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Exeter Advocate, 1909-11-18, Page 24111.11, back to LiI uu1 Love; OR, WAITING THROUGH WEARY YEARS. cSrn, and led her into the open air f +o0o4'O+o1o•0•('4'`3+_ I in front of the ('curt huuse, "My child, where do you wish to go 1" "First of all on my knees to tl ank you. sir, for saving my pis .1 life, and for much inure than that, ft.r pre ing not only to the jury, ler. to my own bleeding heart that 1 neser hurt Ivy poor baby even while- 1 was out of my head'" "Stay! stay, Marie! you must kl.ce) only to the Lord, and nut to Ilia human instrument' Where Shall 1 take you I I wish to see you in safety before 1 leave you. i have ('HA P1' Elt V 1 1. - (Cont d) noun, Mr. Worth aekcd for a isust• to drive to the Wendover station, ponement on f the trial, until an nn and take the train to Richmond te- The trial attracted many persons pot taut w itness for the defence. eight " tt• the court house. And the cowscould be brought from Baltimore. "1 wish to go to my own little morn was densely crowded.rhe petition was granted, and th, house under the cliff. But don't But many OM had never seen trial postponed until that day week, yen trouble to take ole there, sir. Marie Seralinne, and who expectedthe 14th of March. I car• go very well alone. to behold in the accused a monster Marie Seralinne was remanded •.) lou are surer' as revolting in spin as the Ler prison ; and the ('ours took u}' "Yes, sure." alleged crime was in essence, were „thee cases of less vital Court took u astonished when they saw the sten- Ishmael c esorf l deferred his visit importance. der, fragile form, and the fair, wan to face and simple, childlike aspect of the young prisoner. When she was formally arraigned end asked whether she were guilty. cr not guilty, she answered very artlessly -- "Then, here child. Take this," he said, putting a twenty dollar bill 'Washington, and gave his full at in her hand, which she made a ges- tc11tien to getting up the defence ture of refusing --"Nay, you must of this poor girl, as if he had been take it, as from a father. And here is my address. If ever you should want a friend, write to me," be added, as he forced the bank note with his card into her hand. "I wouldn't have hurt my poor ease. In the interim, he had many He was gone. And she hurried little baby to have saved my own interviews with his client. (.14 w -n the street, and out of the vie life, if I had known it. But I didn't The day of trial came, and the lege by the road leading to her hut. know when 1 did it. 1 didn't even court, as before, was crowded. As soon as she found herself alone know 1 had done it. But 1 know The prosecution was opened by a ie the woods, she knelt down and thanked the Lord for her great de- liverance, and prayed Hint to bless her benefactor, Ishmael Worth. terfield, the farmer's wife, who d1s- There she hurried en towards her covered the dead child. hut. But when she reached the spot She testified to the facts within a great shock awaited her. The her knuwi"dge, and which are al - _but had disappeared, and young retained with a ten thousand dol- lar fee, or if he bad been a young barrister with his reputation de- pending upon the success of his first ) must have dune it, because thele short address of the State's attor- til'as nobody else in the house. And, nes to the jury, fc bowed by the cal - mit. I am williug to die for it." line of the first witness. Mrs. But - She was here instructed that her informal answer would not do ; but that If she could not recollect hav- ing committed the crime, she must .lead "not guilty." Then, in her obedient spirit, she pleaded as she had been told to do. When asked if she had any coon eel. she answered, "No sir." But just then the stately form an 1 1,e( by the sufferance of the 1 h i oftubed meal, made noble face of Mr. Ishmael Worth, of the Bic•hnwnd bar, one of the most eminent lawyers and humane gentlemen of the age, was seen t,. art witnesses for the prosecute 1 rise from the crowd of spectators. which closed with d short swum .'t He had only that day arrivetJ ie u►' address by the State's attorney Pine Cliff, on his way to Washing- The cross-examination -•f witness down for the sake of the quarry 1 t - ton City. And his presence in th.� (-o-. was rigidly reserved for the I. i nhath it. court room was purely accidental- fence. On the Farm j.o+c -►o+o+o+oil+ O+ oi'a FEEDING THE DAIRY CALF• There is no such thing as fixing the amount any calf should be fed in order to grow well, and be kept in the pink of Health. Each calf has an individuality, some calves have better digestion and power to assimilate their food than others. Consequently, there can bo no such tiling as figuring to a scientific nic- ety what amount a calf shall eat. The class of food which when eat- en -providing it is palatable -- can be well laid down, but there all rules of feeding trust end. The feed- ing of calves after they are four months of age -most calves are weaned from milk -depends again upon how well they have been fed in their infancy when milk was their chief source of sustenance. Many a calf's digestion is impaired by feeding on skim milk wholly when only a few days old. or hav- ing been fed cold milk that was germ -laden from being keut too long before being fed. Thus, a lot depends upon the calf's condition when you start in to feed them at four months of age. Some may be strong and vigorous, of large size and grow thin by reason of being bred frotn strong, large parents; Lin - other small and weakly from weak do not become constipated. Lin - vitality in their parents, or of being seed meal, roots, corn stalks and badly fed when young. apples are useful to prevent this In a -general way, alfalfa hay and danger. •r • arsenate of lead. Let when half grown or 1a1ger, a,•cor(ing to San- derson, file p,.unds of arsenate of lead to 511 gallons of water is nec- essary to prove effective. • LIVE STOCK NOTES. For horses that are confined to the stable on dry feed, a hot bran mash once or tw k e each week is most beneficial. . Pigs are clot well protected by Nature and to thrice they must have warns winter quarters free frotu drafts. They must have a good range for exercise but they must have warm quarters in which to sleep. Before you go into the poultry business you should visit some well- established poultry plant, where you can see and study its workings. By so doing, you will gain much in- formation that will be valuable to you in the future. You will see the absolute necessity of care and eco- nomy in all of its bran( hes, tnc com- plete knowledge of which is requi- site to success. A yearling may be kept well, which means kept growing at not to exceed from $`2 to $2.50 a month while -in stable, and for much less when at pasture. A favorite ration is a pint of ground oats, the same of bran and half a gill of_oilmeal, twice a day, made into a thin grhel with water and spread on the hay feed. If hay is high, feed oats straw in its place if bright and clean. Do not give the colts any dusty food, and sec to it that they ready known to the reader. teen were at work digging out red clover hay make, generally speak - She was followed th Ur. Btesti- sand -stone from under its founda- ing, ideal roughage for calves the LONDON'S FOOR COSTLY who being called to the stand testi 1t'' The hut, indeed, had never first winter of their lives. All they fad that he had made a post -mor- been her own or her grundinother'e will eat of this; feed the red clover tem examination of the child's body pi•opert•. They had lived in it, rent .epee a day and the alfalfa once, and and found from appearances ancea that one pound 1 of it had been burn alive and nubee landholder, who owned the ground. oats, two parts by weight to one of nuently strangled. I His interests had at last requir- (''rn, to every hundred pounds These were the only two import ed its removes. And during the weight of calf will be about what long imprisonment of its mistress, most calves will require - which it was supposed would end I But feeders must always keep in only in death. he had had it pulled mind that food alone cannot grow up a healthy calf, colt, lamb, or pig, any more than it can grow a healthy boy or girl. All growing or providential. \i r. Worth arose on the part of -� The thirty-one London Boards of pAnimals must have regular daily He now adlyaneed, and hewing to the prisoner. He, too, made but a ('11APTFII VI11. exercise in order to develop muscle, Guardians, says the London Daily t1 Heneh, said: remit preliminary speech before cal 'Mail, arc now engaged in dealing "Your Honor, I am counsel for bug witnesses. She saw and understood all at a 1'(le and nerve force. The one who the prisoner, if she will accept me. ' first, he called in succession some glance; for there had been quarry- huts his young calves in a shed or with rho hundreds et tenders sent d His words produced the profound- (•' the most respectable i•.izens . f nig in that neighborhood defer( basement barn and keeps them in by the various contractors for ,.. est senratien. Here was a lawyer the country, who had kn. wn t':. end the chance, of losing their little there fro fall until spring rnny the supply of previsions, coal, have sleek fat calves, but they will j clothes, and other necessaries in- uf world -e ide renew'', whose ad% e! little cottage girl, Marie Seralinne, horse through the quarrying had disappoint ,point his expectations of haw cidenlal to the feeding of nearly cavy alt nu•l always secured a v •r- I rem her childhood to the ,resent Lc en one of the bugbears of her .. t 1 D diet for his client, whether in 4 time, and could testify to the uni erandmuther's last clays. i,mg serviceable potent males and 80,000 people per day. criminal ur a civil suit, and whose l,rm gentleness and sweet ne.. of She uttered no complaint, if in !good dairy cows. Sterility fullows� DAILY FOOD BILI. $10.500. A Sergt.•Wheeler In R.C.A. rinds Cure lrcrn retaining fee was often as high as le r temper and disposition 41t•e d there had bee,) anything to ;that kind of managemc't in the mA• I The bare mention of rho figures jority of cases. A calf might far ! Agonlzrng Sktn Disease. ton thousand dollars offering now Finally, he called his most wain• complain of. I better have an hour's run on a win suggest that the quantities Ion- to give his inestimable time, till- when witness --1)r. Marius Simson, j She only asked one of the work sume<I must be of enormous dimen- ter clay, Cyril in a snowstorm, than cions. It costs from 12 to lf, cents B encs, and legal knowledge to the 'ef Baltimore, the greatest author -:nun what had been dune with her Ser t. Wheeler Thos P. Bennett, 1 be kept shut up all day in a pen. defence of a poor. friendless, fled its en the medical (vestige's 1111 bear reinchnelher's little household fur- aday, on the Aye rage, to feed an 11 C. A., who lives at 705 AIIa'it The neuter' barns are, to an ex- PenShesailloutcast. tl18r►kf1111y Accept yourIpared }ing �inlaelf forcase. the presentleecs ►i'Iheeman raised his bend and re - not weakening the fbovine family, Tttoinmate daily feodl)bill,llw therefrtre,,ttak Shicht., Ohttagot frwa, emr1)Csllthe relief 1 n the born, but aid, ne doubt, Mr. Worth," sai 1 skin by reading up the minutes of c•4 gnized her, with a look of hoe- Ing the lowest figure, will amount s(•riptiona: the judge. the post-mortem examination with rum- and disgust that chilled her ke the manner in which animals Are; kept in thein day after Jay with - SUM OF $4.e110.0oo SPENT ON F001) YEAR I.1'. Six Tons of 'febaceo-Soap Bill of Oyer $IINI.f11H1-A Regular' Business. people in London's peer -law insti- tutions lies in exactly knowing what is wanted. Tenders are gerl- etally according to sample, 111(1 it is the duty of responsible officials to Ft Lack every article not up to the standard. Considering the enorm- ous quantities supplied it is a tare c.ccurrenee for lies.. colaraeturs, whose peer law supply week forme an imperial.' part of their business, to base boots at $1.20 a pair, and women s list slippers at 5 cents a pair rarely fail to pert the test ac- cording to sample. ASTOUNDING 11:;('RES. It is when we go into the esti- mated quantities of supplies for a whole year that a person gets some idea of the enormous task of .feed- ing, clothing and caring for its `0,- 000 poor and its 5,000 indoor offi- cers. The following quantities also show what a big business is done by these special contractors in sup- plying the goods needed. Suits of clothes .... . , .. 20,000 Pairs of boots .... ...... 25,010 Dozens of mugs 5,000 Dozens of knives .. 1,600 Dozens of forks .... .. „ 3,000 Dozens of spoons .. 4,000 Dozens of frying -pans 200 Cwts. of bacon .... .. .,20.000 Cwts. of butter • . , , 4,000 Tons of ham .... .. Cwts. of Margarine .. 3 10,000 Eggs .... .... .. .... .... 250,000 Stones of beef .... „ ... 200,000 Stones of mutton .... , „ 80.000 Stones of pork .... ....,. 8.000 Stones of suet ,.., .. .,, 3,000 Fowls 18,000 Rabbits .... • . .. .. .... 40,000 Tons of vegetables .• .... 7 rounds of fish ....• , . .. 2,700,000 uartern loaves ., . 6,500,000 Pounds of jam ...... 480,004) Gallons of milk 3,000,000 Tons of tobacco Pounds of snuff , .. , 501 A VERY GREAT TASK. Until one spends considerable time in the stores and kitchens of the great poor -law institutions enc does not realize what a task it is t(.. feed the London ratepayers' pau- per family. It is a work which needs skilled and good organization, but there can be no doubt that if the difficulty of distances could he got over in the platter of perishable goods a central supply store would save the ratepayers many thousands of pounds yearly. NO LONGER TORTURED • Ishmael \North bowed, and pass 'great care. 1 ht art. ed to the side of the young prise,' I Anil now, being sworn and exam- I He would not even speak. but et, who after her arraignment, lied ined he proved by a very thorough !pointed to a Ing cabin about a quer- been 1 erinitted 14. sit (leen in a ',recess of testimony, that t'te child l ter of a mile distant. down en the chair, under the immediate slimy '1 1 lute to her death by accidental ! ether side of the road. lance of a constable. r1'' Steingical causes alone. - t Marie turned ate ay, heart -sick of erage 30 cents daily. the cost cordon: to directions. It required ialt one 1 h•. Ne animal will inflate the lungs B g ' "Yen are milling to let me try t•. The (lector submitted to a very , the world• int a warm barn to the fullest ex °mounts to 1,11,560 a eine', or about luted t« effect we foe. I aamenoy longern rt r- save you, my child 1" he said kind trios crura examination by the pen-! The sun was sinking behind the ten• t, neither mill the heart action 857,000 a year. ledging to the world the worth and area; Ie-. sccution ; but that only brought ' n•ountain, and the shadows were send the blood to all parts of the The pros ision merchants' bilis, •irtuo of D. D. D. "I thank you very much. sir, but out his evidence in a clearer, strop- I darkening over the valley! system properly. This is not an ad therefore, for the poor -law institu- Blood medicines cannot kill the I hays no money, not a cent," she per light. 1 How well she remembered one science of turning out a colt ena tions for the year amount to near- germs in the skin which cause cc - answered in her apathetic way. Ile sat down. similar scene, some ten months be• winter day and allowing it to hump It $4,5°0,°°0• zema and other )kin diseases. "Money? 1 ()Uhl 1 do n,•t Doctor Bartel'. who had been a fore, when she took one fatal walk halves fail because they cannot pe- „ around all day. 'Nota bit of it, nei- A SPI?('I:11. BUSINESS. netrate. 1). D. I). goes right into pe- ttier should it be turned out in a the kills the germs and cures, blizzard. But any ordinary winter The business of supplying the pores.g day a calf or colt is better mut for London and suburban workhouses For free sample bottle of 1). 1►. an hour or two than in the bard. Warm barns are good, but good sense demands that growing ani- mals should not be kept in them constantly. --(2. 1). Slump', V. S. t, $10,500 a day, or $3,832,500 a "11 gives n,e qreat !denture to commend I year. As a matter of fact it corner D. 1). 1). t.sit erer, from ..kis disease out exercise duringthe winter For three year, 1 .uffered iutenoety from. months. It •- to -day so weakening t( much more than that. a skin diseaw• ,-.1,.,-h 1 developed on this In addition there are about 5,000 back of my ne. k 1t grew ea„:,nually arid the vitality of animals as to render lnmetime. east oB .oalen- Ni' ghbor! ad• them susceptible to all classes „f indoor officers .,f all grades to feed, yle•e, prve.-t'1ple na, ►elves end ea,-euelr� and, allowing their toed bill to ay- blood mediwnc• were IarishlF n-.• t. germ disease, tuberculosis especial Al last 1 found ',diet in 11 n R. a-od a6 want any from you, he nese t r 1 witness for the prosecution. was with her lover, and the sun went gently. res- recalled 1,r the defence. flown .in her happiness forever. "And besides, air, 1 am %%Wine He leas subjected to a searchingNight was coming on, and she had to die," she added meekly. cross-examination, during which he not where t^ lay her mead' "Hut we arc not willing to let you }.erame confused. exposed his own . She walked slowly towards the die especially. with an undetnerye 1 comparative ignorance, cntangl e1 , Lett which the workplan had point- ilig,na upon your name. as I an l,is ew n former testimony, and apna !ed out, as containing the relics of purr this is." the whole cerroberated that of i)r. her grandmother's pour furniture. And then. again addressing the Simeon. The leg hist. was occupied by a 10. neh, he said : Ne was then permitted to retire. negro woman. Balled Aunt Sukey, "Your Honor, l crave• of th • Arid Mr. Worth arose to address the eel her bushnnd ar.d children, all ('curt eppertun:ty to confer wi '1 juny, with tine of these strong pithy. ,laves of the rich landheelder who my client. and to examine the eti closely -reasoned and eloquent up- owned the quarry. den -e against her." Then followed a short cunsnita- tien between the Judge and the State's .\tterney. And then. ti' .t ma' near the lust of neon, the' ('curt was adjourned until 2 p. in. \%len the .fudge had left th' bench, the prisoner was taken to the marshal's room, where she was 1eft alone with her counsel. i'limael 1Vurth, t rue, tender. 1•ynlpathetie, drew from the fer- sakee girl the sad story of her leve Bed trust, and hitter wrongs and suffering's. and he knew that ete•v understood what had haPpened to It'' only- n heti anti an arm - word she sp. ke was truth. except, 1 er. chair, and seine little tea -things, indeed. her despairing self-accnsa- The venal great gabbling Anhef'L and rich' .11I the rest was stele. tions of the death of her babe the spectator. followers the render i ry c kon. \(arse tele Inc to keep I de not believe yen are guilty, ' in j. of the verdict and the adjourn tl,( se. ease yon ever come to want .1e said. R+ scull ns he had hen • 1 nlent of the Court. 'em. So der let yeti off, did der 1 her to the end. '•So, she warn't guilty after a!:." .iar'e said cloy would, soon's he "1 ►Host he,-- she 'aid piteeusl;:: said orie. 11(11r Marscr Worth took you up." ''for lee child was Irving. 1 heard Itut she would haw•• been con• remarked Aunt Sukey, staring et her cry ' That is all I know till I t i. -ted and hanged all the sate ,tp h• ; visitor. Paw her dead' But I 'trier nteartt or the testimony of ell Dr. Bar it "They said 1 •.vas not pulite-. %of to !put her. 1 wmuld hate diel it Mr. 11'orth had not takers up t• e 1 aAA net. Aunt," meekly replied first. She knows it new : for •he es.e, and brought that great I)r. the girl. as, ne tenger able to stand, must he an angel Irl Heaven. ' Marine Sinis-in, (temp lla!timore. to she sunk (leen and sat upon a Stone. ' 11u•h. Marie • You are yet-) •g- -Soot' up the rights of things,•' 'a'd '-1 (Intim,, no tellin' whcd.l: r nt tuns a'.tm' t c ignu'rRlll RS C I t!n.,1her, you 1a or net. Well. you kin std. ',11:hrlrr'!ea' 1,( this O'lr••ner'•e 1nry.1 .lull 1e think that Mr. 1Ve4t11 here to -night. Which 1 hopes to mho found the terdiet against yeti. nee :,ply gaso up all his own preei goodness yen went J, nuflin had t•. 1 Shull .Ilmlllell (1' 8 elut •s% for the ullc time. geed for a million a tni'ii h trey poor ehilliin, said .111111 Sn de fence, the celebrated 1)r. \laries elm• st. in term time. but actually leev doubtfully. t41n1'en, she i• our greatest author nai' nil the expense, of bringing "(►h. Heaven' 1)e you think i ily 111 that special .lepaltlnent et Cie ,he eitneen here. whose time 'As 111 Rm a devil .' - cried peer \?stir• pra••tiee of nledieine that affects i early a' preeitnIa as ills r.wn, It 1 tir!•ting into tears. emir ease. 1 think his test in) • .v 118 nr nosey "' ' llnnne. Hard tenni. what veil will be -altuhle," replie.I % .. •• •Princely :`' Yes' But Henan! is. But eon kin stay here to -night, 11'ei th. n' he set himself to examine Werth is it prince among nice ''' anyw•ny', 't-au'e 1 don't st5•('t pe, a , .t . f the Ininultes of the ('n"•,- \'.:Isl!o these ee111mente were }„Ina «hitt person ain't agi'l'e to lake rer's Inene't, with which the rear 11 e•lc by the . rcall- Ishmael Worth y.•e in. So I(:1 p •ffen do damn shpt ha•s teet fnrni'her! him. •um!, the hand of his beeildere•l green', arcs c•luiE. • .1' hot,Se," ''.' fe,erf met in the after- r!ient and drew her nrm within his (To be continued.) peals that nearly ale ays gained his On seeing Marie Sernfinne ap- Callse. t•Ioach, they came out to meet her. 'tee native bird3 has been reslxln- And with the end of his speeen n., with words of welcome, lilt sible for more damage by insects the defence closed. a:11' looks of silent aversion. and weed peaty than all other eaus- The ,fudged summed up in a very' Poor Marie explained meekly es c• mbined. including cats. and fe W. impartial words, and gave the; cur ugh that she had come only to 1)e}s w1th guns• case to the jury. ask nbeut her grandmother's poor Without even leaving their seal', 1 horsehold penis. that were not the jury returned a prompt serdir:i atoll!much. she added: but if the of memen would give her shelter that •\ot Guilty." ;eight and the next day. or until The Ind the young prisoner was de 1(e141(1 think of where to go, she (the (barged from custody. and fell i I woman) might have the little bit of herself at liberty before she (e•! fereiture. with previsions is quite n special 1). Prescription write to the D. 1). one, And is largely in the hands of I). Laboratory, DepartmentWL• about twenty firms, some of whom 23 Jordan St.. Toronto. assure scores of thousands . sol- e'er sale by all druggists. .f lars' worth of contracts. in addition there are contractors who make a special feature of stlp- F•1RM NOTES - plying workhouse and infirmary The intmdnction et the English chitties, blankets, sheets, bedsteads, ;,arrow by its driving away the lit - things requisites, nurses' u'i- fernrs, and a thou'and and one things the public hatdly suspect. M:1Nl'FA('TURED SPECIA1.I.Y. Then come the cutlery nn(i earth - The farmer has As r push right as enware merchants,a he also make 3 any one t., wear a good suit of special business of manufacturing clothes and adorn and beautify hisor getting others to do so for them home. In fact, it is his duty to do so It is also part of his duty to furnish good reading matter for the family. We should strive so to ele- vate and dignify the business that any 'man could be proud to say, I am a farmer. Extracted hunt., if {slough( t: a temperature of net over 100 degrees Fahrenheit. bottled and sealed while het, will usually, if kept in a uniformly warm teml•r -•pent, keep liquid for a year or mere. Rut there is a great diffrerence in horsey. Some will candy much more quickly than others. ('01(1 atmosphere• is quite 1114.rnh0e to candying of both extracted and comb honey. .Cel - !are and cold rooms are poor places fee honey. The Nene n tail moth is a serious pest. and is likely to spread. The easiest and practically the only ef- feetive means of artifieial control where established, is by cutting off the overwintering nest' during the laic fill. winter or early spring and de'troying the laryRc within. This, of course, can be :supplement- ed by spraying with an arsenical nnieture when the caterpillars map pear on the ("nage in spring. When young according to Howard, they tsar be killed with the e•r(l nary strength sprays or paris green or the mugs. plates. and other articles which are necessary to replace those broken in large quantities every year. In haberdashery alone the fit. Pancras Guardians spend $1.210 a year. It is net an exaggeration to say that the Len(lon beards spend $20,000 a year en buttons, eettens, needles, and all the other articles which e'inc tinder the head of halo erdasherv. Thr sante (an be said of institie tienal linen drapery, which is quite A specialized article. mainly Sup- plied by four or five firms who take every year about $10,000 from the guardians for their goods. 'these merchants also know exactly shat the guardians want in the way of 1UUiICti goods. 1►s::11 EHS AIll: HONEST. The great art .1 entering for the feeding and clothing of user h0.')00 Ee ete:'-. �~. - O(rr 'THE\•!.E. "Since when are t••u living is that hole 1" "Oh, I've only swapped houses with the hedgehogs while they're learning to fly'" ---Life. i• DISTEMPER Ptak f ye, t pi/went. absl peas reser a Cetorlkal fewer autocue and anti, ire p ^otMhh nn matter }vas h,-v+a•,r awe sr• Infected m'•eap•ned." 1..0 1. g.vrn nn the?nngur. 5.t. nn tr' )4Ir.A 5,4 (land.. eap';. the pni.mx,a• germsfrnm th-, bwlr. e.. -me Die ea)pm: in Pied and mheep and Chute -a in l'eultrr. Larje•t te1i ng I..entn.a remedy. ( ey 1•a Grippe among human twinge sad is* tune Kulp,' remedy. !•te and f1 a Mate: }ean.t 011 a dn,.a. cut thta out. rr'ep It. Shaw to tour dnygl.t, who will get it for yna, r'ee Rnoilet. " Distemper, ( au.•a and (,ores,'• O•SrP.SV1GPS--511. WHOLESALE G•V00'4,1.9 $PORN MEDICAL CO.. Cktitlu sat Iaglgrlelolisn, GASSER, IM.. b.S.1