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Show 8kt Dg4cn function. rablinlMNl every WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY ITniusnma Compani. by tlio CHiUK JAMES McGAW, I'resi iit and Business Manager, eoitiuiuiuVatiuu should be Business to whontaU addl'eHHed. committee on fowls and swine. Dr. Lamoroaux sells rabbits of suitable age for three dollars per pair. A candle box is a good thing for thorn to make their nest in. Respectfully. A. Flh ami Ilabbits. The following communications to the President of the Society for the Improvement of Stock etc., will bo found both interesting and profitable, 8. L. City, Jan. 9, 1871. President Woodruff of the Parent Society for tbe Introduction of Stock, Dear Sib: I have received an excellent work of ninety odd pages, from Seth Green, Esq, o trout, culture. Chapter 1 treats on "fish culture and trout breeding," etc. Chapter 2 "trout ponds, location ! laying out, and shape of ponds," eto. Chapter 8, "hatching house troughs," etc. Chapter 4, "Treatment of eggs, placing them in troughs," etc. Chapter 5, "young trout, their appearance food," etc. Mr, Green says that half a tetcupful of bonny clabber or thickened milk is sufficient food at sue feeding for several thousands of young trout forty odd days old. Chapter C, "adult trout," et. Chap ter 7, "taking eggs and all about spawning," etc. Chapter 8, "stocking ponds and streams," "will it pay," "to those starting iu business," eto. Appendix, "transportation of live fish," etc 1 have examined the treatise and consider it just the kind of work for every person engaged in this moat important branch of industry, viz : the introduction and cultivation of fish. Messrs. Tillotson of New York have kindly sent me another work, entitled "A Complete Treatise on Artificial Translated and Edited by W, H. Fry. Illustrated with Engravings," This is a book of 188 pages, and I think is not so well adapted to our wants as Mr. Oreen'a work. Mr. James Dwyer the enterprising Kailrottd Book, Paper, and Notion Dealer, of this city will, in a few days, have copies of Mr, Green's work for sale at on dollar each. At Logan we organ ized a fish committee of live persons in tip. w. is. Prestou, Thoe Jones, fcnoch Lewis, Thomas Tarbctt and Benj. Guff; at Franklin we organised another committee of three thorough Alex. mon, viz: Stalker, Andrew Morrison and William Woodward. Oth er committees in that county, also in Box Elder and Weber counties will soon He set on foot. 1 will append to this Mr. Ureew's "General Circular Directions" which accompanied his letter to ne. In his letter he says that eggs cannot be sent by him to Utah by express, but will come safely in charge of an attendant. Let me say again to fish committees and to fish farmers; obtain the above work and the agricultural reports for 1868, then you will be in possession of sufficient uuta to commence a successful business. I would respectfully recommend that all articles that have appeared and may hereafter appear in the papers treating upon this and kindred subjects, bo cut out by fish committees and the bishops, and be preserved for future reference. Very respectfully, yours, && A. Miltos) Mvsseb, Chairman of Fish Committee, To the Parent WILLIAMS Im- provement of Stock, etc LUMBER How to Make Hen Lay, People would better understand this matter, says tho Country Gmtteman, if they considered for a moment a hen to be, as she is, a small steam engine, with an attachment, and thus there must be a constant supply of good feed and pure water to keep the engine and its attachment up to its work. In addition to keeping before hens, who have complete liberty, a constant supply of pure water, summer and winter, I have found that during the cool and cold weather of fall, winter, and spring, a dough compounded as follows, fed one day and then intermitted for two days, to produce excellent results; . To three gallons of boiling water add one. half an ounee of common suit, a teaspoonful of cayenne pepper, and four ounces of lard. Stir the mixture until the pepper has imparted considerable of its strength to the water. Meantime the salt will have been dissolved and the lard melted. Thca, while yet boiling hot, stir in a meal made of oats and WILL FUItXISII corn, ground together in equal propor la formed. Set mush a until stiff tions, away to cool down to a milk warmth. Before feeding taste to see that you A.T have an overdose neither of salt nor pepper, and to prevent tho hens being North-We- st Corner of imposed upon with a mixture, not fit to be eaten, lhe lien mush should not be Union Square, more salt that to suit your own taste, nor so hot with pepper that you could not swallow it, were so much in your Close to the Jtrscnos Printing Office, broth. B jware of too much salt, too much lard, and to much pepper; and ALL KINDS OF beware, too, where the seasoning is not too high, of feeding this dough to long at a tune. Let the hens be fed one day fully with it, then let it be omitted and the ordinary feed given two days, and so on, and the result will be found satsfac-tor- COMPANY. egg-layin- Cheapest Yard in Ogden. , WILLIAMS & CO. TIIEIK YARD, Plank, y. Scantling, this in Joists, Eafters, the her night Fencing, in Inch Lumber joiner jury, Siding, Battens, Flooring, Trnckeoifc SaltLako Finishing Luna ber, and LUMBER YARD, Picketing, ' : Take notice hens fed way will be a good deal less inclined to sot than when fed ordinary manner. In an Iowa breach of promise case, accused had the woman swore that for several hugged every months, and Sunday nights until three o'clock the morning. The industrious oulprit was fined $1 and costs. The greatest the lawyer. He box can place a tenant, impanel a a witness, bore the court, augur the gains, floor a witness, cut his1 board, nail the case, hammer the desk, file his bill, and shave a whole community. SALT LAKE CITY, FROM RABBIT CULTURE. , , Saw Lak Citt, January Oth, 1871. . rMT.'W. Woiuvrn SHINGLES, $4.50 . PER THOUSAND. I would like the members of the Society ever which you preside, and all others interested, to learn some facts in relation to rabbit culture, which I firmly believe may be made ?ery profitable to ON OGDEN, almost any one having a spare rod or two of ground for a rabbit garden. Tbe following data I obtained from Dr. David B. Lmoreaux, a successful rabbit culturist, at Logan, Cache County: Doors, Hash Some time ago he obtained two doc IUIikIm and a buck of the "prick cared" varieIn had he months from tevem this ty. rabbits. beginning eighty-fou- r They are very prolific, each doe having offspring from three to sine in number very month of the year. She carries her young thirty days. The average monthly growth of tins young is bout ene pound for the Hist seven months; less thereafter. At four mouths of age they multiply agaia; ono buck to from successful eight to twelve docs, ADDRESS, breeding the bucks should not be over two years old. Tbe doe always makes her nest in a dark place some two Sait Lake City. weeks before giving birth to her Three or four days bofore this period the previous litter must be taken away, so as not to interfere with the new crop, which mast not be handled for the first nine or ten days. Fcr fattening purposes the males should be emasculated, (the process it as easy and simple as with lambs). In this condition they grow larger, and make sweeter meat, and are less combative. They ONE LOT NORTH OF WHITS HOCSR, must always be haudled by the ears;, otherwise you kill them very easily. They will eat most all kinds of vegetables, also weeds and corn fodder, hay Th best quality sheaf-oat-s, corn, wheat, milk,apple and ete. .Artichokes potatoe peelings, etc, make splendid spring food; surplus apple limbs, willows and some pine From Bear Lake Divide, near Mount Nebo, Sir bark may be thrown to them. Colonel Bate, at tho Mill, McKenxie tells me that they are very fond of dandelion, which grows go spontaneously everywhere. They must have fresh water regularly, and are Anil at tbe Yard, from ' fond of snow... The pen in which the Dr. propagates and keeps his rabbits, is made of laths, nailed to a frame, $25. to per 1000 feet. with a small space left between them, In Cash or It. equivalent. thewholo covering say half a square rod of ground. The place is covered amd furnished with several apartments, OatsTaml with small gates opening into them. They must be kept dry; and Colonel McKcnzie says secure from the depredations of cats. The skins of the Doctor's kind are very beautifully colored LUMBER PLAXED ON ONE SIDE, black and white; two or three large at Reasonable Kates." nes would make a very nice cape for a miss. In view or of the easy cul lady ture and the consequent cheapness of lit Z.C.M.Inet, or of the rabbit meat, I beg respectfully to rec- Apply to D. U. PERRY, man iu the yard. ommend that their introduction and LEVI WUKKLEK. culture be placed in the hands of the Dear Sir; $30 to $35 13 ox Tlxo-ULsctnd- . Fencing Lumber CARS AT $25.00 per M. Doors, "! made to order. Bills sawed to order at a few day's notice. LUMBER YARD. Fr LATH, SHINGLES. J). W.PAllKU UltST, 80-- tf WHITE PINE LUMBER Flour, Grain, Stock, YARD, and all kinds of Produce taken at Market Rates. WliitoPino Lumber ... $25. per 1000 foot, $40. Wheat, Wanted. Tbrouirh BtruRsrle and sufferlnir. at the cost of multiform agonies, bereavements, devastations, the American Idea embodied in the preamble to our fathers' Declaration of Independence ap proaches its complete realization. The uoble, inspiring assertion tliat "all men are created equal," and endowed by their Creator with inalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, is no longer a glittering generality, a poeisiancy, a pnuosopners speculation, but the recognized base of our political fabric. The benign Revolution, which dates from the Boston Massacre of 1770, finds its logical completion, lust one century later, in the XVth Amendment; wuicn gives to the equal political and civil rights of every man born or naturalized in our Republic the shield and defence of the federal Constitution, The billows of Caste and Privilege may roar and rage around that rock, and may transiently seem on the point of washing it away: but its foundations are deep-lai- d and steadfast, and the breakers of Reaction and Slavery are hurled against and dash their .pray over it in vain, n e do not underrate the torces of Preiudice and Aristocracy. We do not forget that a very large minority of tbe American People still hold in their inmost hearts that Blacks have no rights which Whites are bound to respect. We fully appreciate the desperation wherewith all tbe warring elements ot hatred to Republican achievement will be combined and burled against the battlements of Republican ascendency in the Presidential election of 1872. We do not doubt that local successes, facilitated bv Retmbllcan feuds and dissensions, will inspire tho charging uu wnui Buiiguuiv uope oi victory, sucn as nerved it to put forth its utmost strength in the earlier stages of the contests of 1804 and 1868. Yet our taith is clear and strong that the Ameri can People still bless God that, on tho red battlefields of our late Civil War, tbe Union was npheld and Slavery destroyed, and will never consciously ueciae uuu cue precious Diooa thereon poured out was lavished in vain. Tan Thibunk believes In the prosecution of the great struggle by legitimate means to beneficent ends. To State Sovereignty, it opposes indissoluble National Integrity; to Slavery for Blacks, Liberty for all; to Proscription, Snfranchiseuwut; to Popular Ignorance, Universal Education; to intensity and eternity of wrathful Hate, universal and invincible Good Will. It would fain do its utmost to hasten tho glad day when the South shall vie with the North in exultation and gratitude over the disappearance of the last trace or taint of that spirit which impelled Man to exult in tbe ownership and chattlehood of his fellow Man. that the contest is not yet ended that Millions mourn, more or less publicly, the downfall of the slaveholders' Confederacy, and rear their children to hate those by whose valor and constancy its overthrow was achieved. If we ever seem to diOer essentially from other Republicans, onr conviction that magnanimity is never weakuess,that vengeance is never politic, and that devils are not cast out by Beelzebub, must serve to explain alleged eccentricities whose perfect vindication we leave to Tim. and Reflection. The Tauiuxs has been, is, and must be, a zealous advocate of Protection to Home Industry. Regarding habitual idleness as the greatest foe to human progress, the bane of human happiness, we seek to win our countrymen in masses from the ensnaring lures of Speculation, of Traffic, and of always overcrowded Professions, to the tranquil paths of Productive Industry. W. would gladly deplote our overcrowded cities, where thousands vainly jostle and crowd in misguided quest of "Something to Do," tocovor prairies and plain, with colonies absorbed in Agriculture, Mechanics and Manufactures, and constantly projecting Into the blank, void wilderness the home, and the works of civilized Man. Holding the Protection of Home Industry by discriminating duties ou imported Wares and Fabrics essential to the rapid, beneficent diffusion of Production in all its phases and departments, and so to the instruction of our people in all the gainful arts of peace, we urge oar countrymen to adhere to and uphold that policy, in undoubting faith that tha true interest, not of a class of a section, but of each section and evsry useful class, is thereby subserved and promoted. The Tribune aims to be a Newspaper. Its correspondents traverse overy State, are present on every important battle-fielare early advised of .very notable Cabinet decision, observe the proceedings of Cougress, of Legislatures, and of Conventions, and report to us by telegrapb all that is of general interest. We have paid lor one day's moiueutous advices from Eurooe by Cable far more than our entire receipts for the issue in which those advices reached our readers, If lavish onllay, unsleeping vigilance, and un bounded faith in the liberality and discernment of tbe reading public, will enable us to make a journal which has no superior in the accuracy, variety, ana iresnness oi us contents. I ills lain-I'shall be such a journal. To Agriculture and the subservient arts, we nave devoted, ana shall persistently devote, more means and space than any of our rivals. We aim to make The Weeklt TawuNE such a paper as no farmer can afford to do without, however widely his politics may differ from ours. Our rcorts of the (Jnttle, liorso. Produce, and General Markets, are so full and accurate, our essays in elucidation of the farmer's calling, and our regular reports of tne farmers Uuo and kindred gatherings, are so interesting, that the poorest farmer will find therein a mine of suggestion and counsel, of wmcn n cannot remain ignorant without positive and serious loss. We sell The Wikklt to Clubs for less than its value in dwellings for waste-pape- r; and, though its subscription is already very large, we believe that a Half Million more farmers will take it whenever it shall be con mended to their attention. We ak our friends everywhere to aid us in so commending it. Profoundly do we realize TERMS OF THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE. To Mail Subscribers. ....... . - $2. One Copy, one year, 62 Issues Five Copies, one year, 52 Issue. 9. Tb One Andreas, all at one Post-Oflk10 Copies $1 60 each. 20 Copies 1 26 each. - 1 00 each. 60 Copies Aud One Extra Copy to each Club. ... ... Barley Address all couiuiuDlcKtioiu, JOSHUA WILLIAMS & CO., Weber Station, U.P.K.U OR, H. B. SCOVILLE, Box 10, OCDUX, ' To Names of Subscribers, all at one - $160 each. 10 Copies . . . , 1 35 each. 2b Copies . 1 10 each. 60 Copies ' And One Extra Copy to each Club. Person, entitled to an extra copy can, if pre ferred, nave eitner oi tne following books, post Poliitical conomv. bv Horace age prepaid: Pear Culture for Profit, by P. T. Ouiru: Grly; The Elements of Agriculture, by George E. War ing. Advertising ItateSi ( Daiit Twbonk, 80c, 40c, nue. 50c., C XT HtmdrBcls c o Bear testimony to their "Wonder, lul Curative Effects. 1 11 o I! From Dispensatory of the United 8tates. E. Ef S e 2. V 2 WHAT ARE THEY ? f 3 - flog 75c, and $1 per tr Tribune, 25 and 50 cent per line. 13, Mid $5 per line. Weekly Tribune, According to position iu the paper. To subscribers wishing to preserve Mr. Greely'a essays on "What I Know op Farming," and who pay the full price, I. e, $10 for Daily, $4 for or $2 for Wekkli Tuibune, wo will send th. book, post-paiif request ke made at the urn. of subscribing. f OFFICE. The Tribune Almanac. Price 20 cents. Tribune Almanac Reprint. 1838 to 1858. 2 vols. Half bcund, $10. Recollections oy a Best Life. By Horace Greely. Variou. styles of biuding. Cloth, $2 60. Library, $3 60. Half Morocco, f4. Half Cloth, o. morocco Antique, w. Political Economy. By Horace Greely, $1 60. Ewbane's Hydraulics and Mechanics. Six tepnth Edition. Large octavo. Cloth, to. ' Prab Culture fot Profit. Quinn. $1. Elements of Agriculture. New Warring. Edition. Cloth, fl. Draimno for Health and Profit. "Warring, Cloth, tl sa Sent free on receipt of price. Is making remittances alviay. procure a draft e on New York, or a Money Order, if possible. W here neither of these can be procured seud the money, but always iu a reiusterkb letter. lhe registration fee has been reduced to fifteen cenis. aud the present registration system ha i lounu oy tbe postal authorities to be virtir ally an absolute protwtiou against losses bv" mail All Postmasters are obliged to regis ter letter. wneii requested to do so. Terms, cash in advance. BucIiq Leave. " Z .. TABi5V ''la Crcuata DioHuta Eofl ' I" Rib. XW;.i Al! Their odor ia Pbopektiks atroDg, diflushe, and somewhat aromatic, their taste bitterish, and analogous to mint, f Medical Peoperties and Uses g3n J OT y S p i i nr. 1 Aim ivi a, t peculiar tendency to the Urinary O".-oq Bj. chu leaves are gently stimulant, with "a JF 5 IIFANCY DRINK, Pi? Madaof Poor Hum, Whiskey, Proof Bplrit aud Kefuae Liquor aoctorca, picea ana sweet, enedto please the tasto, called " Tonics," Appetiz er.." " Restorers, &c that lcaa tne tippler on 10 drunkenness and ruin, but aro a true Medicine, made from the Katlvo Boots and Herbs of California, frco from all Alcoholic JStlmnlnnts. They aro tha CHEAT BL,OOI PI lliriElt ana A Mr CI VIXO FttlSCIPLE parget Innovator and tniriirnratnrof the BvBtem. carryinir off all poisonous matter andrcstorlng the blood to a, healthy condition. Ko person can take these uittcrs Becoming 10 uircc-tlo- n and remain long unwell. JlOO willbe given for an incurable case, provided the bones are not destroyed fcy mineral poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. M For Inflammatory and Chronic Khenma-tisi- n and Uont, Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, Itilioiis.Ueinii tent ana Intermittent Fevers Disease, of the lilood, Liver, Kidneys and Madder, these Bitters have been most success-fu- They are given in complaints of tha Urinary Organs, such as Gravel, Chrou- - f ic Catarrh of the Bladder, Morbid Irri. tation of the Bladder Disease Gland, Retention or Incontinence of in the parts from a loss of tone ed in its evacuation. I and Urine, concern The remedy also been recommended Chronic Rheumatism, ? and Urethra, of the Prostrate haj iu Dyspepsia, Cutaneous Affeo- - tions and Dropsy. l. Such Diseases tire caused by Vitiated Hlnod .which is generally produced by derangement jf the Digestive Orsans. i. OR-- INDIGESTION. Hcaa-Oif- l. Pain In the Shonldcra.Conehs.ThrhtncBS of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, palpitation of the Heart, Inflammation ot the Lungs.Paln in the regions of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. Theylnvlgorate the stomach, and stimulate the torpid liver and bowels, which render them of unequalled efficacy In cleansing the blood of all Impurities, and imparting new life and vigor to the whole system. DYSPEPSIA F0K8KIS DISEASES, Eruptlons.Tetter.Salt Rhuem, Blotches, 8 pots. Pimples, Pustules, Scald Head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Dtscoloratlons of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried ont of the system in a short time by the useof these Bitters. One bottle la such cases will convince the most incredulous oftheir curative effect. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenerer yon find its Impurities burstingthrongh the skin InPimples.Erup-tlon- s or sores j cleanse it when youOnd it obstructed and sluggish In the veins ; cleanse It when it Is foul, and your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure and the health of the system will follow. FIN, TAPE and other WORMS, lurking In the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroy-e- d and removed. For full directions, read carefully the circular arouad each bottle, printed In four English, German, French and Spanish. J. WALKER, Proprietor. R. H. MoDON AID CO., CaL Druggtrti and Gen. Agents, San Francisco, New York. 82 SI Commerce and and Street, XT SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. Bolls.Car-buncl- Exteact Bcchu is Helmbold's c. used by persons from the age of 18 to 25, and from 35 to 55, or in the decline or J change of life; Labor Pains; after Confinement 'or in Bed-Wetti- children. In affections peculiar to females, tht Extract Buchu is unequaled by any atb-e- r remedy, as in Chlorosis, or RetenPainfulness or tion, Irregularity, of customary evacuations, Ul- cerated or Schirrous state of the uterus, Leucorrhcea Diseases or Whites. of the Bladder, Kidneys, Gravel and Dropsical Swellings. Thi medicine increases the power of Diges- tion, and excites the absorbents into healthy action, by which the watery or calcareous depositions, and all unnat-ural enlargements are reduced, as well as pain or inflammation. Extract Bccnu Helmbold's has cured every case of Diabetes in which it has been given. Irritation of the of the Bladder, Inflammation rapidly .uperKdlng all other preparations tot producing Mllgcnt, Svcet and fFAotftois. BOLLS, BISCCITS, BREAD, Buckwheat and other Griddl Ceftes. Ptrfatly Pur and M. Tha BdiabU, and oteayl ready for taudft Ptncdtrin tkt WOBLD, and It WILL KESP OH USD OB SKA, fa any climate, far sura. It tl well adapted to tb um of Iloutketptri, Jlaert, Mariners, BmiqranU, 4b, and It In fact. In Mr rarpwt, thtBEST T8AST POWDEB, Bud "for ( Kitchen, tie Camp, tht GalU)." L DEALERS EVERYWHERE. BOLD BY OUOCEKS It ilanufactured by D OO LEY & BROTHER, 69 NEW STREET, NEW-YOR- VICK'S FLORAL GUIDE For 1071. The Fibst Ediiiox of One Huxubkd a.nb Fifty Thousand copies of VICK'S ILLUSTRATED CATA-LOOUof 8KKDS and KLOKAL GUIDE, is published und ready tc Send out 100 pages, and an Kngraving of almost every desirable Flower and Vegetable. It is elegantly printed on fine tinted piuier, illustrated with Three Hundred fine Wood engraving, aud Two Deautiiui COLORED PLATES. The most beautiful and the most instructive Floral Guide published. A GERMAN EDITION published, iu all other respects similar to the English. Sent free to all my customers of 1S70, as rapidly as Sent to all others who possible, without application. order them for TEN CENTS, which is not half the cost. Address . JAMES VICK, Rochester, N, Y. 99-- 8 Neck of the Kidneys, Ulceration of the Kidneys and Bladder, Retention of Urine, Diseases of the Prostate Gland, Stone in the Bladder, Gravel, Calculu3, Brick-Du- st Deposit, Mucus or Milky Discharges, and for feebled en- and delicate constitutions, symptoms: the Indisposition of following to exertion, Loss of Power, Loss of Memory, Difficul ty of Breathing, Weak Nerves, Trem- bling, Horror of Disease, Wakefulness, Pain in the Back, Dimness of Vision, Hot Hands, Flushing of tha Body, Dryness of the skin, Eruption on the Face, Pallid Countenance, Universal Lassitude of the muscular system, &c. Helmbold's ExtractBuchu is Diuretic and blood purifying, and cures all dis- eases arising from habits of dissipation. THE Helmbolds : Addrra THE TKIBUSE, Kcw York. TJ, 3BL" both sexes, attended with BOOKS FOR SALE AT THE TRIBUNE H. B. SCOVILLE, Agent at Ogden. of Thousands S O TERMS. Daily Teiiwxe, Mail Subscribers. Sinner annum. lt Tribune, Mail Subscribers, $4 per annum. Five copies or over, $3 each; an extra will be sent for every club of ten sent for copy at one time; or, it preferred, a copy of Rocol' lections of a busy life, by Mr. Ureely. Salt Lake & Truekee 33 VINEGAR BITTEES. 1871. UTAH Milton Musssa. for the A GREAT MEDICAL DISCOVERY Dr. WALKER'S CALIFORNIA NEW YORK TRIBUNE. ? Society the & CO'S COLUMN. Extract Buchu is a sov- ereign remedy for the evils resultieg OGDEN JUNCTION from the use of Alkali water, which is so widely distributed in the west, exposing JOBPRIiWlIOIICl la supplied with the latest improved facilities for turning out every description of almost every person in this vast region to its baleful effects. Sold by all druggistsand dealers everywhere. for Helmbold's. Take no other. $1.25 per bottle, or Delivered JOB PKLXTINC. In the finest style. Beware of counterfeits. C Ask Trice, bottles for $6.50. to any address. Describe symptoms in all communications. Address II. T. HELMBOLD, S Broadway, N. Y. None are genuine unless done up in d BOOKBINDING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. wrapper, with fac-simi- of my Chemical Warehouse, and signed 79-l- y H T. HELMBOLD. |