Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Woodville Advocate (1878), 13 Nov 1884, p. 7

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3p for the lostttrawberiies and grapes as Ioon as raepherries are over, big blanched salads. peas in enceeeeion. as well as his town neighbor. who sells him groceries and cotton ? Why should he not have as fine pears, peaches. winter apples and pea at Christmas as the President of the Horticultural Society, and why should not his girls have big French roses and tube- :oees as well as the solitary dahlia and China aster which decorate the yard. and the common geranium in doors? Why doesn’t he have an herb bed to make hie plain dinner savory. and lavender to sweeten his eheete at night? A r En - lieh eottager will have all there y thri t and contrivance. Why not an American hmer ? Nero- or rte Farm. An Oren e county. New York. former keeps pee owle to destroy potato beetlee. claiming the. “my are very eervloeeble in the. reepeet. The heelshleeo rlr eennot be obtelned hem A clear field 0 dry corn. The digeeo a layer 0! lawns, and so on. To secure the most perleot condition. a 0001, even temperature must be preserved, but vegetables keep better at any temperature by this than by any other method. leinx Ill-om the. «union. Gardeners. and show all, iarmers have no business to lure meanly or [0 think of themseIVes as obliged to Grudge ceaselessly without the indulgeuoes of other classes, says the Chicago Unald. One has no busiâ€" nets tosee town ioik havmg early vege- tables and berries it won lh oi lore hm tardy ‘ supply comes on. to be out ol them in dog days before the merchants and cheap boarding house keepers in the city have begun to see the end of fresh things; he has no need to hire on doughnuts and boiled dinners the year round. when others try the changes of spring lamb, fresh fleh. boiled chicken. salads, ducks and green peas. cspme and Veal until turkey time comes again. He ought not to see town homes fragrant with flJWerfl while his wife hasonly a bunch of syringes of cinnamon roses, with a tuft of as parhguil, to sweeten the parlor when she thinks to pick them. What better right have riou men to sit over desserts and choice pears, plums. grapes and apricots. while he must con~ tent himself with a Baldwm apple in mid- winter? Why should he not have a becoming home with its lawn in front and large borders of the richest flowers; hie house one story and small, perhaps, yet hung with woodbine. wild grapes, and roses against the background of orchard and shade trees. spreading their flanking boughs wnh good that. as it it were a cot- tugs ornee. with its acres of shrubberies ? Why should he not have in his garden choice lruite of the season, strawberries. currents and goossberrise jostling each other in earliest perfection ; red and black cherries. golden and purple plums. plenty_of black cops to make A's-event": lor Jumping Huck. Animals which will jump oVer fences are not only a nuisance on their own account, but they will oiaen in juinpmg themselves break the lance or gate, so met me rest of the herd Will tollow them. If a preventive for thin jumping It! not iinmvu. the animals have to be kept in a stable. or in a email lot by themselves. With an extra high fence. A simple method of keeping either a horse or cow in any kind of enolvbure is to put a common halter on them. Remove the tie-, strap to it. and pan on in no place a piece 0! hall~inch rope eleven feet long. Three.‘ feet (or thereahouts, depending some on the size of the animal) from the end attached? to the halter tie in nrnily a ring ; bring the} rope between the lore-iege, and up around} the body just behind the fore~legs. This vull bring the ring that was tied into the‘ rope under the cheat. and between the lore- legs. Tie the looee end into the ring under' the body. The animal cannot now raise it. head high enough to jump. and will be lound where it in put. regardleee of its‘ jumping proclivntiee. After a little practice in putting this rigging on. the medium will. be struck in [IDI- in-tiiing it too tight so In to fret the animal. nor yetso loose that it can get over the ieuce.â€"BrcederkJouml._ Preaching Vegetable-e. [Investing evarything is now in order. All the tender vegetables. 0! course. have been secured. The hardy sorts will keep betterit taken in beiore severe freezing.- except, perhaps. the parsnip. This ie' especially true of the been and carrot, which are often much injured by cold before being gathered. One or the beat melhtds of pre-‘ ,eerving vegetables is to pack them in Iliahtly meistened leaVee. This in much .better than aoil, being a better non-conduc- tor. keeping the roots at an even tempera- ture. Common flat turnips may be kept perfectly crisp and fresh until May, and beets until July. Leaves 0! any kind may be used. In one corner of the cellar spread a layer of leaVee one or two inches thick, then a layer 0! vegetable-i (one deep). then Oh glorious colors the clouds are turning, If she WUUId but look over bills and ueea; Bm‘hure are the dishes. and here is the churn- ugâ€" Thoue things alwuya must yield to those. The world 15 xi nod \s m; the wine of beauty, 11 she could but paum: and drink it. in ; Bit pleasure. the w) s. mun: wait for dutyâ€" Noglected won: i; cummiued bin. The day grows hot and her hands grow weary. Oh. for an hour to ccul her head. 0m with the bmlr uuu wxuds so cheery I But she must get dinner and make not breed. The huay men in the hey new working. u they um hrr sitting \\ uh idle hem]. Wouul call her lazy end cell it alnrkmg. And she never could make them uuuensumd. Bot utter the strife and weary tussle With lite is done. and she lies an rest. The nation's bran and hum and muscleâ€" Ber soua um daughters she]: can her blest, And 1 than the awucltal juyuf heaven. The rarest him: of eternal life, And me fairest cruwu of a“ win] be given Unto the weyumu larmer‘s wife. Good Advice and Vlluablo Intonation for the farmer. Ugh with the birds in the early morningâ€"- he dew drop gzuur like a precious gem . Benuulul tint-1pm we skies are dumb g. But rho' s never u. moment. to look at them. be men are wanting mm bwuklul ou'rly; ‘She must no: Huger. sLo mun not wait , 7. '7- 'â€"â€"'r w-.. -'â€"â€"... â€"_â€". mv “mi, Arew at uu- men guo “hen the met]: no I-.- THE FARMER'H GARDEN . The “ lie-u "and on the I'm-III.” “luau nu. uuh cl. DLU mum. HUB \vuu . you. that Bro hump and looks thnt no THE FARM. mama“ wolsififi A fastidious per-on proposes. intend ol dogigpmng ginqlojodlao as old moms. to â€"A clever parody on the national nu~ thcm appears in the Pall Mall Gasem, which says it is the production of a. clergy- man. The sentiment is in accord with the spirit of the times, and the words are very tollcitcuc: WI. tell-es lll-caces by the buying on 0! Hands. Now that no inecnsiderable commotion has been created in the city by the advmt of Mexrcan Joe. the alleged fortune-teller, anything appertaining t) the extraordinary becomes of peculiar interest. Mrs. I. Dosey, Talbot street, is the mother of a seventh daughter, who, although but u ‘child. is accredited with possessing the :power of curing by the simple laying on of ihands, to a remarkable degree. When any members of the family or relatives are afillcted with any disease her services are called into requisition, and. if the euflerers \ are to he believed. an instantaneous relie! is invariably the result. The child is said to have given ample proof of her remark- able power in scores of cases. and certain it is that the lamily at least have every faith in the eflicacy cl her ministrations. Miss Dcsey comes from a remarkable family. her aunt having possessed the wonderlul laculty of defining the future. in many instances restoring articles to the owners which had been lost or stolen years before. on one occasion telling an English traveller in what part 0! London she could recover a watch stolen from her months prevrously. She was the oracle of New Orleans for years. and used to he sought out by people from far and near, anxious to have the future laid bare t3 their Vision.-St. Thoma: Times. } There are eeveralreaeone why the break- ing up of the ground for fall wheut is a task to be dreaded by the horses. The occasion will give the .furmer a grand opportunity to‘dlepley hieoere and intelli- gence. First. as a very general rule it must be done when the weather is hot. causing a great amount of perspiration. Again. there is frequently a good deal at duet flying. of which he wnll inhale more or lone. To add to ill of this. the ground in often dry and hard, and extremely hard on the horeee'ehouldere. 'l'he duet and sweat will paste and work into the hair, and sore ehouldere will be the result, unless they are carefully washed every night when the humans in taken ofif. The following is said by the American Stock Journal to be an infallible remedy for chicken cholera : Make a mixture at two ounces each of redpepper, alum. resin and flour of sulphur. and putit in their food in proportions of one tablespoonful to three pints of scalded meal. In severe cases give about one-third of a teblespoonful in a meal pellet once a day to each tow]. putting a small lump of alum in their drinking water. The writer :eaya: “ I have tried the above ingredients with marked success ; have cured [owls in the last stages ol the disease. .I make it a practice now to give my fowls some of it once or twme a week. and there are no symptoms of any disease among them." To keep cider perfect take a keg and bore holes in we bottom of it ; epreud a pieceol woollen cloth at the bottom ; then fill wth eaod cloaely packed; draw your cider from a barrel just as fast as it will run through .the mud ; alter this. put it in clean barrele which have had a piece of cotton or linen «sloth two by seven mchee dipped in melted ‘Lulphur and burned inside of them. thereby absorbing the sulphur fumes (this process will aleo sweeten eour cider); then keep it in a collar or room where there is no fire, and add one-halt pound white mustard seed to each barrel. There is an art in raising early pullets, so as to have them begin to lay soon. The object should be to breed from parents that mature early. ln as heating acock and liens from which to breed early pullets. select a cock that throws out his hackle and tau leathers early. as this indicates his early maturity. Then mate him with old hens. and batch the pullets as early in the year as possible. Such pullets will begin to lay in October and will then lay all through the winter. The greatest difficulty with heavy milk- ers approaching the period of calving is reducing the flow of milk. The Rural Wurld says that With ordinary cows there is no trouble in the matter. because the milk secretions begin to fail us econ as the caw becomes pregnant. but with heavy and persistent milkers, it the teed is of the right kind and o! suflicient quantity. there is no necessitv for making nnv nnnninl is no amenity for making any special efforts for drying up the cow. The secre- tion will not be large at all events, but the needed phosphates end niuogeu should be supplied for fine building up of the frame of the calf. ' A writer to ‘he Indium: Farmer says he cums braves in horses by withholding bay and aubrtjutiuu green loud instead. He then makes a ball, as large as u lulled wulhuc, of equal parts of buiuaui of ti: and balsam of myuita. gm‘ug the animal one of the balls night and morning. It is augmented also. that she grain allowed be aligmly moistened and seasoned With a 11ch 8315 before fending. A There is this element in the flock busi. noes. says the Fanucrs' Review. which does noi exist in grain growing. It is that the men who produces a choice or fancy grade of beef is paid according to its merits. The same is true cf the raising of horses, wool, muiton. sheep. and in a less degree 0! pork, while the same holds good in horticultural productions. the owns 0! the aim“ no ted are sure to g“ om 0! order on so heating a food. and thus the whole system becomes tainted mymwea . Down with the Lord“ Oonfound their false gretonco, 09:1!29_"9.'.13e!r map“. once. ' bowu itifi‘ihéfifii“ Down with their arrogant, 11.90qu33. Vonnugom, “Down filth the Lords! (hmmoua of En land, yet sum the proud rd: roam Their mule aim ? Inks. than. our hearts rejoice, You are the ooplo'n choice. You no the People‘s voice. Thoy but u nuns. insolont words! Shall they reject the bill ? Blnsll they dissolve at will? Bhgll they gbstmgt us still? 2939 my spoir Iotcv mm. Dg‘wrnr wltli fifi‘éir iKl'fifiéi-é'o'fls. SEVENTH DALG “TEE, Than for this your 2.982 miles of nilwny tuck hove boon hid in the Unitod Baton. ngninnt 4.947 durin the corresponding period of 1883. 8 Rev. Dr. King bu rammed to Monioobn. While In Ontnr o nnd Quebec he oolloosod between an nod nix uomnd dollar in oil of Munch. Gallop. “ The extraordinary depression in the price of sugar. ’says the Mark Lane Ezpreu, “ has again brought to the trout the desira- bility at its use for cattle-feeding. In this country the practice of giving animals sugar or molasses with their food was commenced alter the abolition of the sugar duties in 1874. and has since become common enough. On the continent. cattle are fed to an immense extent on the best pulp left after it has been pressed in the sugar factories. In this country. most of the utility of best in feeding is due to the 4 or 5 per cent. of sugar it contains. Sugar or molasses will induce cattle to eat all sorts of matter which they would other- wise rejeot. such as indifl'crent hay. or cut straw mixed with roots. Now that sugar can be bought for this purpose at a little over SH per pound in London, and refuse molasses at just over ad per pound. there is no dcnbt an opening for agreat extension in its use for feeding steel: of all sorts. This car, with a light hay and root crop. afl‘or sjust the opportunity for its intro- duction."â€"New York Commercial Bulletin. Tons expect: 60 msko 910,000,000 this you in her mm luminous. The Manufacturera' Guzalte. in a recent editorial, made the following statements egerding young men and their advance- ment. which Others than the class to whom it in addreeeed will do well toheed : “ The young men who receive promotion are the men who do not drink on the sly. They are not the men who are always at the front whenever there is any strike, nor are they the men who watch for the clock to strike 12 and leave their picks hanging in the air. They are not the men who growl it they are required to attend to some duty ‘ a few minutes after the whiatle has sounded. They are the men who pay the closest attention to the deteile of their business. who act nail they were trying to work for their employer's interest. instead of to beat him at every crook and turn. They are the men who give the closest attention to every practical detail. and who look con- tinually to see whether they can do any better or not. This class of men are never out of a job. They are scarce. They never strike. they never loaf and they do not ask for their pay two or three weeks before pay day." John .5. Jacobs. Formerly on Victoria, Leaps from I'm eru I. Alliance. It now turns out that the fortune left to John J. Jacobs, who formerly kept the St. George and St. Nicholas hotels at Victoria. B. 0., was not the princely amount of “3900.000, as previously stated, but only the paltry sum of $3,600,000. The San Francisco 1'1.:.ii.ii‘;..r has the followmg par- ticulars: The story ol the new millionaire's lifeisasingnlar one. abouuding in those sudden changes and wonderful incidents so dear to the heart of the uovelitt. He was born in the year 1821 in the city of Cin- clnnati. where his family was very well known, htu'lug a high standing in the com- mnnity. being considered quite well-to-do and thoroughly honorable. He turned upin the city of New Orleans as a diamond mer- chant. the business. no doubt,followsd by his father. as both his brothers were in the same line. He was then considered by all who knew him to be the possessor of a considerable fortune. Handling the purest of gems his patronage was among the elite oi the city. The next heard or him was on hie arrival in this city in 1863 with his brother Solomon. H Jack " at once started in his business of diamond trading, having brought with him a large stock ot the gems. Hie brother commenced a money~lending business, which was attended with such success that he soon became known as the Rothschild of San Francisco. In 1855!.~ the subject of this article became acquainted With Mrs. Mosulskymn estimable lady. also a native of Cincinnati, where she was known by her maidennameolPoweraAfterafewmonthsol courtship the pair Were made one. Shortly after this Mr. Jacobs and his wife left the Pacific Slope. but returning opened a country hotel, in which line of business he was not a success, leaving it a bankrupt. He then. in order to obtain a livelihood for himself and wife, took up the peculiar occu~ pation which he has since followed. His love for the partner of his life struggle was intense. and his sudden fall from afilusnce l.) payerty was a severe blow. He engaged a single appartment in No. 418 Jones street and again took up the struggle for bread. a gray haired man. The fight was a hard one, but he pluckily made a strong efiort, despite which he was often compelled to seek his friends to obtain assistance. It appears from the fact that every item was iplaced on his book that it was always his ‘intention to make good these loans. Busi- ness men will recollect his entering their stores. and the request, always made quietly but earnestly, " Mr. Jâ€", I am a trifle short. Could you advance me a trifle ?" He was always neatly shaven and tastefully clad. On last Thursday he obtained the first information that he was no longer in poverty, but was the heir to millions. through a letter from a brother in England. Enclosed in the letter was a bank note for £2,000. But the sudden ood fortune had come too late to make im happy. the wife for whom he had strug- gled so hard having died two weeks before in his arms. From this blow he has not fully recovered. The first action taken by Mr. Jacobs was to enter a well-known jewellery store, the proprietor of which had often loaned him small amounts, and after pay ing the sum he had received, purchased a watch and chain and diamond ring valued at $460. paying cash. He then proceeded about the city, repaying small sums, the entire total reaching over 8600. The rela- tive from whom Mr. Jacobs has received the legacy followed the business of a diu- mond merchant. and the entire 83.000.000 is said to be cash. He leaves for England in twu weeks. He has already made a donation of 8500 to one of the orphan asy- lums, and will, no doubt, present a gift to all of them. Thu n'len who are Prune-led. A New the [or Sugar. A IIIILIJDNAIKB. Professor Charles W. Bennett resigns the heir of history and logic in Syracuse University. which he has tilled ever since that institution was founded, to accept the roiessorship of church history in Gerrett nemnte. Evenston. Ill.. succeeding there the Rev. Dr Nlnds. who has been elected a bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church. From 1863 to 1883 the lottery ployen Inland intothe Boyd Itdinn Trouury two hundred nnd soveMy-flve millions of dolls". Count Oovour used to call the lottery " the to: on tools." Credited by the Boston Globe to I‘Bucolic Exchange ": A great newspaper-reader was out hunting recently, and a storm coming up he crept into a hollow log {or shelter. After the storm abated he endeavored to crawl out. but found that the log had swelled so that it was im on- sible to make his exit. He endeavore to compress himself as much as possible, but with indifferent success. He thought of all the mean things he had ever done, until finally his mind reverted to the fact that nstead of subscribing for his local paper he was in the habit of borrowing it from his neighbor, and thus defratiding the ._A2_A__ AA .I,!,, s l . . printer." On this he tafao'iififiThio'Eé nipped out of the log wiehout an effort. There has been a great deal of talk lately among the tashionables as to whether it is the correct thing for a bride to be ‘attended to the altar by a string of lair ‘ bridesmaids, and also if the uncompromis- ing black coat of the usher should be longer permitted to obstruct the view. There certainly has been a tendency displayed in recent marriages in Philadelphia to dis- pense with bridesmaids. and several rea- sons have been given by the brides. A per- tinent one is that it is such an expense to ‘ find a handsome dress. which. as arule, can only be worn on one occasionâ€"at the wedding. A bridesmaid’s frock is seldom of any use as a ball dress, and anybody who has noticed the picturesque groups of maidens who follow after the ushers could hardly care to see young ladies attired in that fashion on the streamâ€"Philadelphia Press. “The gold in bullion in the mint just now amounts to $25,000,000 in value," said Chief Clerk of the Mint Hickok. “ It is composed of gold bars six inches in length, three in width and one and a hall in thick- ness, each wort-h $5,000. It began to accu- mulate about five years ago, when our foreign trade increased in a wonderful manner. Alarge amount of English and French gold was paid into the country and was sent to the New York Assay Office, where it was melted down into here. All this gold was sent here. It is 1,000 flue, which is our technicality for pure or 24- oarat gold. The American gold coinage is 900 fine, while English is 925 line. so that we are glad to get that coinage to melt down. You must not suppose that this large amout of gold is always in the miut. The amount fluctuates. Next week we may havea great deal more. or it may nearly all be gone. It depends on the demand for gold coin.â€"Philadelphia Times. The floors are especially curious, being made Very elastic, a sort. of split bsmboo or straw forming s padding underneath the squares of matting. which are finished separately with a. nest binding. The rooms in a Japanese house are designated by the number of pieces of wetting required for each. as the seven. six. or five-matted room. The reception room is furnished With a sideboard with a rounded front, plsced in one corner. on which are richly ornamented tes-csddies, la huge teapot and all the accessories of e. hospitable cup of tea, which they ofier to all callers; and a very elaborate lacquer and bronze table‘ near by holds s. decorative jsrdiniere. A light sliding-door of paper. 38.ny painted \ With Japanese flowers. separates this room from the inner one or parlor. This is the " fivemstted room," and has on the floor a very curiously wrought \ artistic bronze incenseburner. and on one side of it is the box holding the materials for burning the incense. A lacquer resdingdesk stands near. on which is a book. secroll and a. pair of exquisite candlesticks. Hsudsome rsw silk rugs. which serve for chairs, are lsid on the doomâ€"Boston Herald. A. New York scientizt claims to have discovered along the Lehigh Valley a. hith- erto unknown metal which will some day supplant nickel in general use. He was making an experiment with an explosive substance mixed with pulverized furnace slag, which on being heated caused an explosion to take place. Upon examining the crucible in which the mixture had been he found that a chemical process had taken place by which an apparently valuable but hitherto unknown metal had been elimi- nated from the slag. It was silvery white in color, of fine. smooth texture, and ene- ceptible of a brilliant polish that no exposure will tarnish. It was found to be malleable-ductile and of great tenacity. showing a tensile resistance of 140,000 to the square inch. Further experiments only confirmed the results of the first trial. and a company has now been organized for the purpose of I“working" the large slag banks along the Lehigh Valley for the metal. One oi the largest declare in Japanese goods and bric-e-hrsc in New York has fit- ted into the hack of hie store a real J apaneee house in miniature. Only two rooms, how - ever, are represented. correeponding to our reception room and parlor. but these are complete and exact in detail. The house was brought to this country from Japan in sections. and was put together here by 0 Japan« ee artisan. alter their custom. with- out. nails, glue lorming the necessary huh. nutute. The material tor the framework is of Japanese ccdar and bamboo ; a strong, trauapareuu paper term; the little square penee for the window. glass being only 11th by the lower classes. The mouldings ot the meme are of lacquer ot a very artis- tic and beautiful pattern. and the ceilings are 0! hambso, braided in different design!» and colored in difi'ereut ehudee of brown. Ilow Pan cl u N-Ilvo Dwelling lla- ueen Imported uni! I'm ’l‘oxelhu II New Yolk. The Gold In the United states mun. Ill-penning wlIlI Bride-mulch. What Helped “III 0m. A J SPANISH HOUSE. A New flleInl. Tun MAIL hasbcrcrogm ‘l’IIo Becognlml Medium for Fun Ad- verilsomenls And conninmenhhm than all mum Canullandpcpm com. billed. II has 390,000 rcadcu om-e ngm um. ADVERTISEMENTS of “anm (M Sale" and "Puma WAntcd.""Stock"ov "Seed tor Salem: "Wanted" lnsemrl In THE “WEEKLY M.\ll..flnanh [my IOHI rm! mum. 0! mm! ml: per wnnl (M in min/Mu: or In fl"! [LY “A! at In and a Myron!) 'c' "J cad: Insertion. . Examine the lists or “Fauna Foa s'mi" AND “Mum Wumn" at It: ..w 7.3.... 0.1.22.» m”. r? in no... u" 7... “ML. an. LE. man: :62 5:; $3. 8 9.2:» n :9 «are: n2 . The 50,000 tons of soot taken from Lon- don chimneys every year is sold for £41,000 8. ud used as a fertxlizar. "HIS I\'CC_\IP.\RA1}LE MI‘DICIN‘ . has so omcd 101‘) ixsu‘alnuimpcz ishublofuumthruuqhout ”m We; Hal-the Muwiz' tion and C‘ "J of mos. diseasesto“bich Lumuuityish Inc: 0“; 0 «he secretory power: of ‘1"-L:‘\'er,lbrm tl‘n ‘uus syhtcm‘ mu] than: a 11m circula- té . mun-est Jilvmums (if auditing and :3- pair mo Hume. (‘ 'x‘TIOV. â€"»I 4mm “0 ,Lja‘.’ ’n tho Uxfim L‘ul m‘c mv .‘.:-_ : u Luv :11uo.Ptu- ll'tlzid UH" 10119100 ‘{ ,pXu I nn um f.a\ us. If the address m not" . ” Oxford ' Qt Londoufihey are emu-i 1:0. OLIS. 5 Go into the chemical laboratory and touch the two poles at a galvanic battery. What is it that thrills through your bodies. and perhaps even burns the skin of your flngerewr. even. it the current be strong enough.strikes you dead on the instant? Galvaniem. Whatisgalvanism? Aloroe. Yes. and so is lighta force. and heat and gravitation. But when I am told this I am just as far trom knowing what any one of the forces is as I was before. All that you could do,“ I persin-ted in asking for a fuller explanation. would be to tell me something of the origin and properties of the tonoeiu question. and in this way I Iehould obtain some idea of its character- isllCB. and thould be in no danger of mis~ taking it for any other force. T hat is what" your professor of physics does {or you. and it you have only protited by the instruc- tions you have‘reoeived. you have a store of facts at your command that will enable you to recognize heat. light. electricity. gravitation. magnetism whenever you see them manifested. When. theretore. you ask me what mind is. I answer that it is a force. possessing peculiar properties and developed by a substance oonttituting a part of the nervous organism of man and other animals. and knowu to anatomiste and physiologists as gray nerve tissue.â€" Dr. Hammond. #11: ln‘ 1 he mm U‘b 'IL' cures Cholera, cholera Morbus, Dy: aentery, cramps, (Jo/i0, Sea Sick- ness and Summer Complaint ; also Cholera. Infantum, and all 00m- plaints puculiar to children teeth- ing, aid will be found equally beneficial for adults or children. FOR SALE BY All. DRUGGISTS. T. MILBURN 00., Worth their Weight in Goa: w}: u _. . wgmate and improve the quuiiiy of 2113 nou. 4 hey assist the digus‘w organs, cleanse DAILV‘ANp'WEEKLv MAIL AND OINTMENT. SIGNAGE and BOWELS, Addmo- Till NAIL Tmm $133,918 WBRIZDS, CQUGHS “o Threats Bronchitic, m him. u; Hul.A4 Oxford 3: Hindu mat and 'x .ma, and k, mm! o: ‘ ‘ YO'U WANT Will In Mind t Proprietors. Torohtco am; 2"! 5, and JO: also ( 3L . -UnAYb V -. n, and 7 fit} «LL15 London. I? L“.

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