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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 31 Jul 1889, p. 6

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1889. Once said that the aecret of good health consisted in keeping the head cool, the feet warm, and the bowelB open.· Had tihis eminent physician Jived in our day, and known the merits of Ayer·s Pllls . as an a,perient, he would certainly have recommended them, as ao many of hla disiinguish'ed suooessors are doing. The celebrated Dr. Farnsworth, of Norwich, Conn., recommends Ayer's P.ills as the best of all remedies for "Intermittent Fevers." Dr- I. E. Fowler, o! Bridgeport, Corm., says: "Aye1·'s. Pills are highly and universally spoken of by the people :about here. I make dally use of them ~ my practice." Dr. Mayhew, of New Bedford, Mass., says : 11 Ha.ving prescribed many thon8Mds of Ayer's Pills, in my practice, I can unhesitatingly pronounce them the 'best cathartic in use." The Massachusetts State Assayer, Dr. .A.. A. Hayes, certifies: "I have made a C.lll'eful analysis of Ayer's Pills. They contain the actii.-e pdnclples of well· known drugs, isolated from inert mat- · ter, wl!.ich plan is, chemically speaking, ~~eat Importance to their usefulness. It insures activity, certaintr,i and uni· formity of effect. Ayer's P1l s contain ' no metallic or mineral substance, but t.be virtues o! vegetable remedies ln Pill!ul combination." AFamous Doctor Ayer' s Pills, flMpared byDr.J. C.Ayer&Co.,Lowell,~ ·"-· Sold b:y all Dealers in MedlclDe. l'UBEST, e~Klt\6 POWDER STRONG£ ST, CON TAI N S NO BEST, , ., Alum, Ammonia, Lime, Phosphates, f OR ANY INJURIOUS SUBSTANCE. l:. W. GILLETT, TOBONTOoH~;;r;,0, x:r.:r.. MANUFACTURER OF tHE CELEBRATED ROYAL YEAST CARF.8. I CURE FITS! W t1 r'a I say Cun:m I do not menn merely to .stop them fer "time, aml then have them 1·eturn ag'.>in. I ;irn,~N A .RADIOAI, UURE. I have ma<le the disease of ::B'ITS, EPILE PSY or F .ALI,ING SICKNESS A li!e lonrr sLudy. I WARRANT my J'Cmedy to Gui:m the"wornt eases. llecauso otllers ll avef~iled is uo reason for not now receiving a cure. Senll at once fo 1· a tl'cati~oJ :u1d a Fn1m RO'l 'TLE of my INFA LLH' LE R E:>l'F. !ff. Girn Expres~ and Po~t om~e. It costs you nothing for a tri:il, and 1t will cm-c vou. Addre~s: El'.. G. ROOT.1, m:.o., Brc!!.ch Office, 164 '\Veat Adelaide ~t.reet, Toronto. nzezmmn!mPN~!JS·lt. . . . . The nio!lt Sncccssfu l Ronrndy ever cllsoov ered, a.s H is cel'ta iu in Hs effects aud does not blister. Read proof below. CLEVra1~n OFFICE Jlln_ B. J . KENDAu. co. BAY ~~s~;~T~~a BRED Honsm;.. ~ EL:nwooo, !LL., Nov. 20, 1888. oFCHARLES A. SNYDRn, I CnA.S. A. SNYDRn. ~IUl un~ ~m:~ie · ;n. MJlll ,f.f,~ ~lF lUI l lm \llWn!J;.1 ·.,. BnooKLYN, N. Y.,November a, ISSS. !i'.R. B. J . K z>mALL co. Dear Sirs ; I desire to give yon testimonial of rny .~d oplalon ofyour Kendall's S pavin c m·e. I have :n&."CI {t for J~u.m eness, ~ tl:fl' .Joint ,. und ~l>av1na, o..nd I have found 1 t a sure cure, I cor dl- ,,,.01lld 1N1e prices In larger quant!&y. I think tt is ::~;~~b1i:;~i~1,"£J::.~~~e"~a:artb. Ihave usedtt aRf·~rs8~~i'n1 ~~';."ll"i'~i~sJ:~li0~~~~t~~i~:ni VE!Un a 'L'S Yours truly, I I ~ll;)-reco!"mendltto all horsemen. "ours trulyMann:;er Troy i:2;;:ci1~1~~gf,;s. KENDALL'S SPAVHJ CUREa Dec. 19, IS&!. h ave done wtth your Kendall's Spavin Cure. I have Ctu'Cd twonty-fivo h or ses that h >td !Spnvin~. ten ot ]}~o~t~; f:':.:i1t~n~0ciuty to say what I 'l>i>0ks 1psto, SANT, W INTON COUNTY, OHIO, ~!~,!{ 9~1e, j'~;,~~gg l~~~~e!~!~ [ J~';fV~';,~ and fonowe<l the directions, I ha.ve ne~er caro~~:iluf)~d. ANDREW !SOLD B Y ALL DRUGGIST S. TUlt~tm., Horse Doctor. ilf&::l!l~A'ILL'~ srrUlUllll\JI 11\UDl:e i\!!Dl!HH\ ti.l !i"'ilU7 H1 ~ lllllllr&;m Prlee $1 er bottle, or six bottles for $5. .All Dr uglll'lsts nave~toreangetlt tor you, or ltw1llbesent 't<l any address on receipt o! price by the proJ>rlotol'll. DR- B. J . KEND.4.LL Co., Enosburgh Falls, vi_ I l bla.me for his deformity than the grenadier I r.!:[E .MYSTERIES OF Il.Y.l:'J~WTISM. ie t o praise for hie handsome figure. You know, in one word, thab wo do not make ourHtlvea. If I a.m a.n idiot it is du~ to my Tile Sl.rauge Force Wlllc11 b Puzzuna the i mer I heredity and my enviroJJment , which have l!!cltntlllc World, I new assortment. of sum a.ts and Of the Death of Theodore Knight, givel! ~ti tbiB str~otur(I ~f brain; If I ~m Wh~~ a per~on ..h~~ b~Q~.~e thoroughly Bonnets. . No difficulty in ple.aoing any poetit lB due to my heredity and my cnvuoa· · hypnoti z~d. s11._ys a. wf:ttr an tne New Yorlt BY HENRY HAXLAND, IN THE 11 NEw YoRK HERAr,n . ment, which have given me that structure of j World, he is but an automaton, moving, brain, By the same token, if I am a ko11.ve j acting, thiokitlg at the will of the opera.tor, repeated, with t he air of a man who mis· it is because my heredity and my environ- who can produce any sensation that he ma.y CHAPl'ER III. h- · · · ment have shaped me thus and so; if I am a desire. He c~n deatr!.'y eeJJsation and pro· hero it Is bees.nee my heredity and my en- duce complete a.r:rejthesia. The fingers of a who chooses to buy. NO better er t..e I own I had been impressed and stirred by tr~~~~a:~1;~i:~,ng, what he said or bv his manner of saying it, "You-you forget, perhaps, who isaid it'?" vironment have snaped me so and thus, Ia su tj~cb oan be 11ewed together, drawing ..._In my emobion I forgot the hundred excel"No, I remember perfectly who said ili." the tiger to blame who waxes wroth at the thread throµgh the flesh, and the victim lent rea.8oris I had to urge agains~ him. A "And do you venture to aseert of any scene of blood? Can the poor beast help it? wiil remain au n.mused spectator. You can wfoer man th11.n· I, however, obaervitig how smaHestl word that fell ~rom His lips tho.tit If I pick a pocket it is because I oann?b he1p render l\ny aeuse hyp<nre thetio so that in· lhe subjec.b a.aite.ted his interlocutor would i8 unreasonable or preposterous?" it; if I cut a. throab it is because I cannot tense pain will be feh a t ttle slightest touch. this side of T oronto. We a re not ~ave dropped it, introducing a new one, I "It was to your construction of the word help it; if I s~ve a life it is bees.use I can.l!:very sense oon be intiensiGed, thougll no ohall never cease most bitterly to reproach that I a.pplied those terms. It wa.sn't mea.nt not help it; it I write a. good book it is be· other person in the room ca.n be heard save cause I cannot help it; if I ruin my life the opera.tor, yet the faintest whhper by him 1nyself for my folly in pursuing i t. ·lf~ our literally." oonversa.tion hs.d stopped at that poin~ "C~n you tell me of any figurative con- through a. folly of my own commission ID is will be hee.rd diatinctly a.cross a wide room, bhe act, the crime, that followed it ,would struction thab it will bea.r?" because I cannot help it. In no case a.m I A watch in his hand can be heard at a diavery probably never have been committed. "'.rhe 'eye of a needle' referred to was a to blame, In no case t o praise. Factor Neces· tance of t.hir.ty or forty feet distinctly, and but alive to the fact t ha t to ga.in a first· In my unwisdom I said : ·-"Well, eVf n so ? fa.moue gateway, thr<>ugh which it wa.s dif· eity, a.nd yon obtl\ln Heredity j,nd Environ- located even when the subject is blindfolded class trade we must keep Whab of it?.Why ehould you fear dee.th so? ficulb for a loaded camel to pass-difficult, ment-well and good. You know all this Memory is made exceedingly a.cute, so that Whati kthere co be afraid of ? Yes, indubit- ma.rk you, but not impossible. It means, ae well ae I do. Now here is what I want thinga which in a. .normal state are forgotten s.bly, each mother's son of ue may die at any therefore, tha.t the average rich man may you to explain .-If yonder wretched wife are easily remembered a.nd recalled. A moment. But why should we dres.d d11a.th, have some difficulty getting into the King- beater, thief, cutthroat, liar, besotted brute, young man who had loat a. sm11.ll article w11.s shrink from death? The bodily agony, even dom of heaven, because the average rich if he is notl to blame for his misdoings, since made to rememb"er where he bad it laet, and if supreme, cannot be of Jong duratlo~ ;. and man is apt to be purne proud and ungener- he cannot help them, since be is the poor was sent for it, and returned with it as a. tock first -cle.ss millinery. D o not fail t o prisoner and victim of noceaoity, why,! beg matter of co11rse, thouj!h he had searched select your Hats and Trimmings in time. as for the future life, if there in one, we have oue." no reason to expect that it will be!worse than "A deceit and a sham, Norbert," Knight you to explain, why should he be damned long and painfully for in when in a normal the pr e~ent." cried; "invented by ease.loving ecclesiastics, for them? Why not as justly damn him abate cf mind, It is impossible to hypnotizll Perfect satisfaction a.t the Mieses Wilsoa , "Ah, there is jusb the point 1" cried thEmeelves rich, to the end of reconciling for the color of hie hair?" a.n idiot, but not impossible t o hypnot ize a. Knight. "Fhe futura life ! Yon say, if there their unchrisiian luxuries to such shreds of "Juateo l Why,indeed?" cried I. Mvdea.r feeble-minded person, and there .is a use of is one. I am convillced there is." Christianity as they ha.d left, Accord- Knight, you have expended a vast de11.l of it indicated in that respect which promises "Well, even so ! Whal! of it? Whab I fa.ii ing to that reading, Christ's declara.· energy and in~e..uity in knocking over a development to such in acuteness and mental to understand is why you should fe!l.r it. tion is virtually meaningless, and I think we man of straw. I have not said that he streJJgth, It can be made the instrument of many What shadow ofreason have you for imagin· shall be safe in assuming that Christ always should be damned. I ea.y no one should be damned, th11.t the very notion of hell is in crimes. At the request ot a physician present log thn.t it wm be less endurable than the meant something when he spoke." "Well, tten, it mea.ns a be.d rich man." itself intolerable, But cert11.inly I can't see I suggested to a. young lady whom I h11.d lite wo know bare ?" "lb doesn't .s11.y so. As it stands it covers why, if the sinner isn't to be damned for his hypnotized that she was suffering · with a "It is not a question of imagining, Norsins, the virtuous man should be damned sore throat and pneumonia, and that she had bert ; it is a matter of demonstrable fa.oil. all rioh men." ··Well, then, it ia unreasonable. Itl never for his virtues, He can't help it, either. a high fever and was ill. Her pulse incree.sfo the future life- he1e is the horrible knowlenge that lies upon my conscience oould have been so mea.nb by Chirst. The As just ly damn him for the color of his hair." ed so rapidly that in the spa.ca of five seconO.s ··No, no; stop there. You go a step too the physician said thati the increase was at da.y and night, t orturing it like a. coal of notion that all rich men, good and bad, fire, racking me with an utter horror and without:;disorimina.tion, are destined to per· far. You forget, you ignore, the principle the rate of forty beaus t o the minute. It is dread of death-in the future life my por· dition is monstrous. I know no sane person of fair play, of turn and turn about, For my opinion that I could have killed her by who will maintain the conwary." one moment look with me upon the world increasing the heart's aatiou, andfohat a phy· tion will b e hell." " I am sane." . around ue ; contemplate a. little the life aicia.n would have signed a certificate of death I look ed at him. His face was livid. I was beginning very seriously to doubt dram11. in which we a.re e.ctors. See I Hele by pneumonia or paralysis or the heart. His lips were drawn back until they exposShe was of a. gentle, kindly disi:osltion, Uter spending mt1ch time and money, I e.m ed the teeth. His fingers wore clenched. this. But I confined myself to aayiug, is. a. world in which one man, th~nks not ~ prepared to fill all orders P,romptly, himse~f, but t~l.\nks to Neoemnty;-t~ b111 and yet, hyponotized, would commit mur- 1ow His eyes stared fixedly an the ws.11 in front "Well?" ..ave a fine assortment of WAVES, BANGS, " Well, I am sane, and I will maintain heredity a~d lus euvl!onment-t~ his birth, der at t he operator's direction as readily as SWITCHES, COMBS and PINS very cheap. ot him, wit h 11. light in them that wa.s almost the contrary, 1t was meant literally; it is to h~s inhent:d faculties and predispositions, she would eat a.n apple. A paper dagger maniacal. :SA.NGS FROM: $2 UP. ~ " Hell I Whe.b? What ? Good Lord, literally true, It is easier for a Clime! to go to hia educati?n-grows up t~ be healthy in wa.s placed in her hand and she was instrucb- Jld Switches colored aod made to look like Knight, what ails you? To make you talk tbrough the eye ot a. needle than for a rich ~ody · stro~ll( Ill in~llect! v1rtuous in his ed to kill a person present, and she stabbed new. Highest price paid for long cut hair, unpulses, na.ppy, rich; ri~h, ib ma.J: be, in him with but little hesitation, and on being like that, to make you look like that? Are man to <'nter into the kingdom of God." HA.IR 'l'ONIU "Which is a mere repetition of your pre· the ~aterial comforts of. hfe, but r1c~er in awakened had no remembrance of doing the you hoaxing me 1 Are you acting ,? 0 r are you imbecile? H ell I Wha.b do you think vlous assertion, not justified by the fainteat 8 I_lin~i.l wealth, i!1 hM. olear conscience, deed. She would have f'ommitted suicide Warra nted to prevent the hair from falling out and will make lt grow. scintilla. of argument. I should be curious his high and able mind, his: gei;ierous ~ea.rt, with the 2ame indifferenQe PtS she committed you me11.n ?" BI have also a fine lot · of new Stamping . " I am not hoaxi.ilg you, nor acting a pa.rt, to hear your reasons, though, if you have in the love an~ the rt;spect which he IS cm- the murder and made no plea. agains t it. Patterns. A.ll orders promptly attended tonor am I imbecile. I m ean what I say, any. It's a singular thesis, I should be powered to wi.n of .hie fellows. And here, The st ory that comes from France that such absolutely, exa.ctly, After my dee.th I shall interested to know what circumstances you Norberb, here Ill this sa.~e worl~, another a thing was done and that t he operator who .~.:O~-VI8, find myself in bell." can allege in support of it. But, waiving man' thanks not to ~imself, ~1bher, but commanded the suicide is t o be hanged for Neads' Block, Bowmanville. ,7 " May I be permitted to ask a ques- t hat for the moment, there's a manifest way !~"'nk~ a.gall! t-0 Neoeasi~y, to nis. h!"redity murder is all a. probable thing, whether the tion ?" out of your dfficulties. You believe yourd his ~nvironment--his birth, h1~ 1nherib· story publlshad is an invention or a fact. "Twenty if you like." s~lf doomed to hell beo.i.use you are rich. e? faoulties and P.redlspositions, hIS educ!l'· A bnsines~ man who could be hypnotized "Very well.' Since whe:J have you ba. Well and good. Sell a.11 you have and give ti~n-grows up dis!"a.sed in body, dull ID would write a check a.t the command of the i:und, da~ra~ed In s?ul, a cowa~d, a operator and then forget ever having done l!eved in hell ?"-yon who~ of aUrational· it to the poor." "Ah, yes, if I could-if I could. But !tar, a crimmal despise~ and rei ected it, iste, used to b e the extremest ?" of. all dece!lt men, poor 1~ all tho good :rhe whole phenomena of faith cure and "Since I cut my wisdom teeth. Since my there's the worst of it. I can't." '.' Cim't? Oh, well, then you simply lack things of life, P00! In spirit. No~ t here so-called Christian science lie in the dome.in eyes were opened to the obvious, I never n · of this new science, Whatever there is in was more of a rationalist than when, pluck- the coura.ge of your convictions and hell will :-t~ere is an obvious, gr~ns, terri?le i. ing up my courage, I dared to follow my rea- serve you right. If a ma.n sees his salvation JUSti.ce. Is the~e not? Horrible to think of, thoughti transference is here, horrible to admit, yet E1bsolutely undeniublo. son to the farthest depth it would lead me tangible before him, but is too weak to You will go with me in sayinll' that. A and then recognised the necllssity, the lnevi- graop it, he has no one but himself to blame blood curdling, soul sickening injustice. Paoifio Oables. tablenessa of hell, if he is damned." And in view of ill, one oftwo things we must If ·a million dollars have r eally bean "I d eclare, Knight, I think you are losing "Oh, Norbert, you a.re obtuseness itself. believe is true-either t his world is a. mona- pledged in Ian Francisco for laying a.n ocean vonr mind. Whan reactionary talk is this? Materialist that you a.re, you conceive by troaity created ii.nd governed by an arch telegraph to Honolulu, l b ie a good start. e Those of ua who are enlightened, in thiu age t he word 'riches' material riches only. devil; or else somehow, some time beyond Perhaps its first effect will be to stir up Bri· of the world's development, have seen clear· Thosa indeed I could give to the poor. But the grave, the injustice that appalls us here tish Columbia, Austrllli11., e.nd New Zealand VETERINARY SURGEON. ly that given any personal future life at all that would not menu matters in any smallest must be a.mended, atoned for, wiped out. to push ahead their own larger project of ORONO, - ON'l'. it must be but a gradual and natura.l sequel degree. The poor would remain as poorias Ei ther this life drama ie a. wa.nton tragedy the same kind. Their cable is to go from Office,Poet Office Block. to t his life-a logical continuation of tt- ever; I should still be a rich mMJ. Ma.terial of woe and evil-an a'1. bestias spectacle de- Vancouver to the Sl.ndwich Islands, thence that the soul will hegin there where it left off wealth is nothing. It is my spirituaJ vised for the gratifica.tion of the a.rah fiend- t o Fannin~ !Bland, thence to Samoa, thence Calla by telegraph or telephone receive im· here; that it ie the hei!lht of absurditv to weo.lth- my we&lth of eoul and mind- which or else in the fifth act, the 11ct upon which to the Fijls, thence t o New Zealand, which mediate attention. expect an immediate and immense tranela- damns ma. That I can neither sell nor give the curtain ot death shall rise, Justice shall is already connected by wire with Aust ralia. tion co a. heaven or to a hell. Yet you-- ! away, nor sequester, nor in any wise forteit come up'>n the scene, and exalt the valley This is nob the shortest route from the Do· Do you live in the nineteenth century or are nor get rid of' That is enta.iled ~pon me. and Ja.y low the hill, giving to the poor wretoh minion, but it is a.bout the moat advantage· you floundering in the ignora.noe and the So long as I dre.w the breath of life in this who hae had his hell of pain and evil here his oue. It lands in two neutral groups, the superstition of the twelfth? You talk of body l shall be a rich me.n, and that le my fling at hea.ven ; to me, who have had my Hawaiian and the Samoan, although its hell. Well, taking hell for granted, what damnation. Superior parts and cultur9, heaven here, my taste of hell. ['hey that other intermediate stations e.nd the terminal crimes are vou guilty of, what de11.dly sins the love of the woman who to-morrow will sow in tea.rs shall reap in joy, and vice points are British. But will two telegraphs have you committed that you deem yours.ell be my wife, refinementi, virtuous predisposi· versa, Blell.8ed are they that mourn, for to the Sandwich Islands pay? \'Vill even doomed to hell ?" ~!/~a-there fa mv wealth:- I cannot alienate they shall be comforted, Blessed are the one ? There was a measure iu t he Fiftieth "None that I know of, I have committed I looked at the man in· amazement. "I poor in spirit, for tbeir'a is t he kingdom of OongrellB subsidizing the American :.scheme no crimes, to my knowledge ; and I believe hea.ven. Into that kingdom it is easier for on the ground of its str11.tegic a.dva.ntages; my worst sins have been venial. But th11.t give you up," I faltered. "So well as I a camel to go through the eye of a. needle ,,but there is no likelihood of ite b eiDR .succeesful, The present activity in t he project is neither here nor there, or rather -no, that comprehend ,i t, you mee.n that you are the.n for a rich ma.n to enter." is probably due't o the hope of anticipatillg again is just the point. I will speak of that to be damned for your virtues 1 It's a para.· (TO llE CONTINUED) the intercolo::.ia.I plan, and a.bsorbing the in a moment. What strikes me at present dox which I own myself unabl6 to cope with. business by being firet on the ground. is the sublime conceit of · those of us who Go on. I am waiting to be convinced that Native Sheep of Ameiica. are enlightened.' VI hat new and special you arenot lnse.ne." "I said at the outset, Norbert, that you revelation have you received- you who At the time the 8pani11.rds first visited Sharp Teeth. a.re enlightened- that you describe with would probably not understand me. I said, South America. there were no animals in the such confidence a.nd such complaoenoy the too, that perhaps it would be better for country which exactly corresponded to the Yankees a.re ingenioua, but they have not DR. J. E. BINGDAlll, V. S ., nature of future life 1 Ob, the comfortable you lf you should not understand me ; better sheep of E urope; but they found in Peru and yet discovered everything, Mr. E den desHonoraryGradu11te Ontario Veterinary But in uhe regions of the Andes several species cribes an amuaing trick of the Chinese fisher· the fl'.l.ttering theology of men I The for your peace of mind, I meant. College, future life ahall be but a natural and gradual then, on second thoughts, I ea.id, it is per- of anlm11.ls to which they gan the name men in Australian waters, which it is doubt· Calls promptly attended to, night or day, sequel to this life-~ logical 0 011tinuatiou haps a.lways best in t he long run to recog. sheep- carneroBde latierra-but which t he ful whether any Os.pe Cod skipper would OJJlec- BigglnboUuim's Block, Second ttoor, nowman.vllle. l4·4m, of it. We shall begin there where we left nize nnd confess the t ruth. Thus far you aborigines called the llama, the alpaca, t he ever have thought of trying. off here- smoothly, easily, without break, have nob understood me; I will show you guanaco, and t he vlcuna, Before the net was drag~ed up I had nctic · ['he two first· withottt violence l I tell you, man, in the the truth so vividly that you shall not for. na.med varieties were even then nowhere to ed several curious black switches appearing future life every valley shall be exalted aDd get nor doubt it ever again. If you like, be seen in a wild state, but were domestio above the surface. They puzzled me not a litevery mounts.in and hill shall be made low, mind! I make tha.t stipulation; for I warn animale in the service of the natives. tle unt il I discovered the.~ they were the and the crooked shall be made straight, and you beforehand that lihe fruit cf the tree of While there is a. general similarity bet ween tails of "stingarees. " These are large, flat the rough places plain. !I'here is no re11.son, knowledge ia bitter, and that if you taste these several cla.sses, yet each one seems to fishes like the skate,with a. prodigiously long no purpose, no j ustloe, no excuse, for a of it it will poison your life as 1t haa poison- form a dietincb genus. The llama and the t a.ii armed near the ba.ee with three long, fu ture life which ahall be but a.n easy and ed mine, It's for you to choose," . alpaca. are of various colors, and sometimes serrated spikes which they can raise or de. " Oo ahead," I said, lightly, " I guess I speckled. The guanaco and the vicuna are press at pleasure, comfortable cont inuation of this ; so that I, ca.n stand It." who have the start and advantage here, she.11 The stingarees are very troublesome in a generally of a single color - brown,approa.oh· "At your peril, remember. Well, here; ing to red. The llama e.nd the alpaca are said net, for if you haul slowly enough to yive he.ve the eternal start, the eternal advantage you cried om j ust now, 'he expeota to be over yonder poor devil a.t this moment begto be so resigned:to t heiret ate of domeeticiby them t ime t hey fasten upon t he bott om by ging, or perhaps stealing, or it may be even damned for his virtues I' and you derided that t hey are scarcely able t o take ea.re of suction, and It takes a. cart.horse to pull that for a paradox. Thereby y ou showed murdering in t he streets. In the streets, themselves or live in a nild st ate. The them off. Norbert, shivering under the open sky, in that on thsee subj ects you have done no in- guunaco and vicuna vrefer t he wild state. :rhe Chinese managed t hem very cleverly body and mind and soul low and evil and dependent t hinking ; that you have swallowat such t imes, h owever, getting hold of the loe.t hsome, while I sit here in my safe house, ed whole the empty husks of formulas which end of the t ail and biting it severely. The Good I or Bvil. before my fire, well fed, well clad,olea.n 11nd constitutie the diet of those people who take pain, I suppose, caused the fish to relax Its v irtuous and beloved. The valley must be tlieir creeds at second h11.nd, their theologies Cato said that wise men have more to learn hold, when a sudden jork broke the spell, tlxalted, the mounbain and hill laid low; the by hearsay. You showecl th;;t you still pro· of fools than fools of wise men. Probably the crooked mi1st be mac1e straight, the rough fess the elihioal doctrine whicll deems it meet he meaJJt that, beinv wise, t hey would learn CATARRH. places plain. !I'hey that sow in tears shall and proper that a man should be rewarded more. E verywhere the wise man is the al)t reap in joy, There muat be a he11von a nd for the good he does and punished for the learJJor ; e.nd the lesson of a.voidance is oiie a hell to correcb the inequalities, to atone for ovil ; saved for his virtues and damned for which wisdom will ever glean from t he A. New Home Treatment tor the Cure or the iojastices t hat we are in the midst of his sins. Now I say that is indeed a. paradox exhibition of folly. While the examples of Catarrh, Catu.rrhal Deafness, and VETERINAR Y S URGEON, here. H ell I .lieaven l Of course I don't - a fallaov, repugnant to the feelings of every good and great men ar e powerful in winning Hay Fever. The microscope bas proved that theee maa:u a hell of fire and brimstone, a heaven man who has a eenee of iair play, inadmis- us t o love and~to imita te t hei.r exoellencies, BOWlUA..NVILLE, ONT. of mueic and glory. I mea.n a hell and heav- sible to t he mind of everv man who will give those of "" oppos.ite ilescription may exer· diseases are contagious. a nd that t hey are due to;the presence of living parasites in the en of the spirit ; two opposite conditions of the matter two minutes of fen lees thought. cise a warning and restraining effect. T he lining ,membrane of the u pper air passages For consider a little. It proceeds upon cruelty which exoites horror and indignation and eustachian tubes. The eminent ecieJJt· the soul." ists Tyndall, llnxley and Beale endorse this, Knighb had spoken with such sincer- t he assumption ot a free will,- a free will, may lead us to culbivate kindness and ocm- and these autboritles caDnot be disputed. consequent moral responsibility, But pa.ssion. The selfishness which appel.\ro in ity ib wa.a impossible not to t11.ke him and 'fhe method or t reating the diseases you, who know a few principles of such repellent foat uree n; ay cau,se us to is tor e;;i:ular apply an irrltaot remedy weekly and seriously and answer him respectfully. science, you know as well as I do liha.t dread and shun H. :rhe fretful and peevish even dally, thus keeping the delicate mem['herefore I said:- "Well, granting a.11 that, brane in a constant state of irritation, grantlng h ell, heaven-everythiug you wiah there is no such thing, that thera ca.n be no temper, so disagreeable to witness, may accompanied by violent sneezing, allowing such thing, that n.i> such thing is conceivable stimubte us to be cheerful ilnd patient . it no chance to heal and as a natural conae· - I have not yet understood, and I am in man, a.s a free will. nor, t herefore, a The sight of dishonesty, with its lo.ment a.ble quence of such treatment n ot one permanent particulll.rly interested to learn, why you moral r esnonsibility. You knew that we has eve1· been recorded. It ia an a nt icipat e hell as yo~r lndidviual l?t . Y ou are one and a.II of us under the iron and all r esults, may be the t urning-point in the cure career cf one just beginning t o swerve from absolute fact that these diseases cannot be tell me you a.re guilty of no crimes and by any application made oftener than exclusive dominion of N ecessity ; that we st rict rectitude. Ce;rta.init is that we ma.y, cnred in two weeks, for the membrane must and that your worse sins have been venial. can no more help doing what we do t han we if we will, in ao11"1e of the~e we.ye, reap har- once get a chance to heal before any application I , who lrnow you pretty well, should ~ay ce.n help being what we a,re. According to is repeated. It ia now 7 yrs. since Mr. Dixon tha1J you h11.ve led a si~,~ularly mor r.l h fe. the law of cause und effect, you know t hat vesbi of good from the evil that is all around discovered the parasite in Catarrh and form· us. Why, then, h ell for your ulated hie new ti·eatmcnt, and since then his what I do iu the unavoidable result of what remedy has become a houeehold word in "As I said a. moment ago, the very point l am nt t he moruent when I do it; and you WILL CURE OR RELIEVE every cormtry where the 'English language Wrans;; Deahres. of the ma.titer lies right t here I o.m rich know t hat what I am nt that momonu ill ie spoken, Cures effected by him seven years BILIOUSNESS, · · · ·· ' DIZZI NESS, .Norbert; and it 1s easier - it Is easier for a the une.voide.\:le result of my her edity and 'l'he responsibility of any wrong action ago are cures stlll, there having been no DYSPEPSIA DROPSY return of the disease, camel ~ go through the efe of a needle than my environment; in othar words, of my two begins long before the action itself is com· FLUTTERING . . I highly are these remedies valued, and INDIGESTION. for a rach man t o enter mt o the kingdom aets of experiences-my preconceptua.l ex- mitted ; It dee.ls with the source and the soSo great is the demand for them, that ignor· JAUNDICE OF THE HEART, 1 of God." periences- thi>t ia, the .exp:irienc~,of my an- growth of motives. It is not enough to ea.y ant imitators have started up everywhere, ACIDITY Of I losb patience. " :>h come Knight," I pro· cestors back to ~he hegmningo.f h ta, and my we should resist the mot ive which urge8 us pretending to destroy a parasite, of which ERYSIPELAS, THE STOMACH, t ested, "YOU don't mean to say tha.t you poatconceptual experiences- that is, my GX · to do wrnng. This i s of course true ; b·ttl it is they know nothing, by remedies the ~suits SALT RHEUM, of the application of which they are equally HEARTBURN DRYNESS 1 believe suoh- such- -" I hesitated for a i>eriences since t he plii.nting of the seed also tru&t llat we shvuld not have permitted ignorant Mr. J)lxon's r emedy is applied d OF THE SKIN, wor · from which I bpr11.n~. You know that I am the motive to attain such streng~h. We know only once in two weeks, and from one t o HEADACHE. ' applications effect a permanent cure In .Alld eve:ry speci es oi' disease arising ;'l:3uch what?" damo:.nded Knight, t urning no more accountable for my moral character, not what par ticular t emptu.t ion may v.~sail three most aggravated cases, N. B.- For catarrhal di so:rde:;:oed L I'/'ER, KmNEYS,. l arge, surprised eyes up<in my face. nor for my intellectual abilitiies, bhan I am us next month or next yee.r ; but we can ao troubles peculiar t o females (whites) this reme· b>om STOMACH, BOW ELS OR B LOOD. , " Such- oh, WO lJ, you know, that's Utterly for the atruct11re of my body or the color of orc1er our present life us to weaken wron'( dy is a specific. 1 deairea and withdraw the force of evil inffo. ';;>ro~r~6~~N!l!~. unr easonable. That 's nonsense. Bees.use my eyes. You know t hat the ~inner fo Mr. Dixon sends a pamphlet describing his JJew treatment on the receipt of ten cents Jn a man ch~nC6S t o be rich- beoa.use he has no more to blame for his sins the,n the good ences. · etempe. The a ddress is A. ll. Dixon & Son., ~ inherited wealth or legitim11.etl y acquir ed it man is t o praise for his good deeds ; tho.ll t he ['his is t he time of the year when the su- ~:ien1t:~.A:~:fc~n-:Veet, Toront o, Canada,Butb erflles made of colored, dyed, or - he must be excluded from the kingdom of idiot is no more to blll.me for his infirmity pa.inted feathers, large as life, a.nd mounted God! Ohl you know as well as I do that's than the philosopher ia to praisa for h is go.r barrel is hardly a matoh for the straw1 " Sufi'erers from catarrha troubles should j en spiral wires are one ot tl ,.·decorations genius; that t he huuchbr,ok ia no more to berry box. preposterous. carefully read the above-. of suuimer hats of la.oe, tulle, nfi·t, and crepe, 11 UnreasontJ.ble? Preposterous?" Knight HENRY NORBERT'S STORY I I I I A i, : . I w o MAN FOUND. DEAD IN BQ WJYIANVI LLE. Fine Hair Goods. LADIES Patronize Home ' TRADE. 1\1 rs W' ~l(@H:l1JY, JOHN SPENCER, T. MILBURN & co.,

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