HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1890-05-16, Page 3ForSunda' y Reading
GOD'S CARE.
Unbounded lame our Saviour s .owe
In everything ;
In winter's blasts and chilly snows,
In gentle spring,
In summers force and burning heat,
In untttran fair,
Through all the rolling year, how sweet
He shows his care !
When fierce temptations jtry my soul,
Weak, tempest tossed.
When sorrow's billows o'er me roll,
.And Joy seems lost.
When all my heart is overcast
With darkest cloud,
And rains of trouble thick and fast
My life enshroud.
When friends are • false and foes are
strong,
And doubts assail,
When my torn heart sends up one long
And bitter wail,
When dark as night the future seems,
And no help near,
When o'er my way no sunshine streams
My heart to cheer.
Then in my agony, I torn
To him above,
And in his Book of books I learn
Of wonderous love.
"He careth,"—doth the passage come
My heart to cheer,
And with the words, the glorious Son
Of God seemed near.
I read,—he died that I may Iive
In heaven above,
He will my every sin forgive
In his great love,
And so, becanse be loved the world,
Oh, message sweet !
He will himself become a guide
To wandering feet.
And so I read, till faith and trust
Return again,
So sweet, my heart in transport must
Forget the pain.
And all over my burdened life
The light shines clear ;
Trouble and darkness, doubt and strife,
All disappear,
KNEELING AT THE THRESHOLD
I'm kneeling at the threshold, weary,
faint and sore,
Waiting for the dawning, for the open-
ing of the door ;
Waiting till the Master shall bid nie
rise and come
To the glory of His presence, to the
gladness of His home.
A weary path I've travelled, 'mid dark-
ness, storm. and strife,
Bearing many a burden, struggling for
life ;
But now the morn is breaking, my toil
will soon be o'er ;
I'm kneeling on the threshold,my hand
is on the door.
Methink I hear the voioes of the blessed
as they stand
Singing in the sunshine of the far-off
sinless land :
Oh, would that I were with them, amid
the shinging throng,
Mingling in their worship, joining in,l
their song.
The friends that started with me have
entered long ago ;
One by one they left Hie to struggle
with.the foe ;
Their pilgrimage was shorter, their
triumph sooner won.
How lovingly lthey'll hail me whent'll
my toil is done
With them the blessed angels, that
know no grief nor sin,
I see them by the portals prepared to;let
me in ;
0 Lord, I wait Thy pleasure, Thy time f
and way is best,
But I'm wasted, worn, and weary; 0,
Father, bid me rest.
Tun ROUsEHOLD ANQElI:'"` - ' !these buildings, and I want some
The glad -hear t ed, oheery woman
who makes the best of evelytbin
is a treasure to any home. Sb
may make mists lts -1, she may t -w
get, elle may Tull a dish in mix-
ing or in baking, bat if, with the
mishap, she sends in a sunshine—
a smile, a laugh, or some gay and
kindly word—people forget'their
djrsappointments, and make the
best of what they cannot help.
And now bow much better this
is than the unvarying precision
of one who has no faults, and no
patience with those who have;
who never make mistakes, nor
makes allowance for those who do.
Accuracy and precision are excel-
lent; punctuality and promptness
are most valuable; but "love is
the fulfilling of the law," and
Christain charity is greater than
faith, hope, faultless housekeeping
or anything else. If you're born
with snnshine in your heart,
thank God for it, and let it shine
out. But if not, turn your gaze
to the Sun of Righteousness and
catch the brightness that beams
from his face. "They looked un-
to him and were lightened, and
their faces were not ashamed."
I help.'
g ' I am your man,' responded
e , Frank.
So it was arranged that Frank,
OUTDONE BY A BOY.
A lad in Boston, rather small
for his years, works in an office as
an errand boy for four gentlemen
who do business there. One day
tbe gentlemen were chaffing him
a little about being so small, and
said to him: "You never will
amount to much, you never can
do much business ; you are too
small."
The little fellow looked at them.
'Well,' said he, 'small as I am, I
can do something which none of
you four men can do.'
'Ah 1 what is that?' said they.
'I don't know as I ought to be
telling you,' he replied.
But they wereanxious to know,
and told him to speak out and say
what he could do that none of
them were able to do.
'I can keep from swearing,'
said tbe boy.
There was some blushing on
four manly faces, and there seem-
ed to be very little anxiety for
further information on the point.
TEMPERANCE NOTES.
The Supreme Court el Missis-
sippi has decided that wine made
in that State from grapes grown
therein may be sold in the State,
even in the counties where local
option has facade prohibition the
rule resrict'ing the liquor traffic.
The Lancet, in speaking of' the
increase in the consumption of
intoxicating liquors, says: "We
regret this increase, and have ne
apologies to offer for it. It is an
error of' intelligenes that will lead
to errors of health that only medi-
•eal Hien will know of."
Minard's Liniment lumberman's friend
An Englishman, who insulated
his bedstead by placing under-
neath each post a broken -off bot-
tle, says he had net been free
from rkiuematism or gout for'fif-
teen years, and that he began to
improve im mediately after the ap
plication of the insulators. A
paper, quoting this, adds :
"There's many a fellow who could
cure his gout if he would break
off the bottom of his glass bottles
in time."
A rule of the Canadian Pacific
Railway reads : "rhe use of in-
toxicating liquors will be followed
by immediate dismissal from the
company, and preference will be
given to employees who abstain
i•om the use of same altogether."
The General Superintendent of
the Eastern Division says : "I
consider that the only guarantee
of safety for railway companies is
to have this rule strictly enforced.
The increase of drinking among
women is a symptom which has a
painful novelty in England, but
one which cannot bo denied. It
is shown by the growing number
of refreshment rooms and confec-
tioners' shops in which the serv-
ing of spirituous -drinks is the
chief business carried on, and by
the boldness with which women
enter saloons and taverns. A
count at Nottingham between the
.hours of 7 anti 11 p. m. on Satur-
day showed that 460 lads, appar-
ttly under 21 years old, bad ent-
•ed the seven saloons under ob-
servation, while the number of
g;ir 1 i under the same limit of ago
was not less than 1,009. Tho ex-
cess of girls is explained by the
fact that the g;rls were generally
treated to drink while the lads
had to pay for themselves.
Minard's Liniment cares Distemper.
CATARRH,
CATARRHAL DEAFNESS—HAY FEV -'IC
A NEW HOME TREATMENT.
Sufferers are not generally aware that
these diseases are contagious, or that they
are due to the presence of living parasites
in the lining membrane of the nose and
eustkchian tubes. Microscopic research,
however, has proved this to be a fact, and
the result of this discovery is that a
simple remedy has been formulated where-
by catarrh, catarrhal deafness and hay
fever are permanently cured in from one
to three simple applications made at home
by the patient once in two weeks.
'N.B.—This treatment is not a snuff or er
an ointment ; both have been discarded
by reputable pb,ysicians as injurious. A el
pamphlet explaining this new treatment
is sent on receipt of ten cents by A. II.
Biros & Son, 303 West Ring Street.
Toronto, Canada.—Toronto Globe.
Sufferers from Catarrhal troubles should
nftitly read the above.
F.(lonzales.'n 1)r ,rninunt r, nch-
er near Sart .1::1;11 ••, (';d., has been
a1 rest( .1 n:• :: char _c of stl'angling
1, death :be .Iicg:tim:Ile twin
children 1.e. (vhi,•li his daughter
gave birth fiver a ),ur ago.
INE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY
OP PURELY VEGETABLE INGREDIENTS
p AND WITHOUT MERCURY, USED BY
THE ENGLISH PEOPLE POR
OVER 120 YEARS, ,IS
• COMPOUND •
ANTI ILIOUl3
These Pills consist of a nnr peculiar admix.
tore of the best and mildest a aperients and
the pure extract of F1owern o They will
be found a most efficacious rederangements
of the digestive
or nue nn f
d ci
tonRn d
�a1d aetlon of the g
n tor-
liver and
pmdnre 8a-
" digestion and the several vete bilious and liver
lomplalnts. Sold by all Che
meth' and
vegetable
Chamomile.
1 for
y
for obetty
bowels which
ties of
mists.
WUOLRRALR AORNTR
tiANS AND SONS, LIMITED,
' ... MOIIREAL. •
- ,
•
PUSII.
A young man, who for want of
other employment had been as-
sistant to a surgeon for a time,
was riding out into ''to country
from San1'rancisco 1 forgot the
operation ho had just assisted at.
The compr ty in which he had
gone to California in 1869 had d's-
bancici, and c^tech man started in
for himself. So ou:• het o, whom
we will call Frank. was not sett!' 1
as to what he would do. 110 did
not like the Surgeon's bus'ness,
lr
and ;e r
1 was looh,.t
fir something
that he could engage in with fess
injury to his fool;ngs., As he pee-
sc 1 f•,•om Lie city, whom sltonld
ho meet hnt Blake, with whom he
hal sailed
t
from Callao a an t o San
h.rn n c i sco.
'Hello, Blake, what are yon d(
i'rg here?' saidy'ank.
• 've taken the contract t3 paper
who knew just whereaper could
be bad, should share the job with
Blake, and they would divide pro-
fits. Blake was an upholsterer by
trade. Frank had never bung a
roll of paper in his life, but he
has seen his mother paper the
walls of his early home, and he
thought he could learn. Blake at
once busied himself in • hiring
bands to put the paper on, while
Frank bought and carted the ma-
terials. When the walls were
papered, the young firm got the
contract of carpeting the floors
and hanging curtains at -the win-
dows. Then they set up an of-
fice in the city, and their business
increased until before many years
they had the largest upholstering
business on the Pacific coast.
They imported from Paris, Lon-
don, and other European cities,
and had a large trade with New
York. The fires that desolated
that city repeatedly burned them
out two or three times, but they
began again, and al last prosper-
ity was won.
Frank's motto was, "What man
has done, man may do," and he
had the courage to push and push
till the doors through which he
wished to pass stood wide open.—
Exchange.
Minard's Liniment is used by physicians
SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS.
In Paris there is a skating rink
formed of real ice on a circular
basin of water artificially 000led
by pipes containing ammonia gas.
Irrigation in Australia has so
far advanced that the necessary
works for the efficient irrigation
of 25,000 acres of land are com-
pleted, and special machinery for
plowing and grubbing has already
been constructed.
It is reported that the electric
locomotives now being built for
the London and Southwark Sub-
way have, on trial proved to be
capable of moving the loaded
tt: ns at a speed of twenty-five
miles an hour with ease.
On the Tienna and Buda Pesth
telephone line of silicium bronze
ice has been observed to ..ollect
to twice the thickness that it
forms on neighboring telegraph
wires of iron. Difference of vi-
bration is a suggested cause.
A case of transmission of infec-
tion to au unborn child has oc-
curred in Paris. A child born
during the convalescence of the
mother from pneumonia was af-
fected with the same malady, and
died at the end of the five days.
The aim as far as smokeless
powders are concerned, where
high explosives are" tied, is by
chemical and mechanical means
to render detonation impossible,
and to convert a violent explosive
into a trustworthy and contl•olable
propellant.
After twenty months of trial
Dr. E. Houze, of the Hospital St.
Jean, Brussels, reports tannin the
most beneficial substance in con-
surn tion he has known. . After
the ,first few days expectoration,
sweats and cough diminish, and
the appetite improves.
Never had a preparation a
more appropriate name than
Ayer's Hair Vigor. When the
capillary glands become enfeebled
by disease, age, or neglect, this
dressing imparts renewed Iife1 to
the scalp, so that the hair assumed
much of its youthful fullness and
beauty.
COUGH NO MORE.
Tour cough may lead to disease of
the lungs, therefore do • hot neglect it,
Wilson's Wild Cherry will ou It quick-
ly and effectually. For Col Whoop-
ing cough, Bronchitis,Loss of ice, etc.
no medicine equals Wilson's Wild
Cherry, as thousands testify. Sold by
all druggists.
CULTIVATION OFrCORK.
Corks are an article of conveni-
ence to which little attention
is commonly given. and yet im-
mense foil cos have been made in
their production. Their cultiva-
tion and manufacture form an im-
portant item in the industries of
Spain. An account of this I•roln
Mr Day's work on that country
is of interest. The cork tree is
an oak which grows hest in poor-
est soil 11 will not endure frost,
and must have sea air, and also on
altitude ab"ve the sett level. I t
is fotfnd only along all the coast
of Spain, the northern coast of Af-
rica and the northern shores of
the Mediterranean.
There are•two barks to the tree,
the outer ono being stripped for
use. The cork is valuable accord-
ing as it is soft and velvety.
The method of cultivating it is
interesting. When the sapling is
about ten years old itis sc;•ipped
of its outer bark for about two
iect from the ground; the Gro
will then be about five inches in
diamoter, and may six feet up to
"10 bt•llnche- This stripping is
worthless. The inner hark ap-
pears blood -ted, and it it it split
or injured the tree dies.
Afton eight or ten years the out
er hark- has again grown 0.,, and
then the tree is again at.ippc(I four
feet from the t•n')
tN. This stripping
is ver y con; se, rind is used as
afloats
for fish;;.g mets. Every ten years
after it is stripped, and each year
Lwn feet higher up, until the tree
is fol ty or fl
Ay
old, when on it
in its prime, and may teen be
stripped every ton yea's r•om the
geoun(1 to the ore-ichos, and will
last two hunaroe years. It is
t.
j:'
a
l - THE THR EES TARS
HEALTH
HA pp/
WIU absolutely and pert
t anently cure the moot
No le aggravated case of
CATARRH,
Bay Fever or Catarrhal Deafness.
This is not a snuff or ointment, both of
which are discarded by reputable phyei-
eiane as wholly worthless and generally
injurious. Ask for Hospital Remedy
for Catarrh.
N.B.—Thla Is the only Catarrh
Remedy on the market which
emanates from aclentinemaces. $1.00.
119
MOPE
NIV
Wi11 Aradieata all
troubles of the
LIVER AND KIDNEYS,
sad 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
MID T8EBDZN re. awn. There is not a blood Medi.
cine in the rnarltet as good as thia. It 18 yeer1be,
It Is wed In the 8oapitala of Euro", and pro.
sorlbed by the moat eminent Physielans in
the world, Buitable for old or young.
85X Port SOBPITBL aE11IEDT PDX
LIVER AND ItIDNETs.
Tido le an Ineompar•
able remedy for
VI11 General &Nevous Debility
It is truly ate Itself. Vee It and 11Te ar�eitaa.. Ask for
=MX RENERY for GENERAL DERIUTY. MME al AO.
PRICE $1.00.
this extract from the scientlflc papers of Great Britain and Europe
•
The four greatest medical centres of the world are London, Perla. Berlin and Vienna. These cities heed IifilfleRte
hoapita/a teeming with suffering humanity. ,Crowds of atudenta throng the wards studying under the Professors in
charge. The most renowned physicians of the worldteach and practice here, and the institutions we storehouses of
methcal knowledge and experience. With a view of making this experience available to the pub/io the Hospital
Remedy Co. at great expense secured the prescriptions of these hospitals, prepared the specifics, and although it
would coat from $26 to $100 to secure the attention of their distinguished originators, yet in this way their pre-
pared specifics are oared at the price of the quack patent medicines that flood the market and absurdlj clplm to cure
*very i/1 from a single bottle. -
ODOLLAR EACH.
TO BE HAD OF ALL DRUGGISTS OR OF THE
HOSPITAL REMEDY COMPANY, Sole Proprietors, • TORONTO, CANADA.
C38CVL8n8 DESCBISING T3rESE 5.55 T551:55 SENT OR APPLICATION.
WIT
about twenty years before any-
thing can be realized from the
tree, and from this reason the
Spaniards, who are not fond of
looking after posterity, plant few
new trees.
HE EFFECTS OF TOBACCO
John Goodman M.D.—"Tobacco
stultifies the mind, blunts the feel-
ings, and unfits a man for the in-
tense competition of commercial
life."
John G. Whittier, the poet.—'I
feel a great interest in any effort
to check the pernicious habit of
tobacco using. It is not only a
nuisance, but a 'moral and physi-
cal evil, and asbame toourboast-
ed refinement and civilization."
Mr Partello, a clerk in the War
department at Washington, made
44 bull's eyes out of 44 shots at
800, 900, 1,000 yards. He neith-
er drinks intoxicants nor smokes
tobacco.
STOMACH AND LIVER DISEASEs.—
I have seen too most distressing
and fatal cases of stomach and liv-
er diseases traceable to snuff and
tobacco.—Dr. Conquest.
DYsPErstA.--The stomach is
burdened with more work than a
smoker,s stomach can perform ;
hence the dyspepsia so frequently
accomp anying the pipe.—James
Muir Howie, M. D., late president
Royal Medical Society, Edinburg.
BLOOD POISONING.— Tobacco
poisons the blood, depresses the
vital powers, and weakens and
otherwise disorders the heart.—
Gibbons, M. D.
The poison of tobacco gets into
the blood, interferes with the
heart's action arid effects every or-
gan and fibre of' the frame.—Dr.
M. Hall.
HEART DlsaasE.—Nearly every-
one I have rejected, afterexamin-
ing them for life policies, has
brought on an affection of the
heart by smoking.—R, Townson,
M. 1;. (i. S.
CANCER.—TObae(•o, whiel' ans—
wers no natural want, has become
the most common cause of cancer
in the mouth.—Prof. Bouisson.
Certain forms of cancer in the:
lips and tongue are clearly trace-
able to the use of• tobacco.—Wm.
Hardwicke, 11,1. D., Coroner for
Central Middlesex.
Cancer of' the lip is rarely seen
except in men wild smoke.—C.
Drysdale, M. 1)., M. R. C. S, &c,
Iron. Thomas Greenway, Pre-
mier of Manitoba, is in Toronto.
Mr Greenway came to Toronto on
matters connected with intniigra-
tion to Manitoba. Ile says that
crop prospects this year in tho
Northwest aro excellent. There
has begin an early sp'•i ng, followed
by warm weather and warm rains,
and at present matters look well, t.
11/Inch, he says, depends on this T
year's harvest. Railway- c0,1- t
strnetion is going on rapidly. P
lmmigrtaion so tar thk year is
not as large as in previous years, n
but a better class o; immigrants
has gone t) the Province. They h
are mostly Onto'to farmers. with 8
stock and capital, and British tetn-
ant.
farm ,.
0 H
tv t t, t
t.
capital.
The
I
f'ro�:ne'e is .slowly b.tt steadily
progressing.
Children Cry for
'Pitcher's Carftoria.
MESSRS. C. C RICHARDS & Co.
Gents.—Having used MINARD'S
LINIMENT for several years in my sta-
ble, I attest to its being the beat thing I
know for horse flesh. In the family,
we have used it for every purpose that
a liniment is adapted for, it being re-
commended to us by the late Pr J. L.
R. Webster. Personally I find it the
best allayer of neuralgic pain I have
ever used.
B. TITUR,
Proprietor Yarmouth Livery Stable.
Five hundred and forty-seven heads
of families in Quebec province have
filed applications for the 100 -acres
land grant offered by the Provincial
Government to each family of a dozen
living children.
At the conclusion of a law suit in
Philadelphia the other day, the plain-
tiff received a cheque for four cents as
his share of the amount recovered after
the legal expenses had been paid. The
machinery of the Courts must require
a lot of grease when a successful liti-
gant cannot get enough out of his
aim to pay a street car fare.
A somewhat amusing incident oc-
curred recently at St. James' theatre,
London. After a most successful per-
formance Mrs Langtry stepped for-
ward to speak the epilogue of "As Yon
Like It," and when she had uttered
the words, "If I were a woman I
would kiss as many of you as had
beards that pleased me," a deep, man•
ly voice from the orchestral stalls was
heard saying, "Hear, 'hear." Mrs
Langtry was amused, tho company be-
hind her tittered, and a light ripple of
laughter ran all over the house. In
Birmingham, once, when Mdme. Mod-
jeska had repeated the same lines, a
grimy occupant of the gallery called
out, "Just step up'ere, Miss."
Ayer's Hair Vigor
IS the "ideal" hair -dressing. It re-
stores the color to gray hair ; promotes
a fresh and vigorous growth ; prevents
the formation cf
dandruff; makes the
hair soft and silken;
and imparts a troll•,
rate lint lasting per-
fume.
"Several months
ago my hair corn -
falling out,
and in •; h- v tvcrlts
uty heal was almost
hath!. 1 tried tunny
^r•me:Iies. lint they dirt no Cno<i. 1 final -
iv I:o;; tl•t a, front!,' of .1yer's flair Vigor,
am!, ;,fie ming oly a. port of the con -
rent,. oto head ,rax 1.11V(11•1111 with a
nen ry lrrowth of hair. 1 recommend
vntir prcpar.ltiou as the, hes:, in the
ttnr1.1." -C. It itnrint',gLaron(;rove,Ky.
"• f have tine,1 .tvor's 1fair Vigor for a
mtmher of ve;trs„2nd it luty always given
me satinl'action. 11. iv :01 excel lout dress-
ing!, prevents the hair from tnrniu,
gray, i114t1r -n ifs 5- gnrc(uA growth, and
keeps tbe wralp tthitr; awl clean.”—
Mary A. ,faolisntt, Hale',,,, ;\lass.
"I have timed Ayer's (fair Vigor for
promoting the groul h of the. hair, and
think it, un•qualrad. For restoring{, the
hair to its original color, ant for arlress-
ing, it. cannot he surpassed."—Mrs. (leo.
La fever, Eaton I(.ipirls, Mich.
'Ayr's flair Vigor is a most excel-
lent preparation for the hair. f speak
of it. from my own experience. its use
proma the grog GI of new hair and
mal•. •. ;a :;I.rs••v and •:oft. The Vigor is
also ••e fur dandruff." --J. 1V. Bowen,
Editor Enquirer," McArthur, Ohio.
".1 1::t, n used Ayers (lair Vigor for
he pest two }encs, and frnm,1 11 all it is 1
e trenentr•d to he. It restores the nate-
al color to arae hair, causes the hair
o grow freely, and keeps it soft, and
11,2n1."—Mrs. M. V. Day, ('uhoe.v, N. Y.
" \Iv father, at. about the age of ti ft y,
nit all the hair from the top of his head.
fter one month's trial of Ayer's Hair
Vigor hair began coming, and, in
itree t,,.,uths, he had a tine growth of
air M the natural color." —P. J. Cullen,
aratoga Springs, N. Y.
yer's
ilair
Vigor
ONSIi P�1 stuutt t,
0
cuR�o
TO THE EDITOR:
Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above pained
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.
sumPption if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. Respectfully.
T. Ad SLOCUM, M.C.. 186 West Adelaide 8t.. TORONTO. ONTARIO.
The People's Grocery
Basiness Change,
The undersigned desires to intimate to his former patrons and frien
that he has repurchased his former business, and will continue it
the old stand,
Corner of Albert and Ontario Streets
He intends to go out of the Crockery and Glassware lino entirely,
balance of which will be sold cheap, and will devote himself exclu-
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 bo fixed ac-
cordingly. I3y giving close personal attention to the business be
hopes to merit and receive the same liberal patronage that he enjoyed
hitherto.
JOHN CUNINGHAME,
- CLINTON
.tetiseme
ouseClcaningS��s��ll
SPECIAL m CUTS
In BROOMS, BRUSHES and SOAPS, BED-
ROOMiSETS, CROCKERY & GLASSWARE
:X.
J. W. IRWIN, The Times Tea Warehouse
• Cooper's Old Stand, Cor. Searle's 1310 Ir, CLINTON
�t�tea.
ADAMS' EIiIIPORIUr
SPRING GOODS
Last week we received end opened up a large quantity of new goods for
the spring trade. Lovely PRINTS, Hine DRESS GOODS, Extra
(toed T WEEDS, and cheap. CAItPETS in Tapestry, Hemp and Oil.
TICKiNGS, SIIIRTINGS and 13l-JT('If ERS LiNEN, KENTUCKY
JEAN, something new in dress lining. la'ul1 supply of small wares.
MILLINERY, as usual the very best. GROCERIES of best quality.
WALL PAPE!: &c. Field and Garden SEEDS. A11 are cordially in-
ited to see I lie goods and be convinced that this is the right place.
ADAMS.
LONDESBORO
IIA v1giioai's Cream of iTit ii -i azei,
TILE NEW TOILET LOTION.
.
N
Sof ti the skin, removes roughness, eruptions and irritation from the face and
hands, and gives freshness and tone to the complexion.
ft is an invalnable application after shaving. Don't mistake thiasuperior pre-
paaatien for any paints, enamels or injurious cosmetics or inferior complexion
otions. It prevents eruptions, abrasions, ronghneaa, redness, chapping, col.
sores,
rind pain resulting to sensitive P
akin from exposure
to wind and cold
Ir
short D'Arl(rNON'R (or•nv nF Wtrrn•Ilnrrr,is oto nee n remedy And a preventati
for every form of surfers inflnmmatimt or
PRRPASEn RV Manufactured by
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., L.owe1!, Mass.
Sold by Druggists and Perfumers.
irritation. i rice 2b rents per bottl
JAM Ft.14 II. COM. 3
CHEMIST AND DRUGGIST, OL!NTON, ONT,