HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1890-04-18, Page 3rxf
,F i'' '>C�i'"G AS, A Ff N ' IN
KQR1. .
N WS, N.QTI .
The Koreans are egg eaters, and
xnauy of the Japanese liico their
eggs rpm. Rats lista is a common
article of iiiet in both Japan and
Jpgomt and 1 attended a Japanese
.diaper at T pk Q . where slices of
%cagllted 'trent were brot-ght in
Ooy.eted with ice and served as one
of the entrees. It was not bad to
taste end my Japanese friends ate
it with great gusto. In Korea it
ie mot uncommon for the fisher-
zuao to take a bottle of pepper
Dauoe along with them and to eat
a fish as they take it from the
brQQk, sprinkling a bit'of red-hot
chili over it, and eating it down
without cleaning anything off ex•
opt the scales, The Koreans aro
by no means particular as to the
,fe manner in which their fish and
meats are served. The entrails
are sold and eaten as well as the
rest of the meat, and a common
-dish at a big dinner le a chicken
baked, feathers, entrails and all,
served whole upon the table. Tho
Korean is the greatest eater in
the world, he lives to eat. The
average man the country over
eats everything he can get his
teeth on, and ho will take a dozen
meals a day if he have the chance.
I bad sixteen chair bearers in a
trip which I took into the interior
and these bearers stopped at every
village and at almost every house
to rest and be fed. They would
dart off one by one into fields of
turnips by the wayside, and for
the next half mile would go along
eating raw turnips. The bigger
a man's stomach is in Korea the
more wealthy he is supposed to
be, and you see pot-bellied young-
sters everywhere you go. A
Korean has a short sack which
comes down just below the middle
of his waist, and his full, baggy
pantaloons are tied up under this.
• Some of the baby boys never out-
grown the size of their jackets,
and you see a belt of fat' yellow
skin between the ends of the pan-
taloons and the beginning of the
coat. Some of the wealthy ones
wear bustles over their abdomens
In !order to increase the size of
their fronts, and the king usually
makes a present to those who
have audience with him. He sent
a lot of provisions to the American
generals a few days after they ar-
rived in Korea to recognize the
army, and there is no lack of good
things in the palace. The Kor-
ean country produces good meat,
and Koreans are greater meat eat-
ers than the Chinese or the Jap-
anese.—F. G. Carpenter.
'Why, how %vert your !fund is
exclaimed youn ; Nood l e•-1 a i'
clasping hands ith hie frees;
Timpkins ou Feet ,ILO ,lay
during the reeent l' •I i soup.
'You haven't your glove-- en eitre
er ; and yet while my g:eve
hands ase like icicles, yours are
as warm as toast. Do you carry
around stoves in your overcoat
pockets?'
'That is precisely what I do,'
replied Timpkins, laughing, and
with this be drew firth and exhib-
ited to view a curious little tin
box about six inches long by four
in width and one in thickness. It
was elightly i'urved in shape au'l
appeared to he covered with some
stuff like gltized calico. When
the top was slid off the inside was
.seen to be tin perforated with a
great mauy holes. It contained
nothing but a round stick of some
queer -looking substance which
was burning at the end with a
bright redness, but without any
flame or particle of smoke.
'It is a Japanese stove, a device
that has been used in Japan very
commonly for many centuries.
You see it is simply a tin box
with holes in it, covered on the
outside with the calico stuff to
help retain the heat. It is really
quite hot, you observe, and it will
remain so for five hours with the
burning of a single fire stick. You
can't imagine how agreeable it is
to have a couple of these stoves in
your pockets to keep your hands
warm. No frozen hngers for me
when I can carry my fire around
with me. They are so small and
so flat that they don't even make
one's pockets bulge.'
'They cost 85 cents apiece and
witheachone isthrown in two pack-
ages of the fuel sticks for burning
in them. The fuel sticks are
made just the length of the little
tin box and they come in pack-
ages very much like firecrack-
ers. They are made of very fine-
ly -powdered charcoal and curious-
ly enough the burning doesn't
give off any perceptible smoke.
If you want a great deal of hent
you light bc,th ends of a stick—
only one stick is used at a time—
and you get double the warmth
for two hours and a half. It is easy
to cart's three or four sticks in
your pocket if you are going to be
out all day in tbo cold, and as soon
as one is used up, to light anoth-
er and renew the supply of fuel.
You can get as many fuel -sticks
as you like at the Chinese and
Japenese shops where they are
sold.'—Washington Star.
The reeiguatiou of lion. 31r
Nleetin of the p )rtfolio re' the At-
LVL'iltlV-'ereiel'tii or Manit,)l,-t has
been wiihil;:.ty 1.
WJlsou's W111 Caerry reli.:va•i •� t;�
n 1 culls at o i:;, au.1 cures .1 ti,kly.
W. 11. Steele, a G. T. 1a brake-
man, was ran over aL Stoney
Point on Thursday and died be-
fore the train bearing his mangled
body reached Parkhill.
Scrofula is transmitted from
parent to child, and thus becomes
a family inheritance for genera-
tions. It is, therefore, the duty
of every scrofulous person to
cleanse his blood by a thorough
and persistent course of Ayer's '
Sarsaparilla.
One day last week N. B. Smith,
of Geneva, dug new potatoes out
of his garden. The seed was plant -
last fall, and there has not been
frost enough in the ground to pre-
vent propagation. The potatoes
were of good size and were used
on Mr Smith's table.
Minard's Liniment for saleev erywhere
A load of wood was brought to
the village last week containing
about half a cord of good black
walnut, and sold for firewood.
Had the owner of the tree known
that he could have received about
$25 for the log he would probably
have been less anxious to cut it
into stove lengths—Point Ed-
ward Post.
Bloxam's Electric Hair Restorer
restores gray hair tooriginal color
and beauty, cures dandruff and
irritation of scalp, prevents hair
from falling out, produces new
growth, leaving the hair
smooth and glossy, does not soil
the skin, contains nothing injuri-
ous. Only 50c. bottle. Sold by
J. II. Combe.
0
N°
THE' THREE STARS
HEALTH HA pp
Will absolutely and per-
manently cure the most
Iaggravated case of
• CATARRH;
Hay Fever or Catarrhal Deafness.
This is not a snuff or ointment, both el
which are discarded by reputable physi-
cians as wholly worthless and generally
injurious. Ask for Hospital Remedy
for Catarrh.
N.B.—Thia is the only Catarrh num
Remedy on the market which1
emanates fromseientifio sources. $1.00.
HOPE
NIV
Will eradiefte Siff
troubles of the
LIVER AND KIDNEYS,
Mid permanently cure Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Con-
stipation, Bright's Disease of the Kidneys, Catarrh
of the Stomach and Bladder. This is a marvellous
medicine. It rapidly makes
GOOD BLOOD AND LOTS OF IT
&7D THISU If IS LIFE. There is not a blood meal.
cine in the market as good as this. It is peerless.
It loused in the Hospitals of Europe, and pre-
scribed by the most eminent Physicians in
the world. Suitable for old or young.
ASS FOR HOSPITAL REl1IEDT FOR
LIVER AND EIDNETB.
NO•
This is an incompe,r-
able remedy for
VIII General & Nervous Debility
It is traiy H1e itself. tie it and live again. Ask far
HOSPITAL REMEDY for GENERAL DEBILITY. PRICE $1.00.
PRICE $1,00,
o.�•-,v this extract from the scientific papers of Great Britain and Europe
Thome four greatest medical centres of the world are London, Paris. Berlin and Vienna. These cities hated 1NtMefse
hospitals teeming with suffering humanity.. Crowds of students throng the wards .studying under the Professors in
oharye. The most renowned physicians of the world teach and practice here, and the institutions are storehouses of
medical knowledge and experience. With a olein of malting this experienceauailable
d tothe public thealthoughsptat
Remedyy Co. at great expense secured the prescriptiins of these hospitals pe Q thespecifics
would cost from $26 to $1 QO to secure the attention of their distinguished originators, yet in thie way their pre-
pared specifics are offered at the price of the quack pal:?nt medicines that flood the market and absurdly claim to cure
every ill from a single bottle.
Nature has lavishly provided cures
for all the diseases flesh is heir to, but
the proper preparation of many of '
them has not yet been discovered. In
Wilson's Wild Cherry we have a core
for Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough,
Croup and kindred ailments, prepar-
ed from vegetable drugs, in a pleasant
and concentrated form and which var-
'Ably gives prompt relief and effects a
speedy cure. Sold by all druggists.
Some one has figured that there are
in Denver, Col., thirty-one millionaires
whose aggregate wealth is $46,500,000,
and thirty-five semi-millionaries whose
wealth aggregates 3117,500,000, snaking
in all $64,000,000 owned by sixty-six
men.
'After a varied experience with
many so called cathartic remedies,
I am 'convinced that Ayer's Pills
give the most satisfactory results.
I rely exclusively on these Pills
for the cure of liver and stomach
complaints."—John B. Bell, Sr.,
Abilene, ,Teras.
MOODY ON THE W{ K OF
THE HOLY SPIRIT.
At the first of a series of meet-
ings in New York, Nr Moody said
on Tuesday : •
"Not axle of ten professing
Christians has anv conception of
what this work is. I myself had
been a 'church member for ten
years before I was led to grasp the
idea that the Holy Spirit is not a
,,mere attribute, but a person of
the :piety: The first work of the
Spirit is to convict of sin. People
don't llke that. They get angry
and go away stamping their feet.
That is'better than saying, 'Oh,
isn't it grand !' and then- forget-
ting all about the sermon in an
hour. This conviction of sin,
however:,cannot be brought about
by human eloquence. Only the
Hoiy Spirit can do the work. The
creation of a warm atmosphere of.
love is the next result of the Holy
Spirit. In some cases a light will
not burn. So in some churches a
dead atmeephere prevails. We
don't Want that sort of iinterest
whiehconsists in going to aprayer
meeting one night, a theatre the
next,then a prayer meeting again,
and then a ball. Then the Spirit
imparts' hepe. It gives liberty,
about the last thing we have inow-
adays, when you see a man in the
pulpit bound, like Lazarus, band
and foot, with a napkin about Iris
month. 'The consciousness of un -
repented sin is the greatest bar to
our liberty."
'•NOTHING BUT SKIN AND
BONES."
is the inelegant though appro-
priate expression used in describ-
ing the appearance of many fe-
males whom Nature intended for
perfect specimens of her handi-
work, but who have been reduced
to this distressing contrition by
some of the organic trou lee,
peculiar to the sex, style teefemale
complaints," the sy nsptoms - of
which aro "an all gone feeling,"
weakness in the back, especially
mornings, nervousness, and some-
times hysteria. The.eure for'those
beauty -destroy ing troubles—and
an undoubted one in every •ceee—
is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prc'tcrie-
tion, and it renders it unnecessary
to consult a doctor—a disagreeable
duty for a 'modest woman. Of
druggists.
ain and speedy cure for
Cold en the Head and Catarrh
in all its stages.
SOOTHING, CLEANSING,
HEALING.
Instant Relief, Permanent Cure,
Failure Impossible.
anv so-cal.ed diseases are simply symptoms o1
Gatarrtr, sl:cn as headache, partial deafness, losing
sense of smell, foul breath hawking and spitting,
nausea, general feeling of debility, ete. If you are
troubled with any of these or kindred symptoms, you
ring
a botttle 0(ti'Nsa'.Lhould Bsul. Be warnedno time in intime
neglected cold in head results In Catarrh, followed
by censumplt,n and death. NASAL. BALSA is sold by
ell druggists, '+r w;11 be ten{, pout paid, on receipt of
price (5o eerie ,nd ei.00) byaddresaing
HUNG & 00., BNOCKVILLE, 0t(1.
jrg Beware of iMitetipne similar In naso
Mr H. P. Willson, of St. Catr:arines,
says there will be oceans of peaches this
year; and that we may all reokon on
eating "peaches and cream" to our
heart's content.
Marcus C. Stearns, of Chicago, who
on Saturday last, in a fit of depression
caused by illness, fired four bullets in-
to hie own body, has died. He leaves
property, chiefly real estate, valued at
between $3,000,000 and $4,000:000.
A perfect specific—Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Remedy.
A travelling evangdlist recently held a
series of revival meetings at Hamilton,
Madison county, and made many con-
verte, some of them being prominent
citizens. The preacher requested the
new members to relate their eine public-
ly, and•several husbands madeastonish-
ing disclosures. Their wives have de-
clared'-blteir intention .of applying for
divorces.
Resp r. Robertson, nperintendent
,
of Pres terian Missy in the North-
west, in an interview in Toronto re-
affirmed his statement that the Scotch
crofters there had been suffering for the
necessaries of life. "Tie people," he
said, "wene actually pat on half allow-
ance of rations. They had oatmeal
and tea, and some had butter and a few
had a little inferior beef. Think of
such supplies as these during a cold
Northwest winter."
Recent investigations have
shown that the people of Great
Britain swallow over 5,500,000
pills daily, or one pill a week for
every person in the population.
The pill consumption for one year
would weigh 178 tons, and would
fill 36 freight cars, which it would
take two powerful locomotives to
pull. Placed in a row the pills
would reach nearly 6,500 miles,
or from Liverpool to New York
and back again.
Mr James MCGillivary, a high-
ly -respected farmer, and one of
the pioneers of Zone, aged 73, liv-
ing about three -miles from
Thamesvill, was found dead in his
bed :it 5 c'olack Thursday molrn-
ing- Death is supposed to have
been caused by heart disease.
GREAT SIOUX RESERVATION
NoW OPEN.
The fertile lands in the Great Sioux
Indian Reservation,west of the Missouri
river, are now open for settlement. The
President's proclamation was issued on
February 10th,1890. The natural gate-
way to the Southern part of the reser-
vation is via Chamberlain, South Deka.
to, the preePnt western treminus of the
Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul Railway.
From that point to the lands beyond,
homeseekers must proceed by team.
All necessary outfits can be secured at:
reasonable prides at Chamberlian.
For the convenience of persona who
may desire to inspect the new country
drat-elaee reduced rate excursion tickets
to Chamberlain and return, will be sold
from Chicago, Milwaukee and other
points on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St.
Paul Railway, good to return until Oa
tober 31st, 1890,
For maps and circulars, containing
general and detailerl-dnformation,please
send to the nearest ticket agent, or
address A. V. H. CAIIPENTEn, General
Passenger Agent, Milwaukee, Wis
May 30.
ONE DOLLAR EACH.
TO BE HAD OF ALL DRUGGISTS OR OF THE
•
TORONTO,,
�I� COUG�,tOliSX111VV‘Ot
. -
CIRCULARS DESCRIBING THESE RnrieuxIEB SENT ON APPLICATION. I
i
MIRED
HOSPITAL REMEDY COMPANY Sole Proprietors, CANADA,
Five hundred thousand dollars
is to be invested in electric street
railroads in Springfield, MD., and
the company which is new being
organized for that purpose will
purchase all the rights and pro-
perty of the old street railroad
company. Li I-Iamilton, Ont.,
the street railway company med-
itate adopting eleetricity as an
agency for propelling cars up the
steep streets of the city. The
electric horse is the horse of the
near future, and it will be a happy
day for the nag when it is so.
1,1/47HEN a few doses of Ayer's Cherry
V Pectoral will relieve you? Try it.
Keep it in the house. You are lialile to
have 2 cough at any
time, and no other
remedy is so effective
as' this world-
renowned prepara-
tion. No household,
with young children,
should be without it..
Scores of lives are
saved every year by
its timely use.
Amanda B. Jenner, Northampton,
Mass., writes : " Common gratitude im-
pels me to acknowledge the great bene-
fits I have derived for my chi dren from
the use of Ayer's most excellent Cherry
Pectoral. I had lost two dear children
from croup and consumption, and had
the greatest fear of losing my only re-
maining daughter and son. as they were
delicate. Happily, I find that by giving
them Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, on the first
symptoms of throat or lung trouble, they
are relieved from danger, and are be-
coming robust, healthy children."
"In the winter of 1885 I took a bad
cold which, in spite of every known
remedy, grew worse, su that tl e family
phvsic.iay. considered me incurable, sup -
mc .c to be in consumption. As a
• '. S tried Ayer's Cherry Pocto-
the world. The writer is a young ie • '1' a. shat Pilie, the cure was
l have never been
English woman : "'typhoid ant, tt :1 .,•:i : l.a medicine. I alis fifty years
tprhus are raging, and last week o' :. • t' ..,:t; Al ;,Minds, and at -
42
e ." l Le:tlth to. the use of
42 ;people died of the two fevers • ;: c,. ,, ,tl."-G.\V.Yuuker,
in one day- The hospitals are;,,,-. _..,
badly overcrowded, The lack of'ese . eeersr I contracted a severe
business is so great that people c'' `' i':' 1 !r-` rspeeted exposure, be -
p P c:.,:. • , was much
arc actually starving. Last week t,.. , ;:,)a:s t1ese and bronchial
a friend was 72 hours without a it r+f.er truing various medi-
c:n, . . h,,;r i-d:e', 1 at last purchased
mouthful, not having s penny in at, •[.k. of Ayer's C -;terry Pectoral. On
his pocket, and too proud to beg. ta;:... ; llt.s medicine, fuy cough ceased
'You know the mule wagons used aiic:,,:,t immediately, and I have been
for transport. Last Wednesdaywe I) ever since. "-Rev. Thos. B. Russell,
Sec rotary Holston Conference and P. E.
their owners filled six of them up of the Greenville District, M. E. C.;
with boards for seats and an awn- Jonesboro, Tenn.
ing over the top, and they went
down full to Kimberly of young
men who could get neitner work
nor food up here—gentlemen all
of them. They were taken down
for £2 a head. Fancy spending
three weeks like that."
1 ?winger Signal I
A Cold in the head may be aptly termed a danger signal warning you that if neglected that danger -
out and disagreeable disease, Catarrh is sure to follow, perhaps leading to Consumption and the
grave. At no season of the year is Cold In the head more prevalent than during the Spring months,
and at no other season do the people of this country suffer more genemily from Catarrh,w
it
all its
disagreeable and annoying effects. Do not for an Instant neglect`elther of these troubles, but apply
NASAL BALM. the only remedy that will give instart relief and effect a thorough cure. The follow-
ing testimonials from among thousands in our poaseasion bear witness to its sterling merit..
T. D. D. Loyd8 Clarence streetToronto
that. Aays; 1 wish here to,testify to the unequalled
healing powers of your Nasal Balm. I have been
troubled for three years by what the doctors call
post nasal catarrh and -have tried everything in
the elty that could be obtained, in the shape of
catarrh cure., and found no permanent relief
from any of them, till a friend one day advised
me to try your Nasal Balm, and I find that even
one bottle hat done me more good fair all the
medicines put together that I have persecuted
myself with before. I was very much troubled
with spitting and hawking, especially In the
morning, so much so that my throat was con-
tinually a raw condition, but I am now be-
ginning tin knw what it is to be able to speak
freely. 1 shall not fail to recommend It to any of
my friends suffering from the like disease.
A terrible plague has swept ov-
er a large section of Southern
Russia.. Millions of field mice, in
such numbers us to be irresistible
have omerrun those provinces and
passing northward. They have
ruined 'cultivated fields, com-
pletely gutted graineries and
wheattitacks, and killed and eaten
beveled hundred dogs. They swim
rivers -and climb mountains and
there -seems to be no way of ex-
term'inating tlacm or of arresting
thea r progress.
Wr:n<lsor ,€''record : The loss to
the farmers of the county of hent
by the egg tariff alone will be
Prow. 30i00Ei to $35,0'00 a year,
and they ads not in a frame of
mine just now to submit to furth-
er robberies. If Sir John don't
came down and accept offers of
L•ociprocity -the people will take
hold thelneeices next election.
[What will the loss be to the
farmers of Illuron ?]
in Zurich,Switzerland, the oth-
er day, one.ef the law courts clos-
ed a novel.ease. A beggar who
opened the garden gate in front of
a house where he intended to ask
for c elief was attacked by a watch
dog and bitten in the left arm.
Soon afterwards he •commenced a
suit against the owner of the
plaee, calling for heavy damages,
on the ground that the wound he
haat received rendered him per-
manently unable to earn his liv-
ing. The doriense was that he
could beg just as web as ever, and
that Rhe injure in question, far
front beim:; a -disadvantage, only
increased his ehances in his pro-
fession. But the court beld that
the proprietor of' a house is re-
sponsible for the security of the
people who come to visit him, ev-
en when the object of the visit is
to make an appeal to his generos-
ity. So the beggar won his suit.
THE WONDER OF THE ANE 1
�- q.^ - fro/ren/ri�P. %�
f
When Baby waa sick, we gave ber anetoria,
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria,
When ababocame Miss, eke clang se Castoria,
IRhaa sltehad Children, she gave ;them Caatoriq
Alt ie not gold, or diamonds,
that glitters, or such stories as
these would not have to be told of
British settlers at Johannesburg,
South Africa, the headquarters of
the diamond mining industry of
Ayefs Cherry Pectoral,
PREPARED BY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all I)rutigistn- Price $1; Mx bottlea,$6.
Alex. Burns, Sudbury, Ont., says:I may state
I have been affected with Catarrh seven or
eight years, and it was attended by consequent
symptoms such as foul breath, constant dropping
into the throat, hawking and spitting, partial
deafness, ringing in the ears and sickening pains
in the head directly over either eye. I have us-
ed powders and douches, but all to no effect, the
only result arising from the use of such was tem-
porany relief, followed by the usual symptomsin
a more aggravated form. The results arising
from the use of Nasal Balm: Sweet breath, stop-
page of the droppings into the throat, (consequ-
ently leas hawking and spitting), clearness of
hearing, and not once sine I began its use have
I had pain in the head. In fact, it is my opinion
that a carefu and persistent use of thelliahn will
effect a cure ,n the worst case of catarrh.
Nasal Balm
A NEW IMPROVED DYE
FOR HOME DYEING.
Only Water required in thing.
YQCyonr dealer does not keep them,
a package. For sale everywhere. If
send direct to the maoufaeturera,
COTTINGHAM, ROeRI%T$ON & CO.
MONISICAL.
Instantly Relieves
TO THE EDITOR:
Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named
disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall
be glad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your readers who have con.
sumption if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. Respectfully,
T. A. SLOCUM, M.C., 186 West Adelaide St., TORONTO. ONTARIO. —�
The People's Grocery
Business Change.
The undersigned desires to intimate to his former patrons and frien
that he has repurchased his former busin ess, and will continue it
the old stand,
•
Corner of Albert and Ontario - Streets
He intends to go out of the Crockery and Glassware line entirely,
balance of which will he sold cheap, and will devote himself exclte--
sively to
GROCERIES, Fine Fruits, Confectionary &c.
Of which he will keep nothing but. first-class goods. Tho business
will be conducted on a strictly cash basis, and prices will be fixed ac-
cordingly. By giving close personal attention to the business he
hopes to merit and receive the same liberal patronage that he enjoyed.
hitherto.
JOHN CUNINGHAME•
- CLINTON
ouse CIoaningSeasoll
SPECIAL � CUTS
In BROOMS, BRUSHES and SOAPS, BED-
ROO1V1 SETS, CROCKERY & GLASSWARE
:x:
�t.
J. W. IRWIN, The :Times Tea Warehouse,
Cooper's Old Stand, Cor. Searle's Bloak, CLINTON
ADAMS' EMPORIUP
SPRIIITG GOODS
Last week we received and opened up a large quantity of new goods for
the spring trade. Lovely PRINTS, Fine DRESS GOODS, Extra
Good TWEEDS, and cheap. CARPETS in Tapestry, Hemp and Oil.
TICKINGS, SHIRTINGS and BUTCHERS LINEN, KENTUCKY
JEAN, something new in dress lining. Full supply of small ware&
MILLINERY, As usual the very best. GR®CERIES of best quality.
WALL PAPER &c. Field and Garden SEEDS. All are cordially in-
vited to see the goods and be convinced that this is the right place.
Nasal Balm I R, A DAM S.
Oo-ld in Head,
A. W. Mallory, Mallorytown, Ont„ says: My
daughter suffered for years from a most dlstress-
Ing and annoying Catarrh. Her CARO was under
the treatment of eminent physicians In the Unit-
ed States and Canada. Two months:use of Nasal
Balm has hnd more beneficial effects than all for -
mor treatments+ combined,
L. D. Dion, Dept. Railways and Canals, Ot-
tawa, says: 1 am very glad to give you to -day the
testimony that Nasal Balm has completely cured
my catarrh, from which I guttered for nearly
three years.
Positively Cures
Catarrh.
LONDESBORO
D. uerhyshire, Mayor of Brockville and Pre-
sident of the Ontario Creamery Association says:
Nasal Balm beats the world for Catarrh and
Cold in the Read. in my own case It effected
relief from the Brat application.
Isaac Waterman, imperial Oil Co'y, Potrolia,
Ont., says : Nasal Balm gave me the most per-
fo et satisfaction of any medicine 1 ever used for
Cold in the Read. I found It easy to use, quick
In giving relief and effect a complete euro tin a
couple of hours.
If Nasal Balm in not kept 'in stock by your dealer It will he sentpos eceipt of price (5
,Cents for small and >31 for large sire FU ndfiresseng
, ^O
�r�"' v a ONT.BORCR\ ItLL,
•
D'A vignon's Cream of Witch -Hazel,
THE NI:W TOILET LOTION.
Softens the skin, removes roughness, eruptions and irritation fromthe face and
hands, and gives freshness and tone to the complexion;
It is an invaluable application after shaving. Don't mistake thissuperior'fpre-
pasation for any paints, enamels or injurious cosmetics or inferior complexion
otions. It prevents eruptions, abrasions, roughness, redness, chapping, Col -
sores, and pain resulting to sensitive skin from exposure to wind and cold. to
short D'AviexoN's CARAM OF Wtrcn-RAZF.Lis at once a remedy and a preventatiVd
for every form of surface inflammation or irritation. Price 25 cents per bottle.
Manufactured by
JA.MF>'g He COMB,
CHEMIST AND DRUGGIST, OLI Y ON, ONT.