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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1888-09-21, Page 3Y„f t68t"41..... C•a want met thereto Jartuaxy 1889, for age of this low 0 PR1DAT, sB+PT. 211 1888- Bright colored apples sell best f th' in market. eke a note o is FRES1 L FACTS FOR when ordering trees. FARMERS POINTERS ON AGRICUL- TURE tRICUL- T WORTH RKNOWN KNOWING- Useful Information t Soil. Mr II. Boss, in Farm Journal, states that in September, 1886,he purchased 19 ewes an& mated them with a Southdown ram. They produced 21 lambs. Two of them died, and he sold the re- maining 25 for $4.15 each, or in total of $118.75. The' average clip of wool was five pounds, sold at 22 cents, making a total of $20 from the flock for wool. It will be noticed that the flock pro- s. duced nearly six times as much in lamb as it did in wool, and shows that sheep can be made to pay independently of wool, as the manure is not estimated. The total receipts from 19 living ewes wore $139.65. If you have extra nice peaches or pears it will pay you to wrap each specimen in 1papor • before packing:to ship. There is hartllyanything better for the cracked and sore teats of cows than rice, old boiled, linseed oil. Timothy, rodtop and orchard grass are the three best varieties of grasses for permanent meadows and should be most generally used. Clover is often used large- ly for bay, but it is not strictly a grass. , Sheep like grass as well asother stock, and will not kill bushes while there is grass enough in the pasture for other stock to thrive upon. Therefore, do not put sheep in the cow pasture expecting that they will eat the weeds and leave the grass for the cows. Mr Hoard says that those who know pure lard keeps sweet without salt ought to think a lit:de before they conclude that it is salt that keeps butter. Make but- ter as near to pure fat as possible, and all the salt it needs is enough to suit the palate of the con- sumer. Feeding is gradually being done on a scientific plan. It has here- tofore been the rule to make an animal fat and then send it to market. It is now known that feed- ing can be so conducted as to se- cure a large propotion of lean as well as fat, and the animal will gain as rapidly in weight as when fending for fat. The new system , therefore, better, for it • im- proves the quality and secures a higher price for the pr-oduct,wbile the manure from animals fed for lean is more valuable than that from very fat stock. All green material, 'no mutter how bulky, will soon decompose if turned under by the plow or covered in the manure heap. Hence, now is the time to• turn under all green growth that may be unserviceable, such as 'weeds, etc. If the work be delayed un- til the frost kills them they will dry on the surface of the ground, become 'cured,' and decompose veryslowly. It is of more value to the soil to turn under the green ,growth, as it then adds a larger proportion of fertilizing material to the soil. The tomato vine will continue to bear until frost. A good vine should have blossoms, green fruit and ripe fruit on it at the same time. It may be trimmed and kept in shape like a tree, and should be supported by a stake or hoops. ' As the vine produces an abundance of fruit a handful of fertilizer may be scattered around it occasionally, superphosphate being excellent. Weeds and grass should be kept down. When too much milk is required to make a pound of butter the cost is sometimes greater than the product. It should not take over twelve quarts of milk.on an aver- age to make a ' pound of butter, though the quantity ' of some dairies will be more or less than twelve quarts. The feed allowed will largely assist- in regulating the proportion. Where no stock' is kept, and manure must be made for the garden, an excellent mode of do- ing so is, to begin with a, pile of dirt, upon which all the waste wetof• and refuse should be thrown It should be covered to .prevent injury by rain. Each family wastes enough. every season to highly manure a garden plot. The skim -milk and whey may may not be saleable, but it can be used for 'producing pork. Pigs will always pay on farms where skim milk is plentiful, and the. cost of the pork will be but little if' other waste material be used in feeding them. A growing pig will need no grain at all before cold weather. if the market become overstock- ed with poultry,as it is sometimes the case at this time of the year, the farmer can 'use the surplus at home at less cost than to sell. Fresh meat can be provided for the table all the year round by hatching chickens from early spring until fall, It is not necessary to harvest beets and carrots until Ootobcr,as the crop will not be injured by re- maining in the ground. A cool place should be selected for stor- ing them, but it is best not to have them freeze. tielent'y to 8y:411 -anybody thinks that it doesen't get hot in. Siberia, just refer him to• mel At the station of Mttlo Krasnoryarekaye we left the Irtish to the right and saw it no more. Late that after- noon wo reached the first foothills of the great mountain range of the Altai, and began the long, gradual climb to the Altai station. Before dark on the following day we were riding through cool, ele- vated Alpine meadows, where the fresh green grass was inter- mingled with bluebells,from spir- ea, genetians and delicate fringep pinks, and where the mountain tops over our heads were white, a 1000 feet down with l freshly fallen ,snort. The change from the torrid African desert of the Irtish to this superb Siberian Switzerland was so extraordinary as to bo almost bewildering.— George Kennan in the Century. Cut down the wornout, worth. less tree. It occupies a good place without paying rent. Put a new top on a vigorous tree which bears little or inferior, fruit. It is a hearty eater without pay- ing the full equivalent for its food. Insist on your good pay by mak- ing it yield good fruit and plenty of it. If yonare expecting to set out an orchard this full a good work can be done now in preparing the soil. f:f-you do not intend to sot out until spring now is a good time to try and have them arrive this fall and then heel in. Often a good opportunity is offered this m,.nth to haul out manure, and it will certainly pay to improve. There is no overstock of really good fruit. It is the poorer grades that have glutted the markets, so that there is no over -production of the rest. A dairyman who was brought up in a limestone country says that cattle there never bloated from eating green food. This has led him to believe that lime in water prevents bloating. He has followed the practice of put- ting from ono to two gallons of lime every week in the water - troughs from which his cattle drink and none of. them give him trouble by bloating. When Baby wee sick, we gave her•Casterla, When the was a Chad, she cried for Castorle, When she became Was, she clang to Castoria, When she had cbridren, she gays them Castorie FRUITS OF TIII': TRAFFIC Mr A. Lang, gaoler of the Bar- rie gaol, writes to the Globe Da fol lows-- Drunkenness1is the sin of our world. Thirty years ago on the first day of last December I took possession of this gaol. My ex- perience is that eighteen -twen- tieths of our gaol population dur- ing that period foetal their way 11e1.0 through using the poison vended by what is now miscalled the License Victualler's Associa- tion. To talk about building houses for the drunkards widows and orphan children sounds like an empty echo, 'while the law li- censes men to sell the poison till they become insane and commit crimes, and then licenses judges and magistrates to send them to prison or to the gallows. Yes, -first make men drunkards then ruin them, and tnen tax the coun- try to build houses for the widows and orphans all manufactured by law, and finish up by employing keepers to watch over them. I remember a very solemn case which- occurred hero • about nine years ago. A man in our coun- try was hanged for killing his wife. On the evening prior .to his execution, he asked the privi- ledge of addressing all his fellow. prisoners, and fellow -drunkards ns well. This he did by calling each one by his name, and as an earnest dying man he urged them never again to touch the.accursed cup which had been his ruin, and' had brought them to prison. He went on: "To -morrow morning I must die in the fullness of good health, and had it not been for whiskey I would never have been inside this gaol a prisoner.” And on that very same evening the hangman asked me to lot -him out so that be could procure a bottle full of the licensed victuallers' cordial to help him through the terrible ordeal. Ifour good men who can write so sympathetically 'for the poor, lost drunkard's 'Starving child will only set them- selvea to work with an unconquer- able will they can place honest, sober and sterling men at the head of the polls, instead of drunk- en sots who are willing for the sake of holding office to open wide the floodgates of drunkenness and ruin to our beloved country. Why,. sir, if it was impossible nest week to sweep off•from the face of our continent the whole of these streams of liquid death and moral destruction, I would guar- antee that in twelve months the Toronto gaol would hold every prisoner in Ontario, thus doing away with 88 goals and 8 lockups with a saving to the country of over $150,000 a year in cash. Then add to that the amount of pris- oner's time saved, it would rise to ten times that amount in our own Province. And in three years more there would not bo a pauper child in our country. livery man and woman would be clothed in their right mind, and their children would grow up to fill respectable positions, instead of finding their may into gaols,re- fbrmatoriesi, and penitentiaries. Then we would have peace within our borders and 'prosperity with- in our homes, We go to the prin- ciple of strict teetotalism in our. goals, and I try to treat my pris- oners as if they wore human be- ings, the workmanship of God's hrind:and the objects ofGornl's;love. a POULTRY NOT$S. 1111040 to within a fraction of 12 gallons per Capita in 1067. `hese Munn 13REEns..—We do not 'figures put the, American • people i mean crossed fowls, but these of all cola's, shapes and sizes. What is the use of keeping hens that vary in every particular when a uniform flock is so much more at- traetive? It is very easy to change a flock. By using a pure-bred rooster the chicks will be very nearly alike, and if the best of them are kept as layers, the re- sult will be, that the poultrymen can breed with greater certainty and also avoid having dissimilar- ity, By then using a pure bred male every season thereafter, the flock will soon consist of hens so uniformly 'alike as to render it difficult to distinguish one from the other. BUYING PURE-BRED MALES.—In summer the breeders thin out their flocks and dispose of the surplus. These are usually the culls. The culls are often as pure bred as the best, but not being fully up in points for exhibition they sell at a lower price than those which are reserved for the shows. In writing to a breeder, therefore, always state what you wish to do do with the birds you desire to purchase. Good stock demand good priees,but in a short time from now the yards will be crowded and the breeders will sell your birds at much less than the prices asked in spring. In fact,it is often impossible to procure stock in the spring at alt. in the front rank of the da nk ng people of the earth ' and the amount of money they squander in this way ia simply appalling. The prohibition movement in the States may be growing, asits ad- vocates assert,but int is it is mak- ing little impression upon the drinking habits of the people who consume more and pay more for it than any other people in the world. Mothers Castoria is recommended by phy'sici- 'ans for children teething. It is a pure- ly vegetable preparation, its ingredients are published around each bottle- It is dleasant to the taste and absolutely harmless. It relieves constipation, re- gulates the bowels, quiets pain, cures diarrhoea and wind -colic, allays feverish- ness, destroys worms, and preventscon- vulsions, soothes the child and given it refreshing and natural sleep. Castoria is the children's panacea—the mother's friend. 85 doses, 35 cents. 23.12 WHERE IT IS' HOT, I laughed ata Russian officer in Omsk who told me that the heat in the valley of Irtish was often so intense as to cause nausea and fainting, and who advised Inc not to travel betwen 11 o'clock in the morning and 3 o'clock 'in the afternoon, when the day was cloudless and hot. The idea of having a sunstroke in Siberia, and the suggestion not to trayel there in the heat of 'the day, seem- ed to me so preposterous that I. could not restrain a smile of amusement. ' He assured me,how- ever, that he was talking serious- ly, and said that he bad seen soldier's, unconscious for hours after a fit of naseau and fainting bro'aght on by marching in the sunshine, He did not know sun- stroke by name, and seemed to think that the symptoms which he described were peculiar effects of the Irtish valley heat, but it was evidently sunstroke that be had seen. At the station of the Voroninskeya,• in the middle of this parched desert, we were overtaken. by a furious hot sand- storm from the southwest, with a temperature of 105 'degrees in the shade. The sand and fine hot dust were carried to a height of 100 feet and drifted past us in Odense, suffocating clouds, hiding everything from sight and mak. ing it almost impossible to breathe Although we were riding with the storm, and not against it, I literally gasped for breath for more than two hours, and when we arrived at the station of Chreemshanka it would have been hard to tell from, an inspec- tion of our faces whether we were l�irghis(sr Americans—white men or black. I drank nearly a quart of cold milk, and even that did not fully a'ssrage my fierce thirst. Mr Frost, after washing the duet ant of his eyes and drinking seven As soon as pears show a tinge of yellow pull them from the tree and put them in a dark place. They will ripen and become mel- low bsooner than if left on the tree. • By assorting the eggs, seperat. ing the dark fiom the light, they will bring a higher price, as the uniform appearance will increase tl eeir value. Val -es occur with the Ilse Oi insect powder when it is not fresh and pure. Tie careful in purchasing it. Make the fallen apples into NEWS NOTES. A man near Washington, Geor- gia, has the coat he was married in 25 years ago, and says it is his mascot, as whenever ho puts it on good luck attends all he sets his hands to do. Lord Tennyson, though ho de- nies that he is to write a poem outlining the changes of religious faith through which he has pass- ed, acknowledges that he is at work on a philosophical work in verse which 'will touch more or less upon religious questions. rOULTRY ON THE HARM.—COm• pared with the keeping of poul- try as it is now done, it is sur- prising that in by -gone years farmers were content to have fowls on their places at all. Every season the minks, hawks, owls, and rats reaped an annual harvest of choice chicks, while 'the num- ber of eggs lost, or destroyed by animals, wore beyond estimate. The hens were allowed to run at - large, to create filth in the barns and stables, to pick up all they received, and roost on the limbs of trees or wherever a lodging could be found. Despite the fact that the farmers gave very little attention to poultry, yet there were very few farms that did not contain a fair amount of eggs for family use, and many well filled baskets went to market when other produce was unprofitable. .At•the present day our farmers have be- gun to learn that it pays to keep hens in a systematic and careful manner, and that they are most profitable when cared for like other stock. The progressive spirit of the age has compelled better treatment of all classes of stock, and though poultry usually comes to the end of' the list, yet a groat improvement has been made and will continue. (; ider for vineirar. tumblers of milk, revived snf- Children Cry for ! pitcher's Castoria. NEW' NOTES. 'I saw a fly walking around on , an hqur-glass the other 'day;' (said Mr Caution. 'He was making footprints in the sands of time.' The traffic receipts of the Chi- cago, Milwaukee A St. Paul road have decreased so much that no dividend will be paid on common stock for the half year. Mr Blaine recently related that Garfield once said to bile: 'You have no idea ofthe utter loneliness of this life. The minute a man becomes the Presidnt of the United States his relations with his closest friends assume a new and constrained form. I long for somebody to come and talk to me in the old way. Oh, for a good old fashioned cloakroom talk. Canker humors of every description, whether in the month, throat, or stom- ach, are expelled from the system by the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. No other remedy can compare with this, as a cure for all diseases originating in impure or impoverished blood. The Rev Jas. Cleary,of Wiscon- sin, has delivered 174 lectures and administered the plosge to 100,- 000 00;000 persons during the last year. Recent reports of the Internation- al Sunday School Union show that there are 1,504,823 Sunday school teachers in the world and 12,608.267 scholars TlIE LOSS BY FIRE. For the month of August the fire loss for Canada and the United States is $10,286,000, which exceed- ed the loss for the same month of 1886 by nearly $2,000,000. Thus, with all the devices for fire pro- tection and the ' scieptific improve- ment of existing appliancee, there appears to be no let up to the de- struction. Much of it occurs through carelessness. Fee example over $500,000' worth of valuable. property was last month burned in the vicinity of Ottawa by fires oc- curing through carelessness in de- stroying 'bush brush. By and bye, the incendiary Who is responsible for these fires will be bounded down just as the man who sets fire to city and town property is. At present he is t000ften shielded under mis- taken sympathy, on the ground that "he didn't mean to do it." A BIG BILL FOR DRINK. Oa on Your Guard. Don't allow a cold in the head to slowly and surely run into Catarrh when you can be cured for 25e. by using Catarrh. Chase's Ca- tarrh Cure. A few applications cure n- sipient catarrh -1 to 2 boxes cure ordinary catarrh ; 2 to 5 boxes are guaranteed to cure chronic catarrh. Try it. Only 25c. and sure cure, Sohl by all druggists. The Manitoba Government will bonus the Hudson Bay railway to the amount of $2,500,00;1• Reports from districts sur- rounding Montreal show that much damage has been done to crops by cold weather. Farmers in some instances sell their ani- mals in order to secure flour and necessaries they need during the winter. The Winnii:eg Sun publishes opinions of the leading Methodiet clergymen now in the . city upon the questipn of an organic union with the Presbyterians. The ministers are about evenly divid- ed as to the practibility of the scheme at present. A mail coach has been attacked neat Rustehuk; Balgar•ie, by six brigands; who shot the guard. While the robbers were rifling it a second coach, following behind and containing specie to the amount of $3,500, was turned about by the driver and escaped. Two Presbyterian deacons out in Indiana fell out. They hadn't spoken to each other for twelve years. Mhe White Caps took a gun from one of them, left it at the other's house, and told him to toll his neighbor where the gun was on penalty of being thrashed. 'He complied. Mr Chauncey M. Depew, Presi- dent of the New York Railway Company, who returned from Eur- ope on Friday, says he met Glad- stone and found him to be a man of 79, with the physical and mental vigor of a man of 50. The living oft -an unselfish life has been much to do with Gladstone's wonderful physique. George Ruth, a Peabody, Mass., lad, captured in North River, a 'web -fingered sea robin,' a most peculiar looking fish,, slightly more than 'a of a pound. The fish had a tapering head like that of a pickerel, with •very sharp teeth. The body was shaped much like that of a sculpin, and the skin resembled that of a dog- fish. The fish was classified at the Peabody Academy of Science. IS THE BEST 'Or Young infanta it is a perfect ilib tItate imkoftt�Invalid FD P Pati seeing greatest e THE FINEST BABY FOOD. THE BEST INVALID FOO, THE MOST PALATABLE FOOD,, THE MOST NUTRITIOUS FOOD, THE MOST ECONOMICAL FOOD. iso Meals for an Infant for 01.004 A Oebtietabote. of Lias. Butes TR i.ZTa–tbree beautiful children --sent to the mother of any betel born withal areae. Also a valuable pamphlet on tall Care of Infanta and invalids. 15oidb,Drnsslats. 25o.. Som, S0.00. WELLS,RICHARDRON &CO., MONTREAd,P4i The public school teachers in To- ronto have all been notified that their services will not be required atter the 31st December next. In- spector Hughes says this step has been' taken to enable the trustees to weed out the inefficient teachers. Those who are satisfactory will be re-engaged. At the mass meeting of electors on St. James Market, Montreal, last Friday night, nearly 10,000 persons attended, and addresses were given by lion. Wilfred Laur- ier; Premier Mercier and others. The gathering, .by a unanimous vote, passed a resolution bondemn- ing the Dominion. Government for voteing the District Magistrates' Act, which was represented as a blow at the autonomy of the Pro- vince. News of the murder inAfrica of Major Bartelotte, the leader of the expedition in search of Henry 111. Stanley, has given rise to specu- lation regarding the fate of the great explorer himself. The Lon- don newspapers are unanimous in their opinion that Major Bartelott was betrayed by Tippoo Tib, who organized the native portion of the expedition; and the question is asked why; may not Stanley be the, victim of the same treachery? Nyangivo, the home of Tipoo Tib is 800 miles distant from Stanley Falls. There are more Ways than one of making money, and there is a man in Chicago who is profiting. by one of the other way!. AU photographers mss a paper in': pregnated with a silver solution. This man makes periodical visits to the photograph galleries and secures this paper. Ho burns it and refines the ashes, securing quite an amount of silver. His bargain is for 20 percent of the silver produced, and some weeks he secures. Over a $100. It is hard work, but he makes a fair living at it. Prohibitionists, not only on this but the other side of the line, have always clinched their arguments of late years by point- ing to the number of States which have adopted their policy as an indication that the public heart was changing, and that soon the suppression of the liquor traffic by 'the people's will would be general. These assertions might have been accepted as true, and the public might have got along in the belief that the day of eman- cipation from the thraldom of drink was at hand, but just in the height of the hilarity over this pleasing prospect comes a Government return which puts a different face on matters. The Bureau of Statistics at Washing- ton figures that the malt liquor consumed during 1887 in the United States was 720,000,000 gallons, and the distilled spirits 72,000,000 gallons, or 60of whiskey of beer and 6 gallons for every man over 21 years of ago in the United States, at an estimate cost to the consumer of $8.4, or a ;rand total of $1,000,- 000,000. The consumption of malt liquors in the United States increased from one and thirty- six hundredths gallons per capita Children Cry for W. G. Wilson, of East Zorra, appeared at the Woodstock 'Police Court; charged with supplying milk diluted with water to the East Zorra and Blanchford factory. Re owned up to using the rinsings of the milk pails, but this did nc t account for the redundancy of water. He was fined $50 and costs. Wilson, who is a wealthy farmer, had previously paid over to the cheese company .$40 as compensation for the damage done to other patrons by his sup- plying diluted. milk. No more dramatic scone can be imagined than was witnessed in Newark, N. J., the other ,evening. A madman held his wife by the heels from, a third -storey window, and the woman head downward and expecting to be dropped to death every instant, clung des- perately to an infant in her arms and filled the air with shrieks Some men entered the house, and by instantaneous understanding two of them; crept softly behind the lunatic and seized the woman's feet, while others struck down and secured the man. The wo- man was then carefully drawn back, still holding her infant,and both lives were saved. But it is feared that the shock bas unset- tled the poor woman's reason. A number of elections to fill seats in the Ontario asseethly rendered vacent by death will be held on the 11th of October next. The vacant constituencies are North Lanark, East Elgin, East Northumberland and Frontenac. At the last session of the assem- bly all these constituencies save the 'host mentioned were -repre- sented by reformers. Frontenac has a large Conservative majority but each of.the other constttuerl- eioa• are, pretty evenly balanced. In North Lanark, however, Mr; W. C. CaldWell, ex -M. P. P., is in the field as Reform nominee, and the Conservatives seem -wilting' that he should be returned by ac- clai nation. In East Elgin the ,candidates are Mr 1. C. Danes, Reformer, and Dr Marlett, Con- servative. In East Northumbers tend Mesbrs C. A. Mallory, Rd former, and W. A. Willoughby, Conservative, have been placed in the field, while neither party has yet selected a candidate for 'Pron- to iaC. Mr Dewdney's Election for Eastern Assiniboia Thursday by acclamation is no evidence that he is popular. It simply moans that in a country where voting is open and where everybody is at present in the power of the Gov- ernment and of the Canadian Pacific, opposition is out of the question. Mr Lewdney's whole administration wits a failure both political• and moral. For a mart who sowed the North-West with liquorermits to declare that he iS in favor of temperance is a mere abuse of words. .Mr Dowd'•• ney having outraged the Indians by giving theta abuse instead of honest supplies, naturally showed a painful lack of nerve when there was danger of a general Tis- infl, and could do nothing but write panic-stqicken telegrams to Sir John Macdonald. He is vale - nod at Ottawa as the man who created for the Dominion Go;ern- ment a saloon agency throughout the North-west. Since tiro plat- form of the Alliance was issued Mr Dowdney's is the first election in which a professed and presum- able prohibitionist has not been elected. The temperance vote has not yet been organized in those territories, but is likely to he immediately.—Montreal Wit - Eureka Bakery Opposite the Post Office. The subscriber desires to thank the pets• Mei of Clinton for their rimy liberal patron - age in the past, and at the same time bo would intimate to them that ho has removed to the more convenient stand in Smith's Block, directly opposite the Post Office where he frill be pleased to supply theta with Bread, Cakes, etc., of first class qualit ), 'WEDDING CARES A SPECIALTY and prepared in splendid style. J.A.RING, Bolter — -- t itcher'e Caetorlaa Dr. Washington's Throat NEXT VISIT and Lung Surgeon, • • OF TORONTO Will beat the Ratteabury nojt. MONDAY SEPT'R. 1Tti. After arrival of U' ,• Toronto traits Chronic Bronchitis Cured. An English Church Clergyman speaks. WAsnitterox,— Rectory, Cornwall, Out, na Dsta Sia,—1 am glad to be able to inform y that ray daughter is quite well again. As tri - in the second time she has been cured of ,grain brouch'.al troubles under you''tree; mhnt, when the usual remedies failed. I write to. exprm. my gratitude. Please accept lily sincere thank..: Yours truly, C: B. PETTIT. Dtsaasre TaseTI,ls.—Catarrh of the Head and Throat, Catarrh, Deafness; Chronic Bronchiti-, Asthma and Consumption, Also loss of voice, sore throat, enlarged tonsils. Polypus of the nose removed. Come early'. Consultation free. A few of the many eared by Dr Washington,• new method. H. H Storey, of Storer A Son, manufacturer Acton, 0.5, also Pres'd Manufacturing Ass„ of Canada. permanently twits of Catarrh, by Dr Washington, pronounced incurable by note,.l specialistsbtthis country and Europe. Write- htro for particulars. • Mrs John McXch'y, Kin, •tun, Ont, Catarrl•r and Consumption. John McK,eivy, Kingston., (rat, Catarrh. Mea A. Bopping, Kingston, t tot, Broncho Cut, - sumption, Mr D Scutt, Kingston, (ml, Catarrh, head aw throat. Bre Joh» Bertram, linos:ns11.it1), Ot,t, Ca - tarrh,head ,,and throat. Miss 'Mary A Bombourg, Centreville, Ont - Catarrh, head and throat. James Mathews, P Master, Acton Out. A E Fish, (cents Furnishings, Belleville, l!u cured of Cattutrh, throat. John Phippin, Sandhurst l' 0, Ont, (near ss - panes) of Caturrh head thrust and lungs dead oiilee CI! Youge Street, Toronto. ('on - sultation l Tec. Dir- Chase Masa worldwide reputation as a physician and author. lilt llpn rnae Dandelion Liver Cure i+ t uappb }pf gtittneal skill, curing all. diseases is c Rat oyp d Liver. Symptoms of IMON11' 'e70111P1.AINI'. Dist resat p vbdiogendpain in the back; a dullr , pain o 'ggh__t fittlMiil'addel and base of the abdomen; ecaltpitg'tt.►;ine.,otten obstructed; frequent desire to urinate, especially at night, among aged per sohht'bdt; dry Ain, pale complexion, red sad white deppetrltar, drop•dizzlnoss,sour stomach,cou otipation,ptel, 'fiver aired swellings, &c. SYMPTOMS OF LIVER�� b1Pt.AINT. Pa,,, •under the sherihrer fit s; jaundice, sallow complexion. a weary'•,,tlre$xgoitng, no lite or energy, headache dirspep?4,10,02estion,IIts,pb ples, Cc. Mandrake anQ.Ifafdenon are nature's Liver Curer odd tV t c � Cod with Kidney remedies as in Dr.t•:t6teo'e7a i lar 'Cure will most oaitively cure pf,idueyt liver }roubles. P es. it acts like a charm, stihtddldtht5'ttlo'elogged liver, strengthening the Ildtveyx aantimigorating the whole body. Sold 1i' p11 assaeiras 51, with Receipt Book, which a 3oda'ialwfiilyff the money. • Ji1'Alr 'X•.LIV SB P11.1.Ai. Dr. Chase's i . et d'dltIi ttidne)••Lit•er Pills mode. May ;betaken' ouring any employment. They cure •Elduef,-IJvrr troubles, headache, bllilousness, �too ,ee6tiietibs.4,,fin• One Pill a dove. Bold by all ,dealers. P,detSIcents. Ir. EDMA NiSSON • ehr.; Manufacturers, Bradford, Ontario, f>