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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-7-13, Page 3O2 N 'O tS otb. the method and results when Syrup of Fis is taken;: it is pleasant and refreshlttaste, y R refreshing to the and acts ,. gentlyyet �>romptlyon. the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches ituaieeVers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro-. duaed, pleasing to the taste andac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in ' its action and truly. beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthyandareeablesubstances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 'The 'bottles by all leading druggists. ,any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will. procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. I Iallufactl red only by the CALIFORNIA FIG sump G0, Sat i FRA,2(oxSpo, Wein . VXSVII,7,E, ICV.. VI' W-2'0RB, N kt'or Sala at C. Lutz's Drus Store From the btorninx at H-awardeu to the .Evetung at the House of Commons. 1}Y II. W. MAesisoluaT, X am often asked what ' is the secret of Dir. Gladstone's extraordinary 'length of days and of the perfection of his unvarying. health. It may be partly attributed to the remerkabie longevity of the Gladstone family, a hardy Scottish sten with fewer weak shoots and branohes than perhaps any of the ruling families of England. But it has depended mainly on Mr. Gladstone himself and on the undeviating regularity of his habits.. Most English stateside,~. have been either free livers or with a teach of the bon vivant in them, Pitt and Fox ware men of the firat oharaeter ; lliel- bourne, Palmerston, and Lord Beaconsfield were the last. Bat Mr. Gladstone is a man who has beep guilty of no excesses, save perhaps in work. He rises at the same hour every day, uses the same fairly gener- ous, but always ozrefully` reenlated, diet, goes to bed about the same hour, pursues the same round of work and intellectual and social pleasure. Au extraordinarily varied life is accompanied by a certain rigidity of personal habit I have never seen surpassed. The only change old age has witnessed has been that jte House of Coal- mine work has been curtailed, and that Rewards Whioh are Well Deserved. The Government has decided to present to the officers and seamen of the German steamer Guttheil, of Bremerhaveo, hand. some rewards for rescuing„ on the 230 of'. February last in the North Atlantic, the shipwrecked crew of the schoorer Annie, of Halifax. The rescue was effected under circu latancee of great risk during a anew - storm and heavy sea, and the Uuttheil's boat was smashed after the men had been rescued. Capt. Wischhc usea will receive a handsome binocular glass ; First OMeer Dalidorf, a gold watch, and able seamen Schmidt, Kohuig, 1?rederiokaen andStuntz, each a silver watch. Capt. Sampson, of the British steamship Sandfield ; Second Mate 0. 13, Thompson and four seamen will also receive valuable rewards for res- cuing the crew of the Nova Scotia schoon- er Unexpected, of Windsor, ou the 26th January last, in the North Atlantic. e London hat forty restaurants in which only vegetahl ifood la served. An iron railway lasts aixteon years ; a steel one lasts forty. At a medical students' ball in Chicago, the dance! were named aftermedi0ines, a, tliequaseiz quadrille, the aux vomicavalses the podophyllino lancers, oneMr. Gledatcne ascribes his longevity to the simplicity and regularity of his habits. Advertiseme pts first appeared in news- papers ews• pp r a Bra in 1 G J` Silver is so plentiful that it is being more and more used for decoration. Dials were spoken of by Isaiah 700 years before the Christian era. The firat plaster caste was made by Ver- 'mahio, 1470. Cream Tartar PUREST, STRONGEST, UEST1 Contains no Alum, Ammonia, Lime, Phosphates, or any Injuriant E. W. Lig-LETT. Toronto, Ont. Are nlelLOOJO B 1U ELI/WEB. and NERVE TONI1J. They supply in condensed form dtx, the sub- stances needed to enrich the Blood and to rebuild the Nerves,tlausmaking thein a certain and. speedy cure for all diseases arisin from impoverished blood, and shattered nerves, such as par- alysis, spinal die. oases, rheumatism, sciatica,loss of mem- ory, erysipelas, pal- pitation of theheart, sorofula,ohlorosisor green sickness, that tired feeling that affects so many, etc. They have a specific action on the sexual system of totemen and -women, restoring ,lost vigor. :. WEAK.M EN feeling andoldi, suffering from mental worry, overwork, insomnia, excesses, or self-abuse, should take these' pings. They will restore lestenergiea, both physical and mental. SUFFERING WOMEN affiietedwith the weaknesses peculiar to their - The explauatioa of this extreme order- liness of mind is probably to be found in his unequaled habit of concentration on the business before hints. As in matters ot policy, so is all his pri- vate habits, Mr, Gladstone thinks of one thing and of one thing only at a time. When bone rale was tip he had no eyes or ears for any political subject but Ireland, of course excepting his favorite excursions Mee the'twin:subjeots of Homer and Chris- tian theology. Enter the room when Mr. Gladstone is reading a book ; you may move noisily about the chamber, ransack the books on the shelved, stir the furniture, but never for one moment will ,the reader be conscious of your presence. At Down- ing Street, during his earlier ministries, these hours ot study were often; T' might say usually,,preceeded by be amous break fab at which the celebrated anter or ac- tress, ctress, the rising poet, the well-known artist, the diplomatist ht.lting on hie way from one station of the kingdom to another, were welcome guests. Madame Bernhardt, miss Ellen Terry, Hoary Irving, Madame Diod- jeska, have all assisted at these pleasant feasts. EIS ATTER:400N. Lunch with Mr. Gladstone is a very simple meal which neither at Hawarden nor Dowitkug Street admits of much form or publicity. `The afternoon which follows is a -very much broken and less regular period. Ae Hawarden a portion of it . is usually r- out of 'doors. in the r.Gla ba y not of late .ears been Gladstone heti Mr. seen in the House after the dinner hour, which lasts from eight till ten, except on nights when cruetal divisions are ex- pected. With the approach of winter and its accompanying chills, to which he is extremely susceptible, he seeks the blue aloes and dry air of the Mediter- ranean eoasts and of his beloved Italy. With this exception his life goes on in its peasant monotony. At Hawarden, of course, it is simpler and more prf• vats than in London. In town today Mr. Gladstone avoids all large parties and groat crushes end gatherings where he may be expected to be either mobbed or bored or detained beyond his usual bed -time. Ii I9 PEItSONALITY. sex, each as suppression of the periods, bearing down pains, weak back, ulcerations, etc., will tlid these pills an unfailing cure. PALE AND DSALLOW_ GIRLS.... should take these Pills. They enrich the blood, restore health's roses to tbo cheeks and cor- rect all irreguls1ties. Bn`vertn or IBITATIovs. These Pills are gold by all dealers only in boxes bearing our trade mark 'or Will be sent by mail, post paid, an receipt 01 price—SO cents a box or 6 for se,50. TME R WILLIAMS M' .ED. CO.. .xoe xvi11o, Ont., or Morristown. 1I. . Personally Mr. Gladstone is an example of the most wiuning, the most delicata, and the most minute courtesy. He is a gentle- man of the elder English school, and his manners era grand ,and urbane, always stately, never condescending, and genuinely modest.He affects even the dress of the old school, and I have seeu him in the morn- ing wearing atx old blank evening coat, such as Processor Jowett still affects. The hum- blest passer-by in Piccadilly., raising his hat to Mr, Gladstone, is sure to get a sweeping salute in return. This courtliness is all the more remarkable, because it accompanies and adorns a very strong temper, a will of iron, and a habit of being regarded for the greater part of his lifetime as a pe_rsonal totes of unequalled magnitude. Yet the most foolish, and perhaps- one may add the most impertinent, of Mr. GIadstone's dinner -table questioners is sure of an elaborate reply, delivered with the air of a student in deferential talk with his master. To the cloth air. Gladstone shows a rever- ence that occasionally woos the observer to a smile. The sallowest curate is sure of a respectful listener in the foremost English- man nglishman of the day. On the other hand, in private .conversation the premier does not often brook contradiction. His temper is high, and though, as George Russell has said, it is under vigilant 'control, there are subjects on which it is easy to arouse the old lion. Then the grand eyes flash, the torrent of brilliant monologue flows with more rapid sweep, and the dinner : table is breathless at the spectacle of Mr. Gladstone angry. As to his relations with his family, they are charming. It is a pleasure to hear Herbert Gladstone—his youngest, and pos- sibly his favorite son -speak of rt my fath- er." All of them, sons and daughters, are absolutely devoted. to his cause, wrapped up in his personality, and enthusiastic as to every side of his character. Of children Mn. Gladstone has always been fond, and he' hart more than one favorite among his grand- Wry. The importance of these is great. and the chanoes arethat before 4r, .(*lad- et/ne dies they will he all groaned and in, dotted in his: upright a, little crabbed, hut perfectly plain, handwriting. By the waw, a great many statements have been made about DIr. Gladatone's library, and T may as well give the facts which have never be. fora been re. tale public. His original liorary eonstated of about twenty -font thousand volumes. In the seventies, however, he parted with his entire collection ofpoliticat works, amounting to some 'eight thousand volumes, to the late Lord. Wolverton. The retraining fifteen thousand or so are new distributed between the little iron house to which I have referred, and the 8awerdea library, Cariousty enough, Mr. Glad- stone is not a worshipper of books for the sake of their outward adornments. He loves then for what is inside rather than outside. He even occasionally sells extremely rare and costly edi- tions for which he has no special use. In all money matter3, indeed, he is a thrifty, orderly Seotchman. Re has never been rich, though his affaira have greatly improved since the time when in hisfirst premiership he had to sell his vale. able collection of china.. AT THE DINNER TABLE. felling o' e of to the 1 t wast olditdv ed daystf sctio giant of the woods. Within the last few years, however, Sir Andrew Clark, Mr. Gladstone's favorite physician and in• timate friend, has recommended that tree. felling be given over; and naw Mr. Glad. stone's recreation, in addition, to lung walks, in which he still delights, is that of lopping let -ouches od'veterans whose trunks have fallen to younger arms. AS A IMAMS, Between the .a€tornoun tea and dinner the statesman usually retires again, and f 'ter and more o then gets through somelof agrosable of his intellectual asks: He reads rapidly, and I think 7 should say that, es- pecially of late years, he does a good deal of skipping. If a book does not interest liim, he does not trouble to reedit through. He uses a rough kind of memoria tecluaioe to enable him to mark passages with which he agrees, from which he dissents, which he desires to qualify, or which he reserves for future reference, I should say the hooks he reads most of are those dealing with theology, always the first and favorite topic, and the history of Ireland before and after the Act of Union. Indeed, every thing dealing with that tnemorial period is greatly treasured. I remember one hasty glance over Mr. Gladstone's book table in his own home. In addition to the liberal weekly, "The Speaker," untie few political pamphlets, there were, Ishould say, fifteen or twenty works on theology, none of them, as far as I could see, of first-rate importance. Of science Mr. Gladstone knows little, and it cannot be said that his interest in it is keen. He belongs, in a word to the old- fashioned Oxford ecclesiastical school, usfnz the controversial weapons which are to be found in the works of Pusey and of Harrell Fronde. In his reading, when a question of more minute and out-of-the-way scholar. ship arises, he appeals to his constant friend and assistant, Lord Acton, to whose pro- found learning he bows with a deference which is very touching to note. ant. GLADSTONE S LIBRARY. Dinner with Mr. Gladstone is the stately ceremonial meal which it has become to the upper and upper -middle- class Englishman. Mr. Gladstone in- variably dresses for it, wearing the high creat collar millet' Harry Furniss has inunortalized and a cutaway coat which strikes one as of a slightly old-fashioned pattern. Hie digestion never fails him, End he eats and drinka with the healthy appetite of a man of thirty. A glass of champagne is agreeable to nim, and if he does not take his glass or two of port at dinner, he makes le up by two or three glasses of claret, which he considers an equivalent. Oysters he never could endure, but, like Schapanhauer and Goethe and many another great man, he is a consistent- ly hearty and uufastidious ester. lie talks much in an animated monologue, though. the common oomplaint that he monopolizes the conversation us not a just one. You cannot easily turn Mr, Gladstone into a train of ideasthat does not interest him, but, he is a courteous and even eager listener; and if the subject is of general interest, he dose not beer in it any more than the commanding part which the rest of the company invariably allows him, His speaking voles is a little gruffer and loss musical than his oratorical notes, which, spite of the invading hoarseness, still at times ring oat with their old. clearness. As a rule he does not talk on politics. On ecclesiastical matters he is a never wearied dieputant. Poetry has also a singular charm for him, and no modern topic has interested him more keenly than the dis- cusstoa as to Tennyson's successor to the iaurateahip. I remember that at a email dinner at which I recently met him, childten, MR.. GLADSTONE'S MORNING. r. Gladstone's day begins about 7.30, after seven hours and a half of sound, dreamless sleep, which no disturbing crisis in public affaira was ever known• to apofl. At Hawarden it usu- alltr opens with a morning walk to church, with which no kind of weather:— hail, rain, snow, or frost—is ever allowed to interfere. In his rough slouch hat and gray Inverness cape, the old man plods sturdily tohis devotions. To the rain, the danger of sitting in wet clothes, and small troubles of this kind, he is absolutely impervious, and Mrs. Glad - stone's solicitude has never availed ` to change his lifelong custom in this re- spect. Breakfast over, working time cotntaences. I rim often astonished at the manner in which Mr. Gladstone manages to crowd his almost ,endlessly varied occu- pations into the forenoon, for when its is in the country he has practically no other con. tinuous and regular work-titne, 'Y`et'into tins spare he has to condense his, enormous correspondeuce—for which, when noprivate secretary is available, he seeks the help of his sons and daughters—his political work, and his varied literary pursuits. Children Cry for Pitcher's CastoriaY apiece, written ori a single sheet of note paper, and no hint of the course of the oration is, given. Occasionally, eo doubt, espoeiglly in; the case 9f the speech on the introduction of the Home Rifle Bill, ' which was to : my mind the fittest Mr, Gladstone has ever delivered, the notes were rather more extensive than this,. but ;aa a rule they are ex- tremely brief. When ',Mr. Gladstone addresses a great public meeting, the most elaborate pains are taken to in- sure his comfort. Be can note only read the very largest print, and careful and delicate arrangements are made to provide 'him with ,amps throwing the light on the desk or table near which he stands, Sir Andrew Clark observes the most jealous watchfulness over his patient. A curious instance of tide occurred e.t New- castle when Mr. Gladstone was delivering his address to the great liberal eaucua which assembles as the annual meeting of the National Liberal Federation. Sir Andrew bad insisted that the orator should confine himaeif to a speech lasting only an hour. Fearing that his charge would forget all about his promise in the exeitement of speaking, the physician dip- ped onto the platform and timed Mr. Gladstone., watch in hand. The hour passed, hit there was no pause iu the torrent of words. Sir .Andrew was in despair. At last bepencilled a note to Mr. Morley, beseeching him. to insist upon the speech coming to an end. But Mr. Morley would not undertake the responsibility of cutting a great oration, and the result was that Mr, Gladstone stole another half Lour from time and his physician. The neat day a friend of mine went breathlessly up to Sir Andrew, and asked how the etateainan the conversation ran almost entirely on the two subjects of old English hymns and .. young English poets. His favorite religious had borne the additional strain. " He did poet is, I shottldsay, Cardinal Newman and not turn a hair," was there 1y. Practically favorite hymn, Toplady's "Rock of Ages," the only sign of physical failure which is of which his Latin rendering is to my mind apparent in recent speeches has been that far stronger and purer than the original the voice tondo, to break and die away after, English. When he is in town, he dines about an hour's exercise, and for a moment out almoat every day, though, as I have the sound of the curiously veiled notes and e I 1lo of the face said, he eschews, formal and mixed gather- a glance at the m rb e a r Ings, and affects the small and early dinner given one the impression filet after all Mr, party at which he can meet an old friend Gladstone is, a very, very old man. But or two, and see a young face which he may there is never anything like a total break - be interested in seeing. One habit of his is down. Audit() one is aware of the enor- quite unvarying. He likes to walk home, mous stores of physical energy on whichthe and to walk home alone. He declines es• prime minister can draw, who has not sat cora, and slips away for his quiet stroll quite close to him, and measured the won - under the stars, or oven through the fog aerial breadth of his shoulders and heard and mist on a London winter's night. Mid- night usually brings his busy, happy day to a close. Sleeplessneas never has and never does trouble him, and at eighty.three his nights are as dreamless and untroubled as those of a boy of ten. Mr. Gladstone's library is not what can be called a select or really first-rate colIeo- tion. It comprises an undue proportion of theological literature; of which he is a large and not over -discriminating buyer. I doubt, indeed, whether there is any larger private bookbuyer in. England. All the booksellers send him their catalogues, especially those of rare and curious books, I have seen many of these lists, with a brief order in Mr. Gladstone's. own handwriting on the flyleaf, withhis tick against twenty or thirty volumes which he desires to buy. These usually range round classical works, archteolooy, special periods of English his- tory, and, above all, works reconciling the Biblical record with s ience, Of late, as is fairly well known, Mr. Ghttistone has built himself an octagonal iron house in Hawarden village, a mile and, -a half from the oastle, for the storage of his specially valuable books and a collection of private papers which traverse itgood many of the state secrets of the greater part of the can• IN THE tot$E. His afternoons when in townand during the aeason are, of course, given up pretty exclusively to piddle business and the House of Commons, which he usually reaches about four o' clock. He goes 'ay a side door straight to his private room, where he re- ceives his colleagues, and hears of endless questions and motions, which fall like leaves in Vallambrosa around the head of a prime captions, the Peruvian navy had all beau minister. Probably stops will beoaken at captured or destroyed by the enemy, and remove burdenmuch of this irksome shoulders of somewhat these two remeinfng ships, vessels of low petty from the shoulders of the aged speed and little power, were moored behind minister. But leader Mr, Gladstone must uite as fulltate breakwater, absolutely useless for pur- ee anl e was at sixty. will be at tyIndeed, the the poses of war. With all _`_sir power of op - of him always has been that he does too posing the enemy gone, the Peruvians much, both for his own health and the turned their attention toward destroying smooth manipulation of the great machine some of the hostile ships that lay a few which, as was once remarked, creaks*and miles off, a constant menace to the city of moves rather lumberingly under his Callao. Frequent futile attempts were masterful but over -minute guidance. made to blow up the Chilean cruisers with Duringthe last two or three years ie torpedoes, but the Chileans were too alert, has been customary for the Whigs to and succeeded in avoiding or destroying 50 arrange, that Mr. Gladstone speaks Harpdeadly ounssileople, tes. o pielt inoses is s early in the evening. He is not idle Billabis of the Chilean fleet, a small steam gunboat, to do this while the Horne Rule is was cruising inshore to take a near look at under dissuasion, but I do not think he will the town and fortifications. While steam - ever again find it. necessary to follow the ing slowly along a boat' was discovered entire course of a Parliamentary debate. drifting down with the current. A near He never needed to do as much listening inspection roved it to be a fine new whale from the Treasury Bench as he was wont to boat, with oars and sails and complete out. do in his first ani second ministries. Ido fit The commander of the Chilean ateatned not think that any nrfine minister ever close up to the boat and ordered tacldss spent half as much time in the House of rigged for hoisting the prize on board. The Commons as did Mr. Gladstone ; certainly tackles were hooked, and the men on deck no one ever made one-tenth part as many walked away to the pipe of the boatswain's Gladstone's vigilance to avert the physical speeches. Indeed, it requires all : Mrs. whistle. Suddenly, as the boat left the strain consequent upou overwork. With this purpose she invariably watches him in the House of Commons, from a corner seat in the right hand . of the Ladies' Gallery which is always reserved for -her, and which I have never known her to miss oeoupying on any occasion of the slightest impor- tance. I have before me two or three ex- amples ,:of notes of Mr. Gladstone's speeches; one of them refers to one of he most important of his addresses on the customs question. It was a long speech, extending, if I remember right- ly, to considerably over an hour. Yet the memoranda consist purely of four or five sentences of two or three words; his voice coming straight from his chest is great bouti:ees of sound. Then you forget all about the heavy wrinkles in the white f'e,sethe scanty silver hair, and the patri- archal look of the figure before you. WAS LOAD1;1) WITH ,EXPLOSIVES' Aix Apparently Ab$uuloned Moat Which Surprised a Chilean Crew. Toward the close of the teoent war be- tween Chile and Peru, the Peruvians found themselves quite shat in from the outside world by the Chilean blockading fleet that lay off the harbor of Callao. With two ex - e'fw t ci �.^^'�,-•-moi_ -,. ere .,;".4.7 •_ is r/r •i:� ./rte;! r !: �.• r 1 yr./� , . „ye, A'AW ARBEN CASTLE. water, a terrific explosion took place, tear- ing the boat to atoms, and crushing in the gunboat's side at the water line, so that she filled and .sant, leaving her startled crew struggling in the water. Most of t".irn were rescued by boats from the foreign .nen-of- war lying near, but some were never seen again. The boat was a cunningly devised weapon, having a double bottom filled with a powerful explosive, with a fuse and deto- nator connected to the bolts to which the tackles hooked, When the straits came ou the bolts, as the boat rose from the water, the fuse was ignited and the explosion fol lowed. This is the query ger What Is pettially on your little boy's lips. ;And he is It For? " no wore than the big,- ger, igger, older, balder --head; ed boys. Life is an interrogation point. " What is it for?" we con.* t'inually cry from the cradle to ^thee grave. Sd with this little intros ue. tory serrnonwe turn and ask: "What IS AUGUST ,QW R FOR a" _9.s easily answered:a asked : It is for D,ys pepsia. It is a special remedy .for the Stotllach and Liver. Nothing more than this but this brimful. We believe August Plower cures Dyspepsia. ° We know it will. Ws have reasons for knowing it. Twenty years ago it started in a small country town.. 20 -day it has an honored place in every city and country stork possesses Ane of the largest manu- facturing annfaeturing plants in the country and sells everywhere. Why is this ? The reason is as simple as a child's thought. It is honest, does tarts thing, and does it right along --it cures Dyspepsia. �► G. G. GRUEN, Sole bian'fr,Woodbury,N cila,LL 1 Ts PURE 'OWDERE a !off PUREST, STRDNCEST, BEST. Ifeadyforueofnan uantlty.Parmakto;ttoa I leaf .& e9 ats2OOi ouuls&.o*la UnVundre ;Sinal Sold br .311 Groeera ane iireraista. '8i- W. G=X,lC. 'i"V. Z'awoa*U% How to Gat a "Sunlight" Picture. Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrappers. (the largo wrapper) to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St. 'Toronto, and you will receive by post a pretty picture, free from advertising and; well worth framing. This Is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is the beat in the market, and it will only cost lc postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open, Write your address carefully. When Baby was sick, we rave her Castoi'fD. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. Whon she became Miss, site clung to Castoria, tVhen she had Children, she gavethem Castor* Every annex oft. Wanted bto korsenow hooreowwants w to keep his animal in. good health while in the stable on drytafodder, DICK'S IlbOOII PURIFIER is note recogaired as the best Condition Powders, it gives a good. appetite and strengthens the digestion so that all the foodis :assimilated and forms fiesta, thus saving morn than 0 costs, It regulates the llolvels and Kidneys and turns a rough coat Otto a smetth and gltssy one, Sound Horses are al- ways s on. wheand n tbsy Sound this season when they d at are so lichle tasting and strains DICK'S BLIS- TER will be found a stable necessity; itwiil O1' ses remov ' a curb, spavin, splint 0. tboroughpin or any swelling. Dick's Lini- ment cures a strain er lumeness,sad removes inflam- mation front cuts and b d'ele. For Sale byail Drag - gists. Iliek'eI:lc"el Pu uaerMc Dick's B11�.terlDa, ,Dick's Liniment .ac. Dick`sQinuneut25c. wend a postal card for full par oculars, St a book of valuable household and firm recipes' will be sent free. DICE. & CO., P.O. Box 4.1, MONTREAL rat Cattle CARTEKS IV PILLS. Sick Headache and relieve alit] e troubles incl. dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness Distress after eating, Pain in the Side, Ate. 14 bite their mos, remarkable sndcets has been s town in curl Su kl , Headache, yet CARTER s LITTLE LIVER. Pn t.0. art equally valuable in' Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.. Even if they only cured Ache they would be almost priceless to those who suffer from this distressing compla Itt but fortunately their goodness goes not end here, and those who once try them will find these littler ills valuable in so ntau-}' ways that. they will not be willing to do Witllent them. But after all sick head is the bane of so many lives that here is whsle we make our .great boast. Our pills cure it while others do not. CA -tames Y t'Tn.n Lrrrn PtLI.e are very small and very easy to take. ' One or two ti11s snake a dose. They :are strictly vegetable and do not gripo or purge, but by their gentle action please nil who usc, them. in vials at 25 cents; lice for St, Sold everywhere, or sett ry tun. Ct.?1EB h_DICINE (10., Neal Yui h11 Doer earl VAN Regulates thea 5tQrnaQh, Liver erid'Bowels, unlocks t1- e Secretion s,i?urill e"•sthe 'Blood and removes ell lrn- purities ?rorri a Dirruple to thewor.t Scrofulous. Sore., • CUP, 5 ' DYSPEPSIA. BILIOUSNi gS. CONSTIPATION. HEADACHEi SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA..' HEART BURN. SOUR STOMAC DIZZ 1NES S. DROPSY. RHEUMATISM, SKIM DISE ASEt r . .uw7'• a: �y Every annex oft. Wanted bto korsenow hooreowwants w to keep his animal in. good health while in the stable on drytafodder, DICK'S IlbOOII PURIFIER is note recogaired as the best Condition Powders, it gives a good. appetite and strengthens the digestion so that all the foodis :assimilated and forms fiesta, thus saving morn than 0 costs, It regulates the llolvels and Kidneys and turns a rough coat Otto a smetth and gltssy one, Sound Horses are al- ways s on. wheand n tbsy Sound this season when they d at are so lichle tasting and strains DICK'S BLIS- TER will be found a stable necessity; itwiil O1' ses remov ' a curb, spavin, splint 0. tboroughpin or any swelling. Dick's Lini- ment cures a strain er lumeness,sad removes inflam- mation front cuts and b d'ele. For Sale byail Drag - gists. Iliek'eI:lc"el Pu uaerMc Dick's B11�.terlDa, ,Dick's Liniment .ac. Dick`sQinuneut25c. wend a postal card for full par oculars, St a book of valuable household and firm recipes' will be sent free. DICE. & CO., P.O. Box 4.1, MONTREAL rat Cattle CARTEKS IV PILLS. Sick Headache and relieve alit] e troubles incl. dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness Distress after eating, Pain in the Side, Ate. 14 bite their mos, remarkable sndcets has been s town in curl Su kl , Headache, yet CARTER s LITTLE LIVER. Pn t.0. art equally valuable in' Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.. Even if they only cured Ache they would be almost priceless to those who suffer from this distressing compla Itt but fortunately their goodness goes not end here, and those who once try them will find these littler ills valuable in so ntau-}' ways that. they will not be willing to do Witllent them. But after all sick head is the bane of so many lives that here is whsle we make our .great boast. Our pills cure it while others do not. CA -tames Y t'Tn.n Lrrrn PtLI.e are very small and very easy to take. ' One or two ti11s snake a dose. They :are strictly vegetable and do not gripo or purge, but by their gentle action please nil who usc, them. in vials at 25 cents; lice for St, Sold everywhere, or sett ry tun. Ct.?1EB h_DICINE (10., Neal Yui h11 Doer earl VAN