The Exeter Times, 1894-6-28, Page 61.011;0 A.
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10,128k
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, to t.
S. P. SMIT1f, a TOWattda, Pao
wbose constitution was completely
broken down, is Mired by Aver'e
Sarsaparilla. Ire writes:
"For eight years, 1 was, most of the
time, a great sufferer from constipa-
tion, kidney trouble, and indigos.
tion, so that 3;ny- constitution seemed
to be completely broken down, 1 was
induced to try Ayees Sarsaparilla, and
took nearly seven. bottles, -.with. snob
axcellent remits that my stomach,
bowels, and kidneya are in. perfect con.
elitism, and, In all their functions, as
regular as elook-vvork. At the time
I began taking Ayees Sarsaparilla, my
weight was only 120 pounds; 1 now can
brag of 10 pounds, and. was never in so
good health. It you could see me be-
fore and after using, you would. want
me for a travelinr„ advertisement.
/believe this preparation of Sarsaparilla
to be the best in the market to -day."
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
Prepared by Dr, .T. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Ms&
Cures othersoctiiilcureyou
THEEXETER TIKES.
Ispublisned everyThursday morons, al
MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE
relein-streetamarlv opposite Pittozesi Tewelery
iitore,Exeter,Ont.,by John White it Sons,Pro-
prietors.
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ENE MEDICAL 00,, Buffalo, N.Y,
OUR SUPERIOR POSIT'
CANADA AMONG THE NATIONS
TH EARTII.
I
FA
eaeral Parlitunente though there the eorais
i Meted, Chamber hes never leien e etreug force
finraPniaelritsicoaerhP
f-ThPeC;II:itit7ttobr
ioel3eespe°01tasatioh
ei:s
tended. The tendency will be to seeengthen
rether than alsolieh in
"Aen411000 statmertauantp--Tue Duda*
eelace---iteeson to the States—Are we
Over»Coverned--The lanaea Muse'
an editorial recently published the
London Times slays :—,Unobtruaively amel
telinoat unconeoiously, through the sheer
weight of her oonrx ip netiona.I affairs,
Canada's influence is making itself felt in
Imperial eouneils, Three years ago, in
private canvereation, Lord Rosebery re-
marked that no change had more struck
him iu English politioal life during the hot
ten yeate than the new status wheal Cana-
dians had obtained in this coentry, and
the ready way in which Canadian advice
was accepted in matters of great Imperial
importance by statesmen of all parties.
So far Canadian statesmanship haa justie
fied the greater attention paid to it. Be
-
sults sixth as those achieved at the Halifax
,and Behring Sea arbitrations ere the best
proof of this. Both were the outcome of a
firm stand taken by Canada in regard to
what she thorght her right; both were
conducted mainly on Canadian advice ; and
in each case an irapartial tribuual main-
tained the Canadian as against the Ameri-
can contention.
HER MIDDLE Pommes.
In many ways Canada holds a eurious
middle position in political thought be-
tween Great Britain and the United States.
At first sight it might appear that the fin -
pact of so immense a community as the
United. Stites wonld entirely dominate
Canadian lines of growth in politics and
social life and determine their tendencies.
But this is very far from being the case.
Canada has retained a very distinct indi.
vidualit3r of its OWIL Bub with its own
life, the, Dominion grows more cordial
with its great neighbor as tbe latter learns
to respect it.
At the point which they have now reach-
ed the business of Canada and the United
S tatee is to live on friendly terms with
each other. And there is little to prevent
them from doing so, given common honesty'
of dealing and respect for cacti others rights.
The great boundary questions have been set-
tled with the exeeption of that in Alaska.
Other points of dispute have been cleared
away. Mr. Goldwin Smith always assumes
that Canada's presence as a part of the
British Empire on the American Continent
is a standing irritation to the United States.
Possibly it is to a baser element in the
United States, but that is not a think to
which a free people should pander. It is
• much more likely that Canada, in the mid-
dle ground which it occapies, will prove to
• be the solvent which will unite in sympathy
and on honorable terms the two great
• nations with which she is allied in race and
languages. Certainly it is in dealing with
Canadian questions that these nations have
maae the greatest advance in the matter of
national arbitration. In framing her
system Canada took many hints from the
United States.
HER SUPERIOR ORGANIZATION.
In the practical work of Government the
-United States might well take many les.
sons from Canada. In maintaining a high
respect for the law and the judicial offla,
in the management of native races, in or-
ganizing a non-political Civil Service, in
the unification of marriage laws, to mention
a few special points, the greater success of
the smaller and yourifer Federation has
been marked.
On the other hand, by applying the fed-
eral principle of government on a great
scale while keeping the system in harmony.
with British Institution, Canada must be
thought of, not as becoming Americanized,
but as making a most important addition
to the political experience of the Empire.
There is no sufficient ground for doubting
the success of the experiment. Friction
there has been, but nothing that for a mo-
ment can be compared witn what the Un-
ited States had to deal with in, the earlier
years of the Union; nothing that bas not
yielded to judicious treatment. Friction
there will doubtless still be, but the
principle of union has now passed through
the critical stage, and no single province
would be allowed to violate the federal
compact.
HER PAR,REACHING INFLUENCE.
The success of federalism in the Dominion
and th e increased weight it bee given to Can-
ada cannot but have far-reaching re-
sults upon other parts of the Empire. It
will forward the idea of unity in Australia
and South Atrica,and point the way to its
successful adoption. It may suggest the
lines of further political development for the
Empire It is not urlikely to have consider -
%hie effeet even upon political ideas in the
United States. The Dominion is now illus-
trating on the American continent the ad-
mitted fat that the popular will under the
British system works math more rapidly
and effeetively in st democracy which is not
a republic than one that is.
XS SHE OVER -GOVERNED ?
But while this first British application of
the federal idea has been a distinct success,
there have been many lessons to learn.
There is ground for the opinion that since
confederation Canada has been over -gov-
erned. The weak point of the system in
this respect has manifestly been in the
provincial Legislatures.
Confederation transferred to the Federal
Parliament very extensive powers previous.
ly exercised by the province, and particu-
larly- powers which influence vital con-
stitutional change. Itt this the Canadian
system goes faii beyond the example of the
'hatted States, While the importance of
the local Legislature was thus lessened, the
machinery of government was left much as
before, in deference to provineial feeling,
which at first resisted any loos of prestige,
even when ie was artifloial, This machinery
has provea too complieated and expensive,
eepeoially in the smaller provieces.
etels,•/Wren HOUSE.
Whet:, the power to make grave coned-
tutionee Amendment has • been removed
from the sphere o legialationsatuf where the
work to be done is mailer administrative,
the eheok furnished by- an Upper Howe is
tto longee neeaed. This is the explanation
of the elneng.e whitsh has taken place ni the
direetion of e single Chamber, for provincial
Le islet/rem
There would be the axon gest objections to
doing away with te Vesper Houee in the
tARKINON FORMOli LANDS.
What the ilusy Farmer is Molnar In Oren*
laritain, Ireland, Anstralia, New Zeit
land. and South Africa.
The Hessian, fly is reported to have done
great darnage to the wheat fields of New
Zeeland last season.
Indut ranks third among the countries of
the world for wheat production. Its total
wheat crop last year was 2S)3,000,000 busei.
518
The British chief secretary for Ireland
has been urged to establish a department
of agriculture in Ireland. His reply is
very encouraging to the friends of the pro-
ject.
An Auatralian farmer reports a. crop of
seven hundred and fifty bushels of Algerian
oats. from ten acres of land. Another one
eclipses tais by a crop of eighty bushels to
the acre. •
The Frenoh have introduced coffee cul-
ture in Tonquin with good prospects of
success. Both the Liberian and Arabian
varieties of coffee trees are in cultivation,
and all are reported as doing well.
New Zealand flax, Phorrnium tenttx is a
plane of the lily family, and it is calodated
that not less than eighty varieties of it are
grown in New Zealand. It is also grown
to some extent, in the Chatham and Nor-
folk islands.
The dairy industry has grown rapidly in
New Zealand. The exports of dairy pro-
ducts advanced. in twenty years from $45,-
000 in 1872 to $1,590,000 ia 1992. The
colony now has 171 establiehments of all
kinds for the manufacture of butter and
cheese.
The death is reported on a South African
ostrich farm of a male ostrich named Saul,
which was known to be at least fifty-five
yews old. At one time the plumes from a
single plucking of this bird sold for more
than one hundred dollars.
INTELLIGENT I&NZMALS.
Mentori and Observatien btlitersesl Ca",
�5 ti Pegs.
From time to time one boar e of serpries
laRlY intelligent aets performed by certain
epeolee of Mammalia, but a, tudentific treatise
of the subject ie a novelty. A. book be!
Bomanes entitled, "The Intelligence a
Animate," published in Germany, furniehee
a historioel egintnary whioh proves that
cgs and monkeys not logs s are really the
smarted quadrupeds.
Many Meminals do uot only display the
gifts of Inemory and observation but ale°
the power of mental dieorimination and
the ability of drawing • cowilusions, which
can hardly be classified under the bead of
the phenomena of instinct.
In ,Australasia the thorny clot -bur
(Xanthium spinosa*, bas aornehove acquir
ed the local name of" Bathurst burr. It
is, in fad, a native of tropical America,and
tbe seeds were probably carried to our
antipodes in ballast, or mixed with grain.
A South African publication states that
many trees in the government compound at
Kimberley have been destroyed by a species
of underground ants, which eat into the
roots and penetrate upward into the trunk,
whereupon the tree slowly withert.
The Italian Committee for the Defense
of Agrarian Interests issues a spirited
appeal to the agriculturists of Italy to unite
in a solemn protest against the enactment
of the law for the re -imposition of a two-
tenths war tax, which was repealed seven
or eight peers ago.
The importations of eggs into Great
Britain continue to increase from year to
year. The value of egg imports for 1893
was nearly twenty million dollars, The
greater par t of theiraports were fronaFrance,
tin se from Germany and Belgium being
next, while Russia and Denmark supplied
the remainder.
A peculiar and fatal disease is reported
among in horses West Australia, which has
mystified the veterinary authorities. The
symptome are drowsiness and hot running
water from the eyes, followed by white,
watery disohargelrom the nostrils. Death
generally ensues within three or four days
from the first attack.
Tobacco culture is increasing rapidly in
Queensland, Australia, The crop has been
found to be the mose profitable one raised
in the colony, the local demand from the
tobacco factories sustaining good prices for
the leaf. Coffee is also receiving increased
attention in the colony, and many trees
have been planted in the northern districts.
In. the Indian provinces of Patna and
Shahabad, and still more in the provinces
south of the Ganges, maize or Indian corn is
an important article of food for . the
natives. It is said to be prepared and
eaten like barley, but frequently the ears
are pulled while green, husked and cooked,
the natives having learned the secret of
"roasting ears."
The display of sugar canes at the recent
agricultural exhibition of the island of
Mauritius is said to have been the finest
ever brought together in one room. More
than seventy varieties of cane were shown,
including seedlings of all sizes, from the tiny
shoot to the full grown cane twelve feet
high, grown in a single season from home-
grown seed.
A lecture on agriculture by a native is a
quite unexpected indication of awakening
from India's lethargy. Ye t Cake eta papers
report a lecture by Ba,boo Bepin Behery
Ghose, B. A., on "How to start life as an
agriculturist," the meeting being presided
over by a native, wlao et the close of the
lecture, proposed a. vote of thanks, whioh
was carried unanimously.
A singular instance of connection be-
tween superstition and agricultural pests is
reported from Ceylon. The high-class
Buddhist Cingalese refuse to destroy the
predatory. insects which infest the tea
plantations, as they regard it a sin to take
life. Consequently the tea plantations
owned by them becomes the breeding
grounds for moths and other insects, and a
source of infection to neighboring planta-
tions.
The 'Madras Mali is advocating flower
farming and the manufacture of perfumes
as peculiarly well adapted to India. It
urges that the ' establishment of scent
factories would create a market for great
quantities of flowers, of which no use is
now made. The Ka.naga odorata, from
which ylang-ylang is needs, grows in all
parts of Southern India, while roses,
jasmines, tuberose and many others fragrant
flowers are easily 'cultivated there.
In Doubt.
In a certain town in the North of Eng-
land a countrymen had et:melon to travel
by tram to the next town, a distance of
about six mile, ,He was on the point of
getting inaide the tram when the' conductor
remarked:
"Vali up inside, eir; there's plenty of
room on the top."
Whereupon the countryman Said, "Oi
knew all ebeeet thet, but does top go same
plaee
• Australia's Great Staple,
The wool clip of Australia for 1893-91 is
eatinciated at 1,860,000 balea, or 52,000 bale
In &toss of that of the previous Islip, beteg
the largest ever recorded, The London
selling value, however, appears to be
than for some years put,
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla)
voz.°
.46/t
9844'
63.f
4106f..,
.1 . .........
A CALCULATING MORSE. -
The interesting book of Romanes
contains a great deal of authentic and very
entertaining information. Speaking of the
sat, it says that although the dog excels
his antithesis ha prowess and the execution
of smart tricks, yet when it comes to doing
things requiring quiet deliberation and
slyness .the cat is his superior.
Romanes has often watohed a cat thee
used to open the door of a stable. She
sprang up to the lock, held with one claw
to the iron lock box, and scrambled and
pushed with the other claws on the
knob until it turned and the door flew open
with the cat clinging to it. Could. a human
being act with greater deliberation?
M. I. Stevens, of New Brunswick, Can-
ada, relates how one winter day, as he
passed through his garden, a little robin
flew on a twig about three feet from the
ground. His cat crawled noiselessly iear
the shrub, bat as there was about a foot of
loose snow on the ground, which interfered
with the eat'sjuniping, she did nos even
attempt this summary way of despatching
his birdship. Instead Kitty drew closer
and closer to the shrub, and with remark-
able patience kepe tempting the half -frozen
robin into a more favorable position She
finally succeeded in causing it to perch on
the snow. She missed her prey, but the
stratagem nevertheless deserves recognition .
ACV"
•
-7=
gs,
age-te.: Ve,a74e-ele
KLUGE HANSEN-.
The same forethought was observed in
another cat, which would scratch the snow
away from a certain feeding place for birds,
leaving quite a deep hole full of bread
crumbs. Then she would hide in a covered
place, and pounce on the unsuspecting
birds. After citing numerous such instan-
ces, Romance devotes his attention to
monkeys.
He maintains that monkeys are the
smartest of all in every way. They possess
an excellent memory considerable fore-
thought, and they understand bow to apply
their mental experience. No other mam-
mal is so easily tramei. It has ever been
possible, has as been shown In many ex-
hibitions, to have a number of them form a
decorous company at table, and to have
them served by properey-attired waiters.
In their native haunts they break with
large stones the shells of crustacea in order
to get at bite luscious meat, or they will
find sharp stones for the same purpose to
insert between the shells of an oyster, to
say nothing of the wisdom they "eshow in
CtIEMOITS 011,Alfd-OilTANa,
their diepoeition of cocoanuts. The little
orang-outang of Cuvier weal& shove a
chair near the door in order to open it
every titne he wanted to go out.
The art of horse training also often shows
astonishing reeults. The little pony Ma-
homety now exhibited in London by its
owner, Mr, Probasco, is attempting to rival
the modern lightning calculators. Of course
the little horse does not time his feet. `Oa
compels his master to actae hie sig-natuliolo,
The
Best
Food
For Children?
Is worthy every parent's study;
not only what they can eat, but
what gives the most nourishment.
No children are better, and most
are worse, for eating
,
lard -cook- `) en food,
,'-
If, how- q. ever,
their food is
prepare• with the
health- ful new
vegetable ,shortening,
COTTOLENE
instead of lard, they can eat free-
ly of the best food without danger
to the digestive organs. You can,
easily verify this by a fair trial
of Cottolene. 001a41,,VZIP4us
Made only by
The
11. K. Fair13ank
Company,
Wellington
and
Ann Ste.,
MONTREAL
esseseese
It is remarkable how tame the little pony
is and how attentively it seems to listen to
Probasco's questions. He shakes his head
furiously whenever his master makes a mis-
take, and is particular that only the correct
figures are chalked pn the board. The
training of Mahomet has been lona and
tedioue, covering a period of more than
three years, but he promises to become an
expert mathematician. Mahomet had a
bad reputation, being an unmanageable
brute, until he became the property of
Probasco. While sowing his wild oats he
killed a man who attempted te break him in
for the saddle.
TWILIGHT IN ENGLAND.
A. Beautiful Word ranting or tue Eng-
lish Twilight
Round the old mill that stands like a
drowsy sentinel at the gate of the valley,
quiet reigns. Silenced is the plash of the
wheel; hushed the low rumble of the rude
machinery. Through the rich grass of the
meadow by the stream the red cattle are
trooping home in answer to the milking
call. The sun, already sunk below the
fringe of woodland ou the hill, shows Eke a
fiery cloud through the dark lattice work
of branches. Light still lingers on the
steep slope across the glen, on tawny grass
and golden furze and on points of grey rock
that here and there break through the short
turf. There is sunshine still upon the dark
tops of the highest ridge of pines, and there
are lines of silver on the brandies of a giant
oak whose crest towers far above his fel.
lows. But here in the hollow the mist of
evening gathers. All along the stream are
drawn grey lines of vapor that in the far
recesses of the valley deepened into a shad-
owy gloom. The birds, with whose notes
the whole glen was ringing, grow silent one
by one. Their brief vesper hour is almost
over. The hush of night is Settling on the
woodland. Far up the slope there still sounds
the clear whistle ef the blackbird. A thrush,
too, is singing, as if moved to rivalry.
Hie is a song less wild and thrilling, less
powerful and passionate, yet a inaaterpiece
of melody. Still through the deepening
shadows rings the clear treble of the robin,
and through all, like a whisper of peace,
one hears the slumberous voices of the
doves. Two cuckoos are still oalling ; one
near at hand,' whose loud mites, clear and
mellow, seem to linger among the trees,
dying slowly, like music in the roof of a
cathedral, Another, more distant, answers
him. They keep such perfect time that, the
stronger voice overpowers half the answer,
and for the most pars three notes alone are
audible, the last one faint and low, and like
a soft refrain :
Cuckoo, cuckoo—cuckoo.
An 111 Wind, ete.
The present condition of the coal indus-
try in the United States has no doubt been
the cause of a.great deal of trouble and loss,
but on the prineiple of the old proverb
about an "111 wind that blows nobody any.
good," it has at any rate been the 'means of
drawing attention to our Canadian re-
sources in "black diamonds." An illustra-
tion of this is seen in the increased activity
of the mines of the Nova Scotia coal diserict.
Despatches show that the rich Joggings
region has come in for a good share of orders
from Boston and Portland, its natural field
of export and the probability seeing to be
that the coal famine in the States will give a
final impetus to Canadian coal such as has
Jong been desired. Nova Scotia has a good
home output, but the position she is now
taking in the Amerioan market gives her
a fine opportunity of demonstrating the
superior quality of her fuel, and the wedge
thus inserted will not be withdrawn.
alehen Ike*, was Sick, We gave her Cadges- .
When she was a Child, she cried for Castorta.
.When she beetithe Miss, she clung to Cesteria.
When She laildOhildree,Shegalgettem Castories
PayS,to HEI,V Diends.
jinks—"I telt yea what it t., there ig
nothing like havieg Iota
Winks --"I "eats:line not."
• 'nalk —'No sirree. Just as quick as 1
;use a job, my friends ell rueh around hunt.
1 ing a new place for me, so as to gave mo
the trouble of borrowing money from theare"
DOES FARNING PAY?
FOR MEN AND WOMEN.
TH
OWEN
ELECTRIC
BELT.
N'aneuest Partner Ede Acquainted 'Mtn
the SherliF, or Ends ills Faye in a leper
lions&
A. correspondent of the Agrioaltured gp-
itornist has the following remarks on the
question as to whether farming pays: -
11 a merchant in the city is able to earn e
competency ef $3,000 to $5,000 a, year he is
aansid,ered wealthy by most people, yet
this entire sum is often expended in provid-
Mg the ordinary comforts of living, and at
the end of the year he is in proportionate
progrese but little ahead of the well-to-do
farmer who has not been compelled to pay
a rent of several hundred dollars a year for
his home, but, rather, has • got his living
from the boraesteed as he wenb along.
Farrn life le self sustaining and preserva-
• tive, A young man in the country working
at $1 per day and board is proportionately
better off and more independent than a
clerk in a city on $700 a year, who has to
expend $500 for a living. One can save at
the end of the year jiast as much as the
other, and if there are chances in favor of
either for obtaining a competency, they
are in fever of the country boy. Any farm-
er who can support himself on a farm oom.
fortahly and make it pay a net income of
3 to per cent on its cost, is far ahead in
competence of a man who lives in a city on
a magnificent salary and who has to spend
it all for life and appearance& 1118 easy
to figure that not one farm product is
grown with profit. • One may prove falsely
that it is a losing business to live at alI, and
that no economical man eau afford to rear a
family.
When the interest en the cost of the
farm, the time of the farmer, the value of
the manure, the taxes on the house and
woodland, and everything else, are all
charged to the crops, the farmer ought to
be bankrupt. Nevertheless he finds a little
money in his pocket as a surplus.
There is a story of a mathematical cap-
tain who defeated armies and gained vic-
tories by computation; and farmers are
ruined by crazy arithmetic' for every crop
grown is shown to be raisedat a loss, And
yet we live along, and no honest farmer
gets acquainted with the sheriff, or ends his
days in spoor house. But, on the other
hand, the farmers are the bone and sinew
of the country, upon whom all other classes
of the people depend, ancl tlaen they are
the most independent class of people in the
world. Very few clerks ever become
wealthy, for to pass into steady employ.
meat and good ealary your merchant re-
quires you to pass in popular society, so as
to draw custom. • To do this you must be
ready with a helping band for every enter-
tainment that comes around. You oan't
take a day now and then to rest up, to go
hunting or fiahing, as you ca.n if you are a
farmer.
I get all this from experience—nothing
is guessed. at. Farmers should give their
boys an agricultural education, so that they
will know more about business farming;
then we would have more good farmers,
and I know we would hear less about the
farm not paying.
How to get a "Sunlight" Plature .
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrapper,
(wrapper bearing the words "Why Does a
oman Look Old Sooner Than a Man") to
Lever Bros., Ltd., 48 Scott St, Toronto,
and.you will receive by poste, pretty -pictures
free from advertising, and well worth fram-
ing. This is an easy Way to decorate your
home. The soap is the best in the market
and it will only cost lo. postage to send in
the wrappers, if you leave the ends open.
Write your address carefully.
A strange avenue of trees is owned by the
Due of Argyll, and it is growing longer.
Each of the trees has been planted by some
notable person and a brass plate is fastened
to the iron railing surrounding the tree, in.
scribed with the name of the ptrson by
whom it was planted.
,71111% '621[011212111
600d ciar.5 are _
now hic)h
priced,
because of
p hiqh
tariff law.5.
IA/IA.5'11Fr
PLUO CUT
mahinco
pipe-5moki4
popular becau6e'.ir
,tives more for the
money.
THE PACE TOBACCO CO., Richmond
Va., and MOntreal, Canada,
NERV
BEANS
HERVE BEANts ore 0, UV& dis-
tovery that eine the worst cases of
Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor and
railing Manhood.; restores the
weaknese of body or mind caused
by over -work, or the errors or ex-
ot..ses of youth. This Remedy eh-
solutely mires the most obstinate cases when all other
TRZATIsleNTs have failed even to relieve, by drug.
gists at $1. psi, package, or six for 55, or sent by mail On
receipt of pnec hy addressing THE JAMES MEDICINE
00., Toronto. Onz. Write for pamphlet. Sold in --
Sold at Browning's Drug Store, Exeter,
•Ttetio nirkl 1)5, A. OlvEN,
The only. Seiebtific and Practical Bleetrio
Belt made for general use, nrednelane gienttine
Ourrent of ElootricitY for the cure of tnsease,
that can be readily felt and regulated both in
quantity and power, and apphed to any part of
the bad)",1 oan be worn ut any time during
working hoUrs on eleep, and wilipositively cure
'e,Ntt Ilberualatism,
Sciatica,
General Debility
Lumbago.
Nett -out Diseases
Dyspepsia. •
Variedeele,
Sexual Weaknests
Impoteney,
tidney Allenees,
ame Duck,
rinary Dieeasei
Bleotrioity properly applied is fast taking
place of drugs for all Nervous, ATheuinatio,
ney and Urinal Troubles, and, Will cefeet cures
M seemingly hopeless epees where eveter other
known means has failed. 4
Any sluggish, weak or diseesed `eienn may
by this means be roUsed to healthy actiVitY
before it is too late.
Leading medical Men Use and recommend
the Owen Belt itt their praetice.
• oun ILLITSTBATED CATAL001113
Contains fullest information regarding the our
of acute, ohronio and nervous diseases, prise*',
how to order, etc., mailed (sealed)FR RE ter
any address.
The Owen Electric Belt & Appliance CO.
49 KING Sr. W. TORONTO, owr, A
201 to 211 State Ste Chicago, Ill
MENTION THIS PAPER.
CARTEKS
ITTLC
1VER
PILLS.
URE
Sink Headache and rereve all the troubles inci-
dent to a bilious state of the systein, such as
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after
eating, Pam in the Side, &c.-,aWhile their most
remarkable success has heenthown in curing
ICK
Headache, yet CARTER'S Lia -rte lavea Pima
are equally valuable in Constipation, curlue-
and preventing this annoyingoemplaint, while
they also correct all disorders of the stomach
stimulate the liver and regulate the boWels:
Even if they only cured
Ache they would be almoet priceless to those.
who suffer from this distressing -.complaint;
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, and those who once try them will find
these little pills valuable in so mamr 'ways that.
they will„not be willing to do without them.
But after all sick head
is the bane of so many lives that here is where
we make our great boast. Our pills, ewe a
while others do not.
CARTER'S BIrrran Lavna Pima are Vet*,.; sinall
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do -
not gripe or /urge, but by their gentle action
please all who uSe them. In vials at e5 cents;
nye for $1. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail.
G.rim1.3 liEDIVITS 50., lirs v-rk
Snail rui1 kai1 1lo..1
BREAD -MAKER'S
NE-vm1.41.taw
M Fate 10 QIYF SATISFAITteli
FOR SAI -F EY ALLOiri.'ALrifiCi
sialF •
- PLELSNT
SAFE .._
THE GREAT,.
BLOOD
PURIFIER
' tif z
,-;1) 4.
, '
BRISTOL'S ,
t -i
SARSAPAIIILLA
tt.
CURES ALL
Taints of the Mood.
RTA1N
HAVE YOU
1
art.
out
(.1 Bea
the
Ole
ojal
Pla1
ptb
dim
rf"
cane
v
3
POWDERS
Cure ..S/Ote HE4bA�HE attd Neuralgia
in ao iternuorae, alto Coated Tongue, Disci.
nese, Biliousness, Pain in this Side, Conatipation,
Torpid Liver, Bad Breath, to stay cured also
regulate, the bowele, VERY' Iliad TO TAMS.
iintos 2,6 OENTS Al' DOUG StOROSi
"Backache
means the kid-
neys are 111
,;:rouble, Doeles
Kidney Pills glue
prompt relief"
"75 per cenf.
of disease is
first caused by
disordered kid-
neys,
"Might as well
try to haue
healthy oity
Without sewer-
age, as good
health when the
kidneys are
clogged, they are
the scavengers
of the system,
"Delay is
dangerous. Neg-
lected kidney
troubles result
n Bad Blood,
• Dyspepstet, Liver
Oomplaiitt, and
the most dan-
gerous of all,
Brights &One,
Diabetes and
Dropsy,"
"the above
diseases cannot
exist where
Deddfrs Kidney
,Pills are used,"
Sold by all &Ant rsentby mall oil receipt
of mite 50 centh, per boX or six for Sa.so.
Dr, L. A. Smith es Co. Toronto Write for
book evened Xidrioy Talle
NeN
ine et
Yet
know
Nee
ou