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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1880)
"S- a - " ". 'J ifssMtsssssjc Ar 'I THE BED CLOUD CMEr. M. L. THOMAS, Ptiblislirr. RED CLOUD, - - XEBIIASKA. la tv a t our no a iwisa-nousK. As rnnsn as a nlisk. m the other lilo Ji Hits boarding-hum" table Piiuslu, and , V u?:. w h,k" ' "av ,h0 cbla cup J l.at ulft.es Iior xo-y lip?. Snlr w'ho',1",',,, 8tm la ,,cr teens: her flit; tvenrs In si pi ill: uearecii-rt-rk; And I nnj u !irtcl4 li trriilcr ct -die 1 iiikIIiik-s Mullen at inc. My lau- p'of.-soor would scowl, m drxilt, tmilil Lo kimu- what havoc tho'omud have wrought WlUithf.l.jctrlni-sof li-.v li llrd Instilled M hut Itsoiu th.u Up have taught. " ,aVhnient Wla HfvtT como lKfro A ilrcl.traliou." Uv n -d to t?ay: Hut this liMl'i.'lrlfr out U.irllii-hMiw IXic-n t put Uiu tnin that viuy. ' The Clerk will Issuo a rule to nlcnd And pb'iuliiigb ul ways with nilca must clilimj; No iieod Tor "a ni to plena" vrllh her And hor nile-diijs uro all the timol That ili! liw innxlin, the text-look teach. And the jinlei retr.1: liuiucit icr Aliiim fa it ij- re.." U heM In IneirnliKt porn ly her. In her pors m exist tovothor at inco Ufteiidantnud Jtitfironnd Jury unl clerk; fco that one wo ilil linaiu to win n cause Iiittns court were uu up hill work. Y t whenever I sit at the table thorc, 1 lam-y a tiililo whi re only two Are compiiij till I say to myself: 'Th iiih you lose the case, why suo! "K'en though she demur at flrot who knows.' Pontic rest of your Joint lives inadeono life. Vo i may Ii-jtrn together ttr lenvm taught In it3jitct to Hu.nti.iud and Wife." 8t.ll I dally In doubt; though In other things I Hatter iny-udf I am resolute J era ti.iukruiit heart will lie the result If I'm taxed with cot in thU suit. .1. C. Gordon, tit May Scrlittur. Till: L'HILOSOL'UEIl'S BABY. I had been coiisiricrinjr. for about a. your u'IiuUhm- I .should m:irry Winifred Han way, when I hoard that .she was cnir.iired lo the Philosopher. Whv did hho accept him? It is true that lie is oolij iiMAiiiiilivc and critical, but tac ultics (-vreibed in the formation of psy choliio;i(il hypothesis, and the laborious destruction o! th-jso of one's neighbor do not usually rouse the sympathy of a bright and beautiful girl, who is more lit to live than to think about life. He is ceil .tin ly handsome, but as certainly j nit clonics arc laiiiarou.s. II ts trousers can't keep tJieir .shape for a day, and bis haLs an' never new. If he notices the nun, he opens an umbrella which might have .served as :t:i ineffectual Tirotectii.ii at the time of tl. Deluge; if lie finds out that it is cold, he :ls .nines u ganucnt which might have been the even-day coat of .Methuselah. His mannci are as strange as his appear xinec. He niav often ho seen walkinr in the park at the fashionable hour "with a lar-oll look in his eyes, and his lr.il thrust ba.-!c as if to lessen the ex ternal pressure on his active brain; inoic rarely you may hear him bursting into enthusiasm in Piccadilly, though Piccadilly is the last place in which a inaulknuld a'lou himself to be enthu siastic. In .-hort, though he is :t true friend, he is an uncomfortable ac-iimiiit:uict-$ and his volcanic utterances, after long periods of calm contempla tion, cause such shoeJ-s to one's nerves as would be conveyed to the Sunday citizen by the eruption of Primrose Hill. But if it was odd that the beauti ful Winifred llanway should marry my friend, it :is yet more odd that he Should marry any one. There were no topics i;ore "certain to excite an explo sion in the Philosopher than the excess- 1 ive population of the country, and the wholesome solitude of the Thinker. How," he would tierccly ask, can a man thitk effectually on fundamental subjects who is compelled by the des picable circumstances of his life to ex haust his analytical faculty in consider ing how to pay his butcher :uul when lo L buy his coals? 1 tell you, sir, it's bet ter to starve with cold and hunger than to debase one's noblest part to a game i of skill with a grasping grocer." Again and again 1 had heard him declaim in this preposterous fa-hion; ami, after all. he was going to the altar like any other victim, and would doubtless take a house upon his back with the docility of a snail. I could uot solve the problem; I would not give it tip. So, full of the 0 determination to irag Diogenes out ot Ids tub. and the secret out of Diogenes, 1 stepped round to offer my congratula tions. My friend was in his study, apparently writing, really catinga quill )eu. He rose at me with a rush, wrung my hand till it ached, and blushed rcilher uncomfortably. Congratulations arc the curse of the Briton. Whether lie is offering them or reccivinr them, he is generally obliged to take refuge in intermittent handshaking, and most of his sentences tail of into "jrtints and groans. But on this occasion it was evident that the Philosopher had some thing ready to say, and w:is nervously anxious to say it. Indeed, I had hardly siid more than "My dearfcllow, I don't know when ... I really am so awful glad. 1 . . . it's in every way so, such a satisfactory, you know I really do wish all possible, and all that 'sort of thing, you know" when ho burst in witha speech so fluently delivered that 1 knew 1 was not his earliest visitor that morning. "Of course it's taken you by surprise." he said, "as I knew it would; but the truth is that I have been thinking of it for a long time, and 1 am sure I am right." Here I tried to get in an impression of wonder at his new notion of duty, but he was bent on being rid of the matter, and hurried on to his rtvisons. "In the lirt place," said he, " I am sure that, instead of increasing my domestic worries, 1113 marriage will transfer them in a body to my wife; and, secondly, when I consider the vast number of fools who are every day born into the world, 1 mil terrified by" the picture of what the next generation will be, if the thinkers of this are to be without suc cessors." Having discharged his reasons in this wise, the orator stood blinking at me as if he feared dissent, but I was too a-tounded bv his magnifi cent audacity to reply. Slowly a look of peace stole back" into his face, x pleasaut light dawned in his eyes, and the promise of a smile played at the corner of his mouth. His remarkable fluency was gone, and. indeed, his voice sounded 1 haid, "I believe you are going to be married because 5o fell in love?" "Perhaps you are right," said the Philosopher. After the wedding, the Philosopher and his wife went abroad for an iudefi ,:. .,..-;r.rl -md tbeir friends heard but quite choky when he said: "Johnny you ij don't know what an angel she is." A li'dit broke in upon me. "Philosopher," V little of them. He wrote t nobody, end she did not write to me. Yet there were occasional rumors. Now they were breathing the keen air of the En gadine, now sinking to the chestnuts and vines of Chiavenna; now ho was lashing himself to frenzy over the treas- urcs of Rome; now she was gazing with sweet Northern eyes across the glowing eplendor of the Bay of Naples. Then thev were in Germany, and about to settle for life in a university town; but anon had fled from it in haste after a lonr night's dispute, in the course of ii-iiieh mv learnea ineuu nan weu-uigu come to" blows with the university s most celebrated professor. At last 1 heard than they were again in Loudon, and, full of enthusiasm, dated round the corner to welcome then home. Nobody was with them but Mrs. Hanway, Winifred's mother. I would enter unannounced and sur prise the Philosopher. I entered unan nounced, and waj surprised myself. Was this the effect of m rimony, or of foreign travel? Each occupant "of the room was engaged in an exercise wholly unconnected, as it scorned, with those of the rest. My friend's wife, the lady whom I had almost loved, queen of all grace and comeliness, was ap pearing and disappearing like a flash behind the day's Times, showing at the moments of disclosure a f.-uw flu died with excitement, and lustrous coils of hair, tumbled into the wildest dis-jrder, while she accompanied the whole per formance with strange and inarticulate sounds. Her nuthcr, the same Mrs. Hanway who was so perfe.-t n model of dress and carriage that many of her lady friends were wont to lament among themselves that she gave herself such airs, was sealed on the floor dresied for walking, but without her bonnet. Yes. she was certainly drumming on an inverted tea tray with the wrong end of the poker. And the Philosopher? It was perplex ing, after three years' j-eparation, to meet him thus. The Philosopher wa? cantering round the room on all fours, wearing on his head his owu waste paper basket. Briskly he cantered round, ever and anon frisking like a lamb in spring time, until he reached my feet, which were rooted to the spot with astonishment. He glanced up sideways, rose with a cry to the normal attitude of man, and grasped me by the hand. At the sound of his voice, his wife dropped the paper from her hand', raised them auickly to her hair: and his mother-in-law, with as much dignity as the effort would allow, scrambled on to her feet. Then in an instant the cause of their eccentric conduct was made clear. Throned upon the hearth rug, and bliowing by a gracious smile a few of the newest teeth, sat a line baby of some fifteen months. In one dim pled fist was tightly clenclud the brush, which had so neatly arranged the mother's braids; while the other was engaged in pounding the grand- mother's besi bonnet into a .shapeless mass. I We were all somewhat embarrassed except the baby. The ladies knew that they were untidy, and I that I was an intruder. As for'the learned father, he , stood now on one ler and now on the ' other, while he .shifted the waste-paper basket from hand to hand, and con tinued to smile almost as pcrsevcringly as his amialJe offspring. Yet it was he who at last put an end to our awk ward position by expressing a wild de sire to have mv opinion on the new curtains in hw study. Bather sveep-, ishly I said jrood-by to the lady of the house, trying to express by my eyes that I would never call again unan nounced. I knew that Mrs. llanwav had not forgiven me, as I humbly took the two lingers which she offered; and I felt like a brute, as the most impor tant member of the family condescend ed to leave a damp spot by the edge of my left whisker. When, however, I had been swept down stairs by my impulsive friend, and was alone with him in his den, my courage returned, and with it some in dignation. 1 confronted him and sternly asked why I had not been told that lie was a" fr.ther. "Not been told?" echoed he; "do 3'ou mean to say that vou did not know about the Baby?" ""Not so much as that it was," 1 leplied gloomily. He w:is over whelmed. Of course he had supposed that every one knew it from the Queen downward. Of course fifty people ought to have told me, who of course had told mo everything else. At last my curiosity got the better of my indig nation, and i cut short his apologies by beginning my questions. "Does the shape of its head content you?" I asked. "The shape of whose what?" cried the Philosopher, apparently too surprised for grammar. "Of tlic baby's head, of course," I replied, tartly; "I merely wish to know if the child is likely to be as intellectual as you hoped." "" Isn't the hair lovely?' he asked, incouse quently. This was too much, and as-' sinning my severest manner I deliv ered myself in this wise: "I thought, though no doubt 1 was wrong, that the use of a baby to j'ou would be parti to furnish vou with raw material for a philosopher, partly to enable you by constant observation to gain further evidence bearing on such vexed ques tions as, whether the infant gains its ideas of space by feeling about, whether it is conscious of itself, etc." " Well," he said, laughing, "I don't expect much help from my infant in those matters, unless I ean get inside her and think her thoughts." " Her thoughts?" cried I, in amazement; "you don't mean to say it's a girl? Good gracious! you are not going to educate a female philosopher? He looked rather vexed. " Of course it's a girl," he said. "The father of a female philosopher!" I gasped. "Dear me!" said he, some what testily; "i-n't it enough to be father of a noble woman?" Now I have often put up with a great deal from my learned friend, and am quite aware that I have been spoken of as "Boz.y" behind my back. But there is a turning point even for the worm, ami noboily will sit forever at the feet which are constantly kicking him. I had been snubbed more than enough by the illogical parent, ami as suming niy most sarcastic manner, I in quireu. with an appearance of deference " Is it not rather early to speak of your daughter as a noble woman?" I had kept aloof from the Philosopher for some weeks, nursing my wrath, like Achilles, I said to myself cross as a bear, I overheard my landkuly say in the passage when I received a hasty note beggiii"; me to come to him at once, 1 fancied myself summoned to a council of chiefs; so, having donned my shining armor, 1 lett 1113 tent with fit ting dignity, and descended with a clang into the plain. Yet 1 could not but be aware of nry laudkuly's evo piercing me through the crack of the p irlor door purposely left ajar, and of the hasty flapping of loose slippers which told of the startled slavey's flight into the abyss below. An unusual silence held my friend's house that morning. The door was opened before I had time to ring by a melancholy footman, who, walking "be fore me with the elaborate delicacy of an Agag, noiselessly ushered me into the study. It was" my lot to be again rooted to the spot with amazement. By the bookcase, in a shaded corner of the room, with his head bowed low upon his hands, knelt the Philosopher. Here was a long step from the siege of Troy, f roni the simple wrath of the child like hero to the most complex embar rassment of an heir of all the ages. What should I do. The dismal menial had fled to the shades without a word, with out even a glance into the room. If I retreated, 1 left my friend unaided and remained ignorant of the cause of his strange conduct. If I advanced, I was again the intruder on a scene not prepared fojr my inspection. In an agony of hesitation I fell to brushing my hat with my elbow; but not finding the expected relief in the occupation, I was about to desist, when my hat decided what my head could not, by falling with a crack on the floor. The effect was electrical. Without one glauce at the intruder, the Philosopher made a grab at the nearest book shelf, dragged out a volume which had not been touched for half a centurv. and hunted for nothing in its pages with frantic eagerness. He was still at it, when I stood over him and noted with out wonder that he held the book up side down; then with the poorest "imita tion of surprise which 1 have ever seen, he rose and grasped my hand. "You found me on the track 6f something," he said; "I was looking it out in in " Hero it occurred to him tint he did not know the name of the venerable tome which ho liad so rudely disturbed, and with a heightened color and a milieu change of manner, he turned quicklv to me and said, "My child is ill." I felt positively guilty. I liad been angry with that baby for making my wise friend foolish, for not being a boy, for being called a noble woman." Was it not shameful that a great hulk ing bruUj should sneer at a weak thing I that could not even answer with a taunt? Were not rny clumsy sircasms enough to crush po delicate a plant? The poor little " noble woman" was in danger and I could do nothing to help her. , There were tears in the eyes which were looking into mine for comfort, but I had nothing ready to pay. I " I could not stand being alone," he muttered, after a short silence; " the doctor is with her now, and in a mo ment I may hear that my little daugh ter must in fact, may hear the worst." I While he was speaking, I seemed to have fifty consoling remarks to offer; but when he stopped no one sentence would disengage itself from the re.t. 1 What I blurted out at lailsccms almost ridiculous as I look back on iL I " You must hope for the best," I i said; "you know she has youth on her . feide." The words were scarcely out of my mouth when I heard a measured step upon the stair3; presently the door wai opened by the noiseless footman, and the most famous of Ljih1oii doctors en tered the room. Mj" friend leaned heavily on my arm. but looked at the man of science with seeming calm. " 1 am happy to tay," said the physi cian, cheerily, " that our little friend is going on as well as possible." " And she is out of danger?" " She never was in it." " Never in danger?" cried I, almost disappointed. " Slie has nothing the matter with her," he replied, " but a slight, fever ish cold. I have seldom seen a liner or J more healthy child. Good morning. I never was more annoyed. Here was a waste of 1113' finest feelings Here was I stirred to the depth, well-nigh moved to tears, 13 a bale's feverish cold. Of coins; I was very glad that it was no worse; but in' friend was too nb-tird, and I would not spare him. " Won't 'ou resume your studies?" 1 asked, sarcastically, pointing to the disturbed book, which was lving on the ground at our feet. His humility might have disarmed me. " I am afraid I've been a fool," he said; "but if vou linil ccn Iter Till tlie'.'uwl find foruathinir hard; and then she is so small and fragile. " Yes, for a noble woimn." I re marked, lie received the dart meekly. " Philosopher." said I, suddenly, de termined to rou.-e him at 11113'" cost, "when I entered this room 3011 were engaged in pnm-r." His color certain ly deepened. " Ma' I ak," I inquired with an appearance of deference, " whether you were addressing 3'our.Jelf to the Personal First Cause, or" to the Unknowable but perhaps yon were merely bowing to the rational order of the Universe?" lie made a gesture of impatience, but answered still with studied admiration. " I was alone and in trouble." "And the ullicauy of prayer?" I asked. "I'or Heaven's sake," cried he, bursting into excitement, "stop your jargon! Nothing shows such ignorance of a subject as having all its caut phrases on the tip of 'our tongue. Cau't I speak to God without expecting to be paid for it?" This was turning the tables. If ho was going to take to questions, I knew I should end b3' admitting myself a fool. So to avoid a Socratio dialogue I put my hand 0:1 my friend' skoulder and said: " Yuti are a good man. Philoso pher; ma' vox and the noble woman' live a thousand years." " Thank 3-011," he said, simply; "and now 3011 must let mo go anil sing a p:uan with the nobler woman. 1113 pat it nt Penelope, my sweet wife.' So ho went with long strides over the asphodel meadow, and I took myself to my tent full of plcasaut thoughts. lHackioooiF s Mivjiizinc. Bones for Poultry. A wiiitkk in the American roullry Yard urges upon poultry keepers the uecessit of giving to fowls a liberal supply of baked bone and o3'ster shells, and writes his own experience in a ver3r entertaining manner. It is as follows: " I supposed I did 1113 dut3' by 1113 lions when 1 burned bones to " ivon white ness, ground them to the consis"tcnc3' of flour, and fed them occasionally, with the idea that I was giving them egg-shells in a ver3 available form. But i did not consider that the gelatine, the fat, the ammonia, and other constituents of the bones, which were discharged by the internal heat (leaving only a little pure lime) were really the richest possible; food for Sic hens and the greatest egg producing diet that could be furnished them, ly new tenant 011I3 bakes them more or less brown, in an" old tin plate on the top grate of the stove oven. This is not a very pleasant process, for, like all scorched portions of the animal frame, lhc' give a pungent, half-suffocating smell, which tempts you to clar de kitchen' till the fresh air from doors and windows has sent the objectionable odors into outer space. But 3011 soon become reconciled to this invas'-an of ill scents when tiie fiery combs, the ceaseless cackle, the evideut high health of your fowls, and the daily-filled egg-baskets show 'ou what the3 have accomplished. No" other food, noran amount of food, if this is leit out, will give 3'ou such returns; and this baked bone" pounded 011 a rock in 3'our poul try pens and fed with ordinary feed, will give results that.b7ht to "satisfy the most craving lispo&ivii. The hens cluster around that primitive bone-mill, gulping down the rich morsels with ev ident delight; and siuce everything necessary for the production of eggs is thus fully furnished, there is no undue strain on the vital forces, no weaken ing of the system, but a daily attention to business, to the complete satisfac tion of the fowls and their owners. You can hardly give too much burned bones to 3'onr hens to provide the necessary amount of lime for the egg-shells, and the next best thing for that purpose is 03'ster-shells, which am be obtained b3 the barrel (and generally without cost", except taking away) at hotels or res taurants in 3'our nearest city. My new tenant goes eighteen miles for them, and considers them cheap enough at that. The hens eat them when pounded into fragments as eagerly as they pick up shelled corn, and they furnish the needed materi?l for the egg-shell more completely than anything else." Roll Jelly Cake. Sift two tea spoons of cream of tartar with two cups of flour (measured after sifting.) Dis solve one teaspoon of soda in three ta blespoons of hot water. .Beat six eggs, whites and yelks separately. Add two cups of sugar to the yelks, put in half the flour, then the soda, the halance of the flour and the whites of the esgs. Bake in a thin, even sheet in a iSrgc dripping pan; when done turn onto the molding board, spread. with jelly and roll up without delay. Wrap a napkin about the roll to keep it in shape. Minister Fostek, before leaving Mexico, received from the American residents of the Cit3' of Mexico a part ing gift of a silver fac simile of the Aztec calendar stone in the cathedral wall. The gift weighs about sixteen pounds, andis made' of pure Mexican IIOX E, FAUX A.D (URDEX. Gkaium Biscuits. To a quart of graham flour add sufficient thick, street cream to make a stiff dough, beat until light, and bake in a moderately hot oven. HrctXN'io GRinD!n Cakcs. Three cup-! purified middlings, one cup graham flour, one egg, one teapoonful salera tus. a little salt. Mix wiih Mjur milk. Use a hot griddle and serve immedi ately. Cocoa.vlt Dltoi'i. Beat the whites of two eggs stiff with four ounces of .ugar, thn stir in four ounces of dessi-c-ttcd cwcoanuL If the fresh is uv.il. it ;nut be grated, and dried in a porcelain kettle until bice flour; add a third of a cup of tine cracker crumbs; mo'd the mixture into small pointed cones, and bake until a light brown on the top and bottom. Stale Bkc.vo. A nice way louse stale bread is to fry it, Mtnpiy dipping it in cold water before putting it 111 the buttered frving pan. It will brown nicely, ami Is liked b' many -s well as if dipped in beaten eggs. Tne latter makes a nice change in the bill of fare. I often make a gooJ short-cake and spread with stewed apple sauce, cran berry sauce or some kind of canned fruitl Serve with sauce or sweetened cream. To Clean Black Matekials. Take the article yo j wish to clean, on the side ou intend to make up as the right side; brush well all the diist out of it; then take a piece of black flannel or an old black woolen stocking (it must al ways be black), dip it inlo cold coffee, and pong well the material all over alike, theufold up each piece or breadtli nice and even, and let it remain damp for three or four hours. Iron on the wrong side, and the old dusty, habby dress will look just as fresh and bright as new. Bium.Eb Shad. One .shad, two oueces of butter, one half tcaspoouful , of pepper, one-half tcaspoouful of salt. Split the shad, when cleaned, directly through the back-bone with a strong sharp knife. Grease the broiler slight, place the fish between its leaves, and liroil over a quick fire for ten minutes. When done, remove quickly from the broiler, dress with the butter, pepper and salt, and scud it to the table as hot as possible. The dish may be garnished with lemon quarters and a sprig of parslc at either end. Bock. Ckeam. Boil a tcacupful of the best rice till quite soft in new milk, sweetened with powdered loaf sugar, and pile it upon a dish; la' on it in dif ferent places, square lumps of either currant jetb or preserved fruit of an' kind; beat up the wiiites of five eggs to a still" froth, with a little powdered sugar, and flavor with either orange flower water or vauilla;add to this, when ; beaten very still", about a toaspooiiful of j rich cream, and drop it over the rice, giving it the form of a rock of snow. Tnis will be found to be a ery orna mental as well as delicious dish for a supper table. Baising Watermelons. Select a good piece of ground sod is the best. Plow a well ami then harrow and roll it. Now mark it o!f twelve or thirteen feet each way. This allows the vines to run 011I3 six or six and a half feet each way, which is not too much. The seed should be soaked about twenty four hours; then planted, putting half j a do.en seeds in a hill. The' should be ' thinned atterward to three in a hill. I Plow and hoe them well, but do not ! leave the dirt loose. It should be j pressed tight around hilt and vine with 3'our feet. When 3011 think the vines , have run far enough pinch oil the ends. 1 This will cause them to stop running ' and to bear more. Painted Flocks. A correspondent of the Country Ucntkman writes: I should like to tell how we got our paint ed floor hard and dr3 so that it will stand the wear of a large family. Our floor is made of narrow yellow-pine planks, clear of knots; a splendid floor for a kitchen, and we have always kept it painted. This winter we treated it as follows: As fast as the floor was painted we laid .strips one mch-square on the painted surface, and on these strips boards were laid snug, using as long boards as the spaces would allow; where the doors interfered very thin pieces of board were laid to step on. At intervals of two weeks a second and third coat was applied. When this was sufficiently dry we covered the floor with heavy sheets of st raw-board paper; over this paper a carpet was spread. ! Now, after two months' protection we find the painted floor very hard, and ready to stand a long time before it will need repainting. OlL-CLOTII AND CaKI'ETS. A billy says in the Rural Xcv Vorkcr: I have i tried painting old pieces of rag-carpot. . and must say they are not worth the oil and paint put on them. They ab sorb a great deal of oil and are hard to clean. They are not as good as the car pet without the paint, and will not hist as long. Without the paint the' nia' be easily cleaned so as to look nice, by pounding them through good suds and rinse water. If desired to be stiff, they may be starched with flour stareh anil ironed. Good, thick cotton drilling or thick, firm cloth may be made into oil cloth by stretching on a frame and painting. The cloth should be new and strong, or it will not be worth the trouble. I have tried knitted carpets, as highly recommended a few years since, anil must say they are not the carpets needed, and will wear but a very short time. When one wants rag carpets, it is best to purchase warp and take the rags to a weaver who knows how to weave good rags and warp into substantial carpets; and one will be paid for the labor and expense put on them. Very coarse-threaded rags or teuder ones may be cut in strips from one to two inches wide, braided and sowed together for mats or rugs to place where needed. The Chemistry or Butter. The production of butter by churn ing is both a chemical and mechanical process. Milk, according to analysis, is composed of: Calcine, pure, curd 1 1 1 fL o l J sa I ) Saline matter Good butter should contain at eight v-t wo per cent, of fat, or oil. . 4.IE .. ,T.Ic .. 4.TI .. .60 .STJt least This fat is composed of solid or margarine fat. and liquid or oleine. Winter but ter contains, of solid fat, sixty-five parts in one hundred, summer butter onh forty parts. This fact explains win milk should be churned at different tem peratures in different seasons of the 'ear. This fat, oily substance, in the forms of globules, is found in suseu sion in milk. By the mechanical action of the churn, "the envelopes of the globules of the fat are broken, and the globules brought into cohesion and sep arated from tile other portions or com ponents of the cream. By the chemical prpce's the sugar of milk" is converted into lactic acid, and the bulk of the fluid, which was put sweet into the churn, is instantly soured. Bousshi gault prescribes the temperature for churning to "be 59 degrees for sweet cream, t2 degrees for sour and 64 de grees for mdk. About one-fourth of the total amount of butter globules which exist in the cream escape collec tion, which accounts for the rich taste of the buttermilk. Fresh butter con sists of about 83 per cent, of pure butter and 16 of milk of butter. The former can be separated by melting the whole in a long tube; after a time the butter proper rises to the top. It is then drawn ofl'into water at 104 degrees, and after two or three washings may be consid ered quite pure. U!flclioH of Grapes. j CcLTtVATTH grapes are divided loto two rreat clacs the gr.wxi of the old world and the grspes o! the new world and thcx two families are distinct in fruit, foliage, grouth and con:itution. The best clajM:fication of tho variolic of European, or. as we call thra, for-' eign grapes with which wo ar ac-' qualnted, is that given by the Fbtrut t and Vtmolypjt of England. In ihi . plan there arc three flection. fol lows: Orarwrs are known, firstly, by the flavor of ibe fruit, a ; 1, j.wvctwater ; grapca; r. mucat graphs 3, vinous grape. i.'eondlv, by ihe color of the fruit, ai 1, black or'purple; 1 white. , yellow or green; red, tawny or ro colorcd. Thirdly, by the hape of the 1 fruit, as: 1, ovnl," '-', round. ThU , make, in all, eighteen group, and by ( combination any grajw can be docribesf We would, fur in-tanre, decribc the ; black Hamburg a-, an otal, black, 1 wectwater grape; the gros Coleman a a round, black, iinous grape. Ihrh cultunsi. ... I Painted Floors. Dr. Hon.SE fays ho finds orhro ami liu.-eed oil the host for fbors. I --hould like to tell how we pst our painted floor ' hard and drv, 40 that it wdl .tand the wear of a largo family. Our floor is made of narrow yellow pine plunks, clear of knots; a "splendid floor for a ' kitchen, and we have always kept it painted. This winter we treated it a , follows: As fast as the tloir wa paint- . ed we laid strip-, cue inch square on the painted surface, and on then trip j boards wcro laid snug, using a long j Iwmrds as the spaces would allow : where the doors interfered very thin pieoes of board were laid to step on. At inter va'.s of two wciks a second and a third coat was applied. When this wa suf ficiently dry we coveitd the floor with sheets of heavy straw lioard paper; over this paper a carpei was spread. Now, after two months' protection, we find the paint d floor very hard, and ready to stand a long time before it will nued re-painting. Cor. Country Gentleman. You Can 'ot Judge People by Their Clothes. Mi:. G. A. Su.a says one can not judge traveling Americans in the Wet from the clothes they wear aboard l ho c irs. " I'or example," he says, "in the smoker, between Chicago and the im portant manufacturing city of Cedar Rapids, I was addres-ed as partner and offered a 'plug of tet backer' by a gaunt youth, seemingly of some nine teen summers, with lank, hay -colored hair, who-e coarse homespun coat and vest, red flannel undershirt overshirt he had none misshapen felt hat, and nautaloous tucked into boots reaching knee-high and quite innocent of black ing, ostensibly bespoke him to be a rough of the roughs. lie was nothing whatever of the kind. He was a grad uate of the university of his State, had taken high honors in the Department of Mineralogy, and was now on his way far West, with a view to prospecting around' in the mining regions." William 1'. Gillespie- was on his death-brd at Columbus, Ind. The physician told him that he could not iive many hours. 4'Are ou sure I can't get well?" the patient asked; "I don't want 011 to make a mistake about it. Is there a poibility of recovery?" He was assured th it his hjieed demise was absolutely certain. Then he ex plained why "he was so anxious to get exact information. He had murdered a man twelve ears before, and had never been suspected of the crime. He desired to confess and bo forgiven if he really was going to die, but not otherwise. He died, and the truth of his statement has been amply sustained. Watterson, of the Courier-Journal, -tops for a moment out of the political hurly burly to indite the following touching tenderlincs: T ns In tin uloamtii;?, 15 tli- lair V0111I111;, Tlint I left lii d:miu;r 111 mv eurs ago. And inemoi tfiider. ltrint- tier line!, in Milomlor With her cheeks of loses and brow of 8no-a-. Knt wli'TO in thunder I- shr now, I wonder1 Oh! my soul, l-(iite:aniliii -ud honit. ln:sli . t'nilei Hie ninlirellrr Of another fell r Ah, I think I e her paddl.ng through tho sdwli. A few years ago the State's Attor ney In a northern county in Vermont, although 11 man of great legal ability, was ery fond of the bottle. On one occasion an important criminal caewas called on by the clerk, but the attornev, with owl-like gravity, kept his chair. "Air. Attorney, is tho btate ready to proceed?" saiil the Judge. Yes hie no your Honor," stammered the lawver; "the State is not in a state to j 'ry tlus eae, to-day; the Male, your I Honor, is drunk: " m m Kiizabeth Smith, formerly of Del phi, Ind., died recently at the age of ninctv-four. She is spoken of by the Journal, of that place, as of a proud aim ansiocraiic lauuiv, aim was a schoolmate of .lames Buchanan, and, had fortune favored, would have been the lady of the White House. The wedding clothes were prepared, the day set, anu preparations made, when by some cause never revealed the match was broken by a solemn pledge that neither would ever marry a pledge that was sacredly kept. . Western papers make the most of their news. An Iowa paper put the head Shocking Calamity" over an ac count of three swine being slain by the fall of a shed. lloston Post. "What has heen most needed this winter wa? a society for the :rowth and encouragement of ice. Detroit Free Press. What's the matter with the church sociables? Xtw Haven llcyu'tcr. " Yis, yer reverence, all thim names he called me, an' sis I, ! wouldn't de manc ineself to lose me timperwid such a low blackguard,1 so I jist knocked him over wid the stick and comeawav." Richard Grant White says there is no authority for "a setting hen." He grasps the situation, and pronounces sitting " as the proper caper. A little boy at Humeston, Iowa, hanged himself because a baby sister received the attention that hail previ ously been bestowed upon himself. The mind of youth can not remain empty; if you do not put into it that which is good, it will gather elsewhere that which is evil. There is no time in a man's life when he is so great as when he cheer fully bows to the necessity of his posi tion, and makes the bst of it. m Tiuj Eikhart Bngv and flames Manufac tnrine Company, Elkaart, Ini, ship busr.ea and harness anywhere with privllrre of exani in.es before paying for. and pav all charges if not sitisf jctore. Best baad-mide buggv nar ness, oak stock, ? to 4HS: best team httfnes, f2s; platform spring two-eatcl tragons, fio; three-sprine uagons. fT3. I atalopue trith prices seat tree. Address W. B. Peatt, Secy. m Sereral Good ThJngt. If you want good distIoa, If you want good health, If jou want good baking, IX you want ibe bel "stove, If you want the cbeapc-t stove, Tf you want a good square ineal. Buy i Ciiartiu: Oak Sto":. It is said that four million packages of Fra zer's Axle Greoe were sold in 137V; and believe it- 1 - I - rz i A rim tht U orU-Ut 1 K-UrM t the bort p ol Mt tree raU tot lu rjyarv lr rrc f tr MaJktac 3e rl3i fb Un I U tStt & tlrr ?r iJ UoSdf n M!;cl DUeoT trt Uj crrtrii N--l pirt3r J U,,ST' for bU I1fcat l5ryU VtlUt lUlti iocr-cl yUJ. ti rortte Prr1?Ja notnxz't bt friaJ-J otir ral bcc w c?t ta: b?:xa ot ta V crl lHlnr t t3 muMWusI in leuisa, Kn;Uu!. W tfcclr nuaoJctar. Ftvra U ijopot :1kt u-c luKd xa etry rrt of Ea-n;-e, ad to l Ism lottos CM. Jra txl oihtr cwuatrUM. Ttrlt ta V la Nrta fvratfc Atsr rk ' r",r,1,T ? t-trr McOVv; Avx!Uob. Irrrittors Ha2J. N T, it '. KMa :rrt UclUitv Load . a Kutaz. .i.vxucC CV. Int. t cb. r, H7- tH. It. V Vltnctl I tir: irI uVc picture la rtttof tar trtBMiT with rtlxr la rrxM la jof tila We aMsifcNK-. For U I l of fered frvw .ll -? ftf tbr ezv ! aatH I ot tur I vry totl notlilasr Ht J J c-t TJiV Unl I xmrdHfl fel (cwWBisrt It lu alt Yhm trt Mur Kcsait. A Pqunr Mrtl. We re ure our rrttr hIU tbi&l u to ralllni: tbrlr ltrntlvn to tho cr hxntlia ulvcrlirm-S of tlic i:cr!lr lUaufctur ;: C. f M- Iui, M., It would Uuw !r. ftr u to ui thin; ta for of laeir l.tiiMi OuirriK ". kwisj tk riieirry name uj:rst tbc thought of elJ cooked taeal, followed Vr ray dlsrti U, ihcorwi health nd a dire to ht ad to in, plenty of j;r. t. oitK, to B.-thlDjrof ihippT mmI eoctrntrd bourbold. AV tiur slutc lclcr to how jou the!tcl pattern. 3rallt4 I.U.4. I O-irrcn fnB tberttisof the.r"vjj. Cwrr. New lUTen. (ts.. tle folio"!ti rdifemeat. "MiralStudr of a rhretT tnne. earaett and lmptUfi. I dallr, la ttriHHi andtr ltler. Uclu; ltcrd upon 11 H arnrr Co., for tar inln Juct!ot and tac making it-BrrlT Wnua. tkrtr won derful cures, uafced ai arar' i-fe Ketsc dle." I'iMPlM 4V lit v )K os th I'ack - la this c.ui!ltion of the Vln. Ihc corns I tlic grc-i icuiedr, a It arts dirrcltj u;r a tbo eauvr It eleaa' and tiUMJSi" ilic l.vt, thereby causlux humor of all alalia lo di aj)car. Ktitlroljr SnlUfnrtory. The Charter Oak Is a Hear perfection a we ever rpret to and a tor. Entirely utl-farton ; III hurt, a perfect auecess ax a tlrt-cl eooUlu:; toe. Ask your drurgUt for Hedillng Hnla Sihe. " Keep it hi lmuc In ce of accltlcHla. Siuruow you Jetm-mU'r longer the den:it bo. liavlLU gotten a i;rl(i on your ti lis, UtiliiM 011r roii to nitii up hi" !hr than Miii do the tooth ('tiller uho J,-rl. the onVnd in;; l.ry out before ou Liioh It. lntvn "VrVi-aM Mr. (i.,dln:;tin nadir, "he a liiduluiin: In Mijur:erlri:r rierrlre lbs homo eot friable nt'il at i-onirlhlti;; or other ntiil ret lproeated him to the ideM alk U bra ther tiNik him up they found it hail fraetlout I hi lee. and It had to he ctlu.utati'd to aiehailfe" And the old lady didn't ir another wont for at lesol lifteen mlr.ti'ea Mia whs thliikltii;. ax (die after' :t'd a.d. of fie 'dreadful ulsrhls in the couannatorj.''- Itv ton Tru 14 writ. - Ki;mi a think In thetaud a Newfoundland do:; llo:iiti to a Kolon man Uke unle ulid !; to a lmker" tUllv and Inns rin nIN fr his hreukfasi The neighbor rive him (H-unie. uhlrh he luuirs in a djice t-coopedout under the f.tiip. Tin: mule Mm.l on hl oil f.ire h-ir, Whene. hII hut he had th-d. And kiekid a tierce inui-i-ol lou aejr, ItlK'ht 011 Its IxiUnm uciel. Thxki'ir It burt ulth inlet ou pound, 'the mule.rli! uheie us he? (jo ak hlm.for hestixxl his Kniltnd, And allll kirks mulefull) . In-AIjti wij.V. Tn ur. I.akt. beil In Ilanfonl, Cal . I tlv miles from where It four years au'o. On the land redalmed by the ehiuue are fount the riii,itii of a eorful and enhlti, nud irrli,4t iiur ditihes ran be trared running In trullit lines. Wheat is now growing on the lied of the oM hike. Wiirv theO.nrIn.1 of l'ula nlli;htel from the railway ear ttlileli took her to St. I'cter bii'ir. on her return from her lat Journey to Italy, s-hi; exclaimed, "Alas! I hate ilmn wi ti traveling- Farewell railroads, farewell coaelies and loetmintives .My next couvcr Hiice ttiU be the hearne." Tin: fat men of llaltimorc recently gave Iki I The) only looked at the danelng. Thn f.itlest man jiretent Melghcd 4J (oimda. From the fair iex the juhn hu Ininie oil by a Mljih U turns the iwnles at 31.V Vegetine. The Ilcst Medicine. GENERAL DEBILITY. Fcrrroer. Itr. .Sept! ira. n. Tt SrrTKf . aTos Inr Sir I havr l-rn uIncinr raluaMr rollf In. V.rtln'." fur ttrrrrnl luUhty. ami lure tu h-'-tatlnn lrif-i)lrc ihsl I rn.ilTli nenf ibl-at Ifrwil iSr Litl fuilliliir In Hie mailkcl for a prncrsi tn'pi. atorarxt llWo-1 I'uriCiT. J. 11. I'OIMKIL VECETINE CIVKS I.K.SKK.M. SATIrFACTIO. Eruptions of tho Skin, Chronic Sore Eyc3 and General Debility, Hcncl whnt Dr. Simmons inyn. Vkroxa, Mils.. June .V IS71. II U Srir. IlosTos I l.mvr nsl "Vrertlar" tn mjr family fortwn ytan iwl .-..rrtimli iTomaKihl tt k a rtn.y for Krttpiinot if Ok' .sn. rav,ntc t"rr )f irwl Urnrral 1 utility. I Ijsir i1im n eunniKiflrfl It tn a jr; nun; f-isni la ttiU kx-:Iu:u &nl I thlnt It ht drrn gtard :U farllun. err ri t"r, IJR. J. J. SIMMONS, Tonrrrrr rulmKr tnet!!f!ar, "Wortlne." ri'.arrl the aljclit to mi little rtaiiehtrr. Mtrti leT fnm I'Ib j llinj, ar..l I bate n ilult nsrrtl Ii'r life Very gratcf uy, MILs. J. J. FIMM0K3. WITH SUCH BENEFIT. SnanoTOax. Wi.. Kot. 13. t?71 II. It. STrrxsi. noTO.f- wir S'lr 1 ran fully teilfy to lb- 'Sdeaey of yoar Vrsrtlnr a a Gnat III. mm rcrlflrr. hli tuetl a lar Icc Ibe lu: c?n tn- nth. rltn $ut Uifil, lour 'nily, W o. ST. SCHE. Drcoiii Vegetine IS THE BEST SPUING MEDICINE. Vegetine is Sold by All Druggists. alJw,,Hil:laMil!l l"oa Cur for Camummm. lion Is aim U trat rtxiri mrvl Ida. lf mall. bottle Intx. SoW ctttjusan. . aadsi.ea. Wvnsa to tt. tmrw. Ha foCDd t way la!o hlgti ptacra Itir vorUotrr. as4 IdSca J zrvu aad Hiy.Scuaa de tt itrtt xppnTtL WOOLR1CU a: CO.. on crery lalw L OPIUMS" HrlaM HaIICBr4 la H .araujuis.xXtasoa. VLia. CixiiKun. Fxr!ml3il A-Tle ar on-to txxti-i; tat nj ai.1 M.-w." liij l feanttt trwt fotli?jareal rcua; t H: ' Kxxkst. al a& ICCHTC V6a ajx eot aso-r Ti Br. Oaavae'a ""'I TewJCtiptEMk. OmUUscfidr ozc&zvzisz. AJJT'.aaCla;iati.',i -gCa..TolcCo.O. OPIUM. KrfaUHatnCariacHn. IJOrm , AiUnna Ut. stAi&H. iniotr. afick. FPU PPSY ! !?"-' of z'jzzz - ; 'im j i11 n- I- K ZA 42a. Drsrufi. Horer. atais. HAIR A"hn!essIe an.t rpt1. e-.i rrt---. ncfiniltUfLipnn wi...!.1-..- F- CLIAILUt. 71 state Sztf. CuZuZ t ?f1 pcrJa?' t none. Samples worUi 5 J i4 ,Urea.ilrbnxiOTiCsx.IJ)ctla4Ji S72j A VKE?C- 1a.ltr hima.linrm,.t. 4 I 6 CoaUy vsaz fr. AddraTrse lst. Asxza. iU. GUNS ICcrolTcm. UJa. CsXsloz-it free. mmmm S66 A WEEK in Tour own town. Terms and KoafJAiarH.HalrtaCaJcrgaB4JU -. . m T IflOlW V&1 i.A-i ..ii ', .Mt.rM 1 ? TV TT?T 1 .IW.V.nl " I AND UlA)A?Xr. TO LIT; ii.jt towhw.M iitie-.i AOHARTEROAE !l,U(tY BV Excelsior Man'fa Co., KT. LOIW. HO iMroiiTEus and DKAt.nna :t TIN-PLATE, WIRE, SHEET IRON errs! ci.is. or toots isto 02 mjlo i TIN AND STOVE DEALERS. sexi i'oi: nttci: lists. TUTTS PILLS SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Ia Of Apjxslita, IlcaroU COttiTo, l'aln tn lh llk.t. wllhad.lllental JUlU l-,baa prl, I'm unilnr lb abou.Jr Ma.l, fulf nca ai tor tmc. with a ilitvcllfial. in to exertion of bo.ly or inlntl. IrrtiaOllitr of temper Low tpirtt. vrlth a frlut-f har la neleetl aome tlulr. Wrin I' irteaa. Iluttrluc at tt Heart. tMita te fore the eye. Velio Halo. Hedacho Kenerallr oer the right 'ire. HoUt with flttul itrr atu, highly eolorel Urine A CONSTIPATION. TUTT'S PILLS r -llr .IplrJ t u , etagle ! .ftrrl. anrlt rHmg mt f! laac eve l a.inth tli ufTt-rrr, aOLI MLIIlWIIUtE. I'UllK SJ CS1T Ofllocs 3 .tturrajr Mrrl, iew orku Tann.an.lt vl.ll In Mlarral aprlng. hr i feTvol.anl !-" 1 I- f i ,ir, a MMitl fjr Uri:ti.bB f i1j rf Tarrant's SeU.or ApcriiMit vpuVt proinMLh tb rrol' l Hk rr of trw rriila K.ili' r hf -.'t rn ! fty . f rt".. of ;-tv n fir! n r l i i-i t t "n Cli' t. u L.. h" C ilifk J. hi nri icr rit.Lt. Nll.l Iir ALL I'lllOOlSTii. A FRFP RIFT! I wilt. M.'l. a are) taw "tea I t " l I'.llll , I. t IIUUON Nlajir llm.li. rKi.iVvi i,i.ii!.j t. f - ; oBi- djr.. :.l tw a rn !- I- !-' To . rf, ,-,r f . t, ll( MII'lJlV, (WTAfCltlt. .K'l'llU.t nr IIKOM III I l. Hi ill mi,t n tn V . i f'.t 'n I 111 fngr-m I. uv.ul, lb tt. M X .! k- of l J It rlit'nr uf P I- UlL S II UoUt WOUi.i'i'x i. .t rnLi o. SIMMER COLDS I'Ol'IIIIS Allen's Lis Balsam. r.iMiiti:u hy fit rait ia AS A SAFE AND EFFECTIVE REMEDY. OLD BY ALL DftUCCISTS. PENSIOIMSjvH cai Apt.y.t oa-' la irilrtiiLii. n.U - ,-i-BK-nre al Ur ;f 4 wfurrr at th tin- I. llmUHL llflrt of .l.-r.,i .J,,r, ,;., J. frta, Ih,jM, r, ItVfV-aOinr il- .:.cr V tnerr-ftj Ttvm r.l. try rntl'VJ o a L"k r raO-ef rot: .n. lu.nrj. ,J4?i.'.r.,."I.,'Ji:ri,nu"T,a A'Wr " htur. i, DA"T. ' " Vl n Anta. lUom . it tlo(J llolWlnj. Wa.Wi.gtoii. O. U SAWS mrrKrwei Manor act arm f Snwat TAUA-txi H Eror7 Whrli, m aail all flaw and riora ratrntSlottixICIrr-'ilnrHaw. Krry Haw Our Now ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE A NEW 1 timtilnr ki FHAS BEEN ' IJcluaoac. a .h:- o Urr.y IS STRONCLV titMl Iit tiiia iw bral.sr "(' ftr a-! tt'T fnJt THE OXVCEH HOME with Inbanar anntn aal RENT TREE r Twt tin dlatiiiTT avl a larr tfnr'l vt boat ADHINISTERED BY INHALATION. V v R!aH aajLaaaaai WZVr .C Jaal .aV JaaaT- .K" a- 1 X ViJ aVOf aaT .aeWa? r"""r JL Baa 4JvCT VLW rSf? CCVaaBf tEaaaEaaBaaa fafl aLaaaaaaav aBaBB'T:B friL. BaaWEvLa-ia NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO.E2lSi(MlicL A -ea a iu. a lSaBliaaHPflka 1 . A M-.m fTTf :.? PbttTAiiTJTiUkCTToH. asrlAua..? --?.. " ar. Iwmfeiutr. Senary. Kaaor-ar H ni. ym . . .. -..-- . -. 1. ' a-&rPra fsflP f. fL.a.1 eaaav-a. al k..-ae. J T" "" - -m a ajvaa e4 ir" iTTl r iB rs"ir CAUT! Orl ! zu-zzzxjzx BE HOT DECEIVED a aa. r- ue -Orlaaaml vxt . -IZZZZL liLTV. T t. S.-9!!11 aearOealarB 3 ea ar eAvn. vrtu lBzEsru .f, .. T..',--rT'"T f,1 t. -Jv--" ,. o v Jti!JL2 clj fiod f r ' M ?. In Hew TorW. w fin 9Uf raplrtlf IncroanlrtH irsrl mn,) "r opcnlnrt n pfHco n tcery n Cnleajio. lo supply trn ifn trad', and omI1 ill prtlo hlrtK to pln. Xo X'T ouf, wMdl fT r,, "" chip9lln ihomarlmi. Sn far ampin card ard prc. NATIONAL MIXtO PAIHT CO . .vxw Yt'Kic mhiia o. :tt m I. CLENDENEN, M. D orrict:. noo ?. 143 Madlien atrool, Chlc Cancsr,Tumors, Etc., I SEND FOR REFEKENCKS. GRAEFENBERG VfttRTAMUl Mlldait trtr knawn. 9V9 MALARIAL DlbCASCa. HCADACHC fl.LtOUS. NC5S. INOfCtSTlON u4 fEVEH. T.eM lII.LS Top uo Se (Tt'em ad rrttffff or a'th tj thoae ajffertn trrm fer'al debli.rf fteJ nnroona. Sold by tl prurrHtt. f BO Coxites vcr Bo. PCRMANCNTLT CURE KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, Constipation and Pile. IT HAS WHY? WONDERFUL POWER. hkcadik it At-r or thm li.iTiiu.Tiin timrttui ami atn. I.MtVH AT Til K HAM TIME. oauee It clean hm et len i the poieonoue hymt ihi teieee lo Kidney and Urinary dleeaeee, ! loueneaa, Jaundle, Conetlpallon,! rllee, or In Kheumellem, Mewralla and remaledieoruera. KIPKl wnnru.oM,t.vi., Ikee4ea4 a mi by vH r:piA. 0araaaltlakli,t..r4tM. TXITT IT JVXOVtr I Bay II ta fr(t-VMa. fiUa, !). ) 10 ellu, Tk - - f - " Vfilfl'lalra iiarituiL afi j tjr-ni j If 0' 'i Afw A Tct, t.if-n -i a 1 ! If aire) irntrrf; ' ' r ? MrlaUl IHri. Ill.lwlr. n.l 11 LUMiiry, Me. 4) I rlnar? i. utf , 1 - i i.- "tef"f 'rrtf f fK- t'm, : v- a 0 1 iiktr :c f niSr. J5 f" TTa nrr'a Htr tl-rt- luf ai I t , c r tirietal'e aM lfc Hhw . ... tt mrrr' ttmtm MMty nil l.llrrl'Hr. PaTWARriLrfa Safeft'medleaar old br Oruatyltt and Deafen In Mrdlclna every tahere. H.H. Wrier id. trfreaea E0CHC8TEa,I.T. araa4 rt r. ! a4 TQtala K I- ft fVIII'.X WHITINtI Tt APVr.UTKIr'.KJs. plriaM- any ;u taw III A,lrf1lrort In till .tlrr. .tlrrtlr 1 1 a t. 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