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The Herald, 1903-05-01, Page 2
ireeeee. eeeetleeativ,.,ereel sere r'1. ffe`ttreeP etred1 eereleetree 00ererel6P etre LINKS WITH ENGLAND'S PAST® Curious customs Still in Vogue Which Have Come �la Down From Mediaeval nines. y. 42 When the Mae at :the recent Privy launch selected new sheriffs for the >gaieties of England and Wales b arieking a holt, with a. silver bodkin tiaposite to each of the favored names to the list, I.li,•, Me j t \, as carrying rut one of quite. ,t scorn' or interest - ug Customs teat still survive to link aro e'ngl:;.nri of 11)0 3 with the leng- aand of tee efidtlie Ages. There is hardly art important :panty la the land that does not cherish sorue ,noteworthy custom, tailing from early days in English listory. Probably the most Interest - ng feudal ceremony in existence is slanting the horngarth, an act of >enanoe which is now In the ninth >entury of commemoration, and vain has been carried out every roar at Whitby without a single creak. ;The penance is for the death of a rermit who sought to protect a vounded boar, but who was slain by . is furious pursuer. The' horngarth, )r penny healge, itself is formed by slanting a hedge of stakes in the edeway in the upper part of Whitby • Iarbor, in the presence of the lord ; )f the manor. When the penny hedge s complete, three blasts are blown sn an antiquated time -worn horn, which is in accordance with the pre- scribed stipulations. This born is a ;ood 500 years old, so it has seen :onsiderable service. A very long way back in the his- ory of England wa,s a time when the igla festival of Ceres was exceeding- i popular. To this day we have a emnaut of the mystic rites of the emple of Eleusis of the Greeks cur- ving in the forth of the kern -baby. n various parts of the country kern epers are held to celebrate the onclusion of the harvest gathering, nd the kern. -babe is carried on high y the reapers. The baby is a straw age made from the last sheaf of she harvest, adorned with flowers nd with ears of grain. Really the ern -baby appears at harvest fes- ivals of to -day as the representa- ire of an ancient Ceres. Worship the Sun. The most aalcient of cuftoms is still 'laserrved in Ireland on June 21, and the Highlands of Scotland on May , according to tee old reckoning. rais is belief:a, the festival in con- eetion with Cheri worship; fires are ladled on tee summit of the hilly', i a variety of cereuroniee. are gone a rough. Burning the clavie is another inique ceremony, whose origin goes auk fax Into the mists or antiquity. robably the rites stili observed at ui^ghean'., an the Moray Firth, have en performed glume the days of the ruid,s. A tar barrel is Sawn in yes; one hale is filled with, tar- •vered fuel gleen by the townsfolk, ed is Betted with a piece of glowing .eat. The ficsty clavie is borne eboul- eer high wound the town limits in nil procession, anti is placed fin- is, on the aneiett €rce.stone altar to burn high over the waters of the beth. There are various minor weird •eremonie•s observed as the elavie . ries away. --- Terse tnal Fires. Pe, haps even more singnlar are the domestic fires of cer tarn old- faeltionetl farutiemees on tine York - ire delete These peat fires are ver•- Iltable links with 'the past, as they nevem go out. leoine ha,ve been kept ait,iLght for bemirecls of years, and bane wasted genlra.tion after gen- eration of dwellers. The Whitby dis- trict is rich in these, and there is one a,t Osmotherly which, it is claim- ed, has been burning 500 years. A benc1some quaiutairt is to be seen on the village green at Offhem, in Keet. The local castani is. to hoist roa,rried men wee are not fathers to 'its top and then to set the qualetain BCeyc lving rapidly. Throwing the Uart is a, picturesque ',custom which ie observed in Cork. Every third year the chief magis- trate proceeds to the mouth of Cork '$arbor in full state. following im- memorial custom, he throws a dart Into the Hea—a dart with a head of — 'a �ald and a sheat of mahogany—say- tug: aho an s - }, y y g: "I cast this javelin into the sea, and declare that so far seaward as tt falls extends the right and domin- ion of the coreeration of Cork to and over the harbor as well as the rivers, creeks and bays within the dame." Bumping the iilaater. lone of the most quaint of ancient customs is the' .bumping of staid and dignified elderly gentlemen against etones set in the Thames. Every year the court of the \Vatermen's Company is bound to inspect certain boundary marks on the river. The farthest upstreatu ferry under con- trol of the company- is nt Tedding- ton. the spot being marked by stone posts. At the inep=action the beadles seize• hol.l of the worshipful master and the tither members of the court A 1 , n-2 m o n Bred Cow When toned up by Dick's Blood Pun- ier will give as much and as rich milk as ahighly bred aristocratic Jersey cowgives upon or- - denary feed; and a Jersey cow -when given. DICK'S BLOOD Pi1R1>riER will wonderfully increase her yield of milk. It saves feed too because a smaller arncntat of well digested food satisfies the aleslmtlris of the system and. every 1,>s.A.IC.:: of nour- Y s1,,Sxiuerrt sticks. ra oa. ' ,r7c. (� 1.1!' L .. 50 Cult.. [Atoning, .Miles set Co., ,1,geot3, MONTRfIA L • and gravely proceed to ,bump the solemn gentlemen on the stone. This' is done so that the exact location of the boundary may be thoroughly impressed upon their memories. Soms very peculiar ceremonies are observed when the 'Court of Bro- therhood and Gueetling of the Cinque Ports meet. The full -robed mayors, aldermen, councillors, town clerks, sergeant's and macebearers of the thirteen borough& form an imposing sigldt when massed. Curious extracts are read from the decrees of Queen Elizabeth corrteeeetei 1.e the Black Book before the "ancient towns and their limbs" set down to business in earnest. Every year for over 700 years the corporation of London has dicharged the peculiar duty of cutting some faggots and counting out a certain number of horseshoes and nails, This is done ,before the King's Remem- braneer by way of quit lent for cer- tain lands in Salop and Middlesex 111.1.1 from the Crown by the city cor- poration. Paying Debts at Dawn. In the semi -darkness of dawning day is carried out the ancient cus- tom of the payment of "wroth sil- ver" to the Duke of Buccleuch, Lord of the Manor of tee Hundred of Itnightlow, near Coventry. After the steward las reed out the old charter awl called out the amounts due from each parish, tete representatives each place the sum required in a hole In a stone said to be the base of a cross. Thesis a weird seene as the shadowy figures glide up, place in their pence, and hoarsely whisper the words "wroth ,silver." Defaulters incur the penalty of forfeiting ©. white bull tipped with red at nose and ears and tail. A hot milk a,nd rum breakfast concludes the ceremony. The origin of the custom is not clear, though same antiquaries declare that "wroth silver" was originally "wrath money," and wa,s exacted for the murder of some relative of the lord of the, manor. • Cheese -rolling is one of the most peculiar customs we have, and is ob- served at Birdiip, near Cheltenham. A. cheese is sent rolling down the side of a very steep hill. In its wild flight the rolling cheese is followed pell- moll by an excited crowd, each indi- viduatJ. trying to gain it. Women Fined a Penny or a Kiss Hungerford rejoices in an ancient euetoni which is rapidly bieonting extinct. 'hbis ib hoektide, the Tues- day following tLo second Sunday af- ter Easter, when the usually quiet town mate ash.ie all restraint and plungers into wills g.ucty. All work iv brought to a standstill by a blast from John of Gaunt's horn. l'or- u:orly on Hock Monday, the men went into the streets with cords, stopped and bound every woman they anet, the p_Leoner being re- loeee:l on payment of ld or a kiss. The foilowiug Clay the women went out to capture straying mien—and the wpb en invariably extracted the most money. Lat?t year certain resi- deat,e put an end to the .kissing ob- servanee as being out of accord witl. Moder t ideas of propriety, and the "tu^ti-oxen," the jury, drank punch and smoked instead. The "hocking" consisted of capturing some unwary female and chairing her in a ribbon - bedecked chair, after which quaint ceremony she was taxed, with the usual option of kissing. The officials still are given a supper, consisting of- macaroni. watercress, spring on- ions, and bread and butter. Among picturesque provincial sur- vivals is the ceremony of weighing the Mayor of High Wycombe. Tne Mayor is weighed as soon as he suc- ceeds to office, and is weighed again when ho leaves it—presoneably with the object of discovering whether the duties agree with him. HOW'S THIS ? We offer One Hundred Dollars' Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. HENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable in all business trans- actions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WEST & Terex, Wholesale Druggists, To- ledo, 0. WALL N Y i e L• a1IAn91Y . , Wholesale Druggists, ts, Toledo, 0 Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,act- ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur. faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price -75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Hall's Family Pills ore the beet. The Phrase of a Coward. " It is said" le the hedge behind which the slanderer lies concealed v\•h,>n he makes a murderous assault upon a spotless reputation, "It is I raia.l" is the cowards' subterfuge, who 1 dares not face the :recused, who is wilting to circuli to a tale that he may know to bt' untrue but for ' which he does not wish to assume the reeponsibility, " It is said" is the subtle venom xvllich many mol- 1 ern Ia.goe wee to poison the mind and ruin the pence of twentieth-cen- tury Othellos. "It is said" is the iniroduetory note; of every cruel gos- sip end sc end tl. And in nineteen eases out of twenty the men or wo- man who prefaces a tale with "it iH said" will lw. found pretty close to tbe originator or inventor or the ala nder.--Buriington I I:a-ivlceyc. Ask for Minar•d's and take no oilier. Association or ideas. ,wife : "Mother writes that she will he here ta-nlorrow for a H11ort visit, my clear." "Very well," ,rea- plied her husband. And as lie left the house 110 pattea his little boy an tbehead kindly, and said: "Ilol;- by, didn't you ask nee to hey you a tin whistle and aa, drain the other day "" "Yes,. pa.." "Well, .I will 1'ring them homes to -night.'' /Or omen and Fain. An Italian ecienti41 of (lictinaLion eleeleres' that women aro lees sensi- tive to men than nitn, and actually feel le4< elf it in ii. liven operation. Eel:elementn: 0,1 n i11t11drod women lel hint 10 this iena•lueion 1Itit they \P1.1'0 1101 1110('4' ti:n a 011e-Laalr as. f?en- '1tive to pain •ri the top of the fore- fxIlg 1e tit.' nvt'rnge mere elan. Tele ie e:03>f1,>u;itoly of 11 weli-known 1:1,,,i to apt:rte ),te anei dentists. Eight cents a pound is what a young woman paid for twelve pounds of flesh. She was thin and weak and paid one dollar for a bottle of Scott's Emulsion, and by tak- ing regular doses had 'gained twelve pounds in weight before the bottle was finished. Eight cents a pound is cheap for such valuable ma- terial. Some pay more, son -ie less, some get nothing for their money. You get your money's worth when you buy Scott's Emulsion. We will send you a little free. SCOTT & BOWNE, CHEMISTS, 'Toronto, roc. and $x.00 l Ontario. all druggists. Guessed Offhand. Ardupp—I wonder whlat my ances- tor, Adam, said when he first met Eve ?" Diggby—Aro you' sure ile was an ancestor pt seers? Ardupp—Certainly. Diggby—Then I guess about the first thing he said to her was 'Lend me $2' „ T,reherne, Jan. 6, 1902, Massey -Harris Co., Limited, Winnipeg, Man. Gentlemen, It gives me very much pleasure to inform ,you that the No. 4. Binder which I purchas- ed from your Agent here last sum- mer has given me the very best of satisfactions doing its work to perfection and drawing light—very —much lighter than I expected. 10y crop was very heavy and some of 11 very badly. down., but your binder did its work splendid. I had no trouble whatever. I hope you will sell lots of binders for 1903 and save my brother farmers lots of trouble. I wish you every success. R, M. FERRIS. Two Masters. Little Chronicle. In the primary class of a certain Sunday school the lesson was being reviewed'by a visitor. When she final- ly asked for the Golden Text, a little uoy on the back 'row eagerly raised his hand and proudly repeated, "You cannot serve God and women." I keeper MINARrD'S LINIMENT Will cure Diphtheria. JOHN D. BO'G'J_ 11,LIER. Frnuah Village. I know MINARD'S LINIt'IEIN21 will cure Croup. J. F. CUNNINGHAM. Cape Island. I knew MTNARD'S LINIMrl,'T ie the best .remedy, on earth. JOSEPH A. SNOW. Norway, Me. Oh! Tit -Bits, Hnsbaaid—Darling, I believe tbet I am failing, Wife (In alarm)—Gracious 1 How of- ten I have warned you, George, against your *foolish speculations. Huwsband—I don't mean in business, dear ; I mean I'm failing in health. Wife (relieved)—Oh, is that all? 1 it' Feb. 5,9t:1 Oil C1 y, Massey -Harris Co., Lima,ted, Toronto, Ont., Gentlemen,—Please send nee one of your 1903 catalogues of farm- machinery. armmachinery. I have used no ma- chinery that gives as good satis- faction as Massey -Harris. JOHN MABBRIOTr. Editorial Amenities in Missouri. Bethany, Mo., Owl. There is a gander eyed, 'yank jaw- ed, long nosed, hatchet faced man in the Pleasant Valley neighborhood that wants to nlvvays keep up a fuss in his neighborhood. Ile is running far office now. Wash greasy dishes, pots or pans with Lever's Dry Soap a powder. It will re- move the grease with the greatest ease. 36 Precise. ",Tames,"' Kahl mamma, appreeen- vit•ely, "have you ever heard Hugh nee any bad words?" ' Noe," answered the little fee low. Tien, "Well, yes, I (lid, too, mamma. ;The other day he said git for got."—Little Chronicle. CR,11. W. CHASE'S 25 CATARRH CURE OE. is sent direct to the diseased parts by the improved Hlowe. Beals the ideal, clears the arc passages, stops droppings inthn throat and perrnanantly cures Catarrh Ratifies, Fever0Biower free. All dealers, or Dr. A. W, Chase 14fedicine Co.. Toronto and Buffalo Overdid it. 1'onnsylrarnia Punch Bowl, Jotiej)1,1r .-Yes, our trip was ell eight, fee we lied. an atrociously t1la+la (s;'tere ere r:i bele u.--1. thought they had let 1 tie) 1,11 conductors on these' toni' , seplli.nr--'f:h'l1 was the trout -tie t a 1.4 \vas too darned personal. Braised Tongue. Select a fresh tongue far braising. Place•it in a itottle, cover with boil-,. ing waver and simmer two flours. Remove tongue Prim water, skin it carefully and 'trim the roots. Place In a deep pan or earthen dish and surround with 1-4 pound ofsalt pork out in dice, 1-2 cup each of carrot and celery out eute in dice, 1-3 oup of onion, cut the same, a spray of parsley a bit of bay leaf, 1-4 teaspoan peppercorns, 2 cloves ; pour over 2 cups brown stoc1t, cover close- ly and bake in oven 2 hours, turn ones alter cooking 1 hour. Let coal in the liquor 111 which it braised ; serve cold,—Elizabeth 0. Hiller in April housekeeper. Mins ed's Liniment Lumber'man's I'rieand. Dow Be Got Even. N. Y. Sun. Hi --Say, ye knraw1hat rbll of green paper that. tiret city feller hornswog- gled me inter Xtuying last week? Si—Yas. Iii—\Val, Ijes' wrapped a couple of $20 hills round it, so's to make it look real, an' bought a $1,000 gold brick orf the same feller with at. Menard',s Liniment is used by Phy- siciaus. A Cautious Apologist. i''eterboro Review. We do not wish to be misunder- stood ; vve hold no brief to defend every detail of the redistribution of 1881. Mere may be blots in it, as in every ease of complex arrangements devised by human beings. 9 rs la the bank of dirt he makes 'to hold in the melting solder. There's nothing so worthless a ,econd after except Spoon medicines or Catarrh. Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder is an antiseptic, healing lressing, applied directly to the liseased surface by the patient him. elf, who blows the powder through t tube into his nostrils. The cure dates from the first puff. You needn't snuffle from colds ind hay fever, if you have Dr, tgnew's Catarrhal Powder in the louse. It relieves colds or catarrh end cures headache in ten minutes. The American Medicine Co., Allentown, Pa., mites : — " Your Dr, Agnew's Catarrhal 'owder is the best seller in catarrh remedies se have in our store, and our customers praise t very highly." DR. VON STAN'S PINEAPPLE TABLETS are he only conquerors of indigestion, dyspepsia lid catarrh of the stomach. They digest the. ond, giving 111e stomach as long a holiday as it, feeds to get well. Cured thousands, will cure mu- Price, 360, 1• Sweethearts—in Buffalo. Houston Post. "Then you will be mine ?" "All. youree "Oh, joy !c "Oh, rapture ('Ilhey embrace.) "It's getting late, dear ; one more kiss, and 'then good-bye. My huse band doesn't permit my callers to sttay after 10 o'clock, and, besides, I nnas't pu't the eleildren to bed" "But our wedding will be moon ?" "Yes', love, if our divorces do net Marsh. In the pan. Good night, Give my love to your wife" CANADIAN ORDER OF CHOSEN FRIENDS STABILITY i 1 best guarantee of . T.1.BILITYrefs- i ft The 0 g d by any FRATERNAL SOCIETY is the" ability to show— (1) a growing RESERVE FUNIi. (2) a growing MEMBERSHIP. (3) up to date features In every respect. The following table exemplifies briefly and comprehensively the standing of The Canadian Order of Chosen Friends from the first two points 0f view— Memberehlp. Reserve. 347 Year, 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1898 1899• 1900 1901 1902 852 1806 '3145 5032 7803 9711) 1.1364 12090 10027 16152 1,533 10918 22104 28820 $ 1.643 89 4,438 60 11,065 58 21,133 77 52,713 40 72,501 08 100,784 00 108,277 78 /30,284 27 104,2;10 53 208,047 01 214,254 47 234,872 2 05 :113,769 88 Up to Date Features $1000, $1500 an e n0 ease of death of $000, o(2) A disability benefit of one-half face value of certificttte (3 An OLD AGE BENEFIT, 4 A FUNERA.BEN L'IT,this iseptiona (5 . 8I01C BENEFIT, tilts is also optional For farther particular address W. F. MONTAGTJE, Grand Record or,Hanlllton ,Ont. W. F. CAMPBEI T , Grand Organizer,Hatn. iiton, Ont. Organic^r4 wanted. Envied Sister's leasy Task. Detroit News. mamma --Tommy, why don't you ,y your prayers Eke your sister Annulo'? !Jlommy-1 would if I knew a short one like she says. • Mamat a—Why, w,biat does she rani!? (T;onlmy—Olt, she jumps is bed and %vs. 'Oh., dear, 1: , do wish I hacl a new bonnet' 1\' Iuczensa, resiets ordinary ti•etit:tn('nt, but it pee/meetly cnre,i by. Weaver's Syrup and Weavers (Jt>;att. These rented fes env(' been 3101t1 for many years and have cured thousands. They will eltl•e you. ; tret�y lnta1l's house is his castle until .11x3 snakes all asslgnmen1—then It's his wife's, Shirt waists and dainty linen are made delightfully clean and fresh with Sun- light Soap. 613 Towser• Mistook the Sound. :Kansas City Independent, ILe stood in the doorway, hat in hand, and the etuttering young lady was inviting him to call again. " Come around S-s-ses-s," she began, trying to say Sunday, but 1110 sentence was never finished. The dog thought she meant "Sic 'em," and'bte did. $eep Mislard's Liniment . in the House. • A RECOGNIZED FACT, It is universally conceded that to properly appreciate a trip to New York or Boston, one must take the lest road. That road is the New York Central. Of Long Standing. Harvard Lampoon. First New York Girl—Is your ac- quaintance with Jack of long stand- big econd Ditto—Yes, I rode uptown with him in the elevated. The Overworked. Monument. She followed him unto his grave, And reared a marble rare, And chiseled on this sentence sweet "My grief I cannot bear." She mourned a year, and then was wed, And they chiseled on that stone A single word, and now it reads: "My grief i caunot bear—alone." But soon she wore the weeds again, And they turned that stone about, And on it traced this touching line: "'My life's Light has gone out." • Not long she walked in darkness loue Around this marble patch, The bells rang out, the sculptor wrote : " I've struck another match" She's bappy now with number four, But all the neighbors say That she will be a busy girl On resurrection day. —Syracuse Post -Standard. Whatever reduces the drudgery of house work is worth having. The New Century Ball Bearing Washer does away with all hared rubbing. You do not require to touch the clothes to thoroughly clean them and a tub-ful can be done in five minutes. It is needed in every home and you cannot afford not to have it. If your deafer has it you should see it at once. If not, write us and we'will be glad to send you a des- criptive booklet. The Oowswell Mfg. Co. Ltd.,Namilton, Ont. ISSUE NO 18. 1903. Mrs, Winslow's soothing Syrup should always be used for Children Toot -eine. It soothes the child, softens thegume, cures wind colic and is the beet remedy for fiarrhwe. LEARN A PROFESSION IN FIFTEEN DAYS by mall so you can make from Frye. To 'PSN noLLAne A DAY. For particulars write A. NANSELy. Hq'Ave. worth t .Hamilton, Ont. LADY AGENTS. WANTED •THE IaLE. WAYS READY, ' SKIM' SUPPORVU'R -.. 49L•`r.T. ADJUSTER Best Selling Skirt Supporter and Waist Adjuster ever introduced. Sells at sight. Good profit. Send 25 cents for sample and terms to agents. BRUSH ea CO., DEPT 1. H., TORONTO. ®D TkiiiNC,/' TO EXF f �98 ibe Latem. litiby Luncheons Wt, sell the product in key -opening cans. Turn a )cey and you find the mcatexactly as it left us. We put them up in this way: Potted Ham, Beef and Tongue Ox Tongue Mttole), Veal Loaf Deviled Ham, Brisket Beef Sliced Smoked Beef. Etc. All natural flavor foods—palatable and wholesome. Your grocershould havethem "How to Make Good Things to Eat" will be sant free to any address for the asking Libby, McNeill a Libby Chicago, Illinois At the Trimming 3 011111('r, "When a .woman comes up and says, 'Have you' got tlhose—er—' and trhlen begins to paw Iter breast, we know she wants pendants," said the tired looking woman at the trim- ming counter. . "Andthen td s5if w> h , v1. them —wllten who 'have been selling them all winter," si to went on wearily. "It's queer, but not one woman in ten knows the name. No matter what they ask for, we bring out pendants and it's the thing. "Most women ask- for 'those hang- ing things.' "Once in a while some one will strike us for 'flub -dubs.' "Fluttery thinge,' is quite popular. "'Dingle -dangles,' are called for by many. "Se, also, are 'bobby ends' "lent most women just paw their breasts and ask, 'Hhvo eou got those—these'— "And we say yes." Just tion a little woman with a sverrled look fluttered up to tate counter. "Have you got those jig- gly little fly -abouts that every- body is"' --- And the saleswoman stied in ,a tired voice; "Yau mean pendants. Yes, we have Lay, "That's it. I. couldn't just re- call the name. Let me see them, please."—Pl11L;tclelphia Evening Tele- graph. StomaGli Disorders If you want to enjoy each meal to the utmost extent and feel that your stomach is taking Cho good out of the food you eat you should try Dr. Carson's Tonic Stomach and Constipation Bitters It will give zest to your appetite.. Our pamphlet 0n the nae of this superior tonic sent i11 exchange for your name and address on post card. 50c. per bottle at 101 druggists or sent pre- paid on receipt Of 1)t•ic,e, 1 Sample emit 0n receipt e 0c. fstatnl) t0 covey pentatee. Tilt; CARSON ME.DIGIME 430Tonoil'ro 'When you; vcrntela 1r well -develop - el prejudice the Chances are them you will find e bigot. USE 1,000 MILE AXLE GREASE It Has No Equal Manufactured only by THE CAMPBELL 111FC. CO. of HAMILTON, ONTARIO. ror sale by all leading dealers. esee000004+0000000®oeo0eeees •s • 5 0 a 0 0 • • • f• ix 4,114 • • • • m • POSITIVELY CURES s • • 0 ,o • • • - • • • sr • • • 9me eeeeeemee6•esee eseeeleo•e • ST. JACO, r. So • • •, • to m • 0 e 0 Rhauniatista Neuralgia L....ut abaa.;'o tis ae;1gaehe Sciatica Spe'aisao pulses Soremrset sf$ Stiffness The maty Who cheats his neighbor in a business transection hilts no doubt about hills superior business abilities, Wood's Phosplhodine, The Great English Remedy, is an old, well estabe lished and reliable preparation. dcedandv over 40 years. All drag. &Win the Dominioe of Canada sell and recommend as bolos the only medicine of its hind that onrea and gives universal satisfaction. It promptl and permanently cures all forme of Nervous Weal, mess, GI missions, ,S'permatorrlacea, inreefen4h, and all effects of abuse or excesses; the excessive use of Tobacco, Opium or;latfmuranfs, Menta[ and Beafn from, all of which lend to Infirmity, Insanity, Consamption and an Early Grave, Price St per package or ex for $5,. One will please, six will cure. Mailed promppty on r1o• Send for free pamphlet. A.ddrsas Wee of »rice The Wood comspk,A1V, Wladlsor, Ant', beset ear Before aflci Ater,