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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-12-4, Page 71 • ," FE E ! W GRAND LOVE STORIES, • a package of goods worth two dollars to manufacture, and a large 100p Picture Book, that veill surely put you ou the road to a handsome fortuue, Write quick, and seed 5o. silver, to help pay pos. tape. Mention.thisparer. . W.iligromv-, 7 `• aratoutb.N.$. � Corde oe OURS Runs i;asv NO BAORAL.F1E, tie.. ."'.if eivE it d l\;. W iitefoe descriptive catalogue containing testiolontale Iron. hundreds of people win bats sawed from •t to ticords, dotty. 25,900 now uuccess. fall, used, �aency can be hat) Were there is a Vacancy. A liew 11)I;sito11 for :Mug tows sent rtes with each =Wee; by the use of thte tool everybody Can fie their own says now and do l> be' -ter than the greatest o;;pery can without it. Adapted to al! prose -cut saws. Eqt,15, oI O VIM owusi; s?„selioutd dan At* ourdealeroo t'write voI, I:i(ns.iivfatiG Mit MINN CO., 802 to tall fi, Canal SI., t.haeego, l.l• FOR J sect Stings Eyes e Eruptions Sore Feet r ess to 3ru� i7 Boo tt,t-ts1 Files Female gonipigints Mosccuito Pites Su66urn I of larn ation REFUSE SUBSTITUTES BE SURE.THAT BOTTLE WITH B U FFWRAPPER WOKS LIKE THIS. t.UNUfACTIIRtO ONLY $Y PONA'S EXTRACT COMPANY. TO FIFTH NII .,NEYPYQftK. P2ABL$ OF TM} rB, How eircumserihed is woman's destiny.— (Goethe. The man who can be compelled knows not how to. die.—Seneca. The smoke of glory is notworth thesmoke of a pine.--{oeorgoSand. Finesse is the best adaptation of meads to ciredmstnnces.--•tMacaulay. Wo aro always iu the light; fate always in the wrong.—[La. Fontaine. The history of love would be the history of humanity.—[Charles Nodicl•. . Cowards are cruel, but the brave love mercy and delight so save ---[Cay, Pain and pleasure, like light and dark• ness, succeed each other.—[Statue, The noontide sun is dark and music (Rs, cord when the heart is lou.--[Youug, As long as the heart preserves desire, the heart preserves illusions.—[Chateaubriaud. In this world nought which conies stays, and nought which goes is lost. ---Wine. Switehine. Despatch is taking time by the ears; hurry is taking ithy the end of the tail (II. W. Shaw. To divest one's self of sotne prejudices would be like taking. oil' the skin to feel bet. ter,--' EOreville, Though we have two eyes, we aresupplied with but one tongue. Draw your owe moral, •--[Alphonse Karr. `relent of the highest order, and such as is caleulatedto command admiration, may east apart from wisdom. [Robert Ball, Relieve, if thou wilt, that mountains eh ango their phases, but believe not that man ehan;es hie nature,—Eilloltaurnled, If you would not be forgotten as soon as For CRAMPS, COLIC, and all Bowel Troubles, use 0 { MIRY 3M'VIS' ,• Ilea both internally and externally, Ueda rulekl ,afferdinealmostiestant Wier -frees the severest pain. BE SUREt*GET THE GENUINE 25o per bottle. MEDICINE and FOOD COMBINED 1 EMULSION .CF COD LIVER OIL & HYPO arLwEAe SCOA.i Increases Weight,Strengthens Lutists and Nerves. Price 50e. and $1.00 per Bottle. Ministers and Public Speakers use SPENCER'S Chloramine Pastilles For Clearing and Strengthening the voice. Cure Hoarseness and Soreness of Throat. Price use per bottle. Sample free on application to Druggists. mesas TO MOTHERS /ALM®- T/1R SOAP Nursery, foreoleaning tho hScallptor Sonet 0! THE 5a$T BABY'S SOAP KNOWN. Price See. Pbysioians strongly recommend Wyeth's Malt Extract, quid) To patients suffering from nervous exhaus- tion; to improve the Appetite, to assist Di- gestion, ft valuable Tonic. 40 Cents per bottle. affirlagi The most satisfactory BLOOD PURIFIER is Chaim in1s Sarsaparilla, Itis a Grand HEALTH RESTORER. Will euro the worat form of akin disease ; will pure it.heulnatism ; will cure Salt Rheum Flrge. Bottles, $1.00. wierfij *ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM For CONSUMPTION, Coughs, neglected Colds Bronchitis, Asthma and all diseases of the funs. In throe sized bottles 25o, 50e, and $1,00. auk FOR HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA, F r LumbaOo, Sciatica, " Cricks;' Tic, " Stitches,' Rheumatic Pains and Chronic Rheumatism. Each plaster in'an airekieht tin Box. 25c. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO. Lim., MONTREAL, ' - Proprietors or General Agents • . POR MOST OF THE POPULAR Propriefary or Pharmaceutical Medicines, ,Toilets Articles ;End P;, s 'r fumer,.y. To Tell. the Age Qf a Rorse, To tell tto ape of any horse, Inspect the lowerjaw, of course. Tladsix front teeth the tale will tell, Andevery doubt and fear dispel. The middle "nippers" you behold. Before the colt es two. weeks old Before Dight weeks two more will come; Bight mouths the "corners" cut the guru, Tee outside grooves will disappear 1•'rom middle two in Inst one year. In two years from the second pair; In three, the "'corners," too, are bare. At two, the middle"nippers, drop; At three, the second paw Taal t stop; When four yearn old, the third parr goes;. At five, a full now set he shows. The deep blade spots will pass from view At six years front the middle two; The second pair at seven years; At eight, the spot each. "corner" clears. From middle "nippers" elMerjaw. At nine the black spots will withdraw. The second pair at ten are white; .Eleven finds the "corners"ligkt. As time goes on the horsemen know The oval teeth three -sided grow ; They longer get, project before Till twenty, when we know no more. TELEGKAPRIO TICKS, A wholesale expulsion of Nihilists from Pule is expected It is proposed by, the Disciples' Church to establish a Bible College in Ontario. The French Tariff Committee has made heavy increases in the duties on meats. Enormous damage to property and some loss of life have been caused by the floods iu Germany. The majority in the Assembly at Regina have again sat heavily on the llovernor and his advisers. A finane al panic prevails at Buenos Ayres, and on Monday there was a tumult on the bourse. There were several convictions and fines imposed in cases at Toronto yesterday for giving short measure, Dr. Cholette, the Opposition candidate, has been declared elected in Vaudreuil, Que.,by a majority of one. It is uuderstood that the next session of the Ontario Legislature will open in the. latter part of January. Five persons were killed and three neare fatally wounded by a boiler explosion near St. John, N. D. Secretary Windom has nal yet given a ruling in the ease of the United States elevator man versus the Canadian rail. ways. .Il,. °lassie Toilet. According to testimouy which is scarcely to bo disputed, the sun could never have shone upon a less lovely abject than a Ro- man lady in the days of the c'asars when she opened her eyes a great deal, says the Boston Herald, had to be done. i%'hen she retired to real. ber face had to be covered with a plaster composed of bread and ass' milk, whieh dried during the night hours, and, consequently, presented in the morning en appearance of cracked chalk. The purpose of the ass' mint was not only to preserve the delicacy of the skin but to renovate the lungs, and so strong was that belief its the efficacy of the specific that some energetic ladies Lathed themselves in it you are dead, either write things worth react- seventy times in the course of a smite day, iug or do things worth writing. --[Franklin. says a writer in the Jcnness•MillerMagazine. 'have somewhere read that conscience not Ino says Poppi t a, the favorite wife of Nero, only sits as witness anti judge within our never sot out on a Journey without taking in bosoms, but also forms the prison of puuisls• .ler traits whole herds of she asses, that the iuent. - 1 of ea DAM might bathe wheatever she pleased to do Oh, horst smalls► portion of earth will Vold cif)* plaster of -parse bust ha tigg weal:on• US when we are dead, who ambitiouslyrlvseek ed in the morning ill a cracked condition it after the whole world when we are living.•»-• [Philip, King of Macedon. Love is a necessity to marriage ; without it those who enter into matrimony would be comparable to a rot who drinks only to in- toxicate lti:nself.---:Plutarch. A noon barn in a state of poverty never feels its keenest panes t but he whol'as fall- en from a life of luxury feels theft with all their bitterness,. JaluesEllie, Thou invest he sures that he alis tviltin private tell thee of thy faults is thy friend, for he adventures thy iiislike and dont hazard thy hatred. -[Sir Walter Raleigh. Methinks to kiss a lady's band after her lips, as snsne dot is like the little boys, who alter they eat the apple, till to the paring, out of love they have to theapple.4aelden. If the gatherer takes too numb, Nature takes ant of the man what she puts into his Chest ; swells the estate, but kills the owner. Nature hates monopolies and exceptions.-- [I•,ruersou. The Talk of Brutes. The article its the EreasingPost of Septem- bei'.'S, "C'nmr .onlays Talk?" In ought to mind niy own theory concerning the conver satinet powers of animals, a theory which is the result of somneyearsof intimate friend• ship with what we are pleased to call " the lower orders of creation." All domestic animals, living a life of routine, dependent on the Bare of human beings, uuul often, es in the case of coua and horses, with little queers to communicate with others of their own find, use a very linuitetl vocabulary in their every -day life; but any unusual circttutstance produces new words, easily distinguished by anyone at all familiar with their ordinary speech. The remarks of my horse, for iustauce, will, for weeks, be noticeable for nothing but their sameness ; then be will give me a most % n - tunny feeling by an entirelynowobservation called out by sone change iu teed or sur- roundings. Fowls have undoubtedly a larger vocab- ulary than any of the other domestic anim- als ; yet in half n day you will probably y hear from there all the sounds that they use in ordinary life. But, anytluugg out of the ordinary is instantly expressed in unusual sounds. I always know what is disturbing the flock, whether dog, eat. hawk, or stranger. The cry for a hawk near at hand and a hawk far off scents to be the same t -word, but withwitha different emphasis hasis and in a different key. Woodchucks have the same greeting as cats, but louder and morn em- phatic. One day I was startled by sounds from the yard whle11 1 had never heard be- fore, and rushing to the rescue, I found a tame red fox dragging a broken chain, try- ing to got through the fence. The new sentence consisted of several words not com- plimentary to foxes. I have never heard anything like thein since. Very tame hens often show a desire to talk to you, and it is usually possible to understand their meaning. Once a Cochin, whose years and breeding entitled her to a separate perch, came and stood in front of me, looked me full in the face, and complained loudly of something, I could not translate further. Patient investigation revealed that one end of her perch had slipped down, and Mrs. Buff had no idea of sleeping on an inclined plain. Another time a nervous little Leghorn met me at the hen -house door, fairly screaming and jumping with excitement. Tender - stood, from the cackle that finished each sentence, that she had been disturbed on her nest. I chid not wouder at her new powers of speech when I found the nest occupied by my cat and three small kittens. When the chickens first begin to move in the egg, just before hatching, the mother hen sings to them a low crooning song, very sweet, and never heard at any other time. A friend tells me that her canary startled her one day by an entirely new call. It was so plainly, "Come here, quick," that she hurried to the cage to find an enormous cat, with face pressed a ainat the window pane, staring in at poor Ned --a danger sufficient- ly great to account for the new call. There are but two ways by which one can hear animals really converse. One is to lis- ten to them when they are not aware of your presence, always a difficult feat ; the other is to win their entire love and con= fidence, hours of patient coaxing would be needed, before a monkey world do more than "'chatterunintelligently," or " scream •angrily" ; and f1 poking with a stick"' seems a rather miscientlfic way to produce the de- sired result. One cannot help fancying that Prof. Garner's graphophone holds no- thing but varieties of monkey profanity. It is a curious ,reflection on the intelli- gence of mankind that while animals easily `learn our language we make no advance at all in learning theirs. One cannot help hoping that some future generation of men 'may be sufficiently kind and patient and', large -hearted to believe that what those de- pendent creatures have to, say to us may -sometinies.bo as important as what we have tq say tothem and to act accordingly. • The Vanderbilt Millions. The care of the Vanderbilt millions la.a far greater burden than most people im. nine, There are not many eitizeus in aur country who require a great bank of their own in which to transact their business and deposit their seeurities. One of the largest banking buildings In the country is the Lincoln National Rank, a Fifth avenue and! Forty-second street, Titin belcnge to the Vantletbilts. It holds millions of money and many inorowilhions of securities which repro- sent e re -sent their wealth. Aftorthaelder Vanderbilt � died, and his property had to be di tributed emote his children, it was no small task to was the otTice of a host of female slaves tago over the vast nutnber of stacks and mature it to perfect beauty. To clear the field far further operations, the first of these gently washed away with lukewarm milk the .aurally crumbling utask and left smooth face to be colored lty more recondite artists. The slave whose vacation it was to paint the cheeks delicately laid on the red and stttuaon exist ender similar conditions. In white, having rnaist.neflthe sigma withher no other laud eould a family have had a3 lits finaneia►l servant a matt who had been t'ahi. net Minister. let when Thomas L. James eeastel to ire Postmasters( ictseral he anchor- ed himself its the I inetaln National flank to ' count the moue, and 'at as a grins figure- head upon the stool of the stir, c sfnl opera -,t tions of ono mean.'.- Xew York Eveningg Telegram. Winds he left and divide their up according to the provisions of the will. 11or was it a small matter to distribute the ready money that was in the bank. This back and its op- erators aeon like a romance of our rapid civilization. In sentimental features nothing, in Europe eau compere nith it, In no corm. try on earth except this could wrest an iu- own saliva. The apparent offensiveness at this operation was diminished by a eertainj number of scented lozenges, if the alavel neglected to take whirls she suffered cor- poral punishnwut. A precious nrtlelc was thepp.. aint with whirls the Roman doming was laeautified; it wee well worthy the ease of ivory and rock crystal in which it was preserved. The principal ingredient in the red paint was a� moss, known by the name of focus, which is still to be found on the lleditetranean' coast. The cheeks having been perfected,' the eyelashes anti eyebrows came in for their share of attention, met a third slave dyed them with a black inixttu'e, which, though called fuligo, was no eomnton soot, but composed of very choice materials. These blackened eyebrows and eyelashes were absolutely indispensable if the don►ina aspired in the slightest degree to tbo char- acter of a beauty. Tho enratress of the eyebrows was fol. lows d by the tooth -brusher, who not only performed the (Ace which this title implies, but handed to her mistress some mastich from the Isle of Chios, a specific: chewed every anointing to preserve the teeth from decay. Even if the teeth were not already in the .lead of the lady, but had to be in- serted by the dexterous slave, the mastiob was still chewed to keep up appearance. A Do%'s Strange Instinct. This experiment was tried is. few days ago with a sung Ohio foaluound. Raving notte. ed thet og'atalentfortirulinghle way through the streets of alarge city, a number of sport - mon agreed to try his shrill by a harrier teat, and one evening pet hies in a box and took him away on a night train, after snaking sure that he was altogether unable to guess tiro direction of hietrip. A hundred mules south of the Ohio river the train stopped ata place Balled Ring's Mountain, and that same night the aportmen took their prisoner to a fares house in the', hills, about seven miles east of the railroad. Here the dog nils locked up in a dark stable and carried to a lefties; ground in the ad- joining fields the next morning. After geld. fug him a zigzag course tlu'otiga; hedges and ,gullies the experimenters then turned the dog loose and sat down on the ridge of a hill to watch his movements. At first he seemed rather afraid to stray too far away, thinking, perhaps, that he would be recaptured at the brat attempt to leave his kidnappers, but finding that they' showed no disposition to interfere with his freedom, he made his way across a bushy ravine, and then struck a path leading in the direction --not of the farmhouse or the next railway station, but due northwest, to- ward the valley of the Licking river and his far away Ohio home, That was the lust the guests of the Kentucky farmer saw of their dog that day, bnt before the end of the week he turned up all right at the door of his master, 95 miles in a bee -line from the place where he had been turned loose. So much was certnva, that he could not have retraced his trip by a scent. The car that took him away from the Ohio valley was down in Texas by that time. There were at least 20 small rivers and brooks to cross before he could reach the end of Isis journey or any point south of the Ohio he had ever seen iu his life. Could the smoke of a large city have guided hint back? There were other smoky towns all around, and, besides, dogs will return to a solitary farm- stead in the hills just as quick as to a city home. Salting Butter. F. C. Curtis, The dairy authority, opposes the idea taught by some that butter should be twice salted, es butter itself does not absorb salt. He stays : "Our soientine instructors tells us that it is allowable ar right to leave in the butter 13 per cent. of water when the butter is completed This we will accept as correct. What then remains to do is to salt that 1'i per cent. of water sufficiently to season the butter, which is about as salt as we can make it without having undissolved salt in the butter. Let us suppose we have, say, 15 lbs. of butter, winch has been churned to granules about the size of wheat grains, washed and drained withoutthe use of salt. We can add the salt (15 oz) in the churn. A few revolutions will mix the salt evenly through the butter, when it should remain at rest about five minutes for the salt to dissolve. Then revolve the churn until the butter is worked into a moss or in solid lumps. It will be found that most of the superfluous brine has worked out. At one time we will find this brine to measure one quart, at another time three or four quarts, although we suppose we have followed the sante process. -Pfau. insist on the ounce -to - the pound, not knowing that half that pan, tity is plenty to remain in the butter. It matters not how much salt is put in the butter. The gnestion is, how much salt remains in it, for in this process of salting more than half of the salt comes out in the superfluous brine. The best way is there- fore, to salt the butter in the churn, and In too much, is little danger of getting provided no more is used than will dissolve. The butter may be placed in the tub direct- ly from the churn without other working than solid packing with the common butter ladle. These views are not offered for creameries who sift on the salt when the butter is comparatively dry, but to those who have so much contradictory advice offered that the subject becomes mystified. His Part the Rite. The blushing bride -elect was rehearsin the ceremony about to take place. "I shall expect you to give me away, papa,” she said. I'in afraid I have done it already, Caro- line," replied the old man nervously. "I told your Herbert this morning you had a disposition jest like your mother's." ! UN's •;•LiS��\ y i for Infants and Children, 'Castor.£riesowen adaptedtoohlldreatbat tF}starta,cures Colic,Constipatloa, irecommeaeitassuzleriortoanyprescr;prion• Sour Stoumel. Diarrbcea, Er4.et4140n, icemen to sue." l? 1L Atacat:a, 32, A., aitlt9 Worms, 5pvas ;slottP, ae4 promote* dk 111, 80.OxZerd8t, $.&00,;1 ?i' -Y. 4tan._ �i � W�� �Ii�►'1-45.$ Ingdigalkeu Tag CE.xxI'Arn Consent, ;: Rurray Street, sr. y.' DR.. W. r 11# RATTA , 198 .King Street West. Toronto. Ont.. TREATS CHRONIC DISEASES -stud gives Spacial atteution to SE1:i DISEASE, as Pimples, 1::eere, eta. PRIVATE DISEASES—and D:aeases of tt; P.isele Nature, he Irpoteucy, Sterility, Yerioace:e, Nervous Da- bihiiv. ere., (the ret ttit at youthful lolly and egress) allot and Stricture of loug *Medias. DISEASES OF WOMPS.e-Faintal, Natuss or San pressed Menalruation. 1,71eeratlan, Lanes:rh tis, aa3, al psa, Displaretnente of the Weil*, Mee hours-9a.eu iittn1lays.1 GOING TO CALIFORNIA VIA TB3 az.ta fel cute. Lx t:ar�ri;a -.. • G ;i. p. nn. .-un Mon "Inc.'':Wets„Th . • at Ar. Ran+,sta Cit• ":1i p. tai Men Tors Weil ;Tour :Fat •'fla Ar Ilutchinson ; ":3i1 p.m, Moo Tues wed `firer F+ Saar Ar TriuIIls t .... 11:16 a RI. Tues -"WO The, Fri 'FW si,: Ar. Las Vegas. .. r , P. le. Tsea Wei iltet Fri Fut lige Ar.Albusneriva • 1 :Va.nt• Wel Their Fri tint ?rhe Cates Ar Barstow. Ar I.e. tn. Thur Fri Sett Reef • -. ;wed M. Lea Angeles 41.11p. el. Thor Fri Sat ..'.un igen +5113 Ar San LDiesta. . ..,+ • r. En Ther 'Fri yat Stun Mau ;Wel 1"utt get the Duty lista o€ thtma is ears tlitlavat change Ci.i::aatt to Lie Angeles, sand you s:acc' ii Ianur.m lin r. OF11t`E-74 URIsAVt1i,Ii.*T, DETROIT, :tIIIIWl#, P.t6l,N,74:er RDINE OIL Tho Farmers Heavy Boded Oil, made only by McCOLL BROS.& CO,, TORONTO TRY 1.T ONCE AND YOU WILL USE ( OTHER. McCo11's Famous Cylinder OIL Is the finest in Canada for engine cylinders. As fax Laraine. Raising Pullets for Eggs, If you want good laying hens in winter, writes a correspondent of the New York World, keep an eye on your early hatched chickens, and select the best developed and healthy looking pullets for furnishing you with eggs next winter. For several weeks after hatching, the young chicks should be fed a little five or six times a day. After they are half grown three or four times a day—not to fatten them, but to make them grow. I would give but very little grain, and that should be mostly wheat, oats or rye, some buckwheat and very rarely a little cracked corn. Two rations out of every three should be soft food made of wheat, bean, shorts, mashed potatoes, and a little corn meal, all well stirred sip together. If mixed up withmilk insteadof water, it will be greatly improved, Give the scraps from the table through the day along with their other rations. See to it that they have green food of some description and plenty of fresh water. Green clover and cabbage leaves will be ex- cellent ; also a little bone meal in their mash, and gravel should always be within their reach. By forcing the best pullets in this way, you will be quite sure to set them to laying un the fall, which, if properly housed and fed, they will continue through' the winter, when, if left to shift for them- selves and make a slow and scanty growth until cold weather, they are not likely to lay at all until the next spring. Palpitation of the Heart. When attacked by palpitation of the heart, let the patient lie down as soon as possible (on the carpet, if needs' be), on the right side, partially on the face. In this position the heart will resume its action al- most immediately. . . "This is a dollar store, isn't it?" asked Ructions, as he presented 'himself, " No, sir," replied the teller severely, " this is a bank:' " Well,' what's the difference ?" ' A story at hand describing •a cove scene between the' hero anti. the heroine, says.: "Tie' wooed her with a will." That's a good way, . especially if the wooer is old and the. ' will is mnioeilfav .,,.. FOR SALE BY BIS.SI:TT BR OS. Manufactured only at TnoMas ld'as aouv sr's EsT cntniu ss., lea 3.1'31:1 at.k'C)P I1 67.:B.11.171!,„ 1.02N3.eO2'.T. Cs° d -\T''`om Vcc� :Jt 1�y ",y� �`,o yet `I' `` c 4. a, ' '. 'ti`s m et . of ;° t �, 'e� - , S° 5°i Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots, If the address 1s not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are amnions. Exeter _Butcher Shop RICCRI 'S SPECIFIC R•DAVIS, Butcher & General Dealer -IN tLL MINDS S'--- l7FATS (TRADE MARK REGILTERCQ ) Sold by all druggists. Sole Proprietor, E. SCHOI ILLD, Seho eld's Drug Store, Ener Sr., TORONTO. The only Remedy 'which will per- manently curs Gonorrhoea, Gleet, endallprivate diseases, no matter how 1 ong standin g. Was long and successfully used in French and English hospitals. Two bottles guaranteed to euro the worst ease. -" pboerttl bottle.ohas nature on bel. None genuine. Avery my sig. the la - other Those ustomerssupplied TUESDAYS, THURS who have u tried o - AIS AND SATUBDAYS at their :eaideno ther remedies without avail will not be disap- pointed in this. ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE CI•:IPE PROMPT ATTENTION. " So you've been a missionary among the Indians?" said the inquisitive traveler. "Well, the redskins are dying off fast, are they not ?" "Ou the contrary," replied the solemn -visaged man, "the death rate among. them is'Lo." And then everybody fainted. There's nothieg, lost ; the little grains of sand Oft make up mountains girt with dread n n ri. ptve, And i We babe there sleeping on its cot May some, day be, .perhaps, a mousier -in- It is a certain and speedy curd for Cold in the dead andOatarrhin allita stages. SOOTHING, CLEANSING, HEALING. Instant Relief, Permanent Cure, Failure Impossible. Many metaled diseases aro simplyy symptoms of Catarrh, such as head- ache partial deafness, losing Reuse of smell foul breath, hawking and spit• ting, nausea, general tooling of de- bility, ere. if you are troubled with any of these or kindred symptoms, your have Catarrh, and shad Id lose no time. In procuring a bottle of NA,AZ, BAL,e. Be warned in tiao, neglected cold in -head remelts in Cata rh, fol- lowed by. consum ti n an NA541. Dain Is Sold by all druggists, 3d onrecei receipt or will be sous, nest psi p price (60 omits and $t,OU) by addressing FULFQAD & CO„ Srockvilie, Ont. WEAK N and '44pu e t e . �'� quickly Gnre them• selves of 'Ve'astiag 4ital:ty, Losltanitood, from youthful errors, etc„ quietly at Mosso. Book on all private diseasos sent tree (sealed). Perfectly reliable. Over 30 years' experience. Address -- GILDED $'II% CO., 'h'O$CB TO, Canada. LA0t��� our"Reliefforwomeu"is.afeandalwape P6 ramble : bettor than ne eL, Osida, Tansy er Pennyroyal Pills. sneezes regularity. Bend for particular,. Address oi•3.".DBID 2XXLL CO., TORONTO, Canada. 'EARDS FORCED on smoothest laces, heir on baldest hands. in Bu to SU days. Nagle. Latest and greatcnt achievement of modern sta nce t Stoat won. done. discotery of the ago. Like no other preparations Magical, euro, almost instantaneous In action t Boys with wh:skers 1 Bald heed, "1„wed r• Curious spoctaalea, but posit'se truths. Only genuine artiole in market, and certain to give absolute satisfaction. Guaranteed. Price SI a bottle, dreall AA..rDI'ONQeBoxt805,TOlt Nts 'lO,aC NADA. PREPIIRTIIIS. 51,IPER„n6do °015 reparation that 571:! permanently remt5t euporlinoue hair without injury to rho satin. tt'arreate5. Price 51. PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS tervAT `Ii romave . trona() to SO days, Warranted. fPPriccefor gBOdays tr•ntment, tn. 5510 2 1^UORPUI:E5lE.PI5 5,011 Ser .'' ", People PILLS whoe, 'loon., ?ardnt is s matter of eoncituda, whether beenllae 1t to _ — 1ortnbla or unfemhionahle—k AT FOLKS untag `!, `' j oapusn \ors PILLS"lose 10 lbs. a month. Tho$ cam.' ne no uiokao,s; caffein no potion, and neer fail. Price for Ona' tnon.h's treatment, $3; or three menthe medicine, ea, COMPLEXION WAFERS'''. tvssitar9warranted, .et the skin, develop tbeform.Iiarmles. Permanent .wwarranted, Price $1 a bo,, or, sib0oxes for 56. rl4droaa ran-nAt Z GIo'3nn''3iff3, ago' =Jug o5l Taatete