Listowel Standard, 19 Jun 1896, p. 7

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Result of a Neglected Cold. DISEASED. LUNGS Which Doctors Failed to Help, CURED BY TAKING AYER'SH= Pectoral sty ews tracted a severe cold, which settled on my lungs, ' lggeyark ant pementen it, th nking it wouid Foe e; Du found, after a ite spill, ta the slightest exerticn 'Consulted a Doctor who found, on examining my tings, that AL he upper pi irt of the left onv w aa pulse ¢ some medicine which it Fortunately, This ned to tmanac, of the effect tha Veetor:l had cn others, and Tak \ trial. ter taking ve trouble was relieved, aut befe at "the | bette : was cate atom: wevitic, Ayer's Chery Pesta Highest A-vards at Worid' 4ycr's Pitts Curc Indigestion. ALWAYS CURE EY AFTER TEN YEARS SUFFERING Two Box Cure Miverton, 28TH Jur, 1895. Gentlemen,--For the last ten years Thad been i ered with pang Se disease e, being t pec Be Be i lie in t t nor stoo) nd. me arrk ef all the en find sine of d's Kid- aey Pills and am most happy to tie it for my own sake as well as for others that I am per fectly cured after using four boxes. JOHN BILEY. =: -- TNE we Ne eO--- Ee s a METOYO rn 5) UE RN Fo WITROUT* TRU i8si Age of person or case immaterial. CHEAP BY MAIL Your name to us means como to you. A Post Card willdo 0 ST. AD Positively Cures f } Pasian and COLDS }- ¢ PYNY PECTORAL § ) enge certain ts effects. W.C. McComner & Son, Bouchette, Que., Teport in a letter that Mrs. C. Garceau of chronic im chest and bronchial tubes, and also G, McComber of « long-standing Mr. j. H. »Cc + sings 28 Yonge St. Toro oconte, writes: Pectoral is'a most tnvalua a. on , f ( f ( { , 4 For Twenty-six Years " NNS. BAKING SHECOOK'S BESTF RIEND AGCST SALE IN CANA THE HAY BARN. Of all the fine nliooa to frolic and p' Just give me the bay barn apon a werdny, Its seats is and Its braces just fitted to e. And at aay mow the place to have a good Ah . there's many 2 nook mid the oats _, ul the rye Where a fellow can hide when playing "1 »y,°" > 7 And when romping at cirens, an clegant ing, 5 Is the rope stretched over the mow for a swing. To 5 ek the big beam Ix o fent. you'll Or te -- Fer heels from the rope o'er te TGV To es band In hand 'cross the purlin ta nr Then stand on your hendd on the -- mow, when you're donc Then there's oy eggs to hunt wind mice nests To And ae. nests "o'erhead you enn rob if wed, Of all the fine plnces to frolic and pay, Just give me the hay barn upon a wet day. Diogenes Goes on un Errand, be froning is to be done, The kitehen fire ts haste het, But pump, black Dina'x wayward son, Though gone for hours, retusyeth not, She sént him to old Antle Jones* 'Jes fol te-day [° To borrow ftiats--* LIOGENES'S TeERTOISE 'TEAM. Now she berates. his lngy? bones And wonders where he's p:tused to play. Diegenes--that- Is bis mame-- dust stopped te train two doughty steeds And make a wagon for the sume, Feo haul ahr he Georgia dust and weeds, 'The pleture shov with what succes loge has rocked. ara he: "Whoa Bnek ! Come hean you on'ry Bess! What foh you ae' dat way wid me ? "You sofers alut ne good at all, Yen's Spee dan ole Chrismus come-- vow, da t heas my mammy en ils ote "git veked when he ets hum." fhoonp Dena sples the wayward yout Aare a orem oo see his tortolae ten hae Ereenti forsooth-- The we rit or pt sses Hke a dream. Ifow 'THite Tier rd Her Organ. 'acher of our small country school aid that he would give us 1 penny for every head mar So I worked very hard, and when the last day of that long weary term came at last I found that by all my bard Jabor I had gained only 28 cents. In about a month after the term of school closed my father bought a large drove of turkeys. I was very anxious to own one of them, so I gave pa 24 cents of my money and received in return one of the' drove. But my joy came later when it = got large enough to sell, for it well repaid my trouble and brought me back Just.$1. I was very well pleased with my good luck and I resolved to speculate agin, As it happened pa had a very nice litter of pigs about that time, and there was one little runt (as we called them) among them. Pa foresaw that if it had not the best care it would soon die, so I bought it with my dol- lar. I need not say that I took the greatest care of my little pig. The result was that when It came time to sell it this pig was as large as any of them. I traded {it to pa for a hetfer ealf. The calf grew into a cow, and a few months ago, I traded my cow for n gan. I have just begun to take lessons and I think there ts nothing nicer music.--LiilHe Poulson's prize story, in Chicago Record A Battle With a Wolf- The author of a book on early Cana- dian life says that a yung girl was one afternoon on her way to the sping fora pail of water, relates the Youth's Companion, when she heard her pet lamb bleat and saw what she sup- posed was a large dog worry!ng it. Being a brave girl, shé dropped the pall, seized a stout stick which lay on the ground and rushing forward -- to beat the brute with all her mig the animal let go the lamb and turned upon the girl, showing his stead of a dog. The sharp ears, bushy tail and gaunt figure were convinc- ing. But she was not frightened; ex- citement and fears for her pet gave her courage, and when the wolf again scized the lamb she valiantly attacked him. and again he released his prey. She used the club vigorously and rain- ed Slows upon the woll, crying for help meantime Her brother, hearing her outcry, ran with his gun tword the spring, but the wolf saw the reenfoycement com- ing and fled into the weods. A Country Boy's Wit. Anv one who has ever been rash enough to attempt to make sport of the street gamin of a large city knows oniy too well what a fatal mistake it it. says the Youth's Com anion, but one 's not so well prepared to be made the victim of Chis: own joke by an | fed country boy : A lad of 15 was driving along a country road, taking a load o¥ calves to market when he chanced to meet a company of young folk why were evi- dently out for a pleasure excursion. The young men 0: the party, thinking to amuse themselves and thelr com- panions at the boy's expense, began to imitate the bleating of the calves. ut their merriment was of short duration, for without a mement's heel. tation he called out to his would-be tormentets, as the vehicles were pas- snes "Oh, I knew what you were be- r cee ete ee ee ' ' GRAFTING MADE EASY- How Wild Trees Are Changed Into Pro- ducers of Fine Frult. Scattered over Sarech sidehill pas- , fields and anes almost ey trees, whose fruit is seldom fit for Frail thing but the cider press. Yet: very trees, with iu: very little oxtiag time and money, can be changed Into producers of fruit of the best va- rieties by cleft grafting. As soon as Fi Ll. Ul. lie aslo epring has really set in is the proper season to "do this work, and almost anyone, by the excreise of intelligence, cure and perseverence, can do-his-own itting very successfully. ac Yools--A ful kit of grafter's tee 's consists of a keen, fine-toothed, tliY backed saw, a thin, sharp knife for whituling, a light wooden mallet, @ wax kettle and a grafting knife like the one shown in Fig. The entire Any black- emith can make this knife from an old Nile Have him taper the handle end cown to a sharp. point. Cutting the Clions.--Many farmers have the notion that clons must be cut in February, but experience has taught me that the best time to cut grafts, If one does not need any great quantity, is at the time they are to be Inserted, always provided that the buds are not ton far advanced, {n which case they shovld be cut in April and preserved In damp sand or sawdust, For,cions, cui only the last year's' growth from the end of a bearing branch, Sawing.--In sawing off a branch, th! erafter should bear {In mind the future shape of the tree, and not saw too close to the trunk, not saw off branches more than three inches in diameter, and not saw one limb abeve another, so ics A pe fcrowth will interfere, In avy branch, which is liable to ph . Saw under a few inches above you wish to leave your stub, from the top at the place selected, and there will be ve splitting. Make a smooth, clean cu Whittling, an "-_> not exceed a lead pencil in size. ake the twig in your left hand, and Phd the knife at the side of the bud, draw it towarls the end, the cut terminating at the pith, the bevel being perfect, Serve the opposite side in exactly the same wey, taking care that the wedge Is @ little the thickest in front, There should be about an inch of shank below the lower bud. Count off three buds and detach, when your clon w it appear as shown on the right of Fig. 2 Setting the Cion,--Place 'the --_-- cdge of your knife over the end of th ctub, splitting at right angles to the hody of the tree. of the mallet If possible, edge of the knife being calculated to make a clean cut before the bark be- gins to tear, Drive our the knife, and, reversing, drive the wedge lightly into the cleft. Now bear down on the han- dle enough to hold the cleft open, insert your cions so that thelr inner bark will either match with or cross that of the stub, leaving the lower bud a litlie Fig. 2. CLEFT AND CION. above or on a level with the sawed surface,.and drive--not pull--out your knife. The cleft ready for insertion of the cion is seen in Waxing.--Have your wax about the consistency of soft putty and your hands well olled with fresh lard, so that it will not stick. Roll up suffi- clent wax to cover the stub, draw the wax with one motion over the cleft, shutting in the lower bud. Now cover the other cleft, and if you have used wax enough to exclude air and = success will be sure. Grafting Wax.--To make a wax ane will not crack in winter nor melt in summer, melt one part beeswax and one part tallow together, and five parts white resin separately, pour together while hot, stir briskly and dump into a tub of lukewarm water whose sides and bottom have been previously well greased with lard. Grease your hands with the same material and work your wax until fit is a°golden yellow and will flont.--Orange Judd Farmer. Planting Avuples in Nowa. Another thing about the management of my orchard gives me excellent satis- faction. It Is the planting of the trees n rows, and not in squares, The rows are a little more than twe and one-half rods apart, and the trees one rod apart in the row. This aflords an easy oOp- portunity of working the ground witn a team, and of driving with a wag®n in the orchard, With the close plant- ing In squares so common, the work- ing of the orchard !s soon abandoned on accou fn its crowded condition. A sod {s allowed to form, and remains us long as the trees live. So well am 1 pleased with thus planting in rows that I would not change it for any other vystem or reason of which I know at present.--Lewis Ostenson in Rural New Yorker. Fertillzers For Vegetables, of sulphate gives more satisfactory results than muriate, when used on tobacco, lettuce, spinach, bush ceans, early sweet corn and onions as The best form of of potas A Spraying Hint. Young trees that will not bear this year, may be in just as great need of spraying as are the older trees. BY WOMEN PETTICOAT RULE WORKS VLEAY WELL IN GAYLORD, KANSAS. =. Thriving Town That Elected Ladies fet Mayor, Council and Police Judge Result: The People Are Well Satis- Neil, Gaylord, Kan., is the only town in the world where petticoat government js supreme and where the people ure, as & natural consequence, perfec:ly happy. The city government of Gay- the theories offered by the Poet Tenny- son in his "Medley." Gaylord hos a Iedy Mayor and women officials, and the offices of the municipality are gov- erned With honesty, ability, integrity, economy, and e neighbors have no incon- siderable indebtedness, Gaylord owes not @ single dollar, At its last election the town returned to office a ticket composed entirely of women, The women voters surrounded the polls on election day and everything was Carried on jin a gentlemanly «nd ladylike manner. The noticeable lack of profanity and vulgarity was a clear evidence of the desirability of suffrage. n slum-like affair furnished by the usual pelling place on voting day. The head of the _ aang of this little city for the past year has been a lady, and to find a seatie who are more contented and pleased with her administration would be hard to do. She has presided at the meetings of the council and her rulings display a knowl- edge of city affairs that would be @ great credit to any man. Her appoint- ments have been of the best, end every, move she has made has been for the best welfare of the city. TYPES OF WOMAN. A Hottentot Belle Dressed in Her Moat Fashionable Togs. Are Your Lips Metty ? Pretty ips add so much to the pleas- ure with which: we regard pretty face ar one often wonders why some w see! mi is they are cracked, o Lips to be aerate must ve soft and healthy looking, with a pretty red eclor in them, Deep red lips have some- thing startling about them, cnd only look = when seen on very young childre The ips should also ncver va rubbed with strong scent, such as eau de cologne, or vinegar or lem Some wemen have a stupid way py "biting the color into their lips." Not only does this unwise practice make the skin very sensitive, but it also thickens and swells the lips till they lose all harm. vhe best way of keeping the lips are always perfectly dry. allowed to ged moist, especially in frosty weather, they will crack and chap and be most unsightly. The Bea Dressed Woman. Maxine Elliott is declared to be the best-dressed woman on the American This fact was mentioned to her by a friend one day, \ho begged her to tell her how it was she always look- ea so well, "Whatever you do,' she said, "dress becomingly. That ts my rule. See that what you wear suits you---your person, your individuality. yourself to suit your costume. not take long for a good costumer [0 see and learn just what you need, but if you cling to him monotonously ou will always bear the same stamp, like the Goddess of Liberty on the Amerl- ean dollar." Rallding a Home. Mrs. nie Jenness Miller is build- ing & svete home in Washington ard will retire into malate life from her arduous duties as lecturer and promi- nent W.C,T.U, worker. The magazine attention in the past. a An Excellent Letter Writer, Jane Welsh Carlyle was one of the best letter writers of the women of ter time, She kept her husband In- formed of her domestic affairs with a humor so delightful and a wit so spark- ling that the gruff philosopher was wont to declare that she deserved to rank with De Sevigne. Has Become Orthodox. Princess Cristofero, who claims dc- scent from the last Byzantine Emperor, and Who is consequently heiress to iis throne and honors, was reccived into the orthodox --_-- with considerable state recently. e joined the Greek Church at a urate: (London). ughable Tusk. Miss Littian Gatanbum, the owner of the English comic weekly Judy, is to make a new departure for a worn by undertaking to edit this paper. A wo- man as editor of an intentionally 'u- morous periodical occupies an almost unique tion. oN A GOLD DAY Wuul slang it's a a cold day when ICE CREAM, ORANGE In the market. Our aim amounts almost to a fa, amongst the people who th or price. WE Oranges..........15¢ per doz. Lemons... 15 and 20c per doz. 3 cans corn ......... ... for 25e. : 3 cans peais........ PURE CE oe TE WE ALSO Sugar ] Coffee ( Spice : am MacLaren's Imported ch Hu imburg Guelph Ai .B. CITY RESTAUR. 37 Main St. - QD | Woot's Phi Is the result of over ' ge almost ee ee been | tome which | soon lead to » h tottering over the gieie---bat with the cor Wood's rte aes these ¢ases that ho ter who so given you up as incurable--th reach, by its use you can be restorod to a 1. Price, one package, $1; six packaces, { One will please, six puitanteed fo cure, 1 The Wood Company, Vi: Wood's Phosphodine Is sold by responsibic =e @® @ 2222 odd ek dol din fuly, but in current ve the best S, CONFECTIONERY first-class goods only kes a yesponsive cord quality then of quantity 5e per Ib, 1 # tur 25e. = = Whe yp "tinie! HASWD Pickles Cheer . » Imported Chie: ets.) ete, 'GE. 'istowel, --The Great English Remedy. : thousands of cases with all known a3 Ss E i by + § i 3 t sacco, or Alcoholic meeting all of aption and an early gr: 's ly by hundreds of cases s that seemed st talented physi- 7;--tases that were vernevering use of i up todie, were Tes nt-, Canada. |_After Taking. ind retall druggists In the Dominion, "=e e@ @ ee e282 A TRIO OF HAPPY CITIZENS. "In a multitude of counsellors there is safety." said a wise man centumes ago A multitude of counsellors testify that South American Ner-ine cures disease and removes sufvoring a« no other medicine willda Inthese rses from week to weak, has appearod tis testimony of well mown pecple--men and women, in all parts of the Dominion, telling in distinct and thankful terms what this wonderful discovery hesdore for them. A large yolume would be needed to contain all the evidence that comes to the discoverer ef this medicine. This talk is to-day illustrated with faces of three well known people who add their testimonials t: the ot . Here we have Mr. H. H. Darroch, unt Forest, who found himself weak -to desperation efter an attack Of la grippe. South American Nerrine was the only medicine to be found that gave him back his former strength. Mr. Thomas Sullivan, # seoond figure im the group, wos a momar' for bd number of years with agg Hie had been treated by avast doctors, with very little benefit A friend recom- mended South Anierican Nervine, and after taking a few bottles he has found stomach and o Effectively Cured of In:liz+stion and Nervous Troubtes By i . South American Nervince---No Triféng With Disease-- Thiss{edicine Curss at the Nerve Centers and thus Effects a Cerzain Cure--Never Fails in Cases of I::digestion, Weakness and Nervous Prostration. Am ARNON ot Fovert of indigestion. In brief sentence, he says--"it has cured me." Mr. Noble Wright, of Orangeville, was a sufferer for a long period with indiges tion and sluggish liver, these culminat- ing in gestric and nasal caterrh. tors and ductors' medicines were unavail- ing to core, Having taken only twe bottles of South American Nervine he found himself greatly benefited, and after six bottles hed been used he is cured, ; Baffled though dcetors often are with disease, when the root trouble is discov- eredacure is not difficult. Here rests the entire success of South American Nervine. Certain nerves control entirely the stomach, liver and all the internal organs of the body.. Let these become weakened and disewse follows and will continue uatil strength is given to these nerrecenterd' The motor power is cen- teredthere. Attempts to heal an organ is only patchwork ot the worst kind and cannot possibly be offective South American Nervine heals at. the nerve himself -- relieyed of swelling of ther Siegen evidences i takeable cure centres, and for this reason people, after having tried doctors and doctors' medi- cines without success, because the effort is only to give temporary relief, find it | effects an absolute, positive and uamis Soid by J. J. Livingstone, Druggist Listowel

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