The Exeter Advocate, 1890-1-9, Page 7IIXCIIiB FitPIMI TSE fit Ol.NDOLi<ERS.,"
iNixeerpte from Olibeet, arid Sulliven'a New
Coude Opera.
Here is one of the concerted pieces from
the t Deed' /leek)," sunt; by Mareo and
iiueeppe, the gondoliers, and Tessa and
ianetta, their sweethearts ;
Ina contoniplativo fashion
,And a.'.ttauquil frame of mind,
Free trom every kind of passion,
" Some eolutiOld let ua find.
Let ps gresp the situation,
Solve the complicated plot -
Quiet, calm deliberation
Disentangles every knot.
I, no doubt, Giuseppe wedded-
That's of course a slice of luck.
He is rather dunder-headed,
Still distinctly he's a duck.
'a, I, a victim, toe, of Cupid,
Marco married -that is clear,
Ee'e particularly stupid,
Still distinctlyhe's a dear,
To Gianetta I was metes,;
lean prove it in a trice ;
Though her charms are overrated
Still I own she's rather nice.
u. I to Tessa, willy-nilly,
All at once a victim fell.
Sho is what is called a silly,
Still sho answers pretty well,
Now when we were pretty babies
Some one married us, that is clear-
And if I eau catch her
111 pinch her and scratch her,
And send her away with a flea in her ear
Tsui. He, whom that young lady married,
To receive her can't refuse.
'Meas. If I overtake her
111 warrant I'll make bei
To sbake in her aristocratical shoes
Dia.. (to Tess.)
If she married your Giuseppe
You and he will have to part -
Tees (to Gia.)
If I have to do it
I'll warrant ebe'll rue it-
I'll teach her to marry the man of my
heart I
Tees. (to Gia.)
If the married Messer Marco
You're a spinster, that is plain -
Via. (to Tess.)
No matter, no matter-
If I can get at her
I doubt if her mother will know her
again.
All. Quiet, calm deliberation
Disentangles every knot.
—Exeunt, pondering.
Fess.
Jar.
mar.
The Country Woman.
Before the blacksmith's shop she waits,
In her bi.h country waggon eittiug,
Wbilo the good smith with friendly haste
Her horse's clumsy aboo is fitting.
.Be pares and measures, stirs his fire
Ria hammer blows rn.g out with shrillness
Into the August afternoon,
Steeped in its weary twilight stillness.
With anxious eye she watches'him,
tier busy thoughts are homeward straying
Shadows grow long o'er field and road,
And weary farmers leave their haying,
:High in the elm tree o'er the way,.
On sunlit boughs the birds are singing
Their cradle songs above their nests,
Within the whispering sweetness swinging.
She knows at home the patient cows
Stand lowing at the bars to greet bei;
And anxious goodman swansthe road.
And sends the children out to meet her.
She knows the supper fire is lit,
The hearth swept clean, the kettle singing,
The'Eltcben table cleared to hold
The things from town that she is bringing.
And smilee in honest rustic pride,
.At shrewd hard bargains she's been making
Of snowy eggs and creamy cheese
For cloth and shoes and" things for bakin'. "
The setting sun lights up her face,
Turning ite harshness into beauty -
Picture of rustic peace and pride,
Of homely happiness and duty.
L. E. Eirk in Boston Transcript.
Browning Dead.
-Now dumb is bo who waked the world to speak,
And voiceless bangs the world beside his bier,
Our words are sobs, our cry of praise a tear ;
We are the smitten mortal, we the weak ;
We see a spirit on earth's loftiest peak
Shine and wing bence the way he makes more
clear; •1
Sae a great tree of life that never bete
Dropped leaf for aught that age of storms
might wreak,
Snell ending is not death ; such living shows
What wine illumination brightness sheds.
Mont one big heart to conquer man's old foes—
The coward and the tryant-and the force
01 101 these weedy monsters' rising heads,
When song is talk from springs of turbid
source. George Meredith,
CHEESE AS FOOD.
• .It Should be so Prepared es to be Easily
Digested.
/Inch difference of opinion hag pre-
vailed in regard to the value,of cheese as
/trod, but we are beginning to get at feats
with a better understanding of the rela-
iiorta of the digestive functions to food
.elemente, says Good Housekeeping. Cheese
Iiaa been mnoh lauded by many, because
,of the great amount of nutritive food ele
=lents it contains, and people have been
•urged indiscriminately to oat it freely,
some enthusiasts making the most ex-
travagant claims for it as a health diet.
But many people who have sought to
follow this counsel find themselves speedily
the victims of indigestion and dyspepsia.
They would consider it little short of
treason to obarge their disordered digestion
to the cheese, but the truth is the cheese is
the most probable cause in any snob case.
.Although,, eo far aa its constituents are
concerned, cheese is fairly entitled to its
lame as a model food, yet in raw cheese
-these oonetitnenta are very difficult of solu-
tion by the digestive juices -that is, raw
:cbeese is indigestible to a degree that makes
it unavailable asfood except to the strong.
east and healthiest atomaohe, and should
not be eaten by any one who finds on trial
that it gives hie stomach the Least diecom.
fort. It is found, however, that cooking
,the oheese removes this difficulty and
ea f di eition and as
makes Y o cheese e i ,
nntritioua as tender meat or more so.
►arions methode have bean adopted for
;ibis pnrpose, from plain broiling, frying or
:toaating to the most elaborate compound
Siebe,. The main point is to get the
oheeee cooked eo that the stomaoh can
digest it.
Wearing !tubber Shoes.
Mnoh of the diecnmfort of rubber shoes
'would be avoided if the wearers of them
were a little more discriminating. Rubbers
vire of inestimable value in wet weather,
but they Amnia be instantly removed when
the pavements become dry. Being water-
proof, they prevent the escape of the
,natural exhalations of the akin. Wet feet
resulting from confined perspiration are
often more injurious than an nnptoteoted
sxpoeure to the elements would be. Rub -
bars, like umbrellas ehonid be need onlyl
y
transiently.
Two Rind of Fondness.
"Oh;;" said a very email girl. "1 did
.Slava tench a lovely Christman. Delle and
tends', and "-•" Whhioh did you like the
'batt, the dolls or the candy?" "strange
/elks don't know," was the reply. "'liked
'the candy, but I loved' the dollies."
Tennyson s new book of poetns will be
entitled " Demeter, end will eontein about
*twenty-eight poems, including one on the
jubilee.
WHAT HELL Ili LIKE,
Ministers Give Their Version of the
Plane,
002 BIDERABLB PIVhB8ITY 01' OPINION..
(Philadelphia Record.)
" To pose the impossible and sorgte the
inscrutable" wee the paramount aim of e
metaphyeioal clique of Boston men and
maidens in the days of the Concord Behoof
of .Philosophy. But the Concord School
has gone the way of all things mortal and
the impossible is,otill unpoesed, Notwith
Mending the Bostonians' "failure, the fad of
speculative anticipation has recently struck
Philadelphia with terrific force, and it is
quite the thing nowadays tp , tug at the
corner of the oartain that veils the future
and try to get a' glimpse of the good and
bad things beyond. Men are not content
to postpone their knowledge of heaven till
they get there. They demand, to know
here and now just what sort of a place the
realm of the best and the blest is to be and
whether it is a place at all. And it is with
equal anxiety, not unmixed with awe, that
they endeavor to fathom the mysteries of
the future home of ' the worst and the
cursed. Their curiosity overpowers them
and they, scornfully reject the admonition
to patience, coupled with the eesnrance
that they will know all about it, and more
than enough, in due time. Theoft-repeated
reminder that if he keeps straight ahead in
the road he is now travelling he will be sure
to come to it by and by only disgusts the.
impatient questioner, 'who still continues to
fly madly about with the same vexed epee -
tion : "Where is hell ? "
THE EDITOR Or THE "PRESBYTERIAN " SPEAIie.
When one of these questioners pounced
upon Rev. Dr. Mutobmore, pastor of the
Memorial Presbyterian Church, a few
days ago and breathlessly propounded this
burning question the doctor was unable to
answer him off -hand. He had a distinctly
formulated idea that this earth, rejuven-
ated and rebeautified, was to be the
future Heaven ; but the location of hell he
had never dogmatized about. It was a
Subject he did not like to dwell upon.
" It is a certainty, however," be said,
" so sure as the soul is immortal, that
memory will be an important feature of
the life to'oome. Without memory there
would be annihilation. The sanctified will
look back upon their earthly life and its
Bins, but it will be with joy that they have
been overcome. The wioked, on the other
hand, will have their awful misdeeds ever
before them, and their evernieting realiza-
tion of canes and effect will make their ex-
istence the refinement of wretchedness. I
do not know whether the wioked will all be
gathered together in one fixed spot,
but whatever hell is it was not pre-
pared for man. It was for the
devil and his angels, and man brings
himself there by his own misdeeds. A
drunkard with delirium tremens could not
be happy in Heaven. It is logically nines.
nary that men who have so debased them.
selves ehonid have a different abode. The
man who has abused his body will suffer
the physical as well as the spiritual end
mental ooneequences in the world to come.
The winebibber will parry his gout to hell
with him and the glutton his dyspepsia.
Thus the, diseases of this life will be tear-
fully perpetuated."
NO PHYSICAL. SUFFERING.
"No punishment could be eo severe so
that inflicted by memory and conscience,"
said Rev. Byron A. Woods, cf Gethsemane
Baptist Chnroh. " I do not believe that
there will be physical suffering in hell; but
the angering of the mind is infinitely
greater. Where Heaven and hell may be
no one knows, but they are immeasurably,
separated by the impassable golf between
holiness and guilt.' The Bible piotnres of
hell, or Gehenna, are drawn from the valley
of Hinnom, a gloomy vale without the con-
fines of Jerusalem, where fires of wormwood
continually burned. Conscience is the
worm that dieth not, and God's absence
will make eternal darkness."
mmSHOP woIToKEn's IDEA.
" Hell is a place, and it ie also a °harao-
ter," answered Bishop Whitaker, of the
Pennsylvania diocese of the Protestant
Episcopal Church. " And the same may
be said of heaven. What the Scripture
tells as of them is largely figurative, but
the awful truth of their existence cannot
be eneered away. The skeptical urchin
who thought to explode his pions mother's
doctrine by declaring that if all the wicked
went to hell the eupply of brimstone
would soon give out was properly re-
buked. ' Don't you worry over that,
Johnny,' was the reply. ' All the folks as
go to hell '11 take their own brimstone along
of 'em; "
THONGS TO LASH THE SPIRIT.
" Remorse, despair, hopelessness, dejec-
tion -these are the thongs that will lash
the hell -bound spirit," said Rev. Dr.
Eynett, Secretary of the Methodist Episco-
pal Board of Church Extension. " The
blessed spirits may be housed in a vast
city as high as it is long, with freedom to
Boar to other worlds, just as Philadelphians
may travel toother cities. But the wicked
will be somewhere eternally imprisoned,
like the criminal's in our penitentiary, with
their own bitter memories as their ever-
lasting companions."
DARKNESS OP THE MIND WILL BE PAINFUL.
"' The mind can make a heaven of hell,
a bell of heaven,' " said Rev. Russell
Conwell, quoting the words of Milton's
fallen angel ; " whether hell may be a
plane, we know not ; but that it is a mie•
erable state in which the evil -disposed shall
spend eternity we are assured. I believe
there will be no real fire nor brimstone
there, but the terrors of the soul and the
darkness of the mind will be vastly more
painful."
A GREAT PRISON HOUSE.
" It is reasonable to suppose that both
heaven and hell are local habitatione,
said Rev. Dr. J. A. Warden, Superintend-
ent of Sabbath -school work of the Pres. •
byterian Church. " In heaven W., believe
the life will be much the same as oars on
earth, only infinitely more blessed. Birds,
beasts and fishes, trees and flowers, and
much that goes to make our happiness
here may have their counterpart in the
next world. But hell will be the great
prison house, where all the refuse of the
ages will be thrown, and where the
prisoners will be tortured by the stings
of conscience. The inhabitants of the two
places, I think, will be in the same proper.
tion as today ; that is, the number in hell
will bear the same ratio to those in heaven
et the world's imprisoned criminals do
now bear to the free. There will be grades
of blessedness and misery, and 1 see no
reason why a man who had lived up to
the best light he knew might not have
a comparatively comfortable time in hell."
rnott,A CATHOLx0 STANDPOINT.
"I believe p word of Scripture ie
every
literal when it describes the pangs of hell,"
said Father O'Reilly, rooter of the Roman
Catholic Church of St. Cohn the Even -
genet. " The burning , lake and tbe fire
and brimstone are the aura reward of the
wioked, but these cannot be so terrible as
the everlasting withdrawal of God's mercy,
The punishment of thewioked will be
eternal, The righteons will reign in
Heaven, while some oburohmen bold that
there will be a middle place for the un-
baptised infants and those mon of all
nations who have lived morally upright
lives without the pale of the true Church."
Rabbi JoTsHh E$V1Wgr. aEprolo.
f the Tie.
formed Hebrew Congregation of Eeneeeth
Israel, professeeentire ignorance of the life
beyond thQ grave, i
I don't believe in
an
inspired Bible," he said, "and besides the
Old Testament, whioh guides as, tells us
almost nothing of the future state. ,But
from the unsolved preblem of life, I can't;
believe that ,,death is the end of all tbinfis,
and I must think that the soul is immor-
tel. But how, 'when, what, where is man's
future state I know not. In the would to
come it seems probaLle that tach man will
lake up hie work just whore he left°it off.
It will be merely like a promotion 'cir,tren.
eition from the freshman to the sophomore
class.,'
WHERE NICKEL COMES FRom.
Four Thousand'rone Per Year the;,Produet
of a Single Canadian -lefty*.
In the Copper Cliff Mine near Sudbury,
Canada, it is said more niokel is being pro.
doted than the entire market of tbe world
calls for at current prices, says the Youth's
Companion. A little branch railway off the
main line of the Canadian Pacific Railway,
four miles in length, leads out to the mine,
whioh opens into the facie of a'crag of the
brown, oxidized Laurentian rook oharao.
teristio of this region: The miners are now
at work at a depthwf about 300 feet below
the surface. As fast as the nickel and copper
bearing rook is hoisted out it is broken up
and piled upon long beds or rioke of pine
wood to be calcined, or roasted, for the
purpose et driving out the enlphur which
it, contains. The roasting process is of the
nature of lime -kilning or charcoal -burning.
Eaoh great bed of ore requires from one to
two months to roast. When roasted the
rook goes to the principal smelter, a pow-
erful blast furnace, " jacketed "-in mining
phrase -with running water to enable it to
sustain the great heat requisite to reduce
the crude, obdurate mineral to fluidity.
The arose of the molten mase is first
allowed to flow off and afterwards the
nearly pore nickel and copper, blended
together in an alloy called the " mat," or
matte, is drawn off at the base of the fur-
nace vat into barrow -pots and wheeled
away, still liquid and fiery hot, to cool in
the yard of the smelter. The mat .00n -
tains about 70 per Dent; of nickel, the re-
maining 30 per cent being mainly cop-
per. When cool the oonioal pot loaves of
mat can easily be cracked. inpieoes by,
means of heavy hammers. The fragments
are then packed in barrels and shipped to
Swansea in Wales and to Germany, where
the two conetitneat metals are separated and
refined by secret processes which are jean
Daily guarded by theKmannfaotnrers. So
jealously is the secret kept that no one in
America hue yet been able to learn the
process, although one young-metallnrgiet
spent three years at Swansea, working as a
common laborer in the factories, in order
to obtain it. At present there are pro-
duced daily at the Copper Cliff Mine about
ninety pot loaves of mat each weighing
nearly 450 pounds, an output wbioh yields
an aggregate of more than 4,000 tons of
nickel a year.
On What Yon Can Swear Off.
You can swear cif on telling your wife
that you have been detained at the office to
make out bills.
On declaring that the world owee you wa
living and you are waiting for it to pa; " :n
On attempting to make your neig , • ,- e
think you•own the earth.
On borrowing a dollar and saying "I'll
give it to you to -morrow," when yon don't
intend to pay it back at all.
On leaving the enow on your sidewalk
when you know it is dangerous for every
one who passes by.
On riding on a free railroad pass and
keeping your seat when paying passengers
are standing.
On trying to make your friends believe
that because yon have a carriage yon hate
to ride in the horse care.
On telling everybody that you once were
in better circumstances.
On snubbing others who do not happen
to own as much of the world's goods as
you do, but who have more sense.
On going into a business and trying to
give points to those who have been in it
long before your were born.
On marrying awife for her money and
then taunting her with her ill looks.
On pretending to be a Christian and yet
breaking all the roles that are the funda-
mentaI principles of that religion. -New
Haven News.
A Business Chance.
Anxious mama (of six daughters, to
eldest) -Ethel, you really must exert your-
self more. Here it is the middle of your
second season, end yon haven't bad a single
offer yet. Yon know I must bring Clara
out next Beason. and Mand the next ; and
there are three to come after them.
Ethel -Yes, mama, I have been consider-
ing the matter, and the only way is for
yon to persuade papa to by us all a machine,
and let us learn typewriting.
Very Tree.
Stingy Employer -What? W ant more
pay ? John Jacob Astor began work on a
salary of $2 a week and he died worth
$40,000,000.
Store Boy- Yes, air. There's a big
deference in bosses
It is said that one,of the characters re-
presented in.Gerome's picture of the ',Duel
After the Masquerade''' was Gerome
eelf.
Marion Harland says that the best Chist-
mae presents . she got in 1854 were a gold
watch , and a prospective husband. Her
father gave ber the watch and her "feller"
proposed and was accepted on Christmas
eve. Sho Ilan both the watch and the
husband yet. The watch still keeps good
time and the hnaband is more to be depended
upon." Happy Marion Harland 1 People
who -perinea her nook book ought to know
something about her eeoret.
Wooden oofen;
` Vain regrets •
Happens often;
Cigarettes.
Samuel
Tragdon, who wag servinga life.
sentence in the Iowa the kill-
ing a manfor oheeriag for Jefi Davit, has
bebn pardoned by. Governor Latrabee.
To batt! it .a thing: of the pest,
And the spa thine'' mit tit last ;
Whit do we care
Of .Flo tbe worryand tear, •
to pe e Milt froth the storm kinlee1
White the akin lea thing 01 the test ?
90 fit life with its tnrtnofl tact,
Our citron let us learn to oast
Away; shat) we.ntind .
46i -tune that's blind,
Or the adverts 'toes of a fate unkind',
When the tem shin t out at lent ?'.
-You never - can tell the sine o a
w man
n s fief hi the,
g y (Cegiteaoy of lher
sighs.
COD leIVErt Off,
whyWand'a Iiow to fake a Yttlnuble
Medicine,
Cod liver oil is, as its name indicatee,
obtained from the livers of codfish'. It is
an agent whioh could hardly be dispensed
with, being a nourishing tonic of exceeding
value.. Many people have an idea that
consumption is the one disease for wbiola
it; is peouliarly adapted, and they fail to
recognize the fact that it is equally effeotive
in ,many ether affections. Hence, when
physicians prescribe it, patients at. Once.
assume that they have trouble, with their
lun.
Tgehe accepted fiatof diseases in whioh
ood liver oil j0 of epeeist efficacy is much
larger than it was a goore of . years ago.
Undoubtedly physicians in old tunes, in
attempting to combat disease, often used
dregs which depressed and reduced the'
vital powers, doing thereby more harm
than good. All that is changed now
Physioians of the present may be • geld to
ignore to a certain extent the disease, but
nourish and keep up -".restore the life
that is being drained, build up . the tissues
being' wasted," Cod liver oil is practically
a food, and as enoh only does it act.' It
nourishes and fattens wasted and wasting
bodies, and in that way it often checks
the progress even of pulmonary oonsump.
tion•
Among the Many affeotiona in whioh it
is given is nervous debility. In some.
coughs, too, even where the lunge areper-
featly sound, it proves admirable and often
cures the same. Its taste ie so disagreeable
that comparatively few patients can take
it, a fact much to be deplored. Many are
the ways devised to make it less unpleasant,
flavoring it with pepperment, mixing it
with coffee, rinsing the .mouth first with
brandy or, whiskey, pouring it into the
froth of beer. Some recommend that it be
salted and peppered and then " bolted
down," afterward the mouth to be rinsed
with tincture of myrrh and water. Lately
it has been suggested that a few grains of
salt be dropped on the tongue before taking
the cod liver oil, as by that means it will
be rendered palatable. Or a bite of pickle
before and after taking the oil will render
it acceptable. -Boston Herald.
MAGAZINE READERS.
what States are 1N oat Represented on Sub-
scription Books.
•
The subscription lists of the large maga-
zines reveal some interesting facts, if one
has the opportunity of studying them, and
the composite impression one receives after
glancing over four or five is a peculiar
knowledge in itself, says tbe Philadelphia
Times.
It convinces one in the first place that
seven-eightbe of the subscribers to the
magazine literature of to -day are of the
female sex. On the list of one magazine
have been counted 180 names encoeseively
before coming to that of a man. Divide
tbe lists into States and there is another
surprise.
Yon will see, for example, that Iowa is
the most productive of all the States for
the magazine publisher -that is, there are
more subscribers to magazines in Iowa,
proportionately, than in any other single
State in the Union.
The next is Connecticut, and then in order
come New York, Pdaeaachneette, Illinois,
Ohio, Pennsylvania and eo on.
The clergy also form a very large part
of the subscription lista. Of femme men in
public life, the names of Secretary Bayard,
ex -President Hayee, Senator Edmnnde and
George W. Childs are most frequently
encountered.
'rm . Gladetone's name appeare on the lists
o two American megazinee, the reason for
the preference of the American editions
being his desire to follow the advertising
pages as a guide to American industries and
new ideas.
Foreign enbeoribera innumerable attest
to the wonderful circulation of Ameri-
can magazines abroad, one periodioal hav-
ing regular paid subscribers in forty-six of
the sixty nations of tho civilized world.
Didn't Need It,
Tramp -Will yon give me permission,
lady, to go into your barn to commit eni-
oide ?
Lady (filled with pity) -Poor man.
Here's a piece of mince pie for yon.
Tramp -Thank you, marm, but I've got
some " Rough on Rate," that'll do just
as well,
The It umber 9.
- Beginning with neat week the number 9
will be required to earn its salary as it
hasn't done in a thousand years. For a
hundred and ten to come it will have to do
duty every time a date is written in boil.
The writer whose 7's and 9'e cannot be div
tingniahed from each other must study to
improve his style.
At Midnight.
She (sweetly) -Do you believe in the
single tax theory, George ?
He (angrily) -Not by a jugfuI, especially
when it is on the floor, point up, in, the
night and I have this blessed kid in my
arms.
-Buffalo Bill, at the zenith of his a_ op.
nlarity and success, is not ashamed of the
fact that he was once a scout. He scouts
the very idea.
-Dr. McGlynn's former parishioners
have made him a Christmas present of
$1,600, which is jest double what was given
him a year ago.
-"Doctor," said a sufferer to a dentist,
" what wonld you give me for an aching
tooth ?" " I wouldn't give yon anything,"
he replied ; " I'd take it,"
-Barred Out All Around : hire. Littinn
(as her husband enters) -Hush 1 Baby's
asleep 1 Mr. Littinn-But that's the only
time I Lave a chance to be heard.
-" Another good man gone wrong,"
mused the parson as he atood at his study'
window and saw the deacon alip on a piece
of ice, carom on the sidewalk and glide
glibly into the gutter.
--The ' cable care andee greatlyins-
pressed the Sioux chiefein ashig ton'
One of hem said ; " White man heap
great. Makes wagons go without horses,.
and makes wind born."
ACOm N .. E T To EMSN nVA
,
She tripped alot g with ribbons flying.
From a brand new bat she'd just been buying
And jewellry gal re.
Au toy spot lay in her Week -
Sheana flat neon her bask
Sho slipped, DHis Minerva More.
-A black base -The jubilee singer.
-The average creditor is a man of wait.
Cams UP.
Wily do von yield to the bless?
You can be gay it you choose,
Have your fell measure
Of joy and of pleasure-
You're a fool to refuse.
What tbougb you've bele overdue!
What though no 'maiden niece you t
You can laugh --
11a I hal Intl -
You can ebaff-
Hat bat he
What in the world makes you blue 7
-A Philadelphia physician says that
peatnte, taken in moderation and thor-
oughly chewed, are " Oret rate for brain
workers
r
a o` e `e nweeena\nUeneneww wwwwieanewnwase ' \mak\ Sween,:
for infants and Childretno.
"Castoriaissowefadaptedtochildrenthat Caster's, allies Celle, VOIXITHPatiOls.
Irecommend'iteaeuperiortoany prescriptioe Sour Stomach, Diarrlto a, EraetatioO,
known tome." H. A. ARcalia, M. D, rt'i1ls Worms, sivee sleep, and prgmctai
111 flog Orford et„ Brooklyn, N. Y. Without injurious aledfcatfon.'
Tint CmTAtnt COMPANY, TT Murray Street, N. Y.
EVEREST'S RIEXUGHCELLEDSYRUP
CANNOT BE .
Try it and be convinced of Its wonderful curative
properties, Price 26 cents.
'run „rain G,i oeeelftti Remedy ever disco*.
emu, as it Is crrrain..itl tis elreets and does
not blister. Read proof below.
SPiY@H CURE.
0,: rue z or CrrenLES A. Sisrnon,
BeEED7 R 00 -.
CL.:V .LAND s -'-AS• AND TROTT'S° BRED RoaSES.
ELIIWOOD, ILL, Nov, 20, 1888.
Dr. B. 0. IiE.vtip Lr; Co.
Dour Sirs :I have always pnrehaeed yourIien
call's S avid Cure by the half dozen bottles, I
would Iike prices in larger quantity.. I think itis
dine of the best liniments on earth. I have usedit
en my stables for three years.
Yew. truly, Cir:1.e. A. SyYDEo.
Im1 51'iU'ALL'S SPAM CURE.
Ba000Lrv, N. T„ November 3, 1563,
Dr. R, T. iENDALt. Cu..
• 1,cur Sits :i desire to give re you testimonial of my
u, 1 opinlor. o l your Oenda l's Spavin Cure. I have
t It t r Lameness, h,tifi Joints and
I ,^ on, nr t I have found it u sure cure, I Coral -
r_, ,+-5t nd it to ailhorsetrten.
truly,- A. EI. Grxnnn•r.
liana:for Troy LaundryStab:es.
rt c E;EL U SRAVIN CURS.
SA •m, WIN—,Cir Cors^r, Ohio, Dee. 18, 1663.
En. D..1„. Iix.SDALL Co.
Gant i a fc..118 rr;r duty to so'' what I hove done
v'it8 your H'euunit S3 e is Cn ..I have cured
twenty -Ave _ horsy that had la ivies. ten of
laic,; Bore, cant afflicted n ith'Oii 12ead and
seven of'Bi;r.Itiw. Since I have had One of your
1Lnoks• and fo9lowcd t.tu citscctions, I have never
10-ta Carp. ni'n>; fit::.
•�'..._.:t, t:.E:y • AsD rn' Trate-r,. •
IIurae Doetor.
"r t s'S� CURE
,r,„f,1 ^-.•-i o t le, or abr.' bottles for $S. Alt Drng-
.fae.
tave•lrer5-, ;et itIoryou, or.itwill besent
o art t d 'rose on receipt of price by tins propprie-
r '. •:. i',a . 1t 5vOA .L Co.,ueslurgh
3(117,^i T'; rI3,?+ D7'F7�'GlsTS.
•
SURE'
Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles inci-
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Distress after
eattfing Pain in the Side, &c. While their most
remarkable success has been shown in curing
SICK
Headache, yet CARTER's Lerma LIVER PILLS
are equally valuable in Constipation, curing
and preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also correct all disorders of the stomach,
stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Even if they only cured
HEAD
Ache they would be almost priceless to those
who suffer from this distressing complaint
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here,' and those who once try them will find
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be willing to do without them.
But after all sick bead
CHE
fit the bane of se many lives that here is w)tere
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are very small
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
please gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
five f r $1. Sold everywhere, or sent by s at 26 mail.
CABTEB MEDICINE CO., New York.
Sma111MM. Small Dani Small Prim
THE KEY TO HEALTH.
Unlocks all the clogged avenues of the
Bowels, Kidneys and Liver, carrying
off gradually without weakening the sys-
tem, all the impurities and foul humors
of the secretions; at the same time Cor-
recting Acidity of the Stomach,
curing Biliousness, Dyspepsias
Headaches, Dizziness, Heartburn,
Constipation, Dryness of the Skin,
Dropsy, Dimness of Vision, Jaun-
dice, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Scro-
fula,.
Flutteringofthe
he heart,
Ner-
vousness,and en lalb'aII
these ani an other similar Complaints
yield to the happy influence of BURDOCK
BLOOD BITTERS.
Por sale by all Leedom.
T.MILBURIt & CO.rietors Toronto
Proprietors,
1 Y 1
H Acf �Y AR D,
IA / F" 8 r ate ■ s a a r --
'CURES RHEUMA11SM
FREEMAN'S
WORM POWDERS
etre dtcase uttotake. Cenfaintheir 'mit
Ffip e0ti e. Is d xkfei, sure tend e edual
destroyer ofaeormd' eft Children orwid'tiles.
(TRADE MARK:)
Try Everest's Lager Regulator
For Disea•ai 01' the Liver Kidneys, &o., and Purify-
in: of t e abed. Price $1. Six bottles for 55.
For Sale uy ALL DRUGGIST:
klsnufnctured Only by
ULU. M. EVER1IIST, Cursusr, PoitSay Om.
Have you tried the Colebr<cted..,
EL
IC
SHOE. DRESSING ? ;-
If not don't fail to do so at once.
It is not a polish but a wonderful
leather preservative it will make the
finest or coarsest shoe as soft and
pliable as kid and very easy to the foot.
It will make them absolutely water-
proof, and if occasionally dressed with
this dressing will last more than twice
as long as otherwise.
We Mean What We Say.
It is the very life of leather. It can
be applied at any time. No trouble--
Shoe
rouble-Shoe can be polished immediately
afterwards.
PILZGE, - 10 ,a 15 Cents per Box.
Sold by all first-class stores. Sam-
pies mailed -Stamps taken.
OLIVER CABANA Jr.,
SOLE MANUFACTURER,
BUFFALO, N. Y.
THE LIGHT RUNNING
SEWING MACH
ki A S
NO
EQUAL.
,THE
Lht",.
THE ONLY GEWlitleti
THAT re. V ES
NEW FIN E•SE W1NG MACHINE
E ah
CE,MkSS'
4ILL ATLANTA GH TEX.crlwAGO - 28UNION SQUARENY. DALLAS,
„6. 5PNKRANC16Ce.CA
WEAK MEN sad �roxuaEaMtC can
quickly ctnra thorn-
selves of Wasting
Vitality, Lost It'anhood, from yyouthful
errors, etc., quietly at Some. Hook on all
private diseases, Sent fret) (sealed). Perfectly
reliable. Over 30 year's' experience. Address-
GIXaD>oD 1'XZ*X. CO., TORONTO, Canada.
ADIESour "Rollet for Women" is sato and always
rellsbie ; bettor than Ergot, Oxide, Tansy
or Pennyroyal ]ills. Inures regularity.
Send for particulars, Address
GILDED PILL CO., TORONTO, Canada.
BAERDS FORCED oneootbeetfaces,hair
m
on bag Det beadle, in Soto W dsye. Magid. Latest nod
greatest achievement of modern science 1 Most won.
earful discovery of the ego. lees ze other preparation)
Magical, aura, almost .instantaneous in nation 1 Boys with
whiskers 1 Bald beide "haired 1" .Carlene e ectactes, bnt
Dotitive Ern tho. Only genuine et1Icle In market, and cartelnn
to gyre absolute satisfaction. Oherenteed. Prion Si n bottle.
of three bottles for $i, Eeohbottle Instil ono mouth. Address.
A. DIXON, ox 805, TORONTO, CANADA.
M>4DAME gIO1ANNAM S PI EPARITIdSS.
SUPEHF UOUS. HA A preparation that w13i
Y:'G!� LYYY�7 HAIR pperinnfSntJy, removes.
enet7tadrii hill itithoat,injury to Om skin. Warranted,.
Prfab II
PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS p r n nvedti
errottleeelleeerp,, ail•entad,ltricoforea(lees 'treatment, SI.
ANTIICONPULENCE PILLS v4rho,0aao,von
ppoint fsa blotter et sotleltndo whothor bemoan it fe aucnm.
tortablo oti nnfnthIonablb-sl3`AT POLES rising ANTI.
CORPULENCE 5202,8" tom 16 lbs. ei month .0181 cacao.
no sickness; contain no poison, end hover fail.. Pride for ono,
rhonth s treatment,. •1; or three months medicine, 06.
warrehted.
COMPLEXION WAFERS GIAli SN CA2-
menu thb.ekif ,• develop, the fat1n. Iiermieds. P8Ymacent.
Melt.
WR'-vattfenteti. Prkael abag,. or Six hexed far' $6.
Melt.Ea n x ofxoa t twitttr
20d', ' fets'aist*eat 'Warmth), +oats'