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The Exeter Times, 1891-7-16, Page 3•Wt T JEN SBE- BLARES, Tho,lppearancc of t>Vo Beptiilesis Due to I'I'laJIl Congestion e:'tbte Eye-Yeius. yru Martinsville, NJ., Methodist Par- sonage, " My acquaintance with your remedy, BQscllee's German Syrup, was made about fourteen, years ago, when I contracted .a Cold which resulted in a Hoarseness and a Cough which disabled tie from filling my pulpit for a number of Sabbaths. After tryingaPhysieian, without obtaining: relief -- I cannot say now what remedy he prescribed —I saw the advertisement of your remedy andoobtained a bottle. I received such quick and permanent hal4ifrom. it that whenever we have had "Throat or Bronchial troubles since in our family, Bosehee's Ger- man Syrup has been our favorite remedy and always with favorable results. I have never hesitated to report my experience of its use to others when I have found thein troubled in like manner." Rpv, W. H. ITAGGARTV, of the Newark, New A Safe jersey, 11I. . Confer- ence, April 25, '90. Remedy. . G. GREEN, Sole lan'fr,Waodbury,NJ. INTERCOLO N IAL FtAILWAY OF CANADA, '1'hndirectroute between the West and ell e n0 1 lot n the Lower St, Gawrenceand, Rale des Chalenr,Provineeof Quebec; also for New larunvwlolt.NovaScot m.1'ruloe Fdrvara CapenretonIelauas,and Ne wton nal en a and St. Pierre, Express trains leave alon trea 1 au d Halifax itaeissotec)eithrough hbu tha piu house and ea minutia. Tile through expose train cars of the In- tercolouiai Railway are beillianti 1•fi1 tea by electricity and heated by steam Isom ttis3 locomotive, thus greatly lnct'easing the eon* tort and safety et travellers, New and elegant butretsloeping and slay vara arerun ou 6hrouch exeressteal na. Canadian -European Mail and Passenger Route. Plesen„ersforGrant Britain or the conti- nent by leeving ate areal au Oddity moraine will Wu floweret umilsteamer at ldalifax On Saturday. The Attention of88114)pera is directed totho superior /twilit lealtered by this route for the transport of Aon r and genera moreban• disc intended fortllealasteiret Provinoos and aandp oduceintgndodtortue nropoaunmar- ket. came may be obtained and Information about the route; a leofroigltt and passenger rates onanpltefttion to N. WE A THERSTON esItneeinnHousexb3l ek Porknet.Toaonto D B'OTTINGEIt, Chiot Superintendent. Itwaty Waco, Moncton, LB, ant tin '•.Goodo:foe'Iroy\.l ort[ fimkafru,. der you ntn7 alt nmke n, MOO, bill se eau teac4,14 how to porn front OA to $10 a 'a da iltiIto mart, 0 *1111 blimp no 3.641 so on. Both arose, nil opo*. lit any tort of America, you ton Ctn11111r'iti a of Iternof h,g all your 13nlo,.ir,10*, Illi oftta 014 10 the work. An la Neu. trent limn l•t Hk for ("1ell worker. 11e atarlotr, O.nd+Aiing everything. EASILY. **1'111.1)»d• Jrarned. J'A➢t11CULASS FREE. Addrestil arses, sttNSON a, CO., JO*7LANL, NAJMR. Cares Burns. Cuts, Piles in their worst form Swellings, Erysipelas, Inflammation, Frost Bites, Chapped Hands and all Skin Diseases. HIRSTS PAIN EXTERMINATOR —CIIRfia— Luntbage,' Sciatica Rheumatism, Neuralgia By all dealers ` Wholesale br F FDally&Co CENTRAL Drug Store cra A full stock of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand. Win an's Condition Powd- erg, thebest in the mark- et and always refih. Family reoip:- eps carefully prepared pared at'• Central Drug Store Exeter,. C. L . ERRORS O F YOUTH. Nervous De- bility, Seminal Losses and Premature Decay, prontotly and permanently cured by Does no interfere with diet 0',, uSual occupation and fb,,Jy restores lost vigor and insures perfect manbytel. Price. $1 per bee. joie Proprietor, H, $CYHO)rtsILD, echo- :+eme ierug -tore, EwSTrn aT, TORONTO. The cause of persons whose nerves are excited by protracted and excessive use of stimulants seeing the ehapee of auimalspas- sing before them is not due wholly to the imagination, In fact, the £arey only oper- ates ber a tes to induce a belief that what is seen is alive and. hideous. The eyeball is Covered by. a network of veins, ordinarily so small that they do *tot intrude themselves visibly izi Rho path of the light that enters the sight, but in the course of some diseases these 'coins are frequently congested and swollen to such size as to be- come visible, and when this happens the ef. feet generally is to appear as if there were an object of considerable size at a distance from the eye. Of course, this vein is generally long, tt*in and sinuous like a serpent, and the figure seen is frequently startling like a snake, That they seem to live is due to the fact that ihey :are often not in rerfoct line with the direct front of sight. They are either to the side, up or Ilk from the focus ; therefore, when discovered, the victim na- turally turns his eyes toward the effect, and the effect, of Course, moves away. The eye follows, and thus a continuous and realistic notion is got. le"ow, if the eye be returned to the front agate quickly it will see another snake, which if watched will glide away in the same manner. The writer of this is afflicted by malarial disease, arts after his eyes are thus ca*Jgesteel many strange shapes cud clouds pass within les visioe, which, if he were in a state of wr- its collapse, might easily he all that are seen by those suffering frons delirium tremens. Sir Charles Dilke. The decision of Sir Gitanes -Bike to return to public life and to accept the invitation of the Forest of Dean eonstitnency to stand for perharent at the next election, is causing the Liberal part , fn England not e. little embarrassment. itis; generally felt that he is as good as elected, and that should he live he will eertainly appear in the Renee of Comma nexte. •course n us ai, And oftima of y d, his ability and experience will not be con- tent to be a mere ftollower in the party, but will insist upon having a share in its conn- ells, This will throw upon Mr. Gladstone the necessity of deciding whether. having broken with Mr. Parnell because he was an adulterer, he will receive Sir Chas. Nike again into patty fellowship, though an Adulterer more guilty than Mr. Patuellhim•-! self. Thus far the veteran leader has not spoken, though what his decision will be w hen the time for deciding comes there can hardly lie any. doubt. ,All his associate* maintained asimilar;Menet.. E'en the press Conservative and Liberal, appears reluct- ant to resume the unpleasant subject, Only the rimes has illus far broken the silence. This journal exposes the emptiness of Sir Charles' eo•called vindication (te pamphlet written by himself in winch he strongly aI-, sorts his inuoeenece and points out that be'. is i1► precisely the sante position as when the verdict was riven in the Divorcee. court. s, He has indeed," says the Tisn*s', "published a pamphlet for the bene- fit of his intended constituency, but 11e has refuted nothing. Ile has merely reiterated not upon oath, statements which when made upon oath, a British jury did not be. Hove." That lie will be elected if he otTers himself no one doubts; that be will regain his formerposition and influence in the party is very improbable. Of one thing he may rest assured that before he nomas to this height he will have to deal with that inter - eating -thing known 113 the Nonconformist conscience. ce. What that means he may learn to his cost. The Head Surgeon Of the iubon Medical Company rs now at Toronto, Canada, and may be con- suited either in person or by letter on all. chronic diseases poanliar to man. :lien, young, old, or middle-aged, who find them- selves nervous, weak au exhausted, who aro broken down from excess or ovcrwerk, resulting in many of the following symp- toms : Mental depression, premature old ago, loss of vitality, loss of memory, bad dreams,dimness of sight,t ' 11 palpitation of the P p heart, emissions, lack of energy, pain in the kidneys, headache, pimples on the face or body, itching or peculiar sensationabout the scrotum, wasting of the organs, dizziness, specks before the eyes, twitching of the musoles, eye lie's and elsewhere, bashfulness, deposits in the urine, loss of will power, tenderness of the scalp and spine, weak and flabby muscles, desire to sleep, failure to be rested by sleep, constipation, dullness of hearing, loss of voice, desire for solitude, excitability of temper, sunken eyes surround• ed with LEADEN OTROOLE, oily looking skin, etc., are all symptoms of nervous debility that lead to isanity and death unless cured. The spring or vital force having lost its tension very function wanes in consequence. Those who through abuse committed in ignorance may be permanently cured. Send your address forbook on all diseasespeculiar to man. Address M. V. LUBON, 50 Front St. R, Toronto, Ont. Books sent freesealed. Heart disease, the symptoms of which aro faint spells, purple lips, numbness, palpita- tion, skip beats, hot flushes, rush of blood to the head, dull pain in the heart with beats strong, rapid and irregular, the second heart beat quicker than the first,pain about the breast bone, etc., can positively be cured. No cure, no pay. Send for book. Address M.V. LUBON. 50 Front Street East. Tor- onto. Opt "Soggins is engaged to Maud Pottleton. I am glad of it , too, because I think she is the kind of girl to help a man along." " She is indeed. They say heneverwould have proposed if she hadn't helped him over the hard part of it." For a long time there has been talk of a Franco—Russian alliance, but none of the prevailing reports and rumors could be traced to any reliable foundation. A sen- sation has, however, non been caused by an admission made by M. Flourens, ex -Minis- ter of Foreign Affairs in France, to the effect that such an alliance does exist. M. Flourens declares that while he was in office diplomatic notes equivalent to a treaty were exchanged between his Government and Russia, and these notes arranged for common action by the two countries. M. Flourens, who has just returned from Moscow, where he mot the czar, added that the formation of this alliance was the work of the czar, himself. These statements, appearing simul- taneously' with the ljismarckian articles in the HantburgereVachriclzgen, enlarging upon the danger of too close friendship with England as offensive to Russia have evoked indignant replies from the German semi-of- ficialbn ress the which bahsbiiry Govern- ment is openly spoken of as an ally, of the Dreibund' or German -Austrian -Italian alli- ance. This allusion represents the, official belief that within a recent period Lord Salisbury has become •'a party to a secret convention committing lis Government, so long as it remained in power, to conjoin action with the Dreibund. HOUSfUOLD. Cooking a Molten. Travelers whohave made the tour of the Continent,, and snits bane carried wtththem discriminating appetites, are profuse in their praise of the manner in which the Austrian cooks at the Vienna hotels serve chicken, where, they say, it is always ten- der, juicy and richly flavored, And the reason is because the Jowle are not killed until ordered. But that there is a vast dif- ference in the taste, the flavor and the Pala- tableness of cllieken a, it comes variously front different cooks is a matter well known, The .manner of killing fowl as psa,.ticed among the orthodox of the Ilebrew faith has much to recommend it from a sanitary point of view, The obligation of the Israelite ',stop= the reins of the fowl to let it bleed to death before it is cooked is a part of the ritual law laid down by Moses in which the eating of the blood of any animal Bras pro- hibited liner penalty of dealt. It has been learned that letting the fowl remain for some time after it has been killed before cooking has the effect of peaking the niuseles rigid and the fleet, consequently tough. This knowledge was well known to the colored cooks of the &outb, and was part of the secret of their sueeess in the preparation of fried chicken, one of the standing and most famous of the dishes of the old plantation aristocracy in the days of slavery. Young chickens, therefore,should not be ]tilled until. immediately before they are wanted. They should be plucked ami. drawn quickly as possible before the flesh becomes Cold, and not an►omen# shoaikl be lost in getting them into the frying pen. I append some recipes: Bremen Rrrisu Cnieee .-...Split the chickens hi two, clear* carefully, dry with a Cloth and flatten with a hatchet or cleaver. Broil over a moderate fire. When well browned an loth sides, serve tlieni on a hot plate. Season with sett, pepper, butter, the jniee of half a leucon and a little Minced parsley. Serve with fried i;mtatoes" nine r.--•Citt up Rile chickens, sea. eon with salt and pepper, rollin flour and fry in hot lard. When the whole are fried. pour off the lard and put in a quarter of a pound of butter, One teacupful of cream a bale flout' and some scalded parsley, chopped fine. ;UINCFM 011ICKEN Asp Po1wusr E',r,Ge,..-- ('tit up all the white meat of a roasted or boiled fowl lute mince or shreds, and put these luta a email stew pan with a gravy spoonful of llechautel sauce ; when about to serve, warm the mime, dish it up and piece poached eggs amend it with a crouton of Bread in between each egg—surrounded by a, little white saute. rritetwo Curate:se--Take a ehickcn, plump and tenaicr, split down the heck, place in a sleep bowl or dish, breast downward. Season the upper pert with gilt, ppepperand butter, sat in eleemer and keep elosely cov- ered for an hour, or until quite tender. Re. move from the dish, lay in bake -pan, breast up, season, dredge lightly with flour and bake light brown, basting often with !little melted butter. \Take sauce from the drip- pings in the dish. Some SantltViohee. Toxone SAN nlysess s.—Chop very finely half append of cold tongue isithany savory flavoring preferred. Half a sculled matt - gold is very nine ; or better still, a few mushrooms cooked in butter, add the meat well seasoned and mix thoroughly. Take a loaf of sweet '11onro-toads bread twenty. four hours old, out the crustfront ono ons, and then cut a thin, oven slice ; trim the crest from Chia, spread, with the mixture, add a very thin slice of colt- thicken, fowl or ,game, lay on the upper half slice, and cut into strips about2 by 4 inches. No better is required on the bread en account of the quantity mixed with the Minced meat. Yon may use ham or chicken with the mince between the bread, and if you use the Chicken, add ham or tongue. CHER P.AND CM= tin:1)\11(11➢1:s... Whip a gill of thiek sweet create, and add to it sutfieie»tgrated Parniesau ebcese to make a stiff paste ; spread bread with this and sprinkle thickly with very finely minced white stalks of celery. These tnustbe made just before serving, and the Parmesan nmst be freshly grated. If exposed to the air it quiekly becomes tasteless. If Parmesan is not obtainable they will be found very nice made with any sharp, well -flavored American cheese that can be grated. In- deed, sapsago cheese is by no means to be despised for this purpose, but only a very thin layer of it will be required. CmcrEx ASD moaterceTake firm, ripe tomatoes,and slice them very thin with a sharp knife. Have ready half a pound of veryfinely minced chicken mixed with two tablespoonfuls of mayonnaise sauce t spread the bread with butter, cover with a layer of Chicken, add a slice of tomato nicely season- ed ; lay on the other half slice of butterd bread , and cut into narrow strips. SARDIlan SANDwICInES.—Bone a number of sardines and divide them into halves. Cut also a number of thin slices of buttered brown bread. Have some finely minced hard-boiled egg, mixed with finely -chopped tresses, and enough mayonnaise to make them adhere. Spread the bread first with a little of this mixture, then add fillets of sardines, lay on the top slice, press them gently together and cut into squares. White bread may be used if preferred, and Durkee's salad dressing makes a very good substitute for mayonnaise. An inner leaf of fresh, crisp lettuce adds a delightful relish to a sandwich, if it can be added just before serving, so that it does not have time to wilt. Hot Weather Dishes. With the advent of real hot weather the following hot weather dishes will be found acceptable : Conn COMPOTE.—Wash strawberries and raspberries in cold water, drain dry, and place them on a dish. Pour boiling common syrup or boiling currant jelly all over. Serve when cold. IDen Correa. --Take coffee of good brand, make it strong, and when cold mix with it the same quantity of rich cream. Sweeten to taste, and freeze. BLACKBERRY BREAD. --Take slices of sweet, stale bread, butterlightly and remove rust. Arrange in the bottom .of a desert dish and pour in hot stewed blackberries, sweetened to taste. Strawberries, raspberries and cherries may be served in the same way. A meeting of 3,000 striking 'printers,. n Vienna announced the preparation for a general international strike, perhaps to in- clude America and Atitralia. At Lancaster on Saturday two girls Jane Ramsden,aged named Sarahd 11 ears and Ethel Bleasdale, aged years, ywere knocked down by the five o'clock train from Morecambe, on the Midland Railway, and killed. The railway runs parallel with the. highway,: and two policemen on Saturday were engaged driving the children off the railway embankment, from which they pluck wild dowers.., ATTACKED ETA HUGE SEARK. Extreme Peril of aYoung Man While Lathing on the Coast. Iursue➢x by the Sea alonstsre Ur. -Rupert Cowdrey, of Skiddaway, Ga., a young man fond of hunting, had an advert• to re recently with a shark, which would in all probability have had a fatal termination had it not been for the interference 01 a sailor, one -Robert who succeeded in killing the terrible ocean wolf just in time. tosave young Cowatey'e life, The sea at this point has always been singularly fres from sharks, .and bathers are able to indulge themselves usually with impunity, but on this occasion Mr. Cowdrey sought au uufre- (vented nook, some distance from the epot where the bathing is usual and where the coast shelving rapidly lee es the water- veil' deep. Ho was accompanied only by a younger brother, a boy of 13. Re plunged into the water from the remains of an old steamboat landing, and, diving, struck violently a dark objeet that. seemed to be lying inert;, on the sand at the bottom of the little inlet. It was the shark which rose with him, and turr,ingon its bark made for him with snapping jawe. Cowdrey screamed to his brother to go back, The bay, who had just left the shore, scrambled back, and set off yelling for help for hie brother. In the meantime Cowdrey made for the landing, and succeeded in reaching its. rotten tinsbers *before the shark could attack dint, He endeavored to climb up, but the terrible foe belted seemed gave hitt no time, let rushed et him with a speed that sent t water flying in foaan, TO avatd the s ark, Cowdrey. who is a firet•rateswimlter, alerted to the other side of the landing. interposing it hetween him and his foe, which burled Nell blindly against the timlare with a force that seemed to daze it.. It returned, however, altruist immediately to the attack, which the young man again tried to parry by dalibiing about; the crazy 'stream e to which he was clinging t but the shark. seeming to retlize the adiantago it gave its prospective vietim, seized the only remaining support and snapped the Learn in twain, as easily as though it had been of gla s between ➢i6 terrible ayd . Cowllrey seized a piece of the wreckage as a weapon, but had nearly given up hope, exbaustesl and breathless :as lie was, when sltoetsfrom the sha,ro aenthitn fresh eastrage, and he endeavored to frighten ell' the shark lay strlking at, it wait the piece of ws>a+l lte held. At this moment tlaun fond, ural ins a running start, jumped into the water, ansa with a few etnskee ,Rud r. ached the pews ,S�ttant" bide, Ile w, -r, asuted only.witha sift, with which he :➢aa -•crit opening oys. yrs► about a quarter of a nail? front tiro scene of ('owdrey's peril. when summoned by his brother, but, stet the shark bravely -when it darted at then, at the tante time calling to Cowdrey to make for the shore. The young man, wito was no coward, was reluctant to forasheltis rescuer. but per. ceiving he was only emltarraisaing Hammond byhis persistance, he obeyer-, only however,' to arts himself with a small pistol be liar pelte,l to have in his clothes:. By the time ho ll:ui done this, though. IIa'ninon? and the shark -tad dioappeare*l, and (bowdray, in an a;^ony of suspense, was about to plunge in, when the two arose once more, and he could see that the shark was badly wound- ed, It was still game, however, and following closely the sailor, who wetssuvimming slowly, but waiting until the black mtuxle of the shark almost touched him, when, as it flirted itself ovcrun its back, he plunged the knife up to the hilt in its soft belly. It sank immediately, its blood dyeing the water red, and its hugh tail lashing the water in its dying thrum's, 'while Hammond SWAM for the shore. He was so exhausted, however, that items necessary for the two Cowdroys to bring him in, but with tha ex- ccptiou of several severe brniseson the breast and back, given him by the shark's tail, had sustained no injury. Hammond is a sailor on a snail fruit nes. scl plying between Savannah and 'Nassau, mid happened to be on a visit to his family, who live near here. Ile is a stalwart man of middle age, and very modest over his heroic deed, asserting that, it was only his experience with sharks and their manner of a inW' hack Vest Inlit waters that enabled him to rescue young Cowdrey, who has, how- ever, presented him with 8309. A change has come over the character of the immigration to America. For the eleven months ending May 31st of the: year the immigrants lauded were of the following nationalities : Great Britain and Ireland, 105,831; Germany, 84,630 ; Austria and Hungary, 50,636 ; Italy, 45,837; Russia and Poland, 30,636 ; Sweden and Norway, .35,340 ; all other nations, 36,659. Thus only about one-fourth of the grand total (0 1.19 ,69 9) were English speaking, and Great Britain, Germany and France together sent less than one-half of all the immigrants. Tim world will neve stand still for want of weapons of destruction. New inventions for taking life, blowing up ships, forts, etc., are constantly being announced, more than half of which are no sooner patented than they are superseded, so rapid is the march of progress in death and devastation dealing weapons. A dispatch from Manchester announces that a private exhibition has been given there of a species of cannon that will almost entirely wipe out the ordnance now in use. The inventor is one J. E. Bort, a local engineer, who proposes to keep the details as to the design and so on of his instrument of slaughter secret until the American and continental patents havebeen secured. Theprinciple of the gun is pneu- matic and it is claimed it will surpass the Zalinski gun in range and will throw 50 pounds of dynamite a distance of three miles. The t:ew weapon, it is asserted, can be fired twice a minute. Old generals, of the Sir Frederick Middleton stamp, who like to fight as humanely as possible, will denounce the use of this hurler of dynamite as massao] ing and not warriug. The old device of firing off a cannon -to induce rain, though we believe seldom if ever successfully used, 'except incidentally on battle fields, has always had its advo- cates. Given the rain clouds, it seems en- tirely reasonable to sltppose that, if they could be disturbed by violent concussion, they could be made to gr ve forth their watery contents. To give better, test to the theory than is afforded by explosions onthe:surface of the earth, tiie U S. Congress, at the last session, appropriated $7000 for experiments'. with balloons to be exploded in mid-air, and trials have been made, near Washington, of mechanical and electrical devices intended to be used in the experiments, Captive balloons, carrying explosive mixtures of gas, are sent up and their explosion effected at any. desired moment, by means of an electric spark produced by apparatus on the ground. There is no difficulty in that part of the work, but it remains to be seen whether they tvill accomplish any good pur- pose. The actualexperiments will be made in some Western State suffering from drought, but the experimenters will first have to catch their hare (the moisture) be- fore they can cook it, for infants and Children. '"Cuterltlissoweltatlaptedtocbildrent at fir, costes Cc*i*. *matt On, [ t econtmendltas auger ortaeoyB rriptipa Sar Stoapsch; iaiOrr]Xtelie t raetatlerM ltnolrD to int." fit. Arttel�a, AL D., Li memo ,gives sleep, and pnaeaai�4 tli+ Lugo, uozd fit* Ezoody"a,1t-T; 1//4404; i u$ous ulalica 1pa. Ta$ Caa'rsca ColoANtr, 714 array streci, 2T. Y. s3'A. t " S OJCNE41t 514 5 i'Irmtreme . tsousgtotratiteed, Wag—rang'Last14. liaradrantaseatobeginners.Otockcompfets,wizit hapeebitie& OUTFIT FREE. WI utt4evtateat, V. fadvort4s4 WM. 7,#lit0'WN 1 fitQtTk111GlRete 8ittraetirxaaeea Toronto. Ont a.t'rtsls berme .tasrellsbdt l Exeter Ba1 cri er Siaap ltCe - ••-'--tN firm ACISDr (:astousecsauppliel T'Ili9.p t t T'It71i5 Listen, IlttYS Ayn :ly.'1'TIil l 1Y 5 .' "- s . s" i-9-ua s to -lain facts about the 13.84 Bells i .r A Jilin �llzfP w4- a � : C. .. CgiYF I'i1O.11I'`�:' A;� l; l,i i'ffl corset. You cant break the ..,....._ _ bones—for one thing. If you do, within a year, you'll have your money back. ft.fits like a glove. And hear how it's sold , if you're not satisfied, after a few weeks' wear, you can return it and get your money. For Salo by J. A. Stewart it titer. ET' P'tiRg8T, BTaRQNCEST, 'l E#'➢T. Reedy for use inany gnantit7 For making E! 'trouts Water, insu➢rerttr,z.ano a hundred mow Iib Mu equata:.*a Wands t>ai toads. Seca by Alt Grim, era and Drexals4e. erl'Xaae+a 'A iXt, 'S'tarc:tirsl,041 a'rton Remedy for Camera to tit Easiest to Use and lara SIR Id . T. Basch :JJtict tl 8 tp SclestriAMERICA14 GENCYfor A pamphlet of Information and ab- stractof the lans,sbolring Maw to Obtain Patents, Caveat, Thule Marks, Cop rI bra, sent Ira; A,daron MUNN & CO 361 Broadway, �NcIT Cork. .•a on ea r n mod bltrrn neame k r Shaer*rahldly x,v ung orr oyf by tin hose of own- r&1*ions..�ofi.mrdvethe➢r one do th oo* lo, bray to lam one eau rt do tl No rot. Etc can learn, wo faparo rr; mon s. o l all your rt hn No riot!. lbs can Jaron 7002* ap,ru noon's. 0r an yo02r iinr, to thn ,ru,k, 11ais U en entirely nor le,d.and bring, wonderful success to°veryu etk,r. Beginners tan canning from S25 to SZO ye meek and uJ wwrdc, and more taken little exprerience. We c„ fumirh you lila om- pls,•m.ntand tea*lt you bill➢. Noa1 ace to 01,Ilnin Ler,. ra:i Information Ma:. '11CI'E d: CO, .lis L. MAils.. RICORD'S SPECIFIC (TRADC MARK IICOIDTCAED.) Sole Proprietor, H. SCHU1'IEraj tiohoneidls Drug Store, ELIA ST., Tsnuxro. Tile only Remedy which will per- manently cure Gonorrlicea, l,}loet, and all private diseases, no matterliowlonpstanding. waslong and successfully used in Preach and English Hospitals. Two bottles guaranteed to cure the worst c11$0. per bottle. bottle has nature on be]. None tui Ike, $1 Every my sig. the la - other who have (/ Those tried -o- ther remedies without avail will not be disap- pointed in this, Mention this paper - aue—a umng tOrSDOCO IR 1 UP BY USING Bi Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills THEY are the Remedy that the bounteous hand of nature has provided for all diseases arising from IMPURE BLOOD,>••om,. —� eeee♦ F are a sure entre for BILI. lir OII$i ESS, .UEAILt JUE, S 8 S INDIGE➢3TI ON, LIVER, COMPLAINT. D1'$PEPr - Pills SIA", Etc., Ela.- FDR SALE BY ALL DEALERS We Rs C CMSTOCK9 BROCKY/LLE, ONT. Moa'usiowN, N,1: x tsr.f'Ax.1\a wine ,•.curepttrecateia/roil c<!atrlintn{1 testae-/ is frier brtrdrots or mulls eN kat• sawed brae 4 se Ot.tJn dell 25,00 now *tweet* fully used. Agency can tlo Has wnera there Is s vacancy- A saw s Naris:, far mime saws tent re** with each wadding. by Rite tis of ttistool eterytlOdy ton ilia thelrowo eawa neer tied dotubetterttiau 1b artatost cyclist can without It. edema! to alpr0te.-eutsaw, Every Ono Iran (Maim has .train ease one. .l'erluty t. Pari we,tattttel*relm Canada. Mla Tour e�cqalrr or matte *•OLpnen R4;R'2ric Tour C1.1., 40$ to 811 ti. Canal Sty CMe,So, irk B12—mus.19,11, HEAD -MAKER'S NITER FAll.s ;'o OWE SATUWOTiN. won SALE BY At l 'EA1.sER8. AND ST1 111rNi~a:` 121. For LOOT or FAILING 11ANSOOD,General and NM 170110 DEBILITY, Woat:ae t of Body and Hind, =cots Of Errersor ISsemsla old or Tsang. *Jotett. tootle Ml21- E00Dfally cstored. Soo toenlargsand etongthonWEA>L IIlTDEVEr,OPED OROANC.P1 TeefEODY. Atrolttolyna fan? ROME TREATMENT—Braefto in a day. lien testify front 00 States and Fords Conntrltn. Write than. Book explanation and proofs mailed (:ogled) boo. hddrens. ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N. Y `.10 INN HER NASAL BALI. A certain and speedy cure for Cold in the Head and Catarrh in all its Stages. SOOTNINC CLEANSING, NOW NC. Instant Relief, Permanent Curr. Fatah Impossible. '.leny So -e 1 ed . seases are siiiPly s mptoms of atr;rrh, Sue as headache, What des @, 1�si ft arse of smell, fol breath hawkirl b itli s s P u urea enera f e 5 of debility, -e c.� u a general Y Y g t leg i n these or kindred s m F ffi§ •,rb dW a 0 e li Y a y , >S X we _ 3� "old loseno ti a •nprocure Ctort' a h andm t a jj t�.d -settle 6f N $ L BALM. Bo SCkiroAtS t2 s' elected ea d Ii4 a ed r sults• iia tCat4 1 sp. 't: h e la, 2 :'coasuntphon and �eatb. Ni,S.1L ]iA� kk ggg� teed �y 1 druggist§, or will be sent, past paid, d>L"i'teef!t of'. ::e(go cents allot $i.00) by addressing BRDCKvf1,LE, ONT. ., Beware of irnitattons sitiiilar Ida :Arno.'