MSISI iJJ'X',' • • . . • - . m e s a r * * * # * * * . % & * * * # PRETTY MILKMAID SHEPHERD'S CROOK. CURING ROOM. THmks Pt-ru-ita Is « Wmdtrful Jity. People Fivst Learn Use to Wkidi the Implement Is Pat by Owner. Construction of the Walls Which Will Instt^Low Enough JRwa- ' P«rature. v-^:, % •-'T-f Information ana tne accompanying illustration concerning the construction of the walls for a cheese room are taken from the annual report of the Dairyman's association of Ontario: The construction consists of siding on the outside, and one layer of matched lumber with paper between. Then a 12-inch space filled with shav- shepherd'a LINDEN & STALL Arrangement Which Is Inexpensive and Provides Greatest Coin fort for Cow. MIS3 ann:e hendren. IISS ANNTE HENDREN. Eocklyn. ^ Wash., writes: "I feel better than I have for over four years. I have taken several bottles of Peruna and one bottle of Manalin. 141 can now do all of my work in the house, milk the cows, take care of tlie milk, and so forth. I think Peruna is m most wonderful medicine. " I believe I would be in bed to-day if I had not written to you for advice. I had taken all kinds of medicine, but Bone did me any good. " Peruna lias made me M y*eif and happy girl. 1 can never say too mueh/i for Peruna." Not only women of rank and leisure praise Peruna, but the wholesome, use ful women engaged in honest toil would not be without Dr. Hartman's "world renowned remedy. The Doctor lias prescribed it for many thousand women every year and he never fails to receive a multitude of let ters like the above, thanking him for liis advice, and especially for the won- .---derful benefits received from Peruna. The brain of a man is more twice that of any other animal. than Lewis* Single Binder Clear 1ms n rica taste. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory. Peoria, 11L ̂ Shelter Tents. There is a probability of the Aus tralian military authorities encourag ing the» manufacture or importation of shelter tents, as used in Japan dur ing the late war. The tent consists of a waterproof sheet with hooks and eyelets, the weight being trifling. Each Japanese soldier carries one of these sheets in his kit, and any nnm- l>er of them can be laced together, ^the custom being for four men to form a bivouac. Arms? are piled hi the usual way, and the sheets are spread over the pile weapons, afford ing shelter from both heat and rain. They can be utilized in mahy ways for sheltering the soldiers. A Balloon Incline Railroad. OmisuI William Bardcl writes front Bambery that Engineer Balderauer, of Salzberg, has invented a balloon railroad, experiments with which ara now being made in the mountains in the neighborhood of that German city. It consists of a stationary balloon, which is fastened to a slide running along a single steel rail. The rail is fastened to the side of a steep moun tain, which ordinary railroads could not climb, except through deep cuts and tunnels. The balloon is to Boat about 35 feet over the ground, and a heavy steel cable connects it with the rail. The conductor can, at will, make the balloon slide up and down the side of the mountain. Fcr going op the motive power is furnished by hydrogen gas, while the descent Is caused by pressure of water, which ts poured into a large tank at the up per end of the road, and which serves as ballast. Suspended from the bal loon is a circular car with room for ten passengers. The cable goes from the bottom or the balloon through the eenter of the car to a regulator of •peed, which is controlled by the con ductor. The inventor of this railroad Claims that his patent will force all Incline cable roads out of exiateaoa. This requires but little material for its construction, and involves no pat ents, so is not expensive. As cattle in this stall have the greatest possible j liberty consistent with safety, and as it Is airy and easily lighted it affords the maximum amount of comfort for animals and convenience for the herds man. It Is a thoroughly practical rack and manger for all kinds of feeds, the position of the trough being such as to catch all shatterings from the rack and the shape adinits of its being easily cleaned. One special feature of this stall, says the Rural New Yorker, is that cows will not foul themselves when it, Is properly constructed. The reason is that the cow steps forward from her regular standing position to lie down, lying with her head under the trough and avoiding the filth, whereas with other stalls, in order to avoid ' the manger she Is compelled to step back to lie down, thus surely fouling her self. As the bedding in this stall is never fouled, it lasts indefinitely. Much has been said in favor of the "drop" system for keeping cows clean, but in three hours time after cows were tied in a stable with varnished stalls and using the "drop" system the writer saw more fouled cows than we have seen in our barns during the entire three years we have used this stall. The cut shows a side elevation of partition between stalls. The lumber should be some variety of hard wood fully one inch thick when dressed. The feed-trough, the end of which Is shown at A, is made of staves one inch by three inches or four inches and of any length that is divisible by three feet six inches which'is the width of stall. Thus a 14-foot trough would be long enough for four stalls and would have a "head" at each end and one at each stall partition olr five "heads'." in all. These "heads" are two feet two inches long by nine Inches wide with one edge cut in a true arc of a circle containing 150 degrees with 14 inch radius. The staves of the trough are beveled sufficiently to open the joints slightly on the inner side so that>dust will collect in the joints and fill them up. The staves and,heads are held to position by a clamp formed by the three-eighths-lnch iron hoop B, which has a thread and nut on each end, passing through each end of the 1x2- inch wooden bar C. The trough A Is held in position by the post D, under back end of bar C and front end of bar C may be nailed to lower edge of partition E, or a post may be placed under front end of bar C also. The partition E, one foot four inches by five feet, cut to shape as shown, is supported at front end by two lx4-lnch strips K. which engage ceiling at top ends and bolted to metal footing at lower ends. An old plow share built into the copcrete floor answers well for this footing. To complete the par- Avo ii&fte •4 6ouO£#S WALL. FOR COOL, CHEESE ROOM. CURING ings, and then double boards inside that with one inch air space and single board. That air space is put ih there to keep the moisture from the ice chamber penetrating into the insula tion; because Insulation is not effective if it becomes damp. The ordinary air space has been abandoned altogether in modern cold storage construction. The shavings that are put in do not make the insulation, but It is the air which is confined by them and cannot . >J . Bun Of£>S (K . &poos- IT £ JL PLAN OP WALL, FOR BER. ICE CHAM- "T" a' t\ .! cod -ctft rc £9 COMST/ftl „nn BACK TO PULPIT. What Pood Did for a Clergyman. A minister of Elizabethtown tells how Grape-Nuts food brought him hack to his pulpit: "Some 5 years ago „ X had an attack of tfhat seemed to be l*a Grippe which left me in a com plete state of collapse and I suffered for some time with nervous prostra tion. My appetite failed, i lost flesh iill I was a mere skeleton, life was burden to me, I lost interest in every thing and almost in everybody save my precious wife. "Then on the recommendation of gome friends I began to use Grape- Kuts food. At that time I was a mis erable skeleton, without appetite and hardly able to walk across the room; had ugly dreams at night, no dispost- tioa to .entertain or be entertained and began to shun society. "I finally gave up the regular minis try, indeed 1 could not collect my thoughts <m any subject, and became ilimost a hermit. After I had been Using the Grape-Nuts food for a short time I discovered that I was taking <On new life and my appetite began to Improve; I began to sleep better and Spy weight increased steadily; I had some 50 pounds, but under the Hew foqd regime I have regained al- tpost my former weight and havo greatly improved in every way. "I feel that I owe much to Grape- Huts and can truly recommend tha food to all who require a powerful re building agent, delicious to taste and a]«ays welcome." :* Kame given by Postum Co., Battle ^|reek, Mich, A true natural road to S®iega/'n health, or hold it, is by use a dish of Grape-Nuts and cream •Morning and night. Or have the food made into some of the many delicious dishes given in the little recipe book . found In pkgs. Ten dAvs' trial of Grape-Nuts helps iff|any. "There's a reason." •\ Look in pkgs. for a copy of the £*• sons little book. "The Road to Wa|i- •ille." THE LINDEN LEA COW STALL. tition a small cedar post, but prefer ably a two-inch gas pipe, is set as shown at F. This post, F, prevents co'w8 from stepping on one another's udders and is much more conveni ent than a continuous partition for the herdsman to pass in by the side of the cows to tie and untie them. The back of the rack, G, is made by nail ing matched flooring to back ends of partition boards, E, and front of feed- rack is made of slats which are nailed to the girths H,'l. These slits which ane 1x2 inches are spaced to seven inches on centers, hang down into trough at lower ends but do not en gage it. The floor of feed alley should be one foot above the floor of stalls. The sill S, 4x5 inches, and about three feet long, should be placed across the back part of each stall separately, and be made adjustable to accommo date large or small cows. A large bolt may pass through this sill near each end and run down into the gas pipe pockets o o o o, which are set in the concrete flooj; for that purpose. Back of the sill S the floor should slope slightly, but not too much, as the cows always stand with their hind £eet back of this Bill, and only step in front of it when they lie down. Di mensions given are for cows weighing 1,000 to 1*200 pounds. For very small cows the sill would need to be moved forward and perhaps a false floor put into stall raising it four or five inches. Midway between each partition a tie- chain 28 inches long is attached to under side of trough with a swivel joint, the opposite end of chain hav ing a spring-snap which hooks into a ring on the neck-strap worn by each cow. If a headstall 1b used instead of neck-strap the chain should be a few inches longer. Many of these de tails may be changed to suit the build er of this stall but the shape and lo cation of trough and sill are vital re quirements. circulate which makes it. The air must be confined so that it cannot circulate, and where the space Is filled with shav ings or other suitable material there is no circulation of air, and we have the .best form of insulation that is known to-day. There is no other ma terial as far as I know that gives as good a result, considering the cost, as shavings. Of course, shavings are not fireproof. There are materials that will not burn rapidly. Objection has been made that shav ings encourage mice and rats; but if the sheeting isp ut on as it should be, without any openings feZt, there is not much danger of the mice getting into the shavings., The sheeting should be put on very tight without any openings whatever, and mice will not gnaw a hole through an inch board. -wi«t for?" Tha antomobiliats were out, far out. In tha country. A summer sky of bright, delicious blue smiled down on them. An air perfumed with turf and flower scents fanned their cheeks. The land was dotted With sheep, which a shepherd guarded, attended by a shaggy and wise shepherd dQg. ' "The use of a shepherd's cro&k? Why," she said, "it is a staff, a sup port, isn't it?" "Butt the crook--the crook handle-- that is what I'm speaking of. What Is the use of that crook handle?" he repeated. She did not know. No one knew. He called the young shepherd. "These ignorant people," he said, "don't know why a shepherd always carries a crook. Show them what a crook is used for." The shepherd smiled, and, approach- a sheep, he, hooked the crook around Its hind leg, and drew it to him. He hooked another sheep's hind leg, another's, another's. In a minute or two he had hooked a dozen sheep. "That's wot a shepherd's crook Is fur," he said; "to grab holt o' the sheep with. A shepherd without a crook would be like a fisherman with out a hook." SUCCESS WITH GRASS. Rules Observed by an Eastern Farmer .Who Has a Productive Xeadow. George W. Clark, Middlesex county. Conn., who has made a wonderful suc cess with grass and hay, offers these "don'ts" to farmers: Never dig ditches to fill with rocks, in a grass field. Never underdrain your grass field until you find it necessary. Never pasture or make a road bed of your grass field, or let anmials stand, stamp, or otherwise kill the grass roots. Timothy and red top seed sown on an old field will not renew the stand. Never use coarse manure on grass field after seeding. Never undertake to steal anything from the soil. Here are some of Mr. Clark's ideas that are to be remembered: An old field can be reseeded in a month, but it is better to take a year and get one crop of oats for hay. To mow your grass field close just before frost, and rake clean. To fertilize every crop a little more than needed for each crop. Bear in mind, your grass field will never winter kill or die as long as it has anything to live for. The Things We Eat. Too much meat Is absolutely hurt ful to the body. Sailors on board of ships get scurvy when their supply of vegetable food is exhausted. The di gestive organs of the human body de mand vegetable food, and if we don't eat enough vegetables we pay for it dearly. Nature gave us wheat, and In every kernel of wheat nature has distrib uted iron, starch, phosphorus, lime, sugar, salt and other elements neces sary to make bone, blood and muscle. EGG-O-SEE is wheat scientifically prepared. Cooked, and made into crisp flakes, EGG-O-SEE goes into the stomach ready for the digestive or gans to convert it into life-giving sub stances with but little effort EGG-O-SEE eaters are a clean-eyed, strong and happy lot. The proof of a pudding and the proof of EGG-O-SEE is in the eating. EGG-O-SEE besides being solid nourishment is most pal atable. Every mouthful is a joy to the taste and direct benefit to your health. A 10-cent package of EGG-O- SEE contains ten liberal breakfasts. Our friends advertise us. They eat EGG-O-SEE for a while. They grow strong. They are well and happy and thev pass the good word along. Next time you send to the grocer's tell your boy or girl to bring home a racSege of EGG-O-SEE. Have your children eat EGG-O-SEE. It is their friend. They'll eat EGG-O-SEE whtn nothing else w]li taste good. You try ECrG-O-SEE and you csn deduct the cost from your doctor's bilis. We send our book, "Back to Nature," free. It's a good bookful of plain, good, common sense. If you want a copy, address EGG-O-SEE Company, 10 First St, Quincy, 111. WISDOM OF THE ANCIENTS. Att^tion to small things Is the econoKy of virtue.--Chinese maxim. The ways to enrich are many and most of them foul for you.--Terence. Provided a woman be well princi pled she has dowry enough.--Plautus. Where the" love of the people is as sured the seditious are thwarted.-- Bias. He is truly rich who desires nothing, and he is truly poor who covets all.-- Solon. It is a greater offense to steal dead men's labors than their clothes.-- Synesius. . To go a kindness to a bad man is like sowing your seed in the sea.-- Phocylides. We ought either to be 'silent or speak things better than silence.-- Pythagoras. The public has more interest In the punishment of an injury than he who suffers it--Cato. COW LOBE. A poor, slow milker will spoil cows* however good. Never chufti fresh unripened cream with ripened cream. Butter is better when It is fresh than it will ever be again. When cows >are fed any kind of putrifying food the milk is unwhole-' some. The operation of milking should never be hurried, bat the milk drawn steadily. Life is too short and time too preci ous to fool with cows that have any especially undesirable traits. Milk with the largest globules con tains the most butter, but the smaller globules are more suitable for cheese making. Cows will not make good butter when running on short, weedy pas tures during the heat of summer. Be prepared to avoid this. The total which in milk are largely dependent on the quality of the food given, while the ratio of the ingredi ents depends on the breed. No one knows exactly what a cer tain cow will do until she is tested. Even cows which give a large quan tity of yellow milk are not always the best cows. Yellowstone Park. This Is the grand tourist resort of tue people and one of the most beau tiful parts of the American Continent Only by a trip to this region can the tourist comprehend the endless variety and stupendous grandeur of the fea tures embraced in this tract of country. Very low round-trip rates to this re sort have been put in effect this sum mer by the Union Pacific and its connections. For full information in regard to rates, and Yellowstone Park folder, i address W. G. Neimyer, G. A., 120 Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, 111. THEWINNING STROKE If more than ordinary skill in playing brings the honors of the^ game to the winning .player, so exceptional merit in a remedy " ensures the commendation of the well informed, and as a rea sonable amount of outdoor life and recreation is conducive to the health and strength, so does a perfect laxative tend to one;s improvement in cases of constipation, biliousness, headaches, etc. It is all-important, however, in selepting a laxative, to choose one of known quality and excellence, like the ever pleasant Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig ^yrup Co.,a laxative which sweetens and cleanses the system, effectually, when a laxative is needed, without any unpleasant after effects, as it acts naturally and gently on the internal organs, simply assisting nature when nature needs assistance, without griping, irritating or debilitating the internal organs in any way, as it Contains nothing of an objectionable or injurious nature. As the plants which are combined with the figs in the manufacture of Syrup of Figs are known to physicians to act most beneficially upon the system, the remedy has met with their general approval as a family laxative, a fact well worth considering in making purchases. It is because of the fact that SYRUP OP FIGS is a remedy of known quality and excellence, and approved by physicians that has led to its use by so many millions of well informed people, who would not use any remedy of uncertain quality or inferior reputation. Every family should have a bottle of the genuine on hand at all times, to use when a laxative remedy is required. Please to remember that the genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale in bottles of one size only, by all reputable druggists, and that full name of the company--California Fig Syrup Co., is plainly printed on the front of every package. Regular price, 50c per bottle. M (AIJF9RNIA FIG SYRUP (? itn FffcntUco, This signature For A Csrtaln Cur* for Tired, Hoi, Aching FeeL DO NOT AOCKPT A SUBSTITUTE. 8. Olmsted, LeB«r»K.Y. In a few days a letter dropped In the Chicago general postofflce fifteen or twenty minutes before the depar ture of trains for St. Paul, Minneap olis, Omaha, St. Louis, New Orleans, Detroit, Grand Rapids, Cincinnati, Buffalo, New York and the east will be aboard flyers on their way to these and hundreds, of other points between the Lakes and the Gulf and the two oceans. The new fast work will be possible by the connection be tween the Chicago subway and the Illinois Central's mail rooms at the Park Row station, which Is also used by the Michigan Central, Big Four and Wisconsin Central roads. The subway, which runs " under Wabash avenue has a spur in Thirteenth street to the south end of the big railway station. All sack mail to this station has been hauled by wagons. Now it will be dropped into waiting electrical cars in the subway under the post- office and rushed to the Park Row station, where it will be dumped onto waiting elevators which will lift them to the doors of waiting mail cars. The Newrpaper Maker. The newspaper maker is in honor bound to do good and sincere work. The whole community Is his client, and is entitled to respect Whatever may be advanced on his editorial page, the right to color the news to stilt the purpose of any faction In the com munity is withheld. Otherwise the subscriber is not being treated with consideration or fairness. There must be the combination of brains, incessant energy, broad judgment and knowl edge, with devotion to a high purpose, or the paper will fall short of achieve ment--Philadelphia Ledger. When Herbert Spencer was a boy his father sent him away from home to school. The youngster became homesick and with two shillings In his >pocket made his way home, over 120 miles. In three days, walking most of the way. He did 48 miles the first day and 47 on the second. On the third day a friendly coach driver took him most of the way for nothing. Adam and Eve should have got along better than they did consider ing that there was never any dispute about one leaving no room in the closet for the other to hang his clothes. SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Dis tress from Dyspepsia, In digestion and Too Hearty Eating, A perfect rem edy tor Dizziness, Nausea* Drowsiness, Ead Taste In the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain In the bids, TORPID LIVER. Tbgjf regulate tlie Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE SMALL PRICE. CARTERS ITTLE PIUS. CARTERS ITTLE IVER PILLS. Genuine Must Bear fac-Simiie Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES^ Exceptionally Low Rates to Brighter Possibilities The Southwest is the land of possibilities. The opportunities for men of average means are brighter here than elsewhere-- you can get more for your labor or your, investment. The opportune time is now while the land is cheap. The country Is settling up. If you purchase land now you will soon see grow up around you . a com munity of prosperous energetic men who like yourself have seen the brighter possi bilities of the Southwest, and have taken advantage of them. Along the line of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas R'y in Indian Territory, Oklahoma, and Texas are vast areas of unimproved land-- land not now yielding the crops of which it is capable. The same thine, in a different way, is true of Hie towns. Few lines of business are adequately rejftesented. There are openings of all sorts for you. If you're in anyway interested in the Southwest, I'd like to send you a copy of iny free paper, " The Coming Country." August 7th and 21st yon can make a trip Southwest exceptionally cheap. Round trip tickets, good thirty--30--days, will be sold by all lines in connection with the M. K. ft T. R'y at not more than one fare plus 92.00; in many cases--from Chicago to San An tonio, e. g.. the rate is $25.00, from St Paul, $27.50- from St. Louis and Kansas City, $20.00--the rates are considerably lower. The tickets permit of Btop-overs in both directions, via M-, K. & T. R'y. If your nearest railroad agent cannot give you the rates, write me for particulars. W. S. ST. GEORGE General Passenger Agent, M. K. & T. R'y Wainwright Building St. Louis, Mo. G. W. S1I1TH, 31C Marquette Oldg* Chicago, III. '111111M11 OTrwrw tSSMl Preserved Purified and Beautified by Cornelius Vanderbllt, In the name of his father, and Alfred G., in the name of his mother, made application for membership in the Rhode Island So ciety of the Cincinnati as the repre sentative of the Vanderbilt family. The society decided that Cornelius was the proper representative and he was elected with 15 others. " A Neglected Fence. A neglected fence is always a detri ment to the farm, especially If it be a stock and grain farm. The neglected fence teaches the farm aniaial3 that a fence may be ignored when they wish to get Into a field where they should jxot be. A neglected fence is always unsightly and 1* usually a harbor of weeds and predatory insect*. '• ;; v - fc- ' ' • • . Hyslop Crab Apple. Put out a few Hyslop crab apple trees as ornamentals. The head can be shaped after the pattern of orna mental trees rather than after the pattern of producing apple trees. The Hyslop crab Is a* large producer and Is certain to bear a large crop of ap ples, however It may be trimmed. The Hyslop crab is probably the most popular of all crabs due to the bright red color of the fruit. The farmer that plants it as an ornamental has a threefold glory. The glory of the beautiful blossom in the spring, the glory of Its foliage In the Munmer and the masses of red fruit la the fall, , w y - " » A woman can put this and that to gether and tell everything her hus-v band 1s doing. But a woman can fool her husband whenever she wants to. Fortunately, women do not often care to fool their husbands. It Is no use praying that all tl»e world may have the bread of life when your own life has about as much nourishment in it as a arickbat. (1906--30) 2136. •SOUTHWEST" Young Men Wanted FOR THE NAVY Ages 21 to 35 for mechanics, and 17 to 25 for apprentice seamen; good opportunity for advancement to the right men; applicants must be American citizens of good character and physique. Rations, lodging, medical attendance and first outfit of clothing free; pay$16 to $70 a month, according to ratings. Call or write NAVY RECRUITING STATION, Put Office Building, Ckicago, DL The World's Favorite Emollient for rashes, blemishes, eczemas, itc f l ings, irritations, and sea- lings. For red, rough, and greasy complexions, for sore, itching, burning hands and feet, for baby rashes, itchings,.and chafings, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nurs ery, Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, the great Skin Cure, is priceless. Complete External and Ir.torna] Ttvatmmt for <»*f J Homnr, from Pimple* to Scrofula, from Infamy to A|pa» conaiftting of Cuticura Soap, Ointment, wnl 6tV. C?n form of OVxMlate Coated pervtal of •*), mav ha»1 of all t1ruggi*t«, A Riug?eft»-t<'ft€pt-«TVt» Fott»r 7>nit * CItew. Corp., Pole Ptom., Boston, Nik «r»M*flo4 ft*!44 HovtoCai* tor SUn, Seal*, e»4 Bsfc? 31 ANNUAL MR6onal.lv-coNoyovc* NIAGARA FALLS EXCURSION VIA PATENTS KX HAS A <. Wuhka*1M, It. < . t -» Ml Cend tor " Iv t«r'<PrlBer"Md * *• rmiHi.» {established W4. PEN8ION8 UnciMd, iMtnlli For Tnfanta aj|l Children to USI fir Over TMity Yun lie Kind You Han Always BwgM THE (HUM CWImiTi TTJMMUMY •TnCrr.NCW YOIIK Sir*. 60 Bus. Winter Wheat Per Acre That'a tha vietd of Salter's R#d Cro*ff Hybrid Vfintmr Wbea>. Semi 3c in ttwifN for free sample of same.as . also catalogue of Winter Wheat#, Kye, Barley. Clover*, I Timothv. tiraKM *. Bulb*, Tr*e#, etc. for (alt t>iantinir ; •ALZEK8£K»(!a.a«*.K.LaCrMMWh. DEFIANCE 6«ld Water Starch makes laundry work a pleasure. 16 oz. pk&. 10c. |3 a "T" P 4^-page book fkek, I Gi Iw I ^9 J> tu host references. Lake Erie & Western R. R. TIE PNIEER NUSMU FILLS EXCURSION LINE IN CONNECTION WITH THK t Lain Store & MicMp» Saltan Rj. Thursday, August 2, (90S Ticket* good returning on C. & B. iiw Steamer, Buffalo to Cleveland, if deauwL SIDE TMPS TO T0B0RT0,THOUSAND lSUMS,Bt. ALSO CHEAP RATES TO Sandusky and Put-in-Bfly aWiAvn* rora snajisa ecitss res ran nvurr or ausust aki> coal with va Far tMusiphlot containing i«a*nl Umarilia " «• Mqr tidM* «# M t* •*(«, tim«, etc.. ciB tfca tkovo rwota, or iJihtii MTZUKHALD ft CO.. ill n L, W a&iUngutt], L>. C. Tboapstt's Eye Wafer D. McLEISH, iwm AlMI. * IKDIANAPOUS, Ma» DEFIANCE STARCH . tu tort wilki •tarefcw OuifcM am