HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Advocate, 1887-11-10, Page 7s•
=7770=
•
HS7,11
.W114r.BTHE Iij, MAY?
1.60.49. by Bev. Dr! T'sdicer .04 C/1001ts
ft114 Watelled
Rev, Dr. Parker, of the Oity Temple,
Leridort,'Englanddectured in Knox 011104,
.11ami1ton, to a large audience, represent-
ing almost every denominetion anclnlepe of
people of the city. Hie lecture was maique,
solid and prectical,end his etyle wholly his
own, yet not 130 unoommon as to he in
merited contrast with that of other lectur-
ers. De. Idirker is a short, chunky man,
with a very intelligent -looking face and a
large head, which looks larger under a crop
:of thick, wavy hair. He hes just enough
of the English accent to betray his nation,
ality, even if his general Appearance clidnet
give it away. He has a fine command of
..language, his sentences being beantifully
eonficied and finished. He says a good deal
and implies more, bie gesticulations being
full of dramatic force and carrying mote
suggestions with them than his lips give
utterance to. Ile was introduced without
ceremony by Rey. Mtingo Fraser test night
and said:
Once, in speaking to John B, Gough, I
asked him what port of lecture I should
deliver in corning to this country, and he
said, "No matter how fascinating, a lee-
turer will have no lasting reputation unless
there be a high moral tone and purpose in the
leoture." I thought a fairer tribute pould
not bepaid to transatlantic intelligence. I
have not come to this country to speak
:simply to its frivolity. My purpose is a
moral purpose, therefore I do not feel out
of place in the pulpit to discuss upon the
subjeot of "Clocks and 'Watches." I know
.no more than the moat ignorant perpon
present about clocks and watches. I know
nothing of their meohanism,yet hov full of
:suggestions they are. They do more than
tick—they oveellow with all sorts t"f wise
teachings. Can a man make anything with.
.out putting something of himself into it?
How muoli of the man is there in the
horse which he grooms and drives? How
much of the man ie there in the eagle—
atone. So it is with watches and clocks—
there is BO much of the man in them. I
.look at the watch and see three workers.
'The second-hand working hard for its
bread ; surely it deserves whatever it may
need. Then here is this long, slim, thin
one, like iv fastened down young lady. There
seems to be no motion to it, or very little;
then here is the short, thick hand. The
first is always going, the secund moves
with a languid motion, but the
third is absolutely no use at
-all. So a man might say, to
look at the watch, but you could take off
the second hand and not miss it, and the
languid moving ono, but if you touch the
apparently motionless one you cannot tell
the time. So it is with society. Here is
a man always on the alert. You can't
find him napping. He is a man of detail.
He says he can't have anything to do with
sleepy people. Then you have the
class who like to do things quietly, who
don't like so much fuss, and then you have
the slow going ones—slow going as a mao; but if you disturb the slow going
.ones, where are you? We have people
whom we describe its old fogies. They want
to take time to consider and will give you
an answer day after to -morrow. They
may be old fogies but they are the men who
keep society healthy. You see them in the
church. When you want to call a minis-
ter the young people will say one will do if
he is young enough, and can speak 150
miles an hour without Baying anything.
Probably the young folks' fire will be caught
by the older ones, but the old fogies will
consider and take time—but when they
have decided upon a person they will stick
to him. So in life we need all sorts, Wo
must wait for some, and always remember
that the slow 'nay be the sure; that that
which appears to be nething may
be the most important, while that
which makes a great show may be of
least utility. Come to a chronometer
dstore. What a din, 100 different styles and
-sizes of watches all striking twelve. So it
is in politics, in the ininistry and in all
.classes of life, there are different styles,
and wo need them all, so long as they tell
the right tale. If the clocks are all telling
the same tale at 12 o'clock I will be satis:
.fled. I wish people wonld pay more atten-
tion to the message and less todItyle. In
the churoli we have innumerable pedantie
critics all talking of style and forgetting
the message. A rick man dies and the
time has come for reading the will. The
old fogy lawyer adjusts his spectaoles and
slowly reads John Henry Thompson, $10,-
000; Sarah, 4l16,000; Henry Wilkinson,
00,000; and the people interested say, "1
don't like that lawyer's style." Do they?
Well, no! they don't care about his grunty
.rhetorio, they want to hear about the dol-
lars—they want the message. So ought
we to be in all great inatters. Never mind
:the style, bueget at the purpose. But that
.round clock there, I didn't hear yeti strike
.at all, id' Oh; no, I don't strike. I am not
.one of your vulgar clock': if people want
lie know the time they must look at me. 1
.am pot one of those profeesing clocks." A
.man buys that clock and sets hiui up, The
lortg winter nights dome and the man
lies awake. He wonders what time it is
.and wishes his clock struck. He gets up,
knocks over a chair and finds only one
match is in the case and the eulpliut end -is,
off that one, Then he knooksi over a vase.
.nd resolves to buy a striking (look:"
So with men. Thein are those who make
no professiohs. They lutin ne religion; no
politics, no ideas. They never Bay any-
thing. You must look at them to see what
o'clock it is; but sometimes it is dark,
and then yeti see the fade. Oh, for
strong, resonant voice in. the time of
national darkness I Geientiny hid her
striking clock in Luther, and England has
in Gladstone. (This seetiment was ap-
plauded. to the eehod We 'want men who
'can strike at the right time. There are
;sometimes -corruptions and evils, and WO,
need men who elm speak out and say,, No
in 'Godharne, that's wrotig. There us 110
nigatiness Ocifial to the meanness that tvill
siceept all the privileges Of Christianity,.
and will not venture out to olthroll on a
foggy Sunday nigh, but will allok Wrong
and oppression te goby defatilt to 'jthig,
meth.' lilVery watchand clock has he
placii;- and if men edulcl learn that WO
would have Mete contentment in society
than we havel and men would be praising
e Lord instead of envying ono another,
21-'—verY marl cannot t e a Gin3ar: ciGoositt:LwIN
more than all ()Tsar's legon& Wit innate-
have eloquent and learned men to fill St.
Paul's, but tye must also have the shepherd
to reveal the kingpin of God to the
tear-filled eye, We must have the
mother who is Teems in the family and the
father and the little child. They all con-
stitute the raintatrY p Menheed. WnY
should we envy what elle neighbor hap ?
He is our brother. I would like te write a
"Hamlet " andf' Othello' " and even a
work as insignificant as "Paradise Lost."
I will tell you why I don't. I an not too
proud. I could lay abide my pride; the
only reason why I don't is that I can't. It
is net my place. Then there is one great
big clock by which the dealer sets all the
ethers. It is the regulator. ' The situ
regulates the regulator and God reguletes
the sun. Are there no regulittorsin society
in Hamilton—men who are looked pp to as
patterns? _No olock can be put right by the
hands and no man can be made clean hy
washing his iands. You must make
the clock right within. It takes 8,200
operations to make a - common watch.
W.hich one of. the operations made the
watch? No one. Who can toll how many
operations it takes to make a man? Was
it the environments, or the father so wise,
or the mother so good,or the companions
so well chosen ? Which one? No one,
It was the father, the nother, the journal.
let, the pastor, the school teacher—all.
Discipline and sorrow have had their part.
Nine o'clock Tuesday night' here is about
2 o'clock Wednesday morning in London.
So right here may be wrong somewhere
else. Therefore let every one see that he
is right in his place. The lecturer closed
after referring to Gladstone as a regulator
and stating that he had suggested as a
title for a future lecture, "Gladstone—the
man, his opponents and his allies." The
sentiment expressed and the suggestion
m tdo were received most heartily.
EES 'LOST IN CAVERNS.
Animal Life Underground Marked by the
Fading Away of 'Visual Organs.
There is a manifest tendency of all gayly
colored forms to lose their hues in the
caverns and to become of an even color.
This may be explained by the simple ab-
sence of sunshine, and on it no conclusions
ciiit be based. The °hedges of the struc-
tural parts are of more importance; these,
as might be expected, relate mainly to the
organs of sense. The eyes show an evi-
dent tendency in all the groups to fade
away. In the characteristic cavern -fishes
they have entirely disappeared, the whole
structure which serves for vision being
no longer produced. In the crayfishes we
may obsefvebeet:tin gradatien..!!tSemdr
species which abound in cavern are liro:4
vided with eyes; others have themedare,
sent, but 80 imperfect that they cannot
serve as Visiiiir organs r yet other p want
them: altogether. OnOspeoies of :pseudo -
scorpion, as shown by Prof. Hagan, has in
the outer world four eyes, while in the
caves it has been found with two eyes and
others in an entirely eyeless condition.
Scene cavern -beetles have the males with
eyes, while the females are quite without
them... 4s a whole, the cavern.forms ex-
hibit a singular tendency of the visual
organs, not only to lose their functions, but
also to disappear as body -parts. At the
same.tiene there is an equal, or even more
general", development of the interim and
other organs of touch; these parte become
considerably lengthened'and apparently of
greater sensitiveness, a change which is of
manifest advantage to the individual.—
Scribner's Dlagazine.
Miss Phelps' Inspiration.
The announcement of Miss Phelps' new
d Gate " story, entitled " The Gates Be.
tween," recalls the remark of a prominent
Kansas City lady who was driving with
some guests along the Hesperus Road this
simmer, between Magnolia, and Gloucester,
Mass. As a curve of the beautiful drive-
way disclosed the narrow " Neck "stretch-
ing out to sea, the Western woman turned
to her companion, saying "Wo drove
outnn the Neck last week when we went to
Manchester -by -the -Sea, and had a view of
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps' summer home.
After that visit I understand why she's
always writing about gates. Why, there is
nothing else as noticeable. They thrust
themselves across the road at every turn
without the shadow of an excuse; but not
one of the six was ajar. And wirrnings
were poked at every one against leaving it
ajar under extreme penalty of the law. "
—Front Portfolio of the American Magazine for
:November. '
• A
,.1What the Clergyman Does.
"What do they do when they install a
minister ?" inquired a small boy. Do
they pat him in a stall and feed him ?"
"Not a bit of it," said his father ; " they
harness him to a church and expect him to
drawit alone."
•-.4ti.:, lc, • . ,
THE ma4;jority report 'Of the Utah Com-
mission gives a Very intelligible.idea of the
actual strength Of Mormonism. The popu-
lation of the territory is about 200,000; a
gain of nearly 60,000 since 1880, and the
property hi aseeesed et a valuation Of
$85,605;802. 'The 'Morriviti pciPuldtf filit
132,297, with 84,431 ohnrch-digiltarie i but
the Meirinon Church in the yarions1 erri-
tories nuinber 162883, With 46,680'01100
under 8 years of age. The ;strength of the
non-Mornion element in the territory isi
about 55,000,,with 62 cimPehes of different
denominations, employing 280 teachers and
having in their schools 0,608 pupils. ,Sitifee
thepassage of the Edmunds law in -168.2,
541 pintons havibeen indicted for unlawful
cohabitation, and 289 have been ethavicted„
While fourteen have been efinvicted efOk
polyginny; and InadiSi fled t6 0414 iiirest
T1ienia3diity of the CorniniPeieneriXAe4ra
the recent movement to obtaiii statehood'
for the territory through the adoption of a
coestitutien,in which iion•Mornione had no
part•tth it inere' effort to free the Church
from the control of Government and to
give theCietielets a freer hand: On, the
other hand, the minority of the Commis -
Sion bel:ievethat," fhb large plaas orriorfoJ
l-ianlba,MOrlittline lisive becOme 'Pei -winced
thitt thaf interests keg taro the abolition of
polygamy,. and that with its suppression
titbit Inn:netts faith Will no longer militate
,agitiusst them, ,
. The liciii*kcV dtl4t7trfihnittuf;3-1ti'. iirAtilit-
litY ii:/ti'e&inent thitcliing 'GiViitititt tninAlar
to the Suez °anal at.,Yreerneitt, The paper
Says it btheVeit if all the powers interested
ehonicleitieiet Ota, imeli on agreement Eng-
land:kilorIldfyitelda •• ; 4 i't ' 11‘: 4 '
5." .: , , It
,c1T,TAAENT,
effort to Naafi WAN
to build .t.t..1.4o1CPP8 XeMerial ir X.PlAtleii
beings to ,mind the fact that the great
novelist in late will emphatically disap-
proved of any such apt on the 'part .pf hip
editiirere, He believed,. end tightly, that
hip works were a .sufficient monument to
his memory.
Tin London go40 noes the introdne,
thin in English markets of a new fiber,
WITiOh is 110 iing and durable that a new
fabric, made from it ie,exneotedshortly to
drive silk almost .040relyillit,of the market.
The fiber is in the. shape Pf a Pine -apple
leaf, and the new fabric has redeivedtIs
-
name of "pine, oleth."
Tun late lgr, David Kennedy, the ,$cpt,
tish yooalist, was an ardent Liberal., When
he was in Egypt he wrote; "When this
country is goyeened by liberty ap now by
despotism, it will be the garden of the
Lord. Aly puree on all forms of tyranny,
and our Government ,en the side of
tyranny l But not for tong—riot for long.
Heayeti be on the Gladstone side." is
REv. W. ELLIOT, VIOLtr of Aston, Birming-
,
ham, is trying to collect his tithes from
bus parishioners by legal proceedings. One
mem who had lived for twenty-five years.
on his property without healing of tithes
had a levy put on, aucl in another case a
distraint for 4,3wits mit on the Smaltheath
Liberal Club, but the chairman defied the
bailiffs and the warrant was not enforced.
4Rttoros of the fent that it took eighty
soldiers 4144 150 policemen recently to evict
one Irish tenant, the Pall Mall Gazette offers
the Government the following problem in
pimple proportion ; "11 it takes 230 armed'
men to reduce one Irish patriot to the sub,
mission that you call union, how many
armed men will it take to reduce the whole
Irisfi people and thus complete Mr. Bal -
four's promised task of uniting the 'United
Kingdom?"
Bennie:ins in America who have recently
been engaged in discussion concerning the
teaching Of the dead languages will be in-
terested to know that an influential com-
mittee, representing allthe colleges, hap
decided to adopt the continental pro-
nunciation of Latin at Cambridge Uni-
versity. Whether Oxford will follow this
example remains t� be seen, but, if it does
not, teachers preparing pupils will find
;themselves in a quandary.
(Mounters generally produce full crone
only every othetyear. This is because the
full crop of one year BO exhausts the fruit-
diroducing qualities of the soil:that it is not
able to produce a full crop the next year.
Give it a good supply of the proper kind of.
manure and thus make up for the loss of
the fruit -producing qualities of the :nil,
and you may expect good crops every year,
provided you treat your trees properly in
other respects.
Mits. Femme, the wife of Mr. Forbes, the
well-known ,naturalist and explorer, who a
year or two ago published an account of
his scientific researohes, in the Eastern
Archipelago,has written a narrative of her
adventures :. while she accompanied her
husband travels. Mrs. Forbes' ex-
periences in the East were in some respects
unique. She lived for a few weeks abso-
lutely alone in the mountains of Timor,
and was the first European SV011161 who
visited Papua. The book is dedicated to
the Countess of Aberdeen.
Sco Cliames and Lady Dilke have had a
jolly time in Constantinople. The Sultan
was extremely cordial to them, and they
were received by the Patriaroh of the
Greek Cluirela and by the seven Arch-
bishops in Synod assembled. A Turkish
translation of Lady Dilke's "The Shrine
of Death" is being made. The noted
couple went -from Turkey to Greece and
are now on their way to London; They
have won a geed deal of popularity wher-
ever they have stopped for any length of
time.
THERE has been a royal committee ap-
pointed to investigate the Hessian fly
ravages in the United Kingdom, twenty
counties in England and ten in :Scotland
having been Visited by this insect. It is
difficult to estimate the damage, some
placing it at two bushels per acre. In Fife
there are complaints of losses of three to
ton bushels per acre, The treatment in
Russia and in the United States bas been
inquired into, and corn merchants are
requested to be on the alert. The general
conclusion of the commission favors the
dissemination of all information possible,
trusting to the vigilance of the British
farmer.
TATE process of welding invented by Mr.
De Banardoz, of Russia, is now applied
induilitially by the society for the electrical
working of Metals. The pieces to be
Welded are placed upon a oast Iran plate
supported byrt insulated table and eon.
neettel with the negative pole of it source Of
electeioity. The positive pole communi-
cates with at electrie carbon inserted in
an insulating handle. On drawing the
point of the earbon along the edge of the
metal to be welded. the operator closes the
tirchit. He has then merely to raise thed
point ;slightly to preclude a voltaic arc
whose high temperature Melts the two
pieees of metal and datums them to Unite::
" Sue who eweispa a room." gays Geed
Itouseleeeptngr, makes the action no leas
fine by the wearing of a pair of old kid
gloves during the prooese, and the same 18
tetiti'Of blacking a stove, cleaning kerosene
lap*, and Many other hotethOld chides
that 'fall tO Mothera and clittighteri in
honks Where•nO servant is kopte ' Mother
thinks it so a .yening girl4bItishe
Mg with shame ,on being'fotind sweeping
in gtovee. But why Tiot ita Well wear. gloveb
to protect thci. hang as 0 1-3weoping cap. 4:1'
I:feted tho hair? The eceitsional washing
of the hands' with corn ineal and boraX
sop in tepici:watek helps to keep there soft
and ,emooth; and glyaeritio, Mixed with
'Omen juice, is okceilent to apply at tight."
;"axiiite iaho longer" fie" Getman
peTet,:!'.-any ewotd :malting lanky in
Dathastife. What was 0000 knowlt AS 06
sWord tratIothoW beclipiet3 its'elf with ;Cori,:
vbrtiiig the blades Of old Saws and pietieti Of
ordinarry, irori Mtn' daggers, cheap Swords,
and killeS of Solingen and Birmingham
make 'are iileo ,bought Up, fipishod, and
decorated in Oriental style,' and theft put
upon the Market n weAvong of Aritb,itin and
paitutacene briitiThe fainOttes gold and
silver work ivInelf onto gave thie
a reputation throughout the world has
fallen into decay. Fine goldsmith's work
je o longer ediked feel and all that Eurepe
seems to require are Cheap specimen:3 pf
filagree work, such asheaps:tete, hreochee
and. armlets."
4 0044wsksziPEzil:p haskre Journal
ellegee that recentlY 423 Melbourne, with
his wife and two chtldren, aged 2 and 4, be
we to pee the animals tn the Royal Park,
and that fenr wolves sleeping in a cage paid
no attention to himself aed hi a wife and
the eldest child, bet the moment tht3
younger one toddled up they sprang to their
feet and made for the corner of the cage
nearest to her, where they stood against
the bars, pushed their paws through,barked
constantly and seemed wild to get at her,
not viciously, however, but as a dog might
have run to play with her. When the child
spoke their efforts were redoubled. On a
subsequent visit the same thing occurred.
From which the correspondent concludes;
that wolves hona strong maternal instinct
and love children.
AT the forestry congress in Springfield
Ill., last month a Chicago manufacturer of
farm waggons said that a waggon had been
made of twenty different kinds of „timber,
all of which was grown from seed planted
within forty years. It was by no means
necessary to use so many different kinds of
wood, as the entire running gear could
have come from one log of honey locust
eighteen inches in diameter. The waggons
which the speaker himeelf ordinarily made
required five kinds of wood, oak, hickory,
ash, tulip (which he palled whitewood) and
pine. The pine, however, was used only
because it was cheap, as ash was just as
light and more enduring for the same pur-
pose. He maintained that, although forty
years was a good while to wait for the re-
turn on an investment, the money put into
forest planting was prudently used, as a
growing forest, which was increasing in
value every year, was as marketable as any
other property. Moreover, many of the
branches trimmed off as the trees grew
could be used, as well as the saplings re-
moved in the thinning out process.
Do. W. A. IIAMTOND, the distinguishe
New York medical expert, lecturing on
" the use and the abuse of the brain,' the
other evening said: Anxiety causes more
brain disorders than any other agency I
knowof unless it be love. It is well for us
to know that the ernotione cause more
unhappiness and crime than any other
function of the brain. Human beings are
governed by their emotions, and it is well
that they should be, though it is the emo-
tions that wear away the brain, and not
honest intellectual work. Very few people
suffer from intellectual work, and if my
memory serves me 1 do not recollect ever
having a mathematician for a patient. It
is not intellectual work that causes nervous
dyspepsia, but the emotions, such as anxiety,
fear, sorrow and love. T consider that eight
hours are sufficient for a man to use his
brain, because if he exceeds that time he
becomes nervous and fretful, and an
exhausted brain is an irritable brain. You
may not feel the evil effects of the stress of
brain work at the time but you will sooner
or later, when it will be too late. The men
that work at night with their brain are the
ones that expose themselves to danger and
death which will surely come unless the
great strain on the mind is lightened.
Beauty With out Paint.
"What makes my skin so dark and muddy?
My cheeks wore once so smooth and ruddy
I use the best cosmetics made,"
Is what a lovely maiden said.
"That's not the cure, my charming Hiss,"
The doctor said—" remember this :
If you your skin would keep from taint,
Discard the powder and the paint,
"The proper thing for all such ills
Is this," remarked the mau of pills :
" Enrich the blood and make it pure—
It: this you'll find the only cure."
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will
*do this without fail. It has no equal. All
druggists.
Referring to the recent statement that,
at a recent festival held in the Queen's
presence in the Highlands, there was ex.
cessive drinking, Sir Henry Ponsonby,
Her Majesty's Private Seoretary, writes to
say he was present on the occasion men-
tioned, and that he did not see any drunken
persons.
Worth Ten Dollars a Bottle.
Any person who has used Poison's
Nerviline, the great pain cure, would not be
without it if it cost ten dollars a bottle. A
good thing is worth its weight in gold, and
Nerviline is the best remedy in the world
for all kinds of pain. It cures neuralgia in
five minutes; toothache in one minute;
lame back at one application; headache in
a few momentsi; and all ,pains just as
rapidly, Small test bottlee only cost 10
dents, Why not try it to -day? Large,
bottles 4;5 cents, sold'hy all druggists an
country dealers. Use Poison's nerve pain
cure—Nerviline.
The Important Thing..
Eastern man (who has been itiVited to
" take a hand" in the game)—I know very
little abont poker. 1.snppose . the chief ref
quisite in Playing thegarne suoceaffully is
knowledge of human nature.
Western nian2--A knowledge of human
nature helps, stranger, it helps.; but the
bief requisite is cash. •
•
By its roild, soothing and healing prod'
porties, Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures
the worst oases d nasal catarrh, also " cold
in the head," colyza, and catarrhal head.;
aches. Fifty cents, by druggists.
*7 ,
She Has the Earth:
An esteerne&CoritetriPoritrr littabtdepart.
Ment headed "Tho Woman's World."
1iinierIcan., :1;11.4: !IV r'a. itg;l3d°f''7'!.r.r
A. new lino of passenger steatnors ,1ift.„131y,
between KingetOn and Alblitreat is tallesp,of
for next sleafion
it is now reported tiled' the Czar hhSth
measles,
King Hetilbert WAIF Vibit the CrOWII
rrince el Getniefiy Avveno:
Tho Mainnis. Of tbb1iin hes been eleeted
Rector of Edinburgh University,
Lord SaliAnty 1110 notifioa M. WacidirA,
toi),Vrefioll A10CS8ttO1 bLondoii thitt.thO
Royal sanctionhap ,been given, to the eii.
fo1oeth5mit tlio1ItowforindlaXicl Bait Act
mixt seasou
pv P4telligelni Women Peci40,
When the question has to he met MtO
what is the best course to adept te• isecnre
8, pure, safe and agreeable remedy for tho�e.
organic diseases and weaknessep Wbie4
efflict the female sex, there is but one wise
decision, viz., a course of self -treatment
with Dr, Pieroe'p Favorite Prescription. It
is an npfailing specificfor periodical paino.,
misplacement, internal inflammation 840.
all fnnotional disorders that render the lives
of Bo many women miserable an4jOy1049,
They who try it praise it. Of Depggiste.
The subscriptions in the TorontpDhatriet
this year to the IlifethOdist Missionary
Society amount to e,23,403.44, an increase
ot *4,940.53 over last year.
F. Hamilton, whose name has been
before the nubile lately in conneetion with
that of Mrs. Middleton of Ottawa, who has
left her husband, arrived in Toronto yester-
day and left for the west on the 1.05 o'clock
C. P. 11, train. Captain Sherwood, of the
Dominion Pepe°, who also arrived in that
city yesterday, made inquiries at the rail-
way ticket offices regarding Plarnilten's
destination, but not finding particulars he
also took pasmage on the 1.05 train west
with Hamilton.
Appa.....r0p,plorwrowpwp.0.00.,.0,00,posnri...,000....ip.npv0-0,P00prapplopop
The treatment of many thousands of ,cases
of those chronic weaknesses and distressing
ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids'
Motel and Surgical Institute, Buffino, N. Y.,
has adordcd a vast experience in nicely adapt-
ing and thoroughly testing remedies /or the
cure of woman's peculiar maladies.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription
is the outgrowth, or result, of this great and
valuable experience. Thousands of testimo-
nials, received from patients and from physi-
cians who have tested it in the more aggra-
vated and obstinate oases which bad baffled
their skill, prove it to be the most wonderful
remedy ever nevised for the relief and cure of
suffering women. It is not recommended as a,
"cure-all," but as a inost perfect Specific for
woman's peapliar ailments.
As a powerful, invigorating tonic,
it imparts strength to the whole system,
and to the womb and its apyendages
particular. For overworked; wern-out,'
"run-down," debilitated teachers, milliners,
dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop -girls," house-
keepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women
generally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription
is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled
as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic.
As a soothing and strengthening
nervine, "Favorite Prescription" is une-
qualed and is invaluable in allaying and sub-
duing nervous excitability, irritability, ex..
haustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and
other distressing, nervous symptoms com-
monly attendant upon functional and organic
disease of the womb. It induces refreshing
sleep and relieves mentai anxiety and de-
s pi;nrd.
r
en°IYe'ree/s Favorite Proscription
is a legitimate medicine, carefully
compounded by an experienced and skillful
physician, and adapted to woman's delicate
organization. It is purely vegetable in its
composition and perfectly harmless in ita
effects In any condition of the system. For
morning sickness, or nausea, from whatevev
cause arising, weak stomach, indigestion, dys-
pepsia and kindred symptoms, 1M use, in small
doses, will prove very beneficial.
"Favorite Prescription " is a posi.
tive cure for the most complicated and ob-
stinate cases of km corrhoa, OYCOSS1170 flowing,
painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions,
prolapsus, or falling of, the womb, weak back,
"female weakness," antoversion, retroversion,
th
beaig-down sensations, chronic, congestion.
inflammation and ulceration of tho womb:in-
flammation, pain ilnd tenderness in ovaries,
accompanied with ' internal heat."
As a regulator and promoter of func-
tional action, at that critical period of change
from girlhood to womanhood, "Favorite Pre-
scription" is a perfectly safe remedial agent,
and can produce only, good results. It is
equally efficacious and valuable in its effects
when taken for those disorders and derange-
ments incident to that later and most critical
period, known as " The Change of Life."
"Favorite Prescription,” when taken
in connection with the use of Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxative
doses of Dr.Pleree's Purgative Pellets (Little
Liver Pills), tures Liver, Kidney and Bladder
diseases. Their combined use also removes
,blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and
'scrofulous humors from the SYStern•
"Favorite Prescription", is the only
medicine for women, sold by druggists, under
a positive guarantee, from the ,thanu-
,facturers, that it will give satisfaetionin every
case, or money will be refunded- This guaran-
tee_ has been printed .on the bottle -wrapper,
and faithfully ,sareleh out for many years.
Large b'etties (100 doses) MOO, or six
1).°FtoirjelaPrgtrilluS.°
s5tra°te.
dTreatise. on Diseases of
Women (160,Pages, paper -covered), send ten
cents in stamps, Ad'drese,
World'slispensary Medical herniation,
At 663, lIZin Std 131131FFALO. N. V.
45 WI.
^
1.want.d nse._ our
'-7 'J Hairs.
eit" They
Believed...le:twee§ ,Heanaehe,andthe dfseernfoet
bftebi oklusowli all other 1.1111fping.' Lomple bOx
T10o. ..21:dclrek G E, M. 00., Vineland;, ew
When Ivey tore 1 do not wenn mefoly to stop them for el
^ Moe enethen hove them return mtattr. 1 mcon a 'radical
ehre. 1 havoinadothe Mamie of PITS, EPILIO'SY or FALL.
nvolnoomf§iV Ilfe.long study, 1 warrant toy Vented?
15 mettle Worit eintikSBeMtune others hove failed le no
plaice' for not now receletfic 8 cure. Bend nt once for 5
'trentleW end 0.- Er ro 0 'BO Ilero t mylohOltble remedy. Give
Biome and PoetOellee.„ It &mite yon nothtnc for a trial,
i
Otiia TW111 curd YeAti. VASA", 'VI, H. . RROOT,- .
cBranciOfficoalit tan g t., Toronto,
THF. PInv-F?, rign1.-r
hnen n nm1 ft% roi )81y oett,• almeo insetted 1 4 01 hen t
thenenn 0 ore weer th veret C1M1 nu or Iring
hove Ilt h etti t0I. TIM Ni le, rtiliit '.•00 016 In In ,
enlrory) thot wt N NO TWO 1111111,FA ' tottht‘r
will t.A ARABIA: T0e1V111111 06 11114 dime.- 0o 101)P
eitlrerer. 4rye 1±N.100,0 10t1&WAS.
. qt.° 10i1,,
TitiEwali MI4037 YOtitili1X,Torarto:
•