‘A. L. Kumpt‘s ‘ .__** BodEstoresâ€"‘ Waterrod ~!| CARTS and : â€": FISHING TACKLE :â€" Express Waggons, DESIRARLF farm of 180 acros, the N. E é& } situated ir soc. 36, Townsht 37, N.5, W entre Township, Kmmet Co. Mich, for sale or %chulge on wood property ‘n the County o aterioo. Twenty acres clear, balance wel wooded with basswood, elm and maple. .A good dwelling on property Saw mill only one quarter mile gistant, and railroad 3 miles. _ A splendid chance A“lAy to .M. 8 LLMAN, coples w en TV Eis CaN I OBT..:‘!N Ah PA'l‘tK‘l'!ml‘or“ '- w answer an honest opmu::i o experionss t . mao nov‘s ad neasty Sit7 years‘ n paten municaâ€" tions strictly confidential. â€" A Handbeak of Inâ€" ".u t.h:: t f '"‘Z:l""mxo.-'" olm.n-w es n sent free. ical and scientific bmn.go:n free. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive zocm notice in the Scientific American, and ms are brought widely before the public withâ€" out cost to the inventor. This avlenmdtcper. m-ootl .ol-nnuymnnmed.ln'-‘:‘ the ggm{nuon of Anxe-nonuoe in the "!-.“;'u-__ _a year. Sample copies sent fram Have you Cutarrh? This r;l'neâ€"d;'l; Aeed to cure you. Price, §0cts, Injec FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE Wris Carars CoUCHUu Cor® pmmpay cures where cll cthers fail Coughs, Croup, Sore A[broat, E.carsenoess, 'Vlhooplni‘Cou;h and Lasthma. For Cocsumption it s no rlnli Las cured thous::agaï¬cxs! Wfl}‘gcnx You if trikenin time, 8cl y Druggists on a guarâ€" eaoteo." lor m Lome Back or Ch uso SHILOH‘3 CELULADONNA PLASTER 5 +___________ Sold by Simon Snyder, \\'nte;l;; mail. Price, one packaze, #1; {wecu y sie will cure. Pumphicts WOOD‘s PIIOSPEIIODINE The Great English Remedy,. m Siz Packages Guarantecd io o 4* promptly and permanently > gi cure all forms of Nervous R .gv C Weakness, Emissions. Spermâ€" \ p atorrhea, Impotency and all A\ eJects of Abuse or Excesses C \"' '.* Mental Worry, excessive use . , of Tobacco, Optum or Stimuâ€" B'ï¬â€ e and ‘4ftfl * lants, which soon lead to In firmity, Insaaity, Consumption and an ea rly grave. Tias been prescribed over 35 years In thousands of cases, Is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine known. Askdruggistfor Wood‘s Phosph odlné\’f ‘ he offers some worthless medicine In place of this, inclose price In letter. and we will seud by return ‘ mall. Price, one packase, #1; alx, £5, One wiil m \ d Price 25 Cenrs ar Dauae Sror«s. ure SICK MHEADACHE and Neuraigia 20 miwurTes, alâ€"o Coated Torgue, Dizriâ€" eSs, Dinlousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, orpid Liver, Bad Breath. To stay cured and xulate the bowels. veryr mice To raka. GO STRAIGHT iLO X‘5ARCcaATARRN wild cure. Pumphicts free to any address The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Sidlin Waterloo by POWDERS S. SNYDER, Druggist. FPOR 202 King stree weat e _ N T'/M’;’//élflll,’/;//’« I ’{ 5‘77// ////i/«" ,//‘ tA k iCB ifNpID ut " fud ensy to ta‘e of o so fhinely sugarâ€" cColbiwin take them. I airg dn teed a* a larstive soe Chey will Jo good," s iihue Stomach, Liver, REMEDY, uthihay (Me.) Register, s Te has receivea irom sovils. Hosays: "I 1 Broapway,. ECfiectivo PILLS 0 we d & Niluoer to five me bhia old rellze n only one [ thin‘s they inbA AiiBtaind th mrarl N ‘Here is a big, warm church and a prétty chapel shut up in darkness about four nights every week, while hundreds of boys are on the streets, and in the whiskeyâ€"shop, for want of bright, warm, pleassnt places where they can spend the evening. ‘There was one imthe vestibule toâ€"night, and I wish I had asked him to come in.‘ . _ ‘Why,â€"Grace ! : that tramp ? : You would not have had him here !‘ ex. clefoned We 3 /1+ :1 | $ qidew | +. 37, / ‘Yes, I would,‘ Grace, with emâ€" is ‘ ‘If T Had‘fiy" way, I would h RaATE oR Aricr (4» C Ibve Calm C ‘pb-uj:;. ‘If I ‘had‘ is W the chapet * ever ‘nave nice dames wad | f’"‘" bat‘lub® o# i dik ## Errth Riwigreiest 1 ~â€" . AC. TCAZ* T00 enquired if she were ill, ‘No, I am only sad and puzzled over a question that has filled my thoughts all evening, and perbaps you can help tn ontbls is L ut 2032 a Witininl® A0 ABsAuatsadinbct 2.3 Grace had worked in grave silence so unusual for her, that her companions noticed it and one of the church deacâ€" ons who had come in ‘to keep them in order,‘ kindly enquired if she were ill. to settle it,‘ she replied _ He had eaten nothing but & crust during the day and was weak and tired. As he lay there, the warmth, the stil}â€" ness and the spicy odors soothed him into a slumber so deep that the merry voices of the young people returning with their holly boughs did not rouse him, and he slept on after the arrival of others, while the garlands were hung amid much gay chatter. f eyes He groaned in anguish, and down a the floor, rested his the cuchioned seat, while tears As he stood there in the dim silence breathing the spicy fragrance of the evergreens, he remembered the times wher. he used to help in hanging the Christas garlands. He remembered, too, that none of his teachers bad ever warned him to beware of the wineâ€"cup, and the muchâ€"loved Superindent, whose children‘s parties he had so much enâ€" joyed, slwz,ys colored the lemonade with a little dash of claret. He re-l membered that there was always a large bowl of eggâ€"nog on his mocher's,‘ sideboard during the holidays for every one to sip from, though no alcoholic drink were.offered at any other time. | ‘Oh, if those Sunday School teachers | had taught me the strong lessons of total abstinence, in (God‘s Word, as ; faithfully as they taught me the eabe-i chism and the creed, I should have known that the eggâ€"nog was dangerous aud the claret lemonade a snare. _ If I ' had been instructed and warned by | those who have done it, when [ was a ; little, innoceat child, I should not be the sinful, wretched creature I am stationâ€"bouse and the jail than with the house of God. The chapel was in darkâ€" ness exeept for the light which came from the church, and showing the decâ€" orations all in place. On each end of the platform was a tall fir tree, awaiting the candy bags and wax candles to transform them inâ€" to the Christmas tree so dear to the childish heart, uh idsA omm Amettelh Three years hndflpsssed since he had entered that church. Near the front was the fimily pew where he had so often sat with his parents, and he could catch the gleain of the ‘silver plate inscribed with his father‘s name. Stepping over the piles of evergreen, he went into the chapel where he had not lreen to Sunday School since he was a tiny tot in the primary class,and until he was sixteen years of age. Now he was nineteen and for three years he had been better acquainted with the‘ stationâ€"bouse and the jail than with the| house of God. The chapel was in darkâ€"| Pushing open the door, he looked in. A few side lights made it very bright near the pulpit, and, seeing no one, he entered and stood over the register until the numbness left his feet and hands and he felt quite warm. ’ The ‘trampish‘ fellow, as Willis ca led him, again sought the shelt the friendly vestibule, He hbad felt the warm air n& opened the inner door, »ud a 1 see so still witrhin that he felt sure no was there, _ Ha longed to go in f little while and get some warmth bis chilled frame. but they drew their \ stenped ‘along brigkly said Millis'Cln_y, looki Td like to know what that tramp ish looking fellow was doing in there, Cl t ramnlneliee o w Wrapped in their warm garments‘I they started, and as they stepped into. the difuly lighted vestioule, they alâ€"| most stuinbled over a crouching fig ure, | from whose lips came muttered upology!’ as he quickly moved out »nd shrank | close to] the church wall in the gathâ€" | ering gloomn. | | _ __ 1 ~J°°OCB *Cvf o pul up when they come from supper.‘ ‘The old 1â€"dy at the corner may have some left,‘ said Lena Price. ‘Let‘s run out and get it‘ Three merry young people, two girls aod a boy, sat on the pulpit steps twinâ€" ing wreaths and weaving garlands of evergreen, for toâ€"morrow would be the an:iversary of the Savior‘s birth. ‘I must have holly to make one more wreath,‘ s«aid Grace Merton ; ‘for Miss Adams and tre others will expect to tind everything ready to put up when they come from supper.‘ | Boys, Come in, and Have a Good Time P iea in anguish, and sinking e floor, rested his kead on ed seat, while tears of sorâ€" repentance fell from his longed to zo in for a sought the shelter of wraps closer and > warinth into a l seemed Willis bad as they ‘ 10 P C 62 â€" [ Venenibted, r;puidq- them one.;of the |** "I‘s ;"ifle ?"ï¬â€œ poht: o mcls c y || most usefal \medical ‘combinations ‘of | Astus inkley4" "Who‘s |; Well, you may talk as you like about | th® day. â€"© |~ â€". <| ... i/ . . | de spellin‘ for yert" | "Tse Mrs. Lissener, but she‘@‘ a woman ‘that | ""Mr. H. C.: Paterson;ot Mesors.Masorâ€" Pï¬jmlm’-' T‘s6é gw knows her businese,‘. ‘"I admit that, | 0t 4& Co., wholecsale"grooors>sayst_.«f | wif ‘tamé‘as ‘de‘u mhg;n‘:; bjectio &ba»!ï¬md :::‘found 8| ’b‘»P (hrl)fl*; mmws.qumbm ut I o '“ F wto "fl f M Btlic f \ ‘M 3"‘; DARLE : us [AAAY sp > 306 dtt4 Wel), you may talk as you like about! Mrs. Lissener, but she‘s‘a woman that knows her businese,‘. ‘"I adrmit tliat, and have no objection to bet kiowing. xure; | and pool tables. If 1 could speak to ology pevery mother in the city, I would say : rank |©Make your boys have such jolly, good gath: | times at home, thas they would rather | be there in the evening than any where ANDâ€" | elge,‘ * one How to Get a : Sunlight Picture, Send 25 "Bunlight" Soap wrappers wrapper bearing the words "Why Does a Woman Look Ola Sooner Than a Man") to Lever Bros, 43 Scott St., Toronto, and you will receive by post a & pretty picture, free from advertising, and well worth framing. ~This is an easy way to decorate your home. ‘The soap is the besc in the market and it will only cost le «postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefully. 1ly, ; ‘Oh !"‘ she exclaimed. and shut door on him. and tired out by the tTi::ewI find thing to do I can‘t do it.‘ HOOD‘S PILLS are purely â€" not purge, pain or gripe. 25¢, Hood‘s garsaparilia builds up the shattered syeâ€" tem by giving vigorous action to the digestive organs,creatimg.anfappetite and purifying the blood. It is prepared by modern methods, posâ€" sesses the rreatest curative powers,and has the moset wonderful record of actual cures of any medicine in existence. Take only Hood‘s _ And they are ‘Into the jaws of of hell !â€"Youth ner. As I look from my window at this moment, I see outlined against the clear sky, the spires of no less than a dozen churches, within whose walls are only silence and darknees, while the multitude of brilliant saloons, echoâ€" ing with music and mirth, are temptâ€" ing the boys to "come in and have a good time.‘ f ’ There were two or three dozen around the door, and wit an hour forty were inside, at,t,ractem the muâ€" sic and the sounds of merriment. The lhappiest person there, excepting Grace Merton, was young Percy Gray, no longi & trampish fellow, but a reâ€" formed ag verted boy, who resolvâ€" ed on that New Year‘s night that he would do what he could to {bring the boys into that happy and thelpful place | _ The girls vo‘unteered to furnish muâ€" sic. _A special collection was taken to ,'defm.y expenses. The games and books and temperance mottoes were procured, |and withio fifteen minutes after the | transparency was displayed, which | read : | _ But it was decided that boys were of more value than carpets, and sou)s | more than coal or gas. The young men of the church offered to take turns in caring for the visitors each evenâ€" ng. §R ecooant _ Th« ofticial bo«rd of the church held a long and earnest discus«ion over the proposition to keep the chapel open four nigh*s every week tor the benefit of the bays and young men. One said ‘it would wear our the carpets _ Anâ€" other said ‘it would increase the coal and gas bills.‘ The deacon‘s house sheltered the young penitent that night, and the next day be returned l;?,une to receive a glad welcome from his parents. 5. ( C CfEE0C 3600 JHH | _ Startled by the strange voice and ‘solemn words. every one turned and saw standing in the door of the chapel, a haggard, shabby youth whom Grace recoguized at once. He told how he came in during their absence and fell asleep, awakening in tim? to hear her pleading for the boys. ‘Yes, he continued, ‘boys will always go where they expect to have the best time and the ramsellers ï¬now it, and tempt them with bright lights, music. ‘mnd some‘imâ€"s sandwiches a.mi eoffee. | |I believe it would keep inany ‘boyut: ; from becoming tramps, for they would | tind is so much nicer here than in the ,wbiskey-shopa and other bad places ‘ _ | ‘You epeak the solemn truth. God kngws you do.‘ iï¬l‘ ey are going;going-â€"going jaws of dea_t:,h, into the mouth Youth‘s Tel'npel ance Banâ€" When Others Fail Why He Didn‘t vegetable, and. do anyâ€" the know of othérs who buvor"be;;e;;:ll; benefitted.. â€" I gonsider them ong;of the moot‘:betul Hiedical ioombmflom lons: of the day. *‘ Eo he . br? “ilrnlj Ox] :wueumlm- ""1ver) Fowders pérsonally and in my family, as they have afforded me perâ€" fest relief from the most distresing sick beadaches which frequently inâ€" :sp.cit_:hdL. from doing business.* I _ Mr. 8. F, Works, says too strong to fects I have | of R.Stark‘s Liver) Pow family, as th fect relief f sick bead Well known Lotâ€"ldon People say LizzteE DE Armokp. Delaware County, Pa. Work is healthful,but we should like to cease our labors long before the last heauy fadeth,and not renew them again until many beamse had made their apâ€" pearance in the eastern sky.* There is such a thing as swallowing a camel,and many a woman who is old and querulâ€" ous when only in her prime, is the viéâ€" tim of this striving to turn into a machâ€" ine what the Lord intended to be a liv-l iog, breathipg,human being. 2. was a marvel of cleanliness,and even ’t'oher dearest friends a visit to that immaculate dwelling was a trying orâ€" deal. In the first place the inistress overwhelmed you with apologies for her dirty house, then, seizing a aamp cloth, went over every inch of carpet your feet had traversed, then when you thought her settled, she would make flying trips to various parts of the room, bringing to light aluost invisible threads, &c. You feared to move lest some particles of dust might emanate from your clothing. Mrs. P.‘s husband, an easyâ€"going, goodâ€"natured mun, was a carpenter, and she persuaded him to build an outâ€"kitchen to save the one al ready in use, which had only been erected a short time, and was found to be entirely too good to use. The house was making a beeâ€"line for the stable when we left the neighborhood,and proâ€" bably would have reached it if Mrs. P. had not been stricken with a ner. vous fever and shuffled off this mortal | coil, leaving ker husband to the tender mercies of two cheery,rolyâ€"poly oldâ€"maid sisters, whose bright bome seemed like Parudige to the much lookedâ€"after man. band. She owned a small but comfortâ€" able house, surrounded by an acre of highly cultivated land, and at the terâ€" minus of the yard was a tine barn, in which reposedjnightly asteek cow. Mrs. This is an age of progress, and some may ho‘d up their hands in horror at the ide« of resting when thire is so much work to do But tell me how many women die of broom disease and ecrubbing fever and baking on the brain, who might at this very moment be rejoicing the hearts of their families with their kindly presence. I know a lady who was considered a perfect housekeeper, whose family consiuted of a cat, a parrot, a halfâ€"grown girl whowm she had taken to bring up, and her husâ€" â€"a picture that none but the fingers of God can trace. d | _ There is a pretty hyimn called"Work for the Night is Comiupg," that has kept d | step wï¬ch us from the days of our childâ€" d | hood; then we sung it without thinking , | of the}ords, but now what a pitiful e | thing we feel that line to be which say 8, e | "Work till the last beam fadeth" ~A 1 | wholesome amount of Jabor is necessary r | to keep us in good trim and prevent that indefatigable gentleman in bluck s | fromfillingour idle digits with mischief, t | There &re those having poor wages and | | large faimilies depending upon the reâ€" : | sults 02 their Iabor whose life is a grind )'â€"n mere treadimill‘ of existence ; for _| these we can only pray that in the great | hereafter they may findfrest aud comâ€" - l peosation for their sufferings below, , I With others, it has become a bad habit growing with their years, this toiling | from egfly moro till late at night, with no time&for anything but the ceaseless round of work that wears out the ner ves and brain, and brings to the tired trame a reetless, unrefreshing sleep, Suppose the windows are decorated with two or three fly specks, »nd the | chiâ€"dren‘s playthings litter the roomâ€" $ taken few moments to read some bright article | that will .furnish _ cheerfal thoughts for many hours, or n sweet ; story, thiat carries you back to the hapâ€" { py days of childhood. Sing &A sony us you pass to and fro, and if your vocal |* chords give forth sounds less tuneful thin your neighbor‘s, if you live in the s country, it will not matter, as the inâ€" j sects, birds and cattle nre too much in.|‘ terested in their own solos, to criticise youre. Cease working hefore the last 1 beam fadeth, seat yourself in that comâ€" b fortable rocking chair on the porch», fold | ) your hands and feast your eyes on the beauties of that glowing sunset, thosé gorgeous tints of purple, crimson and gold scattered so laviehly over the sky, yet blending into one harmonious whole .. Glass, (London Pottery : ‘"No testimonial can be express the beneficial efâ€" experienced from the use (Headache, Neuralgia and KTILL THE LAST BEAM FADETH. Country Gentlemen. PC MOND prostration, :del.ility, relieves mental °_ _|anxiety and hypochondria and induces refreshing sleep." She took the advice and is well. . "Favorite Prescription" le say |is the only reedy for the delicate deâ€" rangements and weaknesses of females, Pottery | sold by c‘lmg , under a positive guarâ€" hen h« Lantam aB ut C200 i6 ::s' 9 Be polite. Every smile, every ¢p | gentle bow is nioney in your pocket. al 10. Be generous. Meanness makes ep | enemies and breeds distrust. ,to 11. Spt?nd less than you earn. Do i@, | bot run into debt.. Watch the little )Je | leaks and you can live on your salary, ro.|, 12. Make all the money ‘you can p, | honestly, do all the good one can with »p_ | it while you live and be your own exâ€" .. j | ecutor. | Asthma curpd, by newly discovered treatment. pamphlet, testimoniâ€" als and referbnces, . address. World‘s ï¬hï¬â€™enymy Medical Avmsociation, Buffaâ€" ® » 1 " i antee of curing ev paid for it returned Affiction sore long time she boré Physicians were in vain." At last one day, a friend did say, ’ *‘You‘d soon be well again" if you would take, as I did, Dr. Pierce‘s Favorite Prekcription. that is the cure for all the pegullar ailments of women. It is a safe, simple and sure remedy, It banishes those distressing maladies that make woman‘s life a burden, curâ€" ing all pninful’;irregulnrities.uterine disâ€" orders, inflammations and ulceration, prolapsus and kindred weaknesses, As a nervine it cbre. mAPVAUNE avhanati~.« 5. Be conscientious in of every duty. Do your IÂ¥. No boy can rise w work,. h 4. Be independent. Do not lean on others to do your thinking or to conâ€" quer your difficulties. _ 2. Work. The world is not going to pay you for nothing. Ninety per cent. of what men call genius is only talent for hard work. | 3. Enter into that business or | brade you like best, and forâ€" which naâ€" | ture seems to have fitted you, provided | it is honorable. ol c i nnmameinet mar) You zan do the same. Here are a dozen rules for getting on in the world. 1. Be honest. Dishonesty seldom makes one rich, when it does, riches is a curse. There is no such thing as disâ€" | honest success. | Most of our succéssful men began life without a dollar, They have won success by hard work aud strick honesty Viaw wae B2 y ce Pb There are a go in life that we c but they are emi and uot dimples. ts Aell es o ofe with a true heart, it seems like baianeâ€" ing a bubble agrinst a wedge of gold. You may set it down as which admits a few except those who ask your opinion re your praise. God bless all good women ! soft hand»= and pitying hearts all come at last. A person is always startled when hears himself called old for the t time. The scientific study of man most difficult of all branches of lecge. / Faith always implies disbelief of lesser fact in favor of a greater. How To Get On In The World. She ruu many tools, but a lie is ha.dia! which fits them ml}. Conl men ilJ know 1 with most men life is like back gamâ€" monâ€" â€"â€"half skill and half luck, Put not your trust in money,but put your money in trust. His Philesophy as Disclosed in Hits Writings Travellers change their guineas, their characters. w 007 00 ooo ioh ue o /T Onentementredennmsme OoLLVER »Wllj!DBl,L HOLMES. When a strong brain An Old Rbhyme Reset i winy stt it down as a truth admits a few exceptions that who ask your opinion really want 1 hypochondria and indqu.., | VOU !0 many victories, it will meet 1 hypochondria and induces’ your wants and needs. For your en leep." She took the advice couragement the following letter from 1. > "Favorite Prescription" | M rs. Fanny M. Huff of Salmon Point, retedy for the delicate deâ€"‘ Ont., is given as a proof of what results ;;(‘!'wuknes:el of females, you may reap, if you use Paine‘s Celery t , under a positive guarâ€" Compound :â€" iring every ease, or money ‘After receiving #so much benefit etairned. from Paine‘s Celery Compound,1 think | S 'it my duty to inform sufferers what urpd, by newly discovered | this great medicine can do for all who pamphlet, testimoniâ€" | wish to regain health and strength. _ I erénces, . address. World‘s | have been a great sufferer for years Medical Avssociation, Buffaâ€" | from nervousness and weakness, and | b, | u4 have had the advice and.attendance of -â€"’k f doctors with but little benefit. I was ‘ j T ies :‘| induced to use your Paine‘s Celery _ '?':‘“ pohtry," said Erâ€" Compound, some time ago, and I mus: byA wb.°' gwine to do confess it is the best medicine I ever Ne Te evibe to Mubt |mad, aihing piaghg en dhen n vo M Aiiimnbdniinnt. dbndnniniadia t â€" hk ce .ri’ng every ease, or money =tlnrned. llg, by newly discovered pamphlet, testimoniâ€" rences, . address. Warlid‘s frs~â€"â€" doet ) write pOhtry,"’ said Er- ind u ;g "Who‘s dï¬ne to do S;::: yert "I’nmwinetodo used ï¬;r“‘ "'i y 'Pbt’ } muci athéas ‘de ‘udder poicks | Pu‘ roversy equalizes fools and wise the same wayâ€"and the fools res nervous exhaustion, pov ul T ‘a good many real miseries we cannot help smiling at, > emiles that make wrinkies 16x , relieves mentui ous in the discharge your work through rise who slights his is weighing To their we wmust when he the firss \ter in your You are at li Cetery GomeoBielny faroy sof & Sovnbnrtratimadialint 6 t bulib id d â€" .Lb T u ‘ Terbré § u6t teVidho. en .l'â€- k n cuie} l they®" can"protlre rs i such good (work,. I cannot ona.l. is the k“')w- are suffering, dear r;u;i‘;r.,mdeluy longer; test the great healer that All troubles quickly roll away when nature‘s great medicine is used. I n the past tens of thousands have used the waters of that unfailing fountain of virtues, and have been made whole. Thousands are testing it toâ€"day, and miraculous results are fruits. If vou | Every ailing, sick and diseased man, ' woman and child must go to the same fountain for cure. There is no fashâ€" ionable‘or royal road for the elite and wealthy of society ; the moble of birth, the titled and affluent must lay hold of the same means for banishing disease and suffering that is so eagerly sought after by those in humbler positions and circumstances. ps As the sun shines on the rich and poor, the righteous and unrighteous, blessing all alike, so does Paine‘s Ceiery Compound give life, health, strength and a fresh lease of life to people of every grade and class who are victims of nervousness, rheumatism, neuralgia dyspepsia, indigestion and liver and kidney troubles. _ the ;'Test its Virtues, Weary | Sufferer. not *‘«Go with thy pains to the fountain Go with thy loed of disease ; Use nature‘s curer and healer, Thou shalt have health, strength an THOUSANDS HAVE BEEN CIVEN A WEW LEASE OF LirE. Paine‘s Celery Compound Heals and Cures, Your Burden of Pain and Suffering will Roll Away. Go to the Fountain, x mc oo seooee on e es td themn as colleagu«s. _ What is to Le tha end of this sort of thing 1 Will women displace men. and b come the stronger and the sterneâ€"sex 1 Do you observe couples, the recent times you are in a fashionable merting p‘ace, and you will see that the majority of inâ€"tances the lady is taller than the gentleman who anccompanies her. . What are you going to do about it ? er equality in the portions of meu aud women and that women have displaced ialhy men as secretaries, clerks and accountants, whilst even the doctors and the lawyers hbave bad to admitg The modern girl has none of the bad h«bits of the modern man. She does not drink cocktai‘s, smoke iccessant cigarettes, play poker until all hours of the night, and engage in the modern forms of dissipation. But whatever may be the cause it is cortain that thereé is a greater equality in size between the young girls and the young men than existed a couple of generations back, We know,too, that there is much great. Decidedly the girls are growing talâ€" ler and bigger, and the youug fellows are becoming shorter, slimwer, weaker a~d more eyeâ€"glasshish, The reasons are tolerably clear By wile n s afthered i. two years vith 4 56. or Leart ; eTer using sanrs semeasee wither:t re! Lish â€" tr diad owicg to this qure aunarsids u! use plaste. . has < L. S@evore B â€"yiee ; Evolution of the Girl. your Fammes Celery o .. es ) time ago, and I mus* H # est medicine I ever . E nu!r'u§m lse has ever done so | PR J 1. oeaighs now feel quite a difâ€" | tmengowith a "puv K I‘s Spavic Cure Peoike, W | B4 [yCane ag im paaentt‘, on & whil\ ‘2“ f K Kendali‘s Fic Je ~ 4 rs truly, cuie le | 0. 9 e $ours Wht § & I cannot Dr. BJJ. Kompiérc RxfAYOF sof Pss sï¬fi have uregio}‘ nemudoes) rieriinno & mend it, j e topublish this let| .. 3538 e | . Enotour NysRe & [ O3 aler that has it will meet For your enâ€" * â€" {' £. Lu} Sold Everywiere, and ease If you KENDALL‘S SPAVIE CURE pared with 1,000,000 bushels during the same month in 1893. Thnis repre sents over 5.000 loaded cars. On Mon: day telegrama were received from dif ferent parts of the Province asking for nearly 500 empty care. Last week‘sre ceipts and shipments at Fort Williat were also the lurgest in the history of the company. P. R. bave during the past two months been tho largest in the history of the company., During September nearly 3,000,000 bushels were taken out, com Winnipeg. O@ct. 17.â€"The Free Pres to:night says : â€"Wheat shipments from 'jlï¬_‘\Orth west to the east over the C Pew Of John Barleycorn,my king The anagram is upon the word "sut tler," which is made to supply the blanks consecutively as follows : Sutler, ulster; lustre, rulest. result and rustle. belong !" _ And the leaves with the song The |_._ FOR MAN OR sEAST. Certain in its effects and never blisters. Â¥ _ Read proofs below : go lecord : As you seem to appreciate glever anagrams, I muke bold to send you an anagram which I regard as par ticularly good : { bhe put both hunds on her on her ‘ brow this time, smiled a bit, sud a ".rupt.)y changed the conversation by say Ing it was wonde:rful lhow yellow t}» lJeaves on the trees were stetting $y ear ly in the season. \_Half an hour later the young man assed on his way to his room and Eunted up & dictionary, e turn« nervously to the O‘s, found ()‘s, and ran his finger down the column unt he camme to ‘ossify.‘ Then he drew hi« hands into the airand shrieked: Grost Beott, and I didn‘t know that ossify means to turo to bone‘ + And he bagn‘t called on gince. :l‘:’fl.[. uAunu‘I. BRBLTRL AMCC 20 PCCC 5 we ued your II‘s Spavin Cur® x ‘m'y L‘ura .: t:m ;::,‘mu and iment I mxm used. Â¥. UoUst FREDERICL Price @1 per Bottic. Porlahbylflbrum or address . B, J, KENDALL COMPAXY, | ENOUBURGH FALLS, VT. *A ( |__Mast keep her | | toms, said the your; | _ Indeed it does, an ] plaints wre ve ry li+u; j other day she came perfect seriousness t| ' ossifvin«. Brown, he replied. 1 think too, gather the meaning of the= r still I do not suppose that, ex rare instances, sych things do o _ EMC;’PomTl-.. l'.,‘ N. .;'j.-.lnn. 15, 18% « 0. m‘i‘;vuncnn landid bay horse some rqw'llh a #pavin. ?xul lm ror $30. I used I‘s Spavic Cure. The Spavin is cono now ve_been offered $150 for the »ame hor#é xlm él.lj\lt- ‘;&‘-knmm I got $120 for using en ‘s Spavin Cure. ‘ rs truly, W. S. Marspg®. ‘8 SPAVIN CURE The young man looked pu laughed a Jlittle, thougt, What a remarkle compiatn suppose it was true, do young woman‘s faze took a pression. I said she enid were ossifjying. The youne min bitl I fully understand wha‘ y\ Yes, she is a crauk . Every day she has some As a matter of fac:, she om woman, strong and be, but she im Agines onl in the erave Yes, putâ€in the 9\â€\', ult sn _ mio~ **5* Se&mon, "‘lki a bit about the threatres ind there q; not seem to be much left. did After the embsrnssing pause of 6 minutes, the girl said: \, Dave t the funniet cook, She Says the t killipg things. © most & trong, g. ‘tt}der >v correepondent writes to the Chics Big Crain Shipments 5C.each. y me here, giv KLAND Drugz of great battles to thee dott A Curious Anagram &1 Looked Up Websherg en ticdit ane al id SuXLSY, MicH., Doc. 16, 189 C o O OR 1 dlidf its wask . te, iy ing eoual satisfaction. DN‘!IN. River Joha, the entuol Plaster c "Gars youns man inm 6 2 viak?, and 1 11 hrough to the Miss Browr h ndu Duut Mc*m new Si‘*bï¬g oA grest byy. ealthy ag Car has one foop took up M9U8ta Z/]rd wl W Ur bobe. 0, that rewark u'r'pt 1 CCut, d We U8 Wer 8t m M 1 Sxi0 Ti FX H+ the it Thie triumph demons ï¬l‘-en cen do when th 'lhyean organize ; Lhej fittacks and the temptat ty "machinists," they c prejudioes and go into ; ed representatives E:I";lsture. U nder no this should‘ mean the a ion of the balance of | though the official ‘ppo ally cut to pieces and t of power was made a )4 the Patrons are in a po many a compromise on t As miglhit se s pect long traingfi to trey . found it n littie moas in to politics an indeper.de self. The '; ifty ib n sleeve and proplcs j would not stick * 12 1 paign begagp to u: trust each other. : Alecks" of party "th afraid that the Torie= them and 1a~ // elections "nailed that of Industry went into with high courage, wit with the consciougness upon experimem‘u & Bruce had shown then win an P](-Cliun, but t the calm between catn j the parties were tillit their old exciting cries ers fought steadily thr upprecedented attempt dl“de them, ana now seletnin.y h Reforin wi‘ inadeou .t solemn \ ; harmies~ | j a body o1 is the cont« farmers q« of party t k0 politic given up v‘ to write p)4 snapper w hi of party | .* going i1 wants to tawa, at seat of what to s liP w arn:* imng inkt! £XREpUI :: three fo. and nu it so THE FARMERS of phying the part c wl xn me. Thev n to the fact that the hold all Canadian y hollow of theaar horn it does not hecome t ore when they shou. ï¬g census showk t/ clase ie epormou®=‘y | er one C"!~ pnotike most | supertic‘al 6x The fermers of Can we in tOhe Woestors d Bot as boys.: The take such a positic inion Parliament t aet like command: ry at Beautiful Plia the movement is 1 rio. It is the cue il politician to al g ; and the mom proven their stre will be tumbling Mont