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The Huron News-Record, 1891-04-08, Page 3P.AISBATW -Q ( WNDAY. Goreing:.at ottee G the subject :in • 13,4114 let( nae trace the bietory of the 8:abbath, la Gen. ii,, 1-:3,. we read '('Thue the heavens ;and earth wore ;finished and all the host of them and: on the.seventh day God ended •worh which He 'had made, and He created Qn the seventh day from all girl work which He had made. .And. God blessed the seventh day, and IBanotified it, because io it He had rented frem all Hie work which +God created and made." There is a theory that the Sabbath was given to man at the ctoation, a>ad that it is.dosigned to comtueutor- pate.the rest of Gud at creatiou. If that be the case it should be fre- quently noticed aid rigidly euforc- ed at the beginning. But is al Bead the reinaiuder of Genesis and xodua till you reach the sixteenth =chapter, and you find .t O 13EOORD 01" SABBATH KEEPING. The terrible accuuut of the murder p# • Abel, the geuealegy df men, i;enigth of their lives, the building of 7the ark by Noah, and the re peopl- ing of the earth are given in detail The druukenness of Noah and the ^dunes upou Canaau are given, and in these accounts there is not a word as to the keeping of the Sabbath. We read of the call of Abraham, and the minute details of his life, God's covenant with him, the offering of Isaac, his erection of altars, and his worship of Jehovah Here is the record of his deception of Abitueleck and the story of Hagar, vat no word of Abraham keeping S tbbath day. The record of the life of Jacob is :given alini'at as minutely. The rite of citcuiucisiuu, the building of altars, putting away of false gods, are all given in detail. The dale of Joseph, the fielene, the journey to Egypt fur corn, and the discovery of the lost brother, the coming of Jacob, the bondage in E;ypt, are all recounted. There is au interval of 2,500 years from Genesis ii. to Exodus xvi. During this time uo mention of the Sabbath, nor even of the divi''iou of time into weeks, .. is made. , The keeping of th one of the strictest r the Jewish religion, portant day, and if it during those 2,500 y -silence in regard to it conclude from this sil :argunletlt to which r ;give attention, that the not observed by titan fo .after the creatiou, In Exodus xvi., 11.2 :an accuuut of the giv manna in the wilderness. TINDER THE LEADERSHiP OF 1stOSES the Israelites fled from Egypt and aasoaped safely into the wilderness east of the lied Sea. Here they murmured against Moses and Aaron, Ex xvi,, 2, et seq., and said that .they had brought this assembly forth into the wilderness to kill them with hunger. 'Then God said (veree four) "1 will Iain bread front iheaveu for you." Moses com— municated this message to the poo• ple. At even the quails came up ;and iu the morning they received elle manna. Directions wore care Tully given those people to gather manna six days, and on the sixth flay a double portion, for on the elevelith day there would be none. ,Some did as Moses had commanded, while others went out on the seventh .day (verse 27) and found none, This is the begiuning of Sabbat keeping by the Israelites. They were totes forty year. in the to he wilder - mess. tmess. The manna waso them all this time. For forty years, sin which were 2,000 Sabbaths, God gave them manna save ou the seventh day. What a Leeson for beginners During the slavery iu Egypt it Oras not possible for them to observe -a day of rust, but now that the yoke ,of bondage is broken God gives them a day of root, gives thein the 'Sabbath. In what better way and at what better time could God have impressed the lessou of Sabbath - keeping upon his chosen people 1 The manner in which they tried to keep it shows it was a new thing to, then(. Some looked for manna on- the seventh day. One was atoned for gathering sticks on that day. e Sabbath was equireinouts of it was an ire - had been kept ears why this We must nce, and the e will now Sabbath was r 2,500 years , we have ing of the e a t to (J od e . Lord, ,thy God, o m� lid. .thee keoCl tllo Sabbath Day." We have (oohed for the early history of the Sabbath and found .none till the record in Eltodue xvi, ;['fere. wo diecovered the record which tells of the eetabliehinent of the custom, and in Deuteronomy we read why God commanded them to keop the Sabbath day. Againf this ie the fourth commandment Are we obliged to keep the ton cone. maudtnente1 TWO DISPENSATIONS. There are two dispensations : The Old Testament and the Now Testament, or the Mosaic and the Christian diepetsatione. Heb, 1 tells us that"God who at sundry times and in divers manners spoke in time past unto the fathers by. the prophets, hath in these last days epokeu unto us by His Son, "whom He hath appointed heir to all things, by whom also He made the worlds." We have these two divisious of time, "tithe past" and "these last days." Christ is the testator. Ii') made his last will or testament. During his life he had a right to authorize any action He chose, to command as He desired, and to admit thou into His kingdom as He pleased. After His death men must enter His kingdom iu accordance with the provisioile of His testament. The laws Ile left iu force aro• em- bodied in the will He left us. Did Ile leave the ten commandments in force 1 If so, we are bound to observe then( ; if not, then we are not. DID THE SAVIOR INDORSE THE C.)31• MAND WHAT IS TILE OBJECT OP THE SA 'MAT!' DAY In Deut. v, we have given the ten commandments. The fourth one is "Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy,"—Ex, xx, 8,. But in the recapitulation of the law in Deuteronomy Moses says, v, 12.15: "Keep the Sabbath Day to sanctify it, as the Lord, thy God, hath com- manded tutee. Six days th t u shalt labor, and do all 'thy work, but -the seventh day is the Sabbath of tho Lord, thy Gud, in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, nor thy dean servant, nor thy plaid servout, nor thine ox, nor thine ase, nor any of thy cattle, nor the stranger that is within illy gates ; that thy Ivan servant and thy maid servant may rust as woll as thou. And remem- ber that' thou wast a servant in the land of Egypt, and that the Lord, thy God, brought thee out thence through a mighty hand and by a • ,.strhtchefL,rtout,,,arrn.;a._thareforet–thee to keep the Sabbath day 1 In Mark x , 19, it says : "Thou km) west the commandments, 1)u nut commit adultery, do not kill, do not steal, do nut hear false wit - nes,, defraud not, honor thy father and thy mother." Hero are tho five cumiquiduicuts: Matt. v , 34, ,(esus says : "But I say unto you swear nut at, all." Luke xii., 15: "'l'a.ce heed, and beware of covetousness" Matt. iv, 10: 1il'hou shalt worship the Lord thy (1oa1, and hint only shalt thou 8e1'Ve," is a reiteration of the com- mand, "'Thou shalt have no other gods before mo." John iv., 24: "They that worship bitn most worship hint in spirit and in truth." In this the Savior practically says : 11Thou shalt nut make auto thee any graven image." Hero are nine of the commandments quoted by the Savior, but the fourth, the cent - mend to keep the Sabbath, was never given by the Sivior, hewn wo are not commanded to keep it. .Recapitulating, we have these facts : The Sabbath was give n when the manus Was given t0 the Israelites. J'he object was to c cul nlentorate the deliverance from l:;yptiati bondage. "The law w is abolished at Christ's death. The fourth cotnmauduleut was not in- dorsed by tete S tvior or bound by the council at Jerusalem 013 the gentile, hence we are nut required to keep it, Why do we worship on Stint -lay 1 Christ rose from the dead on Sun- day. Christ's church was establish- ed on Sunday. His appearances to His disciples after His resurrection were on Sunday. The disciples met to break bread on Sunday, \Ve object to the use of the term Sabbath for Sunday because it is not the day termed Sabbath iu the Scriptures. Sabbath cleans rest, and the idea of rest is not the chief idea in the day we keep 'The Scriptures give us a different ualne, "the first day," and "the Lord's day.', The observance of "the first day," or Suuday, is not founded oil tradition, as Dr. Lewis asserts, but on ale truth and in accordance with the revealed will of Christ and the precedent of His chosen apostles. REV. W. G. S.I Pastor Christian Church, 1448.84.01t,XN INDIA, Osicotta, 1Ware i•--4. dispatch from ll1anipur, Province of Aeon), brings new of a disaster to, a force of eotivetroops there. John W.Quin• ton, the chief commissioner of Ae- eam, has recently been iuvestigat• ing some serious trouble* which originated in a feud between the Rajah of Manipur and a loading tribal chief. The Rajah was de- poaed and he appealed to the Vice- roy. Mr. Quinton was sent to set- tle the trouble and started from headquarters at Shilonge, escorted by the 42nd and 44th Ghoorka light iufantry. After croaaing the frontier Quinton summoned the chiefs to a durbtr at Manipur for the purpose et' arresting the rebel- lious chief. The tribesmen preten- ded to obey the summons,- mustered in force, and at midnight on the day before that on which the durbar was to. be held suddenly attacked the camp of Commissioner Quinton, which lay between Kohinia an'1 Mauipnr. The attempt to surprise the camp failed and the tribesmeu were driven back, They returned however, and kept up tha attack and siege piglet and day for 48 hours. Finally the atumunitiuu of the Ghoorkas gave out, and Mr. Quiutou was obliged to give the order, "Sauve qui pout." Daring the fight scouts were sent out to try to communicate with Shilouge, but they uever returued. The Mani- pur natives cut down the telegraph wires and killed the messengers. Fugitives ronurt that a general mass- acre followed the taking of the camp. Seven of the British (Acme, who accompanied the chief com tuiesiouer'tud that ofli.iel himself, tire reported to be rfissin,;, and it is said 470 Ghoorkas wore killed, hes and heal is de flacci thing for in For to thonsa conditi no ram Piet ca's Boils, p sal t-reeu cured by BLOOD WILL TELL. t course it will —that in if it ie gourd, 'thy blood. It will glow in the cheek, tell the story of perfect phyetcal th. 1f i' does not, if the complexion void of color, the mu•clee weak and d, enmething is wrong, and some - ought to be done about it at once, such canes delays are dangerous. rpid liver, "biliousness," sod the nd and nue ills to which these ins of the system lead, there is dy in the world equal to to Gob'en Medical Discovery, mples, eruptions, scrofula surge, in, and all kindred diseaoes are it. —Wm. Watts, Texas planta- tion laborer, ou rising yesterday morning told his wife, Fannie, to say her prayers, as he was going to kilt her as soon as he put on his shoes. The woman, to save her own life, determined to take that of her husband, and stopping out to the wood pile she secured an axe, and returning to the house, buried it in the back of her husband's head, splitting his skull and killing him while he was pnWug on his shoes. The woman was held under $500 bonds. Another report says there is ria - soli for b,ltieviug th it the estimate that 470 is incorrect. One account of the affair reports that commiss- ioner (,Quinton and his stuff WOW pl'lsouets. Auuther account says Cul. Skene, the commander, Cons Inissiu ei' Quinton, with sou and daughter, Capt. Boileau, and six ullioers were killed, the natives re - lasing to give thein gearter. Chi rebellious tl'lbn Is famous fur caul fling, cruelty and bravery. Immedi- ately upon receiving the news of the disaster theViceroy at Simla s moiled a council. Two native regi- ments stationed in Assuul have al- ready been dispatched to Manipur. The 'Third Bengal infantry will start for the see lie tO-Ill ol'i'o w• The Viceroy has abandoned his tour and has started for Simla. Five regiments and a mountain bat- tery have been ordered to Manipur. In addition to the disaster at Ma- nipur,it is believed a force of British troops composed of a detachment of 200 soldiers of the 13eu;;al Infantry and 80 Ghoorkhas who were March• ing from Shillongtj to :Manipur to reinforce the troops there were Itlas- s"sued. WE CLAIM' We claim the earl know it's true. We yards' Yellow Oil cul burn=, colds, croup, neuralgia, andp 11 urn matory diseases, is true. Yellow 011 Is a true family remedy for latnenes THE >IOST AI,REEAIILE rest,ro- tive , tonic and mild stimulant is Mil - burn's B•'ef, Iron ar.d \Vine, —Brantford Courier :—"In one. of the city Methodist churches Sun- day night a young lady was desir• ons of communicating with a ser• tain young man, and as she was un- able to leave her seat, and would probably miss him at the door, she quietly tore a leaf out of her hymn book, and writing her message had it handed along the row until the young man, whose name was on the outside, received the message. It was done so quietly that nobody but those handing the note knew any- thing about it. The point of the joke, however, is that both are members of the church, and the message was art invitation t0 a dance." BOWSER XNOWS IT AIL HE ST.PKS TO AN ,OLD MAXIM ANC DOWNS HIS WIFE, What He Doesn't Know He Assumes to Know, and Finds no Dlfloulty Ln Fording Himself to His Own Con- ceit. I once overheard a middle-aged man giving a young man a bit of advice. Tho latter was about to be married, and the former said: "If you begin right, Tom, you will have uo trouble. Never let your wife appear to know as much as you do. What you don't know you must assume to know. Never take back anything you say, no matter how closely you are cornered." Perhaps Mr. Bowyer fell in with this same Luau just before we were married, for he certainly has stuck to the text ever sines the wedding day. One day a friend brought us a oat to help make home happy. Mr. Bowser admired her very much, and while stroking her back he observed: "She is indeed a fine specimen o1' the feluiue race." "You mean feline, my Clear," I auswered. "I do, eh? Not if I know myself! It is well that you didn't use the word feline in company." "Mr. Bowser, there is uo such word as re- tinue. it is feline. You don't menu purioiue, du your "What! Do you mean to tell me that I ani a blockhead t While my word ought to be amply sufficient to settle any platter, I shall, in this case, back it up with the dic- tionary. Go fetch it, and then see where you stand." "I told you so," I said, as 1 foiled the; word and pointed to it. "It is feline, pitta as day." "Then it is a misprint," ho hotly repii'' 1. "I've kunwn of has of such rase;. Th. printer who set that up awns probably tight, or half asleep." "(Well, ask 1Ir. tiutia.'t." "Not much! A lawyer do,,sp't know any better than I do." " Will you ask 11r. CarterP " No! What I know, I know, mal I lot set- tles it !" That evening out- family physieiatt hap_ penpal to rent in, being it tete mei;_•bborlt,u•,l and I asked -hitt, in th.• pre,'w.' of 31r. Bowser: "Doctor, did you ever hero' of a Cabins:'" " Lands! N"," be replte I " \\',d1., I have:" doi;gcdly 1,b,et'lud ?1r. Bowser, "What i, 1U" "A crit." "Coll—oh—I see. Yon 111dn t feline." "N0, I don't; 1 bean I'cloiie, and it is fe- loine, and 1'11 bet auy loan on curth a ti I- lion dollars to a cent that it i- foloinr' ' The doctor saw how it was and hail no more to say. I proved Mr. Bowser wrong by Webster, Worchester and all other dead and Tiring authorities, but he has never given in. On another occasion I asked hila 1vhat sort of a tree it w'a-; .1 nei;;ltbor was setting out for shad=, and lie n ;Mot: "That shows how observing yon were din - fug the sixteen years you lived on 0 fau'tu. It's a soft -map e of course. Better go out and take a close look at it, so you will al- ways remember." "I thought it was tau elan." _"Humph!" "And tow, •,vben 1 cline to look closer, I know it is an elm. Of course it is." "Are you crazy, or do you (m11 it an elm simply for the sake of di.spul ing me!" "I know it is an elm." "Well, I know it isn't! It's a soft -maple, and that settles it." "Dare you go out and a.,lc the man at wur'k'" "Dare I! ('unto on, and see how'yon will take a lack. seat! 'Chu only way to cure some people of their e,gt1ism is to rru�h thialt." We went out and stopped as if by occi- dent, and I inquired tit' the man at work: "%Voltld pill tell me whether that tree i.•1 soft maple, esu or chestnut:" "It's an elm, ana'a,n. The whole row is to be of elms." •`1'bank you," "Look here, man!" put in Mr, Bowser, "do you know an esu trout a soft maple!" "I ought to, sir. I've been furnishing shade trees for the last twenty year's." "And you call that an 111111!" "Of ooursu 1 du." "Then you don't know one variety from another, It is a soft Maple." "Did you come out here to call me 0 fool or n liar?" demanded the titan, getting ve:'y red in the face. "If you don't know ,one tree from another you'd better quit the business." SIT DOWN AND THINK. Sit down and think 1st-, that dyspepsia is caused by wrung actin of the stomach: 2 that Pa 1 du'k Blood 13itters is designed to correct and regralate the stornach: 3rd, that it always cures dyspepsia and swats lees than a cent a dose. Can you afflyd to b: dyspeptic.? —A shocking affair occurred near New Westminster, B. C. An Ind- ian n caned Pierre, employed as saw- yer at Knight (eros.' mill, while working at his post fell against the circular saw. In an instant he was cut up in a horrible manner, one leg was severed close to the trunk, the intestines were torn out, and the body was otherwise terribly muti- lated. Death was instantaneous. Another Indian, named Jim, a strong healthy fellow, saw the accid• ent and the results, and fell down deathly sick at the sight, and roma• fined almost unconscious until early next morning, when he died. IMPORTANT AND TRUE. No better evidence of the fact that Burdock Blood Bitters is a certain reme- dy for blood disorders can tie asked then that of Mr. (3ec, Y. Thomas, Arugeist. of Hull„P. Q, whose wife was cured of a cancer by 11 R. B. The family doet,r Is certain that 'tae disease was cancer and that it is now cured. THE EARTH. —The winter wheat crop iu the h is round, and we south of Russia is very unpronlis also claim that Nag mires sprains, bruises, ing, and small farmers are in a sore throat, rheuma- tism, hopeless condition. all (info( or in• - — and we know this DR. LO WS WORM SYRUP his re- moved tape worms from 1.i to 30 feet at. tie with a bigot.” e or soreness in man lung. It also destroys all other kinds of,. 1 lggtj,, �3igyt '_ Flef>.-,xltP Aelffhi2or.=.a, dl!mb iu all sevon9 —Te iflin s. R ,m �.aQ ... T,... �.. a„•.,,liiorrrra..,- ... , ., . '"Why, you eid dunderhead, you 4on't evell kno\v enough to be a tflgoit1" got 14r. Bowser away and into the bowie. and I tried to bring up some other subject and .emooth the matter over, bet heasweeet his usual pose awl broke out with: " Let this be a great moral 'emelt to you, Mrs. Boweerl What you don't know don't pretend to loam. Confound ti at iufarnat bigot—i wish I had put a cu -pa -low right between his two eyes and taken +one of the pomposity and self-conceit out of him Detroit Free Free Press. I got Mr. Bowser away, and later on I proved by at len.t two rt people that the tree wa< au elm, and that there wasn't a soft maple on the whale square, but he crossed his hands under his emit -tails and lifted him- self oft his heels and replied: "Mrs. Bowser, when I say it's a sort maple that settles the question forever. Vine. 'ill - 1 ng it an elm simply betrays adisposi:ion to carp and cavil," A tleghhol' Of OM's 1)11111 a barn and finish- ed it with a cupola; we were luukitig lit it one evening when 1111'. Bowser observeil: " 1 don't flirt cupal0 is such a gioi1 orna- ment after all." You tue,au cupola, illy dear.,, l hat'.; exactly what 11e meant, and he got tangled 0 bit, bat hnviug once prounlunrral the word Ile was beton( 1„ slid:, Ile thee, lore replies( : "I think I ant old enough to know what I mean. When 1 say cupalu I mean cui alit, and not the rtilgc-pole nor the ailcy-door," "Aud you insist it is cupid() f" "There is slo insist about it. It is simply cupalu and that's all there is to it. 1f people 0 k1 1111 to show thtir ignorance by cubing it cupolong, < 1' cupaling, nr ci pa-sotiething- else there is 110 in t" prevent." .Just then the neighbor came out, and after n few remarks about the weather he 8111''11 afe 1: ' \1' ell. ik,wser, 1 saw you looking at my cupola, I drew the design myself, }low do 3 011 hke it "I don't see any,' dryly replied Mr. Bowser. "What's that up there!" "it's a cupalu." " Where did you onme across that, name? Going to run opposition to Webster?" 1 tried to get 31r. Bowser away, knowing what would be tale result, but he refused to budge an inch, and retorted: "Any one who has over been to school a weetk in his life ought to know what a cupa- lo is, and how to pronounce the word," "The word, Bowser, is cupola, the same as if divided cu-po-la." "Not 111)1(111 It is cu -pa -low." "You don't mean its" "But 1 do! I am surprised at your igno- ranee, !" "And I wonder that you do not call a horse i1t, well, it 1's no use wasting time to High Steaks. He Carried It. Three or four of us had closed our utnbrel- las and gathered under a store awning at the lower end of Market street, Philadelphia, tc wait for a grip par. Along cans; a color- ed man, carrying a faded aud rent ole um- brella, and we all noticed that he carried the shelter tipped forward at such an angle that his t'eet were protected at the expeuse of his hack. ".Stop, sir 1” shouted the man at guy left, who had the look and beariui ),f a Judge. "Yes; salt—what's wante) l !" queried the colonial utau. "I want to show you how to carry an um- brella. Your toes are dry, while your back is all wet. 1 don't believe that one person in arty knows how to carry au umbrella so as to get the most protection out of it." "IC s au old ono, salt," "Yes, I see, but you don't grasp the handle right. Here—take intim." "Yes, sah." "Take the handle with your right hand, and curry it on a line with your right shoul- der, There—that's better." "Can't git along wid sich stiffness, salt." "Yes, you can. Now walk up t" 1 L cor- ner and meek, Hold the handle on a line with your shoulder. 'That's it—goaiacad." The negro marched orf ata steady pace, and whiles he was stepping oft' the ,,;entleuta11 tut tied to us with: "It's a knack to shelter yourself under an umbrella, particularly if it rains bard, and the want of this knack provokes ole when 1 see it." We agreed with him, anal the minutes passed by and a cur crone down. "Why, where slid the nigger go 0)1" ask- ed the owner of the uuibre.la. We looked up and down, but he had dis- appeared. The man ran up the street two squares, but there was no African carrying a fine silk umbrella with a gold handle—not as he could see. We started t" rally hint 1t bit as we went up on the car, but he cl tc'.:ed us by saying: "If any of you think I c'rus't lick you iu one round all you have to dei' is to step orf the car! I won't detain you three minutes!" Hume -Like. Stranger-- , year new town are in 0. horrible conditin. Real -Estate Broker—Yes, I know. You see most of the people who immigrate here are' 1'uruntuuittus, and, we \vttitt to 11.111les it as home -like as.pussil le. pea 1ing is vena I had some important bitsine;; to transact with a merchant in an Ohio town, but we had scarcely- got seated in his private office when in canoe a drummer for a Chicago house, He was probably new 0> the road, and he wanted some of bis cheek shaved orf. IIe was politely informed that tuthiug what- ever was wanted, hut he talked and hung on, and had to be fairly turned out. In half an hour he returned to the attack with a fresh stock of gall, saying: "I know you must want something, and I'um hound to have an order," Again he was turned away, and again he returned to the attack. The merchant was .now mad all the way thritugh, but he con- cealed the fact and quietly rentarkmi: " Couto to think of it, I do need a few things. Cot out your order book." Ah, lea' I knew you would give. me an order if I hung on long enough 1" exclaimed the drummer. "Nothing like perseverance in this profession." The merchant ordered 2,000 pounds of sugar, ten chests of tea, 1,1)110 pounds of coffees, and a lot of other goods, fi'nring up it good hill, and the drummer was of hi.; high heels as he withdrew. "Pretty (lig order," I observed. "No order at all," he replied. "Heow'„ "He'll mail it to Chicago to -night, and to- morrow I'1L coutternatud by tek'grup1. Did it to get even will) him for han;;ing on, you see. All the fun in this thing is not on the side of the travelling men." Casting His Bread Upon the Waters. .71,9•9•. B B 111 Burdock Blood, Bitters IN a.prlrely vegetalale compound,posaessinf perfect regulating pawereover all the organs of the system, and controlling their wore tions. It so purifies the blood that it CURES All blood humors and diseases, from a cow, mon pimple to the woret eorolnlous sore, ant this oombined with its unrivalled regulating cleansing and purifying influence on the secretions of the liver, kidneys, bowels and skin, render it unequalled as a Dura for at diseases of the i3links—"Englesi'la the brewer a a very charitable 111110. 1 see hire g co money to every beggar he meets," Jinks --"0, Well. he gets it all hack. IIe owns almost every saloon in town?" Ne Language. Left DI m. Wife—"Yon don't toll me that Professor A. has been struck (Minn.?'" Husband—"Yes, last night. And he was master of seven languages." Wife --"IA it possible? And w•as he struck SKIN From one to two bottles will pure boils pimples, blotches, nettle rash, scurf, tetter and all the simple forms of skin disease From two to tour bottles will oure saltrheun or eczema, shingles, erysipelas, ulcers, ab soesses, runningsores,and all skin eruptions It is noticeable that sufferers from skin DISEASES • Are nearly always aggravated by intolerabl itohing, but this quickly subsides on the removal of the disease by B.B.B. Passing onto graver yet prevalent diseases, such at scrofulous swellings, humors and SCROFULA We have undoubted proof that from three to six bottles used internally arid by outwart application (diluted if the skin is broken) ti the affected parts, will effect a cure. Th, ;teat mission of B. 13. B. is to regulate the liver, kidneys, bowels and blood, to correo acidity and wrong action of the stomach and to open the sluice ways of the systen to carry off all clogged and impure secre tions, allowing nature thus to aid recover` and remove without fail BAD BLOOD Liver complaint, biliousness, dyspepsia,siol headache, dropsy, rheumatism, and ever; species of disease arising from disordere< liver, kidneys, stomach, bowels and blood We guarantee every bottle of B. B. B Should any person be dissatisfied after using the first bottle, we will refund the money or application personally or by letter. We wil also be glad to send testimonials and in formation proving the effects of B. B. B. it the ahove named diseases, on application to T. MILBUIIN do CO., Toronto, Ont. Cores horns, Cuts, Piles iu their worst tornt, Fwellings l:rys'j rias, Lafluntaie lion, Prost Biles, Chapped Hands and all Skin Diseases. Hirst PAIN EXTERMINATOR L be go, Sciatica, lihca-na(ism, Nen. relgie 'Cool niche, Prins in rvea V form. 111 all Healers. Wholesale b,t 1•. F. Dailey & Co HUMPHREYS' YETERINARY SPECIFICS For Bones, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs, AND POULTRY. 000 Page Book on Treatment of Animals , (st&1!%hart Sent Free. alum( Fevers, Congestions, Inflammations A.A. 1 Spinal itleuiugitie, (Bilk Fever. R. B. --Strains, Lameness, Rheumatism. C.C.--Distemper, Nasal Discharges. F.D.--note or Girubs, Worms. E. -.Coughs, Heaves, Pneumonia. .F. --Colic or gripes, Bellyache. G.G.—Miscarriage, hemorrhages. HAL --Urinary anti 'Kidney Diseases. t.I.--Ilruptivo Diseases, Mange. 1.K. --Diseases of Digestion. Stable Case, with Specifies, Manual, Witch Hazel 011 and Medlcator, $7.O° (('rice, Slagle Bottle (over 50 doses), - Sold by Druggists; or Sent Prepaid anywhere and in any quantity on Receipt of Price. Humphreys' Med. Co., 109 Fulton SL, N. Y. I3'G'MPICRETZ HOMEOPATHIC. 28 SPECIFIC No . use 30 years. Theo successful remedy for Nervous Debility,�Vital Weakness, and Prostration, from over -work or other causes. oil per vial or 5 vials audience vial powder, for (8 SOLD BY baUOOISTM or sent postpaid on reaeiptol price: nmphrcia'itledlrlae Co., 100 Fallon at., N, r. WELLS & RICIIA RUSON CO., Agents, IIION TREA L. ERRORS OF YOUNG AND OLD Organio Weakness, Failing Memory, Lack of Energy, Physical Decay. positively eared by Hazelton's Vitalizer. Also Nervous Debility, Dimness of Sight, Loss of Ambition, Unfitness to Marry, Stunted Deve'opment, Loss of Power Paine in the Back, Night Emissions, Drain in Urine, Seminal Looses, Sleeplessness( Aversion to Society, Unfit for Study, Excessive Indul- gence, eto., eta Every bottle guaranteed. 20,000 sold yearly. Address, enclosing stamp for treatise, J. E. HAZELTON, Graduated Pharniaoist 808 Yonne 8t., Toronto, Ont. O.!)l —IN T!HE-- no._ tont__ i .; [ a1