Newspaper Page Text
CURE EV T PA ll A (!K A P as.
Three Russian officers" inspected a
powder mill near Portland, Me., last
January, and endeavored to purchase
improved machinery like that which was
there in use. This they were unable to
do, but they made contracts for the man
ufacture and shipment of a large quan
tity of powder worth §250,000.
Japan has a wouderful postoflice de
partment, for a 'jew country. During
1876, postal-letters, communications and
other articles transported through the
mails, numbered 30,862,614; the total
amount of transportation was 13,406,-
115 milesand the total cost of the de
partment was only §713,244, owing to
small r claries and cheap labor.
A gentleman is a rarer thing than
tome of us think for. Which of us can
(point out many such in his circle; men
whose aims are generous, whose truth is
■constant and elevated, who can look the
world honestly in the face, with equal
manly sympathy for the great and the
small ? We all know a hundred whose
coats are well made and a score who
have excellent manners, but of gentle
men, how many ? Let us take a little j
scrap of paper, and each make his list, j
The Sultan will proclaim a “holy
war.” Russia has proclaimed also a
“holy war.” England’s possible war
must, of course, be “ holy.” Every one
of the combatants, bible or koran in one
hand and sword in the other, will bellig
erently exclaim to each other, “lam
holier than thou. Our torpedoes are
holier than your torpedoes; and our
bombs, bayonets and bullets are the only
holy bombs, bayonets and bullets in the
world.”
That wild, untamed American po
tentate Don Pedro shocked Emperor
William the other day by wearing a
black cravat at the emperor’s reception.
Besides he was out when the Kaiser
called on him at his hotel. The brazen
emperor from Brazil in point of eti
quette seems a regular bull in a china
shop and his eccentricities justify the
probability of next hearing of him at
some court with his pants tucked in his
boots and his shirt outside his panta
loons, the custom of the country in
Brazil. — Graphic.
The moistening of coal witli a view
to increase its heating effect is frequently
practiced. A calculation in a Ger
man journal, based upon a careful con
sideration of the products formed and
the heat generated in their combustion,
together with the specific heat of the
products of combustion and of the air
required, as well as of the heat rendered
latent in the steam, demonstrates not
only that heat is obtained from the coal,
but that the temperature produced is
lower than with dry coal, and that there
is consequently a waste of fuel. It is
admitted that in exceptional cases of
dusty coal it may be advisable to moisten
it to render it more compact, and pro
mote the access of the air in burning.
It is the general impression in Italy
that bread made from Indian corn is un
wholsome, frequently producing sporadic
diseases, which often terminate fatally.
The facta appear te be well established,
and the result to depend upon a condi
tion of mouldiness which is very apt to
supervene in consequence of the method
of preparing bread in that country.
Quite recently some chemists have suc
ceeded in separating from mouldy Indian
meal an alkaloid substance, which is
white, easily alterable, non-crystalline,
insoluble in water, soluble in alcohol and
ether, which acts poisonously on man
and animals. It is especially noteworthy
that the sulphuric acid solution, when
oxidizing agents are added, has a bltie
color, strikingly similar to that of the
corresponding reaction of strychnine.
Miss Adelaide Neilson says of the
women of Shakspeare: “It would take a
volume to classify them: Each and
every one is a different creation,and their
characters illustrate peculiar compari
sons of mind and force. In the character
of Desdemona we see a powerful illustra
tion of conjugal devotion, and the strong
est sympathy is excited for her sorrowful
fate. In Isabella’s is displayed a high- :
souled principle; in Juliet’s,an enthusi
astic love; in Constance is seen the
highest forms of maternal agony; in
Margaret of Anjou, the sternest energies
of our sex; in Katharine, the complete
ness of resignation; in Rosalind, wit and
romance; in Cleopatra, the beginning
and end of coquetry ; in Imogen, an af
fection that is deathless; in Ophelia, the
fate of a broken heart and a maddened
brain; in Cordelia’s character we have
the beautiful lesson of filial obedience;
in Miranda’s, innocence; sweetness in
that of Anne Page, and a playful freedom
in that of Jessica. In all, Shakspcare
shows a true appreciation of female ex
cellence, and he makes them talk and
act like true women ”
The Norwich Bulletin man remarks;
• A North Carolina paper speaks of a
biby which was born black and subse
quently turned white. In the latitude
a baby is usually born white and turns
to a lively yeller.”
(Ll)c Jcettji Sentinel.
VOL. I.
sritiKd ha is iy bcriangton.
Dowu where (he wake-robin springs from itsslmu
bers,
Opening its cardinal eye to the sun ;
Come the dull echoes of far away thunders
Heavy and fast as the shots of a gun.
Up on the hill where the wind flowers nestle,
Like new falltn stars on the green mossy strand ;
'1 here come the dead notes of the house cleaning
pestle—
The found of the carpet is heard in the land.
Up ! tor the song birds their matins arc singing ;
Up, for the morinng is tinting the skies ;
Up. lor the good wife the switches is bringing,
Out to the line where the hall carpet flies.
Up ana away for the carpet is dusty !
Fly, for the house cleaning days have beguu !
Run, for the womanly temper is crusty ;
Up and be doing, lest ye be undone !
Late, late, too late. Just one moment of snoring,
He wakes to the sound of the tumult below.
O’er the beating of carpets he hears a voice roaring,
“ Breakfast was over three hours ago! ”
See, be is plunged in the front of the battle,
Where dust is the thickest they teil him to stand ;
Where suds, mops and scrub brushes spatter and
rattle,
And the sound of the carpet is heard in the land.
—Burlington Ihurkege.
DARK DA TS OF CA LIT OR
NIA.
ltieh Men Impoverished—Thousands of
People Suffering for the very Xeccssi
ties of Life—The Bur sling of the Big
Bonanza .
I find things in a frightful condition
here. East of the Rocky mountains,
you have no idea of the terrible depres
sion upon this coast. We are suffering
! from a complication of disorders. The
great mining bubble has bursted and has
ruined every one. I mean this literally,
for not only have the rich or the middle
class suffered, but the mania for specula
tion has spread down to the very ser
vants, and they are all to-day out of
pocket and in debt. Men who but three
or four months since supposed they were
rich, are to-day begging for employment;
and probably three persons out of every
four are now making their first acquain
tance with extreme poverty. The whole
community seems to be beggared, and to
add to our affliction we have just passed
through a great drought; our cattle are
dying by the hundreds of thousands.
Their carcaseses cannot be sold for any
sum however small; and the ruin of the
cattle dealers will inevitably bring a
great deal of the land now held in
massesfinto the market to be sold for a
song.
People east, who have money, could
not do better than to come out here in
order to take advantage of the reckless
way in which all kinds of property are
sold. Valuable farms and ranches can
now be had for one-twentieth of their
value, and city property is for sale at
prices which would have seemed ridicu
lous a few years back. The depression
is so great that it cannot last much longer
in this way. But the suffering is intoler
able, and bad as times have been in the
east, they are as naught compared with
the disaster which has overtaken the
residents of the Pacific coast. Thousands
are going to Arizona, where there is said
to be gold for the digging; and the
agricultural population will be increased,
although at present agriculture is the
most depressed industry we have. Word
has been sent to John McCullough, in
New York, that there is no use in his
returning to the Pacific coast, and that
his theatre will have to be closed. This
is the second year of drought since the
settlement of California.
Southern California is described as an
“ash heap/’ while the Sonoma, Sacra
mento and Sonora valleys are burnt to a
crisp. On one ranch alone 25,000 sheep
were killed because they could net be
fed.
The costly exchanges here, far superior
to any you have in New York, are
vacant, andhaveproved to be California’s
greatest folly. Lookout for trouble
among the representative millionaires of
the Pacific coast. —Correspondent of the
Graphic.
tVA TEH AS AS liISVJSRA OR.
No one can exist without consuming a
certain quantity of water, which is the
essential basis of all drinks. It has been
calculated that the body of a man weigh
ineeleven stone contains sixty-six pounds
of solid matters and eighty-eight pounds
of water, and that he loses in various
ways about six pounds of water in twen.
ty-four hours, and this loss of water must
be supplied in his food and drink. In
the ordinary physiological processes noth
ing passes in the blood, and nothing
passes out of it, without the invterven
tion, in some way or another, of water as
a solvent. It will thus be seen that
water plays a most important part in re
lation to animal life and nutrition. It
is also the agent by which the body is
cleansed inwardly as well as outwardly,
and is a necessary, though not quite so
obvious, that the interior of our bodies
should be washed and made clean as the
exterior. In the processes of nutrition—
in the physical and chemical changes
upon which life dej>ends— effete waste
JESUP, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 30 1577.
products are constantly being discharged
I into the blood from the tissues of the
I body, and these have to be got rid ol;
for if they are permitted to accumulate
in the blood the body becomes poisoned
by them, and life is destroyed as certainly
as if a large dose of prussic acid or opium
were introduced from without. Men do
indeed frequently die, poisoned by toxic
agents which they manufacture within
their own organisms. One of the uses
of water, taken into the body as a bever
age, is to dissolve these effete products
of the work of the organism, and so to
convey them out of the body through
the action of the secreting organs. Water
is readily absorbed into the blood and is
rapidly discharged from it. In its rapid
course through the body it washes,
so to speak, the circulating fluid, and
carries away, through the channels
of exertion, substances, the reten
tion of which in the blood would
prove in the highest degree harmful. It
may readily be imagined that pure, un
adulterated water performs that lunction
better than anv modification of it which
we may drink as a beverage. It is, how
ever, true that some slightly mineralized
waters pass through the organism with
even greater rapidity than pure water,
on account of the stimulating action the
most of them exercise on certain of the
excretory organs. Mild alkaline waters
may also, under certain circumstances,
prove more cleansing than pure water,
on account of their greater solvent action
on some substances. The quantity of
water we need in the form of beverage
depends greatly on the nature of the
other substances we consume as food.
With a dietary composed largely of suc
culent vegetables and fruit, very little of
any kind of beverage is required. Much
also depends on the manner in which our
solid food is cooked—whether, in the
case of animal food, the natural juices of
the flesh are retained in it or not; much,
too, will depend on those atmospheric
and other conditions which determine
the amount of fluid lost by evaporation
from the surface of the Indy. The sensa
tion of thirst is the natural warning
that the blood wants water. I may here
remark, incidentally, that it is not a
wise custom to take excessive quantities
of any fluid, even simple water, with our
food, for by so doing we dilute too much
the digestive juices, and so retard their
solvent action on the solid food we have
consumed. A draught of fluid, how
ever, towards the end of digestion is often
useful in promoting the solution and
absorption of the residuum of this pro
cess, or in aiding its propulsion along the
digestive tube. Hence the custom of
taking tea a few hours after dinner, or
seltzer or soda water a little before bed
time.
STRENGTH OF GIB It A LTAII.
Gibraltar, for more than one hundred
and seventy years, las been in a condi
tion to defy any quarter, it is amass
of solid gray marble, connected with the
southern extremity of Spanish Anda
lusia by a narrow peninsula, which is
entirely commanded by the fortress.
The rock, at its highest point 1,439 feet
above the level of the sea, is completely
honeycombed with batteries, bomb-proof
and every species of defensive contriv
ance. Cannon of the largest calibre
frown along its face, steep escarps bar all
paths up the almost perpendicular as
cent, immense cisterns and magazines
furnish abundant supplies of water and
ammunition, and there is always a sufli
cienV stock of provisions to last three
years. The ordinary gariison consists of
about 5,000 infantry, 1,000 artillery and
a picked corps of engineers; and in case
of emergency there are accommodations
for double this force. The last and most
ntemorable siege Gibraltar endured
begun in June, 1779, and ended in Feb
ruary, 1783. The combines armies and
fleets of France and Spain pounded the
impregnable walls in vain for the three
and eight months, and then gave up the
hopeless task. The British lost 333
killed, 536 from disease, 4t from deser
tion, and the wounded numbered 1,008.
The casualties on the other side are not
known. Since then there has been no
attempt to rob England of her priceless
possession; a possession, by the way, of
which she robbed Spain. The present
strengthening of Gibraltar means that
England does not intend to be “caught
napping,” and that the government does
not know lufw soon this matchless citadel
may be needed as a base of operations in
the Mediterranean and the further east.
Ixjuis XIV. threatened to turn the tide
less sea into “a French lake;” Alex
ander, if he had the opportunity, would
gladly make it a Russian lake; but as
long as England holds Gibraltar; the
key of the western door; the Mediter
| ranean is, to all intents and purposes, an
! English lake. —Nashville American.
lilW XING THE PUSS I,IS
IS.I I TERIKS.
Hobart Pasha’s Sarcessfu t Ban Through
the Blockade at Halatz.
The account of Hobart Pasha’s defi
ance of the Russians on the Danube
makes a thrilling story. It is stated
that while his vessel was lying near
Rustchuk the Turkish authorities re
ceived intelligence of the arrival of the
Russians at Galatz, and that they were
placing, torpedoes in the river. Hybart
I’asi.v. was advised to leave his ,steamer
in tlk t<rnule and return to GVnatanli
nopljTby Varna, but disdaining all such
counsel he declared that he would rather
blot' up his ship than desert her. Night
he made everything ready
for miming into the Black sea in opposi
tion to all Russian hostile intentions,
getting clear fires under the boilers of
liis in order to avoid smoke from
her funnel, and making other arrange
ments. The Rethymo, be it said, is a
very fast boat, capable of steaming at
the rate of fifteen Knots an hour. When
Hobart Pasha started on his daring ex
pedition the I)aube current was run
ning swiftly, being estimated at fully
five knots an hour. Upon nearing Galatz
he found that heavily armed Russian
batteries commanded the river, looking
capable of sinking anything afloat, be
sides the torpedoes reported to be hidden
beneath the waters. Immediately it was
dark the word was passed “lights out,”
and the steamer sped rapidly along. The
batteries were soon reached, and the
Russian lanterns, the heavy guns, and
soldiers in great number were visible to
those who manned the saucy Rethymo,
when suddenly a rocket was sent up
from the Roumanian shore to apprise the
Muscovite gunners of Hobart Pasha's
coming. Other rockets followed in quick
succession. Then the hoarse word of
command was distinctly heard; bugles
sounded, and the drums beat merrily,
summoning the Russians to their posts-
Hobart Pashaexpected every moment to
be blown out of the water by the fire of
thi'Heavy guflS'he waft treating so cava
lierly, but being determined to mate ef
forts in some degree proportionate to the
great risk lie was facing, he ran his ves
sel close to shore—not forty metres from
the batteries lhemselves--indeed, so near
that the Russian gunneis were unable to
compress their piece* 'ffieuntly fast to
get a good aim. His boat went quickly
by at twenty knots an hour, and soon all
danger was over. When satisfied he had
nothing to fear from his enemies, Hobart
Pasha ordered the crew of the Rothymo,
which carries one 40-pound Armstrong
gun, to throw one shell into the center
of the Russian camp, an order which
was quickly obeyed, the missile bursting
in the midst of the Muscovite tents.
Its effects were of course unknown, but
it was the first cannon shot fired upon
the Danube in the Russio Turkish war.
Hobart Pasha subsequently proceeded to
< 'onstantinople, where he received a
hearty 'welcome and enthusiastic con
gratulations.
Hobart Pasha reports the Russians in
great force close to Galatz, making pre
parations apparently to cross the Dan
ube, and enter the Dobrudscha, to move
upon Varna. He also found that twelve
Russian gunboats bad been brought by
rail [across Roumania. and were ready
for launching in the river. He has
formed an opinion that the depth of wa
ter is insufficient to enable gunboat ope
rations against Galatz to be successfully
carried out, but believes if he were al
lowed to act he could prevent any cross
ing of the Russians. The Muscovites
fired shot and shell in considerable quan
tities, but the daring of Hobart Pasha
carried him into the Black sea, past all
danger, with flying colors.—A T . Y. Than.
IMMORTALITY.
The wife of W. S. Robinson (“ War
rington,” the well-known newspaper cor
respondent;, in her biography of him
says:
“A few weeks before his death he sat
one day, sis was his wont, before his ojien
fire, in a meditative posture, with his
hands at rest. His wife spoke to him,
and he looked up, with the bright smile
so well remembered by all who knew
him, and said: “It is curious how the
immortality of the soul grows upon you.
As I have been sitting here day after
| day it has come to me, arid I am sure of
!of it—as sure of it, arid of living again,
|as I am that I am here—more sure, for
I don’t know half the time whether I
!am here in the body or not. It is ju-t
like going into another room into that
j room (pointing to the open parlor door
s near him). ‘Why, this world and the
! next ere joined as closely as my two
hands.’ o|>ening them and placing them
I together, one above the oilier, with palms
NO. 31).
i ,
reserved; * there they are—no break, no
break lx tween, no gulf to paß. i feel
•very day like one who walks by a hedge,
and is looking for a gate, a gap to go
through, to *walk on the other side.’
After that the subject was one of com
mon talk, and was spoken of in the
midst of every-day a flairs. Frequently,
when he was spoken to he would look
up, smile and place his hands as I have
described, saying, ‘No break, no break.’
G°d was good to him, He had tried to
lead tbijtpeeple-td truth and right in this
life; was it not given, him, in part,
to lead them still farther—to a belienn
the life beyond, toward the great Center
of Truth and Right itself.”
RUSSIA 9 SRULE OR RUIN '
POLICY.
Views of the Eitylish Admiral Who Com
mands the Turkish Nary.
So at last the farce is played out;
diplomacy retires on its laurels, and
Russia, forsooth, is to have the task of
teaching the Turks how to rule their
peoples. Cleverly has Europe been hood
winked, cleverly has her persistent enemy
played her game. Now we shall see
what an oppressed nation of 15,000,000
can do against a powerful (if a somewhat
divided) nation of 80,000,000, when it
has to do battle for its very existence ;
now we shall see Poles, Circassians, Geor
gians, and the brave Hungarians setting
aside all questions of religious differences
and rallying round the Turk, thinking
only of revenge for past injuries inflicted
on them by this would-be instructor in
the art of governing; and we shall pro
bably see enough blood flow to satisfy
even the most rabid humanitarian. Let
us have no more ravings about fanaticism
and Turkish misrule. The war now so
imminent (if not actually declared while
1 write) will he a war waged on one side
for aggression and spoilation, based on
Catherine's dream and Peter the Great’s
will; on the other, by a nation which is
not actuated by fanatical reasons, but
which will fight—aye, and fight hard—
for the hearths and homes of its people
and its honor as a nation. It is a grand
sight to see an array and navy such as
the Turkish, without pay for months—
aye, you might say for years—sacrificing
all for their country; no tobacco, often
short rations, hut happy as children anil
brave aslions. However, thank govdnessl
they are well armed and clothed and
ready for anything in the way of hard
work. Sir, I have been accused of espous
ing tiie cause of the l urks with too great
warmth. No man has more oj>enly con
demned or more deeply regretted the
sad events in Bulgaria. No one has cen
sured the bad system of government ex
isting heretofore more than myself. Hut
I find in history many parallel cases
during civil wars, and, as I know that
there is so much real good in the Turks,
I have always urged that they should
have a chance given to them, in which
case I foresee happy times anti a great
future for this country. The lessons they
have received have not been thrown
away; but I phrophecy fearful results if
this war (supposing it to have been de
clared while I write) is allowed to go on.
The Turks ask, with reason, “ What does
Russia want? Is it guarantees of re
form ?” “ Gan we, ” they say, “ begin
a strict regime of government by accept,
ing at the outset humiliation in the eyes
of those we are to govern? The only
guarantee we can offer is immediate
action, and this we cannot put into prac-
tice till we are free not only from war> i
intrigue. ” I fear that no !
guarantee weuld satisfy Russia. Let j
Eurojie guess what she wants and look |
to her own interests while she (Europe) !
stands gravely by and sees a brave nation
dismembered. But we have not come to I
that yet. Turkey will prove a hard, a
very hard nut to crack. One hears (re
ports are al ways magnified) of the dis
turbances here and there even now in
the provinces. How can you expect
anything else while every subject of
Turkey has to give almost his last farth
ing in support of the army and navy?
Your obedient servant,
Hobart Pasha.
.Silislra, lianubc, April 26.
l/Iter to the London Times.
A tramp, with last fall’s fracture
still shining in his simple apparel, hid it
yesterday by sitting down on the curb
stone opposite the hippodrome, and he
softly sighed; “I wish I wuz a little
daug! ’f I wuz a little daug I could set
in a silver bird-cage, with a gold collar
on, and hev the ladies feed me with
cookies, an’ poke me with ther parasols,
and call me splendid, instead of settin’
’round here dry ez codfish ’cause my
’ristocratic blood rebels against heatin’
carpits.’
aRA VE A Nl> CA Y.
. The pay of a Russian colonel is said
to be ouly .*4OO a year.
In Sweden beggars are arrested and
made to work.
. A rich man can he as big an idiot as
a poor man, Imt people won’t tell him so
half so quick.
There is a newspaper which might
have contained an account of the cruci
fixion of the Savior had there been cor
respondents at the time of that great
event. The Gazette of Pekin, China,
j was started 713 years before the birth of
[ Christ, and is still a journal in good
standing. ,
.. A Nicaragua journal gives an account
of an electric magnet plant, which, ac
cording to the writer, Mr. Levy, is an
extremely remarkable species, and has
been named by him Phycolata rlerlrica.
He maintains that this plant possesses
strong electro magnetic properties—so
much so that, on breaking off a branch,
the hand feels a decided shock, as if from
a Ruhmkorf battery. 11 also affected
the magnetic needle at a distance -ol
ft ven o. paces, and more and more
violently with a hearer approach. No
traoe was seen in the surrounding soil of
iron or other magnetic metal, and the
writer fit % believes that the electric
condition fefcides in the plant itself. He
states thatthe Strength of the phenomena
varies with the time of day, it being al
most zero at night, and attaining its
maximum power about two o’clock in
the afternoon. It is also increased in
stormy weather, hut intermitted during
rain. No insects nor birds were ever
seen near the plants.
AN ENERGETIC CRIRCI.E.
The enterprise of a recent employe of
the New York, New Haven and Hart
ford railroad cannot bo too much praised.
While taking a trunk out of a baggage
car from Boston in the Springfield depot
some time ago, he was thrown down and
hurt. He suffered terribly and crawled
around on crutches until the Boston and
Albany and the New Haven roads united
and gave him $6,000, when be was in
stantaneously and completely cured.
Shortly afterward a man on the Boston
and Albany road was killed, and the
company gave the widow $3,000. The
former Cripple who had scored $6,000 al
ready, Boon married her and thus counted
$9,000. He recovered his health so com
pletely that he was able to work again
on the railroad, hut finally, not being
hurt again within a reasonable time, he
retired to a farm, which he had bought
with a part of the proceeds of his former
calamities, and where he is living in
peace and quietness and under the con
solations of the reflection that virtue is
its own reward.
A nibKOVS PROTECTION.
A pleasant story is told by Sir John
Lubbock, quoting from Weissmann,
illustrative of the means of protection
which some insects possess. The cater
pillar of the sphinx moth is quite as good
food lor birds as any other insect; but it
is perfectly protected by its ugliness. Its
face is its fortune, having two groat s)K>ts
on it which look like eyes when the
caterpillar wriggles. In general the insect
is suggestive of a small snake, especially
when it is frightened wo that it draws
back its heail and shows its false eyes to
advantuge. M. Weissmann put one of
these caterpillars into a seed tray where
he usually fed sparrows and other small
birds. The first bird that alighted on
the edge of the tray, perceiving the insect,
became half paralyzed with fear. Eight
or ten birds joined the first one, but all
stood on the edge of the tray, afraid to
go in. One bird flew into the tray at first,
but on seeing the caterpillar hastily
scrambled out and joined the company
on the edge that were bobbing their
heads up and down, and looking into
the tray as if half terrified. After the
caterpillar was removed the birds went
into the tray for seeds as usual.
UK. KVARTS’* ASRCDOIE.
Mr. Evarts, in the course of his argu
ment, the other day before the court of
appeals told a story which caused those
who listened to him, including part of
the bench, to smile broadly if not audi
bly. He wished to illustrate the ex
treme complacency with which the coun
sel who appeared on behalf of the New
York elevated railways viewed the vast
damage to property owners which was
involved in building such roads. He
said it reminded him of the Irish land
lord who, while travelling on the conti
nent, received a letter from his balifl'.
The haliff wrote that the tenants insisted
that the rents they were called upon to
i nay were too high, and that they went so
far as to threaten to shoot him if he did
not obtain a reduction from the princi
pal. The landlord promptly wrote back
to the plaintiff: “Say to the tenants
that I will not come down a penny, and
assure them that the threat they make
shall not influence me in the slightest
decree.” — Albany Journal.
A BEAUTIFUL WOMAN must be
hf-ahbv, and to continue healthy and beau
tiful, you roust take Dr. J. M. MeLeau’s
Strengthening Cordial and Blood Purifier.
It imuartH tone and Hush to the *kin, stieugth,
viiror and pure blood. Dr. .1. H. McLcau s
office, 314 Chestnut St., St. Louis, Mo.