The Exeter Advocate, 1894-9-6, Page 7MISCELLANEOUS READING
GRAPE AS. WELL AS GAY.
" Reading For Leisure Moments for Old
and Young, Interesting and Profita-
ble.
Don't Worry.
Don't worry and wonder bow
You will meet the cares, of the morrow,
And darken a day that would else be fair
With the thought of some dreaded sorrow!
The burdens upon us now
Are heavy enough to beats,
And the croaking ravens of doubt and fear
Are meeting us everywhere,
Don't despair if the road is rough
And the end seems so far away,
The- iddle of life is hard to read
If we try to read it to -day.;
We shall reach our goal et last,
If we take every step in its place,
And the threatening clouds clack just ahead
Will dissolve Into meaningless space.
Don't worry your peace away
With some nonsense of hick or fate,
Let the mountains to climb and the rivers to
cross
Take their turn with tete rest and wait;
Our work will be bard et• now,
There's always enough to do to -day,
Don't worry about to -morrow.
Don't give up when failure and fate
Seem to hopelessly block your way.
But take up your life with a resolute heart
Where you left it yesterday;
Our heartaches are easily borne
With the hope, sweet and strong, in our
breast,
If we faithfully carry our end of the load,
Why, Clod will take care of the rest. -
Don't worry! Sometimes, somehow,
Our troubles will all be past,
And the dreary deserts that fright us now
Will blossom In beauty at last;
Devotion is stronger than death,
The day is as long as the night,
God lives all oergh
A STORY OF TILE DAY.
HE divorce had been grant-
ed, and she came out of the
courtroom in a kind of mood
difficult to explain.
Was she glad! She did
not know! She felt an ir-
resistible desire to laugh ;
and at the same time the tears were
gathering in her beautiful eyes. •
She felt as if, suddenly, a heavy load
had been removed from her life; and yet
she was not satisfied.
She had put on a dress for the occasion
that was perfect in beauty and style. All
shades of heliotrope blended harmonious-
ly with suggestions of steel trimmings
here and there, and the little bonnet, all
made of bunches of violet, set off to per-
fection her beautiful golden hair.
During all the long proceedings her
ele husband had not looked once at her. And
in her heart she resented it as an offence.
She wanted the divorce, but she would
have liked to have seen a shade of regret
in him who had loved her so madly not
soing ago; ancl, although all the evidence
was against frim, there was, nevertheless,
a something that she could not explain
which made her doubt even the evidence
that had given her her liberty.
Her liberty! How strange that word
seemed to her after four years of married
life
What was she going to do with that
liberty?
Her counsel congratulated her, put her
in her carriage, and off she went, while
her former husband took the car to go
uptown to the hotel where he had lived
since he had left his beautiful residence
in avenue—rather, her residence,
for he had no fortune himself, only an
income derived from his partnership 1n a
broker's firm in Wall street.
He was a handsome plan of about five
and thirty, tall, with broad shoulders,
thick brown hair, slightly sprinkled with
gray, and fine eyes of a dark brown color.
He had always been n great favorite in
society, as he carne of a family of good
standing, and when, four years before, he
had married the ,beautiful Miss A—,
the only daughter of a railroad magnate.
everybody had thought it was a capital
match.
If she had the minions he hacl the name;
both handsome and in love with each
other, and for three years all went well.
They led the life that is led in. the upper
circles, entertaining in the winter at their
residence in -- avenue, and in summer
at their cottage on the Hudson.
A boy had. been horn—their joy and
pride—for, although a society woman, she
devoted most of her time to her duties of
wife and mother.
Suddenly, as all those echoes come, ru-
mors began to spread of his intimacy with
a pretty actress—then the rage of the
town.
Some well intentioned friends, as one
always has on such occasions, reported to
her his doings.
He had been seen driving her out of
town ! He had been seen inner dressing -
room on the stage ! Going to her home
after the performance and remaining
there late—all of which reports went to
her heart like poisoned arrows. destroy-
ing little by little her peace and her con-
fidence.
She said nothing to • him, and he Was
always loving and tender to her.
One day she found a letter that had fel
len from his pocket in her room. and,
with true woman's instinct,. she read.:
J.\t7 DEAR Bon—Why slid I not see you
yesterday? Come to -night. I hope your
wife suspects nothing, for I love you so
- much that I am afraid of the -Consequences
that "might follow her knowledge. Be
prudent, dear. Think of all the money
we want before we can, tit last, openly
announce what wo are to each other.
And what a happy day that will be. I
kiss your handsome .face.
Your loving, MADGE.
After his darling wife liad read that
letter life seemed a blank to her, and she
remained pale aitd motionless for a long
• time, thinking and torturing until her
brain seemed to be login her pain.
That same evening when Robert came
as usual. to her room she showett him the
letter, without one Word,
. He became red and pale in turn, took
the letter, tore it in. pieces and threw- it
into the burning grate, standing before
her. motionless.
"What have you to' say?" asked his
wife,
"Nothing," he answered, ciI love you,
and ',you alono !"
"But that. letter! the meaning of those
words!" said sha.
"lean say nothing!" he replied, "de as
Ieai
yet please, ever thing you decide will be
x right I am sorry yeti read that letter,
for I would give my life rather than pause
you pain. r3tit, as it. is, 1 have nothing
to say, and ]: can only submit to what.
5 t • t l in a burst of
you shall ,cla.,cldo, Bub, .and "believe.
,passion he took her in his arms, believe
me, my love,, aj,y wifo,1love yen1 Ancl
r shall love you forevert"
She disengaged herself from his ern -
brace, and went away not to let him see
hor tea'ser anguish.
She di,. herd
not believe him. "It is all for
any money that he pretends to love ane,"
and with her pride guiding her she began
the next day proceedings tor an absolute
divorce.
She' did not believe him, "It is all for
m money that he pretends to love ine,"
Ho soon loft the house, ticking rooms in
the X —, and the case went its way
rapidly enough, for there was no defence,
all the evidence straight and true, and`
that morning she had been granted the
divorce, with the absolute custody of the.
boy.d
The carriage stopped at the door, an
she mounted the high stoop and entered
her boudoir. It was early spring. A fire
burned in the grate, but she felt cold—
oh, so cold ! Alone and free ! There she
sat, looking in the fire, and her last foto'
years were passing before her in all their:
toys like vanishing dreams.
How she had. loved. him she only knew
now that he was hers no more. How
happy she felt when those strong arms
had encircled her waist and kisses were
raining on her upturned face!
Oh, yes ! he had loved her as much as
she had loved him; and think and think
as she would, she could not remember
when he had seemed to love her less.
She almost felt a regret that she had
ever read that letter, for now all was over
and she was alone.
Although the fire was burning brightly
she felt cold.
'ghat was she going to do with her
life?
She had loved to be well dressed and
groomed for him only.
She had taken prude in. her home, in
her success in. society, for him only, and
now she was alone,
.A. flush mounted her face. She was
drinking that neverr more she was to sleep
with her head tossed on his shoulder.
The lace of the pillows an her bed to re-
main unruffled ! No more of those legiti-
mate joys of marriage, and of those pas-
sion flights which are the prerogative of
love. Alone ! and cold sheiswill be for-
ever, for not for one minute did it enter
her mind that she could love another
marked disturbances of phyiolo-real
functions when used to excess, as .rely
to possess valuable therapeutic properties,
which wo will, endeavor to find in its
smoke, It has been demonstrated that it
is destructible to certain germs. Dr, V.
1lassinari, assistant at the -hygienic) insti-
tute of the University of Pisa, publishes
some interesting experiments with to-
baeeo smoke on various pathogenic and
non-pathogenic organisms. The dura-
tion of the fumigations varied fromthirty
to thirty-five minutes, and the quantity
of tobaccoconsumed amounted to from
8* to 4i grains. It was shown that to -
beim smoke possesses the property of re-
tarding the development of some patho-
genic bacteria and preventing the growth
of others. Thus the smoke from a large
Virginia cigar retarded the development
of the Bacterium prodigiosus for seventy-
two hours. No development of colonies
of the spirillte of Asiatic cholera, anthrax
and of the bacillin of typhoid fever and
pneumonia was observed after front a
128 to 138 hours, The author regards
these results as due to the chemical action
of the ingredients of tobacco smoke. For
years dentists have recognized the fact
that tobacco is an active germicide, and
state that tobacco users have the best pre-
served teeth.
For twenty years I have been engaged
in the general practice of medicine, and
during that time have treated many oases
of pulmonary tuberculosis. I do not re-
member that one of my consumptive
cases was a habitual smoker of tobacco.
My reflections on this subject lead me to
suggest that tobacco smoke, as inhaled
daily and almost hourly by the habitual
smoker,, retards or prevents the develop-
ment of the bacillus tuberculosis in. the
larynx or lungs of the smoker, as it has
been demonstrated to prevent the devel-
opment of the bacilli of typhus fever and
pneumonia. Look back upon your oases
of consumption, and recall to mind any
among them who were habitual smokers
of tobacco. As far as I can recall to mind
tobacco smokers have good lungs. This
potion merits attention, as the great
doitroyer of human life is consumption.
Another fact in favor of the antidotal or
preventive influence of tobacco smoke is
the fact that consumption claims by far
tho largest proportion of its victims
among females, non-smokers of tobacco.
I am so strongly impressed with the prob-
ability of tobacco smoke being in some
degree a .cure or preventive of tuberculo-
sis that I desire to call the attention of
the physicians to the subject. Is it not
possible that tobacco smoke does prevent
the development of the bacillus tubercu-
losis in the lungs of the smoker? If it is
capable of destroying the germ that
causes caries of the teeth, why should it
not be equally effective against the germ
that causes caries of the lungs ? �iiow
many habitual smokers die of consump-
tion ? I do not hesitate to advise mod-
erate smoking to those who develop a
tendency to pulmonary tuberculosis.
man.
Another man ! the idea alone disgusted
her..
And her boy! What was she going to
tell him when grown up, he would ask
about his father.
Now, already, she did not know what
to say when tottering in. his long night-
gown he carne, led by his nurse to say
good night, for night had come, she had
sat there hours after hours, the butler'
had rapped at the door several times to
announce the dinner, she did not hear it,
and when awakened by the kiss of the
child, who, in his lisping way, asked as
he had been doing every night since his
father went away, for "papa," she could
only clasp the child in her arms to hide
tears which sprang to her eyes. That
same night, after having partaken of her
solitary meal, she went to her room, and
to pass away the long hours of the night
she took and reread. all the letters of her
husband.
It was early morning when the bell
rang loudly and a messenger boy came
with a note from the manager of the
X— hotel, saying that if Mrs. X -----
would see her husband living' she had to
make haste.
vvjth staggering steps, suddenly for-
giving everything, except that he was her
husband, and that she lovedhim as much
if not more than ever, she went to the
X hotel, which was very near. The
manager was waiting for her and told
her that Mr. Robert X—had conte in
the day before, remained in his room
writing the whole evening, his meal nn,
touched, and early in the morning his
servant on guard in the hall. hearing the
report of a pistol shot, rushed in the room
and found him lying on the floor with a
bleeding wound in the head.
A doctor had been called, the first ex-
aminations made and to avoid all responsi-
bility he had sent for her.
When she entered the room the doctor
was still there, and after she told him
that he was her husband he said that
there was hope left, the bullet was located
and would be easy to extricate, but that
he had to wait, as the patient was delirous
under the tension of high fever. " This
letter is for you, madame," he said,
pointing to a volumnious package on the
table. She took it and, on opening the
package, "My clear beloved wile, this is
my confession."
FROM THE UNITED STATES
a:toms At3ItOSS THE LINE.
And there she react with parting breath
and a road joy entering her heart that
Madge, the actress, was his sister, an
illegitimate child of his father.; that he
was afraid to tell her of this before he
could have settled her marriage with a
man of high standing in London) to whom
she was betrothed ; that for this ho ]rad
wanted a great deal of money to free her
of her engagements on. the stage; that he
begged her pardon of that secret which
had separated them and, not able to live
without her, he had chosen death ; be-
cause, as she was now free, he could never
live to see her in some time the wife of
another man.
She did not finish the letter, for at that
moment her husband opened his eyes and
recognized her, "Amy !" he said in a
weak voice.
But the doctor who had seen all and
guessed the troth, stopped her as she
was rushing in her joy to take him in her
arms..
"Remember, madam, his life hangs on
a thread ; be quiet and I will answer for
hisalife." So she contented herself by
approaching and kissing his poor wound-
ed Bead.
He smiled and .fell into a refreshing
sleep.
The same day the bullet was extracted,
and after long days of nursing ho was.
well again.
"But, city dear Amy, Ive shall have to
be married again," he said, smiling, to
his wife. "1 could, not corm and live in
your house now."
"Well, then," she saidi as happy as a
girl, "let us be married right now—and,
in this dress, too." it happened to bethe
same helliotrope dress that she wore three
weeks before.
And so they were remarried in that
room, in which their love had renewed
again, and aftersra'd they wont to thoir
beautiful residence at --- avenue, where
she found lots of cards and lettere eon-
gratulating her on her release—cards that
had come during her stay at the .hotel)
and whieh had been kept a secret.
She laughed great great deal over it, and
b
forgot all the past at once whon little
Bob name in his flowing nightrobo to say
goodn]ght to his mamma ailc't papa, with
Itis wondering brown eyes and the dimples
its his cheeks,
Uuele Sam's Broad ,Aures, Furnish Quite
a Few Small Items that are Worth, a
a Careful Reading.
The officers in the parks of Boston are
to use bioyoles,
Mississippi is the greatest tomato ship-
ping state of the South.
•
California almond crop of this year is
the largest ever grown,
Representative Wilson, of the 'Wilson
Bill, will go to Europe for a trip.
The Iuceme Tax Appropriation BLU: has
passed the United States Senate.
Heavy rains have :fallen in Alabama,
ruining a good deal of cotton and corn.
Senator Gallinger, of New Hampshire,
is said to be the best whist player in the
Senate.
Over 1,000,000 kangaroo skins are an-
nually used in the United. States for boot -
making.
Half the cotton crop in Dallas County
Texas, is said to have been destroyed by
boll worms.
A Chicago man who olreered at a wo-
man who was riding a bicycle in bloom-
ers was fined $25.
The amount of wire in the underground
conduits of New York City is estimated
at $4,000 miles.
It is estimated that the recent strike of
coal miners cost those directly concerned
in it $13,000,000.
Rev. Mrs. Sarah M. Barnes, pastor of
the "Universalist church at Junction City,
Pian., is seventy years old.
Miss Fuller, daughter of E. P. Fuller,
owner of McGregor Wilkes, pilots that
horse on the track daily.
]ttrs, Spencer, of Bourbon., Ind., now
sixty years of age, has had eleven hus-
bands and seven sets of children.
Two hundred scrub horses wore killed
by owners in a California city lately on
account of the scarcity of feed.
The Cotton .Manufacturers' Association
of Fall River, Mass., decided to reduce
wages from 10 to 12* per cent.
Dr. Bridgham, of Sullivan Harbor,
Me., has captured a turtle 100 years old
that can carry a man on its back.
The Australian lady bird, an insect
which makes war on fruit pests, has been
admitted to the United. States mails.
John A. Godfrey, son of the last chief
of the famous tribe of Miami Indians,
died recently at Fort Wayne, Ind.
A monument over the grave of Henry
0. Work, who wrote "Marching Through
Georgia," has been proposed.
Martin E. Yates, of Goshen, Ind , died
from the effects of opium poison in the
'Windsor Hotel in New York.
Governor Hogg, of Texas, while in New
York was offered a law partnership worth
from $20,000 to 525,000 a year.
Charles Winne, of Kingston, N.Y., was
arrested, charged with cutting out his
balky horse's tongue with a slip noose.
The largest farina in the United. States
is situated in Louisiana, it being 100
miles one way and 25 the other. The
fencing alone for it cost $50,000.
Russia and Italy are the two European
countries from which have come the ma-
jority of immigrants who landed at New
York during the first half of the year.
The Book Agent.
"Where there's a pill there's a pay."
Book agents might be termed chatter-
boxes.
The book agent works to keep together
the threads of his story.
There are many bulldogs that teach
book agents to lead a chased life.
Some book agents who carry knives
should use them on their long hair,
Book agents do all their talking before
it comes time to make a speech.
No book agent has ever learned how to
put on a young ladies skates rapidly.
It's generally "all up" with a book
agent when he begins to go down hill.
A. book agent is like a gas jet, the more
he blows the less light he gives out.
The wives of book agents may be the
weaker but it's the husband that's always
broke.
Mirrors often cast reflections upon book
agents, yet they never quarrel with
them.
Wouldn't it be funny were all the old
maids in the country to turn out as book
agents.
A turning point in every book agents
life. Meeting another man selling the
same boor:.
Tob'a000 v. Cotlsratnptidn.
We believe' that ere long tobacco will
be regarded as a valuable therapeutic
agent, A. plant wheli produces such
The past year has been hard on the
prodigal son, especially so if he travelled
as an agent.
The book agent who can change his
mind is better off than the one who can-
not change a dollar.
The book agent who is able to live on
his interest nowa days is certainly a man
cf principle.
It is said when an agent has a pretty
girl in a sleigh it's harder to hold himself
•
m than to hold the girl.
The lazy book agent who insists that
the world owes him a living is a dead
head in the voyage of life.
Jilson says that he has noticed that
when a discret book agent goes to the
pawnbroker's he generally puts up and
shuts up.
It is wrong to , overtax the organs of
speech. Book agents should not crowd
too Much of theirs upon prospective cus-
tomers.
An exchange asks, "will the coming
woman use her left arm as freely as the
right?" That depends upon the conning
book agent.
The pin is given a head so that it may
go just so far and no further. Book
agents can learn a good lesson from the
Ude pin.
The Shooting
Season Approaches,
----DO YOU WANT A -----
Hundred and Twent, -Five Dollar Shot .Gun.
for 70.00
The Oxford Damasous gun is made of three blades or strips of'Damaseus steel,
left choke, right recess choke, matted rib, treble bolt, cross bolt, button fore -end
Plain full or half pistol grip, chequered horn heel plate. Case hardened blue
mounting,
Hammerless, With Safety Catch and Indicators.
Sent C.O.D. on approval, charges both ways to l e guaranteed if not ea
factory,
10 Bore,
12 Bore,
$70,00 Net Cash.
$68.00 Net Cash.
Apply to the editor of this paper.
is.
in fourteen feet of water in the Itiohawk
River, near Rome, and he was under the
surface ten minutes before he was rescued
He was restored to consciousness and will
live.
William Armstrong, of Norwalk, Ohio,
died recently at the age of ninety-eight
years and four months, left six daughters
and one son, and grandchildren, great-
grandchildren and great -great-grandchil-
dren to the fifth generation.
An astonishing feature of a brilliant
Newport, R.I., reception seas the milking
of a gorgeously decorated oow on the
lawn. in 11111 view of the assembled guests.
The milk was distributed in glasses by
girls appropriately dressed.
An old gentleman of Halls, Pa., named
Williams fell over the Niagara bank,
near the cantilever bridge, ' unday and
was killed. It is supposed. he fell asleep
and rolled off. The body was found on
the rocks, 100 feet below.
It is rumored that Perkins, the cele-
brated wheellnan ol` the Northwest, who
distinguished himself at Brocton Point,
B.C., not long ago, has not mounted a
bicycle since that date, bat has sold his
own and joined the Salvation Army.
W. T. Small, for several years superin-
tendent of motive power on the Northern
Pacific, died at Rochester, N.Y.
There are 280 iron and steel manufac-
turing establishments in Pennsylvania,
with an invested capital of over two mil-
lion dollars.
George Alfred Townsend is mentioned
as the possible Republican candidate for
Congress in the sixth Maryland district.
As a fuel for vessels oil is about one-
qnarter cheaper than coal, according to
experiments recently made at Chicago,
William Waite, aged forty-six, of
Chesterfield, Ind., was found leaning
against a tree dead. He had been there
fully thirty-six hours.
John Newell, president of the Lake
Shore and Michigan Southern railroad,
died Sunday afternoon at Youngstown,
Ohio, of apoplexy.
Dr. Judson B. Andrews, superintend-
ent of , the New York State Hospital in.
Buffalo is dead. He was a great student
of mental diseases.
Under a decision of the Supreme Court
of Oonnectieut boys and their trunks can-
not be held for board. Yale youngsters
gave rise to the decision.
A mob of 5,000 people resisted the
efforts of the health officers of Milwaukee
to take a five -mouths -old babe to the
isolation hospital. The child had the
smallpox.
After being a mite for two years a
seven-year-old girl of Vineland, N.J., has
suddenly recovered her speech through
seeing the blood bowing from a cut ou
her finger.
A warrant has beery swore out for the
arrest of Enoch Filer, who controls the
majority of the coal mines in Mercer
County, Pa. He is charged with import-
ing pauper labor.
Henderson & Norton have been award-
ed $3,875 damages against Charles Cogh-
lan by a Pittsburg jury for the actor's
failure to appear at the Duquesne thea-
tre, in accordance with his contract.
The railroads of Florida have a mileage
of 2,500 miles. Compared with the popu-
lation of the state, they are more exten-
sive than the railroads of any other
southern commonwealth.
On the Indianapolis Board of Health is
Dr. Earp. The board passed a resolution
for the compulsory uprooting of weeds on
vacant lots. The doctor was among the
first victims of the law•.
Tho territory of Oklahama has 0 Epis-
copal, 105 Methodist, 25 Baptist, 94 Con-
graagatiortal, 25 'Catholic and 21 3?resby-
tensa churches, 8 Epworth leagues and.
50 Christian Eacieavour soeioties,.
Dr. Cyrus Teed, the Koresh chief, has
given gut to his follower; in Denver
county, Pennsylvania, the information
that ho has discovered a process by which
gold can he produced as cheaply as iron,
0. S. Bushnell, of Connecticut, who
furnished the money necessary= for the
building of the Monitor, and carried out
in full the ideas of its inventor, John
Ericsson, is still living and enjoying good
health. '
Young John Jacob Astor, in his new
house facing Central Park, New York,
has earvcd in marble on the outside his
own bust, wife's, his baby's, his father's,
his grand -father's, and ever so many
mote.
Arthur Smith, :fottrteen years' old', eat*
Something Dearer Than Crold or Silver,
The shades of night were falling fast,
when.. the mistress ttnclertook to inculoate
a few moral lessons in the mind of the
hired girl.
The (ruiner dishes had been removed
from tho table and the fragments of china
swept from the floor.
a` Mary 1"
The domestic raised her large, expres-
sive eyes.
o c 11;tar3-, what is dearer to you tllari gold
or'silver ?"
Even i1). the failing light it was appar-
ent that the servant girt was getting red
in the face.
c Mary—"
The Sweet, sympathetic voice was like
music to the cuss iuiu err to kindness.
"--what is it?"
"Co,pper," said lblefq, who has a weak -
miss for policemen,'
skirts the sound
There was a ofrustle„.
of hurried footsteps and the mistress was
alone.
The beaver's dam is constructed in ex-
act accordance with the host principles of
engineering, and is always in width. bath
° gexactly proportioned
at top and bottom, 3,' p ,
to the weight of water it 15 intended' 'to
strppot't.
When Baby wa8 sick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she eri,rd f.r Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria,
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria
Country visitors to New York almost
always visit Trinity churchyard, the gal-
lery of the stock exchange, Brooklyn
bridge and Castle Garden. Since the
investigation of New York's crime in-
fested quarters have been given such pro-
mise in the newspapers very many
strangers now go "slumming" on their
account, visiting Hester street and the
shady precincts in the Tenderloin dis-
trict.
Your husband will notice a great
improvement iii your cooking,
when
'th U use PfrOLENE
Yol it house will not be filled with
the odor of hot lard, when
"a ygNE
4.Your doctor will lose some of his
Dyspepsia cares, zvlten
c.
&CAI S r!tL0 LE NE
Your children can safely eat the
same rood as yourself, when NE �� 1 e 9OLENE
'
Your money will be saved, and
your cooking praised, when
u USE 1- E
Famous cools, prominent phy-
sicians and thousands of every-
day housekeepers endorse it.
Will you give iia trial?
Sold in 3 and 5 pound pails, by aril grocers
1:.:ci o' : by
prt� Lt , „ Yr”
xa . t3 N. . . airhassk
ii
•;" i' a ^tor. and Anti. Stk.,
•••••11.**♦***♦.♦+•*a*o♦+**♦
LAKEHURST
S A.NITARIUM
For the treatment and cure of
ALCOHOLISM,
THE MIORI'HINE,HABIT,
TOBACCO HABIT,
AND NERVOUS DISEASES
The system employed at this institution
is the famous Double Chloride of Gold
System. Through its agency over 200,-
000 Slaves to the use of these poisons
have been emancipated in the last four-
teen years. Lakehurst Sanitarium is the
oldest institution of its kind in Canada
and has a well-earned reputation to
maintain in this line of medicine. In its
whole history there is not an instance of
any after ill-effects from the treatment.
Hundreds of happy homes in all parts of
the Dominion bear eloquent witness to the
efficacy of a course of treatment with us.
For terms and full information write
THE SECRETARY,
28 Bank of Commerce Chambers,
Toronto, Ont.
THE
MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY
FOR MAN OR BEAST.
Certain In its effects and never blisters.
Read proofs below :
KENDAND L'S SPAV N CURE
LL'S b.D .Y. San. 15.
13L`IIn OIa�T, , N' > , 1894.
Dr. I3..T. TaNbAnr. CO.
Glcntiemen—I bought a splendid by horse sOmO
Ono ago with a Spa'ei n. I gothim for S30. I used
Kends l's Spavin oUre. The Spavin is gone now
and I bave boon offered $150 fertile same Norge.
I only had him nine weeks, so r got $120 for using
$2 Worth of Readalt's Spavin Ouro.
Yours truly W. S. 1H eatng%.
KENDALL'S SPAYING CURE
Sti.Nt er, bXton., DOC, It, PM.
Dr. 13.33'. EnNnAae Co.
Stirs -2 have used your Eenden's Spavin Curd
With geed success for Cati'lis on. two horses and
1915 the best Liniment I have ever used.
Yours truly* Ammar Pnute aio8,
Trico S1 pee Bottle.
. For Sale by 911 Druggists, or address
Dr. 31; .r, ZU71V.DA .n CC/MEANT',
tateanl44H FALC.S, irt,
*ii*siii*line****♦ieoiiii
LECTRIC MOTORS from one-half Florae
Power up to 1 leveu Horse Power, Write
for prices, stating power required, voltage of
current to be used. and whether supplied by
street oar line or otherwise.
TORONTO TYPE FOUNDRY,
Toronto and Winnipe7
KERR WATER 1MIOTOR, from one-eighth
to twenty horsepower. C..mparativeteste
have demonstrated this water motor to be the
most economical agent klvwn for generating
power from e system of waterworks furnishing e
pressure of 50 pounds and upwards. In writing
for information state the water pressure yon pro-
pose to use and the class of work to be done, and
we will be p1 used to furnish all information re-
garding the size motor and the pipes necessary to
drive any kind of machinery.
TORONTO TYPE FOUNDRY,
Torontoand Winnipeg.
. OMATIC NUMBERING MACHINE.
Steel Figures, Perfect Printingand Aecut'-
ate Work, For prices address TORONTO TYPHI
FOUNDRY. Toronto and Winnipeg-,
FOR 215 CENTS WE WILL SEND "A
Receipt for a perfect TIAIR DYE,
g�uaranteed to restore the heir to its natural eater
in three or four weeks, Perfectly fectpy harmless. Can
be prepared at a cost of Treel (ANTS A C T,UART,
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded.
Address °AN ADIAN SUPPLY AGENCY,
240 Adelaide St. ,'4V., Toronto,
yy.. ytIGINEatid'13oiler,15Itorserower a :debt
.XU Second hand in' first Mass order, for a
s d t
a bargain. moRO'N'rO 1 P1i! FOUNDRY, TO.
rontoand Winuipegr,