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Flesherton Advance, 26 Mar 1885, p. 7

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ONE DAY IN SEVEN. Will III. ft-opl. f. I Illll II.. l>. ,..,,,,,.,,, I Ike MKblmlt. ' UI..O.I... IM Kr.. I f .. \ Hi I ,.!,,, ,.*. The text wan ttkou from Exodus n\ U ' \ only uiy bLl/mhh yu auall kwp." The wmduiu of oumuuioa from bud labor oue day out of the seven in almost uuiver- lully acknowledged. The world ha* (ouud out that it ou do IHUM work iu seven days than it can in kU, aud that the titty-two d*>s in the year devoted to ren are an addition ratner thao a subtraction. Experiments have beeu made in all depart- ment*. Toe greatCaatlereagh thought he oould work hi* brain 35 days iu the year, bat after awhile broke down and com- mitted luioide ; and \Vilberforoe laid of hini : " Poor Caatlereagh ! Thil i the reault of the non observance of the Bab- bath." A celebrated merchant declared . " I would have been a mauiao long ago but (or the Babbatb." The uervei, the braioe, the muscles, the bonee, the entire pbysi- oal, mtelleotual and moral nature ory out lor the Babbatio rent. What U true of man U (or the most part true of the brut*. Traveller! have found oat that they oome to their plaoe of dMtination sooner when they let their horeee rent by the way on the Sabbath. What is the matter with eome o< thoM lorlorn ereaturee barneeeed to tome of our oily cart .' Why do they tumble and stagger aud fall ! It ii (or the lack of TBI SAU1IAT1C UM. In other day* when the herdsmen drove their ibeep and cattle from the far Weel down to the seaboard, it wa* found out by experiment that those herdsmen and drov- ers who balled over the seventh day got down sootier to the seaboard than those who patted on without the observance of the Holy Sabbath. The fishermen off the eoatu of Newfoundland declare that these men during the year oaten the most fish who itop during the Lord'* Day. When 1 asked tbe Kjoky Mountain locomotive en gineer why he onauged looomolive* when it seemed to be a straight route, he said ' We bave to let tbe locomotive Mop and cool 08 or tbe machinery would soou break dowu." Man who made large qnan Uties of salt were told that it they allowed their kettles to cool over Sunday they would submit t iiu nisei VBB to a great deal of damage Tbe experiment was made, some ooeervmt the Babbatb aud some not observing tbe Sabbath. Those who allowed tbe lire* to go down and the kettles to cool once a wek were compelled to spend only a small sum for repairs, while in the oaaes wbere no Sabbath was observed many dollars were demanded (or repairs. In oilier woid* intelligent man ana dumb beast and deac machinery ory out (or the Lord's day. A prominent manufacturer told me that be could see a difference between goods wbiob went out o( his establish in sut on Btturday from tbe good* that weut out on Monday He said : " They were very different indeed. Those tbai were made in tbe (or mec part cf the week, beoauae of Ibe real that bad been previously given, were better than those that were made in the lattei part of tbe week when the men were tired out." The Babbath oomes and it bathes the sofsnsas from the limbe, quiets thi agitated brain, and puts out tbe tires o anxiety that have been burning all the week. Oar bodies are BIVXN UA.Y CLOCKS, and unless on tbe seventh day they wound up, they run down into the grave The BabDeth was intended as a savings bank into it we are to gather tbe resources upon which we are to draw all the week That man who breaks tbe Sabbath robs his own nerve, bis own muscle, bis own brain hi* own bone*. He dips up tbe win* of hi* own life aud throw* it away. He who break* tbe Lord's day give* a mortgage u disease and death upon bis entire pnysioa estate and at the most unexpected momen that mortgage will be foreclosed aud tb< ejected (rom tbe premises. Ever] and pore and cell and tiuger-uai demand* tbe seventh day (or repose. Th respiration of tbe lungs, the throb of tbe pulse in the wrist, the motion of tbe bon in lie socket, declare " Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy.' Then are thousands of men who bave bat their lives dashed out again*! tb* golden xatee of the Habbath. A prominent London merchant testified that tnirty year* ago h went to London. lie says: "I have dur ing that time watched minutely, and I hav noticed that tbe men who went to business on the Lord's day or opened their counting house* bare, without a single exception oome to (allure." A prominent Chrutian merchant in Boston say* : " I find It don' pay to work on Bonday*. When I boy I noticed out on Long Wharf there were merchant* who loaded their veisels on the Babbath day, keeping th*ir men busy (rom morning till uight, and it is observation that they themselves came tb nothing tbeee merchants and their child ren came to nothing. It doesn't pay," he says, " to work on the Babbath." There are cities in the land where tbe Sabbath ha* almost perished, aud ever; Habbath night those oiuee are in full blaze of theatric and operatic entertainment, aud it U becoming a practical question whether we, who receive a pure Babbath from the bands of our fathers, shall have piety and pluck enough to give to our children the same bleseed inheritance. TheeterralOod helping us, we will ! I protest against this invasion of the holy Sabbath in the first plaoe because it is a war on divine enactment. Qod says in Isaiah : " If tuou turn away thy foot (rom doing thy pleasures on my holy day, tbon shall walk upon the high places." What did be mean by "doing thy plea- sures .'" Be referred to secular and worldly amusements. I believe with tbe lailor. Tbe crew bad been discharged (rom tbe vessel because they would not work while they were in port on she Lord's day. Toe captain went out to gel sailors. lie found one man, aud he said to him, " Will you serve me on the .Sabbath ?" " No." " Why not ? " " Well," replied tbe old sailor, " a man who will rob Uod Almighty o( Ilia Sabbath would rob me o( my wages if be got a chance." I am opposed to this desecration of tbe Bsbbath by secular entertainments, because it is a war on tbe statutes o( our Btate. bull further, I protest against tbe invasion of the BabbelbPeoanse it is a (oreign war. Now, if you beard at tbis moment tbe booming o( a gun in tbe harbor, or a shell (rom some (oreign (rigate should drop into our street*, bow long would you keep your teats in tbe Tabernacle ? Yon would want to (ace the foe, and every gun thai oould M managed would be brought iu use, and very ship that oould bu brought out of the <nvy Yard would swing from her anchorage and the question would be decided. You o uot want a foreign war, aud yet I have o tell you that this invasion ol Ood's noly ay in a foreign war. I believe God nteuded our national heart to throb with ne blood of all people I But let not the awleiw oome from other shores expecting to break down our Babbath and institute n the place of it a (oreign Babbath. I ill make a comparison between the Bab- >atb a* sf i::j of you bave known it and the r-AIIHiTH OF l-ABIS. peak (rom observation. Oue Sabbath morning I wa* aroused iu Paris by a great onod in the street. I laid : " What ia bis ?" ' " Oh," they said, " this is Bunday " an unusual rattle of vehicles of ail sjrts. ?be voioM seemed more boisterous thao on itber days. It aeemed a* if all the vehicles of PariH had turned out for the holiday. ['be Chsmpe Klysees on* great mob of ileasure seeking people. Balloon* flying, arrote chattering, toot-balls rolling, ped- lars hawking their knicknacks through the streets, hand-organ* and every kind of racket, muiioal and unmusical. Wben the evening came down all tbe theatre* were in ull blare of muaie aud full blaze of light. The win* store* and saloons were thronged with an unusual number of customers. At eventide I stood and watched the excursionists coming bom*, fagged-out men, women and children, a OnU Stream of fatigue, irritability and wretched nee* ; (or I should think it would take three or (our dayt to get over thai miserable way of Buodaying. It teemed more like an American Fourth of July than a Christian Sabbath. Now, in contrast, 1 present on* of tbe Babbath* in one of our >est American cities. Holy silence coming down with tbe day dawn. Basinet* mec more deliberately looking into the (aces ol tDeir children, and talking to them shout Iheir preaent and future welfare. Men ait longer at me table io tbe morning, because tbe store* are not to be opened and the mechanical tool* are not to be taken up There are congratulation and good cheer all through the house. Houses of vocal with thanksgiving for mercies received, with prayers (or comfort, with ohariiiea for tbe poor, rest for the body, rest tor tbe soul. Tbe nerves quieted, the temples cooled the miod cleared, the sou strengthened, aud our entire population turned out on Monday morning ten years youcger, belter prepared lor the duties ol this life, better prepared for the lite that is to oome. Which do yon like beat, tbe American Babbath or the Parisian Babbatb Do you know in what boat the Babbath came aoroee the seas aud landed on our there* " It wa* in tb* Mayflower. Lij you know in what boat the Babbath will leave us, if sver goes? It will be in tbe ark that floats over a deluge of national luiqejty. Still further, I protest against tbie inva sion of the Lord's day beoauae it wrongs i vast multitude of employees if their rest and I oppose this invasion of the Cbristian Sabbatu because it is a war on the spiritua welfare of the people. V ju muit not for get that ninety-nine one-bundredths of al tbe Christian effort of this country are pu forth on the Lord's day. Still further , 1 am opposed to tbe invasion of the Babbeih because it is unfair and it is partial. Wnj hat it been during tb* paat tew week* the some of tbe theatres have been allowed K be open and others not ? Why not bave al open ? Come now and be honest, yon men who manage the theatres and opuraa, an< confess that you do not oars anylhini at all about the moral welfare of tbe people, but you only want more dollars Bring your voices, your [>ent, your print- ing preatee and your pulpits into the Lord's artilltry corps for tbe defence "f our holy day. Decree before high heaven that this war on your religious right* and tbe cradles of your children shall bring ignominious defeat to the enemies of Ood and the public weal. For those who die in to* contest, battling (or the right, we shall chisel the epitaph : " Tbeae are they who came oat o( great tribulation and had their robe* washed and made white in tbe blood of tbe Lamb." Bat for that one wbo shall prove in tbis moral crisis recreant to ( i id and the church, there shall be BO honorable epitaph. He shall not be tvtn worthy of a burial plaoe in all this free land ; but perbape some team- lug at midnight may carry out hit poor remain* and drop them into the tea, where the lawless winds which keep no Knnday will gallop ovsr the grave of him wbo lived and died a traitor to Ood, UM Cfauroh, and tbe free institutions of America, Long live the Christian Babbath ! Pensh forever all attempts to overthrow it I I -ll I..K <M>I IK > I . '- I uuiiiu.Kl mid I ,,,rnid Oal. bi ilew i- . liow oomee it tbat we purposely use such things as mustard, pepper, curry powder aud vinegar .' Well, lu themselves. .11 thene things are, striully speaking bad 'or UH ; but in email quantities they act as agreeable stimulants, ud we take care in ipariug nioet of them to get rid of the most objectionable propertiee. Moreover, we use them, not as foods, but merely as condiments. One drop of oil of capsicums s enough to kill a man, if taken undiluted ; aut iu actual practlua we buy il in such a very diluted form tbat comparatively little harm arise* from using U. Still very young children dislike all tbese violent stimulants, even in small quantities , they won't touch mustard, pepper or vine- gar, and they recoil at ouoe from wine or spirits. It it only by ihw degree* (bat we learn these unnatural taste* aa our nerve* get blunted and our palatet jaded ; and we all know that the old Indian who can eat nothing but dry curries, deviled biscuits, anchovy paste, pepper pot, mulligatawny soup. Worces- tershire sauce, preserved ginger, hoi pioklee, fiery sherry and neat cognac it alto a per- son with BO digestion, a fragmentary liver and very little chance of getting himself accepted by any safe and solvent ininrano* office. Throughout, tht warning in itself i* a useful one ; it is we who foolishly and (itrtistently disregard it. Alcohol, for ex- ample, tells n* at once that U it bad for n* ; yet we manage to to dress il op with flavoring matters and dilute it with water that we overlook the fiery character of tbe pirit itself. But that alcohol is in itself a bad thing (when freely indulged in) bat been BO abundantly demonstrated in the history of mankind that il hardly needs any further proof. Cornhill Magatiiu. >". ii. ,1,,^ ,,,,,1 u, n, Tbuee languid, tiresome aensatious caus- Lg you to feel Maroely able to be ou your eet ; that constant draiu that i* taking rom your sybtem all its former elasticity riving the bloom from your cheeks , that oulinnal strain upon your vital forces, enderiug you irritable and fretful, can easily be removed by tbe use of that mar- elloui remedy, Hop Bitter*. Irregulari- and obstruction* of your syitem are relieved at ouoe while tbe special cause of eriodioal pain are permanently removed. 4one receive so much benefit, and none are so profoundly grateful and show such an terest in recommending Hop Bitters as women. * Po-IHl I HI ,1 lluf , I was at! acted with kidney aud urinary Trouble - " For twelve yean !" After trying all tbe doctors and patent medicine* I oould hear of I used two bottles at Hop "BilMr* ;" Aud I am perfectly cured. I keep il "All tbe time '." reepeotfullv.B.F. Booth, Hauisbury , Tenn. May 4, 1883. pr. In., n BUI ol l nix*'. Mr. Badgerow hat received tb* following from a York county councilman, at embody ing the letter's idea of what the country should pay him on account of bis services and expenae* in tb* '37 affair : lnsn. t s. d. Dee. -To all night under arms at Don I Cash paid for not punch ........................... Dec 6 All day and night guarding Bank u( I'pper Cann-le ...................... .. ....... 12 6 Twelve Klaasus hot punch... _. ......... ... 9 Dec. T. All da; buotiug sfaekensle party and assisting to fire bii barracks on Yongn street .......................................... 7 8 Caan i<al<l fur dinner and hot puneb ...... 3 All ni||bt OD duly and Lot punch ............ 5 6 Dec. 4 All <lay smrcbtnf fur rebels ...... ... Dinoer and but pouob .............................. 3 Deo. 9.- out all uiijbt In tb* woods watob ing rebels .............................................. 6 Lunch and hot punch .............................. 9 6 Deo. 1 j. All day in garrison ami on pa- Total ..._. 1 I Together with compound interest from that time to the present. !!'.- r,..i,ii.i.i..n i. 'i.i ! 'iMi.i.1,,.1 Liquor is shipped from Ilaltimore to points in local-option counties in tbe Stats under many nom dt plumei. Sometime* it is marked sea foam, extract of malt, hard- tack, horse ehoes and spike nail*. Some- times a keg or half-barrel of whiskey i* sent in a bogabead of crockery. " I have been shipping whiskey tbi* winter under every conceivable name," remarked a steamboat clerk yesterday, " but when it oomes to me marked tewing machine*, as tbis package shows, it knocks me out. Lemon syrup and turpentine are tbe favorite brands among tbe hundred or so disguises adopted, but sewing machines is t new wriukle." baltimore Sun. II in said that no one can live com- fortably in Washington and keep house and maintain any sort of looial footing upon leei f ban 15,000. I' u i n . The following communication from Mr W. Q. Dunn will be of interest to bouse keepers : It u now pretty well kuowu all over the country tnat we have beeu brought before tbe Police Court under the ue Adulteration Act, aud, louse plain wordr charged with fraudulent adulteration, noi a particularly pleasant thing to dwell upon, especially when some, out o!pure iguorauoe o( tbe fact*, are too apt to look at things iu ths wrong light, aud as our proaeouliou is the first we think it would interest tbe public to learn something about wbat they are buying in tbe shape of spioe, and the manner in which tbe Ojvernment propose to protect them against fraud. Tbe chance brought agaiust us is not fo selling ct/m pound goods, but with fraudulently adulter ating our bc*t qoalitiee of cayenne mustard, which are tbe hardest to produce entirely free of itarob on account of tb< eil they contain . aud our claim that w can produce them better witb than with out is fully borne out as regards the mustard by tbe evidence given in the English courts by M***ra. Calmant. Bu few people know bow much difference there U in the qualities of whole spioee befon they are ground. Cs>iia to ths fiueel OIL namon, at preaent prioe*. vary from < cent* up to 60 cents per Ib. The fines chillies for cayenne, rich in oil and A tvor are double the price of tbe common benga pod ; cloves are tlie - tme way ; ginger from 5 cents to 'l'< oente per Ib., and black peppe from tbe lowest grades imported, with per cent, of duel aud shell iu the bag which all goes for pepper), to the fines Malabar aud Siugapore, which are per feotly clean, and bave a beautiful aroiu and delicious flavor. Now, the troubl oomes that the law does not recognize it different qualitiee of tbeee goods, but onl; insists that they shall be ground pure, am a dishonest grinder or merchant can jus a* easily cheat witb pure good* as be oai with adulterated onei. For instance, if oocsumer asks tb* storekeeper for som ginger, and bt get* gmiier only worth I oesta per Ib., and pay* 30 cents for it, tb analyst says il U ginger, although a mnoi liner article sold at tbs same price with little starch in il, and trree time* tb Tains, i* pronounced adulterated. Tb finer tbe qualified of vnola spice* tb greater amount of volatile or essential 01 they contain, therefore tbe harder to grim to a nice granulate for domestic use, an great care should be taked by the spice miller to keep hi* mill* tool, so a* not to drive off tbe very essence of tbe good*, an very often it i* beneficial to use a ema proportion of starch to absorb the oil an top tbe beating. Il is not put there to profit (which we always calculate upon th production i, bntonly to facilitate tbe work with such dry goods as oaaeia and alltpioe il is never required, but when it ie beoe fioial to oily once should it be called a adulterant ? We admit Ibat it is poeeibl to grind all a* they are, but it would be a a greater oot, and in preparing and Jrym tbe fresh and finer qualities they woul lose more of their virtue than in th* *ma addition of dry farinaoeon* mttler. Tber i* no difficulty whatever in grinding th poorer qnalitie* pure, a* there i* very Tittl substance in them, and if the iaw insists on tbe beat goods being labelled oompouoi tbe store-keeper, aooner than run the risk will sell commoner kinds branded pure, an tbe Act will defeat tb* very object it i* try ing to attain, and nntil the Oovernimo or our scientific men can establish torn standard to work by, so that a pound o ginger, to be pure, should contain a oertai proportion of gmgerio (the active prinoipl of ginger), and reoogoizi that the fines quality of goods are the puteit, it ha< better let unices be told on their merita, t long as no fnjumn* ingreditnt i* used, an let tbe consumers use their own jadgnien in buying wbere they can obtain the bes goods. To allow old and dried-up spices o bad quality to be labelled and wild for pure so long as the analyst cannot liod bis pe bit of starch, aud at the tame time has pass over nunnrout deficiencies and impart ties, i something worse than absurd, ao works agaiust the public good. The Mahdi has little trouble in (eedin his army. The native will live upon a o*k I of black bred and a few leutels aud ai onion, sud never care (or animal food. Al that an Egyptian boarding boune-keepe i riifuires to set up business i* a few dates, I few oranges, a peok of lentelt and onion* and a ball dozen pone* of blaok bread. A machine U in use at Melbourne, Ans tralia, (or shearing sheep by steam. 1 operates in the tame manner at th* ordi nary sugars, bat outs mnab quicker an cleaner, without th* least dagger ol injnr Ing the tleeoe or th* sheep Onions in Yakimi valley, Washington tarritory, attaint fabulous growth, many of tueiu being six iucii:a across. 1. Pa. May *, IOTA. U has eared m* of several illiisiin. such u nervoaanses sickness at the stomach monthly troubles, etc. I have Dot seea a sick day to a year slue* 1 took Hup Bitters. All my neigh- >on us* them. MH-.. FAX NIK UBEEN. ,I.**>U l.e.1. "A tuur to Europe tbat ooet me (3.000 .lone -is lew good than one buttle of Hop bitten they also cured uiy wifeof fifteen yean' nervous weakness, sleepleuueea aud dyspepsia. K. M.. Auburn. N.Y. Ho. IILOOV INOVU.I.K, O., Way 1. 'TO. SUM, 1 have been sullerlua ten years, and I .-il your Bop Bitters, and it none we more Kuo.1 tbau al! tht doctor*. Miss B. S. It I., I.. ,,...! We are so thankful to say that our uunlni baby was permanently eared ol a dauferuus u I nrotracud c<iustlp*illou Hid irregularity of tne bowels liy the ue ol Hup Huu-r. by ita mother, whinli at tbe aauie time restored her to |Hjrficl health and ueo^th. -Tbe I'anuts. Rochester SO IdT None genuine without a bunch uf tcreeo H, |w oo the white Imhel. Bhuu all the vile, IKJIAUUOU. stud with "liup' or " Hops " In their name. Kioeesively warm weather prevailed in San Francisco a week or so ago , roaee were blooming in ths open air, aud fruit tress weie in lull bloeeom. u. .n. o. Walking down Broadway is very pleasant when you feellwell, and T K never fell better than when bis frisnd asked him bow be got over that severe oougb uf hi* to peedily. Ab. my boy," taid T-, G.M. I), did u ! " And bi* friend wondered wbat O. M. l>. ineaut. lie knew it did not mean a Good Many Doctor*, for T K had tried a dozen in vain. " I have it," said he, just billing the nail on the bead, you mean I >r. Pierce'* Golden Medical Discovery,' or Gn'.d Medal Deserved as my friend J B always dubs u." Bold by druggists. Tbe manufacture of orange wine bat been begun at Bautord, Ha. We accidentally overheard tb* following dialogue on tbe street yesterday Janf,. Bomb, why don't you stop that disgusting hawking and tutting .' .S'lut*. How oan I T Yon know I am a martyr to catarrh. J. Do a* I did. I bad tbe dmease in its worst form but 1 am well now. S. U uat did you do for it 1 J. I need Dr. Bag*'* Catarrh Remedy . Il onred me and it will our* you. 5. I've beard of it, aud by Jove I'll Iry it. J. DJ so. You'll find il at all tbe drug stores In town. Eighteen or twenty year* ago Judge Kudioolt, tbe nsw Secretary of War for the Stales, wae a proud eiperl in amateur photography. i-.. mi. .. .n J PrmsstM. PIIIUM'S PAJMJUI Coax EXTUACIOB, th* great remedy for corn*, is absolutely safe and painleee. doe* it* work promptly, witb- oat in th* leael interfering with th* com- fort of patient*, and is aosolutely alone a* a safe, painleee remedy for corn*. Do not be imposed upon by dangerous counterfeit*. Ues only Putnam's Corn Extractor. Be- ware of base substitute*. Bold everywhere by druggists and dealers in medicine. Take only Putnam's Paioleee Extractor. N.C. Potion A (' >., propn., Kingston. A new tori of menu card* bat juit turned up in London. Il ooniist* of choosing a clever quotation, such a* the host thinks suitable for each gueet. Tbe name and menu are written on another tbeet of paper and Ibis it inserted in tbe card by means of two slits. Ladiee of all age* who suffer from loee of appetite, from imperfect digestion, low 'pints and nervous debility, may have bealtu renewed and life extended by Ibe use of Mrs. I.jdiaK. Pinkham's remedies for all complaints specially incident to tbe female oonstitntom. We not only have a living faith in Mrs. I'lukhani. but we are assured tbat her remedies are al one* moel agreeable and efficacious. DwigbtL. Moody's seminary al North- Held, Mass , which he founded in 1-7.' to promote the Cbristian education of young women, has about two hundred students, and as many more are ready to enter a* soon ai there is room. About 1300,000 baa been expended m tbe erection of per- manent building*. LYDIA E. PINKHAM VEGETABLE COMPOUND.* rr . IS A POSITIVE CDRr * . 11 f ihMe I'alafwl ( i.l.lnc. * a* rmmm te r Wei \\ riBaf eere ee renejiea te r e*el w w . . *raMAI.eiOPt'I*ATIO>.e e f IT WIT i. n KB rTiHri.T Tin wnarr mtui or FM HAL* COMIM.AINT*. AIL UVAIUAV Tanrai-ia, 1 !*} FT AATI"< AM> IT. r RAT I "I. XA| MM* AXII Die IM A mrsTf, AND THS I >.%r^fTM .SmMA.L WtAa .r-f AMI IS FABTI. 1'UAB.I.T AUATTSU TO Tea i HAXOB or I.irt * e * */ IT WILL ninMH TB AMI rt rri. T' nous r> I'TBHt'S II A ltHI T *TA..r "F Hit r 1 . .! E--T. TB TrUDBW TT..I AN ' R"l lit <> TMBHBISC Mur iritniLr r ITI in e * * IT Kr..vr FniTxt**. r"i.ATn. T. DB*TIIOTI :i:of^.r . - r mt I *XT A v : I.I t 1 1 V 11 \V BAt, -..-- r : tt " ' I ' UMIATI > nr. .Nrii>." I i. "TRTI v I.IMK.L UIBILITT I h. T|i M hi> Dellair Is long distanced by a 10 cent bottle of Poison's NKHVII.IM, the neweet and best pain remedy. It cures colds, cramp*, oolio, pain in the bead, sciatica, pain in the client ; in fact it ia equally efficacious a* an external or internal remedy. Try a 10 cent sample bottle of tbe great {-am remedy, Nerviliue. Bold by druggists, l.irne bottles only '!' cents. Try a sample bottle of Nerviliue, only 10 cents. Take no substitute. Baortmento county, California, claims to bave tbe only licorice plantation iu tb* United State*. Colds, fevers a id inflammations broken np by Dr. 1'itroe's Extract of Bmarl-Weed. Ktiser William ifavori I* dttMM iltpOBft oak* iteeptd in pineapple ram. THAT rtE '>r lir>Ki\.i I <. . A' Pio \\ t ..... r AM. M> KA> in. > AI WATI rii.AinTi.r . : Illli B( IT* I -E ( * . * , , * IT WILL AT A;I. ii AM> i Mna AU. riarrtv- I * s. I> A' T It HAI.1..M V ITU THE l_A TAT I.OIIIUI TBS rr.: -Tr * * *"lT- I" l.l- -r * 'I lil.Y r 1ITIII 1 IOITIAT Mrn < "f i.;-i-r AM. THE HIIIIP <>r r*iB, an> THAT IT li.il* Al.l. ir . 1 > -!** .AN IK THE I.I TI-I1D K.. Ml I ' rl_AIT Ol iiTuBu >s& Tin* MIBIUT i* i nttarA*Ei>. e e IVI'lA E. flMCHAMI VbiCTABLl (X>BU^>[ XO at Ljru. >M. lYlor $L Ml I.4IM Cr tf. Irat br auol. po*Ae 1*14. te teB at Flu* or LWT< o* r*rrtrt ..r |.i* mt ahov*. Bn. * . i I . - -ra*i-'l trv+utMf aip. IfHrrt r.^n I^HJ' ..... t iid >- - > ' r HA-s - T 1 "T rr I 'nBMjMfJsM.ift. m favvettty -? 1 J- r *----'- !. I.. II > NEVER BE WITHOUT COOK'S BEST RIEND SOLD BY ALL GROCERS. J. WINCKLER SELF-VENTING PUMP FACCOT Tbs simplest sad best In tb* market. Priest A Lines 9 Hugbaon Mnet sooth llamiiion. RENMIE'S SEEDS are THE BEST Illu-lr ,1. .1 ,,| ,l.. t ,,. for I" FIELD. GARDEN ft FLOWER SLKDS EYE, EAR AND THROA7. DR. O. B. RYER80N, L. R. 0. P. B. -. Lecturer on Ibe Rye arandThrrai Trinity Medical College. Toronto. Ocolun aa I Anrui Io tb* Toronto Oeneral Hospital, late Ollnloal Assistant Hoyal London Opblbausu Hospital Moorefleld't and OeotnT r Throat and Mar Bnepltal. tlf Obareb Tomntn Artlnnial Hnman KT* CONSUMPTION. tl' r j uffc- ' .- ' ; i* i c - ' U "*...- R. U. AWARE TH VT LcrlUard'i Climax . < llpplllfe. B I .. -.. r-nM^ II ,..* I .r M T lai I ' ' I, rtllur ' . nil '.: SCSI ,: ropiiAi lo any one sen.llni namei of mx ftita.ls and lit. Mlaiups taken. MOVK1.TT Co . ManinelJ, Mass. IVlTI ItVKV u lul I L lUrLV* M MB

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