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The Exeter Times, 1891-9-10, Page 3$ Hair vigor deal" Hairalressing. It re- veler to gray Izafr ; promotes vigorous growth; prevents the f ormation of dandruff; makes the hair soft and silken; and imparts a deli-, eat° but lasting per. fume. "Several mouths ago may bair com. rneneed falling out, and in a few weeks aa my bead was almost bald. I tried many edies, butthey did no good, I final - bought a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor, and, after using only a part of the eon. tents, my heasi was covered with a heavy growth 01 hair. X recommend your preparation as the best in the world."-T.11.tunday, Sharma G rove, Ey. "I bave used Ayer's Hair Vigor for a number of years, and blies always given me eatisfaction. It is an excellent drese- ing, prevents the hair from turning gray, insures its viperous growth, and keeeps the scalp winte and clean.", Milty A. Jackson, Salem, fass. "I have used Ayees Hair Vigor for promoting the growth of the hair, and think it tmegoaled. For restoring the hair to its eriginal colon, and for adresa- it caunot be surpassed."-hfre. Geo. La Fever, Eaton Rapids, Mich. "Ayees Hair Vigor b a most excel- lent preparation for the hair. X speak of it from my awn experience. Its use promotes the growth of new hair aud Mates it glossy and Soft. The Vigor is Alii0 cUre or onnOrnit."-4,V., BOWelt, =ter "Euquirer," MeAttliur, Ohio. "I have used Ayees Hair Vigor for the past two years, and fsaurd it all it is represented to he. It restores the natu- xas color to gray hair, causes the hair to grow freely, and Itreps it soft and pliant." -Mrs. V. Pay, eaves, N. Y. "My father, at about the age of Otte" lost all the hair from the top of his head: After one raonth's trial ot Ayer's Ilair "Vigor the hair began coulleg, and, in three months, he had a flue gtowth et bair of the natural eolor."-Pr Cullen, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Ayer's Hair Vigor Mural -mu ire 4. C, Ayer 84 Co., Lowell, Mass, Cold by Druegiste awl Perfumer*. CENTRAL Drug Store NSON":.z BLOCK, ••••0 A fall stock of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package 'I Dyes, constantly on hand, Win an's Condition Powd- the hest in the mark- et and always resh. Family recip- e es carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exeter. LaWarZi ‘314IN et,c, 0 30151AMETGgisor AT T A. pamphlet a infOrmation and ab- stract of the laws, Elbowing How to Obtain Patents, Caveats, Trade Marks, Copyrights, sant Ina. Address MUNN & CO. 361 Broadway, New York. SUNDAY READING. TIM ROL! 00AT. A Visit to the Ancient Town of 'reeves.. At tide moment hundreds of thousands of people of all nationalities are wending their Way to Treves in Germany, there to pay their respect to theHoly Coat, whiele is now on exhibition in the'Cathedral of Our Lady, A correspondent at present making a pedes- trian tour of Europe under (bete of Treves, August Sth, writes : During a ramble along the tloselle River, I could not resist the temptation of visiting the quaint, ancient town of Treves, that lies so beautifully eradled between two ridges of vineyards. • Leaving my knapsaek and staff at an bumble run, 1 event out in search of the re- mains of old Roman monuments, for which the town is femme. Returning in the elten- ingi tired and dusty, the innkeeper, a stout, jovial German with a, round, pock -marked face euticed me into a conversation about liow,1 lilted the town, of whiele he seemed to be not a little proud. He asked me if had seen the "ifoly Coat." I shook my head. "Go there by all meets," he said, shaking his huge pipe • " doe% leaveTreves -without seeing the Boly Colt.' It was ex- hibited in 1814 -before you saw the light -- and drew one million pilgrims from all, pert of Europe to Treves." He had become quite excited during the preceding, cenversation and asked his wife to bring us some genuine Moselle wine from his cellar. We drank it out of ordinary water glasees, according do the eustorti there, and excellent it was no deed. "Ats the time of the exhibition of 1844 1 wee only a merehoy 1" Then he denouneed in bitter words thee, enemies al the ehurch who also wiehed to do away with the Holy Coat." It seams that in 1844 a ehaalaut named Rouge, who badheen excommumeat- ea from the siherch for his liberalism, pub- Iblied an open letter to the Pope denouncing the woreinp of the" Holy Coat " as idolatry. Through Ins ensleevoris isa originated the German Catholics Church, which eplit into different sectmid eventually died out. My host wise a tauch trititohe, like el• most all the pepulation, and creased himself fervently every time he mentioned anything sufficiently putut to deserve it. "Ansi, continued the jovial Mate:per, " why shosdd 1 not, above all others, believe in the iairaculons power of the' Holy Coat,' as it brings me ao many visitors during the mintier seasen. If you hone no objection. my daughter.. Lisbesii, will aceompeuy you to the cathedral, where it is preserved ;we are acquainted with the elleplain 1" Early the next day I set out, under the • itidance of Lisbeth, who, althohgh uo great .auty, braided two heavy plaitof blonde hair neatly combed back, and fair skin and red cheeks; elle was neatly dressed in a -white ehintz dotted with little rosebuds,that made quite a pretty effect. I asked her if she thought the " Holy Coat " was genuine. "Oh, there is no aouirt Aunt it. SUMO society in Frankfort, who can be depended Dom examined the coat and agreed that St, lielena Iowa have brought the coat beck with her from Jerusalem, where she had, made a pilgrimage. and presented it to Agrotius. who was bishop of Troves at that time." Then she gage mea suspicious look, coneidering me quite a pagan, no doubt, ea I was ignorant of thins whit+ were as familiar to her as the alphabet. - • :...i.,,,riolvattAr..14.!.. VIGOR arid STRENGTH! jror LOST or FAILING MAN 00D, General and NERVOUS DEBILITY, Weakness of BO FY AND MIND, Weds of Errors or Excesses in Old ibr Young'. Robust Noble RAN-. 000113 fully Restored. How to en - are and strengthen WEAK UN- DEVELOPED ORGANS and PARTS fsIODY. Absolutely unfailing MOINE TREATMENT— kenefits in a day. Nen testify from fifty States and Foreign Countries. Write them. Doolc, explanation and proofs inalled (sealed) FREE. Address E NIEDIOAL 00., U F FA LO, N.Y. should like to hear as leuell as I can about the "Holy Coat," I answered, and so it happened that we went to see her grandma. We found her in a humble but sunny little room, with old fashioned furniture aud sand strewn over the +white floor. She sat kuitting at the window, Dearing out over the flower pots. "Ob, ny, you want to hear about the great pilgrimage in 1844. 1 wally don't know where to begin. Eleven bishops were here, and every day somebody arrived of whom the people could says: "Oh, he is a well-known man, you must know." 1 have forgotten their names. What a crowd there was. Oh, my, one saw so many strange looking people. Times will never see any - thin like it again. TherewereRussians,with long straight hair and flowing beards. We hadn't the fine h otels then that we have now, ha even they would not have beezs large enough to shelter the crowd. But all the private families took in boarders, far they paid very well, Give the gentlhinau a glass of wine," she told Lisbeth, with the hospitality of the Ger- mans who offer something- to eat and drink whenever they Auden opportunity. "Arnolai was our bishop in 184L Ile said high mass almost every other day. The cathedral was always decorated with fresh flowers. Special altars were erected. The priests put on beautiful vestments, the choir of boys was enlarged. The processions, were gogeous-everything glittered in gold aud precious stones. The holy coat was carried under a baldaquin, with great ceremony, from altar to altar. Beautifullittle children in white dresses strewed. flowers and the altar boys swung the censers, era the incense was such au expeosive ime-oh my, yes! And thousands kueellagaud praying -it 4 great eight and as for the nurecles that wero performed, they nre too many to ise gauntest. Many old people in this town ; could, quiet all disbelievers, I "ma a friend myself who was ailing with consumption - the doctors had given her up. Ilestie," I said to her,'yaxs go end pray to the Imly coat; that will cure you.' So elle dill." " Did ehe get bettert" y asked, "She lives across the way. There the " • at the window I" Se we ehatted for hours. • The following literalist; I again eeseed my knapsack and MIT," took a hearty leave of my kind host and his family and purenett lite' pedestrian tour. Walking along the Moselle River I could not help thinking of the Holy Coaz and all the legends and tra- ditions attaehed to it. It scented so strange to me that sieve the death of St. Helena, 320 A. D., 1 believe, until its first exhibition fax 1100-a lapse of Hill years almost -notilisig ean he said fax or ssgainst it origin. Suil• &lily it is mentioned as lying bidden in a. stone erypt. Who knows if Vie whole lefrend hal not been invented by Leine witty monks and endorsed by Kuno ambitious bishops, who wished to raiee. his diocete in impor- tenee. A Belle in Team Hea gone -I heard. the front door shutting - His voice ao more, his glance no more! now could 1 say 1 did not love him!. I didn't knOW I did, before 'like hie solemn. eourteous manner, That make.; believe my word is law; I like him that, of aIlmy suitors. He's absolutely withoutilaw Of course we re sure to meet to -morrow - The four-in-hand ; the dinner. too, I feel like crying. Can 1 tell him, "My answer wee a lie to your For he would change his love to seeming. lits trust to 'miserable doubt; If I could ea dieseinble to ling.. He'd Say I here's not tang, not flout. So, I will weep ler hours tied houre And pale:old teo. till 1 un dead. :'PardOn- 1 came -back so -what, crYing rDearest, you trod: mean what you said r- " Ola. call me fool -bet then, your eyes ileac. Were turned nwaye-how could I tell Their's is: tbe language that I studY ; 2'llep never would have Raid farewell! ..9.nd now they weep. they are ee true, dear. our lip e are lovelv but la tat't- Ras Oleo lip e that matte it iirgent4 For ma 50 have a world of Met! -Hoer. Hew mower: Lir 'IP, We called at the ehaplain's house. lie was a little old man, rather shabbily stressed, With a wrinklesl, elean-shaven face, a shuf- fling gait, continually coughing and mur- muring to himself. He was not over polite to us, only honoring us with a scrutinizing glance as to whether the remuneration woeld he worth his labor. The cathedral, looming up with its old, weather-beaten walls, thee have resisted centuries of religious wars, meatiest to me the struggle that the Christian chureli had to go through until its name became identi- cal with civilization. lien we entered. Only a few peasant girl's stud smile old emelt and women were kneeling in the aisles, AVe went went straight isp to the high altar. " There it is," said mboth, point- ing to a beautiful shrine of 'wrought gold, half hidden from the curious gaze. The chaplain opened it soul disolosed very old, threadbare, hand-woven piece of cloth, supported by a lining, and apparent- ly repeatedly patched up. It hung from a golden rod which ran through it from arm to arm. The little old chaplain began to tell us in a inonotonous voice, often inter- rupted by bis hectic cough, what is known to all travelers. The coat had been spun from lambs' wool by the Blessed Virgin and woven into a garment by Mary -Magdalen on the Mount of Olives. It is seamless -as the Scriptures describe it, with the words: " The coat was without seasn, woven from the top throughout." I scrutinized the coat in the meantime. The color was hardly discernible, hut seem• ed to have been originally gray. It had short sleeves, a round opening for the head, and resembled somewhat the tunic of a priest, being without any ornament. The chaplain talked for half an hour, for the web boasts of a long history, interming- led with all sorts of pious legends and old. time traditions, which the student should look up in some religous encyclopsedia. It occurred to me that in any other but its gorgeous surroundings the coat would not be thought worthy of a glance and would soon find its way to a junk shop. I also thought it strange that garments could be preserved for so long a time and then the shortness of the coat made me suspicious as to whether it could ever have been a dew ish garment. A fit of coughing, mare ardent than the preceding, finished the chaplain's -discourse, He closed the shrine carefully and then showed us some other relics, among them some hand-written documents in which the "Holy Coat" was mentioned for the first time, a small piece Of ivory with a curious carving representing the ceremony attend- ing the arrival of the coat in the cathedral of Treves. As yet this is the mostimportant evidence which proves the genuineness of the Holy Coat beyond all doubt. "But how is it there are twenty different 'Holy Coats' existing ?" I queried. "Why shouldn't there be? Do you think our Saviour only wore one coat in his life- time ?" was the blunt reply. Then I handed him a fee which he accept- ed with a faint smile a,nd grumblingly shuf- fled away through the half dark aisles. "Will the coat ever be exhibited again ?" asked Lisbeth. "Yes, they expaset to soon, bat our holy father, the Pope, is tardy in giving his con- sent His Holiness is trying hisbest to bring it about. It would be a real blessing for the folks of Treves." And apparently the present bishop, D. Rorum, has succeeded in gaieing the Pope's approval, as an exhibition is announced be- ginning probably on the same day of St. -Helene, 16th of August, and lasting for six weeks derive this summer. "My graeania could tell you a good deal about it," nsy companion informed me. "1 The Garment Reef. Of voltam the great feature of Treves Lowadays, and the ore thing with which it is always ;Associated, is the Holy Coat, or seamlessgannent of 0 mist. This celebrated relic is now fax the treasury of the cathedral. The legend of its *right is BS follows: It was found by $-.. Helena, a British lady and the mother of Constantine the Great. St. Helena was bow at Colchester. mlo be - value a ( hristian at the age of IS. It Was she who sliecovered the true vross and the other inttrumenta of the passion. The true cross was distinguished from those of tbe two thieves by a Mira010, namely, the heal - Mg of a sick person who was touched by the three crosses in succession. The nails used in the crucifixion were eine found. These were three in number. Fax this reason many pictures of the erneifixian represent Christ's teet nailed to the erose by one nail only. One of the nails St. Helena put fax the hel- met of her son Collet autism. Another one was thrown in the sea to appease a storm and was afterward recovered by7a miracle. St* Helena presented the seamless germent , saikt to have been woven by the Virgin Mary her- self, to the eity of Trews, where she had resided for many years. The earliest written testhnony to this effect isi found in the " Leste 'rrevirortun." St. Helene is said to have presented the relic to the Church of Troves during the episcopate of Agrilins, 44-334. Several other notices of the Holy Coat are found in documents mounting nearly up to the twelftb century. But the most remark- able andinteresting piece of evidence given fax support of the authenticity of the relic is an ancient ivory belonging to the cathedral. This ivory was fax some time lost, but was recovered in 1844. The Emperor is repre- sented 011 it seated at the church door and awaiting the arrival of it procession closed, by a chariot in which are two ecclesiastics guarding a chest. Above the chariot is the face of Christ, by width some relation between the Savior and the contents of the chest seem indicated. The ivory was examined fax 1846 by the Archieological Society of Frankfort, with tbe remit of fixing its date at the end of the fourth or the , beginning of the fifth century. The relic was translated from the choir to the cathedral in 1196. After an ipterval of more than 800years it was exposed in 1512 and on several other occasions in the sixteenth century, for the veneration of the faithful. During the wars of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the relic was deposited in the Castle of Ehrenbreitstein, and afterward sit Augsburg. La 1810, by permission of Napoleon, the Bishop of Troves, Mgr. Mannay, took the relic back from Augsburg to has own city, and, in spite of the confusion of the times, malty pilgrims, numbering over ;200,000, visited Treves. But the Most striking and successfuleeexposition was that of 1844, when eleven bishops and more than a million of the laity flocked to Treves from all sides during the period from Aug. 18 to Oct. 6, for which the Holy Coat was exhibited. Several miraculous cures were reported, together with the joy and the piety of the throng. Certain Catholics took offense and wrote against the authenticity of the relic. Among these were Czerski, an ecclesiastic of Posen, rind Ronge, e suspended priest of Breslau. A long controversy ensued. in the course of which many seceded front the Church and formed a German Catholic Church. The historian, Herr Von Sybel, published a book showing that there are no less than twenty seamless garments, eaoh claiming to have been that worn by the Saviour. The most celebrated of these are in Argenteuil and in the Church of the Lateran at Rome. The Tieo.tment of WOMP.14. The treatment of wounds elderly 1:animists in avoiding meitreatine»t of item. First stop the eleedina Expasere t 0 sor will ealt be egeees .10e,4 mart „i 114. ea• The wise old Comteeee ile—ased to re - vessels, /1 any remain unommed and the mark thet there were three follies of mus bleediue• continues. press hrinly but gently Nsiai;ch always amazed lier-the tirstt climb - on the wound or vessels if a large one, for a ilYIrees '14 41131M' fehi't" when h they Walt - few miamtes-examniu., emne ulously rronoun, eating,* the frnit would fall of itself. time to tune to see if Ulm lumped. The The eee""dis w";cg°1112,4 Ztir wait°tekaillthQZ reason this method sometimes fails is that, alun'er' w"en t"°e3C instead at fitia, patient pre,,,sure. a totes would she naturally. The third was to ran t afsaisixisy,a9upeaestast,holieuiroritsedass13iogeon„ iitssok.10741114)311, af rtrl 411 t VliheenwilutZ,1)-x.ciit rzrelftrt rear Secondly, remove any dirt, grave:, glean i tU therm, dm. Thirdly, destroy any gflrle'N fungi, hereteria, by washing the wound, aud Rvett time who live laighare tat cut el " the parts around fax some distance, with t harnis reach 1 Tetroleure aCrowe Nest. Dr. Sel Wyn director of the geological survey, has returned to Ottawa from a vxs' it t ' to the Crow's Nest. Pass, whither he went to investigate the petroleum deposits there. Dr. Seiwya says he saw oil in various parts of that region. "Xis etime places," he says. "I saw it coming 4 out of the rocks, and in others I seooped several sample $ with my hands off the waters, whither it had flowed from the rocks. I have not assayed these samples yet, but from a general test I find the quality LA be excellent. As to theenan- iiai;31.1rpoiyienitofr ueofvtiehwe', craeniryye, tfruonneabalometro- cspeak. W bile the il is llowingin consider- able quantity from the recite, there is 310 visible evidence that it flows in sufficient tillantitY to be of any uee for roercantile FIT - pose% Boring would have to be done to as- 1 certain the extent of the find." Dr. Selwyn has brought samples of oil hack with him. Two Of the Samples are dark, like that found fax Ontario, and smell very strongly, One was quite light in color and was found en the British Columbia side of the lioeMes, in the old Cambrian rocks. Follies of Men Which Amazed some lotion which will km them, and whiell The man who wairs vvila na auy ehemist will stipple-. The person possibly wish for le7s. dresses a wounds%ould always, before tonel" ai big it, wls hands, thoroughly in one • _ of these lotioue. It is obviously ;useless for the drevee to puffy the wound if, after. having ;Ione .u.), he touches some I °Tont() impurities] • 604, which must isa, swarming with germs, collects thou Oil hie fingers, and sows a crop of them fax the A Weii Known Lady Tell of Creat Benefit Derived From 'e• osinLl , fax one germ ma> soon make a lion. For the MA1110 reason, when the is l-ing purified, purify it (the wounds that, then the parts adjacent, washing round and round in a series of circles, cavil larger than the last, and never go back from the edge of the purified area to the wound. This holds • good of all dressines after the first; ixisti many a wound, which has started pure and healthy, has been converted into a put. rid tore by the negleet of this apparently Itrivial preeaution. Tim surgeon, of course, purities all his isistrunieuts before using them. Fourtiav. avoid tension and secure drainage. AU &scherzo from a wound, in excess -of that quautity which can be earriedi away easily by the circulation, should came away in the dressings. If it is allowed to colleet in the woand, it forms a stagnant • pool most favorable to the growth of germ% Further, any euch eollections under, or deep in the wound, if unable to get unt, give riee to tension, great pm, atid • swelliug, eetting u p (nether irritation, leading to the formatiou of matter, burrow - In the flesh and destroying it. Ths-re. fore if a wound after a. few days shows signs of beeonung inflamed, the came is very like- ly melte:sent drainage, and a surgeon should be consulted. Inefficient shainage is tho dauger so often hidden under stiekhsg- plaister. The common remedy is a poultice, • which, though soothing, introduces more germs, and does not attack the cause direet- lee All the advantages of a poultice can be obtained in a hot antiseptic fomentation. Fifthly, see that the sules of the cut are in contain with one another -that there ie no gaping. Sixthly, put on a, dreesing. This, of couree, should be free from game. The most generally eorivenient is ow. hut clean linen rag, whieli has heels boiled fax a quarter of an hour and slipped iu lotion. If the wound is a raw surfeee, dress it with boracie ointnand spread on a boiled rag, as a prot eetive. The chief objection to antisepties fax domettic use lies in the feet that, the germs being extremely tenet, - bus of life, the substaucce whit+ will kill them will also kill human beings if left tare- lessle,• about to he drunk by children. Seventhly, keep the wound as. nat. -DI Family Doctor. Anotherplot on the life of the Czar of Rus- sia is reported. No class of human beings suffer so much from the poison of foul air as infants. Older children and grown-up persons are seldom so much hut up, siert the diseases by which so many infants die, infantile diarrhoea, con- vulsions, and infantilq pneumonia, strongly suggest the irritation likely to be produced Iv breathing these waste,poisons ;•though improper food must also bear a large share of the blame. Of all the evil consequences, however, of foul air none can he traced, more surely than phthisis or pulmonary con- sumptioli. Death of Cleveland's Duke, A London correspondent wvites "1 have to record the (teeth at the age of SS of the last representative on the maternal side of King Charles the second's ehildren by his mistress, Barbara Villiers. Thisperson was the Duke of Clevekind. BarbaraVIlliers was woman of more distinction in her day than Neil Gwynne; but that fact naturally made no difference in the social standing of the Dukes of Cleveland and D tikes of St. Albans. The late Duke of Cleveland was a worthy old „„ftentleinan, interfering but little in public affairs, and taking great pride in his landed possessions, which comprised oot far short of 100,000 acres. lie owned many lordly pleasure houses. his favorite being Battle Abbey, Sussex, the very spot where King Harold breathed his last 800 years ago. There he long ago made up his mind to die, but he was taken ill in London end endexi his days here on Saturday. The Duke of Cleve- land never boasted of the blood of Charles IL, but he was proud of his descent from the family of Vane, who go back through Welsh lineage to some remote perioct not long after the flood. It was, therefore, to the Vanes and not to Berbera Villiers that the late Duke pointed as the stock from which lie sprang. And now what is to become of the hundred thousand acres and all the rest of the Duke's great posses- sions? He left no son andno brother, but his widow survives him end she is the mother of Lord Rosebery. A few years ago, before his own marriage, the very chance of all this wealth coining to him might have thrown Lord Rosebery into great agitation, but his alliance with the house of Roths- child residers him indifferent to such con- sideration. Tho British public always takes an eager interest io the transmission of immense wealth and it wants to know who will get the n200,000 a year or so which the late Duke enjoyed, together with the broad acres and historic houses. The Duke was a Knight of the garter and patron of 22 livings in the English church. Only One ot Them. Mr. Cumback -" Hello, P44! How are you? Father and mother living together yet on the old place ?" Psit-" No, sor !" Mr. 0.-" Why, you don't mean to say they've been separated ?" Pat-" No, sor. Not the two of 'em. Only feyther. He got mixed •up wid a blasht an was badly separated, so he was." "Where did baby come from, mamma? " asked Willie. " kleaven, my bay," said mamma. "It's a wonder his bones wasn't all broke. 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The celebrated %ether, in this admirable essay, clearly demonstrates from a thirty years' successful practice, that the alarming consequences of self. abuse n111.00 radieelly cured •, pointing out at mode of cure at mice Simple, certain and effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no welter what his condition maybe, may cure 'himself oheaply, pri vately and eadicalle. Thisteature should be in the hands of every youth and every wan in theistic]. Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad dress, postpaid, on receipt of tour cents, er tvi postage tamps, liamploa of Kellam free. Addres THE CULVEHWELL MEDICAL CO 41 ADA Street New York root Office Box 450 •mu vicoBSO loam " REAMMENY WOW& X2.431.1:DC RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, Sore Throat, Frost Bites, Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Etc. lalsi bY Dreggista and Dealers evorywbete, nityCcuts a bottle. Direettons111 11 140gliatge9. THE OttelleES A. VOGELER 00.,Rattiniere, Canarriat Zlepo+ ; Toronto, Ont. INTRCOLONIAI., HALLWAY OF CANADA: load ;Tee t route between the West a na potation ties Lower St. Lawrence ano Bea/ New Brenewiek,Nova Scotie.Pripee .E•iwar des dbilene,Proviuce of Quebec; Ol80 fa Cep en veto rafillarid4 Now:cold:a P. Oen st. Pierre, Express traineleeve Mee t eta I and IleilfaX daily ilientlays excepted) end rim tlateneh wittontchange between then points eR bout* ansi 51 =maim. TOse terougb express treinelq$ Of the In. tireelonfal ltaulway EYO eritileetle1/01044 by electricity a nd heated lie /team from the locomotive. 'Mils greatly increasing tteveni fofl audeetetyot travellers. New awl elegant Oa ffet sleeping a le d 4.4 ears AreVOU up througis expresstreire. Canadian -European Mail and Passenger Route. P.4.8,5vozertagiroreatieritimiunro,40 eoot oyhavioa Ito no cal on irrioay ;int- r«iv$ law antwsrd meil steamer At tailifas entOsturtley. Taesiateusiou ofeeldpners is dirt eleti tette eepeteer feciiit les oirer.el by *the rente fel the ttausseert attest r andgenerel nierette11- 4118e szateaded for theBlietettai Previte et- hud liewenniellaud; abets for slipmente aerCistie andprsve*aseudedtor the .13e r z ;teen wee/ get. Tichete muy be obtained turd i Wei ateteeti silseet tile route ; pso freleht and pa rteethe rstesieu applica.lion to te.WEATIIERSTON. WesterzFreight 4 Paesmige Aceut VilleesitilloueeBilegk :Vertat Terente 4. c. Chief 6 uperriteudeet. Jan le IthewaY Othce, Moss:ten, N.1.1. er.ree Burns Vele, Piles in their wort form Erysipela-, Inflammation. Frost Bite., Charmed Hands and all fInn Diseate-. HIRSTS PAIN EXTERMINATOR -tents- Lundeen.. Sciatica. itheumeti.m. kethaelle, Painit in everyform. 13.t all dealers. Wholesale by F. F. I et.'il; N. 'et ERnoss OF YOUTH, Nerv;Ar4 11e• bony. Seminal Losses awl Premature Denny, promptly and permanently cured bs- oes not nterterow 1. tout° uses:lea tremors and fully restores lost vigor and lete.re le teeet manhood. Price $1 per hoe. Sole Propeietor, 11, hOHOI lt. r lafdid'S Drug Store. Sam Sere iro, Tsi,a4. 2. .-7. 1 CURE FITS! V.'hen I say 1 tare 14o not mean merely to step tto• fer a tinna and then have them retain again, I ratan • radical enre. 1 have made thadisette of /ITS, EPILEP. SP or PALLING SICKNESS a life.long study. / variant, my remedy to etre tho worst eases. Because others leat.. WO 15 mermen for not now receiving a mire. Seni at time ler a treatise and • Free Bottle of any Info:this Tamar. Ciao ENREESS and POST -OFFICE. H. G. RoOT, M. 0.1..,186 ADELAIDE ST, WEST, TORONTO• ONT. - , h" - ' ''. lao;.1,21:-:,‘, :i:,i11:•'1.!;01,,...,,,,,tki d C adivr ten. so..*.- tr 'id. 0,2 . tteir auna.atitie.,,nie i., Cr ,t,r li, Any one tan 2. 5,.- nt.df. /NO, n Wt lemith ts try:I:lug. We start you. Nus..... 1.4...t.lesot. year st.,ere ortantetnr, or all your time to the not., E E. .. an emir: .y :lawn:41mnd brings wOndarfel Nt. ears ta es :2., t: ,,ker. Whine. ns aro Naming dunk *258* tie eieek amt 1.1.• ardr, bed MOTO Ortru . Mar enerteuee. we er .. funo.11 ;.. :le try- ple; IWO* und tenth ..k ou CI:GEL No 1INICt to et.nlbiu i so. Val hifenamtinn PIEBE. l'Ittal & CO.. al.022.1a. NAAS& AND THE Hypophospintes of Limo and Soda. No other Emulsion is so easy to take. It does not separate nor spoil. It is always sweet as cream. The most sensitive stomach can retain it. CURES Scrofulous and Wasting Diseases., Chronic Cough, Loss of Appel:. Mental and Nervous Prostration. General Debility, &e. Beware of all imitations. Ask for "the D. et L." Emulsion, and refese all others. PAIGE 500, AND $1 PER GOTT1 E.