Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

York Herald, 28 Jul 1876, p. 3

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Longr stacks or racks are built on two more squares of rails placed together. Where there is a large quantity of grain to stack, racks are economical. The gllief objection to this kind of stack is the long row of heads exposed to the weather on top. unless you thatch or cover with boards. Ricks should always be built with their lengths running east and west. The east sides of stacks and shocks are always more liable to be dam- aged by rain than any other parts. Next morning when the dew is on, is the best time to take it 01?. Pull the butts where there are unsightly holes and beat down protuberances. Stacks built in this way will stand for months in the wettest season and sustain no injury. EThe' main points; to be bbserved in stacking are: First lay down fourlarge rails, spaced equal distance apart, and across these lay about a dozen rails, and you are ready to begin your stack. Throw two ‘or three sheaves across the centre, and build the tops of your sheaves on these, “gee ” round; that is, with your right hand towards the centre of the stack. Continue your widening circle until you have fully reached the corners of the foundation, letting the butts of the sheaves rest on the ground on the four sides. Now see that your base is round and level, and you have your found- ation wide enoug on which to build from sixty to eighty bushels of wheat. Lay another course or two of sheaves with their butts even with tho'se of the last course on the rails, leaving the stack bottom in the form of a pie-dish. Place another course with their butts even with the band of the outside course, and the heads pointing to the centre, and another course inside of this, and so on until your middle is full. Continue .on this way hutil your foundation is eight‘ or nine feet high, or as high as you wish r “ bulge." .The bottom may be uilt perpendicular, or, better still, a little out from plum at the top. Begin now and raise the centre of' the stack very high, making the slope nearly as steep as an ordinary house-roof, and ex- tending well ont on to the last course on ‘ the bottom. You have now come‘to the most important part. of your jobâ€"laying l the save. Having your centre, so as to give your sheaves agood pitch, you begin by takinga sheafand thrusting the butts downwards and outwards until they ex- tend a short distance over the last course. You'now get on your knees on this sheaf, and another is handed you, which you serve the same way,“ until you have completed the circle. Now put some filling in the centre, and lay an- other “ bulge,” with the butts as far out as the first “breaking joint,” like a course of shingles. Be sure and keep the tops of the sheaves well back. They are liable to gain forward, and this will spoil the stack. They should all point to the centre, like spokes in a wheel,‘and should be closely crowded together. If there is a sheaf-bender, he should stand as nearly as possible in the middle so as not to move the outside courses. The third course is drawn in a little, and each succeeding course a little more rapidly, until the job is finished. Having a few small sheaves for finishing, and have a stick five or six feet long, made very sharp at one end. Thrust this down the centre of the stack, taking care to have it perpendicular. Fix a band or two around the tops of the last course, and your stack is topped out. 2. Always have the tops of your sheaves point to the centre. 3. A symmetrical form of stack. Inexperienced stackers are apt to build to high, and run their stacks up to a spirelike point. This is unnecssary and unsightly, apd the tops are liable to be blown off. It Is the pitch of the sheaf and not the pitch of the top that makes it waterproof. An egg shape is the best form for a stack. 1. Keep your centres full, thereby giving your outside cOurses a. steep pitgh. __ ‘ A Contributor to the Horticulturist buys bones of a butcher at a dollar a hundred pounds and considers them the cheapest fertilizer he can obtain. He transforms them into meal by the follow- ing process: “1 have a. large water tight hogshcad standing out of doors, near the kitchen. In the spring I cover the bottom about six inches deep with dry soil. On this I put a layer of bones, then ashes. On these another layer of bones then ashes. and so on till the hogs- head is full. I leave it then exposed to the sun and rain all summer and Winter till the next spring. Then on removing the contents of the hogshead. I find nearly all the bones so soft that they will crumble to powder under a very slight pressure, and they give a nice little pile of most valuable manure, ready for immediate use. Any of the bones not sufficiently subdued I return to the hogshead again, for another twelve months’ slumber. H ave your sheaves of even size and well bound. Badly bound and slobbery sheaves cannot be tolerated in stacking, and should not be tolerated at. any time. Select high ground for your stacks, and begin by laying a foundation of rails. Some stackers omit this, but it is much better to have a foundation to cut ofl‘ the moisture from below. fiere is frequently a great saving in stécking grain. The advantages of stacking are zâ€"Less danger of fire, greater security from rats and mice, and immunity from bam weevil. When the crop isa long distance from the barn there is also a saving of time storing. the stacks can be hauled in when labor is cheaper. With the Mediterranean and Fultz varieties of wheat, the loss by shelling is scarcely worth notice. SIMPLY MADE BONE MANURE Stacking grain is frequently alluded to by agricultural writers as a wasteful practice. ‘So far _as being “wast§ful” HOW TO STACK GRAIN. “ Good, Miss Rose! " cried Walter â€"- “very good. I wish I could as as much for this so-called new-131d egg. by should eggs be of different degrees of freshness?" By the lime Lady Lisgard returned to the Abbey, it was long past the breakfast hour. and her! absence provoked: no little talk from the members of her family, and Miss Aynton did her best to stimulate their curi- oaily. " Yes. Rose," replied Letty warmly; “ but it is not every maid who has lived with her mistress thirty years. I believe Mary would lay down her life for dear mamma. She is almost faultless. I have heard mamma say that there has never been a word between them." "No! between them, indeed, Letty," re- turn“! Miss Aynton laughing; “ for Mistress Forest has all the talk to herself," “She has gone upon Mary Forest‘s ac- count." said she. “I never knew any one take such nouble about their maids as dear Lady Lisgard.” “My egg is very good,” observed Sir Richard sententiously; “how is ours Miss Aynton ?” and he laid an emp asis upon the name, in tacit reproof to his brother for having been so familiar as to say “Miss Rose” “Well, Sir Richard, I am London bred, you know, and therefore our country eggs, by comparison, are excel.ent.” “I wish I could think," said the baronet with stateliness, “ that in other matters we equally gain by contrast with Town. in your opinion. We are going to-day, Miss Ayn- ton, to offer you something which really cannot be got in town”â€" .sharé, ' Where a blind, is drawn down to the afternoon glare. This window, it open beneath them, we close. Lest the cramp should seize hold of their poor little toes A bath about. noomide on every mild day Will keep your smell favorites healthy and gay In hot summer sunshine, some calico green, As a. roof to their cage makes a very good screen, On winter nights cover from lamplight, and cold And lheyhl sing in all weathers, and live to be old. Master Walter had seized the paper-knife as though it had been a more deadly weapon and was engaged in disembowelling one of the several journals which had just arrived by post. grodndsel in- flower. At a. root of ripe grass they will peck with much zest. For seeds and small pebbles their food to digest. But all should be ripe, well seeded, and brown, Few leaves on the groundsel, but plenty of down. In summer I hang them out high in the shade About our hall door by a porlico made ; 1n spring,autumn, winter, a window they “Ah, for shame Richard?” interrupted Letty, holding up her hands. " Now, that was to have been a surprise for Roae.â€"â€"It’s a picnic m dear." I am sure you will be delighted, ear Rose; we are going to Bel- comb, a sort of shooting box belonging to us, about five miles away, and built by grand-papa.” ” Not by his descendants, however, I should hope, with one exception,” obsarved Sir Richard haughtilyâ€"“ I will thank you, Walter, not to cut my newspaper." “ Commonly termed ‘ Lisgard’s Folly.‘ added Master Waher. tasteâ€" The food they don’t care for they scatter and waste. About their bright cages I hang a gay bower 0f shepherd’s-pulse, chickweed, and " I did not see it was yours,” returned he, “ Goodness knows. nobody wants to road the Court Journal but yourself. The idea of not liking one’a newspaper cm." "Yes. must say, my dear Richard,” said Letty, playfully putting her elder brother, next to whom she sat, on the shoulder, “ that is a most singular objection of yours. I think it certainly proves that you will al- ways remain an old bachelor.” notes, They are begging for water to freshen their coats. - Cage, perches, and vessels, keep all very clean, For fear of small insectsâ€"you know what I mean lâ€" They breed in their feathers. and leave them no rest. In buying them seed, choose the cIeanest and best. I feed my canaries (excuse me the him) On hemp and canary, rape, millet, and lint. I try them with all, till I find out their Sir Richard maintained his frowning si- lence. Master Walter twirled his silken moustace, and looking up at Miss Aynton with a meaning smile. “ What is your opinion upon this subject, Miss Rose 7” said he. “ Insol'ent l" exclaimed Sir Richard,risiag so hastin that he knocked over the chair on which he had been sitting. “ How dare you ask such a question in my presence 7” "Richard, Richard i” cried a reproving voice; and 10! at the open door stood my shade. When they chirrup. and ceaselessly hop to and lro, Some want or discomfort they’re trying to show ; When they scrape their bills sharply on perch or at wire, They’re asking for something ghey greatly ' desire ; ' When they set every {ember on end in a twinkling, With musical rustle like water a-sprinklin'g, ln rain or in sunshine, with sharp call-like u * ""4 I'“ "' their feathers, The bird_u mature free fly to bush and to grot, , Ifthe wind be too cold or the sun is too hot; But these pretty captives depend on your aid, In wiptef for warmth, and in summer for cramp ; 01- open the window in all kinds 0" weathers Quite ngarpto ‘their cage till they puff out "W‘V, -- -"u uv them with air, Or leave them out late in the cold and the damp, And then be surprised if they suffer from A pair of canaries I ive to your care, Don’t blind phem wit sunshine, or starve giman “@mwllmg. MIRK ABBEY. TREATMENT OF CANARIES. CHAPTER XVIIIâ€"Continued AK UNCEEEBFL‘L PICNIC. 1H “I am to understand, then," returned my Lady flushing, “ that contrary to my advice and wishâ€"here is the break, at least you will shape your behavior this afternoon as I requested. There is no time now to discuss the matter.” And the next. moment the break was announced. The little party, so strangely out of accord with one another. arrived at Belcomb in due time and took their lunch; but all those harmonious elements which are so absolutely necessary to the success of a picnic were wanting. After the lunch was disposed of each sauntered about as they saw fit. During the afternoon Miss Letty came unobserved upon Master Walter and Miss Aynton, and caught the last words of something Miss Aynton was saying; those were: “ Walter, dear." She marked the girl stretch forth her arms toward him, as though she would have clasped them round his neck; and then she saw him out her roughly by, shake him- self free of her with a movement expressive almost of loathing, and turn on his heels with an oath. “If I consulted my own feelings,” re- turned Miss Aynton. “I should certainly have left Mirk before this, Lady Lisgard. But unleSS Sir Richard himself releases me from my promise to remain until after his birthday. I must, with your permission, madam, do so; otherwise, he might possibly imagine that his presence is too great a trial for me, and I should be loth indeed to have my departure so misconstrued." There was bitterness in the tone in which she spoke, but determination too. An anecdote illustrating Queen Victoria’s good sense and strict domestic principle, writes Grace Greenwood, came to me di‘ rectly from one who witnessed the occur- rence. One day the Queen Was present in her carriage at a military review; the Princess Royal, then rather a wilful girl of about. thirteen, sitting on the front seat, seemed to be rather familiar and coquettish with some young officers of the escort. Her Majesty gave several reproving looks, without avail, “winked at her but she wouldn’t stay winked.” At length, in flirting her handker- chief over the side of the carriage, she dropped itâ€"-t.oo evidently not accidentally. Instantly two or three young heroes sprang from their saddles to return it to her hand ~but the awful tones of her majesty stayed them. “ Yes, Rose, I am going with you to Bel- comb. It is a very favorite spot of mineâ€" very. It wasabout that expedition, partly; {that I wished to speak with you. I was 'nboul to ask you to be very careful in your conduct towards my sons this day. It is the last time they will be together for weeks, tperhaps. Be kind to my poor Richard. ‘Uf course, Walter knew nothing of what ‘has passed between on and his brother; but the how that he rew at. a venture sent. home a barbed shot.” Miss Aynton bowed her head. “ You were sorry for that, Rose, I know. You cannot tail to see how irritable he has lately grown. The fact is, he has overesti- mated the strength of his own powers of seltlconstraint. Your presence is a per- petual trial to him. Under these circum~ stances, dear Rose, do you think it would be betterâ€" I know how embarrassmg it would he to you to propose it, and therefore although your hostess, I relieve you of the taskâ€",do you not think it: would, on the whole, be wiser for you to leave us a little sooner than you had intended?” t “Stop, gentlemen,” exclaimed the Queen, “leave it just where it lies. Now, my daughter, get. down from the carriage and pick up your handkerchief. There was no help for it. The Royal coachman let down the steps for the little Royal lady. who proceeded to lift from the dust the pretty piece of cambric and lace. She blushed a good deal, though she tossed her head saucil , and she was doubtless angry enough, ut. the mortifyiug lesson nipped in the bud her first impulse towards coquetry. It was hard, but it was whole- some. How many American mothers would be equal to such a piece of Spartan discip- line. U BRIG T's PHOSPHODYNE.--MULTITUDE5 OF PEOPLE are hopelessly suffering from Debility, Nervous and Liver Complaints, Depression of Spirits, Hypochondria, 'l‘imidity, Indigestion, Failure of Hearing, Sight and Memory, Lussitude. Want of Power, eta, whose cases admit of a. per» munent cure by the new remedy PHOSPHODY‘NE (Ozonic Oxygen), which at once nllays all irritw tiona and excitement, imparts new energy and life to the enfeebled constitution, and rapidly cures every st 6 of these hitherto incurable and distressing ma adies. Sold by all Chemist- and Druggllts throu hout the Globe. L? flAn'I‘m ’I‘hn mum and innranflina An. XYGEN IS LIFEâ€"DR. BRIG T's PHOSPHODYNE.umnmmrmfi: la' CAUTION.-The Huge and increasing de- mand for Dr. Bright‘s Phosphodyne has led to several imitations under similar names; pur- chasers of 1.1275 medicine should therefore be careful to observe that each case bears the Gov- ernment stamp, with the words, Dr. Bright’s Phosphodyne, engraved thereon, and that the same words are also blown in the bottle. Every case bears the Trade Mark and Signature of Pa.- tentee. Export Agents~Morton, Wntney 6: 00., 107. Southwark St, London, SE. RUBBER BALLS AND OTHER FANCY GOODS, At reduced rates, at the Herald Book and Fancy store. “I hope you are coming win; us. to the picnic, Lady Lisgard, now that that horrid man is gone?” said a cold quiet voice. Glad enough of this excuse to leave the roomâ€"a movement felt by all to be very difficult of imitationâ€"all except Miss Ayn- ton left the room. After a long pause in which, lost in gloomy depths of thought, she had entirely forgotten that she had in- vited Miss Rose to hear her company. "Do not let me detain you at table, my dear Letty,” said she breaking a. solemn pause. “ Miss Aynton was so good as to make my cofi‘ee this morning. and therefore it is only fair that she should perform the same kind oflice now.” Sir Richard bit hi lip, but resumed his seat ; Walter went on quietly dissecting the Illustrated London News, with an air of in- terest; Miss Aynton very accurately traced the pattern of her plate with her fork; Lettie, the innocent cause of the outbreak, shed silent tears. Altogether, the family picture was gloomy, and the situation em- barrassing. My Lady reaped this advan- tage, however, that nobody asked her a word about her trip to Dalwynch. ._....v.. r \uunb Yes. I haée heard it llllfanjd thinklgu both to blame; but nothing can excuse this vio- lence. I“ have any authority in this house at all, not-another word I beg.” lady, hollow-eyed and pale, and with such a weariness and melancholy in her tones‘aa would have touched most heartsâ€"“ Am I to ever find you and Walter quarrelliug thus 7 VA- I’L____ LA, 3-. n . .. . . , A few Canadian Almanacs on baud. THE QUEEN’S DISCIPLINE. 51mm fintivw, (TO BE CONTINUED COLORED JOB PRINTING (Printed by a Process peculiar to our Chromatic Printer) ON CHURCH STREET, Formerly carried on by Mr. John Hall, and hopes by strict attention to business, combined with the best material to merit a continuance of the patronage bestowed on his predecessor. _ Well curbs constantly on hand. Wells sunk on the shortest notice. Address stating depth of well, REU. PEIPLIPSLM 1- und Wagon Maker, Undértaker, etc. Residenceâ€"Neatly opposite the Post Ofice, Richmond Hill. Excelsior Pump Works. Richmond Hill. The undersigned respectfully begs to an- nounce to the inhabitants of Richmond Hill and vicinity that he has returned to this place and purchased the ‘5’:me THOMAS SEDMAN, CARRIAGE and Wagon Maker, Undertaker, etc. JUST RECEIVED, At the Herald Book Store, Sir Walter Scott’s 8: Other Novels. At 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30 cents. Brier root and other pipes, shirt collars, thimbles, etc., etc., etc, Richmond Hill. March 24 ’75. A! prices uml’on terms hithorlo unequalled. Parties wanting pumps will do mill to consul, mo_ lyel'mie nurchuillg. IN referean to the above notice of Dis‘ solution. the undersigned would announce that he is now fitting up ' New and Improved Machinery Driven by ample Steam Power. and intends! manufacture a Pump Works, Ranging in price from 30 cents per lb. upward. Where Adveitlalng CBntmta m be made. SUPERIOR ARTICLE List of pE-icos sent 3n application. RICHMOND HILL? THIS PAPER IS ON FILE RICHMOND HILL “ s '1' E A M Family Groceries. I. Crosby, Fire Proof Store, RICHMOND HILL. kTA A LARGE STOCK 0F 1'81: PRIZE HEB. A Also a. fine assortment of POSTERS, TEAS, OFFICE, ONTARIO. AT THE 3mm, Works, Richmond'mu. H. MILLER. 5. R714" THE GREATEST WONDER OF MODERN TIME B. The Pills purify the Blood, correct all disorders of the Liver, Stomach, Kidneys and BOWelS, and :‘re ilfivaluwle in all complaints incidental to em es. [SUCCESSOR T0 ALEX. SCOTT,] Bookseller, Stationer, Printer, Publisher and News Agent! Richmond 3:111, Ont. The Ointment is the only reliable remedy for Bad Legs, Old Wounds, Sores and Ulcers of how- ever lon standing. For Bronchitis, Diptheria, Coughs, olds, Gout, Rheumatism. and all Skin Diseases it 11M no equal. I deem it. my dut to state that my Pills and Ointment are nail: er manufactured nor sold in the United States. Barnum’s Chariot Axle Grease. Sale Agent for Anderson’s “Family Safety Illuminating Oil." Also a Large Stock of Boiled and Raw Linseed Oil, Turpentine, White Lead and ac Paint Brushes, Sash Tools, Stripmg Brushes, Putty, and Glass of all Sizes. A Large Stock 01' FURNITURE kept Constantly. on Hand. FLO UR AND FEED ! All of which will be sold at the Lowest Possible Rates for Cash. Each Pot and Box bears the British Govern. ment kstalnp, wit}! the wogds :EQLLOWAY’S FERâ€"BE)“ ' oiii'hifiil'r; "LENDBRTJu" ‘gvea thereon. On the label is the address, 583, xjord Street, Lodon. Vile and spurious imitations of " Holloway‘s Pills and Ointment," are manufactured and sold under the name - or "Holloway & 00.," b y J. F. I, Henry, Curran & Co.,Druggists, :0! New York, with an assumed tr a do In a r k, ~thus â€"â€" . ~â€"In Canada, the p r i n c i 1) n1 Wholesale Dem 1e rs in t h e s e Counterfeits are Lyman, Clark a: 00., Northrup and Lyman, and Lyman Brothers & 00., who obtain them at very low prices, from J. F. Henry, Curran & Co, of New York, and this trash is an plied to unprincipled retail venders, who sell t 9 same as m genuine Pills and Ointment, which are menu natured only at 533, Oxford Street. London, and may be obtained from the following Firms, viz. :â€" Messrs. Evans, Mercer & 00., Montreal. Messrs. Avery, Brown dz Co., Halifax, N. S. Messrs. T. B. Barker dz Sons, St. John, N. B. Messrs, Elliott 6: 00., Toronto. Who import them direct from here. v THOMAS HOLLOWAY. 533, Oxford Street, W.C. London, April lst, 1876. Anderson’s Warwick and other collars, card board, carbonic paper, Mucilége, etc. : also a few numbers of the Life of ng William III. Price 50 cents. “ Edith Lyle,” by Mrs. Mary J. Holmes, author of “ Tempest and Sunshine,” etc. Price 75 cents. V THE HERALD Book and Job Printing Oflice, whether for priming, advertising or subscriptions to the paper. VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY AT 'T‘Inr. Wunn’m Rnnl: our? .Tnh Dr€n4;.m nan..- Dry Goods. together with Sugars, Tobacoos, and other General and Fancy Grooenes, Is extensive The subscriber will sell out the balance of his stock of SPADES, long and short handled SHOVELS and IRON RAKES, at a discount of 15 per cent FOR CASH ONLY. Also a quantity of HAY RAKES, at. 100 and 130, worth 130 and 170. The remainder of SUMMER DRESS GOODS, viz, Grena- diues, White Chev/cs, eta, AT COST. HOLLOWAY’S PILLS AND OINTMENT. ABIIMINABLE flflUNTERI‘BITfi. Genuine’and ‘N o. 1’ White Lead. This Machine Oil will neither gum nor freeze at a temperature as low as zero. The Steam Refined Pale Seal Oil is a fine oil that cannot be beat in the market. Richmond Hill, July 17, 1876. UST RECEIVED AT THE Herald book é“ fancy store, BEWARE OF VILE AND MODERN TIME B. Something New at the People’s Store attzdicinal. Good quality and low in price, in the course of a few days. A Large Stock of Fruit Jars. A Fresh Supply of Groceries. and at very low figure. A fresh supply of FRUIT JARS .H.KEEFLER£ FALCONBRIDGE’S REDUCTION IN PRICES. J ust Received, a Large Quantity of COTTON BAGS. THE GENERAL STOCK OF IN MACHINERY OILS. Lightning Lubricator '. K. FALCONBRIDGE. Three hundred pages. A complete Newspaper Directory Gazateeer of towns in which newspapers are published, and including sketches of leading American Newsâ€" papers, compiled by Geo. P. Rowen & Co. At $6 per hundred feet. Also Flooring and other lumber dressed: sap buckets, pails, cider mills, washing machines, shingles, Felloos, Sam: and BENT materiul for buggies and sleighs. For particulars address ' JOHN .LANGSTAFF. Steam Mxlls; Lungstafi I’.O Address R0\VELL'S CENTENNIAL NEWS- PAPER EXHIBITION, Fainnount Park, Philaâ€" :,L.LL delphia. GEORGE RANKIN, MEDICAL HALL, MARKHAM. Physicians Prescriptions and Family Recipes carefully prepared. BOOK OF THE CENTENNIAL Newspaper Exhibition. PATENT EAVE-TROUGH G. SAVAGE. Dispensing Chemist, MAIN STREET, MARKHAM. PRICE BY MAIL, 35 CENTS. WATER SPOUT FOR THE DOMINION, apd colorings, IS HOLD ONLY IN CASES AT 105.61). I v ALL CHEMISTS AND PA- TENT MEDICINE V mmms THROUGHOUT THE Gnome. Full Directions for Use, in the English, French, Gemun, Italian,. Dutch, S anish, Portuguese, Danish, Russian. Turkish, ersinn, Hindustani, Madrasse, Bengalee, Chinese and Japanese Lan- guages, accompany each case. Finally, the Phosphpdyne maintains a. certain degree of activity in the previously debilitated nervous systen‘; its use enables all debilitated organs to return to their SW 116 state and perform their natural fvwctious. Persons suffering from Nervous Debility, or any of the hundred symp- toms which this distressing disease assumes, may rest assured of nu effectual and even 5 eed cure by the judicious us" 01 this most v nab). remedy. la? CAUTIONâ€"The large and increasing de- mand for D3. Bureau‘s Pnospnommn has led to several imitations under similar names; pur- chasers of this medicine should therefore be careful to observe that each case bears the British Government Stamp, with the Words DR. Bman'r's PHDSPHODYNE engraved thereon (white letters on red ground). and that the same words are also blown in the botttle. Every case bears the trade mark and signature of Patentee. The public are also particularly cautioned against urchasin spunous imitations imported from {he Unite States, and are requested to note the directions for use are printed in all the languages as above, without which none can possibly be The Phosphodyne gives back to the human structure, in a. suitable form, the phosphoric or anim fling element of life, which has been Wasted, and exerts an important influence directly on the spinal marrow and nervous system, of a. nutritive, tonic and invigorating character, maintaining that buoyant energy of the brain and muscular sys. ten} Which-yende‘re t_he mind cheerful, brilliant, The beneficial effects of the Phosphodyne are frequently shown from the first day of its admi- nistration, by a remmkable increase of nervous power, with a feeling of vigor and comfort, to which the patient has long been unnecustomed. Digestion is improved; the appetite increases wonderful! ; the bowels become regular; the eyes brighter; t a skin clear and healthy, and the hair acquires strength, showing the importance of the actlon of the Phoephodyne on the organs of nutrition Bounevaiue & co, London, E.C. Colley & 00.,19, F,’ R. Brooks 6: co‘, . London, E. C. Business ' Nervous Dehflity '1}; all Sick Headache its stages Lussitude Premature Decline And all morbid conditions of the system arising from whatever cause. The action of the Phospho dyne is twofoldwon the one hand increasing the principle which constitutes nervous energg, and on the other the most powerful blood an flesh generating agent known; ther: Fore, a marvellous medicine for renovating impaired and broken~ down constitutions, It quickly improves the func- tions of assimilation to such a degree, that where for years an emaciated, anxious, cadaverous, and semi-vital condition has existed. the flesh will rapidly increase in quantity and firmness, and the whole system return to a. state of robust health. The Phosphodyno acts electrically upon the organization ; for instance, it assists nature to generate that human electricity which renews and rebuilds the osseous, muscular, nervous, membranous and organic systems. It owerates on the system without exciting care or t ought upon the individual as tothe process, It moves u. - u.... .._ n,., tfie lungs, liveiflwliéufl,Viié;3y§:gisgmcfiva;al E: teatlnes with uharmony, vigor, yet mfldness un- paralleled in medicine. . _._- .. -_»w. .. u.“ Lu...“ I4“va “u, u: uuun v, 5313 énerggtic, entirely overcoming that dull, in- active, and sluggish disposition which many per- sons experience in all their actions. The New Curatis'; :Atq-eâ€"nt, and only has n liable Remedy. Ne: vans and Liver / ‘ ,.rpla1'nls. This Phosphatio col: - mm is pronounced by most eminent memln : l he Media l Profession to be unequalled fix .1 power in ceplenishing the vitality of the bad). . .)y supplying all the es- sential constituents of in blood and nerve sub- stance, and for develon ‘: all the powers and functions of the s stem t ‘ : 19 highest degree. It is agreeable the pol Va, and innocent in its action, while retlmzrxg all its extraordinmy pro.- perties ; and as r ‘ miflc, surpassing all the known therapeutic ago. 5 the present day for the speedy and perm: 1“ Laure ofâ€" Nervous Prostmtz " Shortness of Breath Liver Complaints Trembling of the Hands Palpitation of the heart and lambs Dizziness Impaired Nutrition Noises in the Head and Mental and Physical De- Enxs pression Loss of Energy and Ap- Consumption (in its first petite stages only) Hypochondriu Timidity Female Comfillsints Eruptions of the Skin General Deb ‘ty Impaired. Sight and Me- Indigestion ’ mory Flatulence Nervous Fancies Incggw :ior Study or linpovcrished Blood UNDER DISTINGUISHED PAT. RONAGEx DR. BRIGHT’S IPHOSPHODYNE. N¢ Dr. Bright'e Phosphodyne AMES. TOYS, &G.,, EUR- SALE Al the H“; ll!) Bhg}; Slgzé Protected by Royal Letters Patent. Dated October 11th, 1869. (OZ ONIO ‘ 0X YGE N. stages only) Tlmidtty Eruptions of the Skin Impaired Sight and Me- mory Nervoua Fanciea Impovcrished Blood Nervous Debflity in an “A A.,

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