The Advocate, 1887-09-29, Page 7TELEPIT141),P40 PU4IMARY,
Owing ;o the contractor's delay in pow-
pleting the barraelis at London, D Sehool
:of Infantey will net be organized for a few
w4.3eka yet.
:M'. Haws, first mate oftheshipRquator,
_lying at Indian Cove, Quebec, was seriously
,stalabed yesterday lay one of the crew, and
.4s not expected to recover.
Mr. William Darhyson, Btevedore, Que-
bec, was badly injured on.Wednesday night
and. almost killed by a barrel of molasses
rolling over him on'board ship.
The Wellington Street Methodist
Church, London, of which Rev. Dr. Ryck-
man is the pastor, has just been re-
decorated and inaproved to the exten of
$1,000,
The men injured by the premature ex-
plosion o « the rockets on H. M. S.
Bellerophon last Saturday will be removed
to the military hospital on their arrival at
4t‘irarispired yesterday that a lunatic
named Joseph Lizette, of Hedleyville, near
Quebec, had gone off in a skiff down the
river, saying he was bound for England,
:Beal* has been made for him without
SUOCasS.
At the London Aspizes yesterday, in the
.case Of WalterSteveneori, accused of hay -
Ing cansed the'death of Ralph Shaw, the
Chatham volunteer, last June, the Grand
-Jury brought in a true bill for man-
slaughter.
At yesterday's meeting of the Cenamittee
.,of the Montreal City Council appointed to
investigate the charges of crookedness
against members of the Council, it was de-
cided to commence the examination of wit-
nesses next Tuesday.
The schooner Provost, brick laden, from
• Chatham, Ont., was driven ashore at the
Detour Lighthouse Point, near Sault Ste.
Marie, on the lath inst., during a heavy
northeast gale. The vessel pounded on the
=eke severely, but was scuttled before the
• crew left. All hands are safe.
Mr. William Wemp, of Chatham, has
, been appointed. colonization agent of the
Canadian Pacific Railway for Ontario, and
will make that city his headquarters as
soon as he returns from his visit to the
Northwest. Mr. Wemp was recently tra-
velling agent for the Chicago, Milwaukee &
. St. Paul Railway.
A. 3 -year-old daughter of Mr. Tarte fell
out of a three-story window last evening at
the Ganadien office on to Fabrique street,
Quebec, and would have been instantly
killed but „that her fall was broken by
striking on the shoulder of a French sailor
from the Minerva who was passing at the
time. One thigh is broken and her head is
cut, but her recovery is hoped for.
Mi. Chisholm, M. P. for New Westmin-
ster, was in Ottawa yesterday en route to
Nova Scotia, his native Province, for a
month's holidays. He reports this tope a
boom year in 33ritish Columbia, prosperity
is generally prevalent throughout the Pro-
vince. Lahor is scarce and wages are high.
A bricklayer or stonemason will not work
under $5 a day, and an ordinary laborer
, gets his $2.50 or $8 a day.
Two or three days ago a young Canadian
girl, aged 14 years, died in childbirth at
Watertown, N. Y., through want of praper
attention. The unfortunate girl turns out
to be a daughter of Albert Malwan, a
wealthy farmer residing near North Gower
• i
village, n Carleton county. The father of
the deceased girl has entered an . action
• against R. Andrews, of Burritt's Rapids,
for $50,000 damages for seduction. The
trial will come off at the Autumn Assizes
in Ottawa. Andrews was, an uncle of the
deceased, and is one of the wealthiest and
best known men in his section of the
country.
A true bill for perjury has been found by
:the Middlesex grand jury against Consta-
ble Endicott, who arreptqd Miss Cass.
The interview between Prince Bismarck
. and Count Kalnoky, . Austro-Hungarian
Minister of Foreign.Affairs, will take place
within a few days. •
M. Heredia, French. Minister of Public
Works,, believes that after the completion
• of rdeans for transportation, it will be tares-
sible to reduce the time required for mobil-
ization of an army corps to one day.
In the Russiana„budget for ,4the coming
year the ordinary expenditure is CeVered by
the ordinary revenue and the extraordinary
expenditure is derived purely from the
ordinary revenue, increased,. by taxation
and Partly from 'pending financial opera-
tions.
It is now stated on what is called the
.highest authority that the 9ueen does not
intend publishing a new book. Such
rumors are stigmatized as blumsy inven-
tions. The Empress of India, says this
wise person, is learning Hindustani, and
• that is Her Majesty's only literary occupa-
tion at present. „
The wardrobe of the late King of Bava-
ria has been sold at Munich; and the pro-
ceeds are to be applied. towards the payment
of his debts. The .3t. James' Gazette Alludes
to this transaction as following the 'prece-
dent set in England when Ring George IV.
died ; but this is an entire mistake, as his
wardrobe beoarrigi4he perquisite Of his
pages, and it was sold by them for their
own exclusive benefit. This was a mon-
- strolls job, as the wardrobe fetched an ina.:
mense sum, and the public, who originally
!paid for it, ought to have obtained the pro-
ceeds. King George P1. left every beat he
had ever bought during a period of fifty
, years eight hundred canes and whips,
every' description of Uniforms, the State
• costumes of all his Orders, and magnificent
furs and .p,elieses, some .of which had been
sent to Inin by the Enaperors of Ruehia and
Austria.
Ira L. Green, formerly of Rochester,
N. Y., murdered his wife and two children
at Sarasota, Fla. Green wasafterwards
shot while resisting the officers. '
It did not appear when " tho Chicago
anarchista emerged.froin -their cells to take,
exercise Yeeterday anorningthat the fatal
neves of Wednesde,ylad,any impression on
them: The reptheontatiae Germanpaper
�f Chicago, the stizatie Zeitung; which has
hitherto been in Wier Of the execution of
the anarchists, came out yesterday morn-
ing in an editorial and eomewhat supported
a commutation Of ;the sentence.
Information reached Baltimore yester-
day of a double tragedy, whioh occurred on
the night of tho lath inst. at Huntingtown,
it arena village in 'Calvert County. Edward
Coolidi a fatmeramit hisWife!s,throat With
raPfC After failing /n an attempt to shoot
her, nearly severing her head from her
body. He then tried to kill his sister,
but she escaped, and With the same weapon
he cut his own throat dying after kissing
his two little boys. Jealousy was the cause -
4 brood mare and two Suffolk Punch
colts owned by Mr- D. Nichol Were killed
on the Grand Trunk tracknearlCingston on
Saturday. The animals were valued at
§5oo. .
-
The clothes on the body found a few days
ago near Oswego have been sent to King-
ston and identified as those worn by Kelly,
one of the two convicts who escaped recently
on the warden's pleasure yacht.
Lieuts. Ogilvie and Benson, of "A" Bat-
tery, Kingston, have received orders to re-
port at "C" Battery, British Columbia.
Eighty men have volunteered to go with
them, and all will have gone by Thursday,
Oct. 6th.
In recognition of gallant bravery in
rescuing the crew of a shipwrecked vessel,
the Marine Department has forwarded a
silver watch to the captain of the banana
Mary Fraser, of Windsor, NS., and ala
each to four of the crew.
A long and interesting petition has been
sabmitted to the Montreal Conference of
the Methodist Church by tho Oka Indians,
clearly and forcibly setting forth the In-
dians' side of the case in the difficulty with
the Seminary authorities, and making an
eloquent appeal for justice.
Charles Butler, a colored drayman, left
the Grand Trunk station at London on
Saturday evening about 7 o'clock with a
trunk to deliver in the northern part of the
city. He had driven four or five blocks
when suddenly feeling ill he stepped into
Dr. Wishart's office, and there died in a
very few moments from heart disease. He
was 65 years of age.
Willie, the 5 -year-old son of Lou Dake,
proprietor of the Dake House, St. Thomas,
fell on Saturday from a barrel and dis-
located his shoulder. Mrs. Thomas Ballard
Scott fell on the sidewalk Saturday and
broke her left arm. F. Payne, of Talbot-
ville, split his foot with an axe, which
caught in a clothes line while chopping
wood at his door yard.
A London married man, 25 years old,
whose name is PalmerKellogg, on Saturday
night undertook to pose as a policeman and
arrested Michael Donahue and a young
lady companion, taking the pair toward the
police station. Under the first gas lamp
Mr. Donahue recognized the bogus officer
and had him arrestedon a charge of assault
and disorderly conduct. The police say
that this is one of Kellogg's favorite games,
by means of which he frightens the unwary
and extorts money from them.
Simon Brown, an Indian from Muncey,
imbibed freely whilevisiting the circus at
St. Thomas, and while going home fell
from the train on the St. Clair branch just
outside the city, receiving a terrible scalp
wound seven inches long„ the whole scalp
being loosened from the skull. The wheels
also passed over the left foot, grinding it
into a shapeless mass, He was taken back
to St. Thomas and his leg amputated, and
was then taken to his home. He is a mar-
ried man, with a child.
The Ottawa authorities have ordered the
Customs' collector at Shelburne, N.S., to
release the American ship Bridgewater.
The facts connected with the Bridgewater's
case are that. she ran ashore and put into
Shelburne in distress, when she was de-
clared unseaworthy and ordered to be sold.
Her principal owner, a New Yorker, pur-
chased her, and was going on with the re-
pairs when a claim was made for customs
duty. The owner refused to pay the claim
and the vessel was seized. A protest being
entered the case was investigated, and it is
understood the authorities decided to
liberate the ship unconditionally.
A man named Alof Criesten, 24 'years of
age, whileaitealing a ride on an east -bound
Grand Trunk freight train, fell between the
cars at Colborne, having his right leg badly
'crushed and other portions of his body
badly injured. The limb was amputated,
and,* was conscious long enough to give
his name and age, but no other particulars,
eald'diedatt 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon.
Half of the face side of an envelope was
found in his pocket, the address .on which
is "Peter Nelson, P.O. Box 55, Port Arthur,
Ont;" On the ether side, written in pencil,
is "Robert Johnson Chresher, C.P.R.,
Ont." The body has been placed in a
ooffin and will be buried to -day, no inquest
beifig considered necessary.
Mrs. Hayes, the inhuman mother who
left her twin babes thirty-six hours alone
in her house on Manitoba street, St.
Thomas, some weeks since, on which occa-
sion one was found dead, was on Saturday
tried before County Judge Hughes, on the
charge of naanslaughter. She was found
guilty and sentenced to eighteen months'
imprisonment in the Mercer Reformatory.
On the charge of abandoning the living
child, she was also found guilty and sen-
tenced to six months in the same institu-
tion. The alleged father of the children
admitted having a wife and seven children
at Port Hope. He was committed to jail
for contempt of court during the trial.
The woman's husband is in the Old
Country.
The fund for the relief of the sufferers
by the Exeter theatre fire amounts to
$55,000,
Prince George, the second son of the King
of Greece, will serve three years in the
English navy.
During the past week gold to the amount
of 44,853,631 was imported into New York
from Europe.
• Prince,Phillip, eldest son of the Count
of Paris, is about to start on a journey
around the world. Ho will pioceed by the
way of India, Japan, San Francisco and
New. York.
Ayoub Khan leas been trackedto a spring
neer "the ;Waterless district of Dashtilut.
Bullets with teeth naarks on them were
found in the water. It is supposed that
.the party had been suffering from thirst.
The Moscow Gazette openly avows
sympathy with Dhuleeb Singh, tho Mahara-
jah, and, his claim to, Succeed his father
as Rajah of the Puniatili, and says: "The
people of India believe that Russia will,
sooner or later, free them from the British
yoke4".
The London Times, speaking of the con,
tennial celebration of the signing of the
American Constitution id Philadelphia,
says: The festival celebrates no ordinary
kind Of a birthday. The United States
haviialrPaclY won the way to a foremost
Place among the nations Of the World, and
to their future development of strength and
wealth no limit can be assigned. The con.
stitutien has been II, compromise through-
out, and in no way more clearly or usefelly
than in the reconcilement it bas effected
The London Post, commenting on tile
between National end local claims!
Samoan difficulty, pays the Washington
Conference will be exceedingly ill.adsised
if it accepts the suggestion of Ger any
that ifile shall have Uplu and Apia, vhieh
contain the best land and harbors i the
Samoan group, and England, and Lhe
'United States shall take Savu and Tubeina,
The Post strongly advises the appointment
of a native Government, with advisers
chosen in behalf of the great Powers, but
who shall be men who have no interest in
or be in connection with trading houses of
either of the countries interested.
Gen. Boulanger, in an address to the
officers of his command after the manoeu-
vres by his corps at Clermont-Ferrand
yesterday, strongly urged the necessity of
giving a wider exercise of the offensive
tactics which were proper to the French
army. He concluded his remarks as
follows: "We have to -day more need
than ever of the qualities of a warrior.
No, no; the hour has not yet struck for
the disarmament of the peoples of old
Europe. It is madness to believe it, a
crime to say it, for it points to ' peace at
any price' as the goal to which our enemy
should aspire, and our enemies, who often
appraise us at our real value better than
we do ourselves, know well „that we have
not got as far as that, More than ever
we must continue t ail work. for
France."
Fresh News No
The Brockville Presbytery has dismissed
from the service of the Church J. J. Stiles,
a student employed at Morton.
The Northwest Council has been en.
powered to make ordinances relative b
direct taxation for territorial revenue pir-
poses, and for the incorporation of con.
ponies with territorial objects.
A searching inquiry into Wednesdea
night's collision between the Exhibitira
ferry steamers on Toronto Bay has ben
ordered by the Minister of Marine.
The Toronto Eihibition, which eked
last night, has been the most successfl
ever held in that city. The total gat
receipts were $52,051.45, an increase
$11,144.01 over last year's receipts.
Several of the judges of the Court ,f
Queen's Bench, of Quebec, being incapac.
tated by illness, Chief Justice Sir A. L
Dorion yesterday issued a warrant to tb
Governor-General asking for the appoira
ment of an additional judge. It is rumofet
that the Court will be reorganized at a
early date.
Savage Attack on a Girl by a cow.
A young woman named Nancy Mille;
who lives with her father in Nassitgaweyi
had a terrible experience with an enrage
cow the other day, narrowly escaping wit
her life, and with every shred of clothin
torn from her beady. It occurred in thi
way: Miss Miller went out for the cows t
bring them home to milk, and found thei
in a thioket and sent a dog in to bring thei
out. The dog enraged one of them to sue
an extent that she became frantic an'
rushed out of the bush just where Mii
Miller was standing, and, instead of pursi
ing the dog, rushed on her, hooking an
bruising her in a terrible manner. Had
not been for the young woman's presene
of mind in holding on to a strap whia
secured a bell about the animal's nee,
she would undoubtedly have been killed.
Rough on the Maiden Ladies.
They have a custom at the Andre
Presbyterian Church, Minneapolis, whic
has brought great consternation to th
widows and maiden ladies. It began wit
the children and extended to the congre
gation. On each Sundayfollowing a birth
day the person who has thus shuffled o
another year marches to the front an
drops as many pennies in the missionar
box as he is years old. It can readily
seen how embarrassing this is to man
They resort to all sorts of tricks to 'ran
divulgingthe truth. Sometimes a lad
will put in over a dollar, and as everybod
knows she is not a hundred years old, i
lets her out of the dilemma. The missio
'ary box is the gainer.—St. Punt Pioneer
Press.
He was Relieved Despite Her Suffering
, Over in Petosky, Mich.,, a lady rubbe
phosphorous on her bunion, presumably t
ease the pain, and then retired toiler down he had been intimate. He said she was
couch. Along in the night her husband being held in Windsor, but he was not de.
who was a drinking man, by the way sirens of having her brought back if possi-
thought he saw a fiery eye staring at him ble to get his money without it.
He imagined that he saw a frightful wingei
monster with one blazing eye staring at him To Cure Pain.
and after standing it as long as he could h The paeans which may be readily and
decided to kill it. Slowly he reached tindesuccessfully employed to relieve pain are
the bed till he found his boot -jack, ain important and should he known by all. We
after spitting on his hands he whaled away give you the name of the best remedy in the
The next moment his poor wife gave a yel world for pain, and the information that a
that nearly lifted him out of bed, but whel 10 cent sample bottle can be purchased at
he found the true state of affairs he wa any drug store. Polson's Nerviline, the
immensely relieved, even though she ha new and sure pop pain euro, will never fail
been obliged to walk on crutches over sine( you in time of need. Nerviline is a safe
and prompt cure of all kinds of pain
Honor to Whom Honer. neuralgia, cramps, toothace, headache.
Waiter—Everything eattilifactory, sah? Sure always. Ten and 25 cents bottles at
Guest—Perfectly. drug stores.
Tried to get everything right, soh."
" This is as well a cooked meal as I eve A physician tells the American that no
tasted." one will catch cold who for half an hour
" Yes, sah, thought it would be, sal in the morning exposes the whole surface
Didn't know but maybe you might like tof his body to a temperature lower than it
offer a small fee, eah." will encounter during the day. Unless one
" I really think it would be deserved." sprinkles himself with ether, how is he to
"Yes, salt." find such a tempeiature in the dead of
" Well, send in tho cook."—Ontalia 'Vona winter ?
The junior ialasses in the Kingston Publi In answer to casual question,
Schools are very,. much over -crowded, e A = lelYtlitiUrrlitigNigt:stginit's
much so that pupils cannot be accepted, an To take Pierces Purgative Pellets.
this after six rooms have just been opene
in the new Central School. A demand ha Mrs. Normoyle, an old resident of Oshawa,
been made on the Board for __more ace"' while purchasing goods in Wightmank shoe
modation, but there being no money tkore yosterav morning, died suciaeniy, of
mapply it the situation of the Kingeteheart disease. She,. was in apparent good
Common Schools is still very interesting' health and was chatting pkasantly when
One of the sights at Conoy Isiand r(She fell prostrato on the floor, expiring
cently Was a bulldog Wearing a linen collainstantly. She was 70 years of age and a
and a ftaBby necktie.
Widow, her husband having been killed on
Grace BlitAley, a Fort Hamilton girahe Grand Trunk Railway sono years ago
18 years old, teditin the New Yor,nLWheisttbyr.eports received by
the visheries
Narrows, a distance of a mile and a half, at
A. lost eanary flew into the DarlingtoDepartment show that thie Season has been
Wis.) Republican office while the corounusually successful and profitable for
pOSitor was setting, the type to advertise iiCanadian fishermen,
,NITCHELL.STOWN
Something About 1_11e' Scene Of the 31449
41,11, flints.
The scene of the recent lamentable riot
is eitliate in eountY Cork, Ireland, and
was yisited by a Hamiltonian in June last,
Mae then wrote to a friend in this city the
following narrative of his visit
" We reached Mitchelletown from Cork
after going over portions of two railways
and riding nine miles on a jaunting car.
Lady Kingston is the present heir. We
went through her privath grounds, covering
1,000 acres, under guard of police and
soldiers, as she has had trouble with her
tenants. Strangers, and even townspeople,
are not allowed in without a pass ; a favor
which a relative kindly procured for us.
The income of the estate was at one time
290,01:10 per annum, but it is now down to
214,000. The tenants, being Land Leaguers,
will not pay full rent. The castle is under
guard night and day and it takes £11,000
to pay interest on money borrowed, so that
now Lady Kingston is raising incany by
selling the products of her green -houses. I
observed one blook of fourteen houses
erected by a former Lord of the Manor for
such of his gentry tenants who had grown
old on his lands and had no provision to
keep them. This lord built the houses and
placed a sum of money at interest to pro.
vide an annuity for the occupants. The
three bishops of the district are trustees, on
whose decision rests the selection of those
who shall participate in the beneficiary."
Making Muttons Out of Blood.
The country is learning to utilize waste.
Making buttons of blood is in this direction.
There is a large factory in Bridgeport, near
Chicago, employing about 100 men, boys
and girls, in which waste animal blood is
converted into buttons. The same firm
has another large factory elsewhere. A
man named Hirsch was the first to intro-
duce the • business in this country some
years ago. He lost §16,000 the first six
months, but stuck to it, and he is now
immensely wealthy. There are a number
of similar factories in England. From
8,000 to 10,000 gallons of blood are used in
the Bridgeport factory every day. Nothing
but fresh beef blood is used. Considerable
of the blood evaporates during the process
of drying, but what remains is pure albu-
men. Some of it is light in color and some
dark, according to the chemical treatment
given it. These thin sheets of blood are
then broken up, and are ready to be worked
into various shapes and sizes. Large quan-
tities of the blood sheets are used by cloth
manufacturers for setting" the color in
calico goods. Not only are buttons made
from blood in this way, but, tons of ear-
rings, breastpins, belt clasps, combs and
trinkets are made annually there from
blood. It is a queer, odoriferous business,
but a paying one.—Philadelphia Bulletin.
A Point for Farmers.
In a conversation with Mr. N. G. Batch-
elder, on Tuesday evening, our reporter
learned the following. Mr. Batulieler ex-
ported from this section last year to the
United States over 26,000 lambs. At the
average price, $2.65, the sum paid for them
was $68,900. On these lambs Mr. Batch-
elder paid into the customs office at Morris-
town, N.Y., $13,780-20 per cent. duty. In
answer to an inquiry as to whether in the
event of the duty being taken off it would
result in theprice of lambs being reduced
to the American consumer or raised to the
Canadian producer, Mr. Batchelder said
the price would be raised in Canada by just
the amount of duty. The Americans- did
not raise enough lambs for their own
market and had to buy from Canada. The
American farmer at present gets 20 per
cent. more for his lambs than his Canadian
neighbor, and if the duty were taken off the
only result would be that the Canadian
would get as much as the American. Thus
it will be seen that our farmers lost last
year on Mr. Batchelderai purchase no less
than $13,780, that would have been saved
by commercial union.—Brockville Recorder.
•
.1 Don't Want Relief, But Cure,"
o exclamation of thousands suffering
from catarrh. To all such we say: Catarrh
can be cured by Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy.
It has been done in thousands of cases;
why not in yours? Your danger is in de-
lay. Enclose a stamp to World's Dispen-
sary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.,
for pamphlet on this disease.
A min named Cram, from Bothwell, re-
ported to the London authorities yesterday
that he had been drugged, and robbed on
Thursday of 4$55 by a woman with whom
Ar, you sad, d.osPondent. gloomy?
Are you pore distressed?
Listen to the weletime
" blcldiug—
Be at rest,"
Have you aches and pains unnumbered,
Poisoning life's Gelder], Cup?
Think not there's no balm in Gilead, an
" give it up."
A Golden Remidy awaits ydd—
Golden not aionem name—
Beach, oh, suffering one, and grasp it,
nosahrealauu.
There is but one "Golden" Remedy—Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It,
stands alone as the great ;' blood-purifter,"
"strength -renewer" and " health -restorer,"
of the age The Liver, it regulates, remov-
ing all impurities, The Lunge it
strengthens, cleansing and nourishing
them. The whole system it builds UP, Sup-
plying that above all other things most
needed—pure, rich Blood.
Emma James writes to the Buffalo Com-
mercial Advertiser a circumstantial story
telling how Thomas Jefferson, third Presi-
dent of the United States, was the father
of Madison naming, a colored man, who
was living in Pike County, 0., in 1874.
Heming's mother was Maria Eferuing, maid
to Jefferson's eldest daughter Martha.
Maria Healing was a colored slave and
bore Thomas Jefferson five children, one of
whom was Madison Homing. Jefferson
promised Maria that all her children
should become free when they reached the
ago of 21. This promise he kept religiously.
The treatment of many thousands of cases
of those chronic weaknesses and distressing
ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids'
Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.,
has afforded a vast experience in nicely adapt-
ing and thoroughly testing remedies for the
cure of woman's peculiar maladies.
Dr. 'Pierce's Favorite Prescription
is the outgrowth, or result, of this great and
valuable 'experience. Thousands of testimo-
nials, received from patients and from physi-
cians who, have tested it in the more aggra-
vated and obstinate cases which bad baffled
their skill, prove it to be the most wonderful
remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of
suffering women. It is not recommended as a
"cure -ail," but as a most perfect Specific for
woman's peculiar ailments.
As a powerful, invitgoratiug tonic,
it imparts strength to the whole system,
andto the womb and its ap,pendages in
particular. For overworked, worn- out.'
:run-down," debilitated teachers, milliners,
dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop -girls," house-
keepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women
generally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription
is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled
115 an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic.
As a soothing and strengthening
nervine, "Favorite Prescription" is une-
qualed and is invaluable in allaying and sub-
duing nervous excitability, irritability, ex-
haustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and
other distressing, nervous symptoms com-
monly attendant upon functional and organic
disease of the womb. It induces refreshing
sleep and relieves mentat anxiety and de-
°Yldree's Favorite Prescription
sipsnonr. pnadie
gitimate medicine, carefully
compounded by an experienced and skillful
physician, and adapted to woman's delicate
organization. It is purely vegetable in its
composition and perfectly harmless in its
effects in any condition of the system. For
morningsickness, or nausea, from whatever
cause arising, weak stomach, indigestion, dys-
pepsia and kindred symptoms, its use, in small
doses, will prove very beneficial.
"Favorite Prescription 99 IS a post..
Vivo cure for the most complicated and ob-
stinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive flowing,
painful menstruation, unnatural suppression,,,
prolapsus, or falling of the womb, weak back.
"female weakness, ' anteversion, retroversion,
bearing -down sensations, chronic congestion,
inflammation and ma
muni co rat ionofthewoomrblies.n-
riaation, pain dtenderness inva
accompanied with "internal heat."
As a regulator and promoter of func-
tional action, at that critical period of change
from girlhood to womanhood, "Favorite Pre-
scription" is a perfectly safe remedial agent,
and can produce only good results. It is
equally efficacious and valuable in its effects
when taken for those disorders and derange-
ments incident to that later and most critical
period, known as "Tho Change of Life."
"Favorite Prescription'', when taken
In connection with the use of Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxative
doses of Dr. Pierce% Purgative Pellets (Little
Liver Pills). cures Liver, llildney and Bladder
diseases. Their combined use also removes
blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and
SOrofulouS humors from the system.
"Favorite Prescription,is the only
raedicine for women, sold by druggists, under
a positive guarantee, from the manu-
facturers, that it will give satisfaction in every
ease, or money will be refuhded. This guaranz
tee has been printed on the bottle -wrapper,
and faithfully carried out for many years.
Large bottles (100 doses) MOO, or six
bottles for $5.00.
For large, illustrated Treatise on Diseases ok
Women (160 pages, paper -covered), send ten
cents in stamps. Address,
World's Dispensary Medical Association,
663 Main St., BUFFALO. N. T.
c, N L. 39
II 01 • 14,-,;1
IVIICI1 8 61k), ‘211rts triff 1011 III u1,11 Mut my to :4,11 them tar a
Woo Alla then 111M: OM re8.11.11 .4,1111, 1 too3 n ...die.'
tare. 1 havehtede the d hates. ot 1,1 rr, li 11 1.hi.n5' or 10 AU,
Itio SICKNESS a lite.long study, 1 whereat my remedy
to cur6 Om worst eases. Dilemma ethers le.tre failed 10 00
reason for not now recolv 1 ng a goro. nand at Alice Thr a
treetleo arsd a VIVO 508125 01 my infallible remedy. Give
Express and Poet Office. It costs you nothing ft or a trial'
snst Twill ears you. Address DR. II. G. MOT,
Brand Ofilco, 37 Tom St" Toronto.
DU "S
BAKING
POW
THE COOK'S ETEST MEM
ONSUMPTION.
have 0 pos10001'6'1)00 for the abiqe dinette° j by lie use
Miens:01de aerates of the worst kind and Ofleng standing
hare been mired, Indeed" en strong . In Its
alneeityf that I WM send TWO nOT1'I.F.14 together
With a VATXAlitti TUATIAS «0 thle Mina,. to any
enterer. Oleo ..pr'.. anti 1' 0. odorant,
Branch Offide1, f.17 tOnio'St., Toronto