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The Huron Signal, 1889-8-16, Page 22 THE HURON SIGNALt,FR1DAY, AUG. 16, 1889 M Mr Jos (1s1/ Dove Tbs Let. Mae James emend to feel whos sb. gear to houssbss .m t that the time had gene by for her to have any Weer* for geLdiag, or say time for her to give fee - diet Mtesliom& to mesio. Now ps•etieal &sties world absorb her, but she bcpd tolled a little leisure now and thou to yea tkroegh use of the blest novels, •red to eases at the inseams•s ones • mouth, eu as to be ebb to chat with acme of her liaaband's literary Irieods about them, but as for any regular reading sod study, that wee, d emcee, oat of the question. Mr Jaw kid enjoyed a college du - cation, sad although engaged in active mercantile life, be had a literary tarn of mind, had always beau • great reader, end wished still to reed and study. At the time of but marriage he had aooumu lated a library of mooral hundred vire e ines of standard works, and he was turd of frequeuung to of the best of the bookstores, and ottso came kora with some now publication which he wised to enjoy with his wife. As be was poeses ed of u', wealth, and was earning but • moderate anemic, Mn James kept but one seri ant, and was m- eusteurd to de much of her light house- work herself. A bright, eoe'rgettc,ambi• Done little body she was, and she t n.k ggrreea.t pride in her new house, and in beautifying it in the many artistic ways by which women can now -a -days adurs their homes. Her little blue-eyed daughter, just three yeah old, necessarily occupied much of her time and thought, and her mind was so pre -occupied of evenings with her various household cares and duties Mr James d.•wvered that when he reed aloud, his wife, who wm always busily esg•gd with her fancy work, would become absent-minded, or, rather, absorbed with her own thuughts, and did not hear what her husband was reading. Then, sometimes, her cook would come W the door and interrupt her, ask- ing for some instructions that might hare been given previously, or Mrs James, entirely diverted from the read- ing, would think of something she wish- ed to my to the look about breakfast or her early morning work, and so excuse herself, thus breaking in upon the plea- sures of the evening. Mr James had been annoyed in this wee so many tunes that he spoke out pretty sharply one evening, "Now, Liz- zie, see here. I have given all the day to business,and you to household Jute., Let us start out this winter and have some recreation in the evenings when we are at home, and dispense with unneces- sary interruptions. It will du us both good, and we are foolish if we do not take it. I want you to see Prof. Schmidt to morrow, and engage hum to give you one lesson a week in music, and then practise an hour every morning, let what will come, and you will soon enjoy your piano again and give enjoyment to others as you used to. "And, another thing, I don't want you to do any more of that fancy work— drawn work, do you call it l—that takes all your thought whole I am reading. It is no pleasure for inc tu.read aloud, and look up occasionally for an appreciative glance, when I come to some Shake- spearean utterance, to find you perfectly eblivu,.ua to what I am reading, while you are puzzling over that work. I evmetimee feel kke tossing the whole thing into the fire. "Now, I'm serious about this. This is the only time we have to read, and I'm bound to improve it. By spending two hours an evening, fur three or four months during the winter, we'll be able to accomplish considerable reading, and then we'll have tackgamm(.n, or chess, and music afterwards. Give all yuur orders to Bridget before supper time, let ns have some peaceful evenings, for I do not want you to have any of these mat- ters on your mind. 1 would much rath- er you would fold peer hands for • few hours, and let us take tura in reading aloud, than to be forever busy over your fsscy work." "Dont get excited, husband," said Mrs Jsmes, as soon as she had an oppor- tunity to speak ; "what has come over you that you are Iayiug down the law so emphatically 1" "Nothing new has occurred," repli.d her husband. "But I have been think- ing of this matter for roue time. The other evening when I was getting to the most interesting part of 'The Merchant of Venice' in comes Bridget with some inquiries about breakfast, and telling you that the grocer had not sent certain things ordered. Then you are called for the account book, and from that we began to talk of expenses, until Venice and its people drafted away into a misty distance, to give place to butter, eggs, and se forth. Ne w, all these practical matters can be attended to at other times, and I do not wish to have my evenings spoiled in that way. It really seems as if a good many ..f you ladies have such • case of late for making fancy things that you feel as if your hands must be busy every moment, and you have given up many more important occupations, your reading and your music. fror in- stance, to take all those stitches and mak. all these pretty things. "You recap ■ talk .1 Mess Lyman's, years ago, when I was at Vassar,- re- joined his wife. "We girls were in the habit of doing all t-•rts of fancy work between dinner and dessert, and it took some time to remove the plates for the company of four hundred nr mote who tat .t table. Some of us wield take out our crotcheting, ..then made tatting, others embroidered, and as I think of it now it was • ridiculous way for it. to in. Miss Lyman. who was • ledy principal hen, said nothing fax • few weeks, bot lase day in chapel she rave in • practical talk nn -..overeaten and table manners. Mia said she never wanted to see any tiers fancy week or handiwork of any kird done at the dinner table in that eolleee. tehe believed to industry and knew that moth mold be accomplished is many ways by imprevmg ,aid and spare tiotrents of time. But she thought it jet an neeeamry that voting ladies Arnold learn how to fold their hands quietly, to he enmpes d, sod learn in eusese.e, and a dinner table was one of the plata where ennversation shoeld be esnrd en, .ad le a height satertainiog way. instead of peeking ep your fancy work to take to tie t.Me whew the din- ner hell resp, esrry slug mass bit of pori Mt Y ....dote, or as is.ideatt, eeabodhies .ltaeeble w relate, she said, 'e.d let M have coutersatu,n at our rause from our Intellectual yvaug la- dies, instead of • eumpeoy of Matteis and trireme sairkerse Aud Ibeu in hes must dignified meaner, she added, 'It is • great uooumpliehmeot, yosmg ladies, le be Arbil* to converse, and a good upper - lenity is here afforded fur you to learn that rare art. 'I wonder you remember her wurds so well, ' sod Mr James. "She certun- ly sem • seoubte woman." "Indeed she was," replied his wife, "but yet that was • deferent matter from doing fancy work in the eveeesg. Macy ct her good talks come to me now, sued are • help to me, and if 1 bad caly acted upon them all I .hound be • perfect character, I suppose. She was • won- derful woman, as everyone samtig those tint classes at Vassar will testify. Her talks to the scholars cel a great variety of subjects were iuvalusbla" "I wonder bow she would like to see some of her old pupils uow with book• and conversances neglected, sitting down at their crazy quilts in the morniug, and their drawn work at evening, while ser- vants, with many a them, form the chief subject of conversation r inquired Mr Jamas, "She would give us one of her good talks, I know, and show us how we could manage all our affairs easily. and still had time to carry un some intellectual pursuit.," replied his wife. "Well; we 11 just imagine we have one cf those talks tonight from Mies Lyman in additino to mine, and we'll set upon it from this time heucefertb,' replied Mr James. "Now, madly, you wouldn't have me sit and hold my hands all the evening,- mid his wife. "That seems almost as absurd as it was for us to do our fancy work at table. ' "Then have something that does not absorb your attention," rejoined her hus- band. "Now you know when you are interested in making all these holes and sewing them up, and weaving in all that elaborate worn, yzu don't hear what I'm reading or care anything about it. Now, be honest, wine were you thinking about w hen I was reading Gladstone's speech i Do you know what be was talking about 1" Mrs James laughed o;atright, and,witb • eiutzzical look on her face, replied, 'You ask too clues questions. Wall.' "Be honer now," said Mr James, "what emit 1" "Well," said Mrs Jame% slowly, "I was wondering if this piece of work was m handsome as Mrs Andrews', and if this pattern was m wide as hen, and I was also thinking that I must look after my pickles in the morning, and make grape jelly, and was planning some work for Budget,"—and she lanehed again. Then she added, "It is hard for me to listen when my hands me engaged, and if I cannot school myself to it I will give up, for you are right about the reading, and we must have a regular time for it.- The t. 'The result of the talk was that they did as Mr James suggested. Mrs James put •way all practical week at five o clink, her orders fur breakfast were given, and everything arranged for pleas- ant, uninterrupted evenings. There were, of curse, occasional interruptions, but by good planning and considering the impruvement of her intellectual life a part of eavel days duty it was surpris- ing to them that w much was accom- plished in one winter. Mrs James found time to give music, to join a musical soctety, and to enjoy much reading, and all without neglecting her family or her church duties, and having some time for visiting the poor and the sick, and giv- ing them comfort. Her home was a delightful and invite inc place for many young gentlemen' d their acquaintance, who appreciatedtbe cordial hospitality and the good cheer which they found there, and who were stimulated by the intellectual and ele- vating society, the pleasant re.din,rs and the music, to higher ideas of • beautiful and happy home, and were kers from in- dulging in many ignoble and geestiuna- ble entertainments by the cultivation of a better and higher taste. Mrs James had heats of friends who admired ani loved her : her sons and daughters grew up to think mamma the sweetest woman and the best company in the world ; and her husband. after twenty years of married life. was more proud of her than when .he was a bride. "I was a little bit of a tyrant, wasn't 11" said he playfully one evening to his wife, as he referred to the Shakespeare- an reading of long ago, "but I .m sure you will confess that if you have not so many crazy quilts and fancy furbelows as some of your neighbors, you have other possessions far more valuable.- And aluable.-And Mrs James did not hesitate to acknowledge that she had. She has thanked her husband mare than once fur laying down the law .0 forcibly on a certain subject. Crowned at I.ereweted. The head of anyone suffering from con- stipation, bilioosnree or dyspepsia will harbor a sick headache. By regulating the bowels, arousing the torpid liver, im- proving digestion and purifying the blood Burdock Dined Batten banishes sick headache, no matter how severe or obstinate it may be. 2 Tax terra. Corsage. A very gay corsairs made of wide Ro- man sashes is worn by young ladies to brighten up skirts of white or black lace, and give variety to their toilets by having this extra bodice to change with the Ito• tt.alne that belongs to the skirts. This is a tight -fitting round waist with V neck, made of the sashes ermined with the stripes grains acs.ss The sleeves are of lace to suit the 'karts, and there is a full sash and black drapery in the pretty Roman clueing ; the pale sashes with blue. pink and white bars are worn ey blondes, while these who ars darker choose the deeper colon with brighter red, ,treed •tad black stripes MP sad tell.bae. I highly reeommend Dr Fowler • Ex- tract of Wird Strawberry for eunne .healers, cholera morhue, cche. crimps, diarrh'e•,dyeentery and all summer enm- platnta It is safe earl reliable forchild- renand alder parsons, Mira Rti.ET Bx►.l-ttaxatnoa Heyworth, (lee 2 TIMM WORRY AMO FRET. • ettapNr en Imaps.ry Weft /has Reuse a maim•■ti, UAL of course life u full of cans ; every owe knows that, and every one has cease to weeny about N,methiai. 11 the children •re ill, or the hgsbaad has tat► d in business, these are thugs that one naturally worries about. These are th bag theme of life that must be borne and about which one carnet help worrylug. But it is the little things of lite over which people worry wort and which ar nut worth worrying •b,.ut. A aerate housekeeper will fret about the way h servant enters the room before coaFany or pauses • dish at table, and frowns .il settle down upon her tees that are seen by the guests who have not seen the causes m The woan will worry incess- antly about her health. If she has tb smallest ache in any part sit her body, or the slightest feeling of laoguor,tne whale household is upset, and fur a law hoursa, ev.rytking u In the wildest state of coi- fuso,whmb the victim—for she cen•io- ly is a Tactile to her worrying disposition —imagines herself a hundred times n manthan she is, and dies many tames before she really dies oar.. Another woman "tomes because she is growing old. U!s, dear ! Is riot esery• one growing cid i Is she the only person, that she should make such a fuss about it 1 She will not do this, or that, nor go here uor then, nor sit in a strong light for fear that some one will durwer • gray hair, or the tioirat suspicion of • wrinkle. And while she worries in this way she helps to make herself look old. She denies herself the plemures of life because some one may dtacover her age : and so the years try by and she is Mel— 'Id with years, and older with worry. lobappy herself, and making those about her unhappy ; unloved and nnloce- able. (Me writer attributes as one cease of fretfulness the habit that s..nte women have of underfeeding themselves. Whether it is Irvin carelessness, from a general indifference to fond, or cu ac- count s count sit having no appetite, or because they are too busy to give the time to eat the proper quantity that their system demands, many women are underfed, and the result is felt in beth mind and buds. Many women really live on two meals a day, taking only a cup of tea and a slice sit bread and butter at noon. They say it is all they require and all they want ; they could not eat anything Inure. But they deceive themselves, for thus is not true. It may be that they do neat want to eat more, but if so it a be- cause they have not been Properly train- ed. Eating u a matter i•1 training as much m anything else, and as the system requires a considerable amount of food to keno the general health up to the pro- per standard, te.inen should be trained to est a suthcsent quantity of wholesome food at regular hr.urs Three meals a: day, or even four, are not tomuch for some women, and meat twice • day is indispensable to good health. Under- . feeding cannot be too severely cin-' demned. It weakens the system, making the victim liable to an innumerable bat of ailments, such as sore th.nat, bacLache' and neuralgia, besides many other ills, which,wheo once fastened on the system, are ditticolt to get rid of. The mind, too, becomes affected ; with a "run-dowa" body goes a "run-down" mind. and irrit- ability, fretfulness, and "blues- become chronic companions, It is so easy to be healthy and strong, if people will but pay a little regard to their health. The demands of society on woman,caused by the increasing complexity of modern life, require perfect health. In order that they may be met and properly ful- filled stimulants and hypnutics, along with drugs sit all kinds, should be un - Leeson /1MN t,. Neter said et make fes of the.. They autrer euuegh without your threats ar sarcasm. Dime est thew kauw you see their awkw•rduess when is company nor their grimaces when aloe.. A case was reported the !Elston (1101e, of • - boy tea years old, who, ou beteg vexed, •ad often without prawn, - .y apparent pr- . tic., wu11 clench bb hands tad make the most frightful euutortIuus of the muscles of his tape sod bead, till his poor mother team he 11 tdtolic. By no weans. He is e the brightest boy in _bis class at school, i but he is of a highly nervous tempere- ✓ moot, and has not heed taught to control the wires, w to speak, on which be is 1 strung. This is no single case. Then are thou -muds of children who give way to their nerves in similar fashion. Never whip them. A proneueot physician in e this city says the man or woman who whips a nervous child should fur every blow given receive five. It is our duty to *nemeses and help them. Be patient with them. They are the waking of our future successful men and women, fur they will work hard at whatever they undertake. lance up your nerves first, and then be uudulgent towards your over -nervous children. k nown quantities to a healthy woman, roper food, and plenty of it, exercise in the open sir. and reasonably early hour' are the three beat prescriptions fur per- fect health. deny women find an afternron nap an absolute necessity ; others, it ho cannot sleep during the day, find that half an hour of absolute raft of mini and body, with • lute. gown in a darkened room, is of great benefit t•, them, math - ling them to endure inc re fatigue,and mak- ing them feel brighter for the evening. Inleed, sows physicians say that every woman should loosen her clothes and lie down for at least fifteen minutes every day, for the sake of health. And aside from health, many woman do this with s view to preserving their youthful looks ; for half an hour they thiole of nothing and close their eyes. The mdselee of the face relax, which postpones wrinkles for a few years, and the eyes retain their brightness, It is • good plan to tags this little afternoon ranee -en if one does n, t absolutely feel the need of it. If a woman leads a very busy life, whether, in a social or business sense, the half hoer of ;complete rest will benefit her eyes, mind and whole body. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, by purifying and enriching the blood, improves the appe- tite, aids the assimilative process, strengthens the nerves, and invigorates the system. It is, therefore, the hest and meat thnroaghly reliable alteratuve that can be (mind for old and young. Iwleriee. Carrel are MUine. An Albany physician declares that Americans suffer more generally frost Bright's disease and nervous disew than any ocher people. attd he says that the reason is that Americans sir down to persistently .t their work. He save :-- Americans are the greatest s tt•n i ever knew. While Englishmen, Germane and Frenchmen walk and exercise, ea American man will go ao his orrice, take Ras *eat t a his , hour, and sit there all day without giving any relief to the erosions of the masons, .of the back. The resell is that these muscles .urroundiog the kidneys hee...ne *eft and flabby. They logs thole vitality. rhe kidneys them - Slaves eons bee -orae weak and dahilit•t- ed. 1f Americans w. old 'serene mors, if they would stand at their desks rather than sit, we would hear lees of Bight s disease. 1 knew of a New York man, who ;tad suffered fee reser years from nervous permeation. until it was events - mended to hes that he have a desk at which he meld stand to J.. his work. IA ,thin a year he was nae of the health - est men jou ever saw His dyspepsia and kidney trouble had disappeared, and he had .n appetite like • paver 3 Tears la lied. Gt'tTLJtuEY, I tried your Fowler's Ex- tract of Wild Strawberry and was per- fectly cured from sickness. I was suck in bed fur three years and after taking six bottles I was perfectly curd, and now I would not be witbout the medi- cate ii the house. M1•o, Eon%RA FCLLaa, Vereker P. U , $Jut, 2 "A MIRROR OF LIFE." Talmage baa a Geed w.rd far It. mesa. In a receot interview Rev T. De Witt Talnupe maid:—"Every newspaper re- porter in New York is my personal friend. I have been betrayed by about every class of men in the world, but by • newspaper man, and I believe that there is a spirit of farness abroad in the newspapers that is to be found hardly anywhere else. There is no man, however poor, if he has been dune an in- justice that cannot get himself set aright by the newspaper. We tind a great deal of fault with the newspapers. Perhaps by our own indistinctness we are reported as saying just what we did. not say, and there is • regn:ar riot of commas aid semizolotu and periods, and we get used to talking about the "blundering print- ing press' Or sometimes we take up • paper full of social scandal and divorce cases, and we talk about the tilthy, @cur- rtleus press, but I could preach a whole sermon on the everlasting blerings of a good newspaper. A good newspaper is the grandest temporal blessing that Gud has given the people of this century. "In the tint place all the people reed the newspapers,and the newspaper. fern.' i.b the greater proportion of the reading matter to the people. They don't read tot oke The old people look Gar the deaths, the young people leek f/ r the marriages, the business man reads the business and financial columns, and thnee who ars unemployed read the want 'ads.' Great libraries make few intelligent mea and women, but newspapers lift the nat- ions into sunlight. "My idea of • gond newspaper is a mirror of life itself. Some people cu - plain because the evil of the world is re- ported as well a• the good The evil must be reported as well is the good, or bow would we know what to guard against, or what to reform! There IS a chance for discrimination as to how mach mem shall be given to reports of such things as prize tights, but the news- paper that merely presents the fair and the beautiful and the bright side of life is. misrepresentation. That family is best qualified for the duties :,f life who bare told to them not only what coed there is in the world, but what evil thele is in the world, and is told to select the good and reject the evil." cave Them A ('bassi. That is to say, your lungs. Also all your breathing machinery. Very won- derful machinery it is Not only the larger air passages, but the thousands of little tubes and cavities leading from them. When these are charged and chocked with matter which ought not t', be there your tunes cannot half de there work. And what they do, they cannot do well. Call it cold, cough, croup, pneumonia, catarrh, consumption er any of the family of throat and nose and head and lung n!structio.ns, all are bad. All ought to be got rid of. There is just one sure way to get rid of them. that is take Roaches's German Syrup, which any druggist will sell you at 75 cents • bottle. Even if thng else has failed you. you may depend upon this for certain eowly A PRAygi r..R Rrraityr u — The following prayer, delivered recent- ly by the chaplain of the Min- nesota legislature, will be of it - tercet : -- "And now, Lord, bless the reporters, whose nimble pens catch our every word almost befxe it is ut- tered. They are omnipresent, and al- most omnipotent. if we take the wings of the morning and fly to the uttermnet parts of the earth they are there. They meet Os in the jungles of Africa ; they waylay us in the solitary canons of Col- orado : mid when at length we tind the altitude of the rearnetic pole. h.hnll Sinn are there. May their light and gortdness iie equal to their power, end in the general aes•mhle of heaven let no reporter be excluded." To abs teedleal rrweeasew. em& all wt6am 1s may e.weea. Phnsphatine, or Nerve Pone, a Phos- phate Element head upon ficientitie s, Formulated by Prnf.gsnr Austin, TK. 1). of Roston, Maes, cures Palmer •ry Consumptnm, Kick Headache, Nee Vole Attacks, Vertigr, and Neuralgia and all wanting diereses of the' henna. system. Phrnphatine is not s Mederine, hot a Nutriment, bemuse it contains no Vegetable or Mineral Poisons, Opiate' Nareotics, and no Rtimnlant•, tat eimpi 1 the F'h'sphatie and Gastric Elements hwnd in nor daily fond. A single bottle is .ofloiont to convincer. All Druggists sell it. 111 0) pa bottle. Lowly & Co. inns agenta for the leowainitee 1ti Front Street legit Toronto, lever is a type acatarrhbraiserrh vise pietagmptoms. It is attire/led Lyme inflamed mueditiuo of the 'Ming mem- branes of ilii nostrils, tear -duets and !bruit, alectiog the lungs. Au acrid muscles Msecreted,the dischargelsaoo..m- pantsd with a burning sensation. There are view* spasm* of aalesung• fretlueut attacks of headache, watery mid lutism- sd eyes. Ely's Cream Halm u a rents• dy that can be depended upon. 30cte. at druggists ; by mail, registered. dOcts Ely l3ruther. , Druggists, Owego. New York. lv Mr R Elliott, P. H. C. R. of the t' u. F., Wingbam, received a richly designed and headman. morocco bound eel y of the address presented at the recent meeting sit the flesh Court at L,ndoo. it is an exceptionally elaborate and elegant piece of workinanship. emseurpui.s sera, tweed. To TH1 Emma :—Please inform your readers that I have • positive rrme.iy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hepeleas cues hats been permanently cured. 1 shall he glad W send two bottles of my rtmerly Erre to any "f your readers who have c.n- sumptiuo, if they will send use their Es• press and P 0. address ltrspectfully, Da. T. A. Slotted. :: Yonge St., Torunto, list. A letter has been received from the Rev Mr elcDunald,ahe is at present in Paris, France. A to moderns) Organ, The largest organ, ail' one that plays a contrcllin: part on the health of the body is the liver. If torpid or inactive AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS the whole system becomes dimmed. AND FLUXES OF THE BOWELS Dr. Chas's Liver Cure is made specially for Liver and Kidney diseases. utd is IT IS SAFE AND RELIABLE FOR g eannteee to cure. Recite book and CHILDREN OR ADULTS. to as liar lmoira Dut•'t allow a coin in the bead to slow- ly and surely run into Catarrh, when you care be cured for 25o. by using Dr. Cbase • Catarrh Cure. A few tap pylioe- te ms cure incipient catarrh ; 1 to 9 house cures ordinary catarrh ; 2 to b beim is guaranteed to cure cbrunto catarrh. Try it. Only 244: and sure ours titdd by all dreatsts ly DUNN'S BAKING POWDER TNECOOICSBEST FRIEND FOWLE1 S •EXT: OF • ' •WILD • TR)kWBERRY, 4 CURES HOIIERA' Vera Mo bus Let 1 C'e -' AMPS IARRH(EA YSENTERY medicine 11. feud by all druggists THE J. A. CONVERSE In Co It Makes A. W. WORMIs ` ata.. PROPRIETORS. - MONTitEAL, You Hungry •I flee Med Palnell Wary ' '4111 p h s bad aad and salutary C '° r._ lite had dand effect It tangoes:, ed the system and I feel like a new man. It improves BRAND 0:: XithIL1.A the appetite and facnnatea direr Lica" .1. T. core- WM. Primus, b. C. Spring medicine mean,moreeowa-d ys thean did ten years ago. The wtnterd Ims-to b.5 the nerves an Arm' out The nerves most be e treogthenetl. the blood panned, liver aid bowels regulated- Pain's Celery Compound— fae /print ws.dtedwv e./te'dap--dOes all this. as he king else can. Neanttril lap Pap.,r.a.1a •wstae isethe by Lreppi.ta, g'ad,rrd by U..isrd►A Mi_.w.Msd by tits MarnObdarws Is to ARE THE tAI JIe or THE l ELanaATIM en v The Best Pronounced, by practical con- sumers, superior to anything In the Canadian Market. Spring Medicine. .1n the spring ot isse 1 was an run down. 1 wield get up to the morning marsh so tired a Ell . and was so weak that I coed hardly get wessert, thoughts battle of Pa1ae's Celery Cotn- pound, and before I had taken n a week 1 felt very mock batter. I len cbeefully recommend Int so all who Med a building upend arengthen- big aetYea" Yrs. B. A. bow. Wtrungt ca TL Paine's Celery Compound Is • uttgee tonic and appetizer. Pleasant to the taste. (Vick In ata action, and without aqy �lmoils etlrat it goes drat rugged health which maitre eveythttg taxa' [rood. It cores dyspepsia and kindred dtsurders Phe„ tcyahs prescribe a. SLIM. 81z nor es,as. berigners . WnuRtriaareostco. - Moseasar.. Nesse Aloft Wrap mph LACTATED FOOD 7k 'h,; ; th aoderich Steam Boiler Works \BITE FUR INFu)RMATiON. Manufacturers also of CORDAGE. JUTF. and COTTON BAGS l ALC'INED and LAND PLASTER. Toronto (►Tee aad Warehouse FRONT STREET kArT. W. C'. DONNELL. Manager imasa UMW, nceZioa. CUM, 1.o. 4 •mal are..,...; Yam Pe .e: u'me I.- .1,1 .Weft ... m.. ir-<M r "Ms .w WV .M,r- /euh.. f ■e eseb.td pnea. nor mr@Ms. m .. i.. smash. .... brie. rid at. Tea a... seas Ia.e• fe ... , e wane►, .. i ,.."a *web . Hsu VO .,. 416,1. .•• , . .. • wry br....1%M.-. promo., Ts.* ..w sr • t. sen .f eisose tM Wareb r..• t..aaplee.w,tooran MOM.. Mtaa..,. AM.w. tww1... ds Co... iia ass s'..ti1o..r. x..Aea. Ch�stall &Black, \lanutacturers and d. al. ry In NASAL BALMSteam Boiles, Salt Pena TanksHeaters. teuokes:ackr. and all kinds of Sheet Iron N ork. i'- +tint . N. U core. r u.. Out Improved Automatic cutoff ('nrlln,. En- gine... Upright and Horizon's! Engii,e., Ma- chin.•ry and Castings of every description. Brnwt Filling., Pipe and Pipe Fattingn con- stantly uu hand. On Hand for Sale Cheap, w. r. ore*. [laud ..ilei. 1 e.IplHw. 1 aesead•M.d : Iter load Inclose II IT ■. r.. 1■ ant.ela+. /'mid111... Maul or,•4 rs wall recrn-e prompt attention. Werba t App. s.. T. R. Marlen. C� RReoa.r+ promptly attended In. P.O. BOX 381 :Ise May i(9- May 11th. 1167. My wife *entree for Ove year* with that distressing disease, catarrh. Her case wee one of the wont knov-n in these pars. She tried all of the catarrh reme- dies I ever raw aiivertised. but they were of no true. I flnally procured a buttk of Nasal Halm. She has used only one half of it, and now AN b like a sew pet.on. i feel 1t my duty to may that Nasal halm (-anent he T(10 11IGHLi- rec•omm. redid for catarrh troubles, aid am pleased ro have all arch sufferers know through its Ime they will recel re ;Instant relief and rIVRh: CHAS. MCGILL Farmer XPFR1ENC, CAPITAEI AND SKILL Are the factors employed in the purchase of Goods from the best houses in the trade. The general verdict is that Munro is abreast of the times, and in all departments fully up to the mark. My increasing business is an evidence that my efforts to please the public are appreciated. And while I endeavor to keep almost everything us- ually found in a first-class house, the general public may rely upon getting the correct thing in every department. Notwithstanding the advance on Silk Goods I will sell Satin and D'Lyons, Surahs and Satin Merveillieuz at former prices. ,lfy Specialties At- the Scaso>t. Linen Goods in great variety, Laces and Edgings, Fine Hosiery and Gloves, and all the leading items in Smallwares, from Needles up. All Goods marked in plain figures and strictly one price. ".4 ALEX, MUNRO, Draper sad Haberdasher