Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, August 14, 1897, Page 7

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FARM AND GARDEN. 1 MATYERS OF INTEREST TO AGRICULTURISTS. So%/e Up-to-Date Hints Abeut Cultiva- . of the Soil and Yields Thereof— jorticulture, Viticulture and Flori- culture. Stick to the Farm. FRIEND of ours owned a good farm a few years ago, about two miles from a_ thriving city, writes T. B. Terry, in Practical Farmer, He and his sons lived on it and had a fine home and were prosper- ing slowly. But they got it in their heads that they could live easier and do better by moving to town and going into some business. And they went, renting the farm. They borrowed money on it, and put that with what they had and started a gro- cery store. He is a man of more than average ability. They all worked ear- ly and late for success. Last year. however, was too much for them. They had to trust out too much, and the laboring people had ‘so little money, and there was so much competition among the dealers to get that, that the weakest had to go down. The sheriff ld the farm, and everything else They have nothing. As they are particular friends of ours, We feel deubly sorry for them. Now, my good riends, don’t you often think that farming is a poor business, and wish you were out of it and at something ° And don’t you know that the usua! result would be about as describ- ed above? You cannot sell your farm and put your money into any business today that is honorable and legitimate and safe that will pay you as well. Let us look this matter squarely in the face, and take courage and go ahead and make the best of our business. There is no chance to do any better, as a rule, nor as well, all things consid- ered, with the capital invested. I was talking the other day with a shrewd old gentlk man, who has considerable property. He remarked: “I keep enough money in farm land to support myself and family well if everything else went to the dogs. I risk the rest im. business.” There is nothing safer than good farm land. We have got enough, too, to support us well, no mat- ter what comes. People must eat, and farmers can always live, on the aver- age. A family out of debt, owning a good farm, reasonably improved, are well fixed in this world’s goods. When to Water Plants, Should plants be watered during sun- shine? Why not, if they need it? The watering of the plant should be gov- erned by its condition and surround- ings. The whole thing, in a nutshell, water a plant when it does require A@PA it, says a writer in American Garden- ing. From my own experience I have never had any bad results from water- ing flowers during sunshine, any more than in dull weather. During sunshine and bright weather the evaporation from most plants is more excessive than in dull weather; consequently plants call for more nourishment in the form of water, and if the plants are growing fast, and the pots are full of roots, I often find it necessary to waier them three or four times a day. Air, run and light are important factors in building up the plant, and one is not much use without the other. Water containing solubie matter is absorbed by the roots and travels through the plant as crude sap, passing upwards to the leaves; there it forms a combina- tion with carbonic acid gas, derived from the air, then by the action of sun and light is refined and digested. As the sun plays such an important part in the disintegration (as it were) of the food of the plant, I cannot see how it would have any injurious effect, to water plants during sunshine; but would look at it as a thing essential if the plants needed it. I always aim to have watering done early in the morn- ing or about tliree or four o’clock in the afternoon, for the simple reason that it facilitates the work, as well as economizes the water; but as I said be- fore, I would not scruple to water a batch of plants during sunshine if they needed it, and would consider I was helping nature by doing so. Currants and Gooseberries. Take cuttings of currants in Septem- ber after the new wood has ripened, as may be seen by having turned brown, sa. Vick’s Magazine. Make them about six inches in length, from the new wood, removing the leaves. Plant them so that only one bud is left above the surface and they will take root in the fall and be ready to make growth promptly in the spring. Some leaves or litter should be laid around them when cold weather comes on, t© prevent them from heaving when the frost comes out of the groanel. Cuttings of the gooseberry are more difficult to root, but treated in the same way a portion of those made from owr American varieties will root. But the better way to raise gooseber- om is by layering. This can be done early as the latter part of July. w the soil up about a bush and lay the branches partly down upon it and heap fine soif up over them, spatting it down well with the back of the spade to make {ft lie close to the wood. The leaves should be removed from the portions of the stems which are cov- ered. Leave the plants earthed up in this way all winter and in spring level off the soil and eut away the rooted pranches and plant them out to make a set of strong roots before final trans- planting for fruiting. From the plant thus employed (called a stool plant), another set of shoots will grow, and at ! the proper time in summer it can ‘be | EYES NOT ESSENTIAL TO SIGHT earthed up, and thus an annual crop of plants be produced. Quick Curing Cheese. The following observations anent the procuring of a quick-curing cheese are made in a bulletin issued by the Ontario agricultural college. The bulletin, it may be explained, was issued for the benefit of ‘actcry authorities. 1. Accept nothing but pure, sweet milk. 2. Heat to 86 degrees and then make a rennet test. 3. Set the milk when the rennet test is about 18 seconds, or at suffic- ient ripeness so that the curd will “dip” in about two and a half hours. 4. Use sufficient rennet to coagulate the milk in about twenty minutes, This will require from three to four ounces of standard rennet. (Be surt that your rennet is all right.) 5. Do no cut more than three times unless the milk is over ripe. Retain plenty of moisture in spring curds for an early market, Our spring cheeses are usually too dry and harsh. 6. Heat slowly to 96 degrees—not above this temperature, as it is desir- able to retain moisture. 7. Dip at the first appearance of acid. If the acid does not show on the hot iron, use the alkali test. Do not leave the curd in the whey more than three hours, even if the hot iron indi- cates “no acid.” If you test with the alkali you will find plenty of acid at the end of three hours, provided the temperature is kept up to 98 degrees, The hot iron is not always reliable at this point. 8. Mill early—as soon as the curé becomes meaty and shows about on¢ inch on the hot iron. 9. Hand-stir sufficiently to improve flavor, but not enough to lose all the moisture. 10. Salt at the rate of about two pounds to 1,000 pounds of milk, and before the grease runs too freely. Al- low the curds to stand longer in the salt. You will thus save butter fat, and will not be troubled with “greasy” curds. Many are sacrificing a good deal of butter fat for the sake of get- ting a “close” cheese. 11. Keep the temperature of the curing room at about 70 degrees, anc thus hasten the curing. 12. Do not allow a cheese to g¢ into the curing room which is noi nicely finished, nor one to leave it un- til it is at least two weeks old. Noi a few are ruining their reputation by shipping curd to their customers. The writer heard of a case this spring where cheese was made on Saturday and shipped the following Tuesday, Such a practice cannot be too strongly condemned. 13. To sum up: In order to obtair fat, meaty, quick-curing cheese whick will. be fit to eat in about a montk after making, use plenty of good ren- net; leave sufficient moisture in the curd; salt lightly; keep the tempera- ture of the curing room up to 70 de- grees, night and day; and keep the cheese in the curing room for at least two weeks. The Farmer's Creed. Prof. Irby of North Carolina State College, furnishes the following to the Progressive farmer: We believe in small well-tilled farms: that the soil must be fed as well as the owner, so that the crops shall make the farm and the farmer rich. We believe in thorough drainage, in deep plowing, and in labor saving im- plements, We believe in good fences, barns conveniently arranged, good orchards and gardens, and plenty of home raised hog and hominy. We believe in raising pure bred stock or in grading up the best to be gotten; they equal the thoroughbreds. We believe in growing the best va- rieties of farm crops and saving the choicest for seed. We believe in fertilizing the brain with phosphorus as well as applying it to the soil. We believe in the proper care and application of barn-yard manure. We believe that the best fertilizers are of little value unless accompanied by industry, enterprise and intelli- gence. We believe in rotation, diversifica- tion and thorough cultivation of erops. We believe that every farm should own a good farmer and that every good farmer will eventually own a good farm. Winter Protection. I have not had a great deal of suc- cess in the cultivation of flowers and roses, but I have a very simple plan of protecting them: I lay down the rose and cover it with leaves, and when I] uncover it in the spring I find that it is quite fresh. In some instances the buds have begun to shape before the leaves are taken off. One season a keen frost came and they were set back, and we had no roses that year. I now adopt the plan of driving a stick down along- side the bush. I then gather the branches together, tie them with a string, and put a hoop around the bottom. I put ordinary rye straw around the inside of that hoop and then put on another hoop around the top; and I find that there is sufficient protection to enable them to come out all right. My grapevines I cover with earth. Three years ago I took them up; they started very early; there was a late frost and I had no fruit that year. The next year I covered them with evergreens, and I had not much more success. Last year I allowed them to«stay up on the trellises and take their chances, and I had a better crop before the frost came than I had had for the last three years. If you have a wet, warm season and protect them toc much you injure them.—Parker, Keep clean fresh water always before your poultry. Clean water and ap airy, dry and clean poultry house ar¢ tbe best preventives of disease known, Many Creatures Enabled to See by the Ald of Sensitive Skins. From the Boston Journal: Eyes are popularly considered to be quite nec-,| essary to sight, but this is an error, if we are to believe Dr. Nagel, a re- cent German experimenter. Many creatures without eyes can see; at least they can distinguish perfectly well be- tween light and darkness and even be- tween different degrees of light. This is the lowest degree of seeing, to be sure, but still it is really sight, and differs scarcely more from the vision of some insects that possess eyes than this does from our own clear sight. Creatures that see without eyes see by means of their skins. All skins, says Dr. Nagel, are potential eyes; that is, they are sensitive to light. In animals that have eyes the sensitiveness has been highly localized and greatly in- creased—so that man, for instance, has a retina very sensitive to light and an expanse of ordinary skin which possesses a sensitiveness to light so slight that it is hardly conscious of it. Yet his skin is sensitive in some de- gree, as is proved by the fact that it sunburns—that is, light may cause a disturbance in the pigment of the skin just as it does in that of the eye. In the eye the disturbance is accompan- ied by a nervous change which sends a telegraphic message along the optic nerve to the brain. In the skin, too, there are nerves, and there are mes- sages also, but their tidings imprint no image on the mind; they simply express discomfort—cry out “sunburn.” But in many eyeless creatures the lack of eyes is in part made up by increased sensitiveness of the whole skin sur- face to light. Darwin long ago noticed that earthworms, although they have no eyes, will suddenly withdraw into their holes at the approach of a lighted candle. Some creatures seem most sensitive to sudden increase of light; others to sudden diminution, If a num- ber of oysters, kept in a vessel togeth- er, are found to be open, they will shut all at once if a dark object comes between them and the light. Another bivalve, called Psammodia, has long, whitish, transparent tubes which pro- trude from the sand in which it lies buried. If these are suddenly illumi- nated they contract, and the brighter the light the greater the contraction. if a number of them be carried into di- rect sunlight they hasten to bury them- selves in the sand; or, if there is no sand, they move restlessly to and fro in the water until they are exhausted. In general, Dr. Nagel finds that crea- tures which respond to sudden shad- ows are those that live in strong shells, while those affected by a sudden in- crease of light live in sand or mud, from which they emerge occasionally. In both cases the sensitiveness of the skin to changes of light serves to pro- tect the animal. How does the skin acquire this peculiar sensitiveness? It will be best for the non-expert to sus- pend judgment, since even the scien- tists do not agree on this point. It may be that it is a universal and ru- dimentary property of all skin, and that animals with eyes have lost it in a greater or less degree, because they have no further need for it. That is one view. Or it may be that this prop- erty has been developed in eyeless creatures just because they are eyeless and need it. That is another view. Those who favor the latter opinion point to the fact that some of the creatures which now have skins sen- sitive to the light are probably de- scendants of creatures with skins not so sensitive; in these instances the sensitiveness must have been recently developed. Snails are sensitive, but their relatives, the slugs, are not; this looks as if the former had acquired the faculty. However this may be, Dr. Nagle’s study of these curious and out- of-the-way facts is certainly interest- ing and may lead in the future to an advance in our knowledge of the me- chanism of sight. No Chance for Breakage. Gobang.—‘‘He boasts that he never breaks his word. Grymes.—“Tnat’s so. No one will take it long enough to give him the cpportunity.” ITEMS OF INTEREST. Over 4,000,000 frozen rabbits are an- nually exported to the London market from Victoria, Australia. A folding umbrella, which may be carried in the pocket, has been in- vented by a man in Salem, Mass. A tragic elopment occurred near Monclova, Mexico. Macedonia Fransta, aged seventeen, before eloping with his sweetheart, Anita Moyas, shot dead two of her brothers and two other mene In her castle Patti has a phono- graphic apparatus, and into this she frequently warbles. She occasionally Jends the cylinders to her friends at a distance, who have phonographs, that they may listen to her melodious strains. A queer-looking little Mexican dog, a pet of the late Alexander Hermann, the magician, which for twelve years had accompanied him in his travels, died recently at Whitestone, L. I., and was ceremoniously buried in a -costly casket lined with purple broadcloth. A fat woman in bloomers was whirl- ing on her wheel in a street in Kens- ington, England, when she was seen by a dancing bear belonging to an itinerant showman. The animal dash- ed at her and wrecked the bicycle, but the injury to the lady was not serious. About six weeks ago the Rey. T. C. Hanna, of Plantsville, Conn., ‘fell on his head while getting out of his car- riage. The shock caused an entire loss of memory; he could not recognize his relatives or any one who knew him. His relatives are endeavoring to teach him to read and write. Patents Issued. List of patents issued last week to Northwestern inventors: Krank J. Coombs, Columbia Falls, ! Mont., bicycle brake; John A. Markoe, White Bear, Minn., mechanical voting machine; Samuel A. Peterson, Kent, Minn., grain elevator; John G. Starter, Fort Logan, Mont., tire tightener; Ed- ward Shepard, White Sulphur Spriags, Mont., hammer; Zenith Wall Plaster and Finish Co.. Minneapolis, Minn., (trade mark) wall plaster and finish. YT. D. Merwin, Patent Lawyer, 910 Pioneer Press Building, St. Paul, Minn. Artfal Audacity. “So Boracks is going to marry that aged Munn girl, is he?’ “Yes; and the funny part of it is that he told her he wanted to marry her on account of her fortune.” “Bh “He told her she was too young and ; “Here, I told you to sit where you could look through the window in the door and see if the master sgossiped | with the typewriter girl.” “Yes, ma’am.” “Did you do it?” “Yes, ma’am.” “Did you see anything?” “No, ma’am.” “Pooh your eyes must have been glazed!” “No, ma’am, it wasn’t my eyes—it was the window.’—Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Glazed Window. | Read the Advertisements. You will enjoy this publication much better if you will get into the habit of reading the advertisements; they will afford a most interesting study and will put you in the way of getting some excellent bargains. Our adver- foolish to have the care of so much | tisers are reliable; they send what they money.”—Indianapolis Journal. Free Trip to Alaska From St. Paul to Alaska for nothing. Two tickets giv2a away. Enter the ‘‘Klon- dyke’’ word contest. Limited to the first 500 subseribers. You won't see this again. Address Home and Garden, Newspaper Row, St. Paul, Mirn. Too Intelligent. “Do you say that you received a col- lege education?’ asked the court of the would-be juror. “Yes, your honor.” “Challenged for cause.” promptly in- terrupted the counsel for the prisoner. —Detroit Free Press. I know that my life was saved by Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Jonn A. Miller, Au Sable, Mich., April 21, 1895. For hundreds of years, in Malta, bee stings have been considered a certain cure for rheumatism. Circumstances Alter Cases. “You have been in the cigarette busi- } ness so long,” said the anxious moth- er, “that you must be able to give me the information I want. I hope you will candidly swer my question. Are cigarettes injurious to the health?’ “It all depends, ma’am,” said the to- bacco merchant. “On what?’ “On whether you smoke them or sell them.’—Washington Star. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25¢. If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. Yellowstone Park contains an area of 3 square miles. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is a constitutional cure. Price, 75c. A pneumatic bumper, to be used in trolley cars, to knock careless pedestrians out of the way without seriously hurting them, has been contrived by a Balti- morean. Coe’s Cough Balsam Is the oldest and best. It will break up a cold quicker than anything else. It is always reliable. Try it. Too Small to Notice. Magistrate—Did the accused offer any resistance? Officer Knock—Only three dollars, your honor, and a pawn ticket. EDUCATIO: A High Class Academy for Young Ladies. Dubuque, Iowa. Mount St. Joseph ACADEMY FOR GIRLS. Careful Training in Every De- partment, Regular and Elective Courses of Study, Vocal and Instrumental Music, Elocution and Physical Culture. Rates Low. Send for Prospectus. Address the Sister Superior. Papa Consented. Father—Is he a hustling, pushing young man, who is going forward rap- idly? Daughter—Well, somewhat. His cy- clometer shows 2,500 miles so far this year.—Puck. Next to An Approv A vigorous stomach is the greatest of mundane blessings. Sound digestion is a guaranty of quict nerves, muscular clas- ticity, a hearty appetite and a regular habit of body. Though not alw: nat- ural endowment, it mzy be through the agency of Hostetter’s Stom- ach Bitters, one of the most effective in- vigorants and blood fertilizers in exist- ence. This fine tonic also fortifies those Conscience. who use it against n alaria, and remedies { biljousness, constipation and rheumatism. Eleven hundred paper mills are in oper- ation in the United States. Paper mak- ing ranks fifth among our industries. Educate Your Bowels with Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, lOc. If C. C. C fail druggists refund money. Child marriages are so common in India that the average age of a mother when she gives birth to ber first child is ten years. ALASKA! Miner's Guide to the Gold Fields! and jatest authorized map, showirg different roures. All about Placer Mining, Outfits, Retes, Ete., by mail 20c. Taylor Publishing Co., Box 2514, St. Paul, Minn. Some of the women of China are begin- ning to comprehend the folly of com- pressing the feet. A missionary has been enlightening them on the subject. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syru; For children teething,softens the aise inflam- mation,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. A halibut’s tooth made a slight scratch on the thumb of a fisherman in Hull, Eng., and in three days he died of blood poisoning. Don’tTobacco Spit and Smoks Your Life Away, ‘Lo quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag- netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or $1. Cure guaran- teed. Booklet aud sample free. Address Ster- ing Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. At a single bakery in Boston 10,000 pies are baked every day. Edward H. Fleming of Opalville, Idaho, has an opal weighing 600 carats. It is said to be the largest in the world. equired j advertise. The greatest merit of an: medicine is sure relief. That's the great merit of Sagwa. In any and all diseases that are caused by bad blood Kickapoo Indian Sagwa is a specific. Ninety per cent. of diseases be- gin in the blood, and ninety per cent. of diseases are curable by the prompt and proper use of Sagwa. Itexpelsfrom theblood all the corrupting and corroding elements and builds up a new body with new blood. There is no substitute for AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD “CASTORIA,” AND “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” AS OUR TRADE ’MARK. I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” the same- that has borne and does now bear the fac-simile signature of on every: wrapper. CLE This is the original “ PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” which has been used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the kind you have always bowght the wrapper and see that it is and has the signature on the ! Dept Utten per. No one has authority from me to wse my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. March 8, 1897: Auk LRhherlu.De Do Not Be Deceived. Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies. on it), the ingredients of which even he does not know. “The Kind You Have Always Bought” BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF ee oe FO Insist on Having The Kind That Never Failed You. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK ciTY. CEO. A. MOOMAW CoO., We bu: Dakota. Don’t speculate on your cash product GRAIN BUYERS AND COMMISSION, all kinds of Grain and Seeds on track, any station in Minnesota, North and South ; sell‘on track. Write or telegraph for prices. IF YOU WANT TO SPECULATE, DEAL IN FUTURES. 7" Correspondence solicited. Minneapolis. Address all telegrams and mail matter to main office at- CORN EXCHANCE, Minneapolis, Minn. BRANCH OF FICES—Duluth, Chicago, Milwaukee, TEACHERS TEES positions. 10 cents pays for @avs. Blanks a fi nd circulars free. WANTED! Send; for list of 4,000 vacancies—we have several times as many vacancies as members Must have more members. Several plans two plans give free registration one plan GUARAN k, containing plans and a %%00.00 love story of College No charge to employers for recommending teachers. pict TEACHERS’ BUREAU, { REV. DR. 0. M. SUTTON, A. M., } SUTTON TEACHERS’ BUREAU, --Main & 3d Sts.,Louisville,Ky. President and Manager. 69-71 Dearborn St., Chicago, Ti Northern vacancies Chicago office, Southern vacancies Louisville Office. One fee registers in both offices. SLICKER WILL KEEP YOU DRY. Don't be fooled with a mackintosh [rea or rubber coat. If you wantacoat that will keep you dry in the hard- est storm buy the Fish Brand Slicker. If not for sale in your own, write for catalogue to A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. [SS ST. PAUL af Mt MINNEAPOLIS ‘ AND CHICAGO Src orescomen nner no nemsace, eeeeT TF teese Columbias,#$5-$15 Ge £50 Wheel for $20, 875 for “WESTER RAIL, erwees OO 6 Oh Oh Oh Oh, OH Oe Oh Fd = rl | @ WONDERFUL TREATMENT—magical ps #45, C. O. D. on approval. R. A. Warner & Bro., 227 Wabash ‘OURES ‘ip 1 wo 5 days. Guaranteed not to stricture. ~ of mucous membranes, Sa[Prevents contagion. “Painless, and not astrin- THEEVANS CHEMICALCO, gent or poisonous. Sold by Draggists, or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid. foF ~o 1.0, or 3 bottles, $2.75. eS ireuiar sent on’ request. pear oA ee aa $12 TO $35 cerccpreremea woe arto ats whole e to the business. Spare Per WEEK Pours, hough, may. ve protably em: Use Big @ for unnatural discharges, inflammations, irritations or ulceration: rk at SECIFFORD, ith & Main Sta, Richmond. Vn. | N. W. N. U. Established 1879. $100 To Any Man, WILL PAY $100 FOR ANY CASE Of Weakness in Men They Treat and Fail to Cure. An Omaha Company places for the first time before the public a MacicaL TREat- MENT for the cure of Lost Vitality, Nervous and Sexual Weakness, and Restoration of Life Force in o!d and A pa men. No worn-out French remedy; contains no Phosphorous or other harmful drags. It is in its effects—positive in its cure. All readers, who are suffering from a weakness that blights their life, causing that mental and peace suffering peculiar to Lost Man- 00d, should write to the ST ATE MEDICAL COMPANY, Omaha, Neb., and they will send you absolutely FREE, a valuable” paper on these diseases, and positive proofs of their truly MacicaL Treatment. Thous- ands of men, who have lost all hopo of a cure, are being restored by them to a per- fect condition. This Macican TREaTMENT may be taken at home under their directions, or they will pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who: pee to go there for treatment, if they ‘ail to cure. They are perfectly reliable; have no Free Prescriptions, Free Cure, Free Sample, or C. O. D. fake. They have- 50,000 capital, and guarantee to cure every case they treat orrefund every dollar; or their charges may be deposited in a bank to be paid to them when a cure is effected. Write them today. UNIVERSITY or NOTRE DAME, Notre Dame, Indiana. Classics, Letiers, Science, Law, Civil, Me- chanical and Electrical Engineering. h Preparatory and Commerciat- eclesiastical students at special rates. Courses. Rooms Free, Junior or Senior Year, Collegiate- Courses, St. Edward's Hall, for boys under 13. The 107th Term will open September 7th, 1897. Catalogue sent Free on application te ‘Rev. A. Morrissey, C. 8. C.. President. DROPS NEW DISCOVERY; sives quick relief and cures worst cases. Send for book of testimonials and 10 days” treatment Free. Dr. 1. 1.GREEN’S SONS, At'anta, Ga OPIU MORPHINE and WHISKY HABITS. HOME CURE. Book FREE, Dk. 4. ¢. HOFFMAN, Isabella Bidg., CHICAGO, ILL, a GAH. B.WILLSON & CO., Wash- PATENTS::: 'D.0. No fectili‘patent secured. 48-nage book free. WOODWARD & CO. nwvervous GRAIN COMMISSION sur BRANCH—CHICACO AND MILWAUKEE. Orders for Future Delivery Executed in All Marketa.

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