The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, October 26, 1883, Image 3

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TE BED CLOUD C
4
At Ci NOSMCn, PiMnlCf
BED CLOUD,
.- NEBRASKA.
WHAT MIGHT II A VE UEICX.
S) many thlnps there mljrht have lccn
Had on rdnir child not died.
AW count them HP ! rail Uiem o'er,
V w clirh the le luminal the morv.
Tin lMjdio lu'wr knew or Minrrd,
'JlieJHr fon.'vt-r apnrcd,
jajHBijror turned nMo
llffi-! full Kvtirlty mil thru.
J Vrplricd, w ulRh ail mhchl have liecn.
V. mlRht hnvewen her nwwt cheek glow
Willi love" own huppy 1 loom.
Her -! with nut Wen yMdiic full."
)'i inline Hu whole world Iwautlfiil:
W might linv; fern Mnj jiiyanco fall,
The dear face midden nnd Krow pale,
Tim ml!o Tmlo into uUnmx.
In'n Mm crow illm and Rink twain
I'.iihcr of Uicmj It mixht have been.
W mlirht hnve wn her with the crown
Of wllelHMHl on her head.
A ijum'ii of home's fair eovcrvf initios
With little children at her knet-s;
Or. lroken-he;irtl nnd nlono.
Jlen-ft hikI Widowi-d of her own,
Mutiniln Im-11 herdend
Till" thlnjr or that, lif-yoiid our ken.
It infill luue lMfn, It might have tcn.
Tin-re I no n-el of uetlon now,
No dntihr, or rlki. or fenr:
J-'ut- folded In tin- ICternitl cans,
;rtiwn fairer eiich day imt nilll morn fair.
AVlth niilliincc In the clear young eyes
Which In cool depths of I'armll!
Ixok ulthonlhtalii or U-nnt,
Itriillnir the I. inl"n intent. anl then
FinHIng to think what might have been.
"tt'f. ton. will smile, oh drain! cblliU
OurIiill oulmay not know
The deep tliinirK lilibleii from mortal enso
Which HikI their Heavenly confidence;
On thm one Mire thought can wo rent.
That !o! ha" chosen for thee th'j best,
Orel It wen not ho:
lie culled th bnek to Heaven avaln
JS taiiM He knew what might have l;en.
.Sii'in OmlUtijr, in Canurtfj'iliontilUt,
TICK STOKY OF A SHOEMAKER
I was born in tlie Luxembourg jut
nlMHit fifty years ago. oorxlnus.! How
J ued to work at the bench when I was
:i lad, j-ewing and himmering. ham
mering and .sewing on boot ami shoe.
There was that dear old father of mine,
with his big Hecl-rimmed spectacle.
perched on his nu-e, tvho .-et me an ex
ample of thrift ami honesty. "Above
all," he u.scd to fa' to us, for a brother
then worked with me, "be n good shoe
maker. Xeer wiiii! anything. "Do
the best yon 'can, and do it all the
time." We would work from sunrise
to far into the night. The pay wo got
wa l.ttle enough, so small that we
used to watch the candle that fluttered
in the wind and worry over its cost.
If we worked very, very hard, and cus
tom was good, we might count on a
gain of ten .sous each, but sometimes we
would all stop pegging away because
the poor people in our village had no
money to pay for .-hoe-. Oh! how diffi
cult it was to buv a .sack of coarse Hour
or a little S"ran of
meat. We livetl
from hand to mouth. 1'oorold father,
do what we could to help him, he got
into debt, and owed atone time "as
much as thirty francs. What n huge
Mini that seemed to me to be! what a
whole mountain of embarrassment!
I htnrvcd myself in order to put a
little money aside. One day I said to
father: "This thing don't work. lam
iroinjr to clear out. 1 can't
stand
it.
You will leavo me, my son? Your
poor old father is an incumbrance "to
aoii?" "No, not at all. Hut I must go
iiwav to work for him." "It is well,"
replied my father. "You are a go d
hhoemaker. Your stitches are .strong
and oven. You hliapo well. (!o see
the world and (tod's blessings accom
pany you."
I "went to Paris and led a miserable
life for a time. I hardly gained mv bread
:il lirst. The habits of the. Parisian
jdiocmakcr liornlicd me, for I hail been
brought up by a pious father. I was a
good workman, however, and after
:i while found .steady employment, but I
could help poor father out hut very little.
O! It used to make my heart sore to
think of him cramped tip in his little,
dingy room, woiking away for dear life,
with" the meager reward of a crust of
dried bread. The habits of economy
be had taught me helped mo Ihen. I
Mraped together mu by sou, and at last
.sent him ten franees. He wrote me
that the sum had saved him from being
tinned out of his poor old chamber.
"Thi will never do," 1 .said. " 1 must
go .-omewhero else. I am a good shoe
maker, and experience in Paris, luis
given me the finishing touch. I must
go somewhere else, where the art of
Cri-pen will le appreciated. One line
day in 1&".0 I took a place as landsman
onan KtiglNh bark, from Havre to l?os
lon. 1 landed in the United States with
ju-t forty cen'-s (two farthings) in my
pocket. I sought work at once. 1 saw
little .shoemakers .shop up a nar
trect a sign written on paper and
: on the glass with wafers. 1 could
read it. 1 did not know a single
not
word
door
made
of English then, but over the
there was :i (tcrnian name. 1
bold to enter, and talked .Ger-
man to
he said
the proprietor. "it down, .
"on that, bench, and sew me on
that sole." "I am a fair shoemaker,
as you will sec," I replied. It was a
pleasure to take holiLof the tools once
m ire; they .seemed to know mo. How
I blessed, iiiy father then. My boss was
satislied, aiid I got a job right oil" atone
dollar a day and my food. That w:is:i
fortune to me then." 1 worked for six
mouths Mendily. and. save for a second
hand pair of trousers bought by me at a
bargain. I hoarded every penny. I sent
the" dear old father fifty doliars, and
back came his blosing. He wrote ho
had never .seen o much money at one
time in his life. Hut I was ambitious.
-Inst then tho California fever was
raging. Something told mo to go to
the Pacilic coast. 1 took ship and
eros-ed the Isthmus. Just before arriv
ing at San Francisco there was a heavy
gale; we came near being shipwrecked,
and I lo-t my hat. I remember that
quite well. I landed in San Francisco
with one dollar exactly. On board
there was a carousing shoemaker, who
bail been .-cut for from the East by u
man who kept a shop in San Francisco.
I heard him say that be bad come be
fore his lime, and that, anyhow, if be
could do better he was not going to
work at cobbling. He mentioned the
name of the man who was to hire bmi,
ami I had bis consent to apply for the
1 .f Oin cline-;hon at onco ana.
asked for the position. "It is given to
another man, who ought to be here
soon, and I can't make use of you. Be
sides, vou have no bat." " 1 hat makes
no difference," I replied. "I see shoe
makers' wages arc six dollars a "ay
it was the ilusb limes of California,
then ive mc three dollars and iced
me, and only let me stay until
...... I.:.-..! inic Tin for I am
tho man
indeed a
uu ...i """?-"- i.;,l nf
shoemaker. " -inc ooss - , -
grudging consent. Then I set to work,
SmVslCirt that night in -the shop. When
the master came to the place in the
morning be found everything in elegant
order, and I bad made five dollar be-
.r 1 i.r..o, 1.,- menilin?? a OOOu 1
..:..! i': voMlv for 1 am a good
shoemaker. I livA with that nan ifar
"Vs,
V year, and saved nti mymunuj. -
The dear old father at homcone 1 nm-
died dollars. If you could only have
seen the letter tbat came back! The
blesd old daddy wanted to -tag-'
thought be was sPendlbtCrln ate
hundnd dollars he SSSJJ
do for tho t three Jerewaf
-!,. T beard of m Sacramento, x
uu. -- . ;..!... ran ennn
ZJ WsTrhond..dollar?;
J L-fnhre
ks:e
" -"J :. .. -ma. 'nnr n u
went there, my master gn.ui; ---ff
his shopworn filocfc IdnvtoJ:
it, civ monins x iuui i.:
ss isffcM & scraasws
simple.soni wcu iu .u .
-4i-.Ti!fi
I want to make him a drunkard, m
pounnanil, and put all kind of tcnipta-j
tion in lil way? Too much money wa1
me fonrco or all pl. I w robbing
myself to pamper Iilm Imt for all that
there was a lot of ftwocinr.' in the let
ter. Well. I thought that fortttnewa now
mine. Hut one night a had fire broke
out and I was hunied out. Fires
oe-1
curnrcl In jja-fomrntn ererj" nllit and
were tha work of thieves I jratbered '
togethe thu fctv pair of booLt I could
put niy hnndn on, and placed them wfch
my money, nil iu cold, in a trunk, and "
I carried It out of the wo'iden altantv!
ju"t as the nof fell in. For better e-1
ctirity J at on my tnink. and azetl be-1
wlldcred-liko at the flame. ' I liave
Hotnethinir left." I aid. after all. tn
lnjgin the world with." Just then. I
v-Mf struck a heavy blow over the head
tvilh a club, and loit all conciomue.i.
When I I'ame to I found myself on ihc
ground and my trunk gone. The
thieve hail done the btisincM for me.
A hi then I gave tnvelf up, just for a v
moment, to ile-pair. 4 I am
iii ruined I
laddvl" I'
rtuneiL for ever. Ixr d
thought. Itut I w snot ruined. f,irtl.at
crack on the head was the means of niv
makiny mv fortune.
I didn't cry over thing much, for I
am good shoemaker, and that U al
wa. a Mdid capital. I had a litt!'
money in my pocket, and wnot to Sau
Francisco. I L-nee mv !! ....r '
would take me back, and'ho did no. I
rcMimcd my old place. There was an
auctioneer among hi customers with
the tenderesl feet I ever flaw, and, as I
am a Mioemaker, that explains all mv
grxul luck. This auctioneer hail bicii
grumbling ever Mnco I left San Fran-
cisco. When he caw me be was do-
lighted. "At least now," he aid, "I
am out of my great m'serv. I sha'l
limp no longer." At once I made him
a pair or hboe.s, and he was delighted.
One day he said to me: "I had au
auction yesterday, and I put up, with
out getting a single bidder, a lot of very
fine French boot. They won't ell be
cause there's a glut of boot on the
market. They were imported a year
ago, but the shape is out of fashion
now. It was a square toe then, uow it is
around one. Do you want to buy them?"
"How much?"" I asked. "Make your
own price." "Hut I have no money."
"That makes no difference; yon may
have them on cntlit; pay me when you
can." I went to look at those eases of
boot. They were of the finest quality,
and excellent as to make. Some of
them were cavalry bootn, and such as
only dandy hoiemen or genera! ollicer.s
wear. Itemember, I am a good shoemak
er and know my trade. I bought those
boots at one dollar a pair. The leather
alone w: worth twice that. At night
I used to work oti them. I made the
square toes j oiuted for I am a good
shoemaker. Some of them I cut down
",l" "ooic.es. jh: i worKcti nigiu aner
night on them after hour.. Then I
hired a small .shop, and hung up a few
pair. in the window.
A Mexican came lir.sl. "How much?"
"Ten dollar." Ho took the boots.
Then a miner passed! "How much?"'
"Fifteen dollars." Then a gentleman
on a line Jioie came by and looked
from his horse at the boots, and he tied
up his horse and asked "How much?''
Twenty dollars." He put a double
eagle down. I must have made .2,fi00
clear on those boots. Then I found
more of them a mine of these ImioLs,
and I put in my pocket .b000 in three
weeks. 1 worked on for a year and
money in my- trade steadily, for 1
mai
am
a rooii s iniiii!iki..r.' Then 1 rmt
goon
married in San Francisco to a worn
man I
lovcu, aim 1113 marneii mo lias been a
very nappy one. It wsis a pang when I
aid to mv wife:
I must leave you, my
love, for a. short time -only long enough
Ik
to pay my near
dear old daddy a vi
" I
rV
leu my ou-ine.ss 111 iier charge. It was
a voyage of business ami pleasure, for I
went to Paris to buy goods.
Poor old daddy! There was the same
magpie in .the wicker-work basket, and
he saluted me, for he remembered me.
When 1 was a l.ttle boy 1 stuck a tail of
false feathers on him with some cob
bler's wax. He never forgot me, and
milled his feathers at me as soon as he
saw me, as if my insult to him 1 ad been
of recent dale. There was hardly a
change in the room." There hung fath
er's old watch, as big as a saucer, tick
ing away, with a spray of box-wood
over it for luck. Then there was on
the shelf the same old earthenware jug.
The handle J broke on" unfortunate
day, and a p'ece of leather was bound
round it. and it hung on a nail by a
thong. He had the .same awl in his
hand -at least it was the same handle,
for once I came near getting a thrash
ing for having whittled it. liven an old
almanac of a year long gone past was
there, tacked to the wall with. shoe brads.
He had on the fame apron, only it was
worn thinner.
The dear old father was bending over
his work, pounding slowly at some bit
of leather on a last. You could count
one, two, three, four between the ham
merings. In my tinio it was rat-tat-tat,
like a drumlcating,with no interval be
tween the strokes. I strode in and the
old gentleman first looked at my feet;
that was a way lie hail. At a glanco
for he was the king of shoemakers ho
could take in all tho difference between
your foot and tho feet of the rest of
tho wor'd. Ho looked and looked
again. He must have recognized a
family foot, for I saw his hand tremble,
then he pushed up his great steel
rimmed spectacles and the ' tears ran
down his cheeks as he rose and tottered
and then fell into my arms. How we
kissed one another. "My son. my son.
you never would havo succeeded had
you not been a good shoemaker: you
never scamped anything; you did the
best you could all the time," was what
he said when I told him of my good
luck. "Like my dear old daddy ilid
before me," I added. Then I kicked
over his work-bonch, and said: "No
more work for you. old pappy, for I
rich. I have a wife; I have a baby -a
baby, named after you and you are
take tho cars 'tirst-ciass. to-mo
nplkn iT- fiiiertvnnll nntl eomn
baste out'of theT old country to Call
nia, so that grandchild shall sit on y
knee, anil vou sunn icacu uim to
honest and pious, and to love y
"And roav I not make him a goods
maker?"-he asked "But you g
fast. Lctmc think over it. You
me to leave this old Luxembourg, w
1 was born. 1 should never see :
the irrave where vour mother, mv
wife, has slept for these last thirty
years. 1 dou't know. 1 am very
f should be in the -way. I love- m
trade. lo they wear shoes m Ca
nia? Mav I cobble there? I assure
vou. though tlie hog-bristles bother me
just a little at times, and my hammer
nioyes just a trifleslower, still J can
turn out a very decent job. I wonder
if I can not beat you now. Come, let
us try." "
To' please the old man, I took up a
bit of work and commenced on it- ""It
is well done," said father, admiringly.
I see you have not forgotten my les
sons. Perhaps that one stitch there is
not quite quite as even as it should
be. My remarks don't worry you.
Still." and he held in bis shaky hands
the old boot near his eye, "it will pass
muster."
At last tlie-blcssed old man consented
to go with nisW. v jKext dav wo had a
feast in the village. .All the old cronies
wereinvitcd," the, ceopcr, the watch
maker, the butcher, the drover, the
tailor and the tax-collector. The cure,
gave the party his blessing. Ob, what
a good that; wehadlitrae old man was
radiant. 1(1 was introditocd to eery one
1 ruuia
.uobu Wi
icor-t
sMlpSl.nu MMannnannMannnnnl m1.?- J-- Tss7 nH
.-BWBrii inannnnnLAatnDiHnL - - TipHlfc?"VC
""' AaTM 'r TfJEl V anV v ' lWHaaim,.
a featuch aa that ulerpy old tows
will rcrnmlcr for many s day. Jul
occlonallyl noticrd that thn oM ma
Weakened when orne ancient ckum
took him try the, faaml to bUl him
by. Then 1 would my1' "lr d4dr,
it a yottr sjrsndohJld -thtt cl54 ywu
Mow the Ueticofo you tne?t he will
nl'iir )w n. rOrvt iliraimaW. ttrtkir.nt
vour tcaehtnr hinl?,, That wa an all
iMWcrftJl-arpimcnt. Tlie blcwrd old
mo rolo Uie trip with mo aero the
occan without much fatipie. How lad
my win wai to ieo brf bu!nd and
father, aud, a to the baby, he. went at
on - c Into Iim grandpapa arm.
Of course, father wa to'oM to work,
but xtill he iiritfl o hsrlu h bench,
A Ife J?rw feeble the rtltche became
more uneven, and we were often
alarmed about the awl. which mfchl
have pricked him. He lived, tljbuph,
happily with u for Aome years. He
srew monj unsteady day by day and
wandtfird a little, but Mill he would
."pend an hour or two ewry day at Ira
Inmch. He madeagoat-harncw for the
littl? xty and juite a numler of pretty
things in b-ather. .
One dav-I heard him in hi room tap-
ping, tapping away on hi laj-.tne
with more than orJinary vijjor. men
I listened to him. He Mid; "A go"d
job; a wry goo job. Capital, though
I ought not to praise myself. There
wver was but one man who could equal
mo. and that is niv dear. d-ar on. and
id son. my grand-on. shall al-o be a
lintt-claM shoemaker, if the good Go.
whose name be blessed, only let. mc
live a little, a very little longer," and
tn-n J ,,eanI lne rntt,e ni a 'Ia,nm-'r a'
il lt bad dropped on the floor, and I
went into his room, and the .dear old
mari ,,r,' pad fpiietly away, with a
Iait prayer on his lip. There are no
shoemaJters nowadays like in the old
t"e.
The Foibh-f of Food.
N'othlnK moro sure t mnnntA to take loW
Of the e"t feeling of mankltxl. bUu ifrow
More ti-nlt?r. a we every ly behold.
Than that all-noftenlnir. orcrpowiTliiir knelt,
The tocrln of the iwjtn the dinner bell I
Huron.
The new philosophy which some phi
losopher of unbounded stomach has
presented to the world is the philosophy
ot eating, not tnree times a uny nut
live, or mx, or freven times, according to
the capacity of the eater. It i safely
demonstrated that people get sick from
lack of sulliciejit diet, that the internal
economy craves constant fuels and that
irwOicicnt.dict is a catt;cof indigestion
anil not over-eating. In proof of wbwli
thi horrible story is told: A child, who
had -alwnj's asked for and received a
hike of bread and butter the last thing
at night from it mother, went to vbdt
an aunt who'hcliuved that late eating
wan incompatible with health ami re
fused 'the child itsaccu-tomed food .In
the morning the child was dead, and its
throat trill mnulli filled with pin-worms,
which, denied their, food, bad crept ur
and sitlfocntcil It. - -
The fact Is ar-o adhered to that in
somnia is caused by want of food, and
is a f'-.uful illustration that the gastric
juice is m strong that the moment dh
.solution occur. it begin to cat the
.-toniaeh iltelf.
Aga n. the new eomo.stiblc philosophy
urges that it is not late supper- that
in j tin people and prevent them from
sleeping It is the unusual isolated
cases that suffer. The man or woman
who hahiltially e-its a late supper will
not feel t!i' least inconvenience, but. on
the contrary, will be icficshcd and
f strengthm-d, and the KnglLsh nation-
I proveruiai as supper eaters is ouoie
I to support the theory. It is a fact
that the icwisii people cat I ur or live
meals daily without any inconvenience.
Theatrical" people eat lit all hours, and
always late at night. They average
longlives, and are healthy and full of
endurance, while the New England in
habitants, with the:r three meals a day.
early supper, and no cold bites at bed
time, are dysMptic .sufferers.
"Two conditions," said an English
writer, "oppose the acquirement ol
sleep. These are by hypeneniia of the
bra u -.stimulating it to undo activity,
and playing tlie part of a whip and
spur to a tired hor.e: and the opposite
of hypeneniia excessive cerebral an
tenna. 'To relieve the former by ration
al methods, a flank movement is re
quired. The Wood forces must be en
ticed away from their persistent as
saults upon the cranial fortress This
can be aecomplshed by till nj the
stomach with solid food. "thus furnish
ing temporary engagement for the pugi
listic globules on other fields. The food
should be of the coarsest and pla'nest
variety, else tin remedy might produce
an aggravation. We all know that the
lower animals, after filling their stom
achs with eoarsc and abundant food,
lie down immediately to rest and sleep,
and they succeed, even after the most
scYero and" exhausting toil upon the
nice-course, at the plow and" in the field.
To a reasonable extent man should sim
ilate the unartifieial hab'tsof less gifted
animals.'
If we are to turn over this new leaf
in the pages of life wy will need a rail
way time-table at home, and twenty
minutes for refreshments will become a
household legend. It may detract from
the purse, but if it gives us added
health and satisfies that indefinite crav
ing which like the daughter of the
horse-leech and Oliver Twist is always
crying for more, we will have reached
a small millennium even if we have to go
there as did Mother Hubbard by the
way of tho cupboard, only in this ease
not to find it bare. Dc'roit Post ami
Tribune.
.
The Strnsglc for Existence.
The intensity of the struggle for ex
istence in England is well sotTforth bv a
magazine writer, who assorts tbat300,000
families in I.ondoti alnne are in the
habit of pawning small articles, and
that moro than l",OM,UX) unredeemed
'dges are sold eyertjnnny
whereas
people relieve temporary pressure in
' f- ;
HcHtTnnU :;, In the East.
. Jfodctibtmaav of our readers resid
ing in the Western States think that all
the arable land j the East, and especial
ly, near our larger cities, was lonjy since
cleared of its forests and broken up
with the plow. But thfc truth Is there
are hundreds and thousands of acres
all aloug our seaboard awaiting the ax
raan and plowman. There is nearly
half a million of acres on Long Island
alone in tkc prjm5tiTe itate,. except
psrhai that a portion of the test tree
211 D cnt and put to practical use,
omv the land itself has never been di
g. by airricHltaral 'implements.
W hat is tre of Lowe Island Is afeo true
of K ew Jer bT whUe'TKith are so
?.? Ahe Stest city on tfcfc continent
iwndofits chnreh bells ay
h?51 be heard in the depths M their
gf. forests, voaar and. aid incngo
w 5 search" new lands taat mcy
wnt fi,
boa. a price not
aw w
TTfi.irjc-.
.
a
"Hn
o
1
He
He
MI
iTHtt whereas ih5S!!!!!T5?TTrTEsn7cT!ffli'
Mark.
tWhavt; trcratly drvotrd etii4lrr
bb; pac In the bjcc of brfnltm
knrr. is which, w rrgttt toy ca
a lamcauMtf want f jujrawt bj W11
jk rrTcrelf dUptaycI, xrl rjtir f
tibi will be the reaft of tbat dwe'dif
cx3atfcatSbwirictrhi aeau )
brWers'Tr ffi8c1cal"84 de careS
not al given to lkjmmg Mpckv -
The life and develor4ic6rof er
animal U tin m unbk tW tiU aad
growth of a yoiar fdaat or trrtya.,!
ological oystim, sad ti) no4 la which
nutrition and growth re rarriei on in
the plant U ft closely akin to the pro
cess fn the young giw!ng animal that
the principle of treatment found good
for the otv will not come araL-Mwith the
other. The plant ban lu circttUfc'ofl, k
ha the colt. The colt yet It growth
through cell growth, po dx ibo t.Uat.
The cultivator of tree known well that
if insufliefmt nntrimeat Ir utpllrd tbtj
growth will be both awry and tuatcd;
the branches will be undeveloped anil
crooked, and from the effects of thU
bad tart thev never recover. A colt
mav inherit all the point.-ud graceful
oatKaetf clnracteri.tle of a saccrjuful
ckbm between a judiciously sclectcii ire
and dam, but through nutriment leing
withheld at the proper time and ia re
quired qualitfc, the nnisc?e and bone
lack the neccary stimulus for dcwlop
raent, and conequently licctime pind
llng, while the cheat a'nd quarter are
narrow and tlie bob lank. A a result
of this mierable and false economy,
"the penny wise and pound foolish'
tolicv. we arc now in no sraU degree
having the country o'verruo w Uh weedy,
bapcle.. undergfown horc.
It doubtles is now a great aim with
breeders of equine Mock to secure site.
But this result can not le obtained un
lesi the progeny are fed well from tho
verv start Again, we too often sec
young colt. Mimutiaie in numbers. coi
"lined in small, and often in dark plactv,
where exercise i nltogi'ther but jt the
quistian; but without thi most im
portant facfor full mtisrtilar vigor and
general agility in hU movement can
Sot be obtained. Hut exereie will
bring neither the muscular tone nor
courage tmle' accompanied by due and
proper nourishment.
Thero is an old Scotch saying that
"thtJ-breciKgoes in at the month,"
which, though not altogether true, still
.shows that the canric inhabitants, of
the land o' cakes fully nek nowled iced
tho potent infliMMico ixerfU- hy bxxl in
jK:rfecting the forms of lomc-ti ani
mals. , Hut we do not, argue from this
.that the colt should I made fat, or
that he should be pushed jn the snme
way as a bullock or bog, I ut that he
should have the nutritioti assistance n
quired for a healthy and natural
growth. Here it 1 to'bc oWrved how
wonderfully nature has provided for dif
ferent animals, for the milk in the marc
in no way compares iu richness with
that of the ewe goat, ow or cow, which,
in point of richness, may bo elassfd in
the order named, while the milk o(, tlje
mare cyntains even less fattening powers
than that of tho camel bras. the milk
of the two latter more nearly n-imllrft-ing
that of the human being than that
of any other animal. Hence the fre
ouent use of both as food for children.
There is altogether too much chance.
work left to both the breeding anil rear
ing of young horses. It would seem to
be as if breiilers, knowing their age of
usefulness is not attained till three or
four years old, too often ignore or neglect
the fact that colts as much as. or posi
blyjuorc than otjiwr domestic animals,
requiro nttentioir-jindrdue feedmg'whcn
youtig, and till more care is paid to the
matter we shall still be overrun with
stunted, shapeless brutes, which will
never repay cost of breeding, and
which, in many cases, arc comparative
ly useless. Caiiwliitn Sjwrhvian.
TrlBimlng Currant Hushc.
How to trim currant bushes so as to
secure the best results, like almost every
other operation on the farm is an un
settled question; so each cultivator
trims according to his own peculiar
idea. The most common method is to
permit quite a number of stalks to come
from each root, then an effort is made
to keep them trimmed so as to leave
only strong, healthy stalks. In this way
the bushes are kept iu a condition to
produce a good crop of fruit every year,
but to keep an acre of bushes trimmed
in 'this way requires considerable time,
so much, that many fail to carry out
properly the system they havo adopted,
and finally fall into another system,
which is to let the stalks come up as nu
merous as they please, and after grow
ing until most of them get beyond tho
condition which is necessary to" produce
good fruit, all of the stalks aro cut close
to'the ground, thus causing an entire
new set to come up. This does very
well if the bushes were set deep enough,
so the roots do not grow out of ground.
The natural tendency of a currant bush
is tOTisc up sp the roots near the stalk
will bo above ground, therefore if they
are expected to be kept in good condi
tion many years, they should bo set
quite deep; then they may be renewed by
cutting down so as to lie equal, or better,
than ncwly-sct busitcs, but if the bushes
havo raised so that the roots can be seen
above ground, whatever the method of
trimmm" maybe, the best way is to set
new bushes.
Another method of trimming is to
permit but one stalk to grow from each
root, and.shorten the twigs back every
year: in this way.very strong wood may
be obtained, which will throw out very
jarge leaves in numbers which will in
Miro a crop of fruit of the best quality.
There may be a question if this is the
besfway'to grow large' quantities of
rurrantitor the market; but if size of
berrv and weight of bunch is the object,
there is buX little doubt it is a better
-method than to permit numerous stalks
lo come from the same" root.--ifa5i
zhuscits Flouqhman.
Daafers freai laipare Water.
Too much reliance is placed on the
Fensc of taste, sight and smell in deter
mining the character of drinking water.
It is a fact which has been repeatedly
illustrated that water may be odorless",
tasteless and colorless, and yet be full of
danger to those who ue it. " The recent
outbreak of typhoid fever in Newburg.
X. Y., is an example, having been
caused by water which was clear and
without taste or smelL It is also a fact
I that even a chemical analysis sometimes
will fail to show a dangerous contami
nation of the water, aaif will alwavt
fall to detect th speci: 'poison if the
water is infected withjdscharges of an
infectious nature. It ia therefore urged
that the source of the water supply
should be kept' free from all possible
means of contamination by sewage. It
is only ia the knowledge of "perfect clean
liness that safety is guaranteed.
The local European Volunteer Health
Commission in Alexandria, where the
cholera has been raging along back, is
unearthing, according to the Saniimry
Acic, some very unsanitary conditions
in that city. They have foand a large
native cewtetery, underneath which rans
a canal, with which communicates a
weU, the water of which isssedto wash
dead bodies. ' A drinking fonntsin ad
joins this well, aad the canal ia the wa
ter snpply of a crowded portion ot the
town, "la the wraeqaes are stagnant
pools of water need for ablations pre
scribed hreligioas belief, tha water in
which, haiar unchanged, gatsindaicrib
ahly foal, buck .nntsaaces are dificalt
to abate because of rriidontprejndicea.
U kanyyenaeraank the Aw, that
attacks tack a Jacal-
T1m Bwjint f Ti
i-r? ' .v-r.'r: wi
S.Ji-
it wat ppiawPr
JkmlxM&i
fwd bora..
fT 1t
oor rrrry
with aadriiied
ruritr.
-Hr win a kvi
la r?fc of fcoarr U
Ut W ttwr kT to
aiik thr hci- Wc hat I.
Veirrtabb Rank
flcm'tht ! rv4- tS fc
.ao waff wy uj &i
Wuh i.j-n fslurw a, XrOiW iWC ctoo.lL.
lie rr!it rvt a ock
tt'tt b-r hf BurrW LHsm -.-.
I! 11 irT M riV 1 I kick it nac
Awl tc fC&ta wfst.Tlfc
Itarf ft ? IVfi.
A Knnlocky paper" ay tbat lb
; breeding of t bonsai bx bxsti mcW
condrniKcl. but it ba doa isiion
; gool to agricultural IntrrmU. It fca
turned the farmer - t-Wllrs;i knj
headwltacibbiig. ttaggrna- jdog mt
a tmarU ltrigiit, qub L-st.'jlj burv
tat can d tw .-t the amount of rk
hi- pmlfw'f i rapsLlr (.f, xl trot
off to market or to cbttich m a qua.-tr
of the tunc.
The ianlnr' Chr4cic relate aa
itvanrt bere apfh and jsw werr
plant'-d on hray cia, wkleh !ial Ucn
trenchdl down to "an lnu hard pan."
The tree made no groth. and i
and lichen grew on litem. Tlo' orehanl
was then thoroogah drained In ix
months the bebem U-gan to disappear,
and the next yenr a line gntk m
maib Tlif Mid bad l,en warmel by
the drainage, and the fertility bad here
made accessible to the gnwing root.
t'innatuou tart pb-asethe children.
To fight ouner of butter alkw oim
pound of llour. one pound of a bnn n
sugar, thrro gg: rno the bulUr and
sugar to a cream, add the egg, leal 4
ou the white of one. tir in the tnr.
roll thin and cut m three-pieb Mpiar-
Uefore putting into the oven, nib th
top with the white of the eg. an"l
sprinkle ui'.b cinnamon and 4par
miked. . A bl.ijseh.d ulmoiid or an Kn
ulish w .ilunt tony U placed iu the een,
ter, prmar Ixjbnikcn In bits and a piece
put ntcaclt etirner. Wnrtf tof.
. S"eil Corn.
We hsv bad some very costly ejcrl
ence in saving seol eo-n, or rather in
not ftaiing it, iu this touutri. l.ut
spring nuuir fariucrn werocompttlbHl to
send lo other sections for seed. xl
mail were disappo.nti d. Kightheien
a good place to t-ach tho lcon that n
many farms there is much better corn
for tlie particular section In which ll
farm is, than can Is." obtained clsewh -re.
if the seed is properh "saved. It is not
a difficult thing for the fanner to .saie
h s own seed. He needs but compara
tively littbt for his i.nn use. and it Is a
small matter tueaic it. Pcd. Mornw
writing upon this subject ave " A is
w'ell known, then is much iliilerence in
the time of riKningof car nf. the same
variety in the same held. An utihealthi
early npeiiing may ih catie by di-eao
or injury to stalks, but, ndo from thU,
a difference of tpu days, or even two
weeks, may often be noticed lit the tni
turliig of 1 ar.s gro u on tbesamu square
rod of groumL ICarly maturity i a
most desirable quality In corn for all
latitudes north of (Antral IlliuoU. And
nothing is more certain than that the
selection of early-maturing reed will
have nit effect on time 'of rlJK'niogOf
the crop in .sulwcquctit year. lti at
tempting to select seed-corn from the
cribs in spring the time, of ripening can
not Im determined with any cTlauitv.
Ears if com plucked from tho stalk
and allowed to dry will giie std of fair
vitality, even when the plucking was
done when the kernels were only haul
ening. btill better results come if the
stalks bo cut and placed where they
can dry without heating as they ina in
shocks. J5y selecting the earlict ripen
ing ears and securing these- without
wailing for full maturty iu the field,
good seed may be obtained of late ripen
ing varieties, otherwise desirable.
Placing corn designed foreed in con
ditions iu which it will become thor
oughly dry without overheating before
hard freezing comes is the best -ecu ri li
fer good seed. Probably no better plan
for doing thK has been found than the
old one of "tracing up' the corn by the
husks anil hanging it ear by ear in a dry
room.
I would not discourage purehas'ng
seed of varieties that promise well; but
hope never again to eo a spring when,
as as the casv in 18!, thousands of Il
linois fanners will purcliUM seed corn
of ivh'eh they know nothing except that
"it will grow and looks like prettygooil
corn." Western Jluriil.
Ijirge Ranches and Small Farm.
The breeding of cattle on the Western
plains has long been a lucrative busi
ness. It has enriched thousand of men
of limited means. Four-year old ste t
'could be raised for about $.'5.8') each
and were then so!d for $lSto $." at the
railway station, lint the old conditions
aro changing. The settlement of the
Western country has lim'td the freo
pasture land, and. as in all other occu
pations, the large cattle breeders have
driven out the smaller ones. The busi
ness is Iwing concentrated into the
bands of a few men comparatively; but
this monopolizing tendency has some
advantages. Tlie land is lieing fenced
in. and successful endeavors are mak
ing to improve the finality of the stock.
American beef anu mutton an now
equal to. and will soon he the l-e-t of.
any in the world. When enilagu is
well understood in the Middle and
Northern States we will probably be
able to ra'so more of our own cattle to
supply the local demand, and then
doubtless the smaller capitalists will
again have a chance. Ensilage, it will
be. remembered, is the system by which
fodder' is kept sncculcnt and fresh all
through the winter months. It corre
sponds to the canning of fruit and vege
tables, and is a comparatively inexpen
sive proccs. lint while the great droves
Of cattle on the Western plains aro get
ting into fewer hand, it is also true
that th? large farmers arc monopolizing
the soil to the exclusion of the smaller
tiller of the earth in all the prairie conn
tries. This tendency to make great
land and cattle kings is not awholoome
one, for the hope of our country is. after
all, in a farming class which tills iu
own soil and arc not hirelings. Luckily,
in otber parts of the, country there is"a
steady incrcasetff the number of farm
crs wlao own 320 and less acres. In
California, for instance, there arc but
little over 3,006 farms of more than 500
acres, while there arc over 30,000 of
less than 500 acres. All the hilly aad
mountainous region of the coantry, in
cluding the ocean slopes, is more suit
able for small than large farms. Is the
neighborhood of the great .cities, also,
the fmit and vegetable farms arcalways.
limited ia extent. Landlordism is more
bkely to develop its crik on our West
ern prairies than in "any other part of
the coantry. Dtm&retCs Monthly.
Senator Logan, talking toaChicago
reporter of his -recent interview with
Sfttinr Ball aad k fellew Indian,'
said: Why I saw the whiskers of one
of oar niMi-iiTTd aeldiers which had
been cat, fleaa aad'alL from" his face;
daagh'ng to the pipe of one of those In
diana, nad this pfpewas passed aroand
as Urn pipe of peace. I say to yon that
IdoaTtwaatto talk abont aay policy
I won't say it. CHc
awt wnt -aj, nwwwVwfawVV
PK IP JwaawiaTw,p waWTwrnT
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M,
,
mm& Aitin
A Wear whs at
lUr. U arm jr m waft at a
a wan wwwana wfarm wswn
cwnarA wVaw1awanaw.fl
ifmtfAjl naam- mswaw MAammmWlaaw
l aww nmyjajjmjwj vmnnwnim
!( a am-aaMiam wmrm
2tJSfS
Xtfrm
u.
-wsa.
TKE HttlHfVT
Vrm a fejwrt t Put im,I. 49m
i- w. - uu
Tl fsUflM.ij t&rklV4i Cr
ef tt JM.tiar 4 tt kr .x$
fittt U ,
ti ih ttivrU-raU rVarr. 1V
rflrU. ry ju 11a t wmi u 1
tfc bv la fT C " 4itU t
lrx pMnH uf li vtH'i k -ry, -i
ttru tta 9t i-tWrt Af cam j-rr4-hurstia:
Ujc Ut iluu'r : Ira lw tc
mtl atKttbt ! UiimI pf ii r
ItMinj rl tt-ojf all & ml tl - 1
trir. lesjU U-;ttiiiac U la.hi f-r
lbcturti. 4 u rrr4 ! 1 y ua .
l9 tb arjttavPtjU aal j
tMtla?r IUtnx Itsat lr iail.ti
tkoM tict-t 10 Utw wfeat mi t- itu-
'nittuf-ot a4 plB. Ty 4uu it,
rttbt to .r l..r thM-M ta ttt
f;trilat ef lli Ur wl J .! 1 tkkt 'l
o-r&l Mm i,t tratolr bjil. t -tetst.
A tfe rtt!t i i rl
vtaLruln. mp -, a cfjr bant, ttt; l
takblc rrlle ( rtunioaW- nw-.
l'olo Uu, a i-w j " 'ft.lof't xit
frrtM th m-l tta In t ft or
itair, ! rU th tU f.Milin
u-b oHir. M xk. rr unJt vh
lmi ,f M;tfsl .,rr a) 'nsil llr.r
h-Ahii u tlurt; ttJTrt Ur roai,iur
li m to tritu uaJefiutil ti fla! r
tllrtl a JHartVt I U Tl,w of tr-l.
mM. Tl-r at miUt o of p!e fl. :
uMttmlv ''' rauliht L l.r 1 1 1
m crrn W c b4 lhlr M-lilat tr l-i
U-si UVru iu tm r Jr p-" tr'U
7lr ar t.rtjsi.t ot jM.-d ft lr.
thoustitlrtttjr eaiturtuz tl flrt nrp cu
of uo4 tt-rl4tt malaUy u t t li t tt
Mrtttl rtalljau9 of tU lrr that U
ltr Ik rut. Tlty Urm altnal tc 1
nUf; a Uk of ptt ' iv a'i I a
r- inm ! ilm n it, r h UBr"-ati".
tlr freiln f WCJrlrti, wwtttur t n
I'SHlM )iY ii.ii,an. atlrltuit t V.
trutiblf b lht?l-l I1a of ' !' e.i t' r
malaria. It l bb tm lht Jh .
ti a Vl.v Ifsl.P w. U efl-rti 't Ifc'M
tisattrr, artij tm,rK"lpll ihnnHVr fM
tk intvaiituit Uwtry bteh cr .
thrill. H'trn tkn iln Mtwl MbcR ail
elas ot jUylrtaol"-iti'lllral rtv uab
U rsaluit nil iltfm-, lht tt l U ptr j
lutv Ut ewr b nlrkl)r t-l 11
'rly a jk.,HU;Ui itiaUlxlti n Mr s.
ill iH than that .f tru liiillr m-rf
talnsil, ainl li 1ml tr anl fvtMmapnit "
teiitslr that l ls-i fnun t u.ofut. tw mat
Urwht t eritJt. Uefw will t n. i-.r
tjiMUTMllnj; aitiiM the 1 l r', wttl thrift
ill l cis'Jl rvjlla thrvushvul tha
witM.
" I in wrll an-arv of tli rniMi tlat
xllllsj rrivl ul to tiiw tr nUit thi ,
lnlVrr lut I fist that I ran nl l tru ti
niv Imncit emrlrtlon iinl IiihI
liltfii; hanil and In.lors all that I 5;n. w
to t rimmI. Th cteMtlt jhbeti fr
tti' jat lew yrar, ana craiiuic xrrrp
toms of ililTeretil llp-a of th kubtr
ami llvrr hare nw.nkft.e.1 tb trJlcv J"v
fistntoii to tho fact that thi lta ar
ctoatly tncfaliiif. Th trratiuwHt ef th
loeler l Isii iarslr eMnmimUt ot
mmiy of tLrlr nntient La tlMt whilo
thfv were cabling about f-r a reily to
cure tlmm.
" It n t(u- nrrr two yrar mince tnr at
trtitiott a llrat ralltsl lothe u f mmt
ivontlrrful j-rejiaratliin tn IU trfrtttiintt f
llrKht, dlx'tte of the Wl tli'V rall-Ht
hail fre.itetjy nkl me alnu th trmsly
and 1 lil l-art of reuiarUable eurr ef.
fcete.1 lv It, I Mil lil many ulhrt 1 heJ.
tntv.1 to'n-Cfitiunrriil lt u. A rennl
frlen.l of tnlii hail hn In ""r henlih f. r
Mime tint- ati't hi nmdlcatlon for iiiir
ant mi hi Itf hntl lvn rejrtt on ae
rountof Itrlzhl Hlea. Qiemleal n4
iulerieiijuolinlii4if?nof hu urlte te
ealr(l lie jrernc of larK" qnantitlM 'f
atluin'n and Rranutar till' cat, htrh
rotiftrtnnl the rorrretne of the diafcn'"!.
Alter trln all tho llUsl renele, I ill
rectal him t- uw thi nrrrara'I'Oiamt v.
crritly urpn'l o rGftrro a l-lt'l lin.
lirmetnetii within a month, and t'hln
'. .. ... .. :.l .1...
tour inoniii nu mw cau .um '" ""
Mirero.1. At that Urn there a preni
onlv a trim of allntmen. ami h frit, a h
exjiree.l It. ferfeetly well nml all
through tlo lnfliiiirt of Warner' Ha
Uure, tho remedy he tietl.
After thlt I jirrcrlbel tt.i medicine In
full itte In Uith acute nml chronic nm
jihrltl. (UriRhf tlUeanel ami with th
moil ntifaetorj- reull. ily oerratton
ware nrfther iaall in nuinb-r nor liastily
made. Tlieyextaode-lor-TKereral month
and mbrared a lrr nmnlr f cat
which have proved a?ifartiry lo uiy
nilnil, that I would eatntly urKeuin
my irofrIonl brethren th lmjortati-o
ol eivimra fair and titln trial to War.
nrr Nnfe Cure. In alirs cin of ail
ment wh-ro tha ldo I I ofiTlniy in an
unhealthy alate, eajctnllr where ciandu
lar ensorRements a' d It tl.vnmatiry ernj
t!on exNt, Imlced In many of Uto form
of chronic indloiiloii In which there i
no evidence of orsfnnla mlel,ef, u where
the Reneral health 1 deplete I, lh fac al
low, the urine rotcreO, conatilntlns the
comlltion in wbleh the j wit lent I iid t t
liillouo theadrantace. gmned ly tie n
of thi remedy i rcmarkahlo. In tirijjbt'
dleae it cm to act ns a aolrent of nl
tmmen:to noothe and hal ths InfUmM J
membrane: to wath oat the ejdthe l.nt
debri which block up th t''K urin'frri,
and to prevent a ile tructlTo tnetamoriuon
of tlue.
IMoninc I do to branch of th
profeion that llere that no one arhool
of medicine know all tb truth rejardlnj
the trratroentof diae, and belnff inde
pendent ononsh to aleet anv renwaty that
will relieve mr patient, wjthoat refrnc
to the onrre from whenw it com'. I am
clad to acknowledge and commeni tha
merits of thU remeily thn frankly.
" Ilepectfnlly your
V- A. Oct, M. P.
"Dean ant rroferof 8rKery, Untld
Ktate Metllcal College of w York;
Elltor of ytt'Uml Tribvnr: Author of
Ounn's Kewand Improve! Hand-Hook of
Uytn9andDatneticM'slicine, c"
A amcRKT cot-hler will never nwed yoar
eld boe- .V. 1". JndprndmL
Great! IleoTrr anc 1 IJ1.
For con gfc, colds, mr threat, broncbill.
Iarynjiti, ami conmptfii in It earlr
alar-, nothla; eqoali Or. Piiros "Olf'
niCe'lical Deovry." IV i a! a grat
bloodpari&er aal mtrntifreior7r or
toalc, and for liver complatat and coativn
condition of tho buw! It bat no ejia
Bld by draczitta.
"iJonoax reflectlona, pjeaae"ald th
Iookiag-cla a fur it had ttanbltd dwa
stairs. .V. Y.JovmnL
nanr " '" '
I HT2 knowa sad ratb tfe a of
Swirt'a 8pecic IS. S. K.) for mr fifty
year, aad aaver bar? known or bard of
Ua failure to ear any case of ElooJ Paisos
whta propcrlv taken.
IL X DrjrAH, Perry, 0s.
a
A ntsxn ia oftea aerprUed at ekr
aaarra." X. I. AVwa.
Teste wiSdIa-a4rt or eld nea, fsfw
faaf trots acrrea tiebUf ;t or Jddrd aif c
Uom, vhoald ad !nr. wfth t3Ua, for
larc aati, Woaus DisrsJit Mxat
Cax. AsaoctATiox, BslTaJa. X Y.
Bnxiaan playiar It a tart of gnmu
ULaa baU caate-.V: X Krayisae.
a i
I bats bsa astsf Swift's Rprtcilc (fS
aad nd ktstette beat rm4j ef tV
klsd tfaat I hare ever baaa aW to , aai
I aaTa.tr(4 tbew aJL
Jons Trscxxa,34 U. L Caralrj.
Tan
who 4d faacy work, toat
war.
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REMEDY
PwwfP; wPaaW PPw VJPaflawda wmawawwrnm- awa m k
ui srw
MJwwnfWw!
KHKiii.iTisjiSawing' Made Easy
NrurnldM,
SCUTU lUVliM,
u at taArtitv
S0RC TMR0AT,
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SaUoc Hi tti,
OR. JOHN IULLS
Sil's Tonic Syn:
row TMt CUC OF
FEVER and AGUE
Or CHILLS and FEVF.B,
AND ALL fMALARIAL DISfAStS.
Th jtrwprUttr of tal ratttirate 4Waa
Jtl cJalai Ut il err!eruy t tM
tJuTfr o3;d ttf tkt paVlU far tavatFJC,
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r cf bort er letg t.aaiii. !! if t la
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kits teitiaauT 19 tt trata cf It nrtla
that in BravkatrTvr wtittt fU Untratf
tAt iiiiUon r Ulttt fH4 a4 t.trii
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branJ3lclrnt fsr a car, aal wtl fnalllea
bav Wa cur4 W a tlajt tU. vtU a ft
fcl rfitaralia of tt Kattal acatla. It 1.
howtrr,;niit6t,aedtarjra r etl
lala to e, If it a t caUea4 Is MaatUr
dt fcr a ir; er twa aflr la a a
tn chckfsl, aosr tillT la Uratl ft4
!afUadiair '. Uiaal j tf 84Jea
will sat rnjslra ajr H t kpttfcrUta
gol order, SJiotil,ltaptlat.hr !
qnlr a cathartic totslldn tfirr svUiftaka
three er foar daiet ef th Tol. a !fU m
of BOLL'S VE0ETA2LE TAMILY FILU
will do 3f5dst.
DR. JOHN BULL'S
icuiTu'c Tniim even
ofl"" lumu oti.wr.
BULL'S SARSAPARILU.
BULL'S WOltw DESTROYER.
Tha Popular Rm!l of lr Oaf.
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KIMCCWARR
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THE 31IXI.STCR M1IO FAILS lo intcrcrf hU rgrira
tion and build up his church b generally acctmti (Jb&vx px jwHcr;
or of not studying hard enough- Thai It not aJway wfiexe tKc treeUc
comes from. Dppcpsh and liver dwofr!rs arc ropoi1e fcf '"2f J
dull sermon and many a vacant wlpit. When Uh: Itttnkr' !tt
aiaratus is working "fcronfand ha nerves arc Kirin haw twin, anrl hVj
brain refuses to do its duty, it is almot impowUc to make Of to tJftsch a
good sermon. Gtvc your suflcruijj jnimtcr a IxhxJc of titxmn'a Uttti VM
tcrs. You will sec its effect on noil SutmUfs preaching Ihc Rcr. J.r.
Zehrinjf, of Codorus, Pa., was paralyxeJ, ami cou! not ' cjwurpl ih
crutches, until Jirwrn's Iron BtUcrs made a neir man of Hon Tm Ror.
Mr. White, of Rock Hill, 5. C, sap:
gor; Iixxiwn'a Iron Hitters a not
parsons:
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mf anmt r1af Om Vmnl t
cc aioar raoa otTrau am,awtiin .
tarn irt rsH C.ifm m tee aaA ften t er
e3 4 r.rg fJgTiTrilgiijgg?-jg.
If you are
Interested
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