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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1889-07-03, Page 12• 1, U The Huron News -Record 81.50 a Year -$1.26 in Advance, Cr The ratan dues not do jt•Iiict to hie bueiacs: who spends lees in aduertieintg than he does in rent. -A. T. STEw'AKT. the neilliuuaire mei ohont of New York. Wednesday. July 3rd 1889 +.res+ NIGHT MURMUR. Dewy eve in golden splendor When the heated sky is o'er, Touches earth with radia cetender: Sweetly smiles on sea and shore. And the modest stars peep shyly From the azure dome ou high ; Angel lamps by seraph lingers Swung to guide us, front the slty. Earth i. wrapped in retest hearty, Holy stillness walks abroad, And the landscape fair reposes Gain!ly 'nesih the smile of Clod. Not a breeze that bends the branches, Not a perfume -laden breath, But is fraught with gentle secrets Of the days mild, lingering death. E'en the Mother bird that nestles O'er her brood far up above, Feels her heart throb close with nature's In the mystery of love. Low -voiced night stoups from the heaven's, Folds the world in dear embrace, All the sordid cures ut daytime Fly before her modest grace. RELIGION GOOD FOR EVERY ONE. , Peoples say:' Religion isverygood for wotnen,it is very good for children but trot for men." But the have in the roll of Christ's host Mozart and Handel iu music ; Canova and Angelo iu sculpture; Raphael and Reynolds iu painting: Harvey and .Boorhaave in medicine; Cowper and Scott in poetry; Grotius and Burke in statomans.hip; Boyle and Liebnitz in. philosophy; Thomas Chalmers and John.Mason in theology. The most brillitynt writings 'of a word.ly nature aro all aglow with scriptural Allusions. Through senatorial speech and though essayist's dis-, course Sinai thunders and Calvary pleads and Siloam sparkles. . Samuel L. Southard was mighty in the court room and in the senate chamber ; but he reserved his stron- gest eloquence fur that day when •he stood before the literary societies at Princeton commencement and pleaded for the grauduer of our Bible. Daniel Webster won not his chief garltiuds while he was cous'lmiug Hayne, nor when he opened the batteries of his eloquence ou Bunker Hill, that rocking Sinai Of the .American revolution; but on that day when, in the famous Girard will case; he showed his affection . for the Christian religion, and eulo- gized the Bible. Tho elogiteuco• and the learning that have been on the other side calve over to our side. Where is Gibbon's historical pen? Where is Robespierro'u sword ? Captured for God. "There is none like that; give it me !" So, I remark, it is with business acumen and tact. When Christ was upon the earth, tho people that followed him for the most part bad no social position. There was but one elan naturally brilliant in all the apostleship Joseph of Arimathea, the rich man, risked nothing when he offered a hole in a rock for tho dead Christ.' IIow many of the merchants in Asia Minor befriended Christ? I think of only one --Lydia. How tuauy.of the castles on the beach of Galilee entertained Christ? Not one. When Peter came to Joppa, he stopped with one Simon,a tanner, What power had Christ's name ou the Roman exchange, or in the bazars of Corinth I None. The prominent then of the day did not. want to risk their Ive utation for sanity by pretending to be one of his, followers. Now that is all changed. Among the mightiest men° in our great cities to -day are the Christian merchants and Chris- tian bankers; and if to -morrow, at the board of trade, any man should get up and malign the name Jesus, he would be quickly silenced or put out. In the front rank of all our Christian workers to -day are the Christian merchants; and the enter- piises of the world are coaling on the right side. There was a farm willed away some years ago all the proceeds of that farm to go for .tkii.eading infidel books. Some- how matters have changed, and now all the proceeds of that farts go toward the missionary cause. One of the finest printing presses ever built was built for the express purpose of publishing infidel tracts and:books. Now it loos nothing but print Holy Bibles. I believe the time will come when in comulorcial circles, the voice of Christ will be the mightiest of all voices, and the ships of Tarshish will bring pres- ents and the Queen of Sheba her glory and the wise men of the !;iist their myrrh and friltnkiucense, I look off upon the business men of our cities and rejoice at the prospect that their tact, and ingenuity, and talent will, after a while all be brought into the service of Christ. It will bo one of the inighiest of weapons. "There is none like that give it rue !" BE DOWNItIF,AR•FEli NO LONGER. Now, if what i have said bP true away with all downlloartednesa If science is to bo on th t side and .the travelling isposition of the world on the right side, and the CANADIAN NEWS ITEMS. learning of the world on the right side, and the picture making on the -lieu, R. T. Burns, the delinqu- right side, and the business acumen out Deputy -Postmaster at Kingston, and tact of the world on the right was sentenced to two years L. prison- side—thiue, 0 Lord, is the king- ment. He pleaded guilty. cloud Oh, fall into line, all ye —At the criminal assizes in Tor people ! It is a ,rand thing to beonto last week, Poland Gideon in such an army, and led by such a Israel Barnett was sentenced to commander and and on the way to seven years in Kingston Puuiteuti such a victory. If what I have4ary, for appropriating to his own said is true, then Christ is going to ase two securities t'ur $5,350 each, the property of the Central Bank of Canada. — Sarah Thompson is the name of the woman living at Windsor, who is said to be in her 109th year. She is blind, partly deaf and en- able to attend to herself, but her mind does not seem to have suffer- ed much impairment. She states that she has uo negro blood iu her, and that she was born in South Carolina, and many years ago came to Canada with a colored husband, although she had been previously married to a whits man. She and her daughters have always declared that 1780 was the year (Alter birth. — G. Ronfel, a wealthy Men- nonite, of Gretna, Manitoba, import- ed two threshers and two engines from tho States a few days ago. Ho paid $3,000 in. cash fur the machinery, besides paying $900 for duty and ;140 for freight. After they arrived at their destination a local machine agent discovered that they had boon made by convict labor across the 11)10 aLd reported it to the Government. The machines Were seized and will be destroyed, as it is contrary to the laws of Can- ada to import anything from the States made by convict labor. — \Vin. McDermott, residing west of Elk horn, Manitoba, shut his wife with a small revolver in three places, the lett shoulder, left l.irdAst and left cheek. He then rushed out of the house, but soon after returned and asked her to forgive trim. In a short time ho asked lira' to die with hila. She prayed on her knees to him to spare her. I13 took some laudanum about midnight and lay- ing by her site felt asleep, '1'lto terror•strickeit wife, leaving her baby in bed, fearing to arouse hint, stole nut of the house across the prairie to a neighbor's house. Mc- Dermott after site left must have awakened, and, missing icor, went to the a table, where he was found hanging iu a noose made of driving reins, quite doad. IL is thought Mrs. McDermott will recover." gather up for himself out of thie world everything that is worth any- thing, and there will be nothing but the scum loft. A proclama- tion of amnesty goes forth now from the throne of God, saying: "Who• soever will, let him come." How- ever great your sins may have been. "Whosoever will, let him come." Oh, that I could marshal all this audience ou the side of Christ. He is the best friend a man ever had. He is so kind. He is so lovely, so sympathetic. I cannot see how you can stay away form hire. Coyne now, and accept his mercy. Behold hint as he stretches out the arms of his Salvation, saying' "Look unto rne, all ye ends of the earth, and be soved; for I ant God-" Make final choice now. You %vitt either be willows planted by the watercourses or the chaff which the wind driveth away.-7'alntaye. GLASS HOUSES AND OTHER POSSIBILITIES. The future of the glass industry in the United States in encuurage- ing, for it is only since the war that the manufacture of polished plate has grown up; and there are now run- ning, or building, enough furnaces to supply all that will he used in the country. It is within the last. ten )'ears that the manufaetnto of cathedral and rough plate has been thoroughly established, at first dis- puting and now controlling the home market against England and Belgium. The improvement in window -glass has also been great, and there are workmen and manu- facturers who think they see the rising sun of much. letter days and a much better American glass. The concentration of capital iu powerful concerns must certainly lead . to changes in the system of labor that are bound to insure a more finished product. A new glass recently in- vented iu Germany is said to add marvellously to the power of the microscope. A Yale professor announces the invention of a per- fect stromatic telescope lens. Legend tells of the lost invention of "malleable glass." Tiberius is said to have discouraged a genius who found the•socret by beheading hila, fearing the innovation would reduce the value of gold. It . is also recorded that Cardinal Riche- lieu was presented with a bust of malleable glass by a chetuist, .who purposely lot it fall into fragments, and mended it before his oyes with a hammer. The inventor was promptly rewarded by perpetual imprisonment, lest his ingenuity should ruin the "vested interests" of French manufacturers. But if glass may not apo the metals in malleability, it may imitate thein in another respect just as important. A more fortunate Freuchnian (M. de la Bustle) has within a few years introlucod into Europe trausmut- od glass which, he claims, may dis- place cast iron. If it fulfils his ex- pectations it will make a new era in glass, and the old adage "as brittle. as glass"•will be superseded by a new one, "as tough as glass." By his process railway sleepers, fence posts, drain pipes, tanks, etc„ are cast in moulds, and so toughened by a beth in oils as to be stronger than iron, thuugh much lighter, and cost- ing one-third as much. But it is question„•! 'whether his results roach what is e! rimed for the process. These undeveloped toughening pro• ceases aogu•tstoundimg changes in the future ,'i Mass houses. 'Glass may become the fashion, and we would have to reverse our proverb about them, for they would bo bomb proof. Already transparent glass bricks are made. Extending the possibilities of glass a little further, why way we not build the entire structure of glass? The walls might be cement- ed blocks cast like hewn stones, but translucent, and of any color. One could thus inhabit.a huge pile of amber or of gigantic genas. The windows could be multiform, some of them telescopic, bringing distant things near, some with lenses or mirrors guiding the focussed sun's heat for culinary and comfortable purposes, others straining out the tight or chemic Pays. Tapestries, furniture, and utensils might be made of the universal material. The whole would be more endurable than granite, No fire could harm it; lightning would shun it. Such a dream, blossoming from 'this miraculous substance, may be ro- alizod• by an Aladdin whose lamp is of glass,--/larjrer's Magazine for July. A CLOSE CALL. AFTER suffering for three weeks from Cholera Infantum-so that T was not expected to live, and, at the time, would oven have been glad had death called ale, so great was my suffering, a friend recommended Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry, which acted like magic on my system. But for this medicine 1 would not be alive now. Toux W. BRADSHAW, 394 St. Paul St., Montreal, P. Q —The Canadian Pacific line of steamers from Vancouver to Japan have now been running for a little over a year, and aro completely cut- ting out the Pacific mail steamers under the United States flag which sail from San Francisco. Tho rates of freight are mucic the same, yet in the past tea season the Canadian Pacific steamers carried 5,357,944 pounds of Japan tea, against only 735,265 Rounds 'carried by their American rivals, and the' curious circumstance is that more than nine - tenths of this tea is consumed in the United Status. Not in tea only, but in all other goods, is the prefer- ence given to the Canadian line, which now carries a large part of the tr tnscontinentiM traffic, as well as that dcsfiYiO for the United States. The journey to'Vancouver is shorter, but this alone would not not account for this wholesale trans- fer of trade. —When Rev. Father Whalen, of St, Patrick's Church, sono time ago challenged any ono to prove that the Jesuits ever taught that the end justified tho means, he announced that the challenge would re- main open until July 12th. This rendered it unnecessary to accept his challenge at once, and Dr. Hurlbert, who at the time was will- ing to take it up, quietly sot to work to prepare fully for that step. Yesterday Dr. Hurlbert caused to be delivered at Father Whalen's resi• dunce a formal acceptance of the latter's challengs, Father Whalen in his challenge ofl'orod to accept a 617-y board of five arbitrators. Dr Hurlbert has selected' two, ono •of whom, Rev. Prof. Scrimgor, of Mon- treal, has signified his willingness to ,act. When Father Whalen names his two, the four will be able to select a fifth to complete the tribunal.. Dr. Hurlbert has not re- ceived on answer from Father ABRAHAM SMITH Whalen yet. —Out near the Grand Marais, in Sandwich West, Hires a farmer named Ciesar Parent. Some time ago Cesar became a widower, but as time passed by, he, like his noble name -sake, became ambitious—to WEST OF ENGLAND SUI1• take to himself another partner for INGS & TROUSERINGS, life, and he married a young widow SCOTCH TWEED SUITINGS & who resided near the Diver Canard. TItOUSERINGS, He had no sooner brought hie bride home than the neighbors concluded FRENCH AND ENGLISH WOR - to give the couple a ” charivari," STED CLOTHS, and for over a week the place has been the scene of the moat unearth- Made vp in Beit Style and Worh- ly noises. A few nights of such fnanvhiji at Abraham Smith's. performances made Mr. Parent do- -- eidedly weary, and he resolved to Now in stock: one of the cheape- make an attempt to stop the pro- and best stocks of ceedinga. Accordingly, ou Satur- day nigdt last,he loaded his double- barrelled gun with rock salt, and as soon as the music was well under- way " lot 'or go " into the crowd, salting one elan in the shoulder and another in tho neck, It is per- A Full Line of GENTS' FUR haps unnecessary to state that the NISHINGS always in stook, crowd quickly dispersed, and the general verdict is " served them 11 will ray you to call on right." ABRAHAM SMITH GIRLS' BIRTLIUAYS. Au old astrological prediction gives the character of a girl accord- ing to the mouth she is born in, as folio We : If a girl is born iu January, ale will be a prudent housewife, given to melancholy, but good•tuiupefed, and fond of fine clothes. If in February, au affectionate• wife and tender mother, and devot- ed to dress. If in March, frivolous chatterbox, somewhat giving to quarrelling, and a connoisseur in gowns and bon- nets. If in April, inconstant, - not very intelligent, but likely to be good-looking and studious of fash- ion plates. If in May, handsome, amiable, and given to style in dross. If in June, impetuous, will marry early, be frivolous, and like dressy clothes. If iu July, possibly handsome, but with a sulky temper and a penchant fur gay attire. If iu August, amiable and practi- cal, likely to starry rich and to dress strikingly. If in September, discreet, affable, much liked, and a fashionable' d vessel'. If in October, pretty and coquett- ish, and devoted to attractive garni- ture. 1f in November, liberal, kind, of a mild disposition, and an admirer of stylish dress. If iu December, well proportion- ed, fond of novelty, and extrava- gant, and a student of dressy effects. —W. 1-1. 81V ITER, iu EDrroR,s DuAWE rt, 11arper's Magazine for July. THE B1BLE IN '1'11E PUBLIC SCHOOLS: A sensation was caused in Balti- more, U. S., last week, at the regular quarterly meeting of the Ministerial Union by the reading of a bitter address ou "The Bible iu the Public Schools," by the Itev. F. M. Ellis, 1), 1),; pastor of the Eutaw Place Baptist Church. In the course of his remarks he said : "I atm also iu favor of the P,ible in the public schools because Rome is opposed to it [applause]. The recent leuteu lecture of Cardinal Gibbons public- ly advised and urged upon his people to read the Bible. Now I do not say that Cardinal Gibbous was not honest in that that advice, but. if ho did mean what he.said he is not a good Catholic, and if he did not itieau it he was. not honest. The aim of the Catholic church was to slake Routanists; our aim is to make character. Rome controls all'her peo'ple,• and therefore a Romanist can not be a good citzen of this lie - public. If the Popo • had Iris way, our Republic, with its public schools and the open Bible, would soon go. Rome has already declared her in- tention not only of driving the Bible. from the public schools but also of dividing the public school funds to hor.own advantage: Rowe openly antagonizes one of the lead- ing institutions of our country." The union authorized the Pov. Dr. Ellis to publish this paper. THIS YEAR'S M Z it T'D CUT and PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO. FINER' THAN EVER. SEE{ az 13_ -IN BRONZE ON - EACH . PLUG and PACKAGE. LOTHING. Market Square, • GODERICH. AND CLOTHS.. BIJINESS DIRECTORY jettttotry. G. H. COOK{, Licentiate of Dental Surgery, Honor Gra ;uate of the Toronto School of Dentistry. Nitrous Oxide Gas administered for the painless extraction teeth. Offiee-Over Jackson'e Clothing Store, next to Post Office, Clinton. rV' Night Bell answered. 492y ledical. DR REEVE. Office -"Palace" Brick Block, Rattenbury Street, an/Wow:a opposite the Temperance Hall, Huron Street. Coroner for the County of Huron. Ola hours from s a.m. to e p. nt. Clinton, Jan. 14, 1881. 1-y DR. GUNN W. Gunn, M. D. L. R. C. P. Edinburgh L. R. C. S. Edinburgh Licentiate of the Midwifery, Edin. Office, on corner of Ontario and/William Ste., Clinton. 478-y. Gelgltl. MANNING & SCOTT, Barristers, cjrc., ELLIOTT'S BLOCK, - CLINTON. Money to Loan. A. H. MANNING. JAS. SCOTT. T. 1. F. HILLIARD, BARRISTER, SOLICI'T'OR, &e. Office -•Cooper's new block (ground floor), Vietoria Street, Clinton. Will attend Division Courts at Bayacld and 131ytlr V._ PRIVATE Fuses To LEND at lowest rates of interest., 513 Tpuw'AItn NORMAN LEWIS, Barrister, Sol IJ leiter in llig1, Court, Conveyancer, rte,, Goderich and Baytleld, hloney to loan at five and onu•haif per cent on two•third margin. liay• field °'rice open every Thursday from 9.30 to 4.30 in Swartz' hotel blues, opposite Division Court Office 404.131 SEAGER & MORTON, Bard/Acre, &c.,& , God- erich and w'inghanl. C. Seager, Jr„ Goderich J. A. Morton Wingham, 1.1y. DAVISON & JOHNSTON, Law, Chancery,and Conveyancing. Office -West Street, next door to Post Office, Goderich, Ont. 57. C C. HAYS, Solicitor, &c. Office, corner u( I Square and West Scrcet, over Butler's Book Store, Goderleh, Ont. 67• .- Money to lend 41 lowest rates of interest. P1j C tMPION, Bierrister,Attorney, Solieitor in Eh Chancery, Conveyancer, &c. Office oyer Jordan's Drug Store, the rooms formerly oceu pied by Judge Doyle, VE Any amount of money to loan at lowest rates of interest. l-ly, ,tttdttoneering. M. W. BALL, AUCTiONEER for Huron County. Sales ,Lt. tended to In any part of the County. Ad. iress orders to Goosaou P 0, V-17. CHAS. HAMILTON, AUCTIONEER, land, loan and insurance agent Blyth. Sales attended in town and country, in reasonable terms. A list of farms and village lots for sale. Money to loan on real estate, at low rates of interest. Insurance effected on all classes of property. Notes and debts Collected. (loode apprised, and sold on commission. Bank• rupt stocks bought and sold. Blyth, Dec. 16, DM Photographers CLINTON. Life Size Portraits a Specialty. Clinton Marble Works, HURON STREET, CLINTON, W. H. COOPER, Jr., Manufacturer of an dealer in all kinds of Marble & Granite for Cemetery ?la8tJ to gun& MONEY to lend In large or small suns, on good mortgages or pperbwtal eeuurity,at the lowest current rates/. 11. IIALE, Hemp bt Clinton. Clinton, Feb. 25, 1861 1v MONEY. -tORIVATE F^,NDS to lend oa Town and fr,u, 1 property. Apply to C. 1i1DOUT, Office, next News-REOoe u (up -stairs) Al butt -St 359.3,4 gIRililt,g. TilE MGLSOJS flEt'L Incorporated by Act of Parliament, 1856 CAPITAL, - • $2,000,0 09 REST, • $1,000,000 Head Office, - MONTREAL. THOMAS WORKMAN, Preeident.l J. H. 1t. MOLSON, Vice -President. F. WOLFERSTAN THOMAS, General Manager Notes discounted, Collections wade, Drafts issued, Sterling and American ex- change bought and sold at low- est current rates. iNTERS5T.AT 3 PER CENT. ALLOWED /ON DFI'Obiie FARMERS_ Money advanced to farmereon their own note with one or more endorsers. No mortgage re quire.) as security. H. C. BREWER, Manager, February. 1884 CLINTeN Ittagoute. CILlN'1'0N Lodge, No. 84, A. F. & A. M. 1J meets every Friday, on or after the fol moon. Visiting brethren cordially invited. J. YOUNG, w. si. J. CALLANJIER, Ss Clinton, Jan. 14, 1881. 1. —•••--«-••••'— .••••••mom,m dt•l oor. L. O. L. No. 710, - C I.HNtel'(31N7e ' Meets bucur'u hlduday of en I's • month.. Hall, 3.1d flat, Vi:•feria block. Visiting brethren always made welcome. 83! 1')'!), W. 51 D. 11. CAI:BICE, D. M. P. GAN i'ELON, See. Jubilee Preceptory (Beach 'Knights of Ireland) Meets In the Clinton Orange Hail, th, nfi,! Wednesday of every month, at 7.30 o'ciock in the evening. Visiting Sir Knights will ulea„s -'•„CiVC a hearty' welcome. A. M. Tann, worshipful Preceptor (,b„m,E „ANLEY, Deputy i'rec.ptur w',DLiAM SIcUEE, ltegistr •r Royal Black Preceptory elle Black Knights of Ireland, Meets in the Orange Hail, Bly th, the Wednere day after full moon of every month., Royal Black Preceptory til5; Bloch Knights of Ireland; Meets In the Orange hall, Goderich, the 11:1s Monday of every month, visiting KT/ it'-Irt> al,. ,y made welcome. JAMES WELLS, Preceptor, Saltford t' 0 W 11 MURNEY, Registrar, Goderich P 0 (-1LINTON KNIGHTS OF ,..,‘BOR ...) Itooms, third flat, Victoria block. itrx„lr meeting every Thursday, evening at 8 o'clon sharp. Visiting Knights made welcome. FOR FIRST CLASS, HAIRCUTTING AND SNAV NC. Go to A. E. EVANS, FAenloi`..ni,x BARBER, 2 doors east of NLws•REc'Onn of- fice. Special attention given to in PiF14 AND CHILDREN'S Haircutting. PoMPADOuIt HAIM:1E11'ING A Sr ETNA LTV. FOR SALE. 97111E SUBSCRIBER offers for sale fourcligible Work at figures that defy competition -L Building Lots fronting on Albert Street; also two fronting on Rattenbury Street: either rn bloc or in separate lots, to suit purchasers. 1'or further particulars apply tonic undersigned.- - E. Also manufacturer of the Celebrated n4 -Ns -NY1, Clinton. Sar ARTIFICIAL STONE, for Building pur- poses an<l Cemetery Work, which must be seen to be appreciated.—All work iotayt; PROPERTY FOR S� 1?-.•�� warranted to wive satisfaction. otoil�7yJ RENT.—Advertisers will tlnr '• ie News•Record" one of the Is ct ,nedionis in the County of Heron. Adr••rtliie fe McKillop Mutual Insurance Co, '"The o Thousands. Rates ie low any. '11/monition Talks to Thousands. Rates us low a� any. T. NEILANS, HARLOCK GENERAL AGENT.] isolated town and village property, as well as faun buildings and etock, insured. Insnranees effected ag:dnet stock that may be killed by lightning. If you want Insurances drop a card to the above address. 602 V. Goderich !garble Works Having; bought out JosrtPH VANsTolsE, in Goderich, we aro now prepared to fur nisi), on reasonable terms, HEADSTONES AND MONUMENTS. GRANITE A SPECIALTY. We are prepared to sell cheaper titan any other firm in the county. Parties wanting anything in this lino will find it to their interest to reserve their orders for us. ROI3ERTSON & I3ELL. May 17th, 1886. 392-3m EXHAUSTED VITALITY! Tr IIE SCiI,NCE OF Li FE, the great Medic/lit/Work of the agcon Manhood,Ner- yens and Physical Dobitlty, Premature Decline, Errors of Youth, and the untold miseries consequent there- on, 300 pages 8 vo., 125 prescriptions for all diseases Cloth, full gilt, only 01.00, by mail, sealed. Illustrative sample Tree to' all young and middle-aged men, Send now. to. Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the ienthor by -,the National Medical Association. Address P. 0. Box 1805, Boston, Mass, or Dr. W. Il. PARiKER, graduate of Harvard Medical College, 26 year practice in Boston, who may bo consult• ed con8dentlally. Specialty,FDleeaeee of Man Office No 4 Bulfinch Street 493y J. C. STEVEN(, Furniture Dealer, .�r.., THE LEADING UNDERTAKE I;as la FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Opposite Town Hall, - Clinton. Gni SALE BILIS.-The - • Ncws•Record bas surpassed f„'litiafor turning out first 41000 work at low <./ A free advert1semi nt iii The News i „ ra w th every set of b,.:e tali . THE KEY TO HEALTH. Unlocks aII the clog: ed a+a • : •• t • ;.tr. Bowels, Kidneys and Li t- r)urg .off gradually without tveake 1 4. ' :y -r< nt, all the impurities and foul hon :' of the secretions ; at the same time C.3' Acidity of the Stomach, mil:hi. hili. ousness, Dyspepsia, lteadac'i, D;.z. ziness, Heartburn, Cor,si•p.atior, Dryness of the Skin, Droy,w s ut- neap of Vision, Jaundice. Salt ft'iertn, Er'si etas, Scrofula, Fluttering of the Heart, Nervousness and G'eue191 Debility; all these and many (Alter simi- lar Complaints y ield to the happ, "tinence of BURDOCK BLOOD BITT.019.8;-, Sample Bottles 10e ; Regular size $2. For sale by all dealers. .r- T.1111.8VRN at CO., Proprietors, Ter.: n to