Loading...
The Signal, 1896-10-29, Page 71* TA IC SIGNAL : GODE'RIOH, ONT.. T R R RADA Y. OCT. 29, 1816 7 Wboe Me Meth •' What de I like sheat i hes girl •" Now, oeeely Vs a task T. roam assiebs sod quietly. too, » The lin a ot yes kamss that gal !' 01 maim 1 masa as harm, list w4.► I like .hest her boot, is my awe •1111. ! HOT (X)RN. lath Old magi w beet --how sweet le bar ffhe estate d beam asci rlisaery dear ! Old Make are bast. -haw tale std thyme Flea with es dews the stream of time ! Old Maths are have -what wealth noteld Afret ors asides Gaskets held ' Old Mews sea hest -what mmsbeaar play Amid the flimere .d yesterday •• Primmer. the Jeri has declared yo'. guilty "'Oa, t h*t'e all right,. My lord ; you're to Iolltg.at • mea, I fatal. to he Maumee.' by what they my." B..afde Old Osetlea•■ (be restran at writer) -I bel. a it M impepr to speak dy.mpsettally d 000'0 Were . Restsera.s Waiter -14o 1 have bard, Mr. 014 Oestlemeo- Thee 1 will be al=t sooess.eg the dealing yea have OM breast, me - Nese dey lo rest only the mother .f even - tis. hot small, the only reward of the i0 treater. Most of the time when we are wendoriae what people think *bent as they are t►Mk Ina about themselves. Mee could Imre • mighty 000vi.•iee les see frees the SM. They sever get into very eeriest tremble as loam as they keep their mouths that. Mrs. Basham -Yea know there'. Botha* halt so sweat M this life se love's yeses dream. Mr. Benham -There's sotbine half so ex pommies. la Old Madrid.-•• Waiter. I hope this steak isn't • pose of the ball from the bull- fight ,.someday ?" No, mast : I think it M . piece of the bores frees the bull-fisht ysmsrdy." lady (greatly es.ib.d- )-Oh, dolor, pray do owes •t ono* to our hew ' Doctor -Yes, directly. Who is so dos. pronely ill' *.adv-- I .M' Bat, as I had so one to seed. I Dass myself to tell yea A paper N . Fig.. bow • private we•tber•prephet. 'Tie is ens of his toilet prophecies : If the wird changes today aid it dose not rwia, we .hall have fine w.siber." Before awriage-Com- srsnd massy times events the halt of my kingdom." After assuage. --Two seisms for • sew hat' Agnes, yes mot think I mm mads of mosey ! Robby -Ms. ve.s said that I sboaldn't est that oisos .1 coke is the pastry -that it wield make me sick. Mother -Yes, !lobby. Bobby (ss.e4cingly But, m., it hasn't made a ask. Herber (tase.•dsely)-Year hair mode outlies badly, sir. Customer (testily) -Well, I dm's know el *scene who esa est it weese than yes. Arthur -1 w Maytag • beoyde ea the M.talme.t plan- ea. „*.. Tom Are von ' Art•.ar-Yes. i got the *dean veaNr- day. ".e Denise ' be said. , • Dearest !" Thea the wester who est opposite seam. to weeder wbetbor Muy were se their wed- ding trip or fes. Traddle.-Yesag Wilkin* ie dein, bettor thus he did ia she poetry lies Teets -Why. he tsld me he heda's writ tin mmyth*/ for • dimple et as.W. Treidles-That's whet l meas. "• We have • sp.aal eyelsmMer for wo leen," reseerkmd aha eyels mssahast. • *hen is .postal about it ! Ie it smaller is Woe them she mw'e !" " Yes. it's ssaYsr, bus Its greet advant- age is that it regisesss 100 miles after • me of 30 sellas." 1'eaag 1.ksesbds tie his father -in -law) - Misfortune abier rihet-in-la - Misfortune.iter misfertuae hes ovardekes se, bet I w not dNrsuragsd Tet. I km. , yeu bat bieney, de(1 8a►wtpold ba' (tomLMgle) - Yam. no)! Irl vile I bel Masa. ve shall sot bout est .s wafer Mies RessbM-1 rases him regelarty *vert -. h. He proposed les• sulk& Ir tic t.eetintb lima sew that 801letal . well. be ie esevia..d ig is safe. The times may be out of joist, but mart *wok whit:Ask boy were bees to set Mee Ilea suffering meth .s.dloss am. hal• Imp0sa0ia.s Earl - Rarely yes easiest Wait I would merry for moue Tbe Herum-Ortserly net. Mr. Repo •o�se : bet every ems aloe would think to, sad it would break sty Mart to have you regarded with unjust seepiaes- Artist-_What'. tin sato*.. Jobs' V•Ib---Why, air. bars'.. este dies Mr. ltshlatiek, is whish he sib se that he Y el .. • Shia Sorb, sad waste me to hand his drawing Mtssisl. en. Ar:st - Wall, isn't time plain wangb' V•lst--HaeMelt, dly. sir. I dm's ele, sir. rias Toe know Mr. Mailed*. I don't kaew whether to and W Mille ..d brushes et only • esrkerew. PILL - AGE DR. 'AONrw M LI V LR MIA 10c.° A VIAL ARE PLANNED ATTER' THE MOOT MODEM IN MEDICAL Sount E rim ,ids *. intone as turieffIntillY Ova Tess 50 Than Olds epe-Oe tk>.W ►at. enouti F..a Al • 1111011M11 1111 dna an 01 omit syr t3•V*, • le 1:1m �att.____�� sue Raw NEL rum es Dreg al ....,•may ie be maim then serer by J. s alt.""' THE RESURRECTION. THE SAVIOR'S RISING FROM A LEGAL POINT OF VIEW. .are they would net have Perokited as they did to the end, our would the rr aide of their labor be 1.4 throughout this elvtI1Md world to -day. --Basher of Gell. • Doers of teem This 1. the Wap * . rotate 1. th. Lawyer'. arta Weald Bend -A Ser Legs.. lase. L The first proposition therefore 1s that there was no motive for the pertear•- tbn of a fraud. In til trials Involving crime ur fraud the absence ur presence of motives Is an important factor. There was every apparent motive why Christ should not take the courts He did. lie aanalltel the oocepted re- ltgion, a course fraught with danger of social ostracism, personal violence. Ju- dicial and religions persecution. He assailed an institution which the Ito - mane protected. lie could nut have +uplred to wealth. His lite proved that. It was not power He sought, for Hr preached and practised humility, and selected as associates the poor and humble. It was not desire for luxury, tor He courted hardship, deprivation and peril. The evidence .bows Him an honest believer In the Importance, di- rectness and truth of His mission. II. Christ's conduct previous to His death is inconsistent with the theory of the fraudulent Intention because He openly and repeatedly stated that on the third day He would rise again from the dead. It Is absurd that * mall should con- ceive and carry out a fraud that was to result In his own death. No motive hut the one the thrlMlan attributes to Christ is consistent with such a pur- pose. The man intending to commit a crime, alms at concealment, other- wise his purpose would be frustrated. Christ made no secret of the Intended resurrection. He preached about It openly. Hie teaching reached the ears of all classes and were held of enough importance to demand that efforts be made for their suppression. This publicity was not the act of one Intending to commit fraud. :R. When arrested, accused, tried and executed, Christ's demeanor was not that of a guilty man, but was that of a permit wrongfully accused, but who knew that He must be condemned in carrying out His mission. He knew His danger. but made no effort to escape. nnr to rally His ad- herents to defence of Him. Through- out His trials He was almost entirely silent Pilate, it was plain, was op- posed to His condemnation, hut Christ neither sought nor encouraged his clem- ency. During the ordeal et execution He said nothing which showed other than perfect faith In His mission and perfect honesty of purpose. Before H 1s death and during His torment. He prayed for His persecutors. All these things are Inconsh«ent with fraudu- lent Intent. He had foretold His death and was endurtng merely what He had Prophesied. His was not the behavior of an Imposter. Iv. The execution of Christ was in pur- suance of a Judicial sentence, and we onset presume that It was fully carried out He was examined by the persons whose duty 1t was to see that He was killed, and was declared to be dead. His prophecy that He would rise on the third day. led to the sealing up of the grave with a great stone, and the placing of a strong guard there to pre- vent the theft of His body. But the body disappeared. There is no evidence that anyone was near the tomb before the disappearance. The soldiers, It is contended. slept. But is it reasonable that Caesar's soldiers slept when ap- pointed to a special mission, the out- come of which was watched by all fhe world? They must have been in- duced to testify that they slept. And. if they slept, what is their testimony worth? v. Thirteen witnesses. unlmpearhed and unimpeachable, and whose names are known, who were well acquainted with Christ, having met Him many times before Hie death, saw and conversed with Him after the resurrection. one witness, not an accomplice, is e ufeclent to prove the highest offence known to the law -murder. Under the Constitution of the United States two witnesses are required to prove high tr.saon: three witnesses is the highest number required to prove the execution of a YOU, and even an oral or noncu- pattve will can be proved by seven wit- nesses. There could have been no mis- taken Identity. It is urged that the 100 witnesses were liable to err through Mas. But where was the motive? Their esuse was condemned, their leader killed, themselves outcasts. Would they swear falsely to his identification? it is Incredible. PL ft is sometimes urged that certain discrepancies to the separate narra- tive•e of the witnewea tend to weaken their teen/tinny, and that, having made some mistakes. they may be mistaken throughout. Thio Is a very common ar- gument In court by lawyers dealing with lennrant or credulous Jurors and appear. welt calculated to Aver t -o the thoughtless and inexperlene.d. No two t'•tn ..t In court, to Roy lncld.nt. will t'Il prvele*ly the PIMP 'story. No two of them w111 agree on the details. The real. me ars• plain. iicety IRwyer know. It to by true. Mme people see more In a given time than others. some ars more self -poo - mama than others: worm have Aetee- live memories and forget minor details, whsle others are able to relate more clearly and precisely what they did tree and hear. So as to the narrators ret (viers career on earth and His resur- Madera vn. 1110 witnesses to the resurrection of war co.tr•dlcted or denied their tattlesony M relation to it, bat told the same story as loos as they lived. Vols subsequent conduct N thirster. e(oseiefaot with the truth eg thole slaw. This Is always oe=petest vvidasee. saisibigp where the number of wtt- Bpeeg N Neva These witnesses all W aa..WM/1 Mees. Thar metathesis we etsieltlga As long so Hb imbed they NMI fi poverty. btnnntti eta& v�pa, r SINN 111.s1er bad tauA'l. tcw pr•eseMd the stoma all their neat f1. Had O w + • seMrd YUoos. W 'malt• .» ttery tibe seed he, Noes edits Piedra ebb% 1' 1 tabs our r dim I* WHY THEY CO NOT PASS. g*DOR Ola1•ss ra07ttpTa ■OODaa0O or •PI•aiPTLY 04LTIrT 1111111 inapt tom- ato • 000M'•L Q•*IO•T70O son Litt 1011*' a•1NZ if yea have awaited tats the easter yes will he .urpri•oo at the .amehr .1 year hoses who MA themselves refereed as sp- .d1•ats for I fa 101st+"w bemires 0 kldaev •r.•ehle They thi.k themselves healthy until they ttadsrgo the medical toot. aid �.. r..l i.e. hie one psis% South Amoeba. Kidamy C.m will remove sin .ress tie early .t'npw..., hat all forme of k*dney daises, ',v diroteu•g the arts acid .red hardening winnower. that esti plies in the eyebm. J D. UNA.. "t Sherbrooke, Qs*, suffered tor -bray years from . oomplteated owe of kid - ..y theme., end meet °WIT $100 tor treat - meet. He rot no relief seal he Deed Nath Americas Kidney ('un, .ad he saye over his own trgnater. *hat toot bottles owed bit. Sold by J. K Davis. A CRIPPLE FROM RHEUMATISM. Curs* by a pew Beset eI Sena Amortise !besmear freer. Mrs N. Ferris, wife of • well heow, menufaoterer of Highgate. (int ems •• For sway veers f was sorely afflicted with ✓ heowatie poise is my ankles nod at Welc- ome. erowe almost dimblod. 1 tried everythias. I thought. doctored for yawn within', .wash benefit. '1 hough 1 bed lost owbde.oe is mediae« I was induced to w Swath American RP.eamatio Cure. To my delight the first does move tam mon relief then 1 Mid had is years, sad two bottles hays ooa- pletely oared me. Sold b J. S Deem. He (jab hes shad►-Tkw life bee so further *hers. I will kill myself. Rho -13y poises H. -Probably. She -Well. emit exams* my m.adosias it, hat brother Jack has jest teemed • ohemist'. shoo. yea know, and w*old yen mind buying the poem nI him1t would .scnerage poor Jack and prove your de reties to me. He still lie**. BREACHES IN THE WALL The Wean •prey the kidneys -Tim Most Iwo ca.rd.d a. use •dvanees-leMleate Nerngtbeaod by bedr's kldtsey P111.. Pour Hors, Oot. 26 1Spooial).-Ctdxeao called oe here to voleob for the oosreotsoa of the toilowias etntemest without •b ex o.neine .sAoreed It as tram. Mr. Cha.. (l•lobriet, Chief of Polios and government Fhahery overseer, of his owe case maid :- •• For t o years my distress inore•eed until the doctor called it Diebetea At times my *offering sae Memos. and medicine takes did .e toed. At last • friend wand see that Dodd's Kido.v Pills would oars ate A few boxes have kept that prose*.., sad I thank these polls for • perfect and I believe p.rm•eent oar.. *ler larsmata. luppese yes are tired out by overwork, feel servous, irritable, and were, and ober- lately oertaia that bed means t0.slag for hours in .n aahappt wakefulness. Tara an the water M tin bathroom sad may is the ho• bath until the drowsy flog 0oasac whiob will le within three minutes- Them rub yourself briskly with • mares Turkish towel sad ge to bad. You will sleep the d eep of the instead rise M tb. Mersin, perfectly refreshed. Mew to rare norma. Easy' Yea, if you go *boat it the right way. Get the best slays Pateam'. Pain- less Cern E[tnwise never tails to mare. Aote in twenty tour haus sad 'seen *either paw sor dise.af.rt. Palms's Ossa Extractor sxtrs0M ebbs : it N Is best. BOOKS AND PERIIODICALS. TOR Lerltea Iloo•rwl; a s•ntk!y published M Ottawa, .t 60seste par amnia, bee robbed its third •tabor wad eoams to h ave e..ard • firm hold of readier people /t is • purely Canadian journal, baa eon- tributere of emhseee• en int list, r Iv ill.ssrated sad printed ea paper le the Oetoker number is el yea the first te- etal.nas of Womb m Pieties. • Moly written serial by Mary L. Campbell. The 1Nyetery of llamwoed. by J. Valentine Roob•e, • emery .boas the evil deters of • hypnetim. is well writs= sad highly inter obteg. 8.behert, • k..a..a.iy-iBa.m.td MOW w muds. by Mary llddoi. *bald be read by all she are seadylegt Ns art This e mber bas aloe sons e£Maiao venom, An O.i.g With she 444441144 ebb A. Eleph- ant Heal. and the fink sad 6th abases et • A Ras Lilt. Meanger." • story etc Oa.. - doss lite, by D. Mentalist Coghlie. The Le.eger should be to the harm el all Irks deers i.str..MMv readies. Tar WB nintlirga, • paper Nu the Remo, psbli.had M T.rwte, has reached its Nth mo.tbly ember, sad W •ppanstly .4Mised • .bett•mtMl faeces is the Doss- iers. The *Material shah disauries the preset pbw et the awe... quut*an. The Reek of tree•• and Meath F....s•. Cos- • riheted wifeless ars, The Piss of Deator- • ease], by Prof. G. L Robles.: Tks Mak- -se 0( • IRs ; The smplre et noi=se. by Midi Murray : A bees se t alto, by J G. Roresd ; The Lila .1 Jas MsOesb. by Ree. ter r terns.. B D. ; Th res she Algonquin Park. by J.R.R. ; Pt.i aaa.•1 its by Dr. Sleek ; The (Nelda King. • peas, by Rat 1. A.: (1wego J.b. Ra...-. ►y Rey. W. G. Jord•e. B. D.: U.bslMf, . nails t Das. • story. by E. W. Thermo. : Th. Eelrmr. by R IL 1411: A North C-'..ar' Hera by Roy Jas. Han* IL D. ; Sixty Yong M Owed Lisae, by 0. R, Rob- erts. eel The Elms W. lies Obey, • peer. Tb.. era have the fosday .hmnew, the Mato weld. she asci g 1 , the PAW - wee would mid thee�wo ll. the int PAW - n amed hatheleg The a Beek tbe1t. The orlMRe World.$ees w Ch..'h Mud., � W be Milk. Ise a 'ase MegaIlottls asst psr DIrs. Whoa yea arise M AMPS d day 1e lobar oaths sae al Irby. Dea'seaaMtMlbOM• heR beam Tuktm.A..• walkdcsawasbob hob L> - 4*'Wad - ill suis rya lat.• r -v ag JM tin • lin 7E hle. CITY CHANTICLEERS. I HEALTHY DIGESTION. POOR JILSON DREAMED HE HAD I A BOON ANi) A HLItie1$(i TO ALL MANKIND. STRANGLED THEM ALL _.-Z4.. lrstboitta Tal.1 s t1,.h Unmet Tera Whose livery 0./gbit.r sept tibio►•a. -Tae Diatrsetlese of Ogg-Lsytas Birds In Cly 5.vlrersreete, Washington 1s a dear, good old town, but there are Instances where it drops back Into the yellow past with a great deal of wast, so U It had never emerg- ed from a large, straggling village. Now. why is it that people living In a city insist on keeping ehkkeus? Wb, maintain In thickly populated districts the hUarloua rummer, the cock that crows In the 'acorn? Why should the hero of (he barnyard Interrupt lhe atuottrrr ut the citizen who does not have to "show up' at office until 1 o'clock? asks the Wa»tits.*tots Star. Jllston, In our nelghbof hued, has been having a very Det1•.u-. 11me with the fowls, wblob, he dei lama ars like idheridan's Indiana -:;nod only when they are deal. JUson is a patient man. More than this, he is peaceful and dislikes disturbances. He will al- most move before he will 'waken oom- plaint to • neighbor. U be lived in a rented house he would move. But he owns a house and L tied down. He has many and '. snots kinds of neigh- bors. Some have lilted Jllson and some Allmon has liked. Sane have not I knd Jlleun, and the departure of some nae caused Jlkton to dance for Joy. Jilsun is patient, but the g cock, the red -combed chantklr.-, /II his .lesion notes ringing out on the night alr,from E o'clock onward, has a distressing elect upon hintHe does not e p much atter the first burst of eloffueuce of this back l spellbinder. He wakes up and wood- en' why Brown keeps that rooster In the back yard. and while be is won- dering the cock crows again. He tries to sleep, and Is Just dosing slightly when the rooster a few doors further down the street breaks In with a ie - Gant cock-a-doodle-doo He o an- swered, of course. Then there are crows and counter -crows. Finally the roosters run the gamut of their voices and are apparently tired out. • Jlisun is now thoroughly awake and thoroughly mad. He makes up ills mind to t'omulain about those ranters as soon as people are up. He is turn- ing this over In his mind when the rooster belonging to the colooed peo- ple 1n the alley breaks out, then an- other,and 'another farther off, but J11 - son has so accustomed himself to 1*. and knows from what direction to ex- pect the different sounds. that he can almost bear roosters halt across the city. The farther away the rooster, the more defiant he 1. In voice. JU- son'a neighbors' roosters and the far- away roosters seem to have a special grudge against each other because they are never likely to come In elope cuntact- Jilson plans hes he can have the nuisance abated. Ile oan locate his neighbors' roosters, and could make a complaint against them, but he would only offend them and accom- plish nothing, unless he could sup- press the others. He resolves to get up in the morning and locate the roosters and make one general com- plaint, and bring the whole raoster- lovfng multitude into the police couft. But how to locate them' His first dtmDctnty is to find out who owns the colored people's birds. Each dweller in the alley denies that he has any birds. None knows to whom the chickens running around In the alley belong. Jilson finds it next to im- possible to locate them. Then he ficins greater difficulty as he goes farther away. The far -away cocks bailie He returns from an early mor prowl only sure that his nelg have roosters, and aware that II must complain it will be against a part of the nuisance. So J11son says nothing and Iles awake every morning ezerUng his in- tellect upon a system of machinery which would reach In and strangle a rooster as sown as he attempts to crow. He fashions strange devices which might be pix on the 'soothes neck at night and removed after peo- ple have obtained their morning naps. He thinks how as a boy he once heard that 11 a cow were tad head and toot she could not break through & fence, and bow he applied that to a rooster that dew out of the hen yard every day. and how the scheme eurceeded In stopping the rooster from crowing ever after. He used a slip-two/ie. and the rooster son choked himself to death. J1ison meditates 'ming around and using a dither •Hp -noose on the roosters that are disturbing him. Then he wages • crusade. in his mind. against the city authorities that w111 permit chickens to be ke•.t in the back yards and shed. 1n the city, and become a general nuisance. J11son be- comes a refortper He sees that there can only be a well -regulated city and the average man have comfort when some masterful man -like Jllson, for instance --b placed In control, who w111 with mar -like rule, make people live aa in a city, and not try farming on a moan scale to ten feet of back card. He would have as commissioner one who would bring up all offenders with a short turn and make the laws of the city respected. But It Is only an early morning day dream, Interrupted by the rising bell. t.oaa- t.t vein "What is the average dere of a good bicycle. Rproeketsr• 'Well, some in them last until they S IP maid tor." rs New Wes.. -i est • :baste. The flee- ter says my life lo ten mosnr.aou.. 1 seed soitears%" Rsa►*.d-Try .ss fag •t ►.me, &doer -Yams ewativ is ten MIA. Arbor- Very well I will Mtrodees esm. hair ramie, bailouts. » Will yon be ray wigs, Mia Roe.bwd,.nd Mite tete Lapp, P ., I ant marry, Mr. Lov*des. het I should lam a be happy symptl. " Tramp-- You eery nos behove M, but I was cissa as edits*. B.rss.Lbt Gestleu 50- Te what de yet Shauna. year slew ha las t Rebel Oeldesere--tya, ye. mast IM as messy Jalk. Re says he pusitivedy were% thia mrb.st s.e m -*.Thep puss awhiss them 1 lea M We he was N limed et'r Ikea Tab Lira or • pr.ttPTW 410* O. 0.0A0? smear -brei no ■•s morraagl. 1100*. ITS Panus FOIST* TUB w•T tl. DA- aKoon NA Len. Trim The Cantwell Freeholder. '* be lire of the dy.peptse m proverbially a miserable ase, .hcNene uaiver.sI 01,mtnt«f- .•tea Noses womb became of the actual p•wlalss.o of the ailment, bat lereely he- aths* it projoetg to pae.imr.U..hadows op - on all the sae.rse of Ile, ..d bene they eat like a deadly Jambes apish evvy eeterprloa Aa 'moaned dineetIc• given n.. to •a irrit- * Mbty that paposes the person to 'nook aa - myths, besides being .xur.mdy tryiy ap es ethers 1a'a are all .ware of the vales of oh.sef.faw m 111e. is is a flower of for rarest worth sad the foreges' ettrsotioea Its • tome to the molt and • dietnfeotast to rhe healthy These Osage that destroy • t•e.'e obeerfulness, loosen hie us.fulo*.e, and ought therefore to be resisted by some drastic sad efficient remedy. TI. duties that devolve upon the average men'end wo- man are invested is so much difficulty .s to pat • premium on bolr.fuloem. The rela- tion between the prevailing moods of the monad and the health of the digo•.v. appa- ratus is elope •od vital Home it is oat ✓ ermeimg that massy would-be besefaotore b.y esit.bt tb. o.trosege of sufferere from iadige•tiww. Dodging Dv reeslto Dr. Wil ham.' 1'iok P 11. is • rem.dv un•yes in its t uoew, therefore it is confidently recom- mended es • safe and ads gests oars tor mute dyspepsia. This claim is .ab.tenti- .red by experience as the following fact. .111 .how Mn. 11 Mc('nmmon, of Williamstown. Glengarry Co., suffered untolo orrery from 'rivers attack of dyspepsu,wbioh m•adest• .d opsit to those may uoplea.aot wave for which dyrepep.tu.o"tor.00s Every attempt to take food win • menace to every (.sits[ of onw.fort, until the ■toms, -h was relieved of its burden by vumitiag. When not sutler mg from the presence of food in the stoat •cb, there were other symptoms more or hoe disagreeable ounsetlasot to the tone - timed dietarbanw of the stomach, such as •mpared taste and appetite. uuwonted Iusgoer, isoreeeine apathy, and failing am- hition Such an aggregation of theeye.p- •ntni pro•+aoed • trying state of affairs, and relief wee e.gerry sought. Ooe of the best phv.iaaes cf the neighborhood woo cos- setted He presented. His medicine was taken and his directions followed, but un- tnrtun•tely three months of the treatment hroagbt Ivo substantial relief. When Mrs. Ilc('rimmom rxpr«..ert her intention of trv- fig Dr. Williams Pink Pills the doctor held the thought in derision. However, Mrs. M.(kimwtea decided .he oould mot afford to leave misted torn • well recommended remedy se Dy. William.' Pink Pills. Hence she took • coarse of this medtoioe, which after • fair trial wa..mia.n'ly .ocoe.sful. trees bovine only able to t.ke stale bread •.d milk or 'ode biscuits, she became •hie to take a hearty meal of aav variety, with- out the paints: effects that oroe ar.rted themselves atter every meal. It only re - males to he said that Mrs. McCrimmoc im- proved in flesh sod general oomfnrt from tin first taking of the pill., and almost anything rang she maid eat with impunity Dyspepsia bootee • thins lees dr..dec. sod howdy bebarioe to the past. It is little evader, (benders. that .he arose the nee of he Williams' Pink Pills span ait►ats auM1- arly aliI ot.d. 1)r. Williams' Pink Pills emote now hlood, build up tin nerves, and thus drive limas* from the system. In ha.deede of oases they hay* cured idiot .11 other medi- cines had failed, thus establishing the class that they are • marvel among the triumphs of modern mediae' scissor. TM teams. Pink Pills ere sold only in boom, t.risg the fall trade mark, "Or. Wil- liams' Peek Pill. for Pale People.' Protect veer.. t trona imposition by refusing *ny p 14 that does not hear tin tone cored trade mark *round the box. Ias.rsaoe companies claim that cycling is mere dangerous than travelling either by railway or by ship. SUNLIGHT SOAP PICTURES FOR WRAPPERS A pretty colored Picture for every 14 "Sunlight " or every 6 " Lifebuoy " Soap wrappers. These Pictures are well worth getting. Address : Lever Bros., ' n Oeeshe ., Teresa*. LTf', MNIIIIMIN IIII� Beware! Whenever in need of kidney treatment always be true to yourself and refuse any substitute or imitation of the or- iginal and genuine 1.11H 1111MI • P(3NLY ;Coal &Wood Yard The undersigned begs to inform the public that he keeps on land all grades of HARD coA SOFT AND BLACKSMITH COAL. PRICES OF W000 REDUCED. SpeoW'•tteattoa gives to OUT SPLIT WOOD Call and get prices and see samples of wood. Office and yard. NELSON -ST.. sear taints Oro.. Hotel. D. C. STRACHAN Proprietor THE HUNTING SEASON Nt2./r Is upon us, and the true sports - Man is beginning already to pre- pare for the prince of sports. When you want your outfit we have everything you need in GUNS and SHOT and • POWDER SHELL. Machine basted Shells always on hand, or loaded to your order on the shortest notice. A full line of the beet American Pow- ders always on hand. Call and see our Shot which for que!ity aim:. 'site downs them a1L DAVISON & Co. WE MAKE_____ Sewer and Culvert Pipes All Mese from 4 i.. to tit is. AIM CeaseHtss•. WRITL FOR PRIOES. THE ONTARIO SEWER PIPE C4 OOi AD4LAIDt IGT. t,. Merawv a7 ramtoo TORONTO THE STAFF OF LIFE. Adulterates and eetatitetloa in f,,,e pre. ducts have of late years become so g.. • e as evil, that erov.rnmeateevery where hat.• *sea obliged to mei In the services a myetyet. e �msheirspread sad wave the lives of the usesaal.sabty is int portant articles of food Forges lid. It mem be made hem Wig int ; for this ,..on it is serap la harm of the stomach. or. le altar wards. light of digestloa, Hop boa Malt Yeast le proeoaaoed by the test aabilyseaV Tagta.d to be the pure and yeah, sed is used b7 the beet =lui1. tb ooan$ty„ IN MY BAKERY Yea no goo for ens amt es aleph Snead made Mea 8M Tessa as yen osa tor three sets treat the pressed yeasts wilts are forams thosa.hor es toe pablb, bot which do ••.s sad omoot sive the ease sweet flavored bread MY BREAD IS MADE FROM THF PURE MALT AND HOP YEAST AND NO. 1 MANITOBA PATENT FWUR. It *•d prove for yourself, h le the most sad sweetest breed that sea be maimed of say yeast on the market My e.g experisnee le the Bakery business has proved them b be tete. D OANTELON. OODtRJOB STEAM BOILER WORKS. A. S. CHRYSTAL, rl.e......fe Oae7isisl e! ANNA. xasatsotarar of all kinds of BOILERS. Smoke Stacks, Balt Paha, Elbert Imo Works, eta., etc., Asti Dealer e- i3egies. MaeWnry Carting-. !a. AM gime of Pipes mil Mem sad Water Gebblis Cheek Valves. Iaap4as*r� tip joMra 0.ast00tly w Har Valois s sad la- teness A Yea e1 Steal Watts awl Rag Trae�im kr set o/ bosses sr Nbaa: Nagabeig i seamilly all sea- te. A. 1. = t -i