Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1872-07-05, Page 7;TT'LY 5, 1872. - om,e• rlf c -e NMI R 1872. _1( ANDERSON, :CIERCII.A,NT TAILOR AND OTHIERI -STIVJET, SEAFORTEL. EP- • CLOTH SUMN1411. COLLA.RS AND. TlES, verythiug else suitable for Summer wear in ondless a.riety. e- _ 7: American Battle of Dorking, or G. at the White House. 1117 MAY ADELER. You ask me to tell you, my dill- .-dren, of the events which immedi- ately preceded thl destruction of We once great American Union, and he country by its rulers, aaidU say f the cause which lot -able results, I the capture .of present Europeai -something also led, to these de undertake the ask -with a heavy heart; for when I revert to that ter- rible time I can not help contrast- ing our proud' positi6nup to that fatal year with the himiiliating po- sition ocoupied now by the American people. The story is a Shalt one. In the fall of 1872 Horace Greeley, - the editor of a newspaper in New York, was elected President of the United States. Tho people voted- -for hina beause they thought he was an 'honest man; and so he was. But he was also vain and weak, and he entertained bertain fanatical and preposterous notions—about agricul- tural matters for instance ---which he has detereablecl to fosce upon the peorie at all hazards and despite all opposition. He lpelieved, among . other things, that every man ought to go West to earn his bread ; and long before he was chosen President he used to advise every body to -move to that region as a cure for all the disasters that could befall the _human family. , . As soon as he reached the Exe- cutive Mansion, which we used to call the White House, President -Greeley oreanized' an army of two hundred thOusand-rnen, and proceed- ed to force the entire population of the sea -board States westward at the Point of the bayonet. The utmost violence was used. Those who re- sisted were shot down, and their -dead bodies were carted off to a -na- tional faetory- which the Piesicient •had establishede for making some kind of fantastical fertilizer., All the large cities of the East were de- populated, and the towns were en- tirely empty. The army swept ;be- fore it millions of men, women, 6,nd children, until the vast plains west of Kansas were eached, when the -pursuit ceased, and the artny was drawn up in a continuous line, with -.orders to shoot any person who at- tempted to vi -it the East. Of course hundreds cf tionsands of those poor creatures 'perished from starvation. This seemed to frighten President Greeley, ancl he sent a messenger to Congress recommending that seyen hundred thousand' volumes of a book of his, entitled "-What I Know e_bout Farming," should be voted for the r•lief of the starving sufferers. This was done, and farming imple- ments and seeds were supplied, and then the milliof owretched ea - a casts Made an effort to till the ground.: Of the. result of this I Will speak further on. In the mean time the President was doing infinite harm to the coun- • -^ looking up, handed him a quarter and an order fora glean shirt, and said t� hitn, "o West, young man —go West 1" So all these natiens joined in making war upon the United States. They swooped down upon our coasts, ond landed, without oppoFsition, !for those exposed por- tions of our, -unhappy country were absolutely, deserted. The President was afraid to call away the army from Kansas at first, for fear the outraged people upon the plains would Dome East in spite of him. But at last he did summon the army to his aid, and it moved to ,meet the enemy. It was too late. Before the troops reached Cincinnati the foreigners had seized Washington and all the country east of the Ohio, and had = hung the Piesident, the Cabinet and every men-C)er of Con- gress. The army disbanded in alarm, and the invaders moved to the far West, where they found the pepulation dying of starvation because they had followed the advice of Greeley's book, to" Try for your first crop, to raise nines ; and don't' plant more than a bushel of quicklime in a hill-!" Of course these wretched people were at the mercy of the eneniy, \Nho—to his credit be it said---z-treat- ed them kin,d1Y, fed Ithem, and brought them back to their old homes. -You ;knew what followed —how Prince Frederick William of Prussia ascended the American throne, and the other humiliations that ensued. It was a fearful blow to -republicanism a blow from which it will never -recover. It made us, who Were freerden, a na- tion of slaves. It was all the result of our blind confidence in a misguid- ed old man who thought himself a ahilosopher, hut he was actually a 'fool. May heaven preserve you, my Children, from the remorse I fell when I remember that I voted for that bucolic old editor) • Trout Fishing- - When I first took to flrfishing, I had the happiness to _make the ac- quaintance c a man who combined in himself We eharacters -(4 poacher and thief. ell met him bi a lone lake -side in Wales. I had previous knowledge of the man's. person. .Meeting him in that situation was not agreeable, I assure you. But thke he wAs, and there' I was. However', he tOok fish and I took none. I: was deep in Bainbridge, then the great authority, and Wal- ton and Cotton,: but either I was not in deep enough, or they were deffeient. The man did not throw better than I threw. There was nothing inAhat. What 'was it? I went to him and begged to look at his flies. ,They were darker and coarser than mine. He: condemned my stock in toto. It's no use,' said he, 'if yen don't fish with some- thing lik-e the flies on the water. You can't make them_ quite like. Take off your' cast and try mine, for my rod would be strange to your hand.' I did- s2,.arld texik fish. The sum of the man's in3tructione was to use flies as near- as may be to the aolor and size of the natural flies on the water, and to use lighter tints on a dark day. -Ineed not remark on the absurdity of trying to make close imitations of 'flies. The best imitation, is a Jong way short of the real. General color and form are all we need . care about'. See what queer things rustic anglers use, and they kill fish. A bit of dun worsted with grouse -feather wings, 1 have seen kill like wink. The instruc- tions of the respectable gentlemen I have named set nie up I shelved Bainbridge. Instead. of bothering my brains with -collections of furs, feathers -and floss, I addressed iny,; self to studyiaag the haunts, habits, and disPositridiA of fish; and when I became tolerably acquainted with them, I found that a dandy niceness at tackle was no:so absolutely es- sential if you could throw and werk neatly with the right flies. Dangers 01%Sleep-Walking. Belshazzar &Atli bad a very bad and very dangerous habit of walk- ing in his sleep. His fatniy feared that during some ope ofehis Som- nambulistic sanntetinge/ he would charge out ofttlie window, and kill himself; o they pursnaded, him to slerp with his little brother William, and to tie one end of a rope around his body and the other around the waist of little William. The first night after this arrange- ment was made, Belshazzar dreamed that a burglar was pursuing him with a dagger ; so he ci-Ot over to William's side of the bed; stepped over William's slumbering form, ,)uniped out on the floor and slid, under the bed. He stayed there awhile -fast asleep, and then his nightmare having changed, he. emerged upon the -other side of the bed and got unclei the covers in his old place. The rope, it will be. observed, was :beneath the bed; and it was pulled taat, too. Early in the morning, Belshazzer, about half awake, , scrollged over against William. TO his surprise, the niovement jerked William clear out try in ancther way. His hand- - -writing was so fearfully and wonder- fi.dly bad that no living man could read' it. Ard\ so- when he sent his first annua message to Congress— the docuthent was devoted wholly' to the tariff and agriculture—ea_ sen- tence appeared which subsequently was ascertained to be, "Large culti- vation of rutabagas and beans is the .only hope of the American nation, am sure." The printers, not being able to interpret this, put it in thZ fullowing- form, in which it went to the world: '" The Czar of -Russia couldn't keep clean if he washed himself with the whole Atlantic Ocean once a day V' This perver- sion of the mossarie was immediately telegraphed to Russia by the Rus- sian minister, and the CZar`was so indignant that Ire immediately de- . dared war. Just. at this tinie President Greeley undertook to write some letters - to Prince Bis- marck upon the subject of potato rot, and, after giving his singidar views at great length, be concluded with the statement that if the Em- peror William said that subsoil -plowing was not good in light soils, -or that guano was better than bone •dust, he was "a Hai, a villain, and a slave 1" Of course the Emperor also immediately declared war, and became an ally of Russia .and of England, against which latter °Olin - try Greeley had actually begun hos- tilities already, because the Queen in her speech' from the throne had declared the Trilmilte 8 advocacy of a tariff on pig -iron, incendiary and calculated to disturb the peace of nations. LTnhappily thiswas not the full measure dour disasters. The PreSi- dent had: sent to the Emperor of Austria a copy of his book; What I Know about Farming' with his autograplr upon a fly -leaf:, The Ern - pe. -or mistook his- signature for a caricature of the Austrian eagle, and he -readily joined iu the war' against the . United States , wliile France was provoked to the same act by the fact that when the French ister came to _call upon Mr. Greeley to present his credentials, the Presi- dent, who waj3 writing au editorial at that time, not comprehending the French litI1 erne ere mistook the em- ne bassador for a beggar, and, without of bed. Belshazzar leaped out to ascertain the auee of this phenothe- non, and at the same .timp his brother disap eared under the bed. Belshazzar, ht rdly yet awa,kei., was scared, and e dived beneath his bedstead. AO he did so, he heard 'William s rmishiug across the blankets abc ve4his head. 011.0 more he rush .al out, just in time -to) perceive Wi liam glide o -ver the other side3elshazzar just , then became suffic'ently conscious to feel the rope pull ng hint. He compre,- hencled the itoation at once, and disengaged h melt And perliap little Williatt was not mad-? Re I was in .the hospit al undergoing re- pairs for about three 'Weeks, and when he cam out had a strange (16 - sire to sleej alone. Belshazzar anchors hinis lr now to an aavil.— Chicago hate -Ocean. ' t Testimony of a 8cotch Seamalir A seaman, on returning home' t Scotland, after p. cruise on th . Pacific, was asked :----' Do you think the missionaries have done any good in the South ea Islands ?' '1 will tell you a fat which speaks for it- self,' said the sailor, 'Last year I was wrecked on. one of these islands, where I kne - that eightyears be- fore, a ship was wrecked and the crew raurcler d ; and you may judge how I felt alt the proepects before me—if not dhshed to. pieces on the rocks to stir ive foss only a more cruel death. When day broke we saw a numbe of canoes pulling for our ship, and we. were prepared 'for the worst. ' hink of our. joy and wonder whet we saw the natives in. English dres , and heard some of them epeak he English - language. On that ver island.the next Sun- day we heard the Gospel preached. I do not know what you think of missions, but I knowi'what I do.' FLO FLor T_TAVING parch sed and thoronghly refitted the -L-Linille formerly weed by the Messrs. SCOBIE, I am now prepared to imadsh. FA1VILY FLOUR, Second to NO Compare. favor If you want A Dealers and tisk MARSHALL'S F E IN SEAFORTH, And thakwill bly with any in the Do; P.11.014R, go to the following or MARSHALL'S—Remember W: SCOTT 110BERTSON, J. WRITE 'IDE, SIMON PO vriu,, JOHN CA -A_NAGET, Or a W. MARSHALL'S Mills. , - Order. left with W. S. ROBERTSON prompte ettendet. to. Partie • who wishto Exchange -Wheat for Flour, Are certain to receive proper quantity, and an arti- cle that will defy mpetition. W. MARSHALL. will be 186-tf IMPORTANT HOTJSEKEEPERS. 0000 FLOUR IT ALL TIMES. W. A HEARSDN & CO..-,. SEAT' Are no .FAMILY roprietors of the H MILLS ! lecturing the lies'k ASTRY FLP URS Uro ' Dominion. Internling pure users in Seaforth and 'vicinity Oan relylmon gettm o-ar Family and Pastry Flours froin the foiIbw13Ig D niers, ONLY :—Thos. Lee, A. M. Strong, Join sh, james C. Luidlaw, Alex. Ault, Thoi ens Elidd. . .1%.1cGriamis, 'William Ault, G. &II: Jackson, and N -• 'Thompson, Egmont:IN-Die, and at the Seafoith Mills. Orders left at our ()Mee, Market Sauare, rece.,1 e prompt attention: Farmers desi for May always rely Pastry Flour n to the value th W. 1S1 -Lf. EAPERS & MOWERS. WE WOULD CALL T H N ATTENTION of tie" Poa:mers of the Counties of Huron and Path " Oar Johnson Self -Rake Reaper, and Cayuga Jr. Mower, - For the Season of 1872. valt7tabeiheaiivnepifotli..eomdietneetds .iofwthine etoomiyonurg hertolvetnttitie.s illn_oyiearcesiygeodnethboy, and. would say we have made some FIRST PRIZE ON THE JOHNSTON -SELF-RAKE REAPER At the Provincial Ezhibitien in the Fallof 1870. The Johmtan Machine was also Awarded the First Prize at Kingston in 1871. .,7,vaef awaraedtho Also, the First Prize akthe Greet Reaper Triel at Paris in the Harvest of 1871. THE CAYUGA 'JR. MOWER First Prize at the Paris Trial. This Trial was held under the auspices of the Pro- vincial Agriceltural Society. g to exchange theirWheit our, t the 1E11, upon eche irlv etting our best Family oz en, in quantities according at. . SHEARSON & 00. Ii --U R 11 A PI FOR l372. Wi)1. ALL!, MAIN ,ST:REE'Il, SE'AFORTII, T_TAS ON ILS Jet' G ROCF.11 brands, Sugars, Glee -en -are, and a Erse -chess Gro We can with nil confidence recommend these tsvo machines to the public; knowing that they oannot be surpassed, if equalled, by any other two llechir,es made in Canada. It is a source of mach satisfaction to us to know that niany competing Manufacturers concede tb.e superionty of our nutehines, and axe willing to give lei the credit of usieg a better quality of material and turning auks snPorior class of work, aH regerds accuracy of fittinpe exactness of tuljustment and high degree of _finish than is practiced by themselves. ' And while we appreciate the honorable sen-" monk which thus aetnate them in r'ailing an honest expression -to their convictions, we cannot but re- gret that there are others so lost to all sense of propriety as to forget the principles whieh actuate bon - est and upeight men iu their dealings -and.intercourse with their fellows, and have, for the sake of gaining popularity and notoriety, resorted, to the tlitlaonest practice of anPAINTInG our nutcbinece r ireopturataotricouvIliecnli,nre hanctenittoeuoireodl ou covering the name, and entering them (It Fairs and Thais as their own manufactuee, thus robbing ti ofs tis ff b)-iydyeeraartsion.of honest, honorable and patient toil, and which to u It is needless for as to warn the farmers to bewa-re of such parties, as their own good sense and better judgment will teach them that there is no safe 0 in dealing with men who will descend to such low trickery, in order to gain a selfish and mercenary 'end. Repeirs for machines will at all times be found at 'WM. ROBERTSON & CO.'S Hartlevare Store. Seaforth. .13) a sueerior stock of FAIITLY S, embeacing Teas of the best hinsins, etc. -Alo, Crockenv vary °flier article nimaily kept in ery S tore. , " • J. CI WOODS, General Travelling Agent. f W. J. MeCUTCHEO.N, Local Agent, Clinton. GRIEVE, Local Agent, Seaforth. PATTERSON (1,,- BRO., Patterson.Ont.Ont. MAY, 1872. 282-18* g.110 Sueh as Fleur, at and Corn -meal, Potatoes, Pork,i eee., Jso, every description cif FEED, Such as Oats, -1) -as, Bran. and. Shorts, all of whieh will he uo'i theaper than the elioapeet. 1?A. MI PRODUCE. The hinehest i arket price paid for all kind e of FarrU Produce. Lcieernber ti C place,: Main street, Eftet thle, opposite Coventlry's 13ootetnd Shoe Store, Seaferth. 213 LI [VIE W.M. A -ULT. - LINI. LIPAL i . . T_TrE- Subscri )ars, barin,7, leard the Lime 9nae- . . e -, A IA il - en, c • 1 -t- ry helong_ei * to . In., . . bore e i .er teen, Seaforth, and ii. nine' le tilt a spit:TAM TIM Rial, 011 t -be ro.ost appro -ed prineiple, ee.pable. Of tinning eu t 20l boshols poi day, ere, tenoned to furnieh . a.ne quautity of . Tiff, ir,lcst Qzfrdii-y Of L:ine, At FIFTEE-N CENTS e bushel. „ ' No air -slake( Lime kept or sold. ' SI _tTER & I1110., '230'13 Joanne thetel, e.:tentertni. THOMSON & WILLIAM Agricultural Implements and'Engine Works, 01\Trr- ;7 " ..'-=!--: - .- e-el•nr rte. .- -1, 4,-. V ,-,e/e., r • , *4*, , . '.5-A•z----:". •-• ,_." -,...N o • 4.20 e . 14'1'0_7'4 -- 16014 • '1.•:";;0 gY)::7‘ .1,•!1•,,fttr 4404 "Z‘-'4•ZI. fieve "';*4 f -I le 4." aea- 1:4.149. . • • •=2:- J01171,3091'8 Self-Raki929.iSilzgle Reaper. - 17T E recommend the above celebrated self -raking Reaper and. the CAYUGA CHIEF, JR.. MOWER, as the beet harvesting machines nOW manufactured. We g•actrantee these te-o single machines, costing but re.21.10, to outwear any two combined machines, costing $300, and with less than cum (Waiter the cost in repairs. We also guarantee each mneh ne to do its 'work better, faster, anti kith much lighter drceight, than any combined maehine. Thetwo machines have not only a perfect lifting, ap- paratus for the table: and bar, but have-alao the on] - perfect tilting table and bar. We offer any trial the purchaser iney deaire of either or both these ma hineet We also build the Ohio Combined Jlictehine, i ith .irohnson S'elf-Rake, Which we guarantee equal to the best combined ma hines made in Canada, and we offer a -trial to in- tentling purchasers. We also build Two -horse Wo d Sawing Machines, and. all kinds of agricultural implements., ani machinery for mills and factories. -Ster-m engines a speciality. Address THOM SON & WILLIAMS, Mitchell, Ontario. "THE MARCH. OF THE BUG." FAR:NIERS, SAVE YOUR POTATOES By purchasing SOMO of MCDOUGAIelni„S DISIi\IFECTING POWDER, A sure kill for the Potato Bug and Currant -bush Worms, to he had at STRONG & FAIRLEY'S, Main street, Seaforth. e To.tro.4 fgq:gitkor - isPVIILISHED EVEItY FRIDAY monxrga, IN SEAFOPeTH. Tealls.—S1.50 per year in advance, or $2 at the - end of the erear. Advertising, Rates. Tna.NOIENT. First icasertion, per line, 8 cents ; subsequent In sertions, g cents each time, per cONTItACT BATES. One column one year $60 08 " " half " ....... . .. . . . ...... 2 85 00- 3 months ,..; .....;.- ... .. .. — 20 oa one year ...... _ .. _ ,„ ...,, 85 00 half " ' 20 00' 8 months ....... ... . . .......- 12 00 One-fourth one year . 20 00 12-00 " " 3 moldhs . 4 8 Oa' One-eighth one year ... 12 °a 800 (‘ Half It if t. • half I r • half ht " 8 months .. . 5 00 One -twelfth one year .. .. oa ''e half " ... ............. 5 00 " " 8 months . ....... .. . . 80a Businees Cards, (6 lines and under, 1) year.. 4 IV Advertisements of Steaynd, Lost, Found, &e. not exceed-ing 10 lines-feent month, $1; aftnr Best month, 50 cents -each mouth. Advertisements of FARMS tmd REAL ESTATB for sale, not exceeding 151inee—liret menthe $1 50; each subsequent mouth, 475 cents. Births. Marriages, Deaths—Gratis. Adeertieements witheut specific directiens will be inserted till forbid, und cleergecl accerdinglye 3IcLEAN 13110TIIERS, M'clueo Y. ItleLeel, Publishers, A tame 3lcLEAN. ASLEinit=22eiaiESTALTWOMWA%-irr-eliffrBMIX FAMILY G!tOCERIES. The best and cheepest Teas. Sugars, all grades. I Tobaccos, of the best brands, including the cele- brated MYRTLE NAVY. Fruits of Various kinds and of the best quality, always on hand at STRONG. & FAIRLEY'S. PROVIPIONS. Flour and Food of every description delivered in the Village free of charge. BUTTER AND EGGS. The highest price paid for Butter and Eggs. STRONG -& FAIRLEY'S FOR • TU CHEAPEST • CHEAP CASH STORE, SEAFORTIT, Cannot be undersold by any other house in the country. The shop is small, but the goods are A No. 1. .,Fre.e.....nA",...MT.etteePe^•exase::momassers•xikeuinraMIIMLNP mulels.moveoemararevainoweeram 4•••rtemeeM i'MOTTLDING & PAPER - EXECUTORS' NOTICE. NrivricE -hereby gi7f.n to all parties having -1- claials against the estete of the late George It.- Boss, or the tine cf Wrieht & Roes. cif Ainley- ville, in the enmity of Haree, to head tb.c; sone to the urtdereirtned Executors, c,r to Geo, H. Wnght, en. or before the let dcy Jely next, as, after that - . date, the affeire of the estate will be closed up and; no 'further mune paid. Also, all 1artie hi lebted to the above estates, either by note, Or book time:nit, are requested to call and Fettle thfe, s:Ulle forthwith. Payment' of, notes or neeonuts may be made to George IL Wrieht or to the undereignee eN).;entatz. 3.011'5,' LECKIE, .„ . •, ••-f JOnN VEliG EXeelit°1 1. GRATIAM, Ainleysille, estatie td the late George Ress, Anuceeent - , of Lots 11)4s Snrvey, in the village e I for Terme, curb. 220 PIIONrCX TO LOAN. TJTE subeerne ze has leIONF.Y to loan to any -amount on eood fann preperty. Int-ereet, SIX per.cent. per annum, when the interest and prin- ciple ere Iota yeerly. aiel 8 per cent. per enenne when the ietereee only is paid. A G. MeDOCCe'ALL, 227:52 At cheep eren etore, eien of the Bear. MONEY TO LEND.- • TIT E niikirrsianpa has :31,410 and upward, privak feuds to luau, S per cent. per annum, on Farm property. Cl!erges elioneeete. edernage tone,: -s emay\f\0. W. G.wil...soN, zurich. 227-52e Tit le undersigned has onleand a splendid lot of • ROSEWOOD AND GILT A:TQTTLDING. . Also, a Fine Lot of Straw WRAPPING PAPER, FOR SALE, CHEAP. Now is the time to buy as it is on the rise. C.. ARMSTRONG. oee, Main Street, Seaforth, JJ'D BEST FURNITURE, GO TO J 01--f N StAIIFFER'S AINLEYVILLE_ Sign of the Two Bureaus - JUNE 18, 1872. 287-52 To Criek-eters and Base -Ball Players. CRICKET AND EASE BALL CRICKET BATS, GLOVES, LEG GUARDSe WICKETS. ALSO, Base Balis,and Clulbs ROOMS' TO LET. LET, in Scotts Block, two commodious Rooms on the eecond fiat: Apply to MeCAUGHEY & HOLMSTED. For Men and Boys, It. LUMSDEN'S DUG -TORE-i SEAFORTH. FOR SALE. The Iran Foundry belonging to the Eztate of Zapfe & Carter, situated IN THE TOWN OF 'SEAFORTH, with. the stock and machinery is for sale. It con - 1 Lots No. 42 and 157, on Main street. The buildinge are of brick, and the mathinery in good order, BO that a purchaserpan make a beginning at Once. An Seaforth In eitneted in one of the meet prosperous sections of Oplario, there is selilona ti- bettcr opening offered, and to an enterprising me- chanic with some mettle!, such a favorable thence Is not Often found. To a suitable party or parties ' favorable terms will be offered. ADAM HOPE, Assignee. Hamilton, 24th Setae, 1872. 238,4 COOPERS WANTED. 'ANTED IMMEDIATELY, Eleven geood . Coopers, to work at Salt Barrels. Apply to JOHN G. AMENT. Soforth, May 22, 1872. 28 1 FOR 'LIVERPOOL MW QUEENSTOWN. TNMAN LINE OF SAIL STEMERS S from New York, t EVERY THURSDAY AND EVERY SATURDAY, Tickets sold bo and/from England, Ireland, and the Continent, at as low rates as by any other line. jO/IN G. D ALE, Agent, ' Rroadweee N. Y., or JOAN SEATTER, 230 Seaforth. -J. P.. BRINE, T ICEltdSED AUCTIONEER for the County of -1-4 Huron. Sales Attended in all parts of the Coentry. All orders left at TBE Ext oseion Office vill be promptly attended to. 108 Divisions Ciour'ts---1812. Divieion Courts will be held afoIlows: .... .. ....Wednesday, 10th jnly. .Tuesdey, 28i -d. Wettnesdny, 24t1 " Tvhirul n•s;..1,ay, 2265trhh DCeriNe-al'AoNNN, .. . 3rd B Monday, 5t Go thAITn1)11::1Ee.....CD'L'olu'rts open at 10 oneock, aeh (Ley. _Wed:tient:my, 7th 44 --;--c-hernical Food and Nteirleit-e Tonfir. -C-3- —The great poi ularity of Dr. 'Wheeler's Com- pound Elinir (if Phoepbetes and Caliefent is owing , to it perfect reliability in beiblitet ttp ronstita- tions Inn down with (liecases -of the. Stomach, ; Li -ser and Keir.eys, erise from bp.,pcpi-ifi, or ; Feeble Digeetion, end eeenit in pnor ine ad and brcaling down of the geeerel h lth. le (Stec:nal- ; ly relieves pain or a nen:-To of 11111M ,s in the Storn- i ach -after eeting, Tic irt-bern, Elateleeee. Constipa- tion from torrid liNer, ineliene Ine...leeinee frnitfr- tion of the linineene and 131,1,1,1(r fret.rtlee red de- ', emelt in the Uline, irritability and restleseness followed by nervene proetra ti 4.71.11. rentrai debili- ty, which inevitably elle° from tie -one common and ere unable to extenve thence -Wee te ony exer- tion or undergo any trainee, will be eetonished at , the rapidity with which the whole system is raised out of this pro rat- cendition and energized and. vitalized under the use of this preparation. It is harrelree, delicione, dees not loeetis tffeet, itua is 1 not follewed beta inlaree. Sell at :IA. _