The Huron News-Record, 1891-06-10, Page 2t.
fz
'e Huron News -Record
llAe aYitare-4126 In Advaacth
ternelninedayp slllue 'lin,* 1$9i0*
',lt '. IDOltr QF CU: $'QIRATOg.
' . YeRT r14.1V`$ 100117,
There..ue Bettie people who live
and thrive hyoandering to the
racial end religious antapathiee ,of
theft* fellow creatures. , The Irieh-
lnterican agitators are of this cities
pre-eminent. The Irl h World, of
New York, edited by Patrick Ford,
18 en organ of those strife creators
and does not hesitate to bear falee
witneve in order to keep up a ruc-
tion. Au Irish nation:hist M. P.
in explaining the position of the
party he eupported took occasion to
say that if Catholic ascendancy
should be the result of Homo Rule
in Ireland, ho as a Catholic was
prepared to say that the Cathulioa
of the South of Ireland would
"fight to the death in favor of
Oreugeineu's rights. They should
do so, for no other class of people
in the world have stood up so man-
fully for Catholic's rights as have
the Orangemen. Wo have in mind
just Dow the remarks of Judge
._ McMahon. of Ontario,' a Roman
"Catholic, who in Court the other
day after reading the obligation of
Orangemen, candidly declared
there was nothing in it subversive
..of the rights or Catholics.
But the Irish World tesorts to a
•spurious form of oath, alleged to be
taken by Oraugernon, in order to
foment that discord by which it
.thrives
"In the awfulpresenoeof Almighty
•God I, , do solemnly swear
that I will, to the utmost of my
power, support- the King and the
present Government, and I do
further swear that I will use my
utmost exertions to exterminate all
the Catholics of the Kingdom of
Ireland,"
,Jo every ordinarily well inform-
, ed Catholic the preceding bogus obli-
gation will bear the ear marks of the
palpable forgery that it is. The
Toronto Sentinel, opportunely pub-
lishes what Orangemen actually do
subscribe to and which will he
found in their Constitution which
can be obtained by any one. For
it must be remembered that the
Orange Society is not a secret Socie-
ty. Orangemen are only too
anxious that the aims and objects
of their Society ;Mould be known
of all then. It is ignorance of
those iiiins.au l ebjec`,e b! outsiders
and forgetfulness of them by come
nominal members which has retied -
ed tr some extent the goof work of
the Society. It was the ignorance
or wilful bearing of false witness
.against his neighbors that induced
M. C. Cameron to characterize
Orangemen a "bloodthirsty" body of
Joel; ss the Irish World has recently
done.
.,The Toronto Sentinel quotes the
following from the Orange Consti•
tutien and Laws, for the benefit of
The World and others
"The Loyal Orange Association is
formed by persons desirous of sup-
porting, to the utmost of their
power, the principles and practices
'n
s -
d
le
e
tutional free om.
"The Orange Association lays no
claim to exclusive loyalty, or exclu-
sive Protestantism ; but it admits
no man within its pale whose princi-
ples are not loyal, and whose creed
is not Protestant.
"Disclaiming an intolerant spirit,
the Association demands as an
indispensable qualification, without
which the greatest and the wealthi•
est may seek admission ' hat
n
to
77
hijON'ORf& taeltri,gre two Rely Watt -
lane for stn."
While_ Oran :eaten do not believe
its ',moan `Catholic re'ligione Clop.,.
trines, they are Obligated "to MA
persegpte ally Q#1+3 .on tteeotint of
religious opinions,",.While in
•the extraeta from the Pregby!terien
Oonfeselop of Fath there is con•
siderable thtut wore of ,;pereecution
"for ecuaciepce sake."
f
f
9
ON,0. .M;A,N'S 11184 7.1 .ri. .
UZOOR"S POISON
It is the abuse of the manifold
fruitsof the earth which shortens
amiss' lives. Everything in thio
world was given to man to use as
best it should seem to him.
Whether he shall use his food raw
or cooked, in its natural form or
converted 'artificially or scientific-
ally into some other form. Genera{.
Trumbull, an Atnerioau publicist
of considerable note, has an article
in the Open Court on the coutradie-
tione of longevity which we repro
duce :—
Do men inherit longevity ? If not,
how shall we account for those weak,
rickety persons who unreasonably
continue to live in poor health for
eighty or ninety years. And for
those robust fellows *ho just as un-
reasonably die at fifty ? !fere is an
old man, hearty and strong, who
accounts for his fine oondtiou by
saying, "For fifty years I have
bathed every morning in cold water";
and here is another man of the same
age equally strong, who explains the
phenomenon by saying, "For fifty
years I have never allowed cold
water to Dome near me." One man
attributes his long life to abstinence,
another to indulgence ; and as the
jury cannot agree, the problem of
longevity remains unsolved. The
testimony of the patriarchs inter•
viewed by the explorer that I spoke
of, complicates the question more
and more. Mr. Holman, a member
of congress from Indiana, being about
to celebrate his golden wedding,
thought that matrimony had a ten-
dency to lengthen life; but then
again, the next witness, General
Early, an older man than Mr. Hol-
man, said he did not know whether
matrimony bad that effect or not,
for he had •never tried it. Mr.
Holman also testified that the use of
tobacco had a tendency to shorten
life, but his testimony must be
stricken out, because he added, "1
have chewed the weed eyer since I
was a boy, and I am an inveterate
user of it still." 'there was a good
deal of testimony against whiskey,
and wine, and beer, but this was re-
butted by Mr. Vaux, a member of
congress from Pennsylvania, an ante•
diluvian who sat in 'congress long
before the war ; and he explained
the secret of his longevity by saying,
"As to my eating I do not take a
great deal of food ; and as to drink•
ing, I believe that whiskey is the
basis of all good liquors and I confine
myself to it. I take it straight, and
1 smoke on an average about twenty
cigars a day. Also I believe every
word that is between the lids of the
Bible." To which of these three
causes does Mr. Vaux attribute his
length of days? I should like to
knew whether he thinks his longevi-
ty is due to his taking his whiskey
straight, or to smoking twenty
cigars a day, or to believing every
word in the Bible. The symposinm
such as it was, tends to show how
unreliable is the testimony even of
experts on the subject of old age.
CURRENT TOPICS.
CANADIAN HAY FOR BRITAIN.
A number of cattle exporters
have gone into the hay hnsinesa and
are exporting hundreds of tons
weekly to G1aagow. It pays well
For instance, it costs $8 a ton here.
_and twenty-five ahillings freight,
and Bells for $20 a ton in the Scotch
metropolis. The deinaud for Cana.
dian hay is very good and quite a
trade is being built up.—Montreal
Witness,
A GOOD LAW.
By a recent Colorado law a man
who is vaueht carrying concealed
weapons anywhere in the State is
liable to be fined $50 or 'lugged" for
thirty days, and what is more if an
officer, when notified, fails to search
a person carrying"aucli forbidden
arm., the officer is liable to he tined
$250,one•half of which shall go to the
informant,aud one•half to the school
fund of the district.
BRITAIN RULES THE WAVES.
The new steamships over the Cans
ada Pacific line from Japan to Van-
couver reach the American shores
four clays sooner than ships by the
United States line from Yokohama
to San Francisco. Not only are the
C. P. R. steamers faster than those
of the United States, but owing to
the far northern latitude of Vancou-
ver the actual distance to be traver-
sed is considerably leas.
AMERCtANS WILL HAVE THE BIO
END.
New York Tribune: Seven
months of grace now remain during
which the series of reciprocity treae
ties may be completed. Reciprocity
is already a substantial gain for
American trade. The full measure
of its success will be known when
the time comes for enfoxcitegtbe re
tali tory scliedules against the Brit,
Leh W'eet Indian and, other gouu'
tries neglecting their present appor.
tunities,
I Niclanan wan: about to take a little
1.011.* for n uruchneeded rot ae he
wax in rt delicalyte °tete of health,
where he, watt arrested on a espias
by the dtienilaute who eat up ' tlfat
he wart leaving the conntry..for the
purpose of defraudinfl hia• t,reditore.
11.uLealu was rooked .tip in Walker
tali jail for two weeicaand after bis
relpase =woe .never. able .to work
again: and ,t1* y't'ar following . he
died, !gra. hieLeatt t'ttribrst.es thio
'Beath. to his errrwcautl itaiteroi-r40en,
consequently die sues for the abgxe
mentioned damages:
hattE slllt tea 80$.
TIM shipping of Oanad;ir is titteXttni
pled in the world's history. The
Maritime Provinces have. luprtl per
capita`tban any other nation, not
even accepting Great Britian, The
city of -<rt, aim aloneOWvlp Pore
shtppiu dean any of the great .&fuer
Wan cities. of Beaton, altliioru Or
131ailadl,ephia, end etentit?`tbe eitthth,
city in the empire in thio regal•tt-Gli1-.
cage c nttlinn .tlmerican.
•
n A T$IItTYMI.LLION BQ1JFAp,
Over thirty lumber achooners are
now waiting in port, unable to get -
cargoes of at,y kind, Lumber 'has
largely stopped cathing, the yards
boldin„ their output on the home
docks. Ceder arid ties have faller,
off, and now there is nothing for the
heats to do at any price. It is the
worst condition of affairs ever known
in all previous times of depression.
It now eeetnt inevitable that a large
part of the lumber fleet must tie up
and wait at the docke for better
etimee, which may come later in
midsumwer, but not before.—Chi,
ago Inter Ocean.
FREEMASON VS. JESUIT.
A. curious ease at law between
the Freetl...esone and Jesuits of
Madagascar has just been decided.
The head of the Jesuit mission in
Madagascar has been fined
$200 and ordered to pay the
amount of $2,000 to the Freemasons
in that country, Last year a lodge
of Freemasons was established at
Antananarivo, the capital of Mada-
gascar. The Jesuits at once issued a
pamphlet, in theMalagassy language,
setting forth the '•disreputable and
loathsome proofs of Freemasonry."
The pamphlet said that the evils of
Freemasonry were too great to be.
described in detail, and therefore
attention was confined to some
principal instances. It asserted
that kings and princes had been so
beguiled by the social plessor° and
feasting; of Freemasonry as to
shelter beneath their rank and
power agents of the craft who had
the destruction of these royal per-
sonages in charge, and who carried
out their mission. The execution
of Louis XVI., at the time of the
French Revolution, was ascribed to
Freemasonry.
The pamphlet also said that prev-
ious to the introduction of Free-
masonar•y into England from
Germany in 1779, the people of
that country were noted for the
rectitude of their conduct, but that
Freemasonry had spread among
them vices of all aorta and many un-
speakable crimes and evils, until
the people had become greatly
corrupted. The English now
neither served nor believed in the
Creator who made them, and this
state of things was due wholly
to the prevalence of Freemasonry.
This pamphlet made a profound
impression and gave Freemdsonry
a bed name among the natives', but
the more intelligent part of the
people think the Fathers have sus-
tained a well-deserved defeat - in
losing their case.
WOMAN'S WOES IN COURT.
A BREACH OF PROMISE CASE.
Miss Annie Haines, aged 18, who
resides with her father in London,
Ont., was courted in 1887 by Mr.
James Hastie, a son of the well,
known cheese exporter of the same
name, who lives in Harwick,
Huron county. In June 1888, Mr.
Hustle asked Miss Haines to marry
him, and his proposal was accepted.
She now concludes that the engage-
ment has been standing a reason-
able time, and as he refuses to carry
out his promise, shoe issued a writ
against him the other day claiming
$10,000 damages for preach of pro-
mise of. marriage. Tho statement
of claim was mild, but Hastie's
defence was a terror. He set up
that the reason he did not marry
her was because her father had
threatened to sue him for seduction.
That he had settled the claim for
seduction by paying Mies Haines'
father $475 and that this was to
Mar all actions and quiet the whole
matter.
Mr. Anglin on behalf of the
plaintiff moved this morning before
Justice Rose to strike from the
statement of defence all reference
to the seduction, holding that the
fact of the defendant having settled
such an action with the plaintiff's
father did not Mar the young lady
herself from suing for breach of
promise.
Justice Rose was with Mr,
Anglin on thin contention, and
struck out the clause.
FOR KILLING HER HUSBAND.
Counsel acting on behalf of Mrs.
Agnes McLean, of Toronto, an
interesting widow aged 24, issued a
writ against Corbett Bros., of Owen
Sound. The plaintiff claims $20,000
damages against the defendants,
bolding that they were the cause eft
her husband's death. It appears
that do 1888 Mme, -and, Mrs -11teLeatr:
were keeping store in Barrie. Mr.
TBE NEW 1i1 UC OF THE•
prSIJSA.N ANtrgG.
"From carb'd tt eeu tOUo p'rteNk
` The muzzle of restraint, and the wild
dog
• Sh.11 tiaah Itis tooth in every isunceni"
----King Henry IV.
[n the case of Sir Charles Dilke,
who was compelled to abandon his
political career•-heoauee of alleged
sexual immorality, and uow'in the
attitude of Mr. Gladstone and his
Euglist' and Irish coadjutors
tewurds their fallen colleague, Mr.
Parnell, we catch a breath of the new
ethic of the sexes, equality Df virfue.
The days of high aims end Potn-
padourisrn are no mora. It may be
said of the great men of today in
morale what John Fiske says of the
meu of the day who have fully kept
pace with scientific movements :
"They are separate from the men of
the past by an immeasurably wider
gull' than aver before divided one
progressive generation of men from
their predecessors." Lord Nelson
and Lady Hamilton did their
country eminent service, but, great
as they were, their private immoral-
ity would at the present day pre-
vent their crowding their drawing
rooms with the wit and Whim] of
London. It is owing to virtue that
we exist. In primeval times the
tribea deficient in conjugal fidelity
and addicted to polyandry, reared
no children and were soon blotted
out of the book of nature.
Although a high standard of
virtue gives but a slight advantage
to each individual over ()there, still
the increase in the number of
virtuous men and women gives an
immense advantage to a nation.
The Irish owe their indoniitable
courage and seven hundred years of
struggle against foreign foes, who
have never completely subjugated
thew, to their respect for virtue
and chastity, and the fact that early
marriages is the rule among thorn
Ireland, as Lord Macauley said in
the House of Commons in 1844, is
the horse and perpetual nursery of
heroes. Her men, as Jahn Stuart
Mill maintained, are Princes among
men in every country but their
own. And why ? Because heroes
are, as history has shown, only be-
gotten by virtuous men and women.
Turkish rule began to totter the
moment she was deprived of her
Janizarit-s. These men, who had
fought her battles so bravely were
the tribute children of Christians.
Polygamy depresses mind, heart,
and body, while the union of one
than to one woman cemented by
love flushes the 'whole organism
with color, gives a higher pitch to
our liyes, and is irnpaited to our
offspring.
The northern barbarians, as the
Romans called the Germanic races,
when they first appeared on the
historic stage had, according to
Mommsen and Taine, the most ex
salted ideas of woman and the sex
relations ; premature unions were
forbidden and were prevented by
infibulation. The Cimbri who first
made the western world feel that
Rome's Empire had begun to totter,
when they first touched the orbit of
ancient civilieation, marriage was
pure among them, chastity instinc-
tive ; the adulterer was punished by
death, and the adulteress obliged to
hang himself.
Lecky in his "History of Euro-
pean Morals," says, "It is one of the
" most reinarkab,le and to some
" writers one of the most perplex-
ing facts in the moral history of
" Greece that, in the former and
" ruder period, woman had un-
"doubtedly the highest place and
" their type exhibited the highest
" perfection. The female figures
" staud out on the canvas almost as
" prominently as the male ones, and
" surrounded by an almost equal
" reverence. . . The whole history
" of the 'Siege of Troy' is a history
"of the catastrophes that followed a
"violation of the nuptial tie."
But aseome animals underdomas•
ticatiou lose the instinct of pairing
with a single mate, so does man
whenever and wherever luxury and
magnificence abound. Ease and
luxury have the identical blighting
effect on the intellect and morals as
extreme poverty. When Greece
and Rome bad to be either anvil or
hammer, and when men to live had
to fight there was little personal im-
morality. But when Greece had
conquered her great enemy Persia
and the Greek began to build him-
self fine houses and fill them with
works of art, and when Rome was
mistress of the world and had not
an enemy whom she feared, then
did their men seek the intoxication
of vice and forgot the thrill of emo-
Aion cvh,ieh,great Chi•Imeteente..,.ait.&
groat mon inspire.
w Crea[ Blood pllmiie�.
Word to the People,
,t ,o4t . is Mighty Mt will
j11>r reap,
$hl
remarkable effeete .and meetsatisfactory restaIte, le, every variety Of
disease amain r f`ro11, mammies OI THE BLOOI?, 'W * ' ere 'e danced
b- v cis R .Ok'
a tilt. NQ_ ?_,
hv.. ose wh h e
•. andlnrudm xuaurfest r17 .tbty to d�ay, th .Q -
& '[�'�M�N;'d VLf1lE"!'.�.PyLk+ .f,1SCt3YEI:tSt', Esme pornplau,ts yvbioli• wolfs• pert.
new:iced i,ncurakie, tare, eurprieieg to all. In many of these MAY. timge�rsoitt.. fay
their pale• said suneriugs cannot be exproesed, as in cases of Sensua.l ip e
apparently the v1 Lule hotly was one mass; of eorrulitLeu.
- This eeltbrate4 mrdicrne will relieve pain, cleanse slid Puri& the blood, s>t
euro such dfseaaes, testeeing the patient to perfectbeelth after trying nap
and avni • offered for ears, la it not conclusive proof that if yoit axil"
remedies, „ h 6 a y
a sufferer yen earl be cured ? Why is this medivi to performing •melt great cures?'
1t Works itt the neteoo, the Circulating Fluid. It can truly be called the
4Pc',v 3$'.a.' $ tatfJ301 ]ESTI X4VZIE IEt..
The great source of disease originates in the BLOOD, anti- no medicine that does
not act directly upon it, to purify and renovate, has any just claim upon public
attention. When the blood becomea Walesa and stagnant, either fronirchange of
weather .or of climate, want of exercise, irregular diet, or from any other cause,
NORTHROP & LYDIAN'S VEGETABLE DISCOVERY will renew the Blood,
carry off the putrid humors, cleanse the stomach, regulate the bowels, and impart
a touo of vigor to the whole body.
The conviction ia, in the public mind as well as the medical profession, that
the remedies supplitdby the VEGETABLE KINGDOM are more safe and more effec-
; teal is the euro of disease than mineral medicines. The Vegetable Discovery is
composed of thejuice of most remarkable roots, barks and herbs. It is pleasant to
take, and is perfectly safe to give an infant. Allow.us to ask you a candid ques-
tion ;-Do you need it? Do not hesitate to try it. You will never regret it. All
druggists have it for sale.
Mn. JonN C. Fox, Olinda, writes :—" Northrop & Lyman's Vegetable Dis-
covery is giving good satisfaction. Those who have used it say it has done them
morn good than anything they have ever taken."
1?1 ITS WORST FORM.—Miss Jrtaa A. Pn.swonmU, 'r'oronto, writes
.—
"I had Dyspepsia in its worst form for over a year, but after taking three bottles
of Northrup & Lymana Vegctoble Discovery, a perfect cure followed. I take great
pleasure in recommending it to anyone suffering from Dyspepsia."
Din W. THAYER, Wright, P.Q , had DYSPEPSIA FOR 'TWENTY YEARS. Tried
many retru.li. s and doctors, but got no relief. His appetite was very poor, had a
II1 tlo.�gin5; p:riu in his side and stomach, and gradual wasting away of flesh, when
1 :• !•u. •t1 of and immediately commenced taking Northrop & Lyman's Vegetable
• •. v. Thr pins have left, and he rejoices in the enjoyment of excellent
, 1' ',v.:.h ; iu fact, Le is quite a new man.
Sold by all Medicine Dealers at $1.00 per Bottle.
-o-. .a. r-�.�<.:,...,. _ ,.,.w..n. •<•..+n+.: .-439 101;
Paradoxical os it may seem, it is
owing to man's selfishness and com-
pulsion that woman owes her more
highly developed virtue. As Win
wood Reade has shown in his
"Martyrdom of Man," women from
their earliest childhood are subject
by the selfishnes of men to severe
but salutary laws, and chastity be-
comes the rule of female life. At
first it was preserved by force alone,
but, after a tittle women.became the
guardians of their own honor, and
regarded and treated the woman as
a traitor to her sex who betrayed
her trust. It is certainly, as he
says, an extraordinary fact that
women bheuld be subject to a severe
social discipline, from which men
are almost exempt. But it is not
the women who are to be pitied ; it
is they alone who are fret', for by
that discipline they are prevented
from the tyranny of vice. That
aan should be subject to the same
discipline and held to the same
standard of virtue as woman is the
doctrine of the new ethic of the
sexes, and the day has evidently
dawnde in which public sentiment
will rigorously enforce the doc-
trine. For good men have begun
to realise with Goethe : "That the
unit that makes a self•saciifioe only
injures himself, unless all endeavor
the whole to accomplish."
WHY NOT GROW MORE
CARROTS.
There is no root crop cultivated
that has the nutritive and medical
qualities possessed by the Carrot.
Fed to cows they not only increase
the flow of milk, but give a rich
color to the butter that cannot be
obtaiued in winter without the use
of coloring matter, and unlike
Turnips that they never impart a
strong or dieagreeable taste to the,
butter.
Fed to horses they improve them
in every way, appearance, spirits,
health and sound flesh. A Horse
fed with carrots is said never to be
troubled with worms.
Williams, the famous breeder,
who sold Axtell for $105,000, and
bred Alerton whom he considers
worth more still, feeds trio or three
thousand bushels every winter.
With the highest cultivation, as
high as twelve huudred bushels have
been raieed on an acre, but from
four to six hundred bushels per acre
will prove a profitable crop. They
do hest on land manurod the prev-
ious year. Never use fresh stable
manure the year you plant.. Sow
in rows fifteen inches apart with a
good garden drill, and when about
two inches high, thin to throe or
four inches apart. If to be cul-
tivated with a horse, plant two feet
apart. For cultivation I prefer the
Planet Jr. horse hoe, model 92,
using narrow steels the first few
times at least. Use Guerande or
Oxheart seeds in narrow rows.
Halflong Danvers can be sown
when planted in rows eighteen to
twenty-four inches apart. Do not
plaut any of the old•fashioned long
kinds, they will disappoint you in
all-around results.
If one had plenty of land, and
help is scarce, it might be more
profitable to summer fallow the
ground, thus killing all weede and
grass, besides turning one or two
coats of green manure under; then
next spring plow and harrow thor-
oughly, crushing all lumps with
roller or plank.
sr. To. ate'ge14,40 01x,laaysu4lenty--=
of time cut the tops of at the crown
SEE MY
SPONGE?
SHINE
your Shoos
with
WOLFF'S
ACME
BLACKING
ONCE A WEEK !
Other days wash them
an wlth
SPONo'eGE AND WATER.
DO
AS
DIC
CO,T3I,
EVERY Housewife
EVERY Counting Roorrl
EVERY Carriage Owrier
EVERY Thrifty Mechanic
EVERY Body able to hold a brush
BBOULD USE
I K-
. N ittrll'eSeiN.
ON
rRY rr:
WILL STAIN OLD l NEW FVRNITVRt and
WILL STAIN GLASS AND CNINAWARE Yarnitrt
WILL STAIN TINWARE at the,
WILL STAIN YOUR OLO SAeocT. same
WILL STAIN BAW,•e COACH time.
Bold everywhere.
A. L. ANDERSON & CO., general agents
tor Canada,. 158King St. W., Toronto, Ont.
CORNS
CORNS
CORNS
Case's Corn Cure
Removes all kinds of hard and soft
corns. warts, etc., without pain or
annoyance. It is safe sure and
effectual remedy and there Is no
stroyingisever It root aondogbranch.
Refusused substitutes. Full regretted.
tions with each bottle. Price 25c.
PREPARED BY
H. SPENCER CASE.,
Chemist and Druggist, 50 King Street West,
Hamilton, Ont.
Sold by J. H. COMBS,
so none of the buds will sprout
during the winter. If hurried
twist tops off, th.ow Carrots in piles
to be picked up and loaded in
wagoue. Then cut tops in leisure
hours during winter.
Ii' the ground is hard, or the roots
rather -long, ruu a plow within an
inch or two of the row, whey they
can be pulled easily. In small
fields they cau be loosened easily
with a spade.,—Popular Garden-
ing.
0 ! 'sr,man, lovely woman, why mil
you null•+r so,
Why hear such pain anti an;uieh, ani
ag•.Ily of a oe ?
WIFy rl• u't y +n se. k •'.' rem : ly- the
one that', 01 ,he g '
"Aid the g •,' b• c+11.10 it makes the
pains go. A. an invigorating, restora-
tive touio. Bootbil.g cur.lial and bracing
nervine, fardebi Trot. -d al+d feeble women
generally, Dr. Fiat c<,'e Favorite Prescrip-
tion has no equal 11 improves digestion,
invigorates the slat, ut, enriches the
blond, dispels ache, •,nrl p dos, produces
refreshing eteep, (tape's ni..lnhohofy and.
nervou,niee, and hull-Ia up b)th the flash
end strength I f those r' doted below a
healthy standard. Dou't be put off with
some worthless compound, easily, but
dishonestly, recommended to be "just as
good," that the dealer may make more
profit. "Favorite Prescription" is in-
oomparable.
The census returns of Ireland
show a decrease of nearly half a
million in the population since 1881.
The population of Belfast" has in -
emit -Body whi•lrr thet.tf-' }t bltttr- has
diminished.
FI
1