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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1896-03-04, Page 6";^. ,, . , 'roll Jam.. E. Nicholson. CANCER ON THE LIP CURED BY APER Sarsa- parilia` "11 consulted doctors who prescrthed for tmt, but to nu purpose. 1 suffered in ssorly seven long years. Finally, 1 began tri.ii Ayer's Sarsaparilla. lu a week ur tun noticed a decided Impruvenreut. !?nrcur- aged by thisresult, I persevere twait ni month or so the sore began to lout, nd, alter using the Sarsaparilla for six unn.tIe„ the last trace of the cancer disnppexre,.."- d'emss L. NtcIIOLSON, Flure1,ccvnls, Ay e s j Sa.r:t . h --i Admitted. at the Wor1d'1 Pair.0 .1YEWWs6 PILLS J eguietto tho bowels. ('he Huron News -Record ®1.26 a Year -$1.001n Advance WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4th 1896. (ADVERTISEMENT.) ltepiy to lir. West, Papal Priest, Goderich. Mr. West's weak effort at contro- versy, and sad lack of consistency and candor, and tortuous methods of make believe reasoning, so very similar to the course of pretended argument pur- sued by his predecessor, the apocryp- hal "Catholic," must go far to justify the suspicion that the latter was the alter ego of the former. Mr. W., in a former letter denied that Catholics were bound by oaths to oppose goyern- ments, institutions and people of the reformed religion. In such a state- ment, he roust be conscious of being guilty of prevarication, and was mere- ly quibbling, most probably, about the mere form of certain verbal differences relative to the oaths of Popish Leaders printed in the Patriotic American. I challenge Mr. W. that the original of the oaths of Romish priests and Bis- hops may be seen in the Poutificale Ro- uwinnm, p. 62, published at Rome, A. D. 1818; and another form is that found in editions of the decrees of the Council of Trent, and in the Ro- man Canon Law, p. 111, ed. 1839. Also, since jesuitism is Romanism, the ter- rible oath of jesuits is the oath of Ro- manists, the world over. 1 wish once more to correct Mr. West's ignorance about the Targum. He reiterates the absurdity that a Targum on the Law of Moses was made by Rabbi Jonathan. If Mr. W. really possessed the learning he pretends to display, and which he deems unnecessary, if not hurtful, for the laity, he should have known that the spurious Targum, in question, is certainly not the work of that eminent man, as its style and diction are im- pure and 1 otally different, and it is dis- graced with the mostridiculousand in- credible tales and legends, which, of course, makes it more consonant with Romanism, and palatable for Mr. W. From internal evidence it has been proved, that it could not have been written before the 8th century, when Romanism was growing apace. Mr. West quotes Cardinal Manning in proof that the word "worship has changed its Eoglish signification, and is, now used or??ly with reference to God." When Manning learned and adopted popery, he must also have learned the duplicity of Romanist,, or else was deplorably ignorant of the language of England. He contradicts all standard lexicography ; for instead of the word in question being now limited to the one meaning, its signi- fication, has rather been expanded - every school boy, ought to know that. But would Manning or West affirm that (atria, the Roman ecclesiastical Latin term, signifying supreme wor- ship, which was originally applied to image homage hy papal authority, has also changed its meaning ? How piti- ful are the subterfuges resorted to by Roman apologists to hide a debasing idolatry I Purcell, Marnning's biograp- her, as /LIS() Mr. Gladstone, give a rath- er unccrnpliment.atry estiulaata' of his abilities as a thinker, his learning or his honor or eitndor as 0 rhristian. Mr. W. tries to mini- mize the dire significance of the papal A nathema. The Standard Dic- tionary says : "Anathema is speci- fically the greater excommunication solemnly pronounced by the H. ('. church upon the greatest offenders only; a formal imprecation, Ilan, or curse ;" and the papacy has leen seat .tering such curses so liberally for many cen- turies, that all reformed sovereigns, governments, institutions and people to -day are the objects of papal impreca- tion. Queen V,ictoria and her reformed aubjects are so anathematized Io -day, as really as was her predecessor Eliza- beth; and that not because, "they love not the Lord Jesus Christ," as St. Paul says (i Cor. xvi 22), hut because they refuse to pay homage to a foreign usurping despot, and decline to accept or believe the unscriptrued. anti-chris- tian, immoral and idolatrous dogmas of the papacy. For the truth of this read the decrees of the 4th Council of Lateran, in my last letter, which are still in force as sworn on oath by the Romish Bishop Foley. Mr. West produces an alleged repudiation by Mr. Gladstone, implying that, he, Mr. Gladstone, denies having written a certain statement against Romanism, imputed to him by a certain paper called the "Patriotic." The wily Romish Bishop, who wrote Mr. Glad- stone, selects just one single sentence from the paper, and asks Mr. G. whether he wrote the words cited. The old statesman of 84 years, replies that it le hard to answer for period of sixty years, hut to the hest of his knowledge and belief he did not write the words noted. Mr. West returns to this again in his last letter. Now the obvious object of the Romish bishop and Mr. West, in all this, is to make it appear that Mr. G. denies having ever weal)) I1galPst RQWlauiwn at all. X. have before wo'apaugablet ot8I p'bgeeet styled "The Vatipa pepreee," a 0111,1311"ing errs u went of t orwti'sh aggreetilOn. and whapver may have sen Mr. Glat4stbtie 8 13rOfessed change Of Certain views, in the past twenty years, be has not retracted theta) statements and arguments which remain unanswered and unanswerable. in that pamphlet, Mr,G. argues out to their lo{fictil finality these four telling propiosittons against the modern papacy ;— . I. That "Rome has substituted for the proud boast of semper easletn (ever the same), a policy of violence and change of faith. 2. "That she has refurbished and lgraded anew every tool she was fond- y thought to have disused. 3. That no one can now become her convert without renouncing his moral and mental freedom, and placing his civil loyalty and duty at the mercy of another. 4. That she (Rome) has equally re- pudiated modern thought and ancient history." Ou page 18, Mr. Gladstone characterises, as `'moral murder," Rome's methods of "stifling conscience and conyiction." On page 25, 26, he gives the "declaration," in the year 1826, of the Vicars Apastolic, who with the R. C. Bishops, then governed the Romanists of Gr. Britain :— "That the allegiance which Catholics hold to be due, and are .hound to pay their Sovereign, and to tie civil auth- ority of the state, is per feet and undi- vided." Also, he quotes the "Pastoral Address of the Roman Hierarchy to the Clergy and Laity of the Roman Church in Ir eland :—In Article 11 "they declare on oath their belief that it is not an article of the Catholic faith, neither are they thereby bound to be- lieve that the Pope is infallible." They also declared, by their vicars Apostolic and Hierarchy "that neither Pope, nor any prelate or ecclesiastical person of the R. C. Church has any right to in- terfere, directly or indirectly, in Civil Government, nor to oppose in any manner the performance of the civil duties which are due to the king." Equally assueing were the staternents of the Irish R. C. Bishop Doyle before the Committees of both Houses of Lords and Commons in 1824-5. What was the object in view, by those Ro- manists, in making such statements under oath? They were then seeking relief from the penal laws passed against thein and brought upon them- selves by their treasonable acts perpet- rated against the life of Queen Eliza- beth, and numerous conspiracies, in chiding "The Gunpowder Plot, 1605, and the massacres under James II, 1685-88, down to the reign of George III. We note the duplicity, and utter untruthfulness of those oaths and state- ments of pretended loyalty, when we are pointedly told by Rornish authori- ties that the Pope's infallibility was always a recognised and essential doc- trine of salvation, even before it was publicly proclaimed at the Vatican Council iu 1870, and that the pope from St. Peter, claimed and exercised the tight and power to rule and depose kings and coerce governments all through the ages. Romish authorities from their highest order down to their penny catechisms,used in Romish schools, hold the belief in the pope's in fallibility to be as necessary to salva- tion as is any other doctrine of the church of Christ. If, since 1870, this dogma is necessary to salvation, it must have been equally so before that date, or all people of previous ages must have gone to perdition. What. then are we to think of the oaths of these Vicars apostolic. Bishops, priests and Romish laity, which denied this saving (?) doctrine in 1826 1 And com- pare their oaths and statements with the Canons of 4th Council of Lateran and St. ThoinasAqui nas'doctrinesof the pope's power and dealings with hereti- cal (Lie. protestant) govern men tss,worn on oath by the Rotnish Bishop Foley set forth in my last letter, and then judge of the perfidy of Rotnanism. Despite the oaths and assurances of loyalty in 1824-6, Mr. Gladstone reach- es the irresistible conclusion page 50, that the Romish convert is notoriously "A Catholic (Romanist) Hist, an Eng- lishman afterwards." And "in case of a conflicthetwetrn theQueen and the pope, intends to follow the pope, and let the Queen shift for herself; which, happily she can well do." Speaking of the Jes- uits who since. 1814, mean Romanist,, Mr. G. calls theta "the deadliest foes that mental and moral liberty has ever known.;' (p. 47.) Cardinal Manning is quoted, p. 0., as saying :--"There is nut another church so called" (than the Roman) "nor any community profess- ing to be a church, which does not sub- mit or obey, or holds its: peace when the civil governors of the curled command." "The Present Cr isis of the Holy Het-," by 11 E. Manning, D. D., London, 18(11, p. 75. Here is the gage of defiance, beast fully flung in the face of Britain by the highest Burnish authority in 1 ho empire. Lord ActA(n, a Romanist, replying to Mr. Gladstone, admits as fo loevs : "A Pupe %vhn lived in Catho- lic tunes" (1'rban ii, 1087-00), "decided that. it is no murder to kill c'xcommuni- (•o'.ted persans." This rule tvaci incor- porated in the ('anon Law, and con- tinues to be a part of ecclesiastical Law." "Another and Inter pope has declared that the murder of a pretest - t, is sr, good a (feed the tit atones, and more than atones, for 1 he murder of a Catholic." -That, pope Innocent, Iii, and the ('ouoril of Latteratn laid dawn this i>roposition, that allegiance must. not. 11e kept with heretical Princes soar et q(1i Dmif,l em non Harm, , Airs servos - 'In, non Rit. This principle was adopt- ed, and is confirmed by St. Thomas Aquinas, the oracle of the (Rornan) schools," Again L. Acton says : "Pius V., the only pope who has been proclaimed a saint, for many centuries, having deprived Elizabeth, commissioned an assassin to take her life ; and his next successor, (Greg. Xi11.), on learning that the Protestants were being massacred in France, pronounced the action glorious and holy, but comparatively haren of results ; and implored the King during two months. by his (pope's) Nuncio and Legate, to cat ry the work on to the bitter end until every Huguenot had recanted or perished." In the face of these ferocious teachings of popes and canon Law, Lord Acton Vends that Romaniets may be trusted. es; while they cannot enforce such teaching. This is the teaching and re-, ligion which Mr. West says Is becom- ing popular in America! This is the teaching and so-called religion that the present pope, Leo. XIII, would reim- pose on Britain, and deem her blessed if she accepted lt,and mourns her hope- less condition in being at present be- reft of that holy faith 1 He calls on the English people to address their prayers for unity,not to God or to the Adorable Trinity or the Blessed Saviour of men but to St. Peter and St. George and above a l to ,x; r ,. ho 'holy . Qth And he ddti t" a .are p1'ease (MO will alit a ,t>ltll(ricy to grant tc1 those who PI,ouqly reelte the, pro; appended to t is letter, soirttlutgence tlu. days. Moreover e, plenary indt; g ice once a month op,t e ohservai of the usual condltions 'to• those e have recited It daily.)1 And here is t#t'ayer; and as Ml'. West stated in t papers�of this town, last autumn, th Qatholies (Romanist,) did not pray saints, angels or images, thio prays dictated by the pope, 181)5, will sin your readers the utter lack of truth the assertion :— "To the Blessed Virgin. Prayer 1 England." "O Blessed Virgin, Mary, Mother God and our most gentle Queen a Mother, look down in mercy up England thy "Dowry" and upon us who greatly hope and trust in th By thee it was that Jesus our Savis and our hope was given unto the wor and He has given thee to us that might hope still more. Plead fur thy children, whom thou didst rece and accept at the foot of the Cross. sorrowful Mother! intercede for ( separated brethren, that with us in one true fold they way be united to Supreme Shepherd, the Vicar of 1 Son, Pray for us all, dear Mott that by faith fruitful in good works may all deserve to are and praise (1 together with thee, in our Heave home. Amen." How sad 1 Such a prayer cotnrne ed to Christian people in the last, cade of the nineteenth century 1 I not a monumental proof of my stet) est charges of gross idolatry agai Rotnanism ? Popular in England a America forsooth I The United Sta now throughout the Union are bat ing together for defence and proteeti against popery, and are enacting strictive le scar legislation against the sc deceiver. England lately bad a decid revulsion from Rome -rule; and Ca if 1 mistake not, will shortly ft suit; and surely it is high time, v Romish Bishops threaten set only liberty of the citizen, but also th dependence of Parliament, the ju ary, and even the Privy Council el Empire, as in the actions of Bish Cameron, Labreque, Begin, Caravel Cleary, with reference to Menit and the murderer Shortis case. V regard to Rnrnanists being the peer those of the reformed religion, learning, Mr. West knows well that mish schools and papal countries, as a whole, far in the rear. He need confine himself to Mexico, and cert ly I did not single it out specially, take every Romish country on eat As to his Romish Sparate Schools, hitt) look at those in the city of Ott a where they ought to he at the Is His reference to Sweden is jesuiti and uncandid. The percentage illiteracy in the States is largely due foreign Romanists and .Romani: Let him take Ontario and Quebec, 1 he quotes an author to prove tl illiteracy in the people is conducive religion, and that Christ did not co mand to teach them secular. knowled. In this respect, our Lord made no c tinction between clergy and poor Why do Romish priests seek a modici of learning? If ignorance promo devotion and true religion in the p ple why should it not be beneficial priests ? He cites an alleged stater( of Dean Farrar. I do not accept it Mr. (Vest's veracity. But he only ci one instance of tffe Rorneward ino rnent. He also cites one example fr•, the Methodists in support of purgato and also Dr. Briggs of the Preshyt inns. Why does he not cite Ju( Iscariot to prove that all the Apost were traitot•s 2 Poor West ! It is curious also, that Mr. W. first con- demns, denounces and virtually rejects statistics in totorelaating to literacy and illiteracy, and then proceeds to quote nearly t wo columns of such statistics, and mainly from whom ? Michael G. Mulhall 1 Why, Mr. Editor, I could fill your paper with positive proofs, that Mulhall is so utterly unreliable, that Mr. West (night as well have coined statistics from his own rather fertile imagination, or have drawn his information from the man of the moon of Romish fable. Mulhall's statistics is nn a par with some pretty teaching in Separate Schools. He says that the great universities of England were founded by Catholics, i, e. under the auspices of pope, and popery, as we know it. This is untrue, and another instance of Romish presumption. He says : "1 have confined thyself almost exclusively to protestant authors for the remarks I have grade." This is only another of the rnaany slips of veracity which Mr. W. is prone to make, as will easily be seen on examination. He makes also some rather unintelligible remarks 1 t s n gout deaths of legitimate and illegitimate children in England and Glasgow. He fails to tell yon of the barge per centatg(' of ltonlaulists it) Glasgow, and the large increase of crime produced there by thein, as in .ill ether countries where they are numerous; e., g. 100X) murders per an- num in papal Italy, and sixty times theto p }0 rtinn of illegitimacy as roul- parcel wit h England. if lir. West, would kindly read you some select por- tions of Standard text honks for the in- struction of Rornish priests for the confessional, viz: Ligonri, Dens, Ken rick, Gnry and Idusenhanm, which Mr. W. knows cannot he discussed in print, it evould reveal the causes for the pre- valence of (-rune, the assassinations of Henry iii• Henry IV, and William of Orange Nassau, and the murders of Cavendish and Burke in Phoenix Park. Hoch teaching would also hy the aid of St. Thomas Aquinas inter- pretation of Conciliar decrees and ('anon Law, explain why Romanist -1r is the only religion, assuming the Christ.- ian name, which teaches the violation of the commandments; of God and the precepts and ordinances of the Lord Jesus Christ,. Mr. West is at liberty t(> retire, 01 go on and discuss the other score )r so, of unscriptual, and anti' christian dogmas of his system; sub- ject, of course, to your pleasure as edi- tor of your esteemed journal, and if this he our parting point, I beg to sin- cerely thank you for space and courte- ous treatment afforded me; and enter taining ever kindly feelings toward my opponents, I remain always, Yours truly, A MEMBER OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE PROMOTION OF TRUE CATHOLIC DOC- TRINE. Clinton, Feb. 26th, 1806. "A creek in the hack," a pain under the shoulder -blades, water brash bili- ousness, and constipation, are symp- toms of disordered stomach, kidneys, liver, and bowels. For all ailments or- iginating in a derangement of these organs, take Ayer's Pills. spotless White Ducks aro ue...o.. ... Hume of Its Name -The Neeess ?obits of a Thoroughbred. rhe breed takes its name from Ay' try, England, where the duck re g and fattening industry is can to an enormous extent. The wi strict presents a most remarkable ance of poultry farming. Cotta ar from 500 to 2,000 head a year, ,ere are plenty of large breeders. ) other part of the world are so m, wls raised on an equal area, tese birds all belong to the so -ca yleshury breed, which is the favo )e throughout England. The full-grown Aylesbury duck .rger than the Pekin. It is generl moldered more graceful, the body Ig lung and well balanced, carry s weight both forward and aft lust ! merely the latter Bite the Ameri ,vorite. The plumage of the Ayl PRIZE DRAKE. ury should be a spotless white, :gs of a deep, orange hue, and the f a peculiar flesh -colored tint. tst is strongly insisted upon, and t ird whose bills are slightly off cc till fall to bring the highest pric ven though otherwise without bleml 'he reason for this prejudice is eneral opinion that the flesh of ure-bred Aylesbury is more delicat avored than that of any other kin( Aylesbury ducks have degenera ) nowhat in size in this country, ow too much Inbreeding; but by care 'lection this tendency may be ated. Where there is plenty of el ater so as to enable it to keep clt Lis is a very valuable breed. 7 rcks are sociable, very easily tam id cross well with either Ituuens skins. -New York World. RICH COLORED EGGS. me Mots for beer/Inc to Produce T Shell Effect, t la a W'll-known fact 1n the fes of dairy stock that foods poor 5 or oils will cause cows to g Ik the cream of which is especia ht in color, and will produce yr alt -colored or white butter•. It o a matter of common knowlec fat of which is color. The same principle would prohn>•r hold true with regard to the feedi fowls. Too much bran, oats and e 'ally buckwheat, would have a dency to produce eggs with very I colored yolks. Confinement wi much variety of food is also knoi cause hens to lay eggs with very yolks, and when such fowls are their freedom, plenty of green foot a variety of grain food, the col the yolks will change In a few so as to be quite noticeable. Som rleties of fowls naturally lay eggs lighter -colored yolks than others. colored eggs are esteemed for richer quality than white shelled and frequently bring a higher pit the market, so that all the diffe in the'color of the yolk may not b, to the single item of food or cot ment. Feeders are agreed that horns and other Mediterranean b will hear feeding with much more than the Astatic and American br and a richer diet consisting of co Arable corn with plenty of green and range would nn doubt give from the Mediterranean breeds rl yolks than 1f confined and fed a larking in corn and green food. At variety In the fond and plenty of IN w, 11Id probably prove an antidote , white yolks.-Amerlran Agriculturist A Seenro F..rd t es. where soft Marl Is given fowls, It usually trampled upon l,y the fns• before fully eaten. To avoid this, mal, a shallow hnx and hinge to It a coy' of slats made of laths. Through the9 the fowls can reach all the fund, ht, cannot soil it The name '1) vlee ma also be used with a mealier box giving water Have a hos Jut lar( enough to set the dish of water a'ithtt ,Ind shut the slat or rover down ova It A similar device for giving wall In a way to keep the fowls out of th water vessel is to have a mederatel )EC11nF. FEUD PDX, high box, with slats up and down one side. Then set the water ( within, and the fowls can drink thro the slats. The top of the box or cc should he sloping to keep the fr off from It. --Orange Judd Farmer Problem rot F, -.'dere. Not less food, but food better anted to the purpose for which animal is kept, and fed In such a rr nor as to give the best results; thl the line of Investigation for the fa. ers and feeders to -day. Keeps the largest assortment; tits de • est Goods, 94aljty One and pne041, tow in Gro"ce hies, Crbckei r au4 1.it Glassware.•� 8.—Black Green and Japans are unequalled in quality and prices; you will save 50, alt 10c. pound if you buy from me instead of Tea Peddlers; compare quality and prices, ARS.—We are headquarters, we buy direct from Montreal Refineries, keep beat qualfte and sell at close prices. V FRUITS and PEELS.—We have already disposed during Holiday season of over four tons and still have large stock on hand, different brands aelling cheap as to quality, ,CKERY, CHINA, GLASSWARE AND LAMPS.—We have got to make room for our Imported Goods and we have reduced our prices on Dinner Sets, Tea Sets, Toilet Bets, Berry Seta, Water Seta, Bread and Butter Plates, Cups and Saucers and Lamps, all kinds and see Goode and Prices; no trouble to show goods. -Arm.---"Terms Cash or Trade.`--- t•"•e�':.lJ,,d°, s_!.�..+�y'i"-'i,:,F.°..:.`w+ate,+.+.moi•'_+++_•e�01;,a;,i +�f �i�b++its+ rrf 11.'.i; dod/t"--arp E.tear v as _ • !! , Absolutely the Best. + 'C?O'C7t Sttperlor flaterial and Scientific Work-, InEn$llip. N t . 5 Styles Urs at the World's Columbia Exposition. zei to:otc stamp for our 24 -page Catalogue—A work of Art. Monarch Cycle Company, Pe,all Salesroom, a8o W.rbash Ave. f_+:>"++++++++++ lw Lake and Halsted Sts., CHICAGO, ILL. Before Taking. 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Wood's Phosphodine bas been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed almost hopeless -cases that had been treated by the most talented physi- cians -cases that were on the verge of despair and Insanity --cases that were tottering over the gravo-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, one package, $1; 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 Phosphodine Is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists lathe Dominion. TO COlelSUMP'TIVESe rhe undersigned having been restored to health simple means, after suffering for several year•, th a severe lung affection, and that dread diaesse u(suvap(ion, H anxi,.us to nick.. kn, tau to hie fellow Hater, the means of cure. To those who desire it, cheerfully send (free of charge. a copy of 1114 • ..n n„d a eurecttre for 'he military ' expedition sen rant.ee returned to England. troops disembarked they were Whited by Lord Wolseley. ND WORDS FROM THE F TUTOR MISSION BIBLE CLA In behalf of the Fred Victor Mia de Class I wish to express titude to you for the box of Ch Amen which you supplied in 0 • charitable work to the infant c Mrs. Brownr'ig, 102 River st.r days ago the child was awl icted with scald head, the ng literally one scab from td to chin, and in that brief tit 'inlets cure has been effected. 1 your gift was worth more the ight. in gold. I?nan•NO YElnll, 2(11 Sherhour•ne St., Toron 'he (:rand Association of the I' sof Industry decided not. to o}, order to all professions nor .dish passwords. The blue -bird is hailed as 0 hath - of Spring. It is also a ren)ine. tt, it blood purifier is needed to p e the system for the dehilitaat1 ether to conte. Listen And you e1 it the birds singing : "Take Aye 'sonatina, in March, April, AI ay.” .aid Low by Indigestion. vas so run down I had to give work. ott's Sarsaparilla the kind th aures. Indigestion or dyspepsia is the bane ousaods, and is one of the most ( essing of afflictions. It arises from (pure or impoverished condition of t ooS, which weakens the digestive a imilative organs, rendering them i ,able of performing their natural fur is, and if neglected, the sufferer los th, complains of exhaustion aftersli��jj -rtion and becomes rapidly debilitatj 4r. »m, W. Thompson, a promin sident of Zephyr, Ont., in a letter da tg 12th, 1895, says: " l t gives me grr easure to testify to the fact that Scot -separilla has caused a moat rema ale change in my condition. I was uch run down I had to give up wo -id felt as if life were not worth livin fr. Dafoe induced me to try Scott's 5 eparilia and after taking four'bott)t m now feeling as I formerly did ys ;o, and I want to say for the benefl 1ooc suffering from indigestion and f ig, to use slang phrase, ' compl nocked out,' don't despair until you rott's Sarsaparilla a fair trial.' Scott's Sarsaparilla is a blood foo :imulates all vital organ. to hea oral action, enabling them to t11 .'i A GENEROUS OFF (Published b Request,)ER Dear Mr. Editor : Kindly inform your readers that I will gladly send ab- solutely free to any sufferer from ner- vous debility, sexual weakness, night es, weak. shrunken parts, varicocele the results of self-abuse, full par - dors of the means by which I was manently restored to perfect man - >d and sexual strength. I have hing to sell and want no money, but 1 he pleased to explain in a private, d letter, how I was cured. As L. this entirely free, each applicant enclose a stamp for reply. D. G. 1, Box 264, Picton, Ont. in J. White, sun of John White, e Exeter Times, has been a oint- •istant Supt.. of the Public `'Yorks of the city of Detroit, at a good Por Over Fifty Years 18'JOWe SOOTHING SYnrrtine been used by , of mothers for their children while teething :bed at night and broken of your rest bya sick Hering and crying wish pain of Cutting Teeth once and get a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow's g Syrup" tort:hildren Teething. It will relieve r little Potterer Immediately, Depend upon it, I, there is no mistake about it. It cures Dior- egulates the Stomach and (towels, cores Wind ,(tens the Gums, reduces inflammation, and ,ne and energy to the whelp system. "Mrs. .V's Soothing Syron" for children feet Ing in t to the taste and is the prescription of an of •st and best female physicians and nu m niter] States. ('rine twenty Ove cents a b I by all druggists thronghnnt the world. Be stire RR)) fur "M ns. w';NeLow' Snos brut SYRUP." n 1 hr Dominion House of Commons . Prior stated that nn Feb. 4 an tit still was found on the premises i he Trappist monks of Oka, and that. ,anally of five hundred dollars was toted. YUl'R PRESENT NEED pure, rich blood, and a strong and tlthy body, because with the ap- loch of spring and the beginning of inner weather your physical sys- n will undergo radical changes. All impurities which have accumulated ring (older weather must now expelled or serous c•nnsequences 11 result.. The one true blood purifier nninently in the (public eye to- y is Hood's Sarsaparilla. Its record ruses is unequalled. its sales are the gest in the world. A few bottles of rod's sarsaparilla will prepare you • spring by !purifying and enriching in- blood and toning and invigorating in- whole system. 4Vhile experimenting on acetylene a in a machine shop in Quebec an ex - ,cion toot place, which killed a bro- v of the proprietor, and seriously tired the proprietor. TARRH AND HAY FEVER RE- LIEVE'D iN TEN TO SiXTY MiNTTTES. ne short puff of the breath through blower, supplied with each bottle ?r. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, dif- s this powder over the surface of nasal passages. Painless and de- tful to use, itrelieves instantly and manently cures catarrh, hay fever, Is, headache, sore throat, tonsilitis deafness. 60 rents. Sold by drug - Sample bottle and blower sent ..1.eceippt of two three -cent stamps. Detchon, 44 Church st., Toronto. old by Watts & Co. 1