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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-8-9, Page 71' MISCELLANEOUS READING • GRAVE AS. WELL AS GAT. Old and Volum wfll find these Selection* Interesting and Profitable as they are Carefully Selected. His Wishes. '" My little man, ec me tell d bmagic be To the unknown fairyland transplanted, Where bea s may have their wishes granted, What would you wish to be ?" " I'd wish"—he Sidewise cocked bis head, Pondered and paused, and then he said " I wish 1 bad two brothers— tha e great big oc, and one I could lick ; That nothin never'd make me sick, And eight or 1=0 grandmothers," Don't Touch. There's now a glory in the dawu. AU gee e are irost and stofm; Tho robin on the verdant lawn Rakes in the early worm. There's perfume In the vernal air, The violet's odor faint, And signs confront you everywhere, Set out to warn you—" PalnT," Tastes Vary. Oh, some me for the ernes of melt And some ie a for the sea, And some for D. nook with a musty *hoc k— But the lips of a maid for me, And some are for the hie est and field— Their whim is to be free— But the lips of a maid in the myrtle shade Are freedom enough for me, How the Contest Ended. "I'll pay the fare of both, conductor," said one of two female passengers in a cable car as that funetionary made his rounds. "]deed you won't Sue," saidthe other, as she opened her handbag, and began to look for ler purse. "1 think I have the exact change," said the one who bad first spoken. " I know I have, if I can just get at my purse, for I put it in just before I left the house." " And I'm sure I bave half adollar, for I got it in change not ten minutes ago at. the confectionery store." " That reminds me, dear, you treated me to chocolate soda there, so I inust in- sist onpaving your fare this time." "Indeed, I won't listen to it. The very last time we rode together, I remem- ber distinctly, that you raid mine." "I don't believe I did. I think that was the time before the last, while yon paid mine the last time." At this juncture one of them found a dime and the other produced half a dol- lar, each abjuring the conductor not to accept the fare from the other. The poor man was bewildered, but a passenger who had not paid his fare broke in with : " If you two ladies are very anxious to pay some one's fare, one of you can pay mine." Both glared icily at the interrupter, and the conductor improved the opportunity to collect a fare from each and pass on down the car. A False Joan of Aro. As shown by publications in this column recently it appears there was a true and false Molly pitcher, heroine of the revolutionary war. There is the same trouble with the fa- mous Joan of Are, but the historians are now feeling satisfied that they have got the false Joan, or at least one of them, located. It was on account of the un- certainty as to which was which that the canonization of the martyr maid was so long delayed. That Joan was never buried at all is a paradox which has beenmaintained at intervals since 1868. Tho idea has been suggested that the false Joan was a younger sister of the true joan, and was put up by her family, now named Du Lys, in the hopes of reward. This is looked upon as a possible hypothesis by Henri Blaze de Bury in his "Jeanne d'Are." The second edition is of 1890. The charge against the family of Du Lys is very dishonoring, but the difficulties about this sister, Catherine, are enough to make a student tear his locks in sheer perplexity. Meanwhile, it is not even certain whether there was only one, or two, or more false jeans. The imposter was first generally heard of in modern times, when the Mercure Galant in No- vember, 1688, published an extract irom the chronicle of the dean of Saint -Thi - baud of Metz for the year 1436. RESTORED A LOST FORTONE. Illeh Man's Story of His Experience Among Kentnoky Mountains. "I had a glimpse of life in, the Ken- tucky mountains the other day that I will not soon forget," said. a capitalist. "I made a trip into that section as a re- presentative of a syndicate to look at some coal lands. I went as far as Inould by rail and then took a horse and rode into the wilderness. Toward night I brought up at a little cabin of -which I ha& been previously informed,and made arrangements to spend. the night there. This eabin was about twenty feet long by about twelve feet wide. Above was a loft to which access was gainea by means of a ladder and a hole in the floor. There was a little corn growing around the place, and there were two hogs. In the rear of the cabin was a low shed, open at one end and with a slanting roof. It was just big enough to hold a cow at night. The cow, which was a lean, woe - gone animal, the two hogs and the corn constituted, apparently the entire assets of the place. "In this establishment were living a roan and his wife and eight children, the eldest being twelvo years. They lived on corn meal and milk, with occasionally same pork. Both the man and the wo- man were barefooted. The elder chil- dren had clothes enough to co -ver their nakedress, but the younger were not so fortunate. The man seemed to be a slow, dull sort of a fellow, who had lived in destitution so long that he had become used to it. " The woman was different. Her face wore an expressiou of abject despair. If a painter had wanted a model for a picture, entitled 'Hopelessness,he need have gone no further. After supper the man went out to feed. the hogs and. the cow and do other 'chores.' I talked to the WOMell, for about an hour and suc- ceeded with great difficulty in getting her story. Her pride stood in the way of her telling me anything for a long time. During all the time in which she talked the expression of dull listlessness, to which her face had become habituated, never left it but once, Then a look of something like happiness came over her features. This was when she said that they had not always been poor. 'Wo weren't always this way,' she said. 'We were well off once. We saved enough, him and me. so that we were rich. We had $27 laid away once.' That was her idea of wealth. Twenty-seven dollars? She went on to say that the children had come fast, a cow had to be bought, and that she cost $18. The children had fal- len sick and a doctor had to be brought in from civilization, and he cost $5, and so it went till their fortune had gone, and they had nothing left of that magnificent $27. "The next morning I paid them my lodging. I had slept in the loft and the family had slept in the room below. I had brought with me a huge lot of roast beef sandwiches and ate these for my supper and breakfast, for I had been warned. that I probably could not get anything to eat there. Before leaving I took $27, and, wrapping it up in a news- paper, loft it on the table in the middle of the room. Then I rode away feeling vastly pleased with myself,and knowing that there was one mountaineer's family in Kentucky that had recovered its lost fortune." To Purify Water. Dr. Leffmann recommends to house- wives a simple means of precipitating turbid water by blas use of a solutjon of alum. One hundred and thirty grains of crystalized alum dissolved in one pint of water will produce a large quantity of the purifying liquid, as it is only used in the proportion of one to two grains of alum to a gallon of water. That would require three teaspoonfuls of the solution to every •two gallons of water. After stirring it in, let the water stand a few hours, and it will be perfectly clean and ready to be poured off from the thick deposit in the bottom. If it is then filtered it will be in good condition for drinking. Even -with- out filtering it will be safe to drink the water if it has not stood very long, as it has been found that the addition of the alum greatly reduces the number of bac- teria,. The taste is not affected, as the alum decomposes in the water, and sets free compounds that attach themselves to the muddy elements in the water and cause them to settle. This remedy is not foi contaminated water whioh should al- ways he boiled. Stunted Growth. It is believed that the' small Shetland 'ponies have been developed from the larger horses of the rest of the herd. In consequence of a smaller amount of food at the command of the horses in the more northern regions resulting in what -+ might be termed a constant struggle for existence they have become reduced in size, and that way took on the char- acteristies which distinguish them now from other breeds of horses. This must surely be nothing but an ingenious sur- mise. Rough, figures of horses and riders have been diseovered on the sculpture of the earlier Celtic inhabitants of the Shot - land Islands previous to the Norwegian invasion, and there seems to be no differ - once now between the Shetland ponies and those of these remote ages. She Was Crushed. "s this a smoking car V' she asked in choice Bostotese as she peened through her girlish spectacles into the uncultured Conductor's face. " No, miss," he answered with a glad, joyous feeling that for once he was get- tiug even with a woman, "it is not." She aissuss,roa into the interior of the car, but in a few moments came out livid With wrath, Veil—told—Me," she said in ley tones, "that it was not a smoking car," "b is not, wise. None of our cars stoke. It is the snmker'e ear." Casting Lots. A slab -sided sort of a fellow with a good-natured countenance came into the presence of a marriage license clerk and stood still. " Well, sir, what can. I do for you ?" enquired the alwayscourteous clerk Can I get a marriage license here?" responded the caller. "Certainly. Is it for yourself ?" "Me and the girl." Of course. That's always understood. What is your name and age, and. that of the young lady ?" He gave his name and age and stopped. "Well, what's the name of the young lady ?" asked the clerk, after waiting a minute. " That's just what I was thinking about," was the rather unexpected reply. You know her name, don't you ?" He sat down by the clerk. "Let me tell you about that," he said, becoming quite confidential, "You see, I asked Sairey Blinker last night, and she said. 'yes,' and as I was coming to town for the papers, I met that pretty Smith girl, and she tot to hintin' around, and I popped the ,question to her, and she took ine up as quick as a flash. Now, that's the kind of a fixI'm in, and there's only one way to get out of it. You aro a sort of legal officer, ain'tyou ?" " Yes, sort of a one," ' admitted the clerk. " Well, you'll do. Here's the dollar to pay +for the license.; heads it's Sairey, tails it's the Smith acad." The clerk objected, but as there seemed to be no other mode of settlement, he finally tossed the dollar audit dropped on the floor and after teetering awhile onits edges, flattened out at the young man's feet heads down. He stooped down to see the result. " Make it Evangeline G. Smith," he eaid, in a complacent tone. "1 shouldn't thank you would like that way of settling the thing," said the clerk, when he handed him the docu- ment. " I ain't worrying about myliking it," lie replied dubiously; "I'm thinkin how Sairey's goin.' to like it." Platter of Construction. Two respectable looking men of middle age were talking quite earnestly and quite audibly in a Cold Spring car the other evening. "Dict you go to see her ?" asked one. "Oh, yes, certainly," replied the other. "How 'do you like her ?" " I think she is a perfect beauty," was the rapturous reply. Whereat all the passengers looked that way, and a young woman directly opposite the speaker bliashed, and tried to pretend. she 'wasn't listening. "Yes, I admire her very much," added the man; "I like her style." "Elegantly built and fitted out, isn't she?" "Yes, and she's pretty fast, too." The young woman across the isle could stand it no longer. She nodded confused- ly to the conductor and got off at the next crossing. The respectable looking men didn't no- tice anything, and kept right on with their gossip. "1 wouldn't mind owning her." "1 wouldn't objet myself. She'll bo a paying investment—that is, if sho sails as well as she did :to -clay. Let's see, what's that her name is?—I've forgot- ten," "The Northwest." And the other passengers 1 TRANSATLANTIC DOINGS A141, ATIGUND THE 'GLOBE. Pointed Paragraphs Practically Putter Busy Beings to Obtain an Intelligent Idea of Foreign Pacts. Troops are killingbears in Finland. Money is very IA entifal„in, London.. Fight in Senegal. French. killed 500 natives, War has been declared between China and Japan. Spain gives Great Britain her lowest tariffrates. Bolivia and Eouador are preparing for war with Peru. Orangemen in council in London have declared themselves against home rule. China and Japan have both issued of- ficial amounts of the naval engagement. Both agree China got the worst of it, Ireland to have local government on a popular basis is a plank in the new Con- servative platform. A blue book issued by Sir W. Robin- son, the Governor of Hong Kong, reports that 120,000 people died of the plague in the Canton district. Earthquake shocks have been felt in Macedonia, .old Servia and eastern 13u1- garia. Many houses at Verna, Bulgaria, have been damaged, and a number of people have been killed aa a result of the shocks. There is a rumor in Paris that Mme. Carnet intends to plead with President Oasiniir-Perier to spare the life of Meunier, who has been indicted for caus- ing the Cafe Very explosion shotly after the arrest of Ravachol. Advices at Tangiers from Fez are to the effect that the Sultan has caused the arrest of a number of his brothers, Muley Omar and the members of his suite. The prisoners are charged with conspiring to depose the Sultan and seize the throne. Dr. Cornelius Herz, the Panama lobby- ist, was formally charged Saturday with extorting 10,000,000 frames from she late Baron Reinach, As Dr. Herz did not put in an appearance, the tribunal declared him a defaulter and judgment was re- served. The Lancet says the pupil of Mr. Glad - stone's eye, which was lately operated on, has become so bad that a second operation is necessary. The other eye is affected with an immature cataract, but he can still, it is said, by the application of a solution of atropine, see to write and read good. print moderately well. His general health is good and his vigor re- markable. A Constantinople despatch says that the rumor that the soldiers who assault- ed Miss Mallon, an American mission- ary, have been released is not true.. Sen- tence of the prisoners, however, has been deferred, owing to the absence of neces- sary witnesses. Mr. Terrel, the United States Minister, admits that the author- ities have behaved with firmness and im- partiality in the matter. There is no truth in. the story that a serious accident has occurred to Otto Lilienthal, the famous "flying man," whose development of flying machines, with birds as his models, has been watch- ed with interest the -world over. The facts in the ease are as follows: Fifteen days ago, not last Sunday, at Cross Liehterfelie, and not at Lichtervelde, Belgium, Otto Lilienthal was experiment- ing with one of his machines. He sus- tained a slight fall, but was entirely un- injured, and the machine was only slight- ly damaged. A despatch from Chemulpo, under date of July 5, giving the latest ad -vices re- ceived at Yokohama, said.: "The Chinese appear to be holding from action in Corea for various reasons, one of which is prob- ably the festival in honor of the Empress Dowager's sixtieth birthday. On July 4 the Japanese ship Orni, now an armed cruiser, arrived with 800 troops who were landed. The men-of-war in port now comprise one Chinese Armstrong cruiser, the Japanese Yaeyama and Mushahi, the French Inconstant, Russian Koreetz and British cruiser Archer. Both Japan and China are making active preparations for the impending struggle. Li Hung -Chang borrowed 1,000,000 taels from a leading foreign bank, pledging as security the property of the China Merchants' Steam Navigation Company. The cities of Han.kow and. Woo Chang, in the prov- ince of Numehare, are guarded by four sloops of war owned by Viceroy Chang, of the province." A telegram was re- eeived at Tokio from Tien Tsin on the lith ult. to the effect that the Chinese Government proposes to engage English officers for the navy and German officers for the array. Caseiro, the assassin of President Car - :ant, gives a dramatic account of how he assassinated his victim. "I saw the car- riage approach, surrounded by some offi- cers on horsebe en.. A q the last one of these passed before me I unbuttoned my coat. The dagger—I had it in an inner side pocket at the right side—had the hilt upward, and I took it in my left hand. As I pushed a couple of boys aside I took it in my right hand, while I, unobserved, let the sheath fall. Quickly but without any leap 1 turned toward the President. I held to the carriage with my left hand and with the right I drove the dagger to th.e hilt into the breast of Mr. Carnot. As I struck I cried out—I don't know if it was lona or not—'Hurrah for an- archy As soon as I had stabbed him I drew myself back. Then, as I noticed that nobody seized me, and nobody seem- ed to realize what I had done, I ran alongside the carriage and passed the horses, and once more—this time very loud --yelled 'Hurrah for anarchy!' This yell was heard by the police. I tried to break through the crowd. of men and Women, but they would not let me pass, and a moment after the police had hold of me." Mr. Gladstone, despite the eye trouble With which he is afflicted, devotes maeh of his time to literary work of varied eharaeter. The latest published work from his pen is an article on heresy and schism in the modern ehurch, which ap- pears in The Nineteenth Century . Among many other things, the distinguished writer says that the evidence which in the days of the Apostles condemned her- esy and schism has been greatly dark- ened and weakened in the course of cen- turies. Tho rupture between the eastern and western churches was widened by the dogma of papal infallibility, which was announced in 1870. The neforraae. tion has undergone mutation, but the sects and 'Artie§ have Settled down and Protestantism remains a hard, inintpugn. able, intractable and indigestible fact. vitality, Continuing, Mr, Gladstone says that the English national church has seemingly . left to the a' on-conforniiste the ehanopioning of the Christian side o' polities. Had the question depended on sentiment the national extinction of slavery would not have been enacted as early as 1888. In conclusion Mi., Glad- stone recommends that the churches re- adjust their ideas and examine their common interests,holding firm to the earthward extremity of the chain, the other end of while lie about the feet of God Items of Interest. twenty years Canada has had but 116 In ' divorces. A. stinted. wife can find a vest .pocketin the dark. Worn out billiard balls are usually out up into dice. It takes 70,000 insects to make one pound of cochineal. Asphalt is taken from a lake of pitch on the island of Trinidad. A machine bas been invented to count dust particles in the air, Mount Blanc (17,781) is mostly within the French boundary -line, It would take sound 14 years to travel from the sun to the earth. In South America rain frequently falls in torrents from a clear sky. It has only once snowed in San Diego, Cal., in the memory of man. The British nation has £100,000,000 invested in American railways. There ate as many different dialeets spoken in China as in all Europe. The unexplored area of Canada is esti- mated at 1,000,000 square miles. Ninety-seven out of every hundred Arc- tic explorers have returned alive. The largest American city park is Fair- mount, at Philadelphia, 2,740 acres. A. wave of thought would require about a minute to traverse a mile of nerve. In China, when a pupil is reciting his lesson, he turns his back to his teacher. Vegetarians claim that hair grows less uxuriantly on the heads of meat -eaters. A voyage around the world, travelling first-class, costs something over $2,500. Tin plate was ma,ntfactured in England and on the continent as early as 1507. The greatest inland sea is the Caspian, which is 700 miles long by 270 in width. Giraffes are almost priceless since the Dervishes have occupied the Upper Nile. A single nerve, the pneumogastric, sup- plies the heart, lungs, stomach and bowels. There are eight edible and twelve poison- ous varieties of mushrooms in the United States. Fifty-one metals are now known to ex- ist. Three centuries ago only seven were known. Some scientists consider sugar the piln- cipal factor in the production of muscular energy. Sparrows have so much curiosity they will gaze in mirrors by the hour if not disturbed. A. certain sign of death is when the temperature of the body in the armpit is 6S degrees. For every four shillings spent in Brit- ain on drink only a halfpenny is expen- ded on education. Bicycles fitted with pneumatic tires are frequently ridden 5,000 miles with.outth.e tires being punctured. The metals which have been proved to exist in the sun are iron, sodium, nickel, copper, zinc and marium. The gnat is provided with a regular set of lancets and a cupping glass from which the air can be withdrawn. The huge guns of modern navies can only be fired about seventy-five times, when they are worn out. Returns show that 16 persons in 1,000 who are confined to lunatic asylums have been made insane by love affairs. The making of lueifer matehes is a state monopoly in France, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Greece, Roumania and Servia. It is a disputed. question among scion- tists as to which is the most fatiguing, walking up hill or 'walking down hill. It has been calculated that there are at least some twenty thousand proverbs cir- culating among European nations alone. In Paris, when a local shopkeeper ad- vertises to sell " at cost," he has to keep his word, or the Government knows why. A. Spanish musician has devised a sys- tem of musical notation by which the sharp and flat system is done away with. An explosive with power equal to that of high grade dynamite is being made in Germany from a preparation of common hemp. Water alone has been known to sustain life fifty-five days. If only dry food were taken death would result in a quarter of that time. In what are called looming mirages' distant objects show an apparent extrava- gant increase in height without alteration in breadth. A check for 25,833,650 on the Bank of England, in payment for the Kimberley diamond mines, is said to be the largest ever drawn. A. girl died at a Berlin hospital from blood poisoning caused by the light blue tunic of her soldier sweetheart touching a scratch on her axm. Doctors say that there is a small gan- glion in the throat that has control of the muscles of that region and acts very much like a true brain. The oldest architectural ruins in the world are believed to be the rock cut temples of Ipsambul, on the left bank of the Nile, in Nubia. There are over three thoueand ancient towers in Sardinia, the object of which no one, from Aristotle down, has ever been able to determine. Tior over sixty years Rev. William Mays of Perryville Hy., has been preach. ing the gospel and 'has never accepted a dollar for his SerVides, The velocity of the earth's rotation on •its axis at the equator is fourteen hundred and forty feet per seeeind, or nearly twen- ty-five thousand miles:et, day. Termites have five different classes of society Workers, sentinels, Soldiers, males, females. Of the last two classes there is only one each in every nest. A scientist claims to have discovered that the eye of man is linninons to the extent that one man, in total clavicles. can See the movement of his arm by the light of his oaen eyes, Colonel Tod, in. his History of India,' says: The sacrifice of the horse is the Most imposing and the earliest heathenish rite on record, and was dedicated to the has spread in Ancierida with the Saint, Still ill India." Thousande of Feeea and Afiddle „dyed hien are annually swept to a prereaturegrave through early indiscretion and later excesses. Self alms° and Constitutional Blood Diseasee bare ruined tr.d wrecked the life of many a promising you men. Have you any of the fel lowing Symptoms; Nervous and Deepondeut; Tired in .rrangiho Ambi- tion;_11lemory Poor; Fatah" 1"atimied; Excite)* arid Irritable; Eyes Blur; Pimples on the Pace; Diem= and Drains at Night; Heatless; Haggard Looking; Bloteheet Bore Throat; Hair Lease; Pains in Body; Sunken Eyes; Lifeless; Distrustful and Lack of Enerzy and Strength. Our Yew efeteed Treatment will build you up mentally, libleicallY and sexually. ()has. Patterson, Read nn0 KENNEDY 86 KERGAN Have What U11101 Dane. "At 14 years of age I learned a bad habit which almost rained me. I became nervous and weak. My back troubled me. I could stand 110 exertion. Head and eyes became dull. Dreams and drains at night weakened me. I tried seven Medical Firnia, Elec- tric Belts, Patent Medic:Wee and Family Doctors. They gave me no help. A friend advised me totry Drs, Kennedy Bc Horgan. They V...". sent me one month's treatment and it cured me, I could feel , iae., :el myself gaining every day. 7'heir New Method Treatment cures when Curod m une ul'uth all else fails." They have cured many of my friends." Dr. Moulton, MU MEE NI ME ETIM. " Bome 8 years ago / contracted a serious constitutional blood diene. 1 went to Hot Springs to treat forsyphilis. Mercury almost Mlle(' me. After a while the symptoms again appeared. Throat became sere, pains 1 limbs, pimples 0a face, blotches, eyes red, loss of hair, glands enlaeged, eta, A medical friend advised Drs. Kennedy & Kergan's New Method Treatment, It eared me, and I have had no symptoms for five years. 1 am married and happy. eea doetor, I heartily raceme= it to all who have this terrible disease— Caren a yew.. ago, syphilis." it will eradicate the poison from the blood." Tmvnsend. 15 YEARS IN DETROIT, 150,000 COED. am SS years of age, and married. When young I led a f-,. gay life. Early indiscretions and later excesses made trouble for me. I became weak and nervous. My kidneys became i,..0 affected and I feared Bright's disease. Married lif • was =satis- factory =limy home unhappy. I tried everything—all failed till )0'iti.., 1 took treatment ,from Drs. Kennedy and Kergan. Their New Ir, _._...,,\ Z...._:.::: Method. built me up mentally, physically and. sexually. I feel Iwo. ... and act like a man in every respect. Try them." :-:- - • icr" No Names Used Without Written Consent of Patient. Cured im. tune. never fails in curing Diseases of neer. Our New Method Treatment It strengthens the body, stops all drains and losses, purifies the blood, clears the brain, builds up the nervous and sexual systems and restores lost vitality to the body. We Guarantee to Cure Nervous Debilitty, Paiiiing manuonsi, Syphilis, V aricocele, atrieture,Gleet,Uttuatu.ral otscharges, Wealc parts and all Kidney and Bladder utseases. REMEMBER Drs. Kennedy & Kergan aro the leading specialists of America. They guarantee to cure or no pay. Their repo- tation and fifteen yeara of business are at stake. Yoa run no risk. Write them for an honest opinion, no matter who treated. yon. It may save yon years of regret and suffering. Charges reasonable. Write for a Question List and Book Free. Consultation Free. DRSKENNEDY&KERGAN 148 Shelby St. Detroit, Mich. . . ..., aa, eye": "e • T., •'•!1 14'. = .. for infants and Children. (171-iE,EVS Do You Know that Paregoric, Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, mons so-called Soothing Syrups, and most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine? Do You Kumar that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons? Do You MIOVT that in MOS countries drugzists are not permitted to sell narcotics without labeling them poisons? o l'"eet 'Know that you should not permit any medicine to be given your child unless you or your physician =ow of what 11 18 composed Do You Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of its ingredients is published with every bottle? Do Ye, -7. Know that Castoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher. That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than of all abler remedies for children combined Do You Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word "Castoria" and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense I Do You Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protectionwas because Castoriahad been proven to be absolutely harmless? Do You Know that 35 average doses of Castoria, are furnished for 35 cents, or one cent a dose ? Do 'You Know that when possessed of this perfect 7c= children may be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest? •Lhese things are worth knowing. They are facts. The lac -simile f3,ignailare ef is en every wrapper. lee4.'4/ GW.Selren Cry for Pitch r's Caotoriae • aeaatflee atatta al a +. LAKEIIURST SANITARIUM, THE MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY FOR MAN OR BEAST. Certain 1,i its effects and never blisters. • Reed. proofs below KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE Npratig.oirr, let, :re Jan. 18,1804. preattjanKletit—I bought a s3lendid bay horse some time ago with a Spa.vink got litre for ego, I used iellisdiag,:vgptrin cure. The ti(eitvin is gone now 1 only had hgunreefveAlg,60sof°11.got $125:AfnorsDT.Ir the same horse. $2 worth otroKutdtarlul'isi,Spavin Curley% S. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE Dr. B. J. Kettnext. co.SEIErar' Man" 1::)`35. 14' 18.88. Sirs—I have used your Kendall's Spavin Cure With good success for Curbs on two torsos and It IS the best Liniment I have ever used. Yours truly, Aueosr Paserannt. Prise .1 per Bottle. Per Sale by all Drtiggists, or address be. REIVDAZT, slyeeeunam rALLs, VT. 1WLEcTItie lilOTOUS from One-half nettle -LA Power up to Mecca Horse Power. Write for prlees, stating power ?catered, voltage et cuttent te he used. and whether supplied by Street ca line or otherwise. TORO.IsITO, TYPt Toronto and Winnipeg .•11 ;W:$'• • fq, <K,se OAKVILLE. ONT. For the treatment and cure of ALCOHOLISM, T101 MORPHINE HABIT, TOBACCO HABIT. AND NERVOUS DISEASES The system employed at this iiastitutiou is the famous Double Chloride of Gold System. Through its agency over 200a, 000 Slaves to the use of these poisons have been emancipated in the last fourteen years. Lakeliurst Sanita,riura is the oldest Institution of its kind in Canada and lase a well-earned reputation town intain itt We line of modisine, Li its whole history there is not an instance of any after Mr effects from the treatment, Hundreds of happy homes in all parte of the Dominion bear eloquent witness to the effioey of a course of treatment with us. Vor teriAti arid lull intormatiou write SEORIIITARY, 28 Bank of Commerce Marabous, Toronto, Ont.