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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 7 Feb 1884, p. 7

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 y. uns! woman m. oi unusual, .^i her Wda^ '^y they mini he gallery cf. re on the point tne prinoipj oeath, regard. DK the extrava. ci utilitarian area oui ' jj[ a fiddler wid 1 Johnnie care- ompony assem- call to suppej. itter Jjhnuie" with a troubl. •mting me, and e two piea into 3 eight pieces." blea coaaidera- ll-KEownbink- created c:uud- "Ofi -â-  "1 gQt '^u^hc that last and to-day it lid say 30," ex. •â-  '"But whit thermometer," War. American offi. to i aspect the VVoolwich has ntagea and dis- iter in the Pall ne employment of battle "If maik remains e done, but the cry bullet out, as the French '-h the mitr^iil- tan.e as 1,-JOO ami that their l.elitest chance of that time, 1 artillery has i.cy. Against ;h the present iQukl have less ly of the Gar- "What is the :he tield of bat- aoe, and whal- es ca 1 be ^iven tag the field ar- hine guns have u iToportion to le same course I'rench and by power. Note I the fieid all il their Held ar- er that France, iudsia, have ail [uraace of war, :y !ro33 burned pinion ought ':L"-iuj.i ideas of 4 to the notion ' t a ion worcby • -^ rtiiuired for â-  t -icjUit face .uii;e3, that its I'.Mer against rki, but they .0 LoJies of in- t „an3 can be :i:-.y have re- .• !â-  ise a great .;ainbat. No .IS â- , provided to be where ll:i-llil. ri..ve long bsen :ir. s. Tlie nu- er years have it'lr cnaraciers; i'lirt-ii ttiid fur- i:i clear. It is J ihta IS dis- til e ^u;face of w tlif strata ror iutal posi- -I ' i-c Of \Ul- ir. privileged •mil icions are " '..s J. at have ..' '.! .i'/eiilents, rt-'i'-r :i: a re- A'p-., Italy, '•: i:u-' isly dis- â-  '-t r r quently i"' ile'^rees, or rht-y rarely :i"'i' Ira.'tion of r.i'-d catastro- "V, 11; b( r, I7-3-" v' irgrees into ' V over a sur- tnuos that of 'f many earth- rmipe the cen- ;he contours of the manner in with the lines S'-vt-ral cf the including Mr, [eim, have con- a as c:;nnected of mountains, f coaiinuation. tb everywhere raised by the en in operation bent over and li thousands of as the great are the elo- lanical actions. nt tranquility of the globe, the earth, and irrested in its ounJ, not only he slow move- md depre-sion IS continued to jal times in all vV/ice Monthly NEWS SUMMABY. Interesting ItemsIfromaU Parts of the World. CAKADIAN. The official Trade Report of Can»d» has K i^n issued It shows a favorable state of ihincs According to this, it seems that the fatal value of imports into the Dominion, in he year endiugVune 30. 1883, was 8132,- "-, Qo-^ the largest in the history of the ^riintrv exceediDe the imports of the pre- :ious/ear by m S3i 522 and that of 1874 _^ the largest previously recorded â€" by U C4U 'l^O- The exports, on the other iianri have somewhat declined, being $68,- 0.5 S04, flsainst .slO-2,137 203 in 18S3, a de- i crease of ?4. CD 1,399. rSlTED STATES. It is proposed in the United States to dis- til f J. if its from glucose. The receipts for license fees in Brooklyn during the past year amounted to $56,- lV,9 62. The sole surviving grandchild of Thomas -lefFcrson is to be pensioned with §250 a )ear. Nellie Lincoln Rossitor a girl cf 18, is at the head of the silk culture industry of the country. She lives at Philadelphia. A bill has been introduced in the United States Congress providing for the construc- lion of a second canal around Niagara Falls. The (iuvernor of Iowa, in his message to the Ljeislature, recommends prohibitory legislation and the submission of a woman sutirage resolution. T«o New Yorkers now in Fioiida claim to have discovered a chemical process that will preserve oranges for a year without im- pairing their flavor. The cellars under Philadelphia's new city hall are the largest in America, their area being four and a half acres. The first cellar is thirteen feet deep, and the cellar under that i.s of like depth. Tiie will cf Rjbprt (Ijrdon, of New York (L-olored), gives ?2.j,000 for the establish- ment of a home for aged and indigent color- ed women, and So, 000 to the colored orphan asylum, (ordon was born a slave. A native of liDmbay, is at work in a glass factory at Clayton, Gloucester Co. N. J. He is a man of education and means, and is icirning the art of glaas-blowing in order to introduce it in his own country. i;P.EAT liRlTAI.N' The boring of the Mersey tunnel has been completed. The consumption of tea in G.-eit Britain is about six pounds to one pound of coffee. The Eirl of Siaftesbury has accepted the Presidency of the International Peace So- ciety. Charles Russell, M. P., the English bar- rister, received over $1(5,000 in fees in one week recently. There were 520 fewer failures in England and Wales in 1SS3 than in 1882, and a de- crcise in bilh ot sale of 29 913. M" Tennyson has been in recpipt of a pfinion of £200 a y ar from the Civil List 3rvice Fund for thirty-nine years, Oj the t^ieen's Park estate, Kensal Green, Ljndon, there are 2,400 dwelling-houses, but no public house. Intemperance is almost unknown. The more substantial English farmers, hoping for a rise in prices, have not thresh- ed their wheat. This keeps them short of cash and reacts unfavorably on trade. The Salvation Army seems to get a great deal of money. It has late'y haa erected an immense hall at Brighton, England, capab'e ui holding 3,009 people. By the general public the army is regarded as an ui miti- gated nuisance. Thei.MeeD, who is at Osborne House, is tow able to take short walks, but she cm- not stand upon her feet longer than a few minutes at a time. Her health is otherwise unatTccted. Tiie value of tea imported from British Iiiilia in 1SS2 wa3 put down at £192,000 ;n 1 I -2 at £3 600,000. Any disturbance in Cniua will react favorably on the Anglo- Iiii.ian market. Ki.gland has the foreign trade of China. I ' the 440 foreign firms residing in the 19 Lpcu or treaty ports, in 18S2, Great Britain was represented bv 288, while the United States hid only 23, and France 56. Of 1 .(II foreign residents Great Britain claims J,Vv}2, and the United States cnly 410. It is anLOunced that Queen Victoria in- tends to leave England for Darmstad, i ar- iriauy, some time in March, to be present at the marriage of her grand-daughter to Piincs Louis of Battenburgh, which takes place the ii.idjle of April. I'he (J jeen is the authoress of a new book, â-  i.ife in the Highlands," which will appear lu a few weeks. The bock will contain ' veral illustration? from drawings made by .iltr Mjjesty and I'lineets Beatrice. It is â- supposed that favorite, the late John Brown, will occupy a promicent place in its pages. inlinal Manning is a ' e y abstemious man, and his appearance for years has been .^ic.re that of a mummy than a well preserved mn. It is said that he had reduced the amount of food to a minimum, and of late n:s physicians recommendod him to more generous food. Since he has followed that advice his health is better. It IS now annoucced that Westminster Abbey, the great national Mausoleum of Hnglaud, is so full of the remairsof the not- all-j men of the country, that no more dis- tiiiguised dead men can be buried within its walls. A? an item of encouragement to sanitari- ans it i.s stated that the death roll in Liver- pool, England, hes been cut down, within the last twenty years from 37 to 27 per 100 of the population by buying up its de- lapiJated tenements and building good healthy houses in their stead. Hot- Water Cure. Q the repoit 3 reentlv pur- near Kansas Napoleon mt i aed a widow, Madame de Mainttnon luled as a widow. Gibbon abased himself at the feet of a widow, Rosseau did t^he same, Disraeli married a widow, one of the greatest rulers of modem Europe was the widowed Empress Citharine, and the tnree most distinguished women in Enropa at presentâ€" Queen Victoria, ex-Emprees ^?Renie, and ex Q-aeen Isabellaâ€" are all 'Widows. Yean ago, the grandmothera of thi pres- ent generation osed to cure their children of colic by making them drink warm herb tea Md arplying hot ennghta to their feet. Group was relieved by dipping stripe of nuiBel in hot water, wringing them out, and then enveloping the child's neck with them. The old- fashioned method of naing hot water as a remedy has again become fashionable, and is spoSen of aa something new. Hall's Journal of Health points out the diseases in which the old remedy will do good, and those wherein it may do harm Take, for example, the case of a person who has taken cold in the Inngs, The circulation of the blood in tie small blood-vessels in that portion of the lungs af- fected becomes sluggish ia some caeea it is quite suspended the geneil circulation IB impeded through failure of an important organ to do the work required of it, and the whole system suffers the man is ill, N iw, if we know why the disease exists, by what unnatural condition it is kept up, the remedy snggests itself as, if a water- pipa were frozen up, any child knows the the remedy is heat. And here is just where watfr as warm as it can be comfortably borne will effect a cure in ordinary cases. Let the patient go to bed. Pat bottles of hot water to his feet, and c'oths w^t in hot water on his chest. Let him dritk hot water as freely as he can with comfort it matters little whether it is clear hot water, or herb tea, it is nevertheless hot water. With this treatment we are employing hot water at its full value. Its internal use tends to thaw out the blood-vessels, and its outward application quickens the circulation in the blood-vesaels near the surface thus drawing on the deep- seated blood-vessels for supplies to keep up the activity, and thus the congestion is re- lieved and the patient is cured. In dyspepsia hot water taken internally, under proper restrictions, is no doubt useful, since dyspepsia depends on a congested and deranged condition of the digestive organs. But in consumption and other diseases at- tended by general debility it can only be de- trimental. When a person is feeble from disease not marked with acute inflammation, the hot- water treatment necessarily increases the debility, Here a tonic treatment is applicable â€" a treatment that will increase and enrich the blood and supply the fuel required to keep the machinery of life in motion. The hot- water treatment is useful in re- moving obstructions from the machinery, but only in systems where there is a surplus of vital power, To recapitulate The drinking of hot water at proper Intervals and in proper quantities ia useful in dys- pepsia, constipation, torpid liver, con- gestion of the stomach, chronic diar- rttpa, and in various affections of the kid- neys and bladder provided that there are not at the same time serious diseases of the lungs, with debility. The water should be as hot as tea is usually made, that ia, from 110° to 150°, and should be sipped, not taken rapidly. The quantity should be from half a pint to a pint. It should be taken one to two hours after meal 3, and nothing should be eaten until at least one hour afterward. The evening draught should be just before going to bed. The hot-water treatment should continue until a cure is effected the time required will vary from one to six months. Bedroom Ventilation. If two persons are to occupy a bedroom during a night, let them step on weighing scales as they retire, and then again in the morning, and they will find their actual weight 18 at least a pound less in the morn- ing. Frequently there will a loss of two or more pounds, and the average loss through- out the year will be more than one pound that is, during the night there is a loss of a pound of matter, which has gone c ft' from their bodies, partly through the lungs and partly through the pores of the skin. The escaped material is carbonic acid ard decayed animal matter or poisonous animal exhal- ations. Tnis is diffused through the air and in part absorbed by the bedclothes. If a single ounce cf wood or cotton ba burned in the room, it will so completely saturate the air with smoke that one can hardly breathe, though there can hardly be an ounce of for- eign matter in the air. If an ounce be burn- ed every half hoar during the night, the air will be kept continually saturated with the smoke, unless there be an open door or win- dow for it to escape. Now, the sixteen ounces of smoke thus formed is far less poisonous than the sixteen ounces of exhala- tion from the lungs and bodies of the two persoBE. who have lost a pound in weight during the tight hours of sleeping for while the dry smoke is mainly taken into the lurgs, the damp odors from the body are absorbed into the lunge and into the pores of the whole body. Need more be said to show the importance of having bedrooms well ven- tilated, and thoroughly airing the sheets, coverlets and mattresses in the morning be- fore packing them in the form ot a newly- laid bed? ____ How Hot is Boiling Head. A subscriber asks " -â- ^t what degree is boiling heat " He is informed that the de- gree or heat necessary to produce ebullition depends on the liquid, on the elevation af the place above the level of the sea, aad the pressure of the atmosphere at the time. At the level of the sea, with a normal pressure of the air, or. when the barometer indicates a pressure that sustains a column of mercury thirty-nine inohes high, water containing the ordinary amount of air boils at 212 de- grees by Fahrenheit's thermometer scale, lOO by the centigrade, and SO by Reamur's. In a complete vaonum water boils at 98 de- grees Fahrenheit. As the pressure ef the air diminishes, the degree of heat necessary to cause water to boil becomes less. On the top of very high mountains water boils at so low a degree that it rai not be employed for ordinary cooking purposes. In some deep minee 212 degrees of heat are not sufficient to cause it to boiL A greater degree of heat is required to make water boil that contains no air than that which does contain it. Liquids for the moat part that are lighter than water boU at a lower temperature. Those that are heavier, aa mercury, require a greater heat. TBUSTWOETttT HESTIMO^rT. it TaallMi OpIoleBa Vpoa aa Impertaat Bnbjeec ot Great Talne to Kvory Baoaer. The day for pretendera haa passed. Men are judged by what they can do and not by what they say they can do. The reading public of to-day ia too ditoriminating to be long deceived by the apurioua. If an article have merit it will became popular if it ia unworthy it will sink into oblivion. Fcr years the people of England and America have put to the severest tests a compound regarding which most ambitious churns have been made. Under such ordeals as it haa been subjected to, nearly every known pre- paration would have failed, but this one did not. Is England and the United States to- day, it is the most widely known and popu- lar of all pablic preparations. In verifica- tion of which note the following In September last, one of the English for- resters of India returned to London, Eng., utterly broken down and debarred from further service by reason of what the ex- amining physicians pronounced incurable kidney disoders and dropsy. He was com- paratively a young man, and felt depressed over the situation. Incidentally learning, however, of the power of Warner's S«ife Cure, which has attracted so much attention of lite, he began its use. Within three months he was thoroughly restored to health, passed medical txamination as a sound man and is to- day discharging his duties as well as ever in the trying climate of India J. D. Henry, Esq., a near neighbor of the late Thomas Carlylo, Chelsea, S. W. Lon- don, Eng., became very much emaciated from long continued kidney and liver disor- ders, the treatment he had sought from the vast medical authorities working only temp- orary results. He then began the use of Warner's Safe Cure, and on May 15th last, declared "1 am now feeling physically a new creature, A friend of mine to whom I recommended the S ife Cure for kidney, liv- er and various diseases, also speaks of it in the highest terms." R. C. Sowerby, Helensburg, N. B., was obliged to relicquish his professional duties because of a severe kidney and liver com- plaint. After using a dczsn bottles of War- ner's Safe Cure he says "I am to-day better than I have been for twenty ysars and I cheerfully recommend the Sife Care to all who are suffering from there diseases." Mr, Wm Jones, 16 Wellington street, Camborne, Eog., says that he was thorough- ly treated in St, Bartholomew's hospital, London, Elng., for urinary disorders and weakness. He used Warner's Safe Care and he tays "I am like a new man." It cured him of indigestion, troubles of the bowels, excessive urination and nervous prostration. He adds " I was taking var- ious medicines for over two years from the best doctors, and a"l in vain, but after tak- ing Warner's Safe Care for only four weeks, 1 was brought from death to life," Mrs. E. Game, 125 Broad street, London, W. Eog., suffered for years from female weakness, skin eruptions and impure blood, but after using Warneir's S ife Care, she says: ' My health is better now than it has been for years." H. F. West. Eiq., 16 Burton Crescent, W. C, London, from his own experience "strongly recommends Warner's Site Care to all persons suffering from kidney and liv- er complaints.aa the best remedy known. Mr, Henry ^Iaxted, 1 Pennsburv Private Road, Wadsworth Road, London, Eag., was cured by Warner's Safe Care of enlarged liver which produced numbness in his left leg, with a dead heavy feeling and dizziness on the r'ght side of his head. "1 have recom- mended it," he says, " to several of my friends most of whom have derived great benefit from it." Mr, W. Clarkson, Hartington, Villas, Spital, Chesterfield, Eng., used Warner's Safe Cure for liver complaint, dyspepsia, flatulence, vomiting of bile, and mental de- pression. January 15, 1883, he writes After using the eighth bottle I feel better than for many years. It is a valuable medi- cine. Mr. J, Hiscock, station master, Taff Vale railway, Navigation station, was cured of abscess of the kidney, calculus or stone, dis- charge of pus, etc. by thirteen bottles of Warner's Safe Cure. •' had long and faith- fully tried some of the ablest medical men in S outh Wales in vain, one of them remark- ing that medical science has failed to find a remedy for confirmed kidney disease. The Sife Care dissolved and brought away about two ounces of stone, I can never praise the Safe Cure too highly," Mr. Robert Patten, New Dclaval, Eng., was much overcome by severe inflammation of the bladder. "I had to urinate every five or ten minutes with great pain aad sufferine. My water was full of matter and blcod. Both kidneys and liver were affect- ed, and in addition I had a bad cough and heart trouble, (all presumably the secondary effect of the kidney and bladder disorder.) He says that after curing his bladder, kid- ney and liver trouble by Warner's Sife Care, his "cough and palpitation are quite gone," William Simpson, Efq., Daughty Mill, Kirkcaldy, N, B., suffered for years from Bright's disease of the kidneys and conse- quent dropsy, His body was dreadfully swollen. His appetite was fickle, he was full of rheumatic pains, his urine burned in passing and was full of mucous and brick dust sediment; his pulse was weak, his heart was irregular in its action, his breathing was very much impaired, in short he had all the painful symptoms of that dreadful dis- order. He spent 17 weeks in the Royal Infirmary, of Edinburgh, under the skill of the best physicians who, having exhausted all agencies at their command, discharged him 'as incurable." He says: "I passed water every hour, day and night,, having great pain while doing so. It was nearly white as milk, with albumen, and when it stooo for an hour, the deposit was a quarter of an inch thick in the bottom of the vesseL" When in this desperate condition, he began to use Warner's Safe Cure â€" the only known specific for Bright's disease of the kidneys â€" "I have used twelve bottles," he says, and his health is so restored that he adds " I bless the day when I read that Bright's disease was curable and for so little cost." The following persons of quality in Lon- don and other parts of England, are a few of the thousands who have used and com- mended Warner's Safe Cure, the great speci- fic for kidney,' liver, urinary, female and Bright's diseases: Hon. Freeman H. Morae, 8 Park Villaa East, Richmond. CaptaiB F, L Norton, Glingall Villa, Lee Road, BlaokbMth. Kent. Hon. S. B. Packard, 14 Alexandra Drive, LiverpooL Hon. A, D, Shaw, United States C^naul, Manchester. The Bev. C, G. Squirrel, Stretton-under- Fosse, Rugby. Such teetimonials from such imqnestion- able aourcea prove the value of this remedy, which is sold in every drug store, beyond the shadow of a doubt. They prove that it is the greatest of all modem medicines for these terrible kidney and liver diseases. What it has done it will unquestionably do for others, and as such it commends itself moat warmly to public oonfidesce. (xood Humor on] the Health. PIET. Diet, qaiet, and a merry heart are worth more than the medicines of the bast phy- sicians, and save their costly visits. Diet- ing is not supposed to mean geing without eating, and every seosible person can very soon find what kind of food best agrees with them. Persons whose digestive organs are cot of the strongest, should never indulge in the use of frefh pork â€" I say fresh pork, as good salt pork can be cooked in such a way as to be easily digested, even by an in- valid. It should be broiled and taken often from the fire, and rinsed in cold water, which takes off the grease it will then be- come brittle, and is sometimes craved and er joyed by mauy persons in sickness. Eggs, with milk, cream and fresh-made butter, mutton, lamb, fish of some kinds, poultry and game of nil kinds are generally consider- ed digestible, as also many kinds of veget- ables. Exercise in the open air aids greatly to assist nature in the work of assimilating our food to properly nourish the system. Among many persons too much tea is drank. IVa is a strong stimulant to the nerves, and excites to action, and because they can do a great amount of work under the stimulating effects of a cup of tea, they resort to it, little dreaming that in this way, after a time, the machinery of the human system would wear out. Beef tea contributes to make muscle and strengthen the body when in need of drink. Nature is a good phy- sician if we would only trust her more. QUI ax. In regard to quiet I need say very little. Let each one coasult his or her tastes or de- sires in thit respect. A MERRY HEART. (iood humor and the power to look on the favorable side of things are the b 3St aids to health. Liugh and grow fat Since the days of S olomon it has been so considered. "A merry heart doeth good like a medicine; but a broken heart drieth up the bones." â€" Proverbi. Sterne tells us that every time one laughs he adds something to his life. An eccentric philosopher of the last century, used to say that he liked not only to laugh himself, but to hear laughter. Lxughter is good for the health; it is provocative to the appetite, £nl a friend to digestion. An old physician said that the arrival of a merry one in the house, was better than twenty asses laden with drugs. Some p;ople are forever looking at things, so as to unfor- tunately throw a dark shadow over them, and making the whole face of nature gloomy hill ugly. It would bj a blessed thing for such person) if their vision could be altered by the aid of spectacles. "Do you preach without notes?" casually asked a new minister from the Eist, of an old preacher in an Arkansas conference, "Preach without notes?" echoed the brother, "I should say I did. Why, my brother, in the Lord's name, I've scarcely seen a greenback in six months!" The sub- ject was dropped. Bid temper often proceeds from those painful disorders to which women are sub- ject. In female complaints \)\ R, ' Pierce's " Five rite Prescription" is a cer- tain cure. By all druggists. I was never less alone than when by myself. ^Youog or middle aged men suffering from nervous debility, loss of memory, prema- ture old age, as the result of bad habits, should send three -stamps for Part VII of Dime Ssries pamphlets. Address World's Dispensary Medical As.sot iation, Baffa- lo, N. y. There is no use in sweeping a cham* her if all the dust come out of the broom. If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have sallow color of skin, or' yellowish btown spots on face or body, frequent headache or dizznass, bad taste in mouth, internal heat or chills alternated with hot flushes, low spirits and gloomy forebodings, irregular appetite, and tongue coated, you a-e suffer- ing from "torpid liver," cr " biliomnefs." In many cases of " liver complaint" only pari of the symptoms are experienced. As a remedy for all fuoh cases Ur. Piercc's "Golden Medicil Discovfr^" has no qual, IS it effects perfect and radical cures. At all drug sterns. In months of eun so live that in months of rain you shall be happy. Triangle Paokage Dyes, The genuire are in ttrae ccrajrad packages to distinguish them from the old fashioned common col rs in square envelopes 39 cole rs. Perfect in al the r shados S itisfactioii guar.n'.e'.d. Price 10c, F,r talc by all druggists, Is virtue a thing remote? I wish to be virtuous, and lo I virtue is at hand, PECTTOBIA Pectoria Fectoria the great remedyf or Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Sore Throat, luduenza. Hoarseness, and all affections of the Lungs and Throat or Chest. Pectoria loosens the phlegm and breaks up the Oough. 25 cents per Bottle. Don't give up until you have tried Pectoria, all Druggists and General Store- keepers sell it. Learn as if you were to live forever live as if you were to die to-morrow. Catarrh â€" A New Treatment whereby a Permanent Cure is efiected in from one to three applications. Particulars and treatise free on receipt of stamp. A. H. Dixon Son. 305 King-St. West. Toronto, Canada. "I would like to get this younjmanon the stage," said Mrs. Do Splurge, presenting her son to a theatrical manager, who was wearied of applicants for histrionic honors. "Very sorry, madam, but the stage haa just gone by; however, there's a horse-car coming around the comer, and you can put the lad on it, preaeotly." 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Amonv them are, We Never Speak as we Pass By; Wer the Garden Wall, â€" Kerry Dance, â€" Warrior Bold, â€" Blue Alsatian Mountains, â€" Only a Blossom from her Grire, â€" Three Old Maids of Lee, â€" Flirting in the Starlight, â€" Grandmother's Old Easy Chair, â€" Don't Drink my Boy To-night, and 90 others, comprising Home songs, Comic Songs, Sentimental songs. Children's songs, etc. All are printed on nice paper, and are bound in a book with colored cover. Remember, we 5end the entire collection of 100 Songs for only 15c., three DOoks for 30c., 1 doz., $1; la or 3c. stamps taken. J. LEE CO., Montreal, P.q. 30 DAYS* TRIAL I^ IdtesIM I fBEFOKE.) (AFTEJ!) TT'tXCTRG-VOLTAIC BELT and other Electbio -1j Appliances are sent on 30 Days' Trial TO MEN ONLY, YOUNG OR OLD, who are suffer- In? from Nervous DEBUJTy, Lost 'Vitaijtv^, â- Wastino â- Weaknesses, and all those diseases of a Personal Nature, resulting: from abuses and Other Causes. Speedy relief and complete restoration to Health. Vigor and Manhood Guaranteed. Send at once for Illustrated Pamphlet free. Address Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, MicL #ll.QO Extraordinarj â€"FOR â€" 350ts. Bargain On receipt of only 35c we will mail, post- paid, 34 pieces compris- ing 48 pages of full size sheet music, bound together in one volume. Names of Vocal pieces â€" All on account of Eliza A Warrior Bold Tee Country Lad Nancy Lee Chorus of Charity Girl.s Drum- mer's Song The Judge's Song The Love-Sick Boy Whoa Emma Two Bad Men Man in the Moon Johnny Morgan: The Gleaners Torpedo and the Whale I Saw Her in the Violet Time Five O'clock in the Morning My Love She's but a Lassie Yet Adieu, Dear Home Dame Babble; and 15 pieces of Inetrumental Music, comprising new and popular dauce music, selections from different Operas, Marches, o,. c. All the above and our handsome new Chromo Lithograph in colors of the LorVs Prayer and 10 Command- ments, sent post-paid for 35c. As a holi'lay offer we will also send free 10 Christmas Cares, 50 money making receipts and a pack of Age Cards. Order Quick. You get all the above for 35c. or 5 lots for $1.25 1 doz. for $2.00. Cat this out and return with order. J AS LEE CO Montreal, P. Q. THE SPLENDID STEAMERS 3F THE- WHITE STAR LIl Are all of them without exception among the Largest and Fastest of Ocean Steamers. 'I'hey were constructed with special reference to the conveyance of passengers, and for Safely C'oni- rort or Speed, are unexcelled. They are spec- ially n-ted for the regulnrity of their rapid passages in all weather. The steerage accom- odations arc of the highest order, the ventila tion perfect and every provision has been made for the comfort and protection of|the pas- sengers. In addition to the total and absolute separation of the single men and womer, 'ex- cept on deck, the married comoartment has been so remodelled and arranged tha' every married couple or family has a little private room to itseif. For particnlars apply to the company's agents sA ah towns in Ontario, or to T. W.JONKd, General Agent, 23 York street FUNANDMYSTERY BNl)LESS AJfCSEMBNT FOK ONLY 30 CTS Have -you seen it The greatest collection of Games, Cards, Tricks, Puzzles, Songs, etc. ever offered for anything like the money. AMUSE- MENT FOK A WHOLE SEASON, for the old or young. Our NE'W BUDGET contains the fo'lowing Heller's Conjuring Pack the Mystic Oracle: Guide to Flirtation: 10 new Evening Games: Set of "Hold to Light Cards:" 1 Set Colored Chromo Cards the Star Puzzle 25 â- Ways to Get Kich the " 13" Puzzle; 5 Beautiful Face Pictures Language of Jewels and Flowers; 101 Selections for Autograph Albums 11 Popu- lar Songs with Music, 13 New Tricks in Magic Pack of Fun and Comic Cards 1 Chinese Block Puzzle; the Roman Cross Puzzle; Great $5 Prize Puzzle; 1 set Transformation Pictures, change color right before your eyes, and Games of Fortune. ALL FOE 30 CENTS, IN ONE OB TWO GENT POSTAGE STAMPS. By mail postiaid. Two packages for FIFTY CENTS fire for ONE DOLLAB. Send at onoe and set the greatest bar^un ever offered. Beturn'.tnis with order to aToid mistake. J IS. LEE CO., MHitreaI, P.{. ^n m 'â- ill m a â- I

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