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Exeter Advocate, 1899-11-2, Page 68ubecribers who de not receive their paper ,:egalerly will please notify us at once. Cell at this .fifce for advertising, rata. TUE EXETER, ADVOCATE THURSDItY. NOVEMBER 2,1899. APHORISMS. The man who pardons easily courts injury. Good ordeh: is the foundation of all good things. Good rummers and good morals are "worn srieutds and fast allies. • Nothing dies so hard or rallies so letter as intolerance.. The jest loses its point when he who makes it is the first• to laugh. If a mau empties his purse into his head, no ogle eau reknit from Nina. To Tremble befene a:,lticipated evils is to temean what tiled hast never Leri. Toil Awl Pleasre. in their nature *pposities. a.re yet ugliest together in hind of+Fess: et 4'Q'alne ti;m. Fate neves w6Awi s move deeply•the _ erons i*eare, than when a block- head's ii;yukF :o`,n e he chart, • The bet portion of a goad man's life is Ws little, nalli,eless, uneemene. leered act cif kindness and of love. R is wily an error in judgment to xaake a mistake, hat it shows uiilrni- sty of character to adhere. to it whets discovererh. He who ie not lateral with what he hen does ]tett deceive Himself when he thinks: he would be liberal if he had more. "tickle's Ata %unap ic'erupstand s *tattle I eel of the list fee all tie:eases cif The threat arcs ae sac,. It acts Pole inn ;;c in breniaa.; rift a coat. A cough is ,,em •seztele d `gt nese of the t'ee--ierelieved, evens tbe wonat anee cons'anipTion lS rig• *loved. nuts :c zn re, c iF cases n eaa.y be said I eeet is f gal I a linnet« c;tae sate. peree teen dee aetive r*r tet sen e, ter v'he'alea at towered a.'^iadv ee. i' h i D .a 4 :ala Q)o d - pent3ea heal ter :AU putt neefury Idea- Dlaimee 1Lrate Ltfalortunw. The Prrin e o < 'iC'n'1ee, while sboot- ing ill Auetri:a, eaueed telaperary trouble anti intim a;edy made the for- tune of the nearest ladies' tailor, by stilluletil:r time all ladies receiving invitations to sheer with him should tonne ill correct shooting costumes. This. in Austria. consists of a short ekul eol nlng Leif waybetween the knees and ankle and a short, tight- fitting jaciiet, with waist -coat of an- other calor, boots of brown leather and a Tyrolese hat with a feather. None of the ladies had just these clothes at hand, and the tailor had to double his force to supply them. linard's Liniment Cures Carget in Cows. Annaal Temperance Sermon. The committee of the Manchester, Salford and Distriet Temperance Unions of England have decided to establish an annual temperance ser- mon, to be delivered each year in Manchester by prominent ministers of .afferent denominations. The tom- saittee propose to inaugurate this new movement on Sunday. November 12, when Rev. Dr. Maeltennal, of Bow- den, president of the National. Free Church Council, will deliver the ser- mon. Some others may be gond. but without doubt killer's Compound Iron Pills are she best. Lanky charm. • Among superstitious ' people few charms are held to be more potent than the pen with which the reprieve of a person condemned to death has been signed. Two great singers are said to possess the talisman, says the London Graphc. Mme, Adelina Patti was presented with such a pen by the old Queen Isabella of Spain, but Hina de Murska, the other lucky singer, had to give 500 guineas for her speci- men. The never failing medicine, Holloway's Corn Cnre, removes all kinds of corns, warts, etc. ; even the most difficult to re - ,move cannot withstand this wonderful itemedy. . True Devotion. "Miss Cayenne," said Willie Wish- blgton, "you are always laughing at me." "That's very true. I'll try to quit, If it annoys you." "It doesn't annoy me. I am con- tent to sit perfectly silent and let you laugh at me ever since I heard yon say there was nothing you were fon- der of than something real fanny." Health fox the children. Miller's 'Worm Powders. Feared for His Liberty. "I believe," he said, thoughtfully, 'that Miss Jenkins intends to marry me." "What makes you think so'?' "I asked her to go to church with ',fare, and she wanted to know if we eonldn't just as well go to the minis- ler's house." A newback for 50 cents. Miller's liCidney Pills and Plaster. Touchers. Madge—Do you believe her stories about all the conquests she made lest summer? Marjorie—Well, she showed me .the rings. A Machine Combination. A steamer trunk haft been patented, -which, being air tight, may be attach- asd to the waist' belt in an ermsrgenoy ;hind used as a life preserve. mow. iIOi1\GS OF THE WEEK ITEMS OF INTEREST FROM AROUND THE. WORLD Pruned, )punctuated and rreser'veid in Pithy P ra;,.raphe for the Perusal of Practical People — Personal, 1'oUtsoal anti I'rootabie. I nivLASSIFI1xD. Thanksgiving; clay was thoroughly enoyed by Canadians on Thursday. The statement that the bubonio plague is raging at Sautos, T3razfl. is otiicially conernted. Tlie Elder -Dempster Company have figaftt been is arded the contract for carrying the British mails this win- ter. hnlalipox is spreading so rapidly as to alarm the health authorities all over Texas. Every part of the state has laze disease in virulent form. Minto House, the ltoxburghshire family seat' of the Earl of Minto, has been let for four years to Mr. Bell Irvine. with extensive low -ground Stem sings, La leetrie announces that the mail contracts may be divided with th Aliens. and Mr. Andrew A. Allan left for Ottawa an Thursday. in comet: - ;ion with the wai.'ter. Copt. Angus Macaulay of South- a"ulpton has received the appointments as captain of the Government patrol boat Gilphie. He has /tad 30 years' experience as a sailor en Lake Erie end Georgian Bay, Au the Hauulton Assizes on Friday Robert Beattiee got a ver let against. the Haniiltop Brass Manufat luring Company for $800 d;iruages and cetera for the loss of his right t'ye. tins uas R workman in the employ of the fri'l'ls. rase ;Title Iteleraf»e hturray'a platting mill at Winnipeg was destroyed by fire early on Thursday. Loss $12,000. Friday morning the barns of Mr. Axford, a farmer living about a mile and a half south of Delhi, were burn- ed, The contents were nearly all burned. including one nuere and colt. machinery and all this season's crops. The less is estimated at tsltslut Sl.000. Boy playing with matches around the straw stack was the c Luse. TUE fE etdeo :s neonate tip to the present the donations tar tEsti ;SlFdtlac xlist Twentieth Century Fund Laysi reached S aa8,IG7. Five hundred and sixteen additional salltscriptions have been sent into the l'resltyierien Century Fund. They total 5;74.783- St. .:r3,St. Mary's Cathedral. .liulifsx, the nit,.t imposing itou'an do thole: ;di- lff a flee is Ii 1 t a ax, aA n, been declared free of debt, errs en l hursdal. r,,n- aeerated with impressive ceremonies, conducted by Archbishop O'Brien. Pt'REL.], The Cologne Zeitung announces offi- cially that Emperor William will start for England on Nov. 11. Admiral Dewey, on the advice of his physician, has cancelled the dates far his visits to Philadelphia and to Atlanta, .and will accept no more in- vitations of this sort before next spring. THE Bt3SINESS WORLD, A consolidation of all the chocolate and cocoa manufacturers of the "Un- ited States and Canada is now in process of formation. The official announcement will al- most beyond doubt be made in a short time that the Pullman Palace. Car Company and the Wagner I'uhuce Car Company have effected an agree- ment of consolidation. Tho Wagner Company, it is stated, will go out of business on Dec. 31, 1899. Telephones pay in British Colum- bia. The British Columbia Company, which runs the system of Vancouver, Victoria, New Westminster, Rossland, Nelson, Vernon, in fact, nearly all the towns, has just issued its first report at Huddersfield, Yorkshire. The amount shows a profit of nearly $20,000. SPORTING. The Ontario Curling Association met in Toronto on Wednesday, set- tled the grouping of clubs for this Tankard, and elected officers. POLITICS—FOREIGN. The latest aspirants for recipro- city arrangements with the United States are the British Islands of St. Kitts and Turks Island, in the West Indies. The Austrian Reichsrath re -assem- bled on Wednesday with a full at- tendance. Dr. Von Fuchs was re- elected President. The House then proceeded with the work of organiza- tion. The North China Daily News says the arrangements for the dethrone-. ment of the Emperor of China are proceeding rapidly. His successor has been definitely chosen. It is Pu Tsuan, the nine-year-old son cf Tsai Lan. Pu is a Manchurian. FOR MEN OF WAR. $860 have already been sent in to the Canadian Red Cross Fund for the purchase of medical comforts for the Canadian contingent. The sham fight was the chief feat- ure of Thanksgiving Day in Toronto, and t'he soldier boys and their thou- sands of friends were greatly inter- ested in it. Tne word Boer Is Dutch for farm- er. It is akin to the Anglo-Saxon Gebur, a countryman. It is applied especially to the Dutch colonists in South Africa. Hugh John Macdonald has declined I the offer to command the western contingent for the Transvaal. His political friends would not listen to his going. However, his own inclina- tions run strongly in the direction of going to the front. General Castro's troops are begin- ning to arrive in Caracas. Victor Rodsreriquez is acting President. All the public buildings, including the Ministerial offices and the banks, as well as most of the private resi- dences, are closets. The city is quiet and orderly. General Otis has received messages purporting to come from the insur gent general, Pio del Pilar, offering to sell out his army and to deliver Aguinaldo into the hands of t71e Am- ericans. $800,000 will buy •him, but Gen. Otis is not satisfied that he would or could carry out his bar- gain, and maintains his policy of not ify-ing surrenders. THE AGRICIJLTURAL WOYt.,v. Sir Charles Tupper opened the Woodbridge Fair on Thursday with a great non-political speech, The food supplies required by England formed an interesting portion of the enter- tainulen t. CASUALTIES.. The hospital at Segue La Gra de, Havana. collapsed on Saturday, hav- ing been undermined by floods from tilheavy rains. Of the 42 ingrates, 4 werekilled and 27 injur- ed. Saturday eveningg, while out on the Hamilton marsh ducat shooting, Na- pier Stewart was shot, 'The charge struck .hire in the face and shoulder, and he Is in a dangerous condition in S. Joseph's Hospital. Four sheep herders are known to be dead and probably eight more perish- ed in. Telon County, Montana, in the recent storm, There are two parties in the mountains, including ladies, who have not been heard from. One man was killed and four were seriously injured, and a woman died from shock, as the result of an ac- cident in the Brooklyn Elevated rail- way on Saturday morning. They were thrown to the pavement e5 feet below. The Canadian steamer Erin and consort, Danforth, mistook the range at the head of the Sault Ste. Mario canal Friday night, tend ran on the reeks at the head of the rapids. Both boats will have to lighter before they coli be released. john Shultz of Tortmto Tunction was struck by a. C.P.R. train on Fri- diey and get off with a bad scalp wound, s, cut across the eye, bruised elbow and injured hip. besides other minor cuts and bruises. The handcart he was wheeling was •smashed to sttomli. Mrs, Maldgett and Mtn, Heil, wives of two farmers who nankin near Il- ton, were tasking butter and eggs to market. on Saturday morning, when. a G.T.R. engine struck the hind wheels of the wagon tend hurled the women and contents .of the wagon Into the ditch. The wagon wee a complete wreck, hut the women es- caped unhurt. THE SPARE CHAMBER. Sane U.00 loattnnat of Dy cane Days,. Raw Poeta Were Made. We have no spare chamber. I have been troubled about it for a long while, kesterdy it occurred to me that the 33rowets have no spare chamber, either, nor the Robinsons, nor the Stuyvesants, and I am more troubled than ever. The decadence of the spare cham- ber strikes deep. It is the concrete difference between past and present. The spare chamber meant e. room in the house set apart from common life, dedicated to the higher nature. The fatally might have only three chambers -one of these was sacred. The feather bed rose plump and im- pregnable in its recesses. The green paper shades shut out all but a chink of light, the cane seat Chairs stood stiff against the wail, and clean straw rustled under the taut "store carpet." Tho stimulus to the imagination alone was worth three times the amount of cubic space the spare chamber occupied. You tip- toed in. Mother's best bonnet lay on the middle of the bed. Some- times a huge Ioaf of fruit cake sat elegantly 1n one of the chairs. There was always something re- served in the days of the spare chamber—fruit cake and bonnets. People had best clothes. They worn them on spare days. Sunday was a spare day, You knew that it was Sunday. Grandfather shaved. (When grandfathers shave every day, what is left for tha seventh?) There was a hush about the house. As the day wore on it deepened; the whole farm lay under its warm, sleepy spell— all but the irrepressible hen. The cheerful cackle lingers still, the most irreverent thing in memory. She worked seven days in the week and talked about it. The very silence waited to hear and condemn. Amid trolley cars, and bicycle bells, and children playing, and the Salvation Army drum, the cackle dies away in- to a harmless whisper. There was spare time then. Peo- ple made visits—not anxious, crowd- ed hurried calls, but good old-fash- ioned visits. The carryall was wash- ed and oiled. Old Flora was care- fully combed and brushed by grand- father, and then grandfather was brushed and combed by grand- mother. Aunt Clara packed the lun- cheon in a big basket. There was al- ways a spare cricket to fit in front for small folk, with a good view of Flora's haunches going uphill, and a wide sweep of country going down. The journey was leisurely, but full of wild excitements. There was the dangerous railroad crossing, where grandfather always got out, rods', ahead, and walked cautiously across, looking two ways at once. The rest of us rode boldly over, with a fair feeling of risk. Grandfather used to crack the whip in defiance of danger. There was the covered bridges, too. Old Flora's hoofs echoed in then and repeated the trampling of armies. The loose boards rattling under- neath held the child on the cricket breathless. Times have changed. Now we speed swiftly over gaudy open bridges, and the legend,.. "No faster than a walk" looks grimly down from either end. We had a spare chamber at first. When the baby came we turned it into a nursery. We cleared out a store room for the nurse and used the little back room for a drying room. Grandmother, when her first baby came, took it into her own bed. When another baby came to crowd it out there was the trundle bed that stood under the big bed all day and rolled out at night with a sleepy runibie. And when more babies still came to crowd the trun- ble bed the first baby, a big boy, six years now, had a fed made for him at the head of he back stairs, or up garret, under the sloping eaves. The rain lulled hint to sleep, and the snow drifted in sometimes. In the spare chamber the Lig hed loomed untouched.It hovered in his dreams,. a presence not to be put by. The snow, the rain, the ,.stars, and the spare chamber made a poet of him. We have no poets now. SIIOEIAKER'S STORY. Tweed Shoemaker Who States Re Was Cured of Backache by Dodd's Kidney Pills.. No Beason to Doubt It—He is But One of a Thousand—Dodds Kidney Pills Always Cure Backache. Tweed, Oct. 23.—Thereis a shoe- maker in this town who is one among the thousands who have been cured of Backache by- Dodd's Kidney Pills. The shoemaker's work sitting bent over the bench or last all day is na- turally a strain on the back, but that of itself is never the cause of the real, Backache. Backache of the genuine- ly painful and distressing kind is caused by disorder of the kidneys, In fact the ache or pain is situated di- rectly in the kidneys as the sufferer will find if lie tries to rub the pain away with liniments as he would were it a mere stiffness of the mus- Iles. Mr.W. S. Busby, of Tweed, thought his case was of the latter 'kind. He bore with it for years, thinking it in- separable from his work. Finally, however, the found his mistake. He writes:— "I have long been troubled with severe pains in ray back, and I always tbonght that the cause was from my constant work on the benoh. I foaled out my kidneys were affected and once I was certain of that I resorted to Dodd's Kidney Pills, I am happy to say three boxes left me clear of Backache. I canhighly recommend them to any person afflicted with that form of Kidney Disease." Teach Children to Read. A mother Should take great pains to teaebher children to read aloud aeeeptably. Muck time and money are, often expended in ealtivating the voice for singing, and yet quite as Inuoh pleasure may be given by the person who reads aloud in a pleasing manner. %To attetupt need be made at elocution as the word is ordinarily understood; distinct utterance and proper emphasis so as to convey easily to the hearer the meaning of the sen- tences read are all that is necessary. -Ladies' Home Journal. Not a Nauseating Pill.—Tho excipient of a pill Is the substance which enfolds the ingredients and intakes up the pill mass. Tbat of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills is so compounded as to preserve their moisture, and they can be carried into any latitude without impairing their strength. Many ,pills, in order to keep them from ad- hering, are rolled hi powders, which prove nauseatiug to the taste. Parmelee's Vege- table Pills are so prepared that they are agreeable to the most delicate. The Caro of Oak Furniture, Oak furniture is bettor for being rubbed with linseed oil, in which some alkanet root has been steeped, and then brushed with a brush stiff enough to got into every crevice of the carving. Ordinarily an applica- tion of beeswax and polishing cloths is sufficient, but the oil and the root preserve the wood. and keep the fur- niture in excellent color and appear- ance. The tilne-honored beeswax and turpentine, used by our grandmothers for polishing furniture, is still as good a polisher as can be found. My nervousness has left me entirely as a result of taking Miller's Compound Iron Pills. Green an Unlucky Color. The Scotch Highlanders considered it unfortunate to wear the fairies' fatal green in a fight, especially on a Friday, and in many places in rural England, this same belief that the fairies looked upon green as their peculiar hue and resented the wearing of this color by mortals was gener- ally held. A dose of Miller's Worm Powders occa- sionally will keep the children healthy. Turning the Tables. "1 hope my explanation is satisfac- tory," said Mr. Younghusband, as he concluded a long narrative as to why he had been detained down town un- til one a. m. "well," yawned Mrs. Younghns- band, "your excuse is fairly good, but it's not as good as father used to make. "- Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. An Easy One. He entered the cheap restaurant and took a seat at one of the tables. "Will you have a fifteen cent dinner or a twenty-five cent one?" inquired the waiter. "Is there any real difference?" "Certainly." "What is it?" "Ten cents." New life for a quarter. kliller's pound Iron Pills. Com - Friendly Criticism. "Yes," said Young Penibbs, who had recently written a book of . verse, "I have a perfect passion for poe- try." "It's too bad," replied Mrs. Cut- ting, "that your passion seems destin- ed to remain forever unrequited." Mental and (physical activity are pro- duced by Miller's Compound Iron, Pills. Want to Be the Whole Thing, The empress dowager has picked ont a nine-year-old boy who can't speak Chinese to be the new emperor of China. The ehicago' Times -Herald thinks the old lady will probably rigs the, pay roll for him, coo. liaard's Liniment Carel Ooldsi ik Old Heads. for Counsel. Young Father—I've just made a big deposit in a savings bank, in trust for my baby boy. When he is 21 I will hand him the bank book, tell him the amount of the original deposit, and let him see how things count up at connpauuld interest. Old Gentleman—Won't pay. I tried that, My boy drew the money and got married with it, and now I've got tosupport him and his wife and eight children, BADDECK, June II, x897. C. C. RICHARDS & CO. DEAR SIRS,—MINARD'S LIN- IMBNT is nay remedy for NEU- RALGIA. It relieves at once. A. S. MCDONALD. $100 Reward MO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to leara that there is at least one dreaded disease nave been locked up years ago. that selenee leas been able to cure in all its stages. and that is catarrh. Ball's Catarrh Cnre VARIETIES. Friendship is worth more than its gifts. Lots of animated thinkers are poor. talkers. There's many a slip after the cup touches the lip. Silence may be golden, gossip gains currency. Preferred creditor is one who never troubles you. The words of the silent man ars never repeated in court. Truth lies at the bottom of the well —and anglers never go there to fish. A baseball player seldom strains at a gnat, but he frequently struggles with a fly. A young man naturally uses a choice expression when he asks a girl to become his wife. Indignant But Confused. "It struck me," said the man who was talking knowingly about politics, "that there were too many delegates at large." "That's what I've allus said," re- plied. Farmer Corntossel, with anima- tion. "It's been my opinion this long time that a lot o' them fellers orter is t le only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a eeestitational ease, requires a constitutional treatment hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direct- ly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the System, thereby destroying the foundation of tho disease, and giving the patient strength by buildingup the constitution and assisting na- ture indoing its work, The proprietors have so much fault in its curative powers, that the offer One Hundred Dollars for any cos , that It fails to erre, Send for list of testimonials.. Address. F, J. CHINEY iC CO., Toledo, O. £U Soldby Druggists, 75e. .rl~ True Friend or women. A Canadian editor, being asked if he had ever seen a bald-headed wo- man, replied; "No; we never did. Nor have we ever seen a woman waltzing around towit in her shirt sleeves, with a cigar between her teeth. We have never seen a woman ga afishing with a bottle in here hip pocket, sit on the damp ground all day, and then go home drunk at night. Nor have we ever seen a wo- man yank off her coat and swear she could lick any man in town. God. bless her She ain't built that way." No worm medicine acts so nicely as Mil- ler's Worm Powders; no physic required. Their Combined Ages. "I'd let you go, Millie," said her mother, "only I'm afraid it's merely a party of giddy young people." "Yon can judge of that, mamma," replied Millie, "when I tell you that the combined age of the five of us is 170." It turned out afterwards, however, that the age of the grandmother, they took along as a chaperon, was 913. Increased vigor and vivacity follow the use of Miller's Compound Iron Pills. Exploration in Iceland. Seventeen years ago a large part of Iceland was unexplored, and only 25 glaciers had been discovered. To -day 112 glaciers are known, and the whole island has been explored and the lim- its of eternal snow determined by the geologist, Dr. Thorodson. Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator does not require the help of any purgative medicine to complete the eure. Give it a trial and be convinced. A Five Hundredth Anniversary. Vienna will soon celebrate the five hundredth anniversary of the founda- tion of its medical school. Telepraph in Africa. The telegraph will be extended 1,000 miles south of Khartoum by the end of the year. A BRAVE WOMAN. How a Drunken husband Was Made a Sober Man by a Determined Wife. A. PATHETIO LETTER. She writes:—"I had for a long time been thinking of trying the Samaria Prescrip- tion treatment on my husband for his drinking habits, but I was afraid he would discover that I was giving him medicine and the thought unnerved me. I hesitated for nearly a week, but one day when he came home very much intoxicated and his week's salary nearly all spent, I threw off all fear and determined to make an effort to save our home from the ruin I saw coming, at all hazards. I sent for your Samaria Prescription and put it in his coffee as directed next morning and watched and prayed for the result. At noon I gave him more and also at supper. He never suspected a thing, and I then boldly kept right on giving it regularly, as I had discovered something that set every nerve in my body tingling with hope and happiness. and I could see a bright future spread out before me—a peaceful happy home, a share in the good things of life, an attentive, loving husband, comforts, and everything else dear to a woman's heart, for my husband had told me_ that whiskey was vile stuff and he was taking a dislike to it. It was only too true, for before I hadiven him the full course he had stop- ped drinking altogether, but I kept giving the medicine till it was gone, and then sent for another lot to have on hand if he should relapse, as he had done from his promises before. He never has, and Ism writing you this letter to tell you how thankful I MIL I honestly believe it will eure the worst cases." A pamphlet in plain, sealed envelope, lent free, giving testimonials n nd full in- formation, with directions how to take or tdmb:deter Samaria Prescription. • Corre- 1 1enetianoe considered sacredly confiden- al. Address The Samarfe Remedy Co., erdan street, Toronto, Ont. I'LO :pis STEM WiNDING WATCH, (Lady's or Gent's), Solid Gold Bing, an Autoharp, Ac- oorddeon:, a Violin or Gui- tar, for selling 9 boxes of Dr. Price's Sarsaparilla Blood Pills at Sae. per box. DON'T SEND MONEY, simply send your name and address and we will send you the Pills, post paid, with our Catalogue. Sell tbem auu remit as the payment and we will send you the Premium you select. These Pills cure Impure blood, rheumatism, liver and kid- ney diseases and all stomach troubles. Pills returnable if not sold. Write us at once and mention this parer. PRICE MFG. 00., SS Day Street, Toronto, Ont. 4 Mivard's Liniment Cures Distemper, Qom Pant's Frugality. President Kruger maintains his do- mestic establishment on an allowance of $2,000 of what is called "coffee money," out of which he also re- quires Mrs. Kruger to sequestrate her S pin money. How toCleanse the System.—Partnclee'sr Vegetable Pills are the result of setontifio study of the effects of extracts of certain roots and herbs upon the digestive organs. Their use has demonstrated in many in- stances that they regulate the action of the Liver and the Kidneys, purify the• blood and carry off all morbid accumu- lations from The system, They are easy to take, and their action is mild and bone - fie' el. The Old Gentleman Knows. "Pa, what's all old man's dar- ling?" "Oh, anyone who will tell him he seems to be growing younger and younger every day." Mexico's Many Tongues. There are 110 distinct language&• and dialects spoken in Mexico. *Cures Rheumatism ST. toNeuralgia a * JACOBS „ Lumbago CIL. „ Sciatica ac tt g Sprains ST. „ Bruises Soreness * JA OBS „ Sfiffness Backache OIL. Muscular Aches 41 i************************t PLOWS, ROLLERS & HARROWS. ale, mat nad,.. ;dud for t'attalog tee. COCitSuOT'r FLOW CO„ istasaTyoRD.. UCAS, STEELE & BRISTOL, L. . 11.Ootfees ,MPORT¢as Of Ganef tits, L.S. & n. Extraot Write us. HAMILTON, L.i't & B. tiptoes BINDER TWINE AND MANILA ROPE ONTARIO BINDER TWINE CO., 1131 Union Station Arcade, Toronto. STOPPED FREE. Permanent- � telt gly Cured. . KLINE'S CARE,\'b" A 'NERVE lei STO REE. Positive eure for all Nervous Diseases, 13'tte, ' Epilepsy, Spasms and St. Vitus'llance. Na„ Fits or Servoasne+s after first day's use. Treatise and S2 trial bottle sent through Canadian Agency _FREE to Fit patients, they paving express charges onlwhen received.. Send 10Dr anise, t31 Archst., Philadelphia,Pa„ Brantford STEEL TOWERS AND WINDMILLS We also make Steel Flag Staff's. Grain Grinders, Iron and Wood Pumps, );eo Suppl les. Send for New Cat- alogue. T. N. U. 243 The t1 wen Electri elt Trade Mak--Dr. Owes, The only scientific and practical Electric) Belt made, for general use, having batteries that generate a strong current of Electricity that is under perfect control and can be applied to any part of the body, for the cure of Nemo s Diseases Thousands of people suffer from a variety of Nervous Diseases, such as Seminal Weakness, Impotency, Lost Manhood, eto., that the oldi? modes of treatment fail to cure. There in aloss: of nerve force or power that cannot be restored by any medical treatment, and any doctor whe would try to accomplish this by any kind of drugs is pursuing a dangerous practice. Pro- perly treated, these diseases can be IP®SiUUvely Cured Electricity, as applied by the Owen Electrics Belt and Suspensory, will most assuredly do so. It is the only known power that will supply what is lacking, namely nerve force or power, impart tong and vigor to the organs and arouse to healthy action the whole nervous system. It will, most assuredly cure, Without iifiedicine, Varicocele Nervous Prostration, Rheumatism. Sciatica, Kidney Disease, Lumbago, Lame Badu and Dyspepsia. OUR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE Contains fullest information regarding the our®• of acute, ohronio and nervous diseases, prices how to order, etc., mailed -dead* (sealed)—FREE—to any d* address. The Owen Electric Bei; And Appliance Co.1,4 TORONTO 1 ONT.