Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1896-9-24, Page 31 Fifty Years Ago. This 19,th'�e stamp that the letter bore Which carried the story far and wide, Of certain cure for the loathsome sore That bubbled up from the tainted tide Of the blood below. And'twas Ayer's name And his sarsaparilla, that all now, know, That was just beginning its fight of fame With its cures of 5o years ago. ,Dyer's Sarsaparilla Is the original. sarsaparilla. It has behind it a record for cures unequalled by any blood puri. fying compound. It is the only sarsaparilla honored by a medal at the World's Fair of 1893. Others imitate the remedy; they can't imitate the record : SAO Years of Cures. Weals, Nervous Women. One to whom a night's rest was unknown. Strength and good health restored. ;was subject to frequent attacks of nervousness that seemed to sap all my vitality and left me in a state of weak- ness and misery. I could not relish food and such a thing as a good night's rest Was unknown Incapable of any exer- tion and with an ever present tired and despondent feeling, Medicines that I took did not do any good; it was a case of gradually becoming weaker and weak- er. Hearilageol' Scott's Sarsaparilla and its success with similar cases to mine, I used it, and from the first few doses began to get better, appetite returned, got natural and refreshing '1eep. I grew stronger, in fact life seemed to be fanned into activity.—Lottie Graham, 174 Craw. ford Street, Toronto. For any weakness of the nerves, pale and sallow complexion, Ioss of appetite use the best blood and nerve remedy ex- tant, Scott's Sarsaparilla. Insist on get- ting Scott's—imitations do not cure. Sold by C. LUTZ, Exeter, Ont. �d➢1tit;ilbi�= �Iil9llt-0WENnlrmnn mlmlannuminifiiinumTiLiunml THESE BRISK LITTLE PILLS ARE EXACTLY WHAT 1H ALWAYS NEEDED IN ALL gASES or CONSTIPATION, SICK HEADACHE, BILIOUS ATTACKS AND DYITPEPSIA. SLD EVERYWHERE AT 260. A Soil. DODD'S MEDICINE COMPANY, Rl#Or urrene, TORONTO, ONT. FOe' TWENTY-SIX YEARS. b u E3 Ki PIAIDE THE COOI(S BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. THE PERFECT TEA THE FINEST TEA IN THE WORLD. FROM THE TEA PLANT TO THE TEA CUP IN ITS NATIVE PURITY. "IVIonsoon" Tea is.packed under the supervision of the Tea growers, and advertised and sold by them as a sample of the best qualities of Indian and Ceylon Teas. For that reason they seo that none butthe. very fresh leave§ go,into Monsoon packages.. That Is svhy "Monsoon.' the perfect Tea, can be sold at the same price as inferior tea. fl It is put up in sealed caddies of 34 ib., r ib. and 5 lbs., and. sold Inthree flavours at ,ioc., soc. and hoc. If your grocer does not keep it, tell him to write Fo STir}.BL, kIAYT>12 & CO„ It and is Rivet St. ast, Toronto, THE FARM. FARMERS AS BOOB-KEEPERS.i As man's memory becomes taxed with the deaths of business his need of some practioal method of recording them, becomes more and more apparent, writes J. A. Vye. Everybody who has anything to do with business, makes an attempt, con- sciously or unconsciously, at book-keep- ing—for records either mental or writ- ten must be kept. The child starting out with a dozen marbles in the morning who sadly re- turns wih eight duly records a loss of four and does not forget 'it. The housekeeper keeps a record of the number of quarts of milk bought by making small marks on the clipboard door. The merchant in the country town has his method of book-keeping—exude though it may be. The blacksmith, the Wailer, the shoe- maker and the minister all keep more or less accurate aeeounis of their fin- aneial'affairs, and I, m told that the college professor occasionally attempts to systematize his business affairs. It is a. well known fact that all large business organizations recognize the importance of methodical accounting. Their records are made in permanent form anti years after may be referred to for the minutest data. Banking, rail- roading and :shipping, are as impossible without book-keeping as raising grain wr ithout sunshine, or developing muscle without exercise. Now it ail are accountants to a cer- tain extent, and the life ot every great business organization depends largely upon its ability to collect, classify and systematize its transactions into form readily accessible and easily understood, are -we not warranted in asserting that the financial success of the farmer may be measured Lu a great degree by his method of accuunting F It is said ot the president of one of the great railroads of the Northwest, that lie knows every Ivan in his, employ, and that it is with amazing aceuraoy that he recalls the smallest details of the gigantic deals which he eo often consuniates. Be this as it may. That he does grasp great subjects and eternally fix them in mind for future use, and that the ready knowledge of these facts is one of his keys to success, is abundantly tes- tified. It is net every one wbo can do this, but alt can seek to so systema- tize the written records of their busi- ness as to have them show unmasked in full details the false and the true; and such records are certain to be of as much use to the farmer as to any other man. Ileneeds them constantly, and without them success or failure to him must be largely the result of blind endeavor. The commission man keeps an accur- ate account separately of his gains and lasses on wheat, oats, barley, rye, fruits. Perk. beef, fish and everything else that ho handles. His success depends upon the, knowledge which these facts reveal. 1f these facts are indispensable to him, they are equally so to the pro- ducer. It therefore, seems certain that a systematic record of .the business connected -with farming is invaluable. But it is claimed that the farmer is too tired at night and too busy during the day to keep his accounts systema- tically. No business man is too busy or tired to stop and determine where he is. He is no more rushed for time than many other men who are more successful. Shall it be said because they realize the value of accurate accounting and see to it, that all nec- essary items are promptly recorded Just how these records should be kept in detail is not the purpose of this article, but to give some evidence of their utility. When one's business is not large enough ,to warrant hiring his work done, it is necessary to have a very simple method. But the fact is the very simplicity of a thing is often the cause of its being neglected. The filing of a friendly letter of ten words, seem- ingly of no importance, may be suffi- cient to save costly litigation. The re- cord of the purchase of a spool of thread may of itself be worth hundreds of dollars. Who can tell? Then let noth- ing seem too insignificant to be re- corded. I would recommend that every far- mer who feels the need of such a re- cord, should procure a common day- book with rulings like that on com- mon writing paper with money columns added at the right. In it make a list of everything of value he has on hand, and another list of everything he owes. The difference will show what he is worth. If he sells anything or buys anything, write it down. If he makes any agreements to be fulfilled in the future write them down. If there are any notes he wishes to make in regard to the weather, the date of sowing, condition of crops, date of harvesting, amount harvested, amount of hay cut, in fact anything that will suggestit- self as being of value, write it down also. He will be surprised and pleas- ed when he comes to look over this book at the end of the year. It will be bristling with facts worthy of his careful consideration. This may be ex- tended a!s much as he sees fit, but this simple method alone wiU repay a trial. ECONOMY OF SHREDDING FODDER. Among he new methods of handling our crops there are few that promise better results than that of shredding fodder, writes Waldo F. Brown. I met last winter at the institutes scores of farmers who were feeding it and visited some farms where it was stored, and among those experienced in its use there was a hearty expression in its favor. When one learns how to manage to the best advantage, the cost of husking and shredding by ma- chinery is not greater than to husk the corn and secure the fodder by hand, and I predict that in a few years the practice of husking and shredding by nnachinerry will be as common as threshing wheat by machinery now is. There is but one serious hindrance to it, and that is, unless the fodder is thoroughly dry there is danger of its heating, but I have no doubt that a plan of ventilation in the storage of it will be found that will make it safe. The advantages are many, as, for ex- ample, the mare than doubling the storage capacity of our barns, the se- curing of the fodder early while it is in the best condition, the reducing of the waste to a minimum -and the avoid- ance of the long troublesome stalks in THE the manure, together with the labor of Carrying them out daily. It is the testimony of all that I have interview- ed who have fed shredded fodder that the waste is reduced to a very 'small quantity, so small as scarcely to be worth considering, while with the best cured fodder fed long, the waste is one- third, as I have proved by repeated weighings. A good many intelligent farmers think that if we can shred the corn butts and rile them with the husks and that l be teshaallsim beimposinonle stock and filling their stomachs with useless waste. But this is a ustaire. The director of the Maryland Experi- ment Station has probably condoled as careful experiments as any man liv- ing to ascertain the relative value of the different parts of the corn plant, and with regard to the fodder he says: valuee;hnext, possess hhredded stast food lks and last the blades." He also places a high value on the cob. These conclus- ions were arrived at by careful feeding experiments as well as by the chemical analysis of the different parts. 1 bee lieve that no other product of the farm has been so generally wasted and so universally under -valued as corn fodder, and when we remember that each twenty-five bushels of corn grown. produces about one ton of stalks, blades and hnskg, which properly saved has a feeding value about the same as an equal weight of Timothy hay, and that it is more palatable and healthful for horses, cattle and sheep, it will be seen that there are few questions more worthy of careful study and experi- ment than the best methods of sav- ing and .feeding this valuable product. 1 believe that for feeding horses, cat- tle and sheep it will pay us to grow our corn twice as thick as it is ordinar- ily grown, and shred and feed it grain and all together, and that fed in this way it will give very nearly a balanced ration. CHIT-CHAT FOB, WOMEN. In some parts of Germany the bells are tolled both for the making and the breaking of an engagement. • They are also tolled for a lovesick maiden. But they are seldom sounded for a man af- flicted so, as men seldom show their emotions. It might be well if the cus- tom would obtain in some localities in our own country. No woman loves to see wrinkles com- ing on her face. Here are some hints to help keep them off, far better than any cosmetic: Don't worry. Lines of care make the face look older by sev- eral years than it naturally is. Cul- tivate all the graces of mind and char- acter that you possibly can, and keep your temper well under control. Ev- ery time one allows herself to get an- gry there is left on heart and brain some disagreeable trace of it, and more wrinkles and crow's feet are put into the face than old Father Time would plant in years. Beauty and closed pores are incom- patible. Therefore, be cleanly and wrinkles will not have a chance to fasten themselves into the skin. Seek the companionship of the young, and be alive to their interests rather than sink into a groove and become morose, cynical or whtmiscal, as so many do when they find youth slipping from their grasp. Do not forget that you were young once yourself, and give part of your time to helping those who are starting in life, with your sym- pathy. All this will help resist the efforts of time to twist body or mind out of shape, and will keep off the wrinkles. So many women (especially those who have to look after many varied inter- ests at the same time) suffer with ner- vous headache, that I want to tell them of a very simple remedy that is "always to be had if within a reasonable distance of a drug store. It is not an absolute cure, but it is an immense relief to most women who try it. Take two grains of potassic salt and dissolve it in a wineglassful of water. 'When dissolved, sip the mixture slowly, tak- ing the whole in about ten minutes. If not relieved in half an hour repeat the dose, taking it in smaller and less fre- quent portions. This is for nervous or "frontal" headache. 1t is the io- dide that acts immediately. NEWSPAPER CENSORSHIP. How the Press Is Gagged in Many Coun- tries of Europe. Those who enjoy the glorious privi- leges of freedom of speech, and freedom of thought and expression, will all the more readily understand and deplore the restrictions of censorship of the plress in many of the countries of Eu- rope, under autocratic and even con- stitutional government. Here is how things are managed in Austria. In Austria every newspaper appearing more than twice a month has to depos- it caution money if politics are treated or mentioned. For Vienna and sur- roundings this deposit is fixed at $9,- 000 9;000 ; for towns of 60.000 inhabitants, at $3,000nat $2,000t;wand for of all otheinhabit- ants, p accees,. at $1,000. By infringement of the press laws the caution money may be partly or wholly forfeited, and all fines are levied on the amount, which has again to be made up to the original sum if. the papers are to go on. To facilitate governmental control, the printer of every paper has to forward copies of it to the looal police, to the public prose- cutor, to the chief of the looal govern- ment, ,to the minister of state, to the supreme polices department, besides sup- plying the imperial court library and the local court or national libraries. The publication of a paper can be stopped either by the police or by a court of law; but the. transmission of foreign papers by the post can be prohibited by order of the minister of state. More- over, the Austria press has to submit to a stamp duty, abolished in Hungary, but not in the remainder of he empire, though many efforts have been made to obtain its total abolition, and this adds not only to the cost of the papers, but necessarily . restricts the number of readers. Row to get a "Sunlight" Picture. Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrappers,. (wrapper imaring the words "Way Does a W omen Look Old Sooner Than a Man") to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, andyou willreceive by post a prettypioture, 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 itwill only coat la. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefully, Miss Chilledame—"Don't you know that nature rebels against laziness ? A man can get nothing in this world with- out labor." Wrestling Offen—" Humphl Can't he ? He can git hungry, I guess." EXETER TIMES ROUND THE WHOLF WORLD. WHAT IS OOINU ON IN THE FOUR CORNERS OF THE GLOBE. Old and New World Events of Interest Chrou. icled Briefly—Interesting Happenings of Recent Date. In response to a request from the Egyptian Government a mission . is about to be sent from the Pasteur In- stitute, Paris, to Cairo, where it will make experiments with the new anti - cholera serum. The river at Tien-Tsin is almost dried up by the drought( The oldest inhabitant Inas never seen things quite so bad. Both the Monocacy and Maya. (Japanese) are lying on deep cradles of hard, sandy mud, The first effect of a heavy rainfall on the Western Hills is to raise the bed of the river to a great- er extent than the surface. Mr. Hurst, the British Consul at Tainan, in Southern Formosa, con- cludes his latest trade report by saying that the Japanese are showing great energy in the development of the in- ternal communications of the island, and during the five months that had passed at the date of the report in March since they landed left more marks of their presence on the face of the country than their predecessors ef- fected in as many decades. A missionary who lives in the Pro- vince of Kansu, China, where the Mo- hammedans are in rebellion, tells this plantive story of primitive surgery:— 'We have attended to somewhere near 2,000 wounded since the beginning. It has been a great mercy that we could buy such good medicine in the native shops, or what could we have done at such a time, being shut off from the outer world for five ands half months, four months of the time besieged?" How strong the sense of duty is in Japanese officials is shown by the fol- lowing incident of the great earth- quake wave: "The director of the Kamashi telegraph office saw his fam- ily swept away before his eyes. In spite of his sad misfortune he at once went in search of the telegraphic instruments that had been washed away and as soon as possible restored them to prop- er order. To his self-sacrificing zeal the public is indebted for the speedy re-establishment of communications." A queer strike is threatened in Eng-' land. The Government inspectors of factories,being dissatisfied with the way they are treated, have formulated their complaints and declare that unless they are heeded "a public protest will be made and a cessation of their duties will follow." They complain of too little salary and too hard work, of not having power enough over the factory employes, of having their reports to the chief inspectors ignored and not pub- lished as they are sent in. Some fourteen Chinese students came to Tokio recently from Shanghai with the object of studying the Japanese language and literature, and also whichever of the scientific professions the students may show an appetite for after they have been in the country for a year or two. The students are sent 'by the Tsungli Yemen Ministers and form part of an educational scheme entered into by the ex -Viceroy Li Hung Chang and the Japanese Minister, Mr. Hayashi, during the late treaty negotia- tions at Peking. Corea is growing more and more set- tled since the people in the country districts become assured that the order for cutting oft the top -knot, etc., is no longer in force. 'There are still some districts in the south wbere it is not safe for a foreigner, and still less safe for a Japanese to appear. There is one subject on which all Careens are united, and that is intense hatred of Japan, It is ten times stronger now than it was five years ago. The in- fluence of the Japanese at court is at an end practically. The passage of the rice boats through the sluice, at one of the cities on the Yellow River, China, is marked by snake 'worship, which takes place an- nually. The priests say that at this season several of the Taiw'ang worthies, who are supposed to preside over the Grand Canal, come down the Canal in the form of a certain kind of snake which is caught and put in glass cases in the temple and worshipped by the Tsaotai and by multitudes of people. Theatricals are held for several weeks in honor of these snake gods, of which twenty or more are often placed in the temple. The eunuchs in Pekin had a rather Ned time of it lately. Out of six eunuchs who had been engaged in a brawl over seats in a Pekin theatre, and who accidentally killed a gendarme who came to stop the row, three were summarily executed and the remaining three exiled to a distance of 1,200 miles. Another eunuch who had the temerity to present a memorial pray- ing for internal reforms in the central Government, was also executed, be- cause by doing so he had broken one e of the Sacred Edicts of the late Em- peror — seventeenth century -prohibit- ing eunuchs from interfering with State affairs. HER COMPLIMENT. Mr. Snaggs—Miss Belleville paid you a compliment last night. Mr. Van Braam--What did she say? Mr. Snaggs—She intimated that you looked like me. Mr. Van Braam—I don't know whe- ther that is a compliment or not. How did she come to say it?" Mr. Snaggs—She cid not say it in so many words, bat she said you looked like a smart man. A SALOON IN A CHURCH -YARD, The strangest saloon in the world is a tavern in Hendon, a London suburb. It stands in the centre of an old church- yard and ancient tombstones surround it., It is many hundreds of years old and is the only licensed beer saloon in the neighborhood of the graveyard. ELECTRA) PAINTING. At the last half -yearly meeting of the Directors of the Overhead .Railway Com- pany, in Liverpool, England,, the Chair- man mentioned among the innovations introduced on its lines a novel way for painting the structure and stock of the system. Eleetrioal ,power, he showed, was utilized for this purpose. The paint was sprayed an by electric ap.. paratus, with the result that the cost of labor was reduced by about 90 per cent. TOUGH. Waiter, said the tired customer, I can't eat that steak and you may take it away. Shall I charge it, sir ? Charge It 1 Why, a regiment of cav- alry couldn't charge that steak with drawn (sabres, and he made good his ea- cagre, Best for Wash Day For quick and easy work For cleanest, sweetest and whitest clothes Surprise Is hest 4 very Day, For every use about the NIIGHT HAVE BEEN. What silence we keep year after year, With those who are most near to us and dear! We live beside each other day by day, And speak of myriad things, but sel- dom say The full, sweet word that lien just in our reach, Beneath the commonplace of common speeelt. Then out of sight and out 'of reach they These close familiar friends, who loved us so; And, sitting in the shadow they have left, h 1 Alone wit oneliness, and sore bereft, We think with vain regret of some fond word. That ouco we might have said and they have heard, For weak and poor the love that we expressed, Now seems beside the vast, sweet un- expressed, And slight the deeds we did, to those undone, And small the service spent, to treas- ure won,. And undeserved the praise for word and deed That should have overflowed the sim- ple need. This is the cruel cross of life—to be Full visioned only when the ministry Of death has been fulfilled, and in the place Of same dear presence is but empty space, What recollected services can then Give consolation for the "might have been." CATCHING A TIGER Mow the King or the Jungle is Taken in Captivity. Tho natives of Singapore have a nov- el method of catching tigers, which is found to be very effective. When they come across a trail they gather together a large quantite of dry ,leaves and mix them up in a kind of bird- lime, made by boiling holly -bark and then mixing the juices with hut oil. They scatter these leaves on the trail and await their prey. Presently a. tiger comes along and a leaf sticks to him. He raises his paw and tries to get it off; this he does several. times, utnll the paw is covered with leaves. Then he rolls over, and his fate is seal- ed. In a. moment he is smothered in twigs and leaves until he resembles a huge, shaking ball, from which issue terrific roars. He struggles for a. long while, then he becomes exhausted. Then the na- tives come forward, and either despatch him or put him in a wicker basket and carry him off. WOULD HAVE ENJOYED IT. A woman was on the witness -stand before a badgering lawyer and was vainly endeavoring to drive her testi- mony about an assault of which she happened to have been a witness. The lawyer, as too often happens, treated her almost as if she was herself a crim- inal. "You say he knocked him down," said the lawyer, Now I want to know how he struck." "Weil, sir," began the witness, "he stood just—" "I don't care how he stood," inter- rupted the lawyer. "I want to know new he struck." Well, sir, I'm trying to tell you," said the witness, growing flustered. "He stood right by—" "I can't stop to hear you tell any- thing about his standing," said the lawyer. "I want you to tell me simply how he struck:" The witness hesitated. "Well, well, madam," said the law yer, in a tone of great exasperation, "if you have come here to testify in this case, will you have the goodness to tell me without further delay how the blow 1 was struck?" I'm afraid my words won't explain to suit you sir," said the witness, eyeing her tormentor resentfully; "but if I had a broomstick here, and was near en- ough,. I reckon I could show you how he struck!" TOO TRUE TO LIFE. Why does the photographer have to sue that rich young widow for his pay? Because he took a dozen pictures exactly like her that she refuses settle. SO tt) HE'LL DO IT. Say, Biggs, I would give anything if I had your faculty of making a long story short. How can I do it, for I have a good one now ? Send it to the editor of a newspaper. Kitty—"Harry won't take no for an; answer. Kate—"How do you know?" KKiittty—"Because I shan't give it to For Weak Backs, Lame Backs, Painful Backs 'or any kind of Bad Backs, Manley's Celery -Nerve Compound is the Great Back Stren thener. Wm. Rogers 5 g g Ottawa Street.. Toronto, Ont.; writes :—"For a number of years I have been troubled with a lame back. Some of the doctors I consulted called it Lumbago ; others, 'Kidney Disease. I received no benefit from their treatment. Nine months _aggo Lwaft lucky enough to try Manley's Celery -Nerve Compound, and, after taking two or three bottles, the pain entirely left poke, and 1 btve had no return of it for 8 woks now," ..•••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Prepare Now for the Cold • • • • •• • r O • O • • • • • by seeing that all your ordered clothing is interlined with Fi lake Chamois. It will not add weight and only costsa few extra cense but it gives a grateful comforting warmth to men's, women's an children's clothing which will defy the coldest blasts of winter. For your own sake don't try to do without this backbone of all winter comfort. Don't buy .: any ready-to-wear suits which haven't the • Fibre Chamois labelThink of the healthful warmth, the ✓ difference in price doesn't count. • Reduced to 25 cents a yard. �1•off•�ttl��4••'4'••••!•••+@4.3.k� s•�•••�•+►•�+►•••••�•1 DR. SPINNEY o The Old Reliable Specialists. 33 Years Ev cperierzoe in the treatment of the Throat and Lung Troubles, Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Nervous, Chronic and Special Dis- eases of men and women. Lost Manhood rderestored—Kidney and Blad. troubles permanently Lured—Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Varicoccleand stricture cured without pain. No cutting. Syphilis and all Blood Disuses cured withoutll�mercury. Young Man Suffering from the effects of b goukhiu! foliics er indiscretions, or any troubled with Weakness, Net Debility, Loss of Memory, Despondency, Aversion to Society, Kidney Troubles, or Any disease of the Genital -Urinary Or- gans, can here find safe and speedy cure. Charges reasonable, especially to the poor. CURES GUARANTEED. Middle -Aged 8,1 i[e� There are many troubled ti 118 with too frequent evacu- tions of the bladder. often accompanied by a slightnrarting or burning sensation'and weakening of the system in a manner the patient cannot account for. There ars many men who die of this difficulty, ignorant of the cause. The doctor will guarantee a per- fect cure in all such cases, and healthy restoration of the enito-urinary organs. Con- sultation free. Those unable to call, can write fun particulars of their case and have medicine sent by express, with full instructions for use. Mention this paper when writing. Office hours: From 9 a, In to 8 p, m. Sundays, 9 to 11 a. m. DR, SPINNEY & CO, At= n c eNo 2 B.Elizabeth 5t.) .3.ETPO.:; t s = I DT, MICR. . PARALYSIS CURED—SWORN STATEMENT. Mrs. Maggie Me fartin, 27 Radenhuret Si., Toronto, Ont., swears that Ryokman's "Kootenay pure" cured her of Paralysis which rendered one side of her body entirely useless. Physicians said there was no chance of her over recovering the use of her limbs. Hope deserted her, but today she is walking around telling her frlends how Ryokman's " Kootenay Cure" gave her life and happiness. Sworn to, July 10, 1896, before J. W. Seymour Corley, Notary Public. SWORN STATEMENT OF A GRATEFUL. MOTHER. Louisa White, nine years old, who suffered with Eczema since her birth, has been entirely cured and her general system built up by Ryckman s "Kootenay Cure." The above facts are given in a sworn state- ment made by her mother, Mrs. George White, 139 Stinson St., Hamilton, Ont., dated July 8, 1898, before J. F. Monck, Notary Public. A. COMBLYATION DISTURBED — SWORN STATEMENT MADE. Charles E. Newman, 18 Marlborough St., Toronto Ont., had a complication of blood troubles, Rheu- matism, severe Kidney trouble and constipation. Was frequently disturbed at night, lost his appetite and was a very sick man. His Kidneys are now in a healthy condition, his appetite good, sleep undis- turbed and constipation cured; all this was done by Ryoliman's e" Kootenay Cure." He makes sworn statement to the above facts before J. W. Seymour Corley, Jule, 10, 18.90. THE Fie "^eLties-sieeeefreaSeLleLteeteeee ltrY A. L` Positively Cures COUGHS and COLDS in a surprisingly short time. I.'s a sci- entific certainty, trifid and trite, sontliing and healing iu its mfe.,s, W. C. McCovnr2 & Sou, I1Ottc.hefte, Que., rood In abbot. that Pray -1 r• tnrad. axed Tics, C. Garcon or, brosi,. cull in chew and bronchial tabus and oleo c•.:red ?, 0. /Wombat. or a fun ;sten .;d. Mu, j. 12. F:' 1 c•r a., 528 Yor St., Toronto, writes: ".Asa geanel .' mg1, and lung eying Pyny- Pectutal b a matt invaiu,Ve t;roparadoa, i Las given the rtn.st eatbtac,,S to all. t;%:, Lav triedll. many';.ri: ; spot5u is ate of ilia bandits t -rived t n, itscei t It is5i4t .,1r i ar ' ^,L to 00 lt:sale ',Ira tu♦ :•• a :1, and l tan arrays r .,yl. :al is as - t'5fa and reliable eouals:naia es." Targe Bottle, 25 Cta. DA.VIS & LAWRENCE CO., Len. 5 r :ttrs TTTn\TT(T,,,,7 1117T1{IIT • Is Invaluable, if yQu are run. O EXETET.illEaR. I a a wnedi, ae et.is a food as well as I5 l. The D. & L. Emulsion Will build you up if your general health is u impaired. t{- , Y" '' it s 6 i l LV The C. & L. Emulsion SHOULD KNOW THAT I To a very remarkable remedy, both for IN- TERNAL and EXTERNAL use, and won- derful in its quiok action to relieve distress. PAIN -KILLER is a euro euro for Hare Q'tailis, Hist:rhtma, Fb Throat, Cramps, 8lioierat, and all Bowel Complaints. PAIN -KILLER is T,SE IIS/EST rent. etly Lnown i'or tie>1. Sickness Sick Elieaelaclie, Pala iP Chet Ltaek }oTr Sickness, Sttheustnsallesia end Neuralgia" PAIN -KILLER ie rxOVSSTIINAntI' tele 1.1E81' I NIB Brie MAINS. It brings sesany easu ricaarniasam artrEr In all rasps of Entities, Cuts, Spiaitts, Severe Burns, etc. fa PAIN -KILLER is the well tried and trusted friend of the Mechanic, ,club classes wni1 Partner, O Planter,ase Hailer, ksnii and 0511510 USE tatternally or externally With certainty of relief. Emirs or 'hnitatteno. Take none but the genuine "5214? DAVIS." Sold r.r^-; •.+::eta: 1Fo. btg bottle. IDENTIFYING HIM. Uncle Theophilus, whet: tc IeW eletr; tial $ He is a fellow that listens baton -try when he is talking to you and never listens at all when you are talking to jla`.m. Is the best and most palatable preparation of Cod Liver Oil, agreeing with the mostdeil- cats stomachs. The D. & L. Emulsion E Is prescribed by the leading physicians of Canada. E The D. & L. Emulsion Is a marvellous flesh producer and will give you an appetite. 50c. Bs, $1 per Bottle Be sure you get I ()Avis & LAWOEUCE CO,, LTB. [C ,,,,1LI„,1.the genuine MONTREAL L,LLLL,1114115111,i 5„1„ FAST TRAVELLING. An electrical engineer has been ex- hibiting in London the model of his proposed single rail electric line Ifor speeds of 150 miles an hour, The rail Es fixed on a V-shaped trestle, and runs up into the body of the car, which, as it were, runs astride on it. The car runs on twelve bearing wheels and. seats 135 passengers, with space for their baggage. One of the difficulties :net with in schemes for (excessively high-speed travel is the tendency of th car to run off he, traok, I3y runhin the rail within the oar the lateral ten - dewy of the, train is overcome. But in this late scheme the great lli.ffi- culty seems to be the passenger. What would happen to the passenger when. the. train took a sharp curve. whip going at 150 miles a.n hour is not ex- plained. xplained. A DOMESTIO EVENT. One day there came a surprise fo 'Ile small boy. The baby., bad pulled itself up and stood by a chair, The small boy gazed in. aau zement. Oh, merman mamma,he called, the baby's standing en its hind legs