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The Exeter Times, 1892-8-18, Page 8falessenamasetewiereaserneneie A Fact oB,TE knowing is that blood disi easeswinch all other remedlea fail An Mire, yield to Ayer's Sarsteparillont I Fr esli conarma- tion a tbis state- ment eQMOS to boad daily. Even saali deepescated and etubborn cone - plaints as Rhine. matisin, Mourne, tio Gout, and the like, are thorough- ly eradicated. by the lase of this won- derfulalterative- n. M.r. rs. , Irving Dodge, 110 West AraF{ 125th, street, New York, certifies e--- " About two years age, after suffering for nearly two years iron' rheuma,tio gout, being able to svallt only with great discomfort, and havingtried various remedies, including mineral waters, without relief, I saw by an advertise-, root in a Chicago paper that a man had been relieved of this distressing com- plaint, after i4ne suffering, by tuition°. Ayer's Sae =ilia. I then decided to make a tall �f this, medicine, and took it regularly for eight months. I an pleased to say that it effected a coin- plete eure, anti that 1 bave since had. no return of the disease," 'elkIrs, Is, A. Stark, Nashua, N, H., wettest' "One year ago I was taken ill with rbeentatism, being confineto my berme six months, I came out of the eickness very mud) debilitated, with no appetite, and my systent disordered in every way. I commenced to use Ayer's Sarsaparilla and began to improve at once,ttainng in strength and soon re- covering my usual health.. I cannot say too much in praise of this well-known anedicine." "I nave falcon a great deal of Medi - tine, but nothing has done me so Much good as Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I felt its betieticial effects before 1 had lquite finished one bottle, auti 1 can einelytestify that it is the best blood - medicine I know of." —L, W. Ward, Sr., Woodland, Texes. Ayers Sarsaparilla men -Vann BY Dr.. J. 0., Ayer le Co., Lowell, Mass. Inice $1; eix. bottles, 05„ !h $5 abatis. OEN TRAL - Drug Store ANSON'S BLOCK. .11••••••••••• A. full stook of all kinds of Dye -stuffs .and package Dyes, constantly on hand, liVinan's ,QP:nditio4 Powd- the best 3.n the mark- et and always resh. Family recip- ees carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exete O. LAMM HEALTIL Health, Notes - The good Father in heaven will Md hs ohildren to the extent that they will use all et their powers, physical, ineatal itucl morel, iu aiding themselves ; will 'answer their prayers for help as far as they will eeXert their utmost efforts to answer them, or *mild do so if in their power, It is in vatn that we pray for suceess in life, we are indolent, lazy; suecess is ettaioable by those who go after it, meting it for themselves, In a "land or plenty, flowing with milk and honey," like ours, there ie no occasion, as a general prineiple, for want and destitu- tion, since the real necessaries of life axe by no means, expensive. If that great and wise man Dio Lewis, could live well at a cost of eiglifeents a day—the cost of he maaerials from which his food was cooked—want and hunger are by no means necessary. With Scab living, using plain, simple and whole- some food, taken only to the amount really needed, at proper times and under proper circumstances, there is but little or no cm- casion for sickness and doctor's bills. It is as certain that We can secure good health, by the necessary care, living simply, observing the laws of our being, the condi- tions of healtas as that, we can do our 'Usual daily duties, The price of this great bless- ing, without which no one can be, really com- fortable and happy, is correct living, doing our whole duty to the body, It would be no more foolish to light A ten dollar bank hill in kindling a fire than to use the same amount in lemming cigars and the filthy pipe." Kindling an internal fire within, a fire which ever increases in inten- sity by each iadulgence, wasting selt-respect, self-control, inanheoa—true dignity of char- acter, making a veritable slave of one who ought to In a man ' With all of thy " gettings, get under- standlue," soh as will deter you from get- ting drunk. In the habitual use of intoxi- cants, oue deseends below the level of the brutes, since they do not degrade themselves by the formation of euch degrading habits, are not thus false to their nature, do not be- come unnatural, but live as the Creator in- tended that they should live, to that exteut honoring him. In cases of a deranged stomach, caused by excessive eating,at improper times and under improper circumstances, practical gluttony, it is safer to fast, 'without praying than to pray without fasting, though both would be proper, the oue who fasts answer- ing his own prayer by using the appropriate means of relief. It wouldbe as appropriate to advise the drunkard to pray tor a de- liverance from his tyrannical habit, while still indulgiag his appetite for intoxieants, as for the dyspeptic to ask for his recovery from the effects Of over -eating, while he still indn'ges his horrible appetites. It would be less unfortunate for a young man to lose a band or foot by accident, than for hin, to form habits of intemperance, ultimately becoming a drunkard. In the former case he need, not lose his manhood, his mental and moral powers, his ability to be of soma use in the world, while'in the latter, it is not the loss of a single hand or foot, but the ruin of the whole body, the loss of everything worth possessing. CONSOMPTIO I base a positive remedy for the abase disease: 1yite rse thensands of CAWS ef the mast kind and a long standby, bast, been cored. Deiced so etrang is my faith Su its :Holey, that I v.ill send TWO BOTTLES PEEE, lth a VALUABLE TBEATISS en this disease to nn3 sodomy who will send me their EXPBEES end P.O. address T. A. SLocuto, M. 0.' 186 ADELAIDE ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT. & OF THE yEXETER TIMES CARTERS Lii1/23 SiTtReadache and relieve all the troubles inci- dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, liausea. Drowsiness, Distress after eating., Pam in the Side, &c. While their most samarkable success bos been shown in curing 1CK Headache, yet CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS am equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and regnlate t,h bosees. •neen if they only cured Acbt 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 511 sick head HE is the bane of so many lives that here is where we make our great boast. Our pills cure it while others do not. CAR:PEWS Lame L/VER Pitts are very small and very easy to take Otte or two pills make dosr,.., They are strictly vegetable and do not ,c1Spe or ?,urge, but by their gentle action pleaqc all who use them. In vials at 25 cents: 0, ' ''••• 31. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail. CART,EZ MEDICINE 00., now York. Affi0 illIrtali 33e. Stull Ea 'PrOgress in Snrgery. One is almost startled, even in these days of rapid progress in all departments of science, to note the seemingly impossible feate of surgical skill. Some months ago a eractising physician in the upper 'part of New York State was thrown from his carriage, and struck upon ethe jft,gi,s i heed- Ile=as Ale With some assista noticed an en though still p His mind, i motioned to mine from hi her a chapter making the to get home, and soon re inability to articulate, ectly conscious. act, was so clear that he s wife to get a book of med.. ielves, and pointed out to Cerebral Hemorrhage, thus agnosis of his own case. He was put in b d, and by worming had become unable to usti the whole right side of his body. This partial paralysis, or henalplegia, grad- ually improved under treatmeet, so that be was again able to be up, and to some ex- tent hobble about. After a time, finding his improvement at a standstill, he went to New York City to see if anything could be done for his relief. In one of the greatest hospitals there he was operated upon by one of the most skil- fel surgeons. Round pieces were trephined from the bone of the skull at the point where, from accurate calculations, it was estimated thet the trouble would be found - A clot was found whei e it had been looked for. This was removed as thoroughly as possible, and the wound quickly healed. When last seen by the writer the patient was walking, still with the aid of a cane, in the hospital wards, and had begun to speak some letters and words which had been taughthim by his wife. The injury had destroyed his ability to make the inotioes of ch.; lips and muscles necessary to articulation; and, when he had recovered the ability to articulate, it was necessary for him to learn to talk just as a child does, or as one learns a foreign lan- guage, though he still retained the power of understa.nding all that was said to him. The experiment has lately been made in Paris of trephining the skulls of infant idtots, the bones of which had prematurely hardened, in order that there might be more room for, brain development. So far the re- sults'in the main, have I een satisfactory. Inthe future it tnay be common to treat epilepsy, paralysis of certain kinds and other brain troubles, as is already done in the case of brain tumors, injuries, etc., by the performance of operations, the technic of which has been rendered possible by the perfection of the antiseptic system of treat- ing wounds. IT IS EASY TO DIE. Tesummy that the Coll TR Shinnied off ' Without Pain. A scientific writer claimthat the easiest way to die is by a fall. Be says "The victim'auffers no pain end no terror. Gentle, oft tunes sound m °AC'S ears, and die away, at last when uneonscionsness sets in. One heves the fall of the body, Wit does not feel it." Those who ,lieve been apparently drow ti- ed and reetisciteted have sada that after the first choking sensation is over the most blissful nappiness is experienorl., . Men who been been haoged and cut clown befOre We became entirely extinct and then restored to consciousness have said that the sensations , were in every way delightful. Soldiers who have been severely wounded in battle affirm that they felt no pain. A women wbo apparently died of heart disease, and was restored by a physician who heppened to be within immediate call, testified that she felt that she was in Heaven, and was not pleased at being brought back to male .The Rev. William Tenneut, of Freehold, a con. tury and a -half ago, who fell into a thre days' trance and. was actually prepared for burial, on doming back to life said that the three days seemed to him like twenty minutes, and that he was supremely happy during that time, From every side comes testimony concern- ing death which seems to make it very different from the terrible thing it appears to the survives -s. And yet the most of us are willing to endure life, with all el its pains, trials, troubles ana discomforts, rather than pass away even in the most Wise- ful mauner. E ars as Indicator& In human beings of low or debased men- tal standard, the ears are large and flabby —note those idiots, cretins etc. When there is no lobe, said the ear widens from the bottom upwards, the owner is of a selfish, eurning and revengeful disposi- tion. When the ear is oval in form with the lobe slightly but distinctly marked, it indi- cates for ite owner a lofty ideality, combin- ed with a morbidly sensitive nature. • Large round ears with a "neat hem" around their border, well carved—not flat, indicate a strong will and a bulldog tenaci- ty ot purpose. Fars in which the " hern " is fiat, as if smoothed down with a flab -iron, accompaty a vacillating mind and cold, unromanti c disposition. The person who has an ear with a round- ed, ovate top is almost without exceptions one with a placid dispositicn and a nature that //Inez to love and be loved in return. Large eaitent drooping at the top, belong to persons MO n animal than human. Scare cy is he element of all goodness ; even virtue, e en beauty is mysterious— [Carlyle- • Children Crii for Pitcher's Castoria4 Trade and Industry. Ti is said that more than 1,000 women work in the iron mills of Pitts burgh and vane ty. It is said thet the strike fund of the Uni- ted Brotherhood of Carpenters and. Joiners amounts to fully $130,000. It took the union eigonuiakers of Wheel- ing, W. Va., two ho urs to induce everymanu- facamer in the city to grant ten hours' pay for nine hours' work. Owing to the strike of nail makers which started some three weeks ago iu Montreal, the four nail factories in that city have been compelled to close down. Andrew Carnegie was forty-five years ago a ragamuffin in the streets of Alleglicey City, Pa. His father was a poor Scotch evea.ver, who came to Americo, in 1845, and his son began isis own career a few years later as a messenger boy in Pennsylvania Railroad telegraph office London manufacturers of musical inetru- meets have discovered that the skill of their workmen has deteriorated since the abolition of the apprentice system, ansi re- commend a return to it "with a view to raise the standard of workmanship in the trade." It is reported that about twelve years ago a atone cutter at Topeka, Kau., invent- ed a stone -dressing machine, and proposed to his colleagues to have it patented and use it for their own benefit, every one of them to" chip in." But theS didn't believe the machine would work. Afterward the inven- tor found a capitalist who assisted him in getting the =whine ready for work. He is now a wealthy man, and the other stone cutters who refused to co.operate with him twelve yeers ago are either working for lower wages than at that time or are re- placed by the inventor's machine. Old Facts and New Discoveries. The drive well, one of the simplest of in- sentiorte, has yielded tts inventor$2,000,000 in royalties. An incandescent lamp without a filament is the next electrical improvement we are promised. An engineer has recently davised an elec- trical machine by which weeds and obnox- ious grasses may be destroyed. A Roman scientist, Dr. Fornesari, claims to have demonstrated that tobacco smoke kills nearly all kinds of germs. Galileo's first telescope was made out of a common lead pipe, into the ends of which were glued ordinary speetacle glasses. Bricks made of plaster of paris and cork are now used in the construction of powder mills. In case of explosion they offer slight resistance aud are broken to atoms. An Ohio inventor has patented a collar in which the end button -holes are placed in tabs of thinner material, thereby avoiding the trouble of buttoning a stiff band. There is a church in the town of Bergen, Norway, that is built entirely of paper. It can seat 1,000 persons in comfort, and has been rendered waterproof by a solution of quicklime, curdled milk and white of eggs. JUST FOUR HUNDRED YEARS AGO. Iffuelva ami Palos Prettlily Celebrating the Sailing of Columba& A despatch fano MADRID sayst—The cele- bration of the four hun,dredth anniversary of the departure of Columbus from the port of Palos began to -day ana will continue en - til Oct, 14. The Spanish Goverement is in- terested in it and is giving it some aid, but it is chiefly a local affair. The people et Tinelva, and Palos want it understood that they are doing it. Use their tribute to the meniory of the great discoverer, aucl to the memory of his crews as svell, who were all men of that district, and whose lineal des- cendants are living there to -day. The pre. sent Alcalde of the village of Palos bears the name of Prieto, and is indisputably a lineal descendant of that Prieto who was Alcalde in 1492, and who saw Columbus weigh an- ohor for the unknown west. This evening formal announcement of the beginning of the festivities was given by heralds going about the streets with trum- pets and cymbals. There as a legend that thus, on Aug, 2. 1499. announcement was made that on the next day Columbus would set sail for the Indies. To -morrow will see Huelva Palen, and Moeller in gals, attire, A great excursion will go by water to the neighboring convent of Santa, de la Rabida, led by three boats named Santa Maria, the Pinta, and the Nina. There will be at La Rabida a festival and a grand banquet. A hymn written fur the occasion and seleeted in public competition, will also be sung. After Oleo festivities at La Rebida, the exoursion will proceed by water to Palos, and services will be held there in the ancient churck in which Columbes himself knelt in prayer before setting out on his voyage. In the evening there will be a grand parade of boats of all kinds, illuminated with colored lanterns, on the water above Huelva. The monicipality of Huelva has decided to address congratulatory despatches to Pope Leo. to the Queen regent of Spain, King Humbert, end gilaail Victoria, the latter as a sovereign of Canada, and to the President of the United States and the heads of other American nations, special recogni- tion being given, so far as Europe is con- cerned, to those countries which took a contemporaneous interest in the enterprise and discoveries of Columbus. The soldering of aluminum, which has long been a difficult problem, has been re- cently solved. By sprinkling the surface to be soldered with chloride of silver, and melting clown, the soldering is effected. simply and satisfactorily. Riotous 01d -Time Elections. Among the items of election expenses in England, therefigured the charges for "kick- ing up a bobbery," broken heads, and simi- lar casualties, in the 'epirit of farce, were directed to be "set down in the bill. " Proffessional bruisers look for werd to these events with ardor; they implied employ- ment and profit. When the tan -hi -an high, a guinea a day per head secured retainers ready, not only to very literally bespatter the opposition, but cheerfully prepare to tear down the hustings, demolish the polling places, make away with the register books of return, to knock adversaries on the head, or to get their own thick craniums batter- ed in the cause. Figg and Bronghton, the prize fighters, are shown engaged COn geni- ally in electoral struggles. Gully, Firby, and twenty other experienced prizefighters are described as having been carried. to Yorkshire by Lord Milton's tactics to op- pose by force of fisticuffs the "mac of peace." W. Wilberforce, and his orderly supporters. The " /nob -directing " system was an important factor, and, for the titre being,at feast, "victory was on the side of the big battalions. The Grand Old mau has declared himself unreservedly in favor of bicycling. He is credited with these sentiments ; " I have noticed with real and unfeigned pleasure the rapid growth of cycling in this country, for not only does it afford to many to whom it would otherwise be unobtainable a healthy and pleasurable form of exercise, but it also enableethem to derive all those anventagm of travel which, previous to the advent of cycling, were ont of their reach. It is far more profitable tba,n the luxurious railway journey from the city to some definite point along an unalterable route, over which the traveller is whirled with no time for obser- vation and no opportunity of examining the district through which he is carried. I can only emphasize the fact that I 'consider that physics,11y, morally, and social:1y the benefits that cycling confers on the men of the pre- sent day are ahnosteunbouncicp, Rot Weather Desserts. With gelantine and fruit juices for the basis a great number of delicious hot weath- er desserts ean be made. To be successful with these you must not attempt to make the extra quantity of gelatine do duty for time or ice in cooling. LTsing more gelatine than the directions on the box calls for re- sults in a less delicate flavor with a strong suggestion of glueyness. Acid jellies must be cooled: in earthen molds. Do not allow them less than eight hours in a very cold place to harden, and after the form begins to " set." be careful not to shake or otherwise disturb it. Include both the cold weter and the lemon or other juiee used in flavoring, in the meourement of the liquid. Having observed these few precautions there can be no failure. Do not trust to guessing or to cups to measure the two quarts which most packages call for, but have a graduated quart measure. Cooper's gelatine calla for two quarts; Coxe's for mica quart and a pint from each box. Which- ever is your favorite, follow the directions exactly in making lemon jelly, except diet you may qualify it for your taste by adding more or less lemon juice. Witen JELLY. —In making this for in- valids the flavor will be improvedby the addition of the juice of one lemon to thin dralietty; mnitrthiroase of fevers you may use half wine and half lemon or orange juice. For greater nutrition, port wine is sotnetimes used, which of course produces a very doek-colneed jelly. Equal parts of lemon juice, orange juice, sherry and brandy, a gill of each, make a very delic- iously flavored jelly that will sometimes tempt the fickle palate. CARDINAL JELLY. —Use one pint of cur rant juice from canned currau ts in place o lemon or orange juice, for a very nice -flay °red and rich -colored jelly. The juice from canned raspberries and currants make jelly of delicate flavor. A pretty fancy dish is made from lemon and cardinal jelly. Make a scant quart of each and cool it in a shallow dish pouring it in to the depth of an inch. te hen firm, cut into inch blocks and pile them like rockworlr on a flat glass dish, garnishing it with rich red nastur- tiums. nacre Jseey.—The juice of a Catl of peaches with a gill of lemon juice, making a pint in all, is very nice if when the jelly 1 begins to harden you stir in the peach cut' small. You may cool this jelly in layers as each layer gets firm put in a layer of fresh peaches sweetened and cut small; pour over more of the cool but not stiffened jelly and so continue until the mold is full. When I firm and cold, serN e with whipped cream. RONIAN JELLY.—This very curious jelly takes a little more trouble than one always cares to incur on a hot day, but it makes such a very pretty company dish that it is worth knowing about. It takes very eare- ful measurement. Divide the box into two equal parts. Make itenilk jelly with one half by soaking the gelatine for an hour in a gill of cold water; add three gills of boil- ing milk and Stir until dissolved, then sweeten to taste and pour into two vessels, flavoring one with vanilla and the other with grated and dissolved chocolate. Soak She other half of the box in a gill of cold water for an hour, and pour on a gill of boiling water ancl half a pound of sugar; when thoroughly dissolved by stirring over She fire, divide this into two equal parts and flavor one with a gill of lemon jelly and She other with currant or raspberry juice. Now pour into a mold a layer of vanilla, jelly and whlM this is firm, one of currant, then one of chocolate and lastly one of lemon, allowing each to get solid first and adding the next when it is cold but,has not begun to congeal. These successive layers must have the cooling process hastened by placing on ice.. Omen J ELLY. —Rightly made, this is an exquisite dish served with whipped cream. Soak a box of gelatine in half a pint of very strong coffee. The coffee can scarcely be made too strong for thia purpose; dilute with three pintsmf beiling,water and sweet- en to • taste. ,1.1 preferred, a little lemma juice can be added. This jelly does not take as much sugar. as the acid jellies.. *fteenewavamomemeiw• oi imeemmemeneeadem.wmakiiMieni Birds, Bets aad Insects. Thirty sardine faotories isa Meizie ere el oss ed because there is no ruu of suiteble-siz ed fish to pack. The miscroscapists say that a mosquito has tweoty-two " teeth ' in the eud of its bill—eleven above and the same nunaber be- low. All the chickens in the western part of French Guinea, aro perfectly white. It is impossible to find oue with a colored feather. Cranes, storks and wild geese fly fest enough to make the trip from northern Europe to Africa inc week, bnsmost of them rest north of the Mediterranean. A fence 500 miles long of wire 'netting, separating the colonies of New Sonth Wiles and Queensland,, is one of the wonders of Australia. It is designed to keep the rab- bits out. • Four different peaks in tho mountains of Idaho are from thirteen to twenty-three feet lower, by actual measurement, than they were fifteen years ago, Geologists do not explain the why" of their settling. Africa is 234 times as large as Ontario It is the most remarkable of all the couu tries as respects its animal distributions Out of a total of 523 known species, 412 of them are to be found in no other country Caterpillars from six inches to a font long are common in the vicinity of the Darlin river, Australia. The natives twist them together ancl boil them in kangaroo grease. Travelers who have tasted this delicacy say that it is not altogether unpalatable. When an Egyptian dog wishes to drink at the Nile he goes a short distance up the river end howls lar some time. The croco- diles being attracted by the sound immedi- ately crowd to the place, while the dog hastily runs to the part which the croco- diles have left and drinks in safety. The University of Pennsylvania has directed its architects to draw plans for a dog hospital. It is to be located in the grouods of the veterinary department, and will be ready for patients iu September. It will be the first building of the kind in America, and is to be modeled after that at When I3aby was sick, we rave her Castorfe-, When she wits a Child, she cried for Castoria. When sho became Miss, she clung to Ca -stork!. When she bsd Children, she gave them Castorirs Took Him. Down, Masher—" rd rather go into a lunatic asylum than enlist in kilty ' regiment." Soldier—" Went, I've nae doot ye'd feel mair ab home there." • He'd Been There Before. The other day a clergyman invited the members of his Bible-blass (rather rough lads) to tea. They all seemed to enjoy the good things provided for them. But the clergymen's wife noticed that one lad refused to help himself to the nia,rmalade. She thought she would try him again, but he rbfused, so she asked him if he did not like marmalade. • He replied, with a broad grin : " No tbank- you, mum ;1 works where they make i;hildren Cr' for Pitcher's Castorial Misery is cured by the brine of tears. The cream of a joke should never be sour tIAKING Powail Nt.G.ILLETT:ron ensete THE I EMM. BAKINa POWDER PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST. Contains no Alum, Ammonia, Lime, Phosphates, or any Injuriant E. W. OILLETT. Toronto. Ont. HAVE YOU "Backache means the kid- neys are in trouble, Dodd's Kidney Pills give prompt relief.' "75 per cent of disease is first caused by disordered kid- neys. "Might as well try to have a healthy city without sewer- age, as good health when the kidneys are clogged, they are • Sold by all dealers or of price so cents. per Dr. L. A. Smith & Co. book called Tiadney Tall thescavengers of ,the systein. "Delay is dangerous. Neg- lected kidney troubles result i n Bad Blood, Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, and the most dan- gerous of all, Brights Disease, Diabetes and Dropsy." "The above diseases cannot exist where Dodd's Kidney Pills are used." sent by mail on receipt box or six for $2.o. Toronto. Write for She Still Lectures. Mr. Tile: "Your wife used to lecture before she was married; has she given it up now?" Mr. Milds " Weiner-yes—that is, in public." Fagged Out!! THAT tired, Worn - Out feeling, of which so many women cotnplain after a dev's washing, is done awe. to with by those Nvho use that greet Labor * 0 0 Vk> Saving \ ' ot, 00P Which manes the Dirt drop out Without Hard Rubbing Without Bolling Without Washing Powders Try the easy, clean and economieal way—the ansi Silillight 9v: Wofill=nbt appointed. SUNLIGHT SOAP litsvieg no equal lot Purity, you may use it with comfort and delight for every household purpose. • 0 • 0 6 WORKS; PT. SUNLIGHT LEVER BROS., Lueirre NEAR BIRKENHEAD TORONTO ut5 a , • Ears Ft: THE BEST COUGH MEDICINE, SOLD BY =MISTS EVEITIMEDE. TN NERVE BEANS NERVE BEANS are 5 new dis- covery that cure the worst cases of Nervous Debility. Lost vigor and Failing manhood; restores the weakness of bOdy or mind caused by over,work, or the errors or ex- cesses of youth. This Remedy ab- solutely cures the most obstinate cases when all other TREATMENTS have failed eveuto relieve, r.lold by drug- gists at 31 per packsge, or six for 85, or sent by mall on receipt of price by addressing THE JAMES MEDICINE Toronto, Ont. Write for pamphlet SOW in— ..,•••• ognsed l•••• NEW Ito•• of woriz, rapidly end honor:04w by them oi etther rex. yoong fir oltould in their own localAleawirtroocr they live. Any ono ran do the 0,1*. EtwY We ft otieh everything. We start yen. N. risk. You cot (10•14Q your pore memo 110, or nn your time to the work. TI•lx Inn entire y +tow told nint lailig8W0Mktall11110.0.11,,i•yerv worker. Beginners ore contitta.110in 525 to $50 per 0 colt nd *arm nolo, and n ore after 0 ufo experience. We CAll 1.11111611 you In on- ploytnent end to an you 05E5. ilo spneeto explein Imre. Full latuo lace 85511. WIZ UM Az ALIKERA, MAINE. pilEAD-MAKER'S 0 -Kmt.a.swixe ElnIONEVER FAUX TO DIVE SATISFACTIOrs FOR SALE By .Ati. OCALTIRCIt READ THE BIBLE.1 And at thr: Same Time Earn One Hun. • dred Dollars isa Gold, A. The first letter containing the correct answers to the following questions received at the °Oleo of Tat GANA. DIANADIVratILTURIST(each week from now until the 31s5 01 Deoemb-r, 1892) will receive $100 in gold; the second will get $50; third, $55; fourth, handsome silver service: to the next 53 correct answers we will send prizes ranging from 55 down to $2. farEvery answer, whether 5 prize winner or not, will receive a special prize. QUESTIONS TO 113 ANSIVERED.—(1.) How many books does the Bible contain? (2.)11ow may eihatzst (3.) iloiv niany vernal nrt (1.)1Ve commence to open letters on bIondsc miming of each week. It more than one letter is rtivrived by the same _wail with correct answers, theAc opened will countnl, ie second will take next plarA, and so on. (2.) Each letter containing answers mut.; be accompanied by $1 to pay for sir months subscription to TUE AGIRIant, xonisi.--one of the vary hest Illustrated Home Journals in Canada. (3.) People living in the United States have precisely the same privileges in connection with tbis corn,. petition as those residing in Canada They can easily gage their letteni each week so as to reach us in the bagin- anignogod0fprthizee. week, when they will be almost sure to get I 66 WIIAT THE PEOPLE SAY OP 135. "Received $1,000 prize all right "—M. M. BRADEN, Vancouver, B. C. "I shall recommend my friend, Ienter yourcompetitlons."—Loar• KTLCOURSIE• A. D. C. to the Governor General, Ottawa, Canada "Splendid prize received." -0. McComack, St, Stephen, 15. B. "Prize 01 3205 recolved."—D. IIARRISON,Syraeuee,n Y. "Handsome prize received."—MisslituTTA. ICENTz, Ox. ford, Mich. Cvvr 5000 receipts f tom prise winners its former competitions on fyle in our office. Letters coa- 1 Mining money should in all cases be regestered. Ad. ' dress, Tan Aunt on LTUIIISTPUBLISHING Co., Petsrbog. ougn,, Canada. go VILER 1.q WT: OF ..61 r.WILD n4 'eir ft AW III CURes .74COL.IC C 01 -ERA CHOLERA-- MORBUS DIARRHOEA DYSEIV TERI( sitigkER COPAINTS CHILDREN 6rADULTS Price 3Scrs BEWARE of IMITATIONS LABORING'. MEN'S REMEDY: ST. J.A.0013S OIL, THE GREAT REMEDY FOR PAIN, CURES RHIEURVIATIIStin, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, Wounds, &reams, Stiffness, Swellings, Backache, Neu. • ralgia, Sciatica, Burns. THE CHARLES A. VOCEILER COMPANY, Baltimore, Md. Danaellan Depot: TORONTO, ONT.