclaimed, ‘ Mother, kies me— I’m going to die,’ and was a corpse three minutes afterward,” If we wish to succeed in life we must learn to take men as they are, and not as they ought to be; making them better if We can, but at the same time remembering their infirmities. We have to deal, not with the ideal man of dreaming poets, but with the real men of every-day life, men precisely like ourselves. This fact of common aims, ambitions and infirmities ought to create constant sympathy and forbearance. While every man has his own burden to bear, he may at the same time in some way help another to bear his peculiar burden, and he himself helped in turn. God has mysteriously linked all men together by this curious fact of mutual dependence; and this wonderful possibility of mutual help. . The number of bones broken in the English lunatic asylum has given occasion for a curious scientific inquiry, and it is now ascertained that the ribs of crazy folk are more brittle than the ribs of the sane. Dr. lleardon instituted an examination of the bones of twenty patients who died in the Carmarthen County Asylum. In nine of these cases “ the very framework of the chest was found to be in an abnormal and diseased state." In two instances the breast bone broke in removing it, and generally the bones were no stronger than stout cardboard. In one case the surface bone was so spongy and soft that it was easily crumbled up between the fingers. Some of the ribs were easily cut with a common there being, through the. action of the diseased brain, a wasting away of the phosphates. It,. is stated, on what is claimed to lie reliable authority, that there is a child in Bristol, now four years of age, that is a habitual smoker, and, incredible as it may seem, who has been addicted to the habit for three years and nine months. When the little fellow was only three months old he held out his little hands and cried for his father’s pipe. The stem of the pipe was held to its mouth, when it took a few whiffs of the smoke and was made sick for a few minutes. The baby was, as we learn, afflicted with asthma, which was greatly relieved by the tobacco-smoke, and no bad effect from the child’s smoking has ever been observed, except in the first trial as mentioned above, and he has smoked almost daily ever since. He usually uses a pipe filled with common smoking tobacco, but will puff away at a cigar equal to any older inveterate smoker. Residents of Bristol who has often seen the youthful smoker “blowing a quiet cloud, vouch for the truth of this singular story. Our western cotemporaries frequently print astonishing narratives of precocious children, but we doubt their ability to trot out anything that will “lay over” this scion of antiquated Bristol. If they can we shall be pleased to hear it.— Proeidence (11. I.) Journal.
The Danger of the Alps.
A correspondent from Switzerland writes of recent fatal disasters in the vicinity of Mont Blanc: “ Aigcnt’eman with his bride and lady friend made the ascension to the Grand Mulcts, which is 6,G00 feet above the valley of Chamounix. The day was so fine that when there, urged by the ladies, whom, with a guide, he left behind him, he started to make the ascension of Mount Blanc. Shortly after he left them, becoming cold, all three went out for a walk, tied together as they always are for greater security in. the mountain excursions. Walking upon the ice and snow crust, the guide ottered his arm to the wife, who had hardly accepted it when, owing either to the softening of the crust by the heat, or cracking from the weight or the formation of a crevasse, both the guide and the wife disappered, the friend only escaping their fate by the breaking of the rope. Disappearing thus instantly in a place which did not seem dangerous, they have never been seen or found, though eight .of the guides, at the risk of their lives, went down into the crevasse sixty feet—in fact, made attempts until the government forbade any more—as the lives of the others were periled for those that had been lost. The ladv who was left screamed, and remained on the spot until the gentleman returned to find that he had lost wife and bride, in the enjoyment of full health, only half an hour previously. Such are the dangers of ascending Mont Blanc, where no amount of foresight or experience can foretell the accidents which may happen at any time, with loss of life to some or all of those engaged. “Other accidents have happened; indeed, every year one or more persons lose their lives upon this mountain. Captain Arkwright and four guides were lost- in 1866. A bride, in going across the Tete Noire —one of the direct routes to Martiny—slipped from her horse unknown to the guide who was leading him, and, falling down a steep precipice, was never found. An American, who sat next to me at the table, gave me ftn accouut of cfoW'
ing the Glacier des Boissona, where the glacier having changed so much since the g»* ide had been there, necessitated leaving him constantly to go ahead and discover the way that might be the safest. While he was gone, some live or ten minutes at a tfrne, it anything had happened to the guide, the gentleman must nave been lost, for he had neither tools for making or as stating his way, nor experience."
NASBY.
I 1 [From the Toledo Blade.) MR. NABBY DREAMS A DREAM IN WHICH TJIE NEXT < JNTBBT Is FORESHADOWED TO SOME EXTENT. . * • ConrsnaiT X Roads, I [ Wich Is In the State uv Kentucky,] a , January sth, ICS7I. ) Last nite wuz one of the most heavenly, all things considered, I>hev ever enjoyed. I wuz in perfect peace and perfectly hapy. I hed sot with my friends in Bascom's, indulgin in that free, unrestricted conversashen wich kin only be among friends, and ever and anon quaffed the cup wich cheers and does intoxicate, till a late hour in the nite. One by one my friends departed, till I wuz left alone, and asleep in my chair. Bascom, with that tender regard for me wich bez alluz characterized him, woodent turn me out in the cold nite, but dumpin me out onto the floor, put a chunk of wood under my head that I might rest comfortable, and left me to sleep and dream. I wuz in the most favorable condishui possible, to dream uv Democratic struggles, uud 1 dreamt uv cm. Methaut the gTeat and all-important struggle uv 1872 wuz at had. The two giants. Rcpublikinism and Dimocrisy hed bin brought out by their respective trainers for tiie reglar battle wich they hev wunst in four years. The two giants wuznt so far different in pint uv size, and they was both sadly dilapidated. Republicanism was well made, but there wuz suthin about him that showd his inability to make a successful shindy. He stood badly on his pins, he wuz wiek in the back and there wuz evidently pizen in his system. Wat wuz the matter with him in pertikeler coodnt be diskivered, but that there waz suthin wrong with him wuz evident. Dimocrisy wuz in still worse plight. He wuz rotten from top to bottom, and all through, wuz bleary eyed and weak everywhere, yet he wuz splendidly supported. The backers uv Republikinism wuz all a fitin among themselves, and all uv em slily stabbin their champion, while the backers uv his opponent were perfekly harmonious. Bill Tweed wuz dosin him with a tonic from a bottle labeled “Treasury uv Noq York,” the Pope uv Rome hisscif held him up on one side, while the English manufacturers supported him on the other, so that he made a very respectable show uv winn'n the site. . Republikinism, however, took his posishun with his back to the capital. Jestin. front uv him, and regardin him critically, stood Bill Tweed and Hoffman, with their followers, a gnashin ther teeth ez they lookt beyond him at the treasures wicn his vigilance alone kept them from posse ssin. “ He'll die soon —he can’t live long,” sed Tweed, and then we’ll hev a nashen to plunder, instid uv one paltry State.’! “ When he does die,” said Jim Fish, “ I’ll hev all the railroads atween Noo York and Washinton, and I’ll hev the Twelve Temptasheris played in the old theater wher Dinkin wuz shot.” “ I’ll go.cz Minister to England shoor,” sed Vallandigham. “ There be enuff Fedral offlscs to pervide fur sich uv the Saulsbury iamily ez can’t be Governors and Senators from Dela ware,” sed the ghost uv the father uv the present Saulsburys. In the meantime there wuz trouble in the other camp. Republikinism, at the final nrinit, wuz found to be so debilitated that he could scarcely stand on his feet, and his backers wuz eggsaminiu uv him to find out what wuz the matter. “ Why he’s kivered all over with vermin!” exclaimed one, “audit’s exhaustid his strength!” “ Yis,” sed another, “he’s eaten up with cm, and his day uv yoosfulnis is over," “Look at this San Domingo inseck whose rite -claw is rcachin toward the Treasury.” “Look at this monster under wich a thousand imbeciles, wich kin do nothin but suck his life blood, are harbored.” “ ’Twuz these that eat Cox out uv the Interior. It wuz too troo. There wuz on him every species uv vermin, all uv cm with two claws—one Listened into him, and the other reachin past him into the Treasury, and those who shood hev bin a holdin uv him up were payin too times the atteu#. shion to the Treasury clan than they wuz to the champion. Fenton and Conklin uv Noo York, for instance, hed one monstrous inseck between em wich they wuz carin for and they fought like tigers over hiz claw, and I notist with delight that half the blows they aimed at each other fell on the giant. The presence uv the vermin bein diskivered there wuz a hurried consultashun as to what to do about it. “ I’m a goner!” gasped the unfortunate giant. “ 1 can’t stand this drain long enuff to make a site.” “ Don’t die yet 1” -ejackilated three millions uv niggers, “ for wat’ll become uv us?" “ Don’t die yet!” howled the great majority uv the people in korius; “ for without you there’s an end uv progress and an end uv everything that’s good and hopeful in government.” But there wuz others. There come up some thousands uv men who hedn't more than a quarter inch atween their eyes, whose necks wuz long and crany, who wore white neckercheefs, and not one uv em chawed tobacco; all uv em that kind uv bloodlis men wich heveu’t no pashens and therefore pride themselves on being strickly vircliuous. They examined closely. “ He’s got em on him from top to toe,” shouted one loud-mouthed one “ let’s kill him!"
“ When he begfin life he wuz pure—he’s kivered now with abominablcd leeches—we can’t endoo?' leeches— kill him !” shouted all the narrer-heads. “ Kill him!” shouted Tweed and all his friends, “ for you contracted for purity and look at the creeping things wich is on him.” And there went up a general cry “ kill him!” from a porshen of his adherents, at wich Dimocrisy, who wuz reddy to give him battle, chuckled, for it lookt ez tho his work wood be done without pullin his coat off, at all. “ Kill him!” yelled a Congressman from the West, “ we kan make the site without him ■» - “ Make the site without him!” retorted another. “ You talk ez tho yoo made him —why yoo mizable ass, hevn’t you sense enuff to know he made yoo But this man wuzn’t allowed to be heerd. “Kill him—he’s foul with vermin —kill him,” shouted an immense number uv them in the ranks behind him. At that moment I wuz soapremely happpy. I woodent hev given a ten cent postal currency to hev ben ashoored my post offis at the comers—indeed, the possibility uv a bigger even than that entered my mind. The throng uv indignant men took the weapon wich the the Dimocrisy wuz only too williu to furnish and ''wuz about to carve him when a man from’ Massachoosits sprang in front uv the victim and ejacklated : Friends— l don’t like vermin, but i po LUCE ReMbuiclxifm, mb
BETTER SAVE HIM, AND KILL TEE VERMIN,WICH HEZ FASTENED ON TO HIM T” Immejitly the aspeck uv affairs changed. That idee had never struck the assailants before, and they saw tha pint to wqnst! In a second a thousand willin hands wuz at work. The leaches wuz ppi led off, the vampyres wpz snaked off, and ez each one wuz dislodged the giant seemed to get new strength. Color came to his cheeks—he straightened up wonderfolly—and inan instant almost he assoomdd the old look and old attitood wich characterized him in the early part uv-his life. At this pint I awoke, so I did not see the result uv the battle, or whether there wuz a ballle at all. But if there wuz a site, and cf the champion uv Republikinism went into in the shape and condishen I saw him ez I awoke, there coodent bo no doubt ez to the result. No, indeed. Will the Republikins hev sence enuff to bring themselves up afore us in that shape in 1872 ? On that depends my hope uv the post orfls at the comers. Wood, oh, wood that I knew.
PETROLEUM V. NASBY,
(Wich wuz Postmaster.) —Seventy-three persons were baptized in the Baptist churches in the vicinity of Boston on a recent Sunday. John V. Farwell Co. have removed to their new store 106, 108, 110 and 112 Wabash avenue, Chicago, and are now opening the largest and most varied stock in the city.
Tested by'l'lnae.—For Throat Diseases, Colds and Coughs, “ JJroum's Bronchial 7rocA,s” haveprowd their efficacy by a test of many years. The good effects resulting from the use of the Troches have brought out many worthless imitations. Obtain only “ Brown’s Bronchial Troches." Godey's Lady’s Book.— The embellishments for March commence with a handsome steel-plate, entitled “Lights and Shadows by the Wayside.” Colored Fashion-Plate, containingslx figures; a handsome Alphabet, printed in colon; “ Flooded Ont,” a wood engraving; a plate of Promenade Dresses; an Extension Sheet of fashionable costumes. In the Werk Department will be found the usual variety of fancy and nseful work. Lamp screen; Infant’s boot in crochet; foot-cushion; children's clothing, with directions for making etc., etc. Marion Harland's story improves in interest. • John V. Farwell <fc Co., having had unprecedented success with the Railroad brand Alpacas, have again secured its entire production. Arthcr’h Lady’s Home Magazine.— “ Guees Who It Is” and the “ Return of the Runaway”—the latter a double-page engraving from a painting by J. Clark, an English artist—are two very pretty pictures in the March numl>er. A double-page steel fashion-plate and numerous other fashion Illustrations are also given. The literary matter is excellent, and the different departments are well filled with useful reading. T., 8. Arthur & Sons. Philadelphia. Terms, $2 a year; 3 copies for $5. A great variety of useful and elegant premiums are offered for subscribers “and clubs. :
Suggestions for the Season.
Thousands regard the winter as a season Of trials; and the truth is, that if there is a weak point in the system, winter is pretty sure to find it ont. Constitutional tendencies to disease are generally aggravated by damp and cold. (Rheumatism sometimes lies perdu all the summer and toll, to pounce upon Its victims in the season of cold.) As a means of fortifying the body against all the diseases which prevail most extensively in winter, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitten cannot be too urgently recommended. There would be fewer cases of the pulmonary complaints tending to consumption, if all feeble systems were invigorated during the season with a course of this inestimable vegetable tonic and alterative. Constipation, indigestion, torpidity of the liver, and a general sluggishness of the secretive organs, very generally prevail at this period of the year. To all these ailments experience (the most trustworthy of all mentors) teaches us that the Bitters is a reliable remedy. Warm clothing is a good external defence against atmospheric cold and moisture, but ’ vigorous activity in the vital organization which generates heat and delivers it to the surface, is also essential to health, and this activity is secured through the operation of the Bitters. The skin sympathizes with the stomach, and if digestion le regular and perfect, tha exterior circulation wil be brisk, and damp and cold may be encountered with comparative safety. v The connection of J. V. Farwell & Co. with the chief manufactories of Europe and America enable them to show the largest and best stock of Notions, Fancy Goods, Hosiery and Gloves in Chicago. The Three Dyspeptics. Here Is an extract from a letter received by Messrs. Drake & Co., Nov. 2, 1869: “ Three friends met one day in the latter part of last September in the rotunda of the Astor House. Your correspondent was one of the tliree. We were all suffering from the ‘national disease’—indigestion; and all agreed on one point, viz.: that nothing agreed with w. We discussed medicines. One had triea blue pills, another extract of dandelion, another almost every variety of purgatives. In fact, we had made apothecaries’ shops of our insides; but nothing had done us any good. I said I wondered if your Plantation Bittibs would help ns any. After some talk we concluded to try it, and meet again at the same place that day month, to compare notes. We did so. It was a jovial meeting, I can tell vou. We scarcely knew one another. Each had gained flesh; each reported a good appetite, sound sleep, an easy stomach and a regular habit of body. The change was marvelous. It was agreed to report the facts to you, and I was appointed to make this communication. You can publish it if you choose, and refer all skeptics for particulars to “Yours truly, “ALBERT W. SHAW,
THE MARKETS.
NEW YORK, Feb. 17, 1871. BEEF CATTLE—Fair to Prime <18.50 ©<l4 50 HOGS—Live... 8.50 © 875 Dressed 9.75 © 10 50 SHEEP 5.00 © 7.25 COTTON—Middling .15?»© .15‘/4 FLOUR-Extra 8.60 © 7.20 WHEAT—No. 1 Spring,new.. 1.53 © 1.54 RYE—Western 100 © 1.12 CORN-No. 2, Mixedß3 © .84 OATS—Western 66 © .68 PORK—Mees, new 22.50 © 22.75 LARDI2H© .13% WOOL—Domestic Fleece 47 © .55 i Pulled 42 © .47% CHICAGO. BEEVES—Choice.<6 25 © <6.50 Prime 5.75 6 00 Fair Grades 5.25 <1 5.50 Medium 4 00 5.25 STOCK CATTLE—Common... 3.75 4) 4.75 Inferior 2.75 3 50 HOGS—Live 6 75 7.75 Dressed 8.50 (I 8.60 SHEEP—Live—Good to Choice 4.10 5.25 BUTTER—Choice .26 © .28 EGGS—Fresh 23 (I .24 FLOUR—White Winter Extra.. 6.50 8.00 Spring Extra 5.50 7.00 Buckwheat 4.00 it 4.25 GRAIN—Corn—No. 2, new.... 50 ( t .51 Barley—No. 275 f I .78 Oats-No. 248 (I .48% Rye—No. 289 (I .90 Wheat-Spring, No. 1. 1.22 © 1.52% No. 2. 1.21%© 1.22 LARD;I2%© .12J£ PORK—Mess, new 22.00 < t 22 25 WOOL—Tub4S 4| .50 Fleece3s © .45 Unwashed2s © .30 CINCINNATI. FLOUR-Famfly <6.25 © <6 50 WHEAT—Red 1.36 © 1.40 CORN-News 9 © .60 OATS—No, 253 © .54 RYE—No. 1 1.01 © 105 BARLEY 1.00 @ 1.05 LARDI2%© .12% PORK—Mess 22 00 @ 22.25 BEEF CATTLE 8.00 © 6.60 HOGS—Live.... 7.25 © 7.75 Dressed 8.50 © 9.00 ST. LOUIS. BEEF CATTLE—Choice <5.50 © <3.50 Good to Prime 4.00 < | 8.00 NOGS—Live 7.00 i i 8.C9 - FLOUR—XI... 6.00 (I 626 WHEAT—No. 2 Red 1.48 © 1.47 CORN-Mlxed4B <k o 0 OAT'S—No. 249 © 51 BYE 100 4 1 104 PORK—Mees.T... 22.C0 It 22 75 LAhD WHI 13 MILWAUKEE. FLOUR—Spring Extra <6 y © <8 60 WHEAT—Spring, No. 1 I.UMt 125 . S’ s ’ B OATS—No. 2................. .51 © .52 RYE—No. 1 89 © .90 BARLEY—No. 2..... 80 © 81 HOGS—Dressed 8.75 © 8.85 - w CLEVELAND. FLOURJtXX Spring <5.50 © © 28 WHBAT-No. I Bed Winter., X 187 00KN-Nsw...s7. .w S ft' OATS-So.l. .(a © .5)
Fbvmi«»’i White Wine Vinegar la a moat superb article tor table nee. Warranted pure. Tint great house of John V. Farwell <fcCo., now opening their foreign Importations, have the best and lowest-priced stock In Chicago. Dom't Taaraa with a Cough.— Perhaps In the whole category of diseases to which -humanity is susceptible, the congb is most neglected in its early stage. A simple cough Is generally regarded as a temporary affliction—unpleasant and nothing more-but to those who have paid dearly for exKrience, It is the signal of attack for tlie most irful of all diseases -Consumption. A cough will lead to Consumption—if not checked- -so sure as the rivulet leads to the river, yet it is an enemy easy to thwart, if met by the proper remedy. Alien') Lung H/ileam to the great cough remedy of the age, and It has earned Its reputation by merit alone. It can be procured at any Drug or Medicine store. Hen Mees Ferine Item pure Irish Moss, for ntsnc Msn<e, Puadlngs, Custards, Creams. 4c., Ac. The cheapest, healthiest, and most delicious food hi the world.
s NOTHING SO GOOD AS DR. WEAVER’S MEDICINES, For Humors. THESE Invaluable Medicine have achieved a COMPLETE TRIUMPH in eradicating Humors of all kinds, from the human system. They were Introduced to the public some Hix years alnce, and have been used with entire success. The Cancer and Malt K lieum Nyrap Ir taken Internally, which cleanse* the Blood, by throwing impurities to tin* huiThcc, when the Cerate Is applied, externally, and all eruptions are destroyed, and Health and Beauty restored. Their Aatonlsnlng Kaccena has called out many ignorant pretenders, who have Introduced their wonderful preparations to tin* public. They are out In almost every form, from Panaceas down to Pills, and all for Humors, (yf cnurn* they are) But it has been reserved to Dr. Weaver’s Hyrup and Cerate to achieve what, (under the clrcunMtancea,} may tee regarded as the most brilliant triumph yet achieved by any medicine ever Introduced to the American public. Why is tills ? 81mplv because they perform what they promise: and notwithstanding the Introduction of these new ana wonderful preparations to the public, the Malt Rheum Hyrup and Cerate keep steadily on their way, conquering as they go. If the public wish to try these new preparations, we have not a word to say, for tliey have a Sure Remedy to fall back upon* viz., Dr. Weaver’s Canker and Salt Rheum Syrup and Cerate. Of this fact the public are well aware, for thousands, in all section® of the country, have been cured by them, after all other remedies have utterly failed. J. N. HARRIS & CO, Proprietors,l CINCINNATI, OHIO. FobSalb by au Medical Dealxbb.
TO THE SUFFERING. A recipe for Consumption, Bronchitis, Asthma, Sore Throat, Scrofula. Coughs, and Colds, rent free. This recipe I discovered while residing in Brazil as a missionary. It cured me of Consumption when All other means hail tailed. therefore I eel it my duty to send it, free or charge, to all who are suffering from Throat and Lung disorders. Address Bav. WILLIAM H. NORTON, 35 Bleecker St. New York City 10,000 AGENTS WANTED! iT VOLCANO FIRE LIGHTER. No small kindling, x , ill no sharing! wanted to .tart ▼ our flreg. One Lighter kl M,J <i / will last for year*. A large aUcount to Agent*. Bam- « |'A UH <I 1 pie Lighter end termaaent poet-paid for Kicente. bend p / for sample. You will then see how useful and sale- r: fnf • able an article lam offering you. Address 1 1 / »' - A 'r'li W. G. KIRKMAN, Gilson, Pm I'M M Knox Co., 111. ANALYTICAL CURE. DB. DUMONT C. DBASE, 548 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, HAS NO PEER in treatment of Asthma. Lung Affections, Heart, Liver, Kidney, Female Difficulties, Rheumatism, Epileptic Fits. Patients successfully treated at a distance. Send for circular, addressing as above. LEAVENWORTH, LAWRENCE AND GALVESTON R. R. LINE, OF KANSAS. The Shortest, Cheapest, and only direct all-rail route from KANSAS CITY ANU LAWRENCE, lOLA, HUMBOLDT. . THAYER, And all pointe In the Neosho and Verdigris Valleys oi
qH H 3 TO THE WORKING CLASS.—We are now prepared to furnish all classes with constant employment at home, the wholooftha time or for the spare moments. Business new, light and profitable. Persons of either sex easily earn from fiOc. to 65per evening, and a proportional sum by devoting their whole time to the business. Boysand girlacarn nearly os much as men. Thatall who see this notice may send their address, aud test the business, w<j make thia paralleled offer: Tosuch as are not well satisfied, we will send <1 to pay for the trouble of writing. Full particulars, a valuable aainnle which will do to commence work on, and a copy of The reople'e Literary Companion-^—one of the largest and best family newspapers published—all sent free by moil. Reader, if you wnnt permanent, profitable wnrk, address E. C. ALLEN A CO., Augusta. Mainb. VHARLES A. DANA, Editor. W WHjj A Newspaper of the Pre«e«t Times. Intended for People Now on Earth. % Including Farmers. Mechanics, Merchants, Professional Men, Workers,Thinkers, and all Man«ncr of Honest Folks, aud tbe Wives, Sons, and Daughters of all such. ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR ! ONE HUNDRED COPIES FOR 850, Or less than One Cent a Copy. Let there be a 850 Club at every Post Office. SEMI-IVEEKLY .SUN, 83 A YEAR, of tho same size and general character as " THE WEEKLY, bnt with n greater variety of ’ miscellaneous reading, and furnishing the news to Its snOscribers with greater freshness, because ' It comes twice a week instead of onco only. THE DAILY SUN, 86 A YEAR. A preeminently readable newspaper, with the largest circulation in the world. Free. Independent, and fearless In politics. All tbe news from everywhere. Two cents a copy ;by mall, 50 cents a month, or 86 a year.
TERMS TO CLUBS. THE DOLLAR. WEEKLY SUN. Fire copies, one year, separatelv address-d. Four Dollars. Ten copies, one year, scnnrately addressed (and an extra copy to the getter up of clan). Eight Dollars. Twenty copies, one year, separatelv addressed (and an extra copy to the getter up of club). Fifteen Dollars. Fifty copies, one year, to one address tnnd the Serai-Weekly one year to getter up of club), Thirty-three Dollars. Fifty copies, one year, separately addressed (and the SemlWecklyoneyearto getter unofcitibk Thirty-five Dollars. One hundred cobles, one year, to one address (and the Dally for one year to the getter up of club). Fifty Dollars. One hundred copies, ene year, separately addressed (and the Dally for one year to the getter up of club), Sixty Dollars. THE SEMI-WEEKLY SUN.. Five copies, one year, separately addressed. Eight Dollars. Ten conies, ope year, separatelv addressed (and an extra copy to getter up of club), Sixteen Dollars*. j BEND YOUJg. MONEY In Post Office orders, checks, or drafts on New York, wherever convenient. If not, to *n register the letters containing money. Address I. W. ENGLAND, Publisher, ’ Sun office. New York City. HOVEY <fc Co.’s Illustrated Catalogue OF SEEDS,’ rxn a nos to tub FLOWER AND VEGETABLE GARDEN For IS/0.. Now ready. Containing 125 pages -. the most extensive and complete Seed Catalogue published; giving plain directions for the culture of Howers and Vegetables. Sent gratia to all on rvcelpl'oftwo stamps. Address X KQVEY & CO., 53 North Merkel St., postal, Maw.
WALTHAM WATCHES. The extensive we of these watches for the last fifteen yearn by Railway Conductors, En«lnocr» and ExpressmctiHHe moat exacting of watch-wearers, has thoroughly < demonstrated the strength, steadiness, durability and ao curacy of the Waltham Wateh. To satisfy that class In all these respects, Is to decide the question as to the real value of these tiine-k epen. More than 500,000 of th**se watches are now speaking for tlwinselves In the pockets of the people—a proof and a guarantee of their superiority over a'i others. Thq superior organization and the great extent of the Company’s Works afWaltham, eaiblce them to pnxluro Watches at a price which render* competition futile, and those who bny any other watch merely pay from 25 to 50 per cent, more for their watches than is necessary. These time-keepers combine every Improvement that a long experience has proved of real practical use. Having had the refusal of nearly every invention in watch-mak-ing originating In this conntry or in Europe, only those were Anally adopted Which severe testing, by the most skilful arthan In our works, and long use on the part of the public, demonstrated to be essential to correct and enduring time-keeping. Among the many improvements we would particularize*. The invention aud use of a center-pinion of peculiar conßtructlon, to prevent damage to the train by the breakage of main-spring*, Ih original with the American Watch Company, who, having had the refusal of all other contrivances, adopted Fogg’s patent pinion at» being the best and faultkiM. Hardened and tempered hairsprings, now universally admitted by watch makers to be the best, are used in ail grades oi Waltham Watches. All Waltham Watches have dust-proof caps, protecting the movement from dust, and lessening ths necessity of the frequsnt cleaning necessary in other watches. Our new patent stem-winder, or keyless watch Is already a decided success, and a greit improvement on any stemwinding watch in the American market, and by far the cheapest watch of its quality now offered to the public. Tothos living In portions of the United States where watchmakers do not abound, watches with the above mentioned improvements which tend to Insure accuracy, cleanliness, durability and convenience, must prove invaluable. The trademarks of the various styles made by the Company are as follows: American Watch Co., Waltham, Mass. Amn. Watch Co., Waltham, Mass. American Watch Co., Crescent St., Waltham, Mass. Appleton, Tracy & Co.“, Waltham, Mass. American Watch Co., Adams St., Waltham, Mass. Waltham Watch Co., Waltham, Mass. P. 8. Bartlett, Waltham, Mass. Wm. Ellery, Waltham, Mass. Home Watch Co., Boston, Maas. Examine the spe'llng of these names carefrilly before buying. Any variation, even of a single letter, indicates a counterfeit. For sale by all leading jewelers. No watches retailed by the Company. An illustrated history of watch-making containing much useful information to watch wearers, sent to any address on application. * ROBBINS & APPLETON, General Agent* for American Watch Co., 1812 Broadway, New York. r j a; iiya ■j ■! Hisilsp * GENTS WANTED— (.22S s montii)-by the A AMERICAN KNITTING MACHINE CO., Boston, Mm., or St. Louis. Mo. 1 *1 I FOMfc SEEING ■ '■ MACHINE. Has the under-feed, makes the ■ ■ | "lock stitch" (alike on both sides.) and is/Wity ■ ■ licensed. The best and cheapest family aew I I Machine in the market. Address JOHN- ■ ■ SON. CLARK A CO., Boston, Mass., Pltts- ■ ■ burgh. Pa., Chicago, HL, or Bt. Louis. Mo.
Till: PRAIRIE CITY Broad Cast Seeder and Cultivator COMBINED Is the best in use; better than a Drill for sowing all kinds of grain and cultivating all kinds sf ground. With its improved adjustable teeth it Is the best tiling out for working com. HARRIS MANUFACTURING CO.. Janesville, Wls. Send for Circulars, with cuts and prices. Good Agents wanted.. * AGENTS, REMEMBER! you can make from $1 to S3O per week, and expenses, by working for us Address DYER & ROBINSON, Jackson, Michigan. Railroad Gazette. The Railroad Man’s Paper AB ItIWnUTXD WnXLT Qoabto Joubhul, oi Twmtt-Focb Faus. Davonto to R. JVew, «mml Isa Operation*. Jg-nyineeiring. Jttechanio*. M JPoHoy. HUIS: U per Auu; Biigh C«pia, 19 Nik A. N. KELLOGG, PuMi.h.r, 110 lc 112 Mndtoon St., Chicago. MLSSOX BOUQUET THE new perfume. NINE CASES 6F~ Out of every ton are curable by Dr. Tooker’s svstem oi treatment. PARALYTICS CAN BE TREATED AT THEIR HOMES. Send stamp for circular. R. N. TOOKER. M. D., 117 East Fifth street. Cincinnati, Ohio. QEND Si.oo and you will get by return mail 112 0 valuable articles, one of which has been sold repeatedly or |25. Address 8. H. WALTBE, Box 6029, Chicago. ri 17 XT T T 717 His Life and Times. A beantiftil VTJjIN. JuJCjJIJ vo umeofßsopages,with3oSteel Engravings. Price $3.75. Agents wanted. $l5O a month made. W. T. KEENER. Furnisher, Chicago, 111. O O’Clocß s7iooo rfwird for a superior article. 66 to 920 per day and no risk. Do you want a situation as salesman at or near home, to introduce our new 7-strand White Wire-Rope Clothes Links which will last forever. Don’t miss tills chance. Sample free. Address Hudson River Wire Co., 75 William St., N. Y.. or 16 Dearborn St.. Chicago, 111.
WORK. Profitable and useful employment In canvassing for the Monthly and Weekly editions of the Christian at Work (Price of Monthly 75 cents and Weekly l&.OOl, and for Good Words (price 25 cents per year.) Rev. srenlien H. Tynr, Jr.. Editor-In-Chief. NOT DENOMINATIONAL. Sample copies free. Address H. W. ADAMS, 27 Beekman St. .New York, PERFUMERYr W. H. TALLMAN’S Florida Watxh, stronger and more delightful than cologne; Egyptian Cai.la, for tho Handkerchief; ToKquin Mvsk, Lang Lang, new, very fine; Cologubs, llaib Orcs, Sacukts, Poxadbs, Covbt Plastkub, Cooking Extracts, Handkxbchixf Extracts, all kinds, handsomely put np tn beautiful 3-bottic boxes. Where not sold, Families can obtain a supply at wholesale prices by writing for price Hat. Goods scut py express. LabobaTOBY JANRSVILLR, WISCONSIN. $5 TO $lO PER DAY. who engage in our new business make from 80 to Si O per day in their own localities. Full Darticiilarß and instructions sent free by mail. Those in need of permanent, profitable work, should addreee •tonce. George Stihsok A, Co.. Portland, Maine. OAA SWINDLERS and HUMBUGS were jwW “ventilated” In the Star Spangled Banner for 1870. If you wish to be “ posted ”on the “ tricks and traps” of Swlndlcdom, subscribe for the “Banner.’ It is a large 40 column, illustrated paper, still of splendid reading. Wit, Humor and Fun. A superb engraving “Pioneers of America,” IK by 2 feet in size, worth $3, will be mounted on a roller and sent prepaid, and the paper a whole year for only 75 cts. NOW IS THE TIME. Only 75 cents. Specimens, 6 cents. Address STAR BPANGLED BANNER, Hinsdale, N. H. »THEA-NECTAR IS A FVBB BLACK TEA with the a,-rtn Jb» Fiatwr. War ranted to suit all tastee. nr KM tvenirhere. And for f,le wholesale only by the Grrnr Atlantic and I’ncMlc. Tea Cj»., N Church St, NewA ork. P. <>. Box 5506. Send for Thea-Nectsr Circular. AI7OKN, TORN and MUTILATED MONiV BY. W'ewantanj’ quantity of mutilated U. 8. notes, or fractional cm rency, (W connterleft.) and will pay Its full value in gtxxl books, Ac, Postage Stamps same an cash; Revenue Stamps 10 percent, discount. Send for catalogue, papers, &c., to HUNTER de CO., Publisher*. Hfosdale. N. H. PATENT BUILDING FELT, for covering the outride snd In.lde of building,. No tar urod, f, J, VAX (psttatwh Csiudw,», J<
A BREAT MEDICAL DISCOVERY MIL.I.IONH Boar Tn.tlmany to their Wonderial Caratlve Ellecto. DR. WALK EH’S CALIFORNIA AihlxlJilJllllirß They are not a vile FANCY DRINK. Made of Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Hpirita and Refuse Liquors doctored, spiced and sweetened to please the taste, called “Tonics,” “Appetizers,” “Restorers,” &c., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, but are a true Medicine, made from the Native Roots and Herbs of California, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are tho GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER and A LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE, a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the System, carrying off nil poisonous matter and restoring tho blood to a healthy condition. No person can take these Bitters according to directions and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. They arc a Gentle Purgative as well ns a Tonic, possessing also, the peculiar merit of acting as a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or inflammation of the Liver, and all tho Visceral Organs. FOR FEMALE COMPLAINTS, whether in young or old, married or single, at tho dawn of womanhood or at the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters have no equal. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumn** tlsm and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Billons, Remittent mid Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys, and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Such DI sen sea arc caused by Vitiated Blood, which is generally produced by derangement of the Digestive Organs. DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGESTION, Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, l ightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart. Inflammation of the Lungs, Puhi in the regions of the Kidneys, and a hundred, other pahithl symptoms, are the ofttprlngs of Dyspepsia. They invigorate the Stomach and stimulate tho torpM liver ana bowels, which render them’of unequalled efficacy in cleansing the blood of all impurities, and imparting new life and vigor to the whole system. FOR SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions,Tcttar Salt Rheum, Blotches Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Bolls, ( nrbuncles, Ring-Worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and qurried out of the system in a short time by the use of These Bitters. One bottle in such cases w ill convince the most incredulous of their curative effect. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find its • Irtipurltles bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions or Sores, cleanse it when you llnd it obstructed and sluggish in the veins: cleanse it when it is foul, and your feelings will tell yon when. Keep the blood pure and the health of the system will follow. PIN, TAPE, and other WORMS, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are ellcctually destroyed and removed. For full directions, read carefully the circular around each bottle, printed In four languages—English, German, French and Spanish. J. WALKER, Proprietor. R. H. McDONALD & CO.. Druggists and Gen. Agents, San Francisco, Cal., and 82 and 34 Commerce Street, New York. £F“SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. EVERY FARMER Should send sl-50 for O’Hara's Pocket Giant ('urn Sheller. Capacity six bushels per hour ; weighs only 12 ounces. A good Agent wnnted in every connty. C’oratnimloDtM Inrge. Semi 51.60 for sample. Address SNYDER A VAN SH'KLEN, 114 West Fourth St.. Cincinnati, O. P. O. Box 1015. W r ANTED—SALESMEN—II, WO so VI.SOO per veiir, and expenses. Address, stating experience, H. CASTLE, Box $22, Chicago, 111. Enclose two stamps. CURIOSITY. -A |lO and |2O (C) bill sent as a curlVJ oslty for 50 cte. H. 8. Jones. 27 Otis Block, Chicago. As EAD’SCATAR RI! CUKE.'For Catarrh. ItJL Hay-Fevkr, -hnd Colds Tn the Head. 19 out of 5» are quite sure of permanent relief amt cure. Tkjnot Intend to blow, but simply say try it once*., Your Druggist can purchase of the trade in Chicago: price. 50 cts. Elent to any address upon receipt of 60 cts. N. MEAD, Proprietor. 10R7 Indiana Ave.. Chteng CUT THIS OUT I And send twenty-five cents for a ticket and draw a Watch, Sewing Machine, Piano, or some article of value. No blanks. Address PACKARD & CO., ■ • Cincinnati, Ohio. BLOOMINGTON NURSERY, ILL. 16lh Year. 600 Acres. 13 Greenhouses. ifnrgCßt Asaortmerit-all sizes. Best Stock! Low P»Ice»! Would von know What. When, How to Plant Fruit. Shade, Evergreen Trees: Root Grafts, Seedlings, Osage Plants; Apple Seed; Early Rose Potatoes; Shrubs; Rosea Gieenhouse and Garden Plants, &c., &e. Flower and Vegetable Heedn. Finest, Be*t Collection-Sorts and Quality. Send 10 cents for New. Illustrated, Descriptive Catalogue— W pages. Send stamp, each, for Catalogues of Seeds, with plain directions - 61 pages*, Bcc ding and Gai den llama 32 pages, and Wholesale Prfre List—24 pages. Address,F. K. PHOENIX, Bloomington, Illinois. Agents! Read This! W 14 WILL PAY AGENTS A SALARY of 830 per week nmTexjH'iiw*, or allow a larea commission, to sell our new wondernil mvuitlons. AoAreas, M. WAGNER & CO.. Man-li:ill, Mlch._ REDUCTION OFPRICES To conform to REDUCTION OF DUTIES. Great Savin, to Gonaumers by getting up Send for ourtKew Price List and a Club form will accompany It containing full directions, J tn consumers and remunerative to club oiganizcrs. THE GBEAT AMERICAN TEA CO.. P O. Box 56-1 X 31 and 33 VeaeySt., New York LANDS! In Sonth-Weat Mlasourl. The Atlantic & Pacific R. R. Co. Have for sale 1,500,000 acres, of best quality, on long credit, Ch Theae lands are Inst brought into market, haring bean reserved since 1853 till the completion of this Road. N one of these lands have gone into speculators hands. Actum settlers are coming In, and to them only arc sales maae, The best climate, with short, mild winters, and loj’f gj l ' mers, relieved by geological elevation, from grt at heat, and healthfhlnew superior to all consumptive tendencies, invite settlors to this region. Cor. Sixth and Walnut Sts., St. Louis, Mo Ki XpectoralX kluaxwCN Gutov COUGHS, CROUP, BRONCHITIS, COLDS, ASTHMA, INFLUENZA, Hoarseaess and Iltcipitnt Consumption. Babb's Pbotobal Eltxtb has rapidly won the faVor of natlents who have tried it, and also the patronage of th. mollciU ftculty In every section of the country where It has been introduced. No remedy for the lungs and throat ever discovered stands so popular after once used, as this nrenaratlon. It is made under the supervision of Mr. T.H. But, one ol the best practical chemists hi the State. The success which has attended the use of this remedy for the E sixteen years, where known, has Induced us to make ore widely known lor the benefit of th. suflertng. Let itnictol giro It • tolr trial, os we are confident that relief and permanent cure will be the result Sold by all druggists in the section where this advertisement la pubN. 8.-Clreulars giving certificates of remarkable cures of tbs afflicted wlllbc rent co application, or they will be found accomnsnylng each bottle of the Pectoral Elixir. The Elixir is pleasant to take, and Is neatly and elegantly pat up th large bottles, ,t ONE DOLLAR EACH. T. H. BARR & CO., SCHAACk, STEVENSON It HELD: EDSALL; E. BURNHAM A SON: gL'.N.g’ 4 cO- - * KUS O ; ROCKWOOD i BLOLKIIn MTI-WAintat by . n „™, BICB * RKISINfI| DOHMENj£ BCIMIDT: OF.KKN JsssilKSfewß--
