Soldiers With Terrible Faces. A rit=r on German cavalry in the Daily News Sï¬VSzâ€"Thc ofï¬ce: s are practicing the art of war every day all the year round. They have large manoeuvres in the spring, summer and antunm,and they are constantly being tested not only in drill and charging, but in the far more deli (rte work ol recon- noitering and mall-1i 1g raids. Take the fol- lowing as an example. At 6 o’clock in the morning during summer manmuvres a gen- eral Bends ontsix rcoonnoitering pa,rties.eacl1 compose-l of an olllcer, non-commissioned ' "r and six troppers to carry an order to other part ,5 20 miles off. An English ofï¬- cer sent from \Vindsor to ll’est Drayton would probably think he had done nony if he could go and return with his men in the least possible time. The German oilicer Willalso endeavor to he expeditious; but this Will not be his main object, for on his re- turn he will be obliged to bring back an mi- svrer in almost the exact words in which it was given llllll, and also to furnish as min- ute an account as he can of everything that he noticed on the road. Perhaps he will be asked to write his report before taking a moment‘s rest, and some of these drumhead reports, indited from memory, display pow- ers of observation quite marvellous. It is, of course, the rule that an ofï¬cer must carry and bring bncl-z verbal messages, without ro- lrcshing his memory with any Written notes, which in time of war might fall into the enemy’s hand so he has to listen with all big ears, committing- every word so far as he can to memory. :‘xs for the soldiers who go with him they are all questioned, too. in order to see whether their report of things they have seen tallies with those of the 011i- cor and sergeant. The rcconnoitering is thus no more child’s play. It is a, hard and salu- tary exercise for mind as well as body; and stamps the features of those engaged in it with a look of intense seriousnessâ€"that aw- ï¬il look which so disturbed the French in the late war, and made them think that, every Uhlan was a spy in uniform. When poor M.vl’0(levin, Mayor of Nancy, surren- dered his city at the outset of the war to six rcconnoitering Uhlans, who rode as coolly through the hostile Streets us though they had a whole army corps followmg close be- hind them, he described these intrepid men in his report to the Town Council as “ sol- diers with terrible faces.†He would have been nearer the truth if he had said “keen, observant faces,†for they were probably picked men whose mental apparatus kept the impress of all things Seen like a. photo- grapher’s glass, and of all words spoken lee the phonopraph, not then invented. “4004â€? OQDâ€"i' The 0ft Told Story. The Exeter (N. H.) case is the same sad story that is told with varying circum- stances many times as yearin the columns of every newspaper. A man in prosperous eireumstances, respected by his neighbors, honored by the conï¬dence of his fellow-citi- zens, is not satisï¬ed with the returns of le- gitimate business. He enters the ï¬eld of speculation, and into that sort of specula- tion where ninety-nine out of every hun- dred are victims. Delibtless he realized something by his ï¬rst venture, as was the case with many during the mining craze which swept the country, and particularly eastern New England during 1879 and 1880. This emboldened him to make larger venâ€" turesâ€"t0 play for higher stakesâ€"when he began to lose. To make good his losses he makes still greater ventures, and to do so he uses the money of others, expecting, like hundreds of other deluded men, that fortune would smile upon him and thus en- able him to replace that which had been in- trusted to his care. In vain, the dice are loaded; great and irretrievable losses conâ€" front him. Still he goes on, until happi- ness, good name, and everything that hou- orable men h old dear. are lost in this game of chalice. The Exeter victim is not a. dis- honest man. He would gladly pay every dollar he has squandered if he could. He would not wilfully defraud any man of a. dollar. lie was seized by this speculative mania, which is simply gambling, and gam- bling when the chances are more than ten . . 1' ,, ,,,,,, TT» 1 . A _ h . 1 and he imagined that it was within his power to make something handsome. He did not stop to think of the great army of small investors, who, buying one, ï¬ve or twenty shares, had lost their money. It never occurred to him to examine the his- tory of 90 per cent. of the schemes of that character to ï¬nd that they were simply de- vices to rob small purchasers of stock of all the money they had put into them. There is a strange fascination in this class of ven- turcrs. Tens of thousands of men having a. few hundreds or thousands of dollars have lost their all in margins of various kinds, and yet the multitude, eager to engage in it is not diminished. Only two weeks ago the lambs in the stock markets were bloating piteously because they had been shorn. The ‘shearers having got their fleeces at once prepared the market to secure another clip to which those who were sheared a few weeks ago .will ‘eagerly contribute if they “anc .. “WV ' to one agaï¬lst ordinary men. He heard that the bonanza. kings had made vast for- tunes in doubtful mining‘stock spequhtiopg, can. Aid thus the process is repeated tim-e and again, the victims ï¬ever appearing to realize for a. moment that a few bold and skilful men manipulate the market so as to accumulate millions which the victims conâ€" tribute by hundre‘ds.â€"Boston Journal. To induce the people to make themselves familiar with the operation and utility of the telegraph, the Chinese authorities have shrewdly made the use of the new lines free for the space of one month. â€"â€"4‘N4O>.¢pâ€"â€"wâ€"â€" No woman of the wealther class earns a holiday more deservele than Queen Vic- toria. Ministers rise and fall, and pass from active life into ease and comparative seclusion, but the Queen has been continu- ously in ofï¬cial harness since 1337,ayd forty- ï¬ve years is a long stretch of uninterrupted work. When her septuagenarian Prime Miniater was occupying his ï¬rst ofï¬cial post she was already a politician of some experi- ence, and had di cussed great questions with the leading minds of the day. A woman, she began activelife when men are reckoned mere schoolboys. “ I suppose,†said a gen- tleman to a former Judge Advocate-General, “it is a. more form, your submitting to the Queen the proceedings of our courts mar- tial ?†“ Do you, indeed? \Vell, I can tell you, then, that she understands the whole business as well as I do myself.†The Telegraph in China. The Greatest Speed to be Found in tho ,‘ Direction of Team Trotting ‘ Mr. Robert Bonner having returned from a visit to Kentucky, during which he exl ,‘ amined almost all the great breeding farms, ‘ in a recent interview said: “Thercis certain- q ly no such country in the world for horses 1 as the bluegrass region in Kentucky. \Vith- 3 in a radius of 25 miles from Lexington you ï¬nd a section which has about it every re- quisite for raising the ï¬nest animals. The ; climate is perfect. I visitcd 12 stock farms 1' and didnot see a single horse blanketed. The grass is as green now as it is here by the lst of May. This blue-grass region is on a limestone formation, and it is supposed that it is this tact which makes it such very valuable food for ‘horses. 1t is certain that the animals coming from there are always noted for their size. The grass itself is the best food for horses which has yet been found. Several of the great stock raisers are breeding running horses. .Thesc they sell as yearlingsat the spring sales,and any one who chooses may buy them. The success of Fox- hall and Iroquois has turned the attention of the racing interest in England to Ameri- can-bred horses. Foxhall was bred by Mr. Alexander, who owns both the sire, King Alfonso, and the dame, Jamaica ; and he naturally thinks he can breed another horse as good. Iroquois came from the Chestnut Hill farm; near Philadelphia, and was bred by Aristides VVelch. It is true Iroquois never saw Kentucky, but if, as I am told, Chestnut Hill farm is in a lime stone region, this is only another argument in favor of a limestone country for horses, and shows that there is a scientiï¬c connec- tion between the nature of the soil and the animal produced. The blood stock from which these animals come is,as a rule, Eng- lish. There is a strain of blood in the American long-distance runners which cross- es wcll with the English, and the progeny seems to be an improvement upon both. I have thought for a long time that it is in the direction of team trotting that we must look for our greatest speed. In England you may have two horses which are brothers in blood. They have the same sire and their dams are sisters.v0ne of them wins the Derby, and is worth 10,000 guinezzs. The other can run within a few seconds of the ï¬rst, but he l does not win the Derby, and is only worth $10,000. A few seconds in time, then, on a ‘ long race, make a difference of $40,000 in the value of a horse. But if you take the Derby winner and put him into a ï¬ve-mile race with his brother and make him carry only a few pounds extra weight, it is the $50,000 horse that will be beaten. A few pounds weight,then, make all the difference between a. winner of the Derby and a beaten horse. This is so fully recognized in Eng- land that several pounds extra weight in a four-mile race is equal to distance. Now in this country we trot our horses to either sulky or wagon. The lightest weight we can put on a horse is 200 pounds. That is, a driver weighs 150 and the lightest 8111le made weighs 50. “’0 can make a wagon ‘ which weighs 107 pounds. Add to this the ‘ weight of the driver and we get 257, or say 258. Each horse in the team has 129 pounds behind him instead of 200. Now, this dif- fercnce of 71 pounds means a good deal in the way of speed, in my opinion, and I do not think that we will ever know what our trotters can do until we act teams on the track. It is, of course, exceedingly difï¬cult to get a team to trot togetherâ€"how dililcult no one but a horseman can know. The horses must be trained to work together, each doing one half of the pulling and no more. They must be equal in speed, in weight and in action. They must, in short, be able to trot as one horse rather than two. It takes a great deal of training, added to natural ï¬tness on the part of the animals, to permit of horses being worked to this point. They must be even tempered or they can not speed together. I believe it possible to ï¬nd fast trotters who will work together, and whenthey are found, I believethat we will see for the first time what American trotting horses can do. It is a number of years ago since I first had reason to believe this and ï¬rst made up my mind that for real speed we must look to the team. On the 10th 01 May, 1862,] drove Lady Palmer an Flatbush Maid toa road wagon two miles in 5:102. The second quarter of the first mile was driven in 633. Then I believed that team driving was the driving of the future. I have never changed my opinion, although some very clever men who then disagreed with me now think as I do. I have no doubt that during the coming summer we will see faster time than we have been accustomed to lookfor from teams, and the race at Bos- ton will undoubtedly stimulate this form of driving.†Field Marshal Count Moltke sums up the result of his recent studies in the statement that “ a. war with Russia could not be under- taken by Germany till after the lapse of eighteen months or two years.†This only means that it could not at the present mo- ment he entered into with the same conï¬- dence and safety as the two last great wars with Austria and France. The Eastern fort« resses, especially Posen and Thorn, the Ger- man authorities consider,ought to be consid- erably strengthened and better armed, and several of the Baltic portsâ€"such as Duntzic, Pillau, and Kouigsbergâ€"put in a. better state of defence, before the commencement of a campaign in Russia. The question of the headquarters for the mustering of an in- vading army would also have to be settled. and Count Moltke is said to be inclined to choose Breslau as such a centre. If every- thing were at once ready to carry out the fortiï¬cations and other preparations involv- ed in this scheme, it is calculated that at least eighteen months would be required be- fore they were actually completed. The prevailing opinion among fruit grow- ers in Ontario seems to be that there will be a. good crop of unit this year. One who professes to have made a study of the signs says that the direction of the wind during the vernal equinox was favorable to such a result. If the wind had been in the east during that time (which was not the case), that would have been the prevailing direc- tion of the wind during the fruit season,an(l it would have had the effect of blighting the. fruit. 15 Germany Prepared“? FAST 'IRO’I‘TERS. Fruit Prospects. oo4o®.>om nâ€"«wâ€"o LN’JIILE FENCES.â€"An Illinois fax'nmx‘ who keeps twenty horses, some of them worth $1,500 each, writes to the :Chicago Times that he has pastured them all at times in fields fenced with barbed wire, has done it for years and had no harm result from it. Before turning them out he ï¬rst leads them to the fence and lets them rub their noses} against the barbs, and the hint is sufï¬cient. They know enough after that to keep away‘ from the fences. Tim LARGEST Cov.’.~1’rel>ably the largest cow in the world is owned by Martin S. Stakes, of Grayville, \Vhitc County, ‘Ill. She is 7 years old and weighs 3,000 bounds, 17-1» hands high, 1092 feet long from the end of the nose to the buttock,17Ȥ feet from the nose to the end of the tail, 8 feet 9 inches around the girth, 26 inches around the fore- arm and 31 inches across the hips. She has been exhibited in four statesâ€" Illinois, Indi- ana, Missouri and Tennessee. She is white and red, mostly the latter, well-formed, and a, perfect beauty. Is YOUR I'IORSE BALKY?â€"-If he is,and you cannot ï¬nd any means of stirring him, try the effect of patience. Here are two odd methods involving patience that a. London paper suggest: “1. Tire your steed out by remaining perfectly quiet until he Starts of himself. 1 once sat in my cart nearly two and a half hours in this way. 2. Now and then a horse is met with that ref uses to draw at all; put him in a cart in a. shed, and keep him there until he walks out. In one instance that came to my knowledge the 0})- stinate one was thirty-six hours in the shaft before he gave in.†GOOD 1’01:LTRY.â€"'I‘lxero is moi-c moneyky half to be had annually in good poultry raising (considering its cost) than can bé realized from the pigs or sheep of the farm, and yet the latter are fed and housed and r r“__1 -LAAL bred by many to the neglect of fowl stock. Good fowls of any improved breed maynow be had at a reasonable price, ‘and cheap houses can be built to shelter a. hundred or two hundred birds. There is very little 1;;- borto be performed in the proper care of a, few score of nice fuvrls during the breeding Season. Farmers will do well to look into the merits of this thing. MILK GEXTLY.â€"â€"Mi}kin§; is an art, and the farm hand who knows how to milk pm- pcrly is more valuable to the careful dairy- man than any other help. 01 course any- body cam milk, and some van milk a dozen . rm A A»«»!.J Mn§\n~ "VHJ Vs... cows before neakfast. The careful manag- er, however, is not so anxious for fast help as he is to employ those who are careful. The operation should never be hurried, but the milk should be drawn steadily and, as it flows naturally. Some cows have very tender teats, and the rapid milkman forgets this {act in his endeavor to make speed. The cow that is naturally impatient and fretful does not like to submit to rough handling, and her disposition is soon-ruined by such treatment. \Vith the constant ir- ritation she will fail in quantity, and be less productive, just as any human being would fail to perform faithful service when labor- ing under mental afflicfion or trouble. As the udder becomes distended and ï¬lled with milk the desire on the part of the‘cow is to be relieved of its contents, and She willingly submits to it for the relief it occasions. The constant practice of being milked at stated intervals impresses itself strongly upon her, and she will seldom offer resistance without cause. When a. cow, therefore, that has been a patient deliverer of milk becomes fractious, the fault can be always traced to the inilkman. The following summary of the forms of oath in use in foreign legislative assemblies, extracted from the reports received at the Foreign Ofï¬ce, may not be without interest at the present time:â€" ‘ v G - L A1- w... Bavai‘iaâ€"I swear . . . So help me God and his Holy Gospel. Denmarkâ€"4 promise and sweat . . So help me God and His Holy VVcrd. Greeceâ€"I swear in the name of the Hon and Consantantia‘J and Imlivisihle 'J‘rinity. Hesse-Dormstadt â€"»â€" I swear . . . So help me God. SaKC-Cobm‘g and Badenwl swear. So help me Goll. Hollamlcâ€"l swear. So help me God. Portugalâ€"1 swear on the Holy Gospels. PrussiawI swear by God, the Almighty and Omuiscient . . . So help me God. Saxonyâ€"~I swear by Almighty God. ServiawI swear by one God and with all that is according to law most sacred, and in this world dearest . . . So help me God in this and that other world. Spainâ€"After swearing the deputy on the Gospel, the President says, “Then may Go: repay you; but if you fail, may lie claim it from you. †Sweden and 'Norway~~-I [President or Vice-President only] swear before God and His Holy Gospel . . . I will be faithful to this oath as sure as God shall save my bogly ï¬nd 230111: 7 .I ,,,..H._.- A: A1.m:~LL.V Switzerlandâ€"In the presence of Almighty God I swear . . . So help me God. United Sta-tesz do solemnly swear . . So help me God. In Bavaria non-Christians omit the refer- ence to the Gospel. In Holland and the United States afï¬rmation is optional. In Prussia and in Switzerland aï¬irmation is permitted to those Who object on religious grounds the oath. In Austria a promise is in every case substituted for an oath. In Belgium and Italy the adjuration is used without any theistic reference,and in France and Roumania, the German Reichstag, and for deputies in Sweden and Norway neither oath nor afï¬rmation is demanded. -â€"-â€"â€"-â€"â€"_vo<<.° rapâ€"â€" A Strange Story. According to the London T771111, several members of the present House of Commons have neither taken an oath nor alï¬rmed. “(hen the House met in its ï¬rst session here were a number of tables with Testa- ments on them. The Clerk read the oath, and asmauy as could put a ï¬nger on one of the Testaments, were considered to have taken the oath, after which they signed the roll. But some gentlemen having, through ignorance, signed the roll before performing the preliminary ceremony did not see their way to go through it afterward, and conse- quently they sit and vote Without their having taken the oath or afï¬rmed. Legismtivo oaths Abroad. AGRICULTURAL. ._-4.~â€"o So help me For Week lungs, spitting of blood, sliort~ ness of breath, consumption, night sweats and all lingerian coughs, Dr. Pieree’s “ lold- on Medical Discovery †is a sovereign rem- eLly, Superior to cod liver oil. By druggists. THE only way of paring the nails and shaving the head of rumor, is for lovely W0- nien never to repeat one word she hears. “Female Compiuints.†Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sirâ€"~I was sick for six years, and oeuldscar- cely walk about the house. My breath was short and I suffered from pain in my breast and stomach all the time; also from palpita- tion and an internal fever, or burning sen~ sation, and experienced frequent smothering or choking sensations. I also suffered from pain low down across my bowels and in my back, and was much reduced in flesh. I have used your “ Golden Medical Discor« ery †and “ Favorite Prescription,†and feel that I am well. Very respectfully, DELILAH B. MCMILLAN, ArlingtonJla, IT is asserted over and over that anxiety shortens life, but when a chap sees another fellow feeding his girl sandwiches at a pic- nic is he going to sit down and bid his soul be calm? Not by a boot-jack I N. B.~1"‘a$tcrns sent, orders by post prmnpfly ï¬lled. A 1m uw‘mcss FIT. Cancers and Otbsr Tumors are treated with unusual success by \Vorld‘s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. Send stamp for pamphlet. “Tired Nature’s Sweet Restorer, Buimy Sleep.†int there are times when this “Renewer of Strength†is denied us, times when our minds and bodies have been. so over-worked and are so worn out mat we “woo the drowsy god in vain.†The Peruvian Syrup (an Iron Tonic) renews our strength and makes our rest sweet and I?» freshiixu. A Maryland man Who wanted to do some- thing in memory of his wife has _erected a, church spire and put four big bells in it. The people in that locality will keep that wo- man’s memory green for years to come. SHEEN AGENTS VVANTED, QQOPSF’s, V y . . m {Enéï¬onE} TnAnrj'MAnK. (AFTER.') Q. Is a. sure, Promm and En‘cctuul Remedy for Nervousncs-s in A LL its stages. 'W'calc ï¬lemory. Loss of Brain" Power, Prostration, Night Sweats. l'i’erdcness, and General Loss 0/ Power. It rvjyfmix‘s Nervous I'Va/séc. chu, vcmcfes {he ath Intellect. Strengthens Enfeebted Brain, and Restores 'varisim, Tone and Vigor to the Exhausted amora- tive Organs. The experience of thousands prgyes it aux} I PI E REMEDY. A_A. 4A LL†‘AN‘A -\’~I‘ €n MAGK’S MAGNETIC MEDIClNE AUVV.) w w†The medicine is pleasant to the taste, and in no case and under no circumstances can it do harm. inch box contains sufï¬cient for two week's medication, thus being much cheaper than any other medicine soldâ€"and while it is the engagest, 1! is‘muclh bettert y. . ALL nu, V..m~y~.~u, £22? Ful Datum we desire to man) 1152‘s mvovflr ifham phlets, which {I'er any adglx'css‘.‘ Mack‘s Magnetic Medicine is sold by Dru:- glsts at 50 cts. per box, or 12 boxes for $5, or will be mailed free of postage, on receipt. of money, by addressinv Supplies the b10011 with im "rim l' rinciple or Life Element. “1091', infusing Strength, Vigor. and 30w Life into all puts-of the sysâ€" PERUVIAN SYRUP What to Study. Pope, the poetical philosopher said, “The proper study of mankind is man,†and yet, how little is the real science of man studied. If people understood and headed the laws of health, and if when out of sorts would resort to a. common sense like Burdock Blood Bitters, many of the “ills that flesh is heir to†might be effectually remodied. It in- vigorates and regulates all the secretions to a healthy action: Cures Dyspepsia, Nervous Affec- tions, General Debility, Fever and Ague, Paralysis, Chronic Diarrhoea, Boils, Dropsy, Humans, Female Com- laints, Liver Complaint, Remitten’c ever, and all diseases originating in a bad State of the Blood, or accompanied by Debili’cy or a 10W State of the System. Apply to ORDERED AT 2.15.le A '8) WOMEMERCE MUTUAL FIRE INSKJSSAM £9 CBMPANW, 0F ONTARIO. _ FREZIEAE’S WORM PGWDERS. to pleasant to t :o. Con’min their own Ingative. Is a safe, sum, and effectual damn:- ol’ worms in Children 01‘ Adults J. BMNDME. Secret ’S MEDECINE (70.. W’lmhm‘. Ont Canada \VHETE BR! 7:1 FREE“ REG ATTA. FLtNN EL “ANITQBA £09 VONGE ST TORONTO. (18) l‘oronto, Ohm-go. (LUMBER? The State of Michigan, having 50 years of im- provements, stilL (-onlm’ns largo, tracts of wra- orcqpicrl lands suitable forfnrms, some of them subject to free settlement under homestead laws, am) all of them for sale at low prices. A un- phlet, prepared under authority of Um la.th and containing a. map, descriptions of its clim« ate, soil. industries. crops, and resources, and an account of its lands. will be sent free to any- one writing for it to COMMISSIONER OF IM- MIGRATION, Detroit. Mich. LYON & ALEXANDER Mouldings, Mirrors, Frames, (fhx‘mnos, En- gravingn. Veh’c! Fx'mnes, Easels, dc. latest Designs in Birthday, Sunday School and Easter (‘nrdm All sizes 011‘ (ml Bevel-edgn Panels for painting. HEMP FARMS NEAR MARKETS. NEW I‘mmsag -. 110, 112, 114- BAY STREET, Photographic Goods ! MANETQBA “nme WATERPRQEF Horse éis Waggon Bums Waterproof. OILED CLOTHING, 46 Front Street East,Tor0nto. WATERPROOF TENT SHEETS, ION HAND AND MADE TO ORDER. Owing to the unsatisfactory mcthad of doing business through agents 1 take this means of intimatinan grangers, that on application of the secretary of grangers lodges I win furnish designs and estimates so that, any member wishingtocrect a, monument or tablet to the memory of depavtcd friends, can do so without the intervention of an agent and at a saving of from twenty to twenty-ï¬ve per cent. auilfll'eas CHARLES ,VVAJ‘SOK, - ~__-.â€".__.,â€" 80 Adelaide street. ‘i-Vcst. Toronto CHAS. 'WATSsON, MAN UFAUI'U RISK OF MONUMENTS & HEADSTONES QREAT WESTERN RMLWAY. For Fargo. Grand Forks, Euler-Hon, Winni- peg, Portage La Prairie, Brandon, and points in the Norm-West will leave the line of thls Railway on A SERIES OF Special Colonist Trains this Season THE FIFTH EXCURSION WEDNESDAY. APRIL 19th, 1882. And >wil_1__be Eccompan‘i‘cd bx u_, responsible Mich? of tlié Com uhy through to NVIinnipéé T cse trains. whi have been sp cially arrang- AJ 5H. ‘LA A-“..Mfl .muu.m- . ,M An :.JAM.|‘ . (Ed-fa} {iliéiécï¬yhveni’encc of intendingmsrétt'lréi‘lffl the NorthWesn will be continued during the the months of March and Apml, leaving on MANETQB E and will be. run through .on express time. reading Winnipeg, 1t is expected, on the fol owing Saturday. Freight trains for general merchandlse and settlers’ ef- fects will leave \Vindsor on Fridays during the same months previous to the starting of passen- ger trains. For further particulurs as to pas- senqer and freight rates, time tables, maps. etc., apply to any of the Company’s Station Masters and Agents. WM. EDGAR. F. BROUGHTON. WEDNESDAY OF EACH WEEK The Electric Light, superceding as it does all other modes of illumination, and rivalled only by the glori‘ ous sunshine, will not be hailed with greater joy by mankind, than is Burdock Blood Bitters, which is as far superior to all other blood puriï¬ers and tonics as the electric light is superior to the old fashioned tallow dip. Burdock Blood Bitters cures Scrofula, and all foul humors and impurities of the blood. (16) linpox'tcrs, Manufacturers, and Wholesale dealers in every dcs Tiption of Biuausnlsss, DYSPEPSM. INDIGESTION, JA diva/05. ERYS/PELAS, 8ALT RHEUM, HEARTBOR/v, HEADACHE, And every épecies of disease arising from disordered LIVER, KIDNEYS, STOMAOH. BOWELS yr.- BLOOD. T. MILBURN 8: 60., Gin. Pass. Agent. TO GRANGERS.‘ WILL CURE OR RELIEVE TORONTO, ONT. Tablets, Fences, &c. J. LECKIE, Marks manufactured by M. II. Youn::& 00.. 13 \Vellington-st. East, Toronto, agents wanted. DI‘?ZINES‘8, DROPS Y, FLUTTERJNG THE STU/MACH, DRY/V588 OF THE SKIN, ' "OF THE HEART, ACID/TY 0F F. BROUGHTON. General ï¬Iungcr. Proprietors. ' TORONTO.