The Exeter Advocate, 1890-1-30, Page 3" &Jett y I"
(I3y ,Telan Inarie.)
Tee, camo "Scotty" if ye WWI
For sie' a name can mean nee
Cr a' uielenamos just
Fxu quite content wi' ' Scotty I"
To be a Scot la nae disgrace,
Erna fook eau trubt aeuid boot& fate
He's uever +ang oot o' a place,—
The honest, faithful "Scotty I"
Scutehman has the knack to plod,
Through thiek au' thin he'll bear his lead,
Hie tryet is aye in riebt au' God,—
The Porsoverin' " Scotty !"
Ile'e 'Contive baith to kirk an' tnart,
To friends ho' s true au' hard to 'mit,
In life's great race he needs nae start,—
I'll wiu or dee," says " Scotty!"
, An' if he meets wi' ane or twa
0. Scotian'ssone,wlien far avva',
They'll gree like. brithers ane and
A " clannish" man is " Scotty!"
Though at he travels far free ham°,
rle's aye a Sootohman a tho same,
Au' proud to crack o' Scotlan'a fame,—
A loyal son is " Scotty
Should Scotian' ever need his help,
He 11 gie her enemiesa skelp;
Ate inake them howl like ony whelp,
And gie respect to " Scotty!
Then, ea' mo "Scotty" if ye will,
Nick -name like that can mean nae ill,
yer ban' wi' richt guid will,
Whan'ere you ca'me" Scotty "
Sow Not Scandal.
"He that uttereth a elander is a fool."—Prov
x., 18.
A woman to the holy fathee went,
Oonfeesion of her sm was her intent;
And so her miedemeanors iroat and small,
She faithfully to him rehearsed them all;
And chb fest in her catalogue of sin,
She everted thatethe a tele -bearer had been,
And bore a bit of scandal upend down
To all the long-tobgurd gobeips of the town.
The holy father of her other in
Granted the absolution asked of him;
.But while for the rest he pardon gave,
Ee told ber this offence was very grave,
And that to do fit penance she must go
Out by the wayeide where the thistles grow,
And gathering the largest, ripest ot e,
Scatter its seeds; and that when this was done
She must come back another day
To tell him his commands she did obey.
The woman, thinking tinea penance light,
Eastened to do his will that very night.
Feeling right glad she bad enaped so well.
Next day but one she went the priest to tell;
The priest pat still and hos rd her story through,
When said: "There's something still for you to
do;
Those little thistle seeds •which 'you have sown,
I bid you go regather every one."
The woman said: "But, lather, 'twould be vain
To try .and gather up those seeds again •
The winds have scattered them both' far and
wide
Over the meadowed vale and mountain side."
The father an, wered "Now I hope from this
The lesson I have te.nght you will not miss;
You cannot gather back the scattered seeds,
Which far and wide will grow to noxious weeds;
Nor eau the mischief once by scandal sown,
By any venom° be auain undone."
FIVE MILLION DOLLARS..
The Great Manufactory ,Of. Tin Warriors.
Some years ago an idea suggested itself
to an'obsoure workman in Belleville' an
idea that since then has engenderedan
array, amply qualified, were it a question
of numbers alone, to realize the dream of
eternal peace, by keeping in check the
assembled armies of Europe. He eets on
foot 5,000,004 soldiers 'a year. These
soldiers are of humble origin, bid so was
l'eapoleone They spring from old sardine
boxes. Relegated to the dust hole, the
sardine box is preserved from destruction
by the dustman who sells it to a rag mer-
chant in Belleville or in Buttes Chaumont,
who in turn dial:ions of it to a specialist,
by whom it is then prepared for the manu-
factories. Two'warriors are made from
the bottom of the box, the lid and sides
are ueed for guns, railway carriages,
bicycles, etc.
All this may seem unimportant at first
sight, but the utilizinion of these old sar-
dine boxes has resulted in the foundation
,of an enormous manufactory, at which no
Jess than 200 workmen are employed. I
went there the other day, and, no one ens-
peeitir g me of being a political correspond-
ent, I was admitted without difficulty to a
view o/ the great arsenal and its 5,000,000
warrice s. Tne poor workman, out of whose
head the armed ten soldier sprung—via the
sardine box—is now a rioh man, and, whet
is more, au eager and keen -sighted patriot,
who in his sphere deserves the gratitude of
his conntry. After retreating for years,
the French tin soldier tekee the offersive
again; every year the German spiked
helmets retire from positions conquered
in French nurseries, and the time is not
far distant when the tricolor shall wave
over the Berlin toy shops, a slight revenge
en attendant the great.—Biackwell's Maga-
zine.
The Railway Knight.
"Peace hath its victories no less re-
nowned than war," but eminence in the
paths of peace has not been so fruitful a
warm' of honors as fortunate campaigns.
All the genius of the world, however, is not
displayed upon the battlefield, nor is all its
hard work done there, and the tendency to
recognize by some mark of distinction
Signet ability and success in peaceful call-
ings bee grown in modern times. Most of
the readers of these columns who are inter-
ested in matters relating to railways are
acquainted with the name of the General
Manager of the Grard Trunk Railway
Company of Canada, whose reputation as
a railway administrator of marked ability
extends far beyond the boundaties of his
own country. A signal mark of the appre-
ciation with which hie work in the railway
and commercial life of Canada is regarded
was reminder bestowed on him by Queen
Victoria, who conferred the dignity of
knighthood on him, making him Sir Joseph
Hickson.—Bradstreet's.
Not Extemporaneous.
Tommy (at dinner, the new minister
being a guest)—Yon are quite a singer, I
believe?
New Minister—Why, no. What makes
you think so?
Tommy—Mother says that you stick to
your notes more closely than any man she
ever heard before.
\ Clothes Pins.
Michigan alone turns 1,000,000 clothes.
pins loose on this country every week, while
other manufacturers bring the figures up
10 14,000,000 The product per year gives
every man, Woman and child a big basket
of pins, and where they all go to is what no
teller can lind out. --Detroit Pree Prete.
Not reeling Well.
Fleet Old Shoe—I am completely worn
out.
Second Old Shoe—You do look run
down.
one Good Resolution.
Mao—Give me a cigar
Fitt --I've sworn off buying cigars for
other people, you know. Hit me for one
next year. So long.
In e Perthshire perish a young woman
went to join the church. She bad DOVOP
been to aohool and *veld not my the ehOrter
cate(obiera. The litsi question the rah:lister
aSked ber with, "Can you tell Inc who
brought you ottt Of ibe lend of Egypt and
out Of the home of bowleg(' ? " Her reply
wits;
"Weal, site titatee met the way lees
Spread; for I never was (river the ) reg of
Catty in my life."
I.ONDON'S Briotouo or 14337,
Awful *elms at the Oemeterles pad
Heepttale.
e In 1837—the year of Queen Vioterie's
acceestou—England offered from an epi -
of irilluenze eo virulent and wide-
epread that it aave eise to is genuine wane,
and for a while almost threatened a pare,
lysis of business," says the Pall Mall
Gazette. " 'the obarecterieticii of elle
malady were intlemnietion of the throat
and lungs, with violent epeeists, eieknosa
and headache. Now thet we seem to be
within measurable distauge of a return of
the epielenaio, it may be intereating to
recall the facts of its lasb visit:
DEADLOCK AT TED I171314I0 EITICES.
So general were the effects of the epi-
demic that at the Wax Office, the Admir-
alty, the Navy Pay (Moe, the Stamp
Office, the Treasury, the Postoffice and
other Government depaetinents, the greater
number of clerks were prevented from
attending to their daily vocations. At
Greenwich and Cheleee hospitals numerous
deaths occurred among the aged inmates,
and at Woolwich garrison the disease was
so prevalent that from forty to fifty men
per day belonging to the Royal Artillery,
Royal Engineers, Sappers and Miners, and
other troops, were adtnitted into the Mili-
tary Hospital, among whom several deaths
occurred. Of the police force upward of
eight hundred were incapacitated from
duty. On Sunday, the 13th of Januery,
the congregations in the churohes were
lamentably thinned, and the number of
burials on the same day in the different
cemeteries was nearly as numerous as
during the raging of the cholera in 1832
and 1833 In the workhouses the number
of deaths far exceeded the figures of any
return made in the course of the previous
thirty years.
'‘ MACE SUNDAY.'
" But it was on the following Sunday
(the 20th) that London realized to the full
the extent and devastating natute of the
influenza epidenaio. • Death,' ettid one
careful chronicler, 'had a high day in the
metropolis, amtperhaps in tiae memory of
the oldest inhabitant latch a then° has not
been witneesed. There was scarcely an
undertaker not employed and many were
unable to accomplish their orders. Hearses
and mourning coaches were to be 'seen driv-
ing through the streets hurrying from the
execution of one funeral to the commence-
ment of another. The walking funerele
were met at almost every corner of the
public streets and many who had ordered
carriages were unable to procure them, and
compelled to wade through the dirt and
wet on foot. The church yards seemed to
be all bustle and confusion. The principal
interments took place in the parishes of it.
.Panorae, Marylebone, St. Giles', Clerken.
well, Whitechapel, Bethnal Green, St.
Margaret's and Si. John's, Weetmineter.
It is competed that not less than one
thousand bariala must have taken place on
Sundaye and when it is considered that the
number of parishes in and wailed the
metropolis is near two hundred, the calcu-
lation does not seem to be an exaggerated
one.
AWFUL SCENES.
" 'In St. Pancras and St. church-
yards she'ecenes were truly awful and even
disgusting to the feelings. The burial
ground in the former had more the appear-
ance of a ploughed field; furrows from the
graves were turned up all over the place;
and such WSB the scene between 3 and 4
o'clock that not lees than between forty
and fifty interments took place, the under.
takers scarcely knowing which grave to go
to. Groups of mourners with corpses,
waiting in every part for the clergyman to
take his turn in performing the funeral
service; then the horrid manner of the
grave -diggers (navviee, who seemed hired
for the purpose), their awful language and
carelees manner of filling in the graves,
jumping and stamping on the coffins—such
a sight, indeed, was enough to appal the
hardeet heart. Some of the mourners had
actually to wait upward of an hour before
their relatives could be interred.'
AT THE HOSPITALS.
" Thie epidemie seems not only to have
proved destructive in its own natural form,
' but at Guy's Hoapital, in the wards where
a free ciroulatioia of the air existed, it ran,
in many cases, iuto bronchitis and pneu-
monia, and even induced severe eymptoma
of typhoid or yellow fever. So fatal, in-
deed, did it prove that the managers of
several }Mephitis set apart wards exclusively
for influenza patients. At a meeting of
the Westminster Medical Society. Dr.
Johnson stated that the influenza had been
far more violent in its oharaoter and nisi.
versal in its extent than the cholera epi-
demic) of 1833. The 'grippe' prevailed at
Boulogne to an extraordinary extent, and
whole families were attacked, but though
accompanied by painful symptome, it peems
to have been of a milder character than the
English influenza. In some of the sur-
rounding villages, however, half the popu-
lation were laid up, and the churches had
to be closed for the want of congregations.
44 During February the epidemic rapidly
declined. The weekly account of burials
published in the Medical Gazette put down
the number for the week ending February
21st at twenty only, and the improvement
in the general health of the metropolis was
even more satisfactory. Thus ended the
n ileums ' of belt a century ego."
Some of Stanley's Discoveries.
Besides his geographical disooveries Mr.
Sta,nley will make some interesting con-
tributions to the anthropology of the
countries he has just visited. Among the
roost important are his discoveries relat-
ing to the wide extent of the Waimea&
people, with whom we already have some
acquaintance. He found Them very
numerous on the east side of Mute Nzige
and he says that most of thein " °en boast
of features quite as regular, fine and deli.
oate as Europeane." All the wealthier
and more important people are pure
Wahtima. They are very light in color
and are the moot interesting type found
on the central African uplands. " Wher•
ever," says Mr. Ste,nley, " we find the
Wahuma with their herds one might
fancy himself transported into the midst
of Abyssinia." He also Leard of a great
people in lemmas, tbe vast unexplored
region west of Muta Nzige ; and according
to the description given him, no people,
not even the Waganda, until now supposed
to be the greatest Dation in the lake region,
equal the inhabitants of Ruanda in number
and strength.--leew York SUN.
Still His Opinion.
"1 only wieh to airy," testily spoke a
mangled paseenger as he dragged himself
out from under the wreck made by a ter -
rifle railway collialon, "that, in My
opinion, nobody is to blame for this mod.
dent." And he then peneefully breathed
his last. He Wfie a coroner.
A railroad train of fifteen cars would be
required tO convey the toed and newish -
mint whieh a men blessed With a moderate
appetite ooneumee from the time of hie
birth to the day when he &Willie the ego of °
three adore year(' and ten. 13noti,' at least,
is the ealonletien whir& has just been Made
ptiblic by Dr. Kul:Woman, One of the prinei.
pal professors of the University of 13erin. r
AISOUT PIPES.
A Riae raneler on the Alai:tram:tore and
Care of el cerechauhae.
The leeeereetiehee, sees a well-kiloWri ees-
Peet, conles to the workman in all kinde of
dharou and sizes, and he makes the most
of the piece in his hand Recording to eels
ekill. ft is a species a olay, not soft and
pliable, nor chseolvable like kaoline. It re-
tains iie eliape and when softened,. by the
absorption of water can be out almost aa
easily as cheese. The workman WOOS in the
shapeless lump an animal, a head, a figure
or a lendsoape, and lifter blocking it out
turn e and perforates the interior of the
bowl. Wherafinished the pipe is put into
an oven and left to dry for several hours.
Then the parts that need polishing. are
attended to by girls,' and where there As no
carving the whole bowl is polished. The
girls TWO Nattlf818 file, the first discovered
by man—the bullrush. This gives a beau-
tiful eurface and the pipe is then ready for
the final proem, the waxbath.
The beth revealwhatever inaperfotions
there may be in the material, suoh OS flaws,
veins or °reeky, and determines the quality,
whioh,may be oreamy,mottled,coarse or fine.
If a meerschaum pipe were used in its
natural state it would never show any color
and would soon be.come soiled, just like a
clay 'pipe. All this is prevented by the
wee, which fills the pores on the outside
and gives the meerschaum a kind of
enamel, keeps back the oil of tobacco and
show e the beautiful color so highly prized.
A new pipe should never be smoked out
of doors in very cold weather nor laid on
cold marble or glass, us frost is apt to check
or oraok the meerschaum, especially when
it ie very fine, but thee° cracks generally
extend only as deep as the wax coating.
00 far dB known, meerschaum is found in
no other part of the world than the pretty
little village of Eskischia, in Aele,tio
Turkey. The component parte of meer-
schaum are said to be nsagneeia silex and
flint, and sometimes traces of iron, earth
and other minerals are found in it. Once
upon a time it was death to the Christians
to go near the mines, which go under
ground some thirty feet, and are aired and
kept dry by a windmill. The Turke do not
believe in reproduction nor in flooding the
market, and prices never come down, but
generally have an upward tendenoy when-
ever the Government needs a larger supply
of feeds, for the greatest expense ET minurg
the production la the taxes of the Govern-
ment. The indolent natives mine for a
couple of hours or so and then lie off in the
sun with their coffee and tobeoco. With a
knife they scrape off the earth from the
lamp of meersoleatim ; then they take the
oily leaf of , a tree which grows in the
vicinity and rub the lump smooth and give
it something of a polish. In this condition
it is sold to the neerohant. -
A material very ranch like meerschaum
is found in Spain and the United States,
but it bears no comparison with the Turk-
ish meerschaum. The imitation meer-
schaum comes from the chips and shav-
ings of the genuine article. They are first
ground or mashed into a pulp, and then
mixed with some binding chemicalso as
to keep the molecules together. The
imitation cannot retain the oil of the
tobacco, and usually cracks whenfilledwith
nicotine.
A good meersohaum can be bought for
$2 5Q or $3, but those with good carving
will ioost $20, $25, $40 and e50 each, and
can be mede to run away above that. The
largest pipe, ever manufactured in this
country was put on exhibition last year in
the Exposition. It is a bull's head,' with
amber horns and mouthpiece, and is valued
at $3,500. The Seidenberg exhibit, r
senting all the Presidents of the United
States, that of George Washington being a
large bust, took the gold medal.
Notes from Scotland.
The Fife miners, whose wages were last
year raised 37i per cent., demand a farther
rift of 20 per cent.
The Rev. W. A. Heard, M. A.'assistant
master, Westminster School, has been
appointed headmaster of Fettes College,
Edinburgh.
The will of the late Mr. George Reith,
manager to the Clyde Trust, Glasgow,
shows the amount of his personal estate
at the time of his death to have been £5,234
13e. 68.
Mr. James Leslie, C. E., who has been
a welleshown citizen of Edinburgh, and
has been for 43 years associated as eneei.
neer with the Edinburgh Waterworks,
died on the 29th ult. He was 88 years of
age.
Two brothers named Quigley, who live
at Eastfield, Caldercruix, near Airdie,
Lanarlishire, have been it nested in comma
tion with the auspicious death of their
mother. It is alleged that Patrick, the
elder brother, kicked her to death.
The Rev. A. Le Henderson, of Camphill
Church, Birmingham, has received a
unanimous call to the pastorate of Ander-
ston U. P. Church, Glasgow. This is one
of the largest ociegregations of the denomi-
dation, numbering about 1,000 membera.
Mr. Hugh T. Tennent, of Dunalastair
Perthshire, and only partner of the firm of
J. & R. Tennant, Wellpark Brewery, Glas.
gow, died suddenly at his residence at 40
Westbourne Gardens Relvinside on the
3r8 inst., at the age 02726 years. He was
the youngest son of Mr. Charles Parker
Tennent.
The death is antotinced of Mr. Wm.
Gray, farmer, Southfield, Duddingston, one
of the oldeet agriculturists in Scotland, and
one of the beat known in Mid -Lothian. In
his time he had been a direotor of the
Highland Agricultural Society, and, always
a well-known figure in agricultural circles,
he was one of the oldest members of the
Edinburgh Corn Market.
No Delay on Account of the Epidemic.
Young Mr. Polhemus (taking her hand)
our—k•chew 1—wedding will --
Ire -oboe I—take place to -morrow evening --
all -kit -chew Kit-oheve—just the same,
will it not?
Hie Darling (tremnlouely)—It shall be—'
kehee 1 k-cihee—just as yon—k-ohoo I—say,
William,
Grip DM 11.
Eike Chestnut—Is it true that your mar-
riage with Mr. Callowhill has been indefi-
nitely postponed?
Mies Walnut— Oh, no, not Indefinitely'
Poor, dear Fido, you know, was attacked
with ,,itt grippe" and died, and of coarse I
couldn't think of marrying for s year.
tthaaespearlan Commentary.
Quevido Shakespeare must have
suffered from cigarettes.
(ladle—Why, what do you mean?
Quevido—Don't you remember wlieke
he them the offence is rank and anaells to
Heaven ? '
Overheard at the Zoo—" Mamma, the
get ivory trona the elephante, don't they 2"
e Yes, my son; they gat leery from the
White elephants and ebony from the Meek
nese
— linearly Hee the head that hem no
rown.
—Nothing but the framer, of many good
eiolutioni reman to•day.
A STOUT Or THE DA.T,
A Thread 118 Mies in Length Spun frem
Single round ol Cotton.
Tile 7th of January is a, day M whiale the
elderly neeidees, who are aometimea called
spinsters, thould take a peouliar intereat,
Li old times it was known and observed as
St. Dietaff's'eiay, became it WWI (jener4114i
then that the women reeumed, after the
Christmas holidaye, the diet affend spindle.
When the spiereng-vvheel wee invented,
along in 1533, those ladiee who used it
begen to be called spinsters. This, after-
ward, ha lewd terminology, eitene to he
applied to eel enmarried wenten, Jaiet the
name was an honored wee until the employ-
ment of spinning was considered too naenial
for women of eank. Then it waa used, con-
temptnouely, and gradually it came to
signify, more particularly, eihgle ladies of
mature years. Before the spinning.wheel
was relegated to the guest some extraoe-
/finery feats were accomplished, or, as
people nowadays would say, recorde were
made, by those expert in its use. In the
year 1745 a woman at East Dereham, in
Norfolk, spun e single pound of wool into a
thread of 84,000 yards in length, wanting
only eighty yards of forty-eight miles.
This, at the time, was considered a per-
formance of eufficient importance to merit
a place in the e rroceedinge of the Royal
Society "—a very high honor, indeed.
Afterward this feat was eolipsed by another
English lady, living at Norwich, who spun
a pound of combed wool into a thread of
168,000 yards ; and she actually produced
from the same weight of cotton a thread of
203,000 yards, equel to about 115 miles.
This last thread, if woven, would produce
about twenty yards of yard -wide rauslin.—
Celicaeo New.
When Re Came Dome.
" Hand me that collar- button," demanded
George Wellsby, turning with an annoyed
air toward his little gui. "Learn to let
things elone, will you ? There now, tune
up and howl."
"George, don't speak to the child that
way," eaid Mrs. Welleby, depositing a shirt
on a chair.
" Weil, why can't she behave herself
Every time She sees that I am getting
ready to go any plates she makes a point
of hindering me. Let that cravat alone."
"Put down papa's °tweet, darling, She's
tco young to 'mow any better."
"No she isn't Other people's children
know how to behave. Pll bet Sill miffs the
train. I am sometimes tempted to with she
had never been born.
"Ob, George," exclaimed the wife, "I
wouldn't say that."
"Confound it, she worries me so. I haven't
more than time to catch the train,"hurriedly
kissing his wife.
"Kiss me, too, papa."
"1 ought not, you are so bad," stooping
and kissing her. "Good-bye. Will be back
in three or four days." ,
Per. Wellsby is a commercial traveller, a
kind and tender-hearted man, but sub-
jected at times to nervonanese. Seated with
several vivacious acquaintances, speeding
over the country, a little voice would steal
in between the roars of merry laughter, and
say:
"Kiss me, too, paps."
In the sample -room of the village hotel,
between the enquiries of the purchasers,
he could hear the voice, and at night when
he lay clown he could see the little hande
reaching toward him, and could hear :
"Kiss me, too, papa."
At Morning when the sunbeams fell morose
his bed he thonght of the bright little face
a ogee, and said :
"God forgive me for wishing that she had
never been born."
" Welleby, what's the matter, old fel-
low 2" asked a companion.
They were in a conveyance, riding toward
an interior town.
" I don't feel very well to -day."
Do any business back here ?"
e Yes, did very well."
" I didn't do anything, but I won't let
it weigh me down. Got a letter from the
house this morning. The cld boy's kicking
about expenses. Got a bottle of cocktail
here."
"1 don't care for any."
"Then there must be something the mat-
ter with you."
On a night train, going home. He could
see the little hands. "Clack, clank, clack
—kiss me, too ; kiss me, too."
"What's the news ?" he asked of a friend,
when he had stepped upon the platform
and called a hackman.
"Nothing, I believe; everything's
quiet."
" No scarlet fever or diphtheria raging,
is there ?"
"No, not that I have heard."
The familiar scenes brought rest to his
mind. He looked back upon his trip with
a shudder, like one who awakes and con-
templates a nightmare through which he
has just reseed.
"Good -night," he said, paying the haok-
man. "A light burning, Julia is ex-
pecting me," he mused, ascending the
steps.
A ghastly face met him at the door. A
voice in agony whispered: "Oh, George,
our little girl is dead."—Louisville Conner -
Journal.
A. Bad Hand.
The widow had just said no.
"Life is a game," said Mr. Upson
Downes, refleotively. " I thought it was a
draw, and I drew for a queen; but it
seems to be euchre for me.'
" In that case," Reid the lady con-
solingly, "you will have to go it alone."
"Yee, and what' e worse," said Mr.
Downes, "1 can't take my partner's beet
card."
"1 always knew you were a horrid,
'mercenary thing," remarked the widow, as
she out out of the room and left Mr.
Downes to shuffle sadly on his lonesome
way.--Puek.
Quite United.
"I thought you were going to marry Mille
Goldthwaite, Charley. Haven't you some
aspiration in that line 2"
'1 bad, but it was no go. Her fatally
were all opposed to it."
"Well, if the girl herself—"
"1 said all the family. She wee one of
'fn."— Puck.
An Exchange of Rensarks.
"1 wonder why the gas doesn't go ont,"
he said signifiaantly, as he edged a little
closer on the sofa.
"11 will as soon as you do," she responded
with equal Significance. And he didn't wait
or the hone° to fall on him.
A hold -weather Present.
Ted—They say Dolly handled Dejittlis
Without elOvete
Ned—Yeo, she gave him the mitten.
The First Baptist Church, Brantford,
hae gieen call to the Rev. T. S. Johnson,
of the Talbot Street Baptist Church,
London.
-4-Frank1yn B. Gowen, who died in
Philadelphia a few days ago, had life
inthrenee policies in force emonnting to
120,060, all of which are being promptly
paid.
:'es` • •:•s;:s.e'ses.se.
ehseckeeNeeseeeieeltkeee
for Infa ntS and Ch i Id ren.
"OttatorhaM so well adapted t,o children that
I. recommend it es superior to anyprescription
known to me." H. A,. A3LoliER'AL D.,
111 co. Oxford Ste Brooklyn, N.Y.
I Castor's cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour ce
Stomach, Diarrha, Eructation,,
Kills "Worras, gives sleep, and promotes die
'Witteitilungn'ulious medication.
Tam Cetera= Coneany, 17 Murray Street, N. Y.
s.. ate Neter:eats, seeeee ehetel,
The Moat Successful Remedy ever disown,
01 -id, as it Is certaiu In its effects and does
not blister. Read proof below.
KENDALL'S SPI N CURE.
OFFICE Or CHARLES A. SNYDER,
BREEDER or
CLEVELAND I3Ar AND TROTTING BRED HORSES.
ELHWOOD, ILL., Nov. 20, 18S3.
DR. E. J. KENDALL Co. _
Deur Sirs: I have always purehased your Iran.
dell's Seavin Cure by the half dozen bottles,
would like prices in larger quantity. I think 18 18
000 00 the hest liniments on earth. I have used it
en my stables tor three years.
Yours truly, CHAS. A. SNYDER.
KENDALL'S SPAVRI CURE.
leaooer.riv, N. Y., November 3, 1883.
_
DS. 13. KENDALL CO.
Dear Sirs : I desire to give you testimonial of my
good opinion of your Kendall's Spavin Cure. I hav'e
I/ lied it for Lameness Stiff Joints and
teen -vi xis, owl 1 littee found it a sure cure, I cordi-
ally recommend It to all horsemen. _
Yeure truly, A. H. GILBERT,
Mo.nager Troy Laundry Stables.
KENDALL'S SPA NN CURE.
Sere Wneron COIINTE, 0111.0, Dec. 19, 1693,
D. B. J. KENDALL CO.
Gouts; 1 bit it my duty to any what / have done
with your Kendall's Spavin Cure. I have cured
twenty-five horses that bad Sprivlus, ten or
Bilis( Bone, nine afflicted v.-ith Big Head and
seven of Big Jaw, Since I have had 000 00 your
boolts and followed the directions, I have never
lost 0, case of any kind.
YOUTS truly, ANDEEW TI7RNER,
Horse Doctor.
KENDALL'S SPAV1N CURE.
PrieetInerbottle,ors1xbot_tleacor $5. All DrL.
.,stsha1t.cange,,1,0_yst,oitribesEryelref"12;yt?.
tors. B. fkgthl,.,EbirahhWt
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS,
Illave you tried, the Coliebrated
SHOE DRESSING? 0
If not don't fail to do so at once.
IL is not a polish but a wonderful
lea trier preservative it will make the
finest or coarsest shoe as soft and
pliable as Iticl and very easy to the foot.
It will make them absolutely water-
proof, and if occasionally dressed with
this dressing will last more than twice
as long as otherwise. „ ^
We Mean What We Say.
It is the very life of leather. It can
be applied at any time. No trouble—
Shoe can be polished immediately
afterwards.
Plater, - 1.0 es 15 Cents per Rai.
Sold by all first-class stores. Sam-
ples mailed—Stamps taken.
OLIVER CABANA Jr.,
SOLE IVIANUFACTLIIIER,
BUFFALO, 1%1. Y.
EVEREST'S CEUGH SYRUP
CANNOT BE EXCELLED.
Try it and be convinced of its wonderful eurativui
properties. Price 2.6 cents.
Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles ine.i.
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side, &c. While their most
remarkable success has been shown in curing
Headache, yet CARTER'S Lir= Div= Prue
are equally valuable in Constipation, ouring
and preventing this annoying complaint, whil
they also correct all disorders of the stomach,
stimulate the liver and regulate the bowela.
Even if they only cured
Ache they would be almost priceless to those
who suffer from this distressing complaint:
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, and those who once try them will find
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be wining to do without them.
But after all sick head
is the bane of so many lives that here is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are very small
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. In vials 0.1 88 cents;
five for $1. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail.
MULE =MOINE CO., New Zak.
2il1. Small Dosof Snall
TINE KEY 70 HEALTH,
Unlocks all the clogged avenues of the
Bowels, Kidneys and Liver, carrying
off gradually without weakening the sys-
tem, all the impurities and foul hunter%
of the secretions; at the $ztme time Cor-
recting Acidity of the Stomach,
curing Biliousness, Dyspepsia,
Headaches, Dizziness, Heartburn,
Constipation, Dryness of the Skin,
Dropsy, Dimness of Vision, Jaun-
dice, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Sero-
fUla, Fluttering; of the Heart, Ner-
vousness, and GeneraLDebility ; all
these and many other similar Complaints
Yield to the happy influence of BURDOCK
BLOOD BITTEitS.
For Baia by azt Dealerc.
T. REEK & CO., Proprietors, Toronto,
Cs:a;
=WORM POWDERS
.etre Peasant to fake- Contain their mos
Purgativeere a safe, sure and eaturt 1
etesfroyer oftvoivas us Chain); or 44146
Alisrmirommumftimmommammummkommeatisomc
(TRADE MARK.)
Try Everest's Liver Regulator
For DisearA( ;V the Liver Kidneys. In, and Purdy -
of t.le iod. Price $1. Six bettics for e5.
For Sole :iv ALL Iiitlit.4U loTe-
Ilanufs inured only by
G1.0 11. IsValsEST, 4-3.171.511bt, thSVe
THE LIGHT RUNNING
,SEWING MACHINE
H AS
NO _
EQUAL.
THE
LAMM'S°
Fee. VC "
h THE ONLY SEWfl
THAT GIVES
—
NEW1101MG MACHINECTRAWZMASZ
ritie, -28 UNION SQUARE,Nee Deege.
Gr
I
LOUIS Mo. ATLANTA
A.c
AtIrRAtielSeilea
/FARaetiet
WEAK MEN mkry DJ:11222122
selves of Wasting
171ta1itv, Last Nranhood, from youthfal
errors, ete., quietly at home. Book on all
private diseasce seat free (sealed). Perfectly.
reliable. Over 30 years' experience. Addrees—
.
GILDED PILL CO., TORONTO, Canada.
LADIES °nr "Relief for Women" in ado nnd always
reliable: better than Ergot, Oaido, Tabor
or Pennyroyal Villa, 1131311ZOS regularity.
fiend for nartionlarn. Addrem
GILDED PILL CO., TORONTO, Canada.,
or throe bottion for Sa..Etialibottle Inset ono nion„th. A...........tideeits .
tn give obsolete satisfaction, eieerilecao. Prloa $I a bottle,
vhiakere I Dahl heeds "hairad I' Cartoon apootsoltio, bat
aunt's trathei. Only gotunno article in market, and certain
A. DIXON, not eoe, TOReNrO, CANADA.
liankial, Imre, almett inntrintnnooes in hotfoot Hoye Mitia,
dBere:d1,010bit'arl;!.Presyt shfeaFtrih�na, In 601050 FeLviDokoentnyorcbtli°a:girho6p.'trIlac.6,t,ter!tithaolinits:
groatent achievement of modern nokineo I Mont Won.
MADAME EIDVANWADI'S PllPALIATIONS,
SUPERFLIIOUS NAIR A pePrrin"turiiit thrsetmetvalye'
taMorilif out hair nitionin injury to the akin.' SVarrint3009 Si.
aiL. '
PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS
from l0 to findaya.Willinfitifd.:Prioe for op dayntrentment,lai
ANTI.COBOULENCE PILLS '°,1;1!'6'gr6t111:
pittio 6 Matter Of lialiolthdli, whether benoltno it in oneenh. "
' bla or unfaabioilitblii*PAT IrOL/IS tniag " ANTV
con utettioni rretse lee le Ibe a WWH33. VliO$' bitlik‘' '
ae alai:heat ; nottinin betoken, and never lin; Prioe foie.* '
month's treetnient, Ills; cir three months medicine, tel. '
COM_PLEXION WAFERS Gi9tkIlioNANNI*"
Mai* ttla akin, doveltalinikfrni. .tharreli*if. rsrm=
in clod: Witiatiteal, falai ii boil.* Set lanai fat ow
...ix 31.8, Eta titit * Wilt Tortintoa '
Address. Stan GIOVANNI