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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1890-10-31, Page 3jobbing Department is not surpassed in the County AN ANSWER. Do you know yon have asked for the costliest tMng6 Dyer made by .'thy, liana above-- A woman's bear$ and a WOman'e life, Ana a woman's wonderful loYle ? PCI IOU know you have asked for this Ili oeloos thing Asa gbtla might have asked for a toy, Dernandiiig whet Others died to win With tie regkleas dash of a boy 2 ,iA have written my lessons of duty out, Mau -like yon have questioned me ; ,NOW stand at the bar of my woman's soul, Until I have questioned thee! .You.regnire your bread shall be always good, Your socks and your shirts should be whole ; require your heart shall be true 8.8 God's stars, And pure as heaven your soul ! 'You `retinire a cook for your mutton and beef - 1 require a far better thing ; seamstress you're wanting for stock- - ings and shirt— l1 Want a man and a king ! A king for the beautiful realm called home, Anda man that the Maker, God, Shall look upon as He did the first, And say, it is very good 1 I am fair and yoting, but the rose will fade From the soft young cheek one day ; `1 r.Will you love me then 'mid the falling rt ." leaves, As you did 'mid the bloom of May ? t ' Is your heart an ocean so strong and 'f>p deep I may launch my all on its tide ? A loving woman finds heaven or hell On the day she is made a bride 1 i require all things.that are good and true, All things that a man should be; If yon give this all, I would stake my life To be all you demand of me. If yon cannot Ido this—a laundress, a cook, You can hire with little to pay ; But a woman's heart and a woman's life Are not to be won that way. There is more fun in a sheet of sticky y fly paper than in the average negro minstrel. Watch the kitten playing with it on the new carpet; the latter is ruined for ever; the kitten goes into a fit and the women and children rush out of the house in terror. If you want to rid, your house of flies, buy Wilson's Fly Poison Pads, and nee as directed Nothing else will clear them out thor- oughly. Sold at 10 o. by all druggists. t, • HEAVEN. of Boston tor s, week; And some butter that was worthy to have Sampson fora foe, And some eggs whose inner nature held the legend—"Long Ago" And some stove -wood, green and crook. ed, on hie flower -beds was laid, Fit to furnish fire departments with the moat substantial aid. All things unappreciated found this night their true vocation In the Museum of Relics, known ata Elder Lamb's donation. There were biscuits whose material was their own secure defence; The were sauces whose acuteness bore the sad pluperfect tense; There were jellies undissected, there were mystery -laden pies; There was bread that long had waited for the signal to arise. Thera were cookies tasting clearly of the drear and musty past; There were doughnnte that in justice 'monget the metals might be classed There were chickens, geese and turkeys, that had long been on probation, Now received in full connection at old Elder Lamb's Donation. Then they gave his wife a wrapper made for some one not so tall, And they brought him twenty slippers, every pair of which was small; And they covered him with sack -cloth, as it were, in various bite, And they clothed his helpless children in a wardrobe of misfits; And they trimmed his house with "Wel- come,"and such bric•a-bracish trash, And one absentminded brother brought five dollars all in cash ! Which the good old pastor handled with a thrill of exultation, Wishing that in filthy lucre might have come his whole donation. Morning came at last, in splendour; but the Elder, wrapped in gloom, Knelt amid decaying produce and the ruins of hie home; And his piety had never till that mor- ning been so bright, For he prayed for those who brought him to that unexpected plight. But some wordly thoughts intruded, for he wondered o'er and o'er If they'd buy that day at auction, what they gave the night before; And his fervent prayer concluded with the natural exclamation; "Take me to Thyself in mercy, Lord, before my next donation 1" Will Carleton. A young man named Joseph Sabin, employed on the farm of H Mr ugh McOoll,near Woodstock, dropped dead Tuesday evening, after having unhitched bis horses from the plow. He was found between the pump, where he had watered his horses, and the bavi, and was then quite dead. Ho was known to have had fits in his younger days, and the doctor called pronounced it a case of heart disease. and declared that an inquest was not necessary. Minard's Linimentlnmberman's friend The strange case of a man flayed alive and afterward passing through an ordeal of unparalleled experience has been brought to public notice at Indianapolis, by the recovery of Wesley Kellar, a woodworker, who fell into a steam vat at the Indianapolis Veneer Works two months ago. His flesh was cooked, and the doctors decided that there was only one chance in a thousand of having his life saved by removing the akin from his body. After two days this was done. $e was peeled from head to foot. Frogs' skin was grafted on as the dead skin was removed. The !opera- tion has proven a complete suc- cess, and the man has recovered sufficiently to be able to return to work. Glencoe Transcript:—"Robert Donnelly visited Biddulph on Monday and sold twenty tons of hay off the Donnelly homestead. He had the pleasure while 'there of noticing that the old log house, in which the gang accused of murdering his parents and broth- ers represented they played cards on the night of the tragedy, was a total wreck, and that the late occupant, who was one of those accused, had left bag and baggage '_o endeavor to build up a new home in Michigan. Fortune, on the other hand, bas smiled upon the remaining members of fie family who were so cruelly dealt with, and Robert; says he will bo prepared to pay the last dollar owing on the oldChomestead when it falls due the 3rd of December next." God's Blessings fall plenteous showers Upon the lap of earth ; It teems with foliage, fruits and flowere, And rings with childhood's mirth. 1a If God hath made this world so fair, Where sin and death abound, How beautiful beyond compare Will Heaven itself be found ! A PRAYER. Higher, purer, Deeper, surer, Be my thought, 0 Christ, of Thee ! Break the narrow bonds that limit All my earth -born, sin -bound spirit To the breadth of Thy divine 1 Not my thoughts but Thy creation, Be the image, purely Thine ; Deep within my spirit's shrine Make the secret revelation ; rf• It Reproduce Thy life in mine. Truer, clearer, Lovelier, dearer, Be my thought, 0 Christ, of Thee 1 Not my earthly, crude conception, But the holy, true reception Of thy Spirit's teaching high 1 May He heighten, clear enlighten, Every thought intensify So Thy lovely image brighten, Till I Thee transfigure see.! Oh, reveal Thy life in me ELDER LAMB'S DONATION. '. Good old,Hlder Lamb had labored for a thousand nights and days, ,*nd had preached the blessed Bible in a multitude of ways; Had received a message daily over • Faith's celestial wire, And had kept his little chapel full of flames of Heavenly fire ; He bad raised a nnm'rous family, . straight and sturdy as he could, And his boys were all considered as nn - o naturally good; And his "slender sal'ry" kept him till Went forth the proclamation— " "We will pay him up this season yvith a gen'rous, large donation." So they brought him hay and barley, and some corn upon the ear— , Straw enough to bed his pony for ever and a year ; And they strewed him with potatoes of inconeequential size, An some onions whose completeness drew the moisture from his eyes; And some cider—more like water, in an inventory strict— And some apples, pears and peaches, that the autumn gales had picked ; Atfd borne strings of dried-up apples— mummies of the fruit creation— Game to swell the doleful census of old iYlder Lamb's Donation. Aiso radishes and turnips preened the turn)kin's cheerful cheek, Likeable beano enough to fnrnisb half, Charles Gerow was tried at Cobourg on Wednesday, on the charge of m,:rderii g R. Lockhart, in the township of Haldimaud, on the 26th of June last. Ho was acquitted on the ground of insan- ity. Two members of the British Iron and Steel Institute had an experience at Chattanooga, they will never forget. They were walking over a trestle on the summit of the mountain and were caught by an approaching train. On one side was a rock, 100 feet high, on the other a precipice of 100 feet, and the ties were too short to stand on without being struck by the ears. In their fearful dilemma they laid down as far out as they could got, but by the mere chance the engine was stopped just before it reached them. The London Daily News, com- menting on the grand scheme for the regeneration of the world proposed by General Booth, con- fesses that nothing can be done for the souls of the millions until something is done fortheir bodies. "This scheme," it says, "is one of the most remarkable productions of tho age, and deserves to be al- lowed a fair trial. We are forced to the conclusion that as far as the lapsed masses are concerned, the gospel of Christianity has lost 'in our day its power and charm. When we consider her vast resources, Booth's project puts the State and church in a verydisagreeable position. A Lobo correspondent sends the. following—"While Messrs Alex McIntyre and James Sutherland were working „on the 'Lobo and Caradoe townline the other day they turned over an old log, and under it, partly covered with earth they saw a huge sack, and upon opening the same it was found to contain clothing but coppersi They were consulting how to divide the spoil, when lo and behold they saw another sack of the same size and full to the brim with the Same valuable articles. They w ere now satisfied, as they could take one apiece, but when therveept to lift them they were surrised that they could not even move them from where they lay. After a little reflecting they threw away their dinners and filled the pails with the coins and started for home. Several trips were made to and from the sacks with the pails, taking each time as much as they could navigate under, bee fore tboy were able to take t sacks and what remained in th .m The correct amount is unkn wn yet, but it is commonly bell; ved there are thousands of dollar SAVED BY BARKING. ALL AROUND THE HOUSE. Hemstitching, Drawh Work and Satin Stitch Embroidery on Linen. Fine sheets, table cloths and table napkins are now hemstitched, many having still more elaborate ornament in the sh..pe of an insertion of drawn work, the very simplest form of which is an improvement to any- thing with a straight edge. Beyond this is often worked a flowing design in white em- broidery, principally satin stitch, and which is so arranged as to be a good deal raised above the background. One of the handsome patterns for this em- broidery resembles a thick piece of lace laid upon the linen. Such work is not very diffi- cult to manage, and " amply repays any trou- ble that may be bestowed upon it. A lace design is first of all traced upon the linen with tracing paper in the usual manner. The outlines are followed with overcast stitches, worked as delicately as possible; the Yllinge are made with lace stitches, the var- ious bars being put in exactly as in lacemak- ing; in short, the work is executed just like point lace, except that the lace stitches are taken through the linen foundation, instead of being worked upon a background which is afterwards cut away. Floral Decorations. Each year floral decorations becomes more and more of an art. Among charming tri- umphs of the professional decorator's skill, recently noted, is an arrangement for the dinner table of a number of slender glass vases of graduated heights tilled with various lilies, grasses and ornamental foliage, These are interspersed among the tall can delabra both branched and single. Trailing sprays of the same flowers are laid upon the cloth. THE FUTURE QUEEN OF ENGLAND. A Barely Wamau With a moat Afagni.eceut Figura. B. H. the Princess Victoria of Teen, daughter of Princess Mary of Teck, one of the German royalties is a tall, fair girl, with rather full face and blue -gray eyes. She is lucky enough to have such a wide shoulder and swelling bust as are !seen to best ad van- tage in a tailor made gown. Her figure is truly magn,flcent, and she is reckoned among the divinest and fairest daughters of Europe. Princess Victoria fa 18 years of age, and is partially engaged to Prince Albert Victor ell- est son of the Prince of Wales and heir -appar- ent to the throne of England. The Prince's much in love with the charming Victoria, but his grandmother, the Queen and his father. do not as yet quite approve of the match. "Collars and Cuffs" as the Prince is facetiously called is the Princess' second eoa- LIVERY. The undersigned have bought out the Liv- ery business lately owned by R. Beattie and desire to Worm the public that they will carry on the same in the old premises, Next COMMERCIAL Hotel. Several new and good driving horses, and the most stvlieh carrages have been added to the businees, and will be hired at reasonable prices. Satisfaction guaranteed. R. REYNOLDS ss S,]N How to Clean Chenille Curtains. Curtains taken down in the spring should be so cared for that they will be uninjured by moths, uncreased and spotless when want- ed in the autumn. Table Talk tells that chenille draperies seem especially to invite the depredations of moths, but a little precaution will put these tiny despoilers to flight. Chen- ille curtains should never be wiped off, not should' they be shaken vigorowly. When taken down the curtains should be Laid at full length over a clean sheet stretched upon the floor, then thoroughly brush on both sides with a moderately stiff clothes brush. Now sponge both sides thoroughly with tepid water, to which has been added two table- spoonfuls of turpentine. Lay them carefully away on shelves or in long cedar Loxes. How to Carve a Leg of Mutton. When you are sure the leg is from a sheer of good breed and that it is really tender, take hold of it by the knuckle with the left hand and then cut the slices perpendicular from the joint to the bone of the filet; then remove the muscle of the knuckles; next turn the leg over and slice off the back portion. For this essentially primitive way of carving gourmets substitute carving by curvilinear Butes, which renders the pieces more succulent. ANTED! I A good pushing Salesman here. First -lase pay guaranteed weekly. Commision or Salary. Quick selling new Fruits nd Specialties. FARMERS can get agood paying job for he winter. Write for full terms and par iculars. FRED. E. YOUNG, Nurseryman, RocntnsTna. N. Y. r BIG MONEY FOR AGENTS NO RISK. NO CAPITAL REQUIRED An honorable and praiseworthy business without any possible chance of lose; steady employment and control of territory Have done business in Canada 30 years. Liberal pay to right map to sell our unexcelled Nursery Stook. Send for terms. CHASE BROTHERS COMPANY, Nurserymen, Colborne, Ont di sin, and has beta fortunate enough to gain her favor. The Princess is a very cultivated and clever woman and is admirably fitted to 1111 the position she may in the future be call- ed upon to occupy—that of Queen of Eng- land. The accompanying tet is from one of the latest photographs of the beautiful girl. I took Cold, I took Sick, Beasts are easily alarmed by the unexpected. The Italian's organ monkey, which saved itself from the bull -dog by taking off its cap, evidently seemed to the startled brute a creature that could pull off its own head. A stranger instance is related by an African hunter who had returned from the Hottentot country, where he had been trapping for the animal collectors of Hamburg. He was out one afternoon with some of the natives, preparing a bait in a rocky ravine. We had built a stout pen of logs and rozks and placed a calf as a bait. The sun was nearly down as we started for camp, and no ono had the least suspicicn of the presence of danger until a lion, which had been crouching beside a bush, sprang out and knocked me down. In springing upon bis prey the lion or tiger strikes as he seizes. This blow of the paw, if it falls on the right spot, disables the victim at once. I was so near this fellow that he simply i'eared,seized me by the shoulder and pulled me down. I was flat on the earth before I re- alized whet had happened. I was on my back and he stood with his paws on my waist, facing the natives and growling savagely. The men ran off about three hun- dred feet and then halted, which was doubtless the reason why I was not carried off at once. I can say without conceit that I was fairly cool. The attack had come so suddenly that I bad not had time to get 'rattled.' I had been told by an old Boer hunter, that if I ever found my- self in such a predicament as this I must appeal to the lion's fears, Had I moved my arm to get my pistol, the beast would have low- ered his head and seized nay throat. So long as I lay quiet he reasoned that I was dead, and gave his at- tention- to the natives. Suddenly I barked like a dog, following the bark with a growl, and the beast jumped twenty feet in his surprise. He came down. between me and the natives, and I turned enough to see that his tail was down. I uttered more barks and growls but without moving a hand, and the lion,after making a circle around me, sud- denly bolted and went off with a scare that would last him a week. If you had picked up a stick and discovered it to be a snake you would do just as the lion did. He supposed he had pulled down a man. The man turned into a dog. He could not understand it and it frightened him. otton Root Compound Oomponnded of Cotton Root, Tansy and Pennyyrroo99el—pprepDared b�yy eo MUM r8 SbCOESSFULLY USRD MONTIILY by thousands of women, and has bean pre- scribed Ina practice of 30 years, Price $1 Will be mailed to any address in Canada and Price, S. Doctor's censnlation hone, 90. 11 and 1 to 4 Diseas- es of women treated only. Senled particulars, two stamps. Ladles onlyy, address POND LILY COM PANY, No. 3 Fisher Bloch. 131 Woodward avbnne,De• volt. Michigan. June 20 It must be remembered that neither of these ways should be resorted to except when the meat is of the best quality and of great tender- ness. endernese In other cases, the better way to pro - coed is to cut horizontally instead of perpendi- cularly, that is, out off the slices paralled with the bone. The slices should be cut very thin, and when a sufficientnumber have been sliced off, plunge the fork into what remains of the leg several times and let the gravy run. over them. A few drops of lemon juice and a little pepper and salt added will improve the flavor amazingly.—Paris letter in. Boston Herald, Veal Loaf. To make veal loaf use three or four pounds of veal and a slice of fat pork, all chopped very fine. Add two eggs and four large crackers. Roll the crackers and mix the crumbs with the egg and meat ; season with cinnamon, spice, cloves, pepper and salt, Mold into an oblong loaf, place in the pan and bake for two hours. Pound twocrackera and put some water, with butter to pour over i1 while baking ; baste two or three times with this. When the loaf is cold cut into thin slices and serve- This is one of the nicest preparations of cold meat for luncheon that I know of. FOR SUMMER HOURS• A Pretty Form of Fancy Work That Isn't Too Warm. A pretty form of fancy work for the sum- mer days, when wool and similar materials seem warm in the handling, is a short cur- tain, for bookcase, cabinet or the lower sash of n window- The material may be the palest green plain Indiasilk, with a delicate decoration worked in dark green or salmon pink embroidery silk. No stamping will be necessary for either a line bf etarfiowers with short stems following the edges, or the same flowers without' stems powered over the whole width, and a hemstitching for the edge decoration. The flowers are done in what it called daisy stitch, one chain stitch half an nab long forming the petal, which is held (down at the point by another short stitch. SOCIAL ETIQUETTE. Some Interesting Suggestions About "Attention Tea." To people of small or moderate means an "afternoon tea" offers a solution of a diffi- cult problem. It is inexpensive, enjoyable, and in its simplicity above criticism. Con- cerning this pleasing form of hospitality Good Housekeeping has, among other useful suggestions, the following; W hent one feels one's house too small to comfortably accomo- date the desired number, a good plan is for the hostess to send out her own visiting card, which is, by the way, the only correct invi- tation to such an affair as this, the card, in addition to the name, bearing the written or engraved words, "At home Thursdays in December," Of course no reply is required to such In- formal invitations. The latter plan will do away with the danger of a crush, as people will not naturally all select the same day. More people, however, may be expected on the fourth afternoon, as in all such things procrastination is characteristic with many. But the guest once bidden, let the faith of the hostess in the simple form of her enter- tainment remain perfect, as it will if she owns the truly hospitable spirit. Let her remem- ber that to ask a friend to break one's bread is a compliment, and to entertain according to one's means is always in good taste. The lady who presides over the tea urn has a very dainty office do perform, but if she has a correct understanding of her du- ties she will not find her place a sinecure. The hostess cannot perform her task as such and preside at the tea table, but she will, if there be no daughter of the house, select some guest under her roof or an intimate friend to act for her. It is the duty of this person to see that each cup of tea which she dispenses, is as perfect as it is possible for her M make it, and one of the first requisites of this is heat. The English complain that It is ....ssible to get a cup of hot tea in Amer- ic• and yet this difficulty is an easy one to over .me, But of the method of prepar- ing his piece de resistance I will speak later. ' The water boiling the tea "drawn," a "coz • uld be pulled over the teapot to keep in theejteam with which would escape much of th aroma- Before pouring a little boiling wa should be left for a few mo- ments in the cup. With these precautions our transatlantic friends will find no fault, though there may be some truth in the state- ment I once heard made that their throats, like a shfp's bottom are "coppered." Each truest win find the `Way to the tea table, and make her wishes known without waiting to be asked. Here let me say what would hardly appear needful but for many inquiries which have proved it so. No special introduction to the Lady presiding is required. It is not only proper but obligatory that the guest show breeding as well askind- linees, by making, if need be, an effort to enter into conversation with her. The fact of meeting under the roof of a mutual friend is sufficient introduction. A witty and ob- serving person should fill this place that she may aid in setting the ball of conversation rolling among those she gpthers about her. In the drawing room even quite young child- ren will prove useful in passing biscuits, tea and platen The help of a servant will be needed most in quietly replenishing and re- moving dishes. Apropos of dinners, one of the burning questions in society relates to the length of time that baste should wait for dilatory guests on such occasions. There are a few people, most of them women. who are no- toriously unpunetual, and it is embarraea bag to decide whether dinner shall be kept waiting for them or whether it shall be served without their presence. According to The New York Sun, common settee declares that fifteen minutes' grace is enough to allow for difference in timepieces and for accidents, and that after that period has elapsed the banquet should go on with those who have arrived, and the others be allowed to come when they choose. A longer delay destroys appetites, is detrimental to the cookery, and where the theatre or the opera is to follow the pleasure of the evening may be spoiled by it. There are seven petals, all radiating from a central point where the needle goes in. The abort line for a stem is worked in ordinary stem stitch. The silk should be a trifle coarse, and the long stitch spread open a little to widen the petal. Instead of the daisy or star flower the decoration may be drawn from the circumference of a silver 25 -cent piece, the circles being in groups of two or throe, ar ranged according to fancy and worked In out- line stitch, which is a long stitch forward on the right side of the material and a very short etitch back on the wrong side. In doing it always bring the needle through. to the front on one side of the stitch already Men to avoi d splitting ttfe silk.—leirper's,llazar. • Use for 010 Towels. Is there any use for other towels that have developed very thin "middles" and lost most of their fringe? If one has time to devote to much saving work, or if there are little girls in the family who need employment, my ad- vice is to cut the towels down the center, Lengthwise, and "over and over" the edger together. This gives 'it firm "middle," good enough to cut square wash cloths from, for those who like such, or to use for any other purpose for which soft old linen can be used. —Good Housekeeping. A Feminine Freak. Miss Ella Ewing, living near Rainbow, Mo., eighteen years old, is now 7 fect8 inches high, weighs 225 pounds, wears a 15 shoe, which of course she bas to have made to or- der, and her shoemaker had to order a spe- cial last. The girl's parent aro of about the renal size, the father being possibly a little feller than the average man. I TOOK $COTT'S EMULSION RESULT: I take M Meals, ) I take My Rest, ) AND r AM VIGOROUS ENOUGH TO TAKE ANYTHING I CAN LAY MY HANDS ON; betting fat too FOR Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil and Hypop hosphitesofLime and Soda Nor ONLY CURED MY Ieaejp- ) ient Consumption BUT BUILT ) ME UP, AND IS NOW PUTTING FLESH ON MY BONES ) AT THE RATE OF A POUND A DAY. 1 TAKE IT JUST AS EASILY AS 1 DO MILK." Scott's Emulsion 19 put up only In Salmon color wrappers. N ld by all Druggists at I 50o. and 81.0u. i SCOTT ROYY;V!, Belleville. �, FLAXSEED EIwDil1DH COMPOUND 188 Lexington Ave. New York City, Sept. Ave., New I have used the Flax -Seed Emulsion in several uses of Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages of Phthisis, and have been well leased with the results. JAMES K. CROOK, M.D. CONSUMPTION Brooklyn, N. Y., Feb. 14th 1889. I have used your Emulsion in a case of Phthisis (consumption) with beneficial results, where patient could not use Cod Inver Oil n any form. J i H. DROGE, M. D. N IIS.PRQSTRATION Brooklyn, N. V., Dec. 20t11,1 I can strongly recommend Flax Seed Emulsion as helpful to the relief and possibly the cure of all Lung, Bronchial and Nervous Affections, and a good gen- eral tonic in physical debility. JOHN F. TALMAGE, M. D. GENERAL DEBILITY Brooklgqna,, N. Y., Oct. lOtb,1888. I regard Flax Seed Emnislonas greatly superior to the Cod Liver Oil E, u1sions so generallyin use. D. A. GORTN, M. D. 7F IN[StIN6DISEASES 1S7 West 89th 5t. pew York, Ante8, 1888. I have used your Flax -Seed Emulstoa Compound in a severe case of Mal -nutrition and the result was more than hoped for—it was marvelous, and con- tinuous. I recommend it cheerfully to the profession and humanity at large. M. H. GILBERT, M.D. RHEUMATISM Sold by Druggists, Price $1.00. FLAX -SEED EMULSION CO. 3L Liberty St., New York. ARE NOT a 1''d OR gativo Meda cillo. They are a BLOOD BninDEn, l- WILUAMs' ToNrcandRaOos- v• aTnneTon,asthey supply in a condensed form tbo enbetances c b the Blood Owing ,•-all diseases oominR ■■'''' from Poon and Wel nv BLOOD or from VITIATED HnxORa in `A Cho BLOOD, and also I • nvlgoreto and Bonn FI "eIMI. P the BLOOD and SveTsne, when broken FOR down by overwork, ded to on - mental worry disease, P excesses and Indisere- tfone. Tlrey have a P L E the Saxo ACTION on the SEXUAL ACTION SYSTEM 0 th men and women, restoring LOST Moon and correcting all rmnent,sarriEa and atPPRESHIONQ. EVER AN who Ludt hie mental fae- tildes dull o failin{;� or bis physio powers flagging, shonld take these Pitts. They will restore his loot onergieo, both physical and mental. EVERY WOMAN ehontll take them. They euro an sup preseions and irregularities, which inevitably entail eleknoes when neglected. YOUNG MEN should take theee PILLS. They will euro the re• suite of youthful bad habits, and strengthen the system. Y09lWOMEN should take them Those Per Le will make t emNG regular, For solo by all druggists, or will bo cent upon receipt of price (50e. por box), by addressing TIIE DR. WILLIAMS" MILD. CO. .Brockville. out