HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-7-28, Page 3Ayers• Hair •Vigor
Ayer's Hair Vigor,
.11S Ihe Hair -dressing. It te..
A Stores the eerier to gray hair ; prornotea
a fresh and vigorous growth; prevents
the formation of
dandruff ; makes the
hair soft and silken;
and imparts a delis
cate, but lasting per.
fume.
"Several months
ago my 'mix com-
menced, falling out,
and in a few weeks
any head was almost
bald. I tried many
remedies, but they did no good. I final-
ly bought a bottle of Ayer's Hair
and, after using only a part of the con-
tents, ray head was covered with a
heavy growth of hair. I recommend
your preparation as the best in the
world."—T. Munday, Sharon Grove, Ky.
"I Lave used Ayer'a Hair Vigor for a
number of years, and it has always given
rae satisfaction. It is an excellent dress-
ing, prevents the hair from turning
gray, Insures its vigorous grovrtb, and
keepaatinee scalp white and clean." -,
Maw A. Jackson, Salem, Mass.
"T. have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for
promoting the growth of the hair, and
think it unequaled. For restoring the
Lair to its original color, and for a dress-
ing, it cermet be surpassed."—Mrs. Geo.
La Fever, Eaton Rapids, Mich.
"Ayer's Hair Vigor is a most excel-
lent preparation for the hair. I speak
of it from my own experience. Its use
promotes the growth ot new hair and
males it glossy and soft. The Vigor is
also a cure for dandruffat—J. W. Bowen,
Editor "Enquirer," McArthur, Ohio.
have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for
the past two years, and found it all it is
represented to be. It restores the natu-
ral color to gray hair, causes the hair
to grow freely, and keeps it soft and
plittiat,"-111rs.ltl. V. Day, Cohoes, N. Y.
"My father, at about the age of fifty,
lost all the hair from tho top of his head.
After one month's trial of Ayer's Hair
Vigor the hair began coming, an& in
thrtats months, he bad a fine groarth or
hair of the 'natural color."—P. J. Cullen,
Saratoga Spriugs, N, Y.
PREPARED RE
*. J. C. Ayer 84 Co., Lowe, Mass..
Sold by Druggists and Perfruncre.
CENTRAL
Drug Store
ANSON'S BLOCIi.
A. full stook of all kinds of
Dye -stuffs and package
Dyes, constan.tly on
hand. Win an's
Condition
Powd-
er,
the best
in the mark -
and always
resh. Family recip-
ees carefully prepared at
Den' ral Drug Store Exete
C. LUTZ*
CONSUMPTIONe
I have a positive remedy for the above disease; by its
use thousands of cases of the worst kind and of tang
standing have been cored. Indeed so strong k my faith
in its eMeacy, that I will send TWO BOTTLES FREE,
%yids s VALUABLE TREATISE on this disease to any
saddest who will Send me their =BESS and P.O. add=
T. A. SLOCUM, M. C., 186 ADELAIDE
ST. WesT, TORONTO, ONT.
h.
THE
0? A 14yEXETER
• TIMES
CA MI fiS
!ins
IVER
P1 L.
STA Igeadache and relieve all tl e troubles inci.
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side, &e. While their most
g emarkable success has been shown in curing
atiaelie, yet CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS
are oci,tolly valuable in Constipation, curing
and pr,,,enting this annoying complaint. while
they also correct all disdrders of the stomach,
stimelate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Jae= te they only cured
Ache they would be almost priceless to those
who suttar from this distressing complaint:
hut fortunately their goodness does not end
kere, and those Who once try them will find
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be willing to do without them.
13ut afesee all sick head
is the Ilene of so many lives that here is wliere
we make our great 'boast, Otir pills cure Th
while others do not,
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER Pius are very- svnali
and very easy to*ake. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable awl do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. In vials at 25 cent;
Ll ve for $1. Sold everywhere, or sent b'y rclaI
can't liatasital at, Nov Inee,
tA, pm, 0%0 Dose,
• HEALTH.
eood Nursing in Summer.
The nursiag of the sick in summer is, even
a more difficult task than in winter. In
winter there is abundance of fresh, pure air,
and a proper temperature may be easily
attained by the use of artificial heat. In
summer, on the contrary, tire heat cannot
be controlled. Pare am is not always pos.
sible in all localitiee, where the neglect of
one or two careless ueighboura, with
slovenly kept dooryardstmay fill the atmos-
phere svith the poison oz decaying vegeta-
tion or some other nuisance. These diffis
culties are against the invalid sufferers in
country or town and require extra care on
the part of the nurse.
A wise physician has said that a good
nurse is a woman, thoroughly healthy and
alert in all her five senses. She must have
good sight, in order that she may watch
the slightest changes in the patient, catch
a motion of the eye, the tips of the fingers,
and see in a moment what is wanted. She
must bave quick hearing; to catch the slight-
est whisper a a weak invalid. She must
have a sensitive as well as asoft touch, that
she may note the most delicate changes in
the skin and may test the temperature of
hot applications that may be ordered. It
is espemally necessary that she have a cor-
rect and acute sense of smell, so that she
may detect the alighest impurity in the at-
mospliere of the sick room. Her taste must
be correct, in order that she may teat the
food to see that it is properly cooked. .A.
good nurse should also be a good cook, and at
the best training schools for nurses a course
of lectures with manual trebling in cookery
is a part, of the curriculum.
A nurse has special need a physical
streugth to endure the fatigue of her place
in the eummer season. Where the patient is
very ill a second nurse is supplied at night,
to give the first or day nurse her needed.
rest. It is a groat mistake for any woman
to undertake the duties of a nurse unless
she is willing and able to endure the physi.
cal hardships of such a. place. A nurse must
have no objectionable eccentricities of man-
ner ; she must liave a general seese of whole-
someness in her personality. A nervous
woman is in no way fitted for a Durso, A
great many women manage to pass their ex-
aminations who do not possess all these re-
quireinonts, but they do not make success-
ul nurses. The question of education is a
cooed one. No education beyond the rudis
melds is required at the admission on pro-
bation. Nevertheless it is found that un-
educated women fall out of the ranks be-
fore the time of probation is over, as they
do not possess the same nerve and power of
endurance and comprehension of details as
women of more cultivated minds.
The good. nurse should certainly be a
woman of tact, in order to humor the harm-
less whims of her patient rather than irri-
tate bim by mertinettish methods. Ono of
the most objectionable habits of the indis-
creet aurae is that of rehearsing her sick.
room and hospital experiences to her
patient. Like a wise physician, the discreet
nurse says little and never talks "shop,"
Summer Diet.
Half the illness that occurs at one seam's,
I think I can safely say, is due to improper
dieting taken at another. We hear of
people feeling weak in the spring or suffer -
mg from those different ailments (Inc to
malnutrition suelt a '
s boils skin diaeasee,
obesity, or debility. Now this would not
be 80 11 the person adapted his diet to his
requirements and to the eettson, No sensible
persort would think of keeping a large fire
burning in his room in the summer. If he did
he would undoubtedly soon feel the effect
of it; bat many a Man wile would feel him-
self insulted if he were net thought a sen-
sible person, will eat in the summer to
repletion foods the particular action of
which is to supply heat in excess. Per-
haps I cannot do better here than to ex-
plain that the foods that are converted in-
to heat --that is, keep up the heat of the
body—are starches, sugar and fat; and
those that more particularly nourish the
nervous and muscular system are the albu-
men and mats ; and it perusal of or refer-
ence to a prepared table will show what
these are, and. also the amounts of the dif-
ferent constituents they contain. At a
glance the reader will see that the largest
proportion of summer food should consist
of green vegetables, cooked or as salads;
white or lean meats, such as chicken, genie,
rabbits, venison, fish and fruits. - [Dr. N.
E. Yerke Davies.
A Parent's Duty to the Young.
The body may be looked at as a living
rnachine, delicate and complicated in struc-
ture, made to run is hundred years or so,
but liable by bad management to be disar-
ranged and brought to untimely destruc-
tion. All continuous physical transgres-
sion, however innocent it may seetn, is fol-
lowed by retribution. Such is the punish-
ment which overtakes multitudes who over-
work their brains and underwork their
muscles ; of not a few who waste vital en-
ergy with anxiety, fret and unstinted care,
of many who overlook the great, law of
their physical being that makes daily recu-
peration depend on the interchange of work
and rest. Even ministers of the Gospel riot
unfrequently allow well meant faithfulness
to end in a fatal mental strain. One of the
final facts connected with many forms of
physical transgression is its tendency to
weaken the vital stamina, of the transgres-
sor's offspring.
The least a child can ask of its progeni-
tor is a fair chance of life. To squander
the vital inheritance of one's offspring is
vastly worse than to squander its large an-
cestral estate. We haven° more valuable
possession than a good heredity—an inher-
itance of longevity; and if this has not de-
scended to us it is generally because ances-
tors, more or less remote, aave squandered
it. Such an inheritance gives constitutional
vigor, keeps its possessor safe amid almoet
every form of microbe diseases, secures the
neededrecuperative energy in case of attack,
makes life worth living up to the north al end,
renders old age green and sunny and keeps
up intellectuel activity to the, last.—[Dr.F.
Tumblety.
----
liemonlages from the Nose.
• Many children are subject to the aose-
bleed, and in ordinary cases it should not be
interfered with or checked, as it is usually
nature's wise method for relieving the head
from an excessive pressure of blood which
might otherwise cause serious results.
When, however, the hemorrhage is serious
and lasts so long that it is weakening to the
child, something should certainly be done
to check the flow. In the first place try
the application of cold, either by using very
cold water, ice or brass keys—ice, being the
most effective. If possible, keep the child's
arms raised above his head for five or ten
ininutes at a time. This alone will often
cause the bleeding to Cease. If not, place it
piece of ice wrapped in a cloth at the nape
of the neck, and another one directly at the
top of the nose between the eyes.
If the ice does not stop the bleeding, plug
the nostril with styptic cotton. Every
house ahould have a bottle of the last nam
ed article, as it will often arrest violent
hemorrhages more gaiekly than anything.
else when proceeding from the head, and
is also useful in dressing wounds when
bleeding. If the styptic cotton is not at
hand, the old fashioned remedy, cobwebs,
may be used, bat fine lint is still better.
Many people use powdered alum, snuffed
up the nose, whieh is good it the child can
snuff it up without the effort increasing the
hemorrhage.
Extract of hasuatnelis (witch hazel) should
be taken internally in dose et from one-
half to a teaspoonful from fifteen minutes
to one hour apart, aceording to the severity
of the case, and it may be taken occasion-
ally between the attacks as a preventive or
where there is great weakness of the mem-
branes.
The Choice of Priends.
"The friends thou hasa and their adop-
tion tried,
Grapple them to thy soul
With hooks of steel."
Girls from tine immemorial have been
ridiculed because of the supposed sentiment-
al aud short-lived character of their attach-
ment to each other. "Notning but a school-
girl friendship" has become quite too com-
mon, a phrase.
A keen observer once declared that, he
sent his son to it certain college simply on
account of the social advantages to be gained
by the acquaintances he would inake there.
The saying has. become almost trite that to
know onto people 13 in itself a liberal edu-
cation, and the man or woman of large ac-
atutintence is regarded as the man or woman
of lerge opportunities for good or evil, In
view of the fact that friends of the right kind
,are elements of persoual power, the Inakiag
and the retaining of them beeomes it matter
of importance.
We are said to endure our relations, but
to chaoae our friends. The character, then,
of those to whom we voluntarily attach our.
selves is an indication of our own. We are
known by them. Therefore it would seem
wise for a girl to take plenty of time in the
commencement of her school life, and not al-
low loneliness or hainesicknese to hasten her
into companionship which may abet her so-
cial buterests through her entire life. The
bright showy new -comer, whose toilettes daz-
ale every eye, and whose reedy wit appeara
so delightful, may, before the term is half
over, disclose quelities that ostracize her
from the best set, The girl who, for lack of
prudent waiting, has rushed into an inti-
macy with her will be obliged to do one of
two disagreeable things—either break off
the friondehip and gain an enemy and a sore
spot in her memory, or lose the helpful so-
ciety of classmates whom slae bas learned to
respect aud admire. Few buy a gown with-
out subjecting it to close inapection, and
even tests, while too loamy do not give the
selection of their companions it serious
thought.
Idleness and vanity tempt some to acquire,
even when they are very small, the taste for
being the greatest ones m the company.
They prefer reigning among inferiors to
service with their equals, aud so become
leaders without caring very much who
their followers may be, Girls have
become unduly intimate with their
mothers' maids and the most un-
worthy of their school -metes, and oven
made disastrous marriages in the end,
through the indulgence of these traits.
.A. girl that you know is your inferior
in birth and breeding, and whose coarseness
of speech and manner at first repels you
flatters you into believing that it would al-
most break her heart if she were refused the
luxury of your society. You say she is so
devoted to you, and so anxious to improve.
You begin as a missionary trying to raise
her, and end on her level; for it is only
growth that overcomes the law of gravity,
and we cannot help those who have not in
themselves the power to rise.
Rothschild, the great banker, was once
asked the secret of his success. We replied,
"I never have business relations with un-
lucky people." Never choose as n friend
that girl whom fate appears to assail at
every point. You think this is very haish,
but remember that, generally- speaking,
there is a reason for failure. The girl con,
tinually in trouble both with teachers and
pupils, overwhelmed by "bad marks," and
always "found out," is called unlucky; but
she is in, reality the architect of her own
disasters. Anyway, it is surely just as well
to throw in your lot with those who are
favorites of Fortune as to pitch your tent
with the =ilea from her favor.
The confidential friend is to be avo'ded.
She swears you to secrecy, and tells you all
kinis of gossip, and then goes to another
with the same details and the
same injunction never to tell. Now
you may keep religiously to yourself what
you have heard, but others will not be so
reticent; and then comes your day otsorrow.
For the confidential girl has a poor memory,
and forgets that she has made thrilling dis-
closures to so many. You are accused of
speaking and even of inventing injurious
reports. Be afraid of people who are un-
willing that their sayings should be known
abroad.
It is quite a common habit among it cer-
tain clase of girls to turn everything into
ridicule. They are generally what is called
In school -room parlance "good company."
Excellent mimics they twist personal
peculiarities and chapel exerciees alike into
monstrous jokes. They parody hymns, and
punctuate t,heir conversatioa with misquote,
tions from the Bible. Birds of the air, they
rob you of serious thoughts and hallowed
memories. Associating with them, you be-
come irreverent and flippant.
Shun as you would a pestilence that girl
who, under the guise perhaps of humor,
tells a vulgar story, or speaks as she would
not dare to do in tho presence of older
people. Almost every one knows the girl
who is enthusiastically attached to one
class -mate, and then drops her suddenly.
without rhyme or reason, to devote herself
to some new -comer. She appears to be in-
capable of continued friendship, but is a
victim of the intermittent theory, for she
generally returns, like a pendulum, to the
discarded .object of her fancy. Let one
lesson suffice. Treat her pleasantly but.
refuse to be made the victim of her caprice,
for she is not worth serious consideration.
An Ocean Island.
Tho Norwegian barque Ettore hes just ar-
rived at Seattle, LT, 8. A., front Melbourne,
and reports Celt an island in the Pacific
Ocean about a Milo square, lying due south
of Hawaii, and marked ou the charts as un-
inhabited, is really peopled. Fif teen natives,
Malays, came out trout the island in canoes
to the bargee. One of them said, "Good
morning, and another asked for tobacco.
These three words seemed to be all the
English they knew. • Two of them wore
mats audthe rest were naked. They had
no weapons.
Least said soonest mended " as the doc-
tor toad to the patient with a fe,ctured jaw-
bone.
Under Falling Rooks.
Alpine climbing is attended by risks of
many kinds. One of the worst is the dan-
ger front fallingstones. Two inerabers of
the Alpine Club, Mr. Foster and Mr. Wal-
ker, with two professional guides, had been
to the summit of the Aiguille thi Midi,
peak which had been ascended only twice
before, The getting down from the top.
most, rooky cone Was a work of much cliffi-
catty, but was safely accomplished, and the
mountaiaeers were carefully skirting round
the base of it, looking for the easiest route
by which to coat:sure their descent. After
a time they found themselves, as Mr. Fos-
ter says, at the head of a great precipice
overhanging a glacier, The rocks present-
ed no great difficulty beyond their steepness,
and the party struck straight down.
Some few hundred feet below, a butteress
at our right hand attracted us, and we pass.
ed straight along the fate of the cliff to
gain it. Jakob was leading, Walker next, I
followed, and Baumann brought up the
rear. Only one was moving at a time, and
every one had the rope as taut as possible
between himself and ais neighbor.
Jakob was crossing a narrow gully, when
suddenly, without warning, as though he
had trodden upon the keystone of the wall,
the whole face for thirty or forty feet above
him, peeled off, and with a crash like thun-
der, hundreds of tons of rocks precipitated
themselves upon him.
III OD iostant he was torn front his hold
and hurled down the precipice with them,
Fortunately, Walker was able to hold en,
though the strain on hitu Was awful.
.A8 the uproar ceased and silence even
more impressive succeeded, we looked in ono
auother's faces with blank dismay. From
our position it seemed impossible to see
what had become of Jakob, and only the
tight rope told us that his body, living or
dead, W55 still fastened to us.
in a voice singularly unlike his own,
Walker at length cried out, "Jakob! and
our hearts sank within us as it passed with,
out response. "...I akob 1 ach Jakob!" Walker
repeated; and 1 trust none of my readers
May ever know the relief we felt when the
reply came back, "14 lebe noch."
Walker eraned over ft rock, and then turn-
ed round,
"1800 him," be said, "He is awfully
hurt, and bleeding frightfully."
I contrived to shift my position, so that I
could see him. itis face was black with
Llood and dirt, the skin torn front lila bleed-
ing hands, and his clothes in ribbons. After
is moment he recovered his footing. Then
he untied the rape with trembling fingers,
and crawled along the face of the cliff to
the other side of the gully, where some
snow offered means to staunch his wounds.
As 50011 as be was safe, Baumann called
to us to stand still, and clambered carefully
over the Elliot where the melte had given
way'our only road lying theze. I followed,
and then Walker.
Jakob had indeed had a wonderful escape,
and on taking hold of the rope to tic him on
again, we were awestruck to find that all
but one of its strands were severed, so that
his whole weight had hung literally on it
thread. Strange as it, may appear, the
rock that had done this had probably
aaved his life by jerking him out of the line
of fire.
No bones were broken, though Jakob was
badly braised all over, and after it (inflater
aogf mai.
an hour's rest he was ready to start
Big Little Men.
Brains and stature do not go together by
any means, and some of the most famous
men in the world have been little men, or,
at least, they have been short, Everybody
can think of a dozen mon besides President
Harrison (who is anything but buried under
"Grandfather's Hat") as caricaturists
feign, whose names are leading ones in poli-
tics or literature or business to -day who
have fewer inchea by several than, say,
Bishop Brooks. A writer in the Gentle-
man's Magazine marshals many celebrated
little men whose little talents have enriched
the world since " Zaccheus, he, did climb a
tree" to see over the heads of his taller
companione. Balm says that little fellows
are the fellows for work; being short him-
self, he did not hesitate to say, what Bacon
said too about the evident relation between
over -developed inches and. under -developed
brain. The champion of the tall may have
his say about that as soon as he pleases ;
but, on this side there are Napoleon (who
was five feet one) and Admiral Iteppel, At-
tila and Oliver Cromwell. The Duke of
Wellington and Lord Nelson were both a
good deal under six feet; General Sheridan
At/4S much shorter than General Grant who
was not a tall man, about the height of
Frederick the Great. :Micheal Angelo and
Sir Christopher Wren, Thomas Moore (not
an inch above the five feet) Alexander Pope
(only four feet six) Voltarie and Calvin and
David Garrick and John Milton and Will-
iam Wilberforce and Lord Shaftesbury are
amine of those named and everybody can add
to the list.
Tea-Ohest Leal
One of the industries in connection with
the tea trade is the collection of the lead
with which tea-chests are lined. China has
been noted for many centimes for the purity
of its lead, and this tee -chest, lead, as it is
called, is regarded as the finest in existence.
There are many uses for ib; it is found very
valuable in making the best kind of solder.
No machinery is employed in the produc-
tion ot this sheet lead; every sheet is made
by hand in the mast primitive fashion. A
large brick is provided, the size of the sheet
of lead to be made, and is covered with
two or three sheets of paper. On these the
molten lead is poured, and another brick is
placed on the top, which flattens the lead
out the required size and thickness. The
sheets are then soldered together to the
size of the interior of the tea chest; the
tea is pecked in, and the top sheet is fast-
ened in place. The workmen are very ex-
pert, and they turn out an immense num-
ber of theets in the course of a day, and,
where labor is so cheap, at a price much
less than if the articles were produced by
machinery.
A Villap,13 Schoolmaster's Experience.
As I am settled in a manufacturing dis-
trict, which is pretty well sprinkled with
the sons of " Ould Erin,' I necessarily
encounter some specimens of Irish wit and
waggery. On the first day of school 1 walk-
ed up to a ragged urchin of a dozen years,
with the usual qaestion of, "What is your
name ?"
" William Flanagan, sir,"
"Well, Willie, where do you live?"
"Next door to Michael Mc Finnegan, sir."
Which, as 1 was a stranger, was, of course,
rather unsatisfactory.
"Bat," persisted I, "where does Michael
Mclannagan live?"
"Sure," said he, with that irresistible
brogue, "he lives next door to -,ne sir."
Children Cry for Pitcher!s Castori
a:
.
• The Paper Age.
The World has seen its iron age and its
brazen age, but this is the age of paper.
We are makieg so nutey things of paper
thet it will soon be true that without paper
there is nothing made. We live in paper
house, Wear paper clothing, and sit on
paper cushions in paper cars rolling, =paper
wheels. If we lived in Bergen, Norway, we
could go on Sundays to a paper church.
We do a good paper business over paper
counters, buying paper geode, paying for
them with paper money, and. deal in paper
stocks oe paper margins. We TOW laces
in paper boats for paper prizes. We go to
Paper theatres where paper actors play to
paper audienoes. As the age develops the
coming man will become more deeply en-
meshed in the paper net. He will awake
in the morning and creep from under the
paper clothing of his paper bed, and put on h is
paper dressing gown arid his paper slippers.
He will walk over paper carpets, downpaper
stairs, and, seating himself in a paper chair,
read the paper news in the morning paper.
A paper bell will call him to his breakfast,
cooked in, a paper oven, served oo paper
dishee, laid on a paper cloth on a paper
table. He will wipe his lips with a paper
napkin, and having pub on his paper shoes,
paper hat and paper coat, and then taking
his paper stick (he has the choice of two
deecriptions already), he will waIlt on 4
paper pavement or ride in a paper car-
riage to hie paper office. He will Or-
ganize paper enterprises and make paper
profits. Ile will sail the ocean on paper
steamships and navigate the air in paper
balloons. He will smoke a paper cigar or
paper tobacco in a paper pipe, lighted with
4 paper metch. Ile will write with a paper
pencil, whittle paper sticks with a paper
knife, go fishing with it paper fishiug-rocl,
paper line and a paper hook, and put his
catch in it paper baaket. He will go shoot.
ing with a paper gun, loedeel with Paper
cartridges ana will defend his country in
paper forts with paper cannon and paper
bombs. Having lived his paper lite and
achieved a paper fame and paper wealtialle
will retire Weeper leisure and die in paper
peace. Thetaadwill be a paper funeral, at
which the mourners,dressed in paper crape,
will wipe their eyes with paper hand-
kerchiefs, and the preiteher will preach in a
paperpulpit, He will lie in a paper coffin;
elsewhere in this paper it wilt be seen that
lie has a chance of doing tio alreaay if he la a
paper—we meats pauper. Ile will be wrap -
p ed in a paper shroud, his mane will be en -
greyed an a. paper plate, and a paper hearse,
edoraed with paper plumes, will carry hine
to a paper -lined grave, over which will be
raised it paper MOIMment
A. Source of Unhappnuess.
"The longer I live," said Sydney Smith,
"the more I am eanvineed that half the
unhappiness of the world proceeds from
little stoppages, from a duet choked up, front
food, pressing in the wrong place, from is
vexed duodenum or an agitated pylorus.
"My friend sups late; Ise eats some
strong SOUD, then a lobster, then some tart,
and he dilutes these esculent, varieties with
wine.
"The next day I call upon him. He is
going to sell his house in London and retire
Into the country. He is alarmed for his
eldest daughter's health; his expenses are
hourly increasing, and nothing but a timely
retreat can save him from ruin.
"All this is the lobster, and when over-
excited nature has hati time to manage
this encumbrance, the da.ughter recovers,
the finances are in good order, and every
rural idea is effectually excluded. front the
mind.
"In the same manner old friendships are
destroyed by toasted cheese, and hard
salted meat has led to suicide. Unpleas.
ant feelings of the body produce corres-
ponding sensations in tho mind, and it
great scene of wretchedness is sketched out
by a morsel of indigestible and misguided
food."
When Baby wag sick, wo zave her Castorts-
tahen she was is chtia, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
When sheluad Children, shesave them castoria.
No Other Alternative.
Judge Peterby—How was your son when
you heard from him last?
Col. Yerger—He wrote me he was so ill
that he could neither sit nor stand.
Judge Peterby—Then if he tells the truth
he must lie.
The bother of being a millionaire—the
million heirs.
CREAM TARTAR
\_•)Or
°
R
PUREST, STROMEST, BEST.
Contains no Alum, Ammonia, Lime,
Phosphates, or any Injuriante
2.W. GILLETT. Toronto. Ont.
milmaimmisazak
0
per THIS
—
0041001.'414 AT ut
auxavoza •
.4 POOR KIND b Se-r4INOZer
nig on a par with buying lots of rubbishy
soap for little money.
Poor sown aro the 0 bunghole" through
v.iticla time and labor are wasted, mad by '
wIlich the clothand hands are ruined.
LIGHT
0 Cloofaosastbe atveleit
by ueor
and its lasting pro.
pertie.s, its wonderfid
cleansing powers and
perfect purity, it savoz Tune &Labors
and brings Comfort do SatiefactIon to
all who use it.
a sea** too
TO USE THE
TRUE ECONOMY 4 Sillilight /
lT IS
• • II • • 0 6
WORKS; PT. SUNLIGHT LEVER 13ROS., LIMITED
NEAR ilIRRENHVAD TORONTO d
,
TRY
viingpv
rHE BEST COUGH MEDICINE.
SOO BY 1/111OGISTO STESTWEESS
NERV E
BEANS
NER,VB BEANs are 0 new dle,
emery that cure tho worst cares of
'Venous Debility. Lost Vi4or and
Palling Manhood; reetorea the
weakness of body or mind caused
by over -work, or tho errors or (mg
ceases of youth, This Remedy &be
rattier curve the most obstinate cases when all other
TREATMENTS have failed even to relieve. Gold by drug.
gists at gl pFS
pr package, or six for , or sent bv ors
receipt of price by addressing THE JAMES motrucomt
oo.. Toronto, Ont. Write for pamphlet. SoLl in—
ON
ay. or eStlira at 41.14 NEW tine (ewe*.
mildly and honorably, by Oast, nf
either IICX, Y011Itg or old. and in their
QIVII/orslairs,wItsrsrer they /M. Any
ono can ,lo dm 11,044. Yasy 10 1,010.
Wo furnish el,rryticing. We start y,Ot, 310 Yoh. You tun Moots
5,00013010 insnoolia, or all your nine re the work. 3 his Is sal
rialtrly new lead,and In'ingsmonclerfol snorts, to every woker.
1kt:inners aro cocain:3. from $23 to 830 per week and urnards,
acal mom afar a hair ex per,ener. We eru famish you 110 ern-
rolM, men% and tench J;Gt4 I. USE. No waren) explain Itere. Full
lefortnstion 5,11511.E1; dr. MAINNs
al Wailgsig
liLVER FAILS TO OM SATISFAOTICO
FOR SALE BY Att, 0EALERCI
READ THE BIBLE.
And at the Same Time Earn One Hun.)
dred Dollars in Gold. t
The first letter containing the correct answers to the
follosona questions received at the office ot TUE CANA,
ZIANAOILIMILTI/hisr(eseh week from now until the 31s1
of December, 1832) will reeaire 5100 in Veld: OM Mood
will get $50 I third, $25; fourth, handsome silver service:
to the next 50 correct answers we will send imzes ranging
from 55 down to 82. it" -Every answer, whether a prirn
winner °root, Will YeetliVe oapevlai priZo. tingsTIoNS TO
as Asswintsn.-(1.) Ilow many boolot Des the Bible
contain? (2,)1low many ohaptem P (3, ) Herr zu amp Tersest
MILES.
(1.) Wo commenoe to open letters on Hominy mandate
of each week. If more than one letter is received by the
pante mail with correct answers, the first opened will
count, the second. will take next place, and so Orl, (2)
Each letter containing answers niust be accompanied by
51 to pay for six ntonths subscription to Tax ACIIIIM7Ls
ztuusx—one of the very best Illustrated )tome journals
In Canada. (3.) People living in the 'United States have
precisely the same privilege= connection with this camn.
petitionas those residing in Canada. They can easily gage
their letters eseh week so as to reach us in the begin.
aim- of the week, when they will be almost sure to gel;
a good prize.
I •
WHAT THE PEOPLE SAY OP DS.
"Received 51,000 ptize an right" -5.L M. Bitsorese,
Vancouver, IL O. "I shall recommend zny friend's to
enter youreompetitions."—Loan KILCOURSIE., A. D. O.
to the Governor General, Ottawa, Canada. 'Splendid
prize ree.eived."—O. F. MeComack, St. Stephen, N. B.,
"Prize 01 5233 received."—D. ELLuzusoer, Syracuse, N. Y.
"Handsome prize received."—Miss RETTA HERTZ, Oz.(
ford, Mb!,. Over 5000 receipts from prize winners in
fortuer competitions on fyle in our office. Lettere eon,.
taining money should in all cases be regestered. Ad.
dress, THE ACINACMIMUBIST YIIBLISIHNO 00..Peterbool
ough, Canada.. olio
nrfOLFR'EX0s
"j 1 RAWBOP.
4, CURES
1\ COL IC
C H 01. ERA
CHOLERA— MORBUS
DIARRHOEA
DySENTERY
samgfi COINT
F
CHILDREN'svADULTS
Price 35675
BEWARE F IMITATIONS
atat n atata Sast.a, attadenTaaastasteslattatattaldet ta5. tat s.Vattaa
LABORING DIEN'S RENEDY
ST. JACOI3S OIL,
THE GREAT REMEDY FOR PAIN,
cratt,s
L.Z 114 E M I
prains, Bruises, Cuts, Wounds, Sorenen• ,
Gtiffness, Swellings, Backathe, Neu -
algia, Sciatica, Burns.
THE CHARLES A. VOCELE2 COMPANY, Baltimore, Laaad.
Canadian Depot: TC)RONTG, OMT,
iiinaiMEMINEFINen
.t.e..,...arestaa,taillaallega lattliScattla