The Huron News-Record, 1891-06-03, Page 11•
4BEAT OO ETJTJON!
E CANADIAN •AOR1CUfeTU'N-.
11 T/S Wee WARD RUNT,
•?O*itIvely closes May aeth, =891, iz5 clays
thereafter -being allowed for letters
•to rOaclt Os from distant points.)
The tot>,orriep elegneleent pais will be given free to
1MtPQAa aen!itPg• i» -Lire qran.test number of words made
++S+,OPt of the letter8 oeutPlued in the two words,. "'rhe
tnamh
$1000 in Gold
tra.,r•'..... f ,1,000 Gd Pia4o
' $500 Plane
$300 Organ
Tleket to England and return
...Lady's Gold Watull
.., . Gent's Gold Watch
"13tChina Tea Set
Hunting Case Silver Wath
1111 1; a• Boy', Silver watn,h
s9 0l! $10 each.' 50prize8 of $5 each. 100 prizes of
*Zee :h. 300 rizee of $1 each,
tesldnlr $ Colal ,00 380 Prizes, the value of which will
a0Srekatti SAF 000; This Grand Word -Malting Corupett-
tion is Rlicn t0 everybody, everywhere, eubjeut to the hd-
lOwing 04114 Hosni The words must be constructed from
the twalvorsis, The A toulturiet " and mast be only
-'etr0h at nun( he found In Webster's 'Unabridged Diction-
. Jury, ualliathe hotly of the boob, none of the snppteuteuta
1G) be used; T1u, words must be wraLen In ink on one side
+11 Cha pMper Only, and numbered in rotation, 1, 2, 3 and
HO On tO the end- of tate ;let, for facilitating In deciding
21;, winners The list containing the largest number. of
+words. wilt Cyt awarded fleet prize and s0 on in the order
of anent. ,.Each list as it is received at. the o01ce of the
"4 Canadian Agriculturist" will be numbered and if two
*srneotl0 tis On the largest lint, the first received will be
41Wgrdedtbe.tiraterizo,the next eeoondandseon. There -
'fore he'benrtlt of sending in early will readily be seen.
Rae, let t i uenompauied by $1 for 6 months sub-
jeicriptlon to the Canadian Agriculturist." One per.+on
:pand^'ia one or more Mets accompanying each fret
with ill, IOr which the paper will be sent to any addrese
for six months. The heat family paper in.Cauada. It le
IN no Means a new paper, but has been established up-
'vvurde of .even years, and etuh year grows in the wallas:
tlun Of the aupseriler. It contains no trashy, highly
?Colored fiction, but has interacting stories of n higher
siren by the most Popular methore of the day. It is emi-
t zeirtlYTltg paper for the home circle, and at $2 a year is
Nrte Cheapest and Leat paper in the market. Thin eorpe-
atittsn' Will positively close on the above named date.
2temen1er, you are paying $1 for six months aulscrip-
lon tel one otthe best home papers in Canada, and at
-the same time run a good chance of winning a valuable
' prize.
AOSNTS WANTnn.—The object of the publisher of the
• "Canadian Agriculturist" in giving away these large
S0101Mt5 in cash, ie to extend the ciruulalinn of the paper,
.andanumber, f agents are required in ever) locality, to
arhoni liberal pay will lie udere t Send line c coot stump
Lir particulate at to clubbing int es, eta Address, '1`aa
"04)78Di/ell AUallUL1'Un137, Peterborough, Ontario.
The Huron News -Record
• $1.50 a Yeas— 81.25 in Advance
t{ edaneaday:.9ane 3rd, 1891
MAY KISS YOUR WIFE ON
THE 8TREE1'.
A Bustou judge has just decided
'that it is quite lawful for a man 60
-kiss hie wife veky affectionately on
a public street. The case is pecul-
iar, and has its funny as well as ser•
louts -aspect. According to the testi-
mony in court, it appeared that Mr.
Hall, u respectable young man eu-
,gaged in the bout auti shoe business
in East Reston, was spun by au aust-
ere and sensitively virtuous police -
an canted D'Ltguire, standing in n
way u❑ Ilenovor street tete one
fight, engaged in the delightful oc-
-oalaittion of kissing Mrs, Hall. A
few curiteegeople had gathered OD
the eidew'*'lk at the same moment,
and were enjoying the uuusual spec
taole. Pttrollnan Maguire, in vig-
orous Celto-S ixon, interrupted the
osculatory proceedings and insisted
that the couple should IIIUVI ou.
'They demurred, whereupon the aust-
ere policutu to t.uok thetu up to the
.atation house, ami next morning
`brought them into court. Mr. Halle
vigorously denounced the conduct
of the policernau as tin outrage on
the rights of hon ist, virtuous citiz-
eon persisted The. officer persisted that the
c6uplo smelled of liquor. Mr. Hall
said that ha and his wife had been
making a call that evening on sows
efriends in Concord and that he had
.drunk a little beer, and that on the
way dowa town they had stopped
into Hill's and opened a pint bottle.
bf chanrp'egne. From Hill's they
;proceeded down town to take a car
for-•hotne, when they had a mieund-
•eretanding• with Patroltuan Maguire.
, 'Mrs: Nall corroborated her has -
,band's -testimony. Judge Burke said
;that. he did not think the arrest an
,outrage as the fact of their kissing
-eaoh other ou the street was certain•
:•ly an unuaual action to the officer,
-who did not know the couple's re-
lations to reicher other. He thought
it would have been better for them
to have deferred their marital. affec-
tions until they had reached their
-home, but that it certainly was not
e. criminal net for theta to kies
•o[t the street. In view of
the fact that the arrested parties
were highly respectable, and that a
conviction would injure their char-
acter, he entered their dischHrgeand
'they left the court -roots both happier
.anrI wiser.
--_
A DREADFUL. PRACTICE.
2•
Some 20 years ago, when prose-
'outions--•for "ritualism" were in
-vogue, a high church clergyman
was appointed to a country pariah
near to a low churct town. He was
iungish and unmarried, and so was
ctuate. The local newspaper,
r ever zealous (as local newspapers so
notoriously aro) for evangelical
'truth, soon informed its readers of
he new rector'scrimes. He turned
to the east ; he bowed at the Gloria;
Ion the pulpit he wore a surplice—
tthdt characterietio garment of the
'Scarlet Woman. And there was
one accusation which touched both
the rector and his curate. "Will it
be believed " said the pious print,
"that they openly prantice celibacy,
even in the public streets ?" This
e. eeePharge was moans --to aro.poe, And no
'doubt it did arouse, ' the spinsters
and widows of the neighborhood to
a timely vindication of the rights of
et woman.—Notes and Queries,
+RO WLINCl' GLOOMY GLQBISTS i.
Ai'or Tea Nmea xteeeeta
Will any Atte .#urniah the Taub of the
. scribe,
Who writes 'pessimistic, from, Bata,
was walls
To fill, the Giloba'soolulnif,s Whigs long
have deemed
Each act of our Aegis encamped, JP, lis
hallo?
Can any mall tell me the ne,ipe of the
wretch
Who writes opposition, and treason.
combined?
13y Globe shekels tempted, all honor
to stretch.
As every true Patriot a name is Ma-
ligned. 0 e •
'1'o judge from his 1angUage,-so far as
I've seen,
(If not mistaken, I have heard his
voice too) :
His doubt reaches farther than Party,
1 ween :
What, wisest men cherish he says is
not true.
A man who ignores the Great Foun-
tain of Truth,
And -labors the basis of law to de,
grade,
Is 'Traitor to Country, to Manhood
and Youth ;
Would barter his soul in the line of
"Free Trade."
With personal venom, he strikes at
"the Chief,
Forgets Legislation in malice and
hate ;
In calm dissertation he has no be-
lief,
The poison of Asps forms his theme in
debate.
Through him and like acribblers,the
Globe labors hard,
To cast the fair dome of our country
in shale;
A land where the toiler meets ample
reward,
And the blessings of Freedom are
fully displayed. ,
We love the broad pennon, we honor
our Queen :
The "Mace', and the Shamrock, the
. Thistle and Rose:
And also the "Sun burst", on Emer-
ald Grein,
And the real honest beaver the Maple
Leaf shows.
Why compare our Dominion with
theta at the south?
Whose debt they are lessening, and
soon may "retire".
Its maw, most capacious, and dental,
ed mouth,
Give naught in return for the gold
they require.
'Tis the price of their blood : let them
boast, if they will;
1\'e envy not now their incarnadined
fame,
We acknowledge their push, and me-
chanical skill,
Yet would not be partners,and share
in their name.
Our own Debt, whate'er its propor-
tions may be,
Is eclipsed by improvements (so
wisely applied +,
Each dollar invested has overgrown
- three;
Cunadians now look on their country
with pride.
Ever dumb be the tonguo,and enerv-
ate the arm,
That would .throw a gloom over pros•
pects •so fair !
Then Silence, the Globe! with your
engines of harm!
Let Ca rtv-righ le and Cameron,and Far-
rar beware I
J. J. C.
Clinton, May 38th, 1891.
FOOLED BY HER WITCH,
CRAFT.
"Ne010101n;y, -was the odd and
serious charge againat one of the de,
fendento at the Hamilton police
court one morning last week. Dur•
ing the magistrate's long experience
a similar case has never Leen tried
before him. On the (light of May
19, when all was still and dark, two
woolen visited 374 Hughson street
north, a 'small frame house, occupied
by Mrs. Louisa 11uCornets, a color,
ed worn tu, who is better known as
Mrs. A'liey. Baying learned of
her high reputation as a fortune -tel,
ler they wanted her to tell their for-
tunes aid to aid them in discovering
tale biding place of a watch stolen
from a Mrs. Harold. Of course Mrs.
McCorwas knew all about it after
she Inysterionsly read the cards.
She took the precaution to receive
her fee, 50 cents, in advance. After
thinking over the- matter and not
finding the watch the women decid-
ed that there was nothing in the for-
tune telling business, and the prac-
tice should be discouraged. So the
charge was accordingly laid. The
indictment reach?:
"That she rlid unlawfully pretend
from her akill and knowledge in cer-
tain o,:cult or crafty science to ilia*
cover where certain geode and
chattlee supposed to have been
stolen or lost alight be found,
to wit, the watch of one Mrs.
John Harold, and received therefor
the sum of 50 cents,agaiest the form
and statute in such cases made and
provided."
In the court room the complain,
ants were seated beside their council,
J. W. Nesbitt,, Q. C. Mrs. McCom-
as was not prey!-nt. She was Huh
peened as a witness at the division
court. Constable Gibbs was dis-
patched to the court house after her,
but she dirt not reach the police
court and the case was adjourned
until Tuesday. A. C. Beasley ap-
peared for the dcfenrlant.
Lawyer Nesbit did not like the
free and easy way the defendant was
allowed to go, "This is a serious
charge," said he. "It is an old state
ute. The defendant is liable to a
year's imprisonment, and to be plac-
1ng the pillory every quarter. r
would auggeit that she furnish bail,
because she might skip out."
The magistrate fixed the bail at
$200 an two litai•etiis in 000 each.
k>; oanatable was ,sent td, the court-
llouse to keep his: eye ola;lAra. no
Cowan until she .furnish bail
* The case will . he a very interest'
luta one;
Mrs. John Harold, and, gigs,;fane
Bloomer are the women wim eon.
Suited- the occultist, ,.Mre,1VloOgwae
told theta that .the watch aatolen was
taken by two small boys and ,that
tare+ meta with .a dark face bad it,
CROSSES. `
It is often stated that a certain
horse. or mere has a number of
crosses of some particular blood
which influences the breeder in
selecting a stallion or blare, than be
may obtain a certain combination of
blood. It is not the number of
crosses of au -y particular blood
which indicates the "proportion of
that blood, bet a given number of
crosses compared with all the crosses
constituting the whole quantity of
that particular blood in the burse.
Now, to find the oroeaes of any
particular blood in any horse, the
annexed table will show the atnount
of any particular blood :
The first cross i3
The second crone is
The third groae is
Tao forth cross is 1 16
The fifth cross is 1-32
•The sixth gross ib 1.6.4
The seventh cross is 1-128
The eighth gross if 1 256
The ninth erose is 1-512
Tne tenth cross is 1.1024
Suppose in tracing the pedigree
of a horse you find any given cross
in the third degree of descent, it is
manifest that that the horse has one-
eighth of that particular cross. If
in the fifth cross, he has one-thirty-
secondth of that blood, and if in
tee tenth cross, he has ouly 1-1024
of that blood. It is too indefinite
88 a rule, to stay a horse has so many
crosses of any given blood, but with
this table you can say definitely how
mauy parts ho has of eny given
blood.—American Trotter.
A PECULIAR MARRIAGE
C USTO M .
Scotland is noted for the siulpli°
city of its marriage ceremony ; but,
however simple, people always recon
nize that by its forum husband and
wife are firmly boned together for
life. 'There was once prevalent in
Scotland, however, a marital tie of a
cotlsldel•ably Beeler description—ogle
which we are afraid would not un-
iversally commend itself nowadays,
though it might be of use to those
unhappy iudivicluals of both sexes
who are constrainers to invite the as-
sistance of the Divorce Court in
loosing their bonds. By this cue
tom the two persons were trot unit-
• I for life, het only for a twelve-
month. This peculiar usage pre,
veiled chiefly in the remote dir-trict
of Eskdalewuir, where there was
little coromumeation with other
places. A, fair was held every
year at a spot at the foot of the par-
ish, close to the junction. of the
Black and White Esks, at which it
was the custom for unmarried per-
sons of both aeXee t0 choose a conn,
panion according to their liking till
the same time next year. This was
called handfaating, or lrand•in-fiat.
If both were pleased with each other
by the time the next fair came round
they continued together for life ; if
not they separated, and were free to
make another choice, as at first.
The children born under this en-
gagement were reckoned lawful
children though the parents did aft
terwards resile. It is not known
when this custom eomrnenced, but it
seems to have continued for a long
period. In the end of last centnry
an old man was living near Lang,
holm who was son to a couple mar-
ried in that fashion. This primi-
tive kind of union was entered into
on occasion by the higher classes,for
it is related in some Scottish his-
tories that Robert II. was thus wed-
ded to Elizabeth More.
SAY, MISTER
Is it possible you are suffering from Ca-
tarrh, and have not used Dr. Sage's Ca-
tarrh Remedy ? All the terrible conse-
quences of Catarrh in the head may be
averted if you'll but make the effort !
Yon know, too well, its distressing sym
tome ! You possibly know, it neglected,
it invariably goes from bad to worse,an•l
is likely to run into consumption and
end in the grave ! bore is a way of es-
cape : Its makers are willing to take all
the risk, and make a standing offer of
3500 for an i❑ourable oaee of this loath-
some and dangerous disease. You can
get $300, or better—a Dura.
—A little daughter of Mr. Henry
Leng 5th line, Erin, was severely irjllred
the o'her day. She hal gone into the
barn yard, acoompanied by the dog,
when a ewe, who had two lambs, became
enraged at the presence of the dog and
alarmed the safety of her offspring. She
rl.ade a run at the dog with the intens-
ion of butting it. The dog ran behind
the girl for proteotion, and the sheep
struck the child, breaking her arm in
two places.
—A ogw on the track caused the de-
railment of a freight train at Churoh'
rills near Streetville Junction on the C-
P. R. Two fatalities resulted, a farmer
named James Ferguson and the engineer
of the train, Robert Johnson, ,being kill-
ed on the wt. Two men ware also in -
...tired ..were brought on, to, . Toronto
and. taken to the General Hospital They
are both youeg men, one, Wm iLittle,
being 21 years of age and his companion
W. G. White, 25. The former lives
at Chatsworth, county of Grey.
NOT T1zs KIND 0,r A.
N1
r. Yr'A.R. , l
rfgdffe 1Tn4er,wood ' cleared' .bias
throat end plaid : "And General,
don't you. remeatber that lane-
Jl't'azier's lane, on the Laughing cis,
areek'x—where there is an apple•: tree
)11 every tepee earner un both .sides.
Qf the lane ulear.up to the top of the
hillt and the limbs of the trope have
got tangled sup together in a solid
wase and you can't saethe sun
above ,you as you drive along ?
140h-, yes,(' said the general. "I
remember ;it perfectly."
.``,And ane fall, when you, and
Tripes, and ChaQuain, and Sllackle,
ford, and Hands, and Hackett, and -
John Wood, and Hooper, and ever
so many more of us struck that land,
and there were twelve buggies all in
a row going- to court. And you and
I were in the hinlluostr buggy end
that lane was ankle deep in apples,
and the horses could hardly get
along, and I looked -back and the
horses and wheelahad mashed apples
until there was a stream of cider,
running pown tie! hill that was big
enough to.turna will. You remote
her that general T'
"Perfectly --perfectly," said the
general ; but he was weakening a
little.
"Ansi old man Frazier told me,"
said the judge, "that one year he
turned the -eider into vats in his lite
tle tanyarel, and made very tine lea,
they. Cider makes very fine tau -
nit'', you know, general. My father
wore a pair of calfekiti shoes for
seven years that were tanned with
cider, aril you could turn them
wrong aide out as easy as Lelia rub -
bee."
AS YOU LIKE IT.
In love the deceit generally out
strips the distrust.—l.ochefoucauld.
A. difference of taste in jokes is a
great strain on the affections.—
George Eliot.
When one dose of religion has
lasted s man 47 years it is well to
keep an eye ou him in business
matter's.
"1--1e can trace his ancestry back
to the flood." "O, pshaw. That's
nothing. Everybody was in the
swim."
Periott—Hyw wany great titles
end in "or"—emperor, legislator,
editor Wiggins (who lives in
a flat)—Yes, and janitor.
Watts—Wonder why they call a
locomotive "she ?"• Potts—Maybe
it is ou account of the horrible
noise it makes when it tries to
whistle.
Pastor—I'ln exceedingly gratified
at the increased attendance of men -
et our prayer meetings this week.
His Wtfe—It's Ihouse.cleauing time.
"Which was the aggressor ?" ask-
ed the court of the witness of a
fight. ?ants was a nigger, but I
don't kSnow whether the other was
a gressor or not."
Things One Would Rather, etc.
—Algernon (who is much given
to talkiephrases)—Angelina,
g in I
love you with a fervor—a fervor—
worthy of a Netter cause !
Little Encouragement.—Softas—
Do you think Mises R. would marry
me if I should ask herI Vau
Riper—Nell, she'looks like a smart
sort of a girl—still she might.
Blinkers—Hello, Winkera 1 I
hearyouma t w w
rrte 1 a omen with
an
independent fortune. Winkers
(sadly)—N—o; I married a fortune
with an independent women.
Moved in on Saturday.—Superin-
tendent--And who is your neigh-
bor? Scholar—I don't know yet.
We haven't had to borrow anything
since the folks moved in next door.
Senator Ingalls was digging on
hislace last week when
p e somebody
passing helloed, "What are you
digging, Senator 1" "Oh, unfitting
a hole," he answered, as he lifted a
spadeful of soil.
Why Her Husband was Not.—
De Broker—Your wife is very relig-
iolts, is she not? De Banker—I
should say she was. Not a month
goes by that I don't have to pay out
big money for Sunday dresses and
things.
Wife—Do you suppose the Creat-
or made woman last on the principle
that the best comes last ? Husband
—Of course not. He did it because
be didn't want everything talked
about and pulled to pieces and made
over.
"It's strange how time reverses
brings, isn't it?" "Yes, I suppose
so." "Ming Kiddling, who}n we
,jlrat passed, was three or four years
older than Inc when we went to
school together. Now I find 1 am
three or four years older than she
18."
A FIGHT BETWEEN GIANTS.
Both desperate,both deter mined ! The
King of Medicines in contest with the
King of Maladies I Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical discovery against "Consump-
tion 1" It ig not^'the struggle of a day,
but the first blows are the fatal blows !
In its early stages, Consumption (which
is Lung -scrofula) ,will yield to thin great
-Reined tt,d. Thin.11ae.been proyeteh@.ypnda
a doubt by innumerable sueoessee ! Aot•
ing directly upon the hlhod, its scope in-
cludes all scrofulous affootions,Liver and
Lung diseases. As a blood -purifier and
i vitalizer, its stands unequaled.
,CU.. U NT2'QJIQS.
Ilamilton Tirrtea;(xri,t We baro,
Piot0 intwt pat-leuce with public triet.
who wetit tahe driven instead of sto
frig sonic Independent thinking' for
themselves. If Mr... Mowat had de,
voted the time and labor t to the study
and principles of taxation which he
applied to .tile study ef,the evidences
of Christianity, he might have done
a service to hie native, province and
indirectly to the civilized world, for
which itis name would he held in
grateful remembrance for gelrer-
etiols. There were plenty of lireaeh-
ers as 'well gnalitied as Mr. Mowat
to tabulate the evidences of Christ,
Sanity.
A PARADOXICAL PRELATE.
Dr. Magee, the late Archbishop
c York, was always the most l:ncou
ventional of weu and bishops. He it
was who remarked, in allusion to a
certain Sunday Closing Act, taut be
would "rater see England free than
sober," He tt was again who more
recently stood up for betting and
gambling, on the ground that neith
er wee per se a sin. He has defeutl-
ed with aingtllar skill the the..es that
it is itot uoesible for tbeState to carry
out, in all its relations liberally, all
the precepts of Ulu'ist, an a State
which attempted this could not exist
fur a week ; and if it were possible
to do a is the result would be a per
fectly intolerable tyranny. A wore
paradoxical prelate than the Tate
Archbishop of York could seurcelt
he imagined.
PCT TU1S ANI) THAT TOG E'rllER.
Rev. Sans Small delivered his se-
cond lecture in the Dun
das Street, London. Methodist
Church last Thursday night. There
was a large audience, and Mrs.
Thoruley, President t,f the \V. C T
1J., presided and introduced the
speaker ie a happy "fanner. "Put
This and That 'Together" was the
title of tate lecture, and Mr. Stnal1
took a very tlespondeut view of any
thing short of total prohibition. He
said moral suasion a as good for the
drinker, mental suasion for the
thinker, legal suasion for the se1h'r,
and Penitentiary suasion for the
statute breaker, and the maxim. was
received with applause. 11 God
had intended matt to have alcoholic
drinks they would have been reedy
for Lain ihere when be came, but the
apeaker was informed by most hon.
orable Germans themselves that God
bad created the Germans before they
knew anything about waking beer.
TEE GRIT ELECTION PUNA.
The petition againat the return of
Sir Richard Cartwright is an 0008
ually formidable document and sets
forth allegations that Sir Richard
aided and abetted various corrupt
practices in the Reform interest.
One of the accusations is that Sir
Richard,1,Ir. Laurier and others col-
lected large suets of stoney in Can,
ada and :he United States to corrupt
the electors of several Ontario con-
stituencies, and that tri fund was
formed for corrupt practices, and
was expended, in buying up the a lec-
tors in North Perth, Wellund,North
and South Victoria, Peel, East El-
gin and North Bruce. The char,
gee also set forth that large sums
of money were expended by James
GI leve, Joseph Featherstone, W.
M. German and John H. Barron in
the Reform interest,this money hav•
ing been obtained from theaformen
tioned fund. Sir Richard and his
agents are oleo accused of treating,
using undue influence; of intimida-
tion, promising to secure offices,
promising to procure employment,
loaning or promising to loan money,
buying up votes, and also entering
into conjunction with Mr. Laurier
and the influential officials of the
Grand Trunk to coerceand intimidate
the employees of that line to vote in
the Reform interest, or refrain from
voting at all.
INTERESTING NEWS NOTES.
—The infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Buchanan, of Winnipeg, died
recently under very sad and dist
treseing circumstances. The little
fellow was prattling about the horse
in the morning, when he stumbled
backwards and fell into a basin of
hot water which was standing ou
the floor. Though rescued in au
instant, and medical aid summoned
at.once, it was seen that there was
little hope for his recovery, and in
the evening he succumbed.
—The bibulous people of Boston
are rejoiciug over the passage of the
law that will allow them to take
standing drinks at the bar,instoad of
compelling thein to sit dawn at
tables and drink leisurely. The
Boston Herald remarks that the
passage of the law will throw out of
work some 3,000 young men who
were employed in serving the tables
of those who enter saloons for
drieks. The law compelling a man
to sit down and drink his glass of
beer, whether he wishes to do so or
note,was enacted under the intpros-
eion that IC' ''fnd`uae in ore
temperate habits on the part of
drinkers. .Tho effect has really been
a groat increase of drinkers.
Some
Critiicfren
GrotOng
Toa _Vast
become listless, fretful, without enter+
gy,n
thin and weak. Fortify and build
uUNy th •u3 -e
AI
s.... o f
ULSION
OF PURE COD LIVER OIL AND
HYPOPHOSPHITES
Of Lime and Soda.
Palatable as Milk. AS A PREVENTIVE OE
CUBE OF COUWIB 08 COLDS, IN 80TH
.THE OLD AND YOUNG, IT 18 UNEQUALLED.
Genuine made by Scott & Bowne, Belleville.
Salmon Wrapper: at all Druggists, 60o, and
61.00.
-_ fx
;',1:-;•., ..�
1,94
t_
Cares Duras, tuts, Plirs to tlheft vvo1'81
forst, Swellings, y al ;wino, Iatfl anunit
tiuu, LOCOS l 1111cd, t!,a l.prd Hands and
all Suet, lYiscuses.
Hirst PAIN EXTERM:[NATOR
880—
Lavabo ,o, S ei nt lea, !then rn at,isrn, Neu-
ralgia 'Toni nn elle, Pales In
every fo,•an.
By all dealers, wholesale by F, F. Dai) & Co
HUMPHREYS'
VETERINARY SPECIFICS
For Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs,
AND POULTRY.
590 Page Book on Treatment of Animate
and Chart Sent Proc.
minus f hovers,Congestions,Innammntfon
A. A.1 Spinal Mon ingitis, Milk Fever.
B.B.--Strains, Lameness, Rheumatism.
C.C..-Distemper, Nasal Discharges.
D.D.--Bots or Grubs, Worms.
E.E.--Coughs, heaves, Pneumonia.
P.F.--Colic or Gripes, Bellyache.
G.G.--Miscarriage, hemorrhages.
Uses --Urinary and Kidney Diseases.
I.I.--Eruptive Diseases, Mange.
J.K.--Diseases of Digestion, Paralysis.
Single Bottle (over 50 doses), - - .00
Stable Case, with Speclflcs, Manual,
Veterinary Ctn'0 011 and biedlcator, 57,00
Jar Veterinary Cure Oil, - - 1.00
Sold by Dragglata, or nent prepaid anywhere and 1n nay
quantity on receipt of pried. ,
11031Plf KEYS' MED. CO., 111 31118 William St., New York.
nvazrzEnEzs'
HOMEOPATHIC
SPECIFiC No.
�
In nes 30 years. The only successful remedy for
Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness,
and Prostration, from over -work or other causes.
$1 per vial. or 5 vials and large vial powder, for t$5.
8o1d by Druggists, or aeut poetpel5 un recelpt or price
anMP11RIIY8' 115». CO., 111 & 113 althorn St., NeW We.
WELLS c Ith('11.-i111)tcllril Co. Agents
MIINTtt 61A 11,
Fib k:
1 .O�
Regulates the Stomach,.
Liver and Bowels, unlocks
the Sec retions,Pu rifiesthe
Blood and removes .aft im-
purities from a Pi'mple to
theworst Scrofulo,tls=Sore.
D`
... .
;' CURES .`
DYSPEPSIA. BILIOUSNESS.
CONSTIPATION, HEADACHE
SALT RHEUM. SCROFULA.
HEART BURN. SOUR STOMACH
DIZZINESS. DROPSY.
RHEUMATI SM. SKIN DISEASES
•
• .� ...•
QRS.
•e. Cnatain thelro'trn
Y1r,. .^ ,. :o, 0111o, unrl etfcctual
or `aory,u in Cidldten or Adult!
-1,Y Tula' --
ewe -Prod
4.44,44”44.444,a4.444.14........abi/aa..