HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1896-02-19, Page 6A
Dr. S. F. Meerut
No Other Medicine
SO THOROUGH AS
Y s 3ar'sa
Statement of a Well iCuown Doctor
"No other blood medicine that I have
ever teed, and 1 have tried theta all, is 80
thorou04 1u (18 action, and effect$,emany
``, •rmaueut cures as Ayer's Sarsaparilla."—
Cr. H. F. 1.111:CLULL, Augusta, Me.
AyerS Only Sarsaparilla
IAdmitted at the Work 'a Fair. r
Ayer's Pills for liver and bowels.
rho Huron News -Record
$1.96 a Year-51.00in Advance
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19th, 1800.
Reply to Priest West, Goderich,
Feb. 12th, 1896.
Mr. West, in accordance with the
tenets of his so-called church, can only
be untruthful or childishly puerile.
When he says that Lord Baltimore,
who carte out from England to Mary-
land, New England, Aniei'ica, gave
liberty to conscience and politics, does
he know what he is speaking about ?
1 trow not. Lord Baltimore was sent
out by a liberal King and protestant
parliament of England, under the
reformation settlement, in 1034,
one hundred years, after Ro-
uranism was vanquished, through
fire and blood, in England. Lord
Baltimore, received his charter,
though a papist, from a tolerant king
and protestant parliament, to settle
protestant churches and rectors in
Maryland, This he did not do, hut
kept every protestant out of office as
much as possible. His grant, so-called
of civil and religions liberty was not in
accordance with his popish principles,
hat in spite of them. He did the least
he could do, and he could have done
little less than he did, without forfeit-
ing the liberal charter received ;
a too liberal one to a papist from any
parliament of a mighty protestant Em-
pire. This is a telling instance of Ro-
rnish perversion of history. Was Lord
Baltimore an all powerful Ruler ?
Nothing of the kind. Was there
ever an instance, that Rorie,
having the supreme power, grant-
ed civil and religious liberty ?
Never. Such is not the genuis of the
papacy. But perversion of history is
now biome's favorite resort—false-
hood is its latter day covert, and Mr.
West is its representative modern ex-
ponent. What he makes his so-called
protestant exponent, say of the Virgin
Mary, is vcr•y dap -trap. 1, myself can
say Amen, to it all, for it ascribes no
worship to her, no adoration, no ven-
eration, no respect than that
due by holy Scripture. When Priest
West speaks of the singular puri-
ty of the Irish women, I am not dis-
posed to tarnish the fair reputation of
our sisters of the celtic race—I glory
in it—but I do affirm that that singu-
lar purity is not because of the deprav-
ed confessional hut in spite of it. Read
the confession of Priest Hogan, Maria
Monk; the terrible history of Barbara
Ubrik, and of every history of the con-
fessional and conventual lite, and there
is only one train of evidence—the satis-
faction of celibate priests, as sensual,
priestly wolves upon helpless, impri-
soned females ; and this has
been the hapless cry since the
popish wild beast, Pope Geogory VII,
1073, imposed celibacy upon a youthful
priesthood. I will not attempt. to tar-
nish the Irish womanhood, as the slan-
derous Archbishop Cleary, of King
niton, Ont., dared to diabolise the pure
womanhood of Ontario, some years
ago—I am above such an act. But
when the slanderous Priest West, of
(loderich, attempts to slander the pro-
testant women of Ireland, and our
pure sisters of Scotland, I wish to tell
hint, that they have not learned how
to conitnit abortion, or to dispose of
illegitimate children its papal-jesuit
priests are taught at Mayneath ('ol-
lege, Dublin, to teach their papist sis-
ters in Celtic Roman Ireland. Since
popish Priest West of Goderieh has as-
sumed this position, I challenge him
that popery : (a) violates the first com-
mandment hy professing in the idolatry
of the mass, to create Godi then to
immolate or sacrifice Hirn, and
offer him in sacrifice for the sins
of the world ; then to eat him
as every God —acannibalism worse
than the worst cannabalism. (h)
They violate the second commandment
iry worshipping relics, saints . and
images, as much, or more than
they do the Creator. (c) They break
the third commandment hy vio-
lating any oath made in the
name of God when the papacy
deem oaths contrary to the interests of
the pagan Romish church—No oaths
are to be held with protestants I. e.
heretics, is papal law. This is surely
'to take God's name in vain. (d). Clod'e
sabbathlis profaned by Rornanists, and
a
espec y bypopes and priests, who
teach that iftheirdevotees attend the
idolatrous miles, as described above,
they may dance, carouse and do mere
ehandiQe the .11�emainder Of the holy
stay; but not, on a Romlbh fast day. (e)
Popes, Bis 00, Oardipals, priesand
Pesti$ pl.teach that it is proper
to ct±tj t► +Fd (onebtn ass it parent's
death'dvatitaijte is to accrue there-
by.
j P aI Itorbardsm of to -day
jtrstitlee�r birder slaughter, and hutch-
erylot l dreties (t. e. protestants) as ipa-
ligtantly as did pipe AI'exander III in
hit's edict Against tbti A.11bigenses in
1170; and grant ind'talgences for so
doing. (g) rT The Confes3i'onal, since its
inception, 1215, in connection with,
priestly celibacy, 1078, and the simul-
taneous raise of monasteries and con -
v01lte. Q) . nn ,Renee,, 'flt1 „ eld, . b7
too tistoEy, be ho>tb lit q aelisua . -
ity', br l' otry, and litter nibM of cell -
bath richt seustl 1 Stag- and as ipfn-
Inoral ti the. Turkish harem o ,Mor -
won endowment louse, (}1)) Of
teachers,.sucb as Butlepbtfugw T__,iggoourl,
fluty and Dens, acer ditetl PoOmisb
author's, terteh theft in :every form, if
it can ba ponces ed, and redound to the
advantag of the. cbtch, or personal
benefit, Peas teaehefa monstrous doc-
trines of a serious immoral character.
This is moderq .papal -jesuitism, under
the guiseofChristiaultystheRomanism
of today, that Pope Leo XIII, would
fain impose as conditltions of Christian
union.
(1). Romanians teaches that any oath
which is against the interest of the
Roman Church is not binding on the
faithful, i. e. upon members of the pap-
al communion—Canons of the 3rd
council of Lateron.
(j.) Romanisrn covets, and desires,
anconfiscates, where it has the power,
all goods and property of all heretics, i.
e. protestants. In the confessional
Pere Hyacinth says, Romish priests, to
the extent of 99 per cent, commit
sin with their female penitents,
which latter are the wives, daughters
and sisters of their parishioners. mead
thee
f tyrt rl evidence of the Rev. Mr.
Chiniqu —"The Woman and the Con-
fessional," which bas never been suc
cessfully contradicted and never can
be; and then contemplate priest West's
foul aspersions upon the protestant
women of Ireland, and our virtuous
sisters of pious Scotland; and so learn
what slanderous beings popish priests
are. I am most ready to maintain by
cogent argument, and historical proof
every popish violation of the ten com-
mandments ennumerated above : And
this is the teaching which has its incip-
ient foundation in Rornish Separate
schools, which are now attempted to
be imposed upon our sister province of
Manitoba. Poor Priest West's plea
for ignorance in Mexico, in his letter of
this week, is too much a popish relic of
the Dark Ages to merit'serious,consider
ation, t n, only for poor humanity's sake:
and only for that, I shall give it eonsid-
ation in a future issue, and will also
discuss the alleged popish teaching in
Kingston—Mr. West does not say
whether in Kingston, Ont., or King-
ston elsewhere. When religion, and
with it, humanity becomes degraded,
how low it. falls ! When priest and
people fall into coinmon error, how
great the declension ! 1 send you the
subjoined statement which is really a
very ;mild expose of the fell intention
of Roman teaching, and warning to us,
the people of this generation
What (tome Teaches.
VERIFICATION OF STATEMENTS 01'
FATHER C'IIINIQUY, BY AN
EYE-WITNWiS,
The American Patriot, of San Fran-
cisco, prints the following convincing
statement :—
In 1882 a copy of the Kankakee
Tithes, published at Kankakee, Illinois,
came to San Francisco, which contain-
ed a communication over the signature
of "Vox Populi." On learning the
name of the author of the coinnrunica-
tion, a correspondence was opened
with him, and it was learned that he
was an eminent lawyer of that place,
the Hon. Stephen R. Moore, who, also,
was Notary Public. In his letters in
reply, bearing date of May 15th and
June 3, 1882, he said : "You ask,
'What Judge was upon the bench at
the time the suit was brought (you
mean trial) when Bishop Foley was re-
quired to translate from the wor ks of
St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Liguori?
Who were Chiniquy's attorneys, etc. ?'
"You ask me to give you the facts in
regard to the examination of Bishop
Foley when we madet hits make the
translations.
''We knew that he was the head of
authority of the church in Illinois.
We knew that he would not dare deny
the authority of the hooks as binding
on the church. If Mr. Uhiniquy would
swear to the books being authority, it
would be denied by all Catholics, when
They could not deny it when the proof
calve from the bishop.
"We wanted to show, also, that it
was authority in the church today, as
well as at
the time they were publish-
ed. This could only be done by forcing
the bishop to he a witness. We knew
he would go away from theurisdic-
tion of the court. so he could not be
served with process, if he knew what
we wanted. Our statue allows any
person, whether officer or not, to serve
a suhpcena. We got the process, and
in my possession on the evening before
the trial, and I took the evening train
for Chicago. I fotind a friend in Chi-
cago to go with ale. I knew that if i
sent np my name he would refuse to
see me. My friend sentup his card,
with request to see the bishop. This
wove about nine o'clock at night. After
a long delay he came to the library.
He was touch astonished when he saw
me, and looked nt his card to assure
himself that no mistake had occurred.
i introduced my friend, who politely
read the process, commanding hire to
appear upon the next day at, Kanka-
kee, and testify in the case, at the
same bine tendering hire his witness
fees, being five cents per mile, and one
dollar for the day:- services. lie indig-
nantly refused the money, and declar-
ed he would notatt.end. Ilethomght the
courts had no power over him. He re-
cognized 110 authority lout the author-
ity of the church. I assured hint that
he roust do as he thought hest; but he
must, take the consequences. It would
be a contest between him and the
court, and 1 had never seen the court
fail to enforce the orders of the court.
"He sent for the attorney of his
diocese, Hon. B. 0 Caulfield, and after
the interview had no difficulty in con-
cluding to obey the process of court.
"Judge Charles H. Wood was on the
bench, Judge Wm. Osgood (formerly
Associate Counsel with Lincoln and
Paddock) and myself.
"When Bishop Foley went on the
witness -stand, we wanted Judge Os-
good to handle him; but he declined. I
had my subject well in band and was
quite familiar with the original, and
after he oaade,a few attempts to evade
me, he came' down to khe. work and
made a goodwitness. He rnyeever for-
gave me for it however. Be really
felt 'that his high position'had been
lowered. It wilf the first Otne that
any lawyer had done such athing.
"I have the honor to he, very re-
14pectfully, your obedient servant.
STEPHEN R. MOOItif."
The following is his communication
referred to, published in the Kankakee
Tidies t—
ame CfuRCrI OE ROME AND LIBERTY
OP CONSCIENCE.
"In one of your past issues you told
Mir refiderfi that t Rpv. Mr. Ohlntf4
qty bad, gains the one and fol'rlyd-
able htvesult instituted Ily the Rornan
Catholic'bishop, to djjs osges hint and
his people of their WWII property.
But you have not {liven anyatticu-
lar•s about the startling revelations the
bishop had to make before the court,
in reference to the stili -existing laws
of the Church of Rome against those
whom they call "heretics," Nothnig
is more irnportant foreveryone than to
know precisely what those laws are
"As I was present when the Roma
Catholic Bishop Foley of Chicago was
ordered to read in Latin and translate
into English those laws, I have kept a
correct copy of them, and I send it to
you with the request to publish it.
"The Rev. Mr. Chinlquy presented
the works of St. Thomas and St.
Liguori to the bishop,requesting him say, under oath, if hosee works wete
or were not among the highest theolo-
gical authorities in the church of
Rorke all over the world. After a long
and serious oppositon on the part of
the bishop to answer, the court having
said he (the bishop) was bound to ans-
wer, the bishop confessed that these
theological works were looked upon as
among the highest authorities, and
that they were tang}� t and learned in
all the colleges ''add universities of
Rome as standard works.' Then the
bishop was requested to read in Latin
and translate into English, the follow-
ing laws and fundamental principles of
action against the heretics as explain-
ed by St. Thomas and Liguori. [We
omit the Latin and give the traslation
by the bishopJ:—
'An excommunicated man is depriv-
ed of all civil communication with the
faithful, in such a way that if he is not
tolerated, they can have no comminu-
tion with him, as it is in the following
verse :—
" ` It is forbidden to kiss hint, pray
with hint, salute hint, to eat or do any
business with hire.' [St. Liguori, Vol.
IX., page 162.]
"' Though heretics must not he tol-
erated because they deserve it, we
must bear theta, till, by a second ad-
monition, they may be brought back
to the faith of the church. But those
who, after a second ttdwonition, re-
main obstinate in their errors, must
not only be excommunicated, hut they
must be delivered to the secular power
to be exterminated.'
" Though the heretics who repent
must always be accepted to penance as
often as they have fallen, they must
not, in consequence of that, always he
permitted to enjoy the benefits of this
life.. . When they fall again, they
are admitted to repent ; but the sen-
tence of death roust not be removed.'
[St. Thomas, Vol. 1V,, page 91.1
" ' When a elan is excommunicated
for his apostacy, it follows from that
very fact that all those who are his
subjects, are released from the oath
of allegiance by which they were
hound to obey hire.' 1St. Thomas,
Vol. IV., page 94.1
"Th' next document of the church
of Rome brought before the court was
the act of the Council of Lateran, A.D.
1215 :—
"' We excommunicate and anath-
ematize every heresy that exalts itself
against the holy orthodox and Catho-
lic faith, condemning till heretics by
whatever name they may be known—
for though their faces differ, they are
tied together by their tails. Such as
are condemned, are to he delivered
over to the secular powers to receive
due punishment. It laymen, their
goods must he confiscated. If priests,
they shall be first degraded from
their respected orders, and their pro-
perty applied to the use of the church
in which they have otiliciated. Secul-
ar powers of all ranks and degrees are
to he warned. induced, and if necessary
compelled hy ecclesiastical censures to
swear that they will exert themselves
to the utmost in the defense of the
faith, and extirpate all hereticsdenoun-
ced by the church who shall he found
in • their territories. And, when any
person shall assume government,
whether it he spiritual or temporal, he
shall be bound to abide by this de-
cree.
•
Populf," and it ''vac the }record of the
court as above given on Dec. 80,1.880
and will be found on pages 670, 677 and of Rev. C. Chiniquy. s ""Fifty Years
in the Church of'Ronie,"
This occurred only fifteen years ago,
and is fresh in the minds of the people
at that place. That reeerd at least is
secured beyond all danger.
"If you believe in an uncontrovert-
ible manner that you are commanded
to lie then lie." [Basnedi, Jesuit, in
' Judie o Teologica, page 278.]
" 'If any temporal lord, after having
been admonished to cle;,r his territory
of heretical depravity, the metropoli-
tan and the bishops of the provinces
shall unite in excommunicating hum.
Should he remain conturnacious a
whole year, the fact shall be siinified
to the supreme pontiff, who will de-
clare his vassals released from that
tine, and will bestow his territory on
Catholics to be occupied by I hem, on
the condition of exterminating the
heretics, and preserving the said territ-
ory in the faith.
"'Catholics who shall assume the
cross for the extermination of heretics
shall enjoy the same indulgences, and
be protected by t.hl; seine privileges as
are granted to those who go to the
help of the Holy Land. We do decree
further, that all who may have deal-
ings with heretics and especially such
as receive, defend, or encourage them,
shall los excommunicated. He shall
riot he eligible to any public office.
Ile shall not he admitted as a witness.
Ile shall neit.hvr have the power to be-
queath his property by will nor to suc-
ceed to any inheritance. He shall not
bring an action against any person,
hut, anyone can bring ria action against.
him. Should he he a judge, his decis-
ions have no force, nor shall any cause
be brought, before him. Should he be
an advocatte, he shall not, be allowed to
plead. Should he he a lawyer, 00 i1r-
stiitments made by him shall he held
valid, but shall be condemned with
their author,'
"The Roman Catholic bishop swore
that, these laws had never been repeal-
ed, and that, they were still the laws of
his church. He had to swenr that,
every year, he was hound under pain
of eternal damnation to say, in the
presence of God, and to read In hie
Brevariunt (his prayer -book), that 'God
himself had inspired' what St. Thomas
had written about the manner that
heretics should he treated by the Ro-
man Catholics,
"I will abstain from making any re-
marks upon these startling revelations
of that Rornan Catholic high authority.
But I think it is the duty of every citi-
zen to know whet the Roman Catholic
bishops and priests t 'deestand by lib-
erty of conscience, he Roman Catho-
lics are as interested as the Protestmnts
to know precisely what the teachings
of their church are on that euhject of
liberty and conscience, and hear the
exact truth, as coming from eueh a
high authority that there is no room
left for any doubt.
"Vox PopVLl."
As already stated, the Hon. Stephen
R. Moore, of Kankakee, Illinois, the
attorney of Rev. Chinigny, was the
author of the article signed "Von
Yours truly,
A MEMBER OH' THE SOCIETY NOR THE
PROMOTION ON TRUE CATHOLIC DOC-
TRINE.
BL''SSING IN FAILURE,
How Advantage Noy Be Taken of r.lre'a
Re vers..s.
Dr. Stephens, in his life of Edward
A. Freeman, the historian, hints at
what must have been the great dis-
appointment of the future historian's
youth. University prizes and fellow-
ships mean more to the student in Eng-
land than they do with us, and young
Freeman had set his heart upon win-
ning the prize for the chancellor's
English prize essay. To his immature
mind the horizon was bounded by that
converted reward. I3y gaining it he felt
that lie should reach a position where
no honor could afterward be withheld
from him,
To "bone" for a prize is very com-
mon in all institutions of learning, and
every reader will sympathize with
young Freeman In the unwearying ef-
forts which It is said he made to se-
cure the object of his desire.
The subject of this practical prize
essay was "The Effects of the Con-
quest of England by the Normans,"
For three months the contestant bent
all his energies to the collecting of ma-
terial, and the writing of what he felt
sure would be the most important
paper of his life. In doing this he
literally worked night and daY.
His essay was the longest and the
fullest of 14 which were submitted ;
but the prize was won by another stu-
dent, whose name even we do not
know, It Is easy to imagine the agoniz-
ing disappointment that fatur•e
brought to the defeated competitor
Mr. Freeman, In writing about this Ex-
perience 46 years afterward, said: "The
Norman conquest was a subject that
I had been thinking about ever since
I could think at all. I wrote for the
prize. I had the good luck nQt to get
it. Had I got it, I might have been
tempted to thnk that I knew all
about the matter. As it was, I went
on and learned something about it."
"Thus," says his biographer, "we are
in some sense Indebted to his rejected
essay for his great "History of the Nor-
man Conquest." The young man lost
his prize; but the world gained through
that loss an enduring work.
The lives of great men are filled with
inspiring failures. One of the most
disappointed men In the country at
the beginning of the war was Grant,
when he failed to get nils military ap-
pointment from the Governor of Illin-
ois. Disraeli made a stupendous fail-
ure on his first appearance in Parlia-
ment. Napoleon started out as a fail-
ure In Corsica, and as lieutenant In the
French army was almost a deserter,
until his opportunity in Toulon came.
Gorden's life exhibits professlona,l (all-
ures; yet who would assert that Gor•
don was not the peer of any English
general?
Theologians declare that Christ, im-
mediately after the crucifixion, because
of His declarations with regard to Him-
self, was seemingly the most gigantic
failure in history.
The failure that teaches us that at Its
best our knowledge is meager; that
gathers and concentrates our wander -
in powers
and p we a nervesi
us into truer
and enlarged views of life and duty, is
a fortunate failure, The fact is, most
of us are not able to gage the value of
deprivation, or misfortune,' or disap-
pointments, or the "ills that flesh is
heir to" in the edt}catlon of the human
soul for the "life that now Is," and for
"that which is to come." God, the all-
wIse schoolmaster, knows what such
experiences mean, and the first lesson
to be ]earned in this school of life Is to
trust Him.—Youths Companion.
Only Our Eye on lifer.
At a card party in the northwest a
few evenings ago a cross-eyed man was
posing as the man who knew it all,
giving his positive Opinions on every
subject In a loud voice, and otherwise
making himself a general nuisance. A
Poston girl was particularly annoyed
at the lordly air he assumed, and the
attacks he had mado on some of hey
pot thPorlos. Phe m>tde up her mind
to howl him over If she "ver got a
chance.
It came Groner than sin exp .•rtod.
A few minutes later she was the part-
nr of the truss -,•yid man, who Irnme-
r]lately pr,>coer]ed to give elaborate In-
struction.: as to how t'rtaln cards
:.hound be played to Insure them the
game. Ile finished by saying, "Now,
go ahead, MIs track flay, and rernem-
her f have my syn on you." She never
looked up• but In the most Innocent
way Imaginable, said: 'Which eye, Mr.
.cones'!" It broke up the party.—Wash-
ington Post.
A irnthor'e Schein A.
A clever mother has hit upon a new
plan for keeping her children well and
dispensing with the doctor's services.
A t the beginning of the winter she gave
.hem a talk on keeping well, called their
attention to the many ways in which
cnida are caught, serious Indigestion
brought on, etc. Then she offered a
prize for keeping well all winter, and
thus far has found her idea t8 work like
a charm. As doctors' bills in a family
of eve children are frequently nn trifle,
the prizes will probably be worth win-
ning, but the greatest result will he that
in all probability the children will grow
In love with health and learn self-con-
trol—New York Pont.
Hebrew Bibi. Text..
Two remarkable illuminated Hebrew
manuscripts of the Bible, written in
the ninth or tenth century, were shown
by Dr, Gaster recently to the Society
of Biblical Archaeology in London.
They came from central Asia, and are
probably the oldest Hebrew texts of
the Bible in existence. The margins of
the leaves are covered with rosettes in
gold and other ornaments, while the
writing is surrounded by a border of
five colored lines.
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Sexual Debility, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Mental
Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of
which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Wood's
Phosphodlne has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed
almost hopeless --cases that had been treated by the most talented physi-
clans—cases that were on the verge of despair and insanity—cases that were
tottering over the grave—but with the continued and persevering use of
Wood's Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were
restored to manly vigor and health—Reader you need not despair—no mat-
ter who has given you up as incurable—the remedy is now within your
reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness and happiness.
Price, ono package, 71; six packages, $5; by mall free of postage.
One will please, six guaranteed to cure, Pamphlet free to any address.
The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada.
Wood's Phoaphodlne Is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists In the Dominion.
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NOW
Is the Time-vox—
This is the season of the year when every well
regulated husiuess estahha111nent, big or little,
requires a sui-ply of Stationery, with Head-
ings, etc., neatly p1 inted thereon.
4.r)Gv<=1.,-Qo4i)o. oc.)oc) voQo•o40Q 000c•o.o
The News -Record
Job Department
e-s,eee•4.eae•m see-wooee•a .aee•-•aa.eee•s.eoe-o.e
Possesses all the latest facilities for doing such
work c'xpc'ditieusly and cheaply. ILeave your
older now for Letter Beads, Bill Heads and
En v el o pes.
Ile I)tr'(ts'r'rl ii rtli the Result.
r--
s.
1
a S
ite
air
y1
Could not get Insured
Rejected by Straight Line and
Mutual Companies.
But now Insured In both.
"Should I die while I am in a position
to pay my insurance premiums, my
family wil(owe their support to Scott's
Sarsaparilla. Two years ago 1 applied
to two companies for insurance, 71000
in each. Mypface was a mass of pimply
blotches and my urine did not stand the
test. One doctor in examining me said
I could not pass, but that my trouble
was curable. He advised al alterative
medicine and I commenced taking
Scott's Sarsaparilla, Both companies
rejected me, but four months later, after
I had taken five bottles of your remedy
I am thanktul to say both accepted me
as a risk—one being a stock company,
the other a mutual. The examiner who
previously examined me, remarked " I
never saw such a change in any man."
This is indorsed by Mr. J. Todd, the
popular druggist, corner Queen and
Crawford Streets, Toronto,
Scott's Sarsaparilla builds np debili-
tated constitutions, Imparts strength,
vigor and vitality, clears and purifies the
blocd. It cures Akin diseases rheu-
matism, gout, India—Atter* and a'II com-
plaints arising' from poor or poisoned
blood. Of all druggists, it per bottle.
If yon would always be healthy,
keep your blood pore With Hood's Sar-
sa.parilia, the One True Blood Purifier.
THE TIME FOR BUILDING
1'p the systIM is at, this season. The
cold well(' her has made unusual drains
upon the vital forces. The blood has
become impoverished and impure, and
all the functions of the hotly suffer in
consequence. Howl's Sarsaparilla is
the great, builder, because it, is the One
True Blood Purifier end nerve tonic.
ROOD'S Pi LLS become the favorite
ca.tha.rtic- with all who use them. All
druggists. 25c.
roar » ,,ches.a. of Marlboron¢h.
There are four duchesses of Marl-
borough now Irving. These are Con-
suelo, reigning duchess; Lillian, wife of
Sir William Beresford; Fanny, the
grandmother of the present duke, and
mother of the late Randolph Churchill.
and Jane, widow of the sixth duke.
These do not include Lady Blandford,
who was divorced before the late duke
reached his title.
Lor,) Lwlrrh tin'. I....r.
Lord Leighton had practically com-
pleted his principal academy picture.
which represents the myth of Perseus
riding on Pegasus and gning tto the.
relief of Andromeda. He carries with
him the head of the Medusa.
Much of life's misery is due to indi-
gestion ; fpr who can bo happy with a
pain in his stomach ? As a (orreetive
and strengthener of the alimentary or-
gans, Ayer's Pills are invaluable, their
use being always attended with mark-
ed benefit.