HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-3-21, Page 34}1E4IITH.
About Eating,
The find organ thot mature mede for a
living creature woe stonsaoh. It is the
most important to.day, after meny thou-
sands of yeare, aad Atter the evolution of
Messy other organs, But it is that one part
of the body whiolswe persist in negleoting
or destroying ; and just where nature began
to build we oegin to pull down. The pee-
eessiou Of a good digestive organ ie really
more important than good eyes and ears, and
even more than a large brain ; for the re-
lation of the nerves in nutrition are as inti-
mate with the other parts of the body as
are the blood veseele, If the etomaoh
be clic:ordered the thinking and recollecting
apperattivia'also disordered, and the unseat-
ing of clear vieion and good hearing is as
liable to be from bad nutrition as from Local
eausee. S e come about that tne firat
son of witioation is how to eat and not how
to think; how to warm up and run the or-
ganism and nob olog it, rather than how to
think; for if there be no hindrances or In•
the brain is euro to do good
thinking and plenty of it. Nine -tenths
of soholarehip is wasted owing to in-
digestion. Many fine brains are rendered
useless by a dyspeptio stomach. There is
no getting around thie. If you want to do
good head -work you must digest suitable
toed to nourish the.brain— enough of it, and
nob too ranch. This is exactly the reverse
of the common pracitice, because we have not
got over the old celibate and ascetics idea
thet the mind is eomehow higher and better
than the body, and oan despise it. A oollege
• is the paradise of ignorance and stupidity on
all mutton: pertaining to the stomach. Braine
are supposed to have the entire oontrol end
alone to be worthy of consideration. The
object of the whole curriculum is to oulture
heads ; and the result is, the foundation of
good head -work beoomee impossible. • Four
out ot five graduates are permanently dis-
abled from doing their level best in the world,
while the coarsest fellows in life outstrip
the finer because they have better stomaohe.
We need a University of the Stomach, wish
a full set of professore of,nutrition, digestion,
assimilation and waste, as well as of general
physiology, anatomy and general biology.
Or better yet, each college and every own
mon school in the land sliould teach how to
take care of the body and how to save the
stomach.
Ib is hardly powsible to use language in
such a manner as to place this matter before
the people so distinctly and emphatic:alit,
that they on nob mistake ite full import.
To establish and maintain a sound digestion
is not only a duty, but the foundation of al1.
duties. it is our greatest need, and the
lack of it our greatest disaster. We are
hurrying civilization into degeneration, not
by overworked braine, but by badly worked
stogaelle. The bottom of not only dye-
pepana, but of insomnia, of hysteria, • par-
alysis and apoplexy 18 bad eating. Few
people really know or care what they eat if
it gives no immediate distress. They bolt
their food while reading the moraine, papers,
which is no better that loading a wagon with
a taitohfork, hay or turnips as it happens.
When the headache follows there is a resorb
trA drugs or alcohol. When know a deal
too, mach what they eat and drink and are
simply desirous ot the immediate pleasures
of appetite. In either oase the very center
of the system, the basis of all lite and activity
is assailed and destroyed. Bo far has this
Bone and so widespread is the misohie that
civilization affords a very few who oan sure
cesefully endure the demands and needs of
business and culture.
The amounb of food devoured is immense-
ly byeond any needs or. demands or the
phydoal systern. • Growth and repair are
the two demands in early lite, and repair
alone is the requirement of our later years,
and these require no moh engorgernetits of
food as are indulied in by the masses. The
heat of the body must always be sustained
at near:y 100 degrees. In summer we have
only to curd* tefew degrees of lower tem.
perature ; but in winter bylood and cloth-
ing, we must raise 'the body heat from zero
outside of 'utc-tio' 100 degrees above zero in-
side of us.- Tt plainly will not do to eat in
summer as we do in ,winter, as muoll, or of
* the same kind of food—if we consider heat
alone. But in summer we live, an a rale,
more active lives and pass off superfluous
heat with great ease and rapidity, while the
surfaoe of this body is cooled by per-
spiration. Besides, in winter we live,
on the average,.far .more sedentary
lives, rendering it bough more diffi-
oult to gee rid •of superfluous food.
It is probable that Most people digest and
assimilate and diepose of waste so much bele
ter in the warm season that they eat more
than in winter --and ought to do so. The
kind of foods used should, .,however, be very
unlike. It is almost impossible in summer
to eat too much of rip, fruits, while of meats
very few care to eat in large amounts.
There is e. remarkable revolution going on
In this matter of diet. Twenty:five years ago
the consumption of fruit per capita in the
United States could not have exceeded one-
half the present consumption, for the. simple
reason that it was nob procurable. The in-
. creased growth of small fruits is enormous,
but the demand is said to fully keep up with
the supply.'Thousands of additional acres
are plantedto berries each seeison;•bub there
is no glut on the market. Fifty years ago a
strawberry garden was almoet unknown,
and there web ° no cultivated rasp.berries
ever seen in market. Residents of cities
• rarely ever enjoyed a dish of berries of any
sorb. Now our farmers oonsidertheir hornet
inoomple ie without a good berry garden,
while the vegetable garden is less thought of
and cared for. One of the most wholesome
of all .foods is the grape. The enormous
increase in its oultivetion is to be welcomed
by all who desire to see a healthy people.
It is one of those fruits that oan be in-
dulged in almost without limit. A eurfeit
of grapes is hardly a possilaility. Thousands
of tont: are now consumed where one ton
X was eaten thirty 'years ago.
s' It is hardly possible to use too much
fruit tie food. While it certainly is injur-
ious to be always eating of anything, even
applee and peaches and grapes, yet at reg-
ular hours an honest stomaoh not only craves
a large supply of fruit, but uses it for the
health of the whole system. Moot fruits,
however, are *bed in their season, and often
injurious out of season. The eeede of can-
ned berries are very often troublesome or
positively dangerous. Eaten in the fresh
state one by one they are all right in ea minet,
bub in the cooked or semi:cooked state they
are liable to clog the system. Again a few
fruitii are poisonous to special organieins
Many portions can not eat strawberries. I
know One who can nob sat azt orange without
severe indicating and almotat convulaions.
Red raspberries in one cage only I have
found to be severely injurioue, while bleak
raepberriee are often rejected unnecessarily
by those who like them. Grapes I have
toner known to be injuriote to any one, if
teed find skire are rejeoted. We elhonld
eat more Oranges. The lemon is also of
prime vatue, although the acid should be
weakened for most Stintleoffs. For my own
heal h prefer" the sour(Merry when quad
ripe to all Other friiita; the grape excepted,
end neXt o We 1helieve very ripe currants HEAD EaT/ITZN'G.
to be invaluable.
Attleefor diet are as common 0.8 snow-
flake, t Is =pee:able, however, for wee to
wesoribe abeelutely for another. The phy-
eiciau is never more severely taxed than
when called on to resuscitate an enfeebled
stornaoh, Vegetarians, Grahamites and a
thousend other nee have their nostrums and
preeeribe with great confidence. The real
neceesity is to discover eeme preventive
rather than a wire. Some ono is 8914 that
dyspepsia is killing more people than rum,
It certainly is undermining the national
constitution and therewith be national
character quite as fast as drunkenness. In-
temperenoe is altogether the same vial
whether it affects food or drink. Horace
Mann sounded the note of warning to young
men forty years ago in his famous lectures.
They should ba reprinted and reread. "No
glutton or dyepeptio can stand up alongside
a man with a sound stomach and clear head."
"Nature abhors two things—a V90111119 and
a foul stomach." Whoever falls to eat
wisely carries decay in his stomach. His
breath is the smoke of the tharnel house.
Every faculty of mind and every function of
body are affected, and degeneration is the
remit. •
The most unpleOstaat feature of this intem-
perance of eating is that it is quite as easily
added to heredity as the intemperance of
drinking. We have to euffer for the sins of
diet of our grandfathers. I have often been
able to trace the ancestral blunders of my
patients. The grandmother of one was an ex.
travagant lover of tea and condiment. A
stout, hale old lady, it was enough for her to
know that she was not herself suffering dire
•
consequences for her habits. The daughter
was born with an irribable stomach, and Buf-
fered more or less all her life with nervous
ills, but she adhered to the same diet as her
mother. The next generation is now on the
field, suffering the full measure of oonse
quencee of aotions for whioh it is not person-
ally responsible. Can the natural selfishness
of -human nature be overcome suffidently to
reverse this tendency, and make it a law that
each generation shall have a little better
chance than the last? If I am not mistaken,
it oan be e� reversed, and there are pretty
sure signs that our next generation will show
the change. The boys and girls who in ten
years will constitute the working world will
have firmer nerves and better digestion, with
mere common sense habits than we have had.
• M. Messnrou, M. D.
As it is Practiced Among New Guinea SOM.
ages.
The bad habit some es,Vagee have of out -
ting off be heads of any strangers who fall
In their way eimply became heads are re-
quired to adorn their sawed housee or to
serve in the dedioatory exeroieee of their
war canoea, has tragically ended the careers
of a number of white mets within the past
year, Faye the Beaton " Herald." The latest
news from New Guinea is that Mt. Arm-
strong, an Eugliehrnan, was recenely lured
to one of the coast islands, where he
was decapitated and hie head :sent to the
coast chiefs as proofs that the islandere were
attending to business. About a year ago a
brave in one of the wild When on the Indian
frontier wee nob permitted to wed the
maiden of his choice, because her relatives
were of the opieion that he had not acquired
a offloient number of heads to demonstrate
his prowess. It was agreed that when he
could show two more heads he might have
the girl, and so he sallied forth to win repu-
tation and a bride, It happened that the
Ara Wringers the brave and his party en-
countered were Lieutenant Stewart of the
Britisb army and his small ercoort, who
were led into an ambush and slaughtered,
and their head e taken book in trtumph to
the village. This was the oap eheaf of a
eerie!' of head-hunting outrages, and the
brave,had not long enjoyed his honey -moon
before an Indian expedition fell upon the
tribe and gave it some new views on the
ethics of head-hunting. This favourite
pastime has flourished greatly at Borneo,
but it is now in a bad way in the British
pari of that island, where the penalty of
death is visited upon every headhunter who
is unluolty enough to be caught. A whiln
ago the British authorities, in settli-ig a dis-
pute between two tribes, found that one
village persisted in head-hunting because
the other fellows had three heads the ad-
vantage of therm The amounte were bal.
taneed by a small supply of trade goods, and
the rival head-hunters promised thereafter
to live in amity.
• The Value of Peanuts.
In the Northern States we know little of
the peanut except as the chief luxury of the
circus and the ball -ground, where the cheer-
ful cry of "Peanuts, five a bag 1" salutes
the ear on every side, and where boys alt,
like the sailor's wife in Macbeth, "and
munch and munch and muneh. " Ab the
South they are more important Farmere-
in that genial clime plant them among the
corn, as well as in the fields by themselves,
and in the fall, when the oorh is gathered,
they tarn all their pigs loose among the
peanut vines to dig and eat.
The pigic root and grow fat. The field
furnishes both food an exercise. The ani-
mals enjoy life to the utmost of their capac-
ity,and, when Christmas comes, render to
their owners, in return for the six weeks'
banquet, a year's supply of excellent pork.
The peanut has other virtues During
the war, ,when the Southern farmers had to
sendall -the oorn'they could spare to the
army, they went far more extensively than
ever before into the cultivation of substi-
tutes and then the peanut became al really
valuable orop.
Besides nourishing pigs and chickens, and
thus saving corn, it was found to be of nu-
tritive power as human food, particularly
when eaten with a.little syrup made from
the juice of the watei melon. Some wise
Southern women learned how to make pea-
nut' oo.nd3 from peanuts and watermelon
syrup. The children liked it very much;
their mothers found it tolerablerand as to
the colored people in the South, they would
eat almost anything shcrt of brickbats if it
was covered with sweet syrup.
The peanut had another use during the
war. As kerosene and whale oil could nob
be obtained, the women were driven to their
wits' end to procure the means of lighting
their houses. Atnong other substitutes, the
oil compressed from peanuts was found to
be useful. Like other nuts, it contains
much oil—more than we should suppose,
one nut furnishing several drops.
Perhaps, however, we ought noft to call it
a nub, sinoe ib grows in the ground like a
vegetable. The southern people oall it by
several names, ground pea, ground nut,
piudar, peanut and goober,the last name
being probably of African. origin.
It grows abundantly on the coast of
Africa, whence vast, quantities are conveyed
to Europe, and this name may have been
brought from that continent by our negroes.
In Alabama, goober is OM the common
name for the peanut.
Rev. Dr. Parker on the Present and Future.
• Dr. Parker is oonvinoed that the whole
:situation of religion in England needs radie
cal revision. He believes that the Established
Church Is doing infinitely more harm than
i
good, that ,the Book of Common Prayer s
full of Popery and that the High Churchman
Is the only oensistent interpreter of its teach-
ings. On the other hand, Nonoonfonmists,
split up into so many sections, are spending
their timeand energy in tearing arirldevour-
hag one another. Their training of men for
the ministry is, he says, In seven oases out of
ten a simple mookery. Instead of committing
the whole Bible to Memory andmaking them- [Chicago Herald.
selves acquainted with the toiling and Wary -
Suited to His Sphere.
There are many adaptations to be noted
in nature, but perhaps some of the most
striking ones are to be seen in the structure
and the economy of the camel. This crea-
ture is described in a humorous way by the
author of " Mashalla 1"
You tie a camel to himself ; that is, when
ha has shut up his legs under him, like knife
blades, you alip a leathern bracelet over his
knee, and there you have him, for it
is impossible for him to open his leg so
long as the bracelet is around it, binding
the leg above the knee and the shin-
bone together like a pear of tongs.
Of course it le not easy to find anything
in the desert to which you may tie your
Ismael withimeurity ; a beneficentProvidence
has therefore made every camel his own
cistern and vegetable market awl step -ladder;
in fact, the comet is the most complete ma-
chine on four legs.that we has, e knowledge
of. His machinery is clumsy and needs oil-
ing. His great joints show through hie sides;
his tail is the barest apology, and unworthy
of notide.
You would think your camel went on
stilts if you were to start off suddenly, sit-
ting in a nest of luggage on that high back
of his. You would think he had his feet in
poultices if you were to look at the soft,
spongy things, as they tall noiselessly on the
earth, and opread under his tottering weight.
And that tearful face of his, with its
liquid and pathetic eyes, and those deep
oevities above them, big enough to hold a
hen's egg ; hie- aquiline nose, with its nar-
row, slanting nostrils that shut tight against
the send -storms, and gave him a very scorn-
ful me:premien ; the whole face looks ae If it
were just going to ory.
The absurd underlip is puckering and porde
ing to an alarming extent, and you are .not
at all surprised when the beast finally bursts
into tears and'ories, long and loud, like an
overgrown baby.
This is the pudding -footed pride of the
desert, whose silken hair is man's raiment,
a.u:1 whose milk is meat and drink.
Went Home in Her Stookings.
A lady who visited Rooley's Theatre the
other evening suffered throu;12 the first
act of the play with exceedingly tight shoes.
When the curtain fell she confidsd her suffer-
ings to her husband, and he suggested that
she sly13r remove her shoes till the perform -
acme was over. This she did, and this con-
sequent relief afforded ber allowed her a
proper enjoyment of the other act When
the curtain went down for the last time she
discovered to her horror that her feet had
so swollen in the warm atmosphere of the
house that she could nob get thetight shoes
even on her toes. As they had only to walk
to the Tremont House, and as the lody had
on black stockings, her husband told her to
do the shoe:nap in her programme and walk
along as though nothing had happened.
This she did, and they started to move out
slowly with the crowd. • The lady walked
along comfortably until near the door, when
she suddenly began to jump and cavort
around as though mad. Her etookinged
feet had struok • an exceedingly warm regie-
ter, ancl the heat had curled her feet out of
shape during her brief sojourn on it When
she struck the stone Sidewalk outside a chill
replaced the feverish feeling, and when she
reached the Tremont she swore never to
wear tight shoes to the theatre again.--
ing people around them, they are made to
studythe Conneil Chalciedon, the Filioque
controversy, theAriewe of Apolionaris
Satell-
lus and Aritne With varimietengeoleries that
rase Under the elastic:nailed philosophy. He
would have the Various Nonconformists dow
centrate their forces, shut tip all their eollegee
brit two or three, and try to get for their
ministers se:me:ling like a genuine and pato-
tical education, which would help instead of
hindering them in their after lite, WOrk• ,
All thie MAY . be ,rother strongly potas is
14,.Parker'e Way in many caSeti, but there is
a vast deal of truth In it all the sarnefor this
is for the other side of the Atlantic.
Pointe in Etiquette.
For calling or leaving cards the hours are
from three to five.
Invitations should be answered the flame
day if possible.
Cards or ..alls can be returned any eime
within a month.
The prefix "Mr," must never be °ratted
froth ti man's name.
On no account must cards be left in the
morning—that is, before 2:30.
A daughter's :same is written underneath
her mother's, on the same card.
On kftrot visit you leave one �iyour own
and two of your husband's cards.
Chicago at present It infee Avith high.
WaYmen who tire exceedinglOr Old in their
prodeeding.
Sharp Thrust.
Some men who pass tor very respectable,
citizens, and who really are not without
geed qualities have a habit nob only a find-
ing fault: with their wives at every least pro-
vocation, buil of doing it in terms such as no
gentleman would ever think of applying to
any lady except his own wife, or possibly
his own sister.
There is a story that such a man Mlle
home from the shop one night and found hie
wife much excited over the outrageous be-
havior of a tramp. He had begged for some
Cling to eat, and not liking what the woman
gave him, had abused her in the roundest
tame.
"Johnny," said the man, thoroughly
indignant, when you heard that cowardly
rascal abusing your mother, why didn't yeti
run at once to the store and let me know?
I would have made :short work of him,
Didn't you hear ?"
" Yee, pa, I heard. I was out in the barn'
and heard what he said about the victuals ;
but"—
" Bub What ?"
"Why, pa, 1 thought it was you scolding
mother. lie ueed the very same worde non
do when the dinner doesn't suit you. I
didn't think anybody else would dare talk
to mother in that way,'
An examination in the public: schools;
Professor to pupil : In which et his battles
was OttsieNuN Adolphus killed 1"unils atter
refleotion "1 think it was in his lad
battle,"
JOHN LAI3ATT'S
Indian Pale Ale and XXX Brown 81041
Highest awards and Medals for Purity and Excel-
lence at Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia,
1876; Canada, 1876; Australia, 1877; and
Paris, France, 1878.
Tif.'STIMOZTIALS SRIXOTED : •
Prof. Croft, Public Aualyst, Woreutc, says feud it
to be perfectly sound containing no impurities or ticlulter-
aticeLs, and can strongly recommend it as perfeetly pure and
oJvoeraB-gw
y Bui3edirittma:,P1t l'Aogfs
ue°srol"
John r of OhernistrY. Afontreal, says;
"I and them to be remarkably sound odes, brewed front
pure malt and hops
Bev. P. J. Rd. Page.Professor of Chemistry, Laval univer
sity, Quebec). says ;—"I have analysed the Indian Pale Ale
manufactured b vJohn Labatt, London, Ontario and have
found it a light ale, ooataining but little alcohol', of a deli -
°fella flavor. and of a ver3 agreeable taste and superior
quality, and oonspa.res with the best imported ales. 1 hcive
wail.richalliasloYfeellotebleleParqteuralftXJ; iltsofluat'vaolr .°ihse'vesarrily eaghrrewabeirey;
it is a tonic more energetic, than the above ale, for it is a
little richer in alcohol, and can be compared advantage-
ously with any imported article.
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT.
`NcN\ We' \\ 'S%.\ \'ve.N\''e;ee\ \'S\s\essWk‘‘''ex"es• vaV:eeer e
TO I
. %.fk's ••••••W\%\\N,
far Infants and Children.
[recommend it as superior to anYpreeoriPtion
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,4•Castorisis so welladaptedtoohgdren tbat Onstorfs cures Collo, ConstIsatioS.
known to me. EL A. Amman, M.D., "atm,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di -
111 80. Oxford !id., Brooklyn, N. Y. Without injurious medication.
Tax Cluereca Cot/re/Tr, 77 Murray Street, N. Y.
•QUEEN CITY OIL WORKS
PE1-4140RIELESS
Toronto. Every Barrel Guaranteed. This Oil was used on all machinery during th
Exhibition. It has been awarded NINE GOLD MEDALS during the last three years
lSrSee that you get Peerless. It is only made by
SAMT7EL 73.0CMRS cre 00., TORONTO
1•1••••••
FOR SALE BY JAS. PICKARD.
Reward for the Conviction
(FDEALERS WHO OFFER m 13 1NFER1011 OIL OF OTATIR
AND SELL 1" `s'4.0 I I .° MANUFACTURE FOR A.,
LAIIIIVEBTE
VL A Cil IN F OIL
Eureka Cylinder, Bolt I I McColl Bros. & Co.
Cutting& Wood Oils. For sale by all leadiIg dealers. I Toronto.
BISSETT BROS.,Sole Agents, Exeter.
TO. x. C'4‘ .(sOON
e OZ.
V so. .•‘S
0CP
s Vt‘°IC'
40 0
IP 4,
4 'C. ,,o,o
>. et,c>
e,`"d°
e,V cb• epoc.,
'so,z
.co
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• ,0 •\,' 4er 4,5`•
4,0 o .cco,
e> • KN.P. efot
faP 414S
V,
Manufactured
40
late 583, Oxford Street, London.
Manufactured only by Thorates Holloway, 78, NOW Oxford Street, )
alf Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots:.
If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious.
8133 Solid COM Witteb.pliilll
Sold for 81.00. until lately.
Beat VS watch in the world.
Perfect titnekeeper. War- ,
,.. rented. Beery Solid Gold
„..1-,-...„ Hunting Caere. Both ladies'
.cc,‘„ and gents' InZeti with works
If 4) . 1 OnoPertion le each io.
.&' and cases of thud value.
N
2,-,- caltly run seance ono free.
(8‘‘ together with our largo and val..-
L% <,
'' 1'1 ' .....0.---s- Samples. Those samples, as
eable line of Household
_well as tho watsh, we fiend
Jeree, and after you hatia kept
Oran In your borne for 0 months and shown thole to those
who may have culled, they bowie° your own proport_Thoso
whet write at once can bo sure of receiving the Nvatell
and Samples. Wo_pay all express, &algid, eta Morose
litisintoke att CO., BOX 812, POIrgIngld, 3/111/10•
A Meteor Analysed.
A blazing meteor hall on Chicago avenue,
Chicago, on the morning of February 2tid,
soaring some of thrum who saw it, and who
thought it a monster Anarchist bomb: It
exploded on striking the ground, and a num-
ber uf pieces were found, the largeet being
about five inohes long and half as broad.
Aualyeie of a fragment of the metallic per.
tion showed it to be an alloy, as follows :--
Per cent
Iron ......... .. . . . ....... . 73.5
Niekel, 21.4
Aluminum .7
Cobalt., .. . .. : . . ... .8
Manganese 2,1
Teaces of tin, magnesium, copper, arsenio,
calcium, potassium, and sodium were die-
covered.-1Phi1edelphia Ledger.
One hundred and thirty Arab immigrants
have arrived in New York,
Fay Gould began his business career by
sweeping out a brokers' office, Subsequent-
ly he tileantel out the broker.
893 SewIng.lWoiobineyl
trade In all parts, by To at once establish111111
4111)11
01.
and goods where the people can am
placing o u r machines
them. We will sonda'ree to one
- person in each locality,the very
beat sowing-mechIne made In
tha worldovith all the attachments.
We will Mao eunul free a complete
lino of our testy and valuable not
samples. In return we ask that you
show what Ivo send, to tno50 who
may call at your home, and aftw
months all shall become your oivei
property. This grand machine id
made after the Singer patents,
which have run outLbefore patents
ran out lt, sold for S.93, with tho
attachments, and now sells for
FIE FR ild8Intglat bronWendl.witn;
c. lito capital required. Plain,
brief instnittIone glom Those who write to us no once canoe -
emu free the best sewing -machine In the world, and the
finest lino of works of high arc evar shown together in America,
TUVE eik CO., llox MM. Augusta. mama.
THE
OF ANYExEml
TIKEs.
A SURE CURS
Fos SILIoUSNESS, CONSTIPATION,
INDIGESTION, DIZZINESS, SICK
HEADACHE, AND DISEASES OF THE
STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS.
THEY ARE MILD,THOROUGH AND PROMPT
IN ACTION, AND FORM A VALUABLE Ala
TO BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS 15. THE
TREATMENT AND CURE OF CHRONIC
AND OBSTINATE DISEASES.
+.•••••Iii
!CURE
FITS!
Then I say Crum 1 do not mean merely tit
stop them for a time. and then have them re --
turn again. 1 smear A BADICIAL 101JBK.
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or
FALLING .SICKNESS,
Alifelong study. 1 wAsseimeer myremed17149
°TIRE the worst cases: Because others have
tailedis no reason for not novv receivings. maim
Send at once for a treatise and &FREE Barna
01 iny 'lemma:aux ItExcemtr. Give Express
:rad Post Office. It costs you nothing MX' a&
trial, and it will cure you. Address
Dr. H. G. BOOT. 37 Yonge St., Toronto Ont.
CREAM TARTAR
PURESTe STRORCESTe BEST,
CONTAINS NO
ALUM, AMNFONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATE%
or any injurious materials.
E. W. GILLETT, TORgifiTe(i,G000
1`.
ilee'f't of the CELEBRATED ROYAL TE A.ST 54m,
Everest's Cough • Syrup
• CANNOT BE BEATEN.
Try it and be oonvinoed of 10 wonderful
curative properties. Price 25 die
How Lost, How Restored
Just published, a new edition ot Dr. Culver..
Well's Celebrated Essay on the radical cure ot
SPIIKHATOURIMIA or ineapaoity Induced by excess or
early indiscretion.
The Celebrated author, in this admirable emay,
clearly demonstrates from a thirty years' atiocosatei
practice, that the alarming consequences of self.
abuse nasty be radically cured; pointing out a mode
of mere at once simple, certain and °Nettie', by
means of which every Sufferer, no matter *hat his
Condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, pre.
vat* and retdieraty. . •
ter This lecture shmild be in the hands of every
youth and every man In the land.
Sent tinder seal, in 0 plain envelope, to any ad
dress, pecetpald, on receipt of four cent% or two
postage stamps. Samples of Medioine free. Address
THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO.
41 AHH Street,New Irork.
Post Offiee Box 460 45864y
(Trade Mark,)
Try Everest's LIVER REGULATOR,
For Diseases of the Liver, Kidneys do., and
purifying of the Blood; Price $1, Ess
bottles, $5. For sale by all drug-
gists. Manufactured only by
G. M. EIVBREST Chemist. Fbrest.
mR,o'v-IaDIGITT 1o133'333
Live Stock Association
(Incorporated.)
—'--
Home Office -Rowe D, Arcade, Toronto,
In the life department this Andeniati011 pro. -
Vides indemnity fel. sicknoati and accident, and
subetential assistanee to the relatives of de..
teased membere at terms tiValiable to all.
\ TO the litre stook department two-thirds ire.
triSilgttfi (IL! tilOr °It grviiii€616iti!!elitte ilEi Itlid)cittai
Ma ectusee, eleime paid, Ire.
WILLIAM JONES.
Managing Diratet.,