HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-10-18, Page 5Broken. hi Health.
That Tired Feeiing, Constipation
and Pain in the Back
Appetite and Health Restored by
Hood's Sarsaparilla.
k
Mr. Chas. Steele
S. Catherine's, Ont.
"C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
"Tor a number of years I have been troubled
with a general tired feeling, shortness of breath,
pain in the back, and constipation. I could get
only little rest at night on account of the pain,
and had no appetite whatever. I was that tired
in my limbs that I gave out before half the day
was gone. I tried, a great number of so-called
blood purifiers, but with no good results. I was
also under the care of several doctors. Fre-
quently I,tad such bad spells that 1 had to be
Brought Homo from Work
during the day and have a doctor called in, but
did not get any permanent relief from any
source until, upon recommendation of a friend,
I purchased a, "bottle of Ilood's Sarsaparilla,
which made me feel better at once. I have con-
tinued its use, having taken three bottles, and
Feel Like a Flew ,,.Ban.
I have a good appetite, feel as strong as ever I
did, and enjoy perfect rest at ni;ht. I have
much pleasure in recommending Hood's Sarsa-
parilla." CHARLES STriELE, with Erie Pre-
serving Co., St. Catherine's, Ontario.
Headache and impure Blood
Hood's Sarsaparilla Quickly Cured.
"C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.:
"About a year ago Iliad an attack of the grip,
followed by a eoutinuect headache a; t dizzi-
ness. And shortly after this my face broke out
In blotches like ring worm:. s tried numerous
medicines to see what they would do for me,
but never found anything to take effect until, at
411 last, I thoneht I would give Hooch's Sarsaparilla
a trial. Ipurchased ono bottle which soon took
effect for the better, and by the time I had taken
Sarsaparilla
half the bottle the headache had ceased and the
blotches had all left my face. I have never felt
better than I do now, and I think Hood's Sarsa-
parilla the best blood purifier on the market
and readily recommend it to anyone in need of
Km same." Miss Louisa Lorre, Kelly's Com-
mercial House, Cul -de -Sac Street. Quebec, P. Q.
Hood's Pills are prompt and efficient, yet
easy in action. Sold by all druggists. 28c.
The Paris Martin publishes an inter
view with Dir. Campbell -Bannerman,
British Secretary of war, in which hr,
is reported as saying that war between
England and France is out of the ques-
tion. •
•Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is the
Best. Easiest to Use. and Cheapest.
Sold by druggists or sent by mail,
50c Lt T. Hazeltine. Warren, Pa.
Frederick Turner, a member of a
leading family of New Westtnitister, B.
C., is dviug from a knife wound in
• flitted on him by Gracie Irwin, with
whom he had been living.
lit;erilec$n Six lronre.
Distressing Kidney and Bladder di
seases rttlieyed in six hours by the
"NlnW GREAT SOUTH AMERICAN. KID-
NEY CURD." This new remedy is a
great surprise find delightto physic
sans on account of its exceeding
promptness in relieving pain iu the
bladder, kidneys, back and every part
of the urinary" passages in male or. fe
male. It removes retention of water
and pain in paesing it almost immed•
lately. If you want quick relief and
cure this is your remedy. Sold by C.
Lutz, Druggist.
Senator Hill .opened the., campaign
for the governorship of New York state
at Syracause lase night. From re•
marks which he made it would seem
that the . P. A. movement is to be
one of the issues in the comiq • contest.
ALL MEN
Young, old or middle-aged, who find
themselves nervous, weak. 'and ex-,
dausted, who are brok,en down from
excess or overwork, resulting in many'
of the following symptoms: Mental
depression; 'premature old age, loss of
vitality, loss,of memory, bad dreams,
Slimness of sight, palpitation , of the
heart, entissloes, lack of energy, train
I in the kidneys, headaches, pimples in
t the face and body, itching or peculiar
sensation about the scrotum, wasting
of the oagans, dizziness, specks before
' the eyes, twitching of the Inusbles, ey'e
lids, and elsewhere. bashfulness, depos-
its in the urine, loss of will -power, ten
clerness of the scalp and spine, weak
and 'flabby muscles, desire to sleep,
failure to be rested by sleep, constipa
tion„ dullness of hearing, loss of voice,
'desire' for solitude. excitability of tem-
per, sunken eyes, surrounded with
IsteMonst CTTtUL7i1S, oily looking skin,
ete., are all symptoms of nervous debil-
ity that lend to usanity ....less cured,
The spring of vital force having lost
its tension every fniictinn wanes in
consd'q en ve Those tvho thtough
abuse, committed le ignorance, may
beiertnalyd'.n 1i Cirfe'd, Send your ad
•dr'�ss for hook on diseases pe•enilar to
man sent fire, sealed, .Andress Ni. V.
LTIl3()1% 24 !Iacdonnel Ave., Toronto
Ont,
False statemos.
AWAY VPITH THEM
It is Only the Direr of
Truth that Moves the
Great world.
Statements Made In Favor of
PaiNe's Celery Compound
Always Ring With
Honesty.
A Marvellous Cure in
Virden, Manitoba.
A Minister of the Gospel can
Endorse the Testimony.
False statements, like counterfeit
coin, for a time will pass current and
undetected,
The false statements mads in con-
nection with a host of common medi-
cines ha vti duped and disappointed
thonsauds of our suffering people iu
the past, and at the present time there
are many whu aro being deceived from
day to day. These worthless at d de-
ceptive medicines, with all their false
assertions about curing disease, are
now beiug posted on the black list in
all well -regulated communities, and
are carefully avoided and abhorred by
the wise and prudent.
It is only the powerful lever of truth
that can move intelligent communities
and peoples. This mighty lever is
Paine's Celery Compound, an agent
that has never had an equal in the his-
tory of medicine for the curing of sick
and diseased,
Every statement made in favor of
Paine's Celery Compound, rings out
with honesty and truth The letters of
testimony come from our own Canad-
ian people, whom doubters may inter-
view or write to for particulars.
Paine's Celery Compound has thous-
ands of records of victories over rheu-
matism, sciatica, neuralgia, dyspepsia,
nervousness, headaches, sleeplessness,
kidniey and liver troubles, general
weakness and lost vitality.
The marvellous cure of Mr. James
Leveruigtou, of Virden,Man.,by Panic's
Celery Compound, after the failures of
doctors and other agencies, should he
sufficient proof for all fair-minded men
and women who are honestly seeking
for health, strength new life.
Mr. Leverinrtou writes as follows
about his success with the world's best
medicine:—
"I think it my duty, without solicita-
tion from any oue, to write in the in-
terest of other sufferer•', and give you
a testimonial in favor of your (to rhe)
almost miraculous remedy, Paine's Cel-
ery Compound. For more than a year
I was suffering tom the agonizing
pains of sciatica; and after trying all
that medical skill could devise, and us-
ing many remedies, patent and other-
wise, I concluded to try the Hot Springs.
of Brett. I took the treatment thorori h
ly and carefully for six " weeks, and
came home at the end of that time
racked with pain and weighing 43
pounds less. At this juncture, when
hoPe had almost fled, I heard of Paiue's
Celery.Compouud. .It seemed suited to
My case, and I sent to my druggist,
Mr. J. W. Higginbotham, of this place,
and asked about it. He recommended
it to me, and I took a bottle. I soon
began to feel better and after taking a
second bottle I was a cured man and
threw away mybcrutchcs.
"I keep a bottle on hand in case of
any return of the eo.mp'aint. I am now
58 years old, and I feel as spry and
healthy and free from pain as I ever
did to my life. I was born in Norfolk
England, and came to Canada when
only three years old. I was brought
up in the township of Cornwall, Ontar-
io, and came to MaLitoba eight years
ago Have always been a farmer, and
am as able: t,o do hard work now as
ever I was.
"With a heart full of gratitude for
the benefits derived from the use of
your remedy, and a wish to influence
others who may suffer, I gladly and
freely indite this letter-
"Pey. Mr. Talbot, Methodist Minister.
of Elkhorn. can confirm my statements
and will dc' so if written to."
Vlr Higginbotham, the ' successful
and estreme:iy popular druggist of
Virden, vouehes for Mr. Leveriugtou's
statements, as 1111lows:—
"I have know.. Mr. Lea'eriugton fpr
two years or more, and can confirm
what he says in re;:'iu•d to his cure by
Paine's Celery Compound. Ever since
his cure he has been sounding its
praises, and he is a perfect enthusiast,
on the sub'Jent of Paine's CeleryCom-
pound. I believe hire to bo thorough-
ly reliable.
A BOON TO 1-J01dt,Jatllseg.—Orte bottle
of. English Spa,vitt Lit:'intent completely
removed at curb from my horse. I ,take
pleasure in recommending the remedy,
as 1 $Lets With mysterious promptness
hi thea vette-tea' from horses of hard, soft
or calloused iumps,blood spavhi,splints
curl's, swoons., stifles antd t prains
George Robb, farmer, Markham, Ont.
Sold by C. Lutz, Druggist,
INTERESTING PARAGRAPHS.
A carload of matches hes was ignited by
friction in transportation. and burned the
other day at Burgin, Ky.
The consumption of wine in Nimes,
France, averages 'a bottle a day for every
man, woman and child in the city.
Tile tensile strength of wrought iron
rods varies as .the square of the diameter.
A 1 -inch rod will support 7,000 pounds and
a 2 -inch rod 28,000 pounds.
The leaf of the cocoanut tree is nearly
thirty feet long. A single leaf of the para•
sol magnolia of Ceylon affords shade for
fifteen or twenty persons.
`1'rornsoe, in Norway, hits just celebrated
its 1,000th anniversary. In that time it has
grown from sixty people to 0,000. The in-
habitants are chiefly devoted to fishing.
The alligator does not attain his full
length until he is fifty years of age. When
one year old his length is about twelve
inches; at the age of fifteen he has grown
to two feet.
The cold is so intense in northern Siberia
that the earth never thaws to a greater
depth than five or six feet. Bodies buried
at a greater depth remain perpetually
frozen.
A railroad between Coalzacoaleos and
Salina Cruz, Mexico, which opens a new
means of transportation between the Gulf
of Mexico and the Pacific coast, has been
completed recently.
The pin machines of England, Holland
and Germany turn out an average of 67,-
000,000 phis for every work clay of the year.
At Birmingham one factory makes 80,000,-
000
0,000,000 pins per day.
QUEER ODDS AND ENDS.
The pope's animal income is $1,480,000.
Harriet Beecher Stowe was •born in 1811
instead of 1812, as given in numerous
biographies.
The first product of Bret Harte's pen, a
poem, was printed in the New York Atlas
when the author was eleven years old.
Since January last any one of the 71,000,-
000 population of Bengal can obtain a five -
grain dose of quinine at the nearest post
office for one farthing.
• A curious estimate comes from London.
It is that out of 1,000 men who marry 332
marry younger women, 579 starry women.
of the same age and 89 marry older women.
In certain districts of Sicily the industry
of gathering the threadlike substance
secreted by mussels is carried on. The
fiber thus obtained is used in the manus
sacture of silk.
A new scrubbing machine is whirled
over the floor like a lawn mower. It soaps,
wets, rubs and dries the floor, and two or
three movements of the machine make the
boards shine.
Herat, in Afghanistan, is the city which
has been most often destroyed. Fifty-sis
times have its walls been laid in ruins and
the same number of times have they been
erected again.
PICTURES AND PAINTERS.
Vanderbilt paid $75,000 for Rosa Bon.
heur's masterpiece, "The Horse Fair," now
in the Metropolitan museum in New York.
The artist herself received 55,000 for it,
The dowager duchess of Montrose has
decided to sell her. fine collection of pis
tures, which includes jeven important
works by Sir Joshua Reynolds, some
Gainsboroughs and Romneys, and some
choice examples of Sir F. Leighton, Land
seer and Morland.
The great Spanish painter, Federica
Maclrazo, who died recently in Madrid.
was the son of an arbist and was born at
Rome in the year of the battle of Water-
loo. For the past thirty-five years he had
been rector of the Royal gallery at Madrid.
Mrs. Leland Stanford is said to contem-
plate converting her San Francisco resid-
ence into a fine art gallery and inuseum
for the benefit of the public. The house
is big and the rooms on its lower floor are
so large and admirably arranged that but
little change Would be needed to adapt it
to such uses.
MULTUM IN PARVO.
Presence of mind is courage,—Byron.
Good reasons must, of force, give place
to better.—Shakespeare. '
A bad Christain will never make a good
Turk,—Turkish Proverb.
No man was ever written out of reputa-
tion but by himself. —Monk.
Peace is the first of necessities, and the
first: of glories. :Napoleon.
We should accustom ourselves to self-
denial and patient waiting.—Scott.
Repose and cheerfulness are the badge
of the gentleman—repose in energy.—
Emerson.
Man's rich with little were his judg-
ment
udgment true; nature is frugal, and her wants
are few. Young.
Overtaxing the mind is an unwise act;
when nature is unwilling, the labor is in
vain, -Seneca. •
Inclividuality is everywhere to be spared
and respected as the root of everything
good --Richter.
MULTUM IN PARVO.
Oratory, like' the drama, abhors lengthi-
ness.—Bulwer.
Fortune calls at the smiling gate:—Jap-
anese Proverb. :
Experience teaches slowly, and at the
cost of mistakes.—Froude.
Life not so short but that there' is al-
ways time for courtesy. --.Emerson,
The reward of one duty done is the
power to fulfill another. -'-George Eliot.
It is easy wheu we are in prosperity to
give advice to the afflicted.—rZisohylus.
He who can suppress a moment's anger
may:prevent a day of sorrow.—Anon.
Even from the body's purity the mind
receives a secret sympathetic aid.—Thom-
son.
Who seeks, and will not take when once
'tis offered, shall never find it more,-
Shakespeare.
Capacity without education is deplora-
ble, and education without capacity ie
thrown away.—Saadi,
CURIOUS FACTS.
The tusks of the largest Siberian mam-
moth ever dug up weighed 850 pounds,
The cubical extent of water in the ocean
is fourteen. times that of the land above
sea level.
The largest tree in, the worltl lies broken
and petrified at the end of a defile in
northwestern Nevada. It is said to be
606 feet long.
A. bat can absorb and digest in one night
threeti.mes the weight of its own body,
Bats never have more than two little onus
int a, time:
Prom one-eighth to three-quarters of a
cord of wood is required to start a Ate in a
locomotive furnace --rho latter amount
when had coal is used.
Iii. ftady the scnateconsists of princes of
royal blood and an unlimited number of
members appointed by the king for lffe.
In 1800 there were 855 member's,'
FACTS FOR FARMERS'
After a gear tree e is badly blighted it 'ie
useless to dtteriiiit to start. it, and the soon-
er the • as is used the less liability of dan-
ger to other trees.
Among the varieties of peat•s the Law-
rertee holds a high place, It is not so stab
lent to blight as some varieties and is late,
giving a crop after the bulk of the pears
haste been marketed.
'Well -cured cord fodder is more fully
digested than timothy hay, and 'is nutri-
tious and palatable. It is roasted, how-
ever, if left in the fields to be exposed to
rains; winds and frosts during the winter.
Though the price of dairy products is.
low, it is paid twelve times a year, .en-
abling the farmer to have cash for his par-
chases throughout the year, thereby .get-
ting the benefit of cash. prices, 'Fhisis one
great factor of dairying.
Experiments show that a grain of wheat
reproduces forty fold. Every pound should
bring forty. It therefore follows that
niuchi of our seed wheat is wasted when we
sow one and.oue-fourth bushels an acre
and get from ten to twenty.
The Virginia creeper is an excellent vine
for covering fences and outbuildings. The
plants should be cub down to the ground
when planted, that the young shoots may
cling as they grow. In the fall the foliage
becomes a brilliant red and yellow.
Excepting the golden rod, milkweed and
ragweed, all the rest of our weeds have
been imported. Those foreign are the
most troublesome and persistent, If it was
some one's duty to keep them from the
highways these pests would not travel so
fast.
DONT'S'OF DRESS,
Don't hold up silks and display rags.
Don't use pins where stitches would do.
Don't wear a sailor hat with a silk
dress.
• Don't wear striped material if you are
tall •
-
Don't Swear tan shoes if you have large
feet.
Don't wear a white petticoat unless it is
white.
Don't dress more fashionably than be
comingly.
Don't imagine that beauty will atone for
untidiness.
Don't buy common boots—they are not
economical.
Don't trim good material with common
trimmings.
Don't wear big sleeves and big hats it
you are short.
Don't expect great bargains to turn out
great savings.
Don't jump into your clothes and expect
to look dressed.
Don't dress your head at the expense of
your hands and feet.
Don't wear a fur or feather boa with a
cotton dress or shirt.
Don't wear feathers in your hat and
patches on your boots.
Don't achieve the grotesque while at
tempting the original.
Don't wear a sailor hat and blouse etc;
your fortieth birthday.
Don't pinch your waist. Fat, like mord'
er, will out—somewhere.
NEWSPAPER WAIFS.
-He—I should like to kiss you as often as
the ocean has drops. She—Which meant
—I'liegende Blotter.
"Papa," said Jack, as he gazed at his tea
cents—one week's allowance—"do you
know what I would do it I was an awful
rich king?" "No Jack. What?" "I'd in
crease my allowance to a quarter a week."
Young Housekeeper—Those soles 1
bought of you were not fresh. Fisherman
—Well, maim, that be your faalt—It bean's
mine. I've offered 'em yer every day thin
week, and yon might 'a 'ad 'em days be
fore if you'd 'a' liked!—Tit-Bits.
"Did Miss Chilton give you any en
couragement when you proposed to her?'"
"Not a great deal. 1 used every argument
Ieven went as far as to assure her of my
ability to support her in the style to which
she had been accustomed." "And what
diel she say?" "She said I )night call
around later and show her my income-tas
receipt,"—Washington Star,
FUNERAL ODDITIES.
Many tribes of the aborigines of this
country elevated the bodies of the dead on
poles.
The practice of burials in churches was
commonly discontinued in Franca about
1777.
"Death is an eternal sleep" is the fa
vorite epitaph above the doors of Russian;
tombs.
The Magi did not buy their cleaci„ but
left them to be devoured by birds of prey
or dogs.
Nero delivered a funeral oration at the
funeral of Poppeae, whom he had killed
with a kick. '
The putting of the body in mourning fm
the dead has been practiced by the people
of many nations.
QUEER LITTLE ONES.
•
Queen Victoria pays over 24,000 a year in
doctor's fees.
Worn out ivory billiard balls are usually
out up into dice.
• Alaska has a newspaper which is pub•
lished but once a year.
In Liverpool recently 150 temperance
sermons were preached on what was ob•
served as "Temperance Sunday."
The swell visiting card in China is an
oblong piece of red paper about four inches
wide and eightinches,long with the name
in black rubber,
It is said that it takes ten men to carry
the Emperor of China's umbrella. There
are many people in this country who have
more )nen than that carrying their um-
brellas.
GEMS OF THOUGHT -
The wavering mind is but a base pos-
session.—Euripides.
It is better to .fall among crows than
flatterers,-Antisth en es.
Nothing is more noble, nothing more
venerable than fidelity,—Cicero.
Noble desires, unless filled up with ac-
tion, axe but a shell of gold hollow within.
---Roscoe.
If I built my felicity upon my reputation
I am happy as long as the railer will give
rine leave." --South.
FEMININE FANCIES,..
.A very fine steel pen is best for marking
With indelible ink.
Brown is the most becoming color Inc a
blonde with fair skin arncd pale golden.
hair.
Repeated applications of alcohol will se -
Move status from any sott of white mater;
sal.
When you curl your bangs :first moisten,
the hair with bay rtnnl that will inflict) it
glossy and snake it stay in curl longer,
MIC 833 of Oxford 11801100,
THE MOST MODERN
2f
ATTRAOTIVE iiiiNGcS,
EVER PUT ON THE MARSET i
Our Patent Duplex Flue
Insures an oven that works
uniformly in all parts and is
perfectly ventilated.
The Fire Linings
P oeted by the draft from.
the Duplex Flue. Lasts
double the usual time.
A Peifect Stove
CLaraflad in ail respects.
MANUFACTURED BY . ,
The Gurney Foundry Co! L't'd Toronto Ont.
For sale by H. BISHOP & SON. Exeter.
Severe Pa.in in Shoulder 2 Years
Cured by"'the D.&L:'enthol Plaster.
My wife was afflicted for two years with a severe pain under the left shoulder end through to thl
heart ; after using many remedies without relief, she tried a " D.& L." Menthol Plaster, it did its work.
and owing to this Cure hundreds of these plasters have been sold by me here, giving equal salt,
J. B. SUTHERLAND Druggist, Rfver John, t.....
Sold Everywhere. 25C. each.
WOOD'S PRO P1iLODINE.
The Great English Remedy.
Six Packages Guaranteed to
promptly, and permanently
cure an forms of Nervous
Weakness.Emissions,Sperm•
atorrhea, impotency andel
effects of Abuse or Excesses,
Mental Worry. excessive use
Before and After. oyrobacco, Opiumor Stimu-
lents, which soon Zead to Xls-
grmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave.
IIas been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of
cases; is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine
known. Ask druggistfor Wood's Phospbodine; if
he offers some worthless medicine in place of this,
Inclose price in letter, and we will send by return
man Price, one package, 81; six, 55. One win
please, siva will cure. Pamphlets free to any address,
The Wood Company,
Windsor, Ont., Canada.
Sold in Exeter by 7. W. Browning, Druggist
Miss Frances E. Willard, world's
president of the W. C. T. U., is serious-
ly ill at Cineinati. Lady Somerset is
with her.
Beyond Coraparison.
.Are the good qualities possessed by
Hood's Sorsaparilla. Above all it puri
hes the blood, thus strengthening the
nerves; it regulates the digestive or-
gans, invigorates the kidneys and liver
tones ands up the entire system, cures
Scrofula. I)yspepsia, Catarrh and
Rhenmatism,Get Hood's and only
Hood's -
Hood's Pills cure a;1 liver ills, bilious-
ness, jaundice, indigestion, sick head-
ache.
Mr. John Laughlar, of Glenels•
township, war driving down a hill on
Wednesday night, when his team got
beyond control. He was thrown from
his waggon and killed.
Rheumatism Cared ifs a Day.
South American Rheumatic Cure, for
Rheumatism and Neuralgia, radically
cures in., 1 to 3 days. Its action upon
rhe system is remarkable and myster-
ious. It removes at once the eause
and the disease immediately disap-
pears. The first dose greatly beuetits.
25c. Sold by C. Lutz,Dr ug gist.
The United Cloak and Suit Cutters'
Union of New York, comprising 700
moll, rvent out on strike yesterday
morning in sympa`hy withe the cloak
makers.
THE MODEL WIFE
and DIAMOND DYES,
A model wife cau realize
Great benelits from :Diamond T)yes;
No matter what her family's size,
She dollars saves by Diamond Dyes;
She happy makes her children's' lives'
By using often Diamond Dyes;
Her home is brigh". as cloudless skies,
Because she uses Diamond Dyes:
All other brands she most despise,
When she can choose the Diamond Dyes;
Her faded dress she deftly tries
To renovate, with Diamond Dyes; [ties
Her hnsband's coats. vests. pants, and
Are soon renewed by Diamond Dyes;
At Fair this year she to..k the prize,
For goods dyed with the Diamond Dyes
She causes wonderand sttrprizn,
By tinting walls, with Diamond Dyes;
She with the artist often vies,
By coloring maps with Diamond Dyes;
She's economical and wise, [Dyes;
This comes through using Diamond
flood -nature sparkles in heo eves
Because she's helped by Diamond Dyes;
On those ?'rand colors she relies,
She knows the hest are Diamond Dyes.
The new steel bridge known as the
Gordon bridge, a mil ltorlh of Tren'
ton, was taken over from the contract-
or oa Wednesday,
Mr, Alf. M. Gustin, son of Dr Gostin
of St. Thomas, was married on Wed-'
nesday mottling in New York to Miss
Harriet M. Webb, the famous elocu-
tionist.
The by-law granting R bonus of
$225,000 to the Toronto, Ramilton and
Buffalo, R R. riomp:lily was c'trri.sd in
Hamilton yesterday by 2135 majority.
Far 4D ver ,Fifty a eatt•s.
AN OLD AIM 'tt:Lra-Tenzin Ri elms.—Mrs.
Winslow's Soo thing Syrup has been used
for over fifty years by millions of mothers
for their chilitren while teething, with per -
feet success. It soothes the child, softens
the gums, allay,' all pain, cares wind colic
and is the best remedy for Diarrhwa. is
pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists In.
every part cf the World. Twen ty- rva den is
e bottle. Its value is incalottlable. Be sure
and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup
and take no other kind
Miss Cate Black, daughter of Mr -
Neil Black, of Glonelg township was
killed in a runaway accident near
Dntrham on Wednesday night -
Davis' Pain-Killer.—The best and
most popular Family Medicine tit the
world. Ablessing to the rich; a friend
to the poor; within the leach of all, it'
has saved more lives and relieved more
suffering incidental to travelling than
any ether medicine. 25e. per. bottle
Iarge size. •
The operatives of five miles at New
Bedford, Mass., went back to wort: yes-
terday morning after a strike •lasting
for 7 1 2 weeks.
HEART DISEASE Et.LIEWSD IN 30
Miwu'ria.—.SII cases of ocgs. uic or sym.
pathetic heart disease relieved in 80
minutes and quickly cured, by Dr.
Aguew's Cure for the Hear,. One dose
eonvi.uces. Sold by C. Lutz, druggist.
In London, Out., coal has beeu pi11
rap from $2.25 to $5.80 per ton,
MTV,>1 i3ARr C'oi S5 sS tii.kititgiE
se ERS
sass
s ui ALjL H ESI r.aea )-t t H
tiled to cure ever;,.
tiainry,bvctsimply beae`.-
aol+e•o. ft, r them, ¢t
will Cost but. Pr cents
toforabox and they
;
herrn cirs.s,
a Thaw are net a n -a,
1
Ej
THE GREAT
BLOOD
17.5 R Ill Fl
forte roes
SARSAPARILLA
`f iiLA
CURES ALL.
Taints of the .l:•l.eo&
C 9.,: kid A A-1 1"i! 184
Per ryDavis' PAIN -KI LLE
NO OTHER MEDICINE ON EARTH is Co so effi Oatntadian
io,
Buy
Big 25c• cholera, Cramps, Chills, D.Larihcea, Dysentery, Cholera
Bottle D5arbus, Cholera Infantu= and ati. Bowel Complainto.
tMeaMiemaiss
.. r ALT, 'SHAMS the Business College Sham is the most to be desised. Not
:~ P
every institution 'dubbed $ttsirirsa (`allege is worthy of your Support, Yon
will in till likelihood take at 13usitic.es Course hut once, therefore, why not eek'et
a school that has earned a reputation for pra-ctical conscientious work. The
THE I711abi CITY BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND SCHOOL, OF LONDON
ON'1', stands head and shoulders above the average Canadian School-,
Graduates everywhere successful, Catalogue free, Address
J. W. WESTERVELT, Principal,