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Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 27 Jun 1895, p. 2

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$€5 15 +1 its s B4 mo t\\'ent_\' years went l)y~I mq.rked them by the merry Christmasâ€"timeâ€" and something happered. I could not guess what it was at first. The talk was ail a riddle to me. But I knew the colonel was going away. I saw him stanging in the great parlor in his uniform. His sonâ€"the baby who had toddled in to say ‘papa‘ when I first cameâ€"stood beside him, dressed as he was, and as tall as be. His wife wept on his shoulder ; the servants moaned and sobbed; and black Jim knelt down at his feet. + ‘Take me‘long ob you, Kunnel,‘ he said, ‘take me ‘long ob you. Don‘t go to de wah and l:;wo ole Jim. Who take care ob you if you gits burt, Kunâ€" nel } Take me ’long.y i mureft me as mucl i ten fhe t â€"wers of t rich flowers daintil: first frtend, old bla« the windows and se one.‘s portrait, we c 11 part n ts pr> that I Tale e gave a ard I knew t I felt a tlush t1i% A Wiay. My th 1t W T that there was a great noise 1 boped T should not | to be wripped in a cl erâ€"the glimpse of life I ha found interesting, and very when at last, amidst cries of kunne‘s portrait ! De kuno done come home " frame 14 p! ‘th &1 ‘D Agalio *My kurn, Mars Ad â€"ms And theo a mist cleared away, and I saw a sniny black fice looking at me; two biack yes, like those of kine; a full se: of ivory teeth, revea‘ed by the wide parting of thick lips in the langh tha Nl‘4'll'llp|l|i6‘.'4 exer y p!â€"a-al-lr- tmoâ€" tion in a fullâ€"»leoded negro ; a fi ({mose and a head of kinky wool. ‘Lthink it is a likeness myself,‘ said somebody else. T A p I was painted years ago. The first I knew of myseif I neard some one 8ay : ‘Wal, dat am se kuonel heself,sartin ahore. Jes de herry lâ€"af in his ayes. You done bewitch de kunpvel into det yar canvas sartiu sho, Ma«rs Adsams, Adams But the colonel said : ib W Y C \I t} ams _ ‘Hold it so, and don‘t hit the ne against anything, and do not oa{ainst m._\l)lul_\'.‘ Wid de kunnel ? cried Jim. *No, : ouo, aab. â€"T‘se keerfal on de kunâ€" you be sho.‘ With which words | teok in= carefu‘ly from the ense',l pred me in & cloth, and4 carried me | Sil M I thick myse 9 U ‘No, Jim, ‘!ycn must Take care of the OLoOoNEL Sf)ORTR‘“T old home. You must take care of your e mistress. . You must take my place unâ€" | til I come back, boy, I and Frank, me as muci e t «wers of owers daint rend, old bl easanter U n innel, <ill, i vple muam it i"Nsom )n taat randsome room is on« of the lucky ones » sort of reception for BY MARY KYLE DALLAS. the t pdod sar 11x t horn it {R€ 1CL asaCu cc,‘ said she, a attle weilâ€"sa that he was vouf prude in d <» handsome~ laims, sah," lcah. am d casant laucht ing very carefal,Jim. s«id Mr. oid it so, and don‘t hit the t anvth‘ng. and doâ€" not orvants brought ureat ses and set them upon a wall beneath my frame first they wereadoight, me by fading so soon, d used to run in and say looked up at me ; and fore Black Jim put out stood before me and sa woOrt elf es, who contint lat am de kunr Kunnel, d ef it is the best likeness . oraid Lm”, fair man, in i jacket and a little blue ) sing gracefully, with a & p\”(v‘(, a litle farther e colonel has a very d ot is easier to cateh idl at ts easter hin if it was le well satisfied Taingb, | \he was my original, | priude in being the por» | wdsome man, and one ’ he sâ€"eimed to be ; and | me by a red cord over | : bandsoumw~rooiw. I felt | L s the garden ly cared f. ick Jim, n« eemed f o. TS SAY the pi How you done do i§ carn‘t teli for de good NA over and over again: it, could you have in t the tire of n ON Olt is the guests de in thisâ€"a gsweeter :fl"fi, flCCUlH?}IV\.\' piano, they look It that lht'y »d I did them. Of garden outsideâ€" Th ven‘: on, with the while; daneâ€" f young people, 6 older people. tire of winter d t 10 came t M me the the soft voice U al l ion for some p 1 the negro rry harusom sinnv. sah sartin shc rood Lord *, un4 the bearth lit fuf Groat In U[Ull A m y frame a doight. ’llll 1) W f¢ )umMON euan my into Colâ€" reâ€" Dat the t | _ Me lay there, and I looked down upâ€" on him, and his marble face seemed | wontinually to say, ‘[ am not like my | portrait any more,.‘ T looked and lookâ€" | ed, and strange,awful thoughts came to | me. ‘And when at last they took him '; aw»\v{ again, after solemn ceremonies, I | said With horror I have no words for: ‘I‘s got ng mo‘,‘ said old Jim, with a groan.~ ‘I‘s got nuffin but myself. I ask dese good gentlemen, one of ‘em, ‘Tenâ€"Mars Jobsonâ€"ten,‘ cried a vcerce T knew. ‘I‘s got ten dollars. I offer ten. . I‘s right hea, Mars Jobson, saly wid de money in my pocket,‘ It was old black Jim. ‘Ten; I am offered ten,‘ said the aucâ€" tioneer,. ‘Fifteen,‘ shouted a sharp voice. _ ‘That‘s a picture dealer from Richâ€" mond,‘ said a man near me. ‘It‘s a good thing, or he‘d not offer.‘ Again Jim‘s voice arosé. ‘Twenty, Mars Jobson. I‘s got sabâ€" in‘s. Twentyâ€"here I isâ€"twenty.‘ ‘Twenty five,‘ cried the dealer. ‘Twentyâ€"cight,‘ said! black ‘Jim. ‘Mars Jobson, dat‘s my kunnel‘s pictâ€" ure, dat ar is. 4 is ready to |gib all I has. : Twentyâ€"eight. I‘s de kunnel‘s own budyâ€"servant, Mars Jobson. I needs that picture.‘ i There were no Christmas festivities to mark the years as they crept by. But dgne day they flung the shutters open, _ Men‘s feet tramped through the house. _ Women came and swept and sc\:urid and dusted. They looked more into» the room, And they set up a platâ€" form there. _ Y heard them say there |was going to be an auction,; and at h;‘ people gathered, and the aucâ€" tioneer stood on the platform before im desk. Each thing was sold to the highest bidder. I was looking on, wonâ€" dering, when at last he Wurned to me, and pointing, said : . Again those â€" solemn ceremonies. Again i white face I did not know, Then darkeess and dustâ€"dust that lay on everything, and made all gray ut last. And there was na sound, save when the swallows fluttered in the chimney, or one of the strings of the piino parted with a twang. How long I do not know. ‘How much am I offered for this fine portrait of a gentleman? How much do I hear? Fiveâ€"five! How can anyone have the ¢onscience to offer five dollars for a head by Adams. Ten; do I hear ten ? . ‘Now, whoso shall wish to colonlel mus: look at me. I an is left of him.‘ The widow came Or tv.i ¢B, each (lfl.}' 8 1y 'J‘hun they saic too. / was full of soldiers, who sat about the tloors, and ate and drank and slept there They cut up the carpets for blankets ; the beauty of the room van: ished before them. _ But once when a soldier bad lifted his bayonet to run me through, an officer struck it out of his hand, ‘It‘s only the portrait of a confoundâ€" ed reb,‘ said the man. 4 )} an officer and gentleman, though we do not think alike,‘ said the officer: fand h noble man, if it is a good likeâ€" ness. | _ Besides it is the best head I ever saw,., Asa work of art it should be honored.‘ > .As dawned I could see men fighting outside, dropping wounded or dead to the ground ; and for a while the house My mistress rushed shriâ€"kirg into the room, followed by her maid. Jim jJâ€"ined them. He besouzht them to seeck safety in the cellar. I think he touk her there ; shortly after a shell explod d outside, I learned the name of these things by hearing them spoken of ; and I knew that this was war. â€"a red glare fHashed through the win doa&s. ‘1 comes to repart, Kunnel. I is doâ€" ing my duts, massa ; I is doin‘ my duty. God bless aud care for you and It was very sad*in those days, but it w«s« to be still «sadder. (Jne night I heard strange soun ‘sâ€" the firing of cannon, the shouts of men ‘Oh ! de kunoel! oh, de kunnel and Mars F auk ! Dey is gone furebber ; dey is gone forebber ! After that no one came to the great paslor to sing or play. Only the colâ€" one‘s wife stole in and looked at me, and kiâ€"sed at me, night and morning ; and ev.ry night came Jiim with his. £aâ€" luate ; =«nd now he said these worda : i. ) InlssUs And then the roum was empty, and I heard them ride away ; and wails folâ€" lowed them down the hill, and 1 heard a negro woman shriek : Then Jim rose up. ‘Trus‘ me, Kumovel,‘ he said, ‘trus‘ me. No barm kin come to mistress, bor to de ole place dat my life kin stand between, Lord Jesus helping ow came and kissed me once ach day walking more feebâ€" they said that she was dead ) words for : i to see the I am all that it might get past medicine dealers. Don‘t Tobacco Spit or Smoke Your Life Away is the truthful, startling title of a book about Noâ€"Toâ€"Bac, the harmleâ€"s guaranreed tobacco havit cure that braces np jicotinized nerves, eliminates the nicotine(;mism,makes woak men gain strength, vizor and manhood, â€" You run no physical or financial risk, as Noâ€"Toâ€"Bac is sold by Dr. MeEacherr:, Linwood, O: t., under guar antee to cure or money ‘refunded. HBHook %re(-. Ad.lswxlmg Remedy Co., 374 St. Paul St., Monâ€" treal. «> Stark‘s Powders, each package of which contains two preparations, one in a round wooden box, the cover of which forms a measure for one dose. an immediate relief for Costiveness,Sick Headache an i Scomach, also Neuralgia and all kinds of nervous pains, and another in capsules, (from } to 4 of one is an ordinary dose) which acts on the Bowels, Liver and Stomach, forming a never failing perfect treatment for all Head and Stomaci complaints. They do nct, as most pills and so many other medicines do, lose iheir effect or produce after constipaâ€" tion, theylar? nice to take. 257 a box at all o oge a se 2 U8 Man is the merriest, and most joyâ€" ous of all the species of greation. Above and below him all are serious.â€"Addiâ€" son. A Milton has carefully marked, in his Satan, the intense selfishness which would rather reign in hell than serve in heaven.â€"Coleridge, Infamy is whose it is received. If thou art a mud wall, it will stick ; aif marble it will rebounrd.â€"Quarles. No man ever did a designed injury to another, but at the same time he did a greater tohimself{.â€"â€"Hume. He fancies himself e‘nlightened be cause he sees the deficriences of others; he is ignorant because he has never reâ€" flected on his own :â€"Bulwer. I have played the fool, the gross fool to believe the bosom of a friend would bold a secret mine own could not sonâ€" tain. â€"Massinger. «©Doctor, I have an important physioâ€" logical question to ask you. When I stand on my head the blood rushes ‘inâ€" to my head. Now, when I stand on my feet, why does it not rush into my feet?" «Because your feet are not holiow."â€" New York World. In the works of man, as in those of nature, it is the intention which is chiefly worth studying.â€" Goethe. Selfâ€"denial is the result of a calm, deâ€" liberate, invincible attachment to the highest good.â€"G.Spring, . The men of action are, after all only the unconscious instruments of the men of thought. â€"Heine. Good intention will no more make a truth than a good mark will make a good â€" shot.â€"Spurstowe. Great mistakes are often made like great cables,from a multitude of strands â€"Husgo. Ses no w en e e on t stt . og n mcce Strive to do thy dutJ: then thou shalt know what is in thee.â€"Goethe. Justice is the great interest of man on earth,â€"Daniel Webster, What morality requirgs true stateâ€" manship should accept â€"Buake. Shun the inquisitive, qor you will be sure to find him leaky.â€"Horace Grains of Gold. The true life of main is in society.â€" Simmg. > The deeper the sorrow the less ton gue it has.â€"â€" Talmud. Cararee Reurivep m 10 But what he siys at night, for J hear him in the dark, is : ‘God bless Mars Ei4wards !* At dusk, Jim carmed me home through pine woods and past tobacco fields to a little hut of one room. Some striw in the corner, by way of a bed, a table, a chair, aod an old trunk for furâ€" nirure. _ And there he hung me where the light of the window f.lis upon me, ud I can see myself in a broken look:â€" ingâ€"gylass that stands upon i‘s sill. Tuere I Fanyg still, aod every morning. before blick Jim goes to work, he stands be fore me and says : ‘I‘s come to report, Kuanel. I‘se waitin‘ fur de cali‘ ,*No you won‘t,‘ said the man. ‘It‘s a rresent. I‘d bave bought it for myâ€" self if I hadn‘t bought it for you. I loved the colonel like a brother. Shake hands, Jim. Your beart is as white as your face is black. I bhonor you.‘ ‘Sure as dere‘s a heaben, you‘ll get dar, mars,‘ said Jim. * _ The dealer turned away. Jim went up to the buyer undrkissed his band. for to buy it. : I‘ll work it out, U nuw Iing and honest. Everybody knows oleJim. m m Buy my kannel‘sportraitâ€"buy it, fur| ___â€" | de Iubobdolonr;“ â€" Very oft ‘Forty,‘ said a man near by. ‘I bid |cles on ‘Ho for Jitm.‘ ers on the f ‘Lord bless you !‘ said Jim. ‘|are written ‘Fifty,‘ said the dealer. and often b ‘Seventyâ€"five, I am ready to go on | with farm r as long as youâ€"can, Jim has got to | to tell you ! have the colovel, and I‘m the richest | was. iuduce man aroand here,‘ said the man who|farm life t was bidding against bim. . may see pos _‘I‘ll work it out honest,‘ said. he ; ‘honest, Mars Edwards.‘ 2 rg: her."â€"Washington 1}â€" Reading is companionship, education culture, No one can babitually read the best books without being : unconâ€" sciously educated. No man knows huâ€" manity or history who does not know literature. fik q C K m Only a fact producable at a moment‘s warning from within the four walls of your own skuil is veritably your possesâ€" sion, and only a thought which you have struck for yourself can truthfally be called your own. To form the habit of indeper dent thinking it will not suffice to read another man‘s ideas; but these must be weighed anu sifted by a an exploration of their premi‘ses and consequences. 4 ." 4 i uinsl â€" ABitddiaintntntii ts t tds ioh 8 d d at d c F43A 3A 4C ed on his back, he wou‘!d ride to the barns where, instead of neglect and a dirty stall, as is often the case with cattle, a careful grooming and & nice bedded stall waited for themâ€"shrift the result.â€"N. E. W., in Country Genâ€" tleman. Bishop Vincent says. "One page of good literature a day, thoughtfully read must p:oduce beneficial intellectual reâ€" sults." Another observes, "Know a few books well rather than many books indifferently. Intensive is better than extensive oading." N o opr PaPiE SPDAGE aake Aict dsb 420 c d s1 00 .0 B n 70 by all drugflsts throughout the world. Be sure gnd ask for "Mrs. Winstow‘s SootHING SYRUP M is. WINsLW‘s SooTHING SyÂ¥RUP has been used by millions of mothers for their children while teething. _If disturbed at ni#ht. and broken of your rest by :}:sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth send at once an get a bottle of *"Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup" for Children Tecthing. It will rel‘eve the poor little sufferer immediately Depend :\pon it n‘l?theis. there is no mistake about it $ed Oigar e nogn t en e eey en mt‘ op ENT o comnind T Ahantiadndie MB cic flsA ids cd ts 403023 1 It cures Diarrhoea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic. softens the Gums, reduces Inflammation, and gives energy to the whole system."Mrs. Winslow‘s Sooth"lg Syrup‘ aor children tecthing is pleasant to the taste fnd is the prescription of one 0; the oldest ard best female physicians and nurses in the United §mtfis;' Pri(_:e't\:'fnly-flve cents a bottle, Sold fiuht iob mouiidve darille disks ANLAdictk ae DUUCIC, As they became merchantable, they were his to sell when he chose, and th» money obtained his to useâ€"invest ag«in or put in bank as he saw fitâ€"gonerally kept invested in cattle as mot profitâ€" able. Onceor twice I have lent him money to buy a particularly promising pair before he tliought his others were quite fitted for the market,un?y thus trading he has acquired the "Gabit of judging ‘points‘ in cattle that some men many years his senior would be glad to possess, _ As he grew older I told him he might have the last two Winters of his minority to himself, if he would help me Summers. As they grew up, he broke them to drive, and from the time they were four till now they or their representatives (purchased by proceeds of their saie) have made the wajor part of the workâ€" ing team of my farm, so that what was given him as @ privilege brought profit to myself as well. ‘ In 1874 my bo'yrr given at birth $10 for his name, which I put at 6 per cent. interest for him. When he was eight ycars old he liked to help me c«re for the cattle, and one black steer calf he bhad taken quite a fancy for. As I at that timé was in need of a few dol‘ars wnich I intended to raise by seiling the calf, and except for that I could keep it as well as uot, I proposed to bim he ‘buy my calf and one of our neighbor‘s that would match it, and o have some stock of his ownâ€"a proâ€" position quickly accepted, and from that time wito ownershtp came & quickâ€" ened interest in ail the work of the farm, but particularly in comfort of the antma‘s in Winter and to increase productiveness of the fields in Sumâ€" mer that he could have sufficient to feed them as he likd through the Winter. s ers on the furm,‘ and raany times they are written by those who inve no sons, and often by those quite unacquainted with farm requirements I should like to tell you how one New England boy was. iuduced to become interested in farm Jlife that perhaps other farmers may see possibilities for their sons for mutual benefit. I £oea ,#,} fls o | A ¢ wles so 0 o0 00 Eds e $ s $"4 Very often we see in the papers arti L_ For Over Fifty Years 8 Kead1g the sons of ftarmâ€"| Mr. G. T. Fulford‘s Return From press is the greatest educative influence }ol.thod&y. Where do you suppose the culture of Brockville would be without the Rrcorpsr! Now, ‘it‘s not the two cents per copy that pays ‘But iour advertising has been very extensive ? ‘Ob, cprtainly. But exactly for that reason we could never afford to do it if we had to depend on first alone. It is the sales on recommendation of those who use|the pills that pay, and if the recommendation were not there I would bj bankrupt in a very short time. All the game, the advertising is a big item, and I consider the Pink Pill busiâ€" ness a public education department on that nt alone.‘ : The r wanted to know where once u:6 them again, and recommend them to others, that we begin to see daylight there; and the case is the same the world over.‘ ‘How do you account for the wa.y! Pink Pills have -J'umpe;y the Engush{ market then ? ‘I cannot attribute it in reasonable | logic to anything but the merits of the | pills. For, consider, in France. which | I have just been opening up, it cost in | advertising somewhere between thirtyâ€" 1 five and forty francs to sell every 3% | franc box of pillsâ€"first sales that is . sales direct from the advertisements, we should be losing frow six to ten dol. | lare on every box sold. It is because | the peoé]e who have used Pink Pills ‘Does Grest Britain do its share in the business ? asked a reporter, A ‘Yes I think we have had a record there, _ The bead of a leading advertisâ€" ing agency in London to whon: I showâ€" ed my figures told mu that no business of the kind had ever reached the same dimensions in Eogland in as short a time ; for though we have only been working in England two years, there there are but t xo medicines there that have as large a sale as Pink Pills, and one of these is over thirty years old, while the other has been at work at least half that time.‘ ‘It is the best twelve month‘s busiâ€" ness y¢t,. Look fora minute at whut the fighres mean. _ If all the pills were turned| out into a heap, and a person set to count them, working ten hours a day, and six days a week,the job would takeâ€"I have reckoned itâ€"4 years, 21 days, 6 hours and 40 minutes, counting at the rate of 100 a minute. Or reckâ€" oning lf another way, it meins about about & hundred and fiftyâ€"seven pills for each minute of the twelve months occupied in selling them. Or, if you want further statistics, it is somewhere about two pills a head for the combinâ€" ed adult population of Canada, Great Britain, Ireland and the United States. If the pills sold last year were made up into necklaces of fifteen inches long, there would be a necklace for every woman in Canada, and leave some conâ€" siderable pills over, And very pretty necklaces they would make, if you stop to think of it,‘ said Mr. Fulford, with the air of one who contemplates an arâ€" tistic triumph in the jewelry line. The reporter stopped to think of it, while Mr. Fulford added, ‘I don‘t give these figures to glorify the business, you will understand, but to enable you to make the facts tangible to an ordinary readâ€" er.‘ ; it T ‘Pretty good. We have sold in the past twelve months a little over two inillion, three hundred and sixty thouâ€" sand %‘XOB of Pirk Pills.‘ ‘That is a pretty large order, isn‘t *Well,‘ he said, in reply to a question ’ ~ The reporter wus silent in the pres: on the status of the Pink Pill business | ence of this educative ‘miracle‘ but re in France, ‘of course it iso‘t altogether , quired turther information as to the an easy matter to introduce a foreign | state of trade. Waseverything lovely, article into a strange market,especially | he asked, or were there any crumpied where there is as much conservatism as | roseâ€"leaves in the couch ? there. _ But I don‘t think we can comâ€"| _ ‘Can‘t grumble excopt in one way. plâ€"in of the progress made,on the whole ! There‘s a certain. amount of substituâ€" aud it is gratifying to report that some, | tion in somâ€" retail stores, and there is at least, of the Paris doctors are open & man in Manchester, England, that I to recognize a medicine of which the have had to prosecate on the criminx]l ‘intrin:ic merits can be ‘demonstrated charge for it.‘ & to them. One of the best of themâ€"at | _ ‘But what do the substitutors doâ€" Verâ€"ailles, the Paris suburb where the do they duplicate your formula under Eqiperors used to keep their courtâ€" | some other name? has given favorable testimony through | _ ‘No, not & bit of it; that is the worst the press of quite wonderful cures feature of the fraud. No retailer can through the use of Pinok Pills in his| possibly know what islin Pink Pills ; practice ; and the Religieuses, an order | and if he did he couldu‘t prepare them of Nuns like the Sisters of Charity,have , in small quantities to sell it a proâ€" also made an extensive use of Pink fit. They are not common drugs, and Pills in their charitable work, and givâ€" ! by no means cheap to make. T suppose en strong testimonials gs to their good | I have spent anywhere from ten to effects,‘ i twelve thousiand dollars, since J ficst ‘How doâ€" you find . business all | touk over the trade mark, in trying if round |? ‘ the formula could be improved, and ‘Pretty good. We have sold in the ' spent a share of it for nothing.‘ A Record Reporter‘s Interesting Inâ€" terview With Himâ€"Some Statistics And Information of General Value. Mr. G. T. Fulford, who is understood to have been doing big things in Paris during the past winter and spring, inâ€" troducing Ir, Williams‘ Pink Pills, reached home an Friday last with his his family, Mr Fulford hes taken Mrs, Field‘s handsome residence in the east end for the sumwer;, and was found there on the eveningâ€"of his‘arrival by a RecorpeEr reporter,and asked to give an account of himself. . The World‘s Gayest City. the press. â€" The newspaper °C mmo 38 BC uomgr' t > £C. lessons at t uld be| . , l":‘“& w Iw, it‘s | . c+d at pays | _ Oldâ€"Boarderâ€"What do raluable | sir, by asking me to loan;y i6 ‘code | doo‘t khow you. aie. oo Ein the ) That‘s who 1 ack vou _‘ i. "I understand that Freddy is gett ing ready to be married." «What is be doing!t" "Taking lessons at the cooking. At this juncture the Island City band put in an appearance to serenade Mr. Fulford and family, and the reporâ€" ter drifted out among the crowd that had followed to Jlisten to the sweet strains of their music. 1 went to Paris last winter I placed my l formula aud a supply of Pink Pills in ‘the bhands of one of the most noted doctors in that city for a three months trial in his practice, with a view to getâ€" E ting suggestions for improvement ; at the end of that time his answer was leave it alone it caonot be bettered. You now have a prerfect blood and nerve medicine.‘ This opinion cost me 10,000 francs, but I consider it money well spent, as it determines the fact that the formula for Pink Pills is now as perfect as medical science can make it. And coming back to the question of substitution and imitations ; what I bave just told you will show what a poor thing it is for a man who goes to & store for Pink Pills to let something else be pushed on to him in place of themâ€"more especially if it is a worn out thing like Blavd‘s pillsâ€"a formula in the French pharmacopeia, that has been & back number for years until a few storeâ€"keepers tried to push in on the strength of Pink Pill advertising. You can take it from me that a storeâ€" keeper who tells anyone that Biland‘s pill (which is not a proprietary at all, anyone can make it that wants to) is in any way a substitute for Pink Pills is an ignoramus and never ought to be trusted to sell medicine at al}. A drugâ€" gist as ignorant as that certainly ien‘t ‘ fitto put up a prescription, and will poison someone one davy.‘ _ ‘After T acquired the trade mark 1 |saw that if the thing was to be made a | auceess it wasâ€" imperative that I should i have the best tonic pill that could be gotten up. Consequently I obtained the advice and opinion of the most noted men in medicine in Montreal and New Yorkâ€"and expert advice of that sort comes high. 1 made the chanâ€" ges in my formula suggested by these medical scientists, and the favor with which the public has received the mediâ€" cine, demonstrates that it is the most perfect biood builder and nerve tonic known. However, J was anxious to stiil further improve the formula, if that could be done, and have since spent a great deal of money with that epd in view, On going to London, two years ago, to place Piuk Pills, 1 went into it again, with the best mediâ€" cal men there, and, as you know, the medical expert is not too friendly to proprietary meaicines ; and least of ail to & good one ; and I don‘t blame the doctors either. It isn‘t good for a business if a man can get for tifty éents medicinethat wi.l do him mors good than $50 in doctoring. Consequently advice came high, but I obtained the best there is,not only on this continent but in London and Paris. 1lf I were to tell you whom I consultedâ€"but that was an honorable condition that 1 shouldn‘t divu‘)ge the names on account of professional etiquetteâ€"you would recognize them «s first rank men, men whosa names are famous all the world over,and talked of by every one. When | _ ‘Can‘t grumble excâ€"pt in one way. ‘There‘s a certain amount of substituâ€" | tion in som«â€" retail stores, and there is a man in Manchester, England, that I have had to prosecate on the criminxl charge for it.‘ § \ _ ‘But what do the substitutors doâ€" do they duplicate your formula under ing‘ ? part of the bill for news and lit rary watter. 1 suppose I have spent anout balf a mill\ion doilars in advertising last year, How much educition do you sup pose that suim has paid for ?‘ * The reporter waus silent in the presâ€" ence of this educative ‘miracle‘ but reâ€" quired turther information as to the state of trade. Was everything lovely, he asked, or were there any crumped roseâ€"leaves in the couch ! id.Boarderâ€"What do you mean, by asking me to loan;you money? I ‘t know sir.. New ~Boarderâ€" t‘s why m you.â€"Detroit ‘Free '\’\fhat do you mean by ‘for noth mss _ A dress that will look well, and at the same time defy rain or dust, would seem to be the ideal after which ladies have betn longing. These merits all meet in Cravenette, Ware,_ proof, but thoroughly porous, thoroughly stylish, while defyinp the deluge from above or the dust from beneath; suitalle cil}or f,, dress, or cloak or wrap,. Cravenette meets a need long jclt. 1 Navy, Myrtle, Brown, Grey, Castor or Black. ‘The ideal costume for spring and summer, < Light and medium weights. ‘Cravenette" cookingâ€" § Waterloo County Chronicle. Barred Plymouth Rocks, White Plymouth Rocks, Black and EBrown Leghorns Indian Games, Partridge Cochins. Buf Cochins. Pekin Bantams Send orders early and secur I Prices Reasonable. Satâ€": ; Fine Cocker Exhibition, of t L. G. Pequegnat, ‘With muost 1 air of the song i 18 done h‘;‘ ind referring to the: any question. . | an air correctly ; take is inadâ€" at 1 certain to blurd ever afterward." It covers the whole fisld. get the sentiment of the comprehends the idea ci; _ fadimg away cf o auti on lack of sympathv in radn blooming alonc. [ts . faded and gone. _ o f! . is nigh to sharcaits prbcadt to its sighs. This is the g. the skeieton, so to «pe«k Impress this firmly on t famidiarize the thought w ment. Imagine the sardon ros» and faded leaves al. . this is fixed in the memeo paratively easy to thl in t» of the words.This is one of and surest way of committ] of a song to memory. commit to memory the s sing}‘ said an amateur i friend ‘I havye never se mit my musiz to me moury â€" never done soâ€"â€"and I thi; of use to me if 1 could.‘ ‘The process is not a was the reply. O‘ have ..] easy, to remember songs a; certTin rule or method thia long!| time ago. â€" Take n ‘The Last Hose of ®amyp ple. It is a good plan to r A d v Cure SICK WHEADACHNE in 20 mimurTes, a 0 < ness, Bihousness, buain in the 5 Mno Torpid Liver, bad Lrog § ; reguiste the bow.‘s. vERY A/CE TO TAKE PRIGE 25 Cenrts ar Dnug SroRES, Breeder of Fancy Fowis ce to Those Wish n Advertise in the W1si1 HOW TO REMEMEER POWDERS New Hamburg ons Masie to Wemmosy rUArant« the M 11 it 1 1 is 10 a r3 ma Ind ave 0 & wP 18 hold ti, at lh(* n *Can‘t \ Mesrs, .( Emaid 1; ting toda, aminatio: bOYN'n_ ()ttaw», ‘cause 3.‘. 8St. Lour. chequer C. bidge thiâ€" Crovn C paid to ( pay lists rendered | the const in M()n'~. Hore. © There are of Perth. f 63 brick an placed J! #] school h‘»uw â€"one ig@ H North ?u:v 701 to fun : of papils en the t&tlj} conce: aged 8J years, June Ist. aged Neatly =: l(i d)‘ dirc‘(' t a of the Middle--' year, of whncl. in connectico1. debenture ce 1,i10 Two aged reâ€"id Ilbe]} m‘ud A w over 4 *‘(NP V eATs A farmer in ihe who, some time ago 2,500 hushe!~ ot wh low figare, on the « sould draw his mor price sufted him. la vantage of the rise, on the b«sis of ~! p holding on to a goo in the hope that it 1 even bigher. 1 a D y'ears’ frahchise free fire nlarm syste phones, BI'OS. Of A} ton W is by fre with conten on building about 5 the Perth Mutu»s! were u&ou( 5000 bi neas déstroved whi by iua*ranw It is rumored tt factory, on a large started in town. an cal inan, who inte honor of presdent, first ooo»ig!llu""l a will he preeery ed . â€" Thefnuni:ipaht! arrangements with Co. by Iwhich they the G. T. K. sta John Adoliph «1 COUNTY A This #upplies a consumer one C a ‘all l’e“e of of pure Virginia U »B1 The tin tag T& To Smo A Combinatio *And ; \ iu 11. Mtr}' J " mid d duck :o= Tomect the 6 & News of t] Oounty Dis The grain store mad sary W De t & walk i: | day t nect the wishos £. 7 ucé ett and & have pi.ced upo Phseasr 1. Of organic c iÂ¥ed in 33 m From E Oncess Cure The st. Le W icipality sO0it tatiof <Â¥A4

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