Exeter Advocate, 1900-5-31, Page 6,Z
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er ere who do. net rEetivV,i3)01."PaPe
rliLy will please 1lotUy us at (axe.
ply tit this ollice foradvertleingrateS •
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TIIE EXETER ADVOCATE.
THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1900,
' HORN WRINKLES.
The li.ttle vices are +star moral bac,
eria
Procrastina tion is a virtue when ap-
plied to anger.
Friendship give's no license to dis-
pose of courtesy.
The energetie man is be who works
when he ia tired.
The emPitY WagOla gOeS fastest and
rattles most.
Many troubles are bubbles that
burst if we but touch them.
It is usually safe to supsect the
man who is suspicious of others.
Wi,se man thimks twice before he
spelake, and then he d'oesn't.
Good fortune sometimes comes to
see us in a very shabby looking car-
riage. I
Not a Nauseating Pill—The exciplent
of a pill is the substance which enfolds
the, ingredients and makes up the pill
-mass. That of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills
is so compounded as to preserve their
moisture, and they cau be carried into any
latitude without impairing their strength.
Many pills, in order to keep them from ad-
hering, are rolled la powders, which prove
nauseating to the taste. Parmelee's -Vege-
table Pills are so prepared that they are
agreeable to the most delicate.
'Don't AllSOVer Impertinent Questions.
Impertinent questions are to be met
with firm and dignified pialitenes.s. AnY
uestiott about another's personal af-
lairs, about the price of one's clothing,
the amount of one's earnings, the ',ea,.
sons one has for tentirely private con -
'duct, is impertinent, Would I answer
such questions? Not at all. 'Usually,
by a little tact, one can settle such
-questioners. If there is no other way,
I counsel a plain but courteous sincer-
ity—a simple refusal to answer. One
may just say: "Pardon me, I prefer
not to give any information whatever
on this naatte,r."—Margaret B. Sangs-
ter in the April Ladies' Home Journal.
iSN'hen children are pale, peevish and
restless at night they require a dose
oe two of 'Miller's Worin Powders.
They are pleasant to take; no physic re-
quired.
ESSENCE OF IillEVITY
The Shortest and Most Conbise
Story Ever Written About
Dodd's Kidney Pills..
Krt. C. Kennedy, of Montreal, tills
Author, Wells fate Whole Tale Ira
Eleven Words A 11:0111/11elllge
TribIlIe to Dodd's gidney
Pills, Notwithstanding.
Montreal, ifaY le seldOM that
the ma.te wthb speaks the most\ words
makes the greatest speeeh. In ,the
Ottaiwa Houlse o parHainent , it is
proved every i day that the member
that eau soy what he has to Say' most
concisely Ca.frieemost Weight in de-
bate. In the shine way the letter of
Bins. Kennedywill not have the less
meaning because of its brevity.
Mrs. C. Kennedy resideS on St. Philip
St., 'City. of Montreal. `.0nolier , own
initiative Lithe 'wrote the following let-
ter ouncerning the well-kriown rem-
edy Dodds Kidney, Pills.
,
January Sth,19110.
Dodds Medicine CO., Limited:—
de.titleraen,—Having ;used Dodd's
KbrineY, Pills,' I find them a great
success.
MRS. C., KDNNEDY,
32, St. Philip St., Montreal, Ca.nada:
Mrs. Kennedy says not a word of
detail bait; the one great -fact oi‘ 'tar
portance te4 other Sufers lies in the
expression "great eliccess:- ,Tbat
contains all the comforting assur-
ance that could be expressed by a
colulan of: detail.
As is, well-known, Dodd's Kidney
Pills are claimed to cure any, form of
Kidney Disease that preys on man-
Eisease,Dia.betes, Rhea-
matism, Dropsy, Heart Disease, Wo-
men's Weakness, Bladder and Urinary
Complaints and Blood Disorders. , It
is used; with equally "great success"
in all. Whatever was the ause of
Mrs. Kennedy's necessity for Dodd's
Kidney Pills, the result was the same
as experienced by everybody.
The race as au Index.
It is a fact that persons astonished
are apt to open their mouths. The
'reason is that attention, involdntarily
attracted, uses up nerve -force, andre-
lases the muscles not engaged in star-
inge'l'or the same reason, the aston-
ished person is liable to let things fall
out of his hands. Contrariwise, one
who is forcing himself to keep' his eye
and thought on a single object, sets his
teeth and contracts his eyelids—an an-
, tornatic precaution against distraction
by other sights. A sudden dissipation
,a the force collected in such voluntary
'attention agitates the muscles, pro-
ducing a sigh Of relief, a smile or a
Mani s Lineut Clues Distemper,
Dot's Prayer for Peace.
On one evening little four-year-old
Dorothy had failed to remember her
lather in her grayer because he had
scolded her.. "You must pray for
leapa, too, Dot," said her mother. "But
„I don't want to," replied the little one,
"But you must, Dot," said her mother.
Draffeng„npon her knees again Dot
added :"And- for pity's sake, bless papa
to, and,let us have peace in the fm -
It is not what you eat, but what as-
similates that nourishes. MILLER'S
,COMPOUND IRON PILLS cure faulty
assimilation.
, THE FASHION,
Provailiaw Ideas In Wraps —Chill-
, demo's, SO'les.
The class of wrap called 1' isiie is reviv-
ed for elderly women and is very digut
liedi and elegant when comPesed of fine
cloth embroidered with soutache oe oi si'
cifienne decorated with fringe.
Plaid capes, with capuehons and wool:
en ',fringe, continue to be in great de-
mand for traveling, excursionand all
purposes where a warm, serviceable end
easily adjusted wrap is required. To
great extent they take the iplaee 'of the
shawl, whieh the last generetion found
s� useful. They are worn by ydung girls
as well as women. '
For children the long cloak
, , the loose
Oita and the jacket are seen. In the
Couldn't Find Thera.
eountryman—and countrYm8I2
May generally be trusted to tell the
truth—relates in the Cincinnati Times -
Star a story illustrative of what he
calls the idiotic behavior of city, folks
on the farm.
—why,- said he, "a student from the
Cincinnati University visited my farm
last summer, and one day, when I was
starting out to dig Sonte new potatoes,
helOole the basket out of my hand and
said he would get them. Efelevas gone
half An hour or so and -came back with
an empty basket .t He had hunted over
the whole patch,`hie said,nd couldn't
finel'anything but blossoins, There
wasn't a single,potato on the vines."
I, really (thduglat he would fa.int
when I took the hoe and began dig-
,
ging them out of the ground."
New Pruitt Piercer.
Fruit can be pick -ed and automa-
tically discha.rgecl let° a barrel with-
out benis,ing by a Canadian patent
'picker, which has a cloth funnel sus-
pended on the and of a rake, which
is used to pull the fruit into the fun-
nel,' with a tube provided With a pad
at the lovrer end, against which the
,frait etrikes. '
New life for a quarter.' Miller's Com-
pound Iron Pills.
Shamrock on Graves in Africa.
Shafenalock will be planteCl on the
eaves of the lIrieh eoldiers in 'Smith
, Africa. The duke of York has accepted
'a thousand packets of seed and has
'forwarded thera to ,the officers of the
Xrieh'brigade. ,
The Most Popular Pill.—The kill is the
most popular of all forms of medicine,
and of pills the most popular are Parme-
lee's Vegetable Pills,because they do what
it is asserted they can 'do, and are not put
forward on any fictitious claims to excel.
lenee. They are compact and portable,
they are easilytaken, they do not nauseate
nor gripe, and they give relief in the most
stubborn cases.
Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator does
not retain.° the help of any purgative
Inedicine to cioninlete the cute. Give it a
trial and be coavinced.
Difference in the Eyes.
IPeeple are right or left eyed just
as tbay are right and 1:eft handed,
and, jut as the right hand is usu-
ally the moire powerful, so iS the right
eye. Only one person in Ten is Ief 1 -
sighted. It is very probable that the
11/Se of weapons during countless ages
has had something to do with the
extria plewer of the right 03'04
llovr.to 1a1tc Coolcies Crisp.
tablespoon of vinegar added to the
regtilar recipe' for cookies Will make
them crisp, and the children'enjoy the
seep.
Holloway's Corti Care is a specific for
tliti removal of corns and WaltS. We have
never heard of its failing to remove even
the worst kind,
Tell the Deaf. -Mr. J. F. Kellock,
Druggist, Perth, writes: "A customer of'
mine having been cured of deafness by the
use of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil, wrote to
Ireland, tellingehje friends there of the
cure.. Ire-conisequence I received an order
to -send half a crezen by expresS to,Vex-
ford, Ireland, this week."
It -vvould puzele an Onion to under-
totand what there is abotti; a rose that
people ilk.
Iiiilimellt Cures Garat.111 COWS
Children Ileld Sacred la Japan.
From one end of jaPan to the (Alt-
er, a child is treated as a. sacred thing
loei it one's own or a stranger's. (Each
one carries its name and address on
a ticiket round its neck, but should
it indeed stray from home food and
shelter and kindness would meet it
anytwhere.
MILLER'S CO MP OUND IRON PILL s
increase the power of assimilation, thus
increasing weight and strength.
THE DRESSY WOMAN.
Parisian designers and ateliers tire
making attempts ,to revive empire styles
oll-WITitttiledaan3
andC1tuinte%YceihOnin ti
iinflggo\‘I
;.h%'.form of
varlous kinds of flowers, some with jew-
eled eeuters, will be used ou dress hats
and bonnets next season.
One of ,the newest forms of the bolero
jacket. appears to have no -fastening at
all, but is hooked invisiblY under the
franta, teivard th sine Seams.
„
Watteau styles, panniers, elbow sleeves
ancl shortened :skirts are entmierated
among fashions that are to prevail be=
fore the summer season of 1900 is over.
niIin
el‘oisituullyn eo'f' tjialceklelet;voef$tseFftt'enftc;1111n7 ;To Poer,
uall'S gray or biscuit color have revers
and turndown collar of richly colored vel-
vet.
GIRL'S GOWN.
case of older girls the fi,garo is also em-
ployed, while the skirt of the gown is
plaited, and the chemisette and high
corselet belt are added to the wardrobe.
Plain cloth, plaids in different shades of
the same color'checked woolens and
It
bengaline are ll fashionable materials
for children's wear. •
Today's cut shows'a girl's costume of
silver gray cloth. The skirt is laid in
stitched plaits, and the bodice and
sleeves are also plaited, the folds of the
latter being horizontal. There is a short
bolero of guipure, which forms epaulets
andlis secured, in front by a'Cliou of ',vel-
vet and a jeweled button. The' plaited
collar is of bengaline, the belt of velvet,
with a chou and long ends hanging at the
back. . Juni° CfronnET.
Art la Cooking Vegetables.
'Dhe vegetables, cabbage, onions and:
carrots are amn.ch more delicate and
deliciou;s, if after they arci boiled you
pour over :them: a • little milk, with
pepper, salt and butter, and boil, like
canned corn.
No worm medicine acts so ,nicely as Mil-
ler's Worm Powders; no physic required.
Inexpensive Furniture relish,
•
.One-dhircl vinegar and two-thirds
linseed oil make an excellent mixture
to brighten furniture when rubbing
it in spring cleaning.
FASHION HINTS.
Materials and Accessories For Sum-
mer Wear.
Printed warp taffetas are among the
new summer goods. They .are in both
floral.and oriental patterns, and are used
for bodices a various kinds, as well' as
for entire gowns.,
Scarfs are used in all sorts of ways.
,Scarfs
of the newest methods is to arrange
the scarf in a large bow upon the breast,
the ends falling upon the skirt. It is
also worn inside the opening of open
front jackets and boleros.
Net is greatly used in many ways, ac-
companying the lace and guipure, which
have continued in vogue_ for so long.
Numerous cravats of pure white point
d'esprit are to be worn during the sum -
JOHN LABATT London
Are undoubtedly THE BEST.
Testirnonialti from 4 cbemists, io medals, 11
diplomas, The Most wholesome of beverages.
Recommended by Physicians. For sale evert.
whoro,
SHOR'y JACIIRT.
Dreaded Meal TiTe.
WIND
THE STORY OF A DYSPEPTIC WHO
HAS FOUND A CURE:.
'there is an Intimate Connection Betweca
Good Illealth, litappines4 and, Coati Di
getdi oft --- Dr. Will Panic Pills
Bring About 'fliese Conditions.
From the Tribune, I)eseronto.
Without, good digestion there can
be, neither good health nibr happiness,.
More depends ft5o,n the perfect work-
ing of the digestive ' organs than
most peOple, Imagine, and even slight;
fiunctional disturbanceec of the stom-
ach leaYes the victim irritable, mel-
at:wittily and apathetic. In such cases
mast people resort to laxative inedir
eines, but these only further aggra-
vate the, trouble. 'Whitt is needed is
a tonic; something that' will build
up the system, instead of yreakeninla
it as purgative' medicines do. For
this purpose there is no ine.daeine
equal to Dr. 'Williams' Pink ,Pills.
They enrich the blood and strengthen
and stimulate the digestive tract
from first dose to last. In proof Of
this -assertion' the ease of Mr.. Thom-
as AL Stewart, the well known and
genial proprietor of the Oriental
Hotel, Deseronto, maY be quoted
To a reportert of the Tribune who
mentioned the fact that he was .suf -
feeling from dyspepsia, Mr. Stewart
said:—"Why don't yo,u,i take Dr, Wil-
liams' Pink Pills?" A.skied why he
gave this advice Mr. Stewart con-
Linu.ed: "Simply because they are the
best medicine for that coanplaint
know of. For years I was a great
eufferer from indigestion, and during
that time I thinle I tried a score of
medicines. In sorne cases I got tem-
porary relief, but not ci cure. I fairly
dreaded meal times ana the food; that
I ate gave the but .little nourishment.
On the recoturnendation of a, friencl,I.
began using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
a little over a year ago'1 soon, ere
peeienced relief and no longer dread-
ed meal time, but as. I was deter"
mined that the cure should beper-
Manent if possible I corainu.ed.' tak-
ing the pills in lightdoses for several
months. The result is every vestige
of the trouble left me and I h'ave as
good an appetite now as any boarder
in the house, anck my digestive organs
work like a eharrn. T may alsOi add
that my 'general health was -.greatly
improved as 'a result ofusing th'e
pills."
"Do you object to my publishing
thiS in the. Tribune ?" asked the re-
t.ro rter.
oWell, I have no desire for pub-
licity," said Mr. Stewart, "but if you
:think it will help anyone who. suffers
as I did, you may publish the facts."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills' dure by, go-
ing to the root of the disease.They
renew and Imild up the blood, arid
strengthen the nerves, thus driving
disease from tb:e • system. If your
dealer doenot keep them, they will
be sent' Postpaid at 50 cents a box,
or six boxes fol' 2.5O,'by 'addressing
'the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock -
Ville. Ont.
eM44,
PARIS OFThE FAUBOURGS.
The Workingman's Pride" and MS -
light In the Beautiful Streets.
Ari, article in The Century, 'Pris of
the Failbourgs," by ltiehard Whiteing,
throws a bright light on the difference
between the lives •af the laboring
clasees
in the French capit61 and in London.
The Parisian lives in the streets and
prides himself on their beauty and clean-
z,The Londoner has less to boast'
of in this respect and takes less interest
in the external aspect of his 'city;
' The people of 'the faubourgs, the hum-
ble folk generally—small aradees mad
mor, ornamented at the ends bY large
t.itcts in which etin ribbons are, rtm.
almbroidered and fringed scarfs of crepe,
16 chine will also be, used. . Nothing, is
.prettier than these large, soft scarfs, .the
knot of which is samealmes fastened by
a jeweled ornament. 'They are particu-
larly pleasing with the half lengthloose
sacques. There are cravats composed of
cascades of mousseline de sole 95 den -
toile, the ends of which are fastened in
the bolt, which a,re more suitable for
wear with the bolero or short jacket.
A picture is given of a short jacket of
black cloth. It is closed cut the side by
a fly, and all the edges are finished by a
blind -of stitched white cloth. '110 collar
and cuffs are of white cloth with a fee-
ble of black velvet, and the pockets are
of black velvet. The hat oL spangled
black tact has white feathers at the side.
TJDIO CHOLLE'l.
Various Team,
There are various kinds of tea which,
though not fraudulent manufactures, are
not made of the real leaf. In Mauritius
they mal -e tea of the leaves of an orchid
they drink mate, a tea inade
from a untie° species of holly. The AbyS-
syniana mnite a tea from the leaves of
the Cath 1 edulis, tehich has such stinui-
lating (IU 111111044 that 1,500 a leaf or two
of it chetved have all the reviving effects
of "the cub that elUiers."
smal) annuitants, as well as workmen—
like all the rest of us, are the product of
thole surroundings. They are shaped by
the private life and by the public life, by
the street and the htnne. 'These people
iu Paris owe a great deal to the public
life. It condescends to their needs for
color, variety, niovernent, in a way uni-
versal ,among the Latin nations. 'Out of
doors is merely their larger home and
they expect to •firid 'adequate .provision
there for every kind of 'enjoyment. Our
own race tends to reealid tlaat.'domain as
a mere thoroughfare between the work-
shop and the fireside, wbere all our inter-
ests are centered. If it serves that Pur-
pose; that is about all we ask of it. It
may be as ugly as it likes and within cer-
tain limits of indulgence almoat as dirty.
To the Frenchman it is more than a place
of transit. It is almost a place of so-
journ.
So the Parisian common man has his
sharp of•the Champs Elysees and of the
boulevards in his fteedom of access to
their fountains and promenades and their
bordering alleys of tender green. He'
conies 'down stairs to them,' so to speak,
as soon' as the scavengers have done their
timely work' He descends to his thor-
oughfare as tbe ex -pe- cts to de-
scend to his breakfast room or -his study,
with all its appointments freali from the
brown arid Shining in their brightness'of
metal and glass. So whatever the gloom'
of the domestic prospect his street helps
.
him to feel good. The beauty of the Stat -
nary, of the pulllic buildings, is a means
to the same end. For nothing the poor-
est of poor devils may see the glorious
bronzes in the'terrace garden of the Tui-
leries, the outdoor figures of 'the'. Luxem-
bourg, the great horses of the Place de la
, Concorde, the magnificent compositions
of the arch: The very lamppost that will
light his way at nightfall serves the pur-
poSe of a thing of beauty all through the
day. ' Compare it with the English bar of
cast iron, hideous to:the ey`e in form and
color, foul with the mud stains of years
of traffic. The Frenchmen must Lave it '
suave. and shapely in its lines, a model of
a good renaissance ornament in its'deco-
rations, bronze in its material and wash
ed and polished every week or so to keep
it smart.
Itt Island of Illacit Cats.
One of the queerest corner's of tlie
earth is Chatham island, off the
coast of Ecuador. The island abounds
in cats. Every one of them is blank:
They live in the crevices of the. lava,
near thah, coast, and get a living by
.catching fish and maim instead Of
eats.
There are cases of consumption so far
advaneed that Bickle's Aitti-ConsnmptiVe.
Syrnp will not cure, but ueue so had that
It will n-ot, give Telief. For coughs, colds
and all affe-ctions01 the throat, lungs and
'chest, it is 0 specific which has never been
l'known to fail. It promotes a free and
;easy expectoration, thereby'removing the
,phlegm, and gives ,t,be diseased parts a
chance to heal.
To make sweepta.,2; Easy.
To lessen the wear on brodros and
ramlee sweePitg easier an impr,oved
handle is divided into three sections,
the, center section being :a flat sPring
plate set in the same plane with the
broom head, which relieves part:: of
the strain on the bristle
THE PELICAN.
A Bird That Offends Both the lEye
111111 the Nose.
Pelican bend, in the Missouri river,
near St. Charles, Mo., is the scene of a
great annual gathering of pelicans. There
sis a big fiat bar in the river there which
has endured far beyond the usual span
of bars' existence in the treacherous,
shifting current of the Missouri. This
bar is the semiannual stopping place of
vast flocks of pelicans that migrate from
south to north 01 the spring and from
north to south in the fall.
Persons who have observed their habits
claim that they invariably arrive at Peli-
- can bend on Sept. 4 and remain until cold
weather sends them south..
The pelican is not an attractive bird.
He offends both the eye and the nose. but
he is cominendably regular in his habits.
The parent birds catch fish and after
eating their fill deposit the others in their
pouches under their bilis and carry them
to their young. These pouches will hold
from three to eight pounds of fish. They
are elastic and when distended to their
utmost nearly touch the ground. When
empty, the pouch lies close up under tte
big bill and is merely a mass of wrinkles.
It is this: pouell tlmt gives the pelican his
characteristic and disagreeable odor,
caused by particles of decaying fish.
The ,pelican's legs are short and strong,
and, its fen have' large webs. It is not
a fast swimmer nor a rapid filler, but it
ispractically tireless .in both air and wa-
ter. On land it is' awkward and un-
wieldy. Its "feathcis Are pure white ex-
cept for a fluffy tuft of brown plumage
that is seen in ,the top of .the head for
about six weeks in, the- early summer.
This telt disappears in August and lea.ves
,a' pimply bald pate that is red, then pink,
then te straw color.' By Nov. 1 the skin
on the head hardets into 31 horny crest,
which grows as the winter progress, un-
til by the time the bird arrives at its
breeding -place in the ' northwest it is so
prominent that it is called the "cciiler-
board," because of its resemblance teethe
centerboard of a sailboat. 'When proper'.
ly cured, the pelican skins and plumage
are largely rated in ‘t.-Jurten's gartnente land
bats.-
By their action on the 'Stomach, Liv-
er and Bowels, Miller's Worm Powders
correct all such troubles as lack of Ap-
petite, Biliousness, Drowsiness, Sallow
Complexion, etc.; nice to take.
For ilesiticuts,Ouly.
A very peculiar effect waS produced
by the foIloWing announcement con-
tained in the advertisements of a
country fa irf—"A.mong other , attrac-
tive features of fills great fair there
will higgly amusilng donkey races
and pig races. Competitions in these
two+ contests (open to residents only!'
IkarEs oilluteut Cures Diphtheria;
cat -0,11e 'Tales role Denalrairds.
SOu.th Carolina having abolished the
ealhon and substituted the disnenserv
she now proposes to establish hoapil-
tl tor drunkards, where thirst ‘vill
Ie 'treated as a disease. It along with,
bromides a.nd tonits the cat -o' -nine
tails should be prescribed tor inebri-
ates who neglect or abuse their wives
and children, the innovation would
work vvonclerfuI cures. Tile one dan-
,
ger of cl6alzing with' dr•nitkonness as a
disease is thaJ, it `may be forgottenz
that', drunkenness is also a vice. ,
Stratford, 4.th Aeig,, 1893.
IVIeSsrs. C. C. RICHARDS & Co.
- ,Gentlemen,—My neighbor's'boY. 4,years.
olds fell into ,a tablet! boiling, water and
got scalded fearfully. A few days later
hit- legs swelled to three times theta na-
tural size and. b-roke out- in rimning sores,
Ills parents.could get nothing to help him,
tall 1 recommended MTNAftla'S LINT-
MENT, which, after using, two bottles, ,
gompletely cured. him, and 1 know of seve-
ral cases around here almost aseernark-
able, cured by the same Liniment, and X.
can truly say I never handled a' medicine
which has had as good a sale or given suc1a
universal satisfaction.
M. H.I131.1RT General Merchant.
vi'itiere Large tritmiiies
Theae is a sletriety with over 300
ineml)ers in Riga, Russia, each of
whom plays three rubles, every time a.
child is born' to orie of the other
members, while the eine who has the
child gets from 300 to 750 rubles, nes
cor.ding to the imbiber of payment&
he has :atade.
Tfealth for'the Worm
Powders.
limiest tittle Wish.
Young Wife—I wish I were o.rn.o1.1i.
Young Husband—*Why ?
Young Wife—So 1 could get into
,
some new clothes.
.Cares Colds Etc',
Moles and, Rats Cau See.
Despite popular ,bplief Moles and
bats are not, blind., Moles' eyes are,
minutelin. or,der to ,aalve , pain when
.htirioWing under the earth. ,
The daughter of a Mississippian who
has adopted Memphis as her home tells
the following story, of her,fathere
"Papa was"relating to the family and
some of his friends one day the experi-
ence ale hadgone through in having atooth pulled., I -Ie eaid tile deutist pulled
se hard that he pulled him clear out of
his chair. 1 11010 only a little girl at the
time, but 1 mustered up ,courage to say
half musingly: •
t"Well, papa, that must have hurt
mighty bad.'
'Well, 1 pees it did,' he replied. 'If
yon could have seen the two roots of that
tooth that ' Nvere wrapped around My
backbone, you would know llow it hurt
without asking vire.' .
-I Suppose he meant jawbone, 1)4 fl
laut,,h that ,folloWed ,was' too1Riud. f eV'
to Ilea 4tlielxlerreetIon,",tind 1 lo hot 1
'tb 1l441ly,il14413)(c1PQtl)1tt7i1tat9
had tit l'euiphiStSeiontetr,
How's This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars reWard for
any case of Catarrh, that calmot Le cured
by. Hall's 'Catarrh Cure.
F. 3. 'CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0.
We, the undersigned. .have known r:j.
Cheney tor the last•:15' Years; and believe
htm perfectly honorable In all business
transactions andfinancially able to
Out ,any obligations made by their firm.
EST & TRAIJX, Wholesale IlyuggIsts,;
Toledo, 0. WiLDING,,KINNAN &
Wholesale' Druggists; Toledo, 0.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is takeniuternaliy,
acting 'directly upon the bleed and mucous
surfaces df the system. Testimonials sent
free: Price 750 per bottle. Sala by alt drug-
gists.
No Odor Front Cabbage.
A dash of soda pub in the water, in
which cabbage is boiled will prevent
anyodor thlrough the house.;
A new back for 50 cents. Miller's
Kidney Pills' and Plaster.
Wise Japanese Lau,. '
Japan's .house of representatives
adopted' a ,proposal to prohibit .boys
under 20 from smoking. 1
Mental and physical activity are pro-
duced by Miller's Coiimoilnd Iron Pills.
It is a good deal easier to pull e
man's reputation to pieees than it is
to pull it together again.
Coiled and other
fence wire at re-
duced prices.
The clern . ...Fence
Machine for
$5,00, Agent:6
Grego,r, Bzutiweiiwszauno.,telvdi.naWsoit:,iptent.
FOR OYbR FIFTY YEARS '
MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTIIING'SYRUP has boerx
'need Ili, mothers for their children tco0uin Jt soo inc
Ole 011115 softens the ;nuns, alluy8 pain, ouroe wind
oolio, and 18 tho'he'et remedy for dim rhum, 211c,a bottle.
Seld by all ,dreggists 'throughout tho world, Be sure
and at* for" Mrs. WiTIS ow'a Soothing Syrup,"
,
11, STOPPED FREE'. • Permanent-
. ,
F„ ;Treatise and •'82 trial bottle, seht
I I ILitCvlil':.V,,:s.roiiI;,].RICLA12i'Vel=
' for all Nervous Diseases, :Fits,
' EpilepSy, Spasms end St. Vitus' Dance, Ne
Fits or Nervousbecs after first day's use. ,
through Canadian Agency PREM to Pit patients,
dieY paying express charges only whee received,
Send. to Dr, Kline, 931 Arch st„ Philadelphia,Pa.,
T. N. U.
-273
CATHOLIC PRAYER
,
Religious Pictures, Statuary aa d Cluu
meets, Educational Works. Mall orcle)ti r alive
promptatiention. & Sz Al,'
FURS. FU
Importer and exporter of
Raw Furs anti Skins. Con-
sigMhents solicited,
et,przzos paid for ginsittg
If, JOIINSO
401.St. Peal street, Alontrea