Listowel Standard, 27 Dec 1895, p. 7

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A. Leflar, Result of a Neglected Cold. DISEASED LUNGS Which Doctors Failed to Help, CURED BY TAKING AYER'S Sten Pectoral. "T contracted a severo cold which settled on ny oy and I didw $ often dene Aisnch cases, neglecte.t jt a bn 'A w orld "ay 2S 1 Cant; Bs but I Ys fica" renee piel tie si Ightest oxerts vil $ pained me. I th or a bs Consulted a Dector upper pare "of the left onv was bad aly a ve me some medicine whicii 1 direst ted, renee i ' Alm tthe off i '" 4 hadou others, and Td atr 'i i Aft - " iy Fro mnie, was ceuere ae lt before = md the 1 atci Out. und, on examining my june, that ane PLA, Ayer's Chern Pectoral Highest Avvards at World's Fair. lalate tint 4ycr's Piils Cure Indigestion, DR. = Syrup. combined with the soothing an & PERFECT CURE FOR COUGHS AND COLDS LUNG pb sare Sue ae st play aya Ne orway Pine Rich In the Supe hialog vistuen ofthe Pine 'ant --_ of other pectoral herbs and barks, rapend al THROAT, BRONCHIAL and aad and all ' PYNY - PECTORAL ) Positively Cures J COUGHS and COLDS in ly short ti 2 i 1 a eae short a me t's eine ] and healing in its etlacts, } W. C. McComaenr & Sov Bou 'hest and bron: AL , Chemist, §28 Yonge St., Toronto, writes: ry sn ts the theif fai fest, pleasant nm wonderful, & sale Large Battle, 25 Cts, } DAVIS a LAWE RENCE Co., Lr ae TREAL 1 av a 2 er bn Sears GeA. SHITE & CO. Toro 0 S BEST FRIEND iN CANADA. ALL AROUND HE FAHM. balecings: wit Fsly be Prof able Sas wi 'The ractical Farmer fays that there is ttle doubt that tae coming BSe7 nivpntacs . and next will be unusually high, he dry" cows wintered will eat #nd produce nuthine to compensace When it comes to a is doubtful s can De turred into anything more profitable than 20-cent butter, provided one has a warm barn and the recessary ar- rsngeements.to well oare for his cows. so that there is not an undue demand ttpon 'the food to protect the cow from rigors of the food--extra--tn have gone either to a more economical keening 'of the cow or a greater yleld of mi One of the reasons why the winter dairy «well managed profitoble is that there is a date compensation for one's labcr and outlay in feed, r- there ix 2 corstant call for milk and lestter In turned into he least of the economies of the winter datrv ig the fact that demonstrated, the milch cow actually do better and produce hetter an d with seme of] meal and the like, than upon fine and more ¢ and e to turn . Unselable fearia "into the flrese of fooda for manity., and. him employment In the » should be Iittle abandonment of the Incnstry, for the re- gret his monision Retter kecp at It. Tron whe es aneg will sony The Connecticut F Farmer = recentiy Ssull that ft is riasonable to predict that road Improvement is destined to spread with great pret, in the next ten yeurs, and tl "apital which here- tefore a rallronds will now sevk In- fine ma vestment cadamized roads. The 'rst palo for developing a country of the size f the United States was a system of railroads that sculd bind together the widely separ- idous system absorbed most of the : and capital of our financiers, » 'the country now Is better supplied with rallroads than any . It is {mpossible to have every hamlet and village connected extension of long railroad lines is prac- n pro- o be --- ed until every small place ph fa se is connected with eries of comme cg roads. It is this neces- sity for bullding more and better com- roads that makes the question such a burning one to-day. The next Generation must devote itself to the ec: struction and Improvement of com- r.n roads feeding the railroads with the products of the great agricultur- al regions, a Acricultural Briefs, A stif{ brush Js better than a card or @ currycumb to heep animals clean, In riding through an extensive dairy section to-day Saw Wagon loads of ripe pumpkins on nearly 'every farm, kathered and> piled in- the open near the barns. As we are having a freez- ing temperature sbout every nigh: this good cattle food was simply being rutped by needless and heedless expo- Sure Farm Hovse 3 is more and admitted that the fall more generally is the better tlme for setting out fruit trees Less pressure of business en- ables nursery men-to get them out tn better shape quicker, and the climate {| ' If to be heeled In, do not leave them ex}. sed to frosts and drying winds. While we hear considerable of farm- ers and dairymen grumbling about in thelr business, noney The question naturally arises: Ts the blame not with the farm If hin ethods are not the best he must ex- pect to fail. Businessmen do it, ana there is no reason why farmers should net. Only the wisest. and shrewdest succeed in anything. bell grow turnips, beets, carrots -- other roots. generally wait rt is harvested be- In this the price is then fiwnys lowest. There Is a better mar- ket for these roots early in the seuson, lo; the portion marketed carly thinned as the thinnings sold, a larger growth of what thered, and qn aa be fs. lef: oes is always conetderstile differ- oorest This shows itself at , and almost invariably the pig is largest end best will, other things being equal, runt is usually beca rcor, Feeding -- ee ~~ a FRAMES INVENTIONS Many of His Ideas. Hane Been Catented Many Times There is not in existence a biogra- phy of Benjamin Franklin which pives a complete account. of the Pee ast and sclentific diseovertes 'ma: Great as diplomat and statesman, says the Boa- ton Pilot, he was greater as a scien- tist In the domain of physics, wherein he planted seeds which bore fruit { his own alee and again in our own sencration His pet 'study, electricity, the eighteenth century Was a of schoolm industry, affordirg; employment for nearly 2,000,000 persons In the civilizea which in tn the sclence of e Brush, Thomas and Tesla began years an expensive litigation between two joint stock compan the right to use a n submarine electric machine for blowing up ledges and sunken wrecks gh end when evidence 'pparatus tn the Delaware River i iS? Many of his inventions have been Patented over and over again office, where articles ' the cave dJwellers mey be ¥Y any person foollsh enough to consider a United States patent of any who does not know that patents taken out have been apparently made for fringers of patents and for tie bank- rupting of Inventors. Franklin's elec- tric inventions number 18. all made vhen his intellectual faculties were brightcs Blcrrsteres Voow + lee Eber rhetty. he electric storage battery, Gevelopment Hes the hope in whore ley wires and other unsightly obstruc- tions, has reached a point of perfec- tion, as shown by an exhibit in Phila- delphia, which makes it a oor possibility, and promises a 1 tension of the usefulness of Sactriatey in every-day Hfe. With a further de- of motive power, the conditions ex!ist- ing In Great Falls, M hat town electric power produced econom- ally at a water privilege does all the mechanical work It propels, Nghts nd heats the street Ts. runs the elevators, the printing presses. the cranes, and all kinds of machinery and ts used for pumping, for excavat- ing and for rock crushing. It Is even > building trades, it not fre on the streets a mortar-mixer attached to -an restaurants cook by electricity; butcher employs ft to chop his saus- ages, and'the grocer to grind his coffee. The housewives run their r sewing ma- chines and heat their flatirons by elec- tricity; they bake their _---- in wood- en electric cake ovens tha crs and teakettles.--New York Evening Post. The Agro of Spend. We are living in the age of speed, and the greater the spsed attained on land or the greater the satisfaction eral perhaps we should say application of an old ides for proposes to propel els at a very high rate "ts -- over the water Instead of unde this purpose he has built a flat- bottom. t prac- ed boat, with screws set/nearly vertical angle, although slightly ie ciined aft, the object being to lift the oat very out of the water by course, mpracticable, 'put ft seems to be rather fitted for use on rivers where waves of any consider- able size are not met with, The Forge of the Future, In the opinion of a writer In the Me- chanical News, vill consist of a lead-lined glass or orcelain vase filled with cold acidu- lated water his will be connected with the positive pole of a dynamu. The apparatus will be rendered com- plete by a pair of tongs connected with the negative conductor, the han- dles being insulated. smith "seizes the heated with the Insulated tongs and plunges it into tke bath of sour water. In a remarkably short time the iron immersed in the water, are but slightly warmed. The principle tnvolved is simple, the resistance to the élestric current producing the light and heat. Tt fs found that epi ~_ can be produced by such a -- much greater in fact than i ne Handy Furntrore. An Englishman ae devised a most clever combinatlo suite, ft Pp by anyone |¢ It conta in the nature of a puzzle. ed c airs, an siresake a bedstead on castors with the bedding complete, a | ¢t chamber service, and a mosquito cur- ulred. this igs in a lot should bé pat up for mark: fattening, giving pey for |? feeding to those that wal best t. ; does not exist. We thought it did'ana acted on the thought, which .w ry t agin extract iron from the most pose ket or talmly, as ncaa ¥ sa and we have to eat eek of wrath and the humble pie nt tan as the sole reality in the whole affair.-- Exchange. screws, no Intricate parts, or i. oe th our authority, and yet I find y laying the advance. If I thought Thane were any treache Sun and Boss of the Moon," replied be minister, in the tone of one who was sure ground. "We are but Relates Two. Wanler- He Wlinessesd, B -oceulist has returned e months' investigation o> rald, Y. remarkable exhibithen: ot ese yokis," he says, "was an exam ple of what js sometimes called levita- nT swor S moved thelr hands, and ne remained suspended in the air for fully a ee "Then, a from fakirs, his Gescended and his head arose unt!l his Body was perpingtculer, feats og lesitetistie = was not done in "Another hing whieii I could not understand done by a fakir and years, or latter ne ing stripped jof all clothin From spool the faklr unwound home thirty feet of thread, coiled it, anid then-cut ball and gave the boy, them. A minute later the fakir made a small Incision in the boy's left -- cutting through the skin, and pricked around with a pin until he had through the skin of that boy, about three feet of thread. Then I asked the fakir to pull out the rest of It, and did pull out about twenty-seven feet mor Before he made the incision pany When the thread was withdrawn there was no sign of the place where it came from. . The Crv¥ of the Begrars. The cry of the besgars, true or false, tive sympathy; and, whether true or fulse, demands attention to ascertain the truth, and Imperatively to prevent destitution. It is the primary duty of every man (says Sir Frederick Eden, in his celebrated "State of and for the political interests of the commonwealth in rescuing citizenship from Incapacity. In the last of these two considerations Pericles asserted tle ves. ey "question » or "pet rid of the -- potind but 'tow best to deal ith it. "ato find employment for the pleyed, or to legislate sufficient aeons are schemes which experience has ex- pieced. To. defy economic laws, argue that they should not be, ts only to paralyze exertion, and staunch the Vice, will -- a Nemesis ultimate ac- ecunt en present beggars will be beeged "py them for a d water, andl when those who had pity will be repald a thoussnd-fold --Fro 'How Lendon Deals With Beggars." by the Rt. Hon. rd Norton, Presiden: of bid Mendiecancy Sre'ety, In ial Am- ican Review for Decem Morbid Senaittvenes«, Did {t ever occur to you _ forcible, emphatic fashion that we e largely the victims of our imagination, the true beauty of Ii ve would not be love ap toh its vague imagining. n upernal blessedness, and now of demoniacal torments. look, a word, wili do I--a look given itn entire uncon- tciousness--a word ing but B 'ng of the lover takes this quite un- conscious expression of eye or 35f speech, and turns it {nto a thousand shapes, twists from 'thousand mH rmalgoury it never had outside of the region of fancy. We fall out and make up preted for things as ight as air and with not so much substange a igs a doctrine of les to which n e imaginings Tenncuntiide for many of our tem- "fly" ra thing that arr pers dm & explains with tears of disdain A Wiss Minister. The potentate was lage t Ps piesa 'My couriers," said a to his Minister on War, Toitenas ery-- "Have patience, oh. Brother of the - - STOVE OR OVES, TINWARE. LAMP GOODS, ETC. If you want something first. class in the TINWARE LINE Call and eXamine our stock. ZILLIAX & SARVIS. Canadian and American Coal Oil for sale, Bs Bad 1 " Saueiburat -- et Tuomas Ho..coway's EsiaBcisuMent, Naw LOND FORD STHRELT, @ Purcnasers should took to the Label on the Boxes atid Yow. If the adoress 1 not 633, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious. NO SUCH THING AS OLD AGE To those who use South American Nervine A Lady of 80 Years Permanently Cured by this Wonderful Medicine. Her JOHN @ MRS. i Wordsworth speaks of 'An old age serene and bright, and lorely asa Lap- 'land night.' And elsewhere this same writer talks of * An old age, beautifal snd free" hese are conditions 'that come to the man or woman, though itheir years may border close on t€a con- tury, when inthe enjoyment of good health, In fact it is difficult to think of some of the old men and women on the stage of life to-day as old ple, there seems to be such a perennial youthful- nessabout their every movement and Does someone tell us that cases like this must be the exception and not the rule with those who hare approached wo or gone beyond the allotted three score years and ten? Not so, if they have be- 'come acquainted with the virtues con- tained in South American Nervine. Be- fore usin this sketch is the picture of Mrs. John Dinwoody, of Fleshertop, Ont, ---- of that town for forty 'years pers: and country 'known than this lady, highly esteemed. Three years ago it was her sad lot to loose a daughter who 'had been all the world to her. The shock sustained by this event complataly broke up the system of M Dinwoody. [She supposed her end hed. come. She doctored for ore year with three doctors, nd Shey gave her case up, saying that it DINWOODY, Filesherton, Sted by J. J. Livingstone, Druggist, Listowel. Three Doctors said "Old Age was Her Complaint" and Gave si ips Bottles of Nervine Gave Relief--Twelve ~ Bottles Curea Absolutely. Ont. wan one ofold ago and no «ne, nor any| medicine could do her good. Made off the kind of stuff that gives beauty toage: atany time she did not despair. She) was influenced to try Nervine he! took three bottles, end this was sufficient} to show her that her end was notyet) From these sho obtained relief. She per-! severed, and in all took twelve bottles off the medicine, with the result that she is! to-day con pletely cured of that break-' ing-up of the'system that threatened her three years ago, There is nothing wonderfol in the fact that Mrs. Dinwoody would proclaim, to the thousands of old people through- out this broad land, that with old age does not necessarily come decline, decrep- itude and diseasa Why shculd we-no' live into the eighties and nineties, a cross the border of the cetitury ? South American Nervine, whether rhe person be young or old, gets at the nerve} centers, and when they are kept in pro-, per condition the system ix a« well able. to withstand disease at eighty os at, thirty. With this prospect in view who would not live to an old age and eniasl the pleasures of family, friends and so-! ciety, and take a part in watching the marvelous progress and developments of these closing days of , a wonderfal cen-i tury, which marks 08 not the least of ite;

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