Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 18 Mar 1897, p. 7

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A VlC'ffl OF ASTHMA dAO NOT SLEP^r IN BED TWENTY-FIVE YBABS. FOB 1. 1a*Bic4 D«*BiMl (• Tartat* •â- < Caatlaaal MUcry- Father, (â- nrndratliar urndfirca* Craadralkcr Mad niMl fram Ike TrMble â€" KcUsM Coaieit la •lit itgaâ€" Tke Car* Laaknl V9»* a« a NIraele. from the Whitby Chroniolo. IFor years storiea of famous cures wrought by Dir. WLlliama' Pink Pills have appeared io the Chroniole. ©ur- iro^ tlu8 time we have been csslincc about for a local case of teuch a nature aa to ieara no doubt of tb» efficiency of these pills. We have found several, but in each, caae it brored. to be a sen- attiv« body who could not bear to have his dr her name' and disease made pub- lic. Recently, however, a moat striik- ne case came to our ears. Mr. Solomon Thompflon liv«s on a beautiful farm on toe west shore of Mud Lake i:n Garden towoship, North Victoria. He has resided there for foB'ty years, being the first settler arou-nd the lake. He was reeve of Garden and Daiton townships thirty- five years ago, before the counties of Peterboro and Victoria were separat- ed, and he used to attend the counties' counoiJ at Peterboro. Mr. Thompson has been a victim of asthma for forty TMirs dr more. However we wiJl let biim teil his own story on that bead. On October 15th, 1896, we> took a trip to Mud Laice to visit tbe haunts long familiar to oa, and made it a duty and found it a pleasure to call upon Mr. Tluxnpson and learn from seeing bim and hearing his 'account' of it bow be had been oured. For' twenty-five years we had known iiim as a gasping, miffering asthmatic, the worst we ever knew who managed to Jive at all. We often woudered how he Jived 'from day to day. On calling be met us with a obeerful aspect and without displayingi a trace of his old* trouble. Being at once ushered into his house, 'we natur- ally made it oux first business to en- quire if it were all true about the bene- nta he had receiivBd froia using Dr. Wiiliams' Pink PUla. "Beyond doubt," said he. "How long have you used theim, and how matny boxes nave you uaedjf" he was aaked. "I ^irtarted a year ag>o, and took eight boxes." We next aaked him if h« fait that the cure was pennaneut. "Weiii" said be, "X have not taken any of the pills for three or four months. Still I am not entirerty satisfied yet. You see <my father, grandfather and' great- grsodiather died of ; asthma. My people all taike it sooner or later and it always ends their days. 1 have lost three brothers from the fatal tlwnS- Kpowine my lamUy history it ia haxd fur me to gaiia faiih. but 1 can tall you for nearly thirty years I never slept in bed until 1 took Pink Pills. As you muart faave known, 1 always slept sitting in the chair you now occupy. I had a ailing from that hook: in the ceiling and always sat with my bead testing in it whUe I slept. I now retire to niv bed when the other members of my nimily do." "How old are yon Mr. Tiii*jt>Bco»»" "Seventy- six." was the reply, "and I feel younger than I did thirty years ago, I was truu- hled a great deal with rheumatism and other miseries, probably nervous trou- bles arising from want of sleep, but Dearly all the rheumatism is gone with the asthma." \ During the conversation Mrs. Thom^ son, a bale old lady, the mother of thirteen children came in and after listening to her husband's recital of these matters, ahe took up the theme. "I never expected that anything could oure Solomon." said she. "We were al- ways trying to find something wibich would give him n>lief, so that he would be able to sleep at nights, but nothing ever seemed to maJca much dif- feren»:e. At first be took one of the the pills after each meal, but after a time be increased the dose to two. Wa noticed he was greatly improved after taking two boxes and l>egan tu have biopee. Later ott when we saw be- yond doubt that he was better. I recom- mended the pills to a niece of mine. Miss Day, whose blood had appare>atly turnvil into water and who had run down in health and spirits so bad that nhe did not care to live. Why, she got :ia yellow a-s saffron, and looked as if •be would not live a week. You would b(irdly lielieve it," said Mrs. ThumiJHUDt, "but that girl was the healthiest au'd hiui4somest girl in the neighborhood before three moniths bad passed, and *ll from takinc; Pink Pills." Mrs. Tlhompson was called from the room at this juncture to attend to some house- bold duties, and Mr. Tiicmi|«on re- sumed the subject of hia marvel- lous cure. "You hhve no idea." said b», "what it is to go through twenty-five years withicnit a' good night's sleep without pain. I can find no words to makie pdain to you the contrast between the comforts I aoAv enjoy and the awful life I had for so long. I had a big family of moi'iths to feed and bad to work when at times 1 felt more like lyinfl down to die. I would coniv in at nighH oompletely tuckered out, but even that was no guarantee of rest. Then was aa rest for me. I .seemed doomed to torture and continual misery. Wh^n my folks uiVed me to try Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pill.s I thtiught it would be useless, but I had to du somethiu^gi or die soon, and bere I am lu right as a fiddle." This old gentleman shook bis bead to add emphasis to his last sentence, and looked like a man who Celt Joyful over a renewed lease of life, with aiU his old mistvriea removed. After congratulating our old frie^nd on his divoroe from the hereditary destroyer of bis kindred, '.ve drove away. At many pl.aoes in the neigh- borhood we opened discussion upon the case and found that all ivgarded it aa a marvellous cure. Whvre the Ihomp- Bon family are known, no i)er.son would OAve believed for a moment ibat any- thing but neath would relieve him from the) grip of asthma. Every word Jjat is written here cam be verified by writing Mr. Solomon 'rhompsou. Deilrymple post office, and an inti- nate acquaintance of twenty-five 'ears enables the writer to vouch for ibe facts narrated above, and for the •eracity of IVTr. Thompson in any slate- oent be. may makei. IXr. Williams' Pink Pills cure Ojy (oing to the root of the disease. They (anew and bui'ld up 'tbe blood, and ftrengthKiin <he nerves, thus driving Usraose from the system. Avoid imita- fions by insistiug th:it eivery box you lurchase is enclosed in a wrapper bear- Dig .'i» fuJl trade mark. Dr. Williams' i'ink Pills for Pale People. i AGRICULTURAL WINTBR WOBK. THEN AND NOW. It is interesting to compare the win- ter work of thM farmer oC a generation ago and the fanner of tbel present. The former is still with xis. and a few that worked two generations ago. The hab- its of the days of their prime still stay with them to a certain extent, al- though changes in many instances have crowded otut much that used to be a part of their liv«s. Then miicb of their work, aa we now view it, was a wwk of distruction and waste. While under the circtmiatances it was necessary to destroy the heavy forests, yet mluch was destroyed that might better have been saved. Tbe practice and struggle was to clear more land, and this was tbe work for the wintier. The first cleared was farmed till it was oeoeBaary to bavenew land to produce profitable crops. The idea predominated then, as now, that profitable farming consisted in the larg« area, cultivated. The original fertility at the soil engendered the be- lief that it would ndver lose ita fer- tility, and working under this belief caised endless prodigality and extra- vagance, that; ia hard to overcome and start famxing in tbe lines that look toward improvemenlt. Tbe old-timet farmer put in the win- ter in the dearing, making rails, cut- ting wood and clearing the land of brush, stumps and logs. The more fencing he could build, the more timber out of tbe way ; the, greater the quan- tity of wood that could be used in the fireplaces of the bouse, the greater de- crease of Che forest. Much of the time then, in severe winter weather, was spent in replenishing the fires, and m reveries over those tires as the sap from the wood sissled and evaporated. What a mingling of tbe past and pres- ent, when the old of tha past who still linger with us warm themselves by the heat of tbe modern fires I These modem fires, should, and do, stomp on ottr minds tbe change that has come to the times and farming. No longer miuA the farmer occupy so mlucb time and muscle in replenishing them. Tbe time shotild be consumed in utber work, if tbe farmer would tbriv«. The old-time way of loasL.ng shins by tbe winter fires has, or should have, disappeared with the forests. The time bus passed for the farmer to im- itate mafijr o< the wild beasts of the forests, by bitiernating six months in tbe year. We reverence those who are gone, and are still going, for what tbey bare dclne for u^ in opening up and rendering the couatry habitable. While we xotist admit that much they did waa but to let loose the virgin fertility of the soil without a sufficient cumpunsation, yet we must acknow- ledge that to them came the hardest part. We can restore fertility more easily than we cokild remove the for- ests, even with the improved facilities now in) use for handling timiier. 'The qfiiestion is now, not how to bring mure land under cultivation, but how, to recover and restore the fertility of what we have. The winter was formerly spent in clearing the land of timber. Now it should be used as far as practicable, in putting it in bet- ter abape for cultivation and in im- proving the condition of the soil. The winiter is looked on by many farmers as a season of rest, or as a time to loiber, and not as a timei to rush work as is dotoe in. the e^ummer. It is no dowbt, this habit holding with many that is the calise uC much poor farm- ing and dissatisfaction among farmers. Diligence prperly applied tendetb to riches, idleness to poverty. The land will not produce as form- erly, unless by intelligent care it is made tu do it. Much ofr this can be bestowed on it in winter in the work accomplished in that direction. When the land was cleared of timber, but little if ony effort was made to rid it of other obstructions, such as stumps and stolne«. Many of these are yet foiund in cultivated fields and the best time to remove them is in the win- ter whien the weather favors. It is much more pleasant doing .such work then Ihivn in the spring, when "spring fever" seriously afflicts us. Instead of tbe live-stock browsing in the wood lot and limlier .as formerly, tbe farmer should be diligent and careful in feeding them, there- by making it poesibl,e to add to the fer- tility of the land. This work should take the place of clearing tbe land of timber. This care and feeding of ani- mals should be continuous and furnish steady winter work. The farmer who is disposed and an.x- lOfis to make tl<e most of' bis oppor- tunities can l>e diligently as work dur- ing tbe winter as well as in summer. No other business plant is e.vpected to lie idle, four to six months in the year and yield the owner a profit, unless the plant is controlled by a trust that gets its profit by forcing misfortune on its patrons. It is a well-assured fact that the farmer cannot come un- der the control of any trust, hut that be musti earn his livelihood along legi- timate lines; that he m^ml keep hi,s plant ecasCantly in operation. If lie has the wisdom to make the changes of ».^ason and the elements of nature play constantly into his hand, so niUch the t)Btter ; and in proportion to bis abil- ity in this direction will be his reward. THB HOUSE'S FEET. From the birth to tbe death of the horse, says a Fellow of the Koyal Col- lege of Veterinary Surgeons, the hoof requires attention, if it is to be ke,pt in a healthy condition. It is before the boof is shod that the feet are generally neglected, and tbe animals suffer ac- cordingly, because they are young and immature, and the bones and other tis- sues are soft: and could be easil.y dis- torted to suit the conditions under wbich tbey 'are kept. The feet of fofils and grojwing horses should therefore have attentiota j^iven to tbem. since neglect at that period often sows the seeds of oontiBuoos trouble. The hoofs abOkild be kept clean by being "picked oat" aa often as possible, to prevent any dirt or hard substance being buried in the fiasures of tbe feet. They should be examined from time to time, aay every six or eigbti weeks, to detect any defecta of shape that might be tak- ing place. If the feeft are not grow- ing level and aynunetrioal, they should be rendered so by rasping away the horn which is not naturailly worn down. If thie is neglected, tbe animal will soon have the fetlock joint bending over towards the outside. On no pre- tense whatever should tbe front of tbe wail be interfered witb for the glazed coating of its surfaoe protects tbe horn baneatb ; it shciuld tbeirefore be left un- touched. It wotiid be aa well to dis- abuse people's minds of a very popular fallacy â€" viz.; that wet, soft ground, and even maalire yards are frequently the beat places to keep young horses â€" and some would even bavetbe frogs and soilea pared thin to allowi the moisture to penetrate more easily. No greater mistake is made than that, for tbe pres- ervation of the hoof depends to a great extant upoti the soil the animal was reared on. The beat.-footed horses are bred on, dry soils, and that is undoubt- edly the kind of ground best adapted to the healthy growth of born. Young horses require plenty of exercise, ana unless they are allowed it, the growth of tbe born> etc., ia sure to be defective. Then tbe question rises, When ought a horse to tie first shod t The answer is wheal tbe work required of tbe ani- mal wears tbe ham away faster than it is formed or grotwn, or, in other words, so long as tbe born of tbe, foot can stajid tbe wear required it will not need protecting, shoeing. More over, if tbe young horses are not shod so early tbey will not be worked so bard, and fewer would be ruined in their yotuth, as is too often tbe case ait the paresent time. , MOTTLED BUTTEBt The most common cause of mottled butter is imequui distribution of tbe salt. If we take two lots of butter, each made in exactly the same manner, salt the one, but not tbe other, we shall notice in a £erw hours that the cslor of the aalted. butter is deeper than that at the other. Why this abouid be so ia noc exactly known, but the fact remains, and if tbe salt is not properly diiAribUted in tbe but- ter, it is easy to see that that part which containa the largest quantity of aait will be deeper in color than tbe rest. If a lumpilia uf mottled butter is e.iamlned, iind a small piece remov- ed frccn the light esit colored spoU, it will be fofand on tasting that there is no salt in it. Although uneuoal dis- tribution Ql' aait ie tho most frequent cause of mottled butter, it is not tbe only one. When milk set in sballuw. pans ts situated so that a drying breeze blows over tbe pans, the cream will di^ on tbe top. When cburned, some o£ f^'" cream, ow'otg to its hard- ness, will nod turn into butter, and will remain ligh*. colored, or the color uf the cream, 'ibis will make mottled butter, or butter with white specks in it. The remedy in this cose is to strain the creaiu betore putting it into tbe chuxn. Yetauullier cause is omitting to stir ttie cream when in the cream hold- er, if this not done, some of tbe milk which is taken up with tbe cream set- tles to tile bottom of tbe can, and ID the creaau Is kept three or four days before chltirniug, this milk forms a cUrd which is lighter colored than the butter, and wbeu broken up forms white specks in the butter. LONGEST RON WITHOUT STOP. Tke CanwoU Bn^nrn Travela rraaa Lea- 4aB to Ixeter Wllkeat a raase. Tbe longest regular daily run made wltJiout a stop by any railway train I in tbe world baa just been placed on the schedule of the Great Western Boiiway, of England. itt' is made between Paddington sta- tion, in London, and Gxetai', a distance of 194 miles, in three hours and tbirty- alx minutes, by what is known aa the Cornwall express. It ia remarkable not so much owing to tbe time, aa for tbe faco that not a stop is made from one end of the run to the other. There bav<e been longer runs made witholut a stop, but they have been made by special and not regular trains. The average speed attained by the Oorn- wall Expreas when making this run is: 31.7 miles an hour, although, owing to a peculiar oonstiuction of the road afi Bristol, 118 milea from London, the train is obliged to alow down to a apeed' of ten miles an hour. Tbe express train ia composed of six long coaches, a tender and engine. An American ^ould call it a vestibule train, bat the Gnglish prefer to call the cars "bogie clereatoried corridor coacbea," bogie being a term applied to tbe trucka. They are fully as heavy aa an ordinary drawing-room car, each one weighing about forty-seven thou- sand pounds, while tbe train without the engine and tender weighs one hun- dred and fort^ tons. Tbe weight of tbe engine and tender is eighty-one tons.- making the total weight of the train as it rushes along on its long run two hundred and twenty-one tons. During tbe nun It is necessary to take water for the engine twice. This howrever, does not necessitate any stop as it is taken up from a trench beside the track as tbe train speeds along at nearly a mile a minute. The engine wbich draws this essen- tially "tarougb train" Is a curious- looking ponderous affair quite unlike any locomotive seen on our roads. It has on either side ai single driving wheel seven feet eight inubes in dia- meter, while wbat must by eompari- aon be termed the small wheels of the engine, six in number, known as trail- ers, are four feet six inches in diam- eter. Tbe water tank of the engine belds thirty thousand gallons, and when run- ning at full speed there is a steam pressure of 160 pounds to the square incfa. while there ia a heating surface of 1,561 square feet. Kach day the run ia made, the train leaving Faddington station at 10.25 o'clock in the morning, and it never falls to roll into St. David's station, in Exeter, exactly on time. The time allonved by tbe schedule for this run makes no allowance for delays of any kind. Ev»n tbe time lost in going over the loop around Bristol and the necessary slowing down when going through 3ath is not allowed for. FAHM NOTIJB. Use tbe best seed of tbe best vari- eties. Duu't expect your treea to produce somutbing lor nothing. Feed them. H'ant Ibji insect eggs and nests oni your trees, and deetroy the source oli m'ach loss to your fruit Qe.\t season. 'I'hu production and mauageiueut of manure deserves as careful attention as thu prodaction of any other farm crop. Currama and gooseberries require lots of well-rotted tuauure worked down in tbe soil around tbem with good cultivation. Tbe farmer's garden ia tbe most pro- £:.^ble piece of gruVnd on the farm, if it uniy produces uU kinds of gardeu crops for iko fiuuily. Keep close watch that the mice and rabbits do not injure the treea. Keep the snow tr.xmped around tbe tree and protect "with lath or wire screen up as high as a rab)jit can, reach. Scientists daim that the daily use of onious by cbiJdron \vill prevent diph- theria, scarlet fever and worms. While tbe children may be able to stand it, the delicate aroma of the fragrant on- ion may be too much for bacteria and microbes. Give every tree that bore heavily last season a good top dressing of well rot- ted manure, out as far around at least as the branches extend. If the ground is in cujtivtttiun, fork this well down into the soU in next spring's cultiva- tion. The most iniiwrtant requisite to pear culture is good, well drained soil. Want standards twenty-eight feet aiKirt. No ({rain crop should be plant - pd auK.'inK llie trees. Most varieties should be picked early, even before tbey ,ire fully ripened. Ripen tbem in a cool, dark room. 1-laut only first- class trees. Give good cultivation. Train carefully while young. ANOTHER BRITISH P0SSES.S1ON, The famous Pitcairn couiiuunity, which for over forty years had governed themselves by their own laws, has been finally alxilisbed by sending the Bri- tish warship Royalist to Norfolk Island with a commission from the Governor of New South W.ales on Iraard, who proceeded to iustall a magistrate and ineorpoi'ate I he island as a part of New South Wales, with laws similar to tho,so of that colony. The population of tbi' island on Dec, 31 was 8fi9, There wen- twelve marriages, eleven deaths, anil nineteen births during the year. Thi.-- information does not refer to Pitcairo Island, where nearly 300 descendant." of the Bounty mutineers live and gov ern themselves. CHAJSGtB OF HEART. Socialistic blobâ€" Bring blm out ! Inventor, putting liis head out of the Hang him! Down mit monopoly I window,â€" Good-nesB me! What does tbis mean / Mob Spokestuunâ€" You mooat die ! Ve bear yoti invent a machine vat do de vork off von hoondrwt men. You dake breat oUt off deir mom bs ; you Inventorâ€" Tbis machine of mine is an attachment for breweries, and will bring beer down to one cent a glass. Mob, wildly, â€" Hbrray ! THE VALLEY OF PAIN. HOW ONE WUMAN HADE HER ESCAPE, k LIFE OF TORTURE CHANGED TO A LIFE OF COMFORT AND HAPPI- NESS BY KOOTENAY CURE. Of all the intense and persistent forms ot pain one cui scarcely conceive of anything more agonizing than NeuraiK<a. Its victim is one of those that draws forth our sym- pathy and pity as all efforts to effect a cure with the ordinary remedies signally fail to do anything more than give the merest temporary relief. Unbounded joy should fill the hearts of neuralgic sufferers at the announcement that in Kootenay the " new ingredient ' is eflfecling miracles in tho way of banishing the excruciating agony which has rendered their lives a curse, perhaps for years. Mrs. William Judeo, of Crumlin, P. 0., in the County of Middlesex, went before C. G. Jarvis, a notary public of Ontario, and made a solemn declaration (so firmly did she believe in Kootenay) to the elTect that for many years she was an intense sufferer from Neuralgia. She says that the pains in her head and neck were so severe she thought she would lose her reason, k She has taken Ryckman's Kootenay Cure and willingly testifies it has bet-n her salva- tion, and believes that without it she would now be in the asylum. This lady has had the deep shadow ot suffering lifted from her life. She has been transported from the Valley of Pain to the Hill Top of Healthâ€" and afl through KiHitenay. Mrs. James Keony, of 30 York St., Hamil. ton, Ont., and m.-tny others testify under oath how they were released from suffering through the agency of Ryckman's Kooteny Cure. Full particulars of these ca.ses will be mailed you by sending your address to tbe Kyckman Medicine Co., Hamilton, Onl. The remedy is not dear, one bottle lasts a month. H£ABT DISEASE KILLS. Belief in 30 Minutes. The most pronounced symptoms ol beart disease are palpitation, or flut-, tering of tbe heart, shortness of breatH weak or irreguiUr pulse, smothering spella, swelling of feet or anklet, nigbt- moxe, spells of hunger or exhauatioB. Tbe brain may be congested. cousUia beodacbes. dizziness or vertigo. Im sbort, whenever the heart flutters, oa tires out easily, aohes or juUpitates, ik is diseased and treatment is imperative. Dr. Agnew's Heart Oure has saved thou^ sands of lives. It aiisolutely never fail* to give perfect relief in 80 minutea, sod to oure radically. Sold by W. E. Richardson. MATTER OF FEELING. Mr. Blinksâ€" What r Thirty jrears old to-morrow t You told the minister who married us only two years ago that you were eighteen. Mrs. Blinks (wearily) Well, I felt eigb* teen then. 10 YKABS A SUFFERER From Kidney Disease â€" Gravel and Strictureâ€" An Absolute Cure Found in South American Kidney Cureâ€" A' Remedy That Never Fails in the MoaC Distressing Cases. The solid evidence of experience is behind South American Kidney Cure. Mr. Wilbur Goff, of Chippewa, Ont., i« simply one of hundreds who have spoken in equally strong terms. He says : " After taking six bottles ol South American Kidney Cure I am completely cured Df stricture and gravel, having suffered from these com- plaints for over ten years. I found great relief after taking one bottle ut continued the remedy until I wsa perfectly cured and I am now enjoyw ing the beet of health." Sold by W. E. Richardwn. JUST THE MIAN FOB IT. Wbat made Homely so tearing mad at tbe bal masque last night? They requested bim to remove hifl mask, and be had none on. RUBY~LIPS And a Clear Complexion, the Pride of Womanâ€" Have You Lost These Charms Through Torpid Liver, Con- stipation, Biliousness or Nervousnesat Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills Will Restore Them to Youâ€" 40 Little "Rubies" in Vialâ€" ^0 Cents. A pleasure to take them. Aot like • obarm. Never gripe. Pleasant lax»> tive doees, and a i^ertain cure. Sold by W. E. Richardson. PBETTY MEAN. Hello. Jim. what are you doing nowt Working for tbe same old farmer I worked fur last year. Doing pretty well f No. Last year I did well enough. I got 120 a month, this year tbe old man played it low dowu <in me and made me take his crop for my pay. APPARENTLY A HOPELESS CASE, A Kincardine Banker who Suffered Di»- tressingly from Indigestion â€" Appar- ently a Hopeless Case of Stomaoll Trouble Until South American Ner- vine was Usedâ€" Hia Words are : " It Cured Me Absolutely." What this wonderful remedy for all forms of stomach trouble can do ia best told in the words uf John Boyer, banker, Kincardine, Unt. "About a year ago, as a result of heavy work no doubt, 1 became very much troubled with indigestioR ; associated with it were those terribly distressing feelings that can hardly be described in any language. L had tried various meth- ods of ridding myself of the trouble, but without success, until I was in- fluenced to use South American Ner^ vine. The result, and I gladly say It for the benefit of others-xihis re- meay cured me, and I never hesitate to recommend it to any person af^ fected with any form of stomach trouj- ble." Sold by W. E. Richardson. WH.\T CAUSKD HER WOE. I am inexpressibly sorry, Mr. Smith- ers, she said, to learn that when you called the other day Tiger bit you. Oh, that's all right, he said, with % forced effort to be cheerful. No, it ain't, she sobbed. Tbe dear lit- tle fellow has biMMi ill ever since. FOR TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER rHECOOK'SBESTFRIENO LAR«csT Sals im Canada. j VICTORY FOR EAST SIMCOE. ] Of One Thing Mr. W. H. Bennett, tbe Conservative Standard Bearer In East Simcoe, is Sure â€" He Suffered From Catarrhal Trouble and Found Speedy and Fixed Relief in Dr. Ag- new's Catarrhal Powder. In the coining by-eJection it will not be settled until the votes are counted, whether .Mr. W. H. Bennett, who has repreaenlod the constitu- ency witb ability for years, will again bo the successful candidate. One thiflg Mr. Bennett is perfectly certain oC whatever turn the eloction may take* When attendinK to bis duties in Otta- wa two sessions ago ho was taken dowa with catarrhal trouble in the head. Hk used Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powdee and over his own signature say:s that it worked like a charm, and quickly removed the trouble and made hiok fitted for his parliamentary duUeSi oold by W. E. Riobardson.

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