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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-10-26, Page 7rsaparill . superior to, all other prepara- tions claiming to 'Ile blood -p urifiers. Firt of all, becaui&he principal ;L.0'.edient used in it is\the extract of nine Honduras sQ.parilla root, the' variety rielicst in medi- cinal properties. Also, because Cures °corr.!, the 'Yellow 3 dock, being „raised expressly for the Company, is always fresh and of the very best kind. With equal clis.crimina- tion and care, each of the other ingredients are selected and com- pounded, It is T ouperiar because it is always the same in appcarance, flavor, and effect, and,'ng highly concentrated, only i 11 doses are needed. It is, th Lfore, the most economical ble.tx -purifier in existence. It Cures niakes food nour- ishing, work WIWI/MB A pleasant, sleep ' utnavi uuro refreshino.lnd : life enjoyable. It searches out all impurities in the system and expels ...them lr-tnlessly by the natural anneYER'S Sarsaparilla giveel- y to the step, and imparts to\ ..0 aged and infirm, renewed health, strength, and vitality, 9 Sarsaparilla Prepared hy Dr. J: C. Ayer & Co., Leaven, Mass* SOW by ail Drontits; Price ; etx betties. es. Cures others, will cure you CEINTRA.L rug Stoll :moyi A fall stook .et all kinds of Dye -s s and package D , constantly on hand, Winan's Condition Powd- ers the best it the mark- et' and, always rash. Family recip- ees carefully prepared at Cen!ral Drug Store Exete G. UTZs yoior is the latest triumph in pharmacy for the cure O f tho symptoms indicating RIDKIW AND Livaz Complaint. On you are troubled with Costiveness, Dizziness, Sour Stomach, Yteadacho, Indigestion. Poen. Arrsruz, Taro FEK/KNO, BUCC21A•210 PWS; Sleepless eelghts, lielancholy.. Feeling, BACK Aeits, lirombray's Eldney and. Liver Cure mbl give innnediate relief and EITECT A Cure. Sold at an Drug Stores. Peterbore, Medicine Co,, Limited. PETERBOR0l, ONT. a' 1 1 "Back ac he the scavengers means the kid -of the system. neys are in , 'Delay is trouble. Dodd's dangerous. Neg- Kidney Pills give tooted kidney nrninot Irelief 4 troubles ?scud. S "75 per 0617E, in Bad Blood, , , of disease is Dyspepsia, Liver first caused by Complaint, and disordered itid- tAg most clan- neys. ggrous of all, "fflightas well Blights &settee, try to have a Diabetes and healthy city Dropsy." without sewer- "The above age, as good diseases cannot health when the exist w here kid,neys are Dodd's Kidney 6 clogged, they are Pills are used." Sold by all dealers or sentby mail on receipt 0 or ptice so cents. per box or six for $2.50. la tt)j, Dr. L. A- Ginith & Co. Toronto. Wilte lar a.b. t(10 hook cal.nfi Kidney Talk, • e RACTICAL FARMING Winter Dairying - Very few, comparatively, are engaged ia winter dairyiug,but as a better understana• ing of the work .aiwi its prate are known, the mike will be repicily ineveased. We, must oveattualy have sununer and winter deirying combined, if we are to make motley at thie budineee, for competition le becoming so throne and the price of feed is goiug up so, that we will find that it does not poy to feecl our animals a good half of •the year without getting any adeemate •returns for it. Of course, the mate thing that concerns the winter dairying, la the kesteetion of food, If food cost no more than iaegsonmer, and weoould get as mach milk and eream as in June, with present winter prices Lr. the same ruling, the prate of the busiewel -must be large. We will peekably never get any food that will equalaJune grass quitebut, we can find good sabetitates that will make the cows yield well anthe winter. For win- ter dairying, the eowseehould. have craves in the month ot Auguste or early in Sep- tember, while the -samther cows should come in early in the spring. The best calves of the cows shoula be raieed, wbile the others should be killed very ehortly after birth, so that food and milk may be saved, We must have the best food to prevent the COWS from drying up, and as we give June gress in spring, fresh, sweet, green corn is given in Augest and Septette- ber. The grass, as a rule, is too dry and withered to melee the milk flow large and Hell. The sweet fodder corn" aised espe- cially for July and August and September feeding, most be in autlioieut quantities to keep the animate supplied until the Acta corn eomes in. This shouli be led to the cows grabn, and in liberal quantities. The silos, meatewhile, are being filled, aud theft aro not touched until the fiebl corn is exhausted. Thee the silo is to keep elm cows in green food until spring grass collies around again. The alio is composed ot both earn stalks and ear, and la a, num- ber of oases with the Robertson combine. Men" of sunflower -heads and Imre beaus ia addition, so that it megh's tc make a rich, nutritious food for the winter feeding. Ia the summertime, good clover hay and bran should be purchased, to be fed in the meter with the ensilage. If ,purchesed in flee sninmer, there is a big swing, and they are necessary to form a good ration for the milking cows. Thia practically finishea up the food queetion for winter dairying. The average feed per day will be two or three pleads of brats fed morning and night, and twenty to thirty pouuds of ensilage and elover hay. The cost of such a ration is not high, and the cows will give a good yield of rich milk from it. The other points necessary for winter dairying are simple. The eows need good shelter from stormand cold weather; they require fresh, eool, but not ley, water. Often, the water roust be beetea for them, to prevent chilling of the atm -emelt. Oa warm days in winter, they should be turn. tleaut in the fields, or in a large yard, to igoa oairoeseeereise. If a dairyman would adopt such iillaams eeno nee up to there, wieter deirying would be oesessuee,„„ d . Fool Tools and Implements. We like to gee a. farmer have every tool and implement that will help him Min to a better or °homer cultivaarion of his erops. Ilut there is suoh a thing as going too far in their purcauese. No implement will prove a moans toward cheaper cultivation unto') you have a sadistic:let area, of the cron upon which it i° to be used, to make its employment econondeal. There is no profit in buying e, fifty dollar implement to cultivate tifty sionista' worth of crop. And then no implement alsouid be bought for which you cannot provide 'limiter, and which yott do not care etiongh for to put under cover whort through using. Nor should you spend money for any that you have not thne to take care of by wanting the woodwork every year or two, and so preserving it from docay. It pays better to preserve the tools you have than to be eon- tinuelly buyaig new ones. Plows anti other implements whieh have a scouring surface should have these parts oiled before they are put away far the winter and so kept from rusting. The time and annoy- ance that will be saved in the spring will well repay you for the labour expended now. If you have any implements at all, a good tool house is important, and it will save you more than its cost each year. The cost of building it will be less than the &lin- age that would result emelt year from leaving your tool e exposed to the weather. Then to have your tools well housed, acids to your reputation as a good former, and this is a point worth coneidering. To leave good tools out in the fields, or strung around the barneyard„gives one the name of being shiftless. The merchants do not want to trust you, for they know that shiftlessnees leads to bankruptcy, and if you want to borrow' money on the farm you evill be charged the highest rate of interest, to tole up for the possibility thot you, will default in the payment. The care of tools, and am- oral attention to the appearance of things, enters as inuth into the making of a good farmer as dos the cultivation of crops or the handling of stock. If this happens to catch the eye of any man who ime left the mowing machine in the meadow, or that new self -binder in the wheat field, we trust he will put them under cover at once, even if he has to stay up to -night to build a shed. 'eany evell-mede farm tool or implement with good care should last at least ten years. When we consider that less than half this period marks the usual limit of their lives, it is easy to see what a leak this is to our agriculture. — • Feeding Lambs. From the results of experimen as at the Wisconsin station it is clear that it pays to feed the lambs grain before they are wean- ed. Fourteen lamas that were fed grain made an increase in gain of 36.5 pounds in ten weeks, over that made by 14 lambs that had no grain. The extra cos, for the ewes and lambs was $2;154 and the difference he the market value of" the lambs was esti- mated -to be $7.63. In two other lots, with let lambs iu each, those that received grain made an increase gain of 54.75 pounds at an expense of $3.79, and the difference in market valise amounted to $9,06. In the lots that were compared the ewes had simi- lar feed and care given them and the aif- ferences in the amount of food that they ate are charged against the lambs. in a similar experiment conducted in 1891 it was found thee the three lambs thab had beeu fed grain before weaning made an ex- cess gain over the lot that had no grain of 25 pounds at a cost of 56 cents. The resulte of two experiments, giving ns data from 64 lambs endorse the practice of feeding the Iambs grain previous to weaning time. In none of the instances did it pay to feed the ewes grain. The lambs suckled by the ewes that were not fed gain., on good pastare made as great a gain as those of the ewes that were given grain. The expense of feedine grain to the ewes was $3,005 no oorrespouding benefit wes derived. from it. • seetteema de Resource. For feeding 1cnib, a grem mixture of oil race' end corn meal gave better results than a green mixture of cottonseed meet and ore, The baths fed the oil meal made a greater gain than those receiving the cottonseed mixture. During the tea weeks' trial the lambs fed the all meta reticle each suede A weekly gain of 3.30 pounds, while thoee getting the cottonseed ration, eaoh made weekly gain of 393 pounds. The oil meal ration was, in additten, cheaper; for the lambs 40 fed made 100 pounds gain atit cost of 62.09, while those getting the cottonseed ration made 100 pouttds gain at a cost of $2.25. Devonshire °ream. Persons on their rebore from their travel abroad, exprese surprise that tho Y can never get at home, such delicions cream as they have in England and Seotlead. It is known as De.vonshire cream, and not many people, in this country, especially, kuow whae it is, but seppeee it to be the rartic• ulerly rich cream of the country in ques- tion, whereaa, every Canadian housekeeper may have Devonshire cream on her own table, if she will take the trouble to prepare it. Rich, uew milk is put in it very ehallow vessel, with an extended surface, and is then set on orange, where the milk will be warmed, but on no,aecount must it boil, or even scald. The heat will came all the cream to rise to the surface ba it very short time, and tha. pan le then %ken off and plural in the lea box, am in a cool piece. When thoroughly ohillede the creara may be taken off, and, will be nearly of the con- sistency of newly suede batter. This ie put in jars, and at breakfast is helped with a spoon and is delicious with oatmeal, jams, berries—everythinge in fact, that orilinery cream is used for, ete merite being, that IrOU.14sTG FOLKS.. A Change of Opinion. A. week ego, wheys Artie boy latest event to school, all hope ituatoy, Oh, how the ehildrea did annc5y. Baealling him " Dames Artie V' To•da,y h know,.ciaree me Yet " Deareee Artie:" now E 'leers 4. king he rolgasesthe remona clear, liets going to give a partyl Dying For Their Galore. , , in the Southeastern part of Africa, bor. dering on the Lathan Ocean, there le it small stretch of fertile ooentry .known ee Zulu- land, whose people Rider Haggard, has im- monetized by seek worke as Allan Quarter - main and King Solomon's alines. The querrel over the beandarylbae which on - carred in 1879 between the Natal (English) government and Oetywayo, chief of the Zulu nation, led to the war Which deluged this waving lased with the blod of ten thouetuirl wil51 fearless men, and carried sorrow and desolation into many fair English home. It did more than this ; it wove su evergreen the number of a gallant regiment. Several days following the death of the young Prince Imperial of Promo who had gone out; to africe on the staff of Lord Oheimsford and heti been ambushed with a reconnoitring party, twenty thousand war- riors, led by the Zulu. King, encircled the oanm of the Twenty-fourth Regiment at a. plata oiled by the natives Ise,ndlalwana. When discovered ley the scouts just after daybreak, the Zulus were being moatied ('lotored) by the meclizinernen to reader them invineible in thecomine fight Sev- eral hours were oceupieti in tis ceremony, and it was not until the sun heel climbed storineme earnest to the meridian that the camp was , The etiady rolling fire of the infantry swept away tba heads of the donee columns as they advanced. through the long gam, and the hoely worked artillery ploughed into the mass ; bat the soldiers of Cety- not anly doe one ,btam the realest cream, wl° closed up the gaps, and chanting but it will keep for two or titree days with- their weird wao sang, iliarched on in per- fect formation, brosting the awhil beptiem of Iced and iron, until at last Zulu steel wise croesed with English bayonet, Out- numbered twenty to one, and melting away by whole compenies before the onslaught of twice ten thousand spears, the brave fellowfwesever gave back a foot, but fought etubbornly an, and fell like heroes, every man with hieface to the foe. "Let's shut our teeth and die hard, .A.DVENTDRE WITII A BOA. lads a" cried. a, Captein to the remnant of -- 1514 company, as he drove hie sword down An Extremely Wispleaeant Encounter in it upon a. Zulu heed, The not instant a ceyionem Garden, shovel -shaped Mails: atom/ out its length, Hawtrey Thwaites writee 4—One incident, between the officer's abouldere, end his men thea occurs to me is a little adventure 1 wout down, pulling themselves together liaise had with a python, a. sneke of the to fire their parti»g ot as the lifeblooa aloluras tribe,in my own garden in Colon). gushed from :Aping wounds. bo. One evening I was smoking on the At two o'&00. in the afternoon two Lieutenante and veranda tater dinner. It was a cloudy a score 01 luau' tho only eight, but the air was perfeetly inn Wkat, survivors of talon who hed defended the themed to be the branch of it tree was lying eemp, threw ehemeelves inte the seddles of across the carriage drive, and as 1 'mama the powerfuleartillery harem', hoping toot it / wondered /gm it wog liege wag their way through the. onemy and awe tlie when not a breath of wind WWI stirriug. It colors of the regiment. So desperate was wee perfeetly inoteionless, and after a while the oharge of this forlorn hope that one of 1 e went down to throw it aside out of the the Whore and aeveral men broke through path. But the moment 1 gteepeg over it the Zulu ranks and gaine I the open, plain. the objet seemed to molt away. lele9 07.. " ::: a a ,', 11,•••:* ' - '4,44., paid. half doubting the evidence divides Zululand trotintreraneeeteria... -4" ‘srm"- T 4^1,1fia Btu in pursuit hut bottomed them to safety only e. few miles htlomdyn,stsaclaIttlayuerolirsacus;;;, inife'Che; ineti, assay. But the officer miseed Ids color -bear- ing comrade, and looking beck, sew him gdeerepildlevsastamint.folnioawehea tsotlatilamewoitfhtohuldtahne- engaged evith the 'Attu chief, striving to movement of a muscle for about twenty regain the colors, which had been wrested seconds, and then the snake imperceptibly from him, instead of maleeng good his ea- disappeared. One long sigh of relief and a G%a alone is keeper of the thoughts that a twenty -yard sprint ciosea the proeeeti- dart into the holm that beat the record for burned though the brein of the hero as he Had 1 by mistake looked into the valley from whoee shadow lugs for ints that night. leld the slightest touch 'upon the creature's he had just escaped, Before hem there bo ly the probability is that within les e than were life and home and loved ones ; baca half a minute I should have been reduced there in tbat whirlpool of swage peseion to a shapeless lump of pulp ana broken there were only the greeting, of the Zulu bones. Remus would have been impossible. war -cry and the kiss of the Zulu speer. Provitlence was mereiful to ma that night. The troo.pers galloped on a short tlietance, Soon after we found that the ye thou hal then rented up to wait for their otheer, taken up its abode in the garden, hue ID had They sew him lift his eyes for it moment to , chosen its tailing platie so, cunningly that the blue sky as if in prayer, then, 0aYalea there was no getting at it One eight a lady enouregement to his comrade, awing Inc who was ill was lying awake in her Isom, sabre aloft anti hurl hip horsm into the :meth- egg tho roam neat to here was °ensign -thy Inge:lass, which opened to that fierce rush my slatete The door between the two of flesh ancl steel. An instont later the two rooms was open, and suddenly the lady officers, both wounded unto death, were sear o large snake come in at the window, waving its heed about in search alt platte vehere it might alight A moment later it Id, with it loud flop, on to the floor. Of course, it had disappeerea by the thne they had recovered front the shook and called for assistance. out becoming sour, Why thee English &ditty is not 1180.1 in this country to the %One exteat as in langlenthia to be wonder- eti at, but our dairy folk seem to kaow nothiug about it, Good Roads Are Economy. Goosi weds will more to ineretem the value of farm pr y than any other one elang. In it re utaiscf Utile from it gentlemen who had ageereonal acquaintance with some of the ;the/cloned farma in the E eateru Stetes, the wrier gave as arm of the prime muscle of thear abandounient the wretchea eondi- tied of the roc -is. We need thoroughly to understand that the condition of our public made largely determines the value of our farms, The grades should in very many cettes be remedied. To this there are two objections—drat, the expense; and aecond, the fact that the -change would in many oases place the highway from 10 to 30 rode .froin the buildings, The drat is nue .vered in showiness the ex- tra needless expense, incurred by farmers in lauding Jowls. Thiel item alone wonld. very soon ney the expellee of making the change. 4,• etioe. there • c. it lane or Elbert oriadevasearein the main highway, which in aome instauems might necessitate climbing it hill, but often not as steep as many -eareetly found on the roads now in me. 111.....14••••••••.. .Dairy aranalez. The man who half feeds the cow is es foolish as the one who hell feeds the hired man. Energy comes from food. The raze wile milks tho rant cows le not always tee best milksr. In feet it is quite apt to be the case that he is not very thorough in his work. Before we decide that it cow does not pay any profit we should be sure that we have uot misjudged her ; perhaps she bas no t had a cliance to show what she could do. There always has been and there always will be an oversee* of low grades of but- ter, and it is equally true that the stock of lirst class butter rarely exceels tho demand. What a soaring ambition the farmer and the farmer's wise ilAV0 who are satisfied to side by side defending the standard to the make grocery butter at grocery prices, and last• then whine because thee° is no profit in Some weeks later Sir Evelyn Wooa's making butter 1 command identified the spot wherethetwo heroes felt by fin ling the torn and blood - Every cow Imo her own individatility, stained colors of the Twenty-fourth looked that is, her own tasteo whims or cranky hi it skeleton hand. notions abent hor feed. Some ()it'll= can be safely indulgel—athere not. Soma Row to Gat a "Sunlight" Picture. cows ham° a Mate for W00a4 that apnil Quer Things About Frogs. their milk, a,ncl time is one of the dilemma Frogs are mainly juice. If they try to I Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrappera (the nage wrapper) to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 incurred in pasturage. make more than it short journey away from Scott St. Toronto, and you will receive by moisture, in a drought., they will perish for pose it pretty picture, free from advertisino Poultry. want of water; and than their bodies will wort and we dry away. The frog's bones are so soft ll h framing,. This as an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is that he scarcely loves any skeleton. the best in the market, and it will only cast A frog meets with remarkable changes during his natural life. He begins as an le postage to sena in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your addrese egg andhatchesoue as a fish. That is, a tad - rale, or polliwog, at first bas gills, breath- ing water alone. In his early days, how- ever, the tadpole Coon loses the outside part of bis gills and breathes alt; so that he has to come to the surface of the water every few minutes, like a porpoise, to get a fresh gulp of breath. • Daring the first part of his career, he swims by sculling with his long tail. After a while his legs begin to grow out, his tail becomes shorter and shorter, and when he is a complete frog, he has no tail at all, but swims by kicking. When half frog and half tadpole, he still has a goosi deal of tail, and, in addition, big hind legs and mere sprouts of fore lege; so that he is a very funny -looking- fellow.. A bullfrog -tadpole at this stage seems "neither of heaven nor of Ae agratilna" , the tadpole eats water -plants ; but when he becomes a frog, he feeds on animal life. Tadpoles eat the green moss or "scum" that we see so often on logs and plants in a stagnant pool, aud they show a good appetite for soft, decaying water - growths. The fouler the pool, the happier the tadpoles. As they are numerous, said thus devour a great amount of matter that - would make it very unhealthful to live near a stagnant pond, they are really use- ful creatures. In captivity they will generally wet meat, whether good or bad, as well as bread anti bran dough; and, as it special relish, will sometimes hinds. on 0219 an- other's tails. The common frog gets his final shape in the first season ; bat the bullfrog goes under the mud for the winter, while still a tadpole; and it takes at lthet another aunt- inet:, and sometimes more, before he has full riget to be *led a frog. He is some four years from the egg in gettiug full growth, tend does not become old for about ten years more. f I we look to the elephant's eye, however, we shell see tisat it le o pretty bright sort of an eye, and aore often then not it will be leered to twinkle in a mariner evhiett inclioatee the posseesion of an idete or two ineide of that mammoth head. This second glance will give tes a more correeb under • standing of the elephant's in telleetual quali- ties than the first ; and ea we eaver judge • a man by his clothes, so we ehould not at. tempt to estimate the elephant's intelligence by Isis personal appearatme, which is not beentiful. • Many A titne and aft, as the poet Beers, the elephant has thew° himself to be a creature of very reentries:41e intelligence . - mete as intelligent, in fact, as th5.5 horse, and sometimes more so than the dull-pated witless persons who have had him in charge. In illustration of this point there is told a story of a large elephant tvhich was seet some years ago to a remote oonntry district la India to assist in carrying and piling timber. The owner of the elephant, sus- pecting that the netive driver was dishonest, wrote a letter to the wife of A missionary, at whose house the elephant was lodged, asking her to watch the servant, and see thee he did not defraud the faithful animal of his rice. Tho lady watched, and her suspicions being aroused by his conduct, she expressed her doubts to the servaut He pretended to be much surprised and very angry, and exclaimej,. in his own leu- guage, "Do you think 1 would rob my obild ?" The elephant stood quietly by, and ap- peared to uuderatand 'What was going on. Nosoonerhad the driver uttered his (motion than the animal threw his trunk raised him, threw him down, aud untied the me. usually bulky °loth the servent wore round his waist. Out rolled a large quantity of Hee Well had been stolen by the servant out of the elephant's allowance. We have frequently seen elephants that could waltz and ring dinner bells and play pranks with a °Irene elown, but this, we believe, ie the first instance on reeord of one of these monstrous beasts turning detective au a bringing a, thief to justice. Furthermore, the °Iroise elephant, smart as he is, had to be taught to do the clever, things he ciao, while the bulky detective had to reason out his work of is own ea. cord, relyitig solely upon his own intel- ligence to help him through.---Elierper's Young People, Den't crowa your poultry; give each fowl one foot of perish room. The wocat enemy to profitable poulery keeping is lice. Fowls are so provided that they can grind any kind of foo I eaten. It is not strictly necessary to grind their food for them. The largest prode is soared by those who sell off them surplue chicks as soon ae they discover that primes are going down. Glass nese eggs sometimea break the real egg when the hen is getting off the nest by being rollel against it. For this reason Japanese egg gourde aro preferable for this purpose. Tney turn yellow after a thne but are cheap and mut be changed for new ones. A TERRIBLE TALE OF WOE. His Wife and Family Cremated He Came to Toronto to Find a Sister, Only to learn of iter Death. A despatch from Toronto says:—Amongst those who applied to City Relief Officer Taylor for help yesterday was it German, who tells it story that reads like a dime novel. He states that he arrived in San Francisco an imigrent a few years ago. By hard work and harder saving he sacceeded in getting together enough money to buy a little home. Before ha bacl a chance to invest his money he had his arm crushed and was sent to the hospital. While laid up there, a worthless brother of his wife applied to her for money. She refused him. One night he broke into the house, secured the money (they had to oonadence in banks) and fired the house. The mother and two children were burned to death. When the father 'left the hospi- tal, a cripple; he found wife, children and rnoney gone. He determinci to reture to Germany. The San Francisco authorities gave him te pass to New York. 'There the German Consul told him he could do nothing for Mtn as he had beea over two years in the country.' The German Consul sent, him to Toronto, veherp he said he heel a sister living. When he arrived here Wednesday he found his sister had been stead twelve months. Mr. Taylor will send him to 13affalo, where the American authorities can deed with him, as he has never been a resident of Cadadis. An Intelligent Animal The elephant at first glance appears to be a dull, heavy sort of a fellow,, with a mind, if lie has such a thing, about suited to the appreciation of pea -nuts and nothing more. Children Cr, for Pitcher's Castorlai Over the door of a library in Tobes is the inscription, "Medicine for the Soul." When Baby waS sick., we save lier eastern. When she was a Child, she cried for Castorla. When she becametliss, sho clung to Castoren When the had Cbildren, she gave them Castorioe The one exclusive sign of a thorough knowledge is the power of teaching. Cream Tartar ?WIEST STRONOEST, BEST. 9 Contains no Alum, Ammonia, Lime, Phosphates, or any Tnjuriant., E. W. cILLSTT. Toronto. Ceram How does he feel feel flue, a deep, dark, unfadidg, dyed - In -the -wool, eternal blue, and he makes everybody feel the same way --August Plower the Remedy. How does he feel 7—He feels a headache, generally dull and con- stant, but sometimes excruciating—. August Plower the Remedy. How does lie feel?—lie feels a violent hiccoughing or jumping of the stomach after a meat raising bitter -tasting matter or what he has eaten or drunk—August Flower the Remedy. How does be feel ?---He feels the gradual decay of vital power; he feels naiserable, melancholy, hopeless, and longs for death and, peace—August Flower the Rem- edy. How does he feel ?—I -le feels so full after eating a meal that he can, hardly walk—August Flower the Remedy. G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury. New Jersey, U. S. A. A BIS Mee rue. gative atedie eine, They are it 13400n Ilaremnit, Tomo ana 'teems- senuoron, 4Atliey supply ba 51 CO21(10{150 form the substances actually waded to e114 rich tiro BleedeZring all cliseasee mill from Foort and ISTAT- az Dimon, or from VITIATIM(11C-310BKitt the B1.401), 2111(1 tdso Invigore.to and Dozen 0.E. the Bz.00n and SrsiTrrwiatu broken down by overwork, worry, dirieace, excesses nza miasma - tions. trims Imo it %memo Acriori en the Snro.at. Sxstens ot both men and women, °storing LoST Vreolt 6=1 correcting en nmsotadatrrma and susznEsstoss„ EVERY ;MIN rig.2-74311?MiTil'eg; his physical powers flagging, should take tires° PILL% Thoy restorelifs last energies, both physical and mental. EVERY WOMAN Tbzkleu±apiti eGtro. prossions and irregularities. 'Watch ruievitaNy entail eieeness yawn ncelectea. YOUNG n?cla„Iimetnre:ctallt of youthful bad habits, and streragthera ta system. yogN 6 WO InEll air4,2 --1,bzviaa:4v.var,,,ir,o, or will ho sent up= receipt of price (GM per box), by addressing &-711:t -Dit. WILLIAMS, MED. CO. araavil80,04. rowler9 s Extraet of Wild. Strfswberry is areliablo remedy that can alwaye be depeuded on to cure cholera, &elan, inametum, colic, cramps, diarrheas, dysentery, and all looseuees of the bon-ela, Is ie a pure Extract- containhue all the virtue:1 of Wild Straw- berry, one of the se 7.'Sti fpla .sureet- cure§ for all mummer complaints, combined with other liarmlees yat prompt curative agents. well known to inedieel seienea. The leteves of Wild Strawberry were known by -the Indians to be an excellent remedy for Claudine, dysentery awl looseness of the bowels)... bnt, medicta science has placea bailee the public in Dr. Fowler's Ext. of Walla Strawberry it complete and effectual cure for aE those distressing aml often dangerous complaints so common in this change- able climate. It has stooa the test for 40 years, and Imam& of lives have been saved by its prompt use. Ica other remedy always Cres summer complaints so promptly, quiet the pain so effectually and allays irrita- tion sn successfully as this unrivalled prescription of Dr. reveler. If you are going to travel this Summer be sure and take a bottle with you. It overcomes safely and quickly the dis- tressing summer complaint so often caused by change of air and water, and is also a sped& against sea -sickness, an& all bowel Cs e el at, nip/nit' Ls'tt. Price 85a. BeWitr0 of imitations aud substitutes sold, by -unscrupulous dealers for the sake of greater profits. The Q11.9011'll Journeys. The two double saloon carriages which the Queen used for her journey to Scotland, and which belong to the London and North- western Railway, have lately been reclecor• atecl ant refurnished, They are pe.nelea 10. claret, white and gold, with the royal arms in the centre, end surroanded by a carved border of roses, thistlee and shamrocks. The glass in the side windows is ado ned with representations of the Ordain of the Garter, Thistle and Bath. The Queen's Scotch jourusys cost her abaut ffe5000 a year or troveling expellees alone. Thinkers are scarce as gold; but whoso thoughts embrace all their objects, whe pursues it uninterraptedly and forlessof consequeaces, is te diamond. of eaormous 41Ze. There are 800,000,000 people in Asia, and more than 200,003,000 in Africa. The soien- tido estimate is that there are 1,45000,000 people on the earth, of whore vet more than 500,0S0,000 wear olothloo teem neck to sole.