The Exeter Times, 1892-7-14, Page 2/HEN seen' doses of Ayer's Cherry
V V Pectoral wilerelieve you? Try it.
'Keep it rn the house. You are liable to
have a cough at any
letne, end no other
remedy is so effective
as this world-
.
renowned prepare,
tion. No household,
.
•
14"e with young children,
should be without it.
eV ' Scores of lives are
, saved every year by
ee` itseitnely use.
Amanda B. Jenner, Northampton,
•lfass., 'writes Common gratitude im-
pels me to acknowledge the great bene-
fits I have derived for my children from.
• the use of Ayer's most excellent Cherry
Pectoral. I had lost two dear children
f rom croup and consumption, and had
the greatest fear of losing my only re-
maining daughter and son, as they were
delicate. Efappily, I find that by giving
them Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, on the first
symptoms of throet or lung trouble, they
are relieved froni danger, aud are be
coming robust, healthy children."
"In the winter of 1885 I took a bad
.cold. which, in spite of every known
remedy, grew worse, so that the family
physician considered me incurablesup,
posinni
g e to be In consumption. As a
last resort I tried Ayer's Cherry Pecto-
ral, and, in a short time, the cure wee
complete. Since then / have never been
l'without this medicine. I am fifty years
of age, weigh over 180 pounds, and at-
tribute my good health, to tbe me a
,Ayer's Cherry Pecteral."—G.W.Youker,
Salem, N. J.
"Last winter I contracted a severe
cold, which by repeated exposure, be-
came quite obstinate. I was much
troubled with hoarseness and bronchial
.drritetion. After trying vezious meth,
eines, without relief, 1 at last purchased
a bottle of .A.yer's Cherry Pectoral, On
'taking this medicine, my cough ceased'
'almost immediately, and I have been
"well eversince."—Rev. Thos. B. Russell,
Secretary- Holston Coeference and P. E.
of the 4reenvil1e District, M. E. C.,
Jonesboro, Tenn.
Ayer's Cherry Pectorai,
PBBPARBB BY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold byall Druggists. Price $1; six bott2es,$5.
CENTRAL
Drug Store
ANSON'S BLOCK.
411.••••••••••••.01.
A. full stock of all kinds of
Dye -stuffs and package
Dyes, constantly on
hand, Winan's
Condition
Powd-
er›,
the best
in the mark-
et and always
resh. Family recip-
ees carefully prepared at
eirer.
Cen4ral Drug Store Exete
C. LUTZ,
CONSUMPTION.
bace a positive renmily for the above disease; by its
use thsanads or cases of the womt kind and of long
standing have hew cured. Indeed so strong is my faltli
In Its enemy, that I will send TWO BOTTLEs TREE,
with a VALUABLE TREATISE on this disease to any
sufferer who will =dine their EXPRESS and1'O. address
T. A. SLOCUM, M. C.' 186 ADELAIDe
ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT.
THE
OF A llyEXETER
TIMES
CA MKS
liTLE
UR
Sick Ffeadache and rel eve all the troubles inc!
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side, &c. While their most
remarkable success has been shown in curing
SICK,
Headache, yet CARTER'S Terme Liven 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.
'Riven if they only cured
Ache they would be almostpriceless to those
a.rhe sufeer from this distressing complaint:
but fortunately their goodness dees net 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.
VIA after all sick head
le the bane of so many lives that here is where
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 dom. They are strictly vegetable and •do
not gime or. purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. In viola at 25 cents'
live for $t, Sold everywhere, or tenths/ maiL
4• ;Ann 1/ EIM011,111 CO., Nee York.
e se IP
hall gmall Dose.' ;.itall hue.
A PRINCE AND AN EXPLORER.
enryet Orleans Doing Good W ork 111. It
tie Known Parts 01 the World.
le hen the well kuown Asiatic traveller,
Bonvalot, made his great journey across
Tibet two years ago he had fora -white cam,
panion a young man of unusually high posi-
tion in lite, Ile was Prince Henry of Orleanse
a member of one of the royal houses of
France, who 'though scarcely of age, burned
with zeal to visa newcountries and ,accom'•
plished something as an explorer. The
young man is very weelthy, and perhaps few
boys with his opportunities could resist the
temptation to lead a life of idleness and
pleasure. His great desire to accompany
Borivalot, however, prevailed on the explor-
er to take him aloug. The event proved
that he made no mistake in his choice of a
coin cede.
Prince Henry endured as well as anyman
in the party all the hardships of that trying
journey through central Asia. He had his
part of the daily routine, a.ad every task ase
signed him NMSAV ell and faithf performed.
He took nearly all of the photographs,
several hundred in number, which supplied
the pictorial history of the journey.
When, he came back last year he said he
desired as soon as possible to go out again
in search of new untravelled regions, The
Prince now is at the head of an expedition
on his own account. The Paris Geographe
cal Society received a letter from him last
month from the upper course of the Red
Riverin Tonkin. He was ebout to leave
the head -waters of this river and make a
journey west into the almoetunknown Laos
country. The Prince wrote that his col.
letions were already quite largo, He had
prepared 360 specimens of birds, 20 inam.
mats, 70 species of plants, and quite a large
number of minerals. He had. also acquireu
a dozen native costumes and a variety of
utensils and other specimens of native gets
and handiwork. He had taken 250 photo.
graphs, many of them pictures showing the
profile and full face of the five different
peoples he hi d thus far met on his journey
up the Red River. •
The place where his letter was dated is
nominally under France's control, but as
yet is almost unknown, and Prince Henry
is paying much attention to the commercial
possibilities of the region. Ho writes that
rick mines can be opened there, and that
the forests abound with valuable teak wood.
Ile believes a, great future is before the
Red River as a means of communication
with the populous Chinese province of
Yunnan. He says, however, that the
Black River, which has always been mark-
ed on the map as a tributary Of the Red
River, is really the larger and mare impor-
tant of the two, and the Red should properly
figure as a tributary of Black. River. It is
expected that Prince Henry will soon be
heard from on the coast, as his design is to
cross a part ot western Laos and then make
his way down through Cochin China to the
tea.
Rain of Blood.
' The most interesting account of an
event of this kind is given by Reamer,
from whem we learn that in the beginning
of July, 1608, the suburbs of Aix and a con-
siderable extent of couutry round it were
covered with what appeared to be a shower
of blood. We may conceive the amaze-
ment and stupor of the populace upon such
a discovery, the alarm of the citizens, the
grave reasonings of the learned. All agreed,
however, in attributing this appearance to
the powers of darkness, and in regarding it
as the prognostic and precursor of some
direful merortune about to befall them.
Fear and prejudice would bave taken deep
root upon this occasion, and migbt have
produced fatal effects upon some wee k minds
had not M. Peirese, a celebrated philosopher
of that place, paid attention to insects. A
chrysalis, which he preserved in his cabinet
let him into the secret of this mysterious
shower. Hearing a fluttering, which warned
him his insect was arrived at its perfect
state, he opened the box in which he kept
it. The animal flew out, and left behind it
O red spot: He compared this with the
spots of the bloody shower and found
they were alike. At the time be observed
there was a prodigious quantity of butter-
flies flying about, and that the drops of the
miraculous lain were not to be found upon
the tiles, nor even upon the upper surface
of the stones, but chiefly in cavities and
places where ram could not easily come.
Thus did this judicious observer dispel the
ignorant fears and terror which a natural
phenomenon had caused.
A Wonaerrnl Sat of Chessmen.
A remarkable set of chessmen has just
been completed by an American mechanic.
The pieces are made of silvered bronze, and
the period of costumes and equipments is
A. D. 1194, all the characters being histori-
cal and contemporary and strictly accurate
in every detail of heraldic blazonry and
costume. The knights are in chain -mill
armor, with shield, ax, sword, and dagger.
Their fur coats have each the indivieual
blazon of the wearer. The queens wear
royal robes and cerry scepters. The bishops
are in church vestments, with cross and
crozier. The pawns are men at arms in a
kneeling posture, with spear, bill -hook and
knife. The white men are English, the
black French. The English king and
queen are Richard I. and his berengarhs.
The bishops are ,Herbert Walter, Arch-
bishop of Canterbery, and William Long -
champs, Bishop of Ely; and the knights
are the Earl of Salisbury and Baron of
Woreester. The ceetle ie zee:es-Norman,
.7. a fiecnes,y aceUii i&piesentive of
feudal architecture. The French king and
queen are Philip and Ingeborg, his Danish
spouse, the bishops being De Dreux and De
Sully, of L'eauvias and Paris. The knights
are also well-known men of the twelfth
century, and the castle is Franco -Norman.
The set has taken upwards of six years to
make.
Twenty -Seven Heroes.
One of the most melancholy elements in
the Bohemian mining catastrophe is the de-
plorable loss of life which has attended the
efforts to rescue the men entombed in the
burning mine. The rescuing parties haye
laboured with a heroism and devotion which
have thrilled the whole country ,and have
been recognized in Parliament. But by fire,
suffocation or accident no fewer than
twenty-seven of the gallant men who ven-
tured into the midst of the flames to save
their comrades have lost their lives. There
is a sad disproportion between this heavy
death -roll mid the list of survivors, for of
the miners who were brought up alive,
from the pit only thirteen are stil
living, The remainder succumbed_ to their
wounds or the effects of asphyxiation.
Would Rather Rave a Goat.
Jamie's father had taken him to see the
baby.
" There, my son," he said, " is a little
sister for you. Won't she he eniee present ?"
"Yes," replied Jamie, "she's nice el:tough,
I reckon, but I'd ruttier' have a goat."
Some Summer Dishes. '
CHERRY SIXORTCARE. —Make a dough wit
two teaspoonfulof baking powder, two
tablepoonfuls of butter rubbed into a quart
of flour and cold water. Work the dough
as little as possible. Roll about hal' an inch
thick and bake in two layers one on top of
the other. When done put fresh stewed
cherries between the layers and on top,
Sprinkle powdered sugar over aud serve
with whipped cream.
Peestavixe Cneenies. —I. is accepted
thet sun preserved strawberries are better
than those prepared in any other way and
now a writer in Dentorest's tells how to pre-
serve cherries in a similar ways Stone the
cherries and put thein on pletters or in flat
dishes. To each pint of cherries pet a scam
pint ot granulated sugar. Mix them well
by putting in firet the pint of cherries and
then sprinkling the sugar over. Let them
stand overnight and by morning the sugar
will bey° extracted much of the juice. If
they seem not ro be very juicy in the morn-
ing, set each platter in the oven for a few
minutes only, Or in a warm place about the
stove until the juice has come out freely.
Then set the platters in the sun—in the hot-
test place you can find—and put either glass
or some sort of very thin netting over them.
In from a day aud a half to two days the
syrup will thicken and the fruit will become
transparent. Put cold into jars and close
them and the cherries and ready for winter
use. No heating is neeessary ; bat it is a
little better to put into self-sealing jars than
into epee ones, merely to keep the fruit
from drying.
STRAWBERRY on CURREY Rota,. --Make
a, crust as for pies but use only two-thirds
the usual quantity of butter. Roll thin and
bake in a, quick oven mita nearly doe° but
not until crisp.. Take it out, spread over
Ilia strawberries which have been mashed
and sweetened or stewed cherries, then roll
it up carefully. Replan in the oven until
it is a delicate brown, then serve with milk
or cream.
L nsioy Cut.—One half cup of butter,
one cup of fine granulated sugar, one-half
cup of milk, two cups of flour, two eggs, one
teaspoonful of baking powder, the grated
rind of e lemon and one tablespoonful of
the juice. After beating the butter to a
eream add the sugar, lemon juice and rind.
Add the eggs well beaten to the mixture
then beat lave minutes. Now add milk and
tben the flour in white), the baking powder
has been mixed. Bake in ono loaf.
What is a Promise of Marriage.
h' A judge at Leeds has decided that " a
promise of marriage may be made by other
ways than by words—by a shake of the
hand, for example, or a wink of the eye, or
O thousand other modes." A young woman
had a drawing master who gave her every
reason to believe that he laved her—short
of saying so. Be wrote letters descanting
o i the "celestial joy" of those who can
" ou out their souls to each tither"; spoke
of woman as a helpmate for man, not a
toy for an hour," and frequently wrote "0,
Jene!" After two years he broke off acquaint-
ance, and later wrote to the lady's solictors:
"11 you have a letter of mine wherein di-
rect marriage is stated, irrespective of my
position or her position, I am willing to see
further, but you have not." However, fol-
lowing the judge's instructions, the jury
gave the lady £100 damages.
A POTATO OMELET. —Miss Parloa tells
how to melte this dish in the following man
ner : Put iuto a stew pan, with enough boil
Mg water to cover them, four pared potatoes
of good size, and cook for half an hour,
Dram off ell the water and mash the pota.-
toes until smooth and light. Now add a
teaspoonful dealt, one-fourth of a teaspoon.
ful of pepper, a heaping tablespoonful of
butter, hall a teaspoonful of finely chopped
parsley, a few drops of onion juice, and heel
O gill of hot milk. Beat the mixture with
a fork until quite light.
Put a tablespoonful of butter in a frying
pan and on the fire. When the pan is hot
and the butter melted, prose the prepared
potato through a vegetable press or a aelane.
or into the pen, andennooth the surface over
lightly withont pressing the potato down.
Cover the an and cook until the omelet is
brown, which will be in about 20 minutes.
Fold over turn out on a hot dish and serve
at once.
ClIOCOLATB OAKS. —.Two and one-half
cups of .flour, ene and one-half cups of but
ter, one-half cup of milk, one and one half
cups of seganwhites of four eggieerell beat-
en, two tetespoons baking powder. Cream
the butter and sugar, add the milk, then
the flour and eggs, boat all thoroughly and
add powder.
IcIxe—One pound of pulverized sugar
two-thirds of a teacup of water. Put these
in a dish within a pan of boiling water.
eVlien melted add one-half a stick of choc-
olate grated, and the whites of four eggs
well beaten and the yolk of one. Boil
about 10 minutes and then cool before
using.
Eleotion Ineidents in Australia.
At tbe recent election for the Eastern
boroughs in Melbourne a strange thing hap-
pened. The deputy returning officer, who
s.eenis to have had charge of the polling
booth at Camberwell on the occasion, al-
lowed various irregularities to take place,
and insisted upon closing the booth before the
proper hour. He has since been sent to
the lunatic asylum at Kew. The Colonies
and India gives another election incident.
Mr. Frank Madden one of the candidates
for the Eastern Suburbs at the recent gener-
al election in Melbourne, " rebbed it into"
one of his opponents in true colonial fashion
A labour candidate was put up against Mr.
Madden, and the latter on ono occasion
spoke of his opponent as "an illuminated
turnip -headed ghost wrappedin the dirty
counterpane of the labour party."
The True ,Man.
Go on and struggle ; only remember that
your struggle will be worthless, however
you may get the things you seek, unless
you can get not merely the bodies of those
things but their souls. We know that any
man who truly feels that: reverence for his
own poverty is thereby liberated from the
worst part of the slavery to wealth. He
may still struggle to be rich, but he is not
the slave to other men's riches nor of his
own unwon wealth for which he strives.
Calm, dignified, self -respectful, with no bit-
terness and no pride—who but he is the
man who knows how to be abased?
Louis Cyr, Canada's strong man, gave a
remarkable exhibition of strength in Hull,
Que., on Monday afternoon. The affair was
in connection with the St. Jean Baptiste
celebra.tion. Cyr had two horses harnessed,
each of which weighed over 1,200 pounds,
brought and attached by straps to either
arm. Cyr folded his arms and stood with
one horse on either side of him pulling in
opposite directions as.to get his arms ex-
tended from his body. The animals were then
whipped up each in his different directine.
Though they strained themselves under the
lashings of the whips, Cyr kept his al me
folded. The horses could not extend them.
The horses were owntd by John Dupuis,
mail driver between Hull and Ottawa, and
are big, strong animals. On one occasiori
oae of the horses, a large grey, the stronger
one of the two, chew both Cyr and the tither
horse after it, but did not make the strong
man lose his grip. Four trials were made.
Cyr said the a.nitnals were the best he had
yet met for hauling. Lonis did another big
acts He had seventeen men sitting on a ta-
ble, and getting under it lifted table, men
and all on his back five or six times. None
of them weighed under 150 and several
• weighed over 200 poande. The strong man
also went through a number of other lifting
performances'. Cyr's brother Peter t was
also present and wenb through a series of
feets, but uene SO herculean as those of
Louis. Peter Cyr is a, six-footer and stet in
proportion, but is not as eavy a his e. es
brother, who tips the scale at almost 350
pounds.
Oatmeal in Summer.
With the advent of the hot summer days
the old discussion as to the best drink for
sustaining the euergies or laborers under
prolonged effort in the open air has been re-
vived. Farmers and other employers have
for a long time pinned their faith to beer as
O beverage for their workmen, but oatmeal
has for the last few years been rapidly
growing in favor, and apparently with just
cause. A strong support to the advocates
of oatmeal has been given by a recent exper.
ience ort the oceasion of the conversion of the
broad guage whieh has been retained so dog-
gedly by the Great Western Railway Com-
pany in England to the narrow gauge now
adopted universally in that couritry. The
conversion had to be effected with the ut-
most dispatch, and the length of line to be
transformed Was over 200 miles. Five thou-
sand men worked two successive days of 17
hours each, with ouly short intervals for
meals. Throughout this exceptiontl strain
nothing but Qatmeol water was imbibed lay
the laborers, and its refreshing, thirst
quenching and sustainiug power was unre-
servedly admitted. Another valuable piece
of testimony to the merit of this modern
rival of beer is the fact that many cricket
clubs have adopted oatmeal water as the reg.,
elation tipple of their active members
while a. match is being played. It is found
that men ploy better cricket and an infin-
itely better game than where beer was
thought to be the only thing thab a cricket.
er aught to drink, with the advantage oleo
undesirable reaction. The method of man-
ufacture is simple. Put a liberal lump of
ice into a pail with a few handfuls of oat-
meal ; fill up with water, add the juice of a
lemon and A little sugar, only just enough
to give interest to the decoction, and the
result is a drink that any man will be grate-
ful for on a sweltering dog day.
Our Boys.
For bubbling laugh ant eurbless glee,
For frolic and mild deviltry,
Aud drum and trumpet noise;
In misobief still to take a part,
E'en tho' Ube:mks a mother's heart,
Boys will be boys.
Frport, or fight. for grit of
vhu—
Endui-aco, like the Anakitn,
And Cyclopean noise :
For tireless toil to gain a prize.
And scorn of meanness and of Heil
Boys w :Ube boys.
Is there a call for volunteers,
To break a colt or yoke cif steers
task of corduroys?
To fight, at testy honor's breath,
Or for a woman—to the death!
Boy's will be boys.
Must the Antilles be annexed,
Or our Dominion cousins vexed
With Fenian fuss and noise/
Or tigers corralled in a pen,
Or lion bearded in his deal
Boys will be boys.
When ruthless wo.r stalks Corolla? land.
With bayonet and firebrand
And welkin -splitting noiPo
Ji front you'll find the youngsters then—
The Nation's boys aro the Nation's—man!
God bless the boys!
—[George 11, Throop.
A 13rave Little Daughter.
There is a very pretty story told by
Miss Strickland, in her "Queens of Eng-
land," of a little girl who saved her father's
life.
It was in the time of Queen Mary, and
Lord Preston, the father of the child, was
condemned to death for conspiring to bring
back the exiled King James to the throne.
Her name was Lady Catharine Graham,
and she was only nine years old. The poor
child was during the trial of her father left
in the Queen's apartment in Windsor Castle.
The day after the condemnation of Lord
Preston, the Queen found little Lady
Catharine in St. George's Gallery, gazing
earnestly on the whole length picture of
James IL, which still remains there.
Struck with the mournful expression on the
young girl's face, Mary asked her hastily
what she saw in that picture which made
her look on it so particularly. "I was
thinking," said the innocent child, "how
bard it is that my father must die for loving
yours." The Queen, pricked in conscience
by- this artless reply, immediately signed
the pardoa of Lord Preston.
A combined crank and pedal pin
made from one piece of mete], thereby
saving nut, etc., necessary to connect the
two in the ordinary way, is coming into
vogue in connection with bicycles. This
combination is intended chiefly for use on
racing machines, where the saving of v. -eight
that it renders possible is a matter of great
emportance. An interesting novelty is a
steam bicycle, tie be run by a boiler 18 inches
by 6 inches, suspended from the upper frame
rod of an Armand model 13, with gasoline
for fuel. The boiler has a regular steam
gauge, and is supposed to stand a pressure
of 50 pounds to the square inch. The cylin-
ders are 2 inches mid the piston rod is to
act on gearing in the crank shaft. The
gearing is arranged 5 to 1 for crank axle
and 1e for reer wheel, which gives about a
, 60 -inch gearing. • In a recent list of patent
theatrical appliances is a device to aid ia
producing the illusory effect of a bicycle
race on the stage. It consists in a bicycle
mounted to have its wheels free from con-
tact with the surface on which it appears to
run, its, front and roar wheels geared to-
gether, and its pedals free to be operated
by the rider. The supports of the machine
are secured to and projected up from a car-
riage adapted to be moved over the stage,
The carriage carries euitably arranged duct
making devices, operated by the motion of
the bicycle wheels, whereby the illusery
effect of the race is rendered more effective.
Collectors of customs in Canada have
been instructed to warn parties bringing
sporting outfits into Canada, or making in-
quiries on the subject, that they will be held
strictly to the observance 9f the fish and
garrie laws iu force in the provinces where
they propose to shoot and fish. In the case
of foreign sportsmen entering at any port of
Ontario and proposing to bunt in Ontario,
collectors are to call their special attention
to the recent enectraeot of the Provjncial
• egielature requiring sportsmen to take out
license to kill certain classes of gain°.
4;hildren Cry for Pitcher's Castoriae
LLEOTRIO AND MEOHANIOAL
PAOTS.
An aluminum piano is among the latest
devices.
Grenulatel cork and bitumen is the com-
position of a new brick.
It takes 820,000 to run a Steamer like the
Majestic across the Atlantic,.
An Englieli firm has invented an ingenious
device for turning on the currents for elec-
tric lights at e certain hour.
A com.pany has been granted permission
to experiment with electric omnibuses in
London the coming Summer.
Edison has invented a torpedo with which
twenty-five men can hold a fort against
1,000,000 enemies.
What will be the largest electric locomo-
tive in the world is being etonstructed at
Baden, Zurich. 11 is to develop 1,500 to
1,800 -horse power.
A company was organized at Phoenix, A.
T., about ten days ago for the construction
of what is claimed to be the largest artificial
reservoir in the world. It will be sixteen
miles long and contain 103,058,040,800 cubic
feet of water.
Electricity has recently been applied to
establish the condition of a horses foot. If
the hoof has been pierced with a nail to the
quick, the horse will feel the electric cur-
rent and become irritated; in the other case
the current can not pass through the foot.
"There's nothing new under the sun."
An English maaufacturer, while examining
the texture and quality of some bandages
found on a mummy, was astonished to find
that the arrangement of the threads WRS
exaotly like that which lie had patented a
few months before, and which be supposed
to be an independent invention of his own.
A French paper reports that the micro -
Phone has been eucceasfully used in St.
Petersburg in a case of suspended animation,
when the patient was given up for dead. As
a last resortthe physician applied a micro-
phone to the region of the heart, and was
enabled by this instrument to bear a faint
beating, which proved that life was not ex-
tinct. Everything was done to resuscitate
the patient, who shortly af ter ward recovered
consciousness.
The Head Surgeon
Of the Lubon Medical Company is now at
Toronto, Canada, and may ho consulted
either in person or by letter on all chronic,
diseases peculiar to man. Men, young, old,
or middle-aged, who find themselves nerv-
ous, weak end exhausted, who aro broken
down from excess or overwork, resulting in
many of the following symptom]: Mental
depresaion, premature old age, loss of vital.
ity, loss of memory, bad dreams, dimness of
sight, palpitation of the heart, emissions,
lack of energy, pain in the kindeys, head-
ache, pimples on the face or body, itching
or peculiar sensation about the scrotum,
wasting of the ' organs, dieziness, specks
before the oyes, twitching of the muscles,
eve lids and elsewhere,bashfulness, deposit;
in the urine, loss of willpower, tenderness of
ithe scalp and spinceweak and flabby muscles,
:desire to sleep, failure to be rested by. sleep,'
eonstipation, dullness of hearing, loss of voice,
'desire for solitude, excitability of temper,
sunken eyes surroundedwith resenest emcee,
'oily looking skin, etc., ere all. symptoms of
;nervous debility thee lead to insanity and
',death unless cured. The spring or vital
kvforce having lost its tension every function
ancs in conserence. Those who through
buse committees ..rt ignorance may be per-
manently cured. sl'ead your address for
'book on all dimwits; .Veculiar to men.
Meeks sent free seeled. Heardisease, the
,laymptorne of which aro faintspolls, purple
ape, nneetssess, palpitation, skip heats,
hot flashee, rich of blood to the head, dull
pain in the heart with beats strong, rapid
and irregitlar, the scond heart beat
,tiater than the first, pain about the breast
, ono, etc., can positively be cured. No cure,
no pay. Send for book. .Address, M. V.
LUBON. 24 Macdonell Ave. Toronto, Ont,
Cross -Questioning Pa. •
A tiny youngster was looking over hi
picture -book with his father recently, and
presently they arrived at a picture of a don-
key and a, fool.
"Now, which would you rather be Ted,"
inquired the father, "a donkey or a fool ?"
The youngster looking up very gravely,
said: "Which is you, daddy ?"
When Baby was sick, we rave her Ceded?.
When she was a Child, sho cried for Castoria.
When she became Miss, sho clung to Castoria.
When she had Children, shove them Castoria,
oPER/4
4AKING
POINDER
WAILLETT:ro
THE BAKINO
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Ei RINGS ,
Ease and Ceni
WITH poor soaps and el
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women of advancing
laundry work. But
famed, labor -going
unlight
AnY14,gdy can do a Wu
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Willi "SUNLIGHT"
rubbing, sore knuckles, hot
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Sear Birkenhead
HAVE YO
"Backacho the
means the kid- of the
neys are in "D
trouble. Dodd's danger
Kidney Pills giue looted
prompt relief." trouble
"75 per cent. in Be
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"filightas well Brig/its
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healthy city Dropsy.
without sower- "The
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health when the exist
kidneys are f Dodd's
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Dr. L. A. Smith & Co. Toronto,
book called Kidney Talk.
THOUSANDS IN HEW
The Great Weelcly Competiti
Ladies' Home Magazi
which word in this advertisement SIE
Ilackward as renoird 1 This is a rare o
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WEREJ.V Paizss,—Every week throus
competition prizes will be distributed as
first correct answer received (the sestinar
letter to betaken 09 11,5 date received) at t
LADIEs' flour 11tAGAZINli (Pilell and eve
1822) will get $200; the second correct ans
third $50; fourth, a beautiful silver serv
o'clock silver service, and the next 50 come°
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R0LE8.—Eat1 list of answera must be
by $1 to pay for six montha subscription
best 11.01411 MAGIAZINES in Amerims.
NoTE.—We want half a million subseri
secure them we propose (o.give Gen ay In rewa
our income, Therefore, in case one ha
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prizes, such excess will be added pro rata to
If the reverse, apt° rata discount pill be ma
RE7ERENCES.—"Tnn LADIES' Rots M
well able to carry out itspromises."—Paterb
ada) Times, "A selendidpaper, and guano
—Hastings (Canada) Star. ''Every prize w
sure to receive just what be Is entitled to.
(Canada) Register. Address all lettere to T
Holtz lliaoazitz, Peterborough, Canada.
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senses eseeirs neereesesser