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Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 24 Feb 1898, p. 6

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3 _ It is always best to employ only effi cient help on the farm. A few dollars extra a month will be repaid many times over in the course of the year by the difference in the work between a firstâ€" class hand and an inefficient one,and it costs ags much to board one as the other, _A careful man, who bas judgâ€" ment and uses it in doing his work, will save his employer a great deal in the use of tools alone in a single season. The careless inexperionced hand will break and injure the implements he uses far more than a good hand will, It does not take many breakages to come to as much as a man‘s wages for & month, & â€" _ Here she showed signs of fainting. The conductor stooped and examined the floor. Every man iu the car dld the same. The girl stood up and shook her skirt. Then all the gratings were lifted up and the space beneath was carefclly examined. _ But there was no sign of the cherished emblem. W hen everybody was beginning to feel exâ€" bausted the girl suddenly exclaimed : _ The other passengers buried themâ€" selves behind their papers and the couductor went out on the back platâ€" form almost broke the bell strap, and then rang up five fares in mistake.â€" New York Evening Sun. Once upon a time sickness came to the family of a poorly paid pastor of a country church. It was winter and the pastor was in financial straits. A numâ€" ber of bis flock decided to meet at his house and cffer prayers for the speedy recovery of the sick ones, and for maâ€" terial biessings upon the pastor‘s family. While one of the deacons was offering a fervent prayer for blessings upon the pastor‘s household there was a loud knock at the door. _ When the door was opened & stout farmer boy was seon, wrapped up comfortably. "I‘ve brought Pa‘s prayers," replied the boy. _ _ _ _ Â¥ _ Investigation showed the fact that ‘pa‘s prayers,‘ consisted of potatoes, flour, bacon, cornmeal, turnips, apples, warm clothing, and a lot of jellies for the sick ones. The prayer meeting adâ€" journed in short order, "Ob, thank you ever so much. It is all right. I remember now that I gave it ba_ck last night." A Host of Witnesses Tell of the Won:â€" derful Oures Effected by Dr.Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder, Right Rev. Bishop Sweatman, D D.; Rev. W.H. Withrow, D.D.; Rev. Munâ€" go Fraser, D.D.;and others sound its praises. It cures young and old. Mrs. Geo. Graves, Ingersoll, writes: "My little daughter, aged thirteen years, suffered from catarrh of the very worst kind. No physician or remedy cured, until we used Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder, and after using two bottles my child was completely cured." It is a pleasant, safe and speedy remedy for Catarrh, Hay Fever, Colds, Headacbe, Toroat, Tonsilitis and Deafaess. Sold by E M. Devitt, Waterloo. There is also a greab advantago in employing competent men if the farmer wishes to leave home occasionaliy. He can feel that the work will go on in his absence the same as if he were there. If anything gives out his man will know how to repair the breakage: His judgâ€" ment canâ€" beâ€"relied on as to how mucha& team should do in a day, and he will seeffthat they do it A man who is kind and carefalin handling. horses is worth more than one who is the reverse.. Very few farmers care to hire roughâ€" talking, swearing men. Good ones can be found who will be choice in their language. > Cerbainly we may exâ€" pect thabt _ he whom we are. to have about the house. who will eat at the same table as his employer‘s family, will not be uncouth in .table manners. There are very â€"many farm hands who are so disgusting in their table habits as to be repulsive to a refined person. Ib is not at all necessary to ‘hire such. After years of experience in managing a farm requiring a great deal of hired help, I find that it‘is notdifficult to obâ€" tain desirable help. Ifinducements by way of good wages, fair treatment, and not too long days in the field are accorâ€" ded, which any intelligent farmer is perfectly willing to give to the right person, one will never have any trouble :ilnksecuring the class of help he would ike, um . $ What do you want, boy?" asked one of the elders. _ _"Yep,brought pa‘s prayers, an they‘re out in the wagon. _ Jest help me an‘ we‘ll get ‘em in." . 22y > She was & tailorâ€"made girl and all the other passengers in the cable car were men. _ The conductor had come in to collect a fare, when the girl clutched the left arm of her coat and eave sort of a half scream. __"What is it Miss? asked the conâ€" ductor. _®Oh" said the girl "I have lost my Harvard pin. _ What shall I do." "Brought Pa‘s prayers ! What do you mean !" § e s A certain man whose wife had reâ€" cently gotangry and gone away to live with her mother was met by a friend, who, in apparent sympathy, accosted him thus : "Man, Jamie, this is an awfu‘ thing that has befa‘en you. It‘s a great peace that your wife has gone and lefté you." "She‘ll come back . again," replied Jamie rucfully, "Deed man," quoth Jamie "sh‘il dae waur than that yot." _ "What waur can she dae than that ?" anxiously inquired his friend. â€" se Preachers and People of One Mind HIRING FARM HELP. Brought in Pa‘s Prayers. Sho Had Forgotten. An‘ Awfu Thing. Irish Nationalist Demand for a Cathâ€" olic University. London, Feb. 17th.â€"When the deâ€" bate on the address in reply to the Queen‘s speech was resumed in the House of Commons yesterday Mr. John Dillon, chairman of the Irish Parliaâ€" mentary party, moved an amendment in favor of a Catholic university in Treland. Inso doing, be said, the Catholics had long suffered from intolâ€" erable grievances inrespect to university education, and maintained that these grievances had been admitted by both Liberals and Conservatives, _ The motion was seconded by Mr. Timothy Harrington. Mr. A. J. Ba‘four, Government leadâ€" er in the House, pointed out the new university, which he, for one, desired to see, was not to be fenced in by any technical limitations. Ib was to be to Catholics what Trinity College is to Protestants, sectarian only in tone. The demand for such a university saould be supported by the friends of higher education, which, under the exâ€" isting system, two thirds of the Irish were unable to enjoy. Ib was in acâ€" cordarcs with the principles of unionâ€" ism, was desirable, and he would welâ€" come the demand of the Nationalists. A Great Book Ogilvie‘s Klondyke book is the best selling one of the year out. A book,free for all who ask, thatexcels it in real merib, because treating effectively of a subject of more lasting importance to the people of this Province, is the Aunual Report of the Oatario Agriâ€" cultural College and Experimen al Farm at Guelph. Where one man will wax rich in the now famous gold mines of the Yukon districos of Canada, a bundred may acquire a competence if not a great deal more by sticking to the farm in Ontario. The wealth of matiâ€" er in the Report is of incalculable value to the country. At the present time every bed in the Residence is occupied and 27 students are lodging outside, most of them in the immediate neighborhood of the College. The total number on the roll in 1897 was 275, 212 in the regular course, and 63 in the special dairy course,ithe great majority being Ontario farmers‘ sons of the very best class.‘ ‘The greabt majority of those who have been with us long enough to get a fairly thorough knowledge of our course of study and apprenticeship, are giving a good account of themselves at home and abroad. They have gone back to work with an increased liking for f2rm life ; they are pushing to the front as practica), progressive men ; and, wherever you find them, they are warm friends of the College at Guelph. Agriculture is our greatest and the information given thereabouts _by this publication of the Ontario Department of Agriculture, : Toronto, is upâ€"toâ€"date and reliable, The Raport is, moreover, wellâ€"illustrated, and for a government Blaeâ€"book, written in a most interesting style. The Oatario Agricultural Colleges is beginning to feel the ful: cumualative force of nearly a quarter of & century‘s existenceâ€"the past year having been the most successful in its 24 years‘ history. Proof of this i: found in the fact that of the students now in attendance over 95 per ceirt came on the express recommendation of exâ€"students. President Mills in accounting for this pleasing feature of the College‘s prosperity says ; Just in Time. Heart Dissase Had Him at Death‘s Doorâ€"Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart Worked Almost a Miracle. C. A. Campbell, Mountiron, Minn., writes : "I laid just at the point of death from the most acute heart discase and with hardly a hope that any remeâ€" dy could reach my case, I procured a bottle of Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart. I believe this great remedy got to me just in time. The first dose gave me great relief inside of thirty minutes, and before I had taken a botâ€" tle I â€"was up from what I thought was my death bed. I was cured, and I consider my cure almost miraculous." Sold by E. M. Devitt, Waterloo. The desire for rich, velvety effects has extended to the trimming departâ€" ment, and one sees chenille embroiderâ€" ies, chenille fringer and chenille nets in great profusion. _=Flannel petticoats are trimmed with flounces of wash silk edged with lace, _ There is a craze for very elegant black t .ffeta house gowns. As an outcome of the tuberculosis agitation, the Hon. John Dryden, Minister of Agriculture, decided about a year ago to provide for the manuâ€" facture of tuberculin in the College. The necessary apparatus was ordered at once, and the bacteriologist, Mr. F. C, Harrison, soon got things in shape to commence work. Thefirst 14 doses were sent out about the end of last May ; and since that time the demand has increased so rapidly that it was found necessary to order an additional incubator and add a room to the laborâ€" atory. With these additions, it is hoped to be able to supply what is reâ€" quired in the Provincs. Quills are all the rage in millinery. From Paris comes the cry that white clothes are worn for ceremonious occaâ€" sions_and for theater box parties. The Roman sash ribbons are in vogue again, with fringe on the ends. _ Camel‘s hair material is in fashion again, and it comes in all the new shades. Short bridal veils are not half as be coming to bridesmaids as. toques or prqt}:y{ hats. f es Malmaison pink, a new English perâ€" fume, is now in> high favor . among smart women. _â€"The work in the department of field experiments is growing in importance from year to year, The experiments WHERE BOTH AGREE. Fashion Echoes. with varieties of wheat, oats, barley, peas, corn. turnips, mangles, potatoes, carrots, green fodders, grasses, clovers, mixtures of grain, etc., bave been carried on (systematically and persistâ€" ently on well defined lines for seven or eight years, on plots in different parts of a fiftyâ€"acre field, and under climatic conditions which bave varied with the years. Hence the results now begin to indicate very clearly which varieties are best adapted to the soil and climate of the College farm; and the coâ€" oprative experiments throughout the Province, carried on simultaneously by the College Experimental _ Union (largely under the direction of the Exâ€" perimentalist, Mr, C. A. Zavitz,) go to show that the varieties which bave done best at the College, give the {best results all over the Province. Waterlioo Coan In this way some excellent foreign varieties bave been introduced, tested, and distributed throughout the Provâ€" ince varieties which yiold from six to eight bushels per acre more than any varieties previously grown. In osts and barley alone, the varieties introâ€" duced and dirtributed by the experiâ€" ment station have, within the past four or five years, paid to the Province a good deal more than the entire cost of the College for tha last ten years. The need of a good Spring Medicine is almost universal and Hood‘s Sarsaparilla exactly mecets this need. Be sure to get Hood‘s. The old story of Prometheus is a parable. Prometheus was on terms of intimacy with the gods. From them he stole fire, and gave it to men. For this sin he was bound to the rocks of Mount Caucassus, and vultures were set upon him. They only ato his liver, This grew again as fast as it was pecked away. Arehis sufforings to be imagâ€" ined. Take a modern interprotation of the parable. There is no cooking without fire, In cuooking and eating the misâ€" chief les, The stomach is o1 ertasked, the bowels become clogged, they canâ€" not dispis3s of the food that is given them. The impurities back up on the liver. Then come the valturesâ€"the torments of a diseased liver. _ Dr. Pierce‘s Golden Medical Discovery is more than equal to the vuitures of dyspepsia and its kindred diseases. There is no more need of suffering from dyspepsia than there is of hanging one‘s self. Sold by all medicine dealers the world over. And so there is a mistaken use of the word ‘"artiste.‘"‘ Mr. Leonidas Swet, the formidable pianist, is an artist, but Miss Eugenia Hammerkuis is a charmâ€" ing "artiste,"‘ as well as a fascinating "pianiste.""‘ ‘‘Artiste,‘"‘ however, is a French word and is primarily mascuâ€" line. The English word ‘"artist,‘"‘ meanâ€" ing specifically ‘"one skilled in music,‘‘ is as old as 1590â€"‘"argues a bad eare and a bungling artist‘‘â€"and Addison in 1712 spoke of "that excellent artist baving shown us the Italian musick in its perfection.‘‘ But this word is now obsolete except As in the general application, ‘‘one who cultivates one of the fine arts, in which the object is mainly to gratify the esâ€" thetic emotions by perfection of execuâ€" tion, whether in creation or representaâ€" tion."‘ The word "‘artiste‘‘ is a reintroâ€" duction of the French word, ‘"in conseâ€" quence of the modern tendency to reâ€" strict ‘artist‘ to those engaged in the fine arts, and especially painting."‘ It means a public performer who appeals to the sesthetic faculties, as a singer, dancer or one who makes a fine art of his employment, as a cook, barber, corn doctor. Thus Chorley spoke in 1832 of ‘"‘the German artistes who did such amâ€" ple justice to the choruses of the ‘Freiâ€" schutz,""" and the "artistes" were male and female. If the sex of the performer must be indicated in one word, why do not the anxious use the word of Horace Walpole, "artistess,""‘ which means a female artist? It is no viler form than "artiste‘‘ in sexual distinction. â€"Musicâ€" al Record. "Pianiste" and "Artiste." We observe with pain that impassionâ€" ad press agents and would be genteel petsons persist in calling a female pianâ€" ist a "pianiste,‘‘ thinking thereby to 1otermine sex by the final letter. But ‘"‘pianiste‘‘ is the French word for pianâ€" ist, and it is a masculine noun as well as feminine. When toned up by Dick‘s Blood Purifier will give as much and as rich milk as a highly bred aristoâ€" cratic Jersey cow gives upon ordinary feed, and a Jersey cow when given will wonderfully increase her yield of milk. It saves feed tooâ€" because a smaller amount of well digested food satisfies tne deâ€" mands of the system and every particle of nourishment sticks. 50 CEenTs a PaAckAGE. LEEMING, MILES & C0., DICK & CO., Dick‘s Blood A Common Bred Cow urifier Proprietors. ronicle, Thursday , February 24, 1898â€"Page 6 A SUCCESSFUL EVANGELIST Rev. W. A. Dunnett, a Man Whose Good Work Is Widely Known. He Throughout Canada, from the westâ€" ern boundary of Ontario to the Atlanâ€" tic Ocean, there‘s no name more widely known in temperance and evangelistic work than that of the Rev. W, A. Dunvett. Mr. Dunnetb has been t‘ e Grand Viceâ€"Councillor of Ontario and Quebec in the Royal Templars, and so popular is he among the memb rs of the order that in Montreal there is a Royal Templars council named ‘Dunâ€" nett Council‘ in bis honor. For more than ten years Mr. Dunnett has been going from place to place pursuing his good work, sometimes asssting resiâ€" dent ministers, sometimes conducting a series of gospel temperance meetings independently, but always Jaboring for the good of his feilows, While in Smith‘s Falls a few montbs ago in conâ€" nection with bis work he dropped into the Record office for a little visit with the editor.. During the conversation the Rcecord ventured to remark that his duties entailed an enormous amount of hard work. To this Mr. Dunnett assented, but added that in his present physical condition he was equal to any amount of hard work. Butit was not always so, he zaid, and then he gave the wri er the following little personal history5 with permission to make ib public. Hesaid that for the past thirâ€" teen years he had been greatly broubled with a pain in the region of his heart, from which he was unable to get any relief, At times it was a dull, heavy pain, ab others sharp and _ severe. Oftentimes ib rendered him unfit for his engagements, and at all times it made it difficult to move. His trouble was always visible to the public and frequently when conducting services he would give out and doctors had to be called in to attend him, This occurred to him in the Yonge street church, Toronto ; ths Baptist church, Wood:â€" stock, N. B.; the Methodist church, Carleton Place, Ont. On another occaâ€" sion while preaching to an audiencs of 2,500 people in the Franklin Street Litharge mixed with glycerine to the consistence of putty will close large or small cracks in iron kettles. It is preâ€" ferable to plaster of Paris for cementing lampâ€"tops and standards, as it does not shrink in bardening. Let stand twelve hours before using. From the Smith‘s Fails Record. An excellent way to keep silverware, not in daily a use, from tarnishing is to seal it hermetically in glass fruitâ€"cans. Wash in warm, soapy water, wipe with a soft cloth, and plece in a warm oven a fow minutes, Place tissue paper beâ€" tween the pieces, so they will not touch each other. Put the teaspoons, butterâ€" knives and other small pieces in a quart can and knives, forks, and tablespoons in a twoâ€"quart can. A‘!l dampness is excludâ€"d, and no polishing is required when they are wanted for the tabloe. Rustâ€"spots often sppear on linen, for which the housewife, having exerâ€" cised due precaution, cannot account Test the blueing by adding some washâ€" ing soda to it in a solution of water. If it turns reddish color, it is Prussian blue, which is a compound of iron and becomes decomposed by the action of soap and sods, causing ironâ€"rust spots. To removs these spots, ore of the most effec:usal methods is to spread the linen on the grass in a hot sun, saturate with lemonâ€"juice, anrd cover thickly with salb. . Repeat the process if necessary. â€"Sarah E, Wilcox, in Country Gentleâ€" MaARD, Relates Events in His Carser of General Interestâ€"For Years He Suffered from Heart Trouble and Frequently from Collapseâ€"On Ons Occasion Five Doctors Were in Attendanceâ€"He is now Freed from His Old Enemy and Enjoys the Blessing of Cood Health. | Helpful Hints. REV. W A. DUNNEIT. of Jan. 21st, from Fitchburg, Mass, ‘ where he has bsen conducting a very (successful series of evangelistic meatâ€" ings, he says :â€"‘I had held back from writing in regard to my health, not beâ€" |cause I had forgo‘ter, but becaus> it \ seemed too gozsd to be true that the old | time pain had gone. I cannot say [wbether it will ever returno, but I can certainly say it has not troubled me for ‘ month3, and I am in better health than |I have been for years. E[ have gained ‘in flesb, hence in weight. I would preâ€" |fer not to siy anything about my appotite ; like the poor, it is ever with | me. Yes; I attribute my good health |to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pill», and you ‘have my consent to use the fact.‘ At that time, abt Mr. Dainnett‘s reâ€" quest, his statemeat was only published locally, but now writing under the date Congregational church, at Manchester, N.H., five doctors bad arrived and were in attendance before ho regained consciousness. In all theso cities and towns tha newspapers freely menâ€" tioned his affliction at the time. Mr. Dannett said ho had consulted many physicians, though he said, to be enâ€" tirely fair, be bad nover been any great lengtboftimeunder treatment by any one doctor because of his itinerant mode of life. In the early part of the summer of 1896, while in Brockville assisting the pastor of the Wall street Methoâ€" dist church in evangelistic services, he was speaking of his trouble to a friend who urged bim to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and next day presented him with a dozen boxes. ‘I took the pills‘ said Mr. Dunnett, ‘and I declare to you I am a well man toâ€"day. I used to worry & great deal over the pain about my heart, but that is all done now, and I feel like a new man.‘ All this the reverend gentleman told in a simple conversational way, aud when it was suggested that he let it be known he rather demurred, bec:ue, as he put it, ‘I am almost afraid to say I am cured, and yet there is ro man enjoyâ€" ing better bealth toâ€"day than I do.‘ The Romanâ€"barber, besides cu‘ting the hair and shaving the face trimmed the nails and kept the fingers in order. The Roman philosophers, with a scorn of fash10n‘s mandates still common to their kind in the nineteenrth c ntury, affected beards of enormous length which became known as the biadge of thsir profession. Lucian mocks, them for considering these a mark of wisdom Shaving sctually became sacerdotal at Roxne _ One of the most important periois in the life of a Roman was when he celebrated bis entrance into marhoud and assumed the foga virilis, marking the full rights of citvizonship In the religious rites that accompasnied this obssrvauce, the puerile face fel! the razor for the first time; the cuttings of the adolescent beard were carefully erclosed in a waxen ball and conseâ€" crated to some divinity. When Ner: assumed the toga his youthful beard was shut up in a golden casket studded with pearls of great price, and then offered to Jupiter Capitolious. _ Had:â€" rian, having a face full of unsightly scars, covered them with a beard, and was the first of the Roman emperors to wear such an adornment, settiog a fishion that was followed by bhis sucâ€" cessors. (The majority of the Latin and Greek gods were represented with flowing bsards â€"there was even a bearded Venus.â€"Lippincott. Beards in Rome. The Sloan Medicine Co., Hamilton. For years I was troubled with periodical sick headâ€" aches, being affected unusually every Sunday, and used all the remedies that were advertised as cures, and was treated by almost every doctar n Guelph, but without any relief. One doctor told me it was caused y a weak stomach, another said it was hereditary and incurable. I was induced by a neighbor to try Sloan‘s Indian Tonic, and am happy to say 1 did so. A few doses gave immediate relief, and one bottle and a half made a complete cure. This was three years ago and the headaches have never returned. I was always troubled with asthma and nothing helped me like your Sloan‘s Indian Tonic. I can heartily recommend it to all and will be glad to give any particulars to any one afflicted as I was. For sale by all dealers or address the Company at Hamilton. $1.00 per bottle ; 6 for $5.00. Call early and inspect our goods, and thus take advantage of an hbA excellent stock to chaose from. _A dollar will buy you a large parcel of goods. Remember the place, reat Bankrupt Store Our Stock is extra heavy and well selected, second to none other in style and workmanship ; our prices lower than the lowest, and we can therefore give you more goods for your money than any other house in the trade in Having decided to move our business into larger quarters, we have instituted a Great Moving Sale for 48 Days,during which sale goods must, and will be, sold at rock bottom prices, to reduce our stock one half. It rarely if ever happens that a naâ€" tive, whatever his standing among his own peopleâ€"for to the whites there is practically no difference between one black and anotherâ€"is received within & white man‘s house on any social 0¢â€" casion. Indeed, he would seldom be perâ€" mitted, save as a servant, to enter & private house, but would ke received on the stoop (veranda). When Khama, the most important chief now left south of the Zambezi, a Christian and a man of high personal character, was in Engâ€" land in 1895 and was entertained at luncheon by the Duke of Westminster and other persons of social eminence, the news of the reception given him exâ€" cited annoyance and disgust among the whites in South Africa,. I was told that at a garden party given a few years ago by the wife of a white bishop the apâ€" pearance of a native clergyman caused many of the white guests to withdraw in dudgeon.â€""Impressions of South Africa,"‘ by James Bryce. _ The Blacks In Africa. The traveler in South Africa is asâ€" tonished at the strong feeling of dislike and contermptâ€"one might almost say of hostilityâ€"which the bulk of the whites show to their black neighbors. He asks what can be the cause. It seems to spring partly from the old feeling of contempt for the slaves, a feeling which has descended to a generation that has never seen slavery as an actual system, partly from pbysig@l aversion, partly from an incompatibility of character and temper which makes the faults of the colored man more offensive to the white than the (perhaps morally as grave) faults of members of his own white stock. â€" GREAT NOVING SALE â€" Fur Goods, Readyâ€"Made Clothing, Underwear Boots and Shoes, Hats, Caps, Rubbers, Dry Goods. DEAR SIRS & __ Cc ~209>Â¥ %}y raidq Dy the WESk, $ ‘ !@{Q@fifi \"}%ES instead of by the pair, T: \fij\l;%gf% he‘d shine the actual //@ leather, hard and smooth surfaced, with E SLIATER SHOE POoUsH| and OVERSHOES thin, light, comfortable. Extra thick at ball and heel. I want to see "Granby‘‘ on the bottom then I know what I am getting. S. R. ERNST & CO., t‘ o) â€" He won‘t use it, b e‘g{%}fl He use it, ecau‘ es @fa® too long, a ‘;‘ % :, ‘Pays 4 ayâ€"dlf y WeX I s S _4 \Z‘.fl*\\m.“ ;@% it § i!|| 2. d f m]wn, _.,fis;.@ h ‘-M{@ 4. 10 Granby Rubbers J. S. ROOS.â€"Sole Local Agent. "*GRANBY RUBBERS WEAR LIKE IRON." manâ€"| | |â€"coump 4 | 4 coram 4( 4â€"come 4 4 corme 46 (â€"aomene 4 64 commee 4 § 4 cxnma® §44 ce retty Eoot Goes a Long W ay But what is the use of a pretty = foot, in this country in the winter time, if you do not have a perfect fitting Rubber _ or. Overshoe. J Now, this may be news to you, but you will find it to be a fact ; },r, there is only one make of Rubâ€" mflf bers and Overshoes, in this counâ€" = try, that are right upâ€"toâ€"date in _â€" fit, finish, quality and durability _ and they are the kiss bruth nnd_ele-cf}"city the soul, while the phyricsal man will swoon before tha delicacies of the season, Come one; come a@ll |‘ 5 ENuod Tw ‘*No,‘‘ was the meek reply. "I madg a poultice."‘ "So did L.‘ said Peck. The Dangers of Spring Wh‘ch atice tom im:â€"uâ€"itie=i~ the blood and a depl=ted conditi_ n of this vitu fln d may be enâ€" tirely averi(d by Hoca‘s ~arsaparilla. ThHs grea medicine cures all spring hnmore, boils erup ions nd sores, and by c-.xrl'icpipz Qr}d vits, A Topeka preacher, in announcing & church festival, bids the gues s to come in this classical lengu=ge : ‘Reason will Hood‘s Pills cure rausea. sick headache, billiousness a: d all liver ills, Price 25 cents, Frank L. Stanton says that on ong occasion when _ William Hamilton Hayne was visiting Samuel Minturn Peck at the latter‘s home in Tuskaloosa the two posts strolled into the woods and paused to rest beneath the shadows of the pines. "Here are your favorite pines, Hayne,"‘ said Peck. ‘‘Let‘s dream a few poems beneath them.‘‘ The lanâ€" guid summer day had its effect on them, and they were soon snoring and dreaimâ€" ing away. But suddenly both awoke and started down the home road at top speed, shouting as they ran. An army of yellow jackets had discovered them, and, not being partial to poetry, bad forcibly and feelingly resented its intruâ€" sion on their domain. Later, at supper, Peck asked, ‘"Did you make a poem, Hayne?‘ S aeere io e 2 e nds e i oo c aprenes I iz no the blood it overcomes that tired feeling ind gives vitality and vizor, up Guelph, Nov. 23rd, 1897 4 44 comman 4 44 omm 46â€" 4 en 444 Both Made the Same, W. E. Keogh. Gush 18 King St, Berlin vVA

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