On  Ilifiwrone  Track.— The  American  Agrl- 
culUirlst  years  a^o  earned  Ike  name,  “  Tlie  Isli- 
mael  ol  the  Agricultural  Press.”  This  position 
seems  to  have  keen  not  altogether  comlortahle. 
Juilglng  from  Its  mean  nttack  on  the  lain  BulTalo 
Uve  stock  Journul,  consolidated  last  month  with 
Its  minii'sake  of  Chicago,  our  neighbor  seems  to 
h.avn  adopted  the  profossirm  of  a  ghoul.  In  this 
safe  Held  we  wish  It  all  Ihc  enjoyment  Itcrave.s. 
it  had  liftter  lake  care  liow  e.ver  not  to  nm  foul  of 
the  National  f.lvc  Slwtk  .fournal  of  Chicago,  which 
is  not  its  kind  of  game. 
State ;  hut  the  public  henetlts  to  all  parts  of  our 
country'  from  this  hompetltlve  study  of  the  best 
methods  of  growing  and  feeding  corn  will  he 
worth  many  times  the  two  thousand  dollars  In 
premiums  by  which  it  is  secured. 
the  II.  H.  can  refer  to  them  at.  leisure  and  cogitate 
over  hls/rtfae  .smfernenW  that  we  have  Ignored  Mr. 
A.  “  In  the  KniAi.  tor  years  past." 
Now,  after  this  showing,  what  can  he  said  of 
the  -very  iist.ute  Hural  Home  and  ItA  editor,  who 
has  thus  wantonly  falsined  fmla  and  miulc  an 
«*DUr#"l.y  iuiprovok«.Ml  atl4w:k  tiyton  ns7— niakln^ 
chargoB  uponTis  which  he  cannot  sustaln-charges 
the  ohiect  of  which,  It  is  apparent,  are  for  the 
purpose  of  iTijuilng  us  utid  to  help  a  j>iTKonnl 
Objector  htsown. 
We  have  no  space  In  t  hoc.oluniDB  of  Ihe  Kckai. 
New-VOkki;k.Io  devole  to  personal  mattcioOf  l.Uls 
eharaclAir,  hut  we  have  felt  eoinpeiled  to  show 
that  this  brur.('n  charge  of  “Jeatousy,”  made  by 
the  Hural  Home,  Is  utterly  false  and  without  a 
sliadow  or  foundation.  Ailer  these  mlsrcprc^sent- 
atloiis  from  the  Hural  Home,  the  puhllc  need  not 
be  Hurniised  ut  iiny  julsHt/aUrincnts  nia-dc  tliroi4,iy 
“PROGRESS  AND  IMPROVEMENT.” 
MOORE’S  RURAL  NEW-YORKER, 
A  NATIONAL  ILLUSTllATED 
EUBAl,  llTEBiEI  AISD  lAMllt  HWSPAPB8. 
D.  D.  T.  MOORE, 
ITouiider  aiid  ConduotiiiR  Kditor. 
WM.  J.  FOWI^R,  ANDREW  S.  FULLER, 
Associate  PlditorH. 
I'piiieiiiiinl  I'oei. — Mr.  I.AYAHt)  Taa'Lok,  Jour¬ 
nalist,  and  traveler,  lias  been  selected  .as  Poet  of 
the  Centennial  Exhibition  in  place  of  Mr.  Long- 
KKi.tOW,  wlio  declined.  The  selection  H  a  good 
one.  Mr.  Taviok  Is  a  many-sided  man,  and 
writing  a  pe>em  Is  one  of  i  lic  man.v  thing!*  he  can 
do  well.  The  tliousands  wlio  will  hear  the  poem 
read,  and  the  many  millions  more  w  ho  will  only 
read  It,  have  a  rich  i,reaL  In  pi'O.spoet.  In  the  ode 
for  our  country's  Cent/ennlal  anniversary. 
RANDALL,  LL.D.,  Cortland  Village,  N.  Y 
Siii<.Kr 
X,  A.  WILLARD.  A.  M..  Lillie  Falls.  N.  Y., 
EiiITOB  0»  Til*  D*rA.llTMKNT  0»  PAIBV  UU»*ANDKV. 
sheep,  encourage  their  further  liuproveincnt, 
and,  as  a  means  ht  lh(!S(!  ends.  1/)  i)rovlde 
for  the  registration  of  the  hlsIorteH  and  pedi¬ 
grees  of  the  flocks  of  .Spanish  Meniio  sheep  in  Ver- 
montand  elsewhere."  The coustlliiUon  of  the  As¬ 
sociation  Is  similar  to  t  hat  of  the  Ohio  one  oi-gan- 
Ized  for  like  purposes.  The  following  ho.aru  or 
ollicers  was  elected  for  1876:  Prf.'Sident— N.  T. 
SrRAGrE,  Jr.,  Hrandon,  Vlcc-Prest’s.— «.  .s.  Hock- 
wcll.  Cornwall;  Ocorge  Campbell,  tVestmlnster. 
Secretary— Albert  i.'hapman,  Mtddlcbury.  Treas. 
—Charles  I».  Lane,  Cornwall.  Directors— E.  N. 
Blssell,  Rhorcham;  L.  P.  Clark,  Addison;  J.  11. 
Mead,  West  Rutland;  A.  E.  Perkins,  Pomfret. 
t;ommlttcc  on  Pedigrees— W.  R.  Rernele,  Mlddlc- 
bury;  ,T.  T.  Stlckney,  .Shorcham ;  J.  J.  Crane, 
Hrldport.  _ 
A  New  Cotton  Plnntrr.  —  mere  have  been 
many  attempls  to  adai»t  machinery  to  cotton 
planting  and  nearly  as  many  failures.  A  decade 
ago  a  clergyman-farmer  of  Western  New  Y'ork  In¬ 
vented  a  cotton  planter  which  scorned  to  do  the 
work  well  hut  lorsomc  reason— perhaps  the  lack  of 
means  or  enterprise,  or  iKith,  to  int  roduce  it — it  did 
not  prove  a  succoas.  Rccc  uiJy  some  one  lum  been 
more  fort, unate,  lor  we  read  tlml.  the  ordinary 
HENRY  S, 
Editob  ov  Iim  Depaktmicm  '>r 
O.  A.  C.  BARNETT,  Publisher, 
hiring  farm  help, 
PuivATK  letters  from  AVestern  >cw'  a  ora  s-ij 
that  the  wages  ot  tarm  hands  open  much  lower 
this  spring  than  for  several  seasons  past.  Prom 
|il6  to  f20  per  month  and  hoard  seems  to  be  the 
usual  price  this  year.  This  rcdticl.ion  is  a  natural 
result  of  t.lio  very  tinlavorable  outcome  ol  hist 
year's  operatlotis,  and  Is  what  wc  may  have  ex- 
pcelod.  Fewer  polaioes  and  other  hoed  crops 
wlU  bo  grown,  and  In  every  possible  way  farmers 
will  trj'  to  reduce  cxjienses  ol  hired  labor.  The 
effort  to  do  t  his  has  .already  resulted  In  a  reduc¬ 
tion  of  wages  which  on  mutiy  farms  wotjUI  consti¬ 
tute  a  cornddcrablp  Item  of  proill  If  the  sjime 
amount  of  lielp  was  hired  sis  last  year.  Y'et  In 
the  great  majority  of  cfises  less  will  be  hired  and 
the  saving  to  lanners  w  111  be  both  ways. 
18  this  the  wLscst  policy  ?  Wo  knuw  very  well 
that  farmera  are  less  disposed  to  hire  help  under 
the  gloomy  outlook  ba.sed  on  last  ,ve;ir’s  ^^lllur^.^s 
thantvhcn  everybody  Is  hopeful,  w-ages  are  high, 
and  all  are  hiring  largeb'.  Yet  11  Is  ultegether 
nrohahle  that  now  ts  a  more  lavorahle  Ihne  lu 
lliislirooiii!..- The  Florida  Agriculturist  sal's: 
There  are  acres  ol  natural  mushroom  beds  on  the 
CaJoosahatchee  River,  In  tills  .si.ate,  and  of  the 
finest  quality.  At  eeitaln  season-s  of  the  year, 
w  hen  the  w.ater  Is  low,  they  spring  up  In  sufficient 
qua  nifties  to  serve  all  the  sauce-makers  In  the 
world.  Why  should  It  not  pay  some  one  to  set  up 
a  faiffory  lo  manutaeture  It-?  There  Is  money  In 
this  for  some  one. 
RURAL  BREVITIES, 
I'TAn  lost  4, Olio  cat  lie  by  the  recent  snow. 
The  hog  cholera  continues  to  prevail  In  Central 
Illinois. 
Mas.  CEOROK  Dooi.nTCE  of  flriskany  Kails,  N. 
Y„  has  ripe  straAvherrics  grown  In  the  house. 
A  CRKAM  cheese  ladorj'  at  Vcriioii,  N.  Y'.,  has 
btJirted  with  quite  a  large  mmiher  of  patrons. 
A  KAU.MER  in  Canaan,  vt..  never  heard  until  a 
few  weeks  ago  Unit  wood-usnes  w'cre  valuable  as 
a  tertlll/.er. 
Tub  (lennan  Oovemment intends  appointing  n.H 
members  of  ita  jiuT  at  the  Philadelphia  Exhibition 
leading  Industrialists  like  Kkl'im'  and  Horsio. 
JONKs  of  Binghamton  dodged  into  onr  office  Just 
as  we  wei-e  going  lo  press,  (it  course  wc  are 
obliged  te  suspend  all  journalistic  operallons  and 
devote  onr  whole  time  and  energies  to  protwlliig 
nui’selves.  Joses,  sUiy  away  and  slick  to  selling 
hkales ! 
R.  It.  IlAiNBSor  ihe  Hudson  River  Nurseries,  at 
Malden-on-l.ljc-Huilson,  sends  us  Ills  eaialogue,  of 
lives  and  pJanls  for  Hie  Spring  of  1876.  .Mr.  H.’s 
specialty  Ls  small  friilis,  slrawherrles,  raspher- 
rles,  etc.,  of  which  he  has  the  newest  and  most 
approved  va  rletlc.s. 
The  loiter  of  Rev.  Dr.  Ai.kx.  i.i.akk  from  and 
alxnit  .Soul hern  M Issts-slppl.  in  tills  paper,  will  In¬ 
terest.  many  ot  our  jv-ideii*  who  arc  looking  south 
for  homes.  Dr.  Cuirk  is  editor  ot  the  .Methodist, 
Recorder.  PRisimrgh,  Pa.,  and  a  gentleman  of 
veracity  and  Intelligence, 
Tint  Nebraska  Agrloultural  Roeleiy  offered  pre¬ 
miums  for  essjiys  on  sheep  breeding  and  sugar- 
beet  culture.  SI iidentsnl  tlio AgrlcuUural  College 
w'on  two  ot  i.he  three  iircmlums  offered.  These 
were  forflOO  and  and  were  taken  by  Harvey 
Culbeitson  and  «*.  H.  Simmons. 
TnR  one  answer  which  it  will  entirely  become 
the  Rural  Home  to  make  to  the  Rural  New- 
Yorker’s  proofs  of  IteralsUiteinenls  Is  a  confession 
by  ite  Editor  ot  willful  fnlsllicatlou.  Until  he 
docs  this  all  he  can  .say  will  go  for  naught,  and  the 
public  will  have,  reason  in  dLseredlllilssintcments 
on  other  quesUons  where  his  supposed  Interests 
or  prejudices  are  Involved. 
ONE  of  i.lie  viUtors  of  tlie  Rural  Horae  makes 
.some  prclcusloiis  as  a  (loct.  It  teoms  from  hls 
uusstetemenis  about  ihri  Dairy  Editor  ot  the  Ru¬ 
ral  New-Y'okkek,  a.s  exposed  In  this  No.,  that 
poet  Hoi’KiNS  relies  maluly  on  lancy  and  Irnaglua- 
Llon  fr»r  hls  statement  ol  fact.  SVilh  a  willful  and 
coinicted  falsltler  it  is  not  worth  wlitle  to  have 
any  lurihcr  couirover.sv,  and  we  herewith  drop 
him. 
More  than  forty  of  the  leading  dairymen  and 
dealeteln  dali'y  produce  ol  Illinois  liave  sent  a 
protest  to  the  Centennial  Dairy  CommiLt  ee  against 
the  appointment  of  Mr,  ARnoijd  as  Juror.  They 
sav  u  Is  vitally  imponant  to  the  success  of  the 
test  that.  Jurors  .should  he  competent  men,  and 
have  practical  expeileucc  in  dairy  products  and 
say  Very  plainly  i  liai  .Mr.  .Arnold  lucks  this  qual¬ 
ification. 
AiTER  w'rltlng  an  article  recommending  the 
purchase  of  trees  from  nurstnyinen  as  being 
chenper  and  belter  thiin  for  laimers  to  grow 
advertising  RATESi 
Inside.  l«h  and  li>th  pages  i  A  Kale  a  pace). rAc.  per  line, 
••  mh  . . .  „ 
Oatelde  or  last  paRe  . . ...i.uu 
Fifiv  ncroenl. extra  forununual  display. 
Fiftv  percent. - — r  -  ,  ■  - ,  .,c  » 
Special  Neilcoa,  leaded,  by  count . i.;»  „ 
I'usinCbH  '*  ,, 
Heading  . . . — 
Discount  on  t  InaerUnns.  10  per  ''‘-.i 
13  ins.,  21)  per  ct.:  26  ins.,  'ij  per  ct,:  oi  ms.,  .38H  per  ct 
ty  No  advertisement  Inserted  tor  leas  than  13. 
underi,ake,ii  the  coming  summer  witn  a  low  p.im: 
of  w'ages  than  In  ordinary  limes.  For  those  who 
have  not  money  to  spare  tor  sucli  work,  it  Is 
equally  probahly  that  extensive  farming  oiiera- 
tlons,  cropping  and  manuring  will  pay  fully  aa 
well  the  coming  year  as  usu.al.  Low  wages  Indi¬ 
cate  Hiat  tarm  work  next  summer  18  to  be  gene¬ 
rally  conducted  on  a  redueod  scale-  Kewer  crops 
will  be  )iuL  In.  or  they  will  be  less  eareluUy  .and 
thoroughly  cultivated.  'ihecUiuiecs  are  that  all 
farm  crops,  being  grown  In  smnlhT  quantities  than 
usual,  will  command  Higher  than  average  prices. 
Wllli  lower  wage.sol  help  and  a  fair  sea,son,  those 
who  crop  largely  the  coming  year  will  he  ajit  lo 
make,  a  liii..  it  m  a  lulc  with  soiiio  idirewd  Cirm- 
ers  te  plant  or  sow  largely  oi  “eiieap  seed."  It 
would  seem  to  be  an  equally  wLso  diernte  of  pm- 
dence  to  hire  a  good  deal  ot  help  and  get  a  large 
amount  of  work  done  when  w.age.s  are  low.  With 
good  erops  and  prices  next  season,  wages  will 
probably  be  considerably  higher  next  spring,  and 
then  rather  than  now  w  ill  be  a  good  time  to  ho.sl- 
tate  about  employing  much  labor. 
PUBLICATION  OFFICEBI 
78  Duane  Street,  New  York  City,  and  No.  67 
East  Main  St.,  (Darrow’s  Bookstore,  Osburn 
House  Block.)  Rochester,  N.  Y. 
I)r!i.lh  of  KyMlyk’s  llniiibleloiiinii.  —  The 
world-renowned  sUiHlon  known  as  Rysdyk’a 
llaniblctonlan— the  sire  of  De.xivr  and  oilier  fa¬ 
mous  trotters  died  at  Uhe.ster,  orange  Co.,  N.  Y., 
on  Hie  26th  ulllnio.  The  incotnc.from  Hamhlete- 
nlaii  was  over  llO.nfHi  a  year,  and  It  Is  said  t  hat  at 
one  Lime  $100,0011  was  offered  for  hbn.  He  was 
nearly  30  jear.s  old.  About  27  yeaiw  ago  he  was 
bought  lor  $1. VI  from  Hie  Skklkv  family,  at,  .sugar 
Loaf,  Orange  C’oumy.  Before  Mr.  Ryrpvk's  death, 
ho  selected  a  place  wliere  tho  old  horse  w'a.s  to  be 
buried  in  a  feuced-ln  lot,  with  appixiprlute  head- 
Btene,  He  1(11.1  ckiuse  In  hls  w  ill,  that  under  no 
cli’cnmHf.anccs  should  the  horse’s  rera.alns  be  mu¬ 
tilated  alter  death.  Two  offers  W'erc  made  afhT 
Ills  death,  one  of  $50(1  and  one  of  fl,(KiO,  tor  Ham- 
bletonlaii’s  hide,  fur  the  purpose  of  prosi'rvlng  the 
horse  in  his  natural  shape ;  but  Hie  offci-s  were 
refused  by  IJie  R vrdyk  tamlly.  The  famous  horse 
was  burled  with  honoi-s,  and  hls  remains  will  he 
undisturbed. 
SATURDAY,  APRIL  8,  1876, 
THE  RURAL  HOME'S  “SOUR  MILK 
Rural  Nkw-Y’orker,  In  l.hls— that,  there  had  been 
a  '‘markeil  omission”  of  Mr,  Arnold’s  addresses 
at  dairy  convcnllona  *•  in  every  report,  wliere  Mr, 
ARNOl.n  has  taken  part,  which  the  It.  N.-Y^.  has 
printea  Qf  law  vears.” 
In  our  reply  w'e  called  the  attention  of  the  l.d- 
Iter  of  the  Rural  Home  to  a  repori  of  the  Pennsyl- 
vanta  Dali’ymen’.s 
where  M  r.  Arnold 
In  very  compllmcntar.v  1.crm3. 
EUKAL  NOTES  AND  ODEEIES 
PnyiiiK  ilir  Nnlimml  Dehi.-A  man  111  Cin¬ 
cinnati  has  forwarded  to  8ec'y  Bristow  at  Wa.sh- 
IngUiii,  a  letter  lu  which  he  carefully  liieloses  a 
dollar  bill.  He  13  not  a  whisky  dl.stlller  nor  a  thief 
ot  liny  kind.  The  dollar  Is  not "  consi’lencc  money," 
sometimes  relumed  by  penitent  defrauders.  On 
the  contrary,  this  man  solemnly  avere  t  hat  he 
docs  not.  owe  UucId  8am  a  ccul,  hut  sends  this  dol¬ 
lar  a-s  a  nucleus  to  a  tund  w  lileh  will.  In  Hme,  pay 
the  National  debt.  M’c  hate  awfully  te  discourage 
such  patriotic  enterprise;  but  It  is  a  solemn  fact 
that  money  “given”  for  any  purpose  is  (lulle  as 
apt  to  do  more  hurt,  than  good.  Paying  the  Na- 
rional  debt  by  private  subsevlption  is  no  ejcccption. 
If  half  a  dozen  men  nr  women  should  lonmrd 
their  dollars  te  Wnshtngteu,  we  should  straight¬ 
way  he  told  that  It  was  aVisolutcly  iieceasary  to 
put  tills  patriotic  lutid  under  a  new  Department 
wlih  a  SceriiUUT  or  Commissioner  to  take  eliargo 
ot  It  and  a  ClUei  Clerk  to  give  ordci-s  to  a  dozen 
Convention  lu  Jannkry  lust, 
is  inenuoned  In  these  columns 
■  1.  convicted  of  hls 
misstatement,  the  Editor  of  the  Rural  Homo  com¬ 
plains  that  the  repori.  in  question  was  not  made 
by  the  Dairy  Editor  of  this  paper,  and  ho  again 
reiterates  Hie  charge  from  this  point.  Wc  now 
call  tiio  attention  of  the  Rural  Home  te  cmnvpon 
Of  the  Anicrlcitn  DalryTmftn'ia  A6<8ocluUon7  p^lnt(^u 
in  the  Rurai,  New-Yorker  ol  Keh.  6,  1S70,  in 
which  there  Is  a  brief  absTract  of  Mr.  Arnold's 
address,  and  wc  say  again  That  this  ivas  made  by 
the  Dairy  Editor  ot  the  rural  Ni:w-\orker,  and 
appears ‘lu  good,  plain  type  In  our  columns  onl(i  • 
dui/-*' sweeping  j 
and  wholesale  inlsrepresentallori  of  our  -‘omit- 
Una  to  nottof,"  and  which  the  ICdltor  then  falsely 
charges  to  Jealousy  of  Mr.  Arnold.  In  all  the 
convenuons  this  year  In  which  we  have  been 
present  with  Mr.  ARSOld  he  has  been  noticed  in 
Hiesc  columns,  cither  by  oui^elves  or  othCra,  with 
the  exception  of  the  v  ermont  meeting,  at  wlilili 
we  were  not  present  on  the  Hrst  day,  and  at 
which  we  heard  no  address  ami  only'  a  few  hriel 
remarks  of  no  partleuLar  hnpoitancc,  and  which 
were  called  out  in  answer  to  questions.  Wc  did 
not  report  the  compllmenlarj’  rcsolutlnns  hoeause 
we  believed,  and  liave  been  inlorincd.  t  hey  were 
auestlonably  got  up,  and  upon  this  we  stand  midy 
to  bo  corrected,  If  wrong,  by  those  who  know. 
We  did  not  say,  or  /mpq/,  ns  the  Rural  Home  has 
It  that  Mr.  A.  was  not  Invited  to  that,  meeting. 
Tho  Rural  Horae  Is  now  forced  lo  admit  that  Mr. 
A.  gave  no  formal  address,  but  says  lie  made  an 
-‘otr-hand  afUin’ss  on  “  curing  cheese.”  Tills, 
we  suppose,  was  one  ot  Mr.  A.'s  short,  answers  to 
oucstlons  propounded  and  now'  claimed  as  an 
address,  for  we  are  lnformc*d  by  an  officer  ot  the 
Vermont  Dalrj'uien’s  Association  that  Mr.  Aknold 
did  not,  make  an  address  at  the  Vermont  meeting. 
nr  t.nc  conventions  of  1875,  we  w’cre  present  at 
The  J'eiinMylviiiilu  liairyiiieiis’  A*>sociiUioii 
Will  hold  a  meeting  at  Union  City,  Pa.,  on  AVed- 
nesday,  April  12,  1876.  Among  Uie  papers  to  bo 
read  at  this  mceUng  tve  notice  the  lollowlng: 
'I'cstlng  milk  at  cheese  i:u:torii.‘S,  by  S.  so'rke.nsen 
of  Meadvllle;  What  are  the  eliaraclerlsUes  of  the 
best  cheese  and  how  Is  such  cheese  made,  by  J. 
.M.  BiGOER,  Cambridge;  Inilueiice  or  a  Board  or 
Trade,  by  .M.  H.  Terry,  Waterford;  Cheese  ex¬ 
hibit  at  the  Centennial,  by  D.  W.  Titus,  PlHlHps- 
vlllc :  Local  intlucnccs  aa  affocting  quality  of  dalo’ 
products,  II.  C.  Gkeenk,  .McadvlUe;  Butter  mak¬ 
ing,  by  8.  E.  Kincaid  of  Wayne.  A  discussion 
w’i'U  bo  liad  on  the  subject,  “Are  ma.nulacturing 
rates  too  high."  Affirmauve- Dr.  Gray  of  Cam¬ 
bridge;  Negative— S.  A.  Farrington,  Cambridge. 
Tlir  C'rnlriiiiinl  C’orii  Prciniiniis.  IIIO  cir- 
cuiar  giving  details  of  the  premlum.s  offered  by 
Mr.  M  ILSON  and  others  for  corn  is  now  ready  and 
will  hi.‘  sent  to  all  applicants,  ft  is  unavoidably 
crowded  out  Of  HicKuralNew-Yorkku  this  week, 
but  will  be  puhllsbed  b.y  us  on  April  16.  It  In¬ 
cludes  HMI  premiums,  ranging  from  $i(i  to  $imt.  In¬ 
cluded  in  which  are  lo  juemlums  of  $100  each  foi' 
the  ten  best  experiments  In  grow’ing  corn  with 
commercial  fevtll'l/.ci'S,  which  is  included  lor 
Granges  and  clubs.  There  Is  a  great  deal  of  m- 
i.»*re.st  among  farmers  In  these  corn  premiums, 
and  we  look,  not  only  lor  lively  competition,  hut 
the  discovery  of  many  important  and  practical 
facts  In  corn  culture.  Without  doubt,  private  en¬ 
terprise  can  manage  this  business  better  than  the 
Ncav  York  .'Suite  iiiid  Ili«*  Cf;iiU-iiiiial  Dairy 
Disiilay.— A  bill  has  been  Introduced  lu  the  As¬ 
sembly  by  Hon.  M.  A.  McKEK  Of  Herkimer,  appro¬ 
priating  from  the  State  the  sum  ot  $s,ooo  to  pay 
neccssaiy  expenses  incldeut  to  a  compleli.*  repre¬ 
sentation  ot  the  da  inj' system  and  dairy  products 
of  the  State  of  Mew'  York  at  the  Centennial  E.xhl- 
blllon  at  Philadelphia.  M.  Folsom  of  New  York 
City,  John  suArrccKol  Norw'lchand  Jobiau  Shull 
of  Illon,  are  named  as  a  speelal  Centennial  Board 
for  the  State  of  New  York  to  co-operate  with  the 
Centennial  Commission. 
A  Coiitth,  Cold  or  8oro  Throat  requires 
irmnediate  atienilon,  us  neKlect  oftentimes  results 
in  some  incurable  Luhr  Disease.  "■  Brnwn'B  Bron¬ 
chial  I'rochts  ’’  will  almost  invariably  give  relief. 
The  best  house  paintets  prefer  Eckstein,  Hills  & 
Co.’s  “I’liiEuix”  brand  Pure  White  Lead  to 
any  other  In  the  market,  because  it  is  whiter,  finer, 
and  will  cover  more  surface. 
