Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-7-10, Page 2"ILAPIEN they find heir rapidly health TV b reatored by taking Ayerts SABA 'Illlepgrella. The reason is 014 thie preparation contains only the purest aniN Meat powerful alteratives and tostlett. To thousands yearly it proves ela 'NfOritable met Mrs. Jos, Lake, 33rockway Centre. Welt, -writes z "Liver complaint and 'Intligeetion made my life a burden, mad 'came near ending my existence. War raore than four years I suffered un - UK agony. I was red,need, almost to Sh skeleton, and hardlyhadstrength to drag myself about kinds of food eltistressed me, and only the most deli - mato could, he digested at all. Within oho time mentioned several pbesicians Ineated me without giving relief. Noth- ing that I took seenteO to do any per - • anent good until I began the use et -Aeries Sarsaparilla, width has }ge- lato/4 wonderful results. Soon after enerinsonelieg to take the Samapazille, 1 amid sae an Improvement Atility condition, my appetite began to ante= etud whit it moo the Ability to Vigo* all tbe food taken, my strength improved each day, and after a taw amontha of faitletut attention to your **emotion% I fetiod myself * wen otroment able to attend to all houtiehold dlinederre The inediotne has given nee Vita Seise ot lite. alma I moot thenk pea too much." eElPre, the undersigned, eitieene of aroekwey Centre, Melo, herebg eertify litat the above statement, made by Nre. Lake, is trim be every particular 4.4 entitled to tell credence,"— O. P. ainberlafu, G. W. Waring, O. A. Prtiggist- 3 MT hrptlitIE. In England, was, for a. mouable t emzid to Ida °emu. In by rue= of nem ea his foot. tient him Ayer's Almanac and the tee- timoolaie it coutained induced big: to lay Ayer% Sarsaparilla, -Alter osiug it little wh$e, lie WC4 cored. awl le utter a well emu, working in a sugar mill at Brisbane, Queensland, Australim" „4.4ttetwell, Sherbet Lake, Oiltarle. Ayer's Sarsaparilla nitPARXD AV Des 4. C. Ayer 4 Coo Lowell, Masse Zniceal; eix trettles, ea, Wentz ee a loiter. TEE XE T E A ETIMES,' Exeter Butoiter Shop fl.DAVI$, Butcher ir General Dealer I ALL X inns 7--- E A T. s .Ntstomeresupplied TUBSDATS. TRUES ; IS AND SATUBDAYS at their maiden° ORDERS LEFT AT TRE SOP WILL BE thEINE PBOI•LPT ATTENTION. a -VRE BEST BIKING POWDER Coors Frnti No Alum. Nothing Injurious. tITELID IIERrNiERE. GARTH &CO., FACTORY SUPPLIES. Vores, Iron it. leisd Pipe, Loess Pulley 011treStsarn lot Pumps, runt Pump, Wind Wile Crum Separ- ators, Dairy and Wok Vitale 536 CRAIG STREET, MONTREAL. KILL:8,-C° WOW.> 117 Fet0. t IStiEStdAP 1 4A18 AWARDED' .1$E‘AL 1 he CHADWICK'S SPOOL COTTON Ivor Hand and Machine Use. HAS NO SUPERIOR. ASK FOR IT. LEATHEROID STEEL -LINED TRUNKS Sample, Liaise' and all other kinds. Llalist and Stron/est TRUNEC6 In the World. J. EYELEIGH& CO. MONTREAL, Sole Frs. for the Domain HOTEL BALMORAL. MONTREAL. fetreDame St., one of tho most central and elegantly furnished Hotels 'lithe City. Aecommodation for 400 roots. Notes r leeSOOQBUFF, seto$3 per day. So VI v v manager. sou Arts ior Canada, PALM ER &SON 1Thedesala Impqrs of #auaGisTr SUNDRIES, 114310,12 DIE ST., MONTREAL. s.SOAP.* DOMINION LEATHER BOARD COMPANY, Manufacturers of ASBESTOS MILLSOARD Steam Peeking, FRICTION PULLEY BOARD, TM. is a Perfiall4eaota 1 TUR BRST FOR LAUNDRY PAPERS 141,411a, Q. ALL AL.4P SIZES ri o • 4-zia WEIGHTS 44 TO ORDER 21 DeBresoles St. MILL PeaTentlie olifigutts rwIDDEEF 41HE GREAT TRENGT.I1 GIVER it PERFECT F6013 `A, trSIRTI NaG tIUTRITIOUSOEVERASE - 00W ERFUL INVIGORATDR The limed Girl Pleb/AIM Every day the hired girl problem becomes more difficult, mei it will continue to do se uutil the mistresies go to work in earnest to try to solve it. Every year it becomes more of a necessity to have help in the kitchem Women hire help to -day who did all their own work ten years ago, and their daughters who are brought up to know little of housework, must hire help from the day they enter their own homes. If statistics could be procured, people would be surpris- ed to see how many more hired girls there Lenox. Poes.—One heaping tablespoonful are to -day than their were twenty years of eorn starch put in a teacup =tin -et with ago. " cold water, then fill the cup with boiling What is the most important rpleSileil water to cook it ; two eggs, the yelks ; of the day ?" was asked recently before a for lemon, grate thtt meld and squeeze the juice one society. composed of ladies who met out; one cup of sugar; take the whites of mutual improvement. "The servant girl question" was the the eggs and beat them to a stiff frothing one half cup of sugar; wlien the pie isbaked prompt reply, which somewhat hisconcerted spread this over the top and put in oven to the presitleut, who had expected to lead the brown. -will try it: Boil one cup of ricehuutil soft season with salt pepper ; then, to a small dripping -pen or pudding -dish, place a laye of nee end a layer of cheese combs unti the nice is all used ; on Up, it layer o cheese and craelter crumbs. CorrAOR FRITZ PEDDING.--rut into aoy shaped baking -dish desired, abeam an inch in depth of berries of any kind, then pout' over them the following ingredients well stirred together : I egg, 1 eupfel of sweet milk, 1 cupful of sugar, 3 cupfuls of floor, 1 tablespoonful of butter and 2 teespoonfids of baking -powder. Bake until the oust is done. , AFRICA'S TAKE REGIONS. 1 DiVisiou of the Ommtry Between England and 0-erme,ny. conversation in an entirely different hue. But the answer mouthed a responsive chord in the heart of every woman preseut, each Treatment for Baldness, f whom had guttered from h difficulty she ould not uuderstend or control, and no despau of therapeutists, and any one who re importeut topie coulti pin their at- suggests a new remedy for either is. at Once tention ; and it is safe to say that ifl anY elevated from ob.seurity to world-wide aseenahlege of women. there is no topic which notice. Our conteximorary, the New York would be of greater interest, to such great t iehftdicatiournot, gives a detailed account of proportions has the trouble gra. wn. I .the treetment for alepecia, pityroides and alSOa lanientable fad that in AMA eases out 'alopecia, areate, devised, by the talented of ten the diSeUSSiOnS have been in vaing o4 41' secretery of the Were:till:mai congress, Dr, great Mall7 miggest111414 have hee11"Ule' "1/t Laver. The treatment is AS f011OWS and IA ao elue puma that eau lead to the of the proldent, And why? Shnply b s°1"1"..to be repotted daily for six weeks or more ; eeauseti 1. The scalp should be lathereit well with a the ladies have begun lin the wrong way.. ohm, tee sown for ten minutes. 2. Ties There is" 11ilesti°" inv°1vbig tw°11°rLies lathe; is to be removed with lukewarm which can be settled by on of them without Baldness awl phthisis polroonalis are the water, followed by colder water in Own. the cement of the other, An overwhelmiug dance ; then the ecelp is to be dried. 3. ,A, majority may silence it for A time, but it will .soletion of bichloride of mercury, 1 to 900, be forever presenting itself in diiferent forms, the Inenstruum being eguel parts of water, of varying degrees of perplexity, and at the glycerine and cologne or aleohol is to be rub. most unexpected and inopportune times midi reel on. . 4Tee seatw v tem rubbed dry places. 'with a solution coutamiug lotanaphthol, 1 The hired ;Oils may institute unions aud nart, evil absolute5 make laws by which the mistress shall be r alcohol, htf0 pmts.. r he linal step in the precessis an anointiug governed ; the mistresses may unite aud ..,aut! of the scalp with en ungeetit containing two make laws to govern the servauts, and e et ; • :parts of salicylic ecu!, three parts of allot - The mistress and servant must work to.the problem remains unsolved. pre of benzoiu and 100 parts of neat's foot . he gether, and the former must stare the reform • — in the right direction, because she alone is rr IlOW ft Charge of Shot Travels. capable of doing so. The "Golden Rule" mug be adoptee wee praetmed by both idlien standing Within a tow yards of the parties or the work will be in vain. There gunh. muzzle at the time of discharges A per - qt premtt, a sort of now:went between , SOn Weilld be amazingly estonieheil were he nustress aud maid which take a little or no „ tudY able to see the shot as they go account of Christian principles. Faith ie big by. Experiments in hietautaucouti pho- suspicious of the other, and more inteut conitheruPbY have Proved to us that the slot not preventing the taking of an unfair raven- g °WY %wean Ont. C00140 -flies AS they ily, but tage thus on doing her vbole duty without ithey striug out one behind the other to a regard to the other. There is need of inert) „10,uelt greater distance than they spread. jUstiee on the aide of the mistress, loom cone; e•MIS, With a cylinder gun, when the first science an the side of the girl, mime of a charge reaches a tweet that is The problem is not to Iresolved in an hour ;If t d 0 last I 1 • or y yar s away, lea lot is egging there Is too znuell preliininarv work to he Omit' telt yards behind, liven with the done on both sides. It would be difficult to choke.bore gun some of the shot will lag Le- v which Ls in the majority, ineomperent.hiud eight yards in forty. This accounts mistresses or incompetent servants ; but xt. la for the wide swath that is mown in a Oa& Without doubt a face, that tlih burden of the of ducksonwhiell a charge of shoe falls just blame •y reallrests with themistresses. They rePt• About nye per cent only of the are too idle, too indifferent, too selfish, too charge of shot arrive sunultaiteoualy at the ignorant to give much instruction to the target,but the balance of the first half of the Young beginner, or the girl who has had years charge is so chore behind that e bird's nuts ef practice in the incorrect way of housekeep. eles are not quick enough to get out of the ung. It is much easier to discharge her for way., although throe who bare watelted mt. incompetence, and try another edrl. The ting birds when shot at have often seen girl tmes another place, feeling that is only them start as if to fly ;lien the leading shot for a little while and there is no use in " fus- whistled by them, only to drop dead as they sing," and so while she dawdles about the were overtaken by the iced= hail. work in her place she keeps au eye opea for yet another place which may prove het. ter. Na Kissing Before Engagements. . ion, sorry fact that there is not one place Among the letters sent here anent the In fifty which a girl feelsis really worth try. ghestatut I asked, as to whether it is true ing toekeep, and on the other side there are teat laelies sit on the knees of their beaux in few girls who are so satisfactory that a wo- .h.ew hark (as we know they too often do in man Weuldnot be glad to exchange them for the country), is one from a born New York - who not only insists that the custom mother, if it were hot for the scarcity of °I', girls and thetrouble of changing. The girls have the advantage, because the call for help is greater than the demand. 1 but it is probable that, in a few more years, uhless there is some change in the immigra- abut it but happening to mention the sub - ton laws, the advantage will be on the Jed at a tvinst club of half a dozem married i other side, and the poor girl who has never couples, t turned out that not one of the had a chance to be other than she is will be weinenhad been kissed until her troth was in a yery unenviable condition, while the plighted. A funny incident markeel the discusssion, accordin to my informant. One of the men had a oose memory. "We used to kiss sometimes, didn't we ?" he said to his Wife. "No, sir," she said, with deep indignation, "you. never kissed me until problem must be taken through the public after we were engaged; you tried to and schools. Private schools are useful to al you fought for the privilege ; but you never succeeded." "Is that so ?" the husband remarked. "I've kissed so many—" "What's that ? What did you say ?" the wife asked. **I say," said the husband, "I have kisa. ed you so many times that I can't remember when I began.* —10hatter never took root hero, but adds that, "ex - opt in very high or very low life, there is very little kissing before engagements for marriage." Ile says that he was not certain position of mistress will only be bettered in' that she will have more incompetent help to choose from and can make a choice oftener. The first step toward the solving of the few, and to the many in so far as they help to mould public opinion; but their work is, after all, far from being sufficient. The problem is important enough to re- ceive universal atteution. Technical and theoretical instruction in the art of house- keeping should have prominent plaee, and should be taught from. the primary class in the &at grade to the graduating class in the high school. In a country like ours, no one can say who shall be mistress and who maid, and if all classes were taught the duties of both mistress and maid, the problem which ignor- ance makes difficult would be solved with- out trouble. Is not here a work for women, to use their influence in having such instruction taugbt in all our public schools and in as many private schools as may bo? They may not be greatly benefltecl by it, but their daugh- ters will be, while their great-grand-doeigh- ters will be interested in the "servant girl problem" only as a matter of history. Contributed Hints. Pumemer Phe. -1 pint of pumpkin after it has been through the colander, 4 eggs, 1 teaspoon of cinnamon, 1 teaspoon of ginger, 1 teaspoon of salt, 3 pints of milk, 1 heaping big spoon of wheat flour, 3 cups of sugar. This makes threepies. FBrar CAKE. -2 eggs, 1 cup butter, 2 cups raisins, chopped tine, 1 cup sweet milk, 1 cup of molasses, 2 cups brown sugar, 1 small teaspoon cloves, 2 teaspoons cinnamon, 1 small teaspoon soda, e small nutmeg. Put bit a little citron. FILLING YOB, Loom CA.xu.—One cup of granulated sugar, with a little waterto . . His Mother's Pies. rve toiled and tried and worried, rve gone the cook books through, Till my brain is tired and flurried, And my hands and patience, too. I've had the best instruction From the ablest cooks in town, And my pies aro crisp and dainty And delicately brown. But apple, mince or pumpkin, Of any form or shade, Are nothingto my husband Like the pies his mother made. So l'll give the struggle over, And throw my pride away, But as sure as a mother fn be avenged some day.My bonnie lads are growing, And they'll not be afraid To ten their future spouses What pies their mother made. Bravely Done. A Map Showing Their New Spheres of nuenee and *her/Withal of Central and South Atalica Among the rowers—Great Sigutticance of the New Arrangement— England nous heir Osru in the Scram. hie The settlement of the territorial claims of Great Britain and Germany in the Atm= lakes regions is an event of unusual signifi- cance. All the coasts of Africa, home for some time been parcelled out among the nations Europe, but it was not until last week that the country of the greet lake regions was also divided. There is nothing left to divide for, in spite of Portugal, England will not relax her hold on Nyasaland, and if last week's agreement is reatified, thepredomina- Wig influences .010 w 11 shape events in the lake regions are perhaps determined for ages to come. This map shows the results of the past mouth's conference in Berlin, and also the division of that part of Africa lying south of 30 north latitude among the powers. A very remarkable series of events has led to this sudden determination of white interests in the lake regions. Three years ago Eng- land and Germany agreed upon their spheres of influence he East Africa, They drew the lino width appears upon our map exteuding from e little north of Zanzibar to the northeast coast of Vzotorie Nyeuza. They agreed that the region north of this hue should be the Britith sphere. They both promised not to intrude upon one another's domain. They thought bowever, there was no use trembling their beetle About the countries Around the lakes. Ihe powerful King of Uganda., north of Victoria Nyeeze, WAS bostile to Europeans, mul the only whites in his capitol were prisoners wile would be Old to get away if the King would let them go. hanin Pasna, at Albert Nyanza, was hemmed in on all Wes by enemies, unable to leave the country if he so desired. The country between Ictoria hyanza and the Congo State was alinoet iinknown, and none of the wise men who were negotiating knew whether they would care to give a sixpence for it. So they decided to leen the lake regions for statesmen of the lettere to (marvel over. But eveuts bave moved with unexpected rapidity, and the (pest of the big lakes came 'very abruptly to the front a few weeks ago. hiwanga, the tyrant of Uganda, humbled by a season of exile, has been restored to his throne, with the aid of the whites, and he timed a willing ear to the blaudishments of the German, Dr. Peters, who Arrived op- portunely on the ecene. Emin, whom Stin- ky dragged unwillingly to the coast, said his country could and ought to be reclaimed, and he posted back in the pay of Germany, and with a large caravan, to take posses - non. A great hue and cry went up from the British East African emptily, who had invested an enormous capital in the British sphere, lfere were the Germans, stealing around behind the line dividing the two wagons. Owing to his untimely death the work was then suspended and has never been resumed. LI the agreement Great Britain retains the so-ealled Stevenson road, and a line from Nyassa to Taamanyika just north of it, marks the limit of the German sphere in this direction. Then the German boundary follows around the north end of Nyassa and down the east coast of the lake to nearly its middle point, where the Remain River, extended. in it straight line to the lake, forms the southern boundary. A curious feature of this arrangement is that not the slightest attention has been paid to tribal territorial divisions. Row will the Kin,g of Uganda like it when he hears that while he is in the British sphere his suzerain and tribute payer, the King of rich Eeragwe, is under the German flag? Massai Land has been cut in two iv, the middle, and it will perplex these nomads who wander all over their country to know whether they are British or Germans. the extension of Germany's sphere to the west and north has thus added many thou. sands of square miles to her territory. Row has Great Britain, fared? Lord Salisbury is loudly censured by some of the Euglish newspapers for having made a sorry bar. gain. But Stanley thinks the Prime Man. ister has done splendidly for his country, and so will everybody else who has studied these equatorial regions, In the first Place, all of Uganda proper is assigned to British enterprise, and Uganda is the particularly coveted plum im the lakeregions. Thea Uayoro uorth and names old province are within the British sphere, safe from any other greedy ower. Eng- land will control the head of t navigable Nile, and when the walling hiandist power at Khartoum succumbs, the great Nile val- ley to the cataracts may be England's if she chooses to take it. On the motet the situetion has been greatly improved from the English point of view. The little country of Vito, the islauds of Mande and Pete, elle towns scottered along the Somali coast where the German flag was waving, have all been ceded by Germany to England and Germany will acquiesce in a. British protectorate over Zanzibar and the rich clovemaising island of Pemba. In short, the British have o clear field for 200 miles along the Somali coast until they meck. the recently acquired Italiau possessions, The British Rest Africen Company was the interest in Great Britain chiefly concerued itt tbis agreement, and it is safe to say that we shall not hear a word of complaint from that company thee Lord Salisbury has not ably looked, out, for the interests of bis comitry. But this is not all, England has already, with the consent of the waive chiefs, esta- blished a, protectorate over the tribes on the west coast of Lake Nyassa. Last week's agreement asserts that the Stevenson road is hers, and this is it distinct declaration that the country south of that road and between. the Congo State and Lake Nyassa is reseri- ed for hengland. Thus anotlaer great region, only partly explored, and containing one of the largest Zrunbesi tributaries, comes under botish influence ; 1±11(1 there ts every reason to believe that ebefore a great while Englaud will do what the British South African Com- ,r. en- eas -- . ; nYst ••it 0 .41,1b1 et e v ; t• 4N— ;Nvki telt neo Pt3 ht tele , t MAP SnoWING THE NEW APPORTIONMENT OF TERRITORY BETWEEN ENGLAND AND O 1 MANI. spheres and about to grab thelake countries north ot the line. The British country was to be eut off from the populous interior, rob- bed of the countries naturally tributary to its coast. Something had to be done, and the present agreement is the result. of the. clamor in England in behalf of the interests of the Briti.sh East African Company. This is what has been done, and the pro- ceeding may be followed on the map, 'flee old line of demarcation which strikes the east shore of Victoria Nyanza at, 1 0 south ; latitude, has been extended etraight aerese the lake along that pooallel. Theo it takes a turn to the southwest around Mouet period of extreme cold so affected a switch (Amp State. The Beitish have Stanley to Quite recently, on a Belgian railway, a Mfumbiro and joins the boundary of the bar that, when the switchman attempted to 'thank for the fact that the berueolary. tine move it is broke in two. The accident makes that curious bend south Of Ifiount prevented the switching apparatus from working. Two passenger trains were approaching, andthe switchman saw instantly that if the switch was not turned, a dreadful collision would be the result. Mfumbiro. When he was on tbe way homc with Emin he found the country between MutaNzige and this -manta:in a very rich and prosperous region for . equatorial rico,. The population is; dense, extete fip of/A by the thousand, awl valuable ;tele Jednes, There was but one thing for him to do; are found. Stanley improve/1 the rrharget , he must, push the movable rail into place make treaties with the efilefe thWyonftpy with his hands. This involved. getting be placing them under British proteetton, oriel tween the two tracks upon which the trains his treatieshave been reepec teed Jo gm Agreo, must pass. Re decided what to do without moisten itBoil until no steam n risesment. licsitathig a second. Stir in the beaten white of one egg, then Throwing himself flat on the ground be ocean to the Congo Sat. forneethetreetireten This arbitrary line, ere ore, rerni .r, it; add one cup of chopped raisins. Put be f ,-,.,..ii the two tracks, the switchman moved boundary of the Gorman sphere, Fullythrea- tween layers. Chop the raisins very fine. ,Dt, rail to its place with bis hands, and then fourths of the coastlineof VietoriaNyanrAU EASY Cen-o.-6 eggs, lb•minces of flour, drew them hack' just hi time t° eseaPe the German. The Germans have aittedtheentlee 1 pound of sugar, h piet of water, 1 table- wheels of the locomotive. ing-powder, pound of but He had a narrow escape, too, from being spoonfel of bak . thrown upon the other track by the rush of terCream butter and sugar together, break one egg and mix well, add a lithe au caused by the rapidly moving train. flour and mix well, hut do not beat, only stir, Adcl eggs and flour alternately till all are in, then add water. Sift baking -powder with flour. Italie in layers, and lade any filling you prefer. Poem. CAKE. —Mt cups flour, 31, cups sugar, limps butter, 1 cup milk, 6 eggs. Season. This is for those who prefer cake without baking -powder. CILBESE.—There have been a number of recipes for using cheese, but as I have not seen my recipe, which 1 have used for years, I will also send it, hoping someone country between Victoria Nyaneu and tele Tanganyika, most of the western partofwiffeh is as yet wholly unkowri. The east coast of langanyika, is theirs while on the copreelte Ile escaped, however, and the passengers Alone the blue flag of the Congo State will whose lives his 3-avetry and presence of mind Wave. It was necessary to draw still another had staved did not et est know that they had arbitrary line to fix the southwest boundary been in chinger. of Germany. This is how it was done : Precious Corns, • The French custom house authorities late- ly laid a trap tor a female smuggler and caught her. When searched the had her toes tied together, and between every tee was a diamond valued at $200 or xriore, Every toe was bleeding with the cuts, but the woman was enduring it for the sake of the profit, A few years ago the African Lakes Con. po,ny, which has steamboats on LakeNyaosa, wanted to make a wagon road between Tanganyika and Nyassa for the purpose Of extending its trade to the northern lake. A wealthy Scotchman named Stevenson sup, plied the funds, and James Stewart, well known for his careful niap of Lake Nyassa, surveyed the route, and then, beginning at Nyassa, prepared forty mike of the road, for pany desires --extend this- new Britieh sphere across the Zambesi to the vast region north and west of the two Boer republics, which has }leen taken ander the proteeting wing of Great Britain. The Freneh oceupy the region In the northwest corner of our map. It will be seeo from the map that the touneariee be. tween the reeicom elainnel by the varimei powers tbroughout the interior cif tier eolith. ero part of theemitiaent have now been quite eleerly defined exeept in the region of tier upper am/ middle Zoatibeei. Portugal Joe put forward At ,retb.er ild Pi 5 1}ii etreieli of torr4tory eleer *moos the (engin. reit, but, as 11( Joel WOY4•1' z1,;,13,10.0.4 thiY teal proteme of the ix:vinery, inrither ';at Many nor kogland prep:al:Ai S4/ reeOff,,MYR, the 444-71 011n the 54.1,4*, geg)ergits ghio.s of limor Afr,:te.4 ;,(„iYIA libe bee, prOiniise of fvfonlo finu -(4,4 .rolittng, 11„roal. poi, fi4i' tiro # fee y north awl A;•444. VM1/dilk 1111,704Y4 ft,/iff redbn 1'M41AoYi4 ON *irk. tfteet(ftea *eat ffN)4 thev flo tYPetertifid ,44ill* 1144 ;Mid§ 444+44 kir ovV.44 04.1wo., ghly fvg,;:w 0,084v,44, of 00(414, $$OXY #1,fr,Y4' ith$: tY16 wf,9,16 wownieliwoc grkgr46,&,. tA 4otu44 A:AWSA, 4,4619 g Afoot fN #04, for vhi614* Lem& Atoolv Awymy tow, odemky mitcyethog met<eifolf, f# 4.1o1,04 fifaa f,f,oiw kodp; 0.1 omasfo foxy hie pel.,414,Miy food tot export ON tfiw wept, Moouti ggeosle,- A VetY 00,§1110Mil6 ibi(Akti'eNi, of fl.e, ifo-434 1q4o torkic liofth Pfiet feitetnthet 'Meth, is lAglyf Strf4 (.414.61%654.61Y kdfIdi'd 6feeiri= tty, Vie& .1,14 tvifiewst. fort stip, potorl to lite oft of 46 '64 sea, ic60wwi,frl Atrioa, firetlogif potootomio olitip vow& Afilog vets,' fogey, azw4,,, arid 10 valtrabie beefy for Oa miiiere YAW/5146W of a Pat* 61 ft, 1$4 2gfii fie t 6gft Tire cowdttolx4. ow tile obAT,26owtaf Wier Me& repOrted fr, Prot deep ilife6Y3 mulas west ei Vaal otri t4§ tht .erein meseed Siert& *Mem* ixtag A 1Thavy tufo arid paSSed Kenidi and MAO there &lie oyeWirxg: ',f14 the lime ettiti be 'Met COatity iit Mere than ts year, WRY COITa NA TIEN a few doses of Ayer's Cherry I' Pectoral will relieve you? Try it. Keep it in the house. You are liable to bave a cough at an7 time, and no other reraedy is so effective as this world - r o nowne d prepare, tion. nre household, with young children„ should be without it. Scores of lives are saved every year by its timely use. Amanda B. Jenne; Northampton. Mass., writes ; " Common geatitude pela me to acknowledge the great bone - tits I have derived for my children fronz the use of Ayer's most exeelle t • Pectoral. 1 had lost two dear from croup and consumption the greatest fear of losing my o et- maining daughter and son, as they wers delicate, Happily, I find that by giving them Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, on the first synaptonts of throat or lung trouble, they are relieved from danger, and are be- coming robust, healthy children." 'In the winter of 1885 I took is bad, cold which, in spite of every known remedy, grew worse, no that the family physician considered me incurable, sup- posing Inc to be in censumption. Aa last resort I tried Ayer's Cherry Peotoe rat, and, In a short thine, the cure was eompletet Since then I have never beem without this medicine. I am fifty years et age, weigh over 180 pounds. and at- tribute toy good health to the use of Ayer's Cherry Pee toral."--GeW.Youlter, Salem, N. J. "Last winter I contracted a *leveret cold, width by repeatee exposure, be- came quite obatluate, I WAS emelt troubled with hoarseness and bronollial irritation. After trying oavioua mettle eillea, without relief, I at last purchased a bottle of Ayer' s Cherry Pectoral, Ort taking this medicine, my cough ceased almost immediately, and I have been well ever since."—Itev. Thos. It Bussell, Secretary Rolston Conference and r. B. of the breeuville District, lil. E. C., Jonesboro, Tema. Ayer's Chem Pectoral, Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mau. Boid by all Druggiste. 1ri/410j elx bott1es,14., Tnto establish AlOWIngalistighinep o at o 111111 trade in ell rani, by plating oar machine. And geode 'crime the people vont we send r roe to One Milan tri v4cli locallty,the very boo towing-truichtne outdo in the worithnith all the sttecitinente. We will alio ttnd ernes complete line of our cosily and valuable art andtletin rattan NIS atk 1118) 305 thow what 11 1' trod. t dote who niay call ett your howato,and odor El month.% all shell bet erne YOU,' OM PrOVIIP. 1 grtn/I mivhIne undo otltr 1117 italtint•r pnottle, 1711111111,110 mu out het, moulds irkin ont It $014 for:S9.3. ualh.thn FR FR t:-g`n'Ll'74011:..Ar0:041. hriefinstrnolons Oren. 1 hots Who write to wila Once can so, SUre free *ha hen sewing -Machine in the worli nd the num Untie( weevils( high emitter shown leguthe IMATE dio Box ,r,tti, August ,gnIZ G13i HOUSEHOLD REIYIEDY. Hammon, Ont, Dear Sir—t 'save used your Pain 'exterminator la my fondly for ev erything that a DitutiY is at'. toted re lith. such as cough s Arad s mitenmettsm. sprains and Burns. Toothache. stud 'wherever there is 'paha. 1 would not be without it la my house. I can recommedet It te the world to be a drat -class ar*tc1e,bctkintraaI and external Yours, ete.. JAS. /MARINA N. Fres. Prohibition Society. , seestette'R X•14 by AU druggist'. F. F. DALLET & CO.: Proprietors, Hamiltott. Pon Sore Eyes Catarrh Lameness Female Complaints Sunburn Soreness Sprains Chafing uc Bruises Uifl Scalds• Piles POND'S Burns Wounds EXTRACT Insect Bites Stings Sore Feet INFLAMMATIONS HEMORRHAGES AVOID ALL IMITA- TIONS. THEY MAY BE DANGEROUS, FAC -SIMILE OF BOTT L E MTH BUFF WRAPPER. DEMAND POND'S EX- TRACT. ACOEPT NO SUBSTITUTE FOR IT THIS IS THE, ONLY IIIGHT KIND, DONOT TAKE, ANY OTHER. , tiliVifloitelOold watch, Sind reedlike*, until lately, Batt S1111 Width In the world. Nitta titsokupar. Wan. 11 Natal. Ham.), Send Gold 1110)11115Oaten Both ladles. and gents, alzes,wIth weeks and 09113$ of equal vane. One rersenta entail°. , kettit. tum secure one tree, tistotho wits Iner large and vat. q0616 Una of Household essuainles. Nampa, as- toii ad the watch, wo sand sae Out yaks have kept ASA iyailt lasSII tor 7o Menthe and shown to those ichd Bilge iliOT tiothothoyout own proporty.,_ Thant ehett,Ntit he ante rteaolvIng the Waktdin 904 fitittlittet We ay an oaten, tmlototc, Addrets IVOti ete iiiVA 4.'ortaccnol. brain". 1