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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-11-16, Page 3prepara- g to beblood-puriliers. irst of all, because the principal in0Tedient used in it is the extract p • of genuine Honduras sarsalarilla root, the -iariety rICheSt in medi- cinal properties. Also, because Cures Catarrh the yellow dock, being raised expressly for the, Company, is always fresh and of the very best kind. With eclual discrimina- tion and care, each of the other ingredients are selected and com- p Unded. it is E Superior edicine because it is always the same in appearance, flavor, and effect, and, being highly concentrated, (mall doses are needed. It therefore, the xnost economical d -purifier in existence. It r, makes food flour- shing, work LILA- pleasant, sleep ir refreshing, and njoyable. It searches out all 4 Ali uri ties in the system and expels them harmlessly by the natural channels. AYEP,„'S Sarsaparilla 0- vi es elasticity to the step, and imparts to the aged and infirm, renewed health, strength, and vkality, saparilia Prepared by Dr. 3, C. Aver &Co., Lowell. Masa. Sold by unruggists; Prie$s ; six bottles, S. Cures others, will cure you THEEXETER Icerdeisuoil every. Throe ii.v women, et TIMES STEAM PHINTINO HOUSE Alain-street,ne.irly a pposite Fittou'i Seivaiery . Jetta 0,/sse ter D.,byg oho Wa .te .g Sena, Pr4. runoters. BATS% 01' ADV8l1glar5T3 stiniert1011.1100,40., . . ... ..10 coati eh subseque ti neer thin ?ler .. itic; ..... To insure lava:Oen, advertiseiumas seogir sent in no ti eter ouau Weilues.itty =ruin; Duran PitINTiNG DEIr illT301 o !the largest auit imatequiepea ia tee Ueanty Iuremall work!, utrustu,1 bi ui wslicaaa, A 111:041tr Latta =WIZ CS1011S ltegar titan. Xesvg- papers. , arm who t'iltai ap.ipor regal triv te 11 t.otilee, whether diroctarita n vno 1: es, wItetha n, u 34r103.1. ornr ilble for pxymeitt. Non ordori 1114 papar discont ad. arre ws or the pith" 4,1 it until tho " i•8 1118 NVIvo A 1'. TRE ARM. About Butter Washing. idea yet prevails to some extent that butter loses much of its flavor by being wasbedand that the fluest of butter an only be ,Ivacie when the buttermilk is aqueez- ed and pre dot either by hand or worker. At the atart, the authorities say that un- washed butter will only keep a day or two, while well washed butter will not change for a much longer period. The prinoipal element in buttermilk is casein,whielebeing an albumineid, is anbject to very rapid de- cay ; but butter fat—pure—is a oerbon, and if freed from the action of othersubstances, will keep unchanged long time, and, for thet -matter, is about indestructible, as it is not affected by even sulphuria acid. The "taste" of the fists may be changed by contamination with other substanees, but the amount le never diminished., Now, irs, churningi le a physical impossibility to perfectly separate the casein from the fatsby pressure, and it is the decaying casein that makes the butter rancid and of abominable flavor when too long kept or left in a room of hightemperature. By the process of wash- ing while in the granular stage, the butter. milk can be dissolved out almost toa certain- ty, and vvhen the dissolved salttakes the:place of buttermilk, one cannot dispute but that the butter will have a better charms to keep itb good qualities than if the 15 per cent. ef moisture was all buttermilk. Butter needs slow washing, reeds brine floating and careful handling, And at one of the stages of washing the batter should be allowed to remain in lta salty bath for at least a half hour, with now and then one turn of the thorn to give all the butter grains %chance at the liquid salt. Some of the best waken now wash twice after the first rinse, and make 'eat wash water strong with Bah, and leave Wu this bath for several hours and then press the butter together, doing moat of the "workbag" as it goes into the pack. ages, by putting in only a pound or two at a time and pressing it well down before adding mere butter. The great trouble in not washing batter is that it is subjeoted to a double process, working out the butter- milk arid working in the salt, a system of prceedure that overdoes the thing in most cases, and we lose flavor and get greasi. ness in its platie, aud thee, without cold storage, the butter goes to the bad in a few days, and then soap grease prices, which is almost a positive loss for production or labor, for with a little different treatment this "cheap" butter might have been put into the inerket as a high-priced luxury. To be Considered. During, and at the close of every dairy season, there is,as a ride, one or more cows that, weary in well -doing, are by age and otherwise, no longer profitable as milkers, and the question is,what shall be done with them ? The first thought is to Bell them for beef,but as they are not in abeefyconditiou, this implies the feeding to them a large arnomat of valimble food. to get them in a presentable condition to sell, Will it pay to do so? What is an old cow worth for beef? What will she sell for now cal stock for bolognes ? At the present priees for cow beef, an old cow well fattened, will not sell for over $12, and of this, eke, must he deduated for extra food consumed, Under these conditions and prices, the best way— from our standpoint—is to disperse the old cow at once at from SO to 104 pat a young cow in her place in the dairy, and f "es six dollars' worth of grata and ^ ^a in milk. T FAMILY X A BACK WOOD3 „FABLE. deem Origett or Tours—Per,hae, :silty May no elosettee Whe cover Verie:Lowiy Anvestry. Limer manes from line burner. Ocis. Chandler eves once a eandle-maker. Poluter And Poynter bed fathers made lace. Skinner's great -great-grandfather dealt iihidee. ho Teener comes frora the name of a leatqr dresser. Payne, Paine, and the like, are °entree - tions of Pagan. . Ininanand Taverner formerly entertained travelers, Seaaner mud Seymour are the decendauts of tailors. Bailor, as a family name, docends from Beenfieur. Croker and Crocker had fathers who made earthenware. Stammer and Stuatard, are relics of phys- ical infirmity. Viper, Vinter and, Winter were once keepers of a vineyard, Phu-41er and Plummer prepared feathers for ornamenting hate. Pear, Pearman, Perrer and Perryman once kept pear orchards. Free and Freeman were once the names of manumitted slave. Stet was formerly a herd, hence the Stet- tards and Stoddarda. Belham represents the fuller and more euphonious Bellehomme. Blook,Blooker aadl3lookman aro the sons of men who fashioned hats. Bridge, Bridger and 13rigster were toll - takers at the King'a bridges. Pedder, Padden:Ilan, Pedman and Pedlar heel fathers who carried packs. Reynolds, Reyntsrdson, Rankin, are de. seendente of Reynerd, the Fox. Simon, gave as Sims, Simpson, Simpkins, Sitncox, Simmons and Simonds. Spicer is a deecendant of the espicer„ or dealer who handled foreign spices. Hooper, Hopper and Barreller eame from families supported by cask making. Calvert was once a calf herd; so Also were the Calverds,Coverts and Calverds. Millar, Mailman, Mille, Milner, 11,111ward, Milne, all have the Sitiria derivation. Armstrong was oaee a complimentary name given to a soldier of nitusuel prow- ess. Moody's first name was John. He died in 1437 and his neighbors were glad ef it. Wakeman di a deciaeudant of the old • watchman ; so are Wake and Wake - son. Pattene were overshoes, hence the Pet - tons, Patens, Petteners, loathers and Put- TIAME1. Taborer was a drummer, and his sons are the Tabrars, Tabors and Tabers of to -day. Dawher is a deseerelant of him wbo chinked or daubed the cottego Wells with wet clay. Pinner and Pinater remind us of a time when pins were a rare and costly ornament. Locke, Curl, Crisp% seont to indleate An ancestor with marked capillary ettrections, 1, Bedell and Biddl he &' n Vanities, Deniodes a TheorY Which litany Sportsmen Stitt Stelteve. "It le a favorite belief among deer hunt. ere " Says an old hermit of the Nerth- wec:de," that& deer, IMISUed by hounds, when it takes to a etrearn will always go down with the ourrent inbtead of up streazn, because its instinct teethes it that if it goes up itaseent will peas down with the water, and the deg..; will be enabled to take it and follow the gum y just ae they had. on land. This is interesting, bat fifty years of active and observant life in the -woods, where deer were more than abundant, but just as careful a their lives as they are to -day when they are few, home setithed me that it is a bs.ekwoods fable. Watee does not carry the scent of a deer with it, but on the contrary, destroya it. A. pecul- iar/y fine -scented deerhound might be able to deteot the scent of a deer's sweat on the surface of water er in particles of saliva from its, mouth dropped while the deer is drinking but I never knew one bred so fine as that When a hounded deer comes to water it 0,1ways takes the direction that seems the best for ita future course. It stops at the nusrgin and glances eargerly up,down, and ahead. It mind is quickly made up. It may go down, up, or straight Across, just as ite judgment hari decided, If the water is deepenough. for the deer to swim, that suits the animal best. If it la not, the deer trots or lopes. It doea not bound along as it did on land, for it must drink, and itifirinksess it goes. It knows that the instant its feet are in the water ita seent is lost to the dogs, at least until such time as they may be able to Aud it again where the deer loxes the water. "The scent of the deer being lost the instant the Animal enters the water, how is the trail found again? The hunter who believes that the deer always goes down stream, and acts aceordingly, may recover the trail and he may not. The bunter who know better will not belong in getting his dogs on the soeut again, In none of the mountain stream that deerily to when the hounds are on their track ban a person go many rods, either up stream or down, With. out coming to a fallen tree lying cross it, or some other obstruction in its bed, which a deer following the stream will have to get over. The hunter who knows his business will first satisfy himself that the deer hasn't gone straight across, and will then go in one direction along the creek until he cornea to the fleet log or amend unruly and discontented subjects, this pop- obettuotion. If the deer has taken that ular ehallition of the love of a people for direction, that leg or obstruction. will he their ruler, which expressed not oily the wet ou top from the water that dripped feeling of London, but what London. from the deer while climbing over it. If era are pleaeed to call the provinces, it is dry, the hunter knows at once that which includes all that is not Loudon, the deer hastat gone that way, and cense- was a, revelation to those who hewer gnently must have followed the stream in only despotism and all its hateful causes the opposite direction, after which the quences. Socialiatio ideespermeate the diaoovery of the spot where the deer left mass In England as they do in many ot/aer the ereek and resumed its course through countries, but it is not the violent and de - the woods is only a matter of time." structiveaocialism of the continent, because e the loater is atheistioal and murderous, ' WARMS OF WILD GEESE. while the socialism of Brittlin is tempered by the teachings of Christianity which T11.8 VEO ItUvEitr. A T 131tITISli Elf?' A, ton.vrrchty Where There ant, Gomocracy---the irreest , nous Finder the ton. tita- ••••eseeteeisedestalliee'etaif The Englisa psople are very odd to American oyes. ' Visitors from this side of the ocean find a dorninaut democracy in Eugleud, so far as the extended franchise ean place power in the hands of the populace, but it is not a radical democracy or ens given to allege. The masses iney meet in Hyde Peek or Trafalgar Spare on a Sun- dry and e.pplaud the meet incendiary speech- es, may assail ao openly tho Monarchy that uoaeoustornecllietenere might go away with the impression that the throne would be overturned before night, bet the next morniogall England goes peaceably to work and affairs glide along in thesame old path. Like the sailorman, the Britisher likes his growl and he must have it out uninterrupt- edly. Try to prevena him and he breaks into riot, but let him vent his grievances to the top of his bent and he will subaide quietly amigo about his avocation like the happiest man in the world. He knows in his heart that the system of government under whieh he lives lEi the TIMM AND MOST STA.DLX W the world, and though he may breathe threatagainst it, yet he would be the first to spring to its defence were it assailed by anyone but himself. Public utterance there is the safety valve of the people, and under its *tinkle provisions things are said open!" which in France, in Germany, and even in free America, would be considered, and in some emit would aetually be, a cleaner to the state. The reason of this is thee if the Britisher, when he etarts out to growl, don not know how to hold his tougue, he haa full conunamd of hie faculties and he loves deeply that whiolx he is contented to abuse. What struck the foreign visitors to Lon- don during the feetivities inoidental to the marriage of the Duke of York woe the in- tense eutinosiasin of the crowds for the reign- ing family. The streets around and edjaeent to the royal residence were peeked with the London multitude alining "God Save the Queen" as an assurance to the august, Arens erable and aplendid woman who fills the throne that the hearts of her subjects were with her. The Russian notables were partioularly impressed by this incident. Coming from a country where the sovereign feara to venture into the most frequented paths lest he should be assassinated by his Ono of the Terrors 'Which newt the Wheat Grower In I had an experience with wild geese in Califoruia, and it is so big that few, except those who are familiar with them, can readily believe it," weld State Sexiator Dare to a San Frame's= Examiner reporter. I own a ranch of 14,000 acres at Knight's Landing, on the Sacramento --e the Yolo raneh. I raise a groat deal of and every year as soon as the wheat ip the country is overrun with geese. Been droves of thane tivo or three so thick that when you are bound ntiful T 1,111B8 1,,NERrkiE maws B11.1.14S ore o nor cove*, that cure the worst enzeu of Nervous Debility, Lest Vigor and r BEANS -,.'tizt.1.1.2'AutVarTgltligi by over -work, or the errors or ex. cessts of youth, This Remedy ab. sanely cures the !nest obstinate cases when all other TREATMENTS liorefailed even to relieve. ;:.,old by dreg - &La at 41 per Package. ee aktfor O. or scot by resil on receipt ot pnce ha' addressing VIII .T.A.511:5514111DICI1B 00.. Toronto, Ont. Write for oninghlet. Sold in— Sold at Browning's Drug Store, Exeter • BSOLUTELY ostPower, Nervous ight Losses, 01- y Abuse, Over don, Tobacco,. unants, Lack ot Memory, Head- less. '1 or old A effects of follies and excesses, • manhood mid vigor. riouseenisternis MARVELOUS REMEDv. <moms. re Guaranteed! yone Using this Remedy according to directions, sey cheerfully and conscientiously refunded. PRICE $1.00, 6 PACKAGES 65.00. ent by mail to any point In 11.8. or Canada, securely tiled free from duty or inspection. Write for our Book "STARTLING FACTS" for men illy. Tells you how to gat well and stay well. Iddrese 01' 00111 on QUEEN MEDICINE CO, jr NEW YORK LIFE BUILDING. Montreal, 0" we eve groat reepeot for tow that has been aprofitable animal her life, you have done her no kindness at last by fattening (?) her, for it will nob soften the creel blow that sends her body to the oheap soup house, and there no Imo will recognize the fact that you ded her SO worth of meal, but in the other event, the sanie money fed to a butter cow, will return you double interest 'on the out- lay. Ick licaaachci and rehove all the troubles inel, ent to a bilious state of the system, such as 1zzine:18, Arinsea. Drowsiness, Distress after ati rig,. Pa in iv, the Side, ac. While their most nuirkable success hasteen shown in curing eacieehe, yet eef eared Tema Liven PILLS 0 equally valuable in Constipation, curing id preventing Chia annoying complaint, while ey also correct.al disorders of the stomach, Mullet° the liver and regulate the bowels. ea if cheese* owed hey woiIhl be almost priceless to th lifer from this dletressin colonial t, at oculness O im- telt times. e winder of silk hrowere and Throw - eters. Pelter, Peliper and Furriers remit the fur trade of tho English with 'Norway and Sweden. 131onde, a complexion adjective, was the progenitor of Blund, Bleat, Blount nod Blondell. Sanders, Saunders, Sanderson, are varia- tions of Alexander, a favorite name in Scotland. Out Feed. Do not undertake the breeding of cattle unless you areprepared to follow it systema, ticalIy. Doing, the right thiug one year, and the wrongthing the next, leads to no i good or profit n the end. Stock is never prohtablit except when le is making a steady. gain. Do not keep a single head more through the Winter, than yoe caa house and feed in such manner as to accomplish this. The practice of veterinary science among farmers is growing every year and tekleag the place of guess work in treating auimal ailments. This affords a paying branch for the young men to take up at the agricultural college. Speaking of veterinary science, it is a good thing to know how to cure an animal that is sick, but Inc better to keep a vi ell one well. Good food and absolute cleanli- ness are the means by which that may gen- erally be accomplished. A swill barrel is too often a synonym for te filth depository. Refuse of all kinds, eetable and uneatable, are thrown into it and left there until soured and decayed, then given to the pigs. It is no wonder that disease is also given to therm Have some succulent food with which to vary the rations of the animals that you are feeding for beef. It will help digestion and Assimilation, and so increase the benefit to be derived from the grain. Ensilage or root crops will answer, whichever is handy. Let either tlao sheep or the pigs have the run of the orchard, at least to such an extent as will enable them to consume all the refuse fruit. 'This is the easiest pos- eible way to check the increase of iesect pests, which otherwise will multiply and do greeter damage another yeer. Do not get any 'crochets in regard to breeds, if you are going into ilia sheep business. Common sense should tell us that the animal for profit is the one that eau give a heavy high.grade fleece, upon a well-developed Carcass. There are such sheep, end you have only to use your eyes to find them. How would you like to bave food before you all the thne, so that you were never out of reach of ite sight or smell? vuLt is what is the matter someiimes with fatten- ing cattle—thy get cloyed by having food before them all the time. Feed only at steted intervals, and only so much as they wfil oat up oleem and relish. Golightly, Lightfoot, He.refoote and Roe - foot vrere nicknernes having allusion to speed. Crook, Crump, Cramp and Crimp are but °haes rung on an old nickname for a cripple. Wiseman was once a eonjurer, hence the family names of Wise, Wisely, Wiseman and Memel). Steven was the original of Stevenson Stephene, Steenson, Stineon, Stimson and Stimpson. Town formerly meant, a farm, hence the Touner, Towners, Towneends, Tones, Tunes and Tuns. Isaac was the original of Isaacs, Isaacson, Rieke, Hickson, Higgs, Higgson, Higgins and Higginson. Poulter was the man who sold fowls; his name may ba recognized in Potylter, Pulter and Punter. Tyer, Tyernaan and their kinfolks were once hair &more; so also were the Coffers and Coffers. Mercer was a general store -keeper, and his memory is embalmed in the Mercers, Mer- cers and Marcy& Clark was the village penman and the father of a long line who spell their one name in many ways. Feed your stock only so much as cao be assimilatea and turned bite, growth: The reatilts to the pocketbook are sometunes just as bad from over -feeding as from the reverse.- Consult your stoeks a little as- eo ,whet they like, and how much they need, and do not attempt. to 'cleoide everything you think best for them off -head. Ite Well Deserves 11.. The newly.elected mayor ' of' 0, country town was about to make his ..first journey in that ottiecity throgglz the place . . The townspeople had arranged that. from ISIS a -eh of flowers ender , which he was to pas a floral, cro n shouldebe hung alu- Ved th well des Horne is an official name. Its original owner carried the King's horne when Majes- ty was at the chase. . Taylor, Tyler, Smith and its compounds arid various spellings, Carpenter aud Mason, are all trade names. Thacker wee a men who thatched houses, and so gave a name to the Thackers,Thatch. era and Thackerays. Kemp meant originidly a soldier, and the Kempers,Kempersons mid others of that ilk are his descendants. Henry, in course of time, became Harry, Harris, Harrison, Ballet, Halkeb, Hawkins, Hawkinson, Harriet. Smoker, Smooker and Smoker recall the old-fashioned smock frock, once the dress of the English peasant. Ledbetter's father was a worker in lead ; so Also were the ancestors of Ledbitters, Lidbetters and Libbetters. into them w to hit aome of them. that I ain obliged. to hire tsr them off. They settle ib great Antis. A band will settle down on five auras, say, and you won't hear a quaok nor asquawk, but the geese are there and very industrious, and loafers you know it they have pulled up and eaten every bit of the grain. They have a skillful way of grasp- ing the tender shoots in their mouths and pulling and relaxing and pulliag again till they get the swollen grains with the blades and then eat the whole, A storm is almost sure to bring them in large numbers, but they often come in entirely fair weather. I keep many herd- ers to drive them away. If ib were not for this I wouldn't have any wheat. The men are armed with loud -sounding Winchesters and they keep shooting among them all the time. Az night the geese don't bother, but early in the morning and all through the day they literally swarm. The herders go out very early in the morning and stay all day. It is a continual battle. The geese must be kept going all the time or the wheat is gone. When the men ere plowing they get very olose to the geese. Take fourteen or sixteen teams, eaca with a big plow that turns four furrows. They come along in a string. The first one is a good way off. The next is a little closer, and so on till the last one is fifty feet or more nearer than the first one MO. The geese don't notice this and a an can kuock there over as he goes by. I saw one man take a monkey - wrench and bowl away and kill one. In atet, if anyone wants geese he may easily kill them by thousands, and I was almoat going to say millions, tip there. I have killed them myself many a time. The an- nual visitation of the geese at Knight's Landing is not a joke. It is the sternest kind of reality and means a heavy loss if warfare is not kept up againat them." A Great Load from. His Elmplopr's Mind. There was st look of stern determinatiou on the young man's face as he started for the private office of the head ot the firm—such a look as comes to a men's face when he has at last made up his mind to do or to die. Knock I Knock I Knock 1 " Cume in I" The young man hesitated for the mill. ioneth part of a second end drew a long breath. It was against the rules of the boils° for an employe to draw a long breath during working hours,but our hero chanced it. "Well?" queried the bead of the firm as he looked up with an icy glare in his eyes. " M r. Overall," began the young man as he tnacle a great effort to coritrol his emo- tion, "1 have been with you over four years." and strive to live up to, however short they may fall of the ideal, Even their religion is a part of their coneervetism, and they who look for radical change must regard the tenacity with which this people have clung to their forma through the conturies„ and still cling to them. If they ars not the chosen. people according to the Scriptures, they have, at least, inherited the promieea and have workedout a, eivilizetion ttuiquein history and have gone far and suffered much in carrying their belief, their virility, and their love of all which is upright and manly to all parts of the univeree. The sandalled legions of Rome in the, povrer may have carried • England. Hight b 3 iso iated. Lord Rohn. ts, in distributing the prizes to the British Artillery Volunteers, said England, happily, hitherto had beea spared the terrible oonsequences of invasion, thatike to the strip of see separating oar oountry from the Continent of Europe, but iter, by a combination of circumstances which they might not forsee, the command of the sea might for a time be wrested from our splen- did cavy, it seemell to him to be the boand- en duty of every able-bodied Belton, no metter what ,his station of life, to go through a course of military training. He was not one of those who expected volun- teers to reach the highest stencleal of mil- itary efficiency, but he did not think that, because they could not reach thee standard, they Were not worth keeping up. The voluntee'a force had a distinct valet) of Ito own, and was a most useful body of men, worth makizig so efficient se to insure their beieg a real addition to England's militaryastrength in time of emergency. reap° know powe of the Britain o glo-Sexon has pone coat has been previth. uphold him against and to emphasize, exacts what eivilit er at 0. cited, there the red ed to follow him, to ppression and wrong, h0. principle that fee- erught not lie e...pared topay. The monarchical system will survive in Great Britain becanse the people know that it is the what and best form which could be adopted. Seine limy hint at a gradual growth of opinion adverse to the monarchy, but we do not believe that it will ever manifest, itself to the extent of sncb a drastic change as is suggested. The remarkable woman who now wields the sceptre is bowel down with years, and it cennot be very long, though we hope it may, before she must surrender the rule to her sou, the Prince of Wales and we believe that his accession to the &reale will be re- ceived with satisfaction by the people, without prejudice to the affection with which they now regard his royal mother. Viewed through the American press, His Royal Highness is a, reckless speodthrift and an immoral man. It must be remembered that, this estimate of him is formed for the purpose of feeding the hostility which eb- talus in 0Qrtain parts of the States agaiust the royal family and the British establish. ment generally. 11 hall the things which are said about His Royal Highness in the Amer- ican presa were true, it is hardly possible that he should occupy TIES MGM PLACE "1 trust that during this long period my conduct has been such thet--" "But this isho time to come to me with any such request." Mr, Overall, I Was advised to come to you weeks ago, but I put it off." "Then put it off again. Haven't you got sense enough to realise that this country has been ou the verge of a panic?" "1 know it has, sir; but one iney love during a panic as well v,s vrhen times are easy. Mr. Over—" " Love ! Love I What in Jericho luts love got to do with it? You are now get- ting twenty-five dollars a week, I believe, and if you atee't satisfied yen can code" "Mr. Overall, you have a daughter." "Yes, 1 know—three of 'rem." "I love the eldest—your Edith—and I •c Itttow she loves mo." "And you want to ask her hand in mer. riage " I do." "Take it I Take Edith, Jane eud Saiab all three of 'eat if they'll lve you—and get marriedtoonorrow if you want to I" " Mr. Overell, how can 1 ever—' i‘ Shut up and get o vhet ehock you Rev he does in the estimation of the people over whom he will be king one day. His position is such that he cannot adopt the means resorted to by ordinary persons to protect himself from vicious attacks of this lettere, and, therefore, be is more exposed to elander and sneers. But no reputable paper iti England or the colonies accepts the frequent reports of him in the American press as being in mar way truthful, and they do not sully their columns with repeti- tion of them. The Prince is like any other gentleman in his conduce, but, in the words of Swift, "()ensure is the tax a man pays to the public for being eminent." The great prominence of his position keeps him in the public eye all the time, but it speaks highly for the understanding and honor of the British press that it does not give currency to the miserable scandals which are concocted for American consumption and brazenly published. On hTovernber 9te, the Prinoe reached his fifty- second birthday: That his days have been useful, that he has given much time and attention to the wants of the people, there is ample testimony. Indeed, judging from the accounts of his work, there are few bus. ier men in England than he and none more popular. He is received everywhere with the respect duo to his position and with the greetings usually bestowedii-pon those who enjoy a large share of the public good will, and there is no doubt that the suaces. sin. will find in him a man fitted in every way for the first place in the woridanel tha he will prove himself every inch a Kiug. see-----earar etesseete—tretemeesseitte • or in tits 40;44,,vials.pmen.apted8Ga11amut44 r reeoranuead ibasostoauypre8�4ptilon Gatown, to me.' . JL, Atimma,lt. 111 or4Sb.,Tlraol4ya4 IT, T. "The use of 'Oesteria'ia unrafft its Merits so vrell known that it ileiencS a work of eupererogation to endorse it. ...Few are the Intelligent families 'who do riot keep Casterie widen ectsy reach." Cameos Meter -re, D,15.. New York oity, Late Pastor Bloohiegdale Beforraed March, Tee Carron any 'On,e can see the Scott's Emulsion of P Liver Oil and Hypop and Soda uparohe face who, from a state of debilitation brought by its use to a satffi/ Scott's Emulsion cures light!, / Colds, Consumption ereful and all Anaemic. a d Westin Diseases. Prevent wasting in chi Idren.* Almost ,. Palatable as milk. Get only tbalemaine. Prepared. by Scott et Bowne, Belleville. Sold by rdl Druggists, 50 cents and $1.00. - For tfiat Bad Cough of y 11 "" ens: Ili As APreventive and Urea a et I..e.tea"eeers 0 es X.. ,..,•e• o'c 4.z.„'s. -- „c50 $0 I. e,i St Neve et aes` •e''' se 'St '1)1 Manufactured only by Therms In • late esa, Oxtera ts ear Purchasers should lea to tke La If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, '40 4 4.4 el' NEURALGIA ,MUSCULE STIFF PMN IN SIDE �LAMEBA WTHHEEN"DlareiVENTHI eedsfetjallitatt.4-d" et.' 1 EAK, N Thousands of Young and Mi through early ind seretion and Diseases have ruined e.ndivre any or the following aympto tiom Memory Poor; Easily the Foce,_. Dreams and Throat; Hair Loose; P Ener,ty ttnalitreagth. and sexually. Chas. Patterson. Rea cla • Villa ed eesses. of many a ; d Deepen< able and "At 14 Tears of ai mo. I became norimo stand no exertion. drains at night weake, trio Belts, Patent Med' no help. A friend all -tis _ Walt 1118 one month's 1, myself gaining every 45, ,reani one „vat), cal etse fails." They have Dr. Itoalten. • 0113 Curou. 5 yam's ago. Copt Townsend. "Some 8 years ago I co disease. I wept to Hot Sprinr, ldlled me. After a while the became sore, pains in limbs, loss of hair, glands enlarged, Komfady & liergere's XONV Method had no syvaptomS for live Tears. doctor, I. heartily reeve -lend it tO syphilis.", 1815111 eradicate the is 15. YEARS IN DTR ern. 88 years of age., Etn gay life. Berle, inaisceetione for me. 1 heoamo Weak um affected and I feared..Dright's d factory anti e nails p • I tt;ok 14Y hom1?/* treatineat froin Drs, tho pisilt'me, up literate ,Y£1, anan (ivory