v J r H H Elcuotcij ta politics, literature, Agriculture, Science, illegality, aui cncral 2ntcIIigcucc. VOL. 27. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., APRIL 1, 1869. NO. 52. Published by Theodore Sciioch. TERMS Two dollars a year in advance and if not paid before the end of (Ue year, two dollars and fifty cents will be charped. No paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, , xrept ai the option ol the Editor. ICAdvcrlisemen'.s of one square of (eight lines) or Us, one or three insertions $1 50. Each additional Insertion, 5-J cents. Loiigcr ones in proportion. JOSS PRINTING, OF ALL KINDS, executed in the liisliest style of the Art, and on the iiiom leusouuble terms. Surgeon Dentist, Office on Main Street, opposite Judge Stokes' residence, Stroudsburg, Pa. Qr Teeth extracted without pain.Q August 1, 18G7. Drs. JACKSON & BIDLACK, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. DRS. JACKSON & BID LACK, are prepared to attend promptly to all calls of & Professional character. Office Op posite the Stroudsburg Bank. April 23, lSG7.-tf. C VV. SESP, D., Physician and Surgeon, STJiOUDSUUKG, PA. Oinco at his residence, on Main Street, nearly opposite March's Hotel. All calls promptly atteuJed to. Charges reasonable. Stroudsburg, April 11, lSG7.-tf. J. B. COOPER. E. L. ROGERS. COOPER & R0GS8S, GENERAL COMMISSION MER CHANTS for the sale of Flour, Grain, Teed, Seeds, &c; 217 North Water Street, and 220 North Delaware Avenue, Philadel phia, Pa. 0OParticular attention paid to BUCK WHEAT FLOUR. Oct. 1 '6SmG. .A. Card. Dr. A. HE EYES JACKSON, Physician and Surgeon, BEGS TO ANNOUNCE THAT IIAV ing returned from Europe, he is now prepared to resume the active duties of his profession. In order to prevent disappoint ment to persons living at a distance who may wish to consult him, ho will be found at his office every THURSDAY and SAT URDAY for consultation and the perform ance of Surgical operations. Dec. 12, 1G7.-1 yr. NEW GROCERY STOKE. rpiIE PUBLIC ARE INVITED to call at JL the New Grocery Store of the subscri ber, on Main street, one door below the JeOVrsonian" office, Stroudsburg, Pa., and examiue of the best stock of GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, FLOUR ijc, ever bought to the place. Everything in the Grocery line will be found on sale in great abundance, and at prices at wbich all can purchase and live. Purchasers will eave money by heeding this no'ice. GEORGE F. HELLER. October 22, 1SG3. tf. Sip and Ornamental Painter, SHOP ON MAIN STREET, Opposite Woolen Mills, STIIOEJDSKURG, PA., Respectfully announces to the citizens of Stroudsburg and vicinity that he is prepared to attend to all who may favor hitn with their patronage, in a prompt and workman like manner. CHAIRS, FURNITURE, tfcc, painted and repaired. PICTURE FRAMES of all kindt con atantly on hand cr supplied to order. June II, 1569. ly. EBP, IRON AND PURE DHAWDY, BY DR. IIARTMAN, Regular Graduate cf the University of Penn sylvania. 07It will positively cure Consumption, Coughs and Colds, and all diseases of the .Luns or Bronchial Tubes. Ithas been the mean of RESTORING THOUSANDS to health who have been giv en up beyond the reach of medical assist ance. It'dues more to relieve the Consump tive than anything ever known. Unequal led strengthener for delicate Ladies and Children. Each bottle contains the NU TRITIOUS rOKTlO-N OF TWO POUNDS OF CHOICE Beef, i rp The cure of Consumption was hret effect ed by the use of RAW BEEF and BRANDY in Russia, afterwards in France, in which countries I have travelled for years. I hive used it with perfect success ia my own family. In presenting this preparation to the public I feel confident that every af flicted one who reads this (even the most skeptical) may become convinced, by a sin gle trial that it is truly a most valuable med icine. Circulars and medicines 6ent to any ad dress. Price 81 per bottle six for 85. Laboratory 512 &3uth Fifteenth Street, PHILADELPHIA. Wholesale Agents. French, Richards & Co. 'IV nth and Market ct reels; Johnson, Holloway & Cowden, bU'Z Arch street; it. Shoemaker & Co., Fourth and Race streets, Philadelph ia. So!d by Druggists Everywhere. , . . M TS TP. ANNETTE JACKSON will A receive a limited number of pupil for instruction on the Piano Forte and in Sing- icrm, x mcen tioiiare per itcov"o. Stroudsburg, Nov. 20, '68 tf. Tha Earth Closet and Treatment Wounds. of To the Editors of the Evening Post As you were foremost in calling the at tention of the American public to the Earth Closet system the use of sifted dry earth for the deodorization and disin fection of human faces and thus became the pioneers of a reform that promises not unspeakable relief from the gravest annoyance of our lives, but the preven tion of the greatest waste of the fertility of the earth, it is just that you should be communicated an outgrowth of this sys tem that offers if possible a still greater benefit to suffering humanity. One of the experimental commodes sent out by the Earth Closet Company was placed at the disposal of Dr. Addinell Hewson, of the Pennsylvania Hospital (in Philadelphia). Its introduction into the surgical ward, where it has been for two weeks in constant use by about twen ty patients, and has been subjected to the severest test possible, has been bo entirely satisfactory that it is proposed to substi tute earth closets for water closets wher ever these exist ia that institution. At the time of its introduction there was lying in the ward a patient suffering from a very severe compound fracture ot jonce fordade this inhuman rite, should the lower leg. Tuc wound was in an un-anow tne priests to again inflict it upon healthy condition, and its exudation, j the peopie. We copy his account as giv amouating to a piut in twenty-four hours, I eu jQ the Missionary Ilearld : were so ouensive as to cause a sickening and een dangerous stench, that the ex ceilcnt ventilation of the ward and the use of the usual disinfectants were hard ly able even to mitigate. It occured to Dr. Hewson to test the power of dry earth to absorb this odor, as it had that of excrement. The effect was magical. Not only was the offensiveness entirely overcome, but the effect on the character of the wound itself was such as no pre vious treatment had been able to compass. The suppuration was, within a few days, so reduced that the daily dressing of a single half pint of earth was not even sa turated ; the edges of the flesh wound lost their inflamed character; the intense pain of the sore was" entirely relieved, and a healthy granulation has ensued. Such an indication of a newly-found healing agent was not disregarded. On Monday last, being in Philadr!phia, I was invited to attend the morning dress ing of the earth-treated wounds. This is what I saw : First two patients suffering from ser ious varicose ulcers, after prolonged suf fering, and with little relief from the usual treatment, have ceased to be offen sive to their wardmates ; they find their sores growing daily smaller ; all pain and inflammation have left them, and they feel the certainty of an early cure. Second A railroad brakesman whose hand was a year and a half ago crush ed between the coupling heads of two cars, and who has never been free from pain, and seldom from intense pain ; whose hand from the wrist to the knuck les was a festering mas3 of carious bones and ioflamed flesh, and whose system had been so reduced that he could not have survived the amputation which alone can entirely relieve him, is now happy in free dom from pain. His flesh wound has taken on a healthy character, and his strength is fa3t returnining. He even hopes to save his hand, but the long-continued decay of the bone makes this im possible. Third Another braekman suffering from a precicsely similar injury, in no re spect less serious, but received within a few days, was immediately treated with dry earth. Its constant application ha3 entirely prevented inflammation, and a healthy healing of the flesh and knitting of the bone will soon return him to his duties with two useful hands. Fourth A farm laborer, on Friday last, had three of his fingers nearly cut off and his hand fearfully torn by a horse power hay cutter. Since the first appli cation of the dry earth (a few hours after the accident) he has been free from pain and he will save his hand. Fifth. On Saturday last a laborer, en gaged in breaking up condemned shells, exploded one that was charged. The pow der burned his face and arms, and (ser iously) one of his knees, which was struck by a fragment of the iron that completely shattered the knee pan. His burns and the fracture were immediately dressed with dry earth, and freedom from pain and the absence of inflammation have been as marked in his case as in the oth ers. Without this dressing the knee joint must inevitably have become involv ed, and the leg must have been lost. ! Now? the wound is evidently healing, and (although it U too early to speak positi vely) there is every reason to nope mat, the only result of the injury will be a still knee. Sixth Within a few nays a woman was brought to the hospital with her neck and a large part of her body very severely and dangerously burned. That she could escape long weeks of agony was beyond hope. Yet on Monday her eye wa3 clear and calm and her voice was when the doc tor asked her how she felt, she said she was a great deal better, and that she had no pain. ' . Senventh Last Wednesday an entire breast wa3 removed for cancer, and the wound was dressed with dry earth. It is now healing rapidly. There has been no inflammation and no suppuration, and this woman too calm and happy-looking, with a lionltViv rnlor and a stead v voice spoke far more than her cheerful words ia thankfulness for her relief. Surely, with our gratitude to the Vicar of Fordington, who has conferred the greater benefit on thejhuman race that it has ever been given to one man to ac complish, we must unite our thanks to the senior surgeon of the Pennsylvania Hos pital for thus applying the principles of his invention to the saving of life and limb, and to the alleviation of unspeak able suffering. And the end, I trust, is not yet. It seems inevitable that the pustules ofsmall pox must give up their painand their offensiveness at this magic touch of moth er earth, and if it is true that its con tagion spreads from its exudations, may we not hope that Dr. Hewson has bound its feet as Mr. Moule has those of cholera? Respectfully, . GEO. E. WARING, JR. New York, February 24, 1869. Hook-swinging in India. Rev. Mr. Noyes, a missionary of the American Board, stationed at Kambarn, ;.n Southern India, writes that the bar barous practic of hook-swinging has been revived in that section of India, and he describes an occasion of this sort which he witnessed last summer. It is surpris ing that thn lritisli omvernmpnt. which Recently, while laboring in the itine racy, I witnessed the "hook-swinging festival." At the beginning of this fes tival the priest of the pagoda sends the sacred ashes and other things to a per son whom he selects a3 a victim to be suspended. On the reception of these gifts the man commences a fast, denying himself all bodily indulgence. On the day fixed for the celebration of the feast he enters the temple with pomp and cer emony, and appears before the idol. The priest performs a ceremony over him, ut tering munthrani3 or heathen Iorm3 ot prayer, and he pretends to be under the influence of devils, and acts like a mad man. While in this state some person standing by give3 him a severe blow on the back, which produces a slight swell ing. The muscle is here pierced in two places, and openings are made sufficient for the insertion of the iron hooks, which are immediately introduced, and then pressure is applied on every side of the wounded to prevent the issue of blood, greatly increasing the man's sufferings. The fact that no blood flows is regarded by the people as a miraculous interposi tion. After these prelimioarcs the man is taken to the machine upon which he is about to be suspended and swung about. This consists of a four-wheeled platform car, in the centre of which is an upright post, twenty or thirty feet high, and upon the top of it a transverse beam, forty feet long, fitted to work like a well sweep, and also to be swung around in a circle. Upon one end of this beam the hooks already inserted in the man's back are fastened by 6trong ropes. Long ropes are also attached to the other end, by means of which several men manage its motions. The victim is first swung around in a circle and then raised high in the air, while the multitudes below fill the air with their shouting. In going up he favors himself by catching hold of the rope with his hands, but pretty soon lets go, and is suspended by the hooks, being bent almost double, his head and feet hanging, and the muscles of his back be ing pulled out to the utmost tension. While he is hanging in tlii3 position, the car is drawn by hundreds of men over the rough ground around the temple, the man being shaken and tossed from side to side by the motion of the car. It was a full hour, by my watch, that I saw the man thus suspended. His countenance was a picture of distress, and when taken down he seemed much exhausted. He is next presented to the people to receive their offering, and receives large presents of money and lands property such as he could not have accumulated by the labor of years. lie is now taken to his house, the hooks are removed, and and his wounds arc treated by the appli cation of small cakes of mud, made so hot as to burn the skin. Three of these plasters are placed on each wound and kept there for seven days, when they are taken off and other medicines are applied. This is severe treatment, but the wounds are said to be effectually healed by it in twenty days, if the man survives it. On the first day he suffers but little, because he ia inde insensible by intoxicating drugs and potions. On che second, and several succeeding days, his sufferings arc so great that ho will often attempt to commit suicide. Profits on Pianos. A correspondent of the New York Sun says : I have been foreman of one of our first-class manufactories for fifteen years, and I know the cost of every one piano made. Instruments sold for six hundred and fifty dollars cost but two hundred and ten dollars, and those sold for one thous and six hundred dollars, which arc hand somely carved grands, cost but four hun dred and seventy-five dollars. You see what enormous profits are made on them. Pianos range from five hundred to two thousand dollars, and some styles with an ! extra moulding, winch costs but nvo dollars, they ask fifty dollars more for. They argue that it looks one hundred dol- lars better. Suppose it does, that is no reason why they should ask fifty dollars Uore for the instrument. A Pacific Railroad Town. CURIOUS SCENES AT BRYAN, EIGHT HUN DRED MIES WEST OF OMAHA. "Carlcton" writes to the Rostom Jour nal the following account of the present- j De"cr- At 3 l us. aa eDur . terminus of the Union Pacific Railway- ll as J text. It give us a better know tha town of IWn. 800 mi!M WPStnf , ledge of the character of the young man, Omaha : The United Stetes at the present time can exhibit one thing not to be found in any other country a Pacific Railroad town. By that we do not mean a town like Omaha, which is an old established city, but one of the mushroom places which grow up in a night, last a weejf or two, and then are torn down and moved on to another locality. I he railrord is pushed forward so fast, and the terminus changed so often, that a town only gets ander way before it is pulled down and sent forward to a new place. You can find houses at the present terminus, Bry an, eight hundred miles west of Omaha, whioh have been put upand taken down fif teen or twenty times. The people who live in them are American Arabs. They are not only nomads, ever on the move, I u..4 4k 4i ri-.i! but they can steal and plunder as adroitly and with as little compunction of con science as their brethren the Bedouins. Civilization and Christianity have not re fined or softened their inhuman nature. Let me not be understood to say that every man in one of these railroad towns is a villain, or a blackleg ; on the coun- trary, honest men are to be Sound who, ra. u,v;n ,t;0ntiw wh r..(T,,nQ uniweauu, dui sureiy, wunout patience, ceases to be a virtue, and there u U,arJ being no law or order, or organized so ciety, take matters into their own hands and become a terror to evil-doers. When some flagrant crime has been committed murder or assassination these law abiding men purify the place by hanging the murderers to the nearest tree, or if no tree is near, they extemporize a gallows by tiliting up the tongue of a wagon, and sending the ruffian into eternity before the body of his victim is cold. Such sud. den punishment is like lihtning on a sul try day purifying and invigorating. It was late in the evening when we en tered the new town of Br-an, then about two weeks old. We rode up a wide street, bright with lights flaming in the windows of the restaurants and saloons, each shop man and barkeeper trying by arrange ment of kerosene lamps and colored glass es to outshine his neighbor in his endea vors to attract a crowd. "There was a sound of revelry," and Bryan had gathered the largest part of her population for a high time. There was such dancing and fiddling, such drink ing of healths, shuffling of cards and rat tling of dice, as we never saw before. From the dance saloons came the sound of hurdy-gurdies, violins and banjoes, the rattle and clatter cf the double shufile and plantation breakdown, mingled with shouts and oaths, the jingling of glasses, as the rudemen, wild with whiskey, and ruder women, decked, in silks, satins, flounced and ruffled, and glittering with trumpery jewelry, went whisking in each other's aams round the room. The railroad company have laid out the town and are selling lots at high prices. Of course, these lots will have very little value after the road is opened, but the town is built as if thero was a limited amount of land available for a city, the shops and houses are all crowded to gether, and if a fire were to break out on the windward side all would go. Here is a town two weeks old, with a population ot live thousand : Ua every side we hear the sound of saws and ham mers. Here is a man putting up his shop, which he has brought from the late ter minus at Green River. The boards are all numbered like those of a window shut ter. He will have it completed in an hour or two, his goods in and ready for trade. Here is a German and his wife unpack ing the chests which contain mugs and glasses. In a few minutes he will have a lager-beer saloon in operation. Yonder a Yankee has establtshed a bakery, building his oven of bricks made on the spot, lie is selling hot ginger bread and seed cakes, and has a large pile of bread in one corner and pumpkin pics on his shelves. The saloons during tho day arc not much patronized, but arc thronged at night. It is a lively town. The whole population live on a small territory and are dependent wholly upon the railroad for supplies. Were the cars to storun- ning the community would be brouiilitto the verzo of starvation in a week ; but that contingency is not thought of. and this crowd of railroad followers are here to gather up the spoils which pass from the treasury of the company through the workmen into their hands. The French chemist, Tardieu, extract ed the coloring matter from some import ed English red stockings, and introduced a jquanity thereof beneath the skins of a dog. The animal died within twelve hours. A rabbit similarly treated died in eight hours, and a frog in four. M. Tardieu advises the absolute prohibition of the importation of red stockings. Tho sales of the great dry goods house, Field, Leithcr & Co., for 1863, were $10, 419,200 exceeding that of any other house in Chicago about 3,000,000 a forcible illustration of what fair dealing based upon a cash system can accomplish. To take stainsout .of ivory-handled kuives, rub them with a littlo moistened salt. 4I Always Konw Where to Find Him." This was said, in our hearing, of a young man by his employer. He could have said nothing more to the point, or and a better key to his future, than Mr. Wells could have furnished on paper after ever so careful a craniologican examination. I said this: That young man is reliable, conscientious, faithful, truthful, intel ligent, competent, and essential to my business. I would as soon think of set ting a watch upon my own actions as on his. His statements bear upon their face the seal of truth. Ilis memory i3 so thoroughly methodical and cautions in all he docs and he seldom, if ever, makes a mistake. He is as much interested in my business as I myself am. A hint to him is equal to a command. If he knows a thing should be done he docs not wait to be told, but goes at it at once ; and when he puts his head to a task you can ii i. 4 : til v.- , , finished belore he leaves it. All this and more was included in that brief, pithy commendation ; and we felt sure then, as we do now, that we can fore cast that young man's future. He will be not simply an honest man and a "use ful member of society," but a jwsitive man a man of independent character and assured position possibly a man of i.ii. i -.i . misfortune, blessed with competence. His wife, should he marrv. and his children, should he m have any, will find in him not a protector only but a companion and friend. They, like his present employer, will know just "where to find him." Ilis neighbors, too, will have decided opinions as to his whereabouts. They will rarely guess wrong as to what he will say or do in any matter of public importance or pivatc in terests. The worthy poor whom he may know will learn to discount his pbilantro phy at ratable figures, and the worthless vagabonds who may cross his path will fix as positive an estimate upon his credulity. He will never sit astride any poitical fence, but, on one side or the other, will be found earnestly at work. If a professing Christian, the fact will be known outside his church pew, net through a blatant self-assertion, but in those many quiet ways which speak more loudly than words. He will forget, while young, to "sow his wild oats," and so, when old, he will reap only the nature and plump kernel, which is the fullness of joy and peace. Packard's Monthly. On Catching Cold. Catching cold is a common phrase for an attack of catarrh, but it is a very in nocent one. One year I suffered so very severely from a scrie3 of "cold" that my attention was drawn specially to them. I was then lecturing on medicine, and nearly every night, from five o'clock to six during the winter months had to turn out from a warm room to go through all weathers, lecture for an hour in a theater heated by a stove and lightend by gas, and then return again to my snuggery at home. When I felt a fresh cold begin ning, I tried in vain to account for it, until I saw in Copland's dictionary that the most fertile cause of a cold was com ing from a moist, cold air to a hot and dry room. This at once explained to me the reason of my frequent suffering, fori had invarably gone into my hot room straight from the cold. I of course, soon changed my habits ; I dwadled in the hall while taking off my great coat, prcam bulatcd the rooms which had no fire in then I went up and down stairs, and the like, ere I went into my study whose temperature was also reduced. Since them, agree with a friend who says, "that a cold comes from catching heat and I am disposed to thiuk that there is a strong analogy between a chilblain on a child's toes and a cold in a person's nose, throat, and longs. Dr. Thos. Inman. A Curious Law Suit A "cat case" has just terminated in the Baltimore courts. The plantiff was the owner of a valuable cat of the Maltose breed, which had been missing for about four months. The cat was discovered in the possession of the dofendant, and the plaintiff, in order to recover it, was obliged to sue out a writ of replevin, the cat and its collar being valued at $25. At the trial of the casein which both sides were represented by counsel, the defendant produced an account against the plaintiff ot 1,20 for boarding tho cat lo2 days at ten cents per day. After hearing the evidence and argument, in, which tho defendant's counsel claimed there was no property in cats, the Justico gave judgement for plaiutiff for possession of the cat, and ono cent damages and cost3 to bo paid by defendant. The bill of defendant for boarding tho cat was not allowed. , Farmers and dealers in vegetables will be gratified to learn that a Michigan cul tivator has a potato that conies to maturity fifteen minutes earlier than the famous Early Rose potato! And cultivators of moderate means will be rejoiced to know, that they can purchase it at the moderate rate of 25 per pound. A correspondent says ho has a friend who is trowing weaker and weaker every day, and that he has already arrived at that point where it is with the greater difficulty he can arise fivo dollars. A Useful Table. To aid farmers in arriving at accuracy in estimating tho amount of land in dif ferent fields under cultivation, the follow- in rr table is given : 5 yards wide by 003 yards long, con tains 1 acre. 10 yards wide by 484 yards long con tains 1 acre. 20 yards wide by 212 yard3 long, con- tains 1 acre. 40 yards wide by 121 yards long, tains 1 acre. con- 70 yards wide by 09 J yards long, coa- tains 1 acre. 80 yards wido by COJ yards long, con tains 1 acre. 220 feet wide by 19S feet long, contains 1 acre. 410 feet wide by 19S feet long, contains 1 acre. 110 feet wide by SCO feet long, contains 1 acre. 60 feet wide by 720 feet long, contains 1 acre. 120 feet wide by 303 feet long, contains 1 acre. 240 feet wide by 1S1 J feet long, contains 1 acre. OLD BREAD. A curious discovery was just made at Pompeii. In a house in course of excava tion an oven was found, closed with an iron door, on opening which a batch of eighty-one loaves, put in nearly eighteen hundred years ago, and now somewhat over done was discovered ; and even the large iron shovel with which they had been meatly laid in rows. The loaves were but slightly over baked by the lava heat, having been protected by a quanti ty of ashes covering the door. There is no baker's mark on the loaves ; they are circular about nine inches in diamter, rather flat, and indented (evidently with the baker's elbow) in the centre, and are slightly raised at the side3, and divided by deep lines radiating froa the center into eight segments. They are now of a deep brown color, and hard, but very light. In the same shop were found 501 bronze and 52 silver coins. A mill, with a great quantity of corn in excellent pre servation, has also been discovered. Good Will. Prentice, of the Louis ville Journal saya many good things, and now he intimates what his will would bo if he was rich. What an idea, to supposa an editor could be rich ! He says: If I possessed the most valuable things in the world, and was about to will thera away, the following would be my plan of distribution : . I would give the world truth and friendship, which are so very scarce. To physicians, skill and learning. I would give to printers their pay. To gossipping women, good sense, mod esty, large waists, and natural teeth. To young sports, and dandies, common sense, littl cash, and hard labor. To old maids, good tampers, smooth faces, little talk and good husbands. To old bachelors, love of virtue, child- ren and wives. Curo for Drunkness. Recipes to cure one of an appetite for liquor, are constantly going the rounds of the paper. A friend who has tried it gave us the following receipt : Ilavo steady employment, and give a strict at tention ten hours each day, except Sun days, and then attend church service regulary. v hen your day s work is com pleted, go home to spend your leisure hours. If your home 13 not pleasant, set yourself about the agreeable task of mak ing it so. When yoa go out to public amusements take some person of puro mind and steady habits with you. Under this pleasant treatment, the sight and smell of liquor becomes loatbsomo. Judgment Notes. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has recently decided that a judgment note should be stamped at the usual rate of promissory notes, being five cents for every 8100, or fractional part thereof, with five cents additional, on account of the clause "without defalcation' The decision is made under the clauses of the Internal RcTenue law, which provide that no stamp duty shall bo charged upon any warrant of attorney aocompanying a bond or note duly stamped. .. The Memorial Methodist church at Washington cost 250,000, and will seat 2,000 people. A lady in Connecticut wears oa her hat a stuffed bird so exceedingly natural and life like to appearances that a cat sprang at it and damaged it recently. A $5,000 monument is to bo erected over the grave of Sam Houston in Texas Six hundred men are working at Provi dence, R. I., ou locomotives for the Paci fic R. R. A Vermont paper says that the annual product of maplo sugar in the United States is 7,000,000 pounds. Most kinds of roots and barks are now used an medicines, except the cube root and the bark of a dog. To Cure Corns. Hold your feet uear a hot Gro till the corns pop. This is said to be a sure cure, but a very painful one. ii 1 I r l! s. f - If-: Ik if ,i i: 1 : l 5;' .' V. I f : !' V It: p. i - . , I 4 f n n n