Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 16 Jul 1896, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Uv -.'« rVRRKNT NOTES. "Jeian, a hundred years hence they'll think mair o' me than they do now," l» the apt qu (tut ion with which a Lon- don paper introduot* a. notice of ihc f»rih«"i)mini? eihibitinn in Glasgow of the rKlicaj of Robert Burns. And it does not need the imposing array of names of sonieties and celebrities taking part in promoting the exhibition to prove how abundantly the prophecy has been vi»rified. Indeed, it is l»ardiy aji exaggeration to say tliat there is no poet who holds the same position '..i Burns in tlie affection and admiration of his fellow-countrymen. Thi« nation- al fepliiiff is equally crettitable to the poet and hia admire.rs. There ia the obvious contrast to 'le drawn between the recognition eitend- •d to Burnd to-day and the lack of re- cognition which ho received in his life- time, but no one now can wish tliat his lot bad te'n different. The man might have sufferftd leas but the world would have been loser by the change. Of all the conditione that contributed to his grwitn»?3s none was more essential than the experience of suffering and material failure that fell to his lot. It is impoa- â- il>le to conceive of such a poet as Burns petted by society and patroaizeil by ar- istocracy, competed for by publishers and ctuuputing the value of hi^ death- less poems by the number of guineas « line they would bring in the market. The world is not producing any poets of the Burns class nowadays, and the world of fashion and of success csin un- der no circuuistajices produce such a po'l: The nobility ajid gentry of Scot- land and the aristocracy of English lit- erature, whose members are now com- peting with each other for the distinc- tion of showing him honor, need feel no pang of self-re(>raach for the ne- glw:t which was the living poet's por- tion. That treatment was so far from doing him huxm that it is among the chief causes vhich mokie the world think more of him now. The New York Journal says that on a recent Sunday night " the most popular minister in Chicaga found. himjelf confronted, by a congregation of exactly fifteen, whom be speedily dis- missed. sa,.ving they were tm few to waste a good sermon on. The same night the city was visited by a storm in which iu rained mud turtles and coarse gravel." The Journal evidently discerns a deep significance in the pro- vidential appearance of the mud tur- tles and (would one persume to say f) thl^ uuprovidfutial uou-appearanoe of the worshi4>peTB. iiut possibly, the ex- pwtatioo of this very storm prevented « larger attendance that evenLng at the Chicago churches. We have known in- •UMioea where individuals were deterr- ed from attendance at church services by their anticipation of a rain which was likely to occur ikt any time duiing the next thirty days, though we can- not recall any authentic, properly ac- crtsliled in.tlajice where atmospheric oooditions, actual or ixjusible, interfer- ed with the attendance of these same Individuals of a week-day at a concert or party. As for the zoological por- tion of the story, we hesitate to be- lieve that the Lord wastes good tur- tles oa bad L'hicagoaua either as pro- vender or as object lessons. Coujse gravel or hail would be more under- alandable as punitive agents or provi- dential monitions, and might be not unwi*lcome as an occasional visitation. â- o lung as nobody was hurt, and th« churchice were filled. With respect to the minister's omitted sermon we can- not forbear registering our afjinion that if thiB Master thought it not Ihv neath his Messianic dignity to preach once to a single hearer by Jacob's well, a moilern disciple of his in Chic^igo need BoL regard it as the wustiug of a good seriuoQ to unfold the gospel to acom- pany fifteen limes as large as the Sav- iours' Samariian audience. DEATH BY DROWNING. Tw* Mlitale* tadcr WHter iiiilMrleiil to l'aa<r Fatal 1'Braa.trluaiiueM. Drowning is » quicker death than most people suppose. Insensibility is â- aid to begin iu about uue minute, and fatal unconsciousness ieueruUy super- venes iu the neighborhood of two. Kven practiced divers cannot remain under water more than a miuute and a half, ami it is almost fatal to remain be- neath the surface longer than that. At Navariuo, where there are many expsrt divers who pl'uugo into the sea aftor spi)Uge>s, not ono was found who could remain under water for two miu- utea. Iu the Ued t>ea the Arab div- ers gcuerallv remain down one and a quarter minutes; while at Ceylon the pearl fi-shers c;ui seldom stay below for e>'eu one minute. There is a case on record at falmouth, Kuglaud. where a diver bad descended ei,thty feel and on giving the "signal was ilrawn up slowly so it was two minutes before he reach- ed the surface, lilood ran Irom his ears and nose and he was insensible. lie died without speaking. luaeusil>ility, however, does not al- ways iuvolv.', death, for in many cases a fetson may be reeusoilated by the use of energetic measaios. I'he liriug- Ing to of people who have Ihjcu under water for five cou.seculive minutes is, however, considered doubtful by physi- siciaus. There have been extraordin- ary caees related, nevertheless, where persons have been brought back to life after having been submerged for fif- teen or twenty minutos, but it is pro- bttbU that tbey have come to the sur- face ii^aln and again during that tiote. THR GRUMBLER. He sat at the dinner-table With a discontented frownâ€" "The potatoes and steak were un'lone, And the bread wjis baked t<io brown. The pie too sour, the pudding too sweet, And the roist was much too fat ; The soup so greasy, too. anil salt, sure 'tw.ia hardly fit for the cat." "I wish you could ealt the bread and pies I've seen my mother make; They .ire something like, and 'twould do you gcod ^ Ju.'jt xa look at a loaf of her cake." Said the smiling wife, "I'll improve with aee. Just now I'm but a beginner. But your mother has come to visit us. Ami to-day she cooked the dinner." USING TIIE FRAGMENTS. It has been said of us by a learned professor that "wastingr is carried on so extensively in our kitchens, it has Ijecoms one of the common sciences." The charge is a serious one, if it be true, and whUe we may ^Ake indisrnant denial of such a sweepii_^ condemnation of our household ad ninistration, yet the fact remains that waste, to a greater or le.ss extent, can Ije found in the cul- in^iry arrangements of the majority of our homes. In nearly every instance this is caused by the inability to use the fragnients which are left from each meal, so as to save them. It ia in itself an art to pre- pare appetizing dishes from cold meats and vegetables, and to serve tbem in such a manner as to disguise the fact th.at they are "warmed over." The most common way of serving cold meat is in the form of "hash," which dish has furnished as many stan- dard jokes (t) for the preas as even the moilern mother-in-law. Yet hash, pro- perly prepared and served, is a most ap- l>eiizimf breakfast dish. The following recipes have furnished many palatable ilishes in one household, of which the mistress aims at a variety on successive me<ils. rather than many dishes .it each meal : Ham Balls.â€" Cold boiled ham, chop- ped fine ; add one eKg for each person, and enough flour to make into balls. Fry in hot lieef drippings; serve on toast. Beefsteak on Toest. â€" An excellent methoil of using small pitsres of cooked steak U to chop them very fine, cook in a very little water, add a cupful of cream or milk, thickened, seasoned with sjilt, pepper and butter, and pour over slices ot toast. Beef a la Mode.â€" The l»iled beef left after soup makes a nice supper dish, if prepared as follows. Cut the l)eef from the bone into small slices. Spice it with salt, pepper and a small quantity of mace. Cover with hot vinegar, and set in a cool place until served. Meat and Potato Pie. â€" To use the cold mfvit and potatoes left from dinner, put alternate layers of each iu a pie-dish, having the polatoes at the bottom and \xrp. t«iiaon with salt, pepper and a large sinjonful of butter, orown nicely, serve bot. Cold Meat and Tomatoes.â€" To make a meat pie of cold beef or mutton and tomatoes, take a deep baking-dish, strew iHJttcni thickly with brea<l crumbis, then fill with altern.ite layers of meat, sliced iiiiix, ,»_a !»_.>».... ..,>i,» ..,„,b.aJ loina- toes left from dinner are excellent ; Ti there are none, use sliced raw ones. .Season each layer, using salt, pepper and butter; finish with tomatoes and bread crumlis, dot with butter, brown, serve hot. Bread crumbs and stale siices of broad can be utilized iu so many ways, it is wanton wasle to throw away even a crumb of bread. Dried bread crumbs, silted, and kept in glass jars, are always re:uly for use. A delicious apple-pudding is made from alternate layers of bread crumbs .ind apples, sliced very thin, seasoned with nutmeg, sugar aud butter, and baked slowly to a delicate brown. Broad crumbs are al.'to nice in place of the usual pastry in preparing des- sert fiM- invalids, l>y using buttered crumbs for lining of ikui and top, and filling with fruit in the usual manner. A verv nice dish Ls made from stale .slii>Njolbread,by trimming off the crust, pbu-tn«c half of a i)eeled apple on each slice, sprinkle witn .su^r aud bake. Theae are but a few of t he many ways of using cold meat and stale bread. There are si> tiuiny ways, all ^otxi, of serving oold potatoes, that it would re- quire a separate paper to enumerate -them. But one thing is certaui, there ca.n always be found a way to serve a.Kain, in some acceptable way, the rem- nants. wl*h from time to time dis- (wuntge .n'en the most experienced house keep -i TWO FRENCH FRIES. There are two methods of frying known to experts, rather elegantly named in English 'w«t frying" and "dry frying. ' or in French by the terms sauter and frire. Both are excellent when tL-wd suiliibly ; when improperly employed the result is. to .say the least of it, uufort unate, and leads to the waste of good material. The reason why our cooks so often fail to try suc- ceisst'ully is that they "dry fry" every- thing, having no notion whatever o( wt\t trying. To sauter, or dry fry. Ls to cook food in a aiuoll quantity of hot fat and in a shallow pan. Omelets, pancakes, liver and bacon, chopt>ed vegetables cut suijill. are samples of the sort of food which may be correctly cooked thus. Small pieces of meal and fish may also be sautes, and when carefully done are very good, al-though it is open to ques- tion whether they would not be much more sjitisfaotory if fried in a larger pan, with a more gtmerous proportion of fat. When saute, articles should Iw in constant motion, owing to the i>an being jerked to keep I hem from si ick- in<? ; and they shouM lie turned, so that they may be equally cooked on both sides. To wet try Is to immerse in hot fat, and thii method It is of which cooks ar« 6o much afrpi'l, which con-stitutea rejil trying. The first neces.sitv for it is to have plenty of fat; sufficient, that is, to cover the food all over, so that the he.it shall be conveyed to sverv part alike, alx)ve and bel.)W. Nor need it be suppose*! that to use a quantity of tax thus is extravagant. It is, oo the contrary, economical, as the fat can be used ag-ain and a^in. The small quan- tity of fat that IS melted in a frving pan gets l>urnt, and is always thrVnvn out; It is strained free from any little pieces of bread or batter that may have got into it, Ls washed when dirty, and can be constantly renewed, little pieces of fat beinj melted or drained into it, thus keeping up its bulk and .ilso its quality. It is never allowed to burn, because it is never left on the hot plate a moment after it has done its work. People who umlerstand fry- ing treat fat most respe<'t fully, look- ui.r upon it as .-i household nva-sure. Not only should the tat U3e<l in fry- ing be perfectly dry, Imt the article to be frie<l should be dry also. It is by way of insuring <lrynes8 that so many people flour f(H>d that Ls to \ye fried just before plunging it into the fat. Usual- ly, also, the food ia dipped in batter or 6gg«!d and breaded ijefore frying. It is well to rememL)er that egv'in*? and Ijrejiding should lie done some time, flouring- immeilLately. before frying. To prevents accidents, be oarefiU that the pan used for frying is not more than lalf full' of fat. Also, when a frying basket is used (a great aid to succesv ful frying) it should not be alhiwed to touch the bottom of the kettle; nor the iir tides in the bisket touch each other. Should an accident occur when frying- the best thing to do is to throw •T. -strip of carpet or a thick clot h on the flame. With many people ihe first impulse would be to use water, but this would create steam, which might do as much h;irm as the flame. Fat for frying sbuulil, we know, lie hot liefore the fixxi to lie fried ia plung- ed into it, but it is requisite to have a clear idea of what is meant by this. Boiling water registers 212 dctjrees on the thermometer, but different fats Ixiil at different temperatures, so it ia no guide to say that fat miLst boil ; â- _ind, oa a matter of fact, fat iiiu^t not Ijoil : it must simplv !» hot Hn.iugh to profluce what the 'French gnphically '•all the "surprise ;" that is hoi enough to contract the tLs.'<u«?M of the mejit aud carlxmize its surface. Fat ha« attained thU condition when it is still (Water of course, bubbles when it boils), and when a blue fume rises from the centre. The ordinary domeeitic test ia a very good 'Tfie. Throw a piece of breml into the fat. If it browiLs immediately, the fat is hot enough; if it remains i wile, the fait needs to heat s little longer. And. it may 1)6 added, the smaller ' he article to be fried the hotter should I* the fat. Supposing we cotlld test the heat of fart by a thermometer, we should let it attain a temperature oC 365 ilegrees >r articles that need to lie ctxiked throujjch and of 40O degrees for such OS can 1)6 cooked inicantly. We can rarely test the beat thus, "but the fact shows that for some thiiurs the fat must be hotter than it is for uthers. It cannot l)e too strongly iu.<isted up- on that for successful trying the tem- perature of the fat is a matter of su- preme importance. When fried articles ooine to the table broken. 8i«ldeu, un- even, and mottled-looking, tlie proba- bility is th;it they have been looke^l in too little fat. When they oome to taUe greasy, the fat has not been hot enough. A good brown color and a orisp. dry surface are the marks ot good frying. FAMINE BREAD OF ARMENIA- IVIy Back 4 »wl ni-inre at hXnAn In 'Hial llahappj f'«unlr7. Thoae who have oontributed either from their aiiundauce or from their little to cha Armunuiu relief fimd will be Interested in the pasaa^o quotsd Lie- low, It is taicen irom a brochure is- sued recently by the Armenian Relief Association of New York, fitly entitled "Horrors of Armenia." 'Its author,! great help to me. I have bean saftBrina ii. rliKonlvi with rheumatium in my left arm »nd shoulder, which wss rendered entirely heipUsw. I am able to uue them again since taking Hood's SarsaparlUa." M sa Axms and limbs ara stiff and lame and ^ ia misery lor me to move. This la nheu- mstlsiu, caused by lautic acid in th» biood. Neutralize this acid, pnrifv «b« blood, and cure rheumatium by uking the ona tme blood purifier, Hood'n Sareeparilla, "I bars be«n taking Hood's Sarsapa- rllla (or the lost six mouthb, and Ann it â-  Mr. William W. Howard, was the only one of the fifteen newspaper correspon- dents who departed from Loudon in Decemijer, loa-l, on the queat of investi- gation into the couilit jun of eastern Tur- key w ho was sutoeaaf ul under peculiar \ perils ia penetrating to the interior of that desolated luuti- A second visit, just completed, waa uuacrtakeu by him a« relief commissioner under a i'urkish eiulxirgo, the penalty atleuduuL upon which was Uis devoted iisad. He writes from the Lulimate knowledge acquired during an ol.»aervation exloudmg over a year and a half in Armenia. Scenes of so surpiuisiug sadness as he wituesa- ed have iu the intensity of his iudigua- tiou wiiigeu his words with an almost brutal force. "i'as.-iiug tnrough an Armenian vil- la^u Lu tUe i'rovuice ot Van one aftor- niwn," he says, "l halted my party be- fore X house where a Utile girl was cryug m the street. A si'ECIliE. in llie person of a middle-aged luun. sat Ustlessly by the dour. '" 'Why does the child cryf I asked. "The man looiied up weakly with the eyes of despair. 1 know uol,' Ue said. â- "Surely one who is apparently the child's father makes u strangu reply to a simple qaesiiuu. Siieak. laou. why does the chUd cryC " li cries ijecause it cries,' he an- swered wearily. " 'Not so; there axust be a better reiuuu." " 'i'erhapa so; but I am a C'hrisi.^<u dog, and thou art a great lord witli fine horses aud :)Uoug servants. Why shoul'l ih" j;rie£ ot uiy little child cun- uem ihcet' C. B. Sat , Box 414, Junction City. Kauo oods Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifler. fl;a(or|B Mood'* Pills cur* oU Liver Ilia. :» seoU FOR TWEXTY-SIX YEARS. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THECOOK'SBESTFRIEND UARCeST SALS IN CANADA. • J .r- THE CONOUEBliNG HEBOES Kidney Disease, Rheumatism and Stomacli Trouble Conqered by the Three Greai Soutk Ameri- can Kemedies rrompi Hi-llef for Every *tmM*r*T, Safety t oihe sufferer from kidney ,,, , . disease is in driving the [xjiisou from ihou art a man aa I am. apeai, t^e s.vstem. Pilh* and powders, whilst they give apparent relief, and thus de- ceive the patient, do not eradicate the disease. I'be hard, sand-like particles that gather in the blood must be dis- solved if the system is to be cleared of the |X)isou, :tnd it is only a remedy like South American Kidney Cure that ill do this. Mr. Michael McMullen.a then, as man to uiau. Why does the child uryT '" 'It cries because it is hungry.' " 'Is there no food fur a helpless childC ily cook had already dis- mounted with a ba^f of bread in his hand. " 'Fuodl" said the man, moving un- steadily bis wasted hands, "Truly there I ^en.ijnown resident of fhi»lev, Ont, IS abundance of food. Ihere is theU^a^ ^ victun of kidnev disease, so sev- bark of. trees by the watercourses, i are that at times he could not lie I'own, which one may gnaw from dawn tiU|or remain in any onu position for » daj-k; there is grass growing in the , ie,^(i, of time. Where other mecli- fields; there are roots to be dug on the i riues accomplished nothing, he secured mountain side; there aixi strong weeds ixnmedmte relief from South American to be had m the ditchos, aud ihere ia j Kidney Cure. The soreness and wear- mo* to lie gathered from the rocksl' mess, after using the medicine soon left ••'But breadl" I iiroke in with. "13 him, and to-dav there is not a sign of there no bread tor a crymtf child*" I the trouble in" his system. "'Verily, master, there is much. There is no question of the muKioal bread.' ho replied; teautiful black character of the Souih American Rheu- AN OPEEATION AVOIDED- A smith's tails tase or Great Im- portance. ery<l|>rln> iu (hr Fare Itrtrlnpr* lalu â-  itaniiinu rvireâ€" IKMrlur^ l*rrlare<l Thnl oal> an Operall«u 4'oul4l Knag Keller â€"A Mrilictncr f'linnd Wbii-ii Ha<le Ikr Painful OprriitloD I nnecDtitary. From the Smith's Kails Hecoril; - A famous German medical scientist once remarked that the world is full of men and women who are sick liecause of their scepticism. Xh:; wisdom of this remark was uever mure self-evi- dent than It is to-day. There are count- leas scores of sufferers who would rath- er suffer than use any medicine not prescriLied by their favorite doctor. To these people, perhaps. I he story of Mr. Thoe. K. I'hillips, of Smith's Kails, may convey a moral. The followiiig is the story as given by Mr. Phillips to a Record reporter :â€" "Several years ago I U-gan to fail in weight, lost my ap- petite nnd erysipelas started in my face, and then a running .-^ore liroke out on my cheek. 1 consulted three physicians aud they all said it would L)e necessary to remove a portion ol the l)one. .AH this time I was unable to do any %vork and was suffering in- tense mental and physical a^uy when I chanced to read in the Bei»rd alout Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and resolved to try thi-m, thinking they would do me no harm anyway. I hail not used one tx>.\ when I felt ihev were helpiinj ine. I continued and after taking eight lx>xes the running sore on my cheek healed and tho operation the doctors saiil was necessary ^vas avoided. I re- g^iined my weight and am once mora poe-e.ssing a good appetite. In fact I was luadp a new man so remarkable wa« the change. We now consider Pink Pills a household necessity." Mr. Phillips was a resptndable and" well-to-ilo tanner of Wolford township until last spring when he sold his farm and is now liv- ing a retlri'd life in Smith's Kails. He is al)out fifty years of ape though looking younger, and a living witness of the wonderful curative proiierties containiyl in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. This great medical discovery has reach- ed the high position which it hulds through the Bower of its own merits. By its timely use the weak are made strong ; pale wan cheeks are given a rosy hue; lost vigor is renewed and the suffering ones are reiea.sed from pain. If your dealer dixvs not keep Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, they will Ije sent by mail on receipt of fifty cents a liox or six lio.xtw for I'i.-W, by addn-ssiufg the company at Broekville, Ont„ or Schenectady, N.Y. Kciiiemlier' th.iO Dr. Williams' Pink I'ills ctire when other medicines tail and do not be per- suaded to take either a substitute or an imiUitioD. bread made from LIJiSEEU AND FLAXSEKD and the seed of the clover, which in- toxicates bim wbu eats. See. my lord. ^ here is Ijread, if it please you io eat. Fear not to touch it. for it is not a cake of stable retiisc, although it may , have that appearunci;.' UftiJ»Vtlw«jr..ca i y2Sr1u»terial which serves as fuel in | * Asia. • "It is the hunger bread of Armenia 'i" - j- ^ „( ^„,b aaid one of my men. Uo not eat of it '^^^^.-^^^ rui^ medicine for a steady diet injorttB the nimd. I i fL„ „"; broke off a small piece. It w:is enuugh. It had the taste of bitter weeils or u.iusi'ous medicinal herl>$. 1 exchanged good wholesome «heut bread for live small cakes of it, which Ihave brought I ;^'";Vl"."known ni'niif.oiurer of thiit'own. matic Cure. This remedi' will drive the worst forms of rheuiualisni< from the system. Mr. Rol)eri E. liibsou, of Pembnike, Ont., suffered untold mis- ery. Doctors blistered him, and »i»- plied every known remedy, but did \ia goo»l. "Tlie first dose of Soul b Ameri- can Rheumatic Cure," sa.vs Mr. Oil). buttle cured." The nervous prostnktion that .omes to manv women can be quickly over- â-  " American .-ittacks the nerve i*ntres, which are the fountains of all health, and the iliseajfe iNinLsbed from ibes* the system can soon be built up. Mrs. M V\ il- Kordwieh. Ont., wife of the liams, of small caaes oi il, niiiuu iimvo ui^uf^ui. ' _ii tnown to .Vmericd as specimens of the famine ^^ff-^.^.^, i„^„„^,,iy (r,„u nervous pros- foo<l of Armenia. i tratiim for vears, and si«mod lieyoiid Ihe spectacle, so piteous of an entire y,.f ^j ^y^^ ,^,t mciical .skill "1 nation, intelligent, peaceful, mdustri- ^^^^ medical treatment," says this OU3, lying prostrate at the gates of the ,. ..^^^ ^^^^ „, ,i,ree vears. but my civili/ed world, full of sores a;»'l '*V"HT con.Ulion onlv got worse.' 1 re,id ot t he nesB, licking up the crumbs which fa'l i wonders perf"orined bv South .American from the rich miin's table, must sera j,-grvine and tried a lioitle. One l)oU the most callous of hearts. ^j^ ^^l^^ ^p sufficient relief to en- courige me to continue the medicine, Sold by W. E. Richardson. THE f AVOM'fE THREE Known All Over Canada -Everybody Has Words of Praise for the Three Great South American Re- medies - Absolute Speclttes for Kidney, Rheumatic and Nervous Troubles-They Relieve in a Few Hours. HERE AND THERE A GEM. A good laugh IS sunshine in a bouae. â€" Tb:ickcray. In law n<yihing ia certain but the exvnse.â€" S. Butler. The envious man grows lean at the ezceai of his neigbl)or.â€" Uoru-e- Augling is souiewhai hko poetry ; men arcto !» born so.â€" lz;iak Walttm. service's ; sweet temoitt- I learn several great t-tuthe ; as that it is inipoBsible to see into the ways of futurity, that punishment al- w.iys attends the villain, that love is the fond soother of the human breast. â€"Goldsmith, rUE KIDNKYS-Diatressing kidneys and bladder diseases are relieved in six hours by South American Kidney Cure. g^^ ^^^ ^^,^^. - â€" This remedy is a great surprise :ind de- , "^m ,row from thcm.-.Muje. light on account of lU exceeding 1 IJâ„¢":^! * projiiptncss in relieving pain in the! "- ' ,i;.iii,,. fi-urorv 'Gladder, kidneys, back, iind every part 6ome who ,f "f 'J,'',''\y'^^\;''l"'''J of the urinary pas8;.ge» in male or fe- mav ye.t be fUilerad "»''"^': > .^ Ji male. It relieves retention of water and | well-^usoned abuse auari.lu.ule ot pain in passing it almost immediately.; their rivals.â€" Colt on. It will cure llright's disease and ilia- ' I'bose who make us happy are always betes after all pills and powders have thankful to us lor l)eing so; their grati- fa.ilcd; as it, t>eing a liquid and solvent, I ,mit, j,,, the reward oi their Ijeuetilji.â€" dissolves the sauddike particles which : Jlju,.. Swetchine. always appear in the blood of persons ^.^^ spirit of a person s life is ever ;trouble<l with thiw disorders. A dry I J. j. ^^^^ ,^ a (lower , I powder or pill, cannot l^fa'"? ^ -l" tb s, gter^iUv lH«toxving fragrance upon as neither is a solvent. Use bouth , . .,:-_â- ' 4,~rr Kiiiir 1 American Kidney Cure it you would Uve the ,iir.- 1. Starr King, 'and injov health. '""e's gradual touch has moldered i RllEl'.MATlSMâ€" ' For the last ' into lieauly m;in,v a tower, .which, wtien i ypa.r," writes William >Lirshall, ol V'ar- j it frowned with all its Ijattleuieuls, w.ia "don, Ont., a resident of that district for . only terrible.â€" Mason. 40 years, "1 was confined almost entire- ] ot what use is genius, if t he or^an ly to my bed with rheumatism. Noth- jg too convex or concave, and can not ing gave me relief, and I had finally f,,j,i a, to-al distance v\^ihiu the actual I given up hope when iwuth Afnerican ^ horizon of human life.â€" Emerson. I Rheumatic Cure was recommended to , , ^ ,^.j .spheres 'j^lff l'^^'^.l^,^'r«„r•r„"'K.TVl•i^!;'?:iof uâ- tioS^^»y have uobler .orL of low j ed. a.< rirjffe~"no ViiTi. *"liVa ever" now'" ] .^ome de.-eut, regulated pre-emiiiCQ<», 1 THIi ti'lOMACH AND ^ERVESâ€" some preference (uol exclusive ippro- Mr.H, Capt. Hacklev, of thven Souml, was priation) given lo birth, ia neither un- one on whom La" Grippe had left its nalunU nor unjust nor innxilitio.- 1 marks. She seemed never lo have com- Burke. : plelely recovered from aji attack, and Nothing more i)owerfully tirgnes .% nervous prostration took hold ot the nf,, liovond this than the failure ot evstem. .Vll the doctoring had only a I 1,1^.^1^ h<.re. Each gives us only frag- teuij)orary effect. She tried South , u,t..nui of humanity of heart, ot miud, An'crican Nervine, and siiys the first ^,|; oharlty, of l0'« aud virtueâ€" Anon. lH>Ltle gave her hoi)o. nnd, conlinuing | ,. " . , ,• ,- ,- . its use in a short lime 3lu,^ complete- Men spend iheir lives in mticipations ly Tegaine.1 her strength, t so South j m determitiiiig 10 l)e viutly hapi>y at Amsrican Nervine if you seem to be I some period or other, when they have f.and I was out of mj', 1>«V'>"^„?°^ 1 duly, bu right with them and with viMg day 1 have used thre«,bott es, ! ^ ^^ ,,„,f ,(,,. s,ime thiug.-Chapin. d 1 must say. I am completely cur- , "" "' '" 1 â-  weariug out. It will 'rel>i:ild the life forces with siirprisintf rapidity. Sold by W. h. UichardiK>a. time. But the present time has one advantage over every ' other, it is our own.â€" Col too. ^y^

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy