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Exeter Times, 1896-11-12, Page 2r �• tIE EXETER TIMES Beautiful eyes grow dull and dint As the swift years steal away. Beautiful, willowy forms so stint Lose fairness with every day. But she still is queen and bath charm* to spare Who wear "south's coronal — beautiful flair. eeseareesseeloo Preserve Your flair and you preserve your youth. "A woman is as old as she looks," says the world. No woman looks as old as she is if her hair has preserved ate normal beauty. You can keep hair from falling out, restoring its normal color, or restore the normal color to gray or faded hair, by the use of Ayer's Hair Vigor. '=or the successful Treatment of •alt Diseases of the Kidneys and Urinary) Organs, Kkthey Bright's Disease, Diabetes and Paralysis, and all forms of Blood Poisoning. Pi11s. HE FARM. A ROOT CELLAR. At every season of ingathering our appreeiation of the value of a Toot house is revived, and we gratefully pro- nounce it one of the most convenient and useful apaa°tanents on the farm. 1e the barn is not built with one there should always be an outside Cellar for the winter storage of vegetables, and this is only one of the many uses to which it may be put. The dwelling house ought never to be permeated with the odors and tithes exhalations con- stantly arising from Bach materials, says a writer, as it must be when they are stored beneath it. in large quanti- ties. In laying out the ground for this building it it well not to restrict its capacity to present. needs only, but to allow ample space for future possi- bilitiea of proeuetion. The location should dse convenient to the barn; if used for family purposes it should be nut too fax from the house. A north- entranee, though not es-=entiai in win- ter: admits. less of the sun's heat in sum- mer. These Pills. are put up in large wooden boxes at 60 cents. Sold by all Druggists and Dealers --never by count or In bulk, and never under any other name than DODD'8 KIDNEY PILLS. ▪ The Vodd'a Medicine Co., Toronto. e Gentlemen—A new medicine called . Coders kidney Pills hada been recommend- ted to me by my physician. and. by his • advice, I send one dollar,the price of two .boxes. Please rend them without. delay. Yours truly, ANDREW =OS. Garden, McPherson Co., Kansas. EVERY KhFA # I LY THAT ' SHOULD is a very remarkable remedy, both for IR- TERNAL and EXTEY.'I•iAL use, and won- derful in its quick action to relieve distress. POLIN-FILLER fs a sur,. care for Sore Throat. Coughs. CI? flka. Diarrhoea. i» e, eira3nps, • {'ioiera, and all Lower COMA:titer. fs rT&.31 H C r m. AA g��,g q g� v EST pelt 1-'iS.I. •E.�f\. + � c.iY knor.n for He rt. %iekuess Sick; 1s^eresiactte, Point int nice ' IiaciL or bide, ellseuaiiatit xn and Neuralgia, PAIN-KILLER i„ vttottastsonany 7!e MADE. It brings srsvl'v AND rl.rat.tzENT I:r±:':r• • in ail rases of S;:rtd'es, ("Ws. F3:,1.•tiu8, 1erere Burns. rte. y,y P`AI -KILLER fs 4ust«e ho wrri ti ed an d trS:•1ortGi of the Mechanic,1£nrtnt•r, Planter. master, nrd;n fa,aall ricevs want h:;: ;. r'c.,'tl:c.ne :Nays at bard. ids ar4veT..r.a fl:trrna.Ly o: exterstafty with certainty of, t,.'r. Beware of imitati'rr Take none but the . "PEaar IMV S/• St:tl cverywbere: tLc. big b,ttle. J y PARALYSIS CURED—swonN 5Ti'AYF,ds-Gti' '. lire. Maggio Mo9fertin, 27 Endeulnust St., Teront ,. Ont. swears that R ck umr' "Kootenay t' • Y S 8 OIC . 5• tile" Cell. . • her Af Psralysis which rendered one side of her ho'iy entirely useless. Physicians said there was no chane: et her ever recovering the use of her limbs. Hol„ deserted her, but today shots welkin,: around tenni; her friends how Ayckman's "Kootenay Cure" sate r life and happiness. Sworn to, July 10, i.:.', ,•)tore J. W. Seymour Corley, Notary Public. AW®RN S'iATEMEiT OF A G1tATESt':, MOTHER. Louisa White, nine years old, who suffered with Eczema since her birth, has leen entirely curers and l,er general system balltup by Ityokman s "Kootenay ire," The above facts are given in a sworn etas e. .,,•entmade by her mother, Mrs.. George White, '130 i a on St., Hamilton, Ont,, dated July 3, 1806, n'e .1. F. Ittondt, Notary Public. i'.. O. OMBEN I TION DISTURBED — SWORN STATEMENT 88.9.!!) . Charles E. Newnan, 18 Marlborough 'St., Toronto reed a complication of blood troubles,. Bleu. tea ism, severe iatiney tronhle. and constipation. 1%s iregceutly disturbed at ideht lost his appetite and was : very slek man. lits Kidneys are now in a hc•dthy condition, his appetite Wood sleep midis. turbid and opstipation cured : all - Alis .'111 clone l:Sckment. a lticatensty (Clive."- „ makei were rtzterrm c above facts before .1. W. Seymour .'arta.,.: IGiJ, ed be, far the flock, however small it may MOTIF} !i PRESIDENTt The writer says: Sheep shawld be kept strictly by themselves and witchs HOW THE UNITED STATES CHOOSE. out mixing up with any other stook. THEIR CaIEF EXEOUTXVE. Tbis is indispensable for safety and success, There should be separate pas- Peculiar and Rather Roundabout Method of Appointing a Ruler for u Country— tuxes, a separate yard with a pen or A College of meteors. shed to it, and supplied with pure wa- ter. The yard must be dry and so The people of the great United States well drained naturally or artificioally have elected their President for the that it will never be muddy, Hent four years, ` ieb tlhey do by elect - The pen or shed should be so made Ing electors. The system isa peculiar that it may be sheltered from wind, one, and foreigners understand it with rain or snow, that is, it should have difficulty. In most of the States for the front all doors, the upper part bang- more thane quarter of a century after ing so that they may be raised and the establishment of the Government supported by hooks, to be let down or Presidential eleotors were appointed by opened as may be necessary. The first State legislatures. One State, South however, will be very rarely. The low - Caroline, continued this er doors are - made to open Inwards or practive down outwards, as tete lay of the ground to the outbreak of the civil war. At makes desirable, but it is better to have present any State that wishes to do so them open to the outside. may choose its Presidential electors in The of ons a�front alternatesothe with equal this manner, the constitution of the parte of rhe front, so that •when they are opened the front may be half open United States providing that. ' each and half closed. it will be very rare- State shall appoint, in surer a manner ly that the Iower doors will need to be as the legislature thereof may direct closed, as there will be sufficient pro- titby the upper ones. and a number of electors equal to the num- it is not vve1l even in the worst weathe ber of Senators and representatives to er to keep sheep quite shut up which the State may be entitled in There should be; feed reties around the end and sides of the pen to give Congress. Tbe constitution required that the day on which the electors are chosen shall be the sante throughout the Uni- ted States, Three years ago 1 constructed one ample room for feeding. '!`hese are 1'3x1e feet and s:•veu feet deep. Cedar best made with the fronts sloping a posts se; three feet apart and sunk a little back to pzevent the sheep get.ttng p bey seeds in the fleece, and the bars Luce un l a half give uupport to the in front should be not w•i(te enough, for euperstrueture. It is boarded up with the sheep to get their heads tbrougkl. hemlock hunter Green cherry poles so that the wool will be worn off their feral. the truss piece& and the main up- rights that support the roof. A double roof of hemlock boards is overlaid with aerate anti dirt. 'lees part I have just Been repairing and intents to finish it with a layer of boli, Wiurh, when well settled, will erueceiy the elements of protection, Beauty anti durability. An opening at eater gal,ie furnished with a sliding pane of glass in a frame, supplies both bght and ventilation. There isa roomy loft for packing away uu nberless articles. It i also just the as soon at; they are ready, lt. is not 1„ ata' for squash and puuzpl,:in s Drage. necesary to feed oftener than three 1 h art cat es for c'tthnt d fruit, a s tunes a day, and all food not consunr curn(n for dIr tsbke 'i unaldl. r for a abash- ed at each natal a houki lie removed el - room Le, besidttpltciau NOS kir the ter they have eaten. Early in elle varedu.s eptZidoe. (inc of nI� the4gh- t cu, called while 1 was building it and morning give them a light races of fine - odd to Ilii: This will Iasi you about Iy chipped grass, onion -top,, lettuce, or one year, than it sill cave in."But any green food, sprinkled with corn - contrary tc' bis adverse pretiittiuns it mom. After they have eaten it, give stocld two years name.when.sae day them as much wheat and cracked corn I entered a to Lind one of the posts as they will eat. At noon give a stiff shovel in at the totem a tragi piece dough composed of a pound each of broken and general demolition threat- corn -meal and ground oatsehalf a pound sled, the toffee or eau>e were at of crude tallow and four ounces of lin- necks, and so small that they cannot get caught between them and possibly strangled. A eloping back keeps the fodder to tbe front. always. FATTENING THE CHICKS. When chicks for market are to be made fat, they should be at Ieast eight weeks oitd, as too much forcing of young chick only cause leg weakness or indigestion. Wattening should be done in a week or ten days, lima the chicks should be chipped to market just A QUESTION OF SENSE. Why don't you want to take FIeckles in as a artner? If leckl � was once engaged to my wife. Do you cul pose t want aman in my Business -weeis smarter than . It voce apparent. The green poles had :e proved _ pressure re of cued IIs llfflcl nt and tri e u s e 1 Varth on the sides too great. To rem- edy the disaster the dirt was thrown which will keepthem thrift. out from all around the outer side and fresh water, charcoal and r t alwayseP the interior timbers replaced, or longer before them . g ones supplied and sunk a, little deeper. Then 1 went to the woods and cut fine brush to pleee in around next to the hoards, with the dirt and brush well peeked and stamped down, then all thrown back and the roof covered as before. Thus the pr• sear(+ was re- lieved without lessening the warmth of the interior. It is now seemingly as solid and the parts as well preserved as when first built. This is built in a light, sandy soil and requires nu drain- into Indian characteristics and habits, age. In hard clay soils the board lin- ing in unnecessary, as the weal would The hunter, the government agent. the not be Iiable to crave in. 1 have seen missionary, each looks at the Indians them in such soil where the sides and from a different point of view, and bottom were as a nuioth and hard as if each observes traits that are perhaps cemented. In one of these the ventil- ation was effected by tubes of narrow contradictory. The man of God looks boards extending down from the roof neither for gain nor for sport. He seeks to near the ground. A shaded slate- . the soul of the red man, and he instructs Una gives incaeased protection from the It . In the original, or perhaps better, the aboriginal state, the Iroquois had cer- tain marked characteristics. As a tribe they were pitiless and cunning; as ba- dividuals they were brave and faithful. Mrs. Caswell gives a touching illustra- tion of the nobler qualities that have in many instances survived the ignoble influences of border civilization. form of small lakes, creeks, ponds and After much personal work and branches, often neglect tbe opportunity months of prayer and patience, a group that they have to increase. the income of of young Indians, who had been es - their farms by stocking up to some ex- pedally uproarious and wild, came into the church and signed the pledge to tent with ducks and geese. give up tobacco and fire -water. To The raising of feathers le too general- them the taking of the pledge meant ly overlooked, where such natural ad- the abandonment of all vice, and living vantages exist. 'et -hen the country was first explored seed -mead. At night give wheat and cracked corn. Between meals scatter a gill of Millet -seed for a hundred chicks and Iet them seek the seeds, A MARTYR !tow a Poor Indian Was Tempted 'unto Death. Mrs. Caswell, in "Our Life Among the Iroquois Indians," bas given her read- ers an insight tbat is almost unique summer sun. 1 recall one each de- lightfully cool retreat familiar to my childhood, used for a milk house. It hall a rippling streaan of water cours- ing through it. No discount wee ever levied upon the dairy products menu - /diet wed t here. ABOUT FEATHERS. Farmers, who possees watertvdy s in the a clean life. One of these young converts was in- duced to join a company of white men and settled up the. water courses were to go "rafting" on the Allegheny ad - found elevated • with wild water fowl, dieted The rattsmen were freely acl dieted to liquor, and soon noticed that especially in the fall and winter. They the Indian never tasted it have disappeared before the advance of "Wby not ?" tbey asked him. civilization. We , still naw the water "Me belong to temperance society," resources and have domestic ducks and was the laconic reply. "Me promise not geese, and yet, the very men and the drink. Me keep promise." eons of the mehl who formerly would The raft smen laugbed biro to scorn. spend a wbel?, day hunting wild ducks "We'll soon teach you, you miserable and geese, and enjoyed one when kill- ed and baked, now pees the likes and creeks With out a tbought of their form- ,er inhabitants The feat here from the wild fowl when captured were carefully saved, and eith- er made into nice beds and pillows, or sold at a good price. they handed hint a glass of whiskey, Tbe .market for feathers is stall active, ,d when he declined it they pushed and the price is good, and there is no him into the river. The Indian swam earthly reasan why there sbould not to the edge of the raft, and begged be ten tame ducks and geese raised to- his tormentors to let bim come aboard. day where one wild one was found "Yes." was the reply, "if you will twenty years ago., drink the whiskey." There is the Pekin duck. a fine !large The Indian shook his bead. "Me no purely :white duck with yellow lcags and break promise," said he. !leak, a really beautiful specimen of the Then the men pushed him away from water fowl, and one that yir ictsa great the edge of the raft. He was getting lot of its soft and pretty feathers at exhausted and sank; but rising he eaeh picking. These ducks should be clutched the raft convulsively. raised wherever there is a source of "Will you drink it?" came the last water. They can also be. raised where demand. there is no large stream or lake, as "No break promise," gasped the In - they thrive nearly. as well without R. dial. "Me cannot." There is money in Pekin ducks. They Then the brutes unloosened bis fin - are prolific layers, hardy and rapid gers for the last time. The Indian sank, growers. and rose no more. There are several other varieties of The. young sbonvert was as muck a damestie ducks, such as the Rouen, martyr to the truth in this• nineteenth Aylesbury (tthe great English duck), and century as any one of the famous Chris - the Cayuga—the latter very much like tians m the third.. Ile was faithful un - the wild mallard species. to death: In tame geese we have several varie- ties, the Embden, Toulouse, White China and the common old , grey goose, THE UNPLEASANT PART OF IT. all productive of ion abundnnoe of feathers, and all large and hardy., Well, Johnnie, said the visitor, I It, is just as easy to grow feathers in' suppose you'll be -gin going to scih'ool and about our waterways as to grow again very soon.. weeds and reeds, and in these heard throes Yea we should advise the farmers to pay Do you like going to schools more attention to waterfowl and there- Yes; it's staying there after I by add alnot'her source of profit to the thhere that I d,'dn't like: . farm,. redskin how much such a promise is worth 1" These brutal fellows tempted t.be poor man day and night. They held liquor under bis noel; they, threw it in. his face he would not yield. They then resolved to conquer his will. So one da.y The : Electoral College is a. some- what,00mplicated affair. It la composed. of one elector for each Senator in Con- gress, and one for each representative. The electors chosen in November must meet, not at Washington, as many sup- pose, but "in their respective *States," on the second. Monday of January next, and vote for district ballots for Presi- dent and 'trice -President, A certificate of the results of their balloting they must send to the President of the Senate at Washingtone and the law re- quires Congress to be in Session on the second Wednesday in February to open the returns AND COUNT THE BALLOTS. The persons having a majority of the whole number of votes are declared elected. But in case no person had a majority of the eleetora-1 vote for Presi- dent, the Houma of Representatives must immediately proceed to the election of a President from among the three per- sons who may have received the treat - est number of votes for the office in the electoral college. But here the complication arises. In balloting for President in. the House the vote must. e be taken by States, the representation from each state having one vote. A quorum for the purpose must consist of a number of members from two- thirds of the States, and a majority of all the States shall be necessary to a choice, It is easy to see that there might come a time in the history of Congress when the Ilouse being called upon Wash Day For quick and easy work For cleanest, sweetest and whitest clothes Surprise is best • For every use about the 1 house Surprise works best and cheapest. 58e for yourself. eget PROTEOTION -FOR SHEEP, A STRANGE DREAM, Although we believe sheep in small A man arrested in London on a numhers•ewty be allowed to run wvitli charge of attemptingto commit sui- cattle while at pasture without injury tide said he had no intention of kill - to them; we most emphatically endorse mg. 'himself, but had had a dream in in- tbe follawvin by which he. thought be was cutting his the idea advancedg the A>lnerican Sheep I3,reeder eancernilig Ute pen or abed that; should be provid- TO ELECT A PRESIDENT more than one-third of the States would be represented, by men •opposed to the candidate about to be elected, and that they could defeat his election by absenting themselves from the ball and thus "breaking a quorum." Nor is any provision made in the law for casting the vote of States whose representa- tions in the Howse may be , equally divided and unable to agree as to how the vote shall be cast. The House might also be divided among the parties that a majority of the States could not 11e secured for any one candidate and there would not be any election. MY FINANCIAL CAREER. Wthen I go into a bank I get ner- vous. The elerkts Intake me nervous; the wickets nlnke me nervous; the sight of the maoney makes me nervous. The moment I cross the tbreshald of a bank, 1 nen a hesitating jay. If I attempt to transact business there, I become an irresponsible idiot, I knave this beforehand, but any salary had been raised to twenty-two dollars a moontah, and I felt that the bank wee the only place for it: So T ehtatmbled in and dboked timidly around at the clerks. F bad an idea that a pennon about to open an account must needs consult the man- ager.. I went up to a, wicket maeked "Cashier." The cashier was a tail, cool fellow. The very sight of biro unnerved me. .My voice was sepuL- chrai. "Can I see the manager?" I said, and added, stlltm uly, "alone.'', I don't know wiry I said "donee' "Certainly," said the cashier, and he fetched him. Tato manager was a grave calm man, I held my twenty-two dollars clutched in a crumpled bail in my packet. "Are you the manager?" I asked. Heavens knows I didn't doubt it. "Yes." be said. "Can I see you?" I asked, "alone?" I didn't want to say "alone" again, but without it the thing seemed self- evident. The Manager looked at me in some alarm. Ile felt that I bad an awful secret to reveal. "Caine in hese," he said, and he fled the way to a private room. Be turned the key in the lock. "We are safe from interruption here," he said; "sit dawn." We looked at one tel rnand lo S�ebathsa :dowel aliother. I found no voice to speak: "You are the detective, I presume?" he said. Ile had gathered from my mysterious manner that I was a detective. I knew what he was thinking,: and it made me worse. "No," I said. "To tell the txutb," I went on, as if I had been prompted to lie about it, "I'm not a detective at all, I've come to open an account. I intend to keep atll my money in this babas.,, 'flue manager looked relieved, but. still serious; he concluded now 'tbnt I was a. son of Baron Rolthseilild, or a young Gould. "A large account, I suppose?" he said. "Fairly large," I wthispered. "I. pro- pose to deposit tweet -two dollars now, and ten dollars a. month regularly." 'Tbe manager got up and opened tbe door. Ile cabled, to the cashier: "Mr. Montgomery," he said, unkindly, "this gentleman is opening an account; he will deposit twenty-two +dollars. Good-morning.:i I rose, A big iron door stood open at the side of the room. "Good -morning," 1 said, anti stepped into the safe. "Come out," said the manager, cold- ly, and showed me the other way. i went up to the cashier's wicket and poked the bail of money at bim with a quick convullsive movement, as if I were doing a conjuring trick. My face was ghastly pale. Here," 1 eakd, "deposit it." Tlhe tone of the words seemed to mean "let us do this painful thing while the fit is on us." tie took tihie money and gave it to another clerk. 13te made ins write the sum on a slip of paper and sign my name in a book. 1 no longer knew what I was doing. Tbe bank swam before my eyes. "Is it- deposited?" I asked, in a hol- low, vibrating voices • "It is," said the cashier. "Then 1 'want to draw a check" My idea was to draw out two dol- lars of it, for present use. Some one gave me a. check book through a wic- ket, and some one eine began telling me boiw to write it out. The peeled in the bank had the impression that I was an invalid millionaire. I wrote" something on the check, and th.rust it in at the clerk. He looked at it. "Wheat! are you drawing it all out tagain?" he asked, in sou rprise. Then 1 realized. that I had written twenty-two doilaas instead of two dol- lars. I . was too fax gone to reason now. I had a feeling that it was im- possible to. explain the thing. All the clerks had stopped waiting to look at me. Reckless with' •misery, I made a plunge. "Yes, the whole. thing." "You. withdraw your money from file bank? `Every penny of it," "Are you not going to deposit any more?" said tihe clerk, astonisihed. ' Neverf idiotic o e struck me that the lh might think something had insulted me while I was - writing the check and that I bad chamged my mind. - I made a wretched attempt to look like a man with a fearfully quick temper. The clerk prepared to pay the money: How will you have it?" "How, will you, bkve . it? "Ohl" I caught his meaning, and an- swered without even trying to think. "In twenties.►+ He gave tinea twenty -dollar note. "And the two?" he asked, drrydy. "In twos," I sand. He gave, it to me, and I rusibed out. As the bigdoorsswung behind me T etiergtilt the echo of. a roar'of laughter that went up to the ceiling of the bank. Since ,then I bank no more. I ' keep my money ire caslhl in my trousers poc- ket, and,my savings in ,gold in a sock. SMOKING IN HER CRADLE. Ada Tallier, Aged Four, Loves a Pipe or Cigar Reiter Than Iter Lolly. Ada Parker is only four years old, but she is an inveterate smoker. Her young parents live in East Ferry street, Newark, N.J. Ada puffs a pipe, a cig- arette, or cigar just like a man.: It is a common thing to see her in the street with a short briar pipe or a, cigarette ion !ler mouth. She often drops into a shoemaker's shop andwhen one of the cobblers lays down his pipe she picks it up and puffs it. Ada rias a companion, Gus Pike, a boy of five, who smokes and chews to- bacco. He lives in the same.house that she does. The children are inseparable. Ada steals her father's pipe from the kitchen mantel. at every opportunity, so that she and Gus can have a smoke in the yard. Althoueh carefully watched by her mother she manages to get the pipe and a supplty of tobacco daily. When a reporter visited the Packer apartments the other day Ada was standing in front of the stove with a briar pipe in her mouth, She picked up a piece of paper, thrust it into the stove until it blazed up, and then lighted her pipe and began to puff out smoke. Gus Pike was sitting in a big rocking -chair near by. Ada was com- fortably dressed and has a plumpb facie, rosy cheeks, large blue eyes, light brown hair and a very stout body for a child of her years. Mrs. Parker said that Ada does not get sick after smoking. She thinks the child will coon drop the habit: She is awl oinly child, and her parents do not like to cbastise her severely. "She learned to smoke when she was •a baby," Mrs. Parker said. "Her fath- er would bold her on his knee when he smoked after supper, end let . her put the stem of the pie in her mouth once in a while. She liked the taste of tobacco, and as 1?he grew older she would take papa's pipe out of doors and smoke by herself. We thought it was cunning at first but we do mot think so now., She and this little boy smoke together, and she gets the tobacco, no matter where I hide it. Of late elle takes a clothes- pin lothe - pin' and walks about the yard with in her mouth apparently enjoying it as much as if it were a piped I believe she wile soon be cured of the habit." While her mother was talking Ada climbed on a -Mir to get tobacco from a box on the mantel. Mrs. Parker took her from the °hair and the child display- ed bad. temper. " Her mother had to whip her to make her behave herself. She evidently wanted to show off. A woman who keeps a cigar and no- tion store near the Parker House said. that Ada used to call' for oLgaretten but none were ever solid to her. The woman scolded her, and now Ada hides the pipe whenever she meets the wom- GE NUMBER OF VOYAGERS. AVERA . DR. • SPINNEY $ CO. The Old Reliable Specialist•. ad" Years Experience le the treatment of the Throat and Lung Troubles, Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Nervous, Chronic and Special Dis- eases of men and women. restored—Kidn.y wad Biad- Lost Manhood der troubles permanently cured --Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Varicocele and stricture cured without pain. No cutting. Syphilis and all Blood pisessee cured without mercury. Tong M Buffering from the egects of ting men youthful tauten or indiscretions, or any troubled with Weakness, Nervous bebihty, Loss of iiemory, Despondency, tt'ersion to Society, Kidney Troubles, or any dis.aec of the Genital -Urinary Or- gans, an here find safe and speedy cure, +i, i. harges reasonable esppe�ciallyy to the �,' .7 poor. CURES GUARANTEED. V i.\�\. Tlterearemnnytroubled middle-AgedYBIl with too fre uentevacu- tions of the bladder. often accompanied by a alight or burning sensation, and weakening of the system in a mariner the patient cannot account for. There are many ,nen who die of this difficulty, ignorant of the Cause. The doctor will guarantee a er- feet care in all such cases, end heeleley restoration of the Benito -IOU organs. Con^ sulcation trec. Those unable to call, Can write full particulars of their ase and have medicine sent by express, with full instructions for use. Mention this paper when writing. �1 Office hours: From 99�a. m. to 8 p. m. Sundays, 9 to 11 a. m. ARD DR SruuuEi JUI Side EntranceNo. 1•• E. Elisabeth Sts) DETROIT. MICH. - ANEMONES HE -WAS BURIED ALIVE. A Gruesome Story trout the Alaskan geld country—shocking Discovery. Advices from Juneau, Alaska, state that Carlton F. Wells, who left south- ern Oregon two years ago for the Are- tiegold fields where, it is said, he so - cumulated $20,000, was stricken with heart disease in Juneau last May. When he became ill, Wells forwarded the bulk of his little fortune to bis wife, now diving in Trenton, N. J. He apparently died and was buried. A month ago the undertaker who buried Wells received a letter from bis widow, asking that the remains be exhumed and shipped east for per- manent interment. `Vben the coffin containing Wells' almost decomposed. body was opened, inspeotion showed be- yond doubt that Wells had awakened from the death -like trance after burial. In the skeleton of the right band was elutched a gutta peroha late bear- ing three false teeth, which in his agony Wells must have torn from his mouth. Near the place where his right jaw resited 'in the coffin was also found a plain gold ring, whioh the dead man had worn. In view of this terrible discovery, the undertaker acid the doc- tor who had attended Welds decided not to send the remains east. A GREAT TASK. Cruden labored 19 years on his " Con- oordance To the Bible," and immediate- ly after its publication was sent to an asylum. He never entirely recovered from the mental disease induced by this gigantic undertaking. Forbear to judge, for we aro sinners all: ShaksPeare. ea. us As a blood maker, blood purifier, health giver and sys- tem°renovator Manley's Celery -Nerve Compound is unrivalled. "The eruptions on the face par- ticularly,have been removed, and the trouble in my back as well, and I feel like a new man. I consider Hanley's Celery Compound better than doctor's medicine for blood and liver troubles, as It has proved se in my case." Isaiah Leffler. Waterford, Ont.. THE OF ANY EXETKR TIMES HE KNEW THEM.: j Hunigry Higgins—Wotl You dunno what a iaisex is! A miser is a man wet denies +hissellf the necessaries of life, when he has the money to buy them, throat, and wokeup tofind that he There are always three and a half Weary Watkinis—Oh I have met some l hacking luta neck with a mi114ons of people on the seas of the of them fellers. But I thought they was really a ng 's� ie 'es prohibitionists. s. r ithe 1•S 1 » 17e 1. v world, La p • vi .knife: carving g k THE PERFECT TEA THE FINEST TEA IN THE WORLD FROM THE TEA PLANT TO THE TEA cup • break Up a Cold in Time• sea Cook's Cotton Root Compound Manufactured by The Cook Co., Windsor, Ont., and Detroit, Mich., is the only known safe, reliable monthly medicine on which ladies can depend in "the !tour and time a h reads p ladyo o recd. � very w this is requested to inclose two post- age stamps, with her address, for BGG{" G/i Yl i { 1 and full particulars, which we will send by returu mail in plain. Beale envelope. An old physician, 35 years colt- tinned practice treating diseases of women, has charge of the office, and can be consulted by letter or in person, Address our main office THE COOK COMPANY, Room 3—No. 263 Woodward Ave. Detroit, £ " Cook's Cotton Root Compound is sold by all responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominion of Canada and United States for One Dollar per box. FOR TWENTY -SIS YEARS. THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. o•••• • • ••••• 'Relief for. :Laing *Troubles • • • • • • • 1 EMULSION • Io CONSUIIPTSON and all LUNO • IDISEASES,SPITTINGOwELOOn. • " GOUGH, LOSS OF APPETITE_ • ® AEICILI!y, the benefits of th' • article at -Emma manifest. • By theald of The "D. L 1." Emulsion, I have gest • rid etahseking cough which bad troubled me for • over a year, and hale mgqalned considerably in • weight. I liked this Etmusion so veil I was glad • when oto time came around to take It, • T. H. WINGiLA3t, O.E.,Moutreai • bee. and $t per Bottle DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., LTD., MONTREAL • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • IN ITS NATIVE PURITY. u ervision packed under the s "Monsoon"Tcaist p of the Tea growers, and is advertised and sold by them as a sampleof the best qualities of Indian and Ceylon Teas. For that reason they.see that none but the very fresh leaves go into Monsoon packages. That is why "Monsoon,' the perfect Tea, can be sold at the same price as inferior tea. It is put up in sealed caddies of IA Ib., x ib. and b lbs:, and sold in three flavours at pec., sec, and 6oc. If your grocer dors not keep it, tell him to write to STEEL, I•IAYTER & CO., at and 13 Front St. East, Toronto. Rack -Ache, Face -Ache. Sciatic Pains, Neuralgic Prins, Pain in the Side, etc: Promptly Relieved and Cured by The "D.,& La" 'Menthol Plaster Having used your D. AL Menthol Plaster for severe pain in the back and lumbago, I unhesitatingly recommend ammo as a ante, sure and rapid remedy :In fact they wet like magic. A. LAPOINTE. Vizabot6tbwu, Ont. Price 2be. DAVIS & LAWRENCE ,CO., LTH, Proprietors, MONTREAL. P�iY- BY USING YECTORAL P The Quick Cure for COUGHS, COLDS, CItODP, BRON- CIHTIS, HOARSENESS, etc.' MRS. JOSEPH MoewxcR, of 68 •Sorauren Ave., Toronto, writes "Pyny.Pectoral hoe never failed to cure ray children of trdup after a few doses: It cured myself of a long-ataudin cough after several otter remedies lad failed. It has also proved an excellent cough euro for trey family. 1 prefer :it to any other. medicine for coughs, croup or hoarseness.' H. O. BARPOUR,. of Little Rocher, N,B, writes "Ae a Ci1r0 for coughs PgnyPnctoral the best selling medicine I have; my ens- .le tmners will lows no other." Large Bottle, 2l Cts. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Lyn. Proprietors, MONTRm a. The ameer of !Afghanistan is care- fully training his future successor in state affirs. • Abduxraihlman now leaves much of hie work to. Habibullab Khan, and onlyy deals personelle with the most important questions rob as re- lations with the Indian gocernment.