Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, July 17, 1879, Image 2

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    (The (Crutw Ilmocr.vt.
•
DBLLKKONT K, 1A.
-A. O- 23.1C XT 21. rr T7 33, X-.
NKWS, FACTS AND StUiIIKSTIONS.
Till TIAT T till UTIOJIAI. wil l tic II Till UItKLU-
Ot.TC* AMD rttlll'KlllTt or Till t At. Wll.
Kerry farmer in hi* annua/ tx/imetice
discover* something of value. Write it and
.tend it ta the "Ayrieulfural Kditar if the
DBMOI'KAT, Hellefunte, I'enn'it," that nther
farmer* may have the heiirtit • it. I.ft
eommumeatma* he timely, and be -are that
they are brief and welt /Minted.
WR I.EARN from the Farmer'*
Friend that the patrons of Centre,
among other leading agricultural
counties of the State, have already
annouiicctf their intention to present
exhibits at the tri-State pic-nic and
exhibition to he held at Williams
Grove next month.
COMMON salt, at the rate of four
k- barrels per acre, and uuleaclied wood
ashes, in the same or greater quanti
ty, are stated in the lowa horlie.ul
f tural report .U* be effective remedies
against the strawberry grub. The
present is the proper time for their
application—with the manure which
should be worked into the beds, to
stimulate the plants for next year's >
crop.
THE hot, showery weather of tin
first and second weeks of this month
ripened the grain too rapidly, and
much of it will l>e found to have
shrunken. The sudden ripniug
found many farmers unprepared to
"push things," and as a consequence,
the crop in this vicinity, already light
enough from various causes, will lose
a large percentage both in hulk and
quantity.
THE Scientific Farmer for July
comes to us tilled as usual, with
sound, instructive reading for every
one interested in farming. Among
the most thoroughly "scientific" ar
ticles are The Laws of Fattening
Cattle, by Dr. Aitkcn, and Food,
Physiology and Forte, by the editor
Dr. Sturtcvnnt. Hither of these is
well worth the price of a year's sub
scription.
"Houo IITON FARM" is the name of
a new private experimental farm, in-,
auguratcd at Mountainvillc, Orange
county, New York, by Mr. I.awson
Valentine, with Dr. Manly Miles as
director. Dr. Miles is said to be |K
culiary fitted for this work, having cx
|>eriencc, ambition and energy. The
c elebrated "Rothamstead Farm," con
ducted by Messrs. Lawes and (Jills rt,
in England, was started under some
what similar circumstances, and we
hope that the time may come when
the new American enterprise shall
hold the same important relation to
American agriculture that "Rotham
stead" does to British.
WE ARE indebted to Secretary T.
J. Edge for a copy of the last quar
terly report of the State Board of
Agriculture, containing a condensed
report of the transactions of the Board
at the June meeting, held in Phila
delphia. A num'icr of interesting
pajiers were read, among which |>er
liaps the most interesting were one
on "Pennsylvania Dairying, as seen i
by an outsider," by L. S. Hardin, of
New York ; and another on the man
ufacture of sugar from corn, by T.
* 1,. Stewart, of Westmoreland coun
ty. Other good papers were read,
a number of subjects in which farm
ers are directly interested were dis
cussed, and the Board adjourned to
meet at Mercer, on the third Wed
nesday in Octolwr.
ONE or the very liest lubricants
for all farm machinery is crude cas
tor oil, mixed with one-sixth its bulk
of common coal oil. We use it In
preference to others, and give it our
unqualified spprovnl. During the
hot weather we use a somewhat
smaller projiortion of coal oil", and
increase the quantity for the cold
aeason. This mixture hns nil tiic
good qualities required in a lubrica
tor, and is entirely free from the ob
jection of gumming. The crude cas
tor oil can be obtained at most bard
ware stores, and if purchased in
quantities of a gallon or so, is not
expensive. A mower or rcnjier kept
in thorough repair, with the knives
frequently ground on the "Favorite
Emery Grinder," and well oiled
with this mixture, will run with the
minimum expenditure of horsepower,
nnd do its work in the most satisfac
tory manner.
A WEEK or two ago we published
an article on Summer Drinks for I.a
boring Men, which counseled absti
nence from beer ai\d i'quors of all
•oils. Of course, the writer referred
to the strong beer of the markets,
and not to the simple, home-made ,
beverages, compounded of ginger,
and the highly-llavorcd and mcnicinnl 1
roots, leaves and (lowers which are
often called "beer" by the good
women who make and the good men
who drink them. These are not only
entirely harmless, but, in our opinion,
decidedly beneficial, inasmuch as |
they relieve the intense craving for
water which is induced by severe la
bor in the sun. We have been for
some days past, using this sort, made
from a "Hoot Beer i'aekage" put up
and sold by Charles K. Hires, 21ft
Market stueet, I'hiladelphia. It is
simply a small package of the leaves,
roots and (lowers of our native aro
matic herbs, compounded in such a
way and in such proportions as,
when the directions are followed, to
make a very wholesome and pleasant
leverage. It is one of the cheap
good things which go far to relieve
the heavy labors of the harvest and
hay field.
The Farmer's Politics.
A western correspondent of the*
Frtetiral Farmer gives figures to
-how that mure than one-half of the
entire male population of the ITiitcd
States are engaged in fanning; that
farmers hold more than one-half the
property of the country; and that
the value of the agricultural "exports
of the country is more three times the
value of all our exports from other
sources; and then, when he remem
bers that there are a less number of
farmers in Congress than he could
count on his fingers; that Congress
appropriated but SHS,(JOO for the
Agricultural Department, while it
voted millions to all the others; and
that this same department has at its
head "a practical, professional poli
tician. and tea-aud - mob. sses culttir
iit," he grows quite unhappy, and
calls it all •"a condemned shame."
This is just our opinion of the mil
ter, and i( all that this correspond
ent says is true, the farmers of this
country have the remedy for this
wrong in their own hands. If farm
ers are not properly represented in
our National or State Legislatures
when they have more than half the
votes of the country, as well as more
than half of its immense wealth, it is
their own fault; and our advice to
them is to stop growling about the
matter and vote about it. If farmers
have a majority of the voters of this
country we can sec no earthly reason
why they should not have a majority
of the Congressmen, who would vote
their department appropriations com
mensurate with its importance, and
have influence enough to secure as
its head a representative farmer who
would be something more than a
"tca-and-molasses culturist."
The truth of this matter is that as a
class we farmers do not appreciate our
importance, perform our duties, nor
live up to our privileges, in the mat
ter of our influence upon the afiTairs
of the nation ; and until we wake up
to these things and bestir ourselves,
until we step boldly into "politics"
and make them just what they should
bo, and just what wc have the power
to tnakc them, we arc estopped from
grumbling about them liecausc of
what they are. Wc believe that "the
farmer in politics" would lie a very
good thing for the politics and not
very bad for the farmer, provided
lie carried with liiin the same level
headedness, probity, and integrity of
purpose which characterizes him in
his other relations in life. "The ag
ricultural classes form and give the
honest conservative vote of our coun
try," and farmers in our legislatures,
both State and National, nnd in gen
crol politics, would have a purifying
influence; nnd that they are not
there, nnd do not exert this influence
is their own fault, and bars them
from growling upon the subject.
Since writing the above, wo have
lieen favored with a copy of an ad
dress on "How to Klcvnte the Stand
ard of Agriculture," read lieforc the
State Board of Agriculture, by Hon.
C. C. Mussel man, in which wc And
the following paragraph, hearing lIJ -
on the sumo subject :
'•The man who spends his time clear
ing up a farm, thereby making provis
ions lor man and the whole nation for
ages to coine, lives and die* almost un
noticed. His exalted patience, modesty,
industry and frugality, doing his duty
to his f imily, serving his country and
honoring his <iod, is looked upon us de
grading, and of little account. While
the political trickster, who is sitting !
around the corners waiting for nomc
thing to lurn up, who is all tilings to
all men, and who bv his crafty machimt-
Hons, can weedlo the masses, secures to
himself honor and profit, ami is cheer
ed ! lt:glil here we help to lower the
standard of agriculture by elevating
idlers, spendthrifts, gamblers, petty
logger- and demagogues tooflices, while
the honest, industrious, unas-muiing,
economical farmer take* what i* put HI
the rack for him."
WHEAT that was well manured and I
put in looks first rate. — < Y<y Itf/wit front ■
.Vi/mnnf Co., Q/n i.
.1 iisl so! and so il does here, and
so it does every where else. "Wheat
well manured ami well put in" will
always look well, and so trill every
other crop that the farmer raises.
That tells the whole story of uni
formly good crops—"well manured
ami well put in." No fanner is, or
can be, independent of the season,
hut the one who makes his land rich,
and puts hi# crops in in the proja r
order, has much less to fear from ex
traordinary seasons,than he who ntg
lecls these conditions.
Poultry.
J K > el' li m > telttifl
Of all the agricultural pursuits,
none pay better than the labor la •
stowed upon the poultry on the farm.
This fact is acknowledged, ami how
many of our farmers fail to make the
same careful outlay for their poultry
that they do for their Cu * and swine!
I'liey run the dairy with care,and the
butter-box goes to market each auk
regularly. \\ iiy not have as a com
panion to it a poultry farm and an
egg-box '! The sour milk from the
butter making will pay far better fed
to poultry than to hogs. Poultry
sells at tin average higher price than
Is . r or pork, ami it costs no more to
make it. Our farmers in most cases
near otir cities have regular customers
for their butter; these same parties
would take weekly a much larger
amount in money's worth of poultry
and eggs. In this way two hundred
U*w !s up in- a farm would pay as
much into the family fund as would
ten cows.
Many of our farmers do not Is lieve
this ; hut let them try the experiment
of keeping an exact account with
IK>th cows ami hens, ami they will
And what we tell them i* true. One
bushel and a peck of corn, or its
equivalent in other fool, will keep a
hen twelve months. Wc know the
average hen will lay eleven dozen of
eggs. Wc know also that the guano
from a flock of hens wsll pay ten per
cent. ti|H>u the cost of quarters for
their use, and that are necessary tor
the production of eggs in winter.
Should our farmers look into this
branch of their agriculture, they
would lie surprised at the waste now
going on on their premises. With
nine pounds, and in extreme cases
twelve pounds,of live weight produc
ed by the feeding of a bushel of corn
to poultry, and a shrinkage of twen
ty |er cent, to reduce it to dressed
weight, one easily records the cost
of his poultry per pound, which at
present market prices—li fly-five cents
for corn and thirty-two cents for
chickens, this date May 20—is a
profit of over four hundred per cent.
Hut the average year's business—
from February to October 10 the
New Kiiglnml farmer enjoys free
from the influence of Western pro
duction, which can be shipped only
in cold weather—enables him to real
ize about twenty cents per pound on
the average for his poultry. This
will ensure to him a profit of one
bundled per cent, above the coat of
food ami shelter. Will not this pay
hiin better lor his time than does his
butter ? Investigate this, farmers, and
let us know the result.
Peas and Oats for Milk.
Krm th# |,|te k Jrnirn*!.
Peas and oats are equal to clover,
and may lie raised on a great variety
of soils—a most important consider
ation. We have raised twelve tons
of this green food to the acre, and
this would feed twenty-four cows
ten days, without any other food.
The pea is rich in caseine—just what
is required to make ntilk—and the
oat is also rich in the elements of
milk.
These two crops grow well togeth
er, fur the oals hold the peas up and
i prevent them from lying too flat on
the ground. They mature so near
together that they arc both ready to
cut at the same time. Hut the crop
should always Ixj cut when the pea
I rod is full ami the grain in the milk.
It is then very succulent and palata
ble, and will produce as much milk
as any fowl wc know of, aside from a
large variety of pasture grasses in
their most succulent state.
Avoin giving a tired horse very
cold water, as it will often produce
colic.
Low Prices Mean Retrenchment.
Krn tin* K Jeiitlfl. Ktinr.
Low prices Hhouhl menu to the
farmer a reduction of expenses. It
will not do now to suffer waste of
labor or material on the farm. Let
weeds grow, if there is no profit in
extirpating them ; hut first lie sure
that you are right, and do not neg
lect to weed through carelessness or
heedlessness, and if weeds are allow
ed to grow, let them grow, not 1M:-
cause they will, but of your volition.
Horse cultivation will usually keep
weeds down sufllcicutly, and will af
ford a profit on the crop: hand cul
tivation will suffice to keep a field
free from weeds, but will it allow of j
a profit from the crop? This is a
question each farmer should meet
and decide. There is too little de
parture from the old style of crop
growing in New Fnglaml: n system j
which lie fore the day of cheap freights
might answer; but now the cotn|ieli
tion with distant products requires a
remodelling of farm practiees, and
lie is the wise man who intelligently
foresees and changes, rattier than ho
who is forced through long and dis
couraging diminution of prodtrf to
arrive at the same conclusion. The
present low prices may, after all,
serve as blessings in disguise tor
New England husbandry.
The Farmer, Nature's Paitacr.
i!> a. u,t log, ,.n
There is u quiet about the life of
a farmer, and a hope of a serene old
age, that no other business or profes
sion can promise. A professional
man is doomed sometime to feel that
his powers are waning. Ho is doom
ed to see younger, stronger men pass
him in the race of life. He looks
forward to an old age of intellectual
mediocrity. He will Is last where
once he was lir-t. Hut tin- farmer
goes, as it were, into partnership with
Nature—he lives with trees and
flowers lie breathes the sweet air of
the fields. There is no constant and
frightful strain on his mind. Hi
nights are filled with sleep and rest.
He watches his flocks and herds as
they feed upon the green and hilly
slopes. He hears the pleasant rain
fall upon the waving corn, and the
trees he planted in youth rustle nliovu
him ns he plants others for the ch'ld
ien yet to Is l .
The Tanner's Lawn,
I'r IB th# Manx I*; ■man.
No one begrudges the chickens a
yard in which to run, flirt and frolic,
and are not children entitled to equal
privileges with the chickens? What
ever makes home attractive, if it i*
no more cx|>enM vc than a lawn, is
not wasteful. If we wish to keep
our Itoya on the farm, to train our
daughters for farmer's wives, we must
make the home pleasant and farm
life something besides mere drudgery.
Wc know nothing that adds such a
charm to a country home as a lawn ;
and when, after the lalsirs of the
day are over, the hoys and girls as- j
sernblc upon it to play croquet, and
the grace of motion and the exhilar
ation of social life arc addisl to this
thing of iteauly, the scene is delight
ful, and if anything will make the
farm attractive, this will.
..1..,.—-,....-. __
How to Cure Ripe Hay.
m lII# Aroeri Ml A STu llturt•!
Hay that lias lcen cut late may 1e
improved by curing it in the cock
instead of drying it in the sun. He
ing comparatively dry when cut it is
very soon cured ; and if put. up in
cocks as soon IJS it is thoroughly
wilted, it will fceat and steam and Is*,
come much softened, and will remain
greener than if sun-dried in the
swath.
Education in Farming.
Of II n. a C. Maaa-tman. •
It is a remarkable fact that many
people, even farmers themselves,
think that education is of very little
importance to the agricultural. It
is true, there is no vocation or pro
fession that can Is* followed with less
education; but there is none,high or
low. that can make use of more than
the business of farming.
To Them That Hare it Should M Given.
From ll* fMnt(ft< FMIUH
Lay it down as a rule that when
wc aee a field left in neglect produc
ing a tolerably good crop of grass
all through the growing season, it
will pay to give it better treatment,
as the fields only require a little as
sistance of Nature to make thctn
grow maximum crops.
Economy in Farming.
"l|tlK" In l>nrlil Vn,i.
More than half the fencea round
the house and barn, on most farms,
could lie dispensed with to advan
tage. Wc need to study economy
in amount and kind of fence, more,
perhaps, than anything else on the
farm.
AM agricultural society offered a
premium for the lasat mode of irri
gation, which was printed "irritation"
by mistake. A farmer sent his wife
to claim the prize.
YOCMO grape-vines that have pusl -
ed many buds, should now have all
ruhhed off hut one or at most two of
I the strongest shoots.
| JAIIDWAKK.
WILHON, McFA KLAN K COJ
DEALERS IN
STOV ES AN I) HA NO ES,
I'AINTS, OILS, GLASS, ItA K EH, FOURS,
CRADLES SCYTHES.
SOLE AGENTS KOJt
♦TO lINSO N'H KA I .SOM IX E.
AI.I.EOIIKVV HTHKKT, - . . LIT'MO' B|K. . . . . BKLLKFOXTK. FA.
STATE NORMAL SCHOOL
{Kiffhth SaritUll Scfiml Jhktrtft,)
LOC K lIAVKN, ( LINTON CO , L'A.
A. N. ItA I It, A. M., I'riurijinl.
'PHIS SCHOOL,as at present eon
-1 •til.l'M. off. r 111. iry .1 U,|Utia ft I t..
f—— to,, al a[,i] Ci..,.,,.| Inartiltlg.
Itulhliuga |<. 1..u. ( larlttag m..| . atnm.rtioaa, > ....
II.M) hri- i 1.7 >t. .m. . ii i an I-■ and hm#
-' 1 villi a l-.uKitif.il aupply "I | ..it i.irr, -.ft -j ili.*
water.
Irratior, h.wltliftil mi.l .-■) (T a> ■ <—■.
Sainnib.lli.il -..-rtari ■ib..iij>M.*.-l
T.. b.iM . >l-li.-u. nl, .11. 1.1,1 k.l'l Mill* 1.. tl.ir
. ik.
Mm. i|.l .nr. Run and X i*l.l, unlf.-iiu -i -i lb r- .i|,-ti
K>i-t.- nwdmu
fifty . .Hl* ■ ...k .twin. In.ii lu lli<.♦• |i.|t, ,g |.,
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'JMIK OKNTKK DI:MCH'KAT
BOOK anil JOB OFFICE
HUSH IKH SK HI.IK K,
BKLLKKtiNTE, PA.,
in now orrxmna
(; N EAT INI) R< I;M KN TS
T<> TIKWK W LULL JNO RIK-1-ILANH
Plain or Fancy Printing.
J c
W< hv>. unutiibl fin ihti.n f.r j.rinliiic
LAW HIMIKS,
PAMPHLET*,
CATA l.'Mit'K*.
PlttXiK \ M M KS.
STATEMENTS,
rinci'LAßH,
ltll.L HEAIS.
NOTE HEAPS,
HI SI NESS CA HPS,
INVITATION OA HP.-,
CAKTKS PE VJSITK.
OA HPS ON EN \ ELOPES,
AM) ALL KINDS OF HLANKs.
Stair Prinling i!.>nn in the Put tj In, on
thort notii-n anil at the 1. w>t ratn.
tevordrr* by mail sill rf>>iv jr.-mjl
aUetition.
KCMKMIIKR TIIR ri.AIR!
CENTRE DEMOCHAT OFFICE,
But A llmtf Bloek ,
lltoil STRKKT, BRLI-KroXrE. PA
GREAT REDUCTION.
ECONOMY 18 WEALTH.
7h sru'. S7C rtiui tc culy Lk
•1.50 PER WEEK.
liiit-Hi-iV Wntt'in I 'rim l.t \tfi.iii.,
"THE rAMILY" SHUTTLE
COR S E W ING
UaiU MACHINE.
M- ualnd po?i ft., |..|i.l —I .-r nilrl 11.k-fclr,nt t..p
UMr .ml tnrodlr, r>>M|drt * llli . I nun • ITMIIf
nf fill! ll* UimH Mfiy • lli.r m. I inr, .r.it 11.-I.jr. I to
<*ll tlj Km Ii m.l l.i U..->..||£|.l_l MilMHlr.| with
h * IIIIM 1.1 itmn lit R<. iara. k.|i,„... i.* nu
.•• i HKk.it. n imi ITIMMM Mt n*♦ If not tr-rj
Tl.. m..t ...lid, rrlt.* I-. MKI.I MNti.fM. I'., a., tin,
♦iff it.ir. lr.l f-ir .11 kind. (.mil) wmk An..
kn..wlrd(r-l nboinlK.. at llirrh.lil. at MKIWA lk..r
rnitlilT tf-iM. and abd In 1. ~ft. r*, • An
. fit. Iml, Mii.nl. rlli.lr. .ii<t nn-mdi ti. lj- i
(.1 th. Whhtt Wtfr lIK ."rni-trr-. that wilt dn thr wntk
"f family hi a Ulb-linir. or It will mm fr..in ft t ft
par da. f..i any on. tbttkkn toaww f.,r a Uriac.aiid
r.ta l.w> limn mil tna rain of ant 11* mm hln.w of
l.kr nn.lilT U..-li.l .ng,l.'. if>l IMmltlr.-watly
ram'.rrd. 1* tl* l.r.r.i ,r.l BoM-tna. h I.ling iiai rar la
of tbroad. d"ina awai with tb. fi |u. i,t trwtwdina "f
hoMiin. It nmkiw thr ahiiiti, donlda-tliriatd. I<vk
•titfh. (th. aim on l.th aidr. ,1 th, w-.uk . whhb
mn.od th. bifiRMT twiknat th- ( -M-I.nlal Th
if'tm. Itn-at.and m,..| lading .111. h --t j.. -1i,.-.|
It ta Imilt for atr-ngth and f-matant hard work Int.r
.bani-al.la working parte. Mannfa. lur—l ot fn* poh
lahfd ateol. Will run l.rtw without rpalr. y
umplr to l-ain.-a.i to mariag-. iui.|. r.t.r-1 |- rf. til
In an h"ar, and klway. r.-a-ti In a motewnt In do -r.ry
ilrw. ription d l.oaiy or lino work at I—a mat, n. r
nuily. amoothly and fnat-r, and a 111. Ira. |a-r or
(n.ul.lr than any idlirr ma.hln—. Kt ai rt< a. -*.-r
.lid or .an .|o. It will a-w anything a a—II- ran
|dr. front larr of ranihrlr to hr-aii .loth or harn-aa,
with any kind of thrrwd. and ran 06 Iw-nty rati, p-r
ml nut-; nan a among, atraighi n—II-. and nri-r
t.rraka Ib-tn It nannot mlaa or duo. a atilrh, rai-l or
br-ak Ilia tlir-ad. Th- n.on-y th—ifully r-fun.l—l If It
•111 not Ot-rw.iak and oefWtM any mvhtnr at d-mld
th- prior. II y.m hav any otlirr ma. hinr. hay thl.
and harr a b-tt-r ona. Th- n— and ra|adiiy .d IU
imdhrb and quality ol Ita w.ak la 11. bm i—uam. nda
tton. II will ham. Ml. la.k, hrnld.mrd. land, gaih-r,
quilt, rnfflr. pint, bdd, aratlop. ahirr. r.dl, tmat*.
rmlwntdrr, mn B p br-adlha. ate , wlih -l-k-an.o war*
and qnh-knraa, nnant|iwiard by any ma.hii., ,r-r
In.rnUd Thr PrVra nf omr wiw marbinn an bwa
than lhoaa a.k-d by drnlrra In ar—md hand, nbnllt
and r-flwl-h-d mwrhlnn.nr tboar artllng out <Hd fn.-k
In rbwr up l.uatnraa, many awrh latotbu and ..Id -tyl
ma. bin-, hrtng nffrnd aa n-w at ndu—d prtm
B-wat* of tmttattona and onli bay n-w ma.ii.am
Tlim an no Il ftral rtaa. nurblnna.4Mr.laa tow at
tho " family.** hy many doltara
For tratlmontala a-w dra,rtptrra l—V., maflnd ffna
with aaaipl-w af work.
"'"•d" Altqd b, ana (wart of Mia r.mntrr an mall-r
bow r-m -1- thr tdarw May ha. and aaf- dwitnry goar
aatawd, wi-h pH.11.8- of a tnotaoron uiniitm
tmforr iwiatml of Mil, or on rwr.-ipt of Itrlr- by
Rrg'.i-mt Ir-ll.r M.mry ordrr. •• Draft.
Ag.lll. wanted Ihrooghowt lb- maalrl for thla. Ihr
(hoatwrl. Moat aalt-fa, tm i and r.i ~1 —lliag nua, hln
la Una World F.q Ittmrnl I-.ma, addr*wa
FAMILV aiiemdli BACH INK on..
t-lr m Broadway, Mr York.
I oNTi; ,v KNOW KHOK
! 11 1 " <•<- ••, AMI TMM IN,
'•iTl'V r """ "."• lM lUllrf.,ot.
n vrTi 1 "" tf10 * * " • ""****•*"•"
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I- IhTlif./nu 4 ' I K .ft(VM at Xm> f|,„
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IJAf.I) KAfil.K V.M.LKV It All,-
• " '• OkD I !
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r.f if Alh'l VI X njrain Fi|<n* Wra| t U* k I9an
Af" n.M4fti *< ar>4 I.y ¥ jr*a tail iaka
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lf. Mn;l A4 <4 ■ X,i , ir(l W.f. arxt f. f , #
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litl.f ,kf, a 111 run Utaw, rt>UM|*hi at,'l
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*tvitram*. Ha A Kiirat,
1879. THE PATRIOT. 1879.
G't Vp n Club and Rcfciv Your
Pp*r Tr**.
: The I)AILT PAIRIOT will U- wnt l.j
rrikil to t 'ultf kl tl,i' following Tkl* :
1 K.I" |t Off l rrt to a .tut. „f ll.a
tij<l pat off j, faar to a rial. .4 In.
lIA w |' Off jaf vokt I- a <lsl. of twmtf.
fl .vi |aa off j- t faar |aa <lal. of Ihtrlj
14 Of (a-, o.| , j, faar t,. a <!at> of flflf.
Atol 'a, i■ i f froa (of <• f,r la tiarf f<t ,|,a
fnraoa ap u>a lal,. |>.|..Tl,..iu,| rata* f,4
<4 a jr nt
Th<- W'ruKi T PATRIOT will Ik- wni l.y
mkil t the following trU-*:
!. " iw.m I . .inl. f |,
|IAO !■ antinat prt of t i„ * rial, of Aa>r
' lIJAA |t annnw jnt ~ j.f | * rial, .4 a, c |,|
II Ol |a| IkMU |a, I j.f 1 krlall<4 klloa.
>t. I pat *nt ant p.t off lo a rial, of lUtf.
HA'. |tat attt.ttat |r onpf t a rial of Id;.
|o "A J-* 4,10,101 prt , ).f to a tlal. .4 kan.tiad
| Ar.'l „n# o.j t flat to, ot.a faar Ik rtatf raaa t.. gat lar
I ap (4 rlaK
i j Tho r*h mutt crrim|tny }) nrdor* to
j inturp kttmiion. All monpy thoultl b
i font by jatfl ofTit p ortlor or regintonnl
Iptlor, ollirrwiko it will Ik> kt tlp kpndor'k
rik. AJtirnt •
PATRIOT Pt*RMRtita Co.,
llkrritburK, Pk.
PATENTS
AND
T TZ ID 12 - I*2! TL X-C S.
* ft xur* r*t%t n% X
Arr.**ri r*r i* mirniin nt. i fl'itnn
Il flit! I 'iltr-l I|wrl tlt'Dtioh |l*Hi l*
ttkffVfprrMcw (W h+§*tr+ lII* •<] all
lil'Ctii |* Itimilmiit r*r htlrtiti.
*l +> PutKf.tß Cili mml uth-t foreign
c*n iiiW.
CitmH Pi!**, nluiprtl. tM *ll
l W itt th Tatr-nt iM lh#
J. ' ,,t * m^ 'NmiU'li 1I ntrioti of *!
M l\lm AlMnrji.
Til K SCIKNTITK Ul'X*Ol<l>a
All r*lM "MJttl (hrxodi nor nfHwy ir> wHKoI
In IH# Mnmnr • m nU.li |wf#r %4 lrt
flrialU<in, I t m. in 4 4*nM I*. )*< intillk
mhl M<- ln- rki niitim It urUim foil !•• of oil
ftlktood I'auriU. H>i|4k<fl|>tiofi US rrotn • roof.
|m*4 oo| j out ftm. M m ytmi otlilif
■ |tt*ul coH.
Am 4 a* a .laa, HjalolMf t>at larmftna. ptiat f ok*
IM* la f.nir on a lancnairn. 4*4 Ml .ra an
tintnhka at to patmuultlf. auk fall infartlim,
fbailing aotkiag for oar aArtrr Ih4f U*. "Row
to prroaf* Pat, Ma.' alant IHa Patant U, Palantn,
Ilwul4, T'aita Malta. Ikrtf foo, Ar„ ami lwa on
mgnoat.
ADDRESS i IL 8. A A. P. LACET,
PATENT ATTOHNEYB,
No. 001 F Rtrwpt, WAktiiituToif, D. C.,
Mwly rlnnl Clie.
Arrc&ra of Pay, Bounty tad Prnuons.
H* a Hat a * Itttroaa In cbarga of atpatlmrnO himn
atol rlrrka, f.o faaaraUM of all RnMHrXMIiw, haf,
Rtnaatf ami Praataoa Aa no rHargo ao taa at, Una
nttaaafal, gnM lot tntnm ptMogn ato.nl,l ha ami
141 IL sTk A. P. LACKY.,|