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Ottawa County Union from Port Clinton, Ohio • 1

Ottawa County Union du lieu suivant : Port Clinton, Ohio • 1

Lieu:
Port Clinton, Ohio
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1
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XXJ I I vj-' i i 3 'x 1 1 -i i Uottrg riculturoL i i I' '( i WHICH WAT TH1 WIIO BLIW FAUX GARDES AND HOUSEHOLD NIOM i- Terms: $200 Per Tear Union of States One Sloan Editor and Proprietor PORT CLINTON OHIO FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 23 i SCIENTIFIC NOTES I' i Tbs wind esma-ap tlie wind Aai oVt Uh Mriannii WfcihouUSprattxmaideilfrowB -A-It slow choose to sail i xberullodieaes bowed their heads bilwM(o(fta(iialMr the illn 700 oocldn't mrmlra Wlilch wj the cweat wind blew ij itC bgi far towringboda mJ ltm wlndeof morning Mow! TeUmehowlongalarar grime When maiden No I oatler etep tni it the gic AallhihNitiUnlmitMnbiu' Bjrninj eijfn yoo oonld Whtefr way met wind blew! i general licence FA0TI8M1L1UI8BI OF fR AHC3E JULES XATBE Gabriel Claude Jnlee Fatm who has been placed at the head of thei Provisional Government of France as Minister of Foreign Affairs is eminent lawyer and politician He was bom in Lyons March 'At the Sg6 df twenty-one he took a prominent part in public a flairs as the opponent of royalty and he had just attained that age at tho a' was hurled from power and gave place to Iiofaia Pnillipper jNo man in France has boen so earnest sb eloquent and ao It consistent an advocate jpf Be publican principles as ules Favra After the revo-I- ilulion of 1848 he took 'thd Sooretery -General of the Ministry of thelnterior bnt resigned his dace On 'being elected to the Constituent Assembly lie officiated for some time as Undersecretary for Foreign Affairs and voted for the prosecution of MM Louis Bland 'and Catissidiere for their complicity in the inHnmsetionof Jnne 1848 He opposed i 1L: 1: tiis i i1 i i toe-Romsn expedition! in (hat year and refused to unite in ttuuota of thanks to GovaignaAv He propooed preamble to i the French constitution dhkug it obliga-i tory upon tlw state to asmM all working men who had boon thrown oat of employ-- inent and were unable to And other occu- ration From the -day of the coup' Hr I ho has been at once 'tho moat idotermined I and tho ablest antagonist of the Emperor i and indeed his opposition may be said to the elootf i i hftve begun flrom I election of Louis Na- i poleon to the- Presidency Elected as General Council of the De-' the Loire and Bhone to take the oath to Support the new eonutitation In he excited the liveliest sensation through-L outiranoe by his bold defense of Ormni lot his attempt on the life of the Emperor in which the intrepid advocate proclaimed I his unalterable attachment to free institu-tions In the sMpe year he became a mem-ber of the Corps Lislatif and soon afterward in April 1859 he veheminently exposed thd inconsistency of the Imperial member of the 'i partments of ho refused Government in seeking to establish by the war with Anstria -that Areoddm for Lorn- fmrdj rad Venice whloh had been overthrown in Franco In 18G4 he made a severe attack on'tha policy of the Imperial GoVernment ini tho Mexican- war Favre published iu 1837 a work entitled CuHiempotwMoua Biography Many of his -most lkmons speeches and several phiun-phlts have beehpublished He waselect-ed Batonnier of the Order of Advocates at Paris in 3860 and- again in -1861 and a member of the French Academy in 18G7 1 auuraniiisa Eoiannel Arago the new Mayor of Paris a lawyer and politician was born at Paris 'In 181 He was the oldest son pf Francis Amgo and at first manifested a disposi- tioirto enter Upon a literary- career In he published a volumn of poetry The authorship of some vaudevilles is asoribed to him in oonneclion with MM Ayoari Monnais and Boohefort In 1837hs began the practh pf law und in 1839 ho was one of the oounsel for the defense of Martin-' Bernard and 'Btubes In 1848 he took a prominent position among the revolutionists and on the 24th Feb entered the Cham' ii Rust ox Dimmer Ksnrxs Cover them with sweet oil well rubbing it on let remain fin fortynsight hoars and then unslacked Ume finely powdered rub rust has disappeared' the To Keep Kxitxs tbox After the knives era washed place the blades in a dipper of hot soap-suds and scour them while hot wipe them dry after soonring without washing again and koep them fo a dry place i i- flAMiwm Aero wondorfui cure-all for sores bums nnd numerous other ail ments should have a place in every family medicine closet It is also gooddisfo- i) foctant and is a sure destroyer of the pest of housekeepers bed-bugs end flies All -who would have clean beds in the spring must sea that they are kept clean in the folL A The Savannah Republican of the 2d ays: largest and handsomest piece of petrified oak which we have ever seen' was shown ns by Dr Dnpon at his residence on the Ism' of Hope a flaw days ago Thfepieoe referred to is shout two feet in to aqd ten inches fo diameter and resembles a largo piece of flint This curiosity was fished np in tit Helena Sound and it is toe intention of the Doctor to present it to tho Georgia Historical 80- kiss Pick each morning and into weak brine ollowing toem to three or four days or long enough to come sufficiently salt for use nutting in mustard pods and horse raffish leaves to them green Then take out agd -and cover with good vinegar for a week at which time take out again and drain and pnt into fresh vinegar adding mustard seed ginger root clover pepper and red pepper abont one or two ounces each to toe barrel or to suit too tastsi Hie pickle will be nice and brittle and pass master at any table' Put on the vinegar cold and add the- spices a desir- 1 ed bnt tho vinegar must be cliangod onee ss the huge amount of water in the cucum- ben so reduces the vinegar that -this change is absolutely necessary and if-toey should torn their sharp taste just add a little moiaspes or spirits and they will -be right again They are always ready Cur use and will keep welL1 -1 Gad-tit and sheep To prevent the attacks of this most annoying insect the no-" ses of toe sheep must besmeared with pins tar This is done either by catching each 1 sheep and applying toe tar with a brush or swab or by putting tho tor in the bottom of feeding troughs or on a board and covering it thinly with salt If toe sheep have been refused salt for a week or ten days they will in their eagerness and hanger get their noses into the tar before they are conscious of toe triek Blncklack mys: gad-fly deposits its eggs on toe margin of too nosfaiLin autumn them are soon hatched and the larvae immedi- atcly find their way np the interior of the -tilt they arrive at the frontal ainna Here they remain until too following spring when they quit burrow In the earth for a short season then emerge winged insects ready to enter upon the career of torment so ably gono through by their Cooxnra Tomatoes Tho -tomato is a vcgetsblo that is difficult to spoil nnd is generally acceptable even "when rudely cooked is capable of so much change in the cooking as to afford a pleasing vari-: ety Oneway of stewing tomatoes is to choose very ripe once nkiu and slice roasting any hard ports Fut fo a pan with' salt butter and pepper and cook very slightly not more than ten mfoqtes Another way is to stow "Ihe tomato until thoroughly soft rob them through a scive and then cook them down to the desired thickness Butler salt and pepper are the usual seasoning Those fond of the flavor of onions will find thfsddition of chopped onions while cooktogto make an excellent variety Baked tomatoes are 'fine Choose large fruit and out out a cavity at the stem end All this with a' mixture ot powdered crackers or bread 'crumbs butter silt or other seasoning set on a pan and bake until dona If managed cordially 'toe -toms-! toes retain their shape Tomatoes maybe broilod cut them in halves crosswise and put them cut side down upon a gridiron -over the fire: When the cut surface fa seared turn them and put butter salt Jbo on each and cook with the skin side down until done: American Agricultural-let Preparing Ilopa far Market Aside from the importance cf coring hons properly there is no liranch of the culture in which the grower should exercise more care than in picking All foreign substances such as leaves find stems should bo kept pom too hops Instead iff the hops off from too vines with the hands as is too much the custom each liop should be picked off separately even when in clusters they should be separated The advantages of clean picking were folly experienoedin the introduction and use of foreign hops -during the season of 1867 The quality and -flavor of the American him folly equaled that of foreign yet by lack of clean picking onr hops did not bring as high prices by five cents per pound as the foreign The rule applies to any season and hops in order to sell' well should be cleanly picked This year there threatens to be a groat many burrs and immature hops on the vines at the time of harvest Great ears should be taken to instruct pickers to reject bam and hops- just starting for by-' mixing those with matured fruit tho value of the stock will bo much impaired Nature uiay do her port well and the grower may have secured large crop of superior quality yet by his' inexperience in the art of curing the hops may be ruiiied either by ovcdiriug or by not diyiug enough The hops by being high dVied and scorched lose their natural rich flayer and aroma while those not suffi-ciently dried are liable to heat in toe bale and become worthless The best time to bale Is on a rainy day as too hops are more pi fable and pack bet- ter It is important that hops bo put up fo the best possible shape Bhaggy loose pdeked irregular shaped bales are almost 1 invariably thrown out and rejected ly the inspector- Many growers aro sjt to rely too much on their Own ingenuity in the construction pf hop-presses paying too little regard to the propeaduuensions shape of tho bale produced Urate would bo no objection to growers exereiUug their construction of inventive pawery ui the bet of Deputies and protested againstthq lie gency and demanded the dethronement Of the Orleens family On the 27th he went to Lyons -with the title of Commissary General of the Bepnblia He was soon elected a BepreaenUtiva from the Eastern Pyrenees but appeared rarely in the Chamber May 25 184 he was Amt to Berlin as' Minister Plenipotentiary Hq intervened in behalf of fhe Poles in the Grand Duchy of Posen and 'obtained- the liberty of Gen Micro la wkki Heproteeted against thp Boman expedition and after the coup Teiat gave -up political life but did not leave France Hs resumed later the nmeticeof the law at( Paris and in 1867 aelended BeresowskL In the general eleo-(ions of 18C9 he was the candidate of the Opposition both ift the Eastern Pyxoneos oud in the Var bat was not-eleckd in eitner place In the parlial elections of thti following November he was a condi-dde from Pari ad was elected teiao osxmxui' j'- Isaac Adolph Cromieux Minister of 1 Mi 1 ll 1 i Tr1' I ejJ -V 1 I- I I 1 I- A 99 IIow Alsace whs lost to Germany- Germany lost Alsoee and Lothringis by the treachery and weakness of her rulers The first cities lost were Metz Tull (Toni) and Yirten (Verdun) all three nevertheless national French cities through the treason of the Elector tfoiitz of Saxony They were ceded to Franco at the peace of Westphalia after attempts had been made by the German Emperor to win them Lick Germany does not desire these cities again they are French in language and character and a such they may remain But with' Alsace and Gorman Loth-ringia Germany will do her best to win bad: thesa lost possessions Alsace wnui lost thus: Daring tho Thirty War Gormany was the battlefield for all Europe The Gath olio Emporor brought (Spanish and Blavo soldiers the Protestants were aided by Sweden the Danes and the French At too ponce of Westphalia Franco dnmandud' as compensation for too aid given tho entire German thon purely and too peace document reads: House of Austria cedes the city of Breisacb tho landgraviates Upper and Lower Alsace the Sundgau" and too jurisdiction over the ten free cities in Alsace namely: Hagenan Col mar Schist Ls-tadt Weiesonlmfg Landau Obcreliuhiem Bossheim Munster Kaisenberg and Turk-beim AH shall be incorporated with the crown of Franco and toe Euipeior and Empire (Gorman) shall have no lurtoer claims upon this land" Tho ton froo cities however lost their freedom immediately for in 1674 in a time of peace France took them by force ot anus Colmar wns taken after groat resistance iu 1677 Labrosse plundered tho oily of Weissenbuig soon afterwards he laid Uageuau in ashes burning up with the city women and children Thus one ci city and tlie other was burned and tons they wore made French- ig spito of their desire -to remain German The rest of Alrntia full a prey to tho rapacious Louis XLV in toe year 1681 in a time of profound peace tilrasburg was) ono of toe last Alsatian cities to give in toe French besieged the city with forty thousand men Leopold who then At on toe German throne being threatened by the Turks could render no assistance and finally tho city gavo up further resistuiice Louis XIV hail promised to allow the Ktraslmrg-era to retain many of their- lilierties bnt bis first acts were to rob toe Protestants of their churches and to give toe cathedral to the Bishop of Zsb-rn ono of toe greatest traitors to Lis country Thus the whole of Alsace was lost Lothringta soon fell a prey to Franco Only the northeastern portion is now inhaliited by Gormans In 1733 the land was given to the Polish King (Stanislaus the father-in-law of King Louis XV who resided until 1766 in Nunzig (Nancy) and Lnnstadt (Lnue-villc)- After his death it fell to the French empire Tims tho two entire provinces were lost through treachery and force of arms The Ocrmans wished to recover these lost territories at the end of the wars of liliemtion bnt Russia and Austria intervened in favor of France and only Landau with a few other places were given buck by the treaty of 1815 OKBHANS AMO XEKNCH IK AIJBACS Tli ere thus fell Into the hands of tbe French exclusive of the French population two hundred and thirty square German miles of purely German district containing 1360000 German inhabitants district ns largo as the present Grand Duchy o( Baduu And though ever a century has gone since Alsace and Lotliringia were entirely lost to Germany the celebrated statistician Bokh (in Deutechan Vulkszahl und Sprachgebiot in den Euro paischon fStoaten" Berlin I860) calculates that in these lands previously German there aro still living '1318961 Germans i ft is a foot that the French language notwithstanding that over since 1857 it lias been tho lauguago of the schools has mode no real progress Tho largo cities wherever the railroads and the official deportments aro found have naturally been Frenchified but in tho villages and especially among the valleys cl toe Vosges Gcrmun is still tlie fongnage which too people uso iu their own homes Tho Alsation jwMisaut does nut speak French to his wife and his children do not know a word of it until it is forced into them at school Even in Stnsbnrg itself as every traveller knows the peoplo aro half German iii their habits In the cities too feeling towards annexation with Germany is hostile In the valleys among the Villages and the peasants there is also a real dislike to Germany though the traveler would bard ly know that he was outride of Bavaria or Baden This dislike of Germany is historical Alsace was lost to Germany at a period when toe effects of the Thirty Years' War were oppressive to Germany too empire boon cut up into a multitude of petty states toe rulers ot which exercised almost ubsolate power within their territories The Alsatiana made np some of the bravest among tho troops ol Louis XIV and soon began to share the glories of their new kingdom Under the German Empire the peasants had boen little better than serfs while under Franco they attained fo numerous privileges they had previously not known and in this respect were better off than tho poosanta of the remaining departments of France Alsaco fnmisbed the bravest contingent to army Kleber Lefobroaud other renowned gon orals were her children and shared in tho glory of the French gnus till the foil ot Napoleon Germany during this time was split up into numerous principalities and was at the lowest stage in her history while Napoleon had been taking care in the intervals of war to develop the industries of all parts of his country Tlus were various feflaeneej at work cob-j stoutly estranging Alsace from tlm mother country producing finally tho feeling that is now met with in this previonsly-Gcrman laud -r-N YPoeL Modes France (to Prussia) Now Pin just going to lick yon Pinssia Well you just try ill 111 tell England on you I ray England he want- ed me to turn agin you and help him to steal Belgium 'Owe? 'Ove's that? Thai won't do yon know Wliat mean by that you miserable frog-eater o-oh I what a naughty flo-for-Hliain story 1 never said any such atliing berides Prtisnia said it firet and besides Pnuria made mo say that is I only said it for fun just Prussia wanted me to! Italy? (Aside to Italy) Mind your eye now old feller or yer know what you'll git I Yes I seen him -France Aud besides mrh a thundering -old liar that nobody can baf lieve him 'Alii I know what he said about you Russia If you only knew -7 oh -Fee-faw-fum 1 What's that What's that? What's that? Oh I nothing nothing of any conseqnonoa Fd prefer not to tell I thank you Thank toe gracious goodness not oueof the sort of peoplo who go blabbing socrets aronud and making trouble about neighbors And now come on yon bloody Dutchman I'll lfek you anyhow Robert Couieb tells of a New York minister who had a call to Chicago at a salary oi 8500 He decided it wes not a divinecalL But an addition of 82000 to the salary altered too decision As an offset it ought to be mentioiied that the Rev Da Betoune refused a call from Brooklyn to New' York which wus acoompaniod with a promised increase of rotary Da Pmn of London haa been experimenting with the effects of brandy upon a He makea ont a teixi-blG record of the acceleration of the-' action of toe heart but the soldier rather liked it Climax oooxs are Fond dft Lae Fair an attraction At the Country One Destiny1 NUMBER 32 Fzosr New Haven we have too intelligence that Baron Von Schlager has given an organ-grinder emphatic notice not to play the tinder his window It is strange that toe Prussians should have any difficulty in securing a war loan to the largest amount when- they have lately made such stunning investments they have at trashing and Metz The difference between Victor de-da and Chinese planters is that the first aro toilers of the sea and the last are soilors of tlie tea Kixo V1114AX has adopted tho namb of Uie Freneh camp for his battle cry and thinks be Chalon to Paris at onoo The French bear the news with great fion-Glia-lons Little Louis the Prince Imperial is supposed to have gone to toe war-field to pick up information thus far however he has only picked npa spcnt biillet Fihx at Long Branch (from the World) 11 At 10 before tha ball-n-om door His mighty Kmilleocy wm Ha Mailed and bowed to aU the crowd 80 cors-eona aAd Immense he The gold notes for the new gold banks are to be printed on yelJcw paper sot os to give as good a substitute for toe real article as circumstances will permit said a sentimental wife yon know is the dearest spot on earth" "Wt-IL said the practical hnsband does cost about twice as much as any other these pure asked a young gentleman who was negotiating lor a gift for his fuir one: mid tlie dealer confidentially raised them 'ere birds from canary soeJ" The bnilder of a church in course of erection wlion toe toast of his health was given rather enigmatically replied that was more fitted for the Hcafljpld than for pnblie The of is the highly appropriate naino of toe new Clothing Union It will be remembered perhaps that in the earlier days of Eden Adam and for that matter Eve eat cloth fog altogether The Euglish is said to bo one of the most difficult languages for a foreigner to lmi Reei ntly a foreign lvty went to seo a fine boy baby and in endeavoring to express her admiration said my what a nice fat babee How fiat she is he said a broker a few days since you think I shall ever be worth I worth that to said the confiding spouse said the other half I put you out Sons one describing a ball said it was a vast assemblage of people who liad never met before and who never cared to meet again and that they talked a littlo danced a little eat a little and then went home cross and tired out Dokn Piatt is astonished at finding the daughter of his old-time washerwoman at Sitratogn here she was before me pretty as a painted wagon and faultless in for fashionable attire as it she had been born to the ailuntion Them instances picture very effectually the delusion indulged in by some respecting what many are pleased to call pure blood Here was toe daughter of a common washerwoman as delicate refined aud well-dressed as toe daughter ot Old Coupon who can count back two generations before she hits a me Dr Campbell's A Remarkable Case of Absence or Mind Dr Joflinh Campbell who lived for many years on toe Western Reserve in Ohio a skillful physician but withal one of the most eocenlrio and absent-minded persons in tbe world except Margaret his wife and she was folly his equal One Sunday morufog the doctor was caught out iua tremendous shower which drenched him to the skin It soouedicl eared off however and Dr Josh rode Into bis own yard where he todk toe dripplfog raddle from his horse and let him go adrift into toe pasture Tho saddle he placed on a stout log of wood which wak elevated some "four feet from the ground on two posts where too doctor had begun to bnild a platform to ry hia peachoa on After having got his saddle fixed so it would dry ha took tho bridle and putting the bit over the end of tho log he stretched out tho reins and hitching them to toe horn of the saddle went in to change his wet clothes and get breakfast Joairfh Jr and Margaret Jr were away from home on a visit and so the two seniors sat down to toe morning meal When they were abont half through Jim Atwood a farmer who lived about eight miles distant earns in tellingf toe doctor he wished he would go 'over to bis house as he reckonod he might be wanted over there and then went off te (he village in a harry after some neea-sary When the doctor finished bis meal Le took his saddle-bags and out be Went into the yard where he mounted bis saddle and set oat fo imagination liar Jim For a long time he rode on in silence with his ejes intently fixed on which lay open before him At length bo ban to feel toe effects of the fierce rays of a mid-day sun and on looking np from his book he disooveied a house close by him upon which he sang out lustily for a drink of water Aunt Margaret who had been for the last two hours very busy in the garden soon made her appearance with a pitchor of milk and afteitoe thirsty stranger had taken 9 long draught they entered fotqhn animated conversation the doctor launch-fog ont into rapturous praises of the scenery about th place the neatness of the buildags toe fine orchard of peach and apple trees and toe lady wlio had eaught a glimse of the saddle-bags made a great many inquiries about the health pf the neighborhood etc The doctor filially took bis leave of toe lady assuring her that he would call on his return and have some further conversation with her as alia reminded him so much of his wife who he was sure would be very happy to make her acquaintance The Jody turned to enter the house and Ihe doctor had just gathered ap the reins when Jim Atwood dashed up to the (ate with his hone all in a father of foam on earth are you doing doctor yelled Jim off that log and oome The doctor was greatly astonished at first but after a few minutes it got through bis hair that Le had been ail toe inornii-g riding a beech log fo his oa door yard The fofulab make of dooekius mannfae-tored by Benj Sons at their mills at Conthohocken Pa are still being sold ahead of production There is no better evidence of the excellence of any make of goods than tbe continued confidence of consumers in buying them from son to season- The doefckin" are now almost a household word with clothing houses throughout the eountry and they are considered the standard by which other makes are graded This finu also manufacture a splSdid coating in all the fancy and fashionable colors These goods are befog used by the flrst-elaas m-chaut toilers and successfully compete with foreign good Thty bavealso started a new mill exclusively on cotton-warp cloth and heaven and they are now putting these goods into the market t'-rair superior unirfi recommending them to the bods in preforenee to many of the old and favorite brands In fact the almost indestructible finish which has si ways characterized the goods manufactured by this firm is one of their principal American Manufacturer? Circular AugndZX 187 The Louisville Oonrici'JournslTiAS'an' item about tin who enjoys the dd-plated distinction of -being the only (roll who was ever thrown ont of a fifty thousand dollar mx-in-hand-wilh-out befog instantly 1S70 OUBBEHT gABAQRA PHB Miscellaneous Items Iksiaka girls go to meeting in ox-carts The United States used last year 6200-000 lbs of zinc The King of Prussia has openod a French boarding-house A cottom picking mnehine has been invented in Louisville Newkpapebs never had so many readers as daring the past six weeks New Yobx has about 18000 French inhabitants schools are to be re-established on toe New England system The United States now have about 45-000 miles of railroad declines to A Rochester clairvoyand state who killed Mr Nathan Mxxpms realized only 86000 from the dog ordinnxee Khoxvilli is to have open by the Templeton troupe White Suefhub Rfbdkm brags of 500 guests yet St Louis has killed just 5108 dogs thin season St Louie is jubilant over three prizefights in one day Winnipiseogee is 501 feet above the level of the sea Fa dm ns in Southorn Kansas Intend to plant cotton next season At Auburn each convict in tlie State prison cost tbe State for his support but 15i cents a day In Cincinnati toe excessive mortality among children is attributed to the impure milk sold in the city Iz is raid too censis wid show a Vailing off in ihe populrfttou of nearly aU toe Southern cities Tux Nashua IL Louse of correction liar bora a girl 17 years old for being a common drunkard Up to tlie first aof September nearly 7 Out) persons had 'visited the sumiuit oi Mount Washington this year A Chicago woman wants a divorce because her husbuul support her aud talks free love Toe Tennessee and railroad will be completed to Lebanon by next Saturday night Laeok quantities of broom com are coming to tha Nashville market The juices are lower than last year Tus Georgia State Fair is to give a premium of 850 to toe best printed daily or tri-wookly paper in the State In Catoosa county Georgia a woman recently shouted heraelf to deali under excessive religious excitement A shipment of 16000 pounds of sumac was made irom Nashville oVfcr tlie Louisville and Nashrill1 railroad Tuesday to timeout The North Georgia coal region is estimated to extend through ail area of 240 square miles extracted to yield 1300000-000 tons Louisiana planters claim that the caterpillars can do the cotton no harm as toe season is too far advanced The annual review ot toe New Orleans market oecnpics about 25 dose columns oi tho -Picayune The Sandwich Islands appropriate 81-116296 this year for tho running expenses of the government The new shops of tho Pennsylvania railroad now building at Altoona covor an of 20 acres At Evansville Indiana they ring toe fire bolls when they want to 'Wake upi-Hp police to effect an arrest It is estimated that the cotton crop this year will exceed that 15000000 of bales of last by more than The New Jersey Btateassociation of base ballplayers will hold its annual session at Elizabetn October 9 th In Virginia a has been organized for the improvement of hounds Ml the promotion or coursing A whits bat as rare a curiosity as a white blackbird was captured in Nipperfs saloon in Paris Mobs car loads of Chinamen passed through Gorin to on the 24 th for toe Memphis and Selma (General railroad The American scientific association wants to establish an observatory on too highest poifits of toe Pacific railroad A Wuxteubeho German paper says that the Anglican Canon Bidden luis been to confer with toe Catholic Professor Dol-linger at Munich for a concert of action In reference to toe dogma of infallibility It is said that Gon Frcssard was at dinner during all tho affoir at Wisscmberg and although messengers oame and told him the state of affairs he remaiued at dinner and smeked his cigar till four James Wautkes wlio abandoned his wife and three children iu Iowa two yean ago leaving them without a eeut while he hod hundreds which belonged to bis creditors is about to be hung in Texas for murder Guard Sibe Faunhwohtii Svho reached New York a few days since on his return from Europe arrived at home in Nashville ou Tuesday He is in good health and well pleased with his trip abroad With the single exception of the occurrence of war upon his arrival in Germany Wit anf Humor A Richmond psiicr publishes Receipts from customs -Ghristmas Fourth of Jnly profits THEGhrisiiau Advocate is not often found among lawyers Imtekmchments are the first care in war retrenchments in peace uimk in some vast the Insane Asylum at Oshkosh i Molasses has been decided by onr poet-offices to be The French troops are being supplied aitii Bibles but Ihe PrusriaiM are just out Salm-Salnis To keep' coon "in the country in warm weather state your roof tight and shingle your hair close Napoixom ought to send for the New York 8 venifa there is note poor soldier in the regiment Thk high-pressure bark-action double-suction Mobile Datlv Tight Boot is just now the other AKnixBsniEN convey their powder in caissons but they sometimes cany their in their canteens The Boston Poet says Murat Halstead complains that he get ioe enough in Paris to cool his heated imagination this bit of torbotis not as rood as that you gave us last Waiter: pardon sir off the very same fish" The Boston Transcript asks: beauty unadorned is adorned the moot em-belished aft the more plain for its trappings? A rano op town asks VwhatiitheBig Horn It-is an expedition around town late Sunday night in Karsh' of anope-t saloon -As the Empreu Eugenie is the acknowledged leader of fashion we may shortly expect something recherche in the way of travelling -dresseq VOLUME VI JT-T LEOX GAXBETTA Leon Gain be Ua the Minislerof tho In-teriof was born at Cdhors Oct 30 1838 of a Genoceo fumi Hostadiedlaw nnd was admitted to tho bar in Peris in 1859! Tho afiair which rendered his name popular In Paris was that which attended the subscription lists opened by fioveral journals alter the scencs'at-tho Cemetery af-Montmartre Dec 2 1868 in order to erect a monument to tho deceased ex-rep-resentative Daudin In the month of March 186 the defense ot the Journal rEmancipation published at Tonlouec gave rise In the- south- to cnthnsinetic demonstrations in favor of the young ad-vooate At thcr general election Giim-presented himself simnitancously as a' candidate for Paris and Marseilles- lUO tUU UV jblo opposition and made great impression by his apiiearance and his impotuons eloquence at tho pabliameetings of the electors IIo was elected both in the First District of Party' and in the -First of the Bon chor-du-Bhone at Marseilles He chose to sit for the latter place-- Xbakooh rAun jcues gbxt Gravy President of the Council was born at Montsour Vandry Department of Jury Aag 16 1813 Educated at th College if ho came to Paris to study jaw took part in tho revolutionary days of July 183 and was among the combatants who took possession of the Babylon barracks Admitted to the status of advocate his soon assumed at the Bar of Paris an important rank among the defenders of the radical party and notabjy pleaded in the prosecution of May 13 1839 for (wo companions of Barber Appointed in 1848 Commissary of the Provisional Government in his department he ishowed iu the exercise of these difficult) functions' gnat moderation and prndenoe He was afterward elected a member of the Constituent Assembly being placed first among the eight representatives Of the (Jura As a in ember of the Committee of Justice and Vice President of the Assembly Grevy often ascended the tribune and distinguished himself among the effective orators ot lhe Democratic pr While preserving a position of iudepi i eneo sufflcientlyf removed from the tiocidl-Ists though prolty close to tho klountnin he usually-voted with the -extreme -Loit Alter the election (of Louis -Napoleon iu of December 10 Grvy resisted' the government of Louis 'Napoleon nnd pronounoed against the expedition to Borne B-eleeted to the Legudativo Assembly he' remained laitht'ul to the Democratic cause without making common cause with the Mountain ho was one of the prinopal opponents of tho royalist coalition In 1868 Grovy re-entered alter a retirement of seventeen years the political arena" In a partial election of the Seoond District pf the Jura he -polled 22428out of 3 718 votes Thp ups the tint occasion bince 1852 that tho administration has been bo completely beaten iu the country In the general elcctiofi of the following year he was returned without official oppoeition OKVi TBOOHUa Louis Jules Trochu a General in the FrenohArmy is the Minister of War under the Prorisional Government He was born at Morbihan in 1815 graduated from Saint Oyr was appointed a Lieutenant in 1840 and a Captain in 184 and attached to the staff of Marshal Bugeaud in Algeria In 1846 he was made Chqf tT Escadron in 1853 Lieutenant-Colonel aid de-ernip to Marshal St Amaud in the Crimea Brigadier-GenerU in 1854 Iu 1859 he was appointed General of Division and served in Italy with distinction In 18CCbe was authorised to prepare tho works necessary for a punsauon of the army In 1855 he made commander of the Legion of Honor and Grand Officer in 1861 At'inis last date he could look back on twenty-five-years of activo Bervioe eighteen campaigns and one wound He was elected a member of the General Morbihan for the Canton of Belle Isle taking the place 6f his father He published anonymously Vurmqt Fran-mSm en 1867 a work which in 'one year went through ten editions limes The Colorado SliTcr Mlnes-Tho editor of the Central City Befeiater fumishestho following items concerning the new Bilver region recently discovered northwest of Denver and 'Already creating intense excitement in mining localities Parties aim starting from' Denver with stocks of goods and there seems to be no danbt of the permanency and richness of the mines reporter has just returned from Grand Island The dis(riotis fifteen miles northwest of Central City on the western boundary of Boulder county and forty mile from Denver -About thirty ledges have been struck and six or eight have been uncovered showing true fissure silver veins' bearing pay rook crevices' from two to five foot in width Cariboo Idaho Boulder County Grand Island Sovereign People Garter Trojan Monitor Cooger and Comstock arc among the most celebrated mines About five hundred men are oh the ground Buildings are going up rapidly Tons of rich ores ore hauled from the mines to Prof smelting works at'Black Ilawk daily regular coaches inn from here each day besides many private conveyances The passengers number about one hundred per day The fxmtement is great and steadily increasing Tha veins no-fay developed give the impression that this is one of the richest jsjlver regions i yot dis covered qn the continent Prof Nall eon-templates the immediate construction of additional smelling works meet the demand from these mines and other companies -are talking of creating smelting Comae of Variegation of Lcirt According to Mr Mprreu tho diffekonoe in the iaolor of tha vAriegatcd plants which fonnbo ornamental a feature of onr greenhouses is due to a disease which is at once contagious and capable of being transmitted from one species of plant to another by a kind of inoculation Ho considers that the alteration of the chlorophyl (which he compares to the red globules of the blood) or green coloring matter gives rise to variegated lekves which consist of a mixture of green parts with others more or less yellow- If the discoloration is general it prodaoes death Among the higher order of plants oply those which ra parasitic can exist when entirely- deprived df oblorophyL 1-'Variegation is a sign of organic disease the discolored or Variegated portions-of the lefff have lost their power of reducing the carbonic acid of the atmosphere tho plants-are generally weaker smaller their flowers and fruit much poorer and their power of resisting cold diminished Variegation may be propagated by means of layers buds or grafts showing that the buds emaelves are infected Tho seeds however from variegated individuals usually produce normal and healthy plants Hoormuin's Gzutur Bitieks We intend-ad to have- ealtod attention to Gorman Bitters advertised in onr colnmne This BUtera as porhaps every body is aware is much a staple article with the draa- torso ao four is withthe grist mills and i call for it where you will you cannot go auiifle There ft no better medicine before tee public it contains no alcoholic ingredi cut and oomniotids itself to temperance people who i seek to avoid whatever intoxi-te Jntemperanoo Most tonics in the spring of the year Hooflndo stfttea at the- heod of them all and potent at any time of the year Those who would oome out in the eurina with a and invigorated eyotemVAhould Jbe (tin its nee now Tha above io the uuoolici? ed etatempntor the Editor of the Waukegan Ilia Toiw ft a combine Um ot alTthe- ingredtonte of thaBitUra with pure Santa Gras Bum orange aniee-e making a preparation of rare medical value The Tnmo Is need for the oame d's-eaaeeao the Bitten in caaea where Alcoholic fitimuluais neoeesary THE REhUSUTATION HORROR Skaggs Lives Fifteen Hoars After Re enacital ton at the Doctors Disposition or the Body The intelligence has at last arrived that the murderer John Skaggs wlio was hanged at Bloomfield Mo on the 26th ult and subsequently restored to life by electricity died in fifteen libera after he was lowered from the gallows Tho 8t Louis Republican says was hung at 1:10 in tho afternoon and after the pliyeicfons had been operating upon him up'to nearly 9 o'clock in an endeavor to resuscitate him -e attempt was given up as hopeless Dr Sandora was the first to desist then Dr McDonald' and finally Dr Jackson It was 9 when Sheriff Kitchen left him Skaggs was then breathing heavily os ii asleep Somo miunles before this he was very weak but had when the galvanic battery was put in operation thrown his left arm over L-is breast and then by his side Tho lastTnp-tionrof the doctors was to examine longue and no sooner hod Dr McDonald pone this than ho picked up his hat and walked out Skaggs was able to open and shut his ej is and as tho sheriff steppod near tho body they followed him Thoy also followed the movements of A Butts who was then in tlTe room It is perhaps fortunate for these gentlemen that they were almost expresKioula- as if fixed in dull leaden Rtare Threo men remained 'by tho body as it lay on the bench in the dimly-lighted room of the Court houseund they watchedft narrowly Skaggs seemed to gain strength but after midnight his breathing was vory lohored At 4 next morning it was almost inaudible and lit 4:18 it stopped Skaggs had at last died He never spoke after he was hanged There was a little difference about tbe burial of the body Mr Ghapman attorney who had received an order from Skaggs As tb the disposition of the body asked the Sheriff to inter it at the expense of tho county Col 1 Kitoken Aid Mr Chapman and the doctors liml contended that he had no right to interfere in the matter after the tuan Irtul been cut down and now he would liavo nothing to do with itunless Mr Chapman declined to do what he considered his (Mr dnty If he Would not bury itbe (the Sheriff) would got twenty uiofi to assist at it without any exjumse to the county Mr Chapman hail the body interred A grjive was dug on the bank of Miller's Creek outside the town aiul Skaggs wus buried at 5 on Saturday evening Not for from where he was laid the remains of throe men who were lynched foif horsestealing during the war were rudely interred Samples of ibc Wit of the Laic George IV Front fee From thn BpriiifleUl Reinibllom George Prentice was a man of gay oind lively wit high spirit tolorablo education and great rtodiucss with tha pen' In a less provincial atmosphere he might have distinguished himself in literature As it is his book is made up of jukes good bad and indifferent bnt all good enough to read ns-Ainples of what passed in their day for sharp wit We will close this notice with a few of thorn: About tbe only person that we ever heard of that spoiled by being lion-feed was a Jew named Daniel An English writer Ays in his advice to a young married woman their mother Eve married a It might be added that the gardener inconsequence of the match lost his situation Whatever Midas touched turned into gpld In these days touch a mnu with gold and tnm into anything The editor of tho Ohio Statesman says on Wo suppose the the editor has lost hiB horse A Newbern paper Ays that Mrs Alice Day of that city was lately delivered of four sturdy boys We know not what a day may bring forth wo your lover jealous yes sir 1 think wc con if wo nut our heads together" Wo aro oft mi told to imitate nature Still we should not imitate her too literally We dress in greeti velvet through tho summer because she does An author ridiculing the idea of ghosts asks how a dead mun can get into a locked room Probably with a skeleton key it possible miss that you know the names of some of your best I oven know what my own may bo a year from now Oar neighbor is still arguing against the credit system' Let him try to got credit anywhere to the amount of 85 and ho will find that his arguments aro considered perfectly conclusive A gentlemau if aggrieved has a right to pull a blnckgnardVeara but he ahould not rut them off) They should beleft on for the accommodation of othar aggrieved parties I A New York editor exclaims shall we look upon the war in Enropo We guess ifho must look at it at all that lie had bottek peep from the top of a hgh hill out of cannon Slio: Byron Ays uf a great laltle OIs God! It is alovcly sight to see Jtov ono jrlio hu no friends no brothor tboro WaAhink he might as well have added who isn't there Wholesale Kobbtri For several weeks and even months past ono of the prineiptd wholesale dealers on Delaware street lias constantly missed from hia store goods of considers-' bio value but in small bills His suspicions were directed very early to 'one of his clerks but so carefully was the peculation conducted that the closest watch fuilod to make suspicion a certainty Yesterday the matter came to a climax and the whole particulars were discovered J-- It seems tha( this young man has hod confederates in several neighboring cities but one is Abilene who attended to the larger part of bis business To them he had expressed almost weekly for many months past t-uinll packages- of 'valuable goods burked 0 ait about hall their value uui uc-ived llu money through express iu le'urti 'uu-i-r an assumed name The suspicious of his employer had been ripid'itraw nig l-i a point wiieu by good iprluno: be discovered the uaiiio under valuable clerk train u-p'd tho business nnd msile his preparations -Yesterday Insuring -that auother package of nioiiL-y luJ ur'ned for him he stationed a in citizens clothes in tho ispive office and pasted tho express agent va to the coarse to be taken Ill the midule ol the 'morning the clerk arrived and askc--l if there was any money for him giving the a-'sutnetl name and adding that tho money was expected from Abilene The agent produced the package and askiug if that was his name received answer in toe affirmative The policeman tneu took charge of the money and the clerk and- lodged him in too calaboose Siuee then the matter has been thoroughly investigated aiul the ckrk discharged from employ but out of consideration for his agonized mother the matter has been hushed up and no prosecution made It is but another eqni of how young men get a salary of a few hundreds nnd spend a few thousands Kansja City Mo) Mem Lxssoxs cw -TpZ Firs--While the great fire i still buruipg the public are contrast- owned by toe Bepablic Life Insnrmnoo Company The managers of these two institutions have wisely secured homes for -their bioineae safe against the destroyer which fitly represents their own 1 promuioiloa and stability TnxTaixtnrx In furnishing Intelligence and the Itepublio Life protection tor the families tif the west Li-t business men Chicago Iribuue follow their Sept Blh exzmple- Tax nsQ of Hall's Vcgetsblo Sicilian Hair Benewer will keep the hair from felling out Sirnrge DlieoTiry on the i'roin the WMlilnsfon (D C) Chronicle Aug- 9S The constant discovery of things which appear strange afford a study for those inclinations lead them to sift out the mysterious workings of the natural world The Cardiff Giant whoso mighty remains wero represented as bavins been dug from the bowels of theearth afforded an opportunity to onr geological savans to expound to the world the result of the diagnosis and prognosis so to speak made by them of that wondorinl curiosity Etch day brings with it a succession of new discoveries and here almost within the limits of tho District of Columbia a tiller of the soil has Potomac funnd upon his homestead a curious phe- the attention of the scientific world On the banks of the Potomac near Fort Foote lives one Wm Durr by occupation a farmer and' who directs the management of a farm of some 200 acres Upon taking possession of this property some time during the year 1869 Mr Dorr found several Indian relics such as stone tomahawks arrow heads eto and subsequently has found others in common use among Indians which led him to the conclusion that either an-Indian settlement had at an early day been located near this form-'or that an Indian warfare had been waged thereon The eastern end of the estate is bordered by a wooded grove of fine timber land Through this grove Mr Durr hod occasion to pass almost daily in tho prosecution of -Lis nsnal work His attention hid soma- time since drawn to what from all appearances resembled a large atone shaped almost in the form of a mound or a grave)' Many times he passed it and seemed drawn by somo unaccountable means to give it more Ilian a passing glance Coup ling the foot thot he haa already found many articles of natural ouriosity upon the plaee with the thought that tho stone might reveal something still stranger he miule up his mind to provide himself with the necessary tools' and un-fathom the mysteries it might reveal On Tuesday commenced operations and upon striking rtlie stone found to his astonishment that it had au outer covering of' the same trabstunoe whii-h yielded readily to the hammer consist-n of a layer ot white sandstone vary-u: from ono to three inches in thickness Lioii niter having been removed left a smoother surface and revealed the comparative distinct outlines of a petrified bear about seven feet in length and three feet in eighth and thickness After farther re? search was found the distinct outlines of a female face and child pud over the forms of which the bear was a complete coverings Tho head of the animal from the -indications in the petrified form' had been cleaved and rested between the two fore-paws it lying in that position The hind legs were pvrdeijtly broken off no farther outline of the appearing The question to be solved by philoso plie'rais: Was the mother jmd child killed by the bear? 'or was the animal killed and placed over the remains of the human beings- as a vigilant watch over the dead? One thing is certain and that is that the bear (or what is Bnpposed to be such) oov era the dktire forms of the two bodies The discovery is pf fench a character as should engage the attention of some of bur leading scientific- men who- no doubt could form a bonclusiou and enlighten those who may liavo a desire for more information on the mysterious subject The farm of Mr Durr is accessible from Fort Foote being bat two miles therefrom DlicsvirlM Bade by Accident Not -a fowl discoveries in the arts and sciences have Jbeen made or sugggested by accident The use of the pondmum Bug- gestod by tho vibrating of a chandelier in a calhodral the power of steam intimated by the oscillating of the lid of a tea-kottlo the utility of coal gaa for light experimented upon by an ordinary tobacco-pipe of white olay the magnifying property of lens stumbled upon by an apprentice while -holding spectacle glasses between his thumb and are well-known instances in proof of tho fact Galvanism was discovered by accident Frofeteoj Golvani of Bologna in Italy gave his namb to the operation bnt his wife is considered as- actually entitled to the credit of the discovery tihe being in bad health some frogs -were ordered -for her As they lay upon (he tablo skinned site noticed that their limbs beeaUf Btrong-fy convulsed when near an electrical conductor Bhe called her husband's attention to tho fool he instituted a series of experiments And In 1789 the galvanic battery was invented Eleven yean later with' that-discovery for his basis Professor Allessandro Volta also an Italian announced his discovery of the The discovery of glass-making was effected by seeing the sand vitrified upon whiuh a fire had been kindled Blanco rt says that the making of plate-glass was suggested by the fact of a workman happening to break a crucible filled with muted glass The fluid lan under ono ol the large flagstones with which the floor was paved On raisibg tho stone to recover the glass it was found in the form of a plate such as could not be produced by the ordinary process of blowing Glass pearls though among the most beautiful inexpensive and common orna manta worn by the ladies are produced by a very singular process In 1656 a Venetian named Jaquin discovered that the scales of a fish called bleak fish possessed tha property of communicating a pearly hike to the water He found by experimenting that beads dipped into this water assumed- when dried the appearance ot pearls It: proved however that tho pearly ceat when placed ontside was easily rubbed off and the next improvement was to make the beads hollow The making of these beads is oanjed on to this day in Venice The beads are all blown separately By means of a small tube the insides are delicately coated with the pea -ly liquid and a waxed eodting is plnced over that It requires the scales of lour thousand fish to produce half a pint of the liquid to which a small quantity of sal-auixnonia and isinglass are afterward added Lnudy Foot the celebrated snuff manufacturer origiually kept a small tobaoet-uist shop At LiiLerick On one night his lioiise which £as uninsured burned to the gruud As he contemplated the smoking wiiSVulni following morning: in a state bordering ou despair some of the poor neighbors groping among the tube is for what they could find stumbled upon kcvciw al oanisters of nueonsumed but half-baked suuflwliich they triedand found it so to their noses that they loaded their' waistcoat pockets with it Lundy Foot aroused ffom his stupor 1 imitated their example and took a pinch of his own property when he was struck by the superior pungency and flavor it had acquired from the great heat to which it had been exposed Aoting upon the hint he took another house in a phwe called Black Yard-created ovens and set about the manufacture of that high dried commodify which soon became known arf Black Yard snuff Eventually he took a larger house! in Dublin and making hia customers pay liberally through the nose amassed A great fortune for having been rained A xxw mineral named-nadorite discovered in the province of Constantine Algeria haa been analysed by PisanL Ita chief constituents are the oxides of Dead and of antimony It also yields a quantity of chlorine The thigh bone of a mastodon i burned on the fojm of Henry Muzzy Aurora Ilk tha other day It is in a perfect state of preservation measures four feet in length und one foot in diameter at each end and weighs fifty-seven-' pounds Saveli for the remainder of the monster's skeleton is being made Bxau-Adiobaxi Breese excellent officer fhodgh he is must remain rear-admiral because every sailor wants a breeze abaft tice was born of Israolitishparentq at Nis-' i- i xy it -i- i 1 1- -x j- diet in 1796L- He was admitted to the bar in 1817 and practiced in h(s native village Jlis wall-known liberalism did not prevent jfaisC- defending one of the Ministers of jOharles M- Gnemon Bansville: but After a long exodium he fainted ana Ids Vclient WaS oondenmed He was oounsel also at different times for the NAtional Const! tutionnel 'and Gazette do France Hq -was a member of the Chamber of De duties for several years during the reign of Louis Fhillippe end Always voted with the reform party Ha advocatod the most romprohensive principles of free trade When Count Duohatel made his blw declaration that no inform could be granted-r-that the Govamment had n- solved to put down the reform Is blood In this" Encountering Louis Philippe and his i Queen in the Plaoede la Concorde on'the day of their flight Cremiduk rocom-I mended them to depart immediately hope for them belUg left and proceod to the Chamber whore he advocated the fjorfnation of a provisional gOYornmentand was made Minister of Jusiico He is one of thaiauthoraof the Cod dea Codes Af-s ter the eq riot he was arrested and ta--ken to Moxas and retired from political life until -186 when ho was elected a Deputy from -the Third Girconsoription Of Paris-- An able- lawyer and an effective ofator he is well known for his proverbial ugliness of features the Minister of Finance gnenx in 1806 and lc- came an advocate lh 1M1 -and was intnv dnoed to public life in Paris by Marshal Buguead- In the oonstiluent and legislative sssemblies of twhich he was a mem-ber Magne did hot occupy -a leading place as a debater but his prac wol spf echoes were always listened to with attention In 1849 -he was made-under secretary -of slate for finances and became minister of pnblie works in This position he held ''rip til 1854 He was enabled to conclude many important Conventions with the great railway companies and daring his cAreer el office he personally inapocted not only-all the principal lines of France bat also those1 of other countries to-enable him to avail jhisaroU of improvements He was Finance Minister from 1854 to-1860 when he became Minister without port-fid retired in Manh-1863 1 and was named a -member iff -the Privy Council April 1 i lie was made Senator 1 185 'Commander iff IheLegion of HonorJ 1861 and Grand Cross 1854' In 1867 ha was recalled to the Ministry of -Finsnob and charged with tho rawing of a new loon in waaexeeodingly soecessfaL He left the cabinet when kL-OUivier formed biff Ministry in 187 "-iT jvr ratae snnni 'J Jutes Simon Minister of Publio in-struetkm was born in Lorient in 1814 In early Hfo was enraged' in teaching Lf meeting with extraprdiunry anooess and beiiqj dsoorated to l845 H(a political life eganln 1848 when he was elected fc from the Gotes-du-Nord and he at once attached himself to tho moderate Be publican party In 184 he was eleeted member of the Coundi of State In 18C turn presses wore more regard to good shaped bales takku into consideration Several patent pne8cson the lever plan are fo use the cost ranging from 840 to 85 Every grower who can afford it should havq one of these presses In districts where but few hops aro 'grown it would be a good plan for growers to club together and share the expense of a patent press The several varieties of patents in use all turn out about the same sized bales viz: (j feet in length feet wiiW and 18 inches thick Hop should be pnt np to wrifib as n--200 pounds to the bale ss possible black pressed or light bales do Dot samla or ell as well ss those property put up Wn comprossedsomuchas to ondude the air hops are quite liable to beat In he bole In baling none bat the best threo-pty twine should be used We would particnlarty urge upon grow- fK fntl toriritrdexi ot hoit tlio BCCcwntjf of lilsin matkinp No grower sUonldbe without a stencil plate bearing the initials of his name The foil name if not a long one would be better These plates cam be gotten tip at a small eot cut from shoot iraim Uni of sufficient durability to last a -growers lifetime The letters should not be uvez three inches tquntw The best material for marking is turpentine and -lampblack A tare amount of American hops have been rejected in thk London market on account of the nse-of keiOSene oil with lamp black as a marking map teriaL The unpleasant odqr of the oi--striking through the lions depriving them of the natural flavor ho mork or shipping directions should jbe put upon too end of the bale for the reason stood on end on muddy wharfa too marks are liable to become defaced llw proper-: place to mtrk is on toe narrow sum near the top ot thebe' Onaayof shipment toujghoM should send invoice by mail statingnow end by what ii- phipped If toe shipment consists of more than one growth ft should be so specified with tho number of bales each marts ot each Ac 11 Aag 10 ErnrwJFmxa rV' Commissics Hop Merchant aeT he was elected a Deputy as an Opposition candidate i He was distinguished as an orator as auadvoeatePf the liberty of the Press right of pnblio instruction to In 1859 hewas eleo ted Dipgty from twodif-forbnt districts the Gironde and: the and chosen to represent the Gir-r onde He haa' always been more or lees idoritjffed with the esnse of edrieation and constantly as its most able and was eleo of Men iff pf Letters bat resigned fbnr month later oonstanuy as its most i ehampiim In 18G8 he President iff tho Sooiety "j-VVLloqnont is'tbeimthdt KookK Tl- rts "ft a -i- -f a Si he Mb.

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À propos de la collection Ottawa County Union

Pages disponibles:
390
Années disponibles:
1869-1871