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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-5-28, Page 3I had been troubled five mouths with, Dyspepsia. The doctors told me it was chronic. I had a fullness after eating and a heavy load in the pit of my stomach. I suffered fre- quently from a Water Brash of clear ;natter. Sometimes a deathly Sick- ness at the Stomach wouldavertake rue. Then again I would have the terrible; pains nfsWiud Colic. At such times I would try to belch, and could not. I was working then for Thomas McIien'y, Druggist, Cor, Irwin and Western Ave., Allegheny City, Pa,, in whose employ I had h�e11 for sever, years. Finally I used August Flower, and after using just one bottle for two weeks, was en- tirely relieved of all the trouble. I can now eat things I dared not touch before, I would like to refer" you to M.Me r Fleti Etat whomI '. worked, ked who knows all about my' condition, and from whom I bought the >, ledi- ciue. I live with my wife and family at 39 James St, Allegheny City,Fa. Signed, Joiix D. Cox, G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, 0 Woodbury. New Jersey, U. S. A. ITl`TE-RGG /ONI,AZA RAILWAY OF CANADA; The dtreat route between the ll'oat and all Palnt4on the lower St. Lawreece tandllato des Chelonr.l'rovieee of Qaehee; also for New 13rimewick.Nov a ACaUa. PCI Red Edward Cep enretentslands,and\ewbsundlan tl and St. Pierre. Expreey kolas IitoutreelaudHalifax •dnu1S (9utioeye excepted) and ruu through wfttioutoh•auro between. these pointeia 28 Lou eand ,:w ring 'ruethroughexpres's train Cara of theta. to tic o fel Beltway are b ii ,1 hte h I n alta r tiara . t d y 7 t: bvetectrloity end heated by steam Isom the locomatty*.thee greatly intimating the cern" fort aud safety of travellers. New and elegant buffet sleeping anti clay ears arena onthroe ell csOre sstrain N. Canadian -European Mali and Passenger Route. }".ass fingers for Groat a Mall! r the conti- nent by •Ioftvipstient, oalouWatley morn ing will jou outward ruailsteamer at Halifax en Saturday. The attouiiou ofashippots is 1irectod tattle eupartorfactlitleen °red by this route for tho transport of floS.h r andrtouerol marchau- dlseiutendod for theFasteirnProvinces and emedouudtand; else for sbpmoute of grata anti produce bitch d°d for tee E'mrep OAn mar- kTfokotsmay be obtat owl and taform aCon about the 1,.uto; else freight and passenger retnson a •1•1.eatton to NB tetight4WotTrePassau go Agent a3it',gsirTtouseOro ek;Stork tit . Toro ate D POTi'I14(#RP., If Chiefrluportutoadont, a Railway Cake, Mow:ton, 11.B, Jan Mel *4000.00 yearis bring mode bydalut/L ` toodatnfroy,\ Y.,nt utak for •. Rreeder,tnuklocsft.toeds jn quicvktmr totems Bre a da)' at the M,*r. and Im1MMO no you Ito on. Both sox.* a;:,*. .1„*ay partof .11neTlra. §nU l'a11 CrIt111U•ara It Loom, iv. hit; an yottr thne,nr more moments ou to tko WW1. die Is raw. heat pay St for ttrry,torlttr. 11u Matt -too, fantitlitng ot rustling. lid an 1 SI.1:8UULX learned. rAlt ret 111144 1•1ILl'Address at ones, •s ietee h le., SeithLAdD, nUlhg, eines Burns, Cuts, Plies in their worst form, Swellings, Erysipelas, Inflammation, Frost Bites, Chapped Bands and all Skin Diseases. �T a�A� �{.�ST IPS � � RiVliNlATOR C I1tEs—• - . Lumtage, Sciatiea kheumatism, Neuralgia.. pothacho. Pains in overyform. By all dealers. ltbolesale by F. F.Dally & Co; CENTRAL Drug Store' rt. j. •A stock fait ,. \ ot,k ref all kinds oi Dye -stuffs anis package ' 'DYe-Sgr'i'm% tll.ntly on e YOUNG" FOLKS One Night intim Zehool-7io014. One night in the sphool•roorn • '.l'bo books ori-: the shelvea Determined to bold A convention theinslves. Down tame u fierce Granular . And ripped on the %leer, And of spellers and lexicons Up leap sd a score. Then an Atlas demanded What meant sneh a row,' Awl a i rench Reader answered, First making a bow, Itis time we should know What the young people think Their school -books are for, When they blot us with ink, "And tear out our titles, Axel loosen our leaves, Or pilo us in heapes like Disorderly sheaves. We are worth better treatment," The Reader averred, "And I,' he said, firmly, "" Resolve to be heard,,, Then eight ranks of figures Qune marching almirg, Tile tide of their plaint Swelling out like to song. "'W We ere" hated and co • ed s 1n , Said a sis and a. five. "'Tis a wonder," chimed ten, " That we're even alive:" ,A history next Arose, solemn. and grand, With the ail of a conqueror Viewing the land. " I confess," said the tome, " To a. certain couterpt ; From troubles like yours ISA always exempt,. "If you interest the yeller; The big volume wens on, "`!'hey will baste to your tasks, And obligingly con Whatever you with ; But a history, no doubt, Is different from figures That puts a child out." What might have been dons Mad not morning appeared I comet conceive Of the strange anal the weird. When nine o'elock came, With the children tli4hnselvee, 1101 !make oh,e 1 ver o all Ewe resumed his professional giant business with gree'%enceese. . • . , The in was really so much, afraid of losing some of kis men that. it is said he would never let them fight,. Whether or not this was the reason, I do not know, but the fact remains that for some reason they did not fight during his lifetime. After his death his son=that famoussoldier Frederick the Great --did not attempt to re- place the tall men as one by ohne they drop. pet) out of piece. He, by -the -way, was the only man of, ordinary stature who bail ever been admitted into their company. $is father, the I`;.rno, had made him Major of the regiment when he was only fourteen years old. A strange sight that young boy among those giants, and yet, as some one has said, the smallest man of thein is the only one who is remembered now, proving, after all, the truth of those old words, " The mind's the standard of the man,"—Hnenee.s Young People.. An Orchard on Poor Land, In planting, the first thing to do is to get a straight Pane on one side of the field to be i planted, then make a light square frame the Ilentth end width yon wishyour trees to stand in the orchard. Lay one side of the frame on the straight line ah'ez+iy made and stick at each corner a small peg. Move the frame on to another section on the same line " letting m " a down, so as to rest the bins endagainsttovthe pees set in the forward end of the first st settiu, and set two more pegs in n thea fell•- 1a td ent 1 of the frame at each corner, as at tirst. Now you have two places for the diggers to eorrupenee at. :low li LVe another small frame, as large square as you wish your holes. I make my holes four feet square and twenty inches deep. Lay this down so that the pegs will I 0 exactly in the centre, mark around the olttside with a spittle, rand yen will have a, complete square auti your rows straight. Digthe holes on the inside or straight line first u*s.le, and let the pegs remain on the out. ride. for agufde by which to set your franc on the return row. Thee continue until the orc•'hard ie finished. In preparing the holes already dug, till upthe hot. tum say •a Ila way if sal• n witgood, n S h i 11411 soil mined with one gallon of air•sl.al.ef, lute and r,atehal¢ bushel of well rotted stable. man.n•e, nil thoroughly q hel v og thee. Now !e!- your 1r:,a exactly iu the ctarirt oil the inti 511,1 ill in the best virgin sail around and among the loots of the tree, until ;wolf hole where the tree sets is a little higher titan the surrotntlling meet. of the land, n di 20 r t. Mee will 1•fi r 1 �. h a oil. the anh111o111a In Our nooks on the shelves, 1 frog:l by tine lithe acting an the manure, and iii+l<rplei'a Young People, mill at up and heregreathe hersisb in statute will the Q nes' growth of the ,young trees. 4A.N ARMY OF GIANTS• The cultivation condists simply in plow. There wahi once a King wvhe was making a collection of tall soldiers. Ire had gather. ed together over two thousand, and the smallest man of them all was nearly seven feet high, while the tallest was so talithat even a tall man could not touch the top of his bead with his hand. All his life the Lane wvasaddingtothomunber, but, like the stamp and coin collectors of the present time he could never get as rewash* wanted. This King, who lived two hundred years ago, was Frederick x., King of Prusia, ;Eris strange fancy was a joke all over Enrepe, for he gave large stuns for men who could tight no better than smaller ones, while this officers were badlypaid,his court mean and shabby, and his own way of liviug so economical that actually the food on the royal -table was sometimes not lialf enough for his children, and sometimes too mean for them to eat, For•tihebribing:and the necessary expenses of transporting James Kirkman, an enor- mous Irishman, for instance, he paid six thousand dollars, which was more than his ambassador's salary. But in spite ot the laughter and the self• sacriheu ii'brought upon shim, the King still rode his hobby Me sent out 0100 all over. the world to tot kafer giants; and so, besides this own Prussians, he had English, Irish, Polish, Egyptian, German, Norwegian, and Russian sehliers—of these last a large num- ber, for the Czar of that country, in return for m cabinet. of beautiful amber ornaments and one of the finest s1tee ti•tt had eye); been seen at teat, mule, sent Fret elle one unti- 1 dred and fifty of this very tallest soldirre, and one hundred more every succeeding autumn. • These foreigners in the Potsdam Guards had, some of them, been begged and bribed into enlisting, while others, on whom persua- sion had had no effect, had even been forced into it. ing the ground to keep down the weeds. Nothing 81101114 be taken from the land, When the orchard comes inttibearing an rap- pllicathon of one bushel of compost for each tree should be made sown broadcast in the spring and plowed in with a small turning plow, Por tbo compost I use one peck of lime and muck, Or vegetable mold from thowooda-.-wellrotted tnanarewoitldanswor, provided the 1•tnd is well supplied with pot- ash. I mounts np nhy trees the semi as L do in cultivating on ;ash bottom, land. I plant on poor landaicteenfleet apart, and ilnpron. ing head in all the peach trees, cutting off one-half of the previous year's growth on all leading branches, thinning, out the fruit so the treea will not be overburdened. It will repay the trouble anti time thus spent. The remaining fruit will be much larger, will ripen more uniformly and bo much higher colored and bring a better pprice when sent to market. Wet. P. 'Tuur r ••-..•nears-+msat,�- ,tea----- The Pope on the Social Question,. Popo Leo III. is understood to bo putting the finishing touches to an Encyclical on the social gneetron, upon which he has been ateadilyp at ,cork for several years. It will; bo publttthed as soon as the several transla• tiara have been completed and revised, and this, it is expected, will be in a few days. In this pronouncement the Popo has con- densed the doctrines of the principal theolo- giansentet'ing into the consideration of social problems, and aimed at udapoing them to the requirements red conditions of the pl'o- 'n1;a{v 11110. It is believed that the Pontiff has consulted also withleading thiukers of the modern world, embodying their views in the encyclical. So far as the contents of the document have as yet been communicat. ed, Pope Leo insists, it is learned, upon an equitable observance of the rights and duties ofall interests alike -of capital and of la- bour, of theStato and theindividual—declar- FATAL VENOM IN A ROSE. lleBrat..e Re)llE 0CHavr'ri Met an: Untimely' Rate, No happening for many a day has caused so muck talk as does the untimely taking off of Senorita Ernestine Olivia, the bell of Havana, This lady was about eighteen years of age. Her beauty was of rare quali- ty. She was the toast of all the gentlemen of the Greater Antilles. She lived with her parents in one of the handsomest houses in the city of Havana, on. the Prado, and was noted not only for her beauty, but for her sweetness and charm of manner and disposi- tion. Senorita Ernestine Olivia was engag- ed to be married this Spring to Don Edear- do Lebredo. Fivit'rinS BEFORE TUE DAY set for the 'wedding the bride•electhappened to be in the garden adjoining her father's house, Carelessly plucking a rose she put oneof the petals in her mouth. It is pre- sumed that an nsect which had been feed- inJ, for she complained of pain in her lip, which began to swell in an alarming manner, F .ysteiaus were summoned, but the poison could not be controlled or er'adi. cated and. after suffering great agony, she liedfoll �t r onthe aneosiemg morning. M1 of the bloode:l Rnvanese were ,AT TRS litAlDE', a BrRI1L. A gorgeous gala coach was drawn by eight Sic reelsclscemay ;'O. -George L.hn♦a?s decked with plumes, all coal Mack Stu: 1,. to,t ant v D#, a john man,has 'est sueoumb 1eoert1 i .. 3 e 1v th white nettinagd driven by ed to Addison's di ease, hiss .fn beeorrin a eight pages fn scarlet livery* aha two coach- block as a negro',g. Three ears ag,o; wI*en .neat. Following t e h n ,ci ins y e # a the fat►hilt' car- rlt' lisea e t• ti itself, � inuameraute tearfi a .e>ahe fa11i r thio Liellnt,. `;` the time of death his body was perfectly ffavana tolled g bail,. The first indicatiohi of the disease 1 and the runt rah guns seunde,l was the a stance on the ton ue of a b'.a;la neer the waters. ppm g " pigment foranation of the size of a pea. Two months afterward his skin assiuned the raf. fron hue of jaundice. A diagnosis by eat for Infants and Children. `a'Caesariatssowelladalrtedtocbiltlreathat Castor** caress Mlle, Conennetioda, lrecommeeditassuperiormaeypreeeription' 6oarrstomach.1411'4v:ea„ Frt1°45.otl„ im4ffili2hn°," LL d 3L Nola WomntS, K1Pe,i sleep, Mead prornctei di Vico. Oxford 8* , A�oartpn,, N S•. S9i ouu> i�pjuriaut8 .r:aedteat ori Tee Cza-rtra Cos,razer, T: siurrav *'tree*, A. Y. BIi;' S$LN mum BLA:Ol . "'teener Contiiitton ot" a 'Cristo Mian Who Weil] of Addison's Ptseese, ,•• s u's i e , t c ma fest.. n e ri,a e t h u rt Ira t with et t ot• -i h ► . wwiL h ' into m h .ing and tie Ise.. • "aot'sclearskin was hiachiefclaisrrto beauty Some Causes o: Hard Times. ports final s3r established the fact that belied I di The farmer is seeing hard times, but what Addison's isease, the ho seeanfl year his is the remedy? Is it to sit down and talk 1 skin changed to ca bronze tint, and in the politics, curiee uoouopolies. grumble at trusts 1third year, from the chest down, he was A anti Mk for impossible legislation! Three- dead black. His tongue was also black. fourths of our farmers by their own sots in- f Iia, hail no paten, and amused himself by read- ereas: their expeneee unnecessarily, They ' D f In what lm t Ise t t o not 1 need,and ' n y1 iti niany 04808 take no care of what hey do buy. New maehinery and cools are purchased wheu the old if repaired properly would do goal service for yyeers and the interest on the money paid ikr new woald keep them up. 'Thousands of dollars are thus squalid. u.»1 every year and we complain of hard times. 01 course, firet•class tools are esseu• tial to good farming. But another essential is to keep them in repair. ing land playing the piano, but complained of Our farmers are in many cases trying to reach a twolve•foot persimmon with an eight -toot pole, Many of the older femora are in easy circumstances and have acquired small fortunes. They live well, spend money freely, and eau afford it. But for the small farmer who is in debt or is jnat starting out to undertake to follow in the footsteps of great lauguor. Hia case hail onepeculiarity never before observed. The majority of patients die in the second year, but all who have heretofore passed titin stage became in. I sane in the third year. Sturtevant lived the full limit of three years, but showed 00 aicfts • of insanity. The diseaaeiedue tothe deem. 1 position of the outer coating of the kidneys It le not 4tten that a 40141i a deaisio» to re- move 3atzreacayerinfeom his face so much attention as has Dr. Talrnage'a eltaving off his whiskers. It would be diffi- cult to say =tow many journals tll.rouihout the country haw informed their readers of this act of t110 famous Brooklyn divine ; cer• thinly as very great number. It was left for one of our city dailies, however, to discover t sue ' gang S� DOCLY DY USING Dr. Morse Indian Root Pills HEY are the Remedy that the bounteous hand of nature has propr/ided for all duces pa arisingfrom rem IMPURE B�,ft4Li..are a sure cure for l Si1A; T J 4Y i IIIA, Littair Etc, fists£ SRL£ sr Au MI QS W. H. COMSTOCK the man who has already twenty, thirty,. or any conneetion between this tonsorial act forty years the start of ]hien is folly arca the and $1weess in church work. In its "dee 8"C r 1st-, ONT. Ma s o irA.• iy�i•. A comfortable home is one of the greatest blessings. But wo eau be comfortably situated without manyof the coatly luxuries that our retired neighbors can afford. A man can do very good farming with a dreughthorse. It is. not essential for a farm term to trot a mile inside of three minutes. it costs more to train a fast horse than to run a five•hundred acre farm. Only men that have money to spend ean afford it. Onr ,reatost drawback is that we live too fast, of the recent opening of Dr. Talnmage's now i tabernacle, which is stated to have aseating capacity for 5,56O people, to have cost to date 0110,000; to have an organ which coat 05,000 ; to be built in the forth of a great open carved amphitheatre with two galleries one over the other ; to ih'ere conspicuously displayed on the platform four stones ac- quired by the doctor in the muse of his re. cent travels in the East, this journal gravely concludes 1 " 111•. Talmage has shaved off hie whiskers, and the newbuilding is opened liters are always two ends to a procession tender the most enterprising auspices." and we cannot ell heats it. The ery is farm. " _ - - _. — • ing does not pay ; farming pays better than trying to imitate some rielr capitalist, Tho idea has become prevalent that wo might as well be out of the world as out of the fashion. This rulomay apply to the auoiety man who spends lois money at fashionable watering places in slimmer and in Washing- ton during the winter. But it is ruin to the farmer of small means. Weil% of all we patronize too many humbugs, and are made victims of sharpers whose only nim is to live without work Too many of us are anxious to get sontetlhing for nothing. It requires economy, patience, perseverance, and toil to make the farm pay. But if we devote one- half our time to polities and divide the other half between work on the farm and trying to gat suddenly rich by ,l uestionable +nethoda, then " fanning won't pay." "Cut .And Dries" At present the Czar eschews all Russian newspapers ; their pavans and theirlamonta- tions never reach his ears. Among the many departments of the ministry of the interior 1:here is one called the " Department of his !1 ts Journal "which is .11ar ed with • A sad story is told of a tall young cartoon- ing neither for nor against any interest m` ter who fell into their hands one day. Tho Poe recognizes that social preparzthg day by dog a carefully worded �' resnlmhe of some mild articles and items of One of these - officers came inti-h.� . shop, conditions are subject to eouetant change intelligence meant for the emperor's eye. A modification and and ordered a good stout of 0215*. be erste, and ,iuare therefore to be tselhiuovnfk of the censure rises from his bed and ai strong lock to he put ou it. When the encountered according to place and einem- in the grey of the earlymorningand hurries young man asked. Whhat size it should be, he stances. For our particular time he recom- off to the department,here adance sheets was told it was to 'lie of such. and - such 'a mends, it is understood, State intervention of the journls come ith damp from the press. height -and -breadths and: in length between in favour of fixing the maximum number of These he reads over, marking with red pen- sixaiid even feet. "'"A little longer than hours for work each day, of fixing a day of rest, Theseall thepassageseth interest of which is yourself," the man said. of prescribing the minimum wage,of regale- not marreby ijudiciousness. There are On theappointed day he returned for his ting the work of women and children, and 'certain events nswellasnumerous words and ' chest, but he complainedof its length, '" Not of intervention in matters regarding hygiene phrases which a Russian emperor, like am- en long: as -1 ordered," he said.. and the conditions under which work is per- tain French king, must never be allowed to' • The carpenter insisted that it eves longer fortned in factories. The sympathies of the hear. than himself;, and at last, to satisfy the man, Pontiff, if report speaks trite, are largely,ou • The marked passages are then cot out, wvlhoMill refused to.believe, it, he, got in, and- the side.of .tlte labouring, classes, -and tire'pasted together on shoots and handed over stretched himself out.:, , encyclical is intending evidently to ' awing to the director of the department, who, after This was just,whatehe.offioerliad wanted, the Church into line, with the , Social ;move-. • carefully considering and if need be curtail- Hastily'slamming the lid and locking it he {neat.• _ ,;a,lied.iiithree of his. men; :'l:he , •bore '►t • ..ng them;siguifieshisapproval. The extracts, y • • e Farm'laTotes ; are then: copied ealigraphically on the. finest rapidly dowfr mtho street,. ArriveQi at.a,plaee description of paper, forty or fifty woids to of safety, the chest, •was opened, but the nuui Make writer furrows from the lowv place the page, and the journal in this state is was:dead for went Of; an , in your fields. . given to the minister of the interior or his .'-This izecident:causedrso much tally that Grub oitt the sick treeaud plant.ahealthy. adjunct, If this dignity is satisfied it is the Kinghad. hie enterprising officer put to olhe in its•:plade.passed on to the. general-in•wsiting, who death.: He claimed,not tele res onsible for . The best 'butter inthe world naturals ' P y deposits b,on h!s•,Inajesty s table about four ', snob do s •.but ofli 'e s • 1 n Lv be\ hugh� c r ,,. ,, o, t -►b hotel than .:adly:inji:rod by the ase•of very' poor. o'clock ti]ze.fofulwiug•day. The news's that import:aut• itwas ,that±they,fib oultl get gall :salt. - ,,:slowly- dribbles through this:official biter is men if they would keep theirpositton., et ten - To get the best result* `handling. and , seldoan of a nature to discompose th. feelings restored to such expedients. training slhould begin when theeiolt is very of the Czar or disturb his sleep. • The, tallest man m the world almost' fell :.. + _,•' t _,�' f In to t]Tl4ir ti's,!. tt �1"16onli;• i'ia�ve'tl'tn;e -so 901:14iti94 PO Wd- er> tllo 6Sb" in thetiiark. et : and?icy Q ; : y 1'.e.cip es carefully a '.. V prepared t Col; ts'lil Drug Store Egetel. %saes +.'.1.; tRt 10 RS OF *01.*01.111-1.1'. Nerves/. De .1- eety,,leni-nal Losses wad Prorhatnke Decay, } ;tjroln tl., and pornianently ourhdtby 1 1 D ti tori _. with dlet oosno . n or w o or,xsualocaup ti n, q � 4. , andfully' .estoros itis vigor anti incur + t y .ea f2•`u 'tnanlhtiodt Piseoiitthiei b>F, a :I; c7o • tb, .t .zc or B. BUHUt t l0'L U t , , rya 'w iE slit h Tri?; r.. ;>, r s y Nt,131stEfnital 7i D7toa,To..• �' t I. tt'I _-intron this tl¢iCer,gslt aihiil,•tslo;.ii bit`t'fot'the-faeb`that Ile 'was tc distinguished ambassador. His carriage -had. jsrhlrel' dol'i' ',vhile'he ro'ta0Mn ,his ivsy to some distant, oottit,'a)i!1 while it vae meriduigi•he•left his attendents and went for a short vea1k. ' • The' reethitiilg officers felt their mouths water when :they met`thfs• giant.: Tn tonne way they got" him togb" With them • to ,the. berracks, ii*tending to keep=shim ; but, much tiethei& horrow;. •tvlhen' they'. hrrived,.i they fonn�dsoia of hlsShit etifixiouslyseekang hill.. As. soon lie . they • fowed eirho.,, he' was, they insclefiiany apologies; bet he did' not like' such treatment. nevertheless,?abd Europe b8ge.n to think Frederick's ' whiin;hadl been• carrredlar enough. • • ' ' ' •' Tiie'Iii'ng's gi•eatetit pleasure' was ^in these gitants of his. He drilled them -to• perfect time ; lie 'paid 'thehn mere than his other sOldiersin order to keep them ;'and to insure their't'eetil tune; in case'tliey should, •desert,. he had the portrait -•i if eaoh 'time .painted: Except When •alimee tvas'irlade'wohthlese by clieeiisd'therewas ho. oseape•freuithe service. '''"WW ead 't)f "bnkirtinetha,t:was: dischairgeti g or this tea t s son a I£' '' t#k►icrillbu . olio. ' s # w ihd' r1k- M1 , v • �C 1Q t3 f chin ,jg�Tiad'1SraV�lled�frothh !ace, Ito rY 'r P 1, y , 1a�9 .if§' , it birdie 1 d lj¢titb,nr th , d e GrennYan .l l PC' r r t .af, A£$ ` a' i.`` �il'}ii� dt's'clielr o lie•,• ':belt $e m y fI ai d r 'g`ltiill, hliid•'oftli•hihovJifels:ailsistaiioe, young. • Au average crep••.of hayin the OXnited .raise Teeth -That. ,Grow Into The ; Gums. States is estimated nt'•40.000;000 tons and • the value is estimated -it...53S7,000;000. Accordin to the tiolitische Yolksteitnng, a With poultry, as with everythingg.else on Moscow de Mist ;appears' to have solved the the farm,, there is' alwitys all opportunity, problem of supplying the 'human Month with to sell at goad prices;fowls or•eggstlhat are false teeth ,that grow into the gums as of little better quality'�than others are offer -!firmly as natural ones: Dr. •Znamensky has int n ;. 'performed several successful operations on �{ in teeth r Goo�eberr and etirratiit bushes shoul b do s as well as human beings. Tho t e h a e pruned now. Cut:out some of the cess e made of gutta ercha porcelain,or metal. u sal hoots where too crowded. . y'trt them ,close Holes are madatthe�rot of -the alsetooth, to the main stem.er they wyhjl•-Sic:out worye .and also Upward -into the. jaw. The 'tooth is than ever; Leave young wood lepreferencethen placed intothe• cavity. In a shorttime to old. a soft granulated growth ,finds.itsway from ,. , ri n s' agriculture ultttre the patient'Sjaw into the holes in the •tooth'•' Prof. W ghto say.. c is a p , g eIt isfullof hetan zool this' rowth graduallyhardens and holds born science. 0 geology, andentonology Itis fell of chorus- the tooth hi osition. -It is stated : that it try, from. the soil to•the growing plant, the does not matter whetherthe cavity in which ripening seed•and.,the animal life which is the tooth is placed is .one.from . which a the outcome. natural '• tooth has been' recently drawn, or A fernier of Atohison, San., wanted to Whether hasbeen,healed-.for some years. „f.., ... ( ... I dig a well, so he plowed a hit o, land and � -,:, planted it in mater 'Every, day he watched ; .the spots that showed • It is -a fact that within a year • a lads fee the oats, observing p, _ y f the greatest moisture. Finally he :seleeied' fashion has engaged.as..a maid a propos • rn uhun -.roman t o excellent Mess c t i z cal" nt ec. pati t int four feet � education hk awell. At w y g aspot andsa w, y '. 1 e • t �; ta,hvl.ab. acquirements •ements 'and ui o e grand. wh nd hehad'a $ne strea'lri',of water.' TL is;as,fil'co 1 g be the best well iti %1117 county. ' father employedt rr .irapdfathe,r .as his •�, .-.it,slt,., •+ . 1 -valet: • The lady ot r:t J ion does ..not know, ,a The Kingof Greece:has made . 5,000,000 t1Si�s, •'but,dhui riaaiti, Itig,s,-EN .w, .Orleans s n easons For the Wonderful Success off Hood's Sarsaparilla, the Most Popular and Most Extensively Sold Medicine in America. e Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses great A medicinal merit, which it positively demonstrates when fairly tried. 2 It is most economical, being the only medicine of which loo Doses One Dollar" can truly be said. 3 It is prepared by a Combination, Proportion and Process Peculiar to Itself, unknown to other preparations, and by which all the medicinal value o>t the various ingredients is secured. It effects remarkable r - cu es where other medicines have utterly failed to do any good whatever. It is a modern medicine, originated a+ by experienced pharmacists; and still carefully prepared under their per- sonal supervision. It is clean, clear and beautiful in appearance, pleasant to take, and always of equal strength. my It has proven itself to be positively • the best remedy for scrofula and all blood'. disorders, and the best tonic for that tired feeling, loss of appetite and general debility. Q It is unequalled for curing dyspepsia, • sick • headache, biliousness, catarrh,. rheumatism and all diseases of the kid- neys and liver, , It has a good .•name at home; there being more of Hood's Sarsaparilla.: sold'in Lowell, Mass., where it is made, than of all'other sarsaparillas slid blood purifiers combined. • i® Its advertising is unique, original, b honest, and thoroughly backed up by the medicine itself. A Point for You, If you . waist a blood'purifier , or strengthening' medicine, you should get ,the best. Ask for Hood's Sarsaparilla, and !,nsist upon having it. 'Do not let any argument or .persuasion influence. you to,buy what you do not want. 13e sure to get the ideal medicine, a01d,bynladruggists.r,p1 ,tx,torn 1Teparedonly. b94x �tIi(1f1A GQ', �Nua1 c sties, 7 ytyc t, Mass. I IBirds of passage make their way across wide stretches of •waterwitb, instinct, not only in regard to their course but in regard to the proper season as well. The findiug of • flies and butterflies a long way 'out at sea is perhaps hardly more wonderful, but to most readers the fact is not so well known. What ' Mr. Collingwood found to be the. habit of such °insects in Chinese waters may be observed over large•areas of tropic seas. When wehad stood out some thirty miles from the land, a plague of flies overtook us. ' The cabin was so full of them that the beams ' were blackened. 'Common black house -flies they were, '• for the most part, with; however, a good sprinkling of large green flies. Where they could have come from was a mystery; but they aere -a terrible nuisance, and al- though we swept -off hundreds in alaet, their numbers were not;sensibly diminished, Another singular cirenmstence was, that although no; land was in sight, largo dragon. flies repeatedly flew across the ship ; and,I • observed a large, dark butterfly flit ;across in the direction of the laud, without stop- 'ping'to, rest on the ship.At this time the nearestland was the Clausen Islands, tully thirty miles off. , It 1s by no means an uncommon circum- stance to see butterflies launch themselves off one shore for a short aerial excursion to: the opposite shore, half a mite or a.,nile dis- tant,without the leastlisesitiation; and when we were anchored in harbor; as at lie -sting, theY:were constant] w fi3st114u a h he r g ging »i `rapidly -elial 11. Was impossible to catch them for tires nine .rested tipnn the ' ship. Viler these ei oumstances,theyusu- alliy+'fly IOW.; it' a :straigb tilde; smlhri:•bear the A 1>eumpbiet of Information and ab- ? attactciftbalaws,gbowmneSlowto Obtain Patents, Caveats, Trade - sharks, OunTsighta, sena frrr. ad,i,Ma MUNN & 00. 361 Broadway. New York. RECORD'S SPECIFIC ( 1A0C Mantt nCG1atOgCDSolo 3 %CllOiflL'1.11.1enonclds Druej Stere Proprietor, 22. "eenc \To, The only ltcmedg'whieh will peri teanentlyeuroGonorrhrea, Gloot,andcalm-trate diseasca,uomatter ltow10nastandtna. Wassong met Successfully used in Frrneb end ;nthlish ia.tepitair•, Two bottles suernuteel to cure the worst case. i"t•iee,e1 stlot bottle. Lvory bottle has _ A 0 rn v t ig- bel. on I" ,the ia- bel. Nano " o • u o r genuine. Those wh have ave yz` timid o - titer remedies Without avail will not be disap- pointed in this. 'Mention this paper. READ AKER'S , O T r HEV fel r 1 .a t, TO t,l. FOR SALE BY 1.1.1. 9 Cord_ Runs Eesv fek No BACKACHE. r s • , re er 0147E 16i�N. NPel Y:un to* .ieserlptive cataloeu5 containing testimonials frrltla^sinlrnua of people who barn eatsed from 4 to 0 cords dour. :li.tC nota oueeess. fully used. Acenoyy Otto bo hat , oer:. 1 ^r0 le a Vacancy. A %1517 1NVSa'1'lON for i itltc San rent fres With each marhmei by the use of thi'+t 01 �nbody cgnaTees tthexrpwtn clawswnhy and do it b u:luo ttole ioa reseeut saw. Every one who 010115 I. shouldhave one. No duty to par; no taanntnrtuo ins , da. Aek yes:. dealer or write r*Thai:.E* BA.chU `i 51.5. Offi3:NE CO., 808 to 812 &. Cannul at , Chlcnou, Alla 0a • Insects at Sea, en spectde. et}on qn the Londonl„ hanoe.. ' a, Picaw nue.. : T r � Etat„+? 12•Y-4'.'" ;' •.: _ ..,: ,,..'1�.0 ''Dose�' i�l•1h� I��c�hiar water:.: ... .;..• ai.. ialnah„rrstljr bag 61.,!4ri:14 v, atau;u.ie u a:,trr tl'1' ref . r ," . lair r i• t, i . , .,, X slo t. rlAL i •w '1t $ • o ggkgia v,. •d ,° u, » r i + , , 3 r "., A t c a"=t,g'os..l •na: .ibf, ,d3i:Y: sm :- ss.l,ne erifY. Etts7ts ,: ronoti'4 c.1 �..t ,ta� 1 • 'ii,3iltise \e