Star of the Cape, 4 June 1873 IIIF issue link — Page 4

| , , i oe Jnlj. A SUM luetUmbiiudi'id Uu» xnnwg tkal at soon to-d>r vu nauirl ud doS well; when r<«md.t«T e r.ii. wm « os iu^de, week, ud utisg ^nt drew up its legi ud ^iook 1 ' U. HOW, WhU WM Ufl) mmiior »*u* ‘ imb? I don't know ranch .boot

Ssap* not ask be rairriied at the lot. of ImsIm mt the Hraeof Wrth ot uon »fter, u Un tast rauueraent will not *1w»t» ssflot to prerrai it. There in no ob-ji-otion to feeding, aodente mrf of corn during the tint ud m month of gwUfion, idler which it better be dbpuied with. « it i. in>■—»>nij ud alsalUed to prodnou f»t, which is objeaUmbk, fa breeding eWH. flood stora condition i« .11 th*t Urenired. ~ •ng f would

ii .ttribnted to the hoeting ud utringent nature of the corn fed to the owe., which, howsoever, is sot tppliosble to tdoli animaia. Olorer hay ia nntritione, ud ebonld be fed . month before ud during the Iran hi ng eeeeon. ee it trill afford a larger anpply of milk thu uy other rariety of hay. It is unfortunate that he doet not atale hi. breed. If merino. I would recommend haring is 10th to the 30th o

miUrasd of s quality adapted to tender condition. Tbaeiaoof hiaebeda ia ample for the number of keepe. I repeat my i ud in due time will rarely rt

Ur. Olrrar Dalrymple, the great U naaota wheat farmer, give# high pru te wheat, of which be I eropa. He aeye it hsa yie

esiK

tud at e rariety <f employmeuU, but left them in auoceeeion until he went to work iu the ebop of Oiorunni Beriotti, > itallu like himself, ud the'futan rarce of mil his future miaeriee, who ept s shoe shop in Centre etnet, Hew In Now York he married an ItalUn omu, Johanna Mooai, described by 1 who hare seen her as .splendid type I peculiar style of beauty for which K—a -,f lulj are so Ju»tahort honeymoon ell went merjnarriage bell. Luigi waa industrioua, Johanna waa a good bousekeep*

£Si.rS idled, r

gone away the true nature of Johanna bagu to manifeat itaelf. She ebunned '* nyofLui^ud commenced loons of Baxter street. Luigi yWfta at length compelled to interfere ud, if poaeible, reeoue the womu from the downward oonrae whitli he ssw a he waa rapidly pursaing. Ho remonatratod with her, at first gently bnt firmly, but ' iscd to listen to him, and rows of freqnentarocurrenoe, which •— —• J ~ J *- blows, Lnsignuni . . .. of these encounti ud threats were of no Use, mi had recourse to a stratagem, day, when Johanna was out, he haring prenoualy procured apartments in the upper part of the city, had her clothes romorod to the n< * JI

thu the Scotch, Fife, or other rarietiee that he has grown. Ita weight, per bushel, has been from two to three pounds more. It studs protracted atonaa bettor. The Odessa has taken the highest price in the Milwaukee market. With ita milling quailti ia unacquainted. Ho could not i to raiae Fife rather thu Odessa withont a premium of from 16 to 20 per bushel. He begu with eighty as u experiment, but tbia year nothing alee. Mr. Dalrymple has made u large amount of money in wheat growing, ud Is enthuslsstio on the subject Ho cloaca his article in the -fbrmerh Onion, from which we- condense the abore, with the following: “Whu wo

as doomed to miner ah e became furions*ud deluded back her effects. Luigi refused to giro them to her; ud, haring giren rut to her indignation, she suddenly disappeared — left the city—ud for months Lusi—— 1 — 1 — *—— ' ' er. Luigi left so stone unturned to obtain-

d condition af theoom-produc es south Of ns, MinnsaoU farm-

era may justly congratulate themaelres that our great staple Is a success. It is no longer u experiment With it the battle basbeeu fought and won. It has

giren raise to ■

.— Jeen of our u. udeitiea. This year 100,000 Minneaeta farmers diride among themaelres, from the sale of their surplus whest ■ alone, twenty million dollan. flu the aame number, in uy of our aister States, present n more nUefaetoiy exhibit »" ■aw Te Dastroy Badkag., "W« here just mered into e house, end from present sppeanneos I hare u idea that we will be troubled with bedbug!, as the wrath er gate warm. Haring always lired in our own houses we hare had no such trouble before. How shall I get rid of them entirely Answer: "May is a rather late lease

bedsteads, in the joints, with M parte of spirits of turpentine ud k pane oil, sad also the cracks of the base iu tha mom, or fill up the on

is papered you will hare to

cntplu. Oleu the paint thoroughly, and place in the centre of the room a dish ooutaiuing four ounora of pulreriaed brimstone. Bet fits *- the brimstone, ud close the room windowa ud firoboard fit tightly in -o keep the fumes ot.

ed life pare lair premise But the clouds were g ud thedreamof con>oat to be rudely die.

in Centre street, ud it finally * 'that he sold out his stock

re in the mining town of line of the Delaware

A wandering Italiu organ grinder, paeaing through Dover in hia recognized in the streets Joid Benotti. He made inquiries about them, ud heard that they were iring together as mu and wife. When is returned to New York ho oommnniisted the intelligence to Luigi, who moe determined, if possible, to recot ois wife, ud with this end in riew i consulted si lawyer, who adriaed him write to the woman. He wrote twi< offering her forgirenees if she would t turn ; but his letters were unuswere ud, inconsequence, he determined ._ proceed to Dorer himself. An old friend of his childhood, Philip Massolini, consented to accompany him, a on the 7th of Norember they to the early train from aHobokr They errired in Dorer about ton o'clock n the morning, ud the first news they heart waa that Bariotti had b. lenkro'pt, ud that in asking to I

mrried man , securing himself $760 Lnaigneni ud Masaolini at uce pro. deeded to the residence of Bariotti on

engaged in the truly delectable and mu on the East India Bailway, drawing the mnnifioent aaiaryof forty: a month, and it waa with feeli: nnv.iW.-sble ugnish that he felt duty to inform the lady that th« ud n hall of rupees were iu the hi uuother party who obstinately refused .togjr^up ' ■’ ‘ of llil ben The bride bore tin huabaB^w^' ]ar difficulty existed in regardfather's estate Bear Coneo. te wne there all right, of c it waa encumbered to such u that it waaunpoaaible to get at it. tremely peculiar ; u old somindi mother estate on top of-it, ud ho obitiuatolr refused to Hka it off. And .he whole of the raluable jewelry, wfa' had prosed so excellent a bait, had b — * - *•-- bride's sister and □ whom it had b

wted uni

Th e B

not present—not /or want of pure unadulterated air, but for lifelgir- —„ inflnencea of the sun. Remarks scattered through the pages of both of Dr. Hue's jourasls indicate that the euntinned darkness influenced thephysiologicsl state of - the system, ud gore rise to the rariona diseases suffered by himself and companions. In his naira ire of the first Grinnoll Expedition he lotioee the peculiar paleness which wai S reduced bf the perpctusl night. Uner date of December 21st, the day preceding their "solatiealdsy of darkness,' he writes, after noticing the bloodless appearance of himself ud "In truth, wo were all e _ time undergoing changes unconsciously. The haxy obscurity of the nights — *---’ -[one through made them darker corresponding nights of Parry, iplexions of my oomrndee and i, too, were toned down to a peculiar waxy paleness. Our eyes were more recessed, and strangely closr. Complaints of shortness of breath became general; our appetite was almost ludicrously changed, • * • • and

. . knees, begu to euo Again. January 22d-'

thi- regetation ng themselrea in lurry patients, t

A correspondent from Mexico writes: The territory 'erer which the government of Loxsds extends is Roographi eallv the euton of Topic, in the Steto o Jalisco. Its president ia a pure-Mood ed Indian, as waa Jnorcz, udhis life lug policy is that Mcxicus ~ynildl govern Mexico. He organixed hts gov-

a purtv-biood'-

ud intelligent, ud baa hi era! ideas of State. Long a .strife for power between 'aorex, ud for months “ ven balance hung." Juarez triumphed dtimotoly, however, ud from that Jme the two were bitter ehemies. Lozoda, with hie followers,‘retired into the mountain fnstueszee of Jalisco. He became a dictator. Law and order were established, and, while othi tiens of the country were in a st anarchy ud disorder, the State of Heyarit had perfect peace. Outside of th limit, murder, rapine, ud outrage we common ; within, the inhabituts we as safe as if, they had inhabited aor pastoral New England valley. If crime waa committed, the retribution was swift ud complete. Itambition toeztend his poi . whole of Mexico, ud even his late

clothing, ud well. Their

the rear of which 1 Hie f ‘

occupied gUTMS,

used for (deeping

iry Luigi ii

true.) The i ‘other in

to do; bnt Luigi • and a»ked to

parties eS looked at es ziluee, . silence omino

is tl'tly refused

d hit sutrostie

speak to her privately, no inner apartment the unhappy pair oame out upon the stoop to talk. They conversed in Italiu, ud ss their —

to be rur

—_— __—ItskdinMflif Lurignui would return to Vow York he would promise that his wife should follow him. This did not satisfy Luigi, ud he still urged the womu to return,

but she became savage, accused Luigi Let of robbing sjn^ill-treatinjr her, saying

nopurauioneould b« to fltotentr. interfere. When the ill-mated husbud

d talked some time upon the

— T returned into the bonne

**While_ Luigi

The Modoes Before the Her. The Philadelphia Svenino Bulletin pubHahsa a letter from Mr. Elijah Steele, a lawyer in Yreka, in which the Modoes are partially described aa they were before the outbreak of the late troubles. Twenty-three yean ago they were a numerous and powerful tribe, ud those whs are left are not renegades. They were not, es has been asserted, in tbe habit of lounging about Yreka. but wut hithr- •-

trade furs and goose S ties af provisions ins provided themst

credit was good with Yreka, who trusted them from fall to spring. They wore, however, always requested to ramp out of town. Captain Jack, who waa always the spokesman, tever drank uy liquor, ud invariably puniaheduy of tits tribe for any wrongdoing, whether they were drunk or — 1 — They are, according to Mr. , a raperior race of Indiana in intellect and physical development, ud they ore resolved to die rather thu yield. In Captain Jack’s own worts: 11 To die by bullet does not hurt mneh; -Jarre to death or reservation hurt

heap."

nearly flre-eizths of the .100,000 Indians

« studing with Eis he suddenly ( as he

- — .wring knife ud in-

the -wound, the mark of which : » carried with him to Mg grave. ,

in*, struck behind

mer. Ho grasped

- ud fiercely strngrted for the possession of the knife. In tits encounter the woman reeeirod a out upon the breast. Luigi got the o_i. » v-«.— t noaaeniy threw ?

attempted toseii

fe which lay upon Bariotti'a bench. Luiga's fierce blood —- ->.- u ungovernable degree,

wife Was bending for’, t her a terrible blow, sting far into the buck, _ >Q BwxotkiBprangimon I latter, with bloody knife,

— wounds in his stomach, which disabled him from further combat Masaolini, who Ufi cat through the tragedy iu a etupefi- i Auto, at this point jumped up ud wrestled the knife fnm the nude of Loigi ud flung it into the atre*1.1 They wereTmth soon afUrwerda srreatod, and when the nor 1 * inquest had been held they oent to tbe County Jail s' ■'—

a Bariotti'a life was for i

' o*. but

The Portland JVras states that Hon. N. A. Farwcll, of Roeklud. a prominent candidate for the Governorship of Maine, withdraws in favor of Judge Hut, of Bangor, who waa Governor in - Maine riotory ii inflner.ee in

-ila tkat ]

.... olf the core it is posthjm, are perhaps no

fjworae; but pains in the joints, rhoaraanTtism, coughs, loss of appetite, ud general debility, extend even to the whole ,snv ■ • - • Wo arc a gkastli

faoee, ud none paler tkal

In hi* " Ai

in epileptic tendency which ws

„ Horace Greeley's rotate, „, Bayard Taylor, 4; H. Parsons Farnbam, 8; Silas Cheney (Mr. Greeley e brother-in-law), 8; Mrs. a T. Clerk ' idow of a T. Clark, deceased, who ■ the former financial ”

Jenny, 2; Otirer John

binson, 1; Theodore — Thomas N. Bodkef, 1; George Ripley, 1; John F. Cleveland, 1; John Hava 1; Palrick OTtouke, 3; Philip A. Fitzpatrick, 1; Cornelius A. Bunkle.l; Mrs. Albert D. Richardson, 1; William Orton, 1; ud Charles E. Wilbour, 1—

making up the 100 shares.

The Aim is-maitdy owned by

A Dua, Marshall O. Roberts, WiIllam

Hitchcock, ud Isaac though there are a nui

stockholders.

The Journal Comi . more thu three or four stockholders, the principal of whom is David M. Stone, occupying the poeition of editor-

in-chief.

Tho Evening Poit is owned by William Cullen Eryut, Isaac Honderaon, and Parke Godwin. Mr. Henderson tins by far the largest interest, bnt br mutual consent, the responsible cditoral

control during his life-time i Mr. Bryant, vith hia su-i Godwin, os exeentire chief.

The Commerrial Adrertiltrin a joi stock concern. The capital stock 872,000,'in shares of $1,000 each, he.u br Hugh J. Hastings, Henry Smith, TliurlowWeed.Thomasiltirphy.Tlie E. Stowart, Jenkins Yu Schaiek. Mrs. A. Maverick. The first named

te head of the colon

feather at the oilier. We will also state in ml a mu with new shorn on, ud big cage in one hud, can furnish interesting spectacle to over forty byetandera b^sjmphrjJimblng a treAto

chised canary.

The real way to catch a (pose canary, ud the only way which can bo warrant-- * " ' rra of yrora, ia to collect all „ da ud family and pout them around the tree or fenoo whero the cqpery it at bay. Let them all furnish themeelree witt plenty of bita of kihd-

Tho first officer in the Anglo-Araeri-in service gets about £16, or 875 a onth, or 8900 a years-what '*

i ordinary clerk. “

rts 850 a month.

dinary clerk. The Beeosd officer

. x hundred d ; the third officer 830 the fourth $35. To m

hunks of brick, ourry-corabs, boo-

',^,.11 porter-bcttles, ud other hudy mi

-ud let (them fire away boldly inorr. If the bird cowardly tur id aies off, let everybody Milo rigor. It will be hud to confh entertainment to your immediate No boy whose heart is in the place ud who has uy legs will: from the pursuit, ud there ar who Vould leave a dentisfe e]

her priceless freight human life. These sums correspond closely to what we pay our waiters and men ot all work about Uie house, while they would not hire, in New York, a Unit-class waiter or a butlci. The ides is horrible, but the facta are as wo state them, or we hare been misinformed by le who has the beet opportunity o’f lowing them. What l *

q the class of mu whe ; these wages? Whu itionatiy answered, we

-law, Mr.

s.v:

fellow-stockholdi

canary-hunt Even from the winder of upper rooms, where aioknoas or di liabille may detain unfortunate el thusiasts, lucre will come, ever or uon, a frantic wash-bowl or a whizzing

lamp-chimney to testify the "

of the public interest Of , _ this rapid free distribution of fire-wood and paving material, it will not bo long isb they bod brought a tin nmbrella long. But considerations of mere psr-

? ■ ■ -bo allowed to

this up long iretty straight.

h he had taken to participate in ixplorations, were particularly affected by it "Theinfluenoe,"oaysJie,

i by 1 . ... this long intense darkness was most depressing. J ” —

though the greatei ttivto of thr *—*'

ir part of th( ic Circle, wore

__ lomaloas form of disease, to which I am satisfied the absence of light contributed os much os the exinflnonee which the long winter night exerted on the health of these mucli-valnod animale. The subject has some interesting bearings, but I content myself for the present with transcribin.q a passage from my journal. • • • * To-day I give up the lost hope of saving them (the dogs). Their disease is os clearly mortal aa in the ease of uy human being. The more material fanc-‘-■-ne of the poor brutes go on without erruption ; they eat vorsciouoly, ren their strength, ud sleep well. But the indications beyond this go to eve that the original epilepsy which a the first indication of brain disease n them has been followed by s unacy. They bark prodigiously

5‘"]C““ t th‘

principal owuor of the Ei\ „ ud, being in ill health, is represented by hie brother Robert, whe, being Scotch, partakes of the characteriotim of the race forithrilu Cyrus W. Field was ou owner. Of late, its editor, J. M. Bundy boa. It is understood, obtain-

ed a handsome interest.

The TWepraro, the evening edition rt

ZK

enough, ud you all fire E u'U bo sure to get voi er —

cu lm had for twcu a by tiie.dozen, for

Present Status of the Steam Plow.

Bvu

post a

nothing, ond w witiiout seen

Thelndi

Civilized Indians.

_ _ follows: OiTitined, 87,000, i-civilized, 125,000; wholly boxbarons, 78,000. Of the r'-”’- ’ dius the_CherbkeH are t

v number 15,000, ud have In the Italiu Tsrritoiy of lerea. "Theyhave their language, their wHnw.t

and TawSL thsdr ehureben, sohoolz, ud academies, their jndgro ud oonrta. Their dweltinge conaist of 500 frame and 8,500 log houses. During tha yror 1873 toe^ ratoed 8,000,-000

ice. They fawn upon yon log to appreciate the no-

(U give them in return, pusMng jeada against yonr person or oeeillating with a strange pantomime of fear. Bometimcs they remain for hours in moody silence, and then start off howling as if pursued, and run up ud down for hours. • • • Generally they perish with symptoms resembling locked jaw, in less than thirty-six hours

after the attack."

Witit all this untold amount of bodily ad mental anflering, u’ a — _ad disease, endured Wytb< — voyagers, in this dark and cheerless gion, it is not singular that they should haD, with exceeding great joy, the approach of light. Baye Dr. Kuo, “The day ia beginning to glow with the approaching sun. The sun, at noon, has u almost orange tinge. In tea days Ms direct rays will reach our hill-tops, ud in a week after he will be dispensing hie bleroed medicine among our sufforThe coming sun will open sppliot moral help to the sick, ud give energy to the hygienic resorts -a‘-ii j am arranging at th • For ths last ton da > watching the growing andacape, as it emerged from buried lows through ell the stages of distnere of u India-ink washing, stop top, into the eharp, bold definition desolate harbor aoene. We have marked every dash of color, wMch the Great Painter, in His benevolence,

id by. Bays the Tribune, it will 1 isnredly obme to pass that agri-

eumire will not be the only employment in wMeh the human muscle, aided by the horse, will be required to do all the heavy labor at the most costly rate. English formers arc now engaged in aecultivatof 20 inchro deep, ud thetpbv present, ud et actnally less expense then is now required tfAfccrutch the surface. But does it pay? That is the question. Unfortunately there arc many difflcnltiee to be met, not the leaat of which is the vie inertia ot the farmer ; the dead weight, so to speak, of old notions, with which we encumber our minds. This leads no, having formed an idea that a thing’ ia impossible, to strive " how not to do it," rather thu to vanquish obstacles. Nevertheless there are some enterprising individuals who have put their hud to the stosm-

1 have succeeded to s' marvel.

lo-bodied males in Cn re now been called.

ill probably fight as long as th u wS* iwfoUiras : Elminob ai . oaet Csstl.* wcro'tatol’v^oeded'to^K English by the Dutch. Up to th ol the ceding the Dutch Oover had paid ejearly present ol $400

m. When England beoai if Elminah the diplomat!

eee " vested rights ” of the

■uteo, ud instead of

__ 0 him before the transfei place ud offering to compromise administrator, Mr. Pope He

" - lunsele of

"Tfc

las lake, the flickering yellow peering et ell these poor wretches—everything seemed uperlative lustre sod unspeakable glory. “I row Mm (the eun) once more, says he, “and upon a projecting crag nestled in the sunshine. It waa like bathing in perfumed water.’'

• of New Mexico ai

bined. Their stock romoats -of 16,000

31 tliese echo,

" There are in tha Indian 3 ritory from 40,000 to 45,000 Indians tha same general condition aa I

Horses ud cattle have excellent eyeeven - - -•* » -

Dogs in a vision unim

^th* Ht_— . ted dogs aee very imperfectly in the uree ot ton yean, if they live so long. ,n seems to be owing to look-

■ ofAge.

never grot , .er her head, but if benevolence ud virtue dwell in her heart, she it aa cheerful as when the sprtn f life first opened to her view.When ws look upon a good womu; we never think of her age; she looks as charming aa whan the roae of youth t bloomed on her cheek. That not faded yat; it will nsvar i In her neighborhood, mho is the friend ud benefactor. In the church, the ud the exemplary

ing at fires in the house, e

- ......icultural 8o-

beu harvest last finest they had ever seen. '— ,! -\ farmers give simi- '. Greig thinks that

.... machine is better thu uy whatever. Mr. Nield cannot see .mere are going to avoid the into steam-plow. Another farmer 100 acres cannot now possibly do wunuiit it; uother oh 1,200 acres plainly peroeivra that steam plowing must soon become general, ud just as horses superseded the spado so roust horses bo superseded in their turn. Mr. Carey began in 1866 with one set of tackle ud plows as u experiment; now he has 10 seta. His plowing is 16 inches deep. Just how many plows are at present in use does not appear in the report we epitomize, but it is stated .... — munfsctoiy -no leas thu

made each year f England, ud 60 for ezportotir -'—1 countries. In the ueigl Magdeburg, Gennuy, SO

S lows are now engaged in the < on of beets. Three roots, raown on stram-plowed land, in consoqhenco of the depths ud finer tilth of the soil, contain two per cent, more sugar thu others, ud there is a gain of 30 per ' the weight of the crop. All the

tore the womu who h days in acts of kindness ua i who has been the friend of m God—whose whole 1” '

lm., .

» devotion

will always be fresh ud buoyant

—- - —— spirits, ud active in humble deeds

- n.,. I , -mercy ud benevolenoe. If the young gur light*,-*Bd battg abofit ^ desires to retain the bloom ud where the sphere of vision is bSn t - o( -, aU] , let her not yield to » mtorvutton of fenere, the si»y of fashion ud foUy : let her A free range always in love truth ud virtue ; and to tbe dose

of life she will retain those ft ‘

which now

■light and u injustice vhenMr.'Ht missionsrios u§ offering 85,000 if they ■hould be sent to Cape Coast Castle, the messenger was made

whereby

only three men ud one horse ud w: cart. Such, then, is the present tr of this Important innovation.

of force imparted to the earth by tbe eun’e heat. According to the beet investigations that hat

done by a ntOteed in „—. found that tbe heat sent to the earth in the sun's rays during the space of minnte ia able to do aa- much wori would be done by two thonaud ate engines of one hundred horse-po each, working continuously for ■pare of faur thousand yean. What beeomra of this inoonoein.— gnat amount of power is worthy of consideration; and we begin to realize

captive

The

, in spite of the o

of the

Tide was both

rolSL..are compelled

is we crowd with passengers, s hardly find room for the

The Flagur.

eak rt the plague, which has fof the it two years raged in Persian Kurdisn, owed its origin to the opening rt roe old eaves, wMch forty years ago, served es burial places for the victiuri inner epidemie. There could-be licioneol contagion broogbt froi elsewhere, as plague was not known t cist either.in *ala Minor or in Perm i the summer rt 1870. One of the perme earliest attacked woe seized a few sura after he had been engaged in the ork of excavating a cavern for harborig sheep among uie hiHs near the vilige. While thus engaged he had disiterred a quantity of human bones. The other person had olso been attacked soon after removing same hnnum bones which he hsd fonnd in a neighboring cavern in which flooks were sheltered. It was ascertained that the places in which Be bones had been found were the spots where the deed who had died from u attack of plague which hod depopulated some rt the villages rt the district forty years before, hsd been buried. During 1829-32 it is well known that plague was widely disseminated in northwestern Persia, Aria Minor, ud Arabia. The recent outbreak ia i’eraiu Kurdistan, in short, 1 followed almost immediately upon the opening rt the two old plague pits, ud to this opening the outbreak probably

id popular plus, agents find it io dralresapirasant ud remuu isinesa, ud does not care t

o and energetic mu. A good busiesn be done in' uy lAcality. The it territory-is being rapidly takes ad persons interested should apply ,ce to the head office, 816 and 84! dway, New York.—Gem. - rxonone Taolus, the celebrated Mtm-leodor, says the Masox * Hakldi Cabinet, Groans are Jhe best in the wqrld, excelling i ” richer, bettor qualities

MASOy&^HAMLIN " T ”v^” 1 ~^ , .§Sssn;

ZEST

Wealth of Dairying Districts.

“■HI

slight--1

districts , York, is said to sMp unttally ov< 000,000 pdunds of checao, ud 300,000 ids of ■butter, worth 84,500,000. " " N. Y., perhaps as mneh.

fdMJe .

St. Albans, Vermont, ships —,— pounds of cheeea, 2,750,000 pounds of butter, worth in the market 81,250,000. The village of Wellington, Ohio, shir - -’ 1,000,000 pounds of cheese in 1 worth 8500,000, The products of dairy ere sold for cosh, ud hence 'Otnnm ore quick. This indnatzg enables the munfseturer to reduce a large bulk of food into amall

through the two

i know how it is yourself." If you have not fomsl It out jot, try th. Elmwood Conor that hsa noatad ioeb a furoroand mada no look no handsome.—Com. , ison's Anodyne Liniment may be usod-10 sdvantago whore uy Psln KUIer U darn the stomach. It Is unduuhledly liie beat t

PKRItT DA WSPAIX-KILLEn. s ~-S“

litual constipation leads to the folreoulta t lefluuastiou pt llw'kidiieya. 1 nsrreos headaoba, hffioousoa. dyaDec Dooley's Yeast Powders i. rellafc light, .WOOL whcloume Bloeulla, Itolia. For loss ot Appetite, Dyepepma, di«ootioa. DopreoJon of Brirlto sod Ou I)«balty, iathotr various toruia, _FlsK>-Pi SSSjm Fnioo's IibtTi

ientieta when we reflect that by larger part of this heal faros axItself upon the earth in actual work, only a email portion of it being radiated into snaoe. Of course the result accomplished, ouch as the meintanuoe of uie temperature of the earth.

sgsr* ■

the courts of New York, hsa had a poaitive oetUament Train wro charged with aonding immoral literature through

itV «•> --T-wrtt rtf

omour —- -*• '■V'swyll.0 SOS HsHSu., oro. ■...iiere^r;

CHICAGO. MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY. Itliwsukao a It Paul lailway 09.)

IS

fASaSSEj'S iSreVoaiSraSl cStzi'SrthwLSiasSi.. - ?*■. 1 44 '

Dr. Whittier, "VKSyFK' 1

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THE GREAT ALTERATIVE

AND BLOOD PURIFIER. Q is pot a qtiadk nostrum. The ingredients are published on eaen bottle of medicine. It

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g——^ tCATISM, WHITE BWELUJUft <301T, OO/TBE BBOKCniTIS, EEE YOU DEBILITY, lECIElEEl COESOAIPTTOE, andslldinMM which yon will find certifica from reliable end trnftwort Physiciana, Ministers of the floapel and others. ftfeftggSffigs -« svpwKw - iiejsrohbra^M^imioa^tol •tSBtSSiassrzsz:

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MAGNETIC BALM. tz&as

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12,000,000_ ACBES ! Cheap Farms T

UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY, «1 MS ajWJMTTU vouax.

$40 BsSrg^g.Ta.affla.-aa;-

3 ssasai.gqii&'gBaaaEi.yg THEA-NECTAR

$1.000.

MOTHEES! MOTHERS.

MOTHERS!

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