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The Signal, 1893-10-19, Page 22 wast Mfr the heewwrfs wllb degas!. And stakes her biome asp .nod light, glee hosed se tempt die appals 1 COTTOL[N[ Whet is it ashes ha pigmy midi A treat, her hta6and esu so made Tbsagh piss he .ever used to tomb COTTOLCNC Whet is it shortens take so nice, Better than lard, while Ism in pries, Aad does the cooking la a trice T COTTOLEN[ What is it that hies oysters, tisk. Canine:nes, or eggs, or meth hke dl.k. As act sad quickly as you'd wisb ? COTTOLENC What u it saves the time sad care Aad patience of our women fair, Aad kelps them make their cake so rare T COTTo LE N Who is it eras the gratitude Of every lover of pure food By making " COTTO LE N E " so geed T Meds octy or N. K. FAIRBANH & CO., Wellington and Ann Susses, MONTREAL. Parra Aped ap.sStew•l sa.y. Phe girl who is earning Ler !assay L) working says with • sigh, who she boys a eat that ., ton extra. ascus • boa n f sweets that she doesn't oeed. "Well 1 worked hard eteugh for this money, I may spend it as i ple..e," writer, Ruth Ashmore in • pleasant article on "Girls and the use of money " in the September Ladies Home Journal. That sounds rwsonable, but ■l. ought to want to spend it in the richt way She ought to think of the days when roe sibly sick tees w-11 come—then does she want to feel sure teat she hasn't a dollar in he world and that she is beteg taken care of by people on whom she iia no claim! Or there will cone a day when everybody else is going for an ou4ng ; will she have to decline because she haw't saved soy motes' I know she has earued it ; I know the file hat or the fine sown may be very tempting -- but toe mere fact that she has given her strength and her nervous force to get tbia money should make her cautious in taking ..are of tr. Jhsll I be mean •" asks a sensitive girl. No, my dear, but 1 tell you it is just as well to remember the old proverb stout being just, before you are generous. There is no generosity in contributing to a doral piece tor some dead comrade endowing a bill to your washerwoman ; there is no generosity in treating all the girls you know to ice cream and baring to catch cold because you haven t • thick flannel petticoat on. the reason toeing that you bave no money to buy one. The girl who is talked of as generous with money, is, I sun sorry to tray, too often very foolish with it. She is ready, when she hora it, to Iesd it to whoever asks her, to give to whatever is lining on, and wheel it is gene she ether sutlers teem ita lou in mortification and tears or else she becomes a borrower. The wise girl is the one who tempers generosity with sense. Prewar. of Mad. A good story comm. from the Windy ('it) regarding a well known San Fnnsiecan, who is now • pilt'rim to the '•cerate of the universe." Sirs. 1)r. Cool went east • short time since as a do'e;rte to the world's .len tal emigres. at Chicago. On •r: wing at her .'eetioation she modem' early roast to the fa:r grenade, end as usual with sojourners in tic.: seductive place, found upon leaving that she had spent all her ready cash. On her way back 10 her hotel, thereture, she stopped at a bank to hese a thee: es .lied. As usual, the clerk infor.ne 1 her that she would have to be identified. As Pr. ('ool was . stranger in a straw:e land .he brand herself in a dilemma. to. presented her ear 1, but that would not do, when • bril- liant idea struck her. F lashirg • beam from the diamond set in her front teeth upon the clerk, she said, " Please look •n my mouth." " Another one gone ovary," thought the clerk, but. he complied with the rola-et, looked astonished, smiled and paid the check, for on the movie of the dentist's mouth the clerk read the inioription, " L Cool, t995. ' Identity was thus established beyond • modties, and Mrs. Cool welt on tier way rejo:Mas.—Sas Fraasisso News- Letter. ews- I.etter. 1lke In.ses Werke. From the Kew York Ad ea vier. An English ecle.tiot is quoted as author- ity for tits etalemeat that there are Ave times as 01.ey .perces of insects as there are epeeist of •11 other living things pot to- gether The oak tree alone supporta 450 species of 'newts, and 200 kinds make their home in the pine. Forty years ago Hum- boldt estimated that the number of specie, preserved in oollectioes was between 150,000 and 170,000, but scientific men now sal that there must be more than 750,000, without taking into ennide.ration the parasite restaurant. Of the 35,000 species in Farnp.., however. sot more than 3,500 are alma=lone or destructive. Than am wore than 100- 000 kinds of beetles - The let.vs t'a.ei..ws, Englishman Pardon me, sir, belt where do you Grote from • faddy From County Cork. I nglishe..e - Th.n that soonest. for your brogue. Paddy May 1 at where volt come torn ` Englishman Frees tVor .ester, Mr proudly. faddy --Then that somata for year same*. sict was stwms ear awe ab*ess- 4'aptals (to Erma eaile,)—" Pat, wy Ind go aloft sad trim the mile." P,.t (startles es ss below) -" Yen. ser." cnpt.is isharplyi--" Hem, whim ere yes renew Wes fee . Pat " Per see sbsro, ceplaim. Sim ' hers y.e dee % thank 01 wed be Other tbllw.sa' the stile will M Swim de LiverLessem �mos resit w+lb d.Ffy•a 4.4 THE SIGNAL :t GODRRI( H. ON r THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, Di t. IN GLASS i 00eU. VIIIVIIIIMeg odd sea... 1a tat. ter...., Deem W th. Rueter Who has not seen odd spaces in green- houses unoccupied during the winter month•, which night have been used fur growing any or .11 of the following vegetables: Raddlshes, lettuce, beans, beets, carrots and spinach? In einem* there is a large amount of ground space available fur such crops. They can be OILLPTRY eel rn SPACE !roe vrozTAatsa matured before the vines become so .tense of foliage as to materially inter- fere nterfere with the crops below. A corre- spondent of American Oardening writes se follows: I had such s bed made 50 feet long by 9 wide, as shown in the eng,ravtng, and have g.'own all the above meed vege- tables with good success for a number of years, without any perceptible damage to the vines, but the bench has bean a ... help in reaching them v:•hen thinning the fruit, Tboqualityof vege- tables thus grown nnder glass is very en- penor to those grown outdoors, and the quantity obtained from a small apace with proper management would astonish those who have nut tried growing them indoors. The number of dishes taken from these usually waste places is grati- fying to an employer and is well worth the extra trouble to the gardener of studion. habits. emN•s Apples Is Whiter. For keeping apples in winter use only clean barrels and sort the fruit well, packing each grade separately and mark- ing it accordingly. Let no good fruit go to waste. Dry what cannot be mar- keted arketed othsrwiee. For winter storage pick winter fruit when fully mature, Handle it as carefully as you would eggs, leave it outdoors ss. long .s safe from freezing, then put it in • cool cellar. For home use in spring try packing Partisans apple's in barrels or boxes of dry oats or cork dust. Pine sawdust, if used as packing material, imparta a bad flavor to the fruit. Color of Flowers. Blue rosee or blue dahlias, at one time thought impossible, and probably still inipo Bible as a natrral product, may uuw be obtained by placing the cut flow- ers in a solution of atialine substances, says Meehan's Monthly. Indigo car- mine produces beautiful blue tints. For awhile there was qnite a rage for having these artificial colored flowers, lily of the valley. dahlias, hyacinths And of being successfully so treated, but t use entirely gone out of use. ex where people wish to try the !natter a 'Ample chemical exps-ri:nect, The Proll5c Gooseberry, The am.eant of fruit gathered from prolific goosrbirry bushes is often sur- prisiug. "How many guosrberries did you get from those three rows, eight rods long?" Mr. C. A. Green of Rochester asked his foreman. "Eighteen bushels," w.:a the reply. Tbe men scraped theta off in handfuls, with gloved hands, They then ran them through the fanning mill, like so many beans, blowing out all the leaves and stems. Dore Meatlea The Star apple, a newcomer, originate.: In New Jersey. It is described as a large, handsome fruit. pale green in color, measuring 11 inches in circumference and pleasantly acid. The phylloxera is an American insect, but doer not injure the American vine as it does the Europeen. The Marshall strawberry Is a new variety, cone shaped, dark colored and gloomy, with flesh firm and luscious. Agnatic plants are hearty feeders. Therefore the soil for them ought to be rich as possible. TheOstrich fern is not only excellent for the garden. but aatiafactory for hoots growth. Royal Church is the name of a prom- ising new re sal¢+berry. A torte Illey. Well, i saw • little boy do.omethieg 16. other ay that made ms feel good for a week. As I was walking •long the street, i saw as old man who seemed to be blind walking do.g without wpm* to lead him. He west very slowly. Imbue with hi. cams. "He's walking oteaieht to the highest part et the carh.tcee," acid I to myself, "sad it's very high: too. i wonder if some ens west start hist is tice right direetiew'" Just then • hey, •host fourteen years old, who sum playing near Lim eereer, left his playmates, ran up es the cid esu, pot his em through Ike old m•ah and said, '.1st me lend yea mem tee steres." By this floss lbw* were threw er four ethers wasebes tic bey A. hos ^107Wp. d ed him over sae s•a•au, het W hist weir wader se the Mow side of the .trent. This he me bask te his piny. Now this hey thought he had stay dates the leas a !Mita. es, while i 6...'' 6e hse made three ether peewee feel •ad ere es b Il•ttle ice arid niers m .D wMem. ea The three hoer esj wee had mapped se wee* She , isnNi away with • ardor smile es their see1 lsisw the n.Wea•inglie and i them I w that i AN chile melte e yitlierblt rep may lebe- ALCOHOL Mr TNM e1/iTEML ..w M P.1.e. AM.. and Peewee*, she p>eaestw.a .r tbs •sely. Tbs immediate effect al a moderate amount at alcohol is a feeling of IA - crossed vigor. Ideas are increwed in quickness, but lose hs oonceut.retloa The system .eon demands the stimulant more frequently. Abstinence is followed by suffering. Tice hand lams its stestdi- nes., the brain its clearness. In.oennla adds to the drain on nervous forces, and the patient instinctively resorts fur relief W the poison which is the direct cause at hi. condition. In time these symp- toms become intensified, and evidences of chromic degenerations Manifest them- selves. Scarcely an organ in the body is exempt. Alcohol in the stomach retards diges- tion by paralyzing terminal nerves, and by a chemical action on the pepsin of the gastric juice produces changes in the •e- cr'tioaa of the liver and vitiates the peoo- eAses throughout the whole alimentary tract by canting a perverted action of the sympathetic nervous system. Par- tially artially digested food passing from the stomach to the intestines becomes sub- jected to abncrulal fetsnentatione. As a result. poisono ua products designated by modern cher u.te as ptotnaints and lettcomaines are formed. Elimination is retard d by alcohol. Consequently these products are absorbed into the sys- tem. yrtem. and an aatopoisoning results. The lungs and sktu undertake to asset in relieving the system of effete material, as shown by the peculiarly dlbat,-reeable odor of breath and perspiration persist- ing for days after cremation from the use of alcohoL Thome patients will be found to safer from chrunic catarrh of most of the mucous membranes, notably the stomach, and chronic liv.r and kidney clutng.s, leading to c irrhocmis and Bright's disease. Degeneration and resultant weakening of the walls of blood vessels predumose to rupture. usually to the brain, prodncing apoplexy.—Dr. E. F. Arnold in North American Review. ltiklaal's Dark Epoch, In 1721 gin e:rini.-ing began to affect the masse•. and Mr. Lecky, in his "His- tory of the Eighteenth Century," draw* a terrible picture of the way in which "the fatal paseion for drink was at once and irrevocably planted in the nation." On that account he 8_w oei that year ae one of the blackest and most fatal epoch, in English hr.tory. And are we now tc be told that drink in those days did not cause crime? Ono may suppose that the grand jury of Middlesex were under nc such utter delusion. for soon after 1724 they sent in a p. n'erful presentment in which they declared that "much 0[ the greatest part of the poverty. the robber- ies and the mnrders of London might be attributed to drink." In 1750 the London physicians also drew up a memorial and averred thea* were then 14,000 cases of fatal illness due to gin alone. At the same time L i.6op Benson of Gloucester, one of the .,est bishops on the bench, used thew words so diametrically the opposite of Mr. Walker's insinuation. "Our peo- ple," he said, "have become what they never were before—crnel and inhuman These accursed ligton which, to the shame of our government, are so ea.ily to be had have changed their very na- ture." At the same time the whole bench of bishops interposed the unsullied purity of their lawn between the nation and the curse of the drink traffic, ea in these days our jndges have into posed "the stainless sanctity of their ermine," They protested against the gin act as "founded on the indnlgence of debunch- ery, the encouragement of crime and the destruction of the human raco," Lastly, John Wesley was far from think- ing of those days as Mr. Walker now thinks, that "it amid have been a pal- pable absurdity to speak of a relation- ship of can.. and effect between drink and crime." He said: "Bat all who sell drams of spirituous tignors in the com- mon way to any that will buy are poi- soners general. They drive men to hell like sheep. A corse is in the midst of them," — Archdeacon Farrar in Fort. nightly Review. *retie etzplerers Drink X. Atietr.L Temperance people will feel the strong- est interest in the success of Dr. Nansen, the intrepid young explorer, who has recently set sail from Christiania on his long talked of expedition to the north pole. Dr. Nansen has already made a famous exploration in Greenland, and has learned to sleep in the snow in a beg of skins. In all of his expeditions nei- ther he nor his comrades have allowed a drop of alcohol to pass their lip.. Ieebristy sod Crime. Lord Chief Justice Hale was p—taps the first to call attention to inebriety as a cause of crime, requiring special study and attention, In 1870 he is reported as retying, "If the murder. and manelaugh- ten, the burglaries and robberies, the riots and tumults and other enormities committed during the last 20 years were divided into Ave parts, four of them would be found to have been the issue and product of drinking." The 014e.t Inebriate Asylum. At Lintdorf, Dnesteldorf, Germany, is 16e oldest inebriate asylum, founded in 1851, for the retention and protection of released prisoners whew intetapsrance led to their imprisonment T.mp.ra.ee Neter. Prince Oscar Bernadotte, steam. of tb• Wag of Sweden, has _ 'service to the temperance awes is gm country. He has arisaaaN a total ab- stinence society among the aolrile.0 at earlscrona sad is himself the peeeetent of the Melange Province Temparaacs unease Lits said of alcohol that -manab sl!sally by this fell poison: first ��sMt if, thea be warms to ft, then be #I!s lir it, than be a enaamed by it' The aatsmsstt wee renew* guide la !lbs O...a redsisteff that tbsre are 11,- : mesons le heottan tat:benign, who r f eltig FER'z 5 WID RRy RAWBEL 44- cuRE%G 4_ H C OL.ERA G G HOL RRHORBUS DIARRHOEA o ySENTERY Stll�l�l�RCOtilLAINz p.�E l!! orA DULaTS • peke 3S vs D: t.'r IRE o F !M: Tri 7:0 1111..MsI.4 rfiass, As two aim were bazsiag arousal the room they said to,:ae k cube. : "(let ea to tic.: tly paper'." They dud get to to it sad esaselasn'ly neither got ea to it. Ileau.ctts is d the result of a constipated or *ranged cosditioa of the digestive organs. To cure the headache it is ueoeseary to gut at the root of the evil, and for this a toeing laxative is much better than a violent purgative. A doctor says, I know of uo bettor 'medicine for this per - mese than Fseljsy'. [Iver Lozenge.. 1 Deal Meow Vow" W all rad word. of toegae or pen, The saddest are those that aro herd by men, • res, Who attempt to speak W the summer girl, When tatty meet her spin in the city's whirl -- - Fseljey's Liver L.ssages invigorate the wroth. The *uiteman Pea Hary 1' The Leat in the world for.the follow- ine mesons Ute rt IS built of the best mills.ble wrought iron and steel 2nd. It requires no holes to be drilled is cutter bar. 3rd. The outside divider can be raised or lowered at back or frost, indspeadest of lifters. 41k. 11 has no rod at the back to hold obstructions acyl casae choking. 5th. There are no springs to break or tel out of order. 616. It has movable clips and can be set in hoe back. 7th. tongue of machine if cutter bar hangs 7th. Each lifter has a guard stay, and breaking mower guards is impossible. fish. Each lifter is bedewed/et of the other and can be raised or lowered at the lack so as to line in front should mower guars be out of hue. 9t6. The number of machiem acid dar- ing the last sewn enables a large number of the leading farmers of the Province to testify to it. merits. Every machine is war- ranted and given on test. Sample machine oan be seen at R. Thotnpson's Blacksmith shop, Godericb, besides at different .hops over the Crusty. J AM FS tV II ITEM A N, Patentee and Manufacturer. Thomas Brows. General Agent, Seeforth, DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THE COOKS BEST FRIEND LAN t$T S*Li iN CANADA. PLANT ITG MILL EUTAwISIRI Mfi. Buchanan & Son, raswrAcrea�s BASH, DOOR and BLIND Dealers asMI bbi�t,,� LUMBER, LATI-SHINGLES Ase bellow.** st•Lwis1 of ovary dlsslrWtss School Furniture a SDecialt,. NEW ARRIVAL IMAM= GOODS LATEST STYLES. lwm•mam as and showyNese• H. DUNLOP, resew be Irswas. *Ai TEC GMAT sorra NERVINJIONJC StomachLivr Cur The Most Astonishing Medical the Last One ay�Pel'Y of It le Pleasant to the Taste u the Sweetest Nectar It b Safe and Harmless u the Purest !lilt;. ' This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced tato this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value as a curative agent has long been known by a few of the most learned physicians, who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of eta general public. Thie medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure of indi. gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is also of the greatest value in the cure of all forms of failing health fry at whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities which it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the digestive organs, the stomach, the liver and tho bowels. No remedy compares with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder ata; .treugti ener of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer tie a broken-down constitution. It is also of more real permanent value is the treatment and etre of diseases of the lungs than any consumption remedy ever used on this continent It is a marvelous cure for nerv- ousness of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the critical period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Seryias Tonic, almost constantly, for the space of two or throe years. It will carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and cura- tive is of inestimable ralue to the aged and infirm. because its great etre' sizing properties will give them a new hold on life. It will add ten or fifteen years to the lives of many of these who will use a hadf dose bottles of the remedy each year. IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CI IRE OF IN. uaness, Broken Constitution, Nervous Prostration, Debility of Old Age. Nervous Iiendache, Indigestion and DIe,mp,llo, Sick Headache, Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Female Weakness, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach, N:rvou. Chills, Loss of Appetite, Paralysis, Frightful Dreas, Nervous Paroxysms and Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears, Nervous Choking, Weakness of Extremities and Hot Flashes, Fainting, Palpitation of ..he Heart, Impure and Impoverished Blood, Mental Despondency, Boils and Carbuncles, Sleeplessness, Scrofula, St.. Vitus' Dance, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, Nervousness of Females. Consumption of the Lungs, Nervousness of Old Age, Catarrh of the Lungs, Nenralgia, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough, Pains in the Heart, Liver Complaint, Pains in the Back, Chronic Diarrhea, Failing Health, Delicate and Scrofulooq Children, Simmer Complaint of lt.tants. All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonic. NERVOUS DISEASES, As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant and harmless in all ire effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most delicate individual, Nine tenths of all the ailments to which the hamate family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges- tion. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood. a general state of debility oPthe brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is tie result Starved nerves, like starved muscles. become strong when tie right kind of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailments disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervous system must supply all the power by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is the first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does not con- tain a sufficient qtfantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon the nerves. For this reason it heeomes nec eery that a nerve food be supplied. This South American Nervine has been found by analysis to contain the essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts for its universal cdaptabllity to the cure of all forms of nervous de- rutgement. Caawroaasrrtt.., icy., A. us 's<. 76 She beast See!* A.v.ri -e. Natinwi Ca. • Dem Gtres:-1 dwL-e to my to Vow Ma 1 bats eaavrrd for mane years with a very 'rbcs Ames of the stomach and serves I tried eery mrdleias 1 rook, bear of. but milder( dons me say appreciable go.A until i was advised to try your drrat goatb Aoer&ea Scrams Tocol. and momW and Liver ('art, and atm* mien several bottles of it 1 mist my (hat I am sum. plaid at Its woadmeul p.sees to rare 18. atom as* and moeral a,rvous system If everyone Mew the value of 161. remedy se 1 do you would eat bs obis to supply t*. detraed. J. A. Hamtt, fez -Twee. Ilonteommrytic. Rescue Wn.en.o.. of Drowmraae7. t ars : " 1 bed Men Ina distressed eoeditloa bar terse years trees tl.rwmeeme. wakes.. d Ns atomseb. Dyspepsia. •ed radlsusttns. vara ay health was soma i bad tee, doctoring eons Mandy. with tee riled. 1 bwsglit ons battiest sovtb Amwlema Mewls., wbtrb does as mom good than any gm worth of doctoring f eves die ha my ms. I were aeries every moldy pm ✓ ia to M the valuable and lovely ivmrdy : • Mr bottles of N Me stavd nes romprt.t7. I tosdeer it tics E'.edset mvAis M vas wselL• A SWORN CURE FOR 8T. VITAS' DANCE OR CHOREA. June ?A My daughter, eleven yeahd old, was severely afllict �dlwith Ht Vitus'1Dania or Chorea. We g;"tve her three and one-half bottles of South Aruerlcan lIse. vine and elm Is completely restored. 1 believe it will cure every nese of 81. Vitus' Dance. i have kept it in my belly br two years, and asn and the greatest remdI rented In the world for InoN and Dyspepsia, forms of Nervous i)Isorden and Falling Health, from wv r cause. Eddie of Joan T. M . Yoneg� F }er: Subscribed and sworn to bs‘j me tide Sons let, 1t . CNA& W. Witmer', Notary Pehlke INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA.. The Great South American nervine Tonic Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever discovered for the cure of Indigestion, I)yspepeia, and the vast train of symptom. and horrors which are the result of disease and debility of the human stomach. No person can afford to pas by this Jewel of incal- culable value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex- perience and teaUmony of many go to pmve that this is the tent and ONLY omit great cure to the world for this universal destroyer. There is no ease of unmalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative power of the South American Nervine Tonic. eases. rL Dat,.,. ei wmys.es_ hd ..tea • way tan. A. Hawse, sr IAw Mesa tadm... '. 1 w.• y las es w swat asetb A ser4a• Nervtm. i bail sues la bed ser eve mouths hem y t f .seMt..pe.:111.1.1.1"141""theboodval.40":14111.:0 tYtic sakes, et Y esbeessed emmaeh. 14rr1om Tear. Ivy grapresea ice. mad a pawl+�.wt�•ted. •.path gime, weensbl•s dIs•abepw ofe I iFislwsa� M esfi4 4viewds fiOOd:•m nae1mew, u4M M The newt b.t of w lr.. ssaeeWeManseb�mt�bys Me Twalk ools roved mem mesh to t twos able to . wemtsMal_ geswntwmsmsllMed Tres ear Ni 1 Mime It r Ow bee �~ M oboes s1s Tamfse,, as�M .m m ant emomwe.4 a tmo b •tic wawa. j I Ib arendmt wear* Ise arts.. • Imo I ha mo Nee Ne perm wMb icer larMrllirr as a ironPow* AmMilIali �aewee awes as a sere w ... --- Po as '�md^�esYt� W seem Aesysrsrte�sa. it isver� myawe tor , es eas�hewn 4stw errR�ie•e .�isaII lMrlr s.w�w M has ie wbmde ewes.mex •o. 18.la W „.trewe era Mho w settf? ssi i mea Ktreeerdis ,a/s pew army t tis meldthe mind d, illid1. Os .s1 asd'ml b mm alb "Illi" mime ewe be it eel ppm r!m Neem r, tmgtd Ilse ffi m$ ea ass prebm Mee soap year aab■am ems ass 16 Large 16 ounce Bottle, $1.00, EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED. F. JORZ7.A_1•T, Tubo .a1� RetailA� enc !Oi -. ll�deteiobdand viad»dtT.