Loading...
The Brussels Post, 1895-2-22, Page 7EB D'AR ' 22 895 TUE THEWEBK'S NEWS pANApA, Regina, Exhibition opens July 29; Soap ({tease hoe been platted On the free list. Mordon•loet two hotels and a number of stores by are, Notice is gazetted of the incorporation of the Bank of 'Winnipeg.. Ottawa City Oouncil has refused to reduce the cumber ot licenses, Mr. Adana McGowan, a highly respected resident of Tweed Village, is dead. Mr. Richard Jary, a well-known citizen of Melrose, Out„ dropped dead on Tues, day. The date of the general eleotioi .. will probably be between the. 2nd and Oth April. The Lake Erie & Detroit River Railroad Station at Merlin was burned, with two freight oars. The report that ex•Detective Fahey ie to be released from penitentiary is without foundation. The Lower Loi .•ontian Railway bas been sold to the Que:iec & Lake Sb, John Rail. way Company. Mrs. James Thompson, of Camille, was fatally hurt by a bullet from a rifle in the hands of the hired man.. Mr. Thomas Gordon, of Strathroy, drank a liniment in mistake for oough mixture on Saturday and died on Sunday. The voters' lists are pouring in upon the Clerk of the Crown•in•Chanoery from all parts of the Dominion at present. The papal brief appointing Father Lan• ggevin to the Archbishopric of St. Bonifaoe, Man., arrived in Winnipeg on Friday. The yearlyoontraot for supplying opal to the Grand Trunk has boon awarded to Shipman of Detroit and the Erie R, R. Co. It is understood that Mr. Theodore Davie the Premier of British Columbia, will peon be appointed Chief Justice of thatprovince. The Toronto Granites won the Governor- GeneraPe prize for 1894 by defeating Dun- dee 3 shots an a curling match at Galt on Friday. Surgeon -Major Perry of the Madras Presidency and Capt. T. A. Houghton of the First Bombay. Grenadiers are in Ottawa. Four oonviote attempted to escape from the Kingston Penitentiary on Monday. They were naught before their plans were matured. PremierGreenway,ay ,. of Manitoba i suf- fering from a severe attack of erysipelas in the head. The doctors do not apprehend serious results. The Dominion Lfue S.S. Labrador, from Liverpool, arrived at Halifax at 4 o'clock Friday afternoon, making quickest as. sage ever made to that port. Mr, L. 0. David, the Montreal City Clerk, who has been president of the tit. Jean Baptiste Society for many years, is expected shortly to retire. Rev, Robert Johnston of Lindsay will receive a call to the vacancy in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, London, caused by the death of Rev. J. A. Murray. The Canadian Pacific Railway Company on Monday took back to work in the Vion- treall000motiveshops anumber of employee who had been laid off owing to the depres- sion in business. klugland, propose to ereeb a statue to John Walker, whom they olalin to be the inventor of Moiler matahae,,, Ton mon, all the drew of the British brig Nelson Bice, were drowned on Saturday by, the wrecking of the voosot no the Tooke oft Douglas, Isle of Man, The Doke of York has boon elected pre- sident of the Benevolent Soolety of St. Patrick, which holds its one hundred and twelfth anuiveraary this year, It is said that the Prince of Wales will visit Rome in the spring, with a view to arranging a marriage between the Princess Maud and the Prince of Naples. Tho fishing smack Verena has landed at Lowestoft the body of. p'rederiok Ernst, of Magdebur , Prussia, one of the drowned otgthe Elba and dome mail bags. passenger,: ft Mr, W, R, Cramer, M. P„ hos returned. to London from Washington. He eaye that the proposed arbitration treatywas very favorably entertained by President. Cleveland. The effeota of the cold weather and bliz rat., in (4r at Britain have been severely felt. Man eathe are reported in the midlands, and live dtook and game of all kinds have perished in numbers. The Princess of Wales arrived in London on Thursday from Rueaia, where she has been iu oonstant attendance upon her sister, the widow of the Czar of Russia. She was given a very hearty welcome. The mouth of the River Mersey is blook- ed by a mass of ice halt a mile long and several hundred yards wide, The ice has blooked access to the landing stage and compelled the stoppage of the terries. The Queen is considering the creation of a literary order of three grades, the first to oonsiot of 24 members, the seoond of 100 members, and the third of 250. All the. members of the girder are to be titled and pensioned. Railways in Scotland are atilt blocked with snow. Snowploughs, which have been sent out to clear the linos, have themselves been imbedded in snowbanks, and the men operating them have suffered eeverely from the intense cold. Sir William Hareourthae announced thab the Govorument would ii rnediately appoint a committee to inquire into the condition of the unemployed and seek means tomitigate their situation. The inquiry, he said,would extend to the provinces. An amendment by Mr. Jetrreye calling upon the Government to take some action regarding the prevailing industrial distress was voted down in the British House of Commons by twelve votes, the Government majority without the Parnellitee. In the House of Commons on Friday evening, Jeffery's Mr.. Jeffer 's amendment cen- suring the Goverment for ignoring the claims of the agrioultural classes, the Ministerial majority was reduced to two. The Parnellites voted against the Govern- ment. Capt. Gordon, of the Cynthia, which ran into the Elbe, says that after the collision the big steamer lay to for some time, and then proceeded in rho direction of London. Capt. Gordon nays, notwithstanding the disabled condition of the Crathie, he re. mained in the vioinity until daybreak. In the House of Commons on Thursday, Sir William Harcourt, in reply to Mr. John H. Johnston, as to whether ib was the intention of the Govorument to make pro- vision for Lady Thompson, said that he had reason to believe that the people of Canada would make provision for the family of the late Canadian. Premier. Major Harrison, for twelve years an officer of the Royal Grenadiers, Canadian militia, and well and popularly known in the service, died at his residence at Toronto on Thursday morning.. At a funeral in Quebec the hearse got stunk in the snow and could not be moved. The horses were unhitched and the hearse with the body therein left etauding in the road until next morning. There is every indication that sn ice bridge will be soon formed at Niagara Falls. Ice is coming over the falls in great mum - titres, and it may become stationary at any moment in the narrow gorge, It is oxpeoted that Mr. Samuel Wilmot, Dominion Superintendent of Fish Culture, and Mr. Samuel Pierre Bausel, chief clerk of the Department of Marine and Fisheries, will be shortly superannuated. 3,1r. Samuel Lenore, of Ruaeell County, became impaled while chopping in the woods. He lifted himself by a branch above his head, but after walking home in dreadful agony died from hie injuries. Mr. F. E. Kilvert, collector of customs at Hamilton, bus gone to Ottawa to tato the place of Mr. T. T. Watters, who was arrested the other day on charges of mis appropriating money belonging to the Government. J. E. W. Macfarlane, manager of the British Columbia Iron Werke Society, Vancouver, B. C., was arrested on Thurs- day on the oharg.e of attempting to bribe Ald. McCraney in order to ammo the oontraot for the oity'e eleotrio light plant With regard to the proposed Atlantic and Lake Superior railway, Mr. Foster, Minister of Finance, stated the other day that the Government had simply agreed to give the company three per Dent. on such moneys as they might deposit for the purpose of paying interest on their boade. The Rev. Wm. Booth, General of the Salvation Army, waitedupon Sir MacKenzie Bowen on Thursday, at Toronto, and asked for the support of the Government for the projected Salvation Army colony in the Territories. The Prouder said that the matured scheme would receive careful consideration when submitted. Mr. J. W. Tyrrell, C.E. of Hamilton, Ont., has been asked to take charge of au expedition to explore Ellosmereland, and to look for the two Swedish explorers, Bjor- ling and I olletenius, who are ouppoaod to be lost in that region. The expedition is being organized by an Amerioan society, and is to leave is the spring. (MEAT BRITAIN. Ex•Empress Frederick ie at Osborne. The traffic. of small vessels is greatly endangered by heavy ice packs at the mouth Of the Thames. H. M. S.. Rambler will be added, to the North American ,equadron this year. She is third-class gunboat. Prof. Reginald Stuart Toole, lato.leosoper of ooihs in the British ,Museum, 10 dead. He was sixty-throo years of age. The cold weather oontinnes in England and in some pieces the thermometer registered twelve below zero on Satur- day. The fourth session of the thirteenth Parliament of Great Britain of the present reign was opened on Wednesday by the Queen's speech, Munielpalauthoritles ofStook toh.ou•Tees jumped from the oar leaving the oceupante to their fate, Tho ear piuuged down the steep grade, jumped the track, and struck against the end of the bridge which apane Wood'e Run 150 feet below. Three of the passengers were badly injured, The Brooklyn Grand Jury handed in a baboh of indictments against men who out the trolley wires, obetru(ted tracks, threw bricks and committed other acts to inter- fere with the running of ears. The charge againeb them is malicious iotorforenee with the running of oars. This 10 felony. Miss May McDonald, eighteen yearn old, the leader of a mob on Fifth avenue, was aloe indloted, , Arrangements have been made by Pi'esi, dentOleveland for the issue of a 4 per cent, " ooln "bond, to run 30 years, ata premium which would make the actual interest 33.4 per cent., but coupled with the ocndibion that if a 3 per gent, gold bond were author. Mod by Congress within ten days they would be substituted for the 4 per cent. bonds, thus saving 5539,158 in annual in - tercet, and saving 315,174,770 in interest for the foil term of 30 years, Commercial reports from the United States are only negatively satisfactory. They do not report trade as unproved, but say there aro "some pointe of encourage- ment." Prices of farm' produce are no better all round, though there have been, okcourse, fluotuations, Iron and steal have declined a little ; some grades of cotton goods are lower. In woollens there has been more doing, but prices. are weak. Sales ot foreign wools in the States are not noticeably larger, with the duty off, than they were for the corresponding week last year, Receipts of corn have been limited, and values are a shade higher. GENERAL, Gen.Anniballe Ferrero has been appoint- ed ppointed ItalianAmbaesador to London in evocee• Bion to Count di Vergano. By an explosion at the St. Eugiene col• liery in France on Tuesday, between 20 and 30 lives were lost, and a number of miners injured. Madame Joniaux, the Belgian lady con- demned to death for poisoning her relatives to obtain lite insurance, has appealed from the sentence. The remains of Gen. Boulanger, who committed suicide on the grave of his mis- tress in Brussels in 1891 are to be taken to Paris for reinterment. - The amendment which Mr. Joseph Chamberlain will make to the address in reply to the speech from the throne has been approved by the Unionist leaders. It will depreciate the dieouesion of measures which the Government admits have no prospect of becoming law while proposals involving great constitutional changes have been announced, on which the judgment ot Parliament ought to be taken without de• lay. uN1TED STATES. Fifty per cent. of the orange crop in Florida has been killed by the reoent cold. Secretary Carlisle expects that the Unit- ed States this year will have a surplus of twenty-two million dollars, instead of a deficit. The Etruria, which arrived at Queens- town on Saturday, reports that she saw no sign of the overdue French line steamer La Gaoeogne. Orange trees in Florida aro probably destroyed, also all vegetable crape and half a million quarte of strawberries just beginning to ripen, Mayor Sohieren of Brooklyn has vetoed the resolution of the Board of Aldermen providing for a revocation of the charters of trolley oompauiea. Nine mining proapeotors in the Rainy River district have been frozen to death, with the exception of James Cummings. The thermometer marked 42 below zero. The man arrested in Cleveland a few weeks ago, charged with murder, and giv. ing the name of Johnson, has been identi- fied as an ex -policeman at Windsor named Maike. PRACTICAL EARNING. Sugoessful Dalrymea•. "When praotioable, milking should be done by the Same pigeon, and with regular- ity es to time. Ho only that) bath (lean hands should be allowed to milk a cow," says Geo, Abbott, "I eay he, beoause I think the anon of the farm should do the Milking, at least during the winter months. I ht.ve exercised. the right of changing my mind on this eubjeet eines I loft the farm It is no more difficult to milk with dry heads than with them wet. It ie certainly more cleanly, and leaves the milk in a muola more desirable Condition for table use or manufacture. Pure stable atmos- phere is indispensable to prevent oontamin ation from that source. Immediate strain ing will remove impurities which other- wise might bo dissolved to the permanent injury of the whole product. "After the straining is attended to, the milt should be aerated. Too often it is poured into one large can' and left there just as the cows have given it. That nogleotimplies three things that are very injurious to its quality for cheese making. (1). The peculiar odor which the cow im- parts to the milk will be left in it until it becomes fixed in the flavor. (2). The germs of feranentatiou that come in the milk and from the air have the best condition for growth and action when the milk to left undisturbed. (3). Then themilk will be- come almost unfit for thorough coagula- tion by rennet. Hence itis needful and ad. vantageous to aerate it for three reasons. First, because by pouring, etirring,dipping or by trickling it over an exposed surface there is eliminated from the milk by evaporation any objectionable volatile ele- ment that may be 10 it. Seooudly,beoause, as has already been stated, the milk eon-. tains germs of fermentation. Oneof these are galled vibriones. A strange peculiarity about these microbes is that they become active only in theabsence of free oxygen. When Warm new milk is left undisturbed oarbonio gas is generated, rind that furnishes the best condition for the commencement of action by these almost invisible areat- ures. After they get started they can keep up their work of decomposition even in the presence of oxygen. It is impossible to so coagulate such milk as to yield a fine quality of keeping cheese. Coagulation by rennet of milk that is ripe can never be perfect unless it. has been thoroughly aerated immediately after it is taken from 1 the cow. Neglect of aeration will increase the quantity of milk required to make a pound of cheese. Thirdly, because the air• lag seems to give vigor to the germs of fermentation that bring about an acid con- dition of the milk without producing the aoid. So mughis this so that it has been found impracticable to make strictly tim- eless t olaae cheddar obsess from milk that has not been aerated." Two American citizens at Hawaii are under sentence of death for oomplioityin the recent rebellion. The Administration is corresponding on the aubjeot. New Zealand has set apart two islands forthe preservation of its remarkable wild birds and other animals. All hunting and trapping are forbidden thereon. Sheikh El Bakri, the chief among living. descendants of the prophet Mohammed and head of the religious oommunitiea in Egypt, has resigned all his public offices. The notorious bandit Areeki and nine of his followers have been condemned, at 1 iera to death. Five other members of the band have been sentenced' to terms of penal servitude. During the trial" of Anarchists at Liege it was shown that the notorious "Baron Sternberg" was a Russian Nihilist agent paid to organize and inoite dynamite out- rages in various European capitals. An attack of Anglophobia has broken out in the Berlin press, and the wreck of the Elbe by the British steamer Crathie is the text upon which they are hanging many sermons on British brutality and selfishness. BEATEN AND ROBBED. A Man Who Sold a hoose and Lot Met With n Bough Baudling. A despatch from Niagara Falls, Ont., says :— Ned Flanders, a man about 40 years of age, was terribly beaten,andclaims to have been robbed of 5240 while walking along Pierce avenue, on the American side of the river early Saturday morning. Flanders, it is said, had got hold of the money from the sale of a house and lot and had been drinking heavily through the day He had visited some disreputable houses the evening before and been followed, and had just left Zieger'e saloon, on Pierce avenue, when he was pounced upon by three men and hit on the head several times, the result of which left several ugly scalp wounds. Flanders managed to make his way to Dr. Talbot's who dressed his wounds, had the man sent to the Ensergenoy hospital and notified the polios, who arrest- ed three well-known characters, named " Reddy" Winslow, Jim McGrath and George Wiehl, on suapioion. The former bwo have confessed to the crime, one turn- ing state evidence on the other, but exoner- ating Wiehl from having a connection with the affair. Part of the money has been ro- covered,and Flanders is lying in a precarious condition at the hospital. Miss Anna Gould, the youngest deter of George Gould,is engaged to Count de Cast- ellano of Paris, and the wedding will take place in New York some time in the spring. By the decisive vote of thirty-six to twenty-five the United States Senate on Saturday voted to inaugurate the projeot of laying a cable from the Pacific coast to Hawaii. The contract for the construction of the largest tow barge ever constructed on the. !aka, if not in the world, has been taken by the Chicago Ship Building Co. The boat will carry four thousand five hundred tone. Mr. W. T. Baker, President of the Chi- cago Board of Trade, presented his resig- nation as the result of the adverse vote oh the amendment to the rules of the board by which traders in "puts" and "calls" wore to be disciplined. Superintendent Warren, of the Barber Asphalt Company, Buffalo, has been eon- vioted'of employing a laborer upon oity works who wat nob a citizen of the United States, and sentenced to one year in the penitentiary. Owing to the motorman's carelessness a trolley oar ran off an open drawbridge in Milwaukee on Monday and throe people were killed, The car fell to the ion below which gave way under it, and still pre- vented it from sinking in the deep river. At San Francisco an attempt was made to kill I, W. Hellman, President of the Nevada Bank. William Holland fired two shots at the°baukdr near his residence on California street and than shot himself. He. to mortally wounded. The allots fired at Mr, Hallman went wide of the mark. Ab Pittsburg an electric car became unananaveable while dosocudiug the Wood's Run Hill, The motorman and conductor • A Clerical Bank Robber. A deopatoh from Portland, Ore., says:— Thursday afternoon a man entered the First National Bank of East Portland, and pre- senting a revolver, called on Cashier E. T. Holgate, who was alone in the bank, to throw up hie hands. The cashier complied, and the intruder then bound and gagged him, after which he started to empty the ooin trays into a sack whioh he carried. At this juncture the cashier of the Citizens' Bank, across the street, who saw the affair, rushed in with a shotgun and arrested the robber, who was then turned over to the polios. The thief was indentified as the Rev. J. T. Reid, a 13aptllt minister. Reid oame into notoriety a few months ago by disappearing, after leaving his clothes on the river bank to give the impression that he had beau drowned. He afterwards turn- ed up in -Illinois, whore he olaimnd to be suffering from mental troubles. When Reid entered the bank ho wore a long false beard, but in the souffle it was torn off, revealing his indentity. He's a Confirmed Smoker. The French sooiety against the abuse of toba000 notes with regret that or the first time Franco has a .'resident who ie a con firmed smoker, M. Felix Faire smokes several cigars a day, M. Thiers had a detestation of tobacco that was almost fanatical. 'Marshal s4laoMahon had been a groat smoker, but gave up smoking long before ho became President. 'Similarly, M. Gravy had abandoned the praotice be- fore his election.. M. Carnot not only dia not smoke, but, like M. Thiers, disliked the small' of tobacco. M. Casimir•Porior was not really a smoker, for at moot, on taro occasions, he would just light a cigar• otte, which he would throw away immodi• atoly, Jerseys, The Cows laavo a run of a large Pasture hill that is well supplied with abode enc} pane water, In the sum. met season, and in the winter they are housed in a high, well ventilated, (lean table, They are watered twice a day in winter, from a largo tank of running water in the yard—the water being warmed, Their feed oonsiets of well cured timtabhy and plover hay and out corn fodder and a ration of ground Oslo, corn apd mill feed, Turnips and anything of like nature, which would tend to give butter a strong taste are never fed, except to dry cows. The stable is kept clean and well littered with out straw and saw -duet, The (owe are brushed and no 5lth is allowed to remain on them. The cream is allowed to stand until slightly acid, when it la churned, the butter washed with cold spring water,saltod three-fourths to one ounce per pound (as desired by the euetomere), and then printed or peaked in small tubs, as the tri edemands. Feeding Rations, A rather conservative dairyman in die cussing the ration problem says, "the moth skillful chemieb in the world cannot, in hie laboratory, lay down rules or Com. pound rations that shall give the very beet returns possible from each one of 25 good. dairy bows. This is very true, but it la equally true that the agricultural chemist San lay down certain general rules which will enable any intelligent dairyman to vastly improve on the unscientific methode which so generally prevail. Childish Realism. Mamma (in the next room)—" Why are you saying you are five years old, when you know you are eight 1" Child—"We're only playing." "Playing what?" "Playing oars. For Twenty -Five Years 9 D UNNS BAKINC POWDER. THECOOK'SBESTFRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. As Well as Ever After Taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Cured of a Serious Disease. "I was suffering from what is known as nrlgltbs disease for Ave years, and for days at a time I..have been. unable to stralgbten myself up, IWas in bed for three .weekS; (Wring mat time I' had leeches applied and derived no bene- fit. Sexing Rood's Sarsaparilla advertised in. the papers I decided to try a bottle. X fused HOOD'S Sarsaparilla U ES relief before I bad mashed taking half of a bot- tle. I got so much help from tatting the Arst bottle that I decined to try another, and since taking the second bottle I fee. as well as ever dtdmmyUie.'• Gxo.MEniETT,Toronto,Ont. . ;'food's Pills are prompt and efficient, set easy of action. Sold by all druggists, 200,' Not " Advanced." One—" I presume you are one of the 'ad- vanced' women. Tether—. Well, no, really, I can't say that I am. You see, I'm married and have four children." Give Them Good Care. With a dairy herd that has not been well sheltered and fed during the winter, the spring is a very trying season. The cows are thin in flesh and weak correspondingly. Often they are forced to live on straw and other fodder which should be thrown to them between meals, to be picked over at eisure only through the cold days of mid- winter, and as soon as the snow begins to disappear and the ground becomes frozen they are permitted to roam over the lots et will, picking the dry, dead grass from the corners ot the fences and enjoying them selves as best they can, with occasional days of sunshine in the raw blasts that sweep across the fields, chilling them to the very marrow. This allowing cattle to roam about at large in the fields, during the early spring, is a mistaken and very bad practice, too commonly indulged in by many. It is much better to keep them sheltered, turning them out to breathe the fresh air only in warm, sunny days. If they are thin in flesh, they are in no condi- tion to resist the chilly winds, and the stubble grass and dead tufts in the corners of the fences, which they piok up, does them more harm than good,only distending their craving stomachs without affording them any nourishment. It is a burden to gat rid of, and makes them feverish an costive. They ought to be generously fed and prepared for their coming work, if they are cows. The burden of ealf•bearing and the milk -producing that is to follow, call for plenty of good hay and a liberal supply of grain, to give them strength and furnish a supply of nourishment Tor the calf as well as an abundance of materialout of which to elaborate milk. Nor should this full feeding of hay and gram he di000ntinuod as soon as the grass begins to start. Gorging with that relaxes the system, loosen the bowels, and makes the cow feel weak, lazy and faint. This sudden change from dry to green feed gives too great a shook to the system to maintain perfect health. Every one knows how green grass operates upon horses. It makes them weak and flabby, loose and lazy, and so they are supplied with bay and groin unm, til the working season is over and they are turned out for a run on the grass. A oow is no less severely worked in giving birth to ger calf and elaborating a generous Sow of milk. Besides her labor,she has no Beason of rest, when she can roam at leisure, doing nothing. She must continue ter work through the summer and fall season, what - over may be the weather or oondition of the Med, and then enter upon another six months' siege of dry feed and cold; winter. Her life experience is not one of the great- est possible enjoyment, At all times it: should be the aim to give her strength and build up her system, so that it can perform and endure the burdens thatohe is expect. ed to boar. The better she is oared and provided for the butter she will do, and the better she does the more she is entiti. ed' to kind and generous treatment. The greatest profit lies in breeding your beet cows to the boob blood you can get— ib oosta but little more than poor blood— and then in giving tlaoir offspring the bust keep and most kindly treatment you are oapable of. This has been said so often thatit seems almost useless to repeat it. But progress is JO slow and so many are penurious and slow to learn, that the evid- euco, of progress is disoouragiug. There is no more mastakenpolioy than that of try- ing' to economize by raising inferior stook and trying to save by pinching an its keep —especially in the lino of the dairy, How One Creamery Makes its Butter. The Clover Bill creamery of Derby, Vt., makes its butter from a herd of high grade aff %tomer Cnvestiga o it, by Writing to t63::, Fay® Postmaster, any C ie7,€3::c1 os' CItiWcn o'f. Hartford City, O 1 1s fu HARTFORD CITY, Blackford Qounty, Indiana, Sane 8th, 1898. South American Medicine Co. Gentlemen: I received a letter from you May 27th, stating that you had heard of my wonderful recov- ery from a spell of sickness of six years duration, through the use of Sousa ADLERICAN NERVINE, and asking for my testimonial, I was um thirty-five years old when I took down with nervous prostration. Our family physician treated me, but with- out benefitting me in the least. My nervous system seemed to bo entirely shattered, and I constantly had very severe shaking spells. In addition to this I would have vomiting spalls. During the years I lay sick, my folks lead au eminent physician from Day- ton, Ohio, and two from Columbus, Ohio, to Dome and examine me, They all said I could not live. I got to having spells lilts spasms, and would lie cold and ,stiff for a time after eaob, At last I lost the use of my body --could not rise from my bod or walk a step, and had to be lifted like a child. Part of the time I could read a little, and one day saw an advertisement of your medicine and concluded to try ono bottle. By the time I had taken one and one- half bottles I could rise up and take a step or two by being helped, and after I had taken five bottles in all I felt real well. The shaking went away gradually, and I could eat and sleep good, and my friends could scarcely believe it was I. I am sure this medicine is the best iu the world. I belivo it saved my life, I give my name and address, so that if anyone doubts my statement they can write me, or our postmaster or any citizen, as all are acquainted with my ease. I am now forty-one years of age, and expect to live as long as the Lord has use for me and do all the good I can in helping the suffering. MISS ELLEN STOLTZ. Will a remedy which can effect such a marvellous caro as the above, euro you ? A. Dk1ADt Lt1V Wholesale and Retail', Agent for Brussels