Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Dec 1893, p. 8

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aOM-fa lt*T**efc up its coas . tfcus drops off l-«8 it really i»-*t Its root. The fleece of a 100 pound Bheep make ̂ t tf$IO per cent or of the animars „?V j tftlgbt, and it coni&sfet of a far greater v? ' proportion of the most exacting ele- t ttents of nutrition than the flesh of the does. Flesh hoi 75 percent of wa- 'V tw in it; **oi/feae 15 per cent. The * flesh lias in its dry matter the following . elements, and wool has the quantities * ; set opposite to them. Thus the composi- Ijon of flesh is: Carbon, 51.83 per cent; •( A*Vkydpogen, 7.57; nitrogen, 15.01; oxygen, : J #1.8ft; ashee, 4.23. Wool-Carbon, 48.65 largely ble for if fnd worked herd t© make It aeueoess. She aeMd is gen­ eral secretary of ttM^eonovepa. end had eharge eit the exhibit Of the Veg- MISS MAT TAirn etarlan Federal onion up to the time of her departure for her home in England some weeks ago. During her stay among m Miss Yates reached the conclusion that there wis a promising Held in this country tor the pro­ pagation of the vegetarian idea, and now she has resolved to come hack and wider- take the work. She is going to lecture and expects to reap an overflowing harvest of $ per cent; hydrogen, 6.93; nitrogen, 17.81; converts. It is quite probable she will hot 1 * be disappointed, for she is very energetic, and vegetarianism is fast becoming a pop- alar fad among Americans again, even without the impetus which popular leeturei are sure to give it, as they did in the days of Sylvester Graham. ( The toothsome graham bread is about all that remains to us of that old original •vegetarian movement, so far as the general public is aware, but there are still surviv­ ing a few of the old disciples who expected to usher in an era of temperance, peace and prosperity through the mediumship of an entirely vegetable diet for the people. There are some thousands of vegetarians among us, too, Who have bat recently been con­ verted to the idea by the writings of lady Paget Mid other eminent English advocates of the doctrine, so that Miss Yates will not find a soil entirely unprepared ftfr the seed she wishes to sow. She evidently expects some help from thi temperance people, too, for* she says: "Aside from the reduction «f the cost of living, I consider the vegetarians are doing good temperance work. By abstaining from meats and eating nothing bat fruits, grain and vegetables, one gradually loses his appetite for all aldohoiiC stimulants. This in itself, I think, should induce most men to become vegetarians." * oxygen, 22.11; ashes, 2.0; sulphur, 2.0. vl„ Taking Mo account that the wool has | § o n l y o n e - f i f t h as much water in it as the & V > ®esh-, it is easily seen that it requires W ) -,v" five times as much of the elements of \ nutrition for each pound weight as the flesh, and thus, if the fleece of a merino weM*k® 15 pounds, and the carcass, after f* ^ '•$$*"" shearing, weighs 75 pounds, equal quan- ^ .. <•' tities of food are required for the pro- ^ ' duction of each. This is perhaps never " " '£•> . thought of by any feeder of the flock, ^ so far it seems to have been com- < 1 & '<, p le te ly ignored by all writers upon sheep , %i 4-" husbandry, and yet the importance of it 'M paramount The common ignorance -,$f w••••, urgent demandsof the fleece for • {; , /special nutriments is doubtless why the r sheep suffer? so much from the exhaus- V' t tive requirements of the wool. »•' -A.s the fleetfe must be supplied after fV" ,v the animal itself, the wool suffers while s * ̂v/ the sheep escapes, at least to some ex- */ ̂ H tent, and as the wool cannot exist with- *"out its necessary accompaniment of the and grease^ which naturally pro- 7 cf ̂ tect it from injury by the rains, heat or i ' cold, this is to be considered as calling for requisite nutriment as well as the . actual body of the animal. It is worthy * ̂ ' ̂ of Bote, too, that as wool contains con- ; _ ŝ : ^eiderable sulphur this is also to be pro- ;• v V, tided in the food. DOMINO, THE RACE HORSE. LIE Is «&• Greatest Two-J-e»r-oMl RUJMMT Below is a picture <rf «» %ne Bros, Domino, the «u»r, who mado for his owners this y«ar $176,780, the largest pma ever won by one horse in one year tn this oourilrv. Dominfli has never been beaten. What­ ever he majf do or not do as a mature 'jitVA'. A ' flu Man to try an well that we 1 Fwmpi iraiscrohiclcr wa : I pyi'MNi Every time the sheep is underfed or * i >; suffers from any other cau8§, it appears the wool, the fiber of which shows a V 7'*^thin place in it, and each of these weak g^fspots represents a fault in feeding or ';vXother part of the management, --j^weakness in the fiber is ruinous to the i rf 'Wool, as it causes it to break in the card- y Wjing or combing, and thus become too * jshort for the spinner and fit only for ' felting. This defect is known by the fwoolen manufacturers and buyers as "breik" and makes it unsalable. Con­ sequently the matter of feeding and the ^regularity of it are special points to be * " ^regarded by the shepherd. Yet it must * 'Vfiiot be supposed that the wool only suf- ^jfers. The sheep must necessarily suffer, * .^,%for the damage to the wool is only one ,, „, visible signs of injury to the whole "v^," ffanimal. ^ ' In fc«timating the amount of food nec- ' ^ ( for a sheep, all these points are to |lbe taken into account, and the gross ^weight of the animal is to be increased A VETERAN RAILROAD PRESIDENT. Sloan HuLong Dlroet^ the Iotcntti of Uw LmIuwuum. The acquirement by W. K. Vanderbilt of a controlling interest in the stock of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western rail­ road^ aroused considerable newspaper dis­ cussion, in which frequent mention was necessary of the name of the president of that road, Sai^f Sloan, as he signs himself. This I though he was probably christened S*"mel, No one would ever suppose that Mr. 81oan is an Irishman, but it is nevertheless a fact that he was born about 76 years ago at Lisburn, a small place near Belfast, the native heath of ginger ale and Orange* men. His memories of the land of his birth must be rather vague and uncertain,' however, for his proud parents determined to give him a chance to develop under frh# , ? •> 'for estimating the allowance of food by \ X the proportion to be added on account " t^.4of the extra dry substance of the fleece. r • Vwv 4"b<m r*<% JIa a i. * '*** ' 2 J • " •3* 'h • f , ; t To be on the safe side, it Will'be quite ^\, v;iessonable to add to the live weight of •••V-the sheep fully 100 per cent--that is, to V - ;V double the weight and estimate the ra- ^^tion accordingly. The normal allow- k4aaoe of 8 per cent of dry matter per 100 * v'l' ^poundsofearcassmaythus be doubled . without any fear' of overfeeding.^, , < - . Henry in American Agriculturist. / • • <; • ifK. >'• ... LIto Stock Potato. p „. "Wisconsin mutton leads the world,^ ;^%.;,:is the jubilant announcement of the ' (n'v Cotswold, Oxford and Shropshire breed- '4 «rs of that state. Their announcement is based on the statement that at the O*' Cblumbian exposition Wisconsin took f|?; more sheep prizes in proportion to the "f "a number of animals exhibited than any ip&r? other state in the Union or any province . y t of Canada. Canada got away with an >ISX \ appalling lot of cheese prizes, however. \"S <_ Sandy soil with an undulating surface •f^rf;( is one of the best kinds for poultry. ; * Winter lambs are usually wanted to be born in December. To make them ar- >« - on time the ewe8 t(J |jreed are 2-year-olds that have I! "juttt unvt) had no iamb be­ fore. To lamb the first of December «, , they should be bred in June t6 an old y/V ram if pos^ble. When necessary to V^j|£ breed old ewes for winter lambs, they .A ^ should first be made to skip one season p and not be bred till summer. /-I If you have not planted trees to , v; shade for your stock in the pasture fields ^ around the spring, now is the time 'to do it. Plant the trees, take care of " _ L ^ v them a few years, and you will be richly . "§• rewarded. Get those that grow rapidly fe-j| spread thejr branches far out. Even a fruit treeS can be made purpose of shade if their fl to answer this branches are trimmed up out of reach of the animals. There will be a December show of fat V stock at the Union stock yards, Chicago, ?£, early in the month. Don't forget that. Jf| J. S. Woodward, a breeder of market J, lambs, says he has found Dorsets hardier ,1# in*"* Shropshires. They are certainly more prolific. f Eight pounds of wheat a day is the proper quantity of concentrated food for a dairy cow. An old mare will psy off a mortgage, and this has often been done. One farmer wipes out the mortgage by means of hogs; with another the cow pays it, while still another accomplishes the same result with small fruit culture or rearing early lambs. Each farmer must study the situation for himself, taking note of his soil, of the markets, distance from market, what products are m<yst salable in his part of the country and finally of what particular branch of farming or live stock rearing he ,likes best and is most successful in. This last is by no means a small consideration^ -3. SAM SLOA3T. benign tnfluenoe of the stars and ctripec, and brought him to America when he was but S years of age, Since then New York city lias been the scene of his activities and suc­ cesses, which h^d a beginning humbls enough to prove his sterling qualities. At the age of 10 he was sent to the fa­ mous old Cplumbia College, Grammar school, then thought to be the best school In existence, but before lis had com' the course he was compelled by ttie of his father to leave school and^fbto work. His rise was rapid. At 18 he was an errand boy, at 27 s partner in one of the best known mercantile establishments in New York. DOMINO. * s horse, his record as a 2-year-old will probably stand unequaled for some time to come. It will not surprise anybody to know that Domino is Kentucky bom and bred. He was foaled on the farm of Major B. J. Thomas t of Lexington. Victory has perched again ON the ban­ ner of the Kentucky horse breeder this year. Domino's sire Was Himyar, his dam Mannie Gray, a daughter of En­ quirer. Domino is a black horse. It will be interesting to know that as a yearling Domino was not considered very promising. It was said of him that he was too small and that his forelegs were weak. All the same they got them. They brought the winnings of the Keene stables this year to the top of the pile. Domino's trainer is William Lakeland; his rider usually Taral. C/*Um OmttmOf,- : < The ftnmense.floods of c t̂le-nsteers, cows, heifers, bulls and calves--of all conditions |rom prime fat to skin poor, that have been thrown npon the market during the past year or two con. mean nothing else than that the ranges are be­ ing gradually depleted of their stock. It must.be a practically unlimited supply that could stand' the drain of the past two yeurs without having its power for turning off increase considerably dimin­ ished. If merely the increase were being marketed, there would be small hope of any betterment in prices until the de­ mand increased materially, for the sup­ ply from the permanent stock on the ranges would be a constant one and would serve to hold prices down. The fact is, however, that everything is going. The lessened supply has not been made plainly manifest yet, for the reason that the breeding stock has been coming along with the steers, but the breeding stock must soon begin to run short,which will directly result in a shorts age of steers also, for the marketing of each cow lessens the fnture supply of steers by the number that she might have raised had she remained upon the range. How soon this condition of af­ fairs will rpsmit in a change for the bet­ ter it is impossible to say. There are other things that must be taken intocon- sideration in determining the future of the cattle trade. The number of cattle on the farms of Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa and the other western states has rather in­ creased than diminished during the past few years, and the supply of steers from these farms is enormous, The fact that there is but a small margin of profit on each animal, or possibly none at all, seems to have no'infiuence on the num­ ber of steers that are raised. Every farmer must have a certain number of cattle to pasture off his waste land in summer and to eat up his rough feed in winter, and this number he will keep whether there is any particular pay in it or not. The supply from this source will be a constant one and will serve to retard the coming of the shortage which pleteti ] has been predicted. The outlook then is death 1 about this: The supply of range cattle, the heavy marketing of which at certain seasons of the year and at other irreg­ ular intervals, determined by the condi­ tion of pasturage, tends to depress prices and at best o render them very fickle, is At 38 he was president of the Hud­ son River Railroad company, and at 40 , tired from mercantile life to devote himself being lessened and will in time cease to entirely to his railway interests. Mr. Sloan remained president of the Hud­ son River road until it was leased by the New York Central in 1802, when he resigned and became commissioner of arbitration for the settlement of disputes for the trunk lines. In 1867 he was elected president of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, in which position he still remains, having conducted the affairs of the company suc­ cessfully through many trying periods and built up a powerful line. Mr. Sloan has been remarkable all his life for the strictness of his attention to business and the regularity of his habits. His friends know of but one lapse io his whole career, and that was in 1858 when he •eglected business long enough to serre a term in the New York senate. He soffa re­ covered from this, however, and has Bince been a model in all respects. ^ * Kovel Postage gtMBjh The ITtenctt government has just as ai. experiment only, a postal service by camel express in the French territories of Obock and the Somali coast. In ftonnec- tion with this service a special provisional stamp will be issued, the value being 5 francs. The new stamp is triangular, like the old Cape of Good Hope vignettes. ID the center is a "mehari," or' racing camel; in the background a desert landscape. Around are inscriptions in three languages Abyssinian, Arabic and French--mention­ ing the year of issue and the name of the colony. Later on, if the experiment is sat­ isfactory , a further issue of stamps will be francs. ranging from 2 to #0 .!•) Jordan Water In Bottles. A firm in Palestine is engaged in supply­ ing water from the River Jordan to churches. It is put up jjj sealed bottlee and sold l»* *hn Maud--Why did you break off your en­ gagement with Charley? Ellen--Well, you see he would wear shirts and neckties which didn't become have any marked influence on the mar- ket. On the other hand, the supply of cattle in small bunches on the farms is not be­ ing lessened, nor is it likely to be. A man in the cattle business must calcu­ late on the close competition of these h&rds for a long time--probably forever. Cattle can be raised on western farms so cheaply and in such great quantities that scarcely any condition of affairs can drive prices up to the pitch of nine or ten years ago, and cattlemen must not expect to receive such figures. The best that they can hope for is a steady market at fairly remunerative prices, and they must go to work with the idea of raising cattle more cheaply rather than of recei " double present prices.--Exchange _ _ 'W/' oHold a Steady Rain. ""-v." While driving the reins should not hang so slack that it is difficult for a horse to know which way the driver in- 'W* _ _. get it to |ip^p«||rly.' After getting it thorottghjy heated the eggs WWftrat in. _ AsIMd new Md any experience with a machine before--in factr this was the first I had evef seen-- r was doubtfttl** to results of the first 1 hatch, but made up my mind to give it all the care and attention I possibly could. I watohed it pretty closely night and day and did not get a good night's rest for the tlsree weeks the eggs were • hatching. The result was that I took 850 chicks out of , the incu^tor from 820 eggs. I put them in the brooder and succeeded in raising most of them. Al­ though it was late, I concluded that I would try it again, putting in .800 eggs. This time, as I knew more about run­ ning the machine, I did not attend to it Or watch it so closely. , I regulaffed it night and morning when filling the lamp and turning the eggs. I did not lose a wink of sleep this time. Still got 225 chicks from 250 fertile eggs.. I did not have such good luck raising this lot as the first, for something went wrong with the brooder lamps when tfye chicks were only a few days old, and when I went to look at them in the morning the lamps were both out and most of the chicks chilled so that that they did not get over it. In the first batch there were probably between 40 and 50 eggs holding birds ready to come' opt, but all dead. I wrote the maker of the incubator as to the probable cause, and he replied that it was for want of moisture, although there were two pans of water above the eggs. At the last hatch I put a shallow pan of water un­ der each egg tray on the eighteenth day,, and there were fewer dead birds. The chicks were fed first on the infer­ tile eggs boiled and chopped up fine;, then we mixed up cornmeal and bran with milk, baked the , mixture and crumbled it up and fed it dry. After the first week they had small wheat and cracked com--in fapt, anything they would eat. Finely ground 'bone is a valuable addition to the bill of fa^e,rr- James Bufton in Rural New Yorker;; , > Tĥ r a*"*" ** Dry Goods, Notions, Boots & Shoes, , Also Groceries, •>. • - :q And Mk of Me Henry and vicinity to call knd insp^ct 0ar stock, which is alway* complete, and >?et. our prices- T ' or.."iflV 4^. t-V; I ' ' I •' - .'31 .Gt&feSSf1 ,iu. l&om JOHN L SXORT. ̂ . . Live Stock Feeding. • Our manner of feeding each kiAd of- stock is as follows: Horses when not*at work receive six ears of corn in the morning and four quarts of oats in the evening, with plenty of good, nutritious hay, and are. turned upon a blue grass pasture every day that is not stormy, and when working they get eight ears of corn or six quarts of oats three times a day, with an hour at noon to eat hay. Our cattle, suchN as dry cows, heifers and steers, are fed once a day with shell­ ed coirn and oats in equal parts, with plenty of hay all the time. Our milk cows are fed liberally twice a day with ground feed1--oats and c<Srn, or oats, corn and bran. To the calves are given night and morning ground oats and corn, about a quart apiece. The sheep are fed once a day on shelled corn and bats in equal parts, with hay, and are turned upon a blue grass pasture during the day . when the weather is favorable. Our hogs are fed lightly with corn twice a day, and ail get a small ration of oilmeal twice a week, which, to­ gether with the hoped slops, keeps them in fine condition. We raise our calves upon the cows, turning them to And from them night and morning until' they are 4 or 5 months old, but before weaning them we always have them taught to eat ground feed and scarcely ever have a caif to fall off fjrom weaning.--Cot. Breeder's Gazette. live Stock Potato. v The best trotting time in 1886 was again made by Nancy Hanks, but she has not equaled her famous 3:04. Her best this season was 2:04$. A man who had been in the habit of raising his hogs year after year on the "swill gathered from hotels" was sur­ prised to find at length that he began to lose his hogs - rapidly by disease and death. Do you wonder what the reason was? "Just think of some farmer that feeds his mares well on oats from the- time they were stinted until foaling time and then compare their colts with the colts of sqme shiftless farmer that feeds corn. Though the colts are from dams that are alike and sired by the same horse, you can see a vast difference in favor of good feeding. You can feed for good bone wid muscle and a salable animal." Did you ever try to doctor a hog? In England mutton is not considered at its best till the sheep is from 2 to 8 pears old. That is rather slow for us. We want the same results in 13 months, ind we are going to have them. Keep your hog pens clean and dry. Besides that, put into them a bbx filled with a mixture of 6 parts ashes, 3 parts salt and 1 part copperas. Keep'this box filled with the mixture, so the pigs can kelp themselves at will. With this and ; sprinkling the hog yard freely with crude UP QUALITY *4^ J - "I-1' > J *'A that »tuys Boots aod Shoes---that is »H mankind hereabout* V * -- know how thoroughly we combine perfection of style, fife-f * -; and finish with moderate prices. We propose always to • v •, h Upnesft " A W ; . . .V -"'vi jVj Of eotifiw th* •ttpftess* refers to quality and finish,while the J . v •downnew.' points to priecs. A happy combination, a* % hundreds of ple»H?d and satisfied customers cheerfully tea- - - ^ ?i tify. We have lad es' Shoes in all grades. Boots ard &ho«» for jjeentlemen, and foot-weir for children. We also wish to call attention t6 bur Hardware and Grocery ]- , ? departments, which are always well stocked with good goods. : m, DOWN tended he should travel. The animal, j jarbolic acid or air slaked lime, yoiwean however, soon finds out if he attempts to turn the wrong corner, or runs the wagon wheel into a mudhole, or strikes a stone in the road, as that act seems to jog the driver's memory, for the hdrse is given a vicious jerk, supplemented by an un­ complimentary remark from the driver, when he alone is to blame for careless­ ness and inattention. A steady pull on the reins supports the horse and allows him to travel easier. In a great meas­ ure? it prevents stumbling, and should an accident happen to the vehicle, or should ttie horse become frightened, he can usu­ ally be brojnght under control in time to almost defy hog cholera, especially if part of your hog feed is something else ;han corn. The hog sales at> the Columbian show were satisfactory to everybody con­ sented. The biggest four legged hog at the World's fair was a boar weighing actu­ ally about 870 pounds, though the fairy tales in circulation about him claimed 1,800. | Foot rot is apt to attack sheep that 'pasture long at a -time on low, wet -lands. prevent any serious mishap^ In the field j Ten ewes and a blooded ram make a this matter is not quite so important, uh- joOd be®tenihg for the small fanner less you have a young team full of met- who w&nts to go into sheep. In two •W 'I /!'*r MAT. ENQLEXT, 55" • : 'U^A PIONEER HEROES A* CI THEIR DAWlNG DEEDSI The ttartllina-exnloita of American border heroes end heroines, with Indiana, outlaws «B<1 wiM ue»ai». ir<m the eariieei timet) to now. Lives and fit nous d<>e'ia of DeHoto, Standiab, Boone, Ken ton. Brai y. Crockett, farson, Cut>t«r. Oomatock, Wild Bill, Buffalo Utll, G«ns. Crook and. Miles, Ger<>nimo, Sit- tin«r Ball, and other great Indian Chiefs, etc Hietory of the War with Ihe GtoOBt-DanoeriW and i ll. 3S0 Eugrav.ug*. Young boys uof answered, lowed agents short or Agents Waited funds . . FLAKET PUBLISHING CO. ' Box 0001, St. Loois, Mo, United States far Claii Ape; Is an element of nature whiclt furnishes a happy medium for ^ enjoyment. But even when ^ the ground is covered with J- snow, there can sport without * ; *- SLEIGHS. Woodstock W . Illinois. Proseeuteaall elssasa and ki^cls claims aninit the United States tor ex-Soldiers, t&etr Widows, Dependent Relatives sr Heirs. A apeolalty la mad* rejected claims. in proseouuag old and eommuoleatlona Postage Stampeare eno tromptlv unawtnd If forrsply. WM, JB, COWlUlS Ofllee at Raatdeaee, Madlsoo St., Woodstoea jaauu-jiiate'.'jfi jiLr.xa« ' " tnaEaBaaaaaae STOCKS Demand quick, sharp and pereietent ad> vertiaing. Merchants who do not wish to keep over a Targe amount of -goodfc until next season should make' arrange* ments for H0LJDAY ADVERTISING In the JPlaindeJlLeb without delay Those who are not advertising now should make haste, and all who desire more space than they/now carry should contract for the same at once. We have still a limited amount of space for sale, but this will soon be sold: hurry up. The size of your ̂ .. ' < \ v * HOLIDAYTRAttlE Will depend mainly on the amount of ad­ vertising you do. Thfe is the modern way oi selling goods. Come in and let us sell you a nice space. > • Safety Truly Yours, - A - o The time for buying sleigh© is most auspicious. We have a»P largo stock on hand and can| suit yott qualifcyand prices. Always- • v • ; T| •mtsM %'h * TBI LSAS t * ^ , / ' < > { when it coraee to sleighs, as as farm implements in general. Let us show you our goods | giv6 you our prices. " ^ TO BACON,' ' < McIIcnry, Ift. rnblication Hotico. w. •1 II r*w. i »• '! mry Coonty FIT Court f Mollenry County, Jani ^*»Wj»«4P JWl/j id •«»/* lf*m 4|« a* 'wt't MM inntni M HLLWO S3NAV Julia A. Storv is bringing on od s a stock of Christmas go ook next week for h STATE OF tl.LINOIS MeHen Ciuctr ary ter«n, A. T> 1^94. Joseph J, Ho wen. Hubert Bo wen, fleletffc Row« r». Barbara Eowen and Kate l owftrmwa. Oatharme Frienrl, Job" H. Friend^-jferV Frientf, Jo«ei)h Frl'nrt, Kate Friend, lfl|rtm H Friend, Fetor Friend, Nicholas *rli Rosa Schumacher, Emma Frten<t, Jam Mo«*se, Mary A Lester, Carrie A Hai . , Sadie Morse, Carrie Morse and Baby Morse ia cha-rery. Affiiiavii of th« von residence of Joaei Fripn'i, Kosa Scf iiHWher, aadie Morse, rle Morse and Ruby Morse, of the defcl above nameit, having been fl ®d in the «>f the Clerk of said HireuitCourt of MeHenrf County, notice is herebv Kiven to the Mia non resident ietenda«t % that the complain ants tiled their bill of complaint In said uonrt on the Chancery aide thereof n the 27th day of November, A l). ltw», and that a stimmos* thereupon issued out of eai<l Court aga i st sa<d »1ef»»'daPbts, re. urnable on the 8th day of January, A. D. 1894. as is by law req tred Now, therefor*, unices you tbe saM Joseph Friend, RosaSdrnmaeber,8a<iie Morse, C me Morse and Rnby Moree shall persor-aily be and appear befors stid Circuit Court tf McIIenry County on the first day of the next t»«rn» thereof, to ; e h^lnen at the Court House in the city of Wootlstocb, in >ai<t County, oe the Sib day of Jan uary, a. D. 1?!U, and ptatd, a. fewer or demur to the ;aid compbiinanm bill of eomplaint, t ne * urr>e and i h®*nr>atten- and things therein chared and stated will M taken as confessed, and a decree entered / ,;.g| • •• :-:Si • • ^ a large and says to tls, and thenstocb of ' pneente. ' , v j ^ ^ ^klnst you according to the prayer of In testimony whereof I have hereunto my band and nfflxed (he seal of saiu Court, i my office in Woodstock this 27th day of No­ v e m b e r , a . i > . i m , . ; i , r •• W. p. MOBS® Clerk, v JOSLTW A OASKT, Ootnplain'tB soltei«era -'*" •>. J. V 1 • ' ' Hi.. i ' It is no trouble tor oa l» ^o«r goo ̂ Come in and look at 0Ui

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