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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1915-2-4, Page 7ALMOST EVERY ONE
NEEDS A TONIC
Almost everyone -•-- pian, woman
and child ,needs a tonic at eom e
time, Itis often said that .a man is
lazy because he takes little or no
tn'terEst in his work; but the truth
is he isnot well. He needs a tonic.
The same is true of a sou an who
does not hustle over her home work,
brit poly feels At to be in bed. She
is not merely tired, but ill. A dull
pain in the bead or back,, poor appe-
tite, appe-
tite,elossef strength with low spirits
and loss of interest in life show that.
yen need a tonic to brace up the
nerves and give you a new lease of
life. The proof is that when the;
right tonic is taken all the trouble
quickly disappears. The one tonic—
the only tonic—for weak and ailing 1
men, women and children is Dr,
Williams' Pink Pills, which speedily
bring hack abundant health,
strength and energy. They have
done this in thousands and thou-
sands of eases as is proved by the
following, Mr. Ed. A. Owen, Bur-
dett, Alta.,says.--"About two
yeas ago my health was in' a
wretched eoudttion. My whole sys-
tem seemed to be run down and the
doctor seemed puzzled at my condir
kion, .1 had ria appetite, exertion
would leave me breathless, and I
was troubled mucb with dizziness.
Ml the medicine I took did me no
good, and I was steadily growing
weaker. My "mother urged me to
try Dr, Williams' Pink Pills, and
before I had taken thein very long
I began to feel like n new man, and
esentlnuing their use, 1 was restored
to complete health. I now recom-
mend them to all run down in
health es they are the best medicine
I know of."
Sold by all medicine dealers, or
by mail at 50 cents a box or six
bores for $2.50, from The Dr. WU-
tams -Medicine Co,,.Brockville, Ont,
NEW INDUSTRY FOR ENGLAND.
Liverpool Bids For the German Toy
Trade.
Writing of Liverpool's efforts to
capture the German toy trade a car-
respondent of the London Times says:
Liverpool is primarily a distribut-
ing centre, but it has always bank
eyed after solid industries. The
Education Committee are malting
some notable experiments which may
lead to important developments. The
committee are believers in the theory
of the thinking band, and they are
accordingly given facilities to girls
lust leaving school to learn toy -
making and the power -machine work
required in the ready-made clothing
trade. Other English towns are mak-
ing a. bid for the German toy trade,
but Liverpool is building on a par-
lieularly firm foundation. Furniture
makers, whose trade has fallen off are
turning their attention to wooden toys,
and are ready to absorb young work-
ers with soma training to recommend
them. Some of the toys which the
children have already turned out are
of admirable design, topical and hum-
orous, but not grotesque or ugly. Rus-
sian models, probably the soundest at
the present time in all forms of art,
have been largely brawn upon, and
a typical set of toys is a row of nine-
pins designed to represent Death's
Head Hussars and German infantry
with spiked helmets,with the mailed
list as the centre pin. The new in-
dustry is scarcely on its legs yet, but
one of these days "Made in Liverpool"
may be the hall -mark of the toy -shop.
Our grand -children will then pity a
generation which bad German trees
foisted upon it in its Noah's Arks.
OUR N.<i'X"IONAL DISEASE
Caused by Tea and Coffee.
Physicians know that drugs will
not correct the evils caused by tea
or coffee and that the only remedy
is to stop drinking it.
A doctor says:
"I was a coffee drinker for many
years, and often thought that ,I
could not do without it, but after
years of suffering with our national
malady, dyspepsia, I attributed it
to the drinking of coffee, and after
some thought determined. to use
'Postum for.my morning drink. (The
,effects on the system df tea and'cof-
fee drinking are very similar, be-
cause they each contain . the drug,
caffeine.)
"I had.ithe Postum made careful-
ly according to directions on the
pkg. and found it just suited my
taste.
"At first I used it only for break-
fast, but I found myselfgetting so
much" better that I -had it at all
meals, and I am pleased to' say that
I have been relieved of indigestion.
I gained 19 pounds in 4 months and
(my general . health is greatly
proved. - •
"I must tell you of a young lady.
She, had been its ill health for many
yeaxs, the vital forces low, with but
little pain.•:r 1. wrote her of the, good
;that, Postum did me'and advised her
to try it.
""At the end of the year she:wrote
me ;that she had ;gained 40 pounds
in weight and felt like herself
again,.'
Name given by Canadian Poston
Co., Windsor,, Ont. Read "The
Road to Wellville," -in pkgs.
Postum comes in two forms :
Postum:.
Regular -mu,st be. well
boiled, 15c and.25c packages,
Instant Postnln—is a soluble pow-
der, A teaspoonful dissolves quick-
,ly in a cup of cold water, and with
cream and sugar, makes a delirious
beverage Instantly. 30e and 50c
;tins,
The 'cost per -cup . of both kinds is
about the same.
'There's a Reason" for Postum.
-Sold. by Grocers.
Maharajah of I3ikanir,
Famous Indian fighting Yvan who
has returned to what he terms the
"monotonous" fight in Flanders,
after undergoing an operation in
London.
Rad Fixed Things,
"Say, father, Johnnie Burton's
going to give a party next week, en'
he said he'd invite me. An' I got
to take a present." "A present?
What's that for 1" "It's his birth-
day. All the kids take presents."
Something had gone wrong in the
office that day, and father wasn't
in agood humor. "That's all non-
sense," he declared. "Every dal
or two it's a. present here and a pre-
sent there If you can't go to a
party without taking a present you
might as well stay at home." The
boy's lip trembled, but he said no-
thing. The next morning the tread
of the .house regretted . his hasty.
words and tried to square matters.
"George," he said, "there's a, nice
present for .your. friend Johnnie in
my- overcoat pocket, You may take
it to bun. ""Too late, father,"
said George, eoollti. "1 licked him
so he couldn't invite ire."
•
BABY'S BATTLES
Baby's battles for health can be
easily won if the mother will con-
stantly keep at hand the means of
aiding her little ones When the
emergency may arise. Baby's Own
Tablets should be found in every
home where there aie small ehil-;
dren. The Tablets are a gentle but
thorough laxative. They break up
colds; relieve eroup ; prevent eon-
stipation .; cure indigestion; pro-
mote sleep. and in fact cure all the
minor ills of little ones. They are
sold by all medicine dealers or by
mail at '35 cents a, box from The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
THE BAYONET CHARGE.
British Use Steel with Peculiar
Dash, But With Method.
One of the features of the war has
been the brilliant successes accom-
plished by means of British bayonet
charges, and time and again the
boys with the cold grey steel have
scattered the Germans like chaff be-
fore the wind. A modern bayonet.
charge is a, combination of pluck
and discipline, for it consists of
more than a reckless rush at the
enemy. Troops engaged in such an
undertaking now advance towards
the foe by means of a series of rush-
es—which is to say a battalion does
not adyance simultaneously, but in
portions, and each unit runs for a
certain distance and then takes co-
ver. This method has proved to be
more satisfactory than the old hap-
hazard dash with bayonets which re-
sulted in such heavy casualties
amongst the participators.
During the charge the battalion is
split up into three portions—right,
centre and left. Whilst one unit
advances,' the other, taking cover or
lyingon the earth, keeps up a sour-
derma
usderous fire at the enemy, and slow-
ly the men, by numerous short rush-
es, creep towards their goal. The
assailants take advantage of every
little shrub or hillock, and even a
fold in the ground is used for pur-
poses of cover, and in this way cas-
ualties are kept ` down to a mini-
mum.
One great advantage of this. form
of advance is: that the men, .when
they, do come to grips with ,the en-
emy, are _comparatively fresh, and
not ready, to fall with fatigue as
they would be if they had run for
several' hundred yards without a
breathing space. Thelast few yards
to be covered by the bayonet -fight-
ers
fi
ergs i5 taken with a es rush,
,
which not ply adds impetus to the
charge, but also badly scares the
enemy, especially when our troops
.shriek out ;tneir'favor.ite war -cries
at•the top's of their `voices. Phe Bri-
tish are generally recognized as I ,e
ing the best bayonet -fighters in tihe
world, and ,special; pains are taken
to train them in this form of attack.
A machine for this purpose is in
use in the army, which consists: of a
number of wires stretched .acressson
a frame along Which balls of plaited
straw run downwards inan erratic
fashion. The soldier ,stands a few
feet. away :front, the app "ratus and
makes quick jabs at these balls, his
object being to strike' them true in
the centre, and, with: a. quickwrench, withdt aw the weapon in
time to make a stroke at. the follow-
ing ball.
Silo Was In lice
For seven Weeks
'.1`IIBN DO,):1.1D'S KIDNEY PILLS"
'CURED MADAME 3IERI.IIE.
Montreal Latly• Tells •Ilene 4Aftel:°
Four Y'ears' Illness, She.Found as
Complete Cure For All Her
Troubles.. . -
Montreal, Que., Feby. ist (Spe-
cial)—Madame 3. Baptiste Berube,
residing al,t. 1393.Logan Avenue, this
city, araeats that .after four years'
suffering from kidney disease "she
lids been completely restored to
health by Dodd's Kidney Pills.
"1 had a pain in my left side
around the heart," Madaane Berube
says in her. statement. "I suffered
constantly witir headache and back-
ache, and for seven weeks I was in
bell with kidney disease and feeble-
ness. The doctor eould not help me,
Pills,
so I decided to try I)ocid's Kidney
"After the first box I was some
better, I continued to use. Dodd's
Kidney Pills till now the palpita=
tion has left me, and I ,am a well
woman, able to do my work. Dodds
Kidney Pills cured me and I recom-
mend them to all persons who suffer
as I did," .
Notice ltow many women tore rising
to tell their suffering sisters they
can find relief in Dodd's Kidney
Pills. The reason is that nine -
tenths of women's ills spring from
diseased or disordered kidneys.:
Every woman whose kidneys :show,
signs of weakness should itse Dodd'»'.
Kidney Pills.
Mosquitoes at the Role.
The presence of mosquitoes in
myriads within the bare, uninhab-
ited arctio eirele is surely in some
degree a naystery. The mosquito is
a bloodsucker, but in these unvisit-
ed plains he is for the must part
and of strict necessity a vegetarian.
A few birds executed (and the birds
are furnished with' impervious
feathers) there is Co local life what-
ever. The Lapp in summer drives
his reindeer to the sea, and no na•
tive eosses the field if lie can help
it. Yet in this region, "eseexniugly
the most unsuitable for its effective
working,' the mosquito flourishes,
-a, primeval and enduring curse, in-
explicably developed to its ut-
most.'"
Granulated Eyelids,
Or V Byes inflamed by expo-
sure to Sun. Dust and. 'Mad
Eyes quickly relieved by Morino
Eye RemedyMori
.NoSm
Smarting;
just Lye Comfort, At
Your Druggist's SOc per Bottle. Marine Eye
SalveinTubes2Se. ForuookoftheEyerreeask
Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co.; Chinese
' Resisting Temptation.
Sunday School Teacher—"Willie,
did you ever resist temptation' 1"
«'illie— 11res'm, once," Sunday,
School Teacher—"And what noble
sentiment prompted you to do it?"
Willie—"The jam was on' the top
shelf, and I eouldn't reach it,"
Birds of Different Feathers.
"If they persist in teaching the
boys in the schools military adios,
I don't believe our Willie would go
in for it."
"Do you mean he's too chicken-
hearted 1"
"No, he's too pigeon-toed."
Minard's Liniment Cures Carget' In Cows.
Same Thing.
"Does your husband keep a
scrap -book l" .
"Not exactly ; he keeps a check-
book and we have ascrap every
time it is used for nay benefit."
I\EORMATIO;w; FOR INVENTORS
Messrs. Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis,
patent solicitors, Montreal, report
that 99 Canadian patents were is-
sued for the week •ending January
12th, 1915, 73 of which were granted
to Americans, 18 to Canadians, and
8 to residents of foreign countries.
Inoculation Succeeds.`
' Of; the first. 421 cases of typhoid
fever • in the , present campaign
among the British troops, 305 were
in men who were not inoculated. In
the421 cases there have been 85.
deaths, '.of''which 34 were men' who
had not been 'inoculated within two
years. Only :one.. death 000urred
among the. patients who were inocu-
lated, and he only had beeninoou
latedl once;
One can't .always judge a man's
importance by the angle at which`
he wears his hat.
ED, 5',:
obit and 3Inscie Pans
Banished by fierviline
IT CURS RHEUMATISM. •
Thousands of people, •cltuCk full of
the joy of living Happy, glad, -bright
people, that Nerviline has .cured of
their pains, all tell the same wonder-
ful story of its power to drive out the
aches and tortures of rheumatism and
kindred ills.
"Ay goodness, but :Nerviline is a.
miraele•woa"ker," • writes. Mrs. . Char-
lotte Chipman, mother of a ' well-
known family residing at ilouut•
Pleasant, "Last niontle 1 was so rip-
pled 'up with .sciatica and mmuseular
rheumatism as to be almost turahle to
do a bit of housework. My joints
were so stiff and the mueles so fright-
fully sore that 1 even cried at times
with the pain. • For years we have
used Nerviline in our family and I
just got busy with Oils wonderful,
good old liniment. Lots of rubbing
Iwith Nerviline soon relieved my niis-
ery and I was in a real short time
about my work as usual,"
No matter where the ache is, no
matter how distressing the pain you
can rub it away with Nerviline. For
forty years it has been curing lum-
bago, sciatica, back -ache, colds, chest
trouble and all sorts of winter ills.
Keep a large 56e. family size bottle
handy and you'll be saved lots of trate
ble and have smaller doctor bills.
Small trial size 25c, at dealexs every-
where.
verywhere.
Dangerous Bridges.
According to the Engineering Re-
cord, many places have a large
number of inferior bridges, of both
wood and steel. The town and+
County clffioials tivhu have the
bridges and highways in charge
often put 4kf needed repairs to the,
bridges, because they prefer to
spend the money at their disposal
in improving the surface of the;
road:; --work that the public is
mueh quicker to notice and praise
them for. ITerelr from the point of
view of safety it is wise to improve
no road until every bridge on it is
put into proper shape, for smooth,
metaled roadways and weak, poor-
ly maintained bridges form a• dan-
gerous combination. In eaees in
which the road commissioners have
little control over the bridges; the
conditions are likely to he even
more dangerous. Putting Ni) much
of the manes' into the bridges rather.
than into the roads rimy not be
practicable in every ease but in
every ease enough money should be
put into the bridges to make then}
safe beea'nd question.
Sympathy,.
"Sir, your daughter has promised
to become nay wife. -
' *Well, don't come to file fur syln
pally. you night know something
would happen to you, hanging
around here dive nights; a week. -
DEATH REPORTED
An old offender that hung on for years.
Nothing touched his .stony heart but Put -
name ('+ern Extractor and out he came.
root, stem and branch. Ail cornea eared
just ars quickly when Putnam's is used;
try it, 25e. at all dealers.
KETTLE VALLEY RAILWAY.
Links Up tin' C.P.R. with United
States Railways.
What the completion of the Kettle
Valley Railway will mean tai trans-
continental traffic, both freight and
passenger, was explained by Mr. J.
J. Warren, the president of the
company, who has been spending a
few days' east. For years past the
Canadian Pacific Railway has been
wrestling with the problem of reduc-
ing grades in, tihe Rocky Mountain
section, and it is probable that it
will continue to struggle for years
to coma, Even in clays when ex -
pension work is' necessarily restrict-
ed and cut -tailed, orders are given, !.
for example, to push the work on
the Rogers Pass tunnel to eomple-
tioii. But with the Kettle Valley
Railway and the Kootenay Central
Railway in operation the Canadian
Pacific will have alternative routes
from the main line, which should at
once make much more economical
the handling of trains to the Pacific
Coast. The Kettle Valley line in
Southern .British Columbia, which
links -up with railwayys in the United
States, and with the Canadian Paci-
fic, which has running rights over
it, will make an admirable alterna-
tive route by way of the Crow's
Nest Pass, as its grades norwhere
exceed 2 per cent., while the Koote-
nay Central.. ,lanae an `average grade
of less titan 1 per cent, The Kettle
Valley line .e will aleo be of great
value to thefruit
growers of the
Okanagan y'alley,. a,s it touches
,
entice
P n . �and
Penticton ntmerland
S
u and
puts; then into direct `touch witch" the
mininK districts of Southern British
11r Mq,. AS a scenic route the
sue eh+ou prove tt tive to tour
-
Okanagan
r�
fats, the tout ern find. 4f the
i ' b
�>y -� by ter the;. most
p'iotpiresgge otft}on of 1314 l'on l',
section sit h COI aa1bIa, Jay
early: anI�n'iel •t�e . fu• pr"lsisen e
l l
r. e.r ac :Illi be GA over
'
yy
,.lti • en
g
o�exech��Y&s
ve will. he ryeitei se 1n4
Minard'e 1.,l Pi.(l'RA` Iiiloi4herIa.
•WONDERFUL INTENTION,
..
S11e118 Cao Be ,p. tiotegraplied in
Their >l4
Throu a tf wondiAFlfghrftxl
w�hi,cka truin ren
ISSUE vas the1rollemoo
highest of high speed photographyel
it has been found possible to photo-
graph shells' while in actual flight..
By this means the British army ex-
pects to solve many problems of
ordnance which hitherto have re-
mained secrets.
The camera used for this purpose
(says the Royal Magazine), differs
from the ordinary ones in two re-
speets—its size and its shutter. It
as, almost four feet in height, and is
equipped with the finest 2.4nch lens.
The shutter is worked by an elec-
tric motor that makes several thou-
sand revolutions a minute, and as
the speed of the motor is capable
of accurate adjustment, the opera-
tor can 'calculate the exact length'
of the exposure up to 1-5,000th of e
second.
The formation of the deadly
smoke -ring" which follows the is-
suing of the projectile is also clearly
shown by means of this camera.
The ring of gaseous stroke can be
seen, obscuring the muzzle of the
gun and rising rapidly upward, al-
most before the shell appears.
With this unique camera views of
q
mortar shells in all puositions up to
the time when they ceased their up-
ward flight and started to descend ta, W. oewsott, Colborne St., Toronto.
have been obtained.
British army' officials hope, with
the aid of this camera, to discover late r•,caltSTHR D SHORTHORN AND
exactly what the modern high-power D•u�haflii°!stet,a Calves. T. 1. Morrison.
shell does when it plows its way
through steel. Front negatives show-
ing pieces of a shell i-5,000th of
a second after it has burst, it may'
be possible to find a way to make
steel stronger by remedying defects
in the hardening and 'tempering
processes. ;
Highest grade beaus kept whole
and mealy by perfect baking,.
retaining their full strength.
Blavored wxtk etc leious sauces.
Thor brrvaa na geoid. x
FARMS FOR SALE.
ii, w. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street,
Toronto.
TP IOU WANT TO BUT Olt SEL!I b
i Pratt. Stook, Oraiu or Dairy 'arta..
write H. W. »aweon. Drarspton. or 90 Col-
borne Si., Turista*.
Z'OE RAZE..
NURSERY STOCK.
► •
RASPBE TATOES. Catalogue free I MeC ouuil ell
�Tli�rva3l:IilaISE3,
91c4
Son. Port nurwell, Ont.
When a Woman Suffers
With Chronic Backache
There is Trouble Ahead.
Constantly on their feet. attending
to the wants of ,a large and eXaCillig
MALS HELP WAN'TEP.
EAItN DABiiitn TR•ADB ALWAYS
sure employment, as mod wages, few
weelu• reguircd to complete course urine
for full particulate uod catalogue to -day.
Molar Barber tid ;e, 219 Queen Lan'.
Toronto.
MISCELLANEOUS.
CANGER. TUMORS, LUMP E
Internal and external, cured Tithe
out pain by our home treatment. Wri1:a
us Co.. tmited toolaten Dr. s1Ee(ixtaixa ]t„ciiwT►
family, women often break down with
nervous exhaustion. n
In the stores, factories, and on a
farm are weak, ailing women, dragged
down with the torturing baekaehe avid
bearing down pains.
Such ;suffering isn't natural, but it's •
dangerous, because due to diseased
kidneys.
The dizziness, insomnia, deranged
menses and other -symptoms of kidney
complaint can't cure themselves, they
require the assistance of Dr. Handl-
ton's Pills which go direct to the seat
of the trouble.
To give 'vitality and power to the
kidneys, to lend ald to the bladder and
liver, to free the .blood of poison::.
probably there is no remedy so suc-
cessful as Dr. Hamilton's Pills. For
all womanly irregularities their merit
is well known.
Because of there mild. soothing, and
healing effect, Dr. l'lamilton's Pills are
safe, and are recommended for girls `
and women of all ages. 25 cenis per
box at all dealers. Refuse any sub-
stitute for Dr. Hamilton's Pills of :Man-
drake and butternut.
llis Drawback.
"Why, pa, I am astonished to
hear you speak of Henry a' you
Ile is one el the best men going.
"But he never goes
d.,
:.1
The publisher of the. best Farmer's
paper in the Maritime Provinces' in 'writ-
ing to us states:
I 'would say that I do not know of a
medicine that hae stood the test el time
like MIN tRD'S LINI1MMENT. It :has'been
an unfailing remedy' iu our household
ever since I can remember, -and has out•
lived dozens of would -he competitors and
imitators.
Cheap Staff.
Nell—You say you saw her wed-
ding gifts. How was her silver
marked I
Belle -Prem the looks of it I
should say it was marked down,
Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
Speaking of the old wild days in
Scotland an aged dame, with her
grandchildren about her knee, said
concerning a leader of her clan
whohad been beheaded fiallpwing
sometrouble with the Crown; "It
wis nae great thing o' a held, tae
be sure, but it ,wis a sad loss tae
him."
LOW FARES TO THE CHICACQ
EXPOSITIQNS. -
Via Chicago & Borth Western Ry.
pour splendid deby trains from the New
Passenger era -atrial, Chicago to flan
piranoisco, Lee Angeles'•an5 San 'Diego.
a o ce oq iscenic •aril direei routes. •I)ouhle
f, act: Automatic ele4trie eafety ei>;ii als.
*11 thc� ovay..
Dett, us .plan yaur tsir and fnr}}isi} fold•
ere and dull particulars. •
B. H. Bennett, Geri: Agt., 46 Yongo St.,
Toronto,
Ont.
' Different.
f"J'd apls you to dance q�niy you
j>oIid nip you were tired.);
But I'mnot too tired to dance.'"
.Iliinard's Liniment Cares Colds, Eta.
' }e• -i Qw . dp' you suppose tie
g' �x
taFk pile hardsheils of t
hey pick? He=Withano
nie
est p
'wrench,
t
' •ch, of course.
t.• i se.
N ..apd f gcati. n or he�atingg�
AN i�f� SMOKE
PO1,SOIi.niet�naUt aKSTORONTO
anilineel't and ehiptsultdcrrt
OE INVENTIONS
Pioeoe. PIOEON & DAVIS
Ise $itifoutraatWre or information
n
stakes Mem, las moreeg s, .us a fall.% t+ • tir
taxn y rad
a 3. n. iorkag.' 1, ioy9
I verywbrra', Write
uct rit:.nN.• IntemAtltnui,
r ulayt.uldt. 15c1.
asi 4 t. t' " b' ``, IriEReaTiceG. S1tiK nese CO.
Imam?, TORten. on
^..0-"M.1.".===.#1710.,
Pr ce to t •
rri: as 5." er
xa1:,:: T ,,fa, t
beforttl�.a,• e.,°
cATAi.Cutin MCC.
GiVes factory ,
print on 1 are 1 ,,.
nes.'l a II;a-dt.a!"e:o.a
norm Cods.
TheliALLID'A` Y COMPANYumi.,
Bac 1 oh;`
HAMILTON. - CANZ1,0
FOR SA1
Nevi Wheelock dB
Automatic Valve
Complete operating condition.
flywheel, frame, belt, cylinders
and all parts. Clan be sliorsn
running at present time.
Will self at less than half
cost price.
S. FRANK WILSON & SONS
73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto
;ti
none oscosaczaaM1
OR colds in the ebestor'sore
Ai throats; for rheumatism or.
stiffness; for sprains and cramps.
Capsicum "Vaseline" brings
quick relief. ,
CAPSICUM
4tadcrodG
Pectic in Canada
t; does all that a mustard plaster
rill do. Is cleaner, easier to apply,
a}}d will: not blister the skin.
There are many other "Vaseline"
' reparations—simple borne reme-
died that sl oi}1d,be in every, family
" ,
] aline a
— ar latecl �
C ba "Vaseline" it
antiseptic caressing for
cu
ts
insect
rtes, etc.C "taae a e" Aaxilgis
for neuralgia and headaches; pure
"Vaseline," for piles, chilblains,
sty,
and others.
4j'O1f tpniTITVTES In$ist oq "glee
lifR" 11 elriYinaa rackaC'ei (venue the rirtme,
mess k uo . MANUFAC'rrn uNG co,.
Asha{, pie , nor s,1la �a ell' Ohemis and '_^ -
Cbdetal Re 4 . me Newt
Ci'! ESEBROUQH MVMF'G CO,;
(C_ ni p
soito )
1880 'Ci -CABOT A T., MONTREAL