S5 3T5K.S .BUT III Ml MMWWi "V - .ifHhT " ' (' --T Tltniirfai -Hi - " f ' - ifi I 4-1 -SK iiiaiff !! , pT ' v tfiiMn. ii.iiji"iii,jr. niia'L'i'-'i''Va !1K" TVW V X - .awsC aV. KSKP" 1 V Rk .X--"""lfc. EHE BED CLOUD CHIEF. M. L. TKOWIAS, Publlshor RED CLOUD, - - UEBKASKA. NESTLINGS. O llttlo blnll Klnp sweot nmonir the leaves. Sate hlil (mm Hlifht. 1-eside thy downy nc"t: The rain falls inunniirliijr to tbo drooplnjf OllVf'S A low refrain, that suits thy music ttcri. Slnjr sweet, O llnl" thy recompense drawa Jnlirh. Tour fallow nestlfnjra ncCh tho mother's winjr. ?o many l!uhlnt- wlnm that by nntl by si "A'lll clcavo tho gunny air. O sltur, bird, 3 slnjc! Sin;?, O my heart! Thy callow ncslllnira Fnfo hitMcn 'ncath a trraclous folding win?. Until tho tlmo when, from their slumber deep. They wako and soar In beauty. Siujr, heart, binl 0 little blnl! slnjr sweet, Ttiouvh rain may fall. Wlri'l tbotiRh thy callow lirooJ thy caro re quire, """" I Jon 1 nil the r.iln-cloinl with its trulllm: nail Shliioth iindlmmcd the i-ntciuiis volclen tire Miur on. O bird! nor of thovlotirt take heol; I or thou art heritor of 1 irlous if.rlnjf ; And every Held is -aerel to tliy uo-l. 'I he wealth, tho beauty, thine. O siUT, blnl, Mtur! lnj-, O my heart! Binjr on, though rain may iKiur: .-liiirnn: for unaware tho wind will briny K drift ff PiiiiMlilm ft i thy cltaji! floor. And areli the elondi with r.iintKjwi. Hint-, heart, blnj-l () blnl! elrur sweet. What though tho tlmo bo near When thou uliilt sit upmi that stviiylni" Ikiii'Ii. Willi iio.iHi-t mat!, no ii;tlln;r. by, to hear 'lliu liubldiiisou thou Min.r ht to K'ad them now! Thy tak win done, fulfilled in awevt spring iliiys. T liiKoldn Hummer, when thy brood takes win v. Slmlt thou imt Mill have left a hymn of praise, Itccaiiiu thy work is fiver? Hnr. blnl, sinirJ Nii'.d my heart? What if thy birds havo tlown.' Thou hadst tho Joy of their awakening. And thoiiuand memoriea Iclt tiico for thine fiwn; F i"Jn,r, thou, for task a-eompllsbcd. fliifr. ileal t. bln-f! CliamliCT' JtiuriuiL g A IIIDKOL'S Ti)U..CATHi:nER. In llio year 1857, I was mate of tlio fillip Kilcn l'ird, t lieu making her third voyage. It v:is in tho palmy days of tho sandal-wood and boeswav trade, and wo were at the Island of Timor, an chored at Delhi haven, taking in a cargo. " Sandal wood, so valuable because of its enduring perfume for the manufac ture of fancy work-boxes, desks and cabinets, could, at that time, be ob t amed in considerable iiantit'os in Ti jnor. It grows tliere as a small timber tree anions the mountains of the interi or. The natives are hired to take it to tl-e harbor in small logs, earned on the shoulders of two or three men walking together, or upon tho bacKS of their tamed ponies. "Vhi'c slowly taking in this part of ifrSr cargo, log by log, I, as male of the vessel, was dispatched on a trip inland, to hasten the collection of beeswax. Three of the seamen accompanied me. Some twenty natives of the island also went with us to take up tho wild ee' nests, and these were to bo paid in goods at the vessel for all the wax they might gather. For ver a week we slept in twobam- ftt) huts set up on posts, with thatched. roof-?, at a place the natives called tho JJirdees, twenty or twenty-live miles uack from Delhi. Dardee is tho Timorese name for a very curious tree, tho roots of which rise out of the ground in a tangled, complicated pyramid to the height of sixty, and even eighty, feet. It is at the lop of this vast mass that tho real trunk of the tree begins, branching out """ above in a top almost as thick and e tenMve as the root. Often these wide spread and thiekby-woven dardee roots ini lose an open space at their center, where one may stand directly beneath the great trunk overhead. These root systems are not unfroipientlv thirty, Jartv and even lifty feet in diameter, PNiiibitSng a singularly-grotcsijuo, gnarled appearance; and where a forest of then stand moderately close togeth er, they present to tho eye a most be wildering maze. Hut the forests of Timor are, as a rule, by no means dense. Open plats, ty full of rank, coarse grass and flowers, alternate with the groves of larger Mrccs; and the whole country round about tho huts, where we spent our nights, was one great natural apiary. The huts, in fact, were built by bee hunters, who each year visit the district to get honey ami wax. Much as" has been said and written concerning bees, 1 think the reader will a yet find something novel in a brie? de- scription of the wild bees of Timor, and the old method bv which the natives capture them. These bees (the apis tlorsata) do not, like tho wild bees of f America and other countries, build their diesis in hollow trees, or clefts in the crags. I was astonished to see hanging to the lower side of some stout branch, n far up in the tops of the loftiest trees, a great cone of honey-eomb, often four fQct in diameter by live feet in length. Those combs are so piled and covered in as to resist the weather completely, and are cemented to the branch with a thick, glutinous stump of very tough y and compact wax. I estimated the "" weight of some of these large combs at three hundred pounds. During the week we were in the for est, we took, I should think, nearly five hundred of these horov-cones. The honey, save what we could eat with our food," was of no use to us, and 1 havo Jttle doubt that thirty or forty thousand ""l pounds of honey were tlestroyed by us in that one week; for the wax was all that we cared to take. The lirst time I saw the natives take a bees" nest, I thought their method of doing it as curious as tho nest itself w:is odd. This peculiar nest hung from jfc limb of a tall, straight, smooth-barked eucalyptus tree, scveutj--hve feet from the ground. The trunk of the tree was a yard or more in diameter. To cut it down would havo been several hours' work, even for an experienced woods man; while to climb it, after the ordinary fashion, would havo been out of tho question. This is the way Benu, one of the Timor men. set to work- First, he took from his bundle a torch of some """"rcsiuous wood, and lighted it. This torch he attached to his waist-cloth, or girdle, bv means of a string some ten feet long" so that as he climbed up, tho slowly burning, "but densely smoking, torch would hang beneath him. To his girdle was also hung a ehopping- inite, for cutting off the eomb from the branch, and a long line, in a coil, for lowering it to the ground. Fola, an other of the men, now brought him a strong bush rope, or creeper, some twenty feet long, green and pliable, and freshly cut from a thicket. Benu first passed one end of this creeper round the trunk of tbo tree, thengrasp- -Jiig an end in each hand, leaned Dack, ami setting his feet against the trunk, he began to walk up the tree, holding fast by the bush rope and throwing it up, by a quick jerk, after every second step. It was wonderful to note the r skill with which he took advantage of the least roughesss, or scar in "flic bark, to get a hold for the ' loop, or for his feet. He was not much more than a minute going up sixty . feet. All this time, he was almost on- fj xv"fnirfl in n. fVlnnd of smokft from thft torch, which secjned to prevent the bees from settling upon his body; ' which, but for his waist-cloth, was en- -airely bare and exposed to their stings. . Arriving directly beneath the limbto which the comb was suspended, by a tjexterous spring ho threw himself partly over it, then drawing up his -ftjfgh, so that its smoke completely en- veloped his body, he rested for some foment oeiore ctw-ju-jt m v m. branch to cut off tho comb. Thousands of the bees were Hying about him. and thousands more were clinging in black masses to the outside of the comb. But upon Benu' a holding out the torch be- nnnth it. llinv nil rrun in n. dense nloiid. filling the forest with their deep, solemn j num. I'clcnucu by tho smoke, licuu had in a moment or two more made a double noose of his smaller line round tho comb; and then, with a few deft cuts of his chopper, ho cleaved off the cone from the limb, and lowered it un broken to the ground. In three min utes more he had walked down tho tree, much as he had walked up. and stood among us, none the wor-io for his ex ploit, with tho exception of a few stings. Afterward, I repeatedly saw Fola, Amine, Motulect and a dozen others of our native S'piad, climb up for nests in the same way. It was their customary. method. Nothing would have induced j me to attempt sucu a ic.it; nor count any of our sailors be induced or cajoled into attempting it. A little way out from our huts, on the further side, and just bevond the three dardee trees, there was a rocky gully or gulch, twenty-live or thirty feet in , depth, and from" forty to fifty feet wide. So steep were its sides, and so tangled with creepers and vines, that to cross it we should have been forced to made a long detour, cither below or above, had it not been for a bridge, which nature ' had provided in the shape of a tree I which had fallen across the ratine, I spanning it completely from bank to ' bank. It hail been a very large, old tree. The shattered top lay on the side next our huts; ami the ends were over-, run by a luxuriant wild grape-vine, j loaded down with dusters of 'grapes. the outer skins of which were covered with hair! But their flavor was deli cious, though on first putting one in jour mouth, the hair cave you a very peculiar sensation, winding throujni , the top of the tree with the vine, there was a beautiful crown-lily, displaying its glorious festoons of blossoms side by side with tho strange hairy grape clus ters, so that a most singular and gor geous effect was produced. The trunk of tho tree, which was at least four feet in diameter, offered a perfectly safe bridge across the gully; and for the first four days we were constantly going back and forth on it. It had evidently been u-ed for this purpose, either by men or wild animals, long before our arrival, for the log was worn smooth, apparently, by the many feet that had passed and repassed on it. Though still tolerably sound and strong, the log was plainly a hollow one; and out near tiie middle of it there was a hole in the upper side. I noticed this hole the first time I went across, and thought what an ugly thing it would be to step into it when crossing with a load, it must have been not lar from a foot anil a half in diameter. Several times, while walking over this log. I noticed a strange, sickening odor coming from it, which, though faint, was very nauseating, and once, when standing still for a moment, looking down into the gully beneath it, I saw some bunches of what ap peared to bo bones wadded together. There were a good many of these lying thero among the rank grass, and I con cluded that a number of animals had died, or been killed there, and that tho peculiar odor came from these. The fourth evening wo wero there, just at sun-set, when tho natives were coming from bee-hunting, each with his great sack of mashed comb on his head, I suddenby heard a fearful outcry in the direction of this gull'. "Some of 'em havo tumbled ofTn that log!" Myers, oiks of the sailors with me, called out, ami we all ran from the hut where we wero eating supper, to see what had caused so dread ful a shriek. On coining in sight of tho log that spanned tho ravine, a strange specta cle presented itsolf. Dangling from tho under side of tho log, struggling and shrieking, hung one of tho natives a brother of Benu, named Oati. At the same instant I perceived tho folds of a monstrous, mottled snake, rising in great loops above tho log, and heard a native who was standing on the farther end of the log. screaming " Whir lc hai! Wlar Ichai! (Great snake! Great snake!) " TasnJtn! tasuhu!" (Help! help!) "Come forth, white chief, with your lire gun!" Without waiting to get my gun, for foor Oati's shrieks wero awful to hear, seized a largo handspike lying-near, and dashing out on the log, delivered two heavy blows upon tho serpent's writhing folds, cither of which I feel certain would havo broken an ox's back. Feeling these, the monster dropped Oati," whom it had seized by the thigh in its mouth and was holding up by main strength, and rearing its huge, flattened head six or seven feet above tho log, looked me full in the face, its great eyes dilated with fury and its tongue licking the air with a strange, hissing sound. It was a sight to startle the bravest of men. I struck at its head and leaped backward on tho log, but lost my foot ing when close to the bank of thogully, aitd, slipping off the tree-trunk, went tearing down through the vines to tho bottom. The fall did not hurt me much, but I was snarled up in vines, and it was some moments before I could struggle out, or even clear away the foliago sulhciently to see whether the great snake was after me or not. 1 could hea- a tremendous shouting and noise, however, and soon the reports of several guns. Tho moment I got clear of tho liana., I ran through tho bushes and grass, down the bed of the gully; aud hero I came upon Oati, crawling off on his hands and knees. His thigh was bleed ing profusely from several deep, ugry looking holes, aud his ankle was out of joint from the fall. There was so savage a battlo going on above us, that my shouts for assist ance were unuoticcd. After several ef forts I succeeded in throwing Oati's ankle-joint hack into place; aud then, binding up his leg as best I could, I helped him along to a place whero it was possible for us to climb out. But altogether this had occupied fif teen or twenty minutes; so that thu light which Myers and Benu. Amrue, Fola and the rest were making with the IP lar lih-ii" was now for the most part over. The shots had driven the ser pent back into tho log; whence, ac cording to Oati, it had darted its head out to seize him, as he walked across. Myers was now watclfing for it firing whenever it thrust its head out from the hole. He said that he had put two balls clean through its body before it had commenced to slide back into its retreat. Benu now brought an axe, and in the course of an hour tho great log was cut off. close to the bank, and tell down with a loud crash one end of it into the guily. It split as it fell, and the body of the python was thrown partly out of the hollow but the crack closing somewhat again, as tho end of the log came to rest on the bottom of thegulch, the great reptile was held fast within it. For awhile it writhed and twisted there, emitting a most horrible odor. Seeing it was caught fast, the natives went down and beat it to death ith handspikes. They then cut away the log and let its body fall out. With my pocket-rule I measured off a ten-foot pole, and when I say that I placed this pole three times along the dead serpent's body, and had still a foot to spare off its tad, perhaps I shall be accused of telling "a snake story;" nevertheless, it's the truth. At the middle, its body was nearly as thick as a man's; and its scales were as large as clamshells. But the most ferocious feature was its great, bony, flattened head, with its huge gaping jaws and great lidlsss' eyes. Its colors weze a pale j How along the belly, shadine to coppery hues on its sides, with livid brown and black marking- along lh back. There is little doubt that this mon strous creature bad long had its lurking place in the old log; -and it made me fdiuddcr to think how many time wo had all passed back and forth over itJ head. 1'ouWs Comjxininn, Summer Homekcepln-j. It is in tho dog-days that the souls of housekeepers are most severely tried. Appetites are capricious; dishes heartily eaten one day anil sent away untastcd the next, while the praiseworthy economy practiced at King. Arthur Court, where what they could not ext that day, tho Queen next morning fried," becomes an impossibility. Cook ed meats will not keep long, even in the refrigerator, while cooked vegetables sour out of tho ice-chest, or, it kept in it, become "Hat. stale, and un profitable." In this state of affairs it is well to fol low the example of dwellers in hot climates, who live principally on fruit and fresh vegetables. Dates and bread form the chief diet of the dcsert Arab, and the hardy K.ist Indian codie sub sists almost entirely on rice. Bouillon, that is. light soup, fresh fruit, a salad, and coffee is the Henchman a b II of fare for the hot weather. Indeed, nature in this respect as in others, is a law unto herself, and he who eats much meat in hot weather is apt to pay the penalty for it in a clogged brain and feeling of general heaviness. Breakfast, especial ly, should in warm wether be a light meal. .Milk and oatmeal or cracked wheat, .ofi-boiIcd eggs, bread, which however, need not be htale. fresh butter and fruit are far more refreshing and healthy d et with the thermometer up among the nineties than hot cakes aud fried meat, washed down with hot coffee. The athletes in training for the Greek games were restricted to a diet of bread and milk and fruit, and in our own day the prospective prize-fighter is strictly limited in his supply of animal food. Dio Lewis gives it as his opinion that meats, except lambs and chicken, should be eschewed in hot weather, but then Dio Lewis would make oatmeal the staff of life, and ascribes most of the ills that llesh is heir to to intemperance in eat ing. Yet, while 'one man's meat is another man's poison," the fact remains that in warm weather much less animal food is necessary than in cold, when the fires, so to speak, need to bo kept up aud an excess of carbon is required to keep us warm. In this state of af fairs it is a matter of congratulation that Nature provides us with so many dainty dishes, all ready to bo eaten. Strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, blackberries and peaches may all come to the table without the smell of lire having passed upon them, and, eaten with lresh country cream, aro "a dainty dish to set before a King." Tomatoes, eaten raw, are a sovereign remedy for biliousness. In tho country, whore fruit and milk are abundant, ice-cream, that most do licious of hot-weather dishes, costs but very little. Given a five minuto freezer and a pailful of ice, the rich milk, or, still better, cream, has but to be mixed with the crushed fruit, sweetened, aud left to freeze itself. Covered with an old blanket or piece of carpeting, the process of congealing will go on slowly but surely, with smalt aid from you. even it your freezer be but a tin bucket, only in that case you must cut up the cream two or three times from tho bot tom with a knifo while freezing, in or der to prevent the formation of crystals of ice in the freozor. A popular fallacy condemns soup as too hot for warm weather. On the contrary, it is one of tho host of sum mer dishes. In a well-mado soup the process of digestion is half accom plished, and nothing else, except beef tea, containing :is much nourishment can be eaten with so little offort. Veg etable soups are easuy made, and well made aro delicious. Against tiles, that plague of summer, two weapons aro powerful cleanliness and darkness. Th6 table should bo cleaned as soon as meals are over and all crumbs carefully brushed up from table and floor. Tho dining-room should bo kept dark between meals; but it will not do simply to shut up tho room, shuttingthctliesiuit. Close every door and window but one and drive tho Hies out through that. This is by no means so dithcult as it appears upon paper, and praotico enables one to bo come quito an expert at the task. Air all sleeping rooms thoroughly every morning, and if possible suu tho mattresses occasionally. Oftenat night, when the heat is unbearable, a wet cloth stretched over tho window blind will cool tho room as though a shower had fallen, and every one knows how watering the pavement in front of tho door will freshen the hot, dry air. This principle of the reduction of tho teni peraturo by evaporation is capable ol much practical application. In India and other tropical countries, where ice is almost unknown, tho natives cool their water for drinking by suspending their water-bottles, which aro of porous earthenware, in a brisk current of air. caused by tho punkahs or largo fans of the country, which. process is said to cool it rapidly aud thoroughly. But abovo all, tho grat secret of doing housework with comfort in warm weather is to do it as much as possible in the early morning, resting in tho middle of the day. Philadelphia Press. Sell by Weight. Progress in some things is slow. Many years ago nearly everything was sold "by measure by "the bushel, quart, gallon" etc Fifty years ago salt was measured in a half bushel, and so was flour. But there has been great prog ress made in many articles. But there is a reform demanded in others. There is great injustice done to both buyer and seller to seil eggs by tho dozen. The eggs of the improved breeds of hens are twice as tieavy as aro the product of tho common scrub stock. There are constant frauds in the quart or fruit boxes of small fruits. Thero arc shortages, stealings and leakings in every box." Honest scales will not thus cheat. Besides boxes, packages or measures which aro professedly put up for a bushel, barrel, gallon, "quart or pint, and which fall suort. are a fraud on the public, and should be avoided by changing the rule to testing every thing by standard measures or scales. Thero is a3 much eertainty in selling wool by the fleeco at a standard for all fleeces, as to sell eggs by the dozen, or hay by the load. The only right way of selling all farm products is by weight. ""Justice can be done in no other way. This is the best standard for selling potatoes, tomatoes, wheat, barley, oats, apples, berries, eggs, but ter, chickens, turkeys, hogs and beeves. Let us have no exceptions. At present the exceptions aro where the greatest frauds are perpetrated. Let us have an opportunity of ordering by telephone from our grocer ten pounds of eggs. Iowa State Hegistcr. At the close of the services in the Central Church at Rochester, N. Y., the other Sunday evening. Miss May Marsh, the well-known and favorite soprano, sangtho beautiful selection entitled " If J. Were a Voice." When she reached the refrain, " Til fly, I'd fly away," etc, in flew a bat through one of the church windows. The wimred visitor be?an to mononoliw th -attention of the congregation, and not a tew ot the people ducked their heads as the bat flew close above them, while the singer continued in the sweet re frain, "I'd fly away." Fertility f Araeriraa Soil-. The term fertility. a now generally acd by writcm oaagriculturc, exprns cs the amount of plant foci that Is pres ent in the soil in a form to be taken up by the growing crops. Thb fertility n bejit measured by the crops which the soil will produce, but owing U o many modifying cauv. it la safe to judge o"f the state of fertility of any Mil oal after three or. more crop5 have beca grown. A soil may be rich, but for some other reason produce, for exam ple, only a small crop of corn this year, owing, it may be, to exces-dre dryneM or the reverse, to poor wrcd and other modifying causes. It is a natural question to ask when -o thui fertility cornea.-! n 1 in what chemic al elements and com-ounds it consists. In answering this question, tho features of an infertile or barren, or as it :.smot frequently called, an czhuustoi noil, will be brougfit forward as the natural op posite of fertility. A fettile oil. one that is capable under favorable circum stances of producing a paying crop, luu-tt contain all of those elements of foojl that agricultural plants derive from the toil, and, as before stated, in avail able form. This last clause is of great importance, for-the soil may contain a full complement of food elements, but have one or more locked up in tome insoluble form, in which state it is of very little use. A sod that has all these elements of plant food, without their having been added b the hand of man, may be termed niluriUj fertile toil one that ol itself will pro luce good crops of grain, roots, etc. Such are the rich virgin so.l of all nev countries, as the vast areas of the MisM-ippi Vallcv. when they wero fir?t broken by the plow, and much of the far West that is now be ng brought into cultivation. A soil that is naturally jnior or infertile may be made to produce paying crops, by adding the elements of plant fo-d in the form of barnyard manure, or its equivalent in commercial fertilizers. In the same way. a m:1 that was once naturally fertile, but has bc-onio poor or exhausted by constant cropp.ng. may be restored to "its original virgin 'fertil ity or kept in a sufficiently fertile state to produce good crops. 'I his last is tin work of the fanner in all old countries; the keeping up of the fertility of the Miil is the problem, often perplexing and dillicult. that all farmers upon old land havo to work out during their whole lives. With them the sol ts a machine," or perhaps more evidently, i "factory," in which the plants work, anil out of the crude materials supplied to the soil, together with thoic lur nishcil by the air, they make the stib stauco of their stem, leaf, fruit and grain. In this sense a large farm may be a thousand-aero ' factory" where grains aud fruits, leaf and wool, ate made from the crude materials, which must in good part be supplied by the farmer to the soil. All of the fanning in the countries of the old world aud much of that in the older-settled parts of tho new is of this faotoiy" kind, where tho most successful farmer is he who knows best how much of the raw material to put into the factorv," and how and when it is best to do it. He is also the one who runs the grain and leaf-producing mill" with thogreate.st economy with the least wear and tear upon the machinery, so to speak, and sells his goods at the right time and plaee.and therefore at thegreatest pro :iL Tliere is another style of farming which is more largely practiced in America than anywhere else; namely, the farming upon new and rich soil a soil that has a virgin fertility su'licient to grow largo crops, and no addition of fertilizers of any kind is needed. The fact that we havo such land and such farming is felt the world over, and gives the American virgin-soil farmer certain important advantages over all who must feed their soil be fore a crop can be raised with siicccs. It is simply a process of taking off from tho soil with no corresponding return, and for a time the products of grain, beef, etc., can be sold more erieaply than the same can be grown whero an expenditure must be made in food for the soil. But as fertility is so largelv dependent upon the amount of nitrogen in th soil, and this is stored up only by previous generations of plants, anv .se vere cropping in which more nitrogen is removed from the soil in the crop than is formed and stored up in the soil during the same period will soon er or later bring tho most fertile soil to a state of exhaustion. There is, therefore, an end, though it may be many years hence, to the virgin-soil farming in America. When th's comes, all will engage in the ""give and take" system, or'upply anddeiuau I" prac tice; that is. supply the soil with its quota of food, anil demand in return a fair compensation for the expenditure, in the shape of a paying crop. When this time comes, the competition be tween the farmers upon tiie new and the old lands will bo more healthful, and our system of agriculture will be come evident, because common to all. Cor. Country Ucnilcman. - The Modern Cook. What arc some of the things that ev ery cook who prepares a meal for any family ought to know? Unless the whole routine of her work be haphazard and unreliable, she should have intelli gent and well defined opinions concern ing the relations of food to physical groyvth, so that she can furnish" that which is the best adapted to tho whole household, lit to bui d up healthful and svranietrical bodies fcr the children as well as the mature workers in the family, the nutriment necessary to keep good the balance between "supply antf de mand. The children should not fail to develop properly ou account of her ig noranco of their needs. The father should never give out more vitality in his struggle with the world than "she can make good to him as she prepares his daily food. All this implies a prac tical application of the principles taught in physiology and chemistry, as welfas a knowledge of the kind and the qual ity of nourishment stored in plants, flesh, fish and fowl. Earth, air and sea furnish her with materials which she must understand hov to prepare, so that it can be transformed into bone, blood and muscle in such proportion that each shall have its proper devel opment. She must be both too wise and too humane to concoct any dish or brew any drink that will induce dys pepsia, headache or dullness. Never until cook gives more time to the mastery of such studies will cook ery take its proper place among the sciences. These bodies of ours are ex ceedingly complicated and delicate ma chines, not to be safely tampered with by bungling. A blacksmith can under take with greater impunity to make a watch than an ignorant and untrained housekeeper to build up, without knowledge or skill, a S3mmetrical and perfectly-developed human body. And when the value of these bodies, not onlv as physical organisms, but as related to mental growth, is fullv appreciated, the work of the skilled cobk'will rauk with that of other great scientists, and more than that, with other great philanthro pists. It is not extravagant' to say that the progress of human:y toward true gerfection depends largely upon this ranch of domestic economy. How much thought and study are given to the p-roper food for tine' stock. Surely we owe as much care to our children as to our herds. It is certainly true that just in proportion to the advance of anv people in civilization will be the ad vance of care and skill in the prepara tion of the articles of food. It Is, there fore, worthy of an absorbing studv. Health, mental vigor, virtue and hap piness are more closely dependent than we are apt to imagine" on the cook that reigns in the kitchen. Mrs. M. B. Witch, in College Quarterly. HOXE, FA KB 15D CUBBE5. Planning aad jtsj mtb labor and losa. If the cucumber that gro" nearest the root be aTed cvury rear, aa earlier and smaller variety wlli b the result, if avcd nf-a" the cad, -a lanjcr and lat-r variety wdl bo obtained, melon ?vei are a'so cully nare-L Jawociu tli Pioughmtn. Wheat docs not mix like corn by forc'gn jHUcn. for the reason that wheat, as well a rye, barter, etc. are bcr mapUrodittti. "harm; both -Uma aad p it:L m th saui- slower, aad fertiliza tion is Si-compltshcd before the anthers appears on the utide ol the glumc. Nothing U better to clean tl'er with than alcohol and ammonia; after rubbing with IhU take a little whitening on a soft cloth and jKdish; la this waj even frosted jlcr. which n so dhltcult to clean, mnv b easily made clear and brighL . Writing of tho offect of fool on flesh and -gg a correjKm!cnt of the Toronto GV,e cites the fact that thee products of fowls kept on .ipphet of an unclean kind, such as swill and de emed garbage, will in one cam quickly taint and in the other taato unsavory. For hoarseness take the whites of two eggs aud beat them with two te.v spoon'mU of white Mjar, grate a llttlo nutmeg, then add a pint of lukewarm water, stir well, drink often, and it will cure tho most, obstinate ca-o of hoarse ness in a short time. When fatt'ning an animal for l-ccf let the prucovi nt a quirk as p'Kv-ibl-t. Any -tint in focd.ng w.llmake tne meat tough arid dry. Stall fed auimds will fatten more readily than others, and young animals require richer food than older ones. In yvmter fattening much depends upon the warmth of the stable The warmer the cattle are kept the less food yvdl be needed Cod Cutlets Steam the cod until nearly done. Cut a sdice and have a batter of .-elf-raising flour ready. The batt-T is good when mixed with one egg atid water, rut the piece of fish in thu batter in the pan and fold it over when it sets, having h"rt sprinkled pepper , and salt on. .Make the citllcU as well shapvd as you can Have potatoes cut in small balls aud beamed in parsley sauce ready with it , Green Corn I'udding A most deli- ! cious accompaniment to a meat cour-e. j Take one qt'art of milk, live eggs, two ' tablepoonfuls melted butter, one table spoonful yvh tesugar, and a dozen largo i cars of green corn; grate tho corn from the cob; beat tho whites aud yelks of thu eggs separately; put thu corn and! yelks together, stir bar I and add tho ' butter, then the milk gradually, beat ing all the while, next the sugar, and a little salt, lastly the yvhites Ba'u slowly at tir:. 'ovcriiig the di-h for an hour; remove thu cover and broyvn nicely. j Kver3-day Soup. tho bones of a . leg of mutton, or those of six or seven pounds of roasted loin or sirloin of beef, yvill make a quart of excellent soup. Break up thu bones, also a j bacon bono if you have it. fry them a nice broyvn; frv three onions until ' brown, put them with tho bones and tivo sliced turnips into two quarts of yvater, boil gently for two hours, strain the soup, taku o!f all the fat, let it boil up, skim it yvell, season to taste. Havu ready two ounces of vermicelli pa-to boiled, put it in the tureen with tho MJiip. ami serve. Delicious Cucumber Preserves. Gather young cucumbers, about tho length of" your midd'e finger, anil lav in strong brino one. yvcok ; wash and soak thum a day and night in fair yvater. changing this four times. Wipe, and with a small knifo slit them down one side; dig out tho seeds, stuff yvith a mixture of chopjed raisins and citron, so-v up the slit yvith a lino thread ; weigh them anil make a sirup, nllo'ving a pound of sugar to a p mud of cucumber, and one pint of yvater. Heat to a boil. skim, and drop in tho fruit; dimmer half an hour; taku out and spread upon a dish in tho suu, yvhile 3011 boil down tho sirup yvith a fow slices of ginger root added. When thick put in thu i-tu-umbcr.s again, sim mer live minutes, and put im in glass jars, t3ing them up yvhen cold. m m Kindly Treatment of Domestic Animals. Nothing can be more foolish than tho attempt to catch either a horse, coyv, pig, sheep or dor 1)3 running after it. ilort many futile attempts to catch a horse have been made in pursuance of tho above method. Hoyv many times has the horse, just as the hired man yvas anout to yvalk up to its head and at the point of catching it, made a sudden yvheel and shoyvn the brightness. of its shoes. At this juncture wc have seen a little bo, yvho had never struck the horse yvith a yvhip, but yvho had given the animal many an apple in da3s gone b3, stroking him and playing yvith him at the time yvc have seen even this litt.e felloyv take the horse quietly by tho foretop. and together the3 would go to any desired point. Or perhaps a lady makes her appearance, in whom tho horje recognizes a friend yvho has frequently regaled him with a lump of sugar. He docs not even wait for the lady to come to him; for he goes to her, and the simple lump of sugar yvill cn- fihlft his mirJtrps to lo'iil tli nnhln hnrsn to his stall, a task yvhich all the chasing j ami yelling ot the lured man has tared to accomplish. The intelligent animal is attracted neither by the personal ap pearance nor the tone of voice of tho rough fellow who strives to rulo b force alone. Another individual attempts by run ning and 3elling to catch iiis coyv or coyvs. Win do these naturally gentle animals run ayvay from him? Because they remember full well that on former occasions, yvhen he has succeeded in catching them, a series of blows from , some heavy cudgel has been their re- j ward. Is there not some better xvay of securing the good yv.ll of our herds and j in managing them as wc wish? There j is a holloyv place on the head of every j cow, just behind the junction of the J horns, which is commonly full of dust, short hairs and tho like, causing the animal an itching sensation. It is a source of extreme pleasure to the coyv i to have the spot scratched, and "(sinco from its location the animal herself cannot reach it), hence, when her keeper approaches her, either in the stable-or in the pasture, an era of good feeling may at once be established if due attention be paid to scratching this hollow spot. If, at your first ap proach, the cow is a little shy, offer her from one hand a nubbin of corn while with the other hand you gently scratch the particular spot "in her head men tioned above In a very short time, whenever you go into their pasture, the whole herd will come to you to have their heads scratched, and you will soon be satisfied that it is as easy to have them follow you as to resort'to driving and loud noise. American Cultivator. "How delightful to enjoj the com panionship for which thesonl lonsjeth," said he. as his arm naturally drifted across the back of the next chair. ''Indeed! And is that companionship you speak of so feelingly anything that 1 can assist von to?" mt-nired she, with hesitating languor, "le-s-s. Oh, Adelaide, even now the stars seem to look down upon as with their bene gustus, you're just too sweet for any thing, we will go to the excursion to morrow, won't we?" But Augustus replied not. He hadn't bat Sl.KJin his purse, and tickets for the round trip were 75 cents each. Jfaa Eavta J Register. dictions and the comet lights up with additional glow, as if our happiness added a new rav to its luster" "Au A dork k& b fztrcit4, by II. M. Alow, of ffwt OakUsd, CaL, fcr whkh any ose who ktow Ibn aJplutbci and ho to pcfl can corrrctly traa-.nl: Uileraphic dpalcbrt Tb lavratkwt U a wtwikctc for th !trr, which ntv qtnre trait-fag la ordrr tube ami. It coast-1 of a ptece of nctai. la which are iav-rtrd cosductor of bra.-. and oon--oBdt2Ciur of whalebone to corrc pood with the charactcn of the Morw aiphabrt. Kach letter or narwr-J I dmded off aad marie!, ilr milaj a metallic pencil oirr any one "of the? dl vtkru the particular letter or forum ! reproduced at the other end of the hoe by mean of the iaiulatioas acd conned Uoas. One tnAc suflicm for charao ter, while grttater precixn l obtained than by the ley, x oa account of the mihnairAl "accuracy of Mr. Albec device letters or nutabcr can tot Ue rua together, as now tuo f rcqucntly occur The Connecticut Valley wji form I crly the great broom-corn regxn of the country. Now the corn I chiefly raicd 1 on the'fertile prairies of the West, ana ' Chicago U the priDcipai market. Occe Northampton, Hadley, Hatucld, and many a town in that vicinity dM a thriving buines in the production of brooms, aad largely- supplied the coun try with the.e article. Before the days of railroading it was not an unusual oc currence to nd a fifty or Uiy-ton load down the Connccticut'on a nat-bot to b rohipped at Hartford by- steamer A veteran in the busine.M aaya that he has M)!d as many as -t",(X) brooms within a month. Majv-achutetb- no longer mo nojKjlie.i thb business ; it Ls distributed all over the country, with perhaps the ' largest Interest centered in New York j State. The city fathers at Battle Creek, Mich., havo paxsed an ordinance pro hibiting tho um5 of barbed-wire fence I inside tiie city limits. Hard cider and j barl.d fences sometimes play the mis- j chief with thu plavful citizen, and tho actfon of the officials above named will no doubt aMt with a wholo cord of ap proval. Hatfcy Sit. We n so thsnVfnl to y that our b!T was prraiancntl-' cured tf a ilaii-i-ron at.l protmcted Irrpj-nlaHt? of the lo-rl ly tho u of Hop littler ly Its mother, which -t the same time restored her toierfecl hralih and strength. The parent", Kocbetter, N. " I rxiiEiWTA! that your son U a bach elor of arts," said Mm. l!ron to .Mrs. Homespun, hoe son has Juit been rad i aied at Harvard. "Well. e..' re-.tlr.l Mrs. Hoiiittmn, yes, he's a bachelor but ho's engaged." l'tnt Trunvrif The Tresa and the Nw Mini flreat South. MMl. The States of the .'outh. acting after th manner of the great railroad, hate opened a bureau for Information as to their re sources and attractions. In New York, and London and other Kuropeau cltlr. The bureau will have samples of the agricultural and manufacturing rhtercts of the South .... .. . .t.t.i .k 1 unit eu iiir tree einiuuion, anu tor 10c ju formation of Intending emigrants. The press of thet"oirh and West ant It to theiii-clvrs to note the groMh of their re spective center-, and the special excellence of Its manufactured ppulucts. This 1 a duty yvhich the pre fulfilW all oicr the -orld, and one of Its highest ml ion and serv Ice to the people. The supremacy of the Wet In agricultural tnachlnerv 1 now conceded all oyer tlm world, and the f'K sktkk IMk Stovk Woltk'M has puhrd M. I.oui to the front in thU Industry; hut thl superiority Is atteti'l---" ,ti ther good results, the best pk the future locate Itself ihre, a-. Mrcctly on the neighboring states In !lng them with skilled Ulxjr and huilduig up other Industries. Tbl w,t- Iho plan the Western States adopted In building up their respective agricultural and rosnu facturlng Interest. (G .)) -Resetted Croat llratk. William J. CougbUn. ot ijomervllle, Mssa, ays: "In the fall of 1"70 I vext taken nltli a UUnt bUrdinijnftt'ftunft. followed bra tirtTQ cough. I was admitted to the Ctty Hoso.taL While there the doctors safil 1 had a hole In my leftluncaabtz as a half dollar Igarcupho;, but a friend told me of I) 11. Wvi. H six's Hal- SAM FOR THE LfNOS. I got a bottle. wtlCIl lO inr surprise I commenced to feel better, and to day I feci In better spirits thau I hare tho pa it tnree years. 1 write this hoping that everyone Illlcted with I) sensed Lungs 111 take Die Wu. Hall's II imam roriTiiK Lc.nos, and be con vinced that t'OSsl'MITION CAM HE Itliri) " Also a sure remedy for Colds. Cough. snT all Cheat aud Lung Dl-cascs. Sold by UrugxlsU. s Thkuk I scarcely a person to bo found yvho -vlll not be greatly benefited by a thor ough cour.se of Kidney-Wort every spring. If ou cannot prepare the dry bur the Ibjuld. It has the same clfccU I'alCvli-tii. . s lion' III In lh llous. Ask Druggists for " Kouzh on Itats." It clear out rata, mice, roaches, 11 es. bed-bugs, 15c m RcnntNo's Rcmia Salve meets with won derful success In all cases ot sklu diseases. Fa it Mens, teamsters, don't experiment, bat use Frarer Axle (Jrcaic. It la the best. Ask your grocer for National Yast s Thkuk I om- corn in Michigan poor that it can't afford to ear llk. It will havu to return to iU fodder. f rot fit J'rtM-. - A kiiii:i:m.ns occupation ought to bo the most profitable because his entire s-ro receipt are net profits. tXrmttd .'.itfiwy Jvirmi'. It's nil very nice tn read about those old curfew belN. but let : man besin now-a-da to pound lUylizht out of :in old Ml at Miii et. and the people "would rally on.hhu ho tilck that saltpeter yvouldn't save him. lh'n t t'rtt J'rru. - - - ONi: of the mot laughable things ever keen Is ;i mosquito alighting on the cheek of a Cleveland reporter, ind training himclf all to pieces in a yvihl, desperate effort to force Its sting in. The disappointment of tbeskeetl very ludicrous. luivn li. Jim Wkis.tki: dropped In on I'nch- Mos during one of the hottest flays lat week. U!d ."lose sitpcted Jim was after a d. am, and sm enough, pre-cnlly Jim as: t nele Mo-e, I fee! berry debilitate; luia't ycr got no refreshment." " Ycr wji! re IrehmenL? Jess lake dat cheer and -et in thedore whar de breeze kin strike yer Heah's a pal ra-leaf fan." Too Sjluy. Awrytruv Iron founder of Pittsburgh has bought an island off the Alabama coat. As he i known to be afflicted with agricult ural weaknes.es, it I- believed that he in tends to fence it In and run a farm for rais ing steel cranes a lid breeding Ilcemerplgs. " Yoi" are a itt-craec to your family, jlri I am almost ashamed to cafl you my .on," aid 3!r. Smilher to his off-pfing the other day. "m- nothing, dad," replied tb 3 oung scapegrace; " I'm m much asbarael ot it as you arc' lton J'utt. - - The .-calcs- i'nd for weighing gold in the asay offices are so delicate that one glance from a -fiulnt-eycd man will throw them ol balance. Sak.1 Hkilviiakot has drawn a plan for her tomb. It does not, as might be Inferred, re-cmble the barrel of a shotgun or a John of gas pipe. lfTEr.S a la Jat-rcrr Jta .Aad fiber srsft fereraad atese, er bOLsas tse7tteta!Br jet te freed frsa tae -risflf im Ttras wtjffntarriiY'iSrniisrTftaTTi PrsietiUa-; Haa tt -rt-atavtsbneacvataail-i afantqsa-easiniisac naasily tsritTcrrrTiytalar. coastlja-laa, trosAiataaS eaeri rraaiar7a; IU UlV 1 safT OTTUT iPawtl 'I m - -a,..- itiair MAsssaalaaa SV TTZ.TZZZ'l . - TsTSMetfcsfal-sAsJ-sla JTT -" ll ' fl wmMAyrn Tuirwritr m. imi l nun. if uw, ma. tKVttSA-S et LYDIA C PINKHAM'8 TV rwe fy rwn f is. .J ynfc I jMy1.Ssiii;V 4 IV b. rKf M-t tSlil.lH I MS. U4U. Ilia t1 SaJ wA-. w 1, irurij ii'i)i w Vfc. caw u It a . ii .j .;. ,r fww ia- hn sawt ac- mt irtivtwsi TV- I '. W rJ- is f fc Siii ur U lMa -rj ii ittf f K. - It iimni t ,,t,i.n, t.i.-.ir- a irvf kit ,.v SI ra- . Huk'jrfus irmcmti :Os- -i, i. . It srB kt mii Wiw. 4 v- s. ' ' now M aenr iq ,v u.,iui r.n u . 171,. ror i. rsir.w k.., jw, , ,..m. .t . LYI . fIM.II IV luntBU(X. l"SttU TtnJ w CO ASA Wmm iw..s Ltm. ss I-riM f L B twM, Im tv aul S wi I IA. tWM M bis A l t& rs T kM.Sk am rsss4 W rw. )XM fw Mtw Br rwiXwt tfif .MS in Jl Ukn rt JHr Sm4 - fA- u iiis, m .. ti.ih. -. r arMkiij ta-Mia siu.i ltiha r. r-sKBAK-r. Ltrxa niiA. tw isswtii. t---.--Tn 4 tornA-H u Us. B . - Imjv eld by K!CrUUD0i 4 CO St LeaU, X riK-i.: iiv iut .iiT. J 'or ih Cr f Cft. t .- II xww". At " The Herald 1 gp s KM) o" vot 1: t'lti'i'na r -n nua New Book for Choirs, Convontioiih and Singing Olnsaoa. ll Islh- wfk f I I r. -tjf ftvni Imok of f4 , -l .'- mutrnn i ! Irn-i.1 ihu tf "f .-1 Iur 1V-.A -y ! Is - U. , m jM4n sr pMHlHfl"lil' '' fc4f -. J ! n.,r t.' bs lliis. i- . 4 M "H - t i U f!-l r'uir'it'i tlM. I" -. 'v-' "-rf. .rri s mr.ic I w t J .mi, t-.ptr uii-1 wrl, U 1 M uui. p.a '! O l.f 1MUttn. THE IDEAL I. rnmhit'x nk la 'I. Iltasib r I'tiKt sl I. t'-tvl 4 f. ' t ., !. wrtli r- f re ' tn 1 1 Tr 1 ft Ta etn T tlnrt-.r l ih ik ft ih'fif . n (Irs.tn. Km n.ts(. r , Irusl. .! hi- . a ' i'l. syrfrti Nr biD,is(ivi. It r .t Nrlara Cuplr. MmJI..! f.r"S (Vnls. Tic H.usl rdurtluD t r '' s. Wt-hU' ItL. sfhtfll ! "l fsl M - lsllf-r I'asiis. shhli Is lfr I. ,t ft H. Ux-hrts 4 t It .lr h -t l I bs- f.:y J-I III ,ucxt-fu. uuic-il n OLIVER OITSON 4. CO., Do-Ion. CBAS. H. m i (0, J 13 Ef..Jsi. .Vt T-rl. I.VO .V ItKAI.V. IhlratT. kva cxr cauusmo -R-J -it 3 ai'turw trrren ov st ko f cjirtt oeve. WA. W.MOHGANA ca iNOVWAPCUS. iK'JlAMA. H) A st '-. S5 Tf tm4 .Ulna- r M ST IIOHui.t Aurfri.i... rAMii., ' si.i. W ,..:,. -.t-1!. I 'SlSI.30. s 1 KOSTH -ICE NTS WHTf D -so br.i Jf" w ln r .r'' V,tH.ltimfi'", J.toH .l ttrmn.lu.rr trK Anryra SOMXTHIJO , !. r," mV UkL aIE W tlilc) f J J-, -,,---X , fc t.ir m )1 lrnrv--TirSrVJ j U jjfw "" ticr "A'fyF U S SSSffffPL" SMiSJJJ3 i m -l-m -mr F siaaiKJlilJJJPlJJiJJJJJJkilJli' DrMEITAURS .. . ! , ,1.0 -. ft r, a rar wrr a-sort Ue IsoUa KICJC auvl NKnTOr JtlAXACIIK; avwi WI vrtl Um rx-rrooa uyttrm. el-airw th alntnmch of rr of J. jirsOocic resulavr UtaUj -Uoa ts bsnrcls. si sr-T-t - l. r as1..V.fa aaea-LKt-'f mtimmfrmtK wkmiik -tr- Blc.a4sr3 gon;nr. r fiixxr at U,nn4Sal3rr- On rm la uirre rvtr-r AJI7 -roo V srtatatv 1 sCl eaa tlrit tm 1 u IX vrca iurssmunl ta soaad fceac. If s a tt.'. ! vrmdkr (,"ljm. orarss StsuSCm WiffKjoin. L Sj. toKff JouasxACa. Soatea. Maa.. Siu'.j SMf-.a. M sV W For Clillla and 1 AM AU aMSCASIS a-assssf tsy SflaUArtaU Tummmmemm A WJLKSASTrD cumK. Price, m 1 -OO. rsvw-ii tacrrrc f ?- a . duaaa Sasr SlalsiSl S Kfflat Xnrtf niSant aa4 - BrauU.SArnaOnas---a-S!CTalrsSa.a. J. aVs3sV4 TsMXaTT taWJai " -.aH S lssnsi-v m. aaa -s - - - - - - - - pU cszr. ma41sd to any avldrras on r4j f - Hrs--tat jvOt; m ii II! " sr sssssv-Ks z M sssx r f I issi -ASBaararr w . i a aiaaarsaiftiftm- if. a iiBisssssss- rmmm m m w sska aa aaasaassasr a- aaapsaa'siBv' t - .- r-ntin IT f lT r'-rr, ruunv Ai -uai .. , & .a tu.'L ' ktut r -iosft -;- " TLfX. ft4 AH How-. CV-rl-'. TV - - y ss s rs w t- 1 ; rssw4 c - fc!- s,v s sis - '.. m J ITOUCATtOXAU Mt Mr:i-TiiifiMt.",--,' s. t -, f WW m IMtfll (tllllbf or list. - " -.. ., '.? K ST. MARY'S ACADEMY .... .,... J . . w I - -- k. -. f I v . ,.- f5f W-i .4 - sjss - .. :pm A . 1. ., ' a - s - - s r fie Best SCHOOL ii tte Lffli Racine College. Wis. For tftnai, apply to DR. PARKER, Rartat? Callrc. ltacla, Wu A TAHI.IC IIOOH 'mODOCTORfARITflSISTia n 1, a ti 1 s i M K -.!. Stiml ,.-it -s S TAt IISHssttMn.t srwtn x .. I it..' l..iiVWI.s.) - tSSMp AjStWmmvss t tcUu tsuli W tsf rs 1 tfbU.MU. SnMisrX. ISB.rt S tt 'ill N, HUl fAMS U MtiSkt RAILROAD, GAZETTE. tMKHkl W TUJIJf-MHIlOl, Cri;!neirt-sK rillrs.! Nii rwufcl t tS Vrvfr, .. tea. s.4. Vss ... .....if.il,, Vrs.w N . W Ill-All CAR-BUILDER'S DICTIONARY iiw V MH. 1 At .,.. . Ik - - s; . - -,... s , n s, , . .; f- -t .(, U t t - i t - . t , tvk ma" n in Hi -at - r . oTMtKI IMIJII Hrilll'IH TJE GREAT CURE RHEUMATISM As II U f- s. dss-. f U. riOMBTt", LIVLIt AND lOWCLI, It rM Ifc. afiln. lb '1,A -4l UmI mwi A. r.Ji(4l .. s. .,!, nlj u isiiH r ftt , r-l THOUSANDS OF CASES ef tk. rsl C4 mt Hi' l.trtW. HMO Kt. lm jU r.llsssa.. I at USM PERFECTLY CUHCD. IkfM k.4 wilf.lt'inns4 I : l.- Jd-nf Ik t awltl l Ss Cr4L( . "r...-et4 Wr I .tea tn- uu-i in. m j st.iMtt rrttrsr r rt at tiuth.i.w.ni4tiisM. i jr ii.t. -.., !. . a. ji.Ma IJf. .! I. Hpfmtt Sm-tT TSsn.iursI mMmt-t !. a ts4 TV. Lis.r c ..4rf a..4K V Aits.ta km... Ulr s4 "Jlif ts SU varlA. Mt luaaw c4U4 IVasa At It Ks fca rsl S III sfa aS A U UtM ml !fa4wal t.ss.4 1 tr atwl Av ,rt, cf ail awWI ...f.twi.a. t i ahsU W a. a ..r j fcofclt SPRING MCDICINC. Air asuous irj-s. on-my. TlOW.rlJJSt a4 ail rXAJAtJ t a. I rst ay ta tr TtfaU" r ea, la II. ., jfsT. af "'.i a.Mi.ria .. Al.sU tJa rm.ar CaaS4faf tSya miMMMa .f - saaan4a. ts swalL na'srs.s:s-rt"Awv orr rrorTova mcoct rwrs.ti. nn.i., -itriiAiiusoi r . ris. rsttn.s iv. rr rsuts. t r JC w i if f.Tf t -jr--TsJsJ.tk HEADACHE TTT T JT -wffk frttl Atw4i4im W & . WOtTT CITT3CICAX. COJCPAXT. rUJUmorr. 301. PILLS ff 4 aa a1 U vA-MaS au4 msf naSM r-tU aa tU Wmtt. a 7l a, Si ..- aa r, . y "I'.feJii"- Ii-'ISTAajrJMrt. .EUsC-m I'fmn r i milli ntninKHltlflli i WKlrUiO Tfs i ht srass Ibss .-aftninn mmm SAaaaef all aafeiwtat). mmmit w.f. laii.aMIiaia atataaafa I sA Slaiaa atM. bff9 -: j . 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