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The Clinton New Era, 1890-11-14, Page 3eie -wee Is .Jabbing Department is not surpasse: ..in the I provement of soils, preparation of sheep are crowded out; they would TH.I: GAIN OF LIVING. the soil for the seed, rotation of produce. Why should a horse or age mat ]indeth Ida life shall lose it,'' grope, growth and management of an ass be called to bear a burden crops, aro s for soiling, weeds of when there are poor human beasts to be bad, in number suffrient to build pyramids or drag mountains from their bases, if the poorest of wages was to recompense such a task were forth coming? There are practically no plant weeds to be seen in the most thickly popu- lated parts of China. There is no room for them, and they are com- plete'y enterpated in a land where agriculture is so minute that the roots of plants ore examined to expel or to kill any inseet or grub that would dare to dispute ute a living p with the buugry lord of creation. Seeds are steeped in liquid manure to force them to rapid and luxuri- ant growth. Fertilizers are appli- ed directly to the toots of plants, and not placed on the surface of the land as with us, for in the latter process is evaporation and waste. waa the minister's text that day, ,fills Eleanor seemed to listen, though hes' thoughts were far away; In ,a week it would be vacation, and she longed for the time to come Zit would take her away from the city to her beautiful seaside home. "Ie that loseth his life shall find it." Though the words bore a meaning ' plain, They had none for the child who heard them, with restless eye and brain; and was ended, o at 1stwa e n a But thea rm the farm, diseases of crops, insects, principles of feeding, care and management of horses, cattle, sheep and Bovine breeding, breeds of live stock, dairying, the silo and ensilage, cultivation of forest trees for shade, ornament and protection. This will give a fair idea of the scope of the work. The chapter of definitions and explanations, and those on the plant, the soil, diseases of crops, insects and dairying were written Y Mr JamesMills, M.A. re si• b 1 the preaoher e lowly said; dent of the Ontario Agricultural "Our contribution this morning will be College, and the remainder of the for the children's aid." book by Mr Thomas Shaw, pro- fessor of agriculture in that in- Eleanor's heart beat faster, her face stitution. To prepare a work of wore a troubled look . this kind with a view to making As her hand closed softly over her little its teachings clear to the youth - pocket -book, � ful mind and entertaining was a Where she carried a birthday present, task burdened with difficulties. ' It has been accomplished most a bright, new piece of gold, And the look of trouble deepened whil her hand took a firmer hold. "I can't give this," she was thinking, "though it's all I have to give, And I wish that the children all could It may be perused advantageously by every farmer in the land, and every farmer's son ought to reaa ii again and again until he is as familiar with its contents as he is with the fingers of his hands, for it teaches him the first principles of agriculture. without a know- ledge of which there can be no correct farming. Public School Agriculture is a substantially bound volume, printed on good paper in small but clean, clear type, with numerous engravings, one of which (the frontispiece is a strikiug full-paga picture of the Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph. successfully. The book is credit- able in every way to its able authors, to the publishers, the J. F E. Bryant Company, Toronto, the soul dropped iavoiuuz,•y ta wnen off one's guard ; in a word, the lightning form of' a hundred ideous and un -Christian sins. For a want of patience, a want of kindness, a want of generosity, a waist of unselfishness, are all .in- stantaneously symbolised in one flash of temper. Hence it is not enough to deal with temper. We must go to the source, and change thev,nmost nature, and the angry humors will die away of them- selves. Souls are made sweet, .ot by taking the acid fluids out, but by putting something ins. -a great love, a new spirit, the spirit of Christ. The spirit ofC ' •it Christ inter- penetrating P ours, sweetens, puri- fies. transforms all. This only can eradicate what is wrong, work a chemical change, renovate and regenerate and rehabilitate the inner man. and to the Education Department. go to a pleasant place to live." But she saw, with a little trembling sob, that the basket .vas on its way, And when it passed her the gold piece in the midst of the silver lay. 'Twas an August day at the seashore, and Eleanor raced along Where the heavy waves were rolling and the tide was running strong; She stooped for a sea -shell Lying on the hard and shining sand. When a mighty breaker caught her and swept her away from land. • • But, before she xould (cry or struggle, she was seized by a little lad, Whol dragged her out of the water with all the strength he had, C• C. Runasr,s <t Co. N And he said, to her look of wonder, as GET, -I have used yonr MINARD'S soon as' he'd breath to speak, "I'm one of the fresb•air children, a- stayin' here for a week." ' Eleanor thought of the gold piece she had sadly given away ; 'Why, perhaps if I'd kept that money he wouldn't be here to -day ! '"Weren't you afraid of drowning?" He slowly shook his head, •"I didn't think of myself at all, but of saving you," he said. And she suddenly thought of the ser- - more- its meaning grew clear and plain, About the finding and losing;'thegiving that's greatest gain ; That the life which is lived for others is the only life to lead, .And, instead of our vain self-seeking, we should care for another's need. LINIMENT in my family for some years and believe it the best medicine in the market as it does all it is recom- mended to do. Cannaan Forks, N. B., D. KIERSTEAI. John Mader, Mahone Bay, informs us that he was cured of a very severe attack of rheumatism by useing MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT. THE REFUGE. "Within the car, a littlegiri With Bair of gold, and tress and curl Live living sunshine -all alive, Kept litting up and down the aisle; 'Now here, now there, from seat to seat Danced merrily the little feet, The sunny face now pressed the pane, Now called the sunshine back again All loved her as from place to place 'She fluttered with a bird -like grace; e And now with this one, now with them 'Stopped to exchange a smile or chat,' Our eyes were ever en the child, So the long journey we beguiled,' Her blue eyes coalii so friendly be; Nobody knew whose treasurer she. But snddently from sunlight plain Into a tunnel rushed the train. Ali, then we knew whose arms should hold 'The little one with lecke o{,gold, "papa, papa," she trembling cried, And, groping, sought her father's side: As ont into the day we pressed, Tier head lay on -her father's breast. "Tie so with us -when life is fair 'We, too, forget our father's care, And wander wheresoe'er we will, But, oh, he's watching, watching still, And when the shadows round us fall He hears and heeds his children's call, 'We run to him with fem. oppressed, Be folds ns to his gracious breast. TB E CHINESE ARE THE BEST FARMERS ON EARTH Catarrh indicates impure blood, and to cure it, take Hoods Sarsaparilla, which purifies the blood. Fold by all druggist. or Sunday Leading LOVE BEGETS LOVL. Contemplate the love of Christ and you will love. Stand before that mirror, reflect Christ's char- acter, and you will be changed into the same image from tender- ness to tenderness. You cannot love to order. You can only look at tho lovely object, and full in love with it and grow into like- ness to it. And so look at this perfect, character, this perfect life. Look at the groat sacrifice as belaid down himself all through life and upon the cross of Calvary and you must love Him, you must become like Him. Love begets love. It is a process of induction Put a piece of iron in the presence of an electrified body, and that piece of iron for a time becomes electrified. It is changed into a permanent magnet, and as long as you leave the two side by side, they are both magnets alike. liemain side by aide with Him who loved us, and gave Himself for us, and -you, too, will become a permanent magnet, a perman- ently attractive force ; and like Him you will draw all men unto you, like Him you will be drawn unto all rnen. That,is the inevit- able effect of love. One of the most strikin '•a'nd most useful characteristics of the Chinese is their remarkable ability as farmers. In the United States, if a father were to give his son two or three acres of land and to tell him that he expected him to raise Vegetables enough on this acreage to .grow rich the son would be fully justified in indulging in ineredulous laughter, Suppose that in addition to making his own living and to paying and feeding a laborer out of the prod - nee of the land the son were called .ulpon to pay $25 or $30 a month rent per acre would not every one say, " This is impossible"? But it is not -to a Chinaman at least. A year ago I sold for a friend in San Francisco about two and one quarter acres of land in a western suburb. A Chinaman wasoc(•.ipy• ins{ it for this speck of ground he regularly paid .$75 75 q, month and he lived on it with an assistant. He used it foe growing vegetables, which he disposed of to Chinamen. When I; sold the lot the China- man had been upon it three years, and hie lease had two yearajto run. The buyer desired to fill the lot in and to self it for building plots but the Chinaman would not lease. Despite the high rant he was making money and ho was disposs- ossed only by an action at law to suppress his husine-'s as a nuis- ance. The Rev Mr Vrooman, now Chinese interpreter in the California'courts, who was fol' 25 years a missionary at Cftnton,and was subsequently arriong the Chinese in Melbourne, informed - tno'khat he knew of two Chinese in the latter place who made a livieg for themselves and for a horse from a quarter acre of land. In addition to supporting them- selves; and the horse, they each sent $50 yearly to their rela- tives. A USEFUL WORK. The admirable• set of school books, issued under the authority of the Education Department oV Ontario has b -e' increased by the additian nt' a neat volume en- titled Public Sellout Aizeeculture. The Globe ir\s Holt it contains 250 p•1'tes, a'r,l ,'very ret e tell+, and there is. it thinks, in the en• tire catalogue of agricultural publications+ not a work of its size eon tai wn mush 0sera l ittfOrmat•ion and instruction eon- ,Cel'tiing the great snhjeet of which it treats. Its nine'een chapters dtyltf with definitions and explana- tions, the plant, the soil, the im- Itch, Mange and Scratches of every kind, on human or animals, cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. This never fails. Sold by J. H. Combe Druggist. June27-3m., Miss Sarah Brown, of Tweed, who has had her entire tongue excised for cancer is said to be able to talk quite well, Minard's Linimentlumberman's friend A VISIT TO ZQAR. A Singular Comunwutty--ellstorleal Blr'Ftcb of a Strange People. In a little valley in Tuscarawas Coun- ty, 0., stands the town of Zoar, inhabit- ed by a quaint, interesting community. A placid stream flows through the valley almost encircling the houses which ues- tle together, their red tile roofs and rude examples of Dutch architecture !uaniug a sense of romance to a spot embelli.,bed by the hand of nature. Surrounde,l by green hillsides, contented and iielust- rious, the Zoarites live as one tinily with a"common father" and one object -peace. They originally came from Wurtemberg. At the beginning of the one century o e Yaul Baemler funnd it consistent with his religious ideas to take exceptions to some of the doctrines and practices of the Lutheran chur< h in his native province. Of liberal views, and with a due regard for the rights of his fellow man. he pet himself to the task of correcting the abuses. At first the town -folk refused to give ear to his preaching, but at the end of eight years be had acquired a large following. So great did his power become that the authorities took alarm and began a serie of persecutions that ultimately led to his being exiled. Baemler's career. from 1810 to his advent in America, is under a cloud of civic rigid reli ious complica- tions through which, at the critical ino- e-set., shines forth his love for those he ruled. MINION Koine two hundred had determined RAILROAD T14IE TABLE upon following him across the Atlantic, but, when the time for departure had ar- Issned May let. rived, their hearts failed thele and the The departure of trains at the several number dwindled down to seventeen. station8 named, is according to the The members of this sturdy little band last official time card: were prepared to endure all forms of CLINTON Grand True kDivision privation in order to enjoy religious lib - Going East Goin1.20gp.m, West erty. Their sufferings were far greater 7.43 a.m. 10.05 a.m. than they had anticipated, so severe, 2.25 p.m. indeed, that five perished on their jour- • 4.55 p.m. 6.55 p.m. 9.27 p.m. ney inland. They wandered through Northern Maryland and Virginia, cross - London, Huron and Bruce Division ed the Ohio river and faced north. On Going North Going Sarah a bright autumnal afternoon, in 1815, a•m. p.m a'rn. p.m. they entered the valley now entirely Wingham ..11.00 7.45 6.50 3.40 Belgrave ..10.42 7.27 7.05 4.00 owned by them, Baemler was quick in Blyth 10.28 7.12 7.18 4.15 noting the advantages offered by a settle- Londesboro 10.19 7.03 7.26 4.25 ment here and founded the -Community Clinton ..,.10.00 6.45 7.55 4.45 at Zoar," - Brucefield9.42 6.26 8.15 5.01 For thirty six years the Zoarites pros- Kippen 9.34 6.17 8.24 5.12 pered. In 1851 the cholera almost ex- Exeterl9.28 6.09 8.32 5.19 Exeter .. 9.16 5.57 8.50 5.33 terminated them. The few that surviv- London8.05 '.25 10.15 6.45 ed the epidemic set about to rebuild the power of Zoar and succeeded. Baemler died shortly after this, but no ono has The Clinton New Era ever succeeded him as king of the Zoar- ites. Ispublished every Friday Morning by the proprietor, RoiT. HOLLIES, at his The Zoar of to -day is a town of four printing establishment, Isaac St., Clin- hundred inhabitants. It is governed by ton Ont County LIVERY, The undersigned have bought out the Liv- ery-bnainess lately owned by R. Beattie and desire to nforw the public that they will carry on the same in the old premises, Next COMMERCIAL Rotel. Several new and good driving her see, and the most stvlish carragee have been added to the business, and will be hired at reasonable prices. Satisfaction guaranteed. R. REYNOLDS & SJN ANTED.! A good pushing Salesman here. First- olase pay guaranteed weekly. Commis- sion or halory. Q.iieh selling new Fru as. and Specialties. FtRMERS can get agood payingjob for the winter. Write for full terms and par- ticulars FRED E. YOL'NO,Nurseryman, 1toCHESTER. N. Y RULE BY LOVE AND LAW. It is, indeed, better that we do our duty merely from constraint than to leave it undone. But duty has not yet taken on its true glory unless it is done spontane- ously and with delight. It is bet- ter that a man shonld not steal his reigbbor's purse, merely be- cause the law forbids him, than that he should do this ; but if he is simply restrained from stealing by the threatened penalties of law, he is not an honest man at heart. His apparent honesty is due only to the law of constraint, and not to the law of freedom. All laws of constraint have it as their end to develop an inner law of free right doing. The prin- ciples of righteousness are never really oars until the outer law has become an inner law. Hence the Apostle -teaches that the legal system Was Our schoolmaster un- to Christ; but when faith has Inwho• wland In China the, owner should not cultivate it would be deprived of it. Fertilizers un- dreamed of it: Europe are used there, and the nestf•ils of a Euro- pean or an American are assailed with all sorts of odors at every turn in city or country. AN or- dure is penuriously hoarded and used. Every stalk of, rine is planted as seed, replanted in water by human hands, and to add one handful to a crop would be thought nnr unworthy of effort. Rain wirer is everywhere stored in ponds or in water holes for irriga- tion, and in all eases fish are grown in these reservoirs. Human hands do all the work. human backs beat most of the lilt- burdens; human animals are the beasts that drag most of the loads, where manner, they cannot be transported on ronthnoss underneath a, Fampr a rooms aamoplace asbefore . orders resnect- Nally give way to a new older of things. canal or river. Horses, solus and of the most hidden products s of tons solicited. m Yet this is doubtful,, as all the property must be hild bated on long as three mem- bers desire; It to be, • a board of trustees, thiee in number, one TERNS. -'$1.50 per annum, paid in ad- being elected annually. A man named vance Zimmerman, being, a direct descendant JOB PRINTING. of Baer er, is looked upon as being the in every style and of every description, "common father." Imagine a huge executed with neatness and dispatch, family occupying ninety odd houses and at reasonable rates. with three thousand acres of land to till, NEWSPAPER DECISIONS. huge stables that contain three hundred 1. Any person or persons who take a horses and as many head of cattle, farm - paper regularly from a post office, ing.implenients of the most improved whether directed in his name or an- kind, and well clothed and fed, and you other's, or whether he has subscribed havZoar. The houses are small, of or not, is responsible for payment. substantial build and scruplously clean. 2. If a person orders his paper die• ;ontinued he must pay all arrears, or The hotel is an old-fashioned structure the publisher may continue to send it with a tower and broad veranda. It is until payment is made, and then col- furnished plainly; the victuals are solid, ect the whole amount whether the pa- yet tempting. Every cent received by er is taken or not. the landlord is turned over to the trus- s. The Courts have decided that re - tees while he in return receives his sup - fusing to take newspapers or periodicals lies at the general store. from the post office or removing and P eaving them uncalled for prima facie So it is with every family. They per - evidence of intentional trend form their proportion of the general labor •ADVERTISING itA'1ES. and are furnished all the necessaries and LOCAL NOTICES -At head of local not a few of the luxuries of life. When oolumn, 10 cents per line or portion a young couple marry they are furnished thereof, each insertion. with a house, together with the assur- Articles lost or found, girls wanted ance of a comfortable living. In return &c., not exceeding three lines, 25 cents the must live as the' others do and .per - each insertore Five lines. 50 cents for form their share of the work. 'one insertion_ and 25 cents for each sub- sequent insertion. What will they have to do? There are Houses to let or for sale, farms to flour and saw -mills to run; a tannery •to •cent or for sale, stray cattle and all operate and cloth to weave; schools to similar advertisements not exceeding teach and fields to till; carpenter shops and a brewery to care for; harness to Inake a flower garden covering several acres to weed; German carp to raise in the river: wholesome reading, a brass band and orchestra to occupy their atten- tion during the evening. Hats, butter and cheese to make., besides a thousand and one different things to prevent lazi- ness. The men are shaved twice a week by a young man who works in the tan- nery and is leader of the orchestra. Even the tramp who happens to make a friend- ly call is greatly impressed with the habits of the Zoarites. The tramp is well treated, He is given a substantial supper, a good bed i n the "Tramp's Home," a bath in the morning, followed by a hearty breakfast before he is sent his way. Em Ifs MONEy FOR AGENTS NO RISK. NO CAPITAL REQ UIRED An honorable and praiseworthy business without any possible chalice of loss; steady employment and control of territory Have done busin'es in Canada :f0years. Liberal pay to right man to sell our unexcelled Nursery Stock. Send for terms. CHAFE BROTHERS COMPANY, Nurserymen, < o.borne, Out TEN POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS THINK - OF IT ! As a Pieahrrod cer there can be no question but that conte -that is when we have re- eight lines $1 for one month, and 50 ceived Christ and taken His spirit as the inrcier law of life -we are He has done his work for us, andSpecial contract arrangements with we pass can into a higher stage of: business men. religious development; and the4 General advertising rate for unclassi- - cents for each subsequent month. • Advertisements without specific in - no longer under the schoolmaster.; structione, inserted till forbid. higher we ascend. in the scale of perfection of character, the less shall we he in need ut outward constraint,and the more complete- ly shall we be under the bondage of righteousness. We shall be free from the law because we have taken the spirit of the law into our lues as a positive prin- ciple. Ile whose life ie ruled by love is not ender the law sincetbe low in its essential principle is within him a as living and inspri- ing principle of life. LOVE Is NOT EASILY PROVOKED. Professor Drummond in his beautiful essay analyzing St. Paul's grand sermon on lave says; 'The next ingredient is a very re- markable one: Good Temper. 'Love is not easily provoked.' Nothing could be more striking than to fired this here. We are inclined to look upon bad temper as a very harmless weakness. We speak of it as a mere infirmity of nature, a family failing, a mat- ter of temperament,- not a thing of' very serious account in estimat- ing a man's character. And yet here, right in the heart of this analysis of love, it finds a place; and the Bible again s'nd again re- turns to condemn it as one of the most destructive elements in hu- man nature. Bad temper is a symptom, a revelation of an un- loving 'nature nt bottom. It is the intermittent disease within; the occasional bubble esctqing to the surface which betrnys some fied advertisements and legal adver- tising, le cents per line for first inser- tion, and 3 cents per line for each sub- sequent insertion. Changes for contracted advertise- ments must be handed in as early in the week as possible to insure a change hat week. WANTED MEN, local cr tra- velling, to sell my guaranteed NORBERT Swoca. Salary and commission, paid weekly, Outfit free. Spe cis] attention given to beginners. Workers never fail to make good weekly wages. RAHAM me at once for particulars. E. Nurseryman, Toronto. )This house ie reli- able.) apt. 12-10 Executors' Notice to Creditors The creditors of George Oakes, late of the Township of coderich, in the County of Hur- on, yeoman, deceased, who died on or about the first day of October, A.D., 1890' are here - ore the flfthf day of December next, to J, C, Stevenson, Cllintdn P,O., one of the executors of the last will and testament of the said George Oakes, their christen and surnames, addressee and descriptions, the full particu- lars of their claims, a statement of their ac- counts, and the nature of the securities held by tbemtif any); and that immediately after the said fifth day of December next, the as- sets of the said George 'Oakes will be distri- buted among the parties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which notice shall have hese received; and said executors will not be liable for the said mete or any part thereof, to any person of whose claim notice shall not have been received' by thein at the time of such distribution. JOHN OAKES, 1. C. STEVENSON. L Executors. WM McIIATH, I rr^ Dated 5),,' 22nd day of 0 toter, A. D. ttOO Everything is done in a methodical manner. Every cow has its particular stall and milker. The milk is taken directly to the public dairy and there, with the butter and cheese, is distributed. So it is with everything. No one handles money save the trustees and hotelkeeper. Many a Zoarite has not had a dollar in his hand for years and still they are happy. n works faithfully and Every one Y Eve jealousy is a stranger. The men are plain, business looking individuals. They are not, as may be supposed, religious fanatics. Alt a rule they' live to a ripe old age, wholly in- differeet to the busy world and its puzzling questions. They are pleasant in conversation, liberal in their dealings, common sense and integrity being the two staples in their composition. The women diffef but little front the men in character. Their features betray ex- posure and toil, yet there is not a sugges- tion of coarseness. With the growth of Ohio the tendency of the community has been to weaken, MANTLE MAKING especially among the younger me, ntiers. MISS s. SI0ORE. It is but natural that they should look to who has been doing Mantle Making over the a more active life yet dieertions are re- premisea lately occupied by Plnrneteel & markably few. Of late years contn mi- Gibhings, for a year past, desires to return thanks for the patronage accorded her, and tion has been opened with the outside at the sante time intimate that ebe will con- world by rail, This move has led many time to execute, in the moat satiafnctor all orders entrusted to her, at her to believe that the community Will gran- d rad- SGOTT'S LSION EMU Of Pure Cod firer 011 and Hypophosphites Of Lime and Soda is without a rival. Many have gained a pound a day by the use of it. It curets . CONSUMPTION, SCROFULA, BRONCHITIS, COUGHS AND COLDS, AND ALL FORMS OF WASTING DIS- EASES. AS PALATABLE d8 MILK. Genuine made by Scott& Bowne,Bellevitle.Salmon Wrapper; at all Druggists, 60c. and $1.00. ULAXSEED EMULSCON COmPOUNd BRONCHITi S 188 Lexington Ave. New York City, Sept. Ave., New I have used the Flax -Seed Emulsion in several rases of Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages of Phthisis, and have been well pleased with the results JAMES K. CROOK, M.D. C®NSU PTION Brooklyn. N -Y., Feb. 14th 1889. ru I have used your Emulsion in a se of Phthisis onwith could nuse Cod LbereC,lainl ranesultsy form.ere patient J. H. DROGE, M. D. NERVQUS PROSTRATION Brooklyn, N. V. Dec. 20th, 1 I can strongly recominerd Flax Seed Emulsion as helpful to the mile( end por sib' y the cure of all Lung, Bronchial and •' 5,', acus, and a good gen- eral tonic in ph., a LitDi'i:y. it,HN F. TALMAi,E, M. D. GE !L TY Brooklyn, N, Y., O. 10111,1888. I regard Flax Seed Eir•,)s,on as r.•rratly- superior t0 the Cod Liver Oil E1/111151:::IS sus, ri: d V in use. D. M. D• ASTrv" N ''.4►S . " -vest"ith St., rk,Aig.6,1 1 nave r.,ed y^.zr 1•'rat c.' • .: i..i.•,. nen Compound in a severe ,,,=e of 'NI r.l-i•..tr>.••_ rani Inc result was more than hoped for -i- •.,- s rah-, c)oua, and con- tinuous. I recommend i i i i' r `. all y to t )i a profession and humanity at large. M. ll. CILBERT, M.D. RH UMA:':I M Sold by Druggists, Price $ 1.00. FLAX -SEED EMUL.smOIV CO. 35 Liberty St., New York. flINK FOR ALE EOPLE ARE NOT 5 Put gative Medi- cine. Tboy are a BLOOD BUILDER, TONIC and BECON- RTa17OTOR, as the supply in 8 _'onaenee form the subetance., actually needed teen - rich the Blood, curing all diseases coming from Poon and WA's - UT BLOOD, or from VITIATED Hymns in the BLOOD, and oleo invigorate and BtiiLD uP the BLOOD and Svernm when broken down by overwork, mental worryt_d1aease, 0X068808 and Indieore- tlone, They have a Brzerszo Amon on the SEXUAL BY8Tnif of both men and women, restoring nor vision and correcting all IrrREOOLAPITIEe and IMPPREOSIONe. EVERY MAN who ands hle mental fan 015189 51111 or !aliog� or hie pbysleal powers lugging, should thke theeo PILLS. They will restore hie lost energise, both physical and mental. EVERY WOMAN ehon1d take them. TheY� ntrek rm all clip precisions and irregularities, which inevitably entail sickness when neglected. should take thews Pmte. They will mire the re - suite of youthful bad habits, and strengthen the system. YOUNG WOMEN YOUNG MEN make them regular. receipt price (l 60o p r box) byll bo sent addraseing D 711 10 DR. WILLIAMS, D.OBrockvilleOni shmnld take thein. These PILLs Evill Labr4.irr. - .z